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                  <text>10 - The Pomeroy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tueaday, March 16, 1976

Ladder fund at $9,000
A public fund drive to raise
money lor the purchase of an
aerial ladder !ruck lor use in
Meigs County now stands at
about $9,000.
Giving the drive a shot in
the arm Sunday was a doorICH!oor canvass in Middleport

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonite thru Thurs.

MAR . 16-18
NOT OPEN

COMING!
Walt Disney 's
One of Our Dinosaurs
Is Missing
--andCinderella

Show sf a d s at 7: 00p .m.

when some $1,500 was raised
with sev eral areas yet to

Sacred Heart Church, German Evangelical Lutheran
report. The business section Church , Alice Williams ,
was also contacted lor con- Glenna Davis, Mary Virginia
tributions.
Reibel , Ebersbach HardThe truck has been pur- ware, Norman Hysell, Albert
chased in Springfield, Ill., Woodard, Frank Ryther,
and will c061 $1D,OOO with an Tom Cook and Evelyn Clark,
additional $4,000 to $6,000 Jeannie Hines and Mary
needed to paint and equip the Phyllis Whitcomb, Lee
vehicle.
Rudisell. Mary Grueser , Rex
Latest donors turned in to O'Brien, Elizabeth Vaughan,
Mrs . Carolyn Thomas, Friendly Neighbors ClubPomeroy, includes Cam Naylors Run, Everett Dailey,
Phillips, Huntington, W. Va., Herman Werry, Ralph
Mrs. Ruth Evans, Mr. and Werry, Eagles Club, Jay Mar
Mrs. George Kaulf, Donna Coal Co. , Swisher &amp; Lohse
Reibel Shato, Bertha Reibel , Drugs, R. C. Hoce.
Herbert Re ibel, Emma
Also, Harry Schwab, Mr.
Ogdin , Leo Reuter , Mrs . and Mrs. Allen Hughes, Mr.
Graham , the Auxiliary and and Mrs . Allan Keller,
junior un it of Drew Webster Darien, Conn., Mr. and Mrs .
Post 39, American Legion, Walter Schreiber, St. Paul's
Rizer Oil Co., Franklin Rizer . Lutheran Church Women,

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospllnl
ADMITTED Harry
Kn otts, Vinton ; George
Carter . Mason ; Joseph
Bissell, Long Bottom ; Mae
Price, Long Bottom ; David
Donohue, Ra cine ; Lena
Adkins, Accoville, W. Va.;

Ford, Carter triumph
•
ID Illinois election

Tennis courts contract is
awarded to Gallipolis finn

Hol•er Medical Center
(Discharges, March 15)
Thomas Ables, Minetta
Adkins. James Ball, Frank
Brown , Paul Chesser, Jr .,
when the council awarded a for the season Wedne&amp;day.
MASON, W. Va .
Cheryl Clark, Stella Clark,
contract
to construct two
Present were Mayor Fred
Recreation
here
took
a
big
Sarah Coleman, Lura Crooks,
tennis
courts
in
the
town
Taylor,
Recorder Carl Cline
step
forwar\1
Monday
evening
Goldie Gillogly , Lucille
park.
and
council
members Ed.
Re\'3 Johnson , Ewington ;
Jones, Clara Keller, Dollie
Ted
Stoney
Concrete
Floor
Perry,
Bernard
White,
Glen Hudson, Hartford ; Kinser , Ruby Long , John
Co.
of
Gallipolis
won
the
Catherine
Smith,
Charlotte
Mildred Mitch, Pomeroy; McCarty, Cinda Mink, Mrs.
contract on a bid of $10,374, Jenks and Lawrence Roush.
Edgar Roush , Minersville; · Carl Moore and daughter.
more than twice as low as a
Jack Cornell, Portland.
Anna Morris, Herbert Noel,
bid submi I ted by a Gallipolis
DISCHARGED - Ri chard Thelma Plants, Marcus
WDGETOMEET
Ferry,
W. Va. company.
McHaffie, Michael Globokar, Poffenbarger, Patty Queen ,
Middleport
Masonic Lodge
The
courts
will
be
located
By
Bertha
Parker
Salim Yates, Osie Henderson, Carl ~oss , Mrs . Charles
in
the
down
rlver
sectiQn
of
·
363
will
meet
at
7 p.m. Friday
Attendance
at
the
Sunday
Shirley Johnson.
Stapleton and son , Mrs .
for
work
in
the master
the
parking
lot
which
is
morning
services
at
the
Free
James
Thacker
and
masons
degree.
All master
located
beside
the
town
park.
Methodist
Church
was
104,
Mr. and Mrs . Fred Goeglein, daughter, Mrs. Kenneth choir ·members present was
The
contract
stipulates
that
invited.
masons
are
Mary Kunzelman , Erna Thornhill and son , Barbara 11.
the
work
must
be
completed
Jesse, Rock Springs Grange, Wllitt.
SALE PLANNED
Mrs . Floyd Shook visited within 60 days from April
(Birth, March 151
Catholic Church Women's
first.
Racine
Chapter 134, OES,
recently
with
Mr
.
and
Mr. and Mrs. Robert R.
Club, Pomeroy - Middleport
will
hold
a
candy and bake
In
other
action,
an
ornogxnwith
Mr.
and
Mrs
.
Uons Club, Bradford Church Mullins, daughter, Wellston.
Mr. and Mrs . Dick Karr dinance prohibiting steel sale Salurday at the Stobart
of Christ, Chester United
was in Parkersburg recenUy. animal traps within the building in Racine next to the
Methodist Church Women,
PLEASANT VALLEY
Mrs. Karr went to see an eye corporation limits became Steamboat Inn .
Nora Cambron, Mr. and Mrs .
DISCHARGES - Mr s. doctor.
law at 12: 08 a.m. today as
Fred Blaettnar, Happy James Ellis, Geanna Marie
Mr. Robert Burdette, Jn- council listened to and acNAMES OMITTED
Harvesters
Class- Trinity Meadows , Mrs . Edward diana and Mrs . James Smith, cepted the third and final
On the list submitted by
Church, Eleanor Robson, Mr. Blake!llan, Point Pleasant ; Columbus visited r ecentl y reading ·of the ordinan.ce.
and Mrs . Paul Kloes, Mr. and&lt; Mrs . Kenneth Stover, Apple with Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Violators of th]s ordinance Meigs High School In listing
honor roll students two
Mrs. H. C. Brickles, Mrs. Grove ; MrS . Harley Jordan , Burdette .
will be subjected to fines .
Nellie Tracy, Mr. and Mrs. Millwood; Mrs . John Oiler,
names
were omitted, Keith
It
was
announced
the
town
Mrs . Mildred Jacobs and
Carl Moore and Mr. and Mrs . son , Vinton , 0 .; James Mrs. Doris Shook spent a day park will be officially opened Bailey and Krls Morris.
Richard Poulin.
Hammack, Clifton; Mrs . in Parkersburg recently.
Franklin Hudnall, Buffalo,
Mr. and Mrs. Harmon Fox
and Mrs. Franklin Smith, were called to Zanesville due
Gallipolis Ferry.
to illness of Mr . Fox.'s sister.
FOUR RUNS MADE
Mr. Vern Story, Columbus
Four runs were made by ·
(Continued from page I )
ATHENS LIVESTOCK
spent the weekend with Mrs.
the Pomeroy Fire Dept. and
nursing
home
needs
in Meigs County. The study indicated a
SALES, INC.
Story and son John.
its E-R unit Monday. At 1:30
definite
need
lor
more
nursing home facilities, not less than 137
Salurday, Mar.I3, 1976
Mrs . Bertha Par ker ,
p.m.
Nettie
Warner,
beds.
The
only
facility
in
Meigs County is the Syracuse Nursing
Feeder Steers ( 400-800 lbs .) received a letter from her
Ebenezer St., was taken to
Home
which
offers
17
beds
..
Holzer Medical Center. At 30-36.50, Feeder Heifers 1400- grand,son Airman Timothy
Attending
the
.meeting
were Jennings, Johnson, Buehl,
7:31 p.m., the fire depart- 7011 lbs.) 25-32.73, Slaughter Talley, Alaska stating prices · John Rice, Naomi Brinker, H. E. Shields, E. F . Robinson ,
ment went to Carpenter to Bulls Iover 1,000 lbs. l 30.50- of a loaf of bread $1.65 pound, Mayor Thompson, Grate, Mrs. Plummer, Mrs. Thomas, Doug
extinguish a brush fire near 33.20, Feeder Bulls 1400-800 jar of peanut butter $2.35, a Uzon, Joan Culp , George Collins, Boyd Ruth , Art Stegall and
pound of powdered sugar
the experimental station . AI lbs.) 30-36.50.
John Stitzlein.
Slaughter
Cows:
Utility
27$1.80.
10:43, the emergency squad
went to near the Dairy Queen 30.90, Canner-Cutter 20-27.
Veals (choice-prime) 47on West Main St., where Roy
68.00,
Slaughter Lambs 48·50,
Boggs was ill. He was taken
SUITS FILED
Hogs
(No. I ) 43 .8.)..46, Sows
to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
(Continued from page 1) .
TwO·
suits
for money have
At 11 :56 p.m., the squad went 38 .25-40 , Boars 36.25-37, Pigs been !ilcd in Meigs County himself in the chest and slumped to the ground, dead.
·
to Lasley St., for Mrs. Dale (by the head) 26-38 .
Common Pleas Court. The
Snyder who was taken to
Farmers Bank and savings
WASHINGTON - A CONGRESSIONAL HEARING on
CARD PARTY SET
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Co.,
Pomeroy
,
asks
$5,440.34
·
charges
President Ford's campaign manager, Howard
A St. Patrick's Day card
from
the
Great
American
Ca
llaway,
used improper influence to gain use of federal land
party will be held Thursday
UNIT CALLED
Homes
Inc.,
Pomeroy
.
The
for
his
Colorado
ski resort has been set lor April 6, the day of
at the Sacred Hear t Church
The Middleport E-R unit auditorium from ·7:3o to 10 :30 Pomeroy National Ban.k is the NowYork primary. Callaway reportedly "feels bad" a bout
was called to Route 6811 one p.m.. under sponsorship of suing -in the am·ount of the developments which prompted him to step down Saturday
mile west of Alfred, at 1:19 the Catholic Women's Club. $81,486.45 from Fred B. and while the charges are being investigated . But acting campaign
p .m. Monda y for Steve Refreshments will
manager Stuart Spencer told reporters he sees "no signs that it
be Barbara A. Goeglein el al.
Milhoan, 20, who was found available during the evening.
will have a political effect."
unconscious along the road. The public is invited .
·. Sen. Floyd Haskell, 0-Colo., chairman of the environment
Milhoan was transferred to
. . . - - - - - - - - - - , and land resources subcommittee which will investigate the
the Coolville SEOEMS unit
A
. allegations, said the matter should be resolved "as q!lickly as
and he wa s taken to a
l"f~ we can." He added: " If the allegations that I have read in the
~ "' Cl
Parkersburg hospital. There .
FIREMEN TO MEET
B .EN• 71"
papers and that I have seen on television are accurate, he
was no evidence of fOul play,
The Area Assoc iation of
clearly would appearfrom them to have attempted to use the
it was reported. Al6:02 p.m. Fire Departments and .........- -.................... influence of his offi ce for private ends which I do not consider
the squad went to Cheshire Emergency Squads will meet
proper. But that 's a big if."
for Marion Thomas who had at 7:30 tonight at the lire
suffered a possible heart station in Mason, W. Va. All
WASHINGTON - THE GENERAL ACCOUNTING Office
attack. He was taken to area groups are asked to send
suggested a suspension of four drugs used in food animals
Holzer Medical Center.
' represen tali ves.
~~!~:io·r the danger of cancer to h111118ru!. A GAO report ,
a recornmepdation to Health, Education and Welfare
F. David Mathews, was released Monday at
lhE,arin2s by the House Commerce subcommittee charged with
lo,,erseei·r•• Food and Drug Administration activities.
The recommendation said continued use of the four as long
there are no adequate tests lor detecting residues "may
~:~:gan inuninent hazard to the public health." The four
Journal of
to a category of drugs known as nltrolurans. The FDA
found that one, ftlra:uilidone, causes cancer in ·laboratory
FRANKLIN
·
The other three , nitrofurazone, nihydrazone and
II!ISTITUTE is re9ard:
are suspected or causing cancer.
ed as one o+ fhe

•

Laurel Oiff

News Notes

'

Multi-serve

We're Celebratin' the
"Wearin' l?f the Green''
With A ...

YOU CAN'T FOOL WITH MOTHER NATURE, but that old girl doesn't hesitate to fool
her children doing the best they can midst all the problems of this decade of the 70s. The
heavy snow Tuesday, not unusual in mid-March, did not stick long, but it was pretty while it
lasted. - Katie Crow picture.

.e

News •. in Briefs

•

'TM

NOW THROUGH MARCH 31

SAVE 15%
Of The Normal Finance Charge!
We're selling money:
Dur ing Pomeroy National
Bank's Money Sale you can
save IS percent of the normal
finance charge on any
installment loan of $1000 or
more . And that's . for the
duration of the loan .
Pomeroy
National 's
Money Sale applie s to all
kinds of loans. Auto loans .
Personal
loans.
Home
improvement loans ... Home
furni s hing loans . Vacation
loans .
Boat
loan s .

Con sol idalion
there others?

loans . Are

FRANK Ll N

l

HAVE ANEW
CAR ON
YOUR MIND?

l

leading o;cientific;

So, if you are planning to
borrow money , do it now
during Pomeroy · National 's
Nloney Sale . .. and save.
Remember. during this
period you can save 15
percent of the normal ·
finance charge on any
Installment loan of $1000 or

m&amp;&lt;JOX

in #le

v.s. The •..,titure

was founded in
Ben's honor.

Ben
One to&lt;llaV'is worttl

two

more.
It's here ... the big Nloney
Sale. At Pomeroy National
Bank!!!

CINCiNNATI - A BLACK PRESIDENTIAL candidate is
be nominated by the National Black Political Assembly
1~:::~~··~~ here this week. The assembly's 18-member
I'
council had intended to recommend that the 3,000 to
delegates expected here nominate Georgia legislator
fJullarl Bond, but Bond has turned down the offer.
"The executive council has been considering other
candidates and it is still our intention to recommend a
to the delegates," says Ron Daniels, assembly
Persons under consideration for the nomination
comedian-lecturer Dick Gregory, Rep. Ronald
, D-Calif., and Gary, Ind., Mayor Andrew Hatcher.

Start your mowing season
off right with a special price on

St . Patrick's is a friendly day ...
A day ·to slop awhile
"
To talk a bit and visit ...
To share a friendly smile ... so . ..

Stop in the Pomeroy National Bank and its branches
at Rutland and Tuppers Plains, on St. Patrick's Day
!March 17), and March 20 to enjoy refreshments with
our friendly staff. There will also be favors!

&lt;;

LAWN-BOY~ ·
LET US PUT
YOU IN THE
DRIVER'S SEAT

Reg. $229

YOU MAKE lHE
DEAL···
Wf SUPPLY THE CASH!

SPECIAL

$199

95

WALK-UP TELLER WINDOW AND
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRt EVENINGS5 To7 P.M.

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The LAWN-BOY exclusive 2-cycle engin applies
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prevents eng ine from starting with drive e ngaged.
Simpl ified carburetor eliminates adjusting. Upfront discharge and vacuum-like action means
better grass catching. 6 cutting heights.

ON SAL£
NOW AT

MECHANIC
STllEET
WAREHOUSE

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

•

VOL. XXVII NO. 236

By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
CHICAGO
(UP!)
President Ford and Georgian
Jinuny Carter decisively won
nlinois presidential primary
victories Tue&amp;day, leaving
the 1976 campaigns of Ronald
Reagan, George WaWace and
Sargent Shriver in shambles.
A "real clincher," said the
ecstatic President of his filth
Republican primary vlc;!ory
in a row over Reagan. But
Reagan, saying he still has a
"50-50 chance," declined
suggestions
by
Ford
campaign strategists to drop
out of the race.
;rile wins were the most
impressive to date for both
Ford, seeking the Republican
nomination lor the office he
assumed without election 17
111onths ago; and former
Georgia Gov. Carter, the
political phenomenon of the
year.
In the biggest state to hold
a primary. so far, Carter's .
victory appeared to virtually
kill Wallace's ·hopes for the
nomination unless he can
score a big win in Norih
Carolina next week. Wallace
said he was pleased with .

at y

POMEROVMIOOlfPORT, OHIO

SC\.'(Ind place.
Shriver finished a poor
third behind Carter and said
he would actively campaign
in only two more states,
Texas and Maryland, to seek
a voice at the national
convention.
He called
Carter's · victory
~~ ex­
traordinary."
"It was an extremely

important victory in a big,
northern industrial state,"
said Carter, expressing
surprise in New York at his
margin of more than 150,000
votes over Wallace.
"It was Gov. Wallace's
second big chance," said

Carter, who also defeated
Wallace In Florida. He said
the Democratic race' now has
"almost boiled down to a race
between myself and Sen.
(Henry) Jackson."
Neither Jackson nor Rep.
Morris Udall, D-Ariz., were
entered in the Dlinois Democratic primary .
At 10 a.m. EST, with 98 per
cent of the precincts
reporting, the GOP race
stood:
59pct.
Ford: 446,311
Reagan: 303;808
40pct.

In the Democratic voting,
with 98 per cent of the

precincts reporting , it was :
Carter : 616,263
48 pet.

Wallace : 353,018
28pct .
Shriver : 207,235
16pct.
Harris: 96,738
3pct.
In the separate race for 1&gt;5
delegates to the Democratic
convention, with 67 per cent
of the precincts reporting,
Sen. Adlai Stevenson led with
87, followed by Carter with ii9,
Humphrey with 3, Wallace
with 3; Gov . Daniel Walker
with I and 9 uncommitted.
Stevenson, though not in
the preferential primary, was
entered on delegate slates so
that Mayor Richard Daley's
organization
Democrats
could have bargaining clout
at the party's convention in
July. Daley was denied a seat
at the ·1972 convention, and
was
determined
the
humilation would not recur.
In the .GOP delegate race,
with 69 per cent of the
precincts reporting, Ford led
with 64 delegates. Reagan
had 14 and 14 were
uncommitted.
Before Illinois, Carter led
(Continued on page 20)

en tine

WEONESOAV, MARCH 17, 1976

Callaghan has
favorite's role
LONDON (UPJ) - Foreign
James Callaghan
and fo ur other cabinet
ministers announced their
candidacy today In a growing
battle to succeed Pr ime
Minister Harold W)lson .
Callaghan, 64, was the clear
favorite.
Other Wilson cabinet mern•
·[ rs in the light were Energy
• • cretary Ant~o n y
•.:J.
gwood "TonY 11 Berm , 51,
Emplo yment Secretary
Michael Foot, 62, both of
them leftwl ngers, ,Home
Secretary Roy Jenkins, &gt;5,
and Environment Secretary
Anthony Crosland , 37.
Chancellor
of
the
Exchequer Denis Healey . Sll,
was widely expected to stake
. Ids claim too , but he had not
done so yet .
Callaghan , a personal
friend of SetTetary of State
Henry A. Kissinger and
known to Britons as "Sunny
Jim " or •iBlg Jim, " was first
to file this morning, just a day
after Wilson 's surprise
anouncement
he
was
resigning .
The others followed in
·quick succession . The result

of the first ballot will lie
announced March 25 but a
Wilson aide said it coUld take
two . weeks lor the patty to
complete the com plicated
procedure of electing a new
leader.
Ca llaghan filed as a candidate without making any
statement,
But Benn told a news
conJerence
he
was
campa igning on a program
in .c ludin g more
parliamentary control over

governmen t ,

more

government ·irutestment m
industry and more worker
participation in industry.
1
'1 think I can win /i he said.
WilSon 's departure does not
mean the country faces an
inunediate general election
since it was .the party and not
Wilson that \VaS elected to
power in October, 1974.
Ca ll aghan was clear
favorite to win. London's
morning
newspapers
EPLING LEGION SPEAKER - . Above·, Mrs. Grace
un animously predicted a
Pratt,
third from left, president of the auxiliary of Drew
Callaghan victory.
·
Webster
Post 39, American Legion, Tuesday night, presented
Bookmakers made
Post
Commander
Raymond Jewell a gift of money from the
Callaghan the top choice at 5
auxiliary.
On
the
left Is John A. Epling, Gallipolis, guest
to 4 odds.
speaker at the post's birthday party, and on the right Is Mrs.
Arnold Richards, Middleport, Eighth District President of
the Auxiliary. In his rema-lla to the post, auxiliary and
guests, Epling stressed pride in being an American, the
tradition of American Fftadom, retracing historical events,
and urged his audience to "give themselves to Uberty." The
junior unit, accompanied by Lori Wood, sang several
nwnbers
and music was provided on the organ by Arrnand
By United Presslnternatlnnal
.
Turley.
Legion
members were presented membership
DUBLIN - IRISHMEN HAD TO PAY TWICE the price
Mrs.
Tom
Crow, Sr., sent flowers in memory of her
awards.
for shamrocks, but they pirmed them on anyway and jammed
brother,
the
late
Drew
Webster lor whortl the local post is
into Irish towns bv the thousands todav to celebrate ·the
named.
national least day of St. Patrick. The little sprig of shamrock
jumped last year to 20 cents. This year It doubled in price,
reflecting the 17 per cent annual inflation rate that has swept
LEGIONNAIRE OF THE YEAR - At left, Leonard
the Irish Republic.
·
Jewell,
right, was named "LegioMaire of the Year" whim
But economic problems here and abroad have had little
Drew
W~bster .Post 39, American Legion, held its annual
effect on the celebration. Travel agencies reported hundreds of
birthday party Tue&amp;day night. Jewell accepts the trophy
Irish streaming home from abroad to join in the festivities .
- the second thne in recent years he has been accorded
.
.
.
Hotels, guest houses and even private homes said they had
the
bonor
from
Charles
Swatzel,
finance
officer
.
good bookings. Nearly every town and village scheduled its
Following the program, ·the auxiliary served ·
own parade with an assortment of brass bands and flags to
refreshments
from tables attractively done in a
honor the saint who converted Ireland to Christianity and,
bicentennial
theme
with refreshments in a red, white and
IICCOrding to legend, drove the snakes from the country: ·.
blue motif.
Emergency medical ser- are available to any parBEIRUT, LEBANON - SYRIA HAS summoned
vice into a reas of Meigs ticipating county or area
Palestinian l!llerrilla leaders to Damascus to outline a new
County formerly served by when an unusua1 number of
peace plan and avoid an attack on the presidential palace by
the Athens·and Coolville units emergencies, or a disaster
rebel military troops. As negotiations on a settlement dragged
or the Southeast Ohio occurs."
on, street violence in Beirut Tuesday left 43 dead and 100
BOSTON, March 17 Emergency Medical Service
wounded. ·
Taylor further explained
Britain troops evacuated (SEOEMS)
has
been that since Meigs County is not
Among the dead was UP! teleprinter operator Antoine
Boston In the early mor- disconUnued, according to fundin g the SEOEMS service,
"Tony" Alallah, 19, whose badly beaten body was found in 11
'I'hree persons were in jured
ning hours with a . SEOEMS director William H. and
Moslem sector of Beirut following his abduction Monday night. In an accident at the in·
cannot
provide
rearguard of grenadiers
Taylor.
Palestinian guerrilla leader Vasser Aralat traveled to terseclion of SR 248 and TR 39
reciprocal service to its
and
light
lnfntry
The action, Taylor said, neig~bor in g coun ties, it
DamasCUB Tuesday to join Lebanese militia leaders in peace In Chester Township at 8:51
providing
protecllori
for the
talks with Syrian President Hafez Assad. Other guerrilla , p.m. Tuesday.
became necessary when
embarkation of. soldiers
leaders al110 left for the Syrian capital.
Meigs County failed to
The department of Sheriff
and
civilians.
Gen.
provide its previously . ::::::~~~~~,~~g:~:~~,~~~*:::;::::
Robert Hartenbach said a car
Washington remained in
WASHINGTON -MORE THAN HALF of the American driven' by Debra T. Connolly,
committed share of funding
camp but aent Gen . lor the service; also resulting
people now Jive alone, or with only one other person. The 16 , Rt. I, Reedsville, failed
Friday through Sunday,
Sullivan
to
occupy
In phasing out or the Pomeroy fair Friday and Sunday and
number of one · and two-per110n households has Increased to round a curve near the
Charleston:and dispatched
dramatically over the past five years, and now represents Chester Golf Course and went
station which was announced
a chance ol rain Saturday.
Gen. Putnam to take
mDI"l than half the nation's total domiciles, the Census Bureau over an embankment. Miss
earlier.
~
Highs wlll be In the 80s to
possession ol the city Itself.
''Cross county response,'' · the low lOs Friday, cooling
iaid Tuesday.
Connolly and two pa~~~enaers,
A recent bureau survey shows the number of one-person Jody Crow, II, and Everett L.
Taylor said, "is one of the
to highs In the . 50s by
households jumped 29 per cent between 1970 and 1975, while Crow, 15, Route I, Reedsvllle, taken to St. Joseph Hospital advantages ' Of the SEOEMS Sunday. Lows wlll be Ill the
twG-pi!I'IOn households ~ose 19 per cent. More than half - 35.7 bad apparent painful but not in Parkersburg bf the system. That Is, neighboring mid 30s to the low 40s.
(Continued on page 20)
critical injuries and were Pomeroy Emergency squad. county emergency vehicles ·:;:::;:;:;:::::;:·:·:::::;:::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::

Annual birthday party
of Drew Webster Post
is held Tuesday night

I
.ili
;::;
;:;:
:;:;
:;:;
;::;
:;:;

~=:TO~~) j::~~o~~:pai~

has sent a message to Rona)d Reagan - abandon his
quest for the presidency and unite the Republican Party.
Ford's White House political adviser said Tuesday night
after Ford's nlinois primary victory that he Is using "old
friends in the Congress" to tell Reagan it's time to get out
of the presidential race.
? "I've recei~d no response back yet and I wouldn't
:;:; expect any thiS soon," Rogers Morton told reporters. "1
;::: can't speak lor him, but I think he's going to do what's in
:::: the best interest of the party-throw in .his lot with the
i:': President and begin to unite the Republican Party."
:::: In California, Reagan said he still has a 50-60 chance of
:::; winning the nomination.
:;:; Morton said the message might get through next week if
;::; Ford makes it six In a row and defeats Reagan in the
;:;; North Carolina primary, because "it will be apparent that
f nomination is out of his grasp."
;::; At The White House, Press Secretary Ron Nessen was
;:;: asked if Ford thinks Reagan should now consider bowing
:::: out of .the race.
.,
::;: "As far as the President Is concerned, that's a matter
f for Reagan .to decide," he replied.
;:;: Morton said his "bridge building effort" to the Reagan
;:;: camp was being carried out by Sen. John Tower of Texas,
;:;: House Republican leader John Rhodes of Arizona, and
:::: Sen. Paul Laxault of Nevada, cOchairman of the Reagan
:;:; campaign.
·
:;:; As usual, Ford watched the returns at the White House
? and said he had won a "great victory" In lllinols that
:;:; would be "a clincher" lor the Reoobllcan nomination.

.,

·,

Dateline 1776

t

:Ill
:;~

:;~

:;~
;:~

;=:;
;:~

;:f,
;:~
:;~

::~
;:;:

:::!

::::
;:;:

;:;:
;:;;
;~~

:;:;
:;:;
::;;
;:;:
;;;;
:;:;
:;:;
';:;

;g:

:;:;
::;:
:;:;
:;:;

::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:

udge stops
teacher cut

ELYRIA, Ohio (UPI) Lorain County Common
Pleas Judge Floyd Harris
llllued a restraining order
today prohibiting the Lorain
School
Board
.from
eliminating 98 teaching and
lilt nursing positions.
"The court finds that while
tile extent of necessary staff
reduction is within the fair
ad SOWid determination of
tile Lorain school district, a.
reduction in force pollcy, a
fair dismissal policy, aalary
111d arlitratlon are all items
which affect the educational
program of the Lorain
alhools," the judge ruled.
"Thus, according to the
aegotlations aareement,
tllese are negotiable items.
"It is therefore ordered
tllat the defendants herein, its
agent or employes be
restrained and enjoined from
·unilateraly adopt.lng a
reduction in force policy and
Implementation of same Ul)til
luriher order of this court"
effnct lve inunedlately, the
jli ~e said.
u arris luriher ordered the
llchool superintendent, a re· .
presentative of the school
board, ita counsel and· other
desi~ated agents meet dsily
with LEA negotiators in an
effort to reach agreeement on
the issues. He also ordered
the defendants to submit a
report weekly to the court
regarding \he progress of the
talks.
Negotiations were to
reswne at 4 p.m. today.
At 2 p.m. today, another
hearing was scheduled In
Common Pleas Court before
visiting JudRe Robert

Inter-county service
by SEOEMS stopped

Three injured
in auto crash

I

PRICE fiFTEEN CENISJ

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

~cretary

r;::;~:,;:;:;wl

would be unfair to expect
taxpayers of other counties to
continue assisting Meigs.
"The justification for crosscounty respon~e ," he sa:ld,
. "is that the cost.s of such runs
eventually even out among
participating counties."
The Meigs County areas
affected are most of
Columbia, Scipio, Bedford,
Orange and Olive townships.
The service to the Southern
Ohio Coal Company Mine
complexes remains intacl
through the Rutland unit.
NOW YOU KNOW
Of the first seven
presidents of the United
States, the Adarnses. - John
and John Quincy - were the
only two who failed to win
5econd terms.

Murray of Madison County m
the school buard's request lor
an injunction against the
·
strike.
. LEA members were to
meet at 7:30 p.m. today to
determine their next course
of action.
School officials claim the
IlK professional positions
must be dropped to avoid a
year-end deficit. The dispute
triggered a .teachers' strike
March 9 by the 788 members
of the LEA.
The strike did not close the
system's 22 schools, but
attendance has declined to
abuut 10 per cent of the
system's 15,800 students.

Suit asks
for ·$50,000
Carl Nottingham, Route 3
Pomeroy, has filed a suit
asking lor $50,000 from
Norman J . Schoonover,
Middleport, and Margie E.
3
Schoonover,
Route
Pomeroy, in the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
Nottingham petltions the
court that Norman J .
Schoonover operated his car
in a negligent manner on SR 2
in Mason County, W. Va., on.
Oct. 19, 1975 and that Nottingham was permanently
injured as a result. He asks
the amount for Injuries and
expenaes incurred.
In the same court, Ruth M.
Conrad, Supply, N.C., has
filed for support of lour minor
children under the Slates'
Reciprocal
Support
Agreement Act against
Daniel Shane, Racine .
An action lor $919.68 has

been filed by Loretta K. Long,
Reedsville, and the Buckeye
Union
Insurance
Co. ,
Colurbus, against Robert S.
Osborne and Lorraine T.
Osborne resulting from an
accident on March 15, 1974 in
Olive Township. The plain·
tiffs charge the Longs' car
was struck In the rear by a
car driven by Robert S.
Osborne. They ·seek the
amount lor repair costs.
OURS FILES
. Ralph W. Ours, Republican
incumbent, has flied his
petition of candidacy with the
Meigs County Board of
Elections to seek nomination
in June to run for reelection.
Ours is seeking eventual
reelection to the. term
beginning Jan. 2, 1977.
LOCAL TEMPS
The
temperature In
downtown Pomeroy at II ·
a .m. Wednesday was 32
degrees under cloudy skies.

'

�'

...

_3-:: The Daily S!!nlinel, Mi~dleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March 17,1976

f----p~~---~ Players

I

_2- The Deily Senllnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday, March 17, 1976

J.StaJltl1ngs !

TOM TIEDE

Plush exile of Vietnam's 'savior'
By Tom Tiede
WASHINGTON - A Volks·
wagen and a Cadillac stop at
the same traffic. light In the
Capl'tal's Georgetown
district. The driver of the
sm8JJ car stares for a lopg
moment at the driver of the
large.-, 8!1d then rolls down
his window to commwticate.
"I know who you are.'' he

!18YS with feeling, ."drop
dead ."
.
The driver of !he Cadillac Ia
Nguyen Cao Ky, and If we
tear the acabs off old sores we
all know who he is: one time

of his all but disintegrated
country .
Who can forget his final
testimony as saYior? With
Communists rushing Into
Salgoo,. and U. S. allies
.rushing out, Ky caned for the
inevitable leadenrhlp coup,
!18ying: "Lei the cowards
who are leaving with the
Americans go, and let lhoae
who love South VIetnam stay
and fight." Three days later
he sent his wife and family to
Hawaii. After l'll'o more days
he gof aboard a U. S. plane
and beat it himself.
Now a nine mooths resident
of suburban Washington,
driving his new CadiJlac'
around Georgetown, he
serves as a reminder ·of the
ultimate lrulh 111 Vietnam:
those who Insisted on It, those
who perpetuated It, thoae who
caused it have not by and
large
suffered.
The
Communlsta who started It
woo, the U. S. officials who
confused it are moslly
relaxing In other executive
capacities,
and
the
Vietnamese masters who
fouled it up are, In two

commander of the South
Vietnamese Air Force,
premier of !hal nalioo from
~, later Yice president,
IUpected narcotics Lord,
111J11eman land grabber and,
.. I moustachioed 45, still a
!lllshlng If unsavory bon
vivant.
Nguyen Cao Ky. Few can
pronounce II, but as the first
anniversary of the end of the
war In Southeast Asia nears
(April) many remember \he
name with consternation and notorious cases anyway,
some shame. An American rellred In comfort. The last
government favorite for , premier, Nguyen Van Thieu,
years, nooetheless rejected lives in Taiwan with mUIIoos
by the Vietnamese people as in confiscations and Ky
an egotistic incompetent, it resides here, earning $2,500
was about this time a year lor each college lecture
IIJ!O Utal he emerged from a appearance,
forced )Xllitical retirement
You 'II remember that the
for what he called a last lesser lights Involved in
minute effort as "Ule savior" Vietnam did suffer. Nearlv a

million deaths, lor example,
more
than
6,500,000
displacements in the South
alone. One recalls Ky and his
wife, in tastelessly matching
black "Captain Midnight"
Dying suits, attending !he
ceremonious funerals of the
fallen .
Many
dead
combatants then were cut In
half by Ky's military
morticians, apparently lo
make them easier to bo!ry,
and the Premier, after a
refreshing drink, would urge
the sw-vivors oo to greater
sacrifices in the name of the
!18VIor.
(.nd there were other
sufferings, Ky's wife, a .
former stewardess who
thought sD little of her
Vietname~ heritage Utat she
underwent surgery to
Anglicize her eyes, once stole
five square. miles of choice
land !rom Monlagnard
tribespeople who owned it.
Dissidents were condemned
by the Ky administration lo
years of imprisonment and

that ."

But aU that's In the past
now, at least for the likes of
Ky. And the Ukes of him are
numerous in .WaahlnetoJI.
Former South Vietnam
Prime Minister rr.il 'nrltn
Khien is here nbw, aa Ia
former chief of milltary stall
Gen. Cao V!in Vlep, and
former minister of ecdnoml~
P)tam Kim Ngoc. TheR are
former admirals and lormer
bankers, and Ky's former
propagandist, Nguyen Ngoc
lihh, who owns a Georgetown
restaurant.
For many of the formers
there Is a sense of failed
JX!rpose. One of the admirals
lor example now is a flagman

"Let me know If you think
P,W'cbaaed • 24 lncb

Color

of something."
demand for Vletn,amese

merdllnl. In America, he

a-ew. But for Nguyen Clio Ky television, Is . writing bla tells bla audiences, all things !18viors Is a little slow right
there Ia !lilly optlmln. He memoirs and plallll!l beame are possl ble, even if lhe ·• now.
rents 1J11 expensive home. has either a farmer

or a

-

-

State wanting $83,664 froni Moritz and Niehm
. .,_
contaibed a claUR for
arbltraUoo.
"Wheil our worlren Wale
assigned to jobs they dldll1t
bave 1 cMIIce to ti.d ,.
because of •lorlty, we Jmew
we had to ltrlke," the aid!
ssld.
The union adviled tlul
workers wtake the state's 31).

COLUMBUS (UPI)- Ohio
Attorney General William ~.
Brown said Tuesday his
office Is studying · the
complex, legal aspects of
collecting $83,664 In a state
auditOr's fmding against two
high ranking mental health

DR. LAMB

wages were part of the
auditor's
real findings.
lobi and re~ve paychecks
"I
hope
legal aclloo is
yellleday for the l!rst time In
taken
to
.
Its logical
~~y three monihs.
·
conclusion,"
SlgaU
said. "I
. .lllate eumlners were at
per!IOilally
wan!
to
see
Moritz
!be IQstltute In Gallla County
and
Nelhm
learn
first
hand
to dlllrlbo!te l'll'o paychecks to
Ute
suffering
and
aggravatloo
eacb of the employes totaling
»4,014, averaging out to caused by aomeone taking
nearly $700 a month. The away your daUy wages."

dly IUipelillioll to keep their

.'

High bilirubin could be nornlal
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - In a
recent column you stated that ·
bile salts are made from
cholesterol _and increased
elimination of bile salts leads
to a decrease in cholesterol.
My 21-year-old so n has
bilirubin "on the high side of
normal." The doctor stated
that the high bile· level is
·apparenUynormallnmyson.
He is slim and athletic _and
regularly eats large amowtts
. of meat, eggs, and .other fatty
foods. Is a high blood bile
level ever normal? Could
high cholesterol levels lead to
the overproduction of bile? l.s
there a relation between the
blood bile and his diet?
DEAR READER
Bilirubin is not bile ssit, it is a
bile plg~f!ent. The bile salts
are substances in the bile
produced by the liver that ·
help to emulsify fats so that
they can be absorbed.
Bilirubin is a pigment that
comes from h~moglobin in
the red blood cel)s.
The adull human body
manufactures about 3 million
new red blood cells . every
second. These replace those
thai are destroyed. As red
blood C!!lls break, their iron·
containing hemoglobin,
which carries oxygen and
carbon dioxide, is released
into the blood stream. The
liver processes this. Through
varioUJ bodily processes
much of the pigment Is
recycled and used again, but
a certain amount of it is•
eUminated In the bile. This is
the major factor in cuusbg ..

Editorial comment,
opinion, f~atures

bile to have its color and
The mild elevation of cholesterol deposits in th~
imparts the color to the 1111· bilirubin would not have arteries that leads to heart
digestc'&lt;i food residue In lhe anything to do w!Ut your son's disease. This process can
diges tive tract.
cholesterol level or his diet. hegin early In life. Many of
The bilirubin pigment can
Although il's unrelated, the young men examined
incr,ase in Ute blood because your son should change his · after death In the Korean War
were · found lo have
of increased destruction of eating habits and use lean
red blood cells or because of a meal, fish, poultry and avoid significant· fatty cholesterol
slow response of the liver to fatly foods. II he wants to deposits In their arteries
eliminate excess pigment keep his cholesterol intake despite the fact ·-that .Utese
through bile, If Ute bile ducts . down he .should use a ve~;y ffil'n ·had an average age of
are obstructed so Utey can't Umited amount of egg yolks. 22. The best time lo start a
drain then bilirubin In the Most heart specialistS believe program to prevent heart and
blood will increase.
Utat · diet is a significant vascular disease is early in
life and then continue it
I have just described Ute factor in producing l~tly
three major resulls of
jaundice, which is caused by
Increased bilirubin , in·
creased destruction of red·
blood ceils, disease of Ute
liver cells or through disease
of the gall bladder and bile
ducts obstructing
the ·
drainage of bile and bilirubin
pigment.
Some people may ·have a
mild elevaliori of bilirubin
without
havipg
any
significant liver disease or
oUter medical problems. I
preswne Ute elevat1011 in your
son's case · was sufficiently
mild and in Ute absence of
any other evidence of disease
Ute doctor has wisely deci&lt;;led
that it is of no significance.
For more information on
bile and Ute biliary sys!em
send 50 cents for· The Health
Letter, nwnber 4-9 Gallstones
and GaU Bladder _lllsease.
Send a long, stamped, self·
addressed envelope for
mailing. Address yOW' letter
to me in care of Ibis newspaper, P. 0. Box 1561, Radio
City Station, New York, NY
10019.

season would open on
schedule.
"It 's getting very close,"
said an obvlously·wearled
and disappointed Lee
MacPhail, president of the
American League. "Every
hour we fall to reach
agreement now puta the start
of the ~son in jeopardy."
Basis for Ute players' latest
rebuff to the owners was a
clause In the management

"liability i.!lsue"

would ,

according to the players,
serve to wtdetscore their
Andy Messersmith

Cofield is
first black

Big 10 coach

·
W"ltenberg

~udglng

by 1 CGDIInulng parade of
stories In lb,i - · · the . •Utica of the
Amerlan bulllneaa CGilllllwdl)' are al a
diatresllngl,y JooW leveL

Some 14 maJ« CCJrPCII'IIiGDs

btlve been

cOnVicted of Illegal po11t1c:a1 con1ributlooa

and nearly a do1111 othera 1n1 under
lnveatlptloa. The t!lmlnlm by Lockheed
Corp. that II paid llll1&amp;na of dollars In
to·1forelln offtelals cr lnfiuencewidclers may be only the wurst enmple of
whalls • .faltly generjil )II'IICII.ce. .
But the ,.-y fact that lblre Ia 10 much
public lndiplalilln oYer I'ICellt ezpolllll'ea of
llllthlcal Cliiporale ~ lbat has been
. tolerated for geaerallolia "Ciftlra hape that
our system.la aelually laJdal 1 11"8t leap
forward,'' tblnb ooe t.J'•am•n. ·
There Ia no !NCb tbbtC M an ethical or
wtethll:ll till poratlon, polnta out Frtderlck
A. Colllnl dr ., )lt'.ulent af tile Spa I I and
Hutehln8oq Co. COrpora'*- are wbolly
inloral. They are lnaniml&amp;e llplccn:ejb,
neither IOPillllll' '-1. Nor do IIIey act ill an
evil Or t1iitqll ..., - onl)' people do.
Hiving lllld IJ*I, bolrewr, hi ljulckly

RAY CROMLEY

brl'*

Nothing bumbling

adds that COT)Xlrate managers cannot evade
personal responsibility by claiming
sanctuary within the corporate cloak.
"No amount of rallonall2ation can shift
elsewhere the consequence of avarice,
unrestrained ambition or other per10111l
weakness ... There Is no earthly way to
defend bribery, kickbacks or attempts to
bo!y votes."
.
.
·
While lribery, price-fixing, allocatioo rl
markets and the Uke may maximize shortlerm gains, they are neither inherent In the
profit system nor do Utey, In Ute long run,
contribute to profitability. Simply stated,
"bad ethlca II blld busbiess."
A better educated and better informed
public Ia demanding an Increasingly higher
standard of ethical conduct among buslnea
leaden, .says Collins.
Voluntary compliance with Ute law, and
beyond thst, with eUtlcal principles Ia
~~~entlal to oqr democracy and our soclel)',
he says. Uwe do not lnslat on ethical conduct
by aU, Including people In bllliness, we will
eventually 1ooe thai democracy and llu!t
BOCiety.

rolls over

Mile slol •75.

League

plans to
expand

BILL VAUGHAN, GRIDDER

Vaughan important in
Case·Western athletics
Bill Vaughan, a jwtior at
Case-Western Reserve
University in Cleveland, is
making a name for himself in
campus sports. The son of
Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Vaughan of Middleport, Bill
is majoring in metallurgical

Varsity in football . In three
years on the team, Bill has
picked up three !etten. He
has also lettered twice In
baseball and is now busy
preparing for his third
season. Case-Western
competes In the Preildent's
engineering.
Conference.
A 1973 graduate of Meigs
His sister Beth, a student at
High School where he par- Meigs High Is a sland-oul on
ticipated In basketball and Ute Meigs Girls Baskelball
baseball, Bill plays tailback team.
and quarterback for the Case
INVFBTIGATION ENDED
CINCINNATI (UPI) The following area cage
Alter Indicting 10 persona In
players were honored
an investigation of alleged .
Tuesday by the Associated pollee corruption, the work of
Press on the All-District a special HamUtoo CoWity
learns: Class AAA -Mike grand jury has ground to a
McBroomt Logan, second bait, at least temporarily.
leam; Class AA - Dean
"The main thrust of the
Fltzpalrlck, Ironton, first investlgatlon Is over,"
team and player of year; Hamilton County Prosecuwr
Gary Snowden, GalllpoUc, Simon Leis !18id Tueaday.
first team; Ed Howard, "But If anything developa (In
Ironton, second team. the upcoming trlalB), the
Class A - Greg James, investigation
will
be
Narlh Gallla, ftrsl learn. reopened In that area.
Lancuter's 8111 Bowman
The 10 persona lndl~ on
was named AAA coach of various
charges
of
lhe year; Mike Hughes of misconduct included seven
Wheelersburg was named policemen, Pollee Chief Carl
AA coach of the year and V. Goodin amoog them. All
Oak Hlll's John Eaton was seven were suspended,
named Class Acoach of the pending the outcome of their
year In the souUtem Ohio ujlcoming trials.
dlslrlcl.
HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS Tuesday's

College

Results

Basketball

By United Press International
National Invitation Tournament
c Second Round)
Kentucky 81 Kensas St. 78
Providence 73 LOuisville 67

NCAA Mid Atlantic
(Quarterfinals)
Sc:ranto, 94 Shepherd 78

The U .S. Navy CACHE
program lets you choose
Your
field
now
for
guaranteed train i ng this
summ er . Get the lump on
sum mer lob hunters. Pay
starts at $360 per mo . from
day you report and w1
furnish quartet's, food and
health care . To check it out·
call or visit ~·our t-~avvman
at :

Navy Recruiting Station
221 Columbus .RoaCI

NCAA Division l
(Quarterfinals)
Wittenberg 101 M iles 75
Plattsburgh 51 . 91 Rhode Is .
Cotl. 78

Athens. Oh. 45701
( 6141 593-3566

Stolz resigns at MSU

Berrys World
depression wbjch had . one
brlghl.year ill lix, thai bein8
In 1172 when the then IDCIDilbant wil running for
reelection; tile Nl&amp;on who ill
1181 was goiDg lo atop ID·
daUon by pll!chlng the
ecooCIIIIy and eahanaed hla
brand ol lldlatlon fer the
~-- braad; waaaoiDg ID
1M coarace or slap the mm. wave with an
''llc:t-p~-..lclonlent• iillil. · attorne, gii*JI who wu
.. ,
flew swallowed up Ill lbe worat
lllllllnl ~ that ...- roc:ked 'cnr · .
·..llonll a::mu:nt, and· a · ·

teJ.J me
Bul

)ll'llidlnl. - - ·~- goiJIC to :
~--etllerlntbe
lhacllh! cf . . . .le.
'

Do not ciiU!ml IIIIa lttW

:.:; =r:~o:.=
wblch

~ taDIDI - - .

eacl! '- tao 1111111 loopMJ•
... etmlplllill,l!lillben .... llo iiiiiCII ~ 'lo bribe 1111

.lltclorali . . wh111
tbec .
Jlllllflllll......, up "' thl ..,. wllrcb Cllft'ielllbtough In
thelt """Wttnllon.
.. '
Ia II time lo blrp the bam to ·
1tl rid of tbe rats?. ..., ·
Respeelfully, Cariler A. Bill,
Old of P. 0. Boa 111, BldweU, Ohio.
type

:

,

By BILL MADDEN
!IT. PETERSBURG, Fla.
(UP)) - The cry of " Play
Ball" remainsmuledtoday in
tile wake of the major league
players' stubborn rejection of
the clubowners' "final and
best offer" to setlie tbe
haseballlabor stalemate.
Refusal of the players to
ok~y the owners' plan, which
te chnically would have
enabled all600 current major
leaguers to P.lay out their
options and become free
agents at Ute conclusion of
Uteir current contracts, cast
grave doubts that Ute 1976

Wildcats nip
Sport Parade Kansas State

•
on a highway conatructloo

'J

llabllily of the eight clubs pro)Xlsal.
HThis is il," said Gaherin
altached to it , I cannot
' tion Stiind ing 5
grimly.
"We have made our
recommend
tha~
the
Bv United Preu International
final
and
best proposal as lhe
executive board accept it."
W. L · Pet. GB
D enver
51 19 . 72'9
players
asked. If it is
The players' executive
''emancipation
victory''
New York
_.5 26 .634 61!2
rejected,
it
will be wiUtdraWI)
which, having been upheld In board was lo meet in Tampa
San Anto nio
41 JO .577 lO,h
and
we
will
nol submit
Ke n luck v
39 33 .542 13
the courts, gives any free today but Ute owners, after
Ind ian a
36 38 .486 17
another
one."
the
players'
agent the right to bargain hearing
.. St . L o uis
33 39 . A58 19
Asked if that meant the
sentiments, dido 't bother to
Virgini a
12 59 . 169 39V'1
with au 24 clubs.
Tu e sda~·s Results
basebaU
season was In real
"The owners' pro)Xlsal is wait around for a formal
Den ver 111 St . Louis 94
jeopardy
because of the
nothing more than a reply. Both MacPhail and
Ind iana 115 San A n ton io 95
obvious
impasse
In the talks,
· TOday's Games
Gaherln ,
chief
modification of the free agent ~ohn
Den ver at Ind iana
Gaherin
said
:
"You
can't be
draft," !18jd the players' negotiator for Ute owners,
New York at St . Loui s
optimistic
in
the
face
of the
"one
and
one
"
option
Ken t ucky vs. V irg inia a t
union chief, Marvin Miller. headed hack to New York
Norfol k
proposal whlcb would have "In no way does It make a where they were expected to attitude being displayed
Thursday' s Games
limited a playe.-'s bargaining playe.- a free IIJ!ent In the true continue their ''stonewall'' on ·here."
Denv er at New Y ork
While the players remained
St . Louis a t San Anlon io
posiUoo w juBI eight major sense that Andy Messersmith both the ~pring training
•
in lhelr bard~ine
adamant
league
le4ms.
The
so-called.
lockout
and
lhe
final
Is. As loog as there is a
NatiDnel Basketball Association
stance
on
the
"one and one"
•
Standings
By United Press International
issue, they were unanimous
Easlern conference
in their feeling that sufficient
Atlantic Division
,
progress had been made to
W. L. Pel. GB
43 21 .66'2
get on with spring training
• eo~ to n
· Phda .
39 29 .574 S' ''
while the talks &lt;lOilllmied.
: Buff al o
38 29 .567 6
Ne w York
32 37 .464 13
Miller made that clear and, in
Central Division
fact, issll!'d a challenge to
W. l. Pet. G. B.
Wa sh ington
42 26 .6 18
Baseball Commissioner
Clevelan d
39 27 .591 2
Bowie Kuhn to order the
35 3·4 507 7'h
Hous ton
camps
opened.
Ne w Or team
32 37 .464 10'' 2
Atla nta
28 39 .4 18 13'h
"Allbuugh
we are not satisBy MILTON RICHMAN
West e rn Conference
fied
wilh
everything
the
Midwe5t Division
By CHRIS SCHERF
additional playing time·when
UPI Sports Editor
W. L. Pet. G. B.
owners
have
demanded
we
NEW YORK (UP!) - Ken· Providence center Bob
M i lw a u kee
29 38 . 433
NlcW YORK ( UPI) - Bowie Kuhn Is a man of his word.
accept,
it
is
obYious
they
have
lucky, badly outclassed at
Ka ns . C it y
27 41 .397 2''•
He promised he'd open the baseball camps If he saw any guard by Kansas Stale, had to Mlsevicius was limited to come a distance toward us,"
De tr oit
26 41 .388 3
ooly 14 minutes by fouls.
Chicago
21 46 .313 8
progress and he is about to keep his word.
rely on !he muscle of Mike
ProVidem-e,
.. now 21...g, rea MUle.- said. "That's progress.
Pacifl~ Division
He
hasn'tsaid
much
U!epastfew
days,
and
has
taken
a
lot
of
Now Mr. Kuhn has stated
W. L. Pet. GB
Phillips and prospects didn't
criticism for it, but he has been keeping up with the negolla· · look good when the 2.'!5iJowtd ceived uneJpectedly strong publicly that if he sees
Golden s tat e
49 20 . 710
Lo s Ang .
35 34 .507 u
lions, doing a.great deal of thinking about Utem and has come center limped off Ute court performances from Eason progress in Utese talks, he
sea ttle
34 35 :493 1s
and
reserve
Mark
to a resolution.
Phoe ni x
3'2 36 ,471 161r2
would order the camps
lale
In
the
first
half
of
McAndrew,
who
each
scored
Port lan d
30 40 .429 191 1
He will open the camps before the week is _out.
opened
. Apparently he hasn't
Tuesday's
National
Tuesday ' s Results
The decision Is strlcUy his own and he's taking full Invitation Tournament game. 15 )Xlints. Bruce Campbell because the camps still aren't .
Chica go 120 Phoen ix 87
also had 15.
H ouslon 11 6 New York 111
responsibility for it whether it angers some owners or liot.
PhiUips
was
given
a
sbol
of
Louisville grabbed a 21·13 open."
Los ,Angeles .109 Cl evela nd lOS · Some owners will be upset with him.
Buffalo 11 2 Port land 95
cortisone at halftime to . kill
Most of them will be happy, secretly or otherwise. Eve.-y· the pain but Coach Joe Hall lead with a )-3-1mne defense
Gold en State ,110 Detroit 101
Wednesda~ ' s Games
body suddenly grows happy when he sees players hitllng and kept him on lhe bench at the that featured guard Phil
A tlanta at Houston
Bond as the lone defender
catching a baseball in the warm Spring sllilllhlne.
'Buffalo at Seattle
start of the second half and under the basket.
Chicago at Ph iladelph ia
-- .Even Utough Marvin MUier wasn't pleased wi.th the last offer Kansas State capitalized oo
After a timeout, the Friars
New York at .New Orleans
submilted in St. Petersburg, Fla., by Ute owners, the breach his absence to outscore
Los Angeles at Milwaukee
made
!hat their )Xlint of
Thursday's Games
between them and the players has narrowed. The two sides are Kentucky 17-1 and take a 63allack
and
Cooper accounted
Detroit al Pho enix
not that far apart, particularly on the reserve clause, which 511ead.
Buffalo at Golden Stat e
for
eight
)Xlints
from along
remains Ute basic issue.
Phil adelph ia a1 Cl eve lanc;l
At
that
point,
Phillips
Ute
baseline
in
a
15-7
surge as
Ktm sas City al Wash inglon
Some of Ute owners and players have . told me Utat turned to Hall and said:
Providence
drew
even
with
MADISON, Wis. (UPI)
themselves, asking they not be quoted.
"Coach, I'm ready to go back the Cardinals.
Bill
Cofield, an assistant
: National Hockey League star,dOne owner, Brad Corbett of the Texas Rangers, doesn't even in."
"During
the
timeout,
he
coach
at. Virginia, Tuesday
;ngs
mind being quoted.
Tentatively, favoring his (Providence coach Dave Ga· became the first black head
. · B~ United Pr ess Internati onal
" We're reaDy not that far apart/' he says. "I wouldn't be the sprained ankle, Phillips reviti) jXlinted out 'Hey, there's basketball coach at a Big Ten
.c ampb ell. Conference
least
bit surprised if we go to spring training Tinlrsday or
Patrick Di vision
turned to Ute game and a little man back Utere - use school, replacing John
w. L . T. Pts. GF . GA Friday . That's right, I'm talking about THIS Thursday or proceeded to score 14 of his 17
him."'
Powless at Wisconsin.
, Ph i ladel ph ia
Friday ."
)Xlints In leading Kentucky to
•
&lt;l6 10 14
106 31 1 18 2
The
second
game
of
Thurs·
"I guess it is a historical
, NY l slanoers
Corbett, an eminently successful yowtg buslnessmim, Is a an 81·78 victory.
day's
semifinal
doubleheader
whether I Uke it or
event
38 1s '15
91 268 168 friendly, outgoing lndividualwlth . treme~dous enthusiasm for
Providence
spoiled pairs UNC..Charlotte, the not," Cofield said.
Allnt
J l 32 10
72 2&lt;10 2·19
. NY Rangers
living. He loves. baseball and couldn't really get upset with his Loulsvjlle's hopes for a longtournament 's surprise team,
Frederick Haberman ,
'
" 37 9
57 235 291 players even during this present struggle agail\'lt
awaited grudge match with against homestate · rival chairman of the Wisconsin
Smyttt e Division
man8gement.
W. L. T. Ph. GF. GA
Kentucky by topping · the
athletic board, said Cofield
. Chlcg 2s 25 11
73 216 218
On Monday, he did a terrible Uting in the eyes of Marvin Cardinals 7~7 in lhe second North carolina Stale.
. vncv r 29 29 13
71 739 244 Miller .
received a five·year contract
game of the qyarterfinal
-St Lo s 25 33 13
63 218 255
at
a salary of $25,000 for the
M ;n nesota
He walked to the outfield of a high school field In Pompano doubleheader.
19 48 4
42 .110 210 Beach, F1a., where 30 of his Texas Rangers players were
first year .
Phillips, playing against a
Kansas 12
City
·
1ked to them. Bra d Corhe It read. I he m t he
I
Powless resigned Feb. II
4
47 10
sitting
around
and
ta
163
296
3
lightweight Kansas Slate
during
a 14-game losing
Wal es Conference
owners' latest proposals and asked them all how !hey felt front
line
further
streak. the Badgers finished
Norris Division
about the proposals.
W.. L T. PU. GF . GA
handicapped by foul trouble,
1().16 and in eight years under
Mn t' l 53 9 10 11 6 302 154
Marvin Miller heard about it and got all worked up.
ignored Ute slight throbbing
Powless
had only two winning
L9s An g •j•~
He said Corbett had viola~ the Labor Relations Acl on five in his desensitized ankle to
3 1 7 73 227 237
seasons.
PHISbu,g h
counts and he was going to file a complaint against him with score the first time he got the
Cofield, 36, had been al
11 29 t t
n 101 2M Ute National Labor Relations Board. I checked the NLRB and ball
and,
with · that
Dc l r t 21 40 ' 9
51 lBO' 26 8
Virginia
two years and lhe
w a s h ;ngton
· Utey said they're up to their ears. They're still trying to resolve
reassurance, took control of
school
won
the Atlantic Coast
9 52 9
21 to3 339 a coople of National Football LeagUe grievances.
the game.
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio Conference tournament this
Adam ' o ;v;,ton
In
spite
of
all
!his,
Brad
Corbett
is
a
Marvin
Mille.fan
.
W L . f . Pts . GF. GA
His basket slarled a 18-.5 ( UPJ) - Rick While made all year. It lost, however, in lhe
1
Bostn 44 14 12 roo 273 206
'1 like Marvin Miller,'' he says, genuinely. ''I love a guy who Kentucky
spurt.
The
Bu ttt
39 20 12
90 298 211 walks in there, chaUenges all of us and _
beats us. With a small sophomore center scored 10 his 18 points and Tom Dunn. 12 opening round of the NCAA
Torn 1 31 26 14
76 763 241
·
c tt m 2s 38 9
sword, he fought like a helluva knight. You gotta take your hal of those )Xlints, Including the of his 14 In !he first half to regina~s .
59 216 m
spark Wittenberg to an easy
Tuesday 's. Results
off and tip it to him."
· final two with a pair of foul 101-75 win over Miles in a
Bos ton J St . Loui s 3
1
lh
h
Mon1real s Pitt sbur g h 4
What about the reserve cause, oug ? What's going to shots, lo give Kentucky a fill.
quarterfinal game of the
Chicag o 6 Kan sas City 3
happen with the players becoming free agents after only one or 66 lead .
NCAA
Division
111
P.:hiladelphia 4 A tlant a 2
two years?
Guard Chu~kie Williams,
Wash ington 5 NY Rang ers 2
M in nesota 3 NY Island ers i
"Anytime someone mentions reserve clause, they're who · had 27 points, then tournament Tuesday night
Van couver 4 De tr oi t 2
regarded as scare words, like cancer or rape," says the scored to regain a short-lived and advance to Ute finals at
Reading, Pa., Friday and
Bu tf o lo 4 Los Angel es 2
Rangers'
owner. "Baseball lived· with Ute reserve clause all
Today' s Games
lead lor Kansas State. ~ames
Toronto at Ch ic ago
these years , so it will learn to live with modifications. I don't lee, who finished wilh 20 Saturday.
Witlenherg jwnped .to a 2U
Bu ff a lo at C~ lif o rn i a
think I't' s Ut e end of the s·port. I Utink the pIa Yers rec.,.
~- 1
'M inneso ta at NY Ran gers
•• ze )Xlints, scored two straight
Thursdoy's Games
some type of reserve system is needed. they also recognize . baskets to give Kentucky a lead, had a 57·25 margin by
the intennlsslon and got its
St Lou;s at De tr o ;t
Utey want financially solvent ownership. They don't want to lead it never lost.
Boston at Kan sas Clly
biggest lead at 81-40 at 8:42
vancouver at Ph iladelphi a
see the leaguesdlm:inish from 24 teams to 16teams.''
Bob Cooper, a reserve before sending in the subs for
Corbell agrees basebaU couldn't survive without some form inserted Into Providence's
Ute rest of the way.
of reserve system.
starting
lineup
because
of
Bill
Bob Fennell, public
Wiltenberg, also led by Bob
w orld - H o c k e v Association
"When a fellow like Bill Veeck. comes in and says, 'golly, we
Standings
Eason's leg ailments, led the Heubler with 18 and Greg relations director for the Ohio
ey United Press International don't need the reserve system,' I just wish he had the same Friars'
victory
over
East
money invested in the game I have," says Corbell, laughing. lAlulsville . with 17 points. Seay with 17, won Its 23rd Valley Amateur Football
w. L . T Pts . GF . GA · ".Youcanalwayslalk whenyou don't havec hi psm
· Ut egame."
game In 27 starts. The League, ' announced today
N ew Eng t and
Cooper
also
received Alabama team, headed by plans ate underway for
30 35 6
66 227 257
Cleveland
Stan Jamieson with 25 points league expansion.
29 35 5
63 232 2.46
Comlliwtilles Interested In
and Gene Berry with 19,
Cincinna ti
31 38
63 '255 292
finished Ute season with a 2~ forming an amateur team
Ind ianapolis
should contact Fennell by
record.
29 37 J
61 201 214
west
Wittenberg shot 55 per cent writing lo the Ohio Valley
w. L . T Pts . GP . GA By JAMES V. HIGGINS
October
at
lhe
height
of
the
said.
'
from
Ute field w 43 lor the Amateur Football . League,
Hosln 43 24 0
86 27 5 226
Phn x 35 78 6
76 256 234
EAST LANSING, Mich. NCAA lnvestigai!Cln, also was · Stolz .!18ld he agreed to slow starting Millis, and 708'f.o BUt St. Marietta, Ohio
.
San Dg 33 31
4
70 261 237
(UPI) - Foolhall recrulllng asked to resign. Since he Is a resign to remove the final . outrebounded the Alabamans 45750.
x ·M inn esol&amp;
Thus far, four teams will
excesses toppled Michigan tenured employe, taint of suspicion from the 52-30. Seay got 12 rebounds
30 25 4
64 211 212
canadian
State football coach Denny negotiations are tmderway athletic department . Bul he and White 10 for the host compete in 1976 but others
w . L . T Pts . GF. GA
said he felt no personal b~ Tigers, while Gene Berry wa~ are being sought. The teams
Stolz. Basketball coach Gus for his removal.
Winnipeg
•
areGallia County, Meigs, and
"If we are to restore and hopes w find another Miles top reboWider at 7.
48 22 2
98 3 18 22 6 Ganakas apparently sinned
Qubc 41 25 4
86 305 274
Washington Counties in Ohio
unquestioned Integrity to coaching job.
In
Ute
oiher
direction.
Ctgr y 36 30 4
76 262 238
and Wood County, W. Va.
"I believe .it Is important
In an unprecedented MSU aUtletlcs, we h~ve no
Edm Onton
Wood County was admitted
24 44
5
53 242 305 athletic department shakeup, choice but to rebuild our that this prot!ram Wider a
Torn t 20 43 S
.45 283 335
during
a recent rnei!ting.
the university announced athlellc program from the top new athlellc director and
;.:.Qflawa
League
commissioners are
14 26
1
29 134 172
Tuesday that Stolz resigned down," Wharton said. He remaining staff go forward,
x T eam d isbanded
Clarence A. Mcintrye,
Ohio G Iris H lgh School
under pressure and GIJIIakas declined, however, to discuss and the young men Involved
Tuesday's Results
Biskttblll Tournament
Pomeroy, and Kenneth Of.
was dismissed from · his de taUs of the Information thst be allowed the opportunity to
Calgary 4 Edmonton 3
Scores
Toront o 6 Clevel tmd 0
fenburger,
Marietta.
led to Stolz' resignation while play without any longer being
United Pren International
baskethall job.
Qu ebec S New England l
CLASS
AA~
The league approved the
In
rumor,
Ganakas !18ld he didn't Ute Big Ten confe.-ence Is embroiled
Today ' S Games
Deyton
use of professional rules
Houston af Phoenix
In the same speculallon, Innuendo and SpringfieldAtSouth
know why he was fired, but investigating
56
Green.on
'
Cal gary at Winnipeg
. during its 1976 season instead
coatrovery," he !18id In his 48
most of his critics have cited area.
Toronto~~ Cinc innati
Dayton
Stebbins
32
Sidney
28
of high school rules. Also
''No one relishes seeing two letter of resignation.
Ind ianapolis al New England
)Xlor recruiting.
At Mentor
Thursday ' s G01me
indiYidualli penalized In Utis
"Thill Is of more concern to Mentor 43 E·astlalt.e North 36 reviewed were officials and
developed
by
a
Information
San Diego at Ind ianapolis
South •3 Madison
fees for officiating games.
special university task force fashion for actions they may · me than any personal conse· Willoughby
34
Investigating a football well have felt were generally quences or regardless of how
AI"North Aidgevllte
tnlernetlonal Hockev
Avon Lake 28
recrulllng scandal led sch~l accepted In lntercoUeglate others may interpret either Mldvlew 4?
Leatue Standings
CLASS AA
officials 1o ask for Stolz's athletics and were In the besl the reasons, timing or
United Press International
AI Westerville
North
Interests of a strong athletic motives lor my resignation." Col HartleY .47 Col Wehrle 38
resignation,
MSU
President
w I t pts gf Ill
land 56
NEW SUPERINTENDENT
Stolz, 42, bo!Ut ·the alllng Utica 68 HAtighH,udson
program," Wharton said.
Clillon R. Whartoo !18ld.
Sag ina,w -41 22 9 91 318 258
COLUMBUS (UPI)
team
he
Inherited
from
Port Huron
Akron St. Vincent 35 Akron
In virtually every previous referring to stolz and Smith.
.
3Jn11772712s1
Myers
R. Kurtz, S2, executive
Hoban
34
into
a
Big
Ten
Daugherty
The I,Bsk force, he !18id,
statement, Wharton said that
Fl int
30 28 lJ 73 249 230
CLASS A
director
of the Ephrata
believes
Stolz
Inherited
a
bad
contender.
In
his
three
Muskegon
Stolz
had
his
full
At Wtltervllle
Community
Hospital .Jn
30 29 ~2 12 235 221
F l st~er Catholic 87 Licking
situation
.
f
rom
predecessor
as
head
coach,
be
seasons
confidence .
Kalamazoo
Hts 41
Lancaster,
Pa.,
will he tbe
Duffy
Daugherty
In
1972
and
earned
a
19·13·1
overall
The task force was created
2~ 38 9 59 256 307
new
superintendent
of
record.
South
took
"vigorous
corrective
II months ago when Wharton ·
w 1 t pts gf ga
obtained
with
the
Big
Ten,
!.Dngview
State
Hospital
;in
There
were
reports
!hal
Smith,
Wharton
said,
steps."
learned thai the school's
Dayton
41 21 10 92 304 22:1
For t Wayne
football recruiting program believed he was acting to University of Washington which Is -expected 100!' to Cinclnnall.
release fllldlngs of Its own
Kurtz was named Tuesday
27 33 12 66 270 286 · was under Investigation by strenalhen the football team. coach Don James, long
Toledo
24 34 13 61 239 268
Investigation
.
to
succeed Dr. Robert Glover,
"However,
In
the
wake
of
associated
with
Joseph
the NCAA. Early this year,
Columbus
The
most
persistent
rwnor
acting
suprlntendent at the
23 43 7 53 233 332
recent
NCAA Kearney, MSU's new athletic
the NCAA placed the school lhe
T~,tesday's Results
Is that football ofllclils hospital .
lnvestiption
and
penalties
director,
was
being
on three years proballon for
Sag inaw 8 Fort Wavne .4
diverted university monies
Kurtz Is a graduate dl the
Kalam uoo 9 Co tum bus 3"
ptoYidlng Jorbldden financial against MSU, we cannot considered lor Stolz's job. into a recruiting slush fund ,
Unl-slty
of Maryland and
TonltM's ~ames
James
said
the
reports
were
condone
or
overlook
consldera!ions to student alh·
Toledo at Dayton
Neither
MSU
nor
Big
Ten
earned
his
maste.-'s degree
totally
Wlfoll!ded.
violations ollhe aplrlt or ,the
Port Huron 1111 Columb"s
letes.
officials have confirmed that from Indiana University tn
Kalamazoo at Fort Wayne
letter
of
bnlversltJ
and
Wllarton
said
the
university
Former Athletic Director
Thurldly's Games
Burt SmiU\, relilslgiu\d last cilnlerence hlle&amp;," Whai1oo abated Information It had such a f111d was &lt;!lscovered. ·1963.
No gilmes scheduled
Ameriun 8uketbalt As socl a·

torture. And In 1971 a ·u. s.
Intelligence . report accused
Ky ol running narcotics .
Even no" Ky displays
contempt for Ute people and
nation he once led . Asked by a
collegiate
about
the
American Massacre at My
La I, Ky has said : " In war you
have to expect things like

reiect final offer·

T

•

Ohio girls'
basketball

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Specializing On The
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.
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992-2148
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...

_3-:: The Daily S!!nlinel, Mi~dleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March 17,1976

f----p~~---~ Players

I

_2- The Deily Senllnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday, March 17, 1976

J.StaJltl1ngs !

TOM TIEDE

Plush exile of Vietnam's 'savior'
By Tom Tiede
WASHINGTON - A Volks·
wagen and a Cadillac stop at
the same traffic. light In the
Capl'tal's Georgetown
district. The driver of the
sm8JJ car stares for a lopg
moment at the driver of the
large.-, 8!1d then rolls down
his window to commwticate.
"I know who you are.'' he

!18YS with feeling, ."drop
dead ."
.
The driver of !he Cadillac Ia
Nguyen Cao Ky, and If we
tear the acabs off old sores we
all know who he is: one time

of his all but disintegrated
country .
Who can forget his final
testimony as saYior? With
Communists rushing Into
Salgoo,. and U. S. allies
.rushing out, Ky caned for the
inevitable leadenrhlp coup,
!18ying: "Lei the cowards
who are leaving with the
Americans go, and let lhoae
who love South VIetnam stay
and fight." Three days later
he sent his wife and family to
Hawaii. After l'll'o more days
he gof aboard a U. S. plane
and beat it himself.
Now a nine mooths resident
of suburban Washington,
driving his new CadiJlac'
around Georgetown, he
serves as a reminder ·of the
ultimate lrulh 111 Vietnam:
those who Insisted on It, those
who perpetuated It, thoae who
caused it have not by and
large
suffered.
The
Communlsta who started It
woo, the U. S. officials who
confused it are moslly
relaxing In other executive
capacities,
and
the
Vietnamese masters who
fouled it up are, In two

commander of the South
Vietnamese Air Force,
premier of !hal nalioo from
~, later Yice president,
IUpected narcotics Lord,
111J11eman land grabber and,
.. I moustachioed 45, still a
!lllshlng If unsavory bon
vivant.
Nguyen Cao Ky. Few can
pronounce II, but as the first
anniversary of the end of the
war In Southeast Asia nears
(April) many remember \he
name with consternation and notorious cases anyway,
some shame. An American rellred In comfort. The last
government favorite for , premier, Nguyen Van Thieu,
years, nooetheless rejected lives in Taiwan with mUIIoos
by the Vietnamese people as in confiscations and Ky
an egotistic incompetent, it resides here, earning $2,500
was about this time a year lor each college lecture
IIJ!O Utal he emerged from a appearance,
forced )Xllitical retirement
You 'II remember that the
for what he called a last lesser lights Involved in
minute effort as "Ule savior" Vietnam did suffer. Nearlv a

million deaths, lor example,
more
than
6,500,000
displacements in the South
alone. One recalls Ky and his
wife, in tastelessly matching
black "Captain Midnight"
Dying suits, attending !he
ceremonious funerals of the
fallen .
Many
dead
combatants then were cut In
half by Ky's military
morticians, apparently lo
make them easier to bo!ry,
and the Premier, after a
refreshing drink, would urge
the sw-vivors oo to greater
sacrifices in the name of the
!18VIor.
(.nd there were other
sufferings, Ky's wife, a .
former stewardess who
thought sD little of her
Vietname~ heritage Utat she
underwent surgery to
Anglicize her eyes, once stole
five square. miles of choice
land !rom Monlagnard
tribespeople who owned it.
Dissidents were condemned
by the Ky administration lo
years of imprisonment and

that ."

But aU that's In the past
now, at least for the likes of
Ky. And the Ukes of him are
numerous in .WaahlnetoJI.
Former South Vietnam
Prime Minister rr.il 'nrltn
Khien is here nbw, aa Ia
former chief of milltary stall
Gen. Cao V!in Vlep, and
former minister of ecdnoml~
P)tam Kim Ngoc. TheR are
former admirals and lormer
bankers, and Ky's former
propagandist, Nguyen Ngoc
lihh, who owns a Georgetown
restaurant.
For many of the formers
there Is a sense of failed
JX!rpose. One of the admirals
lor example now is a flagman

"Let me know If you think
P,W'cbaaed • 24 lncb

Color

of something."
demand for Vletn,amese

merdllnl. In America, he

a-ew. But for Nguyen Clio Ky television, Is . writing bla tells bla audiences, all things !18viors Is a little slow right
there Ia !lilly optlmln. He memoirs and plallll!l beame are possl ble, even if lhe ·• now.
rents 1J11 expensive home. has either a farmer

or a

-

-

State wanting $83,664 froni Moritz and Niehm
. .,_
contaibed a claUR for
arbltraUoo.
"Wheil our worlren Wale
assigned to jobs they dldll1t
bave 1 cMIIce to ti.d ,.
because of •lorlty, we Jmew
we had to ltrlke," the aid!
ssld.
The union adviled tlul
workers wtake the state's 31).

COLUMBUS (UPI)- Ohio
Attorney General William ~.
Brown said Tuesday his
office Is studying · the
complex, legal aspects of
collecting $83,664 In a state
auditOr's fmding against two
high ranking mental health

DR. LAMB

wages were part of the
auditor's
real findings.
lobi and re~ve paychecks
"I
hope
legal aclloo is
yellleday for the l!rst time In
taken
to
.
Its logical
~~y three monihs.
·
conclusion,"
SlgaU
said. "I
. .lllate eumlners were at
per!IOilally
wan!
to
see
Moritz
!be IQstltute In Gallla County
and
Nelhm
learn
first
hand
to dlllrlbo!te l'll'o paychecks to
Ute
suffering
and
aggravatloo
eacb of the employes totaling
»4,014, averaging out to caused by aomeone taking
nearly $700 a month. The away your daUy wages."

dly IUipelillioll to keep their

.'

High bilirubin could be nornlal
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - In a
recent column you stated that ·
bile salts are made from
cholesterol _and increased
elimination of bile salts leads
to a decrease in cholesterol.
My 21-year-old so n has
bilirubin "on the high side of
normal." The doctor stated
that the high bile· level is
·apparenUynormallnmyson.
He is slim and athletic _and
regularly eats large amowtts
. of meat, eggs, and .other fatty
foods. Is a high blood bile
level ever normal? Could
high cholesterol levels lead to
the overproduction of bile? l.s
there a relation between the
blood bile and his diet?
DEAR READER
Bilirubin is not bile ssit, it is a
bile plg~f!ent. The bile salts
are substances in the bile
produced by the liver that ·
help to emulsify fats so that
they can be absorbed.
Bilirubin is a pigment that
comes from h~moglobin in
the red blood cel)s.
The adull human body
manufactures about 3 million
new red blood cells . every
second. These replace those
thai are destroyed. As red
blood C!!lls break, their iron·
containing hemoglobin,
which carries oxygen and
carbon dioxide, is released
into the blood stream. The
liver processes this. Through
varioUJ bodily processes
much of the pigment Is
recycled and used again, but
a certain amount of it is•
eUminated In the bile. This is
the major factor in cuusbg ..

Editorial comment,
opinion, f~atures

bile to have its color and
The mild elevation of cholesterol deposits in th~
imparts the color to the 1111· bilirubin would not have arteries that leads to heart
digestc'&lt;i food residue In lhe anything to do w!Ut your son's disease. This process can
diges tive tract.
cholesterol level or his diet. hegin early In life. Many of
The bilirubin pigment can
Although il's unrelated, the young men examined
incr,ase in Ute blood because your son should change his · after death In the Korean War
were · found lo have
of increased destruction of eating habits and use lean
red blood cells or because of a meal, fish, poultry and avoid significant· fatty cholesterol
slow response of the liver to fatly foods. II he wants to deposits In their arteries
eliminate excess pigment keep his cholesterol intake despite the fact ·-that .Utese
through bile, If Ute bile ducts . down he .should use a ve~;y ffil'n ·had an average age of
are obstructed so Utey can't Umited amount of egg yolks. 22. The best time lo start a
drain then bilirubin In the Most heart specialistS believe program to prevent heart and
blood will increase.
Utat · diet is a significant vascular disease is early in
life and then continue it
I have just described Ute factor in producing l~tly
three major resulls of
jaundice, which is caused by
Increased bilirubin , in·
creased destruction of red·
blood ceils, disease of Ute
liver cells or through disease
of the gall bladder and bile
ducts obstructing
the ·
drainage of bile and bilirubin
pigment.
Some people may ·have a
mild elevaliori of bilirubin
without
havipg
any
significant liver disease or
oUter medical problems. I
preswne Ute elevat1011 in your
son's case · was sufficiently
mild and in Ute absence of
any other evidence of disease
Ute doctor has wisely deci&lt;;led
that it is of no significance.
For more information on
bile and Ute biliary sys!em
send 50 cents for· The Health
Letter, nwnber 4-9 Gallstones
and GaU Bladder _lllsease.
Send a long, stamped, self·
addressed envelope for
mailing. Address yOW' letter
to me in care of Ibis newspaper, P. 0. Box 1561, Radio
City Station, New York, NY
10019.

season would open on
schedule.
"It 's getting very close,"
said an obvlously·wearled
and disappointed Lee
MacPhail, president of the
American League. "Every
hour we fall to reach
agreement now puta the start
of the ~son in jeopardy."
Basis for Ute players' latest
rebuff to the owners was a
clause In the management

"liability i.!lsue"

would ,

according to the players,
serve to wtdetscore their
Andy Messersmith

Cofield is
first black

Big 10 coach

·
W"ltenberg

~udglng

by 1 CGDIInulng parade of
stories In lb,i - · · the . •Utica of the
Amerlan bulllneaa CGilllllwdl)' are al a
diatresllngl,y JooW leveL

Some 14 maJ« CCJrPCII'IIiGDs

btlve been

cOnVicted of Illegal po11t1c:a1 con1ributlooa

and nearly a do1111 othera 1n1 under
lnveatlptloa. The t!lmlnlm by Lockheed
Corp. that II paid llll1&amp;na of dollars In
to·1forelln offtelals cr lnfiuencewidclers may be only the wurst enmple of
whalls • .faltly generjil )II'IICII.ce. .
But the ,.-y fact that lblre Ia 10 much
public lndiplalilln oYer I'ICellt ezpolllll'ea of
llllthlcal Cliiporale ~ lbat has been
. tolerated for geaerallolia "Ciftlra hape that
our system.la aelually laJdal 1 11"8t leap
forward,'' tblnb ooe t.J'•am•n. ·
There Ia no !NCb tbbtC M an ethical or
wtethll:ll till poratlon, polnta out Frtderlck
A. Colllnl dr ., )lt'.ulent af tile Spa I I and
Hutehln8oq Co. COrpora'*- are wbolly
inloral. They are lnaniml&amp;e llplccn:ejb,
neither IOPillllll' '-1. Nor do IIIey act ill an
evil Or t1iitqll ..., - onl)' people do.
Hiving lllld IJ*I, bolrewr, hi ljulckly

RAY CROMLEY

brl'*

Nothing bumbling

adds that COT)Xlrate managers cannot evade
personal responsibility by claiming
sanctuary within the corporate cloak.
"No amount of rallonall2ation can shift
elsewhere the consequence of avarice,
unrestrained ambition or other per10111l
weakness ... There Is no earthly way to
defend bribery, kickbacks or attempts to
bo!y votes."
.
.
·
While lribery, price-fixing, allocatioo rl
markets and the Uke may maximize shortlerm gains, they are neither inherent In the
profit system nor do Utey, In Ute long run,
contribute to profitability. Simply stated,
"bad ethlca II blld busbiess."
A better educated and better informed
public Ia demanding an Increasingly higher
standard of ethical conduct among buslnea
leaden, .says Collins.
Voluntary compliance with Ute law, and
beyond thst, with eUtlcal principles Ia
~~~entlal to oqr democracy and our soclel)',
he says. Uwe do not lnslat on ethical conduct
by aU, Including people In bllliness, we will
eventually 1ooe thai democracy and llu!t
BOCiety.

rolls over

Mile slol •75.

League

plans to
expand

BILL VAUGHAN, GRIDDER

Vaughan important in
Case·Western athletics
Bill Vaughan, a jwtior at
Case-Western Reserve
University in Cleveland, is
making a name for himself in
campus sports. The son of
Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Vaughan of Middleport, Bill
is majoring in metallurgical

Varsity in football . In three
years on the team, Bill has
picked up three !etten. He
has also lettered twice In
baseball and is now busy
preparing for his third
season. Case-Western
competes In the Preildent's
engineering.
Conference.
A 1973 graduate of Meigs
His sister Beth, a student at
High School where he par- Meigs High Is a sland-oul on
ticipated In basketball and Ute Meigs Girls Baskelball
baseball, Bill plays tailback team.
and quarterback for the Case
INVFBTIGATION ENDED
CINCINNATI (UPI) The following area cage
Alter Indicting 10 persona In
players were honored
an investigation of alleged .
Tuesday by the Associated pollee corruption, the work of
Press on the All-District a special HamUtoo CoWity
learns: Class AAA -Mike grand jury has ground to a
McBroomt Logan, second bait, at least temporarily.
leam; Class AA - Dean
"The main thrust of the
Fltzpalrlck, Ironton, first investlgatlon Is over,"
team and player of year; Hamilton County Prosecuwr
Gary Snowden, GalllpoUc, Simon Leis !18id Tueaday.
first team; Ed Howard, "But If anything developa (In
Ironton, second team. the upcoming trlalB), the
Class A - Greg James, investigation
will
be
Narlh Gallla, ftrsl learn. reopened In that area.
Lancuter's 8111 Bowman
The 10 persona lndl~ on
was named AAA coach of various
charges
of
lhe year; Mike Hughes of misconduct included seven
Wheelersburg was named policemen, Pollee Chief Carl
AA coach of the year and V. Goodin amoog them. All
Oak Hlll's John Eaton was seven were suspended,
named Class Acoach of the pending the outcome of their
year In the souUtem Ohio ujlcoming trials.
dlslrlcl.
HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS Tuesday's

College

Results

Basketball

By United Press International
National Invitation Tournament
c Second Round)
Kentucky 81 Kensas St. 78
Providence 73 LOuisville 67

NCAA Mid Atlantic
(Quarterfinals)
Sc:ranto, 94 Shepherd 78

The U .S. Navy CACHE
program lets you choose
Your
field
now
for
guaranteed train i ng this
summ er . Get the lump on
sum mer lob hunters. Pay
starts at $360 per mo . from
day you report and w1
furnish quartet's, food and
health care . To check it out·
call or visit ~·our t-~avvman
at :

Navy Recruiting Station
221 Columbus .RoaCI

NCAA Division l
(Quarterfinals)
Wittenberg 101 M iles 75
Plattsburgh 51 . 91 Rhode Is .
Cotl. 78

Athens. Oh. 45701
( 6141 593-3566

Stolz resigns at MSU

Berrys World
depression wbjch had . one
brlghl.year ill lix, thai bein8
In 1172 when the then IDCIDilbant wil running for
reelection; tile Nl&amp;on who ill
1181 was goiDg lo atop ID·
daUon by pll!chlng the
ecooCIIIIy and eahanaed hla
brand ol lldlatlon fer the
~-- braad; waaaoiDg ID
1M coarace or slap the mm. wave with an
''llc:t-p~-..lclonlent• iillil. · attorne, gii*JI who wu
.. ,
flew swallowed up Ill lbe worat
lllllllnl ~ that ...- roc:ked 'cnr · .
·..llonll a::mu:nt, and· a · ·

teJ.J me
Bul

)ll'llidlnl. - - ·~- goiJIC to :
~--etllerlntbe
lhacllh! cf . . . .le.
'

Do not ciiU!ml IIIIa lttW

:.:; =r:~o:.=
wblch

~ taDIDI - - .

eacl! '- tao 1111111 loopMJ•
... etmlplllill,l!lillben .... llo iiiiiCII ~ 'lo bribe 1111

.lltclorali . . wh111
tbec .
Jlllllflllll......, up "' thl ..,. wllrcb Cllft'ielllbtough In
thelt """Wttnllon.
.. '
Ia II time lo blrp the bam to ·
1tl rid of tbe rats?. ..., ·
Respeelfully, Cariler A. Bill,
Old of P. 0. Boa 111, BldweU, Ohio.
type

:

,

By BILL MADDEN
!IT. PETERSBURG, Fla.
(UP)) - The cry of " Play
Ball" remainsmuledtoday in
tile wake of the major league
players' stubborn rejection of
the clubowners' "final and
best offer" to setlie tbe
haseballlabor stalemate.
Refusal of the players to
ok~y the owners' plan, which
te chnically would have
enabled all600 current major
leaguers to P.lay out their
options and become free
agents at Ute conclusion of
Uteir current contracts, cast
grave doubts that Ute 1976

Wildcats nip
Sport Parade Kansas State

•
on a highway conatructloo

'J

llabllily of the eight clubs pro)Xlsal.
HThis is il," said Gaherin
altached to it , I cannot
' tion Stiind ing 5
grimly.
"We have made our
recommend
tha~
the
Bv United Preu International
final
and
best proposal as lhe
executive board accept it."
W. L · Pet. GB
D enver
51 19 . 72'9
players
asked. If it is
The players' executive
''emancipation
victory''
New York
_.5 26 .634 61!2
rejected,
it
will be wiUtdraWI)
which, having been upheld In board was lo meet in Tampa
San Anto nio
41 JO .577 lO,h
and
we
will
nol submit
Ke n luck v
39 33 .542 13
the courts, gives any free today but Ute owners, after
Ind ian a
36 38 .486 17
another
one."
the
players'
agent the right to bargain hearing
.. St . L o uis
33 39 . A58 19
Asked if that meant the
sentiments, dido 't bother to
Virgini a
12 59 . 169 39V'1
with au 24 clubs.
Tu e sda~·s Results
basebaU
season was In real
"The owners' pro)Xlsal is wait around for a formal
Den ver 111 St . Louis 94
jeopardy
because of the
nothing more than a reply. Both MacPhail and
Ind iana 115 San A n ton io 95
obvious
impasse
In the talks,
· TOday's Games
Gaherln ,
chief
modification of the free agent ~ohn
Den ver at Ind iana
Gaherin
said
:
"You
can't be
draft," !18jd the players' negotiator for Ute owners,
New York at St . Loui s
optimistic
in
the
face
of the
"one
and
one
"
option
Ken t ucky vs. V irg inia a t
union chief, Marvin Miller. headed hack to New York
Norfol k
proposal whlcb would have "In no way does It make a where they were expected to attitude being displayed
Thursday' s Games
limited a playe.-'s bargaining playe.- a free IIJ!ent In the true continue their ''stonewall'' on ·here."
Denv er at New Y ork
While the players remained
St . Louis a t San Anlon io
posiUoo w juBI eight major sense that Andy Messersmith both the ~pring training
•
in lhelr bard~ine
adamant
league
le4ms.
The
so-called.
lockout
and
lhe
final
Is. As loog as there is a
NatiDnel Basketball Association
stance
on
the
"one and one"
•
Standings
By United Press International
issue, they were unanimous
Easlern conference
in their feeling that sufficient
Atlantic Division
,
progress had been made to
W. L. Pel. GB
43 21 .66'2
get on with spring training
• eo~ to n
· Phda .
39 29 .574 S' ''
while the talks &lt;lOilllmied.
: Buff al o
38 29 .567 6
Ne w York
32 37 .464 13
Miller made that clear and, in
Central Division
fact, issll!'d a challenge to
W. l. Pet. G. B.
Wa sh ington
42 26 .6 18
Baseball Commissioner
Clevelan d
39 27 .591 2
Bowie Kuhn to order the
35 3·4 507 7'h
Hous ton
camps
opened.
Ne w Or team
32 37 .464 10'' 2
Atla nta
28 39 .4 18 13'h
"Allbuugh
we are not satisBy MILTON RICHMAN
West e rn Conference
fied
wilh
everything
the
Midwe5t Division
By CHRIS SCHERF
additional playing time·when
UPI Sports Editor
W. L. Pet. G. B.
owners
have
demanded
we
NEW YORK (UP!) - Ken· Providence center Bob
M i lw a u kee
29 38 . 433
NlcW YORK ( UPI) - Bowie Kuhn Is a man of his word.
accept,
it
is
obYious
they
have
lucky, badly outclassed at
Ka ns . C it y
27 41 .397 2''•
He promised he'd open the baseball camps If he saw any guard by Kansas Stale, had to Mlsevicius was limited to come a distance toward us,"
De tr oit
26 41 .388 3
ooly 14 minutes by fouls.
Chicago
21 46 .313 8
progress and he is about to keep his word.
rely on !he muscle of Mike
ProVidem-e,
.. now 21...g, rea MUle.- said. "That's progress.
Pacifl~ Division
He
hasn'tsaid
much
U!epastfew
days,
and
has
taken
a
lot
of
Now Mr. Kuhn has stated
W. L. Pet. GB
Phillips and prospects didn't
criticism for it, but he has been keeping up with the negolla· · look good when the 2.'!5iJowtd ceived uneJpectedly strong publicly that if he sees
Golden s tat e
49 20 . 710
Lo s Ang .
35 34 .507 u
lions, doing a.great deal of thinking about Utem and has come center limped off Ute court performances from Eason progress in Utese talks, he
sea ttle
34 35 :493 1s
and
reserve
Mark
to a resolution.
Phoe ni x
3'2 36 ,471 161r2
would order the camps
lale
In
the
first
half
of
McAndrew,
who
each
scored
Port lan d
30 40 .429 191 1
He will open the camps before the week is _out.
opened
. Apparently he hasn't
Tuesday's
National
Tuesday ' s Results
The decision Is strlcUy his own and he's taking full Invitation Tournament game. 15 )Xlints. Bruce Campbell because the camps still aren't .
Chica go 120 Phoen ix 87
also had 15.
H ouslon 11 6 New York 111
responsibility for it whether it angers some owners or liot.
PhiUips
was
given
a
sbol
of
Louisville grabbed a 21·13 open."
Los ,Angeles .109 Cl evela nd lOS · Some owners will be upset with him.
Buffalo 11 2 Port land 95
cortisone at halftime to . kill
Most of them will be happy, secretly or otherwise. Eve.-y· the pain but Coach Joe Hall lead with a )-3-1mne defense
Gold en State ,110 Detroit 101
Wednesda~ ' s Games
body suddenly grows happy when he sees players hitllng and kept him on lhe bench at the that featured guard Phil
A tlanta at Houston
Bond as the lone defender
catching a baseball in the warm Spring sllilllhlne.
'Buffalo at Seattle
start of the second half and under the basket.
Chicago at Ph iladelph ia
-- .Even Utough Marvin MUier wasn't pleased wi.th the last offer Kansas State capitalized oo
After a timeout, the Friars
New York at .New Orleans
submilted in St. Petersburg, Fla., by Ute owners, the breach his absence to outscore
Los Angeles at Milwaukee
made
!hat their )Xlint of
Thursday's Games
between them and the players has narrowed. The two sides are Kentucky 17-1 and take a 63allack
and
Cooper accounted
Detroit al Pho enix
not that far apart, particularly on the reserve clause, which 511ead.
Buffalo at Golden Stat e
for
eight
)Xlints
from along
remains Ute basic issue.
Phil adelph ia a1 Cl eve lanc;l
At
that
point,
Phillips
Ute
baseline
in
a
15-7
surge as
Ktm sas City al Wash inglon
Some of Ute owners and players have . told me Utat turned to Hall and said:
Providence
drew
even
with
MADISON, Wis. (UPI)
themselves, asking they not be quoted.
"Coach, I'm ready to go back the Cardinals.
Bill
Cofield, an assistant
: National Hockey League star,dOne owner, Brad Corbett of the Texas Rangers, doesn't even in."
"During
the
timeout,
he
coach
at. Virginia, Tuesday
;ngs
mind being quoted.
Tentatively, favoring his (Providence coach Dave Ga· became the first black head
. · B~ United Pr ess Internati onal
" We're reaDy not that far apart/' he says. "I wouldn't be the sprained ankle, Phillips reviti) jXlinted out 'Hey, there's basketball coach at a Big Ten
.c ampb ell. Conference
least
bit surprised if we go to spring training Tinlrsday or
Patrick Di vision
turned to Ute game and a little man back Utere - use school, replacing John
w. L . T. Pts. GF . GA Friday . That's right, I'm talking about THIS Thursday or proceeded to score 14 of his 17
him."'
Powless at Wisconsin.
, Ph i ladel ph ia
Friday ."
)Xlints In leading Kentucky to
•
&lt;l6 10 14
106 31 1 18 2
The
second
game
of
Thurs·
"I guess it is a historical
, NY l slanoers
Corbett, an eminently successful yowtg buslnessmim, Is a an 81·78 victory.
day's
semifinal
doubleheader
whether I Uke it or
event
38 1s '15
91 268 168 friendly, outgoing lndividualwlth . treme~dous enthusiasm for
Providence
spoiled pairs UNC..Charlotte, the not," Cofield said.
Allnt
J l 32 10
72 2&lt;10 2·19
. NY Rangers
living. He loves. baseball and couldn't really get upset with his Loulsvjlle's hopes for a longtournament 's surprise team,
Frederick Haberman ,
'
" 37 9
57 235 291 players even during this present struggle agail\'lt
awaited grudge match with against homestate · rival chairman of the Wisconsin
Smyttt e Division
man8gement.
W. L. T. Ph. GF. GA
Kentucky by topping · the
athletic board, said Cofield
. Chlcg 2s 25 11
73 216 218
On Monday, he did a terrible Uting in the eyes of Marvin Cardinals 7~7 in lhe second North carolina Stale.
. vncv r 29 29 13
71 739 244 Miller .
received a five·year contract
game of the qyarterfinal
-St Lo s 25 33 13
63 218 255
at
a salary of $25,000 for the
M ;n nesota
He walked to the outfield of a high school field In Pompano doubleheader.
19 48 4
42 .110 210 Beach, F1a., where 30 of his Texas Rangers players were
first year .
Phillips, playing against a
Kansas 12
City
·
1ked to them. Bra d Corhe It read. I he m t he
I
Powless resigned Feb. II
4
47 10
sitting
around
and
ta
163
296
3
lightweight Kansas Slate
during
a 14-game losing
Wal es Conference
owners' latest proposals and asked them all how !hey felt front
line
further
streak. the Badgers finished
Norris Division
about the proposals.
W.. L T. PU. GF . GA
handicapped by foul trouble,
1().16 and in eight years under
Mn t' l 53 9 10 11 6 302 154
Marvin Miller heard about it and got all worked up.
ignored Ute slight throbbing
Powless
had only two winning
L9s An g •j•~
He said Corbett had viola~ the Labor Relations Acl on five in his desensitized ankle to
3 1 7 73 227 237
seasons.
PHISbu,g h
counts and he was going to file a complaint against him with score the first time he got the
Cofield, 36, had been al
11 29 t t
n 101 2M Ute National Labor Relations Board. I checked the NLRB and ball
and,
with · that
Dc l r t 21 40 ' 9
51 lBO' 26 8
Virginia
two years and lhe
w a s h ;ngton
· Utey said they're up to their ears. They're still trying to resolve
reassurance, took control of
school
won
the Atlantic Coast
9 52 9
21 to3 339 a coople of National Football LeagUe grievances.
the game.
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio Conference tournament this
Adam ' o ;v;,ton
In
spite
of
all
!his,
Brad
Corbett
is
a
Marvin
Mille.fan
.
W L . f . Pts . GF. GA
His basket slarled a 18-.5 ( UPJ) - Rick While made all year. It lost, however, in lhe
1
Bostn 44 14 12 roo 273 206
'1 like Marvin Miller,'' he says, genuinely. ''I love a guy who Kentucky
spurt.
The
Bu ttt
39 20 12
90 298 211 walks in there, chaUenges all of us and _
beats us. With a small sophomore center scored 10 his 18 points and Tom Dunn. 12 opening round of the NCAA
Torn 1 31 26 14
76 763 241
·
c tt m 2s 38 9
sword, he fought like a helluva knight. You gotta take your hal of those )Xlints, Including the of his 14 In !he first half to regina~s .
59 216 m
spark Wittenberg to an easy
Tuesday 's. Results
off and tip it to him."
· final two with a pair of foul 101-75 win over Miles in a
Bos ton J St . Loui s 3
1
lh
h
Mon1real s Pitt sbur g h 4
What about the reserve cause, oug ? What's going to shots, lo give Kentucky a fill.
quarterfinal game of the
Chicag o 6 Kan sas City 3
happen with the players becoming free agents after only one or 66 lead .
NCAA
Division
111
P.:hiladelphia 4 A tlant a 2
two years?
Guard Chu~kie Williams,
Wash ington 5 NY Rang ers 2
M in nesota 3 NY Island ers i
"Anytime someone mentions reserve clause, they're who · had 27 points, then tournament Tuesday night
Van couver 4 De tr oi t 2
regarded as scare words, like cancer or rape," says the scored to regain a short-lived and advance to Ute finals at
Reading, Pa., Friday and
Bu tf o lo 4 Los Angel es 2
Rangers'
owner. "Baseball lived· with Ute reserve clause all
Today' s Games
lead lor Kansas State. ~ames
Toronto at Ch ic ago
these years , so it will learn to live with modifications. I don't lee, who finished wilh 20 Saturday.
Witlenherg jwnped .to a 2U
Bu ff a lo at C~ lif o rn i a
think I't' s Ut e end of the s·port. I Utink the pIa Yers rec.,.
~- 1
'M inneso ta at NY Ran gers
•• ze )Xlints, scored two straight
Thursdoy's Games
some type of reserve system is needed. they also recognize . baskets to give Kentucky a lead, had a 57·25 margin by
the intennlsslon and got its
St Lou;s at De tr o ;t
Utey want financially solvent ownership. They don't want to lead it never lost.
Boston at Kan sas Clly
biggest lead at 81-40 at 8:42
vancouver at Ph iladelphi a
see the leaguesdlm:inish from 24 teams to 16teams.''
Bob Cooper, a reserve before sending in the subs for
Corbell agrees basebaU couldn't survive without some form inserted Into Providence's
Ute rest of the way.
of reserve system.
starting
lineup
because
of
Bill
Bob Fennell, public
Wiltenberg, also led by Bob
w orld - H o c k e v Association
"When a fellow like Bill Veeck. comes in and says, 'golly, we
Standings
Eason's leg ailments, led the Heubler with 18 and Greg relations director for the Ohio
ey United Press International don't need the reserve system,' I just wish he had the same Friars'
victory
over
East
money invested in the game I have," says Corbell, laughing. lAlulsville . with 17 points. Seay with 17, won Its 23rd Valley Amateur Football
w. L . T Pts . GF . GA · ".Youcanalwayslalk whenyou don't havec hi psm
· Ut egame."
game In 27 starts. The League, ' announced today
N ew Eng t and
Cooper
also
received Alabama team, headed by plans ate underway for
30 35 6
66 227 257
Cleveland
Stan Jamieson with 25 points league expansion.
29 35 5
63 232 2.46
Comlliwtilles Interested In
and Gene Berry with 19,
Cincinna ti
31 38
63 '255 292
finished Ute season with a 2~ forming an amateur team
Ind ianapolis
should contact Fennell by
record.
29 37 J
61 201 214
west
Wittenberg shot 55 per cent writing lo the Ohio Valley
w. L . T Pts . GP . GA By JAMES V. HIGGINS
October
at
lhe
height
of
the
said.
'
from
Ute field w 43 lor the Amateur Football . League,
Hosln 43 24 0
86 27 5 226
Phn x 35 78 6
76 256 234
EAST LANSING, Mich. NCAA lnvestigai!Cln, also was · Stolz .!18ld he agreed to slow starting Millis, and 708'f.o BUt St. Marietta, Ohio
.
San Dg 33 31
4
70 261 237
(UPI) - Foolhall recrulllng asked to resign. Since he Is a resign to remove the final . outrebounded the Alabamans 45750.
x ·M inn esol&amp;
Thus far, four teams will
excesses toppled Michigan tenured employe, taint of suspicion from the 52-30. Seay got 12 rebounds
30 25 4
64 211 212
canadian
State football coach Denny negotiations are tmderway athletic department . Bul he and White 10 for the host compete in 1976 but others
w . L . T Pts . GF. GA
said he felt no personal b~ Tigers, while Gene Berry wa~ are being sought. The teams
Stolz. Basketball coach Gus for his removal.
Winnipeg
•
areGallia County, Meigs, and
"If we are to restore and hopes w find another Miles top reboWider at 7.
48 22 2
98 3 18 22 6 Ganakas apparently sinned
Qubc 41 25 4
86 305 274
Washington Counties in Ohio
unquestioned Integrity to coaching job.
In
Ute
oiher
direction.
Ctgr y 36 30 4
76 262 238
and Wood County, W. Va.
"I believe .it Is important
In an unprecedented MSU aUtletlcs, we h~ve no
Edm Onton
Wood County was admitted
24 44
5
53 242 305 athletic department shakeup, choice but to rebuild our that this prot!ram Wider a
Torn t 20 43 S
.45 283 335
during
a recent rnei!ting.
the university announced athlellc program from the top new athlellc director and
;.:.Qflawa
League
commissioners are
14 26
1
29 134 172
Tuesday that Stolz resigned down," Wharton said. He remaining staff go forward,
x T eam d isbanded
Clarence A. Mcintrye,
Ohio G Iris H lgh School
under pressure and GIJIIakas declined, however, to discuss and the young men Involved
Tuesday's Results
Biskttblll Tournament
Pomeroy, and Kenneth Of.
was dismissed from · his de taUs of the Information thst be allowed the opportunity to
Calgary 4 Edmonton 3
Scores
Toront o 6 Clevel tmd 0
fenburger,
Marietta.
led to Stolz' resignation while play without any longer being
United Pren International
baskethall job.
Qu ebec S New England l
CLASS
AA~
The league approved the
In
rumor,
Ganakas !18ld he didn't Ute Big Ten confe.-ence Is embroiled
Today ' S Games
Deyton
use of professional rules
Houston af Phoenix
In the same speculallon, Innuendo and SpringfieldAtSouth
know why he was fired, but investigating
56
Green.on
'
Cal gary at Winnipeg
. during its 1976 season instead
coatrovery," he !18id In his 48
most of his critics have cited area.
Toronto~~ Cinc innati
Dayton
Stebbins
32
Sidney
28
of high school rules. Also
''No one relishes seeing two letter of resignation.
Ind ianapolis al New England
)Xlor recruiting.
At Mentor
Thursday ' s G01me
indiYidualli penalized In Utis
"Thill Is of more concern to Mentor 43 E·astlalt.e North 36 reviewed were officials and
developed
by
a
Information
San Diego at Ind ianapolis
South •3 Madison
fees for officiating games.
special university task force fashion for actions they may · me than any personal conse· Willoughby
34
Investigating a football well have felt were generally quences or regardless of how
AI"North Aidgevllte
tnlernetlonal Hockev
Avon Lake 28
recrulllng scandal led sch~l accepted In lntercoUeglate others may interpret either Mldvlew 4?
Leatue Standings
CLASS AA
officials 1o ask for Stolz's athletics and were In the besl the reasons, timing or
United Press International
AI Westerville
North
Interests of a strong athletic motives lor my resignation." Col HartleY .47 Col Wehrle 38
resignation,
MSU
President
w I t pts gf Ill
land 56
NEW SUPERINTENDENT
Stolz, 42, bo!Ut ·the alllng Utica 68 HAtighH,udson
program," Wharton said.
Clillon R. Whartoo !18ld.
Sag ina,w -41 22 9 91 318 258
COLUMBUS (UPI)
team
he
Inherited
from
Port Huron
Akron St. Vincent 35 Akron
In virtually every previous referring to stolz and Smith.
.
3Jn11772712s1
Myers
R. Kurtz, S2, executive
Hoban
34
into
a
Big
Ten
Daugherty
The I,Bsk force, he !18id,
statement, Wharton said that
Fl int
30 28 lJ 73 249 230
CLASS A
director
of the Ephrata
believes
Stolz
Inherited
a
bad
contender.
In
his
three
Muskegon
Stolz
had
his
full
At Wtltervllle
Community
Hospital .Jn
30 29 ~2 12 235 221
F l st~er Catholic 87 Licking
situation
.
f
rom
predecessor
as
head
coach,
be
seasons
confidence .
Kalamazoo
Hts 41
Lancaster,
Pa.,
will he tbe
Duffy
Daugherty
In
1972
and
earned
a
19·13·1
overall
The task force was created
2~ 38 9 59 256 307
new
superintendent
of
record.
South
took
"vigorous
corrective
II months ago when Wharton ·
w 1 t pts gf ga
obtained
with
the
Big
Ten,
!.Dngview
State
Hospital
;in
There
were
reports
!hal
Smith,
Wharton
said,
steps."
learned thai the school's
Dayton
41 21 10 92 304 22:1
For t Wayne
football recruiting program believed he was acting to University of Washington which Is -expected 100!' to Cinclnnall.
release fllldlngs of Its own
Kurtz was named Tuesday
27 33 12 66 270 286 · was under Investigation by strenalhen the football team. coach Don James, long
Toledo
24 34 13 61 239 268
Investigation
.
to
succeed Dr. Robert Glover,
"However,
In
the
wake
of
associated
with
Joseph
the NCAA. Early this year,
Columbus
The
most
persistent
rwnor
acting
suprlntendent at the
23 43 7 53 233 332
recent
NCAA Kearney, MSU's new athletic
the NCAA placed the school lhe
T~,tesday's Results
Is that football ofllclils hospital .
lnvestiption
and
penalties
director,
was
being
on three years proballon for
Sag inaw 8 Fort Wavne .4
diverted university monies
Kurtz Is a graduate dl the
Kalam uoo 9 Co tum bus 3"
ptoYidlng Jorbldden financial against MSU, we cannot considered lor Stolz's job. into a recruiting slush fund ,
Unl-slty
of Maryland and
TonltM's ~ames
James
said
the
reports
were
condone
or
overlook
consldera!ions to student alh·
Toledo at Dayton
Neither
MSU
nor
Big
Ten
earned
his
maste.-'s degree
totally
Wlfoll!ded.
violations ollhe aplrlt or ,the
Port Huron 1111 Columb"s
letes.
officials have confirmed that from Indiana University tn
Kalamazoo at Fort Wayne
letter
of
bnlversltJ
and
Wllarton
said
the
university
Former Athletic Director
Thurldly's Games
Burt SmiU\, relilslgiu\d last cilnlerence hlle&amp;," Whai1oo abated Information It had such a f111d was &lt;!lscovered. ·1963.
No gilmes scheduled
Ameriun 8uketbalt As socl a·

torture. And In 1971 a ·u. s.
Intelligence . report accused
Ky ol running narcotics .
Even no" Ky displays
contempt for Ute people and
nation he once led . Asked by a
collegiate
about
the
American Massacre at My
La I, Ky has said : " In war you
have to expect things like

reiect final offer·

T

•

Ohio girls'
basketball

IS NOW

OPEN
Specializing On The
Installation Of •••

BRAKE SHOES

SHOCKS
.
.

·PIPES

MUmERS
TUNE-UP

· and
'

nRES &amp; BAnERIES
NOTE: Some parts are coming in
slowly. It will take several weeks
to get completely stocked.

Moore's Service Center
992-2148
124 W. Main

Pomeroy

�4- The Daily Sentin&lt;!l, Moddleporl-l'omeroy, 0 .. Wednesilioy, March 17. 1976

Cavs drop 109-105 tilt :f Thousands of 'Witnesses' inten1ed
1

•

Pro BMketball Roundup
By
United
Press
llllernatlonal
While !flow was piling up
outside the Coliseum Tuesday

night , basketballs were whi sUing U1rough the nets in si d~
th e Cleveland Cavaliers'
h&lt;)me base.
TI~e Los At1geles !;Jkers.

whose bus almost ran off
suow-covrred roads enroute
UH! g~w, hila sizzling 47"'()f79 shots to grab n 109-105 NBA
\'idury over the cavaliers,
who canned 41k&gt;f-84.

Kareem Abdul.Ja bbar and
Gilil Goodrich paced t!oe Lal.ers' olfensive show. Jabbar
h!l 16-&lt;&gt;f- 20 for 32 poinl s ami

Goodrich hit 12-&lt;&gt;f-22 shots
and added three fouls for 25
points.
" It was a great game for us
to win ," said Laker Coach
Bill Sharman, "We are
shooting for a playoff spot
and our defense was
outstanding."
Jabbar and Goodrich out:

•

Plattsburgh State next
foe for Tiger quintet
PROVIDENCE,li.). 1UPI ) llhude Island College 91-80
Plattsburgh Stale will 'J'ue scl ay
night
in
a
game
at
meet Wittenberg 1Ohio) quarle rfi nal
Friday in one of the semifinal Providence.
games of lhe NCAA Division
The semifinals are at AlbUl tourney.
right College in Heading, Pa.
Plattsburgh, led by Hannie
Rhode Island took an ·early
Wright's 38 points, defeated lead :!2-22 with 7:'l:lleft in .the
~

NFL owners agree
By RON HUTCHERSON
CO RON ADO, Calif. IUP I)
...,... Owners froze the Nationol
Football League at 28 teams
for the 1976 seawn Tuesday
foll owing their decision no.t to
admit any new clubs to the
lea gue in the foreseeable
fut urf.
Memphis and Birmingham
of the now defunct World
Football League Jwd actively
sough t a dmi ssion into 1he

NF'L.
In an earlier sossion, the 28

owners
selected
tilt!
Louisiana Superdome in Ne w
Orleans to host Super il&lt;Jwl
xn in 1978.
"Aller a leng thy and
thorough discussion, '' said
NFL commissioner Pete

Rozelle, "the clubs concluded
th at under th e presen t
conditions - that is our legal
and labor problems - Uo ey
could not firmly commit to
expausion at this time.
~~How ever it is clear these
two cities were the most
active in recent montils and

will be among those strongly
consi dered when the league

eventually feels it

ca n

the league's refusal to admit
the (i rizzlies was a " tremendotts disservice to the people
of Memphis who worked so
hard and demonstrated the
ability to form and support a
teaw .' 1
Bassett cw-renlly holds 30
pla ye rs und e r persona l
service contracts, including

for mer Miam i Dolphin stars
Paul Warfield, Jlm KHck and
Lan y Csonka. Bassett
refu sed to comment on
whether he would take Iega 1
acloon against the NFL.
''That's been ;m opti on
fl:om the begllming," he sai d,

"but it's been one I told Mr.
Rozell e on 15 separate
occasions [ didn)t want to
take."
Th e NFL's two newes t

franchises, t11e Seattle Seahawks and the Tampa Bay
Buccane er s , wi ll ha ve a
chanc£ to fill their ranks
March 30·31 in a' a llocation

draft to be conducted out of
the NFL's New York office.
The existing tean1S will be
able to freeze 30 players on
their rosters before Seattle
aod Tampii llay ·make their

expand.' l
: selec tions .
·
JOhn BHssett, a Canadliln
RQz.elle said the names of
millionaire who spent $1.5 eligible players will be made
millionto form the Wl'L, said available to the two teams the

day before the draft.
TI1e annual collegiate draft
will be held eight. days later
on April 8-9.
Among the problems the
league must resolve before
expan sion , Roze1le sa id,
w·cre co urt rulings that went
Hga inst the NF!.and llle issue
of f'fJ\Iective. borgaining with
the players associati on.

Meigs
Property

1

Transfers

The owners

cast

fo ur

ballots during a morning
Clyde J . Morlan, Ethel M.
MOrl&lt;m tp Bruce F. Owens,
J oyce B. Owens. l .ot, Ortt hi ~C.
Nathan S. Croy, .JMe l G.

Croy to Croy Lwnli er Cu. BG
/\., Lebanon .

Sidney R. Hayman. Carol
Hayma n to Darrell H.
Nels.on,

Linda

K.

Nelson ,

Lots, Salisbw·y, Hobson .
Norman St. Clair, Bcul,ih
P. St. Clair lo Spencer R.
Burhancm,
F'reda
r~ .
Duchanan, ·G Atrcs, Olive .
Ri char·d B. Hayrrw n
Vir ginia l.. Hayman tu
1

Richcml S. Ba rton, M:1c1)l

Bart•1n, 2.8 A., Olive .
Will iam

G.

Viney&lt;~rtl,

Tl1ehna P. Vineyard to Fred
E. Davis, Judy L. Davis, 53 ,
A. Salem .

S. ~·. McComas, Celia
M('COJnas to Don C. Hooper ,
Parcel, lk&lt;lford .
Norman 0. Weber, Vera
Webe r
to
Dar wv n
En evol d se n,
E leanor e
Enevo!dsen 5.013 A., Oli ve.

WiJmie Holsinger. Maz.ie
Hoisjnger
to
Cli ff ord
Long ene tte , Mary Lou
Lon genet ~ e. 0.872 A., Olive.
John Blake, Sylvia Blake to
Virgil M. Dill, Pamela Dill ,
Lol~ . Syracuse.

JONI,:S' RREACH
WASHINGTON (UPI )
Rep. Robert Jones, 0-0kla.,
assistant Democratic whip in
the House, has been fin ed $200
for breach of the campaiun
finan cing laws in his 1972
· race.
'Tm glad it's all over.'' l1e
said.
.Jones, ~. was fined for
failing to report contributions
of between $1,000 and $2,000
from former Gulf Oil counsel
Royce Savage in 1972.
Jones said he will seek a
tnlrd term .

..

,,

first hull. Despite a strong
defensive effort by Rhode
Isla nd 's seven-foot center,
Carlo DeTqmmaso, who

blocked 15 shots, Plattsburgh
closed llle gap. Rhode Island
led 43-42 at tne half.
The lead changed hands
eight times in the second half.
Plattsburgh going ah ead for
good ,
52-51,
when
DeTommaso was called for

on 28 teanzs in '76

session befo r e pi cking New

Or!e&lt;Jns over four other cities
for Supe.r Bowl XJJ lor Jan.
15 , 1970. Cities that had made
bids for the Super Bowl
included Miami. Los Angeles.
Houston and Dallas.
Super Bowl XI wiU be held
at. th e Rose Bowl in
P"sa delia, Calif.

goallending after blocking a
shot by Daryl Hutson.
John King led Rhode Island
)Vit h
19
points
and
DeTommaso had 16. Larry
Parker added 18 points and 21
rebounds for Plattsburgh.

Ohio legislative
briefs
By United Press Interna tional
WELFARE REFORM
COLUMB U S (UPI) The
Ohio H ouse took what Rep.
Helen H . F ix , R·Cincinna li .
ca lled the firs t step in r eform
of Ohio welfar e laws Tuesday
with 84 to 6 passage of her bill.
Th e legisla tion wou ld allow
til e st at e Depcirtmen t of Wet .
fa r'"e to recover some of tile
paym ents it makes to m ed ital
insurance compa nies on beilalf
of Wf:lfar e recipien t s. Mrs . Fix
SCi id a simi lar law in Miciligan
saves $2 r:nillion a year .
SENATOR ACCUSES .
C OLUMBUS (UP I J Stale
Se n , MaX
H . Denn i s, · R·
Wilmington , Tues day accUsed
the Oernoc rali c dom·ina ted sta te
Controlling Boa rd or "try ing fo
bla ck ma il the governor into
fi scal disaster " by demand ing
an end to th e 2. per cent
spending
r ed ucl ion
1n
the
Dep artm ent o f Rehabil itation
and Correction .
Tile board voted Monday to
a ll ow the department to bo rrow
$2 .2 mil l ion from its fis ca l 1977
appropr 1ation , but only if tile
spending cutback were lifted to
furn ish another $1.1 · mi ll ion.
Dennis , a board member·, said
if the governor agreed. " !ile
d~m would breaK and all other
departmen ts
would
demand
eliminat ion of the cutback ."
TAX BILLS.
.
COLUMBU S (UPI) Re p.
J am es W . Rank, in , 0 -Cincinnati ,
Int rodu ced l egislation Tuesday
req uiring mortgage holders to
furnisil .copies of tax bi lls to
hom eowne r s f or whom they pay
rea l es t ate tax es .
The bill would apply to
lend ing ins titution s wh 1Ch hOld
a po rt ion of mort gage money in
. esc row for payment of prope rt y
tax:es .
RETIREMENT PAY .
COL UMBU S ( UPII
Sen .
Doug la s Applegate, O.Sjeuben ·
\Iitie, T uesday ca ll ed on Con .
grcSS; to refra in from sUbj ecting
mi l i tary disab il ity r et irem ent
pay to the f eder el income Ia)'; .
Ap pl egat e's r equest came in
the form of a Sena t e reso l ution ,
w hicil
was in l roduced and
ref erred to tile Finan ce Com ·
mi l!ee .
" Th e whole basis o f personal
ded uct ions und er !he Interna l

scored the entire Cleveland
team in the third period by
combining for 21 of 25 points
as the Lakers took a 79-12
lead into the final12 minutes.
Jabbar, who has 66 points in
his two appearances in
Cleveland this season, hopes
he can return to tne C&lt;&gt;liseum
later in the finals of the NBA
playoffs.
After the Lakers opened up
a 91-80 lead witn 6:05lefl on a
25-footer by Goodrich, the
Cavs battled back and cut the
lead to 105-101 on Austin
Carr's 1&amp;-footer with I :091eft .
Cornell Warner followed
witn two of his iour clutch
foul shots in the last 45
seconds and the Cavs
dropped I wo games behind
Ce ntral Division-leader
Washington .
Houston defeated the New
York Knicks 11&amp;-1)1, Chicago
beat Phoenix 120-87, Golden
State topped Detroit 11!1-101
and Buffalo downed Portland
112-95 in other NBA games.
Denver ·defeated St. Louis
111-94 and Indiana beat San
Antonio 1)5-95 in ABA play.
Roekets 116, Knicks Ill
Mike Newlin 's six points
late in llle fourth period lifted

JOHANNESBURG, SOuth
Africa (UPI) - Anestlmaled
12,000 Jehovah's Witnesses
have been herded into
detention camps in northern
Mozambique after fleeing an
alleged terror campaign
in
against the
sect
neighboring
Malawi,
movement leaders said
Tuesday .
Th
ey said in Mozambique
another 10,000 followers, denounced by tne new Marxist
Igovernment in Portugal's
ormer possession, have
swelled the number in
detention near the northern
town of Milange to 22,000.
The Malawian government
consistently ha s denied

reports of a persecution
campaign against the 30,000
Jehovah's Witnesses in that
central African country.
Frans Muller, presiding
minister of Jehovah's
Witnesses in South Africa,
said a "reign of terror ,
reminiscent
of
Nazi
Germany" has official
blessing in Malawi and that
an additional 5,000 fOllowers
were in prison there. He said
they were confmed in the
"most degrading" conditlons.
Detainees
in
the
Mozambique camps were
subjected to hard labor and
political
indoctrination.
Muller said the victimization
stemmed from the sect
members refusing to become
involved in' politics. In both
Malawi and Mozambique,
J ehovah's Witnesses were
resisting compulsory
membership of rulin g
parties, he said.
Accusing Malawi and
Mozambique of the worst
practices of discrimination,
he said the sect attracted
more persecution on the
African co ntinent than
anywhere else.
In a report scheduled for

Separation
rumored in

royal family

publication March 22 in (1,.,·
sect magazine Awaken,
Malawi Is charged with
permitting "rapes, beatings,
torture o1men an d women, to
continue
despite
an
international outcry when the
allegations were first
published last December.

Awaken is publshed in
conjunction with the U.S.
Tract and Bible Society. The
latest
report
entitled
"Cruelties go unchecked in
Malawi'' charges that on Jan .
2 Witnesses Alsekl ;wyoya
and Harry Kampango from
:Wmba district " were
murdered by having their
p-ivate parts cut off."
The magazine also alleged
tnat in mid-January 14 foilowers, three men and 11
women, were heaten for half
a day by officials of the ruling
C&lt;&gt;ngress Party in Malawi.
Two men had their arms and
legs broken and the Congress
offldals were not charged,
tne report said.
11 . said tne campaign in
Malawi has been waged for 10
years now , unchecked by
President Hastings Banda
whO was quoted as calling
Jehovah's Witnesses "devUs
of God."

5.75%
On 90-Day
5.75 per cent paid on
90 day Certificates of
Deposit . $1.000.00

Minimum . Interest
Payable Quarterly.
A substantial penaltv 11
1nVoked on all cert ificate
accounts wl.thdrawn prior
to the date of maturity.

Meigs Co. Brancb

-~~uhr

Marvin Barnes scored

16

points for the Spirits.
Pacers 115 Spurs 95
Travis Grant had 24 points, .

The

Ho sh BrO
Natural Wicker

21.00

1976

From

12 Noon
KEY WEST

$27'6 f.~su~ET

'
t&gt;

••

•
'
'

•

•

•

0=

offer thos seovice to other oligoblo persons.
seovlce lhal one or more counties have proposed to offer eligible persons .

OP~ional

• • Numbers 1n th iS co lu mn relate to Who Is I

section bel ow.

1

Eligible persons include:
tl Aid for Dependent Childoon (ADC) recipients.
2 Sup .lemental Secu•.iiY Income (SSI) recipients.
t3 Me~cald Only recopoents whoso gross fami~ Jncor(lo is no
more ~hen the oncome of ollgoblo persons in (4) or(~) .
(4) Income Eligible without a fee payment:

.

.

'

(5)

rsons in immed.iate danger ~eedinC protective services ,
and ~rso~s needmg Information and Referral Service as
P
.
e

descnbedon lhe Ohio CASP may be provided without regard
to fam1ly 1ncome.

(6)

·

income eligoblo with a foe payment lor day care for adults
and children, homemaker, chore, iami~ planning, foster
caoe for adults and mental hoalfh/mental 10tardation related
soovlce, provided gross lamlly Income for a fami~ of four is
not over $12,100 or undor $8,20 1.
$170.333,333
$127,750,000
s 30,131 ,560
s 12,451 ,773

Public Rovlow ond common!

VisH your local County Welfare Oepartment to view the co~lote
State Plan and your loco! county plan. Telephone youo local
County Welfare Department to request a detailed summaoy wHhout
cost or to arrange for purchase of the comp~te proposeil CASP
for $t2 . ~ .
Middle of

'.~'~Upper

Block

1Pomeroy, o.

Open All Day Thursday
FRIDAY NIGHTTIL8
5

298 Second St.
POMEROY, OHIO

NO SALES TO .DEALERS
·QUANTITY .RIGHTS

USDA Choice

.•,
'

O

.

69
O
ENGLISH ROAST•••••• ~ 7 9
ARM ROAST••••••••••• ~·.

USDA Choice

·

.

.

USDA Choice

RIB STEAK •••

u- ..

....... ~.~.139

mer."

''

.
.

' .

,.

•

•
•

...
...
,

Columbia Gas of Ohio
currently ·1a curtailing large
baUer loada !DO per cent,
industrial loatla lbat could
uae an alternate fuel 20 per
cent, lndulrial loada that
cannot uae altemate fuel 10
per cent 111d l111e commercial cuatomen 20 per
cent.
In January, Columbia
projected more severe
curtailment levels this
summer. .
.
"When we announced our
preliminary
summer
forecasts in January.''
Koebel said, . "·weather
condlll0111 in Ohio were just
about normal. However, this
Pill February was the
warmeat February in more
than 20 Yllh - with all Ume
reccrd hlgha belni set in
10111e areu - reaulllng in
much lower consumption by
OW'

Superiors
12 oz.

FRANK IES.........:~~·..

19

Crispy Serve
1~.

.

BACON ...............-....p::·..•.

39

USDA Choice

cuatomera."

Koebel aald the "warm
weather came to late in the
aeason to enable the company
to adjust winter curlalbnent
levels, but it will mean more
gas for our customers · this

RIB ROAST. .............~.
Kennebec Certified

summer.n

50 LB.

ollhe HOcklna lDDa Women's
Republican aub. She allo

Who lo Ellglbloi

Aperiod for public review and comment is being provided from March I7, 1976 through May 1, 1976

•M

•

SEED POTATOES •••••~~ ••

Meigs County Welfare Department
175 Race Street, Box 191
. Middleport
Phone: 992 -2117
James A. Rhodes
Governor
State of Ohio

Written comtnents on the plan may be made to your County
Welfare Department or to the Division of Social Services Ohio
Department of Public Welfare. Comments and requests may be
sent to:
Mrs. Mildred Milloy, Chief
Division of Social Stovices
Ohio Department of Public Welfare
30111 Aoor, 30 East Broad Street
Columbus, Ohio 43215
Raymond F. McKenna
Director
Ohio Department of Public Welfare

Aavorite Hamburger or

LOGAN, Ohio - Marian S.
Slnael, 235 N. Orchard Sl.,
loday llllnounced abe has llled
a petlllon to seek ~ecUon
to the Republican Slate
Cenlral Committee from the
lOth IAngrellional Dlalrict in
the J111e primary election.
Mra. Slnael, who will be
bidding for her third two-year
term, owns and operates a
Western Auto ~late Store
llld craft ahop in IAtllll with
her bwlband, Wayne.
Currently Mrvinll her lhlrd
term u ci~ treuurer of
Lopn,ahe Ia a~ pmldent

i
M == Mandat~ry service . Serv ic~ m~st be ot1ered in 88 counties in Ohio to the persons eligible as listed. A county may elect to

21.00
MEin'l Pa nama

Mon...sat. 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm
--·-

requested

Funding
Maximum Federal allotment lor Ohio at this time would be about
Estimated Annual Expendoturo:
$127.750,000 annually with the availability of at least
$42.000.000 in State and Local ma~ching fund s. Tho State Plan
Federal
has lhe lollowlng estimates based on current~ identifiable malch·
State
ong State and Local funds:
Local

Hearing Aid Center
525,7221

•

Store Hours:

Reele(!tion

SERVICE

exceeding $8,200.00

..

Phone

.-

Columbia Gaa of Ohio
IIUIOIIIced lodlly lbat natural
pa curteilnwlt Ieveii for
111011 rl. Ita large lndulrial
and Ctlllllllercial cuatomera
would be reduced to zero
beglnnlnc April 1. The only
ex~IIOIII would be large
indulrial boUer loatla which
will continue to be curtailed
!DO per cent.
J. M. Koebel, manager for
1be gu CCIItlpany In the
Gallill-Melga area, aald the
lemp(or..-y brllht.enJns rl. the
nat.-al gu supply pictw-e for
ColliDbla's 1,130 indulrial
and 1,320 commercial
CUIIomen lbat uae a million
cr more cubic feel of gsa a
month. 11 the result of
reccrd.elllnc warm weather
in Ohio In recent weeks.
Koebel aald lbat whlle ·the
new curlalbnent Ieveii beins
announced today for the
seven month IIIIIIIJa' period
bet!lnnlng April l and ending
Oct. 31 are baled on the best .
data available at lhia lime,
the company's supply
situation Ia under conatant
review and subject change
at any time.
He uld "the new curtailment · levels Include
. .umpt10111 and e.atlm.otea
aa to economic condltiona,
anticipated underruna by
indutriea
and
other
vlll'lables. If
ump110111 do not develop, it may
necessitate increased curlalbnent during the sum-

Effective lhru,
20 1976
Marth '

Application for social se~Yices Wm be ~ccepte.d by. the local County W~lfare Depart~ent which has respon sibility to adrni niste r th~ serviCe
progra rn under supervl ston of the Oh to Department of Public Weflare.
·

Example: Family of tour with gross annual Income not

Batte ries
and
supp li es fo r al l makes
for sa le: ·

Hunting ton , W. Va .

•' •

Athens County

capabthttes tor sell: support (G~al l ) , self·su tficiency (Goal II), to preYent or remedy neglect , abuse , or exploitation . or to p1eserve families
(Goal Ill) . lo poovode communoty-based care (Goa! IV). and where necessaoy to provide improved instotut1onal care (Goal V).

Revenue
Service
Cod e
is
founded on th e belief that some
per sons
have
already
e)( ,
perienced enough l oss and that
they shOuld not be subjected to
ta)(alio n as well," said Ap
plega t e.

18,

60 1 Six.th Ave.

'·

Savings &amp; Loan Ca.

MEIGS TIRE CENTER INC.
POMEROY
L!:=============='==========O=H=IO:::!J

M ei gs Inn , Pomeroy,
Ohio
On

BELTONE

'

'•
•

'1976

Handsome styl ed summer coo l er s
vamps or natural wicker .
Com f ortable 3-eye let ti es and slipon s
with fan t ast ic Nitro crepe soles and
steel shank support .

Our Consultant wi ll
be glad to give you a
fre e hear ing lest wi th
the l a le st Be /tone
Elec tronic
equipment .

•

•

wi th

To re pa ir and serv ice
heari ng aids.

I

FRONT TRACTOR TIRES
"TRIPLE RIB R/S"

Will Be At

9 A.M. Ia

big gas
user off

..

~'

Certificates

2'6 Second 51,
LONDON (UP!) - British
Pomeror, Ohio
1ew~papers said today Queen
E:lizabelh is believed to have
:onsented to a legal
reparation to end the stormy
IS-year marriage of her
sister, Princess Margaret, to
Houston over the Knicks, tne Earl of Snowdon .
whose Earl Monroe was
Buckingham Palace
evicted for hitting tn e referee confirmed the Queen has had
with tne ball. The Knicks discussio ns about
the
were ahead 30-28 wh en troubled couple 's future, gut
Monroe drew two technical :1: spokesman rerused comfouls for his offense and was ment on reports a separation
thrown out of tne game. In the 1nno.uncement was imnext six minutes llle Rockets minent.
GOODYEAR "SPECIAL"
scored 17 straight points.
"Obviously the situation
Bulls 120, Suns 87
has been discussed by the
500x15x4 P~
John Laskowski scored 20 royal family but I am not in a
points and Norm Van Uer position to say what decision,
had 19 in leading Chicago to if any, has been reached,' ' he
Plus .67 F.E.T.
its lllird win in the last 11 :&gt;aid . "We do not comment on
games. The Bulls broke open press speculation."
tn e game in the second
An equally authoritative
650x16x4 PLY
600xl6x4 PlY
quarter and took a 4&amp;-23 iead. 'ource said, " Divorce is out
Warriors 110, Pistons 101
of the question - the royal
Rick Barry, playing willl family. does not divorce ."
an injured hip, scored 20
SPECIAL ON REAR TRACTOR
points including 12 in tne last
· TJR
1001
period, as Golden State
mathematically clinched its including 10 in the last period,
second straight Pacific
Division Iitle and increased to help rally Indiana. San
its record to 49-20. The loss Antonio led 82-78 entering the
was Detroit's fiflll in its last final period but scored only 13
992-2'01
six games. Bob Lanier had 22 while the Pacers tallied 37. .
for the Pistons.
·
with
pointsled
. San Antonio
James25 Silas
Braves 112, Blazers 95
Bob McAdoo scored 29
points and Randy Smith had
28 for Buffalo, Which scored
PUBLIC NOTICE
only its tnird win in the last
eight games while handing
P~OPDSED PLAN FOR SOCIAL SERVICES IN OHIO
Portland its fiflll loss in eight
JULY 1. 1976 ·JUNE 30, 1977
games. Geoff Petrie led
The
Plan
fo
r
Ohio
has been developed in accordance with Title XX .
Portland with 28 points .
ol the Social Secunty Act , enacled by Public Law 93-647
Nuggets Ill , Spirlis 94
David Thompson scored 28
points and Byron Beck added
PUBLIC HEARING
DATE : Apoil 19, 1976
17 as Denver ·beat St. Louis
(OHIO REVISED CODE 119 .03) liME: 9:30·A.M.
and ended a three-game
PLACE : HEARING ROOM , FIRST FLOOR, 30 E BROAD ST .. COLU MBUS
lo sing streak. Thompson
scored 12 points in tne second
period leading llle Nuggets to
pURPOSE
a 62-45 halftime margin .
The P~~Ro se of the plan is to provide Ohio with social services that Will enable res idents of Ohio to restore . maint3in or improve their

A Be /tone Consultant

Thursday, Mar.

J

Our Interest Is
Greater For You

BELTONE
Hearing Aid
SatVice Center

IJ;;lt;:o~n~~,~~~~========::====~~,~~------------------------------~--~--

~~i.::::::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:::::::::::::::::::::::::=:=~:=:=:=:=:::::::=:=:=:::=:=:=:=:·:=:·:::::::::::=:=:=:=:=:=:::::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:~::=:=:=:=:=:::;::::::::::::::::::::;;:::::::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:::~:=:~:~:::::::~=~~:::::::::;:::::::=:=:::=:=:::::=:=:=:=:::=:=:~::~:!::::::~=~:::::~:*s'l.s:~a~

belon1a to the Municipal
Finance Officers League,
Bulineas 111d Profeuional
Wom1111'1 Qub and lnul1111uel
Methodlat Qlurch.
M a member of the Ohio .
GOP's top political body,
Mn. Slnaella llrYIDc on the
policy ( eseeulive J commlttes, national convention
study committee, Ohio Houle
Advt.ory committee ud the
bolnl rl. the ObiD Fedtratlon
rl. Republican W0111111'1 Qub.
She llrVed u a lllllllber of
the
original
1tate
"acreenlna" committee and
now ct.ln lbat lfiiiiP for
letllllatm ofllctl In Dlltrict ,

I, wbldl 1acludel the lOth, ·
llatand find HoUle Dlllrlcfl. ·

a-lib', Mn. llnail - '
appointed t.o the -me
CCIIIIIIItt. fGr Jadlel I IIDJ

election t.o till Oblo llup•eme
Caurt 111d an March I at the
Dlatrlcl 10 encua, wu

INillmoullJ aleeled

u •

eandldlle far .....te to the

8 PAKS

HOT DOG BUNS •••••••
Del Monte

:it~ t;;EE~E suCES~~.99 ~
Kraft Salad

MIRACLE

79~
WHIP. •••••••• !!~..
·
.

32 _0Z.

I I) IH'(Jr-..

DOMINO SUGAR _
SLB.BAG

WITH COUPON

990

Litnit 1 Per Customer
Good At
Super Valu

»ir••• 3-20-76

·

MARGARINE
1-tB. PKG.
WITH COUPON

oz.

CATSUP••••••••••••••• ~: ••
17 Ounce cans

ARGO PEAS ••••••••••••

CANS

"'---·- ,
...
. . . ..........
...r.....
:.,..;,:• . .,

KRAn PARKAT

Pure Granulated

38

39'

limit 1 Per Customer
Good At Powell's Super Valu
·Coupon Expir•s: 3-20-76

1

J

..-~,.

:J

HAVILAND CHINA

Ballard's Whole Hog

SAUSAGE
1-LB. PKG.

99

~

:- ~

WITH COUPON

:- ~

limit 1 Per C:ustomer
Good At Powell's Super Valu

"W

&lt;i

3-20·76

REG. 19.99

WITH COUPON
limit 1 Per Customer
Good At Powell's Super Va lu
~upon
: 3-20-76

l'iallanll Ollltliltlan for the

.l'! llate of Qenld Ford.

---·
•

�4- The Daily Sentin&lt;!l, Moddleporl-l'omeroy, 0 .. Wednesilioy, March 17. 1976

Cavs drop 109-105 tilt :f Thousands of 'Witnesses' inten1ed
1

•

Pro BMketball Roundup
By
United
Press
llllernatlonal
While !flow was piling up
outside the Coliseum Tuesday

night , basketballs were whi sUing U1rough the nets in si d~
th e Cleveland Cavaliers'
h&lt;)me base.
TI~e Los At1geles !;Jkers.

whose bus almost ran off
suow-covrred roads enroute
UH! g~w, hila sizzling 47"'()f79 shots to grab n 109-105 NBA
\'idury over the cavaliers,
who canned 41k&gt;f-84.

Kareem Abdul.Ja bbar and
Gilil Goodrich paced t!oe Lal.ers' olfensive show. Jabbar
h!l 16-&lt;&gt;f- 20 for 32 poinl s ami

Goodrich hit 12-&lt;&gt;f-22 shots
and added three fouls for 25
points.
" It was a great game for us
to win ," said Laker Coach
Bill Sharman, "We are
shooting for a playoff spot
and our defense was
outstanding."
Jabbar and Goodrich out:

•

Plattsburgh State next
foe for Tiger quintet
PROVIDENCE,li.). 1UPI ) llhude Island College 91-80
Plattsburgh Stale will 'J'ue scl ay
night
in
a
game
at
meet Wittenberg 1Ohio) quarle rfi nal
Friday in one of the semifinal Providence.
games of lhe NCAA Division
The semifinals are at AlbUl tourney.
right College in Heading, Pa.
Plattsburgh, led by Hannie
Rhode Island took an ·early
Wright's 38 points, defeated lead :!2-22 with 7:'l:lleft in .the
~

NFL owners agree
By RON HUTCHERSON
CO RON ADO, Calif. IUP I)
...,... Owners froze the Nationol
Football League at 28 teams
for the 1976 seawn Tuesday
foll owing their decision no.t to
admit any new clubs to the
lea gue in the foreseeable
fut urf.
Memphis and Birmingham
of the now defunct World
Football League Jwd actively
sough t a dmi ssion into 1he

NF'L.
In an earlier sossion, the 28

owners
selected
tilt!
Louisiana Superdome in Ne w
Orleans to host Super il&lt;Jwl
xn in 1978.
"Aller a leng thy and
thorough discussion, '' said
NFL commissioner Pete

Rozelle, "the clubs concluded
th at under th e presen t
conditions - that is our legal
and labor problems - Uo ey
could not firmly commit to
expausion at this time.
~~How ever it is clear these
two cities were the most
active in recent montils and

will be among those strongly
consi dered when the league

eventually feels it

ca n

the league's refusal to admit
the (i rizzlies was a " tremendotts disservice to the people
of Memphis who worked so
hard and demonstrated the
ability to form and support a
teaw .' 1
Bassett cw-renlly holds 30
pla ye rs und e r persona l
service contracts, including

for mer Miam i Dolphin stars
Paul Warfield, Jlm KHck and
Lan y Csonka. Bassett
refu sed to comment on
whether he would take Iega 1
acloon against the NFL.
''That's been ;m opti on
fl:om the begllming," he sai d,

"but it's been one I told Mr.
Rozell e on 15 separate
occasions [ didn)t want to
take."
Th e NFL's two newes t

franchises, t11e Seattle Seahawks and the Tampa Bay
Buccane er s , wi ll ha ve a
chanc£ to fill their ranks
March 30·31 in a' a llocation

draft to be conducted out of
the NFL's New York office.
The existing tean1S will be
able to freeze 30 players on
their rosters before Seattle
aod Tampii llay ·make their

expand.' l
: selec tions .
·
JOhn BHssett, a Canadliln
RQz.elle said the names of
millionaire who spent $1.5 eligible players will be made
millionto form the Wl'L, said available to the two teams the

day before the draft.
TI1e annual collegiate draft
will be held eight. days later
on April 8-9.
Among the problems the
league must resolve before
expan sion , Roze1le sa id,
w·cre co urt rulings that went
Hga inst the NF!.and llle issue
of f'fJ\Iective. borgaining with
the players associati on.

Meigs
Property

1

Transfers

The owners

cast

fo ur

ballots during a morning
Clyde J . Morlan, Ethel M.
MOrl&lt;m tp Bruce F. Owens,
J oyce B. Owens. l .ot, Ortt hi ~C.
Nathan S. Croy, .JMe l G.

Croy to Croy Lwnli er Cu. BG
/\., Lebanon .

Sidney R. Hayman. Carol
Hayma n to Darrell H.
Nels.on,

Linda

K.

Nelson ,

Lots, Salisbw·y, Hobson .
Norman St. Clair, Bcul,ih
P. St. Clair lo Spencer R.
Burhancm,
F'reda
r~ .
Duchanan, ·G Atrcs, Olive .
Ri char·d B. Hayrrw n
Vir ginia l.. Hayman tu
1

Richcml S. Ba rton, M:1c1)l

Bart•1n, 2.8 A., Olive .
Will iam

G.

Viney&lt;~rtl,

Tl1ehna P. Vineyard to Fred
E. Davis, Judy L. Davis, 53 ,
A. Salem .

S. ~·. McComas, Celia
M('COJnas to Don C. Hooper ,
Parcel, lk&lt;lford .
Norman 0. Weber, Vera
Webe r
to
Dar wv n
En evol d se n,
E leanor e
Enevo!dsen 5.013 A., Oli ve.

WiJmie Holsinger. Maz.ie
Hoisjnger
to
Cli ff ord
Long ene tte , Mary Lou
Lon genet ~ e. 0.872 A., Olive.
John Blake, Sylvia Blake to
Virgil M. Dill, Pamela Dill ,
Lol~ . Syracuse.

JONI,:S' RREACH
WASHINGTON (UPI )
Rep. Robert Jones, 0-0kla.,
assistant Democratic whip in
the House, has been fin ed $200
for breach of the campaiun
finan cing laws in his 1972
· race.
'Tm glad it's all over.'' l1e
said.
.Jones, ~. was fined for
failing to report contributions
of between $1,000 and $2,000
from former Gulf Oil counsel
Royce Savage in 1972.
Jones said he will seek a
tnlrd term .

..

,,

first hull. Despite a strong
defensive effort by Rhode
Isla nd 's seven-foot center,
Carlo DeTqmmaso, who

blocked 15 shots, Plattsburgh
closed llle gap. Rhode Island
led 43-42 at tne half.
The lead changed hands
eight times in the second half.
Plattsburgh going ah ead for
good ,
52-51,
when
DeTommaso was called for

on 28 teanzs in '76

session befo r e pi cking New

Or!e&lt;Jns over four other cities
for Supe.r Bowl XJJ lor Jan.
15 , 1970. Cities that had made
bids for the Super Bowl
included Miami. Los Angeles.
Houston and Dallas.
Super Bowl XI wiU be held
at. th e Rose Bowl in
P"sa delia, Calif.

goallending after blocking a
shot by Daryl Hutson.
John King led Rhode Island
)Vit h
19
points
and
DeTommaso had 16. Larry
Parker added 18 points and 21
rebounds for Plattsburgh.

Ohio legislative
briefs
By United Press Interna tional
WELFARE REFORM
COLUMB U S (UPI) The
Ohio H ouse took what Rep.
Helen H . F ix , R·Cincinna li .
ca lled the firs t step in r eform
of Ohio welfar e laws Tuesday
with 84 to 6 passage of her bill.
Th e legisla tion wou ld allow
til e st at e Depcirtmen t of Wet .
fa r'"e to recover some of tile
paym ents it makes to m ed ital
insurance compa nies on beilalf
of Wf:lfar e recipien t s. Mrs . Fix
SCi id a simi lar law in Miciligan
saves $2 r:nillion a year .
SENATOR ACCUSES .
C OLUMBUS (UP I J Stale
Se n , MaX
H . Denn i s, · R·
Wilmington , Tues day accUsed
the Oernoc rali c dom·ina ted sta te
Controlling Boa rd or "try ing fo
bla ck ma il the governor into
fi scal disaster " by demand ing
an end to th e 2. per cent
spending
r ed ucl ion
1n
the
Dep artm ent o f Rehabil itation
and Correction .
Tile board voted Monday to
a ll ow the department to bo rrow
$2 .2 mil l ion from its fis ca l 1977
appropr 1ation , but only if tile
spending cutback were lifted to
furn ish another $1.1 · mi ll ion.
Dennis , a board member·, said
if the governor agreed. " !ile
d~m would breaK and all other
departmen ts
would
demand
eliminat ion of the cutback ."
TAX BILLS.
.
COLUMBU S (UPI) Re p.
J am es W . Rank, in , 0 -Cincinnati ,
Int rodu ced l egislation Tuesday
req uiring mortgage holders to
furnisil .copies of tax bi lls to
hom eowne r s f or whom they pay
rea l es t ate tax es .
The bill would apply to
lend ing ins titution s wh 1Ch hOld
a po rt ion of mort gage money in
. esc row for payment of prope rt y
tax:es .
RETIREMENT PAY .
COL UMBU S ( UPII
Sen .
Doug la s Applegate, O.Sjeuben ·
\Iitie, T uesday ca ll ed on Con .
grcSS; to refra in from sUbj ecting
mi l i tary disab il ity r et irem ent
pay to the f eder el income Ia)'; .
Ap pl egat e's r equest came in
the form of a Sena t e reso l ution ,
w hicil
was in l roduced and
ref erred to tile Finan ce Com ·
mi l!ee .
" Th e whole basis o f personal
ded uct ions und er !he Interna l

scored the entire Cleveland
team in the third period by
combining for 21 of 25 points
as the Lakers took a 79-12
lead into the final12 minutes.
Jabbar, who has 66 points in
his two appearances in
Cleveland this season, hopes
he can return to tne C&lt;&gt;liseum
later in the finals of the NBA
playoffs.
After the Lakers opened up
a 91-80 lead witn 6:05lefl on a
25-footer by Goodrich, the
Cavs battled back and cut the
lead to 105-101 on Austin
Carr's 1&amp;-footer with I :091eft .
Cornell Warner followed
witn two of his iour clutch
foul shots in the last 45
seconds and the Cavs
dropped I wo games behind
Ce ntral Division-leader
Washington .
Houston defeated the New
York Knicks 11&amp;-1)1, Chicago
beat Phoenix 120-87, Golden
State topped Detroit 11!1-101
and Buffalo downed Portland
112-95 in other NBA games.
Denver ·defeated St. Louis
111-94 and Indiana beat San
Antonio 1)5-95 in ABA play.
Roekets 116, Knicks Ill
Mike Newlin 's six points
late in llle fourth period lifted

JOHANNESBURG, SOuth
Africa (UPI) - Anestlmaled
12,000 Jehovah's Witnesses
have been herded into
detention camps in northern
Mozambique after fleeing an
alleged terror campaign
in
against the
sect
neighboring
Malawi,
movement leaders said
Tuesday .
Th
ey said in Mozambique
another 10,000 followers, denounced by tne new Marxist
Igovernment in Portugal's
ormer possession, have
swelled the number in
detention near the northern
town of Milange to 22,000.
The Malawian government
consistently ha s denied

reports of a persecution
campaign against the 30,000
Jehovah's Witnesses in that
central African country.
Frans Muller, presiding
minister of Jehovah's
Witnesses in South Africa,
said a "reign of terror ,
reminiscent
of
Nazi
Germany" has official
blessing in Malawi and that
an additional 5,000 fOllowers
were in prison there. He said
they were confmed in the
"most degrading" conditlons.
Detainees
in
the
Mozambique camps were
subjected to hard labor and
political
indoctrination.
Muller said the victimization
stemmed from the sect
members refusing to become
involved in' politics. In both
Malawi and Mozambique,
J ehovah's Witnesses were
resisting compulsory
membership of rulin g
parties, he said.
Accusing Malawi and
Mozambique of the worst
practices of discrimination,
he said the sect attracted
more persecution on the
African co ntinent than
anywhere else.
In a report scheduled for

Separation
rumored in

royal family

publication March 22 in (1,.,·
sect magazine Awaken,
Malawi Is charged with
permitting "rapes, beatings,
torture o1men an d women, to
continue
despite
an
international outcry when the
allegations were first
published last December.

Awaken is publshed in
conjunction with the U.S.
Tract and Bible Society. The
latest
report
entitled
"Cruelties go unchecked in
Malawi'' charges that on Jan .
2 Witnesses Alsekl ;wyoya
and Harry Kampango from
:Wmba district " were
murdered by having their
p-ivate parts cut off."
The magazine also alleged
tnat in mid-January 14 foilowers, three men and 11
women, were heaten for half
a day by officials of the ruling
C&lt;&gt;ngress Party in Malawi.
Two men had their arms and
legs broken and the Congress
offldals were not charged,
tne report said.
11 . said tne campaign in
Malawi has been waged for 10
years now , unchecked by
President Hastings Banda
whO was quoted as calling
Jehovah's Witnesses "devUs
of God."

5.75%
On 90-Day
5.75 per cent paid on
90 day Certificates of
Deposit . $1.000.00

Minimum . Interest
Payable Quarterly.
A substantial penaltv 11
1nVoked on all cert ificate
accounts wl.thdrawn prior
to the date of maturity.

Meigs Co. Brancb

-~~uhr

Marvin Barnes scored

16

points for the Spirits.
Pacers 115 Spurs 95
Travis Grant had 24 points, .

The

Ho sh BrO
Natural Wicker

21.00

1976

From

12 Noon
KEY WEST

$27'6 f.~su~ET

'
t&gt;

••

•
'
'

•

•

•

0=

offer thos seovice to other oligoblo persons.
seovlce lhal one or more counties have proposed to offer eligible persons .

OP~ional

• • Numbers 1n th iS co lu mn relate to Who Is I

section bel ow.

1

Eligible persons include:
tl Aid for Dependent Childoon (ADC) recipients.
2 Sup .lemental Secu•.iiY Income (SSI) recipients.
t3 Me~cald Only recopoents whoso gross fami~ Jncor(lo is no
more ~hen the oncome of ollgoblo persons in (4) or(~) .
(4) Income Eligible without a fee payment:

.

.

'

(5)

rsons in immed.iate danger ~eedinC protective services ,
and ~rso~s needmg Information and Referral Service as
P
.
e

descnbedon lhe Ohio CASP may be provided without regard
to fam1ly 1ncome.

(6)

·

income eligoblo with a foe payment lor day care for adults
and children, homemaker, chore, iami~ planning, foster
caoe for adults and mental hoalfh/mental 10tardation related
soovlce, provided gross lamlly Income for a fami~ of four is
not over $12,100 or undor $8,20 1.
$170.333,333
$127,750,000
s 30,131 ,560
s 12,451 ,773

Public Rovlow ond common!

VisH your local County Welfare Oepartment to view the co~lote
State Plan and your loco! county plan. Telephone youo local
County Welfare Department to request a detailed summaoy wHhout
cost or to arrange for purchase of the comp~te proposeil CASP
for $t2 . ~ .
Middle of

'.~'~Upper

Block

1Pomeroy, o.

Open All Day Thursday
FRIDAY NIGHTTIL8
5

298 Second St.
POMEROY, OHIO

NO SALES TO .DEALERS
·QUANTITY .RIGHTS

USDA Choice

.•,
'

O

.

69
O
ENGLISH ROAST•••••• ~ 7 9
ARM ROAST••••••••••• ~·.

USDA Choice

·

.

.

USDA Choice

RIB STEAK •••

u- ..

....... ~.~.139

mer."

''

.
.

' .

,.

•

•
•

...
...
,

Columbia Gas of Ohio
currently ·1a curtailing large
baUer loada !DO per cent,
industrial loatla lbat could
uae an alternate fuel 20 per
cent, lndulrial loada that
cannot uae altemate fuel 10
per cent 111d l111e commercial cuatomen 20 per
cent.
In January, Columbia
projected more severe
curtailment levels this
summer. .
.
"When we announced our
preliminary
summer
forecasts in January.''
Koebel said, . "·weather
condlll0111 in Ohio were just
about normal. However, this
Pill February was the
warmeat February in more
than 20 Yllh - with all Ume
reccrd hlgha belni set in
10111e areu - reaulllng in
much lower consumption by
OW'

Superiors
12 oz.

FRANK IES.........:~~·..

19

Crispy Serve
1~.

.

BACON ...............-....p::·..•.

39

USDA Choice

cuatomera."

Koebel aald the "warm
weather came to late in the
aeason to enable the company
to adjust winter curlalbnent
levels, but it will mean more
gas for our customers · this

RIB ROAST. .............~.
Kennebec Certified

summer.n

50 LB.

ollhe HOcklna lDDa Women's
Republican aub. She allo

Who lo Ellglbloi

Aperiod for public review and comment is being provided from March I7, 1976 through May 1, 1976

•M

•

SEED POTATOES •••••~~ ••

Meigs County Welfare Department
175 Race Street, Box 191
. Middleport
Phone: 992 -2117
James A. Rhodes
Governor
State of Ohio

Written comtnents on the plan may be made to your County
Welfare Department or to the Division of Social Services Ohio
Department of Public Welfare. Comments and requests may be
sent to:
Mrs. Mildred Milloy, Chief
Division of Social Stovices
Ohio Department of Public Welfare
30111 Aoor, 30 East Broad Street
Columbus, Ohio 43215
Raymond F. McKenna
Director
Ohio Department of Public Welfare

Aavorite Hamburger or

LOGAN, Ohio - Marian S.
Slnael, 235 N. Orchard Sl.,
loday llllnounced abe has llled
a petlllon to seek ~ecUon
to the Republican Slate
Cenlral Committee from the
lOth IAngrellional Dlalrict in
the J111e primary election.
Mra. Slnael, who will be
bidding for her third two-year
term, owns and operates a
Western Auto ~late Store
llld craft ahop in IAtllll with
her bwlband, Wayne.
Currently Mrvinll her lhlrd
term u ci~ treuurer of
Lopn,ahe Ia a~ pmldent

i
M == Mandat~ry service . Serv ic~ m~st be ot1ered in 88 counties in Ohio to the persons eligible as listed. A county may elect to

21.00
MEin'l Pa nama

Mon...sat. 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm
--·-

requested

Funding
Maximum Federal allotment lor Ohio at this time would be about
Estimated Annual Expendoturo:
$127.750,000 annually with the availability of at least
$42.000.000 in State and Local ma~ching fund s. Tho State Plan
Federal
has lhe lollowlng estimates based on current~ identifiable malch·
State
ong State and Local funds:
Local

Hearing Aid Center
525,7221

•

Store Hours:

Reele(!tion

SERVICE

exceeding $8,200.00

..

Phone

.-

Columbia Gaa of Ohio
IIUIOIIIced lodlly lbat natural
pa curteilnwlt Ieveii for
111011 rl. Ita large lndulrial
and Ctlllllllercial cuatomera
would be reduced to zero
beglnnlnc April 1. The only
ex~IIOIII would be large
indulrial boUer loatla which
will continue to be curtailed
!DO per cent.
J. M. Koebel, manager for
1be gu CCIItlpany In the
Gallill-Melga area, aald the
lemp(or..-y brllht.enJns rl. the
nat.-al gu supply pictw-e for
ColliDbla's 1,130 indulrial
and 1,320 commercial
CUIIomen lbat uae a million
cr more cubic feel of gsa a
month. 11 the result of
reccrd.elllnc warm weather
in Ohio In recent weeks.
Koebel aald lbat whlle ·the
new curlalbnent Ieveii beins
announced today for the
seven month IIIIIIIJa' period
bet!lnnlng April l and ending
Oct. 31 are baled on the best .
data available at lhia lime,
the company's supply
situation Ia under conatant
review and subject change
at any time.
He uld "the new curtailment · levels Include
. .umpt10111 and e.atlm.otea
aa to economic condltiona,
anticipated underruna by
indutriea
and
other
vlll'lables. If
ump110111 do not develop, it may
necessitate increased curlalbnent during the sum-

Effective lhru,
20 1976
Marth '

Application for social se~Yices Wm be ~ccepte.d by. the local County W~lfare Depart~ent which has respon sibility to adrni niste r th~ serviCe
progra rn under supervl ston of the Oh to Department of Public Weflare.
·

Example: Family of tour with gross annual Income not

Batte ries
and
supp li es fo r al l makes
for sa le: ·

Hunting ton , W. Va .

•' •

Athens County

capabthttes tor sell: support (G~al l ) , self·su tficiency (Goal II), to preYent or remedy neglect , abuse , or exploitation . or to p1eserve families
(Goal Ill) . lo poovode communoty-based care (Goa! IV). and where necessaoy to provide improved instotut1onal care (Goal V).

Revenue
Service
Cod e
is
founded on th e belief that some
per sons
have
already
e)( ,
perienced enough l oss and that
they shOuld not be subjected to
ta)(alio n as well," said Ap
plega t e.

18,

60 1 Six.th Ave.

'·

Savings &amp; Loan Ca.

MEIGS TIRE CENTER INC.
POMEROY
L!:=============='==========O=H=IO:::!J

M ei gs Inn , Pomeroy,
Ohio
On

BELTONE

'

'•
•

'1976

Handsome styl ed summer coo l er s
vamps or natural wicker .
Com f ortable 3-eye let ti es and slipon s
with fan t ast ic Nitro crepe soles and
steel shank support .

Our Consultant wi ll
be glad to give you a
fre e hear ing lest wi th
the l a le st Be /tone
Elec tronic
equipment .

•

•

wi th

To re pa ir and serv ice
heari ng aids.

I

FRONT TRACTOR TIRES
"TRIPLE RIB R/S"

Will Be At

9 A.M. Ia

big gas
user off

..

~'

Certificates

2'6 Second 51,
LONDON (UP!) - British
Pomeror, Ohio
1ew~papers said today Queen
E:lizabelh is believed to have
:onsented to a legal
reparation to end the stormy
IS-year marriage of her
sister, Princess Margaret, to
Houston over the Knicks, tne Earl of Snowdon .
whose Earl Monroe was
Buckingham Palace
evicted for hitting tn e referee confirmed the Queen has had
with tne ball. The Knicks discussio ns about
the
were ahead 30-28 wh en troubled couple 's future, gut
Monroe drew two technical :1: spokesman rerused comfouls for his offense and was ment on reports a separation
thrown out of tne game. In the 1nno.uncement was imnext six minutes llle Rockets minent.
GOODYEAR "SPECIAL"
scored 17 straight points.
"Obviously the situation
Bulls 120, Suns 87
has been discussed by the
500x15x4 P~
John Laskowski scored 20 royal family but I am not in a
points and Norm Van Uer position to say what decision,
had 19 in leading Chicago to if any, has been reached,' ' he
Plus .67 F.E.T.
its lllird win in the last 11 :&gt;aid . "We do not comment on
games. The Bulls broke open press speculation."
tn e game in the second
An equally authoritative
650x16x4 PLY
600xl6x4 PlY
quarter and took a 4&amp;-23 iead. 'ource said, " Divorce is out
Warriors 110, Pistons 101
of the question - the royal
Rick Barry, playing willl family. does not divorce ."
an injured hip, scored 20
SPECIAL ON REAR TRACTOR
points including 12 in tne last
· TJR
1001
period, as Golden State
mathematically clinched its including 10 in the last period,
second straight Pacific
Division Iitle and increased to help rally Indiana. San
its record to 49-20. The loss Antonio led 82-78 entering the
was Detroit's fiflll in its last final period but scored only 13
992-2'01
six games. Bob Lanier had 22 while the Pacers tallied 37. .
for the Pistons.
·
with
pointsled
. San Antonio
James25 Silas
Braves 112, Blazers 95
Bob McAdoo scored 29
points and Randy Smith had
28 for Buffalo, Which scored
PUBLIC NOTICE
only its tnird win in the last
eight games while handing
P~OPDSED PLAN FOR SOCIAL SERVICES IN OHIO
Portland its fiflll loss in eight
JULY 1. 1976 ·JUNE 30, 1977
games. Geoff Petrie led
The
Plan
fo
r
Ohio
has been developed in accordance with Title XX .
Portland with 28 points .
ol the Social Secunty Act , enacled by Public Law 93-647
Nuggets Ill , Spirlis 94
David Thompson scored 28
points and Byron Beck added
PUBLIC HEARING
DATE : Apoil 19, 1976
17 as Denver ·beat St. Louis
(OHIO REVISED CODE 119 .03) liME: 9:30·A.M.
and ended a three-game
PLACE : HEARING ROOM , FIRST FLOOR, 30 E BROAD ST .. COLU MBUS
lo sing streak. Thompson
scored 12 points in tne second
period leading llle Nuggets to
pURPOSE
a 62-45 halftime margin .
The P~~Ro se of the plan is to provide Ohio with social services that Will enable res idents of Ohio to restore . maint3in or improve their

A Be /tone Consultant

Thursday, Mar.

J

Our Interest Is
Greater For You

BELTONE
Hearing Aid
SatVice Center

IJ;;lt;:o~n~~,~~~~========::====~~,~~------------------------------~--~--

~~i.::::::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:::::::::::::::::::::::::=:=~:=:=:=:=:::::::=:=:=:::=:=:=:=:·:=:·:::::::::::=:=:=:=:=:=:::::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:~::=:=:=:=:=:::;::::::::::::::::::::;;:::::::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:::~:=:~:~:::::::~=~~:::::::::;:::::::=:=:::=:=:::::=:=:=:=:::=:=:~::~:!::::::~=~:::::~:*s'l.s:~a~

belon1a to the Municipal
Finance Officers League,
Bulineas 111d Profeuional
Wom1111'1 Qub and lnul1111uel
Methodlat Qlurch.
M a member of the Ohio .
GOP's top political body,
Mn. Slnaella llrYIDc on the
policy ( eseeulive J commlttes, national convention
study committee, Ohio Houle
Advt.ory committee ud the
bolnl rl. the ObiD Fedtratlon
rl. Republican W0111111'1 Qub.
She llrVed u a lllllllber of
the
original
1tate
"acreenlna" committee and
now ct.ln lbat lfiiiiP for
letllllatm ofllctl In Dlltrict ,

I, wbldl 1acludel the lOth, ·
llatand find HoUle Dlllrlcfl. ·

a-lib', Mn. llnail - '
appointed t.o the -me
CCIIIIIIItt. fGr Jadlel I IIDJ

election t.o till Oblo llup•eme
Caurt 111d an March I at the
Dlatrlcl 10 encua, wu

INillmoullJ aleeled

u •

eandldlle far .....te to the

8 PAKS

HOT DOG BUNS •••••••
Del Monte

:it~ t;;EE~E suCES~~.99 ~
Kraft Salad

MIRACLE

79~
WHIP. •••••••• !!~..
·
.

32 _0Z.

I I) IH'(Jr-..

DOMINO SUGAR _
SLB.BAG

WITH COUPON

990

Litnit 1 Per Customer
Good At
Super Valu

»ir••• 3-20-76

·

MARGARINE
1-tB. PKG.
WITH COUPON

oz.

CATSUP••••••••••••••• ~: ••
17 Ounce cans

ARGO PEAS ••••••••••••

CANS

"'---·- ,
...
. . . ..........
...r.....
:.,..;,:• . .,

KRAn PARKAT

Pure Granulated

38

39'

limit 1 Per Customer
Good At Powell's Super Valu
·Coupon Expir•s: 3-20-76

1

J

..-~,.

:J

HAVILAND CHINA

Ballard's Whole Hog

SAUSAGE
1-LB. PKG.

99

~

:- ~

WITH COUPON

:- ~

limit 1 Per C:ustomer
Good At Powell's Super Valu

"W

&lt;i

3-20·76

REG. 19.99

WITH COUPON
limit 1 Per Customer
Good At Powell's Super Va lu
~upon
: 3-20-76

l'iallanll Ollltliltlan for the

.l'! llate of Qenld Ford.

---·
•

�J -

PTA agrees to
student sponsorship
Sponsorship of a student to
the Teenage Ins titute on
Alcohol and Drugs at Ohio
Wesleyan

University

in

pr eside nt; Mrs . Donna
Gheen, treasure r, and Mrs .
Shirley Roush, sec retary.
Delega tes to the Meigs
County Council of Paren ts
and Teacher elected were
Mrs . Cinda Harris , Mrs.
Susan Baer , Mrs. MariJyn

Po ulin, Mrs. Pat Kitchen and
Mrs. Ch er ole Burde tte.
Al ternates are Mrs. Jane
F r ymeye r ,

Mrs .

Be tty

available and

g ;;~ve

some

ideas for programs at the
P.T.A. meetings. He talked
also abo ut the tornado drills
which have taken place at the
school.
Mrs . Philson 's third grad
led the pledge of allegiance,
with Mrs . Vaughan giving
devotions . Mrs. Philson's
room won the attendance

Becker, Mr s. J ea nett e
Thomas, Mrs. Ruth Riffle
and Eddie Kitchen . The
presi dent will be elected at
the April meeting with the
nomin ating commit tee to
make a recommendation at
that time . Mrs. Sally Ingels a ward .
was added to. the nominatin g

Shrine elects officers
Election
of
officers
highlighted the Friday night
meeting of Mary Shrine 37,
Orcter of the White Shrine of
Jerusalem at lhe Pomeroy
Masonic Temple.
Mrs. Clara Riley, worthy
high priestess, and Thomas
Edwards, watchman of
shepherds, presided; '
Officers elected were Helen
Pickens,
worthy
nigh
priestess; Thomas Edwards,
watchman of sheph erds;
Nellie
Casto , . noble
prophetess; Oscar Casto,
associate watchman of
shepherds; Sharon Warner,
worthy chaplain; Jacque
Gabritsch,
worthy
shepherdess ; Arline Davis,
worthy guide; Erma Yoho,
worhty scribe; Barbara
Dugan, worthy treasurer.
. A. rehearsal for installation
to be held April 9 at 8 p.m.
was set for Sunday, April 4
at 2 p.m. A business meeting
was announced for 4·p.m. on

April 9 at the Masonic

Te,mple.
Invitations to attend in·
stallations were read from
Lakewood Shrine 26, Rocky
River, March 28, 8p.m. ; Rose
Shrine 28, Zanesville , March
20, 7:30 p.m., and Nazarene
Shrine 28, Chillicothe, March
27, 8 p.m.
An announcement and
invitation tO the wedding of
Miss Gabritsch ·and David
Fowler, March 21 at2 p.m. at .
the GOOd Shepherd Methodist
Church, Rt. 2, Flatrock, Point
Pleasant, was given.
Metnbers were reminded
that dues must be in by
March 31. Potluck refresh·
ments were served at the
conclusion of the meeting.

a youth rally revival in April
were planned at a recent
meeting of the youth officers
of the Middleport United
CATCH TilE CHIEF
Pentecostal ChW'ch at the
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
That was no hijacker that Shaffer.
TWA security agent Hans
In addition to the revival,
Langer caught - that was the
the youth will organize teams
head of the Federal Aviation
for Bible quizes. They wiU
Administration., John
attend a youth conference
McLucas.
t
and youth camp in Miller·
An FAA spokesman ·said
sport at the Apostolic calnp
McLucas was conducting his
grounds and will participate
own security test at Los
in the Sheaves for Christ
Angeles International
March.
Airport. McLucas tried to · Suggestions were given on
bypass
the
security ways to create interest and
checkpoint by posing as an participation in the Friday
airline employe·.
night youth service and the
Langer stopp'ld him and special youth activities.
gave McLucas a lecture, Attending the · officers'
without realizing he was meeting were Michael Zirkle,
upbraiding the head of the director ; Mark Sauters,
FAA.
youth president; Jenell Kelly,
McLucas " just loved" lhe secretary; Teresa Shaffer,
fact security precautions treasurer; and Paul Jones
were good enough to catch promotion and publicity
him, the spokesman said.
director.

~•t " "'"'

..

RIO GRANDE - The Rev. Seminary (M.Div.), has been
Charles W. Lusher will an army chaplain, pastor,
become full-time pastor of evangelist and area minister.
Calvary Baptist Church, Rio Last summer he led his fifth
Gra nde , beginning Aptill . He tour oo the Bible Lands and
m1d his wife , Gladys, will Mid·East.
move to the parsonage.
The Rev. and Mrs. Lusher
Rev . Lusher, a graduate of have. four sons . The youngest
Ohio Un iversity ( A.B.) , John is a sophomore at Rio
Southern Baptist Seminary, Grande. Mrs. Lusher is an
(Th.B.) and Northern Baptist elementary teacher at

The Heighl of Cruelly
Dear Helen:
My wife, people warned me, was spoiled ~hen I married
her. I didn't help matters - gave her everythmg she wanted
and had a blind eye for her faults. If I showed signs of mutiny ,
she poured on the affection, and I soon forgot them. ·
Six months ago, she announced she'd faUen in love with
another man. Because she is childlike, she told me all about
the affair. Even indicated he was a better lover than I am, I
know when she meets him, wlle're they go , and what they do .
But 1don't know what to do about it.
She doesn't want a divorce - just "time to get this out of
my system." Since I've alwa~ given in to her, she epxects me
to sit and wait. She's nol "deceiving" me as she's perfectly
honest about the man. But when she buys new clothes from my
paycheck to Impress HIM , isn't this going too far ? - NOT
QUITE CUCKOLD

Celebrates
birthday

Dear N.Q.C.:
"Cuckoo" is the word!
Tell your wife "Time 's up," or you 'U get HER out bf your
system ... and your house. - H.

Mr. and Mrs . Paul Card,
Rt . I, Racine, entertained
recently with a party for their
son, Aaron Bradley, honoring
him on his first birthday.
Cake, ice cream and punch
were served to Mr. and .Mrs.
Thomas Holter and Kevin ,
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Holter ,
Debbie, and Tammy, Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Holter and
Jamey, Mrs. Mike Heck, Eric
and Jeremy, Mr. and Mrs.
Greg Hayes, and Rick Werry.
Sending gifts were Mr. and
Mrs. A. F . Wilson and Rachel
and Rober t Reiber.

+++

Dear HelenL
My mother-in~aw has three younger children; ages five,
seven and eight. Jim, my husband, is their balf-brother. He
didn't get along with his mother and step-father, so he moved
oo my parents' borne six months before our wedding.
.
His mother drinks a lot and when she can't take the kids
any more, she bundles them up and leaves them with us . I feel
sorry for them, but I have a life of my own, also a toddler, and
am expecting another baby.
The only time m-in~ shows up or calls is when she wants a
favor, and then she spends half the time complaining a bout
how ungrateful Jim is.
Her children need more care than she gives them, but why
pick on me, just because I'm soft-hearted? - HELP!

Retreat planned

Dear Help :
Soft heart never won fair treatment from a mooching
mother-in-law .If her children are dangerously neglected, your
husband should contact the authorities, who may h~lp her
straighten up. But you, a young mother, can't take on his
family.
"No" yoW' way out of this. - H.

A Spiritual Ufe Retreat for
Athens District Un ited
Methodist Wom en and
friends will be held at Camp
Otterbein , near Logan ,
beginning with a covered dish
meal at 6 p.m. Friday, April
9, and closing at 3 p.m. on
Saturday, April 10.
Leader will be Mrs. Herbert Massey of Virginia, well
known for her inspirin g·
spiritual reb·eats. She has
chosen the topic, " Li fe , F'ull
of Surptises."
Registration fee of $7.50 for
Friday and Sattirday or $~.~0
for Satul'day only is to be
mailed to Mrs . Ralph
Ropinson , 690 Church Street,
Logan, Ohio 43138 by Apri l 2.

+++

Dear Helen :
I'm so glad you told women it isn't impossible to chang~ a
htlsband. So many of us just shrug and say·it's hopeless, then
either give in to HIS way or sink into self1'ity, or both.
1 married a chauvinist. Most men were in those days. He
felt that women with brains should hide them or risk being
"above their station." For a whUe I played up to his idea of the
"little homemaker," but gradually I started entering what he
termed "his world." I found I could sway his set views with
valid argwnents. We didn't fight, we just discussed ....
something his parents ·had never done together. You see, his
father was BOSS, and no one questioned it.
• Today, we're equals in every ivay. He never puts me down
as he once did, although if he thinks I'm wrong, he says so
honestly as I do to him. Best of all, if we fight, we cool for an
hour or two and then say, "Let's talk about it." Before, he'd
make ultimatums, and I'd sulk; he'd never apologize, and I'd
find underhanded ways of getting even.
One of his last breakthroughs was learning to say "I'm
sorry," but he's accomplished that, too. Who says you can't
change a husband - and in the process change yourself for the

Mrs. Mildred )llcDanlel diggings of the Holy Land and
· reviewed Jl chapter from the the new things which are
book, "Decision for Destiny," being uncovered . The
at the Thursday Afternoon
Circle meeting at the home of
- LETTERS WANTED
Mrs. James Clatworthy.
Emphasis was on prophets
Mrs . Ethel Williamson,
from the Old Testament and longtime Pomeroy resident,
the need for prophets today. is· at the Autumn Years
Jeremiah was listed as the Nursing Center in Sabina,
greatest of all prophets while and ls anxious to receive mail
Oral Roberts and Billy from her friends ~ere. For a
Graham were mentioned as Ume after leaving Pomeroy,
today 's prophets. Mrs. Mc- she lived with a daughter,
Daniel . commented on the Mrs. Clarence (Helen) Boster
of Gallipolis but for the past
year has been at the Nursing
NOT GOOD ENOUGH
Center.
SPRINGFIELD ,
Mo.
(UP!) - Tony Boyle, fonner
president of the. United Mine
Workers Union, will get out of
the U.S. Medical Center for
Girl Scout representatives
Prisoners two months early
have been named to serve on
for good behavior - but that the Meigs County Junior Fair
doesn 't mean freedom.
Board.
He now faces, at 73 years of
They are Denise Lam bert,
age, three life prison terms in Sheila Fetty and Patti Dugan,
Penn sylvania.
cadettes, and Jennifer Wise,
Boyle, union president for senior scout. Named to the
II years, was convicted in advisory board for the scout
September of ordering the representatives were Mrs .
killings of union rival Jock Phyllis Dugan, Rutland
Yablonski, his wife and cadette; Becky Triplett ,
daughter.
Salem Center Juniors; Mrs.
He is ~nishing a three-year Merle Johnson , Rutland , and
term at the medical center Pat Thoma , service unit
for unlawful use of union director. Miss Wise will serve
funds.

COLUMBIA

HAMS

12 OZ. PKG.

600 EXTRA
TOP VALUE STAMPS

CRY.Q..VAC

HALVES

as publicity director for the
junior fair board.

4 to 5 LBS.

100 Extra

MONITORS LISTED

fOP.VAW£ STAMPS

Ri verby monitors for this

With 2-12 oz. pkgs.
Columbia Sliced

weeke nd have been an noun c ed . Saturday ' s
moriitor s are Mrs . Janet
Byers, Mrs. J. Howard Neal ,
I to 3 p.m.; Mr . and Mrs.
William Menshouse, 3 to 5
p.m. S unday's monitors are
Mrs. T om Tope, Mrs. Bess
Grace, 1 to 3 p.m.; Mrs.
Gre tc h en Ca rty, Co nni e
Wells, 3 to 5 p.m .

·49 LB.

FISH &amp; CHIP STYLE

BACON

..

"

..

~

MRS. TUCKER'S

THE SHAMROCK
The Shamrock symboliles

1,Sunday school .! :

how the Trinity can be

:~

PARTY TONIGHT
The . American Legi on
birthday will be celebrated
with a party tonight by
Feeney'Bennett Post 128,
Middleport. Dinner will be
served at 6:30 p.m .

SLICED BACON

necessity of listening to God
waE s tressed by Mrs. Me·
Daniel.
Mrs . Nan Moore opened the
meeting with a reading about
the robin anc;l prayer. Of.
ficers ~ reports were given
and plans were made to send
an Easter •gift to Tommy
Fishe r . Thank-you cards
from several receiving
valentine trays were read.
Mrs. Clara Criswell, Mrs.
Mae Ketchka and Mrs.
Clatworthy served refresh ·
ments . Guests were Mrs.
James Clatworthy , Sr. and
Mrs. Bertha Ebers bach .

CELERY

:t
:: 6 7 attend ::
MASON, W. Va. - Sunday
school attendance at Faith
Baptist Church here Sunday
Marchl4 was 67.
Morning " 'orship services
were conducted by Rev. Bob
Petry of Clear Creek, Ky.
Seminary . Following th e
services a potluck dinner was
given in his honor . His wife
and three sons accompanied
him 1to Mason .
Rev. Freeland Norris of
Racine brought the Bible
study Wednesday evening
and will be bringing the
lesson each Wednesday
evening at 7:.30.
SWlday school is at 10 a.m.
Bible study on Sunday and
Wednesday at 7:30p.m. The
chW'ch is.presently located in
the Steel Workers Union Hall
on Railroad St. between
Horton and Pomeroy Sts. The
public is welcomed to all
services.

REIGEL
SEMI-BONELESS

With 2 Stalks

~:1

A report on hospital Patrick's Day theme. Others
equlpment owned and loaned attending were Mrs. Della
to those who need it was given Curtis, Mrs. Georgia Diehl,
by Mrs. Bertha Parker at the Mrs. Leona Karr , Mrs .
Thursday night meeting of Marge Goett and Mrs. Kate
the Laurel Cliff Better Health Parker.
Club at the Parker home.
The club acknowledged a
hospital bed donated to the
club by Mrs. Jean Wright, a RECKLESS RICH KID
member, and also reported·
FORT LAUDERDALE,
that a bed used by Mrs. Lena F1a . (UP!) - YoliJlg richling
Guth had been returned along Leo Goodwin, who has heen
with a donation for its use.
bimned from driving a car,
Mrs. Ann Mash was boat or plane, has .been
welcomed Into the club. The arrested again for drWlk
birthdays of Mrs. Parker and driving and driving without a
Mrs. Mash were observed. license.
Mrs. Donna Gilmore gave
Goodwin's license ' was
devotions with the Lord's taken away last summer
Prayer being prayed in when he was involved in a
unison. Robin Campbell read crash that killed a teen-ager.
'The Old Mill" and Mrs. Ruby
The 24-year-old heir to the
Frick read "St. Patrick's Government Employes
Day." Some health hints Insurance Co. fortune has
were given by Mrs. Iva heen released on 1664 bond. ·
PoweU and·Mrs. Parker gave He is scheduled.for a hearing
"The Night the Cocoa Pot April 8.
Blew its Top ."
The state attorney's office
Garnes were played with . said Goodwin could get a year
Mrs. Mash winning both. in · jail for . his second
Mrs. Parker served refresh· conviction of driving without
ments carrying out the St. a license.

PACKED BY ARMOUR

rGirl scouts named to board

;:::::::::::;:::::::;:;:;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:

~

Hanna n Trace.
Spe cial Insta llation ~ e r ­
vices will be Sunda y evemng,
May 2 at 7!30wlth Dr. Joseph
Ch ap m a n ; exe c utive
secretary of The Ohi6 Baptist
Convention, as speaker. Rev.
Kirby Oiler, present interi?'
pasoor , will also have part Ill
the prog ram.

Afternoon cir,cle hears review

AARON CARD

rA;;i:;i;1
;~:;ent report ~ven ,
: :, discussed::::

J Several activities includingt

''"''UY
... ._" t l tUU t...U
.
o V • t ,..,.,,If:
.._.
-.~

Rev. Lusher named pastor

committee.
Mr s. Ruby Va ughan,
pr es iden t , tha nked the
committee for the letter sent
to the Me igs Local Board of
Education abo ut the leaking
roof and noted the board had
gotten an estimate on the
work .
Mrs .
Burdette
prepared the letter .
of t he .
A mee ti ng
playg round volunteers was
set for today at 5 p.m. with
the new equlpment to be
installed at that lime.
Me mbership stands at 187,
it was reported. The unit is
saving Campbell soup labels
for a special project, and still
has coloring books for sale.
The April meeting wiU
fe ature a bi centennial
program by the first , second,
third and fourth grades .
Plans were made to serve the
Middleport Alumni banquet
in Ma y. Robert Morris, .
principal, talked about the
libr ary and the books

Delaware Aug. 8-12 at a cost
of $45 was approved by the
Middleport PTA Monday
night .
Meeting at the school, the
PTA also elec ted new officers
and made plans for hosting
the April 8 meeting of the
Me igs County Coun cil of
Parents and Teachers. At
that time the cultural arts
judging on the county level
will take place.
The new offi cers are Mrs.
Kathy Chadwell, first viee
president ; Mrs. Frances
Whit ti ngton , second vice

•

! llt i.JGU )' ~II U i lt:'I 1 1VJI UWt:.,Uit.•rW

50 Extra

TOP VALUE nAMPS
I

because St. Patrick used it to explain the lll~ery- Thr_
ee

With Pq. of

'

SHORTENING
3 LB. CAN

6 GRAPEFRUIT

15

JOAN OF ARC

I

R

Mary R. Hurley

With Family Pak

~

Miracle

MIRACLE
OLEO

so
Extra
TOP VALUE STAMPS

,.

"

KRAFT

And the people understood then having it explained to
them-And still today, the s_hamrock grow, a living symbol
of the Unity God in his sweet Trinity of love.

,.

0

Kidney Beans

persons in one God, just as three leaves are one stem-

oz.

SALAD
DRESSING
~

YEl.UM ONIONS

qt.

l4ttgd-Sfr-N.ot
l'1orfsta

100 Extra

David &amp; Joy RusseU, Owners

(304-882-2727

CORN

TOP VALUE STAMPS
With 10 lb.

New Red

POTATOES

NEW HAVEN, W.VA.
. (DAY)

Martha White

OHIO POTATOES

(NIGHT)

'

MEAL

LB.

(304)-882·2939

BAG

'"

"

.'"'
"'"

,,

.....

,..

...

5 lb. bag

'139

6 STICKS

7e

LB.

""

....

•

~

FRENCH CITY

FRENCH CITY
USDA CHOICE

USDA CHOICE

BONELESS
RUMP ROAST

ROUND
STEAK
lb.

$119

MISTER BEE
oz.
11
POTATO CHIPS ...... :............. :.......................... .
VALLEY BELL
TWIN PAK
1 GAL
2% MILK ........................................................... ,.
G_OLD BOND
.
32 oz. CAN
PEANUT BUnER .... .. ........................................ .

LEAN
BEEF
STEW

MEAT
BANQUET

FRIED
atiCKEN
2 LB. BOX

RED
RADISHES
6 oz.
BAG

II

10~
I)

RED OR GOLDEN
DELICIOUS

APPLES
3 LB. BAG

69~

PEPSI COLA
-- -·or 7-UP
~

&amp;-16 oz.
RE1URNA81 ES

·

~

••
••

...~·

..."',..
r..."

'

.

.....

CARROTS

" .'

...,.

.....
~

25 LB. BAG

..•

IF~ICt ...................................... .

.~

..••

•

.••.·

''
I

'

...
•..
•

•

Mon.-Sat.
Sun. 10 to 5

~

••

•

'I'
•'.

....
-•

....

;Prices Effective

at~

OR

GOLDEN

Open 1
,9 till
'

SOLID CABBAGE

79t;

~:::.:M.TISSUE ............... :.... :.. ··~-~.~~-~~~.'. 68~

VIM.PAK
CHUNK DOG

...

~

•

.."••

Thursday thru .sund81

•

",,

--

LB.

•

I'

..-•
~

J

••
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{

�J -

PTA agrees to
student sponsorship
Sponsorship of a student to
the Teenage Ins titute on
Alcohol and Drugs at Ohio
Wesleyan

University

in

pr eside nt; Mrs . Donna
Gheen, treasure r, and Mrs .
Shirley Roush, sec retary.
Delega tes to the Meigs
County Council of Paren ts
and Teacher elected were
Mrs . Cinda Harris , Mrs.
Susan Baer , Mrs. MariJyn

Po ulin, Mrs. Pat Kitchen and
Mrs. Ch er ole Burde tte.
Al ternates are Mrs. Jane
F r ymeye r ,

Mrs .

Be tty

available and

g ;;~ve

some

ideas for programs at the
P.T.A. meetings. He talked
also abo ut the tornado drills
which have taken place at the
school.
Mrs . Philson 's third grad
led the pledge of allegiance,
with Mrs . Vaughan giving
devotions . Mrs. Philson's
room won the attendance

Becker, Mr s. J ea nett e
Thomas, Mrs. Ruth Riffle
and Eddie Kitchen . The
presi dent will be elected at
the April meeting with the
nomin ating commit tee to
make a recommendation at
that time . Mrs. Sally Ingels a ward .
was added to. the nominatin g

Shrine elects officers
Election
of
officers
highlighted the Friday night
meeting of Mary Shrine 37,
Orcter of the White Shrine of
Jerusalem at lhe Pomeroy
Masonic Temple.
Mrs. Clara Riley, worthy
high priestess, and Thomas
Edwards, watchman of
shepherds, presided; '
Officers elected were Helen
Pickens,
worthy
nigh
priestess; Thomas Edwards,
watchman of sheph erds;
Nellie
Casto , . noble
prophetess; Oscar Casto,
associate watchman of
shepherds; Sharon Warner,
worthy chaplain; Jacque
Gabritsch,
worthy
shepherdess ; Arline Davis,
worthy guide; Erma Yoho,
worhty scribe; Barbara
Dugan, worthy treasurer.
. A. rehearsal for installation
to be held April 9 at 8 p.m.
was set for Sunday, April 4
at 2 p.m. A business meeting
was announced for 4·p.m. on

April 9 at the Masonic

Te,mple.
Invitations to attend in·
stallations were read from
Lakewood Shrine 26, Rocky
River, March 28, 8p.m. ; Rose
Shrine 28, Zanesville , March
20, 7:30 p.m., and Nazarene
Shrine 28, Chillicothe, March
27, 8 p.m.
An announcement and
invitation tO the wedding of
Miss Gabritsch ·and David
Fowler, March 21 at2 p.m. at .
the GOOd Shepherd Methodist
Church, Rt. 2, Flatrock, Point
Pleasant, was given.
Metnbers were reminded
that dues must be in by
March 31. Potluck refresh·
ments were served at the
conclusion of the meeting.

a youth rally revival in April
were planned at a recent
meeting of the youth officers
of the Middleport United
CATCH TilE CHIEF
Pentecostal ChW'ch at the
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
That was no hijacker that Shaffer.
TWA security agent Hans
In addition to the revival,
Langer caught - that was the
the youth will organize teams
head of the Federal Aviation
for Bible quizes. They wiU
Administration., John
attend a youth conference
McLucas.
t
and youth camp in Miller·
An FAA spokesman ·said
sport at the Apostolic calnp
McLucas was conducting his
grounds and will participate
own security test at Los
in the Sheaves for Christ
Angeles International
March.
Airport. McLucas tried to · Suggestions were given on
bypass
the
security ways to create interest and
checkpoint by posing as an participation in the Friday
airline employe·.
night youth service and the
Langer stopp'ld him and special youth activities.
gave McLucas a lecture, Attending the · officers'
without realizing he was meeting were Michael Zirkle,
upbraiding the head of the director ; Mark Sauters,
FAA.
youth president; Jenell Kelly,
McLucas " just loved" lhe secretary; Teresa Shaffer,
fact security precautions treasurer; and Paul Jones
were good enough to catch promotion and publicity
him, the spokesman said.
director.

~•t " "'"'

..

RIO GRANDE - The Rev. Seminary (M.Div.), has been
Charles W. Lusher will an army chaplain, pastor,
become full-time pastor of evangelist and area minister.
Calvary Baptist Church, Rio Last summer he led his fifth
Gra nde , beginning Aptill . He tour oo the Bible Lands and
m1d his wife , Gladys, will Mid·East.
move to the parsonage.
The Rev. and Mrs. Lusher
Rev . Lusher, a graduate of have. four sons . The youngest
Ohio Un iversity ( A.B.) , John is a sophomore at Rio
Southern Baptist Seminary, Grande. Mrs. Lusher is an
(Th.B.) and Northern Baptist elementary teacher at

The Heighl of Cruelly
Dear Helen:
My wife, people warned me, was spoiled ~hen I married
her. I didn't help matters - gave her everythmg she wanted
and had a blind eye for her faults. If I showed signs of mutiny ,
she poured on the affection, and I soon forgot them. ·
Six months ago, she announced she'd faUen in love with
another man. Because she is childlike, she told me all about
the affair. Even indicated he was a better lover than I am, I
know when she meets him, wlle're they go , and what they do .
But 1don't know what to do about it.
She doesn't want a divorce - just "time to get this out of
my system." Since I've alwa~ given in to her, she epxects me
to sit and wait. She's nol "deceiving" me as she's perfectly
honest about the man. But when she buys new clothes from my
paycheck to Impress HIM , isn't this going too far ? - NOT
QUITE CUCKOLD

Celebrates
birthday

Dear N.Q.C.:
"Cuckoo" is the word!
Tell your wife "Time 's up," or you 'U get HER out bf your
system ... and your house. - H.

Mr. and Mrs . Paul Card,
Rt . I, Racine, entertained
recently with a party for their
son, Aaron Bradley, honoring
him on his first birthday.
Cake, ice cream and punch
were served to Mr. and .Mrs.
Thomas Holter and Kevin ,
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Holter ,
Debbie, and Tammy, Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Holter and
Jamey, Mrs. Mike Heck, Eric
and Jeremy, Mr. and Mrs.
Greg Hayes, and Rick Werry.
Sending gifts were Mr. and
Mrs. A. F . Wilson and Rachel
and Rober t Reiber.

+++

Dear HelenL
My mother-in~aw has three younger children; ages five,
seven and eight. Jim, my husband, is their balf-brother. He
didn't get along with his mother and step-father, so he moved
oo my parents' borne six months before our wedding.
.
His mother drinks a lot and when she can't take the kids
any more, she bundles them up and leaves them with us . I feel
sorry for them, but I have a life of my own, also a toddler, and
am expecting another baby.
The only time m-in~ shows up or calls is when she wants a
favor, and then she spends half the time complaining a bout
how ungrateful Jim is.
Her children need more care than she gives them, but why
pick on me, just because I'm soft-hearted? - HELP!

Retreat planned

Dear Help :
Soft heart never won fair treatment from a mooching
mother-in-law .If her children are dangerously neglected, your
husband should contact the authorities, who may h~lp her
straighten up. But you, a young mother, can't take on his
family.
"No" yoW' way out of this. - H.

A Spiritual Ufe Retreat for
Athens District Un ited
Methodist Wom en and
friends will be held at Camp
Otterbein , near Logan ,
beginning with a covered dish
meal at 6 p.m. Friday, April
9, and closing at 3 p.m. on
Saturday, April 10.
Leader will be Mrs. Herbert Massey of Virginia, well
known for her inspirin g·
spiritual reb·eats. She has
chosen the topic, " Li fe , F'ull
of Surptises."
Registration fee of $7.50 for
Friday and Sattirday or $~.~0
for Satul'day only is to be
mailed to Mrs . Ralph
Ropinson , 690 Church Street,
Logan, Ohio 43138 by Apri l 2.

+++

Dear Helen :
I'm so glad you told women it isn't impossible to chang~ a
htlsband. So many of us just shrug and say·it's hopeless, then
either give in to HIS way or sink into self1'ity, or both.
1 married a chauvinist. Most men were in those days. He
felt that women with brains should hide them or risk being
"above their station." For a whUe I played up to his idea of the
"little homemaker," but gradually I started entering what he
termed "his world." I found I could sway his set views with
valid argwnents. We didn't fight, we just discussed ....
something his parents ·had never done together. You see, his
father was BOSS, and no one questioned it.
• Today, we're equals in every ivay. He never puts me down
as he once did, although if he thinks I'm wrong, he says so
honestly as I do to him. Best of all, if we fight, we cool for an
hour or two and then say, "Let's talk about it." Before, he'd
make ultimatums, and I'd sulk; he'd never apologize, and I'd
find underhanded ways of getting even.
One of his last breakthroughs was learning to say "I'm
sorry," but he's accomplished that, too. Who says you can't
change a husband - and in the process change yourself for the

Mrs. Mildred )llcDanlel diggings of the Holy Land and
· reviewed Jl chapter from the the new things which are
book, "Decision for Destiny," being uncovered . The
at the Thursday Afternoon
Circle meeting at the home of
- LETTERS WANTED
Mrs. James Clatworthy.
Emphasis was on prophets
Mrs . Ethel Williamson,
from the Old Testament and longtime Pomeroy resident,
the need for prophets today. is· at the Autumn Years
Jeremiah was listed as the Nursing Center in Sabina,
greatest of all prophets while and ls anxious to receive mail
Oral Roberts and Billy from her friends ~ere. For a
Graham were mentioned as Ume after leaving Pomeroy,
today 's prophets. Mrs. Mc- she lived with a daughter,
Daniel . commented on the Mrs. Clarence (Helen) Boster
of Gallipolis but for the past
year has been at the Nursing
NOT GOOD ENOUGH
Center.
SPRINGFIELD ,
Mo.
(UP!) - Tony Boyle, fonner
president of the. United Mine
Workers Union, will get out of
the U.S. Medical Center for
Girl Scout representatives
Prisoners two months early
have been named to serve on
for good behavior - but that the Meigs County Junior Fair
doesn 't mean freedom.
Board.
He now faces, at 73 years of
They are Denise Lam bert,
age, three life prison terms in Sheila Fetty and Patti Dugan,
Penn sylvania.
cadettes, and Jennifer Wise,
Boyle, union president for senior scout. Named to the
II years, was convicted in advisory board for the scout
September of ordering the representatives were Mrs .
killings of union rival Jock Phyllis Dugan, Rutland
Yablonski, his wife and cadette; Becky Triplett ,
daughter.
Salem Center Juniors; Mrs.
He is ~nishing a three-year Merle Johnson , Rutland , and
term at the medical center Pat Thoma , service unit
for unlawful use of union director. Miss Wise will serve
funds.

COLUMBIA

HAMS

12 OZ. PKG.

600 EXTRA
TOP VALUE STAMPS

CRY.Q..VAC

HALVES

as publicity director for the
junior fair board.

4 to 5 LBS.

100 Extra

MONITORS LISTED

fOP.VAW£ STAMPS

Ri verby monitors for this

With 2-12 oz. pkgs.
Columbia Sliced

weeke nd have been an noun c ed . Saturday ' s
moriitor s are Mrs . Janet
Byers, Mrs. J. Howard Neal ,
I to 3 p.m.; Mr . and Mrs.
William Menshouse, 3 to 5
p.m. S unday's monitors are
Mrs. T om Tope, Mrs. Bess
Grace, 1 to 3 p.m.; Mrs.
Gre tc h en Ca rty, Co nni e
Wells, 3 to 5 p.m .

·49 LB.

FISH &amp; CHIP STYLE

BACON

..

"

..

~

MRS. TUCKER'S

THE SHAMROCK
The Shamrock symboliles

1,Sunday school .! :

how the Trinity can be

:~

PARTY TONIGHT
The . American Legi on
birthday will be celebrated
with a party tonight by
Feeney'Bennett Post 128,
Middleport. Dinner will be
served at 6:30 p.m .

SLICED BACON

necessity of listening to God
waE s tressed by Mrs. Me·
Daniel.
Mrs . Nan Moore opened the
meeting with a reading about
the robin anc;l prayer. Of.
ficers ~ reports were given
and plans were made to send
an Easter •gift to Tommy
Fishe r . Thank-you cards
from several receiving
valentine trays were read.
Mrs. Clara Criswell, Mrs.
Mae Ketchka and Mrs.
Clatworthy served refresh ·
ments . Guests were Mrs.
James Clatworthy , Sr. and
Mrs. Bertha Ebers bach .

CELERY

:t
:: 6 7 attend ::
MASON, W. Va. - Sunday
school attendance at Faith
Baptist Church here Sunday
Marchl4 was 67.
Morning " 'orship services
were conducted by Rev. Bob
Petry of Clear Creek, Ky.
Seminary . Following th e
services a potluck dinner was
given in his honor . His wife
and three sons accompanied
him 1to Mason .
Rev. Freeland Norris of
Racine brought the Bible
study Wednesday evening
and will be bringing the
lesson each Wednesday
evening at 7:.30.
SWlday school is at 10 a.m.
Bible study on Sunday and
Wednesday at 7:30p.m. The
chW'ch is.presently located in
the Steel Workers Union Hall
on Railroad St. between
Horton and Pomeroy Sts. The
public is welcomed to all
services.

REIGEL
SEMI-BONELESS

With 2 Stalks

~:1

A report on hospital Patrick's Day theme. Others
equlpment owned and loaned attending were Mrs. Della
to those who need it was given Curtis, Mrs. Georgia Diehl,
by Mrs. Bertha Parker at the Mrs. Leona Karr , Mrs .
Thursday night meeting of Marge Goett and Mrs. Kate
the Laurel Cliff Better Health Parker.
Club at the Parker home.
The club acknowledged a
hospital bed donated to the
club by Mrs. Jean Wright, a RECKLESS RICH KID
member, and also reported·
FORT LAUDERDALE,
that a bed used by Mrs. Lena F1a . (UP!) - YoliJlg richling
Guth had been returned along Leo Goodwin, who has heen
with a donation for its use.
bimned from driving a car,
Mrs. Ann Mash was boat or plane, has .been
welcomed Into the club. The arrested again for drWlk
birthdays of Mrs. Parker and driving and driving without a
Mrs. Mash were observed. license.
Mrs. Donna Gilmore gave
Goodwin's license ' was
devotions with the Lord's taken away last summer
Prayer being prayed in when he was involved in a
unison. Robin Campbell read crash that killed a teen-ager.
'The Old Mill" and Mrs. Ruby
The 24-year-old heir to the
Frick read "St. Patrick's Government Employes
Day." Some health hints Insurance Co. fortune has
were given by Mrs. Iva heen released on 1664 bond. ·
PoweU and·Mrs. Parker gave He is scheduled.for a hearing
"The Night the Cocoa Pot April 8.
Blew its Top ."
The state attorney's office
Garnes were played with . said Goodwin could get a year
Mrs. Mash winning both. in · jail for . his second
Mrs. Parker served refresh· conviction of driving without
ments carrying out the St. a license.

PACKED BY ARMOUR

rGirl scouts named to board

;:::::::::::;:::::::;:;:;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:

~

Hanna n Trace.
Spe cial Insta llation ~ e r ­
vices will be Sunda y evemng,
May 2 at 7!30wlth Dr. Joseph
Ch ap m a n ; exe c utive
secretary of The Ohi6 Baptist
Convention, as speaker. Rev.
Kirby Oiler, present interi?'
pasoor , will also have part Ill
the prog ram.

Afternoon cir,cle hears review

AARON CARD

rA;;i:;i;1
;~:;ent report ~ven ,
: :, discussed::::

J Several activities includingt

''"''UY
... ._" t l tUU t...U
.
o V • t ,..,.,,If:
.._.
-.~

Rev. Lusher named pastor

committee.
Mr s. Ruby Va ughan,
pr es iden t , tha nked the
committee for the letter sent
to the Me igs Local Board of
Education abo ut the leaking
roof and noted the board had
gotten an estimate on the
work .
Mrs .
Burdette
prepared the letter .
of t he .
A mee ti ng
playg round volunteers was
set for today at 5 p.m. with
the new equlpment to be
installed at that lime.
Me mbership stands at 187,
it was reported. The unit is
saving Campbell soup labels
for a special project, and still
has coloring books for sale.
The April meeting wiU
fe ature a bi centennial
program by the first , second,
third and fourth grades .
Plans were made to serve the
Middleport Alumni banquet
in Ma y. Robert Morris, .
principal, talked about the
libr ary and the books

Delaware Aug. 8-12 at a cost
of $45 was approved by the
Middleport PTA Monday
night .
Meeting at the school, the
PTA also elec ted new officers
and made plans for hosting
the April 8 meeting of the
Me igs County Coun cil of
Parents and Teachers. At
that time the cultural arts
judging on the county level
will take place.
The new offi cers are Mrs.
Kathy Chadwell, first viee
president ; Mrs. Frances
Whit ti ngton , second vice

•

! llt i.JGU )' ~II U i lt:'I 1 1VJI UWt:.,Uit.•rW

50 Extra

TOP VALUE nAMPS
I

because St. Patrick used it to explain the lll~ery- Thr_
ee

With Pq. of

'

SHORTENING
3 LB. CAN

6 GRAPEFRUIT

15

JOAN OF ARC

I

R

Mary R. Hurley

With Family Pak

~

Miracle

MIRACLE
OLEO

so
Extra
TOP VALUE STAMPS

,.

"

KRAFT

And the people understood then having it explained to
them-And still today, the s_hamrock grow, a living symbol
of the Unity God in his sweet Trinity of love.

,.

0

Kidney Beans

persons in one God, just as three leaves are one stem-

oz.

SALAD
DRESSING
~

YEl.UM ONIONS

qt.

l4ttgd-Sfr-N.ot
l'1orfsta

100 Extra

David &amp; Joy RusseU, Owners

(304-882-2727

CORN

TOP VALUE STAMPS
With 10 lb.

New Red

POTATOES

NEW HAVEN, W.VA.
. (DAY)

Martha White

OHIO POTATOES

(NIGHT)

'

MEAL

LB.

(304)-882·2939

BAG

'"

"

.'"'
"'"

,,

.....

,..

...

5 lb. bag

'139

6 STICKS

7e

LB.

""

....

•

~

FRENCH CITY

FRENCH CITY
USDA CHOICE

USDA CHOICE

BONELESS
RUMP ROAST

ROUND
STEAK
lb.

$119

MISTER BEE
oz.
11
POTATO CHIPS ...... :............. :.......................... .
VALLEY BELL
TWIN PAK
1 GAL
2% MILK ........................................................... ,.
G_OLD BOND
.
32 oz. CAN
PEANUT BUnER .... .. ........................................ .

LEAN
BEEF
STEW

MEAT
BANQUET

FRIED
atiCKEN
2 LB. BOX

RED
RADISHES
6 oz.
BAG

II

10~
I)

RED OR GOLDEN
DELICIOUS

APPLES
3 LB. BAG

69~

PEPSI COLA
-- -·or 7-UP
~

&amp;-16 oz.
RE1URNA81 ES

·

~

••
••

...~·

..."',..
r..."

'

.

.....

CARROTS

" .'

...,.

.....
~

25 LB. BAG

..•

IF~ICt ...................................... .

.~

..••

•

.••.·

''
I

'

...
•..
•

•

Mon.-Sat.
Sun. 10 to 5

~

••

•

'I'
•'.

....
-•

....

;Prices Effective

at~

OR

GOLDEN

Open 1
,9 till
'

SOLID CABBAGE

79t;

~:::.:M.TISSUE ............... :.... :.. ··~-~.~~-~~~.'. 68~

VIM.PAK
CHUNK DOG

...

~

•

.."••

Thursday thru .sund81

•

",,

--

LB.

•

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..-•
~

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••
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{

�t - 'Ibe J&gt;a!1Y Sent!ml, 14iddl81*'!:

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March 17, 1916

~K"'~~~S~~,i~r,.,.,.,., j March

I Calendar ~

ceremony unites couple

Miss Seren Lewis, daughter
IS
~ of Mr. and Mrs. William E.
Sf
:~ Lewis, M.iddleport, became
~
:~ the bride of· Tr oy W.
WEDNESDAY
Livingston, son of Ralph
MIDDLEPORT LIT - Livingsl&lt;&gt;n, Sanibel Island ,
ERARY
Club,
Wed- Fla ., and the late Mrs. Jean
nesday, 2 p.m. at the home of Livingston, on Friday, March
Mrs. Bernard Fultz. "The 12.
Massacre of Fall Creek" will
The 6:30 p.m. double ring
he reviewed by Mrs. Fultz. ceremony was performed by
Roll call will be a famous the Rev. Dwight L. Zavitz at
Indian .
the Middleport First United
OHIO VALLEY Com- Presbyterian Church. The
mandery 23, special con- bride wore a gown of ivory
clave , 1:30 Wednesday, floral print with cape style
Pomeroy Masonic Temple. sleeves edged in lace. The
Order of the Temple to he gown was fashioned with an
conferred . Full uniform.
empire waist and square
-ROSE GARDEN Club, neckline. She carried a
Wednesday, 8 p.m. at the bouquet of multi-colored
home of Mrs. Jimmy Cald- rosebuds and baby's breath.
well. Members to take vases
to be donated to the hospital,

Foll~wing

the ceremony,
the bnde's parents hosted a
dinner at the Meigs Inn.
Guests included Scott
Livingston , Miami, Fla . ;
Mrs . Ron Brock and Becky,
Mrs . Don Morris and Lori,
Richmond, Ind . ; J ohn
Pugsley, Pittsburgh, Pa .;
Nancy Ritter and Jim
Fleming Cincinnati; Carole
Painter , Co lumbus ; Mrs .
Theodore Michael, Wellsl&lt;&gt;n ;
Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Lewis,
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Hackett,
Mr . and Mrs . Emerson
Heighton, Middleport.
The bride graduated from
Middleport High .School,
Warren Wilson College and
Ohio University. She will
receive a masters degree in

Dance preparations are
underway ·by auxiliary

Showbeat

The escapades
of a Chaplin

social work . from Berry
College, Miaml, Fla.lnMay.
The groom is a graduate of
Purdue University and is
employed as a production
manager of Allied Leisure,
Inc., in Hialeah, Fla.

By Dick Kleiner
HOLLYWOOD - (NEAl Geraldine Chaplin has
worked all over the world.
She's done films in Spain ,
Scandinavia ,
Isr ael ,
England, Egypt, Canada and,
of course, NashvUie.
"And I've · decided, " she
says, " that I love Southern
Calflornia best of all.
Imagine. It's the middle of
winter and I'm swimming.
Incredible. They talk ahout
smog. I don 't see any smog,

Workshop
set Sunday

POINT PLEASANT Preparations are progressing
for the 16th annual Olarlty
Ball sponsored by tne
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Auxiliary.
On ApriiJO, from 9 p.m. to 1
a.m. at the National Guard
Armory near Point Pleasant,
those attending the ball will
enjoy music by Johnny Lynch
and the Lynch Mob.
Donations for the semiformal cbarity ball are $10
per couple. Tickets will be
available at Fruth's Pharmacy, Rardin's Shoe Center,
Citizens National Bank and
all auxiliary members. If
anyone wishes to reserve a
table they should contact

Shine refrigerator
with kitchen wax

Tt&lt;E

coullly , Ohio

parcel No . 2:

I

.

..

Exciting Night Spot

$}19

lb.

Another .Good .Buy

from

I' I 'I

BAKER'S

HOOVER
CONVERTIBLE ·

$

...

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

fiQOWU'I TIIU

··~-··

Cnoll

I.

-

•

I

-

•

.

Phone 992-3629

Pomeroy, Ohio

CHEPS PIZZA
CHEESE OR
PEPPERONI

W~OLE LOIN
.
t121
ASSORTED CHOPS •.•••••••••••••• !¥; ••••
HOLLYWOO~.
· ,
129
SPARE RIBS ••••••••••••••••••••••• !Pe.... .
O"'R HOM.E MADE

,

. . $ 129

S~&amp;llt~Cil •••••••••••••••••• ~ ••••••• ~ •••
.

D&amp;D MEAT
OHio

POMEIOY

)I

Il

PH. 992·3507

I\

U.S.D.A. FOOD
STAMPS GlADLY
ACCEPTtD

13~

2~b. box
'

'1.29

HOME MADE

,.

·HAM SAlAD ........... ~:.
SUPERIORS · ' .

lb

99~

$ 29

JUMBO FRANKS.....:... 1

TAVERN SMOKED 16·1b., Averege

BONELESS:'~~. ·•· ~.1.79

HAMS.

SLICED ...

/I

~1.19

oz.

99~
A.ORIDA
WHITE
GRAPEFRUIT

::·. 79~

17 2
· • . Jl 1&lt;17· " · 2 1 '

28 71
• c

AstraGraph
Blfnlee B- Oaot
FOI T""'-t.,, M - 11, 1171
I

ARifl (IiiilCh Z1 ·Aprlt 111 An
'

unlr1tentional breach of faith
could t\urt someone you love.
·1 However. you will have ·a second chlllnce to recury matters
• and to Perform nobly.

1

TAIIIIUI (APfll 20·M•r 201
Eorly·ln the dSY your decisions
won't be toO realistic. Your se'

cond thoughts will be the best

1.and can be relied upon.

GEMINI (Mof 21-Juno 201

Go&amp;~ls YOu once thought unattainable ere not P!Jt of reach todaY · Uae v~:wr natural
resourcetotness.

CAifCIII (.IUfMI 21 -.lilly 221 If
you're invited out today , by all
means Qo. vou could meet
•o,.,eone with whom you'll
lorm an instantaneous
rel•tlonship,

.......

bllf U OpenVr'l INmd
IIIIIIIJ·willlcllrll It iial

.............. ,

.... , . . . . 'nlll
,.., . . . . . . 1.- ml third
llpOII

~

~

reelam1tlaa,

KEYS 'nJRNED OVER-Ollby Mllrtm, w1to fer the Jut
baa operated Olsle's
Recreation Center, 20 N. Second Ave., Middleport, turned over the keys to his place Tuesday
to Lee Ann &amp;nllh. Mrs. Smith and ber btBbmld, Jack, a collltruction superintendent at the ·
Southern Ohio Coal Mine, have leased tbe establlsbment. Remodeling iB Wlderway with the
billiard and other games area to be separated from ihe restaurant part of the business.
Paneling is being installed. The establisbment will open at 6 a.m. and close at 10 p.m.
Monday through Saturday and will be open trom noon to 10 pm. on Sundays. The
establishment will be renamed the "Golden Nugget" and will feature short orders in the
restaurant. Mr. and Mrs. Smith reside at 737 Beech St .ln Middleport.

~l=tlnl, GD

Democratic candidates are conventiDn.
...
By RicK VAN SANT
acceptable to u.s," Daniels
However, deto:nninlng the
CINCINNATI (UPI)
said Tuesday. "Black people executive rouncil's nominee
Leaders of a group trying to consistently have had to was not expected to be as
forge a "third political party ch
be~ Tweedly Dee simple as just picldng one of
for black people" say that
oose '"""n
•
the four men under
comedian-lecturer Dick and Tweedly-Dum, the lesser consideration. The candidate
two evils.
Gregory,
two
black of ''Oursturt(iasuesrnlaedby
also had to choose to align
congressmen and a state black!) is always gett!Dg with the alll!flllbly ·
senator are being considered comprGmiaed out," he com·
"We're still negotiating
as the organization's 19'16 plalned. "We want to offer a with the four," Daniels, 33, a
!X'esidential candidate.
political party for· black peo- · HIJ:am College professor
Besides Gregory, the pte."
from Youngstown, Ohio,
National Black Political
The candidate backed by admilted as he arrived here
Assembly Is considering the lll&amp;elllbly's 18-member to get the convention rolllag.
Reps. John Conyers, D-Mlch., eaeclitlve &amp;IWICII is expected
The .. executive council
and Ron Dellums, OCal!f., to be the favorite lllllQIIg the ·originally
wanted
to
and MassachllSeits state Sen. 3,000 to 4,000 auembly nominate Georgia legislator
BiU Owens.
members from around the Julian Bond, but Bond turned
Assembly President Roo country expected here for the down the offer·
Daniels
says
the Thursday through Saturday
Daniels, in a carefully
organization's execl!tlve
worded statement about the
council will announce Its
Bond matter, complained
choice Thursday and tben put
that Bond was intereated in
the name into nomination
"matters other than the
Saturday night, when
expressed political direction
delegates to the a!iSOIIIbly 's
of the National Black
national convention select a
Political Assembly."
presidential candidate.
The 11811e01bly hopes to
"None of the Republlcan,or
;aJse $3 mUUon and ~!~Kilts
:andidate on the C8lliPIIiln
trail against the ~ubllcan
and Democrat rumlnees. .
The asaembl)l conventioo 11
expected to attract ~ns
COLUMBUS (UPI) from abuut 25 st,ates, wtth the
Democratic sen.torlal heaviest concentration' of .
candidate Howard M. delegates e~pected from
Metzenbawn today ulred the midwestern ·and eastern
United Press Internallooal
Ohio Senate to protect states.
A storm swirled over the ~esldential utlllty users from
Delegates also will WQ'k oo
\'ortheast today, dumping "rigged costs Increases."
a
"19'16 Black Political Plat·
.
_ . ,
Metzenbaum, In remark! form," but Daniels said ''ire
:'Ieavy snows bn St . PatrJ&lt;:k s
Day celebrations In a wide prepared for delivery to the probably won't be able to
'll'ea and sending heavy rains Ohio Senate Energy and finalize the plaUonn at the
Environment 'Committee, convention.''
ID wash away the green
'enter line along New York said the General Aumbly iB
''the last reso~rce of Ohioans
::tty's parade route.
Winds left at least one agl!inst unfair ullllty costs."
He aUed the oommittee
&gt;erson· dead In Virginia.
Rains dampened St. and the Senat&gt;· to BDIII'OYe a
Pomeroy Village fUDda
Patrick's Day opirits in New Hou.se.passeo btU that would the month . of February
lfork City, washing away the probitilt public uWilles from
Sl77,075.76 according
!Oiuble green line along the passing through to all totaled
to
a
report
submitted to
:&gt;arade route Tuesday on the CUBtomers increased c:osta of Pome,roy Council Mood!iy ·
purdlases of gu, electric,
!ve of the holiday.
night by Jane WaiiDn, clerk.
"God must be P\)llsh," a and water ~lflcally bought
Receipts, expendltlires· and
jistraught New York ·Irish· for lnduetrial CWilomers.
balance
in the active fwlda
Melzenbaum . said , the
man lamented.
respectively
·were &amp;enenl, ·
Snowfalla of eight to 14 legislatioo wu lnlroduced
S4,934,
$8,062.53,
$5,47t14;
inches stacked up In northern after PUCO approved a $32 revenue. sharing, no receipts,
New England . and winds mUilon bike for restdmtial
$3,000, U0,512.84; . sewer,
produced near-blizzard Columbia Gu of Ohio u.sers. ts,J&amp;'UO,
$1,321.ot, Jl3,7211.111;
' onditlons in New England The 'u\ility Is charging fire department, no receipts,
md Interior eastern New customers about $1 . per
month to help pay for gu '-19.80, fi,17US; cemetery,
lfork.
· by
iadustrlal t661.70, $170.811, (12.1111,50);
Seven Inches of snow used
street, J7 ,038.05, u,eta.~.
1ocked Boston Tuesday, oonswners.
$5,116.60;
's tale bigbway,
"It · Is not fair that
'lOSing Logan Airport for a
$185.15,
no
ezpendltarea,
lime and snarling ll'afflc. reeldenlial customers were t$,611.50; water
forced
to
pickup
the
tab
for
Jfficlals at Logan Airport
u 861.37 ' ,, 31.
1aid fiight delays could buslnesa," Mellenbaum llid
:!DilUnue today.

till llidl ~d.

synthetics
is reported

·
k
d
costs as e

hit Northeast
celebrations

'

lULO~ :

NEW YORK UP!. ~ The
highest temperature Rporled
Tuesday t~ the NaUonal
Weather Sei'Yice, . exclridhll
AIBika and Hawaii, wu 87
degree11 at Miami, Fla.
Today'1 low WIS ~ degrees
below zero atiUbbtnC, Minn.
,, 'v-

.-

. .

.

Funds total 8177,076
ior

BOMBS EXPLODE
BUENOS AIRES,
Argenfina UPI - A dqzen
1
terrorist bomb• exploded
I·I
durln{c the ntchl In four ·
widely separated cities In
.j cornrnun!catton is your forte
Argentina 'scontlnuiug war of
todiY· You oan lOin those you
nerves, police reported
,I , ' wanl lo '"'Pro... over In a face- today.
There wu eatelllllve
'· to-tac• uet-logether.
. · property damage but no
LIIJIA (lopt. ZI·Ocl. 211 injurle8 were reported. The
Good fortune cen come to you
!od•Y Iron, periiOnl you'd leaat bOmblnga appeared aimed at
expj!CI to bo bHrora of glad increulng pressure on
President laabel Peron's
. 1ldlnll•·
amid open
1overnment
ICOIIPIO (OOL I,._, D)
speculation
the
mllilary was
You're the 1ype who rarely goea
\ llllfiOIICed, but today you have· polled for 1 possible coup.
a pertk:ularly d\'namlc quality
..., oeto you ·llitrt, aapeclallv
JOQIIIIY·
PltCEI ·(Poll, a.11 ch •1
iAG'""IIIUI (Now. U.Doo. Your Imagination and wfl aro
try to restrain an lm·
more than a match for one who
11
toay. Turn on
~ 10 do something extra .
ijeoial lOr .one you 1.,... Tf!t
ntef11181U Will bt enormoutly

•112,
........ :

.1/11~1311.110;

illllllllt,

P.71, parJrjng

· fl,J96, - .tii,OOO,

UWU,, DO~

M,OI7.211;
receJilla, DO
mrea.

are

ex-

LIO-(Ju~ 23-AUfi.UI Thlals a
good day 10 fulfill social
obllgallona. An lmpromplu ,lnYltallon to your place would
those you "owe."
YIIIGO (Au• 21-a,pt. 221

p-•

I

I

I

.,,oon,
.........
GAJ'IIQOM

La· 79~ BEEF
:WiENERS
.......
.'~.......... t.tJ.:~ 1
MADE.
· . .
'
SAlAD.................. ',';: ........-..',;!'.!"·!~"~:~!
R. C.
'

•.;.

'

NEW TEXAS
CABBAGE

2~.

·29'

,dlea, u .......
'ill ~ .vw iCiullne loclay. tt
w~~~uwltlor• ..- entidn you.

Cf\loot4l ~ ~- loacl of to

,..,. VOIIr ohlftlle ql

~·

_,AIIIUt 1• • ,....

11)
yau 111o

.fortullt "''ll' 1111lle on
M
alert lor unusual
I !JIIY.
~1rcu"'atan9••· ·you could
' po1albly fulfill a malarial

vau·,.

l. dill,.·
l -

Try to Involve yourlllltln lhfngl
ola creet~W nlttiN IIlii coming
. IINr. Tl* m1y not - r l t y
b4 a~. but the expo~ure
will broaden your horlzono.
t NEWSP.APEII

KN'I'ERPRISt: A"SSN, J

\

\

~

laeludlnl

Blacks· needing candidates

Heavy snows

Coort , Probate D ivision.
Pom eroy 1 Oh io

IJI

.

lllllllltllll1w.it bt 1rhrnd

...·~"''
.

t

Protection
• ged
from ng

Manning
0 · Web$1er ·
JudQt end EK ·Offlc lo
Clerk ol lhe Melos
CountY Common Pleas

TE·EN QUEEN
CHEESE SPREAD

,•

the f_
O IIowing desc ribed real
,,.,te Sltoated in the vIllage of
pomeroy , county of Meigs and
atatl Of Oh 10 : Be lng L.ot No . 35
In c . Vtl , Dabney 's Addition to
pornuoy , Ohio. The plat of
pom•roy , · Ohio, shows t he
·~ve lot to be abou t 40 feet
"o"' on S.lt Street and to be
100 feet deeP ·
.
Rtfere.nce Deea : Vol. 156.
page l72 Deed Records ,
Meigs County, Ohio
rne Prayer further provides
Jnat the rightS, Interests and
11e11s Ol all ·p arti es may be
tuiiV Getermlned. adlu ste tl
an.d Protected ; that your
petl.tloneor De authori zed and
ordered to sell said real estate
ol said Otcedent according to
the stetutes In such cases
mad• end provided , and for
such Other relief as to which
he may be entitled .
vou ere reQuired to an swer
tne cornplalnt wi t hin 28 days
lifter ft-.e last PUbli cation of

thil nouce, which will · be
puDIIIhea on~e each week tor
aiJC. succ:.esslve weeks , end the
tast PUbli cation will be made
em _.APril 2Btn. 1976. 1
· 1n Case of your failure fo
answer or otherwise respond
as per·rtlltted by the Oh io
Rule_s Of Civil Procedure
wJtn ln
the tfme. stated,
judgment bY default will be
re11dft'td agelnst you for the
relief demanded In the
comPlaint ,

THE MEIGS INN

Hb.59e

1

_·

Reference Deed : Vol. 138,
pagt 341 Deed· Records . ·Me lOs

The Tri.County's Mo&amp;r

MARGARINE

$139

·

trom ldiacent or contlnguous

.
.

'..atllacz-.,._
....
,..,. ..... ..,....,....

1111 otiMr mm'met
wwld paowldl ... n'l • ~

melnte . . . .

m years

parcet No . 1:
ihf follow in g described rea l
estete t.ltuated In the village af
pomeroy , county or Mel'gs and
state Of Ohio : Being lot
numbeted 17111 dellnuted on
the plat of said village and
be i'10 at the junction of Ma in
and Locust Streets In said
viiiJ!Oe . The coal and all other
mineral, are hereby reserved
ancl are not sold . Th&amp; r ight Is
altO reserved . to m ine end
remove the Ierne , .together
wit" the right lnd privilege to
tranSPOrt through seftms. and
et~trle&amp; \lnder sa i d prem lses,
coal ana all ~the,. m in erals _

ptus tax

PAR KAY

lb.

'

The Dblect of the complaint
Is to . sell the following
aescrlb~d real estate In order
to Ply thl debts of the

territory ,

_..

'he
o. . .

m

~-

Hoose. P.orneroy , Oh lo , 45769,
ces• No . 21,625 .

aecedent :

nbeammMtee ... diW
If
, ... Jl7l In,
AldaPidraf
1\'a ntr
IDIItc•dl ldllefl&amp;ln

snbcommJUee,

League of W&lt;men Voters, the

Pleas Court of Meigs Coun tv ,

·

'tkr.

prondlu
m u1
for
I nGJ llall I If tillra.
- - llld 1111
° rt
-..Jd . . .. h J 'I • .,. ... , ...., tw te line
_..1 lmhf....,flftw

~tlvaoltheOblo

Otc;eued .

OhiO. Probate Dlvlslan , Court

'

KRAFT SPAGHEm &amp; MEAT DINNER ..........1.~':~.?.z:.... 69~
TIDE (UJ* OfF) ............... ....................... ~?. ?.~·....'1.29
NESCAFE INSTANT OOFFEE ........................ !?. ?.~·.. '2.39
HUNTS 10MA10 JUICE .............................~~-?~: ..... 59•

' .'

HtSI ,

PI810tlft , hll brDUiht thl&amp; .
action 'leming each of you 11
one of the aettnCiants by filing
hiJ CDI'r\plalnt on February
26th • 1t76, In the Common

;•h

dlpeJ¥Is 011 tbe aliUty ,
mlniDI industry to lib!nr I
need for II.
Opponeotl of the bW
=ailed it Tuelday It 1
mee11ng of a Ho11111 F.nerv
and
Environment
the menro.n could flatdrll
operators witt loopboles for
poor reci•"'IUM.

n'linlltretor of the Estate ot

SPECIAL

Oranae. Lemon, Umt ...................... ~.~~:. 2/79•

. Roast

olol"'aa llall
recl-atilJn rulel 11J11* mliJ

peaalllea for

eXECUToRS AND ASSIGNS
OF
lliACH
OF
THE
FOLLOWING• IF Tt&lt;EY BE
oeCEASEO :F RANKCOOK ;
WlLLIISi COOK : FLORENCE
WiLSOf'l ·
JOieph 1/1 . (ook IS Ad -

THE INN PLACE

SS
atiPS..................~.~.~~: ..... 69•
PlAIN atQJYHIZ .......................~.~~: ..... 79•

Pork
Chops

ralrlctioolllld loflalltlll

AD~ ~lSTRI'TORS .

GREEN GIANT P.EAS ..........................1.~.~ ~:. ~~~ ... 2/69•

JEU.O,

lesllliUoo euiDf boDcliDI

IIIIKNOWN HEIRS ,
LEGA;fEE$,

clare

·'" ,.,. .

UPI
OOUJMBUS Ctn'l) - ~­
Iller 11111-.t of llrlpW.

Dfi~I1 ~,1SiES •

heritage hoiiSe

'

•u a

HEIRS,
OE~ 11 !1,tl5 • LEGATEES,
AD~ ~ lSTRATORS.
EliEClJtoAS AND ASSIGNS
Of
lliACH
OF
THE
FOLLOwiNG .
ALL
OF
Wt40M ARE DECEASED ;
ct&lt;ARISis COOK ; W ILLIAM
H. NCOOK ; FRANK COOK:
OA
l.. COOK : LEE OR
cOOK ; ETt&lt;EL SAUVAGE;
HE NR\' COOK ;
SUSAN
CD 0 K;
CLARA
REES ;
oANliSiL, e. REES

FRINGE
MOCCASINS

'2.95

. , LEI!; LIDWU)

U11""'"IINKNOWN
""'

Tt&lt;E

Barbara Caudlll at 675-3792 or
Mrs. Quentin Wickline at 67S2102. An additional charge
will be made for this service.
For one to three couples it
will be $3, four I&lt;&gt; six couples,
$4, and seven to 12 col!Pies,
$5. Set ups and other 1tems
wiD be catered by Jobnny
WaKisley at an additional
charge. ·

Visit Our Salad Bar
Pork and Sauerkraut
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Vegetable
Hot Roils
Coffee, Tea or Milk

Strip niine hill awaits push

cOOkL . IRtJ idence Unknown;
WIL IIIli cOOl&lt; , Ros ldenco
U11knoown ;
FLORENCE
W'.,I;,SON ,
Res i den c;e

· Geraldine never thought
ahout acting untl) later. At
first, she got a job with a
circus, tending the elephants,
in France .
1
' 0 ne of my jobs,'' she says,
"was to make the elephan Is
go to the bathroom before
they went on. Do you know
how to make an elephant go
to the bathroom• You have to
make him stand up on his
WOMEN'S
hind legs and then, when he
comes down, he goes to the
bathroom. It always happens."
When she left the circus,
she was out of work and
Genuine Suede
broke . After deciding acting
Sole &amp; Heel
Crepe
was the easiest thing she
could do, Geraldine told a
MEETING CANCELLED
friend who told another
The
March meeting of the
friend, an agent, of her
Bend
0'
the River Garden
Middleport, Ohio
· decision . Within a week, she
Club
has
been
cancelled.
had 12 offers.
"! realized, Of course, that
it was on .the strength of my
name and who lily father
was," she says, "but at that
point I had to make some
money. I did one film I dldn 't
like and then 'Dr. Zhlvago.'
Then I fOWld I loved acting."
She particularly likes her
THURSDAY NIGHT
association with Robert
Altman. She met him, first, at
a London party. He brough\
her to Los Angeles for a
picture that never happened,
then put her in "NashvUie,"
which was good for everyone
Involved.
And now she's just wrapped
up ber part in "Welcome To
L.A.''
which
Altman
produced but didn't dlrect Alan Rudolph directed it. .
"!love working for Bob,"
she says, "and I hope It goes

The French Art Colony's
monthly parent -c hild
workshop wil be held Sunday,
Marcq21, from 2 until 4. p.m.
at Riverby.
A unique and exciting do you ?"
project will be taught to the
Despite her love affair with
children and adults who Southern California , sbe lives
attend. Six students of Mrs. In Madrid. That's because
Joan Loeffler who are seniors "the man I live with" TIIURSDAY
· at Rio Gra'nde College, Carlos Saura - lives there.
MAGNOUA CLUB, Mrs.
. majoring in education, will Actually, Geraldine was horn
Georgia Watson 's home, 7:30
conduct the class called a in Southern California but
p.m. _Thursday.
Mind Bending Workshop, a moved. to England with her
combination of sound and father, Charlie Chaplin, when
DEMOCRAT mee ti ng
sight art.
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at
sbe was eight.
, The workshop w!U have
Episcopal Parish house.
"I don't remember much
,
appeal for small children, about my childhood here,"
Judge Hottle, candidate for
1
, teen ... gers and adults. They
appellate cour t, guest
says. "Just a few vague
_B.:.y_P_o_ll.:.y_C_r_am~er=---..,...,=-:::-::-:--.,.,----.,--- will make slides out of she
speaker.
memories of the bosue on
Polly's Problem
ROCK SPRINGS Better
pLastic hood on my hair dryer common things around the Summit Drive where we lived
DEAR POLLY - My cracked along the bottom ·house by using color - the tennis courts and the
Health Club, I : 15 p.m.
Thursday, home of Phyllis coppertone refrigerator is edge, causing it to feel cellophane, decorating It with place where r used to keep
twelve years old . I would like scratchy and uncomfortable all kinds of tiny Items, using my rabbits. I went there
Skinner. Louise Radford to
to know how to clean it since to use. I repaired it by cutting glue and paint. While these recently - trespassed, achave the program, Susan
it
no longer shines. Some red a strip of f)annel two inches slides are being created, tually - to see it. It was as I
Pullins, the contest.
CLASS 12, Heath United nail polish was spilled on the wide and along enough to go there is music in the remembered."
Methodist Church, 1:30 p.m. top also, and I do not know around the band edge of the background. After the slides
Her parents sent her, for
how to remove it. Any help hood. This was placed over are completed, they are several years, I&lt;&gt; a convent
at the church.
PUBLIC CARD party, 7:3(). will be appreciated. the cracked edge, like bias shown by a projector· on a school in Switzerland. She
NANCY.
10 :30 p.m. Thursday at
tape , and sewed. The flannel screen, again to the ac- hated it - she never parDEAR NANCY- I suppose feels so cozy against my neck companiment of music.
Sacred
Heart
Church
tlcularly liked school, and she
Shelly Hook will be the disliked that one especially .
Auditorium sponsored by you have , washed your and face.- MRS. E.P.
refrigerator with a non·
Catholic Women's Club.
DEAR POLLY - After one coordinator of the afternoon
"I wanted to be a dancer,"
abrasive
household
cleanser,
JITNEY SUPPER Thurof my friends had her P\U'Se workshop, ass.isted by Larry she says. "I studied ballet a
sday at Rutland Elementary but I wonder If you have ever sl&lt;&gt;len, including the cash Saunders, Janice Deem, Pam long time. I did some dailcing
gym beginning at 4 p.m. used a good kitchen wax on it. from her Social Security Stringer, Terry Cordle and but I couldn't get a job - I
Sponsored
by
Ladles That should make It sblne. It check, I thought of the Mark Sanders.
guess I really wasn't very
Anyone who is interested is good ."
Auxiliary of - Fire Depart- seems nail polish remover or following . I sewed a breast
a paint thinner, used quickly pocket )Vith a zipper safely invited. Small children must
·ment.
on forever." ·
·
SHADE RIVER LODGE and carefuUy, should remove tucked away in it. ln RJY be accompanied by adults.
She
says
her
father
Is
proud
453 F&amp;AM, Chester Thurs, the red polish. If done quickly
purse I only have make-up The workshop is open to both
of her accomplisbments, but
It
should
not
penetrate
the
day 1:30 p.m. Work In E. A.
things, gloves, handkerchief members 8!ld non-members
it isn't exactly what he'd
of the French Art Colony, at
·degree . All Masons invited. baked enamel finish on a
and so on. - MRS. A.C.H.
hoped for.
MORE MEETINGS
DEAR POLLY - For no charge.
MEIGS ·COUNTY Slow refrigerator. It will doubtless
"Poor daddy," she says
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Pitch Softball League to be be dull where the polish bridal or baby shower gifts I
"He
had 10 children and he
Members of Ohio's Trade
make a macrame plant
organized among county was .removed, but apply
had
it
all planned in his mind
mission to Europe will hold
holder, using decorative
churches at 7 p.m. Thursday kitchen wax there also. one
would be a doctor,
meetings the rest of the week
beads (available in many The Almanac
at the Syracuse Church of the POLLY.
an
other
a
lawyer, another an
t6 try to interest more foreign
DEAR POLLY - My Pet stores). Then llnclude with it By
Nazarene parsonage . Any
·United
Press
architect.
and so on . As it
Peeve is with the mistakes so
manufac.t urers to locate
interested church is asked to often made in recipes printed a briaal veil plant for brides . United Press International
not one of' us went
turned
out,
!acUities in Ohio before they
send a representative . in newspapers . Fractions or a baby's tear plant for a
Today is Wednesday, return home Sunday.
to university. There are still
Anyone with questions may seem to be a problem in the new baby, These gifts are March 17, the 77th day of 1976
The trade mission has split two left in school, but I doubt
call Eber Pickens, the coach, p.mounts given, and readers unusual, Inexpensive and with 289 to follow. This Is St . into sales teams lot trips to they will go, either.
992-1181.
."We're aU actors or writers
Sweden , England, France
have a big investment in time personal and are an. ever Patrick's Day .
WILLING WORKERS and ingredients that are bearin g gift of love . The moon is between its full and Switzerland to give Ohio - and one sister, Vickie , is a "
Class, Enterprise United wasted if the recipe is in- M.E.R.
phase and last· quarter.
producers the oppo"'unity I&lt;&gt; · tight·rope walker with a
Methodist Church, Thursday, correct. - JEANNE.
The morning stars are meet with distributors and c!rcus, and quite good, too."
DEAR POLLY - This
7:30 p.m. ·at the LaSalle
sales outlet representatives.
DEAR POLLY - The . Pointer will save a little time Mercury and Venus.
Hotel.
and is a good pastime for. the
The evening sta rs are
Ohio Economic and Com·
FRIDAY
older children when they Mars, Sattirn and Jupiter.
munity Development .
SPECIAL SERVICES at
have time on their hands. If
Those born on this date are Director James Duerk
Long
Botton
United
you have letters to write and Wider the sign of Pisces.
reported from Germany that
bills I&lt;&gt; be paid, a little job· is
American singer Nat • _,g more than 45 meetlngli with
Methodist Church beginning
Friday through the 21st, 7:30
· finished for you before , yo~ Cole was born March I 1°19. boslness leaders.were held in
nightly. Evangelist, James · night. Sponsored by Orange
start: When I buy envelopes I
On this day in histr,, . :
Germany alone.
·
Leach . Special singing. Township Fire Department.
In 1889, a submarine devesit down and write the name
The mission was headed by
Everyone welcome.
and return address on each loped by John Holland re- Gov. James A. Rhodes, who
SIGN UP DAY for
envelope
or put on name and malned submerged off Staten returned here late Sunday.
MIDDLEPORT MASONIC Pomeroy Boys League
address
stickers
when I have Island, N.Y., for one hour and
Saturday
at
Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, Friday, 7 baseball
them
.
.
When
I
get
down to 45 minutes,
·
p.m. for work in Master Pomeroy City Hall from 10
really
doing
the
job
all
I
have
.
In
1912,
a
group
of
young
Masons Degree; all Master a.m. until 2 p.m. Five dollar
to do is address them . women to be known as "The
registration fee to be subMasons invited.
Usually
I put on the postage Campfire Girls" was formed rights to any oil and gas
mitted.
SATURDAY
stamps
at
the same time I do by Mrs. Luther Gulick of resources on the Atlantic
GOSPEL
SONGFEST,
ANNUAL INSPECTION,
the
return
addresses. - Lake Sebago, Maine.
.
Saturday, 7:30 p.m. at · Ohio Valley Commandery 24,
Outer Shelf beyond the 3-mile
MARY
S.
.
In
1958,
the
U.S.
Navy
Midway Community Church, Knights Templar, Saturday,
limit.
You will receive a doUar II successfully
launch ed
BAKER'S~ ~CHMDATE
Langsville , Dexter Road; 7:30p.m. Full form. opening.
featured · singers, Gospel Robert H. Emmons, past Polly uses your favorite Vanguard I, a 310-pound .
A thought for the day:
Echoes, Jackson ; Heavenly grand commander of the homemaking Idea, Pel satellite, Into orbit around the Anierican publisher Horace
~RAFT
Peeve, PoUy's Problem or earth.
Highway Trio, Middleport. Grand· Commandery of Ohio,
Greeley sail;!, "The illusion
In 1975, the U.S. Supreme that times that were are
Everyone welcome.
. ;~spec ling officer. Dinner at 6 solution to a problem. Write
Polly
In
care
of
lhls
Court
ruled that the federal better than those that are has
CANDY AND bake sale, p.m. for Sir Knights and their
newspaper.
government
has exclusive probably pervaded all ages."
Saturday, at Stobart building ladies. Entertainment for the
next to Steamboat Inn , ladles.
Racine , by Racine Chapter
SUNDAY
134 OES.
REVIVAL at Racine First
RACINE AMERICAN
Baptist
Church Sunday
Legion 602, birthday party,
28, 7:30
through
March
7:30 p.m. Saturday at the
oightly.
The
Rev.
Don
Walker
hall. Legionnaires, auxiliary
will
be
the
speaker.
Specjal
members and their families.
singing. Public Welcome.
Games and refreshmen is.
COUNTY WIDE prayer
MEIGS COUNTY Retired
meeting,
2 p.m , Sunday,
Teacher s
Association,
Chester.
Church
of the
Saturday, Meigs Museum, 2
Glen
Bissell,
class
Nazarene;
p.m. Bicentennial program
Center Cut
leader
.
by Mrs. Nan Moore. Refresh·
. ..
TUESDAY
I
Perk Loin
ments.
\
RACINE
·
AMERICAN
SQUARE DANCE Satur\'
day at Tuppers Plains school Legion Auxiliary, 7 p.m .
from 8i30 p.m. Ulltil mid· Tuesday at the hall.

Polly's Pointers

PUniC NOTICI!
TO the Oettndants : F RANK

-'·

�t - 'Ibe J&gt;a!1Y Sent!ml, 14iddl81*'!:

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March 17, 1916

~K"'~~~S~~,i~r,.,.,.,., j March

I Calendar ~

ceremony unites couple

Miss Seren Lewis, daughter
IS
~ of Mr. and Mrs. William E.
Sf
:~ Lewis, M.iddleport, became
~
:~ the bride of· Tr oy W.
WEDNESDAY
Livingston, son of Ralph
MIDDLEPORT LIT - Livingsl&lt;&gt;n, Sanibel Island ,
ERARY
Club,
Wed- Fla ., and the late Mrs. Jean
nesday, 2 p.m. at the home of Livingston, on Friday, March
Mrs. Bernard Fultz. "The 12.
Massacre of Fall Creek" will
The 6:30 p.m. double ring
he reviewed by Mrs. Fultz. ceremony was performed by
Roll call will be a famous the Rev. Dwight L. Zavitz at
Indian .
the Middleport First United
OHIO VALLEY Com- Presbyterian Church. The
mandery 23, special con- bride wore a gown of ivory
clave , 1:30 Wednesday, floral print with cape style
Pomeroy Masonic Temple. sleeves edged in lace. The
Order of the Temple to he gown was fashioned with an
conferred . Full uniform.
empire waist and square
-ROSE GARDEN Club, neckline. She carried a
Wednesday, 8 p.m. at the bouquet of multi-colored
home of Mrs. Jimmy Cald- rosebuds and baby's breath.
well. Members to take vases
to be donated to the hospital,

Foll~wing

the ceremony,
the bnde's parents hosted a
dinner at the Meigs Inn.
Guests included Scott
Livingston , Miami, Fla . ;
Mrs . Ron Brock and Becky,
Mrs . Don Morris and Lori,
Richmond, Ind . ; J ohn
Pugsley, Pittsburgh, Pa .;
Nancy Ritter and Jim
Fleming Cincinnati; Carole
Painter , Co lumbus ; Mrs .
Theodore Michael, Wellsl&lt;&gt;n ;
Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Lewis,
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Hackett,
Mr . and Mrs . Emerson
Heighton, Middleport.
The bride graduated from
Middleport High .School,
Warren Wilson College and
Ohio University. She will
receive a masters degree in

Dance preparations are
underway ·by auxiliary

Showbeat

The escapades
of a Chaplin

social work . from Berry
College, Miaml, Fla.lnMay.
The groom is a graduate of
Purdue University and is
employed as a production
manager of Allied Leisure,
Inc., in Hialeah, Fla.

By Dick Kleiner
HOLLYWOOD - (NEAl Geraldine Chaplin has
worked all over the world.
She's done films in Spain ,
Scandinavia ,
Isr ael ,
England, Egypt, Canada and,
of course, NashvUie.
"And I've · decided, " she
says, " that I love Southern
Calflornia best of all.
Imagine. It's the middle of
winter and I'm swimming.
Incredible. They talk ahout
smog. I don 't see any smog,

Workshop
set Sunday

POINT PLEASANT Preparations are progressing
for the 16th annual Olarlty
Ball sponsored by tne
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Auxiliary.
On ApriiJO, from 9 p.m. to 1
a.m. at the National Guard
Armory near Point Pleasant,
those attending the ball will
enjoy music by Johnny Lynch
and the Lynch Mob.
Donations for the semiformal cbarity ball are $10
per couple. Tickets will be
available at Fruth's Pharmacy, Rardin's Shoe Center,
Citizens National Bank and
all auxiliary members. If
anyone wishes to reserve a
table they should contact

Shine refrigerator
with kitchen wax

Tt&lt;E

coullly , Ohio

parcel No . 2:

I

.

..

Exciting Night Spot

$}19

lb.

Another .Good .Buy

from

I' I 'I

BAKER'S

HOOVER
CONVERTIBLE ·

$

...

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

fiQOWU'I TIIU

··~-··

Cnoll

I.

-

•

I

-

•

.

Phone 992-3629

Pomeroy, Ohio

CHEPS PIZZA
CHEESE OR
PEPPERONI

W~OLE LOIN
.
t121
ASSORTED CHOPS •.•••••••••••••• !¥; ••••
HOLLYWOO~.
· ,
129
SPARE RIBS ••••••••••••••••••••••• !Pe.... .
O"'R HOM.E MADE

,

. . $ 129

S~&amp;llt~Cil •••••••••••••••••• ~ ••••••• ~ •••
.

D&amp;D MEAT
OHio

POMEIOY

)I

Il

PH. 992·3507

I\

U.S.D.A. FOOD
STAMPS GlADLY
ACCEPTtD

13~

2~b. box
'

'1.29

HOME MADE

,.

·HAM SAlAD ........... ~:.
SUPERIORS · ' .

lb

99~

$ 29

JUMBO FRANKS.....:... 1

TAVERN SMOKED 16·1b., Averege

BONELESS:'~~. ·•· ~.1.79

HAMS.

SLICED ...

/I

~1.19

oz.

99~
A.ORIDA
WHITE
GRAPEFRUIT

::·. 79~

17 2
· • . Jl 1&lt;17· " · 2 1 '

28 71
• c

AstraGraph
Blfnlee B- Oaot
FOI T""'-t.,, M - 11, 1171
I

ARifl (IiiilCh Z1 ·Aprlt 111 An
'

unlr1tentional breach of faith
could t\urt someone you love.
·1 However. you will have ·a second chlllnce to recury matters
• and to Perform nobly.

1

TAIIIIUI (APfll 20·M•r 201
Eorly·ln the dSY your decisions
won't be toO realistic. Your se'

cond thoughts will be the best

1.and can be relied upon.

GEMINI (Mof 21-Juno 201

Go&amp;~ls YOu once thought unattainable ere not P!Jt of reach todaY · Uae v~:wr natural
resourcetotness.

CAifCIII (.IUfMI 21 -.lilly 221 If
you're invited out today , by all
means Qo. vou could meet
•o,.,eone with whom you'll
lorm an instantaneous
rel•tlonship,

.......

bllf U OpenVr'l INmd
IIIIIIIJ·willlcllrll It iial

.............. ,

.... , . . . . 'nlll
,.., . . . . . . 1.- ml third
llpOII

~

~

reelam1tlaa,

KEYS 'nJRNED OVER-Ollby Mllrtm, w1to fer the Jut
baa operated Olsle's
Recreation Center, 20 N. Second Ave., Middleport, turned over the keys to his place Tuesday
to Lee Ann &amp;nllh. Mrs. Smith and ber btBbmld, Jack, a collltruction superintendent at the ·
Southern Ohio Coal Mine, have leased tbe establlsbment. Remodeling iB Wlderway with the
billiard and other games area to be separated from ihe restaurant part of the business.
Paneling is being installed. The establisbment will open at 6 a.m. and close at 10 p.m.
Monday through Saturday and will be open trom noon to 10 pm. on Sundays. The
establishment will be renamed the "Golden Nugget" and will feature short orders in the
restaurant. Mr. and Mrs. Smith reside at 737 Beech St .ln Middleport.

~l=tlnl, GD

Democratic candidates are conventiDn.
...
By RicK VAN SANT
acceptable to u.s," Daniels
However, deto:nninlng the
CINCINNATI (UPI)
said Tuesday. "Black people executive rouncil's nominee
Leaders of a group trying to consistently have had to was not expected to be as
forge a "third political party ch
be~ Tweedly Dee simple as just picldng one of
for black people" say that
oose '"""n
•
the four men under
comedian-lecturer Dick and Tweedly-Dum, the lesser consideration. The candidate
two evils.
Gregory,
two
black of ''Oursturt(iasuesrnlaedby
also had to choose to align
congressmen and a state black!) is always gett!Dg with the alll!flllbly ·
senator are being considered comprGmiaed out," he com·
"We're still negotiating
as the organization's 19'16 plalned. "We want to offer a with the four," Daniels, 33, a
!X'esidential candidate.
political party for· black peo- · HIJ:am College professor
Besides Gregory, the pte."
from Youngstown, Ohio,
National Black Political
The candidate backed by admilted as he arrived here
Assembly Is considering the lll&amp;elllbly's 18-member to get the convention rolllag.
Reps. John Conyers, D-Mlch., eaeclitlve &amp;IWICII is expected
The .. executive council
and Ron Dellums, OCal!f., to be the favorite lllllQIIg the ·originally
wanted
to
and MassachllSeits state Sen. 3,000 to 4,000 auembly nominate Georgia legislator
BiU Owens.
members from around the Julian Bond, but Bond turned
Assembly President Roo country expected here for the down the offer·
Daniels
says
the Thursday through Saturday
Daniels, in a carefully
organization's execl!tlve
worded statement about the
council will announce Its
Bond matter, complained
choice Thursday and tben put
that Bond was intereated in
the name into nomination
"matters other than the
Saturday night, when
expressed political direction
delegates to the a!iSOIIIbly 's
of the National Black
national convention select a
Political Assembly."
presidential candidate.
The 11811e01bly hopes to
"None of the Republlcan,or
;aJse $3 mUUon and ~!~Kilts
:andidate on the C8lliPIIiln
trail against the ~ubllcan
and Democrat rumlnees. .
The asaembl)l conventioo 11
expected to attract ~ns
COLUMBUS (UPI) from abuut 25 st,ates, wtth the
Democratic sen.torlal heaviest concentration' of .
candidate Howard M. delegates e~pected from
Metzenbawn today ulred the midwestern ·and eastern
United Press Internallooal
Ohio Senate to protect states.
A storm swirled over the ~esldential utlllty users from
Delegates also will WQ'k oo
\'ortheast today, dumping "rigged costs Increases."
a
"19'16 Black Political Plat·
.
_ . ,
Metzenbaum, In remark! form," but Daniels said ''ire
:'Ieavy snows bn St . PatrJ&lt;:k s
Day celebrations In a wide prepared for delivery to the probably won't be able to
'll'ea and sending heavy rains Ohio Senate Energy and finalize the plaUonn at the
Environment 'Committee, convention.''
ID wash away the green
'enter line along New York said the General Aumbly iB
''the last reso~rce of Ohioans
::tty's parade route.
Winds left at least one agl!inst unfair ullllty costs."
He aUed the oommittee
&gt;erson· dead In Virginia.
Rains dampened St. and the Senat&gt;· to BDIII'OYe a
Pomeroy Village fUDda
Patrick's Day opirits in New Hou.se.passeo btU that would the month . of February
lfork City, washing away the probitilt public uWilles from
Sl77,075.76 according
!Oiuble green line along the passing through to all totaled
to
a
report
submitted to
:&gt;arade route Tuesday on the CUBtomers increased c:osta of Pome,roy Council Mood!iy ·
purdlases of gu, electric,
!ve of the holiday.
night by Jane WaiiDn, clerk.
"God must be P\)llsh," a and water ~lflcally bought
Receipts, expendltlires· and
jistraught New York ·Irish· for lnduetrial CWilomers.
balance
in the active fwlda
Melzenbaum . said , the
man lamented.
respectively
·were &amp;enenl, ·
Snowfalla of eight to 14 legislatioo wu lnlroduced
S4,934,
$8,062.53,
$5,47t14;
inches stacked up In northern after PUCO approved a $32 revenue. sharing, no receipts,
New England . and winds mUilon bike for restdmtial
$3,000, U0,512.84; . sewer,
produced near-blizzard Columbia Gu of Ohio u.sers. ts,J&amp;'UO,
$1,321.ot, Jl3,7211.111;
' onditlons in New England The 'u\ility Is charging fire department, no receipts,
md Interior eastern New customers about $1 . per
month to help pay for gu '-19.80, fi,17US; cemetery,
lfork.
· by
iadustrlal t661.70, $170.811, (12.1111,50);
Seven Inches of snow used
street, J7 ,038.05, u,eta.~.
1ocked Boston Tuesday, oonswners.
$5,116.60;
's tale bigbway,
"It · Is not fair that
'lOSing Logan Airport for a
$185.15,
no
ezpendltarea,
lime and snarling ll'afflc. reeldenlial customers were t$,611.50; water
forced
to
pickup
the
tab
for
Jfficlals at Logan Airport
u 861.37 ' ,, 31.
1aid fiight delays could buslnesa," Mellenbaum llid
:!DilUnue today.

till llidl ~d.

synthetics
is reported

·
k
d
costs as e

hit Northeast
celebrations

'

lULO~ :

NEW YORK UP!. ~ The
highest temperature Rporled
Tuesday t~ the NaUonal
Weather Sei'Yice, . exclridhll
AIBika and Hawaii, wu 87
degree11 at Miami, Fla.
Today'1 low WIS ~ degrees
below zero atiUbbtnC, Minn.
,, 'v-

.-

. .

.

Funds total 8177,076
ior

BOMBS EXPLODE
BUENOS AIRES,
Argenfina UPI - A dqzen
1
terrorist bomb• exploded
I·I
durln{c the ntchl In four ·
widely separated cities In
.j cornrnun!catton is your forte
Argentina 'scontlnuiug war of
todiY· You oan lOin those you
nerves, police reported
,I , ' wanl lo '"'Pro... over In a face- today.
There wu eatelllllve
'· to-tac• uet-logether.
. · property damage but no
LIIJIA (lopt. ZI·Ocl. 211 injurle8 were reported. The
Good fortune cen come to you
!od•Y Iron, periiOnl you'd leaat bOmblnga appeared aimed at
expj!CI to bo bHrora of glad increulng pressure on
President laabel Peron's
. 1ldlnll•·
amid open
1overnment
ICOIIPIO (OOL I,._, D)
speculation
the
mllilary was
You're the 1ype who rarely goea
\ llllfiOIICed, but today you have· polled for 1 possible coup.
a pertk:ularly d\'namlc quality
..., oeto you ·llitrt, aapeclallv
JOQIIIIY·
PltCEI ·(Poll, a.11 ch •1
iAG'""IIIUI (Now. U.Doo. Your Imagination and wfl aro
try to restrain an lm·
more than a match for one who
11
toay. Turn on
~ 10 do something extra .
ijeoial lOr .one you 1.,... Tf!t
ntef11181U Will bt enormoutly

•112,
........ :

.1/11~1311.110;

illllllllt,

P.71, parJrjng

· fl,J96, - .tii,OOO,

UWU,, DO~

M,OI7.211;
receJilla, DO
mrea.

are

ex-

LIO-(Ju~ 23-AUfi.UI Thlals a
good day 10 fulfill social
obllgallona. An lmpromplu ,lnYltallon to your place would
those you "owe."
YIIIGO (Au• 21-a,pt. 221

p-•

I

I

I

.,,oon,
.........
GAJ'IIQOM

La· 79~ BEEF
:WiENERS
.......
.'~.......... t.tJ.:~ 1
MADE.
· . .
'
SAlAD.................. ',';: ........-..',;!'.!"·!~"~:~!
R. C.
'

•.;.

'

NEW TEXAS
CABBAGE

2~.

·29'

,dlea, u .......
'ill ~ .vw iCiullne loclay. tt
w~~~uwltlor• ..- entidn you.

Cf\loot4l ~ ~- loacl of to

,..,. VOIIr ohlftlle ql

~·

_,AIIIUt 1• • ,....

11)
yau 111o

.fortullt "''ll' 1111lle on
M
alert lor unusual
I !JIIY.
~1rcu"'atan9••· ·you could
' po1albly fulfill a malarial

vau·,.

l. dill,.·
l -

Try to Involve yourlllltln lhfngl
ola creet~W nlttiN IIlii coming
. IINr. Tl* m1y not - r l t y
b4 a~. but the expo~ure
will broaden your horlzono.
t NEWSP.APEII

KN'I'ERPRISt: A"SSN, J

\

\

~

laeludlnl

Blacks· needing candidates

Heavy snows

Coort , Probate D ivision.
Pom eroy 1 Oh io

IJI

.

lllllllltllll1w.it bt 1rhrnd

...·~"''
.

t

Protection
• ged
from ng

Manning
0 · Web$1er ·
JudQt end EK ·Offlc lo
Clerk ol lhe Melos
CountY Common Pleas

TE·EN QUEEN
CHEESE SPREAD

,•

the f_
O IIowing desc ribed real
,,.,te Sltoated in the vIllage of
pomeroy , county of Meigs and
atatl Of Oh 10 : Be lng L.ot No . 35
In c . Vtl , Dabney 's Addition to
pornuoy , Ohio. The plat of
pom•roy , · Ohio, shows t he
·~ve lot to be abou t 40 feet
"o"' on S.lt Street and to be
100 feet deeP ·
.
Rtfere.nce Deea : Vol. 156.
page l72 Deed Records ,
Meigs County, Ohio
rne Prayer further provides
Jnat the rightS, Interests and
11e11s Ol all ·p arti es may be
tuiiV Getermlned. adlu ste tl
an.d Protected ; that your
petl.tloneor De authori zed and
ordered to sell said real estate
ol said Otcedent according to
the stetutes In such cases
mad• end provided , and for
such Other relief as to which
he may be entitled .
vou ere reQuired to an swer
tne cornplalnt wi t hin 28 days
lifter ft-.e last PUbli cation of

thil nouce, which will · be
puDIIIhea on~e each week tor
aiJC. succ:.esslve weeks , end the
tast PUbli cation will be made
em _.APril 2Btn. 1976. 1
· 1n Case of your failure fo
answer or otherwise respond
as per·rtlltted by the Oh io
Rule_s Of Civil Procedure
wJtn ln
the tfme. stated,
judgment bY default will be
re11dft'td agelnst you for the
relief demanded In the
comPlaint ,

THE MEIGS INN

Hb.59e

1

_·

Reference Deed : Vol. 138,
pagt 341 Deed· Records . ·Me lOs

The Tri.County's Mo&amp;r

MARGARINE

$139

·

trom ldiacent or contlnguous

.
.

'..atllacz-.,._
....
,..,. ..... ..,....,....

1111 otiMr mm'met
wwld paowldl ... n'l • ~

melnte . . . .

m years

parcet No . 1:
ihf follow in g described rea l
estete t.ltuated In the village af
pomeroy , county or Mel'gs and
state Of Ohio : Being lot
numbeted 17111 dellnuted on
the plat of said village and
be i'10 at the junction of Ma in
and Locust Streets In said
viiiJ!Oe . The coal and all other
mineral, are hereby reserved
ancl are not sold . Th&amp; r ight Is
altO reserved . to m ine end
remove the Ierne , .together
wit" the right lnd privilege to
tranSPOrt through seftms. and
et~trle&amp; \lnder sa i d prem lses,
coal ana all ~the,. m in erals _

ptus tax

PAR KAY

lb.

'

The Dblect of the complaint
Is to . sell the following
aescrlb~d real estate In order
to Ply thl debts of the

territory ,

_..

'he
o. . .

m

~-

Hoose. P.orneroy , Oh lo , 45769,
ces• No . 21,625 .

aecedent :

nbeammMtee ... diW
If
, ... Jl7l In,
AldaPidraf
1\'a ntr
IDIItc•dl ldllefl&amp;ln

snbcommJUee,

League of W&lt;men Voters, the

Pleas Court of Meigs Coun tv ,

·

'tkr.

prondlu
m u1
for
I nGJ llall I If tillra.
- - llld 1111
° rt
-..Jd . . .. h J 'I • .,. ... , ...., tw te line
_..1 lmhf....,flftw

~tlvaoltheOblo

Otc;eued .

OhiO. Probate Dlvlslan , Court

'

KRAFT SPAGHEm &amp; MEAT DINNER ..........1.~':~.?.z:.... 69~
TIDE (UJ* OfF) ............... ....................... ~?. ?.~·....'1.29
NESCAFE INSTANT OOFFEE ........................ !?. ?.~·.. '2.39
HUNTS 10MA10 JUICE .............................~~-?~: ..... 59•

' .'

HtSI ,

PI810tlft , hll brDUiht thl&amp; .
action 'leming each of you 11
one of the aettnCiants by filing
hiJ CDI'r\plalnt on February
26th • 1t76, In the Common

;•h

dlpeJ¥Is 011 tbe aliUty ,
mlniDI industry to lib!nr I
need for II.
Opponeotl of the bW
=ailed it Tuelday It 1
mee11ng of a Ho11111 F.nerv
and
Environment
the menro.n could flatdrll
operators witt loopboles for
poor reci•"'IUM.

n'linlltretor of the Estate ot

SPECIAL

Oranae. Lemon, Umt ...................... ~.~~:. 2/79•

. Roast

olol"'aa llall
recl-atilJn rulel 11J11* mliJ

peaalllea for

eXECUToRS AND ASSIGNS
OF
lliACH
OF
THE
FOLLOWING• IF Tt&lt;EY BE
oeCEASEO :F RANKCOOK ;
WlLLIISi COOK : FLORENCE
WiLSOf'l ·
JOieph 1/1 . (ook IS Ad -

THE INN PLACE

SS
atiPS..................~.~.~~: ..... 69•
PlAIN atQJYHIZ .......................~.~~: ..... 79•

Pork
Chops

ralrlctioolllld loflalltlll

AD~ ~lSTRI'TORS .

GREEN GIANT P.EAS ..........................1.~.~ ~:. ~~~ ... 2/69•

JEU.O,

lesllliUoo euiDf boDcliDI

IIIIKNOWN HEIRS ,
LEGA;fEE$,

clare

·'" ,.,. .

UPI
OOUJMBUS Ctn'l) - ~­
Iller 11111-.t of llrlpW.

Dfi~I1 ~,1SiES •

heritage hoiiSe

'

•u a

HEIRS,
OE~ 11 !1,tl5 • LEGATEES,
AD~ ~ lSTRATORS.
EliEClJtoAS AND ASSIGNS
Of
lliACH
OF
THE
FOLLOwiNG .
ALL
OF
Wt40M ARE DECEASED ;
ct&lt;ARISis COOK ; W ILLIAM
H. NCOOK ; FRANK COOK:
OA
l.. COOK : LEE OR
cOOK ; ETt&lt;EL SAUVAGE;
HE NR\' COOK ;
SUSAN
CD 0 K;
CLARA
REES ;
oANliSiL, e. REES

FRINGE
MOCCASINS

'2.95

. , LEI!; LIDWU)

U11""'"IINKNOWN
""'

Tt&lt;E

Barbara Caudlll at 675-3792 or
Mrs. Quentin Wickline at 67S2102. An additional charge
will be made for this service.
For one to three couples it
will be $3, four I&lt;&gt; six couples,
$4, and seven to 12 col!Pies,
$5. Set ups and other 1tems
wiD be catered by Jobnny
WaKisley at an additional
charge. ·

Visit Our Salad Bar
Pork and Sauerkraut
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Vegetable
Hot Roils
Coffee, Tea or Milk

Strip niine hill awaits push

cOOkL . IRtJ idence Unknown;
WIL IIIli cOOl&lt; , Ros ldenco
U11knoown ;
FLORENCE
W'.,I;,SON ,
Res i den c;e

· Geraldine never thought
ahout acting untl) later. At
first, she got a job with a
circus, tending the elephants,
in France .
1
' 0 ne of my jobs,'' she says,
"was to make the elephan Is
go to the bathroom before
they went on. Do you know
how to make an elephant go
to the bathroom• You have to
make him stand up on his
WOMEN'S
hind legs and then, when he
comes down, he goes to the
bathroom. It always happens."
When she left the circus,
she was out of work and
Genuine Suede
broke . After deciding acting
Sole &amp; Heel
Crepe
was the easiest thing she
could do, Geraldine told a
MEETING CANCELLED
friend who told another
The
March meeting of the
friend, an agent, of her
Bend
0'
the River Garden
Middleport, Ohio
· decision . Within a week, she
Club
has
been
cancelled.
had 12 offers.
"! realized, Of course, that
it was on .the strength of my
name and who lily father
was," she says, "but at that
point I had to make some
money. I did one film I dldn 't
like and then 'Dr. Zhlvago.'
Then I fOWld I loved acting."
She particularly likes her
THURSDAY NIGHT
association with Robert
Altman. She met him, first, at
a London party. He brough\
her to Los Angeles for a
picture that never happened,
then put her in "NashvUie,"
which was good for everyone
Involved.
And now she's just wrapped
up ber part in "Welcome To
L.A.''
which
Altman
produced but didn't dlrect Alan Rudolph directed it. .
"!love working for Bob,"
she says, "and I hope It goes

The French Art Colony's
monthly parent -c hild
workshop wil be held Sunday,
Marcq21, from 2 until 4. p.m.
at Riverby.
A unique and exciting do you ?"
project will be taught to the
Despite her love affair with
children and adults who Southern California , sbe lives
attend. Six students of Mrs. In Madrid. That's because
Joan Loeffler who are seniors "the man I live with" TIIURSDAY
· at Rio Gra'nde College, Carlos Saura - lives there.
MAGNOUA CLUB, Mrs.
. majoring in education, will Actually, Geraldine was horn
Georgia Watson 's home, 7:30
conduct the class called a in Southern California but
p.m. _Thursday.
Mind Bending Workshop, a moved. to England with her
combination of sound and father, Charlie Chaplin, when
DEMOCRAT mee ti ng
sight art.
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at
sbe was eight.
, The workshop w!U have
Episcopal Parish house.
"I don't remember much
,
appeal for small children, about my childhood here,"
Judge Hottle, candidate for
1
, teen ... gers and adults. They
appellate cour t, guest
says. "Just a few vague
_B.:.y_P_o_ll.:.y_C_r_am~er=---..,...,=-:::-::-:--.,.,----.,--- will make slides out of she
speaker.
memories of the bosue on
Polly's Problem
ROCK SPRINGS Better
pLastic hood on my hair dryer common things around the Summit Drive where we lived
DEAR POLLY - My cracked along the bottom ·house by using color - the tennis courts and the
Health Club, I : 15 p.m.
Thursday, home of Phyllis coppertone refrigerator is edge, causing it to feel cellophane, decorating It with place where r used to keep
twelve years old . I would like scratchy and uncomfortable all kinds of tiny Items, using my rabbits. I went there
Skinner. Louise Radford to
to know how to clean it since to use. I repaired it by cutting glue and paint. While these recently - trespassed, achave the program, Susan
it
no longer shines. Some red a strip of f)annel two inches slides are being created, tually - to see it. It was as I
Pullins, the contest.
CLASS 12, Heath United nail polish was spilled on the wide and along enough to go there is music in the remembered."
Methodist Church, 1:30 p.m. top also, and I do not know around the band edge of the background. After the slides
Her parents sent her, for
how to remove it. Any help hood. This was placed over are completed, they are several years, I&lt;&gt; a convent
at the church.
PUBLIC CARD party, 7:3(). will be appreciated. the cracked edge, like bias shown by a projector· on a school in Switzerland. She
NANCY.
10 :30 p.m. Thursday at
tape , and sewed. The flannel screen, again to the ac- hated it - she never parDEAR NANCY- I suppose feels so cozy against my neck companiment of music.
Sacred
Heart
Church
tlcularly liked school, and she
Shelly Hook will be the disliked that one especially .
Auditorium sponsored by you have , washed your and face.- MRS. E.P.
refrigerator with a non·
Catholic Women's Club.
DEAR POLLY - After one coordinator of the afternoon
"I wanted to be a dancer,"
abrasive
household
cleanser,
JITNEY SUPPER Thurof my friends had her P\U'Se workshop, ass.isted by Larry she says. "I studied ballet a
sday at Rutland Elementary but I wonder If you have ever sl&lt;&gt;len, including the cash Saunders, Janice Deem, Pam long time. I did some dailcing
gym beginning at 4 p.m. used a good kitchen wax on it. from her Social Security Stringer, Terry Cordle and but I couldn't get a job - I
Sponsored
by
Ladles That should make It sblne. It check, I thought of the Mark Sanders.
guess I really wasn't very
Anyone who is interested is good ."
Auxiliary of - Fire Depart- seems nail polish remover or following . I sewed a breast
a paint thinner, used quickly pocket )Vith a zipper safely invited. Small children must
·ment.
on forever." ·
·
SHADE RIVER LODGE and carefuUy, should remove tucked away in it. ln RJY be accompanied by adults.
She
says
her
father
Is
proud
453 F&amp;AM, Chester Thurs, the red polish. If done quickly
purse I only have make-up The workshop is open to both
of her accomplisbments, but
It
should
not
penetrate
the
day 1:30 p.m. Work In E. A.
things, gloves, handkerchief members 8!ld non-members
it isn't exactly what he'd
of the French Art Colony, at
·degree . All Masons invited. baked enamel finish on a
and so on. - MRS. A.C.H.
hoped for.
MORE MEETINGS
DEAR POLLY - For no charge.
MEIGS ·COUNTY Slow refrigerator. It will doubtless
"Poor daddy," she says
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Pitch Softball League to be be dull where the polish bridal or baby shower gifts I
"He
had 10 children and he
Members of Ohio's Trade
make a macrame plant
organized among county was .removed, but apply
had
it
all planned in his mind
mission to Europe will hold
holder, using decorative
churches at 7 p.m. Thursday kitchen wax there also. one
would be a doctor,
meetings the rest of the week
beads (available in many The Almanac
at the Syracuse Church of the POLLY.
an
other
a
lawyer, another an
t6 try to interest more foreign
DEAR POLLY - My Pet stores). Then llnclude with it By
Nazarene parsonage . Any
·United
Press
architect.
and so on . As it
Peeve is with the mistakes so
manufac.t urers to locate
interested church is asked to often made in recipes printed a briaal veil plant for brides . United Press International
not one of' us went
turned
out,
!acUities in Ohio before they
send a representative . in newspapers . Fractions or a baby's tear plant for a
Today is Wednesday, return home Sunday.
to university. There are still
Anyone with questions may seem to be a problem in the new baby, These gifts are March 17, the 77th day of 1976
The trade mission has split two left in school, but I doubt
call Eber Pickens, the coach, p.mounts given, and readers unusual, Inexpensive and with 289 to follow. This Is St . into sales teams lot trips to they will go, either.
992-1181.
."We're aU actors or writers
Sweden , England, France
have a big investment in time personal and are an. ever Patrick's Day .
WILLING WORKERS and ingredients that are bearin g gift of love . The moon is between its full and Switzerland to give Ohio - and one sister, Vickie , is a "
Class, Enterprise United wasted if the recipe is in- M.E.R.
phase and last· quarter.
producers the oppo"'unity I&lt;&gt; · tight·rope walker with a
Methodist Church, Thursday, correct. - JEANNE.
The morning stars are meet with distributors and c!rcus, and quite good, too."
DEAR POLLY - This
7:30 p.m. ·at the LaSalle
sales outlet representatives.
DEAR POLLY - The . Pointer will save a little time Mercury and Venus.
Hotel.
and is a good pastime for. the
The evening sta rs are
Ohio Economic and Com·
FRIDAY
older children when they Mars, Sattirn and Jupiter.
munity Development .
SPECIAL SERVICES at
have time on their hands. If
Those born on this date are Director James Duerk
Long
Botton
United
you have letters to write and Wider the sign of Pisces.
reported from Germany that
bills I&lt;&gt; be paid, a little job· is
American singer Nat • _,g more than 45 meetlngli with
Methodist Church beginning
Friday through the 21st, 7:30
· finished for you before , yo~ Cole was born March I 1°19. boslness leaders.were held in
nightly. Evangelist, James · night. Sponsored by Orange
start: When I buy envelopes I
On this day in histr,, . :
Germany alone.
·
Leach . Special singing. Township Fire Department.
In 1889, a submarine devesit down and write the name
The mission was headed by
Everyone welcome.
and return address on each loped by John Holland re- Gov. James A. Rhodes, who
SIGN UP DAY for
envelope
or put on name and malned submerged off Staten returned here late Sunday.
MIDDLEPORT MASONIC Pomeroy Boys League
address
stickers
when I have Island, N.Y., for one hour and
Saturday
at
Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, Friday, 7 baseball
them
.
.
When
I
get
down to 45 minutes,
·
p.m. for work in Master Pomeroy City Hall from 10
really
doing
the
job
all
I
have
.
In
1912,
a
group
of
young
Masons Degree; all Master a.m. until 2 p.m. Five dollar
to do is address them . women to be known as "The
registration fee to be subMasons invited.
Usually
I put on the postage Campfire Girls" was formed rights to any oil and gas
mitted.
SATURDAY
stamps
at
the same time I do by Mrs. Luther Gulick of resources on the Atlantic
GOSPEL
SONGFEST,
ANNUAL INSPECTION,
the
return
addresses. - Lake Sebago, Maine.
.
Saturday, 7:30 p.m. at · Ohio Valley Commandery 24,
Outer Shelf beyond the 3-mile
MARY
S.
.
In
1958,
the
U.S.
Navy
Midway Community Church, Knights Templar, Saturday,
limit.
You will receive a doUar II successfully
launch ed
BAKER'S~ ~CHMDATE
Langsville , Dexter Road; 7:30p.m. Full form. opening.
featured · singers, Gospel Robert H. Emmons, past Polly uses your favorite Vanguard I, a 310-pound .
A thought for the day:
Echoes, Jackson ; Heavenly grand commander of the homemaking Idea, Pel satellite, Into orbit around the Anierican publisher Horace
~RAFT
Peeve, PoUy's Problem or earth.
Highway Trio, Middleport. Grand· Commandery of Ohio,
Greeley sail;!, "The illusion
In 1975, the U.S. Supreme that times that were are
Everyone welcome.
. ;~spec ling officer. Dinner at 6 solution to a problem. Write
Polly
In
care
of
lhls
Court
ruled that the federal better than those that are has
CANDY AND bake sale, p.m. for Sir Knights and their
newspaper.
government
has exclusive probably pervaded all ages."
Saturday, at Stobart building ladies. Entertainment for the
next to Steamboat Inn , ladles.
Racine , by Racine Chapter
SUNDAY
134 OES.
REVIVAL at Racine First
RACINE AMERICAN
Baptist
Church Sunday
Legion 602, birthday party,
28, 7:30
through
March
7:30 p.m. Saturday at the
oightly.
The
Rev.
Don
Walker
hall. Legionnaires, auxiliary
will
be
the
speaker.
Specjal
members and their families.
singing. Public Welcome.
Games and refreshmen is.
COUNTY WIDE prayer
MEIGS COUNTY Retired
meeting,
2 p.m , Sunday,
Teacher s
Association,
Chester.
Church
of the
Saturday, Meigs Museum, 2
Glen
Bissell,
class
Nazarene;
p.m. Bicentennial program
Center Cut
leader
.
by Mrs. Nan Moore. Refresh·
. ..
TUESDAY
I
Perk Loin
ments.
\
RACINE
·
AMERICAN
SQUARE DANCE Satur\'
day at Tuppers Plains school Legion Auxiliary, 7 p.m .
from 8i30 p.m. Ulltil mid· Tuesday at the hall.

Polly's Pointers

PUniC NOTICI!
TO the Oettndants : F RANK

-'·

�10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleeort·Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, ~arch 17. 1976

Ohio blanketed Insight to p~st offered at
by heavy snows Ruth~rford B. ·H ayes' ho~e

11 - The Dally Sent.lnei,Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March 17, 1976

Ohio
has
figured room and several rooms and Indians in their war
significantly in America 's upstairs. Uving as 8 private against the British, it later
past 200 years, supplying the citizen and keeping out of ; became a supply trail for
~try with no less 'than public observation, his William Henry Harrison
e1ght Presidents. One of them remaining twelve years in during the War of 1812.
was Rutherford B. Hayes, Fremont were happy ones as Winding through the estate
elected to office during the his last wish to a fri~nd lor nearly hall a mile, the
nation's first "Centennial" testifies: "I would rather die trail provides visitors a
celebration in 1876. The at Spiegel Grove than to live scenic walk through the wellbeautifully preserved estate anywhere else."
landscaped
grounds,
in Fremont, where he lived
Today softened by age the surrounded b:,.. the White
prior to and following his graciou~ !our-story b~lck ' House gates of Hayes '
years at the White House, is home is made even more so Presidential term. Flowers
now a state memorial of. by the collection of personal and
shrubs,
planted
fering vacationers an in· belongings of the Hayes by Mr. and Mrs. Hayes, are
timate Insight into the family. Inside, the tastes, scattered throughout, as are
lifestyle of the former chief traditions and the quality of the huge , old trees, many of
executive and his family.
tile that grew out of a more which are named lor famous
Located 21 miles southwest romantic era, have been Americans. This tradition,
of Sandusky, nestled in a preserved for 20th century started by Hayes to honor his
wooded plot on the outskirts visitors.
distinguished house guests, is
of town, "Spiegel Grove"
Although not an osten- sUD carried on today. The
stands a century apart from tatious home, the dignified most recent "tree-naming"
the concrete and steel of our portraits, gas-burning was for Senator Mark Hatmodern day architectqre. chandeliers, ornate brass field, when he visited the
Here is the weD-furnished door knobs and fifteen home in 1967 to dedicate the
house that Sardis Birchard fireplaces found throughout Hayes Memorial Ubrary.
The Rutherford B. Hayes home at Spiegel Grove
purchased for his promising the rooms, Indicate that the
Not far from the house , on a
young nephew and his family owners were a family of private, wooded knoll, are the Presidential administration, students of American history year. an afternoon or
in 1846. Looking much wealth and Importance.
graves of the President and beginning with George from the period of the avu yesteryear's elegance right
War to the 20th century.
at their own back door.
Downstairs, plush crimson his first lady, marked by a Washington.
smaller in old .Prints . of
The · library , upstairs,
Operated jolnUy by tht
Atrip to Spiegel Grove will
the chairs and drapes colorfully - large, but simple block of
Birchard's
time,
"'!lodernizatlon" of the furnish the "red parlor" Vermont granite, quarried preserves lor history , the recall the life of the Prsident Ohio Historical Society and
home, as we see it today, can while direcUy across the hall from his father's farm. military career and White and of 19th century Ohio as no the Hayes Foundation, ihe
be largely attributed to the spacious drawing rooU: Behin(i their graves, stands House years of Rutherford B. formal history lesson -ever home is open year around
Hayes.
displays an awesome life-size another, smaller monument, Hayes. Serious students of his could,. Changed little since Wednesday through Saturday
labeled simply " Old Whitey," life ·and times will be in- Hayes' time, the nostalgic from 9 to 5 and from 2 to 5
Immediately assuming portrait of the President.
charge of -the property in
The externally Imposing where Hayes' relaible war trigued with the collection of charm Spiegel Grove held for Sundays, . Mondays and
papers, diaries, journals and him lingers on, and promises Tuesdays. The museum is
1873, Hayes made several wing, exlendlng frarn the horse is buried .
.
family
records housed here. Ohio travelers, eager to open Monday t.hro Saturday 9
necessary changes to the rear of the house conThen, for a more scholarly
·
It
is,
in
fact,
one of the major explore our nation's proud to 5 and from 1:30 to 5 on
original structure, most tains Hayes' library, finished but equally interesting look at
research
centers
for the past during this Bicentennial Sundays.
notably, the addition of a throtighout In rich butternut the former President, visit
huge front porch at the en- paneling . His edensive book the Memorial Museum and
tranceway of the home to collection flUs the floor-to- Ubrary, next door, housing a
fulfill his iong-Ume dreams of ,ceiHng shelves, and the desk, fascinating coliection of
owning a "veranda with a close-by, was used by Hayes Hayes memorlbilia. Some of
house attached." Here he to store his Presidential the interesting displays inShe cited a PUCO-study of provide Ohio's homes and
By J .R. KIMMINS
Uved with his \Vile and three books and papers . The two elude: the Presidential
other
states' utility law which Industries with the service
COLUMBUS (UPI)
sons during his second term ornate sideboards in the carriage, used in Washington Public Utilities C..rnmission indicated that other jurisdic- they expect and deserve in
as governor of Ohio, unm formal dining room display until 1881, transporting such of Ohio member Sally tions do not mandate many of the years ahead," he added.
1877, when he left Spiegel the state china used during famous passengers as Grant, Bloomfield Tuesday asked a the subcommittee's additions
Rep. WUUam E. Hinlg, 0.,
Grove and heacjed for his administration.
Garfield and McKinley; the House cormnittee to change to the Senate bill.
Ne,w Philadelphia, chairmall
Washington to become our
In the foyer, the massive; fascinating toy co)lection of five parts of proposed utility · Areas Mrs. Bloomfield of the committee, said
··
19th President.
open stairwell leads to the 18 the Hayes children , including rate legislation and return objected to include:
further
testimony
In
Agreeing to serve only one bedrooms on the upper three the famous Fanny Hayes doll Ohio utility law to the
- Allowing utilities to add opposition •to the amended bill
tenn in office, he returned to stories, only six of which are house; the wedding gown or "mainstream of national the cost of construction work would be taken next . week
J '
his Ohio home in 1880, but not open !_or inspection, including Lucy Hayes and an assort. regulatory policy.'' .
in progress to their rate base. before final committee ··
before building another the one, downstairs, where ment of gifts . !tom foreign
- Making permanent any action.
The areas receivi ng Mrs.
7\.T•
substanUal addition and Hayes spent his last days. ·
Th_e
of the Bloomfield's objectiops were rates requested by utilities
utliity rate reform bill:
}t
1 lt .J~i 1 ' u remodelmgtheinteriorofthe Outside, the spacious exhibits, however, 1s a large among a package.of amend· within 18 months of their hasOnealready
been heard this,
.· .
older section. At fifty-one, grounds of the estate contain diorama of
Brigadier ments added to a Senate filing with the Ptico year
. ,..
TOK- y- 0- (UPt)· _The fi~t - 1
by
the
House:
••
eadership first was VOiced in Hayes,
far
from as much history as the home General Hayes, surrounded passed bill in the House regardless of a commission committee. Similar
Roy~ Family in the history 1973b~ananalystfromSouth "reUrement" was kept busy it surrounds. A section of the by his officers, depicting his Utilities subcommittee over decision.
amendments were added to
of communism may be taking Korea s Central Inte!Ugence raising his youngest son and famous Sandusky-Scioto years in the Army during the the last several 'Weeks.
-Setting a "future" test that version, but it has been
shape in North Korea.
Agency. At ~etimeit was not daughter, and, as a speaker Indian trail follows one of the Civil War. And, this summer,
the
PUCO stalled in the House Rules
She said most of the year for
President Kim.n Sung, who taken seriously by most on prison reform , was in major drives, running along a special Bicentennial exhibit
amendments have "eroded" calculations ending nine -conunlttee pending Senate.
wiU be 64 on April 15, has students of Korean affairs. popular demand. In-1889, he the southern portion of the will be featured, displaying the bill while having the months after a rate request action on utiilty rate
dominated his country for 31 Si~ce then substantiating made further changes to the estate. Used by the French documents. from every "seductive appearance of . has been filed with the legislation .
years since the end of World evidence has appeared.
home, adding a large dining
corrunlssion.
compromise."
One major feature of tbe
War II.
Japanese visitors to, Pyon- Establishing a "people original House version of the
The Senate version of the
Now, analysts of North gyang say the son's picture
bill, said Mrs. Bloomfield, cowtsel" to represent Ohio bill was the "people's·
Korea both in Japan and now Is displayed prominently KCNA news agency for·about
would simplify the rate consumers in all rate counsel," who would be
South Korea are convinced beside that of the father in three years has been
making process in Ohio, and requests pending before the appointed by a . 15-rnember
the President's son, Kim many
public
places. carryb)g glowing stories ori
advisory cormnlaslon.
Chung D, 36, is being built up Members of Chosen Soren, President Kim's family
Would tend. to hold down PUCO.
John · Robert Jones, a
future utility rate increases.
Mrs. Bloomfield said she
as his successor when time the pro-Communist history, along with hints that
removes his father from the organiZation among Japan's the Kim clan's leadership
"No one can 8!Jarantee that Co I u m b u.s attorney favored the legislature
scene.
rates wiU zoom lower or be representing major Ohio providing funds to local city
600,000 Koreans, also say they should
be considered
H the transition comes off, believe reports of a buildup permanent.
lower in the future," she said. utilities, told the committee or county attorneys to .allow
that the proposed bill wO. not them staff to enter Into
it would be the first case in a for the son io be true.
"The Korean people will
By J.R. KIMMINS
. set standards and issue "But rates will go up at a a "pro-utility bill."
Communist country where a
much less rate. And the
commission utility r~te
The designation of young make the revolutionary
COLUMBUS (UP!)
licenses for therapists.
"It is an antl-ut!Uty bW ... decisions.
son followed his father into Kim as his father's successor family of the great leader Senate consideration of a bill
increases
will
not
be
fattened
A move to require that
and it is an anti-consumer bW
supreme power.
A "people 's counsel
certainly has not been comrade Kim n Sung, the to limit the sale of handguns, three members of the up unnecessairly."
as
well. It wW not lower section was added to the
The idea that young Kim formally
She
said
it
was
misleading
announced. genius of the revolution, shine which passed the House last proposed
board
be
u 'v
industry current utlllty rates nor will it Senate version of the bill last
~ . b_e_in~ ___!!':_Oomed for However, North Korea's
until the end of the sun and week, was halted Tuesday by representatives of the public, for
- - -·
to tell the keep them from rising in the week but any appropriation·
the moon," KCNA said in a a parliamentary maneuver In rather than members of the representa1.
future.
to cover expenses of the office
dispatch back in 1974.
the House, initiated by state profession, was defeated 18 to committee that many of the
"All it wW do is sharply was omitted. Those expenses
suggested
revisions
in
·Ohio
"The Korean people wW Rep. William G. Batchelder, 71 before the bill was passed
utility law were already In reduce the ab!Uty of Ohio's would be funded under a
help them carry through to I!·Medina.
on a 76 to 12 vote.
utiUties to earn the money the
the end the revolutionary
Near the end of the House
The House also agreed in the statutes in other states. companies will need to separate bill.
cause of the leader, floor session, before both Senate amendments and sent
generation after generation." chambers adjourned until to Gov. James A. Rhodes a
The son is no student prince 1:30 p.m. today, Batchelder bill correcting an oversight in
in the wine and · roses offered a , motion to the sweeping revision of
BY DONALD LAMBRO
challenge by Lhe murt tradition of · European light reconsider the 71-22 paasage Ohio's criminal code In 1972.
WASHINGTON (UPI) - conservative Sen. John opera. North Korea watchers of the biU Ia at Thursday. The
The
revisions
had
The announced retirement of Tower of Texas. Tower is in Seoul think he has been motion was left pending, mistakenly Included bicycles
Democratic Leader Mike · known to have asked key rotated since the early 1 • allowing Batchelder time to and tricycles under penalty
Mansfield and his Republican conservatives if tbey will through a series of low.,ievel gather SUJlll!lrt for his move provisions for operation of
counterpart, Hugh Scott, sets support him.
jobs in the Korean Workers to amend the bill.
motor vehicles on public
the stage next January for
Griffin, a party moderate, (Communist) Party (KWP),
They were
sidewalks.
The motion stops the
major intraparty struggles is a longtime friend, House so that he wiD know its Senate from working on the exempted in the bill which
for the Senate's two most colleague and confidl!nt of structure from the ground up. bill. · Batchelder
said passed Monday, provided
powerful posts.
Gerald · Ford. Should Ford
Believed to have been born amendments to the b!U might they are operated at less than
Who wins or .loses could be win the presidency In his own about 1940, he was the child of be ready by the end of this 20 mph.
determined more by the right in November, Griffin President Kim's first wife, week. Before they can. be · Allio sent to the Senate was
future political directions of would be hard to beat despite who died In 1949. He went to considered, however, a a !XU requiring a oourt to
the two parties than by the the heavy conservative , high schoqi at Pyongyang's majority of the House would determine within two days
personalities invoived, makeup of the GOP side of Revolution Institute, a school have to vote to cancel laSt the cowtty of residency of an
though that, too, will affect the aisle.
set up for Korean war weell'i approval of the indigent ward of the state
the outcome. Iii the end, tbe
Byrd, a shrewd and orphans. Some · of his measure and brine It back who dies. Burial expenses
late of powerful ambitions tenacious political tactidan claSiiltlates now are rising before the chamber.
would tben be paid by the
has
developed members of Korea's army
may hinge on the outcome of who
The biU, authored by Rep. county.
this year's presidential race. considerable support in the officer corpa.
Troy L. Jamea, D-aewland,
An appeal of the court
Mansfield's announced Senate through hard work
He studied aeronautical provides for a five.&lt;fay decision would not be allowed
retirement was hardly cold and doing little favors for ·his engineering for a while in "cooling off" period during · to prohibit the prompt burial
when the heretofore behind· colleagues, is clearly the East Germany before the sale of a handgun to ailow of the perliQn, or the payment
the-scenes jockeying for frontrunner fo replace Mans- becoming a professional dealers to find out if the of any expenses to a funeral
power broke the surface on field.
worker in the 'KWP.
purchaser
is
legaily director.
the Democratic side. .
But Muskie, one of the
There has been no burry pannltted to own a firearm,
Meanwhile, the Senate
Within a few hours of the leading liberal vol,ces of his about brln8ing him along. In
It was one of three gun billa · gave unanimous approval to
speech, Edmwtd Muskie of party, a former vice September, 1973, he waa which passed the House and House-passecj legislation
Maine, perhaps the most presidential candidate and given a medium level sent to the Senate last week. waiving tuition and fees at
.
..
influential Democrat in tbe now chairman of the appointment u the party's The other bWs set mandatory state universities for children
Senate, announced he would in f I u en t i al Budge t secretary for organization prison terms for people of Ohio· policemen and
run for majority leader. Committee, · sees
the and propaganda. His naine so convicted of a felony while firemen killed in the line of
Muskie in fact had let It be leadership post as the far does not appear on lists using a handgun and duty.
known sometime before that touchstone of hia Senate publllhed by KCNA of top restricted the use of flreaflllB
Committee testimony
he would seek the post and he career.
party leaden attending by juvenllea.
indicated about six officers
Byrd's political past, oo the important functions.
has been quietly gathering
Batchelder ~aid he thought are kllled In Ohio each Year.
support.
other hand, is the product of
Anal)'ltlln Seoul thi.nk one. gun dealers ought not have
The measure was returned
Muskie's . candidacy runs deep coollerVative rOOII, al- of young Kim'a coaches may the legal re1ponaibWty of to t~ House for concurrence
1mack into the life-long though he has become be Kan1 Ryang tlk, 71, North dedding Who was and who in amendments limiting the
11111bition of Robert Byrd of substantially, a
party Korea'• vi"' president and a was not elilfble to buy a educational 1181istance to four
West Virginia, the Senate's moderate in recent yean. relative of hil mother'a.
FOR :,
firearm. He lllo noted that active years· In college and
No.2leaderwhohasvirtuaUy Senate inliders are quick to , They gueu that if li81a a( people who apply to aetting a mulmum age of 28
.nm the Senate in recent note that Byrd "hasdooe a lot Prllllident Kim, whote health Jllll'chaae a ftrtlt'lll co!lld be - 30 for veteriJIB.
ONLY
years. "
of favors for a lol of is believed good, Jives llllilltained by police, even
The Senate alaJ agreed
01 the Republlc111 aide, senatora." ,
another five years, the though the purchue was with House amendmenta and
Alllltant GOP leader Robert
Others, such as Hubert lra111fer of power to the aon within the law.
sent to the governor a bW
Grimn of Michigan Ia the heir Humphrey, Minn., and might be llllooth. If the father
food -service
.In its floor selllon, the revising
lppllte.1\ to retiring lfulh Ernest Holiin&amp;s, S.C., may luvea the 1Ce11e earUer, a HoUle Pllled and sent to the inspection feel llld including
8cott of PennlylVIIlia, tholJih get Into the fray. But the race· collective leedenhip could Senate a biU llltUni up a fiVe- government operated food
be may be given a 1tron1 as of ndw Ia between Muslde result, but with yoq Kim as member .Occupational servtcea under Department
and Byrd.
one of the strong contenders. Therapy Board which would of Health regillatlons.
. United Preas lnternatlooal
drifting.
A late winter snow
" It's a little bit snowy,"
blanketed
most
of
said
Sununit County sheriff's
northeastern Ohio today but dispatcher
Ron Wood in
the National Weather Service
Akron.
"It's
slowed
things up
says that will change with
and
the
roads
are
snow
temperaturi!s·soaring into the
covered
and
slushy."
60I'l and 7~ by Friday.
In the PainesvWe area,
Numerous school closings
where
snow is a way of life,
were reported in the
northeastern area of the state Lake County sheriff's
today .and driving was . dispatcher Paul Panico, said
reported hazardous in some there had been some drifting
but the roads were open.
sections.
"You never get used to the
"The snow has eased up but
snow,
really, but we put up
the side streets are icy with
with
it,"
Panico said.
the main streets and
The
National
Weather
interstates clear," said a
Service
said
a
brisk
dispatcher in the Cuyahoga
northwest
wind
pumped
very
County sheriff's office. "We
cold
air
into
Ohio
throughout
had four to six inches ranging the night and by early today
from the eastern suburbs to the
mercury had dipped to a
the western suburbs. We got
low 10 degrees at
record
It pretty good."
Mansfield.
The snow was compowtded
The Weather Service ·satd a
by a two-day old strike by
few
snow flurries may linger
Cuyahoga County road
in
the
cowtties
workers which delayed tonight northeastern
but'
other
than
that no
Clearing the roads.
precipitoion
is
forecast
for
The weather also snarled
Ohio
tonight
and
Thursday.
traffic bound for the
Warmer air is expected to
Cleveland Cavaliers-Los
move into Ohio tonight and
Angeles Lakers basketball
'game at the Coliseum in Thursday with lows tonight in
Richfield. Attendance was the 20s while highs Thursday
expected to reach the mid
about 11,000, some 3,000 less are
40s
to mid 50s.
than the advance ticket sale.
And
it is expected to get
The weather also caused even warmer.
postponement of Cleveland's
The extended outlook for
St. Patrick parade. The
Friday
through Sunday calls
parade conunittee decided
for
fair
weather Friday calls
Tuesday night to reschedule
Sunday
with
a.chance of rain
the event for . Sunday
on
Saturday.
afternoon.
Highs wiU be in the 6~ to
The police department in
the
70s on Friday and in
Cuyahoga Fans in Summit , the low
50s on Sunday.
County said the roads are
will be in.the mid 30s
"snow covered and slippery" to Lows
the
low
40s.
and there had heen ,some

•
Commun·zsm may
h ave fi rs t rova l
~amz•ly z•n
Vo..,.e·o

Utility law changes asked

vi.sl~s.

highll~ht

•

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�10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleeort·Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, ~arch 17. 1976

Ohio blanketed Insight to p~st offered at
by heavy snows Ruth~rford B. ·H ayes' ho~e

11 - The Dally Sent.lnei,Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March 17, 1976

Ohio
has
figured room and several rooms and Indians in their war
significantly in America 's upstairs. Uving as 8 private against the British, it later
past 200 years, supplying the citizen and keeping out of ; became a supply trail for
~try with no less 'than public observation, his William Henry Harrison
e1ght Presidents. One of them remaining twelve years in during the War of 1812.
was Rutherford B. Hayes, Fremont were happy ones as Winding through the estate
elected to office during the his last wish to a fri~nd lor nearly hall a mile, the
nation's first "Centennial" testifies: "I would rather die trail provides visitors a
celebration in 1876. The at Spiegel Grove than to live scenic walk through the wellbeautifully preserved estate anywhere else."
landscaped
grounds,
in Fremont, where he lived
Today softened by age the surrounded b:,.. the White
prior to and following his graciou~ !our-story b~lck ' House gates of Hayes '
years at the White House, is home is made even more so Presidential term. Flowers
now a state memorial of. by the collection of personal and
shrubs,
planted
fering vacationers an in· belongings of the Hayes by Mr. and Mrs. Hayes, are
timate Insight into the family. Inside, the tastes, scattered throughout, as are
lifestyle of the former chief traditions and the quality of the huge , old trees, many of
executive and his family.
tile that grew out of a more which are named lor famous
Located 21 miles southwest romantic era, have been Americans. This tradition,
of Sandusky, nestled in a preserved for 20th century started by Hayes to honor his
wooded plot on the outskirts visitors.
distinguished house guests, is
of town, "Spiegel Grove"
Although not an osten- sUD carried on today. The
stands a century apart from tatious home, the dignified most recent "tree-naming"
the concrete and steel of our portraits, gas-burning was for Senator Mark Hatmodern day architectqre. chandeliers, ornate brass field, when he visited the
Here is the weD-furnished door knobs and fifteen home in 1967 to dedicate the
house that Sardis Birchard fireplaces found throughout Hayes Memorial Ubrary.
The Rutherford B. Hayes home at Spiegel Grove
purchased for his promising the rooms, Indicate that the
Not far from the house , on a
young nephew and his family owners were a family of private, wooded knoll, are the Presidential administration, students of American history year. an afternoon or
in 1846. Looking much wealth and Importance.
graves of the President and beginning with George from the period of the avu yesteryear's elegance right
War to the 20th century.
at their own back door.
Downstairs, plush crimson his first lady, marked by a Washington.
smaller in old .Prints . of
The · library , upstairs,
Operated jolnUy by tht
Atrip to Spiegel Grove will
the chairs and drapes colorfully - large, but simple block of
Birchard's
time,
"'!lodernizatlon" of the furnish the "red parlor" Vermont granite, quarried preserves lor history , the recall the life of the Prsident Ohio Historical Society and
home, as we see it today, can while direcUy across the hall from his father's farm. military career and White and of 19th century Ohio as no the Hayes Foundation, ihe
be largely attributed to the spacious drawing rooU: Behin(i their graves, stands House years of Rutherford B. formal history lesson -ever home is open year around
Hayes.
displays an awesome life-size another, smaller monument, Hayes. Serious students of his could,. Changed little since Wednesday through Saturday
labeled simply " Old Whitey," life ·and times will be in- Hayes' time, the nostalgic from 9 to 5 and from 2 to 5
Immediately assuming portrait of the President.
charge of -the property in
The externally Imposing where Hayes' relaible war trigued with the collection of charm Spiegel Grove held for Sundays, . Mondays and
papers, diaries, journals and him lingers on, and promises Tuesdays. The museum is
1873, Hayes made several wing, exlendlng frarn the horse is buried .
.
family
records housed here. Ohio travelers, eager to open Monday t.hro Saturday 9
necessary changes to the rear of the house conThen, for a more scholarly
·
It
is,
in
fact,
one of the major explore our nation's proud to 5 and from 1:30 to 5 on
original structure, most tains Hayes' library, finished but equally interesting look at
research
centers
for the past during this Bicentennial Sundays.
notably, the addition of a throtighout In rich butternut the former President, visit
huge front porch at the en- paneling . His edensive book the Memorial Museum and
tranceway of the home to collection flUs the floor-to- Ubrary, next door, housing a
fulfill his iong-Ume dreams of ,ceiHng shelves, and the desk, fascinating coliection of
owning a "veranda with a close-by, was used by Hayes Hayes memorlbilia. Some of
house attached." Here he to store his Presidential the interesting displays inShe cited a PUCO-study of provide Ohio's homes and
By J .R. KIMMINS
Uved with his \Vile and three books and papers . The two elude: the Presidential
other
states' utility law which Industries with the service
COLUMBUS (UPI)
sons during his second term ornate sideboards in the carriage, used in Washington Public Utilities C..rnmission indicated that other jurisdic- they expect and deserve in
as governor of Ohio, unm formal dining room display until 1881, transporting such of Ohio member Sally tions do not mandate many of the years ahead," he added.
1877, when he left Spiegel the state china used during famous passengers as Grant, Bloomfield Tuesday asked a the subcommittee's additions
Rep. WUUam E. Hinlg, 0.,
Grove and heacjed for his administration.
Garfield and McKinley; the House cormnittee to change to the Senate bill.
Ne,w Philadelphia, chairmall
Washington to become our
In the foyer, the massive; fascinating toy co)lection of five parts of proposed utility · Areas Mrs. Bloomfield of the committee, said
··
19th President.
open stairwell leads to the 18 the Hayes children , including rate legislation and return objected to include:
further
testimony
In
Agreeing to serve only one bedrooms on the upper three the famous Fanny Hayes doll Ohio utility law to the
- Allowing utilities to add opposition •to the amended bill
tenn in office, he returned to stories, only six of which are house; the wedding gown or "mainstream of national the cost of construction work would be taken next . week
J '
his Ohio home in 1880, but not open !_or inspection, including Lucy Hayes and an assort. regulatory policy.'' .
in progress to their rate base. before final committee ··
before building another the one, downstairs, where ment of gifts . !tom foreign
- Making permanent any action.
The areas receivi ng Mrs.
7\.T•
substanUal addition and Hayes spent his last days. ·
Th_e
of the Bloomfield's objectiops were rates requested by utilities
utliity rate reform bill:
}t
1 lt .J~i 1 ' u remodelmgtheinteriorofthe Outside, the spacious exhibits, however, 1s a large among a package.of amend· within 18 months of their hasOnealready
been heard this,
.· .
older section. At fifty-one, grounds of the estate contain diorama of
Brigadier ments added to a Senate filing with the Ptico year
. ,..
TOK- y- 0- (UPt)· _The fi~t - 1
by
the
House:
••
eadership first was VOiced in Hayes,
far
from as much history as the home General Hayes, surrounded passed bill in the House regardless of a commission committee. Similar
Roy~ Family in the history 1973b~ananalystfromSouth "reUrement" was kept busy it surrounds. A section of the by his officers, depicting his Utilities subcommittee over decision.
amendments were added to
of communism may be taking Korea s Central Inte!Ugence raising his youngest son and famous Sandusky-Scioto years in the Army during the the last several 'Weeks.
-Setting a "future" test that version, but it has been
shape in North Korea.
Agency. At ~etimeit was not daughter, and, as a speaker Indian trail follows one of the Civil War. And, this summer,
the
PUCO stalled in the House Rules
She said most of the year for
President Kim.n Sung, who taken seriously by most on prison reform , was in major drives, running along a special Bicentennial exhibit
amendments have "eroded" calculations ending nine -conunlttee pending Senate.
wiU be 64 on April 15, has students of Korean affairs. popular demand. In-1889, he the southern portion of the will be featured, displaying the bill while having the months after a rate request action on utiilty rate
dominated his country for 31 Si~ce then substantiating made further changes to the estate. Used by the French documents. from every "seductive appearance of . has been filed with the legislation .
years since the end of World evidence has appeared.
home, adding a large dining
corrunlssion.
compromise."
One major feature of tbe
War II.
Japanese visitors to, Pyon- Establishing a "people original House version of the
The Senate version of the
Now, analysts of North gyang say the son's picture
bill, said Mrs. Bloomfield, cowtsel" to represent Ohio bill was the "people's·
Korea both in Japan and now Is displayed prominently KCNA news agency for·about
would simplify the rate consumers in all rate counsel," who would be
South Korea are convinced beside that of the father in three years has been
making process in Ohio, and requests pending before the appointed by a . 15-rnember
the President's son, Kim many
public
places. carryb)g glowing stories ori
advisory cormnlaslon.
Chung D, 36, is being built up Members of Chosen Soren, President Kim's family
Would tend. to hold down PUCO.
John · Robert Jones, a
future utility rate increases.
Mrs. Bloomfield said she
as his successor when time the pro-Communist history, along with hints that
removes his father from the organiZation among Japan's the Kim clan's leadership
"No one can 8!Jarantee that Co I u m b u.s attorney favored the legislature
scene.
rates wiU zoom lower or be representing major Ohio providing funds to local city
600,000 Koreans, also say they should
be considered
H the transition comes off, believe reports of a buildup permanent.
lower in the future," she said. utilities, told the committee or county attorneys to .allow
that the proposed bill wO. not them staff to enter Into
it would be the first case in a for the son io be true.
"The Korean people will
By J.R. KIMMINS
. set standards and issue "But rates will go up at a a "pro-utility bill."
Communist country where a
much less rate. And the
commission utility r~te
The designation of young make the revolutionary
COLUMBUS (UP!)
licenses for therapists.
"It is an antl-ut!Uty bW ... decisions.
son followed his father into Kim as his father's successor family of the great leader Senate consideration of a bill
increases
will
not
be
fattened
A move to require that
and it is an anti-consumer bW
supreme power.
A "people 's counsel
certainly has not been comrade Kim n Sung, the to limit the sale of handguns, three members of the up unnecessairly."
as
well. It wW not lower section was added to the
The idea that young Kim formally
She
said
it
was
misleading
announced. genius of the revolution, shine which passed the House last proposed
board
be
u 'v
industry current utlllty rates nor will it Senate version of the bill last
~ . b_e_in~ ___!!':_Oomed for However, North Korea's
until the end of the sun and week, was halted Tuesday by representatives of the public, for
- - -·
to tell the keep them from rising in the week but any appropriation·
the moon," KCNA said in a a parliamentary maneuver In rather than members of the representa1.
future.
to cover expenses of the office
dispatch back in 1974.
the House, initiated by state profession, was defeated 18 to committee that many of the
"All it wW do is sharply was omitted. Those expenses
suggested
revisions
in
·Ohio
"The Korean people wW Rep. William G. Batchelder, 71 before the bill was passed
utility law were already In reduce the ab!Uty of Ohio's would be funded under a
help them carry through to I!·Medina.
on a 76 to 12 vote.
utiUties to earn the money the
the end the revolutionary
Near the end of the House
The House also agreed in the statutes in other states. companies will need to separate bill.
cause of the leader, floor session, before both Senate amendments and sent
generation after generation." chambers adjourned until to Gov. James A. Rhodes a
The son is no student prince 1:30 p.m. today, Batchelder bill correcting an oversight in
in the wine and · roses offered a , motion to the sweeping revision of
BY DONALD LAMBRO
challenge by Lhe murt tradition of · European light reconsider the 71-22 paasage Ohio's criminal code In 1972.
WASHINGTON (UPI) - conservative Sen. John opera. North Korea watchers of the biU Ia at Thursday. The
The
revisions
had
The announced retirement of Tower of Texas. Tower is in Seoul think he has been motion was left pending, mistakenly Included bicycles
Democratic Leader Mike · known to have asked key rotated since the early 1 • allowing Batchelder time to and tricycles under penalty
Mansfield and his Republican conservatives if tbey will through a series of low.,ievel gather SUJlll!lrt for his move provisions for operation of
counterpart, Hugh Scott, sets support him.
jobs in the Korean Workers to amend the bill.
motor vehicles on public
the stage next January for
Griffin, a party moderate, (Communist) Party (KWP),
They were
sidewalks.
The motion stops the
major intraparty struggles is a longtime friend, House so that he wiD know its Senate from working on the exempted in the bill which
for the Senate's two most colleague and confidl!nt of structure from the ground up. bill. · Batchelder
said passed Monday, provided
powerful posts.
Gerald · Ford. Should Ford
Believed to have been born amendments to the b!U might they are operated at less than
Who wins or .loses could be win the presidency In his own about 1940, he was the child of be ready by the end of this 20 mph.
determined more by the right in November, Griffin President Kim's first wife, week. Before they can. be · Allio sent to the Senate was
future political directions of would be hard to beat despite who died In 1949. He went to considered, however, a a !XU requiring a oourt to
the two parties than by the the heavy conservative , high schoqi at Pyongyang's majority of the House would determine within two days
personalities invoived, makeup of the GOP side of Revolution Institute, a school have to vote to cancel laSt the cowtty of residency of an
though that, too, will affect the aisle.
set up for Korean war weell'i approval of the indigent ward of the state
the outcome. Iii the end, tbe
Byrd, a shrewd and orphans. Some · of his measure and brine It back who dies. Burial expenses
late of powerful ambitions tenacious political tactidan claSiiltlates now are rising before the chamber.
would tben be paid by the
has
developed members of Korea's army
may hinge on the outcome of who
The biU, authored by Rep. county.
this year's presidential race. considerable support in the officer corpa.
Troy L. Jamea, D-aewland,
An appeal of the court
Mansfield's announced Senate through hard work
He studied aeronautical provides for a five.&lt;fay decision would not be allowed
retirement was hardly cold and doing little favors for ·his engineering for a while in "cooling off" period during · to prohibit the prompt burial
when the heretofore behind· colleagues, is clearly the East Germany before the sale of a handgun to ailow of the perliQn, or the payment
the-scenes jockeying for frontrunner fo replace Mans- becoming a professional dealers to find out if the of any expenses to a funeral
power broke the surface on field.
worker in the 'KWP.
purchaser
is
legaily director.
the Democratic side. .
But Muskie, one of the
There has been no burry pannltted to own a firearm,
Meanwhile, the Senate
Within a few hours of the leading liberal vol,ces of his about brln8ing him along. In
It was one of three gun billa · gave unanimous approval to
speech, Edmwtd Muskie of party, a former vice September, 1973, he waa which passed the House and House-passecj legislation
Maine, perhaps the most presidential candidate and given a medium level sent to the Senate last week. waiving tuition and fees at
.
..
influential Democrat in tbe now chairman of the appointment u the party's The other bWs set mandatory state universities for children
Senate, announced he would in f I u en t i al Budge t secretary for organization prison terms for people of Ohio· policemen and
run for majority leader. Committee, · sees
the and propaganda. His naine so convicted of a felony while firemen killed in the line of
Muskie in fact had let It be leadership post as the far does not appear on lists using a handgun and duty.
known sometime before that touchstone of hia Senate publllhed by KCNA of top restricted the use of flreaflllB
Committee testimony
he would seek the post and he career.
party leaden attending by juvenllea.
indicated about six officers
Byrd's political past, oo the important functions.
has been quietly gathering
Batchelder ~aid he thought are kllled In Ohio each Year.
support.
other hand, is the product of
Anal)'ltlln Seoul thi.nk one. gun dealers ought not have
The measure was returned
Muskie's . candidacy runs deep coollerVative rOOII, al- of young Kim'a coaches may the legal re1ponaibWty of to t~ House for concurrence
1mack into the life-long though he has become be Kan1 Ryang tlk, 71, North dedding Who was and who in amendments limiting the
11111bition of Robert Byrd of substantially, a
party Korea'• vi"' president and a was not elilfble to buy a educational 1181istance to four
West Virginia, the Senate's moderate in recent yean. relative of hil mother'a.
FOR :,
firearm. He lllo noted that active years· In college and
No.2leaderwhohasvirtuaUy Senate inliders are quick to , They gueu that if li81a a( people who apply to aetting a mulmum age of 28
.nm the Senate in recent note that Byrd "hasdooe a lot Prllllident Kim, whote health Jllll'chaae a ftrtlt'lll co!lld be - 30 for veteriJIB.
ONLY
years. "
of favors for a lol of is believed good, Jives llllilltained by police, even
The Senate alaJ agreed
01 the Republlc111 aide, senatora." ,
another five years, the though the purchue was with House amendmenta and
Alllltant GOP leader Robert
Others, such as Hubert lra111fer of power to the aon within the law.
sent to the governor a bW
Grimn of Michigan Ia the heir Humphrey, Minn., and might be llllooth. If the father
food -service
.In its floor selllon, the revising
lppllte.1\ to retiring lfulh Ernest Holiin&amp;s, S.C., may luvea the 1Ce11e earUer, a HoUle Pllled and sent to the inspection feel llld including
8cott of PennlylVIIlia, tholJih get Into the fray. But the race· collective leedenhip could Senate a biU llltUni up a fiVe- government operated food
be may be given a 1tron1 as of ndw Ia between Muslde result, but with yoq Kim as member .Occupational servtcea under Department
and Byrd.
one of the strong contenders. Therapy Board which would of Health regillatlons.
. United Preas lnternatlooal
drifting.
A late winter snow
" It's a little bit snowy,"
blanketed
most
of
said
Sununit County sheriff's
northeastern Ohio today but dispatcher
Ron Wood in
the National Weather Service
Akron.
"It's
slowed
things up
says that will change with
and
the
roads
are
snow
temperaturi!s·soaring into the
covered
and
slushy."
60I'l and 7~ by Friday.
In the PainesvWe area,
Numerous school closings
where
snow is a way of life,
were reported in the
northeastern area of the state Lake County sheriff's
today .and driving was . dispatcher Paul Panico, said
reported hazardous in some there had been some drifting
but the roads were open.
sections.
"You never get used to the
"The snow has eased up but
snow,
really, but we put up
the side streets are icy with
with
it,"
Panico said.
the main streets and
The
National
Weather
interstates clear," said a
Service
said
a
brisk
dispatcher in the Cuyahoga
northwest
wind
pumped
very
County sheriff's office. "We
cold
air
into
Ohio
throughout
had four to six inches ranging the night and by early today
from the eastern suburbs to the
mercury had dipped to a
the western suburbs. We got
low 10 degrees at
record
It pretty good."
Mansfield.
The snow was compowtded
The Weather Service ·satd a
by a two-day old strike by
few
snow flurries may linger
Cuyahoga County road
in
the
cowtties
workers which delayed tonight northeastern
but'
other
than
that no
Clearing the roads.
precipitoion
is
forecast
for
The weather also snarled
Ohio
tonight
and
Thursday.
traffic bound for the
Warmer air is expected to
Cleveland Cavaliers-Los
move into Ohio tonight and
Angeles Lakers basketball
'game at the Coliseum in Thursday with lows tonight in
Richfield. Attendance was the 20s while highs Thursday
expected to reach the mid
about 11,000, some 3,000 less are
40s
to mid 50s.
than the advance ticket sale.
And
it is expected to get
The weather also caused even warmer.
postponement of Cleveland's
The extended outlook for
St. Patrick parade. The
Friday
through Sunday calls
parade conunittee decided
for
fair
weather Friday calls
Tuesday night to reschedule
Sunday
with
a.chance of rain
the event for . Sunday
on
Saturday.
afternoon.
Highs wiU be in the 6~ to
The police department in
the
70s on Friday and in
Cuyahoga Fans in Summit , the low
50s on Sunday.
County said the roads are
will be in.the mid 30s
"snow covered and slippery" to Lows
the
low
40s.
and there had heen ,some

•
Commun·zsm may
h ave fi rs t rova l
~amz•ly z•n
Vo..,.e·o

Utility law changes asked

vi.sl~s.

highll~ht

•

MEN'S OR BOY'S C.B. EXPRESSION
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INFANTS &amp;TODDLE~S

MIN'S FRAYED

DENIM SHORTS-*'

SLACK SET

Dvr®M Wort. thai will kttt the ..t.olt
long. ,..,., Meet itollift9 . Froy.d Ill; INidth.
Si1n JO.&lt;I()

$297
HECK'S REG.
$3.99

Maneuver stops
hand gun bill

1

Power struggle

1977

WHILE THE EASTER BUNNY
IS HERE~­
YOU G

'

I

..

, \...

-.....~,~

...,, .

PLAYTEX NURSER

'
fl«~l.

Idea l oifi for boby ihoweu .. the a nswer to ony new
mother'' baby loyetto . Complete full sin nur~er ,

HECK'S REG.
$5.95
ClOTII/IIf M"T.

HICK'S
REG •
' $2.99

$ 444

ClDTIIIK . .T.

LADIU'

PHOTO PRINT

EXTRA WIDE
PANTYHOSE ·
SIZES IX, 2X. 3X, ana (,Colors

RUGS

"T,.,. Qr. . llf&gt;(,J (Grd" ihfo., &lt;!l(f, lle&lt;JII I!t~l pl., •o
P•lo! l,.ow '~'II "'1&gt;1 ..,,,.. IPt'C&lt;G I fl'II Oji•I&gt;Q ~
~p~~dol occo l0111. Thll .,..,...,.. !od i11101 . ~~~
flwm OITO.. wo~ld

HECK'S
RIG.
$::t.49

$188

HECK'S
REG:
$1.58
Pair

MEl'S

LADIES'
SLEEPWEAR

SPORT SIIRTS

Soft. MIIM. Tlmt b.ot dll10:rlbn our~• • • for d'"""'f
~; niglllo .. . d.o)". 5'oc10orl of W~•· J.nvlh ond
!Qrlg fiJ-I oo lobr Ddlt "' ~ wl«t wit~ klce tr1 rn.
Siz11 S,M,\.,X,lUI. 111 cot~~to,..le OocfOII cottan.

l't: rlf&gt;Or'IO"m p••" oo~ d I&gt;IILI p rinl 'POri 1hi"1 h~ ' "'" o l the loom
l'lt ..r nnd ~tOIIino . Choate ftom hand100111l~ '"' lored ll!lm ;, 111••
~. M, t , XL

HECK'S
REG.
$4.99

$]99

HICK'S
REG.

$3.88

CI.DTIIJIIf IIIPI.

BAB\'
BIBS

RAG
RUG

LADIES' TUNIC TOPS

24". 45" .... . ...

s ...

. sz..

HECK'S REG.

. $4.88

24" I 72",, , , , , , , • , ,

HICK'S RIG.
'To$3.49
CI.DT/1,_ IIIPT.

tlDTHIMDII'T.

•

12:30 TO 5:00

PLUS GU A 5x7 COI.OR PHPTO
OF YOUR CHILD· AND
THE EASTER BUNNY

I I

.•

•210

I

$277

lodit s tuni c-tops with V-necks , mock turtle nedtl and square n«ks . Ri~ knit
with belted wo i ~t . Sin \ ~mall , medium and lor~ . Chocue from white,
blue, yellow and gr~ten .

19" •33" _

MARQt 19
4PMT08PM
MARQt 20

J"t

99C

Pacific Cinnamon and . Brown.

0 ~hn'•,

'

l

'&lt;

$366'

Pill

�13 - Tbe DaUy Sentlnel,Middleport.P(lQI«oy, o., Wednelday,M.lreh 17, um

il- ThellallySen\!nOI, Mlddltport,P«Deroy, 0 ., Wednesday,M.lrch 17, 1976

OPEIIIAI.Y

10 TO. 9
OIIIIIAILl

10 TO 9

5/I"BII.
'

GARDEI·
HOSE .

'

aoz. ·

slo••

FIIAL lET .

e REGULAR e UNSCENTED

H:::s $119
$1.69
EACH

HECK'S REG.
59'
ttJSMI1ICS 1111'1.

a oz.

lEG.
HECK'S

lll:

89~"'

.

EA.

I

,·.&lt;::.

SINK BASIN CHOICE
CUTLERY TRAY

88cuc•

HECK'S REG.
$3.18

\((.

(OS_,CS III'T.

88(

~

HICK'SIIG.
TO $1 .79 EACH

89. ·r~

7·7,.

HECK'SREG.
99'

.

s•.a1101.1

HAlSPRAY

AIM .
TOOTHPASTE

BRYLCREEM

A. FLORAL BOWL BRUSH &amp; HOLDER
B. OBLONG DISH PAN
C. HANDI..CARRIIR
D. RICTANGULAR WASTEBASKET
E. ROUND LAUNDRY BASKET
F. SI'OUT PAIL

S01. VII'AUS

6.40Z.

4.5 oz.

_j

1rr.Jl

RiG•
1.11

"' ·

IICE'I EASY
$ .1 39

s

~ l!!rn

..;_
1 ~-·

HECK'S
REG.
$1.28
.iACH

'

FIELDER
GLOVE
, :'!';:.,~';;~ltuo.,.Modo

POLY-LIT~ COOLER
\

'8"

HRII'I
110.

$1477

.

.

.

.

.

.~~9

· .·

)

COLEMAN

EACH

HECJ('S
, REG.
$3.55

_s

ams

or 1,. OZ.

MARIBU SPINNER

·RAIISIIl

••
2

1

HICK'S
RrG.
.'.•..
29'
" . ,. .\ . EACH .
SI'MIS-1.

.

~

' $776
, Hec•'i Rea. '9.99 .
Sparll fJipl . .

.

. BASEBALL

s122
u.i_k's 111 '1.99 .

SPHTJIIUr.

- &lt;---- _,. . '

-

- ....! -

' .t.'... ~-

,
.

..,.,
HECK'S REG.
$11.99

tank.

·

t,;··

5

11
._...
.

·..-

'

.,,,;.,
,.,

$

$81.88

.

74••

,--~~

'·~

23(

IIOIISIWIII
,T.

TO

HICIC'IIIG.
o$6.77

. .rs,r.

d

IIOGIWA.,IIII'T.

..

EGG

Carnival Glass

BEATERS
fteck's Reg.

IUIIIIMAID

SCOTCHGARD SPRAY

DISH DRAINER

H:::s $277
.

IIG.

s

•

1212% OR 8x3"

PEAT POTS

EACH

::~·s

69•
PICG.

.

PIC.

$133

.. STillEY

PRUNER OR FOLDING PRUNING SAW
HICK'SIIG.
$5.191ACH

,IIA.WAII

5 OZ.CHOICE
-BOWLS
HKIC'S
IIG.
47' EACH

3 FOI

$1 00

$377

CHOICE

IACI

· CULTIVATOR

.tT

HECK'~
REG.

g•

$4.99

SJ66
.

IIAHWA., . .T.

HOFFMAN

1 PINT IHIRMOS

VACUUM BOTTLE
HICK'S .
209

.

$

llfiiiSLI'AB-T.

IHHISIWA.IJII'T.

.

...,,.,..,
HICK'S IIG.
$7.87

IAT111UI
APPLIQUES

160Z.

$4.29

8''

39C
sac
.....,.

'100

'1.88

cova

CHOICE

T0$1.44

~~o~aw

OVAL BOWLS

$233

GLASSWARE SALE

HECIC'S RIG.

52172
Heck's Reg.
$299

H~i!tg. $22~.

..

C, 42 OZ. I Sl- JAI 1r CO.V a
t. 34 OZ. WDFOII JAIIr COVa

TABL£ CLOTH
'3.99

D.

GLASSWARE
SALE

A.32 OZ. FAl-l GOLD JAIIr COVB
I. J2 OZ. FAIMRI AVOC. JAI 1r

RMNB.
BACK

$219

.

NAHWAB IJII'T.

DENNIS CUPS
[ ":~~:s
46'
.
L ....

PR~~
.

$

..

.$12.88

~

SIMILAR

· . Hardware Dept. ·

GARDEN FERTILIZER .

HICIC'SIIG.
$1.49

H==~
$1.99

$133

NAMIWAII . .T.

3.36

1

8ruwA. . .T.

~; ,

11

47'
EACH

COOKIE PAN

.PLAIN~NK

$6.1,2

HICK'SRIG.

IIG.

Heck's Reg.
13.66

HICI"SUG.

$2.59

11x16

·$·4'' .

Lon terti.

$1 09

WITHSAW

ILlUSTRATION

101
ounce and .ljl.l oynco
With ColtmliJI ' adaptor

$144

.
.

I'IUf

Model 51

24 SIIIRS

90Z. MUGS
3FOR
HECK'~$1 00

HICK'!
II G.
$S:26

3 ONLY.

i .. .:. \_,.

BERKLEY
ULTRA-LITE
REEL
.,~·~604 .· .. ,.· sa••

36 5111115

HECK'S
RIG.

IIIJIISEWA.IJII'T.

sa ••

,JAC·KLE lOX ·.

I

HECK'S REG.
TO $1.99

•

HICK'S
REG.
$32.99

,~::s

. WOOD POLE

CLINC FREE FABRIC SOFTNER

Model 5410B708 Coleman Deluxe Propane
Camp Stove. Operates fro01 dispooa,ble
bolt los or relillablt bulk lank. Footure• noc~.
el· plated '•loW. top, ribbed CO"! bo!fom;
folding wind baffles with dip wice .. ~~~.
sprmg-oction t99gle tatch for RCutinlll lid.,
~.'JT
.

3-IIAY . ·

LlnLELUGUE
SLIGGEIIAT
HECK'S
$488
REG.
$5.66 .

88(EACH

$3''

·

Selectomatlc.

'..: _. ·.. . . ::t::::·~

100PIIPMX

6 ONLY

CHOICE

;--,. ..

BRONDHOOKS

5 .. 10

$109

1/4

IACI

. EACH

. 1/WII

PIOPAIE STOVE
· DELUXE
2: PIICI

s6••

LAWN MOWER

-CHOICE

WIIGHI·McGIU

MEl'S .
GOLF GLOVE
$1.59

CHOICE

HECK'S

. WILSON

H:::s

6' SPIN CAST
OR &amp;lh' SPIN ROD

s8.,.

HECK'S
REG.
$11 ..44 .

$12.ft

SIWTS ""'· .

SPALDING

BASKETBALL

.

.,.,,.

...

.• SOUTHBEND

WILSON

COLEMAN

~

20 INCH DEWXE

20" ln.llne wheel, mower, 14 gauge steel deck with
bottle; 31h HP, B&amp;S vertical pull recoil start engine
with handle mounted speed and stop control. Elght
Inch wheels with wheel adjusters offering a choke
of cutting heights. Chrome handle with arlps.

..,

. C8SMmCS. .,

.. - ·

9 only

1101/SlWAII

lATH OIL, SHAMPOO
OR CREAM RINSE

CLAIROL

·C.

HICI(II

((ISMETK$1111'1.

HECK'S REG.
$18.99

A.

A. VANI1TWASTIBA5KET
B. VANI1T WASTEIAS.,:U

$228

f~~

$1. 27

RUBBERMAID SALE

EACH

COS.IM11fS _,,.

. COSIIITICS III'T.

HECK'S REG.

·

NIMIWA., WT.

QUIET TO.UCH

SUNSHIIE SHAMPOO

e STRAWBERRY e LIME
e RASPBERRY e TANGERINE

HICK'SIIG. $14.99

26 PC. PUNCH BOWL SO

$3
. 44

~·
· ':: .

HECK'S IIG,

'~
·, , ., ' :· ·,, !')

'~~
..·••f t;

..

RICIANGULAI
HICK'S

$5.99

.. .

- ~~

. ·:'};

\i•

RIG.

$2.29

DISH PAN
$144
• • IUI,.T.

HOFFMAN

10LI.COW

MANURE
HKIC'S
II G.
$2 ... 8

s1••

~- · -,::::--' -.L-,~

:JioiToo• .

·.·.'

~

�13 - Tbe DaUy Sentlnel,Middleport.P(lQI«oy, o., Wednelday,M.lreh 17, um

il- ThellallySen\!nOI, Mlddltport,P«Deroy, 0 ., Wednesday,M.lrch 17, 1976

OPEIIIAI.Y

10 TO. 9
OIIIIIAILl

10 TO 9

5/I"BII.
'

GARDEI·
HOSE .

'

aoz. ·

slo••

FIIAL lET .

e REGULAR e UNSCENTED

H:::s $119
$1.69
EACH

HECK'S REG.
59'
ttJSMI1ICS 1111'1.

a oz.

lEG.
HECK'S

lll:

89~"'

.

EA.

I

,·.&lt;::.

SINK BASIN CHOICE
CUTLERY TRAY

88cuc•

HECK'S REG.
$3.18

\((.

(OS_,CS III'T.

88(

~

HICK'SIIG.
TO $1 .79 EACH

89. ·r~

7·7,.

HECK'SREG.
99'

.

s•.a1101.1

HAlSPRAY

AIM .
TOOTHPASTE

BRYLCREEM

A. FLORAL BOWL BRUSH &amp; HOLDER
B. OBLONG DISH PAN
C. HANDI..CARRIIR
D. RICTANGULAR WASTEBASKET
E. ROUND LAUNDRY BASKET
F. SI'OUT PAIL

S01. VII'AUS

6.40Z.

4.5 oz.

_j

1rr.Jl

RiG•
1.11

"' ·

IICE'I EASY
$ .1 39

s

~ l!!rn

..;_
1 ~-·

HECK'S
REG.
$1.28
.iACH

'

FIELDER
GLOVE
, :'!';:.,~';;~ltuo.,.Modo

POLY-LIT~ COOLER
\

'8"

HRII'I
110.

$1477

.

.

.

.

.

.~~9

· .·

)

COLEMAN

EACH

HECJ('S
, REG.
$3.55

_s

ams

or 1,. OZ.

MARIBU SPINNER

·RAIISIIl

••
2

1

HICK'S
RrG.
.'.•..
29'
" . ,. .\ . EACH .
SI'MIS-1.

.

~

' $776
, Hec•'i Rea. '9.99 .
Sparll fJipl . .

.

. BASEBALL

s122
u.i_k's 111 '1.99 .

SPHTJIIUr.

- &lt;---- _,. . '

-

- ....! -

' .t.'... ~-

,
.

..,.,
HECK'S REG.
$11.99

tank.

·

t,;··

5

11
._...
.

·..-

'

.,,,;.,
,.,

$

$81.88

.

74••

,--~~

'·~

23(

IIOIISIWIII
,T.

TO

HICIC'IIIG.
o$6.77

. .rs,r.

d

IIOGIWA.,IIII'T.

..

EGG

Carnival Glass

BEATERS
fteck's Reg.

IUIIIIMAID

SCOTCHGARD SPRAY

DISH DRAINER

H:::s $277
.

IIG.

s

•

1212% OR 8x3"

PEAT POTS

EACH

::~·s

69•
PICG.

.

PIC.

$133

.. STillEY

PRUNER OR FOLDING PRUNING SAW
HICK'SIIG.
$5.191ACH

,IIA.WAII

5 OZ.CHOICE
-BOWLS
HKIC'S
IIG.
47' EACH

3 FOI

$1 00

$377

CHOICE

IACI

· CULTIVATOR

.tT

HECK'~
REG.

g•

$4.99

SJ66
.

IIAHWA., . .T.

HOFFMAN

1 PINT IHIRMOS

VACUUM BOTTLE
HICK'S .
209

.

$

llfiiiSLI'AB-T.

IHHISIWA.IJII'T.

.

...,,.,..,
HICK'S IIG.
$7.87

IAT111UI
APPLIQUES

160Z.

$4.29

8''

39C
sac
.....,.

'100

'1.88

cova

CHOICE

T0$1.44

~~o~aw

OVAL BOWLS

$233

GLASSWARE SALE

HECIC'S RIG.

52172
Heck's Reg.
$299

H~i!tg. $22~.

..

C, 42 OZ. I Sl- JAI 1r CO.V a
t. 34 OZ. WDFOII JAIIr COVa

TABL£ CLOTH
'3.99

D.

GLASSWARE
SALE

A.32 OZ. FAl-l GOLD JAIIr COVB
I. J2 OZ. FAIMRI AVOC. JAI 1r

RMNB.
BACK

$219

.

NAHWAB IJII'T.

DENNIS CUPS
[ ":~~:s
46'
.
L ....

PR~~
.

$

..

.$12.88

~

SIMILAR

· . Hardware Dept. ·

GARDEN FERTILIZER .

HICIC'SIIG.
$1.49

H==~
$1.99

$133

NAMIWAII . .T.

3.36

1

8ruwA. . .T.

~; ,

11

47'
EACH

COOKIE PAN

.PLAIN~NK

$6.1,2

HICK'SRIG.

IIG.

Heck's Reg.
13.66

HICI"SUG.

$2.59

11x16

·$·4'' .

Lon terti.

$1 09

WITHSAW

ILlUSTRATION

101
ounce and .ljl.l oynco
With ColtmliJI ' adaptor

$144

.
.

I'IUf

Model 51

24 SIIIRS

90Z. MUGS
3FOR
HECK'~$1 00

HICK'!
II G.
$S:26

3 ONLY.

i .. .:. \_,.

BERKLEY
ULTRA-LITE
REEL
.,~·~604 .· .. ,.· sa••

36 5111115

HECK'S
RIG.

IIIJIISEWA.IJII'T.

sa ••

,JAC·KLE lOX ·.

I

HECK'S REG.
TO $1.99

•

HICK'S
REG.
$32.99

,~::s

. WOOD POLE

CLINC FREE FABRIC SOFTNER

Model 5410B708 Coleman Deluxe Propane
Camp Stove. Operates fro01 dispooa,ble
bolt los or relillablt bulk lank. Footure• noc~.
el· plated '•loW. top, ribbed CO"! bo!fom;
folding wind baffles with dip wice .. ~~~.
sprmg-oction t99gle tatch for RCutinlll lid.,
~.'JT
.

3-IIAY . ·

LlnLELUGUE
SLIGGEIIAT
HECK'S
$488
REG.
$5.66 .

88(EACH

$3''

·

Selectomatlc.

'..: _. ·.. . . ::t::::·~

100PIIPMX

6 ONLY

CHOICE

;--,. ..

BRONDHOOKS

5 .. 10

$109

1/4

IACI

. EACH

. 1/WII

PIOPAIE STOVE
· DELUXE
2: PIICI

s6••

LAWN MOWER

-CHOICE

WIIGHI·McGIU

MEl'S .
GOLF GLOVE
$1.59

CHOICE

HECK'S

. WILSON

H:::s

6' SPIN CAST
OR &amp;lh' SPIN ROD

s8.,.

HECK'S
REG.
$11 ..44 .

$12.ft

SIWTS ""'· .

SPALDING

BASKETBALL

.

.,.,,.

...

.• SOUTHBEND

WILSON

COLEMAN

~

20 INCH DEWXE

20" ln.llne wheel, mower, 14 gauge steel deck with
bottle; 31h HP, B&amp;S vertical pull recoil start engine
with handle mounted speed and stop control. Elght
Inch wheels with wheel adjusters offering a choke
of cutting heights. Chrome handle with arlps.

..,

. C8SMmCS. .,

.. - ·

9 only

1101/SlWAII

lATH OIL, SHAMPOO
OR CREAM RINSE

CLAIROL

·C.

HICI(II

((ISMETK$1111'1.

HECK'S REG.
$18.99

A.

A. VANI1TWASTIBA5KET
B. VANI1T WASTEIAS.,:U

$228

f~~

$1. 27

RUBBERMAID SALE

EACH

COS.IM11fS _,,.

. COSIIITICS III'T.

HECK'S REG.

·

NIMIWA., WT.

QUIET TO.UCH

SUNSHIIE SHAMPOO

e STRAWBERRY e LIME
e RASPBERRY e TANGERINE

HICK'SIIG. $14.99

26 PC. PUNCH BOWL SO

$3
. 44

~·
· ':: .

HECK'S IIG,

'~
·, , ., ' :· ·,, !')

'~~
..·••f t;

..

RICIANGULAI
HICK'S

$5.99

.. .

- ~~

. ·:'};

\i•

RIG.

$2.29

DISH PAN
$144
• • IUI,.T.

HOFFMAN

10LI.COW

MANURE
HKIC'S
II G.
$2 ... 8

s1••

~- · -,::::--' -.L-,~

:JioiToo• .

·.·.'

~

�•
14 - The Daily Sentinel, MidcUeport-Pomero). 0., Wednesday . March 17, 1976

OPEN DAILY

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

10 TO 9

~

STARTS THURSDAY MORNING

~

•

10 AM TIL 8 PM

2''

V.W. Oil CHANGE
GASKET KIT

Come and enjoy
a cup of coffee &amp;

HECK'S
REG .

48(

79'

$299

$4.77

HECK'S REG.
$7.99 PAIR
AIITOMOTWE/19f.

AUTOMATIC

LIGHTED
MIRROR

TOP

lhi~ mu ror give ~ you doy, evening,
ho me, o r oflice lighting to see you r ~elf
m others ~e you . The b1g mirror lock ~
at a ny o ngle and ~ w i veh fro m reg ular
to mogndyin g W ith " Broad Sp e ~ ·
tru m" light, a (_loirol e•d u !.i~e . tor
pure, tr~,~e lighl.

CLEANER

$1676

GJ _09

~

.

- ··

, -I

~&lt; 1

I

I

-"~

BABY FOOD
WARMING DI$H
IQ

e

I!Wflible, eo•y clao..n'il.

e

KENDAll

I Aoaolcblein~•~- -

e

oH

~

.....

..

-r

LIMIT

49"

HECK'S
REG.
69'
QT.

TEA KETTLE CLOCK
A1 fa miliar os the hand lebar mou~­
tocheond equol ly c hormillg, this kettle
i~ idea l fo r kilc he·n~ or di n ette~ . Cry~ tal
covere d eo}y·to- reod block num l!! rol ~
on while dia l with §weep.second hand.

$1.89

~

HECK'S
REG • .

JEWElRY
DEPT.

QT.

AUTOMOTIVEDEPT.

$599

68(

HECK'S
REG.

99( ~-~

~nd

, ~,

JIWB.WY
. .I.

=111Fl·

mm:

HEADPHONES
Model HP-10

Heck's Reg. '21,96

LUBRICANT

FAN BELTS

•..

····-

-

- ·----··-.....

kll-ill AK.
fM•AN. ..... M

_........................
.......

•fM.•V'-~

SIZES TO FIT
MOST CARS

-.. .. u.. .. ~....._ .. , .. .....,...,.
· .

-

•

~

REG. PRICE
119.95 .

~
~

~
~

MARANTZ

~

N

~

~

~­

,·-~

"

SONY

PANASONIC

.

~

.

~

n

~

AJDIOVOX

~

"'
m

~

•

.,

~

· Automatic. H).min . timer . I and 3 quart

HECK'S

40CT

-

HAIR DRYER

'129.95

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

VALUE

$32.96

HECK'S
REG.
$18.88

SONY:

'

"-~.

•

.s2776

AFULl UNE OF

•

FROM

.....
..

AUDIOVOX

,.

NEW

SONY &amp;
PANASONIC

PORTABLE TELEVISIONS

"

~

ANTENNA BOOSTER :

COLOR AND BLACK &amp; WHITE -·

Adds miles to Antenna Pickup Great for
.Windshield ANTENNAS

COLOR ORGAN
LIST PRICE
134.95

$1995.

. MODEL 0.12-A ..._

LI~:1:1CE

RAIN-LITE

·MIDGETS

MINI STROB.E

. ..

CASE

$5''

HICK'S

RIG.
$25.56

HP2114

LIST PRICE 129.95

'100 PAIR
VALUE

I.AIPOCIET
CAMIIAIIT

$1999

'13 95

......._ _.._....._..__

SUPER

CASSEnE

REG. 169.95

·

WHILE THEY LAST

"We Service What We Sella~d . Everything Else E~jerybody Sells That They Won '1 Servic~"

Ph. 446 7886

243 Third Avenue

Monday thru Friday 10 AM till PM Saturday 10 AM til 5
II
I

)

II

'

\

..

••

'•

•

~·

WE HANDLE

C.B. RADIO
HICK'S
RIG • .

.

••

ALLIGATOR
GRAIN VINYL

..

Jeweky Dept.

4976
COBRA 19

....-~. (~ (~

. HECK'S REG. 119.96

AIITOMO"rE IJIPT.

: $:~?96

$

Panasonic

I«&lt;I....,.ot ~.,...~. l.duM_,...,..._, ,_.1
a. !Gh ... hM! off,.. loq, )(X) wDic lftth ......... · - ...

JEWEUY
119T.

EACH

'

~

M

N

$5995 Value

HECK'S REG.

. -AM..FM TABlE
UDIO
..............· ....
TOR HOSES ...i•....,_..
""""""*'"'-c-...e
OR

HECK'S REG.
$2.99 EACH

.1

u

"

AM-FM RADIO

$1276

SPRAY ·

$1

~-

•"

REGISTER FOR FREE GIFTS

HICK'SRIG. ·

Resistant . • 9 " Holl ow
Groun.:f Stainless Steel Slicing Blades.

SILICONE

99

SUPERSOOPE

"Meet The Factory Representatives"

No Purchase Necmary-Need Not
Be PI'ISiflt To Win

$37••

$14.96

NORILCO lADY lUG

~-

iic•fi

ONLY

Grease

Clo .. , fast , comforta~le sllaotes al a
low, low price! Unique dual action
W!o'l'ing head tor o~ •Jrolte do~enns .
E•duUwe styling ··· eo1yto hold, easy Ja
uwl Coil cord . Easy, flip-up cleaning .
Eltgant styling in fashion colors .

$2.49

.

control•. lh compcx:~ siu permits installation where spoc:• is at a pr.mium.
MeaiUII!'§ julf 5.1" Wide, 7.0" deep. 2.7" high,

e Compact Power Handle,

Odor, Heat

LADIES' SHAVER

REG.

~IJ

FOR AUTO AND HOME USE

PRESTONE

'

... --~

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

stainle" steell:&gt;owlsl Ten position speod

160Z.

;_ .

~~. .,..&gt;~; $
... :;if..-$

Model TM226S combine~ a !.left, but cotrlpcxl look with fine instrumentotion

JIWEUY 119T.

HECK'S

I

· control.

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

~

. ,.,~

8 TRACK CAR TAPE PLAYER

HAl SETTER
MIST COIIDITIOIER

$1.79

SJll

N

Come in
and register for
these prizes to be
•
~ven away.
Saturday, March 20th
last day of our
Grand Opening

I .

MULTI-CLEAIER

H:~::s

•
..,

.

G.E.

TUFF STUFF

FUSE KIT

•

..

$9.49
JIWIUf IJEI'T.

PRESTONE

VOLKSWAGEN

•

~

:• :# ' +

g....,. .

SPAITUS

CHOICE

6 QTS.

I

$11 97
REG.

--...--..
I ••
•

(Not As Shown)

e Pro ...o:t•• • lo.,.. ., ,Hih lloof&gt; orcbo"'' hcw~t:l· bt~&gt;oh ·
lfl9 e Coflfrolled \IP ond do-n ,.,fiot! e Aid. "'

. ~

HECK'S

·~
·~

.:fo'Cwe!.

C.B. RADIO

ELECTRIC
TOOTHBRUSH

• •c: t i\IG on
J

' NGt
'&amp;ldll
. iM ., ,

pto ..dnQ """ llhl..lcGft Cl l lh•
l ightweogloo,
t&lt;&gt;&lt; dlt., P-•• ho ndle moybe ronwd lotltt&gt;&gt;y &lt;'-'oo&gt;'"'il • • ,.,..,..., brvU.o '" .....,..o p&lt;n-1 wlo&lt;o.

SUPERB 1OWJO
OR GTl-30
MOTOR OIL

AUTO.
DEPT.

-

·~

representative.

KARCO

G.l,

FOR POCKET CAMERAS

GT-1'

99C

119T.

KENDALl

89'

•

•

"'

IIG. ~JI

SPRAY
HECK'S
REG.
$1.89

MACiiCUBES

KENDAll

!iUPEP8

HECK'S
REG. ·

~

N

~

$2497

PIISICIIE
can 11 CIIOilE

Dortudd... &lt;&lt;lfd

SYLVANIA

•
. ..

·1\eofl bob,-'' &lt;Iinne&lt;

JEWElRY
DEPT. ~~~

AUTO.
DEPT.

REDU CES "THIN NING" AT
HIGH TEMPERATURES

k

G.E.

oe..W.Q ~"'PP"' ''""• ·
fliminateo t.,.ti~&gt;g
with hoi WOMf ~ 1'1&lt;1 eoho &lt;..,ln;,._n .........d
lm 1 5...:1ion bolloll'l hf,IJ» o_.j lippof\9.

HECK'S
REG.
$21.96

HECK's
REG.
$1 .99

PORTAIL£ 8 .

-/~.-A- . ·' T

e 0... •fep p&gt;9po&lt;otion

~*D T o•

~

.over with a factory

CLAIROL

RALLY VINYL

....

•

your stereo problems

ss~!.

SET

AUmMOTIIIE DEPT.

TRANSMISSIOt•
FLUID

..
..

cookies ••• then talk

TRUCK FLAPS

SET

P.P .O.

..

..,

STAINLESS STEEL AND VINYL SPLASH GUARD:

H:~::s

AUTOMOTIIIE IIE/11.

•

•n

BLACK OR WHITE
PICK-UP

SETOF4

-·-~

HECK'S REG.
$3.99
AIITDIIOTWI
119T.

V. W. BOSCH
SPARK PLUGS

.

Gallipolis, Ohio

PM
••

-

�•
14 - The Daily Sentinel, MidcUeport-Pomero). 0., Wednesday . March 17, 1976

OPEN DAILY

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

10 TO 9

~

STARTS THURSDAY MORNING

~

•

10 AM TIL 8 PM

2''

V.W. Oil CHANGE
GASKET KIT

Come and enjoy
a cup of coffee &amp;

HECK'S
REG .

48(

79'

$299

$4.77

HECK'S REG.
$7.99 PAIR
AIITOMOTWE/19f.

AUTOMATIC

LIGHTED
MIRROR

TOP

lhi~ mu ror give ~ you doy, evening,
ho me, o r oflice lighting to see you r ~elf
m others ~e you . The b1g mirror lock ~
at a ny o ngle and ~ w i veh fro m reg ular
to mogndyin g W ith " Broad Sp e ~ ·
tru m" light, a (_loirol e•d u !.i~e . tor
pure, tr~,~e lighl.

CLEANER

$1676

GJ _09

~

.

- ··

, -I

~&lt; 1

I

I

-"~

BABY FOOD
WARMING DI$H
IQ

e

I!Wflible, eo•y clao..n'il.

e

KENDAll

I Aoaolcblein~•~- -

e

oH

~

.....

..

-r

LIMIT

49"

HECK'S
REG.
69'
QT.

TEA KETTLE CLOCK
A1 fa miliar os the hand lebar mou~­
tocheond equol ly c hormillg, this kettle
i~ idea l fo r kilc he·n~ or di n ette~ . Cry~ tal
covere d eo}y·to- reod block num l!! rol ~
on while dia l with §weep.second hand.

$1.89

~

HECK'S
REG • .

JEWElRY
DEPT.

QT.

AUTOMOTIVEDEPT.

$599

68(

HECK'S
REG.

99( ~-~

~nd

, ~,

JIWB.WY
. .I.

=111Fl·

mm:

HEADPHONES
Model HP-10

Heck's Reg. '21,96

LUBRICANT

FAN BELTS

•..

····-

-

- ·----··-.....

kll-ill AK.
fM•AN. ..... M

_........................
.......

•fM.•V'-~

SIZES TO FIT
MOST CARS

-.. .. u.. .. ~....._ .. , .. .....,...,.
· .

-

•

~

REG. PRICE
119.95 .

~
~

~
~

MARANTZ

~

N

~

~

~­

,·-~

"

SONY

PANASONIC

.

~

.

~

n

~

AJDIOVOX

~

"'
m

~

•

.,

~

· Automatic. H).min . timer . I and 3 quart

HECK'S

40CT

-

HAIR DRYER

'129.95

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

VALUE

$32.96

HECK'S
REG.
$18.88

SONY:

'

"-~.

•

.s2776

AFULl UNE OF

•

FROM

.....
..

AUDIOVOX

,.

NEW

SONY &amp;
PANASONIC

PORTABLE TELEVISIONS

"

~

ANTENNA BOOSTER :

COLOR AND BLACK &amp; WHITE -·

Adds miles to Antenna Pickup Great for
.Windshield ANTENNAS

COLOR ORGAN
LIST PRICE
134.95

$1995.

. MODEL 0.12-A ..._

LI~:1:1CE

RAIN-LITE

·MIDGETS

MINI STROB.E

. ..

CASE

$5''

HICK'S

RIG.
$25.56

HP2114

LIST PRICE 129.95

'100 PAIR
VALUE

I.AIPOCIET
CAMIIAIIT

$1999

'13 95

......._ _.._....._..__

SUPER

CASSEnE

REG. 169.95

·

WHILE THEY LAST

"We Service What We Sella~d . Everything Else E~jerybody Sells That They Won '1 Servic~"

Ph. 446 7886

243 Third Avenue

Monday thru Friday 10 AM till PM Saturday 10 AM til 5
II
I

)

II

'

\

..

••

'•

•

~·

WE HANDLE

C.B. RADIO
HICK'S
RIG • .

.

••

ALLIGATOR
GRAIN VINYL

..

Jeweky Dept.

4976
COBRA 19

....-~. (~ (~

. HECK'S REG. 119.96

AIITOMO"rE IJIPT.

: $:~?96

$

Panasonic

I«&lt;I....,.ot ~.,...~. l.duM_,...,..._, ,_.1
a. !Gh ... hM! off,.. loq, )(X) wDic lftth ......... · - ...

JEWEUY
119T.

EACH

'

~

M

N

$5995 Value

HECK'S REG.

. -AM..FM TABlE
UDIO
..............· ....
TOR HOSES ...i•....,_..
""""""*'"'-c-...e
OR

HECK'S REG.
$2.99 EACH

.1

u

"

AM-FM RADIO

$1276

SPRAY ·

$1

~-

•"

REGISTER FOR FREE GIFTS

HICK'SRIG. ·

Resistant . • 9 " Holl ow
Groun.:f Stainless Steel Slicing Blades.

SILICONE

99

SUPERSOOPE

"Meet The Factory Representatives"

No Purchase Necmary-Need Not
Be PI'ISiflt To Win

$37••

$14.96

NORILCO lADY lUG

~-

iic•fi

ONLY

Grease

Clo .. , fast , comforta~le sllaotes al a
low, low price! Unique dual action
W!o'l'ing head tor o~ •Jrolte do~enns .
E•duUwe styling ··· eo1yto hold, easy Ja
uwl Coil cord . Easy, flip-up cleaning .
Eltgant styling in fashion colors .

$2.49

.

control•. lh compcx:~ siu permits installation where spoc:• is at a pr.mium.
MeaiUII!'§ julf 5.1" Wide, 7.0" deep. 2.7" high,

e Compact Power Handle,

Odor, Heat

LADIES' SHAVER

REG.

~IJ

FOR AUTO AND HOME USE

PRESTONE

'

... --~

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

stainle" steell:&gt;owlsl Ten position speod

160Z.

;_ .

~~. .,..&gt;~; $
... :;if..-$

Model TM226S combine~ a !.left, but cotrlpcxl look with fine instrumentotion

JIWEUY 119T.

HECK'S

I

· control.

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

~

. ,.,~

8 TRACK CAR TAPE PLAYER

HAl SETTER
MIST COIIDITIOIER

$1.79

SJll

N

Come in
and register for
these prizes to be
•
~ven away.
Saturday, March 20th
last day of our
Grand Opening

I .

MULTI-CLEAIER

H:~::s

•
..,

.

G.E.

TUFF STUFF

FUSE KIT

•

..

$9.49
JIWIUf IJEI'T.

PRESTONE

VOLKSWAGEN

•

~

:• :# ' +

g....,. .

SPAITUS

CHOICE

6 QTS.

I

$11 97
REG.

--...--..
I ••
•

(Not As Shown)

e Pro ...o:t•• • lo.,.. ., ,Hih lloof&gt; orcbo"'' hcw~t:l· bt~&gt;oh ·
lfl9 e Coflfrolled \IP ond do-n ,.,fiot! e Aid. "'

. ~

HECK'S

·~
·~

.:fo'Cwe!.

C.B. RADIO

ELECTRIC
TOOTHBRUSH

• •c: t i\IG on
J

' NGt
'&amp;ldll
. iM ., ,

pto ..dnQ """ llhl..lcGft Cl l lh•
l ightweogloo,
t&lt;&gt;&lt; dlt., P-•• ho ndle moybe ronwd lotltt&gt;&gt;y &lt;'-'oo&gt;'"'il • • ,.,..,..., brvU.o '" .....,..o p&lt;n-1 wlo&lt;o.

SUPERB 1OWJO
OR GTl-30
MOTOR OIL

AUTO.
DEPT.

-

·~

representative.

KARCO

G.l,

FOR POCKET CAMERAS

GT-1'

99C

119T.

KENDALl

89'

•

•

"'

IIG. ~JI

SPRAY
HECK'S
REG.
$1.89

MACiiCUBES

KENDAll

!iUPEP8

HECK'S
REG. ·

~

N

~

$2497

PIISICIIE
can 11 CIIOilE

Dortudd... &lt;&lt;lfd

SYLVANIA

•
. ..

·1\eofl bob,-'' &lt;Iinne&lt;

JEWElRY
DEPT. ~~~

AUTO.
DEPT.

REDU CES "THIN NING" AT
HIGH TEMPERATURES

k

G.E.

oe..W.Q ~"'PP"' ''""• ·
fliminateo t.,.ti~&gt;g
with hoi WOMf ~ 1'1&lt;1 eoho &lt;..,ln;,._n .........d
lm 1 5...:1ion bolloll'l hf,IJ» o_.j lippof\9.

HECK'S
REG.
$21.96

HECK's
REG.
$1 .99

PORTAIL£ 8 .

-/~.-A- . ·' T

e 0... •fep p&gt;9po&lt;otion

~*D T o•

~

.over with a factory

CLAIROL

RALLY VINYL

....

•

your stereo problems

ss~!.

SET

AUmMOTIIIE DEPT.

TRANSMISSIOt•
FLUID

..
..

cookies ••• then talk

TRUCK FLAPS

SET

P.P .O.

..

..,

STAINLESS STEEL AND VINYL SPLASH GUARD:

H:~::s

AUTOMOTIIIE IIE/11.

•

•n

BLACK OR WHITE
PICK-UP

SETOF4

-·-~

HECK'S REG.
$3.99
AIITDIIOTWI
119T.

V. W. BOSCH
SPARK PLUGS

.

Gallipolis, Ohio

PM
••

-

�Big Jim has

line from

......

the American farmer for

granted - and this includes
many Members of Congress.
As long as there is an
adequate supply of food in the
market, everything is
assumed to be normal. In
fact. much more has to be

structure for estate taxes is

farmer

enough food for himself and
si x others. Today only five
percent of the population
feeds everyone else. The

mOOt::rn farmer provides for
his own food needs and 55
other people. Even just 100
years ago it took a week to
produce the same amoun t of
wheat that can be produced
today with a single hour of
human labor. Despite the
decline In actual nwnber of
farmers, there has never
been widespread shortages of
famine in the United States.
The American farmer not
only provides an ample
supply of food for 220 million

The current estate tax

exemption was set 34 years
ago- in 1942. It is clearly out
of line with the decline in
purchasing power of the
dollar and inflation of the
past three and a half decades.
In addition , a family must
pay the estate tax im·
mediately

unless severe

hardship ca n be shown. Since
the major value of the estate
is in the land, this type of
policy almost forces the sale
of the farm - often to a large
agribusiness

or

land

developer - leading to a
concentration of economic
powe r and the further
disappearance of the family
Americans, but also feeds farmer and valuable farm
many of the hungry in the land.
rest· of the world.
Several months ago I
This tremendous farm reported on the Jobs Creation
productivity must continue if Act which would subthe food needs of Nor th stantially and dramatically
America and the world are tv create jobs in the private
be met. In 1976 there are sector of our economy. This
roughly 4billion people on the bill which I have coplanet. If present population sponsored would also .aid the
trends continue, by the year family farm . The $60,000
2000 there will be between 6.5 present estate tax exemption
to 7 billion people ·living on would be increased and a 25the earth. Despite these year stretch-out period for
star tling figures Congress payment of estate taxes is
has neglected the farmer , provided - a 5 year
proceeding
under
the moratorium followed by 20
assumption that productivity annual payments.
will continue to rise even as
Reform of the federal
the absolute number of estate tax laws is just one of
farmers decline .
the ways that Congress can
Nothing could be further encourage the continuance of
from the truth. · It is totally the family farm. A stable
tll1,realistic to expect con- economy that will hold down
tinued growth in farm fuel and fertilizer costs is also
production if we do not needed. Above all , we must
provide meanin gful be sure that this agricultural
legislation . to meet the far· abundance is not brought to
mers needs.· One e&lt;ample an end by unwise governmental policies.

Lawmaking at a glance
COLUMHU!I
tUPI ) A
glance at ac t ivity Tuesday in
th e Ohio General Assembly :
HOUSE·
Bills lntroduc.ed
HB1399 Mclin Clarifies
law enforcement power S of
Humane Societies.
H.Bl400 Feighan - r=x em pts
sales C)f corr~ctive lenses and
fr ames from the sales tax .
HBl401 Gilmart in - Limits
the circumstances under which
delay in delivery of the subject
of a consumer tran saction may
be considered ev idence of a
dece pt ive act .
HB1402 Rankin - ReQu ires
rend ing institutions to send
persons for Whom property
taxes are paid a copy of their
tax bill .
HB1403 Tablack-Youna
Expands def i n i t ions or retai l
sales ' and sates at reta i l to
ln.c lude transfers · of cert.lin
tangible personal property .
HB1405 Bransto,ol - Prov ides
state aid fOr ii'nprovement and
promotion of purebr ep swine .
HB1406 Hin ig -Batchetder Permits state payment of
claims for liabil ity arising out
of operation of aircrafl. wat er craft and other vehicles.
Bills Passed
Sub.
HB1227
Hart ley
Establ ish standards and proce'·
dures for th e l icensure of
occupational
therap ists
and
their assistanis . vote : 76-12.
Am .
5856
Applegate
Excludes children 's tricycles
from definition of b ic ycle. Votes
- Emergency : 82·7. Bill . 91-0. ·
Am . HB707 Mrs . F ix Grants Welfare
Department
and county welfl!re agencies
the right to subrogation in
clalnis against a third party .
vote : 84 -6.
Am . HB112B Hiniq Pro -

vides tor judicial determination
of legal residency of indigents
whose bl.lrial expenses are
bOrne
by
counlies,
cities.
v-illage and townships. Vote ; 89·

0.

House Concur~
Am .
HB729
Ml.lrdock .. Clar ifies responsibi l ity
of
schOols for payment of unem ploymen t compensation benfits
to aull:il iary serv ice p~rsonn e l.
Concurrence : 86· 2.
Votes Emergency : 86-2. Bill: 88 -1.
Motion to Reconsider
Left Pendi.l19
Sub . HB-441 T . James Prov ides
manda tory
prison
sentence for illegally conceali ng

• fi rearm . SENATE.
. Senate Concurs
Am . SB269 Jackson - In ·
eludes government opera t ions
undet food service licensing
and · rev ises i nspection
fee
Schedule . Vote : 32 ·0.
Bills Passed
Am . HBJ37 Orlett - Waives
and fees
at · state
t uit ion
universities for children Of
f iremen and peace officers
ki l led in the line or duty . Vote :

EDWARD TOBER

,,

Void Alter Sot., March 20, 1916
S11hject to Applitobl• Stat. &amp; lO&lt;ol Te»~•t

Ca~yr il' tlf 1!116 - The l( ror:,r Co. Items lndl ~rites . IIOd thrll
Sal. , Mar. II , 1,71 i1 Ill .Wtit Yirlirtil ltrocer StOUI, plus
lllurfie'l , Yir1 lni; , Piktn ill t, llf ., GllliiiOiis 11111 l'omeror. Ollil.
Wr remve th e ri&amp;lll to l1111i t qu attitiu. NON£ SOLD fO DUURS.

kits.

Radio Shack, a division of
Tandy Corporation (NYSE),
headquartered in Fort Worth,
Texas, -operates a chain of
3,000 full-line stores in all 50
states, Canada, South
America and Europe. The
army
company expects to establish
a network of 2,000 across the
COLUMBUS - Edward L. nation .
Tober of Columbus has been
Big Jim's Plaza has been
appointed Education Coor- S.rving the Middleport area
dinator for the U. S. Army since 1966.
Colwnbus District Recruiting
Command. ·
Although his office is
located here, Tober's activities will cover the central
Ohio area comprising approl&lt;imately one-third of the
state. His primary responsibility will be to apprise
school officials of the inCOLUMBUS (UP!) - State
service education
op- Superintendent of Public Jn.
portunities available in the struction Martin W. Essex
Army, and to explain the says that 43 per cent o.f 21
merits of the Armed Services issues on ballots at special
Vocational Aptitude Batter elections in 20 Ohio school
( ASV AB) administered in the districts since the November
schools. The test is controlled general election have been
by the Department of approved.
Defense and is administered
One-third of the bond issues
at no cost to requesting school and 58 per cent of the new
officials.
operating levies on the ballots
"The Army is placing a were approved, he said Tuesgreat deal of emphasis on day.
education," said Mr . Tober.
"The results indicate that
He went on to say, "A real the climate for approval of
benefit which I hope many of school-related tax issues is
our young people will look slightly improved when
into is the Army's new compared to last year at this
educational program entitled time, but that tax resistance
Project AHEAD (Army Help is evident,'' Essex said.
for
Education
and "There is rio statewide
Development)." Essentially pattern."
the program enables a young
A year earlier only 30 per
person to enlist in the Army cent of the issues at special
and at the same time pursue ehictions were approved. In
a college degree from one of November, 38.5 per c.ent of
over 1,200 colle.g0s par- the 239 issues on baUots in 204
ticipating in the program school districts passed.
with the government paying
up to ' 75 percent of tuition
costs.
Tober attained his BA
degree
from
Capital
University and his Masters
Degree from Ohio State.
Prior to his assunnption of
ORPHAN'S
duties will) Army Recruiting, . THE LITTLE
MESSAGE
he was employed by the There lived a lil1te orphan
girl ,
Arlington School System and Nobody
want ed her around .
taught at the Upper Arlington They sent he r to an or phanage ;.
.
High School . in Columbus,
No fr ,iendship t h e re she
Ohio.
found .

Columbus man
will explain

ICrtttr Uallwtetllltd 10Q"'e Pure

Florida
Orange Juice

Cost Cutters Help
Trim Your
food

training

!k99c
With Coupon

Limit I Cou,on With SlO Addltlonol Pur,ohal
Void After Sot., Mor~h 20, 1976
Subi•c:t Ia Applicable State &amp; locol Ton•

Regular or Chub

School issues

100°/o Pure
Ground Beef

hatting Wlder

Buzz Buttered
Steaks

.500 recently

p r.'IJVda
den z·es .
war azms
c

•

MOSCOW (UP! l - The
Communist
party newspaper
Jl.O.
S6493 M eshel Corrects Pravda said today there is no
error s in the budget and capital such thing as a Soviet
improvement acts . Votes inilitary threat.
Emergency : 32 -0. Bi ll : 32-0.
Am . HB607 Kopp Se ts
In a commentary on
m in imums for liabi lity insur .
current
NATO
naval
ance school boards purchase
for pup i l transportation person - exercises in the North
nel and allows purchase of Atlantic, Pravda said "It is
unlr1sured motorist coverage .
clear to any saber-minded
Vote : 32-0.
Resolution Ottered
person that there is no such
SJR4J App legate - Requests
CongresS to defeat a resolution threat in el&lt;istence either for
tha t would subiect military the West or the East.
disabi lity pay to the federal
"The Soviet Union is not
Income tax
·going to attack anyone and it
does not need war," the
newspaper said.
·
FUNNY BUSINESS
By Roger Bollen
The party daily criticized
persons who it said were
trying to spread fears of such
... 4ES, IT 1S A c900D RESoME ... a threat, which It said "was
incompatible with the spirit
f30T; UJHO ARE 4o() TR41r\lG
of the times."
TO INIPf&lt;ESS?
Specifically named we.re
•
Admiral Isaac C. Kidd,
Supreme Allied Conunander
for the Atlantic, and Gen. J .
A. Dextrase, chief of the
General Staff of Canada.
Pravda said the two "have
joined actively in the chorus
of opponents of the relaxatioo
of tension (the Russian
phrase for detente)."
According to Pravda,
:• reactionary
minded
circles" in NATO are wring
' such Cold Warstyle threats to
justify "inordinately high"
weapons' budgeta and their
•'militarist'' course.
The naval exercises, which
include forces from the
United States , Britain,
France, West Germany,
Holland and Canada, foUow
by one month Soviet land
exerciles in the Caucasus
involving at least 25,000
Cl1976fJYI.U h I~~ ik!l U\ /',d 011
troops.

.•

ll•lt 1 Coo,on With $1 DAd41tlonot Po•·chollo

Plaza will stock a selected
line of products from Radio
Shack. Its products include
Realistic hi.fi and citizens
band equipment, Archer
antennas, Micronta test instruments, Science Fair and
Archer electconic and hobby

farms each year. They rna ke
it almos t impossible for

produced

Pkc.
With Coupon

man, store owner, Big Jim's

so intolerable that it is forcing the sale of many family

middle·dass Americans to
done to insure continuance of .provide their children with
the super-abundance from the farms they have spent a
the American farm and a role lifetime in building . When 'One
for the . farmer in our ' of the owners of a familyeconomy.
owned farm dies, more often
At the turn of the century than not the farm must be
·there were 30 milli on sold to meet heavy estate ·
Americans on farm s :wd taxes.
each

:!,49c

Big Jim's Plaza located at
Pearl and Locust Sis . in
Middleport is now a Radio
Shack Authorized Sales
Center.
According to James Rick-

would be. a lessening of the
estate tax burdens now facing
our family farmers .
The present federal rate

t\

-~·*199

Pkr;.
With Coupon

limit 2 With Coupon and $10 Additional Puc·chcqc

They had a rule within the
. home
No letter should leave the
grounds
Before it had been read and
passed
And nothing of i ll will found .
We shall how go, the keeper
said.
And get the facts we need
To rid ourselves of an ill bred
Girl who never will take heed .

Marc~

:?0, 1976
S'u~ject to Appli coble Stole &amp; loco l To11•1
Void After Sat.,

,, :.( .·~

Swlft'nlng
Shortening
2-lb.
IO·oz,

Can

89C

With Coupon

limit 1 Coupon With $10 Additional Purc:~au
Vc;&gt;icf A.fter Sat., Morell 20, 1976
Subject lo'· Applicob le Slate &amp; Local Tu••

Spotlight

I 6-ox. Returnable Btls.

Bean
Coffee

R.C. Cola

8

Pale

They thought she had an evil
mind ,
They could no t understand
her ,
There was no one gentle and
kind ,
She was a trouble maker .
T!'le keeper of the orphanage
Was eager to turn her .away ,
She thought her luck bad
come at last
When the little gir'l ·one day
Took a Jetter to the high fence
And climbed a friendly t ree
And hung her message there
at" length
Where passersby might see .

....... '" loll

Charmln
Tissue

Radio Shack
·For far too long a majority
of people have been taking

3$
.a.

Goo41n
Silver lrid11
Shopping
Plara and

89

b.

Bag

Pomeroy Only

. ,~.*I

Sungold
Bread

t

t

t

t

I

e

I

e

I

Chunk Light
Tuna ••. ~ •.•••

Kroger
Grade
A
Do
Large Eggs . . . . . . . :·

6Y1-t1.

sa· =··~·~~ ........ ~=: *139
Leans

I

Can

C

Dried

Fancy F,.ah

Pinto
Beans

California
Strawberries

4-lb.
Bag

this world of unkind
judgment
Let us go beyond the walls
or hate and hang a message
In the tree of love where all
In search of hate and
vengeance
May read what the little girl
had asked ,
God's message in the manger
And Christ ' s message .o n the
cross:
.
" Whoever you arP,
Wherever you are ,
.·
t love you . - Carmer A. Ball,
P . a . Box 119, B idwell, Ohio
4561 ...

In

I

Now .Open
24 Hours'bl9a Day
(Except Sat1rday Midnltht

a.m. Sunday)

(Except Gassaway, Hinton, lr••ton 1514 S. 3rd);
Plkevlll•, RalntUt, S.111mtrsrlllt aad W"tt !!Jp!IJ!)
herylhlng you bur ot
!(roger h guoront~ed lor
1 our total tatilfoc!ion

rqordleu at monvfactvrer
If yov ore not l'llitfitd .
Kr~ will reploce your

it,.rn
Of

wifh

the

lOIN

o comporoble
your

brond

bro~Ml

pUJ.cho..

or
i

We al1o Ouarantet ftlot" Will • t'f'•rrthinf in 01.11' po...,
10 have Ornpl• wp,tl•• of all och,.rlfMd 1p.cial1 on our
th•l"'' ,. .... ,. ~au .hop lor h.., , If, dw!o conditio"'
beyol'ld 01.1!' control, we IYn avl of on odwertiMd tpet;iol,
we wltl 1ulntitu111 lh1 ltlfM 1,.111 ill o comporoblf brand
[whll r. 1uc.h on It- it a¥oilobl•l
1fM 101M lll'lllfltl
or, if yo~ prrf•r,
I
" whlc;h fltfttlet
yov lo th. IOf'!fl
ot the tome tpeclol

ctt·

,I

Jones discusses free enterprise
"The American Economy
and the American Farm
Economy" was the topic of
discussion when Tom Jones
met with the Gallia County
American Private Enterprise
Study group March 11 .
Jones, the second of several
business leaders scheduled to
lead discussions with the
group! raised the foUowinR
questiOns :
What is the meaning of "a
modified free market?"
What is the relation hetween economic freedom and
political freedom in a
Democrjlcv?

What ii the responsibility of
government with regard to
inflation?
In what ways can economic
competition be compared to
the checks and balances in
government provided by the
Constitution?
Responding lo questions
from students, Jones expressed a strong beUef in the
individual and the private
enterprise system asswnlng
responsl bill ty, taking
initiative, and Undertaking
all the functions they tll'e able
and willing to perform in our
society, and only when this

;.;::·:::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::;:::;::·nn::;&amp;:~XOU ... ,, ''? ... , , ..

Ji.

Mason County

!

News Notes~·· High school

By Alma Marshall

••••

·:·:

The Mason Senior Citizens, meeting this past Thuroday
planned to meet again on March 18 at their trailer on Adams
St. Mrs. Frank Hendrickson, aide, wW pick up persons
desiring to go to the meetings and wW return them to their
homes. Her number Is 773-5997.
The ladies main project is quilting. At Jresent, they are
accepting orders. If interested in having these ladles quilt for
you call 882-2826 or 773-5640.
Two inspectors at' the meeting stressed leaving the two doors
unlocked while the ladies are meeting In case of fire. It was
also suggested that they have fire drills.
Mr. Rayburn of the board and Mrs. Paullne MarshaU,
coordinator, attended the meeting alonR with Mrs.
Hendrickson, Wilda Coleman, Clara Staats, Edna Burris, Ella
Ford, Blanche Jones, Barbara McDaniel, Susie Brinker,
·
Bertha Hall and Helen Elias.
At the next meeting persons baving birthdays wW enjoy ice
cream and cake along with all the others attending.
THE MASON CITY Historical Society wW hold a Craft Show
on Sunday, April 2S from 2 to 5 p.m. at the Virgil A. Lewis
house , on Brown Street.
The show is open to the public to display, and view the crafta.
No admissi!lll will be charged. Persons bringing craft Items
will be responsible for taking them borne after 5 p.m.
Craft items donated to the society will he sold that day and
proceeds will go to the organization.
MASON - The Mason City Historical Society met March 11
with M~s . Catherine Smith presiding. The secretary read a
letter from Lecnard Davis, State Historic Preservation
Officer, in which he said he was pleased to receive infonnatloo
in regard to the Lewis home. "As time permits," he said, "We
will add items of ilifonnation to our fUe on the Lewis house,
and hope to establish this building as a West Virginia historic·
site at some future date."
Mrs. Fred Taylor read Scripture, ThoURht for the Day, and
closed the devotionals with prayer .
Mrs. Delwon Roberts, treasurer, reported that after
expenditures there is a balance of $142.05 in treasury. Mrs.
John Marshall, secretary, read minutes which were approved.
Harry Campbell, a resident of Mason many years, haa asked
tO donate ID the society. The group voted unanimously to buy a
large· colonial hand made plaque inscribed with Mason City
Historical Society - formed in 11174 and donated by Harty
Campbell. Vernon Cadle, an exeo)llent wood carver, has
consented ID undertake this project.
The president appointed Mrs. Fred Taylor and Mrs. Earl
Ingels to be in charge of the Art and Craft Display scheduled
for April 25 from 2 to 5 p.m.
Mrs. Smith also appointed Mrs. Delwon Roberts to see about
getting the yard surrounding the home cleaned.
, .
Requests have been made In regard to having names placed
in Memoriam. A book will be purcbased for lhla purpose and
names placed in memory, Memorial cards are $1.
A potluck lunch was served at noon. Attending were .Mrs.
Smith, Mrs. Marshall, Mrs. Roberts, Mrs. Ingelll, Mrs ..Taylor,
Mrs. Zelma Hunter, Mrs. Russell Barton, Mrs. Lester
Foreman, Mrs. Christine Guthrie and Mrs. Evelyn Proffitt.

Kroger Welcomes
Your ftdtral

Food Stamps

PERSONAL MENTION
MR. AND MRS. ROBERT COMPSON of Iran visited hJs
mother, Mrs. Blanche Compson J~nes, their daughter and sonin-law, Mr. and Mrs. William Zuspan, Jr. and family In Mason;
and Mrs. Compson's parents, Mr, and Mrs, Otto M!Uer, West
Columbia; recently. F'rom here the Compso111 went to Montana
to visit their son and daughter and famUies. Their son and
wife, Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Cmpson and family Uve at Great
Falls, and their daughter and husband, Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Einarson and family reside at Columbia FaUa, MCIItana. Wbile
in Montana the Compsons saw their two new grandsons.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Roach and family recently
were Mr. Edward Bumgarner, Mr, and Mrs. CarroU Elliott,
Rev . Walter Cloud, Mr. Richard lambert and Mrs. George
Tripp.
Mrs. Gladys Goulding of New Haven vlalted with Mrs.
Chester Oliver and family on Thursday.
Ca lling on Mr. and Mrs. Chester OUver on March 12 to help·
Mr. Oliver celebrate his birthday with Ice cream and cake
were Mr. and Mrs. Luther Tucker, Tim, Todd, Terry and Troy,
Cathy CUrry of New Haven, Mr. Robert OUver and lance ol
Mason. Gifts were presented to Mr. OUver.
·
Retha Lewis celebrated her 80th birthday Cll February 29.
Bill and Goldie Smith.took the honoree out to dinner at the Mar
Van Restaurant. Retha expressed thanks for IUch a lovely day
and the many presents which she received.
Mrs. Betty Ault o( Colunnbus spent the weekend vlaiting her
sister, Mrs. Laura Johnson.
Landon Smith, Mason, and hJs brother, Durward Smith, and
Leroy Durst, both of Pt. Pleasant, are fiahlnlat Franklin, W. ·
Va. Both daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Denver Blake ol Clifton,
recently celebrated their lilrthdays. Dawn J!!ab wlebnled
her sixth birthday at the home of her IP'I~renll, Mr. and
Mrs. Uoyd WUiams, on March 1. Games were played and
·refreshments ljJrved Ill Brian Varian, Matt Rickard, Kevin
Peters, Darin Young, Chjris Grogan, Kri1t1n &lt;lark, Kann
Robertson, Becky Hoffman, Mrs. Helen Blrlllr, Marie Smllh,
Vicki Clark, Sandra Hoffman,. Kaylene Roberllon, Jaclde
Blake, Theresa Smith, Mark Gilkey, PhyUia Glllley. .Sendina
gifts were Katie Oliver and Evelyn LDckett.
.
The Blakes other daughter, Jackie, ap 11, beld a shnnber
party at her home on March 5. Attending were laura James,
Lisa Peters, Theresa Smith, Kaylene Robinson, .Jqer Hill,
Julia Roush, Margaret Joluwon and Dekna Varian.
.
THE CHEROKEE Homemakers Club met February ~at
the home of Mrs. Sally Smith for their reJIU(ar DICIIIITJy
meeting.
·
·
The meeting was opened by the prealdent, Mrs. Nellie CillO
and the members giving the Flag salute. The clab pledge IIIII
creed were given.
.'
·,
Devotions were given by Mrs. Ollie Browning, "The Simple
Ufe." The Scripture was found in John 3:18. A poem 11'111 "'-d
"Up Hills."
The Jesson, "AU About Indoor Planll and Their Care," wu
prsented by Mrs. Willa Scltes.
Refreshments were served to Mn. Nellie cuto, Mn. Ollie
Browning, Mrs. Willa Scltea, Mrs. MI. ICmma Paaah, Mrs.
Juanita Clark, Mrs. Kate Stone, Mrs . .utarah Dawhunt and
Mrs. SaUy smith.

'

•

'

has ~n done, and there are function or his consumer
yet important unmet needs spending function .
should government step in.
With more than a dozen
He also pointed out that the tough questions to discuss,
competitive market system, only a few really got "in
imperfect as it is, is still lhe depth" treatment leaving
best bwliness system in the important areas for future
world today. He pointed out inquiry discussion.
that •uch a system depend•
Rick Altizer of the Jacksoo
on responsible behavior by Production Credit Assn .,
both producers and con. program leader, announced
swners, who must, therefore, the Earl Durham of Central
be
economically Soya will discuss "Essentials
knowledgeable. He must for a Successful Business &amp;
have marketable skills, Busines$ in the United
know..IJow, and talent for Staies" at the next group
either his income-earning session.

ltc8:W~

THE MOTHERS CLUB of Mason will meet at the home on
March 17.

~

fresh

When the woman read the
message
In silence she hung her head .
II was from the orphans'
heart,
And the ·message that she
read :
" To anyone who finds this
letter ,"
Then the sweet words, "I love
you ."
If an angel would sar It better
Sill no other words would do .

· WANTCONNALLY
WASHINGTON UP!
President Ford's political
lieutenants are trying. to gel
John Connally to endorse
their leader and thus dljn
Ronald Reagan's hopes of
winning
the
Texas
Repablican primary In May,
White House sources said
·.today. Reagan's hopes of
winning the May 1 Texas
primary Is one of the main
reasons he is sticking to hill
challenge of Ford despite five
primary losses, lhey said.

..

17 - The DaUySentinel,Middlei&gt;ort-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wedneoday,March 17,1976

Gallla ColD! ty School Supt.
C. Comer Bradbury confirmed Tuesday afternoon
action taken by the Gallia
Local Board of Education to
place a bond issue before the
voting public on the high
school building program was
illegal.
According to Section 133.18
of the Ohio School Law, a
board of education tnay
IUbmlt a question to the
voters to issue bonds for
permanent improvement, but
such board's action must be
by two-thirds of all its
members, meaning four
·memhers.

•
ISSUe

At Monday night's special
session in the North Gallia
High School cafeteria, the
board voted 3-1 to place a
$6,700,000 bond issue before
the public Aug. 10 at the rate
of 2.28 mills. Since two-thirds
of the members did not ap·
prove, the action was iUegal.
During the vote, board
president J . E. (Dick)
Cremeens opposed it while
James Blevins, William
Carter and J. C. Mitchell
favored the one-high school
building concept for students
in grades · 10·12. Board
memher Bruce S. Stout was

- -----

Green is

OPEN FRI.
TIL8

S. B. 94

.OPEN SAT.

POINT PLEASANT AND MIDDlfPORT

TIL6

REG. '1.99 YARD VALUE

•0

TOM JONES

absent.
According to Supt. Bradbury, the board must meet
again to act upon the high
school issue. Sinse the
board's approval on the
question of constructing new
elementary buildings was 4-o.
no further action is needed.
That issue will be placed on
the special election ballot.
Under the board's plans
adopted Mnday night, a $6
million dollar bond issue at 2
mills will be presented for
voter
approval.
The
elementary proposal is for
new buildings in the Bidwell·
Vinton area, CentervilleCadmus area and Hannan
Trace area and refurbishing
of existing buildings at Ad·
daville and Cheshire-Kyger
Elementary Schools and all
four existing high school
buildings. The high schools
would be renovated into
junior high centers for
students in grades 7-9.
Under a separate bond
issue, voters would get the
opportunity to approve or
reject a $6,700,000 issue to
construct one high school
building and renovate the
existing four high schools.

"

INCH POLYESTER .

DOUBLE KNIT

faulty

proviStons of this bill wiU
severely restrict its ability to
earn the necessary return.
"If we fail to earn a
reasonable return on investment, we cannot convince our lenders to put up
the addi tiona! monies
necessary to build for the
future. If we cannot build, the
result is going to be industrial
stagnation, loss of jobs and a
COLUMBUS - "Senate serious shortage of elec·
BiD 94 g'oes beyond the repeal tricity," he S:Bid.
.of the reconstruction cost new
(ltCN) formula. It's really
asking utility customers to
swallow a candy-coated pill
today that may turn into a
time bomb tomorrow," A. G.
Greeri, chairman of l!&gt;e board
and chief executive officer of
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Company, said.
Green ~s statement was in
response to hearings by the
Ohio House Utilities Committee on Senate Bill 94 which
would replace RCN with an
&lt;riglnal cost formula.
He said the proposed
original cost formula would
Inflict restrictive and
unre•Hstic limitations on
utilities that would result in
energy shortages and higher
prices tomorrow.
"This blll is unfair
legialation ... unfair to the
public because It Increases
the danger of future energy
shortages and threatens the
jobs of Ohioans ... and
New Spring Shipment
unfair to utUlties because it
instills in them a fear of
Full Stock
reduced earnings which
would suppress construction
On Display
programs," (keen said
emphatically.
IMMEDIATE INSTALLATION
Columbus and Soulhern
feelll ·a rate making law
BY EXPERT CRAFTSMAN
ahould be based on the
principle that a pubUc utllity
Ia entitled to recover, In
rates, the cost of providing
service plus a reasonable
return to Investors. The
Company believes that the · ...iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiol_______.

•
opposmg

WI CAN SA vi YOU MONitl

FABRICS
Special Group of 60 inch
Polyester Double Knit in plain
and fancy patterns, assorted
. colors. Stock up now at this low,
low price at Stiffler's. We can
save you money .

.59
Reg. '1.99 .

YARD

Value!

LADIES NEW SPRING
PROPORTIONED TO FIT
100% POLYESTER

..

..

..
,.

..
..
"'

..

DOUBLE KNIT

.

SLACKS

::;:u

-.

New for spring, Ladies' proportioned
to fit 100 p~l. Polyester Double Knit
Slacks, in assorted colors. Sizes 8to 18.
Values to $5.99.

..
" "'

......,.

..:""',

..

NEW FOR SPRING
LADIES BUDGET PRICED

••

-·

SANDALS
Special group of
ladles' new Spring
Sandals . in brown,
mint, yellow, white,
wedge heel. sling
back. Sizes 5 to 9.
Shop Early.

CARPETING

.99

'·'"

•H

\

.

••

. " '"
~

PAIR

NEW SPRING ·COLORS
36 INQI OOURlESY
FANCY AND PlAIN

100% COTTON

PRINTS

Beaulih.il new courtesy print,
100 pet. cotton, 36 inch wide, all
the new spring colors. Stock up
now at Stiffler's. We can save
you money. Plain colors too.

79t

We Bought A Trucldoadf
You Get A LOWER PRICEI

4" PLASTIC

FAMOUS CANNON
CAMEO ROSE FANCY

NO-IRON

Solid &amp; Petfolated

SALE

10'
Joint

2.50
3" Solid
$zt0 '

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS

CO~

SHEETS
Twin and Full size f.ancy no iron
sheets with matChing pillow cases.
Cannon's famous Cameo Rose
patterns. Assorted colprs.

lWIN SIZE

$347

CASES

$259 .

EA.

PAIR

.'
."',

SPICIAL PURCtiA~I
LADIES IONDID KNIT

·2~!

CKS

MASON, W. V

- '

I

(

·--

�Big Jim has

line from

......

the American farmer for

granted - and this includes
many Members of Congress.
As long as there is an
adequate supply of food in the
market, everything is
assumed to be normal. In
fact. much more has to be

structure for estate taxes is

farmer

enough food for himself and
si x others. Today only five
percent of the population
feeds everyone else. The

mOOt::rn farmer provides for
his own food needs and 55
other people. Even just 100
years ago it took a week to
produce the same amoun t of
wheat that can be produced
today with a single hour of
human labor. Despite the
decline In actual nwnber of
farmers, there has never
been widespread shortages of
famine in the United States.
The American farmer not
only provides an ample
supply of food for 220 million

The current estate tax

exemption was set 34 years
ago- in 1942. It is clearly out
of line with the decline in
purchasing power of the
dollar and inflation of the
past three and a half decades.
In addition , a family must
pay the estate tax im·
mediately

unless severe

hardship ca n be shown. Since
the major value of the estate
is in the land, this type of
policy almost forces the sale
of the farm - often to a large
agribusiness

or

land

developer - leading to a
concentration of economic
powe r and the further
disappearance of the family
Americans, but also feeds farmer and valuable farm
many of the hungry in the land.
rest· of the world.
Several months ago I
This tremendous farm reported on the Jobs Creation
productivity must continue if Act which would subthe food needs of Nor th stantially and dramatically
America and the world are tv create jobs in the private
be met. In 1976 there are sector of our economy. This
roughly 4billion people on the bill which I have coplanet. If present population sponsored would also .aid the
trends continue, by the year family farm . The $60,000
2000 there will be between 6.5 present estate tax exemption
to 7 billion people ·living on would be increased and a 25the earth. Despite these year stretch-out period for
star tling figures Congress payment of estate taxes is
has neglected the farmer , provided - a 5 year
proceeding
under
the moratorium followed by 20
assumption that productivity annual payments.
will continue to rise even as
Reform of the federal
the absolute number of estate tax laws is just one of
farmers decline .
the ways that Congress can
Nothing could be further encourage the continuance of
from the truth. · It is totally the family farm. A stable
tll1,realistic to expect con- economy that will hold down
tinued growth in farm fuel and fertilizer costs is also
production if we do not needed. Above all , we must
provide meanin gful be sure that this agricultural
legislation . to meet the far· abundance is not brought to
mers needs.· One e&lt;ample an end by unwise governmental policies.

Lawmaking at a glance
COLUMHU!I
tUPI ) A
glance at ac t ivity Tuesday in
th e Ohio General Assembly :
HOUSE·
Bills lntroduc.ed
HB1399 Mclin Clarifies
law enforcement power S of
Humane Societies.
H.Bl400 Feighan - r=x em pts
sales C)f corr~ctive lenses and
fr ames from the sales tax .
HBl401 Gilmart in - Limits
the circumstances under which
delay in delivery of the subject
of a consumer tran saction may
be considered ev idence of a
dece pt ive act .
HB1402 Rankin - ReQu ires
rend ing institutions to send
persons for Whom property
taxes are paid a copy of their
tax bill .
HB1403 Tablack-Youna
Expands def i n i t ions or retai l
sales ' and sates at reta i l to
ln.c lude transfers · of cert.lin
tangible personal property .
HB1405 Bransto,ol - Prov ides
state aid fOr ii'nprovement and
promotion of purebr ep swine .
HB1406 Hin ig -Batchetder Permits state payment of
claims for liabil ity arising out
of operation of aircrafl. wat er craft and other vehicles.
Bills Passed
Sub.
HB1227
Hart ley
Establ ish standards and proce'·
dures for th e l icensure of
occupational
therap ists
and
their assistanis . vote : 76-12.
Am .
5856
Applegate
Excludes children 's tricycles
from definition of b ic ycle. Votes
- Emergency : 82·7. Bill . 91-0. ·
Am . HB707 Mrs . F ix Grants Welfare
Department
and county welfl!re agencies
the right to subrogation in
clalnis against a third party .
vote : 84 -6.
Am . HB112B Hiniq Pro -

vides tor judicial determination
of legal residency of indigents
whose bl.lrial expenses are
bOrne
by
counlies,
cities.
v-illage and townships. Vote ; 89·

0.

House Concur~
Am .
HB729
Ml.lrdock .. Clar ifies responsibi l ity
of
schOols for payment of unem ploymen t compensation benfits
to aull:il iary serv ice p~rsonn e l.
Concurrence : 86· 2.
Votes Emergency : 86-2. Bill: 88 -1.
Motion to Reconsider
Left Pendi.l19
Sub . HB-441 T . James Prov ides
manda tory
prison
sentence for illegally conceali ng

• fi rearm . SENATE.
. Senate Concurs
Am . SB269 Jackson - In ·
eludes government opera t ions
undet food service licensing
and · rev ises i nspection
fee
Schedule . Vote : 32 ·0.
Bills Passed
Am . HBJ37 Orlett - Waives
and fees
at · state
t uit ion
universities for children Of
f iremen and peace officers
ki l led in the line or duty . Vote :

EDWARD TOBER

,,

Void Alter Sot., March 20, 1916
S11hject to Applitobl• Stat. &amp; lO&lt;ol Te»~•t

Ca~yr il' tlf 1!116 - The l( ror:,r Co. Items lndl ~rites . IIOd thrll
Sal. , Mar. II , 1,71 i1 Ill .Wtit Yirlirtil ltrocer StOUI, plus
lllurfie'l , Yir1 lni; , Piktn ill t, llf ., GllliiiOiis 11111 l'omeror. Ollil.
Wr remve th e ri&amp;lll to l1111i t qu attitiu. NON£ SOLD fO DUURS.

kits.

Radio Shack, a division of
Tandy Corporation (NYSE),
headquartered in Fort Worth,
Texas, -operates a chain of
3,000 full-line stores in all 50
states, Canada, South
America and Europe. The
army
company expects to establish
a network of 2,000 across the
COLUMBUS - Edward L. nation .
Tober of Columbus has been
Big Jim's Plaza has been
appointed Education Coor- S.rving the Middleport area
dinator for the U. S. Army since 1966.
Colwnbus District Recruiting
Command. ·
Although his office is
located here, Tober's activities will cover the central
Ohio area comprising approl&lt;imately one-third of the
state. His primary responsibility will be to apprise
school officials of the inCOLUMBUS (UP!) - State
service education
op- Superintendent of Public Jn.
portunities available in the struction Martin W. Essex
Army, and to explain the says that 43 per cent o.f 21
merits of the Armed Services issues on ballots at special
Vocational Aptitude Batter elections in 20 Ohio school
( ASV AB) administered in the districts since the November
schools. The test is controlled general election have been
by the Department of approved.
Defense and is administered
One-third of the bond issues
at no cost to requesting school and 58 per cent of the new
officials.
operating levies on the ballots
"The Army is placing a were approved, he said Tuesgreat deal of emphasis on day.
education," said Mr . Tober.
"The results indicate that
He went on to say, "A real the climate for approval of
benefit which I hope many of school-related tax issues is
our young people will look slightly improved when
into is the Army's new compared to last year at this
educational program entitled time, but that tax resistance
Project AHEAD (Army Help is evident,'' Essex said.
for
Education
and "There is rio statewide
Development)." Essentially pattern."
the program enables a young
A year earlier only 30 per
person to enlist in the Army cent of the issues at special
and at the same time pursue ehictions were approved. In
a college degree from one of November, 38.5 per c.ent of
over 1,200 colle.g0s par- the 239 issues on baUots in 204
ticipating in the program school districts passed.
with the government paying
up to ' 75 percent of tuition
costs.
Tober attained his BA
degree
from
Capital
University and his Masters
Degree from Ohio State.
Prior to his assunnption of
ORPHAN'S
duties will) Army Recruiting, . THE LITTLE
MESSAGE
he was employed by the There lived a lil1te orphan
girl ,
Arlington School System and Nobody
want ed her around .
taught at the Upper Arlington They sent he r to an or phanage ;.
.
High School . in Columbus,
No fr ,iendship t h e re she
Ohio.
found .

Columbus man
will explain

ICrtttr Uallwtetllltd 10Q"'e Pure

Florida
Orange Juice

Cost Cutters Help
Trim Your
food

training

!k99c
With Coupon

Limit I Cou,on With SlO Addltlonol Pur,ohal
Void After Sot., Mor~h 20, 1976
Subi•c:t Ia Applicable State &amp; locol Ton•

Regular or Chub

School issues

100°/o Pure
Ground Beef

hatting Wlder

Buzz Buttered
Steaks

.500 recently

p r.'IJVda
den z·es .
war azms
c

•

MOSCOW (UP! l - The
Communist
party newspaper
Jl.O.
S6493 M eshel Corrects Pravda said today there is no
error s in the budget and capital such thing as a Soviet
improvement acts . Votes inilitary threat.
Emergency : 32 -0. Bi ll : 32-0.
Am . HB607 Kopp Se ts
In a commentary on
m in imums for liabi lity insur .
current
NATO
naval
ance school boards purchase
for pup i l transportation person - exercises in the North
nel and allows purchase of Atlantic, Pravda said "It is
unlr1sured motorist coverage .
clear to any saber-minded
Vote : 32-0.
Resolution Ottered
person that there is no such
SJR4J App legate - Requests
CongresS to defeat a resolution threat in el&lt;istence either for
tha t would subiect military the West or the East.
disabi lity pay to the federal
"The Soviet Union is not
Income tax
·going to attack anyone and it
does not need war," the
newspaper said.
·
FUNNY BUSINESS
By Roger Bollen
The party daily criticized
persons who it said were
trying to spread fears of such
... 4ES, IT 1S A c900D RESoME ... a threat, which It said "was
incompatible with the spirit
f30T; UJHO ARE 4o() TR41r\lG
of the times."
TO INIPf&lt;ESS?
Specifically named we.re
•
Admiral Isaac C. Kidd,
Supreme Allied Conunander
for the Atlantic, and Gen. J .
A. Dextrase, chief of the
General Staff of Canada.
Pravda said the two "have
joined actively in the chorus
of opponents of the relaxatioo
of tension (the Russian
phrase for detente)."
According to Pravda,
:• reactionary
minded
circles" in NATO are wring
' such Cold Warstyle threats to
justify "inordinately high"
weapons' budgeta and their
•'militarist'' course.
The naval exercises, which
include forces from the
United States , Britain,
France, West Germany,
Holland and Canada, foUow
by one month Soviet land
exerciles in the Caucasus
involving at least 25,000
Cl1976fJYI.U h I~~ ik!l U\ /',d 011
troops.

.•

ll•lt 1 Coo,on With $1 DAd41tlonot Po•·chollo

Plaza will stock a selected
line of products from Radio
Shack. Its products include
Realistic hi.fi and citizens
band equipment, Archer
antennas, Micronta test instruments, Science Fair and
Archer electconic and hobby

farms each year. They rna ke
it almos t impossible for

produced

Pkc.
With Coupon

man, store owner, Big Jim's

so intolerable that it is forcing the sale of many family

middle·dass Americans to
done to insure continuance of .provide their children with
the super-abundance from the farms they have spent a
the American farm and a role lifetime in building . When 'One
for the . farmer in our ' of the owners of a familyeconomy.
owned farm dies, more often
At the turn of the century than not the farm must be
·there were 30 milli on sold to meet heavy estate ·
Americans on farm s :wd taxes.
each

:!,49c

Big Jim's Plaza located at
Pearl and Locust Sis . in
Middleport is now a Radio
Shack Authorized Sales
Center.
According to James Rick-

would be. a lessening of the
estate tax burdens now facing
our family farmers .
The present federal rate

t\

-~·*199

Pkr;.
With Coupon

limit 2 With Coupon and $10 Additional Puc·chcqc

They had a rule within the
. home
No letter should leave the
grounds
Before it had been read and
passed
And nothing of i ll will found .
We shall how go, the keeper
said.
And get the facts we need
To rid ourselves of an ill bred
Girl who never will take heed .

Marc~

:?0, 1976
S'u~ject to Appli coble Stole &amp; loco l To11•1
Void After Sat.,

,, :.( .·~

Swlft'nlng
Shortening
2-lb.
IO·oz,

Can

89C

With Coupon

limit 1 Coupon With $10 Additional Purc:~au
Vc;&gt;icf A.fter Sat., Morell 20, 1976
Subject lo'· Applicob le Slate &amp; Local Tu••

Spotlight

I 6-ox. Returnable Btls.

Bean
Coffee

R.C. Cola

8

Pale

They thought she had an evil
mind ,
They could no t understand
her ,
There was no one gentle and
kind ,
She was a trouble maker .
T!'le keeper of the orphanage
Was eager to turn her .away ,
She thought her luck bad
come at last
When the little gir'l ·one day
Took a Jetter to the high fence
And climbed a friendly t ree
And hung her message there
at" length
Where passersby might see .

....... '" loll

Charmln
Tissue

Radio Shack
·For far too long a majority
of people have been taking

3$
.a.

Goo41n
Silver lrid11
Shopping
Plara and

89

b.

Bag

Pomeroy Only

. ,~.*I

Sungold
Bread

t

t

t

t

I

e

I

e

I

Chunk Light
Tuna ••. ~ •.•••

Kroger
Grade
A
Do
Large Eggs . . . . . . . :·

6Y1-t1.

sa· =··~·~~ ........ ~=: *139
Leans

I

Can

C

Dried

Fancy F,.ah

Pinto
Beans

California
Strawberries

4-lb.
Bag

this world of unkind
judgment
Let us go beyond the walls
or hate and hang a message
In the tree of love where all
In search of hate and
vengeance
May read what the little girl
had asked ,
God's message in the manger
And Christ ' s message .o n the
cross:
.
" Whoever you arP,
Wherever you are ,
.·
t love you . - Carmer A. Ball,
P . a . Box 119, B idwell, Ohio
4561 ...

In

I

Now .Open
24 Hours'bl9a Day
(Except Sat1rday Midnltht

a.m. Sunday)

(Except Gassaway, Hinton, lr••ton 1514 S. 3rd);
Plkevlll•, RalntUt, S.111mtrsrlllt aad W"tt !!Jp!IJ!)
herylhlng you bur ot
!(roger h guoront~ed lor
1 our total tatilfoc!ion

rqordleu at monvfactvrer
If yov ore not l'llitfitd .
Kr~ will reploce your

it,.rn
Of

wifh

the

lOIN

o comporoble
your

brond

bro~Ml

pUJ.cho..

or
i

We al1o Ouarantet ftlot" Will • t'f'•rrthinf in 01.11' po...,
10 have Ornpl• wp,tl•• of all och,.rlfMd 1p.cial1 on our
th•l"'' ,. .... ,. ~au .hop lor h.., , If, dw!o conditio"'
beyol'ld 01.1!' control, we IYn avl of on odwertiMd tpet;iol,
we wltl 1ulntitu111 lh1 ltlfM 1,.111 ill o comporoblf brand
[whll r. 1uc.h on It- it a¥oilobl•l
1fM 101M lll'lllfltl
or, if yo~ prrf•r,
I
" whlc;h fltfttlet
yov lo th. IOf'!fl
ot the tome tpeclol

ctt·

,I

Jones discusses free enterprise
"The American Economy
and the American Farm
Economy" was the topic of
discussion when Tom Jones
met with the Gallia County
American Private Enterprise
Study group March 11 .
Jones, the second of several
business leaders scheduled to
lead discussions with the
group! raised the foUowinR
questiOns :
What is the meaning of "a
modified free market?"
What is the relation hetween economic freedom and
political freedom in a
Democrjlcv?

What ii the responsibility of
government with regard to
inflation?
In what ways can economic
competition be compared to
the checks and balances in
government provided by the
Constitution?
Responding lo questions
from students, Jones expressed a strong beUef in the
individual and the private
enterprise system asswnlng
responsl bill ty, taking
initiative, and Undertaking
all the functions they tll'e able
and willing to perform in our
society, and only when this

;.;::·:::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::;:::;::·nn::;&amp;:~XOU ... ,, ''? ... , , ..

Ji.

Mason County

!

News Notes~·· High school

By Alma Marshall

••••

·:·:

The Mason Senior Citizens, meeting this past Thuroday
planned to meet again on March 18 at their trailer on Adams
St. Mrs. Frank Hendrickson, aide, wW pick up persons
desiring to go to the meetings and wW return them to their
homes. Her number Is 773-5997.
The ladies main project is quilting. At Jresent, they are
accepting orders. If interested in having these ladles quilt for
you call 882-2826 or 773-5640.
Two inspectors at' the meeting stressed leaving the two doors
unlocked while the ladies are meeting In case of fire. It was
also suggested that they have fire drills.
Mr. Rayburn of the board and Mrs. Paullne MarshaU,
coordinator, attended the meeting alonR with Mrs.
Hendrickson, Wilda Coleman, Clara Staats, Edna Burris, Ella
Ford, Blanche Jones, Barbara McDaniel, Susie Brinker,
·
Bertha Hall and Helen Elias.
At the next meeting persons baving birthdays wW enjoy ice
cream and cake along with all the others attending.
THE MASON CITY Historical Society wW hold a Craft Show
on Sunday, April 2S from 2 to 5 p.m. at the Virgil A. Lewis
house , on Brown Street.
The show is open to the public to display, and view the crafta.
No admissi!lll will be charged. Persons bringing craft Items
will be responsible for taking them borne after 5 p.m.
Craft items donated to the society will he sold that day and
proceeds will go to the organization.
MASON - The Mason City Historical Society met March 11
with M~s . Catherine Smith presiding. The secretary read a
letter from Lecnard Davis, State Historic Preservation
Officer, in which he said he was pleased to receive infonnatloo
in regard to the Lewis home. "As time permits," he said, "We
will add items of ilifonnation to our fUe on the Lewis house,
and hope to establish this building as a West Virginia historic·
site at some future date."
Mrs. Fred Taylor read Scripture, ThoURht for the Day, and
closed the devotionals with prayer .
Mrs. Delwon Roberts, treasurer, reported that after
expenditures there is a balance of $142.05 in treasury. Mrs.
John Marshall, secretary, read minutes which were approved.
Harry Campbell, a resident of Mason many years, haa asked
tO donate ID the society. The group voted unanimously to buy a
large· colonial hand made plaque inscribed with Mason City
Historical Society - formed in 11174 and donated by Harty
Campbell. Vernon Cadle, an exeo)llent wood carver, has
consented ID undertake this project.
The president appointed Mrs. Fred Taylor and Mrs. Earl
Ingels to be in charge of the Art and Craft Display scheduled
for April 25 from 2 to 5 p.m.
Mrs. Smith also appointed Mrs. Delwon Roberts to see about
getting the yard surrounding the home cleaned.
, .
Requests have been made In regard to having names placed
in Memoriam. A book will be purcbased for lhla purpose and
names placed in memory, Memorial cards are $1.
A potluck lunch was served at noon. Attending were .Mrs.
Smith, Mrs. Marshall, Mrs. Roberts, Mrs. Ingelll, Mrs ..Taylor,
Mrs. Zelma Hunter, Mrs. Russell Barton, Mrs. Lester
Foreman, Mrs. Christine Guthrie and Mrs. Evelyn Proffitt.

Kroger Welcomes
Your ftdtral

Food Stamps

PERSONAL MENTION
MR. AND MRS. ROBERT COMPSON of Iran visited hJs
mother, Mrs. Blanche Compson J~nes, their daughter and sonin-law, Mr. and Mrs. William Zuspan, Jr. and family In Mason;
and Mrs. Compson's parents, Mr, and Mrs, Otto M!Uer, West
Columbia; recently. F'rom here the Compso111 went to Montana
to visit their son and daughter and famUies. Their son and
wife, Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Cmpson and family Uve at Great
Falls, and their daughter and husband, Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Einarson and family reside at Columbia FaUa, MCIItana. Wbile
in Montana the Compsons saw their two new grandsons.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Roach and family recently
were Mr. Edward Bumgarner, Mr, and Mrs. CarroU Elliott,
Rev . Walter Cloud, Mr. Richard lambert and Mrs. George
Tripp.
Mrs. Gladys Goulding of New Haven vlalted with Mrs.
Chester Oliver and family on Thursday.
Ca lling on Mr. and Mrs. Chester OUver on March 12 to help·
Mr. Oliver celebrate his birthday with Ice cream and cake
were Mr. and Mrs. Luther Tucker, Tim, Todd, Terry and Troy,
Cathy CUrry of New Haven, Mr. Robert OUver and lance ol
Mason. Gifts were presented to Mr. OUver.
·
Retha Lewis celebrated her 80th birthday Cll February 29.
Bill and Goldie Smith.took the honoree out to dinner at the Mar
Van Restaurant. Retha expressed thanks for IUch a lovely day
and the many presents which she received.
Mrs. Betty Ault o( Colunnbus spent the weekend vlaiting her
sister, Mrs. Laura Johnson.
Landon Smith, Mason, and hJs brother, Durward Smith, and
Leroy Durst, both of Pt. Pleasant, are fiahlnlat Franklin, W. ·
Va. Both daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Denver Blake ol Clifton,
recently celebrated their lilrthdays. Dawn J!!ab wlebnled
her sixth birthday at the home of her IP'I~renll, Mr. and
Mrs. Uoyd WUiams, on March 1. Games were played and
·refreshments ljJrved Ill Brian Varian, Matt Rickard, Kevin
Peters, Darin Young, Chjris Grogan, Kri1t1n &lt;lark, Kann
Robertson, Becky Hoffman, Mrs. Helen Blrlllr, Marie Smllh,
Vicki Clark, Sandra Hoffman,. Kaylene Roberllon, Jaclde
Blake, Theresa Smith, Mark Gilkey, PhyUia Glllley. .Sendina
gifts were Katie Oliver and Evelyn LDckett.
.
The Blakes other daughter, Jackie, ap 11, beld a shnnber
party at her home on March 5. Attending were laura James,
Lisa Peters, Theresa Smith, Kaylene Robinson, .Jqer Hill,
Julia Roush, Margaret Joluwon and Dekna Varian.
.
THE CHEROKEE Homemakers Club met February ~at
the home of Mrs. Sally Smith for their reJIU(ar DICIIIITJy
meeting.
·
·
The meeting was opened by the prealdent, Mrs. Nellie CillO
and the members giving the Flag salute. The clab pledge IIIII
creed were given.
.'
·,
Devotions were given by Mrs. Ollie Browning, "The Simple
Ufe." The Scripture was found in John 3:18. A poem 11'111 "'-d
"Up Hills."
The Jesson, "AU About Indoor Planll and Their Care," wu
prsented by Mrs. Willa Scltes.
Refreshments were served to Mn. Nellie cuto, Mn. Ollie
Browning, Mrs. Willa Scltea, Mrs. MI. ICmma Paaah, Mrs.
Juanita Clark, Mrs. Kate Stone, Mrs . .utarah Dawhunt and
Mrs. SaUy smith.

'

•

'

has ~n done, and there are function or his consumer
yet important unmet needs spending function .
should government step in.
With more than a dozen
He also pointed out that the tough questions to discuss,
competitive market system, only a few really got "in
imperfect as it is, is still lhe depth" treatment leaving
best bwliness system in the important areas for future
world today. He pointed out inquiry discussion.
that •uch a system depend•
Rick Altizer of the Jacksoo
on responsible behavior by Production Credit Assn .,
both producers and con. program leader, announced
swners, who must, therefore, the Earl Durham of Central
be
economically Soya will discuss "Essentials
knowledgeable. He must for a Successful Business &amp;
have marketable skills, Busines$ in the United
know..IJow, and talent for Staies" at the next group
either his income-earning session.

ltc8:W~

THE MOTHERS CLUB of Mason will meet at the home on
March 17.

~

fresh

When the woman read the
message
In silence she hung her head .
II was from the orphans'
heart,
And the ·message that she
read :
" To anyone who finds this
letter ,"
Then the sweet words, "I love
you ."
If an angel would sar It better
Sill no other words would do .

· WANTCONNALLY
WASHINGTON UP!
President Ford's political
lieutenants are trying. to gel
John Connally to endorse
their leader and thus dljn
Ronald Reagan's hopes of
winning
the
Texas
Repablican primary In May,
White House sources said
·.today. Reagan's hopes of
winning the May 1 Texas
primary Is one of the main
reasons he is sticking to hill
challenge of Ford despite five
primary losses, lhey said.

..

17 - The DaUySentinel,Middlei&gt;ort-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wedneoday,March 17,1976

Gallla ColD! ty School Supt.
C. Comer Bradbury confirmed Tuesday afternoon
action taken by the Gallia
Local Board of Education to
place a bond issue before the
voting public on the high
school building program was
illegal.
According to Section 133.18
of the Ohio School Law, a
board of education tnay
IUbmlt a question to the
voters to issue bonds for
permanent improvement, but
such board's action must be
by two-thirds of all its
members, meaning four
·memhers.

•
ISSUe

At Monday night's special
session in the North Gallia
High School cafeteria, the
board voted 3-1 to place a
$6,700,000 bond issue before
the public Aug. 10 at the rate
of 2.28 mills. Since two-thirds
of the members did not ap·
prove, the action was iUegal.
During the vote, board
president J . E. (Dick)
Cremeens opposed it while
James Blevins, William
Carter and J. C. Mitchell
favored the one-high school
building concept for students
in grades · 10·12. Board
memher Bruce S. Stout was

- -----

Green is

OPEN FRI.
TIL8

S. B. 94

.OPEN SAT.

POINT PLEASANT AND MIDDlfPORT

TIL6

REG. '1.99 YARD VALUE

•0

TOM JONES

absent.
According to Supt. Bradbury, the board must meet
again to act upon the high
school issue. Sinse the
board's approval on the
question of constructing new
elementary buildings was 4-o.
no further action is needed.
That issue will be placed on
the special election ballot.
Under the board's plans
adopted Mnday night, a $6
million dollar bond issue at 2
mills will be presented for
voter
approval.
The
elementary proposal is for
new buildings in the Bidwell·
Vinton area, CentervilleCadmus area and Hannan
Trace area and refurbishing
of existing buildings at Ad·
daville and Cheshire-Kyger
Elementary Schools and all
four existing high school
buildings. The high schools
would be renovated into
junior high centers for
students in grades 7-9.
Under a separate bond
issue, voters would get the
opportunity to approve or
reject a $6,700,000 issue to
construct one high school
building and renovate the
existing four high schools.

"

INCH POLYESTER .

DOUBLE KNIT

faulty

proviStons of this bill wiU
severely restrict its ability to
earn the necessary return.
"If we fail to earn a
reasonable return on investment, we cannot convince our lenders to put up
the addi tiona! monies
necessary to build for the
future. If we cannot build, the
result is going to be industrial
stagnation, loss of jobs and a
COLUMBUS - "Senate serious shortage of elec·
BiD 94 g'oes beyond the repeal tricity," he S:Bid.
.of the reconstruction cost new
(ltCN) formula. It's really
asking utility customers to
swallow a candy-coated pill
today that may turn into a
time bomb tomorrow," A. G.
Greeri, chairman of l!&gt;e board
and chief executive officer of
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Company, said.
Green ~s statement was in
response to hearings by the
Ohio House Utilities Committee on Senate Bill 94 which
would replace RCN with an
&lt;riglnal cost formula.
He said the proposed
original cost formula would
Inflict restrictive and
unre•Hstic limitations on
utilities that would result in
energy shortages and higher
prices tomorrow.
"This blll is unfair
legialation ... unfair to the
public because It Increases
the danger of future energy
shortages and threatens the
jobs of Ohioans ... and
New Spring Shipment
unfair to utUlties because it
instills in them a fear of
Full Stock
reduced earnings which
would suppress construction
On Display
programs," (keen said
emphatically.
IMMEDIATE INSTALLATION
Columbus and Soulhern
feelll ·a rate making law
BY EXPERT CRAFTSMAN
ahould be based on the
principle that a pubUc utllity
Ia entitled to recover, In
rates, the cost of providing
service plus a reasonable
return to Investors. The
Company believes that the · ...iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiol_______.

•
opposmg

WI CAN SA vi YOU MONitl

FABRICS
Special Group of 60 inch
Polyester Double Knit in plain
and fancy patterns, assorted
. colors. Stock up now at this low,
low price at Stiffler's. We can
save you money .

.59
Reg. '1.99 .

YARD

Value!

LADIES NEW SPRING
PROPORTIONED TO FIT
100% POLYESTER

..

..

..
,.

..
..
"'

..

DOUBLE KNIT

.

SLACKS

::;:u

-.

New for spring, Ladies' proportioned
to fit 100 p~l. Polyester Double Knit
Slacks, in assorted colors. Sizes 8to 18.
Values to $5.99.

..
" "'

......,.

..:""',

..

NEW FOR SPRING
LADIES BUDGET PRICED

••

-·

SANDALS
Special group of
ladles' new Spring
Sandals . in brown,
mint, yellow, white,
wedge heel. sling
back. Sizes 5 to 9.
Shop Early.

CARPETING

.99

'·'"

•H

\

.

••

. " '"
~

PAIR

NEW SPRING ·COLORS
36 INQI OOURlESY
FANCY AND PlAIN

100% COTTON

PRINTS

Beaulih.il new courtesy print,
100 pet. cotton, 36 inch wide, all
the new spring colors. Stock up
now at Stiffler's. We can save
you money. Plain colors too.

79t

We Bought A Trucldoadf
You Get A LOWER PRICEI

4" PLASTIC

FAMOUS CANNON
CAMEO ROSE FANCY

NO-IRON

Solid &amp; Petfolated

SALE

10'
Joint

2.50
3" Solid
$zt0 '

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS

CO~

SHEETS
Twin and Full size f.ancy no iron
sheets with matChing pillow cases.
Cannon's famous Cameo Rose
patterns. Assorted colprs.

lWIN SIZE

$347

CASES

$259 .

EA.

PAIR

.'
."',

SPICIAL PURCtiA~I
LADIES IONDID KNIT

·2~!

CKS

MASON, W. V

- '

I

(

·--

�..

18 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0., Wednesday, March 17, 1976

For- Fiscal Year
Ending Dec. 31,1975
Rutland "T:ownship
Meigs County
Box 12 , Rutland, Ohio 45775

March 10,1976
I cerfity th e following report

lo be conecl.

Edna M . Swi c k
Townsh ip Clerk
Tel. No . 1 614 74 2-2872

Ba c kl1oe
New Issues Dur ing
Year 1975
6. 500.00
Ba lan ce 'outstanding
D ec. 31 , 1 97~
6,.500.00
Rate of lnt
6 percent
Dal e of Final Mat .
Apr . 1978
(3) 17 , H e

~

Total Rec eipts

General Fund

269.74
13,744. 86

Motor Vehic le License

8.~07 . 95

1975 CHEVROLET CAPRICE

U295
than 7.000 miles, deluxe belts , t i nted
glass, air conditioned , deluxe bumper s &amp; guards,
remote LH+RH mirrors, 500-4bbl, V-8. AM radio &amp;
tape , auxl. lighting, comfort\11 , dark red with black
vinyl roof, l ike new - a real sharpie .

1970 C UTL AS~
Ph on e 992 3~10 .

3 14' lfc

Wanted

ATIENTIOI

Ta x Fund
6,33 6.38
• Gasol i ne Ta :.c Fund
12,400,.00
· Road and Bridge Fund 1,596.99
Cemetery Fund
2.256.17
Fire Dist. Fund
1, 198.26
Federal Revenue
3 BEORM . house on 1662
Sharing Fund
5,915.00
Lincoln Hill , $1.25 per month .
Totals
37 .910.75
Call 1 - 1304 ) 768 ·4041.
Total Receillh &amp; Balanc es
3- 14.6tp
· Genera l Fund
12,556.56
Motor Vehicl e Lic ense
FUR NI S_HED ,
2
bedrm .
Tax Fund
13,024.59
a partment , adults only·, in
Road and Bridge Fund
M iddleport. P11one 992 .J874.
17,597.47
3- 12·1fC
, C:emetery Fund
- 2,327.50
Cemetery F und
3,382.03
F i re' Oi st , Fund
1. 237 .72 SMALL furn ished apartment
for 1 or 2 persons , 139
Fe deral Revenu e sna ri ng
Butternut. Pom eroy, Ohio.
F'und
6, 184.}4
3. 11 .6tp
Total s
51,655.6 1
- -'--- --~--- ----EJipenditures
General Fund
7.34 1. 16 3 AND " ~M . turnished and
unfurniShed apts . Phone 992 .
Motor Vehicle License
5434 .
Ta x Fund
12,760 .46
11 .9.1fc
Gasoline Tax Fund
17,375 .03

Malibu .
3-11 -6tc

1971 INTERNATIONAL 2 ton
dump truck . Phone 992 · 3~0 .
J. Jl .6tp

-------------Pels

.o.KC Registered COllie Stud
Service. St ardus t King .
Phor~ (614 ) 985 ·4248 .
3· 16 ·tfc
-,------- - - - - - - - - 6 PUPPIES to give away, VibOrder collie
Phon e 992.
3646.
.
J.Jl .6tp

RELIABLE
babys i tter
wanted in Middlport area
Phon e 992 ·2220 after 6 p .m :
..,__
3·11·.41c

______________
Misc. Sales

TWO Fiim ily Garage Sa le ,
Thursday and Friday, 300
Wright St. , Pomeroy, First
street past Pomeroy Elem .
Schoot. Lot of children 's,
men's ,
and
women 's
clothing in excellent con .
di tl on . Both winter and
summer. Also, high chair,
baby wa l kers , toys , new
etec . veater ond lots of mis c.
i tems .
3.14 -5tc

-------------For Rent

3 BEDRM·. house with batt1 i;;
Rutland . Phone 992 -5858 .
J .9.tfc

CONSTRUCTION
From a shelf fa a house. all
types of building 1'1d
remOdeling
trom
the
· taundetion up . Additions ,
urpeting, pa intint , siding,
roafinv. paneling, peper
hanging elc ....
Ph. 949· 2023 or 843 ·2 667

MONROE Ca lculator , 8 row ,
S25. Ta.pe recorder with 2
CAS H pa 1d for air makes Md.
speakers. S50, Phone 992.
models of m'obile homes .
7551 .
PhonE'! area code 614 423 .
3· 15·4tp
953 1.
4·13 -tfc

14

Mobile Homes For Sale
1970MOBILE home tor sale, 2
bedrm . Partially furn ished ,
gas heat . Phone 1304) 773.
5460 or 992 ·5001.
3· 14 .61p

ll
60 RIB STONE SILO ,
EVERYTHING
IN ·
CLUOEO . Pllone 949 ·2542 .
3· 16·6fC

-------------Vl NDALE 12 x 68, 3 bedrm .
bath 8. • , , 14ft. expando . 25
ft . awning and por ch , fully ·
carpeted . Phone 7112 ·2880.
'
J 12 61c

rooms, 2 baths , 2 porches .
sun porch , 1' basement, city
and well water , natural gas ,
gar~ge .
Pri c ed to s e ll .
Phone (6141 985•4102 .
2 4 tf c

1973 HONDA motorcycle, 3'50 .
Like new. crash bars and
carrier , new tires. 5800 .
Phone 992 .3A59 after S p.m .
·3· 16·3tc

L A RGE hous e in MicidlepOr i'
on c orn er J(J J. P r iced at
$7,500 or w ill co nsi der trade
P hor.~e 99'1 7797 .
3 I'Z 6tp

STAR CRAFT Spring Sale on
mlnl ·mot(lr homes, trll\lel
trailers and foJd .downs . We
sell serv ice and quality.
financing arranged . Camp
Co nl ey Star Cratt ·sales. Rt.
62. North of Pt . Pl easa nt, w .

TEAFORD

Va .

------------·- --

ARE YOUR planning cabinets
in your home? We have a
lim i ted supply of new
wooden cabil"!et doors and
drawer fronts available a1 a
reasonable price. Some with
glass inserts . Some solid. all
top quaHty, Can be seen at
Kingsbury Mobile Home
:;;.ales. 1100 E . Main St .,
Pomeroy , Ohio or call 992 7034.
3· 11 ·5tc

4 Brs ., 1'h
ceramic baths, F .a. oil fur ..
2 car garage , nice kit. and
dining , $25.000.

REMODELED -

and garden. $21.500.
68 ACRES Near Cool ·
ville,

, .\

r---= _
-

" GRAPEFRUIT PILL" now
With DiadaK Plan more
con'o'enient than grapefruits
- Eat satisfying meals and
lose weight . Nelson Drugs .

,

I

BUY
NOW
AND
SAVE

rm s.,

2112 baths,

Basement

and

barn .

S&lt;SO.OOO.OO .
MIDDLEPORT

4'12 ACRES - B rms., bath ,
central

air

and

heat ,

2

perches. city uti lilies. 2 car
garage. 531,000.
NEW LISTING - Clean 6

WILL TRIM or cut tree s and
sh rubbery . Pl1on e 949 2545
or 74 2 316} .
2· 27 26tc

. CO-OP
,
Automatic Waitt
Conditioner
Model UCXXX,
210,000

- -------------Real Estate for Sale

5 ROOM house and bath on ISO

-

-· ---------· .:.,. __ ----

-----------= -~- ---

~lli~M;-A.t ~··:!'-'.we
o.,

II ' • '

"'"''

•

'

"''

'"I I

U..a-ble these rour Jumblea.
ene letter tG each Jllluare, to
lorn;a Cou.r ordinary worda.

OOREL

I I

Free estimiltes on car· .
peting and installation .
We ' ll bring samples to your
home with no obligation .
See how you can r,ally
save.
Mike Young. ~n•aer
Sales and Installation
, Rl . 3, Pomeroy, Ottio 45760
Phone day or night
614 -992-2106
1 . 1&lt;~ - 1 l)"lo .

I tJ

'SEWNAR

REM. ODE L! N G,

Plumb. in g_, ·
hea ti ng and all t ypes dt
general
repair .·
Work
guaranteed . 20 years ex ·
per1ence . Phone 992 2409 .'
. .6 .1-lf c

- - - - - - - - _..__ ....!, _ _ .

EXCA'iiATlNG ,
doz e r ,
backt1oe
and
ditCher :
Char l es R . Hatf ield Back
Hoc Ser.vlc e, Rutland, Oh io .
Phone 742 2008 ,
11·30 ·78t c

ALLEY 001'

0 &amp; 0 TREE Tr imm ing , 20
yea rs exper i,n ce,. Insured ,
fr ee estimates . Call 997 ·238A
o~ (614! 698 7257 A lbany .
10 15 tfc
_:_
., _._....._

____

__

I DON'T
KNOW
WH'I 'NOT!

________

GASOIJNE AILEY

You

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

SEPT IC T A NK S clea ned .
Modern Sanitation . 991,3954
or 992 · 7349 .
9 18 tic

The land
tal-ies care
of that~

What about
the fleas?

---- __

...__~

LEt US DO

I

.Carpeting

'Strout··

501 NYLON

$499

-.ealty"'

We wi II gel resu Its if
anyone can. List with us .

No. 147- 2 BR. home, full
base .. modern kit ., ready to
move In, S9,000.00. ·

No. 157-3 BR . home, f"lly

.

carpeted.
ft~ll
modern kit., 1'12

base .,
baths,

S20,300.00.
No. 114- 115 a .• new gas
well , somt! timber , large

barn, S32,000 .00.

1

5quare ' .
Yard
·

'NCdllrounn

-

RUBBER BACK

41 Born (Fr.)

we have hundreds of
ca rpet values . Your job can
be completed in 1. •t o 2
weeks . ~ tong · waiting
per iod . bdr instaiJer has 28
yeors d-perlence ... Expert
' in\jaUation . You'll like
what you get .

SHE SPENDS. ~
nMc 5HoPPINo
AND .eEINO

992-7133,
CONTACt,
Lois faulty

TALK TO ~~~D~LL ...
GRIITE
'
CARPET CONSULTANT

Rft'TLAND
FURNITURE .
1412 ·2211

Branch Mlinager

FiTTED FOR
-'""''"....,

Cl..Oil-&lt;ES ...

II .

Rutland

=• ••............••
ShnppiiHJ Hou

·••

e•

•

Mon., Tues., Wed.

·

8:00tll5:00

: :

•

•••

·: •• FRIDAY TIL 8 :
= •• Close Sat. At 5 p.m. • • •
• ••
••

·•••••••••

::

RUnAND PURNI1URE

742-2211

I

"ltNOLD ,OitATI"
.

BE !J IT LOOKS LIKE
1 6U)AV
A 1-!APPII BIRFOAY CARD

~ Aluta ........ wbot
we mean wbltl n .., t111t a
conlrtlet Is a pad.-1

A came « llllllll 11am am- .
tract II llid to be a pad any time lbln II u ....
!"UPTOQVofts
'1be J.-t thlni Soutb Wlllled ' cl1aMe to mllre It "-- Ill the
, ~
t,o , do wu to 1et to seven cards held by dldarer and cNmKXV · KM
FJ V
N H A N ll: ., N E V"
" M :tiamands, but bls flll'ln«'a five my.
• ·
' ·
"' ,... ~ was tbe IJ'8I1d llarn
(()q ~ · , . _ • qiiNI/on
'Gree. 11111 teu. Saalll to bid
IV D X E
H D Z K 8 H'V B W G
DZ
F J N F·lf be bollia two o1 die lor lite . tl!P'ifall Wtlte "All&lt;
'
hree .... ~Man' Ia
lilt JaGOOp." ot w.
KXV
DZ UKXZFNXFWG
rtlll
O ·NTOXE; SouthlookedattbeijueenOl
.
HDZUkAVBDVZ
1

'

"

"

ODW;KV

·,

j FER ME ·-I WONDER WHO
j

'

lllll1s lad for time. His ana.,. litdMtltMI !lCHitllolla
-lnttboucbtwutodlscarda il llemped. =~
JII1Cie from cmmmy and Iettie .,... ~ - 1 ' 1 . .,..

1111 Kint.'-'urn .,_..._.,I-.e.•

'

WlJ'Z SO THOUGHTV

i

RUTLAND

-~-

,,

-------1

I

'

........................... .....
e

~=

5N, T.Pasa : :
Put Pou

~
'
·
·.
Ql'dowq-."nteDbetboulbt
Yl!81erday'1 ~:
'
ttONS .AND- nlln, 'lllliltled "Willi a
..,F,A~(jUiiAJEf4zi!G:EoNERALJZA11QIIS ', A1t£ .
, lp:IJRSE OF .ltle litolluct" and proceeded
v•
~LUoll,Jll'&amp;i - H.Q. WELLS
'
· ' mike bls Cllltract.

•

Thursday 8tll12 noon

••
•••

I.ONGFBLLO, W

.

••

•. Pau
P.au

. One ltUer aimply slanda for another. In thls sample A- ll .f )penlll,lead-Q•
used f&lt;K the throe •t:o. X (qr lbo two, D's. elc. ,Sln1le lettes:s. - - -·- ·
apoatroi&gt;~es. the len'~th. and rqrmallon or the lrnrds ore all
..,__,d .. J
,
8 Y vwwu
hints. \J;:ach dny lho cnde let[en are d~erent.
fllbel ••. . . ,

N.N .

'

•

AX 'YDLBAAX ~It

VPUDFDXE

111111

.•.

Ia

:: '"'
1•

ella..,... ne,..,_,__ ,.,..,.eob)ow

• • • • • • • ' • •lt11••~•·•ce•lli11-•1...,.,..,.,.
Conv•~nll'fll

,

DAILY CRYPT()QU()'J'E-Hen:'s how' to. work It: ~=:

CALL H2 -22 11

804 W. Mllin
Pomeroy
?92-2298
After Hours Ci!ll

Real Estate For Sale

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

7:-Bozo the Clown
7:30-BIII Co$by
I:Ofi-High and Wild

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

w.

-..,-------"--------

LGO--Tomorrow 3,A; News 13.
Cha?tlel Five CAble

2-12-1 mo .

__

1~

FREE BRAKE INSPECJION

I; MovJe "The

x 100 tl . lot loc!!lfed on 120
State St .. Pomeroy . S6,000 .
_...._
._
Phon e 992 .5786 .
3" 16·61c ' EXCAVA,Tl'NG , d6ler , lochn::o and bll ckhoe work ; septic
~OM E for sale , spacious
t anks
ins t alled ;
dump
ltvlng room , d in ing room , 2
tru cKs and IO ·boys f(Jr hire ;
bedrm . , la rge
kitchen ,
will t,aul fil ! d irt , tor soi l ,
family room , new bafhs
limestone and grave . Call
priced to sell. Phone 992:
Bob or Roger Jeffers , day
7394 .
.
phone 992 7089, night pl10ne
992 .3525 or 992·5237 .
3· 16-S! p
2 11 -tfc
f:OR SA LE near Lanosv ltle , 5
------.------ ---~
room house . root cellar with
room over, 2 bay detached
IT!
garage , Jl!s ac.res , no bath ,
hot and cold wttter In kit chen , l.P . gas heat , heaters
w itt1 house . Call 742 2819
after 5 p .m .
J .J1 .7tp '

Capaclty

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

Founders"

Strange Love of Martha Ivers" 10; Janakl 33.

6:0fi-Sunrl.. Semester 10.
6:1s-Farm Report 13.
6:20-Pettorna lor Living 13.
.
•
.6:»-CaaumbuaT.,.y•: News6; Sunri .. s.m..wl;
Urban League 10.
6:w-&lt;&gt;unce of Prevention 10.
6:-45-Mornlng Report 3.
6:5s-&lt;:huck White Reparts 10: Good 'M amlng. Trl.
Stole 13.
7:0fi-T. .y 3,.,15; Good Morning, A..,...lca 6,13: CBS
NOWI I; Bugo BuMy &amp; Friend&amp; 10.
7:30-Schoolles 10.
•
8 : Ofi-Lassle 6; Capt . Kangaroo a, 10; SeN me St. 33.
1:30-Big Valley 6.
9:110-Nof For Women Only 3; Phil o.r..h.. 4; Lucy ·
Sll!&gt;w 8; Mike Douglas 10; Morning with D.J. 13;
Phil Donahue 15.
9:30-A.M. 3; One Life to Live 6; Tettletalea 8; Mike
Douglas 13.
10:00-Celebrlty SWMpStakes 3,4,15; Edge of Night 6;
Price Is R lght I, 10.
10:30--High Rollers J,.j,15; Dinah 6.
11 : 110-WMel of Fortune . 3, 15; Weekday •• Gambit
8, 101' Fwmer'1 Daughter 13; Elec. Co. 20.
·
11 :30-tiollywood Squares3,.,15; Happy Days 13; Love
of Life 8,10; Sesame St. 20.
ll :~TIIke Kerr I; D., lmel's Wor"ld 10.
12:00 MagnlflcentMarbleMachlneJ,I5; Lel'aMakea
Dell13; Bob Briiii1'150-50Ciub•: Nows6,1,10.
12:30-Take My Advice 3.15: Ail My Children 6,J3;
. Search lor Tomorrow 1, 10.
12:o!S-Eioc. Co. 33.
12 : ~NBC Newa 3,15.
1:00 News 3; Ry111'1 Hcipe 6, 13; Phil Danlll.. I;
Young &amp; the Restlnl 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1:30-QarsofOur Ll-3,.1,15; Rhyme &amp; R - ,,13;
AI the World Turns 1, 10.
2:0fi-S2fi.OOO Pyramid 6,13.
2:3o-Doc:ton 3,.j,15; Neighbors 6,13; Guldlng Light
a, 10.
3:0fi-..An0ther World 3,4,15; Ail In the Family 8,10:
General Hoipltel 6,13; U .l l• Yoge &amp; You 20.
3:3G-Onl Life to Llvel3; MlclotyMouleCII!b6s Match ·
Game 1,10; Lowell Thoma Remembln 20; lTV
Utilization 33.
4:0fi-Mister Cartoon 3; liMY Griffin 41 Sgmenet 15;
llewllchecl6; MICkey Mi11M Club I; Mlmir R~t~~on .
20.33; Movie "Tile Wl'f to the Gold" 10; Dtneh 13. ;
4:30 Bewltchod3; Mod Squod6J Pw hld!!e Femlly I; _,
Sesame St. 20,33; Fllnlatu11a1 15. ·
5:110-Bonenza 3; Fa!Yill~ Altair I; Sf.- Trek 15.
5:30-Adam-12 4; News 6; BeV!trly Hlllbllllet I; Elec.
Co. 20.33; Adani-12 13:
,
6:00 NeMW,10,13,15; ABC Ntws6; Zoom 20; lTV
Ullllzaflon 33.
6:30-NBC News 3,.1,15; ABC NeWs 13; ANty GrllfHh
6; CBS News 1,10;. Ikl ~gtpadge ~ 20; Lilla
Yoga &amp; You. .
.·
7:110-Truthar Cons. 3; To Tell flit Trutl14; Bawling for
Dotlan 6; News 10; Space: 1999 11 Let'1 Malta 1
Oj!at 13; fiUIIIIy Alf.... 15; Anyone lor Tll'lol'fiOU?
20; Family at War 33.
.
·'
7:30-Hollywood Squares :I.A; Ohio State !-ollerY 6:
Evening l!dltlon with Martin Agranttky 20; Wild
Kingdom 10; To Tell the Truth 13; Mulk: Clfy
U.S.A. 15.
B:Ofi-Mac Davis 3,.,15; Welcome Back Kotter 6,13;
Waltona8,10; PlayliftheMonth 20; The Way It Wes
33.

--------------- ___ ________

Week"ly Gntin

I '299

6,13; Movie "The

LUCKE TT Farm Eq uipment ,. ' s EWING MACHINE Repairs .
service, all makes . 992 ·2284 .
West
Wash i n!iJ ion
St. ,
The Fabric ShOp , Pomeroy .
A lban y . Phone (61 4) 698 -3037
Aulhor i zed Singer Sal es and
or 698 .7881 .
Se rvice .
We
sharpe n
2· 18 .26 t c
Scissors .
_..;.
,__
3·29·1fC
REO DOG . lime~stone , gravel
and fill dirt delivered .
Phon e B i ll Pullins , 992 .2478 . ' RE A DY MI X CON"- ~' -=:'r t::·
delivered r i gh t to your
2· 19·26tc
pro jecl. Fas t and easy , Free
est i mates . Phone i;-92.J'ZB4,
L . BRAD FO RD . Auct ioneer
Goeg le in Ready MiMO- .JCo . ,
Complete Service . Phone ·
Middleport , Ohio .
949 ·2487 or 949 ·2000. Racine
6·30·lf c
....,.
Oh io, Cri ll Bradford .
'
10. 9-Jfc·· ELWOOD BOWER S REPAIR
- Sweepers . toasters , irons:
-W I LL do odd iotls , ' rO ot ing ,
all '5mell appliances . Lawn
painting , hauling . tre ework
mower , next to Sta·te High
and mowing . Ca ll 992 -7409.
way Garage on Route 7.
·
·
·
3· 2 261c
P11one 185 3825 .
4· 16·1fC

rms ., bath, &lt;:ity utilities ,
garage on nice lot near
stores. S6,000 .

3-17 lip
ENJOY gracious living at - Village Manor in Mi.d ·
dleport tor as low !JS Sl30 TRUCK camper, 36 incnes
Reg. sm.oo Val .:
high. panelled w itl1 lights,
per
month
with
all
hinge , back door with top
uti l it i es
p.aid .
Thes~
vent and screens . Phone 992·
POMEROY LANDMARK
arc brand new high quality
5258 .
apartments at prices you
.
. . . Jack
carsey, Mv'r .
3. 1J .)tc
Road and Br idge Fund 4l. 77 C9Uf'JTRY MO.bil.e. Hom P.
can afford . .Your ren f in _
.
Phone
m-2tlt ·
Cemetery Fund
2,092 .72
ParK , ~I . 33, ten miles north
JUST OFF RT. 1- 5 BR.
cludes month lo monfh
Fire Di st . F und .
1.238 .72
of Pomeroy . Large lOis with
teases, all elec . li~Jing • . PUREBRED SALE . West
bath (hot water heat N.G.)
Virginia
Polled
Hereford
Federal Revenue Sharing
c~ncret e patios . si d ewa lk s,
carpeting,
rang~
and
own well
wlth water
Association will t1old 9th
r u r'lner s and off street
Fund
2.706.72
refrigerator . tree trash
Annual Sa te Mar&lt;;h 27. 1976
softner, paneling tile,
Totals
43,556.58
parking . Phone 992 ·7479.
pickup, cable TV at your
at Jackson's Mill State 4-H APPROX . 10 acres with very
Balance Dec . ll , 19H
12·3l ·lt c
e:.cpense.
and
on · sit.e .
carpeting. 7 hilly acres
Canlfl at Weston . Offering 69
General Fund
5.215 .40 -~ ~-----'---~---'~-laundry ft!lcilit les. Con .
ni c e .building lot on Co . Rd .
fenced,
1000 11 . road
head 30 bulls mostly
Motor Vehicle Licehse
venient to shopping on Th ird
32 . Chester w'aler d istrict ,
frontage
.
ap t,
in
breeding
age
and
38
heifers
.
Tax Fund
264 . 13 UNFURNI St-I E.D
and Mill Streets In Mid .
beautiful locat ion . Phone
Pom eroy . 2 bedrm . newly
For inform arion co"tact Jim
Gasol ine Tax F und
222 .44
CORNER LOT- l'i&gt; story
dleport . See the manager at
949 .2770 .
redecorated
,
fully
carpete
d
.
Westfall
,
Rt
,
2,
Box
115,
3
Cemetery Fund
- 2,369 .27
R iv erside Apartments or
frame
, 4 BR , bath, dining
Call in tt1e early a .m . 992·
Spencer, W . Va . 25276 or call . -- ---------- ~~tc
Ceme tery Fund
1,289.31
call 992 -3273. Furnished
r.,
basement
, porches,
1304)
927
-2104
.
2288
.
Fire Dis!. F1.md
~ 1.00
apartments
are
also
2·2'Z ·tfC .
. 3· 11 · 1tc 3
BEDRM .
home ,
just
gaqtge, about '12 acre,
Federal Re\l.enue Sharing
available .
- - - - - - - -- - - - - f inished, remodeling, Salem ·
Fund
3,478 .02
Middleport.
2·2-78tc
St ., Ru~land . Phone ?42·2306·
Tatar ·
8,099 .()3
1974 TS19S
SUZUKI
A ·1
RT. 143- 2 acres close In,
after
A
p
.m
.
or
see
Milo
a
.
·
General Fund
· condition, 1', 100 m i les . Call
Hutch ison .
water available, Ideal for
Bal. , Jan . 1, 1975
4,348 .61 .
?~2 . 2l,j3 after S p .m .
COUPON
9-23 -tfc
home or 1rol1er. ASKING
Receipts
3·8-9tc
--------::;------ -'' $4,000. (make an oHer)
General Property Tax TUPPERS PLAINS, New. 3
GOOD THROUGH MAR. 24,1976
Real e ·state and
SYRACUSE - Lot BOx90 .
MOOl R N ~·- i.l lnu l ConSole.
bedrm . houses , carpeted,
Trailer I Gross)
3.011 .74
Am -Fm Radio. 4 speed
(newer home) 1 story
range, geraoe , large lats .
Tangible Persona l Property
changer . Balance S102 . 10 or
FHA llnanclng a'Jallable,
frame , 3 nice BR, both,
Tax &lt;Gross)
87 .94
terms . Call 992 -39'65.
521.900. Phone (614) 667 .
Estate TaK (G ross)
22 .25
carpeting, paneling , tile,
J . lQ .tfc
6304
.
Local Governmen t and
large
garage,
port
With purchase of front end alignment or
3-1061p
Slate Income Tax
3,039.24
GOOD quality hay for s.ai'e.
basement,
S22.SOO.
,
Cigarette License Fees
wheel pack.
Call 992-3658.
And Fines (Grqss)
75.00
RT.
143-1'12
acires,
mlblle
·
3-5· 12tc HOME tor sate by pr·ivate"
-Done by N lASE Cert. Mechanics.
Adlustments and
with added roOml and
oWner ,
3 1'
acres,
4
Refunds
78.86
bedrooms.
barn
on
blilcktop
garage,
2 or 3 BR, own and
Other
1, 892.92
GOOD hay , never wet. Phone
road, gas and water . Phone
city water. landscaped.
Totat Neceipts
8,207 .95
949 2523 .
9•9 ·2023.
Total Beginning Ba l ance
l · 10· 12tc
Close ln.
--- =---- .:...~ ------3· 1·26tfl
Plus R~ceipts
11,556.56
135 ACRES at just $123 per
COJ 1 ~OF'-? "r. L:E .. C/\!3 Coal ,- - - - : _ - - - - - - - - - Expenditures
POMEROY
992-2174
ColliVOIIY
1 · mile north o( 3 BP t-rov.E. . ; .. s t f inished . acre, minerals, close to
Total Expenditures
Cheshir&lt;:. on Rl. 7. P i ck your
remodel.ng . Salem
St.,
recreation , some timber.
- Administrat ive
7,34 1. 16
own . S70 per toft , Open' 6 days
Rutland . Phont 7112 -2306 .
Grand Total Exp . ~
OTHEIII'ROI'IRTIES TO
per week , or call {6141 l67 :
afler 4 p .m . or see Milo a ,!
General Fund
7,341.16
CHOOSE
FROM
7330
for
further
in;ormellon
.
Hulch
lnsori
..
Bal., Dec . 31 ; 1915
5.215 .40
"YOUR FRIENDLY DEALER"
1·8 ?lie
.
IO.f . tfc i
Total Exp. Plus Bar .•
m-lf••or~·-

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

SMALL . SEPTIC TANK S
INSTALLED . • B l l. L
P.ULL'IN S. PHONE 992 ·2478 ,
DAY OR N lGHT .
2 22 .52 tp

THURSDAY,MARCH11.lt16

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

-

Renewed 12 rms . • 2 baths.
large mod. kit ., family rm .,
arid
wood
burning
fireplace . $15,000 .

WE INSTALL!

TENNA 8 track
FM stereo .
radio combination lor car .
Speakers included. S50 .
Phone 949 -2322.

8

mod. U kit .. hot water heat .

1974 FORO F250 Ranger ,
19,000 miles; 1973 10ft . cab
over camper, like new .
M!lglc Chef Elec . range ;
Coleman oil furnace with
tank for mob!le home .
Phone (614l 698 -7255 .
3· 14· 3tf1

HAY tor sale . Phone 992 -7306.
3·5·12tp

Fine 3

Brs. with lot s of storage
and closets. Large bath ,
nat. gas. furna ce, gCirage

AN TIQUE home com fort
cookstove . Also qu ick meal
bottled gaS and wood ttr coal
combination stove . Good
condition . Phone 949 -2770.
3· 10 ·61c

8 WEEK o ld baby pigs. Phone
91j9 2857 .
3 12 6tc

10 Mechanic Pomeroy, O.
Phon. 992-1325

1 ACRE -

3·16·-&lt;ll c

SAVE MONEY?

------

VIrgil B., Sr ., Brolcer
j'

BACKHOE S

AND DOZER LARGE AND

MODERN ~horn-iin chester :- 8

COAL , l imes tone and all types
of sot! and rock salt for ice
and snow removal. Ex .
celsior Salt works , East
Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio ,
Phone 992 ·3891 .
12.J-tfc

WHEELCHAIR , SSO. Robert
R . Lewis , 1047 South Second
Ave , Middleport .
3· 15·3tc

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

9 AC R ES . 4' good w ell s. 2
bedrm tr ai l er . Will se ll with
trailer or w lt hou r Call 742
27 17 af ter" p. m . Pr ice $7 .500
for bolh .
3 14' 121 p

Tablets and Hydrex Water
Pills at
Dutfon
Drug .
Middleport and
Nelson
Drug .
3· 16-31p

1974 SKY LINE tra iler , blue
and While, furnished, $A,500.
Or take over payments .
Phon e 949 .2960 .
3· 17 · 41c

·E&gt;&lt;CAVATING
-.. .

--·---·----------

----------'----LOSE weigh-t wll.h New Shape

t)N F URNISHEO 14 x 7U
mobile home . total ele c., 3
ton central air con dilion·er ,
excellent condition . Phon e
2A7 ·2684 or 247 ·'2664 .
3. to.ttc

O'DELL Alintment ioca t ed
beh i nd
Rutland
Grade
School. Tuneup , . brakes ,
wheel b!!ilancing , ali~emenl.
Pt1one 742 -2004 .
II . J6.1fc

7 ROOM house with ba.th , good
location . Fu ll basemen! , 391
South Second, Middl eport .
Phone 992 2265 .
3·7 · 12tp

I
!

SLOAN'S .
CARP.ETING

D&amp;D

Real Estate For Sale

3. 14-4t c

WANT TO

Ph. (61f! 985-4102

2· 19. \ mo .

FT . SELF -CONTAtNEO
camping tra iler with ex tras .
Excellent condition . Phone
(3041 773 5876 .
3·9-8t c

-

Ph . 992 -'3993
4.10· lmo .

BULK WATER
AVAILABLE
Tuppers ' Pla lns ·-Ch .ester
Wafer Dis trict now selling
bulK wa t er to tanks on
trucks at our new off ice!
located on St . Rt. 7
1 Mi le North of
. Eastern-High Sc hool
Serve Yourself D ispenser
Taking quart ers only , one
a t a time . for 250 ga llons of
water.
Open a li the Time
for your c onvenience!
3· 1· 1m o.

1973C\-:IEVY lf2 ton p ickup 350,
p .s . , p .b .• automatic , $1 ,800.
Phone 992 ·3668 .
J.14-6tc

Ph.

m M!

BISSEll BUILDERS

lARRY
LAVENDER
Syracuse, Ohio

Rutla,_d 742·2331
Roger Wamsley
3- 1-lma .

1975 DATSUN Model B ·210,
SJ,OOO . Phone 992·3453 or 992·
3381 .
3·14 -6k

20

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

MUSI.CIAN
fiddle or
mando l in. for young Blue
Grass Band . Timing im ·
portant. Calt 742 .2796 .
3· 17 ·6tc

STORM

R&amp;J COINS

jj:Jt:t:fi~M0:::7&amp;::.;1~E

Take advantage of our
prices.
Quality
built
homes. Nice lots available
in nice locations.

WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIOING·SOFFITT
GUTTERS· AWNINGS

HAY. never been w~t . Phone
(614 1 378 ·6205 after 6 p .. m .
3 ·11 · 12tp

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

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

Fin a ncinv_A'Jailable
BtownlntoWalls&amp; Attics

or

For Sale

REDBONE coo nhound male .
In L'an'gsville area . Call 742 ·
2848 or 992 . 7894 . R . T .
Stewart
3· 16 ·6tp

·srown
Insulation--Services

YOUit.. E'R.
M155nJ6 A1R.~

: MOTOR$,

FREE ESTIMATES

For .Sale

1975 OLDSMOBILE Starfire.
mut sell . Cell 992 ·7692.
3- 17 ·4tc

1969 CHEVELLE
Phone 992 -7830 .

"S~ITH NELSOpt·

3· 17-lmo .

Find buried
treasure.
Coins, rings, silver, gold.
Coin &amp; Metal
_
D etectors
For Rent

1968 CHEVY Van with 1970
motor , 6 cyl . car pe ted.
paneled , stereo tape deck .
FM radi o, mag wheels in
good
condition.
$1,300 .
Phone 992 -3710 .

Supr eme.

Ph. 949-2404

PLU~

•

IO :Ofi-700-Ciub

Wom..;

HOtiOfl ,·iV. . ·~-=·,i-E;·c;(~ ~~"f'i:~"i''~T;H:"rf'.ANI!t\ATINCr FLUID
AOID MY FORMUl-A-

Nathan Biggs
Rilldiatar Specialist

OPEN TUES. THOU SAT .
6: 3.0 Tilt 10: 00

_CAPTAIN EASY

From 'the targ·est Truck or 1
Butlctoze,-Rad i ator to the
Heeter Core .

LOCI'-CI lf32f.:Jrd Street
Racine , Ohio

Watch for List
Items Later .

BUY, SELL or T.~A.· OE

Notice

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

In twenty minutes.

COINS .

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

LO ST in v jn ci nty of Tanne r's
Run, black and wh ite
spotted coon hound pur .
Phone 247 · 2280 .
3-11 ·6tp

Cl!l In ard•rs and pick up

3-17-1 mo.

Wanted To Buy

lost

ltalan-Style Pilla

10: oo a .m.

$5495

4door , co. car , lowmileage , sandstone finish , \llnyl top
and interior, air conditioning , power windows &amp; door
locks, tilt steering wheel, cruise control, AM rad!o &amp;
tape , truly a loaded car and has good eye appeal .

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

-·-----------.--

GET

Orange Twp. Volunteer
Fire Department will hold
a consignment auction at
the fire house located in
Tuppers Plains. Ohio on
April 17th beginning at

Cl~ 'i"ilc coupe. less

1975 CHEVROLET CAPRICE

SAM'S
PIZZA SHOP

AUCilON SALE

1:»--Mov'- "Bad Mon'a Land"

-

Pomeroy
QUAUTY Motor Co.

BLACK PONY wearing blue
halter , found on . Rt . 14 3
IN MEMO.RY of our mo ther .
Harrisonville Road at Lewis
Mary Rowena Rowe who
Smith residence . Phone 992 d ied March 11, 1961.
31 83 .
3 15·61c
Althoug h o u r hearts are
heavy ,
With the sorrow that we bear .
We know we can be with her,
In that land God made so fair . OLD fu rni ture , ice boxes .
The children .
brass
bedS,
old
wall
J . lJ . Jic
telephones ·and parts , or
comple te.households . Write
M . D.
Miller , Rt .
2,
Pam eroy , Ohio , Ca II 992 ·
WILL ca re for elderly woman
7760
In tny home . Phl:lne 992 ·7314.
10· 7-74 '
3· 17 •61c
TIMBER ,
s tanding
446 ·8570.

MAKE SURE yqu gel every
poss ible d educt ion lh is year .
Have. your ' Fede ral and
Sta,te Jn co.me Tax return by
an accountant. Phone 992 ·
6173 .
1·21 ·52tc
- ----- -- --- -~ -

•
WEDIIEIDAT, MA!ICH tr,'ft76
5:00-Botililzli3if"iirltly Affair I; Stir Trft 1~.
5:-Adam-12 ~; ,...... 6; Beverly Hllibltllea I; Etec.
Co. 20.33; Adem-12 13.
6:- - . 3,4,1, 10, 13,15; ABC Nowa 6; Z0C11n 20,33.
' 6 :~BC Now13,.1, 15; ABC News 1:1; ANty Grllfllll6; ·
CBS News 1.10; Crap Game 20; C..riiCDIIFd" 33.
7:110-TruthorCons. 3; Probe: ThoWarldAround UU;
Bowling lor Dollars 6; Pap Goes the Courrlry .a; .
.News 10; Wlld 1\ingdam 13; Fmlly Affair 15; Book
But 20; Know Your School 33.
7: 30-l.alt of the Wild 3; Wlld Wild World of AnimeiU; ·
Name That TUlle A; IMtch G1me PM I; Evoning
Edition wltll Martin Agronoky 20; Tho Juclgo 10; To
Tell the Trulll13; Wild Ktngdom 15; Book .... 33
B:Ofi-Little House on the Prairie 3,.j,15; Bionic
6,13~y Orlando &amp; Dawn 1,10; The Way It Was
20;
dol ot Decision 33.
8:30-Lowtll Thomlo R......,bers 20..
':110-Chlco &amp; tM Man 3,.j,15; Baretta 6,13; Cannctr1
8,10; Music In Amerla~33; Images of Aging 20.
9 : ~umpllnga 3,.1,15.
.
10:00-NBC Reports 3,~.15; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13; CBS
News Special 8,10; News 20; School for Wives 33.
10:30-Aimanac 20; Trapaapheoe 33"
11:00-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,•, 15; Movie "Dead on Target"

Business Services

2 SIGNS
OF

-

In MernOI)

PART .TIME delivery dr i ver,
must own s t ation wagon . or
panel led truck . Phone 992 ·
55 60, .
3· 16 ·3lc

For Rent

'·

..

Found

Help Wanted

Federal Revenue
Sh ar ing Fund

C an ce llat ion
Correcti ons will be ac
cepted unl i t 9 a . m . for
Day ot Pub lica t ion .
REGULATIONS
ihe Publ ish er reserv es
I h e r ig h I lo edlt or rej eC!
~n y
ads deemed ob
teCJion al . The publ ish er
Will not be responsible to r
~Ore !han one i ncorr ec t
•nsertion .
RATES
For Want Ad Service
~ c ents per word on e
mserlion
Minimum Charge Sl .OO
14 cents per word three
consecutive
insert ion s.
26 ce n ts per word Sl)(
co n sec utiv e
Insert ions .
4'5 Pe r Cent Oiscouni on
pa id ad s and ads paid
within 10 days .
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
\2 00
for
50 . word
mi n imum .
.
Each additional word 3
ce nt s.
BLIND ADS
Ad ditional 25c Charge
per Adverlisemenl.
OFFICE HOURS
8 JO a .m ro 5.00 p m
Daily , a: 30 a .m . to 12 · oO
N oon Sa turday .
Phon·e tod ay 99 2 2156

TeletJUion log for easy viewirig

Auto Sales

Auto Sales

a rn .

3 17 6t c

RECEIPTS AND
EXPENDITURES
Balance Jan. 1. 1975
General Fund
$4,348.6 1
Motor Vehicle Li cense
Tax Fund
6,688.21
Gasoline Tax Fund
5,197 ..47
Road and Bridge Fund
3 ,924..49
Cemetery Fund
1,1 25 .86
Fire Di st . Fund
39 . .46

To t als

WANT ADS
INfORMATION
DEADLINES
S P M.
Day
Before
Pubt ica 1 ion
Monday De ad line 9

For Sale

SUMMARY OF
CASH BALANCES.

p

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

~

Sealed proposals w ill be
Dec 31 , 197!1
12.556 56
rece i ved by the Clerk of the
Motor Vehicle license
Board
ot
County
Com
Tax Fund
m i o;s loners . Gal l I a County , Ba l.. Jan . 1, 1975
6.688 .21
Oh io . at the otfice ot the
Rec eipts
Coul'lty COmmissioners , at the Motor Veh icle License
Coun 1y
Courthouse
In
Tax
6.336 .38
Gallipol i s. Ohio on April 8. Total Receipts
6,336 .38
1976 unti\ ' 12 : 00 noon, Eastern Total Beginning Balance
Sl.!mdard Ti me , and at that
Plus Rece ipts
13,024 .59
time w ill be opened publ ic ly
Ekpenditures
and read for the furnish inc., of Total Expenditures
at!
l abor
and
material
- M iscellaneous
4,309 . 13
8.451.33
necessary tor the construction
- Mai nt enance
of a new Medical Building at Gr and Total E)(p , ·Galli po lis . Oh io . All work shalt Motor Vehicle License
be done according to the
Tax Fund
1:1, 750 .46
drawings and specifica t ions , Bat .• De c . 31. 1975
264. 13
as prepared by Hayes , Tota l Exp . Pius
Donaldson , Wilt('nmyer and
Bal , Dec. 31, 1975 13, 024 .59
Partners , Architects , 601
Gas-oline TaJI Fund
E ighth St ree t. Portsmouth , Bal ., Jan . I. 1975
5.1 97. 47
Oh io .
Rec el pl s
Proposals will be received GasollneTaK
12.400.00
for the General , Plumbing , Total Rece ip ts
12.400.00
Hea ting, Ventilating . Air Total Beginning ·Balance
Condition i ng and El ectrical
Plus R eceip ts
17..597 .47
wo rk . Proposa l s shal l be
E11p end iture s
submitted on the Pr oposal Total Expenditures
Form contained in the bound
- Miscellaneous
10 ,960.07
spec i f ications
and
other
- Ma intenance
6,414 .96
contract doc uments , wh ic h Grand Total Exp . 222.44
documents are on file at th e
Gasoline TaK Fund
offices of the Clerk of said Total Exp . Plus Bal. ,
Commissioners at the off ice of
De c. 31; 1975
17,597 .47
the
Architect ,
and
are
Road and -Bridge Fund
available to all pr osp ec t ive Bal., Jan . 1, 19 75 · - 3,924 .49
b idders dur ing regular office
R eceipfs
hours. until the c los ing of bids . General Property Ta x One complete set of bid
Real Estate and
documents . for the purpose of
Tra i ler (Gross )
1,554 .07
b id di ng, may be ob ta ined Tang ibl e Personal Property
fro m
Hay es ,
Dono!!ldson, . TalC. ((; rps sl
42 .97
Wittenmyer
&amp;
Partners , Total Rece ipts
1,596.99
A r chi t ecls, 601 Eighth Str eet, Tot al Beginnin g Balan ce
Portsmouth , Ohio . No deposit
Plus Receipts
- 2,321 .50
wi l l be made to obtain tl1 e
E11pend itures
bidd ing doc um ents . How ever To la l E x pend i tur es
41.77
- Miscellaneous
a charge of S50 .00 w i ll be made
fo·r plans and specifications Grand Tota l Exp -~
whi c h are not returned ,
Road and Bridge Fund 41.77
shipp ing charges pr epa id Bal . . D ec . 31.1975
- 2.369 .27
' lh . 1
d
ft
th d 1
. Plus Bat ..
,
w• •n en ays a er
c a e Total
De c.Exp
_ 2,369.27
31 1975
bids are opened .
All pro posals must be ac .
Cem ete ry Fund
c ompan i ed by a bid bond Ba i., Ja n . l.l975
1,125.56
exec uted
by
a
Bonding
Receipts
Company, licensed by the General Property Ta)( ~
State ot 011 io , or by a Cert i f ied
R ea l Estate and Trai le r
(Gr ossl
1, 159 . 13 ·
c_heck drawn l,lpon a so lven t
bank in the St ate of Oh io, Tang ibl e Personal Property
Ta x (Gross)
39 . 13
payab Ie to the or d er o I I he Sale of Lot s
760.00
Board of
Gallia Co unty
Commissione r s ,
Gal l ipolis, Other
~97 . 91
Ohio , in an am o unt not tess Tota l Re cei pts
2.256 . 17
than fiv e {5) per ce rlt and in Total Beginning Balance
the speci fic amount ot the bid .
Plus Recei pts
3,382.03
The bond ·or c hec k shall be
Expenditures
1,530.00
for feite d if th e bidder falls r o Sa lar ies
1110.3 1
enter i nto a contract with sa id Suppl ies
390.89
Owner . Th e bonds or checks of Repair s
31.52
the three lowest bidder s wilt Other Expenses
2;092.72
be 11 eld un t il the execution of Total Exp.
1,289.31
the con tra ct and tile fur . Bal , D ec . 31, 1975
nisl1ing of the required per . Total Exp . Plus Bal ..
formance bond , after wh ich
Dec . 31, 1975
3,382 .03
th ey w ill be retur ned on
Fire District Fund
demand . The checks of the Bal, Jan . 1, 1975
39.46.
other bidders wilt be re turn ed
Receipts
on demand af te r the bids are General Property Ta x canvassed.
Real Estate and
A perfo r mance bond and a
Tra ll er (Gross)
I , 159 . 13
labor and materi al payment Tang ibl e Per sonal Property
bond. ea c h t o be 100 percent of
Tax ( Gross)
39.13
the amoun t of th e contra c t , Total Receipts
1,1 98.26
with satis fac tory sureties. will
To tal Beg inn ing Balan ce
be required f rom tl1e sue .
Plus Re ce ipts
1 , 237 ~ 72
cess fu l bidders tor the taithfu t
'
E11penmdilures
performance of t he work
Contr-acts
1,207. 20
The r ight is reserved by th e Other Expenses
31. 52
Board of
Gall i a coun t y
Total Exp .
1,238.72
Commissioner s,
Gall i po l is ,
Bal. . Dec , 31. 1975
- 1.00 ·
Ohio. the Director of the Ohio
Total E x p . Plus Bal.
1•237 72
Department of Menial Health
D ec . 31 • 197 5
and Mental Retardat i on, and
F ederal Rev enue
the United States Department
·· Sharing fund
269 ·74
ot H ealth , Edu c ation and Bal. , Jan . I. 1975
Welfare , to reject any and all
Ri!ceipts
bids
and
to
waive
in
Grants - Federal
5,915 .00
form alities. No bidder may
Total Rec eip ts
5,915.00
withdraw hi s bid for a per iod
Totai . Beg inning Balan c e
of sixty days .
Plus R'ec eip1s
6,1 84.74
By Order Of the Gallia
EKpenditures
Co unty
Commissione r s ,
Maint . &amp;Operation
Gallipol is, Ohio
Equipm ent
2, 706 .72
To-t a l E x p ,
2,706.72
Bat , D ec . 31, 1975
), 478~ 0 2
Approved
Total EJip . Plus
Gene Wetherholl
Bal .• Dec . 31,197 5
6,184.74
County Prosec uto r
TOWNSHIP DE~T - NOTES
Purpose For Which Note
(JJ 17, 24; J L Jtc
Debt Was Creat ed
OtJtstanding Jan .
'2 ,333 .00
l' 1975
Rede emed During Year
1975
2.333.00
FINANCIAL REPORT
Rate of Int .
6p er:cent
OF TOWNSHIPS

·-~--·_.........,

____

•"

molt

/ft.....*'

will be 111ft

llfl"lillotl
IIIII oO/umn

.,.d will raealtle coplee ol

JACOBV MODERN.)

�..

18 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0., Wednesday, March 17, 1976

For- Fiscal Year
Ending Dec. 31,1975
Rutland "T:ownship
Meigs County
Box 12 , Rutland, Ohio 45775

March 10,1976
I cerfity th e following report

lo be conecl.

Edna M . Swi c k
Townsh ip Clerk
Tel. No . 1 614 74 2-2872

Ba c kl1oe
New Issues Dur ing
Year 1975
6. 500.00
Ba lan ce 'outstanding
D ec. 31 , 1 97~
6,.500.00
Rate of lnt
6 percent
Dal e of Final Mat .
Apr . 1978
(3) 17 , H e

~

Total Rec eipts

General Fund

269.74
13,744. 86

Motor Vehic le License

8.~07 . 95

1975 CHEVROLET CAPRICE

U295
than 7.000 miles, deluxe belts , t i nted
glass, air conditioned , deluxe bumper s &amp; guards,
remote LH+RH mirrors, 500-4bbl, V-8. AM radio &amp;
tape , auxl. lighting, comfort\11 , dark red with black
vinyl roof, l ike new - a real sharpie .

1970 C UTL AS~
Ph on e 992 3~10 .

3 14' lfc

Wanted

ATIENTIOI

Ta x Fund
6,33 6.38
• Gasol i ne Ta :.c Fund
12,400,.00
· Road and Bridge Fund 1,596.99
Cemetery Fund
2.256.17
Fire Dist. Fund
1, 198.26
Federal Revenue
3 BEORM . house on 1662
Sharing Fund
5,915.00
Lincoln Hill , $1.25 per month .
Totals
37 .910.75
Call 1 - 1304 ) 768 ·4041.
Total Receillh &amp; Balanc es
3- 14.6tp
· Genera l Fund
12,556.56
Motor Vehicl e Lic ense
FUR NI S_HED ,
2
bedrm .
Tax Fund
13,024.59
a partment , adults only·, in
Road and Bridge Fund
M iddleport. P11one 992 .J874.
17,597.47
3- 12·1fC
, C:emetery Fund
- 2,327.50
Cemetery F und
3,382.03
F i re' Oi st , Fund
1. 237 .72 SMALL furn ished apartment
for 1 or 2 persons , 139
Fe deral Revenu e sna ri ng
Butternut. Pom eroy, Ohio.
F'und
6, 184.}4
3. 11 .6tp
Total s
51,655.6 1
- -'--- --~--- ----EJipenditures
General Fund
7.34 1. 16 3 AND " ~M . turnished and
unfurniShed apts . Phone 992 .
Motor Vehicle License
5434 .
Ta x Fund
12,760 .46
11 .9.1fc
Gasoline Tax Fund
17,375 .03

Malibu .
3-11 -6tc

1971 INTERNATIONAL 2 ton
dump truck . Phone 992 · 3~0 .
J. Jl .6tp

-------------Pels

.o.KC Registered COllie Stud
Service. St ardus t King .
Phor~ (614 ) 985 ·4248 .
3· 16 ·tfc
-,------- - - - - - - - - 6 PUPPIES to give away, VibOrder collie
Phon e 992.
3646.
.
J.Jl .6tp

RELIABLE
babys i tter
wanted in Middlport area
Phon e 992 ·2220 after 6 p .m :
..,__
3·11·.41c

______________
Misc. Sales

TWO Fiim ily Garage Sa le ,
Thursday and Friday, 300
Wright St. , Pomeroy, First
street past Pomeroy Elem .
Schoot. Lot of children 's,
men's ,
and
women 's
clothing in excellent con .
di tl on . Both winter and
summer. Also, high chair,
baby wa l kers , toys , new
etec . veater ond lots of mis c.
i tems .
3.14 -5tc

-------------For Rent

3 BEDRM·. house with batt1 i;;
Rutland . Phone 992 -5858 .
J .9.tfc

CONSTRUCTION
From a shelf fa a house. all
types of building 1'1d
remOdeling
trom
the
· taundetion up . Additions ,
urpeting, pa intint , siding,
roafinv. paneling, peper
hanging elc ....
Ph. 949· 2023 or 843 ·2 667

MONROE Ca lculator , 8 row ,
S25. Ta.pe recorder with 2
CAS H pa 1d for air makes Md.
speakers. S50, Phone 992.
models of m'obile homes .
7551 .
PhonE'! area code 614 423 .
3· 15·4tp
953 1.
4·13 -tfc

14

Mobile Homes For Sale
1970MOBILE home tor sale, 2
bedrm . Partially furn ished ,
gas heat . Phone 1304) 773.
5460 or 992 ·5001.
3· 14 .61p

ll
60 RIB STONE SILO ,
EVERYTHING
IN ·
CLUOEO . Pllone 949 ·2542 .
3· 16·6fC

-------------Vl NDALE 12 x 68, 3 bedrm .
bath 8. • , , 14ft. expando . 25
ft . awning and por ch , fully ·
carpeted . Phone 7112 ·2880.
'
J 12 61c

rooms, 2 baths , 2 porches .
sun porch , 1' basement, city
and well water , natural gas ,
gar~ge .
Pri c ed to s e ll .
Phone (6141 985•4102 .
2 4 tf c

1973 HONDA motorcycle, 3'50 .
Like new. crash bars and
carrier , new tires. 5800 .
Phone 992 .3A59 after S p.m .
·3· 16·3tc

L A RGE hous e in MicidlepOr i'
on c orn er J(J J. P r iced at
$7,500 or w ill co nsi der trade
P hor.~e 99'1 7797 .
3 I'Z 6tp

STAR CRAFT Spring Sale on
mlnl ·mot(lr homes, trll\lel
trailers and foJd .downs . We
sell serv ice and quality.
financing arranged . Camp
Co nl ey Star Cratt ·sales. Rt.
62. North of Pt . Pl easa nt, w .

TEAFORD

Va .

------------·- --

ARE YOUR planning cabinets
in your home? We have a
lim i ted supply of new
wooden cabil"!et doors and
drawer fronts available a1 a
reasonable price. Some with
glass inserts . Some solid. all
top quaHty, Can be seen at
Kingsbury Mobile Home
:;;.ales. 1100 E . Main St .,
Pomeroy , Ohio or call 992 7034.
3· 11 ·5tc

4 Brs ., 1'h
ceramic baths, F .a. oil fur ..
2 car garage , nice kit. and
dining , $25.000.

REMODELED -

and garden. $21.500.
68 ACRES Near Cool ·
ville,

, .\

r---= _
-

" GRAPEFRUIT PILL" now
With DiadaK Plan more
con'o'enient than grapefruits
- Eat satisfying meals and
lose weight . Nelson Drugs .

,

I

BUY
NOW
AND
SAVE

rm s.,

2112 baths,

Basement

and

barn .

S&lt;SO.OOO.OO .
MIDDLEPORT

4'12 ACRES - B rms., bath ,
central

air

and

heat ,

2

perches. city uti lilies. 2 car
garage. 531,000.
NEW LISTING - Clean 6

WILL TRIM or cut tree s and
sh rubbery . Pl1on e 949 2545
or 74 2 316} .
2· 27 26tc

. CO-OP
,
Automatic Waitt
Conditioner
Model UCXXX,
210,000

- -------------Real Estate for Sale

5 ROOM house and bath on ISO

-

-· ---------· .:.,. __ ----

-----------= -~- ---

~lli~M;-A.t ~··:!'-'.we
o.,

II ' • '

"'"''

•

'

"''

'"I I

U..a-ble these rour Jumblea.
ene letter tG each Jllluare, to
lorn;a Cou.r ordinary worda.

OOREL

I I

Free estimiltes on car· .
peting and installation .
We ' ll bring samples to your
home with no obligation .
See how you can r,ally
save.
Mike Young. ~n•aer
Sales and Installation
, Rl . 3, Pomeroy, Ottio 45760
Phone day or night
614 -992-2106
1 . 1&lt;~ - 1 l)"lo .

I tJ

'SEWNAR

REM. ODE L! N G,

Plumb. in g_, ·
hea ti ng and all t ypes dt
general
repair .·
Work
guaranteed . 20 years ex ·
per1ence . Phone 992 2409 .'
. .6 .1-lf c

- - - - - - - - _..__ ....!, _ _ .

EXCA'iiATlNG ,
doz e r ,
backt1oe
and
ditCher :
Char l es R . Hatf ield Back
Hoc Ser.vlc e, Rutland, Oh io .
Phone 742 2008 ,
11·30 ·78t c

ALLEY 001'

0 &amp; 0 TREE Tr imm ing , 20
yea rs exper i,n ce,. Insured ,
fr ee estimates . Call 997 ·238A
o~ (614! 698 7257 A lbany .
10 15 tfc
_:_
., _._....._

____

__

I DON'T
KNOW
WH'I 'NOT!

________

GASOIJNE AILEY

You

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

SEPT IC T A NK S clea ned .
Modern Sanitation . 991,3954
or 992 · 7349 .
9 18 tic

The land
tal-ies care
of that~

What about
the fleas?

---- __

...__~

LEt US DO

I

.Carpeting

'Strout··

501 NYLON

$499

-.ealty"'

We wi II gel resu Its if
anyone can. List with us .

No. 147- 2 BR. home, full
base .. modern kit ., ready to
move In, S9,000.00. ·

No. 157-3 BR . home, f"lly

.

carpeted.
ft~ll
modern kit., 1'12

base .,
baths,

S20,300.00.
No. 114- 115 a .• new gas
well , somt! timber , large

barn, S32,000 .00.

1

5quare ' .
Yard
·

'NCdllrounn

-

RUBBER BACK

41 Born (Fr.)

we have hundreds of
ca rpet values . Your job can
be completed in 1. •t o 2
weeks . ~ tong · waiting
per iod . bdr instaiJer has 28
yeors d-perlence ... Expert
' in\jaUation . You'll like
what you get .

SHE SPENDS. ~
nMc 5HoPPINo
AND .eEINO

992-7133,
CONTACt,
Lois faulty

TALK TO ~~~D~LL ...
GRIITE
'
CARPET CONSULTANT

Rft'TLAND
FURNITURE .
1412 ·2211

Branch Mlinager

FiTTED FOR
-'""''"....,

Cl..Oil-&lt;ES ...

II .

Rutland

=• ••............••
ShnppiiHJ Hou

·••

e•

•

Mon., Tues., Wed.

·

8:00tll5:00

: :

•

•••

·: •• FRIDAY TIL 8 :
= •• Close Sat. At 5 p.m. • • •
• ••
••

·•••••••••

::

RUnAND PURNI1URE

742-2211

I

"ltNOLD ,OitATI"
.

BE !J IT LOOKS LIKE
1 6U)AV
A 1-!APPII BIRFOAY CARD

~ Aluta ........ wbot
we mean wbltl n .., t111t a
conlrtlet Is a pad.-1

A came « llllllll 11am am- .
tract II llid to be a pad any time lbln II u ....
!"UPTOQVofts
'1be J.-t thlni Soutb Wlllled ' cl1aMe to mllre It "-- Ill the
, ~
t,o , do wu to 1et to seven cards held by dldarer and cNmKXV · KM
FJ V
N H A N ll: ., N E V"
" M :tiamands, but bls flll'ln«'a five my.
• ·
' ·
"' ,... ~ was tbe IJ'8I1d llarn
(()q ~ · , . _ • qiiNI/on
'Gree. 11111 teu. Saalll to bid
IV D X E
H D Z K 8 H'V B W G
DZ
F J N F·lf be bollia two o1 die lor lite . tl!P'ifall Wtlte "All&lt;
'
hree .... ~Man' Ia
lilt JaGOOp." ot w.
KXV
DZ UKXZFNXFWG
rtlll
O ·NTOXE; SouthlookedattbeijueenOl
.
HDZUkAVBDVZ
1

'

"

"

ODW;KV

·,

j FER ME ·-I WONDER WHO
j

'

lllll1s lad for time. His ana.,. litdMtltMI !lCHitllolla
-lnttboucbtwutodlscarda il llemped. =~
JII1Cie from cmmmy and Iettie .,... ~ - 1 ' 1 . .,..

1111 Kint.'-'urn .,_..._.,I-.e.•

'

WlJ'Z SO THOUGHTV

i

RUTLAND

-~-

,,

-------1

I

'

........................... .....
e

~=

5N, T.Pasa : :
Put Pou

~
'
·
·.
Ql'dowq-."nteDbetboulbt
Yl!81erday'1 ~:
'
ttONS .AND- nlln, 'lllliltled "Willi a
..,F,A~(jUiiAJEf4zi!G:EoNERALJZA11QIIS ', A1t£ .
, lp:IJRSE OF .ltle litolluct" and proceeded
v•
~LUoll,Jll'&amp;i - H.Q. WELLS
'
· ' mike bls Cllltract.

•

Thursday 8tll12 noon

••
•••

I.ONGFBLLO, W

.

••

•. Pau
P.au

. One ltUer aimply slanda for another. In thls sample A- ll .f )penlll,lead-Q•
used f&lt;K the throe •t:o. X (qr lbo two, D's. elc. ,Sln1le lettes:s. - - -·- ·
apoatroi&gt;~es. the len'~th. and rqrmallon or the lrnrds ore all
..,__,d .. J
,
8 Y vwwu
hints. \J;:ach dny lho cnde let[en are d~erent.
fllbel ••. . . ,

N.N .

'

•

AX 'YDLBAAX ~It

VPUDFDXE

111111

.•.

Ia

:: '"'
1•

ella..,... ne,..,_,__ ,.,..,.eob)ow

• • • • • • • ' • •lt11••~•·•ce•lli11-•1...,.,..,.,.
Conv•~nll'fll

,

DAILY CRYPT()QU()'J'E-Hen:'s how' to. work It: ~=:

CALL H2 -22 11

804 W. Mllin
Pomeroy
?92-2298
After Hours Ci!ll

Real Estate For Sale

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

7:-Bozo the Clown
7:30-BIII Co$by
I:Ofi-High and Wild

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

w.

-..,-------"--------

LGO--Tomorrow 3,A; News 13.
Cha?tlel Five CAble

2-12-1 mo .

__

1~

FREE BRAKE INSPECJION

I; MovJe "The

x 100 tl . lot loc!!lfed on 120
State St .. Pomeroy . S6,000 .
_...._
._
Phon e 992 .5786 .
3" 16·61c ' EXCAVA,Tl'NG , d6ler , lochn::o and bll ckhoe work ; septic
~OM E for sale , spacious
t anks
ins t alled ;
dump
ltvlng room , d in ing room , 2
tru cKs and IO ·boys f(Jr hire ;
bedrm . , la rge
kitchen ,
will t,aul fil ! d irt , tor soi l ,
family room , new bafhs
limestone and grave . Call
priced to sell. Phone 992:
Bob or Roger Jeffers , day
7394 .
.
phone 992 7089, night pl10ne
992 .3525 or 992·5237 .
3· 16-S! p
2 11 -tfc
f:OR SA LE near Lanosv ltle , 5
------.------ ---~
room house . root cellar with
room over, 2 bay detached
IT!
garage , Jl!s ac.res , no bath ,
hot and cold wttter In kit chen , l.P . gas heat , heaters
w itt1 house . Call 742 2819
after 5 p .m .
J .J1 .7tp '

Capaclty

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

Founders"

Strange Love of Martha Ivers" 10; Janakl 33.

6:0fi-Sunrl.. Semester 10.
6:1s-Farm Report 13.
6:20-Pettorna lor Living 13.
.
•
.6:»-CaaumbuaT.,.y•: News6; Sunri .. s.m..wl;
Urban League 10.
6:w-&lt;&gt;unce of Prevention 10.
6:-45-Mornlng Report 3.
6:5s-&lt;:huck White Reparts 10: Good 'M amlng. Trl.
Stole 13.
7:0fi-T. .y 3,.,15; Good Morning, A..,...lca 6,13: CBS
NOWI I; Bugo BuMy &amp; Friend&amp; 10.
7:30-Schoolles 10.
•
8 : Ofi-Lassle 6; Capt . Kangaroo a, 10; SeN me St. 33.
1:30-Big Valley 6.
9:110-Nof For Women Only 3; Phil o.r..h.. 4; Lucy ·
Sll!&gt;w 8; Mike Douglas 10; Morning with D.J. 13;
Phil Donahue 15.
9:30-A.M. 3; One Life to Live 6; Tettletalea 8; Mike
Douglas 13.
10:00-Celebrlty SWMpStakes 3,4,15; Edge of Night 6;
Price Is R lght I, 10.
10:30--High Rollers J,.j,15; Dinah 6.
11 : 110-WMel of Fortune . 3, 15; Weekday •• Gambit
8, 101' Fwmer'1 Daughter 13; Elec. Co. 20.
·
11 :30-tiollywood Squares3,.,15; Happy Days 13; Love
of Life 8,10; Sesame St. 20.
ll :~TIIke Kerr I; D., lmel's Wor"ld 10.
12:00 MagnlflcentMarbleMachlneJ,I5; Lel'aMakea
Dell13; Bob Briiii1'150-50Ciub•: Nows6,1,10.
12:30-Take My Advice 3.15: Ail My Children 6,J3;
. Search lor Tomorrow 1, 10.
12:o!S-Eioc. Co. 33.
12 : ~NBC Newa 3,15.
1:00 News 3; Ry111'1 Hcipe 6, 13; Phil Danlll.. I;
Young &amp; the Restlnl 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1:30-QarsofOur Ll-3,.1,15; Rhyme &amp; R - ,,13;
AI the World Turns 1, 10.
2:0fi-S2fi.OOO Pyramid 6,13.
2:3o-Doc:ton 3,.j,15; Neighbors 6,13; Guldlng Light
a, 10.
3:0fi-..An0ther World 3,4,15; Ail In the Family 8,10:
General Hoipltel 6,13; U .l l• Yoge &amp; You 20.
3:3G-Onl Life to Llvel3; MlclotyMouleCII!b6s Match ·
Game 1,10; Lowell Thoma Remembln 20; lTV
Utilization 33.
4:0fi-Mister Cartoon 3; liMY Griffin 41 Sgmenet 15;
llewllchecl6; MICkey Mi11M Club I; Mlmir R~t~~on .
20.33; Movie "Tile Wl'f to the Gold" 10; Dtneh 13. ;
4:30 Bewltchod3; Mod Squod6J Pw hld!!e Femlly I; _,
Sesame St. 20,33; Fllnlatu11a1 15. ·
5:110-Bonenza 3; Fa!Yill~ Altair I; Sf.- Trek 15.
5:30-Adam-12 4; News 6; BeV!trly Hlllbllllet I; Elec.
Co. 20.33; Adani-12 13:
,
6:00 NeMW,10,13,15; ABC Ntws6; Zoom 20; lTV
Ullllzaflon 33.
6:30-NBC News 3,.1,15; ABC NeWs 13; ANty GrllfHh
6; CBS News 1,10;. Ikl ~gtpadge ~ 20; Lilla
Yoga &amp; You. .
.·
7:110-Truthar Cons. 3; To Tell flit Trutl14; Bawling for
Dotlan 6; News 10; Space: 1999 11 Let'1 Malta 1
Oj!at 13; fiUIIIIy Alf.... 15; Anyone lor Tll'lol'fiOU?
20; Family at War 33.
.
·'
7:30-Hollywood Squares :I.A; Ohio State !-ollerY 6:
Evening l!dltlon with Martin Agranttky 20; Wild
Kingdom 10; To Tell the Truth 13; Mulk: Clfy
U.S.A. 15.
B:Ofi-Mac Davis 3,.,15; Welcome Back Kotter 6,13;
Waltona8,10; PlayliftheMonth 20; The Way It Wes
33.

--------------- ___ ________

Week"ly Gntin

I '299

6,13; Movie "The

LUCKE TT Farm Eq uipment ,. ' s EWING MACHINE Repairs .
service, all makes . 992 ·2284 .
West
Wash i n!iJ ion
St. ,
The Fabric ShOp , Pomeroy .
A lban y . Phone (61 4) 698 -3037
Aulhor i zed Singer Sal es and
or 698 .7881 .
Se rvice .
We
sharpe n
2· 18 .26 t c
Scissors .
_..;.
,__
3·29·1fC
REO DOG . lime~stone , gravel
and fill dirt delivered .
Phon e B i ll Pullins , 992 .2478 . ' RE A DY MI X CON"- ~' -=:'r t::·
delivered r i gh t to your
2· 19·26tc
pro jecl. Fas t and easy , Free
est i mates . Phone i;-92.J'ZB4,
L . BRAD FO RD . Auct ioneer
Goeg le in Ready MiMO- .JCo . ,
Complete Service . Phone ·
Middleport , Ohio .
949 ·2487 or 949 ·2000. Racine
6·30·lf c
....,.
Oh io, Cri ll Bradford .
'
10. 9-Jfc·· ELWOOD BOWER S REPAIR
- Sweepers . toasters , irons:
-W I LL do odd iotls , ' rO ot ing ,
all '5mell appliances . Lawn
painting , hauling . tre ework
mower , next to Sta·te High
and mowing . Ca ll 992 -7409.
way Garage on Route 7.
·
·
·
3· 2 261c
P11one 185 3825 .
4· 16·1fC

rms ., bath, &lt;:ity utilities ,
garage on nice lot near
stores. S6,000 .

3-17 lip
ENJOY gracious living at - Village Manor in Mi.d ·
dleport tor as low !JS Sl30 TRUCK camper, 36 incnes
Reg. sm.oo Val .:
high. panelled w itl1 lights,
per
month
with
all
hinge , back door with top
uti l it i es
p.aid .
Thes~
vent and screens . Phone 992·
POMEROY LANDMARK
arc brand new high quality
5258 .
apartments at prices you
.
. . . Jack
carsey, Mv'r .
3. 1J .)tc
Road and Br idge Fund 4l. 77 C9Uf'JTRY MO.bil.e. Hom P.
can afford . .Your ren f in _
.
Phone
m-2tlt ·
Cemetery Fund
2,092 .72
ParK , ~I . 33, ten miles north
JUST OFF RT. 1- 5 BR.
cludes month lo monfh
Fire Di st . F und .
1.238 .72
of Pomeroy . Large lOis with
teases, all elec . li~Jing • . PUREBRED SALE . West
bath (hot water heat N.G.)
Virginia
Polled
Hereford
Federal Revenue Sharing
c~ncret e patios . si d ewa lk s,
carpeting,
rang~
and
own well
wlth water
Association will t1old 9th
r u r'lner s and off street
Fund
2.706.72
refrigerator . tree trash
Annual Sa te Mar&lt;;h 27. 1976
softner, paneling tile,
Totals
43,556.58
parking . Phone 992 ·7479.
pickup, cable TV at your
at Jackson's Mill State 4-H APPROX . 10 acres with very
Balance Dec . ll , 19H
12·3l ·lt c
e:.cpense.
and
on · sit.e .
carpeting. 7 hilly acres
Canlfl at Weston . Offering 69
General Fund
5.215 .40 -~ ~-----'---~---'~-laundry ft!lcilit les. Con .
ni c e .building lot on Co . Rd .
fenced,
1000 11 . road
head 30 bulls mostly
Motor Vehicle Licehse
venient to shopping on Th ird
32 . Chester w'aler d istrict ,
frontage
.
ap t,
in
breeding
age
and
38
heifers
.
Tax Fund
264 . 13 UNFURNI St-I E.D
and Mill Streets In Mid .
beautiful locat ion . Phone
Pom eroy . 2 bedrm . newly
For inform arion co"tact Jim
Gasol ine Tax F und
222 .44
CORNER LOT- l'i&gt; story
dleport . See the manager at
949 .2770 .
redecorated
,
fully
carpete
d
.
Westfall
,
Rt
,
2,
Box
115,
3
Cemetery Fund
- 2,369 .27
R iv erside Apartments or
frame
, 4 BR , bath, dining
Call in tt1e early a .m . 992·
Spencer, W . Va . 25276 or call . -- ---------- ~~tc
Ceme tery Fund
1,289.31
call 992 -3273. Furnished
r.,
basement
, porches,
1304)
927
-2104
.
2288
.
Fire Dis!. F1.md
~ 1.00
apartments
are
also
2·2'Z ·tfC .
. 3· 11 · 1tc 3
BEDRM .
home ,
just
gaqtge, about '12 acre,
Federal Re\l.enue Sharing
available .
- - - - - - - -- - - - - f inished, remodeling, Salem ·
Fund
3,478 .02
Middleport.
2·2-78tc
St ., Ru~land . Phone ?42·2306·
Tatar ·
8,099 .()3
1974 TS19S
SUZUKI
A ·1
RT. 143- 2 acres close In,
after
A
p
.m
.
or
see
Milo
a
.
·
General Fund
· condition, 1', 100 m i les . Call
Hutch ison .
water available, Ideal for
Bal. , Jan . 1, 1975
4,348 .61 .
?~2 . 2l,j3 after S p .m .
COUPON
9-23 -tfc
home or 1rol1er. ASKING
Receipts
3·8-9tc
--------::;------ -'' $4,000. (make an oHer)
General Property Tax TUPPERS PLAINS, New. 3
GOOD THROUGH MAR. 24,1976
Real e ·state and
SYRACUSE - Lot BOx90 .
MOOl R N ~·- i.l lnu l ConSole.
bedrm . houses , carpeted,
Trailer I Gross)
3.011 .74
Am -Fm Radio. 4 speed
(newer home) 1 story
range, geraoe , large lats .
Tangible Persona l Property
changer . Balance S102 . 10 or
FHA llnanclng a'Jallable,
frame , 3 nice BR, both,
Tax &lt;Gross)
87 .94
terms . Call 992 -39'65.
521.900. Phone (614) 667 .
Estate TaK (G ross)
22 .25
carpeting, paneling , tile,
J . lQ .tfc
6304
.
Local Governmen t and
large
garage,
port
With purchase of front end alignment or
3-1061p
Slate Income Tax
3,039.24
GOOD quality hay for s.ai'e.
basement,
S22.SOO.
,
Cigarette License Fees
wheel pack.
Call 992-3658.
And Fines (Grqss)
75.00
RT.
143-1'12
acires,
mlblle
·
3-5· 12tc HOME tor sate by pr·ivate"
-Done by N lASE Cert. Mechanics.
Adlustments and
with added roOml and
oWner ,
3 1'
acres,
4
Refunds
78.86
bedrooms.
barn
on
blilcktop
garage,
2 or 3 BR, own and
Other
1, 892.92
GOOD hay , never wet. Phone
road, gas and water . Phone
city water. landscaped.
Totat Neceipts
8,207 .95
949 2523 .
9•9 ·2023.
Total Beginning Ba l ance
l · 10· 12tc
Close ln.
--- =---- .:...~ ------3· 1·26tfl
Plus R~ceipts
11,556.56
135 ACRES at just $123 per
COJ 1 ~OF'-? "r. L:E .. C/\!3 Coal ,- - - - : _ - - - - - - - - - Expenditures
POMEROY
992-2174
ColliVOIIY
1 · mile north o( 3 BP t-rov.E. . ; .. s t f inished . acre, minerals, close to
Total Expenditures
Cheshir&lt;:. on Rl. 7. P i ck your
remodel.ng . Salem
St.,
recreation , some timber.
- Administrat ive
7,34 1. 16
own . S70 per toft , Open' 6 days
Rutland . Phont 7112 -2306 .
Grand Total Exp . ~
OTHEIII'ROI'IRTIES TO
per week , or call {6141 l67 :
afler 4 p .m . or see Milo a ,!
General Fund
7,341.16
CHOOSE
FROM
7330
for
further
in;ormellon
.
Hulch
lnsori
..
Bal., Dec . 31 ; 1915
5.215 .40
"YOUR FRIENDLY DEALER"
1·8 ?lie
.
IO.f . tfc i
Total Exp. Plus Bar .•
m-lf••or~·-

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

SMALL . SEPTIC TANK S
INSTALLED . • B l l. L
P.ULL'IN S. PHONE 992 ·2478 ,
DAY OR N lGHT .
2 22 .52 tp

THURSDAY,MARCH11.lt16

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

-

Renewed 12 rms . • 2 baths.
large mod. kit ., family rm .,
arid
wood
burning
fireplace . $15,000 .

WE INSTALL!

TENNA 8 track
FM stereo .
radio combination lor car .
Speakers included. S50 .
Phone 949 -2322.

8

mod. U kit .. hot water heat .

1974 FORO F250 Ranger ,
19,000 miles; 1973 10ft . cab
over camper, like new .
M!lglc Chef Elec . range ;
Coleman oil furnace with
tank for mob!le home .
Phone (614l 698 -7255 .
3· 14· 3tf1

HAY tor sale . Phone 992 -7306.
3·5·12tp

Fine 3

Brs. with lot s of storage
and closets. Large bath ,
nat. gas. furna ce, gCirage

AN TIQUE home com fort
cookstove . Also qu ick meal
bottled gaS and wood ttr coal
combination stove . Good
condition . Phone 949 -2770.
3· 10 ·61c

8 WEEK o ld baby pigs. Phone
91j9 2857 .
3 12 6tc

10 Mechanic Pomeroy, O.
Phon. 992-1325

1 ACRE -

3·16·-&lt;ll c

SAVE MONEY?

------

VIrgil B., Sr ., Brolcer
j'

BACKHOE S

AND DOZER LARGE AND

MODERN ~horn-iin chester :- 8

COAL , l imes tone and all types
of sot! and rock salt for ice
and snow removal. Ex .
celsior Salt works , East
Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio ,
Phone 992 ·3891 .
12.J-tfc

WHEELCHAIR , SSO. Robert
R . Lewis , 1047 South Second
Ave , Middleport .
3· 15·3tc

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

9 AC R ES . 4' good w ell s. 2
bedrm tr ai l er . Will se ll with
trailer or w lt hou r Call 742
27 17 af ter" p. m . Pr ice $7 .500
for bolh .
3 14' 121 p

Tablets and Hydrex Water
Pills at
Dutfon
Drug .
Middleport and
Nelson
Drug .
3· 16-31p

1974 SKY LINE tra iler , blue
and While, furnished, $A,500.
Or take over payments .
Phon e 949 .2960 .
3· 17 · 41c

·E&gt;&lt;CAVATING
-.. .

--·---·----------

----------'----LOSE weigh-t wll.h New Shape

t)N F URNISHEO 14 x 7U
mobile home . total ele c., 3
ton central air con dilion·er ,
excellent condition . Phon e
2A7 ·2684 or 247 ·'2664 .
3. to.ttc

O'DELL Alintment ioca t ed
beh i nd
Rutland
Grade
School. Tuneup , . brakes ,
wheel b!!ilancing , ali~emenl.
Pt1one 742 -2004 .
II . J6.1fc

7 ROOM house with ba.th , good
location . Fu ll basemen! , 391
South Second, Middl eport .
Phone 992 2265 .
3·7 · 12tp

I
!

SLOAN'S .
CARP.ETING

D&amp;D

Real Estate For Sale

3. 14-4t c

WANT TO

Ph. (61f! 985-4102

2· 19. \ mo .

FT . SELF -CONTAtNEO
camping tra iler with ex tras .
Excellent condition . Phone
(3041 773 5876 .
3·9-8t c

-

Ph . 992 -'3993
4.10· lmo .

BULK WATER
AVAILABLE
Tuppers ' Pla lns ·-Ch .ester
Wafer Dis trict now selling
bulK wa t er to tanks on
trucks at our new off ice!
located on St . Rt. 7
1 Mi le North of
. Eastern-High Sc hool
Serve Yourself D ispenser
Taking quart ers only , one
a t a time . for 250 ga llons of
water.
Open a li the Time
for your c onvenience!
3· 1· 1m o.

1973C\-:IEVY lf2 ton p ickup 350,
p .s . , p .b .• automatic , $1 ,800.
Phone 992 ·3668 .
J.14-6tc

Ph.

m M!

BISSEll BUILDERS

lARRY
LAVENDER
Syracuse, Ohio

Rutla,_d 742·2331
Roger Wamsley
3- 1-lma .

1975 DATSUN Model B ·210,
SJ,OOO . Phone 992·3453 or 992·
3381 .
3·14 -6k

20

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

MUSI.CIAN
fiddle or
mando l in. for young Blue
Grass Band . Timing im ·
portant. Calt 742 .2796 .
3· 17 ·6tc

STORM

R&amp;J COINS

jj:Jt:t:fi~M0:::7&amp;::.;1~E

Take advantage of our
prices.
Quality
built
homes. Nice lots available
in nice locations.

WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIOING·SOFFITT
GUTTERS· AWNINGS

HAY. never been w~t . Phone
(614 1 378 ·6205 after 6 p .. m .
3 ·11 · 12tp

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

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

Fin a ncinv_A'Jailable
BtownlntoWalls&amp; Attics

or

For Sale

REDBONE coo nhound male .
In L'an'gsville area . Call 742 ·
2848 or 992 . 7894 . R . T .
Stewart
3· 16 ·6tp

·srown
Insulation--Services

YOUit.. E'R.
M155nJ6 A1R.~

: MOTOR$,

FREE ESTIMATES

For .Sale

1975 OLDSMOBILE Starfire.
mut sell . Cell 992 ·7692.
3- 17 ·4tc

1969 CHEVELLE
Phone 992 -7830 .

"S~ITH NELSOpt·

3· 17-lmo .

Find buried
treasure.
Coins, rings, silver, gold.
Coin &amp; Metal
_
D etectors
For Rent

1968 CHEVY Van with 1970
motor , 6 cyl . car pe ted.
paneled , stereo tape deck .
FM radi o, mag wheels in
good
condition.
$1,300 .
Phone 992 -3710 .

Supr eme.

Ph. 949-2404

PLU~

•

IO :Ofi-700-Ciub

Wom..;

HOtiOfl ,·iV. . ·~-=·,i-E;·c;(~ ~~"f'i:~"i''~T;H:"rf'.ANI!t\ATINCr FLUID
AOID MY FORMUl-A-

Nathan Biggs
Rilldiatar Specialist

OPEN TUES. THOU SAT .
6: 3.0 Tilt 10: 00

_CAPTAIN EASY

From 'the targ·est Truck or 1
Butlctoze,-Rad i ator to the
Heeter Core .

LOCI'-CI lf32f.:Jrd Street
Racine , Ohio

Watch for List
Items Later .

BUY, SELL or T.~A.· OE

Notice

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

In twenty minutes.

COINS .

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

LO ST in v jn ci nty of Tanne r's
Run, black and wh ite
spotted coon hound pur .
Phone 247 · 2280 .
3-11 ·6tp

Cl!l In ard•rs and pick up

3-17-1 mo.

Wanted To Buy

lost

ltalan-Style Pilla

10: oo a .m.

$5495

4door , co. car , lowmileage , sandstone finish , \llnyl top
and interior, air conditioning , power windows &amp; door
locks, tilt steering wheel, cruise control, AM rad!o &amp;
tape , truly a loaded car and has good eye appeal .

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

-·-----------.--

GET

Orange Twp. Volunteer
Fire Department will hold
a consignment auction at
the fire house located in
Tuppers Plains. Ohio on
April 17th beginning at

Cl~ 'i"ilc coupe. less

1975 CHEVROLET CAPRICE

SAM'S
PIZZA SHOP

AUCilON SALE

1:»--Mov'- "Bad Mon'a Land"

-

Pomeroy
QUAUTY Motor Co.

BLACK PONY wearing blue
halter , found on . Rt . 14 3
IN MEMO.RY of our mo ther .
Harrisonville Road at Lewis
Mary Rowena Rowe who
Smith residence . Phone 992 d ied March 11, 1961.
31 83 .
3 15·61c
Althoug h o u r hearts are
heavy ,
With the sorrow that we bear .
We know we can be with her,
In that land God made so fair . OLD fu rni ture , ice boxes .
The children .
brass
bedS,
old
wall
J . lJ . Jic
telephones ·and parts , or
comple te.households . Write
M . D.
Miller , Rt .
2,
Pam eroy , Ohio , Ca II 992 ·
WILL ca re for elderly woman
7760
In tny home . Phl:lne 992 ·7314.
10· 7-74 '
3· 17 •61c
TIMBER ,
s tanding
446 ·8570.

MAKE SURE yqu gel every
poss ible d educt ion lh is year .
Have. your ' Fede ral and
Sta,te Jn co.me Tax return by
an accountant. Phone 992 ·
6173 .
1·21 ·52tc
- ----- -- --- -~ -

•
WEDIIEIDAT, MA!ICH tr,'ft76
5:00-Botililzli3if"iirltly Affair I; Stir Trft 1~.
5:-Adam-12 ~; ,...... 6; Beverly Hllibltllea I; Etec.
Co. 20.33; Adem-12 13.
6:- - . 3,4,1, 10, 13,15; ABC Nowa 6; Z0C11n 20,33.
' 6 :~BC Now13,.1, 15; ABC News 1:1; ANty Grllfllll6; ·
CBS News 1.10; Crap Game 20; C..riiCDIIFd" 33.
7:110-TruthorCons. 3; Probe: ThoWarldAround UU;
Bowling lor Dollars 6; Pap Goes the Courrlry .a; .
.News 10; Wlld 1\ingdam 13; Fmlly Affair 15; Book
But 20; Know Your School 33.
7: 30-l.alt of the Wild 3; Wlld Wild World of AnimeiU; ·
Name That TUlle A; IMtch G1me PM I; Evoning
Edition wltll Martin Agronoky 20; Tho Juclgo 10; To
Tell the Trulll13; Wild Ktngdom 15; Book .... 33
B:Ofi-Little House on the Prairie 3,.j,15; Bionic
6,13~y Orlando &amp; Dawn 1,10; The Way It Was
20;
dol ot Decision 33.
8:30-Lowtll Thomlo R......,bers 20..
':110-Chlco &amp; tM Man 3,.j,15; Baretta 6,13; Cannctr1
8,10; Music In Amerla~33; Images of Aging 20.
9 : ~umpllnga 3,.1,15.
.
10:00-NBC Reports 3,~.15; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13; CBS
News Special 8,10; News 20; School for Wives 33.
10:30-Aimanac 20; Trapaapheoe 33"
11:00-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,•, 15; Movie "Dead on Target"

Business Services

2 SIGNS
OF

-

In MernOI)

PART .TIME delivery dr i ver,
must own s t ation wagon . or
panel led truck . Phone 992 ·
55 60, .
3· 16 ·3lc

For Rent

'·

..

Found

Help Wanted

Federal Revenue
Sh ar ing Fund

C an ce llat ion
Correcti ons will be ac
cepted unl i t 9 a . m . for
Day ot Pub lica t ion .
REGULATIONS
ihe Publ ish er reserv es
I h e r ig h I lo edlt or rej eC!
~n y
ads deemed ob
teCJion al . The publ ish er
Will not be responsible to r
~Ore !han one i ncorr ec t
•nsertion .
RATES
For Want Ad Service
~ c ents per word on e
mserlion
Minimum Charge Sl .OO
14 cents per word three
consecutive
insert ion s.
26 ce n ts per word Sl)(
co n sec utiv e
Insert ions .
4'5 Pe r Cent Oiscouni on
pa id ad s and ads paid
within 10 days .
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
\2 00
for
50 . word
mi n imum .
.
Each additional word 3
ce nt s.
BLIND ADS
Ad ditional 25c Charge
per Adverlisemenl.
OFFICE HOURS
8 JO a .m ro 5.00 p m
Daily , a: 30 a .m . to 12 · oO
N oon Sa turday .
Phon·e tod ay 99 2 2156

TeletJUion log for easy viewirig

Auto Sales

Auto Sales

a rn .

3 17 6t c

RECEIPTS AND
EXPENDITURES
Balance Jan. 1. 1975
General Fund
$4,348.6 1
Motor Vehicle Li cense
Tax Fund
6,688.21
Gasoline Tax Fund
5,197 ..47
Road and Bridge Fund
3 ,924..49
Cemetery Fund
1,1 25 .86
Fire Di st . Fund
39 . .46

To t als

WANT ADS
INfORMATION
DEADLINES
S P M.
Day
Before
Pubt ica 1 ion
Monday De ad line 9

For Sale

SUMMARY OF
CASH BALANCES.

p

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

~

Sealed proposals w ill be
Dec 31 , 197!1
12.556 56
rece i ved by the Clerk of the
Motor Vehicle license
Board
ot
County
Com
Tax Fund
m i o;s loners . Gal l I a County , Ba l.. Jan . 1, 1975
6.688 .21
Oh io . at the otfice ot the
Rec eipts
Coul'lty COmmissioners , at the Motor Veh icle License
Coun 1y
Courthouse
In
Tax
6.336 .38
Gallipol i s. Ohio on April 8. Total Receipts
6,336 .38
1976 unti\ ' 12 : 00 noon, Eastern Total Beginning Balance
Sl.!mdard Ti me , and at that
Plus Rece ipts
13,024 .59
time w ill be opened publ ic ly
Ekpenditures
and read for the furnish inc., of Total Expenditures
at!
l abor
and
material
- M iscellaneous
4,309 . 13
8.451.33
necessary tor the construction
- Mai nt enance
of a new Medical Building at Gr and Total E)(p , ·Galli po lis . Oh io . All work shalt Motor Vehicle License
be done according to the
Tax Fund
1:1, 750 .46
drawings and specifica t ions , Bat .• De c . 31. 1975
264. 13
as prepared by Hayes , Tota l Exp . Pius
Donaldson , Wilt('nmyer and
Bal , Dec. 31, 1975 13, 024 .59
Partners , Architects , 601
Gas-oline TaJI Fund
E ighth St ree t. Portsmouth , Bal ., Jan . I. 1975
5.1 97. 47
Oh io .
Rec el pl s
Proposals will be received GasollneTaK
12.400.00
for the General , Plumbing , Total Rece ip ts
12.400.00
Hea ting, Ventilating . Air Total Beginning ·Balance
Condition i ng and El ectrical
Plus R eceip ts
17..597 .47
wo rk . Proposa l s shal l be
E11p end iture s
submitted on the Pr oposal Total Expenditures
Form contained in the bound
- Miscellaneous
10 ,960.07
spec i f ications
and
other
- Ma intenance
6,414 .96
contract doc uments , wh ic h Grand Total Exp . 222.44
documents are on file at th e
Gasoline TaK Fund
offices of the Clerk of said Total Exp . Plus Bal. ,
Commissioners at the off ice of
De c. 31; 1975
17,597 .47
the
Architect ,
and
are
Road and -Bridge Fund
available to all pr osp ec t ive Bal., Jan . 1, 19 75 · - 3,924 .49
b idders dur ing regular office
R eceipfs
hours. until the c los ing of bids . General Property Ta x One complete set of bid
Real Estate and
documents . for the purpose of
Tra i ler (Gross )
1,554 .07
b id di ng, may be ob ta ined Tang ibl e Personal Property
fro m
Hay es ,
Dono!!ldson, . TalC. ((; rps sl
42 .97
Wittenmyer
&amp;
Partners , Total Rece ipts
1,596.99
A r chi t ecls, 601 Eighth Str eet, Tot al Beginnin g Balan ce
Portsmouth , Ohio . No deposit
Plus Receipts
- 2,321 .50
wi l l be made to obtain tl1 e
E11pend itures
bidd ing doc um ents . How ever To la l E x pend i tur es
41.77
- Miscellaneous
a charge of S50 .00 w i ll be made
fo·r plans and specifications Grand Tota l Exp -~
whi c h are not returned ,
Road and Bridge Fund 41.77
shipp ing charges pr epa id Bal . . D ec . 31.1975
- 2.369 .27
' lh . 1
d
ft
th d 1
. Plus Bat ..
,
w• •n en ays a er
c a e Total
De c.Exp
_ 2,369.27
31 1975
bids are opened .
All pro posals must be ac .
Cem ete ry Fund
c ompan i ed by a bid bond Ba i., Ja n . l.l975
1,125.56
exec uted
by
a
Bonding
Receipts
Company, licensed by the General Property Ta)( ~
State ot 011 io , or by a Cert i f ied
R ea l Estate and Trai le r
(Gr ossl
1, 159 . 13 ·
c_heck drawn l,lpon a so lven t
bank in the St ate of Oh io, Tang ibl e Personal Property
Ta x (Gross)
39 . 13
payab Ie to the or d er o I I he Sale of Lot s
760.00
Board of
Gallia Co unty
Commissione r s ,
Gal l ipolis, Other
~97 . 91
Ohio , in an am o unt not tess Tota l Re cei pts
2.256 . 17
than fiv e {5) per ce rlt and in Total Beginning Balance
the speci fic amount ot the bid .
Plus Recei pts
3,382.03
The bond ·or c hec k shall be
Expenditures
1,530.00
for feite d if th e bidder falls r o Sa lar ies
1110.3 1
enter i nto a contract with sa id Suppl ies
390.89
Owner . Th e bonds or checks of Repair s
31.52
the three lowest bidder s wilt Other Expenses
2;092.72
be 11 eld un t il the execution of Total Exp.
1,289.31
the con tra ct and tile fur . Bal , D ec . 31, 1975
nisl1ing of the required per . Total Exp . Plus Bal ..
formance bond , after wh ich
Dec . 31, 1975
3,382 .03
th ey w ill be retur ned on
Fire District Fund
demand . The checks of the Bal, Jan . 1, 1975
39.46.
other bidders wilt be re turn ed
Receipts
on demand af te r the bids are General Property Ta x canvassed.
Real Estate and
A perfo r mance bond and a
Tra ll er (Gross)
I , 159 . 13
labor and materi al payment Tang ibl e Per sonal Property
bond. ea c h t o be 100 percent of
Tax ( Gross)
39.13
the amoun t of th e contra c t , Total Receipts
1,1 98.26
with satis fac tory sureties. will
To tal Beg inn ing Balan ce
be required f rom tl1e sue .
Plus Re ce ipts
1 , 237 ~ 72
cess fu l bidders tor the taithfu t
'
E11penmdilures
performance of t he work
Contr-acts
1,207. 20
The r ight is reserved by th e Other Expenses
31. 52
Board of
Gall i a coun t y
Total Exp .
1,238.72
Commissioner s,
Gall i po l is ,
Bal. . Dec , 31. 1975
- 1.00 ·
Ohio. the Director of the Ohio
Total E x p . Plus Bal.
1•237 72
Department of Menial Health
D ec . 31 • 197 5
and Mental Retardat i on, and
F ederal Rev enue
the United States Department
·· Sharing fund
269 ·74
ot H ealth , Edu c ation and Bal. , Jan . I. 1975
Welfare , to reject any and all
Ri!ceipts
bids
and
to
waive
in
Grants - Federal
5,915 .00
form alities. No bidder may
Total Rec eip ts
5,915.00
withdraw hi s bid for a per iod
Totai . Beg inning Balan c e
of sixty days .
Plus R'ec eip1s
6,1 84.74
By Order Of the Gallia
EKpenditures
Co unty
Commissione r s ,
Maint . &amp;Operation
Gallipol is, Ohio
Equipm ent
2, 706 .72
To-t a l E x p ,
2,706.72
Bat , D ec . 31, 1975
), 478~ 0 2
Approved
Total EJip . Plus
Gene Wetherholl
Bal .• Dec . 31,197 5
6,184.74
County Prosec uto r
TOWNSHIP DE~T - NOTES
Purpose For Which Note
(JJ 17, 24; J L Jtc
Debt Was Creat ed
OtJtstanding Jan .
'2 ,333 .00
l' 1975
Rede emed During Year
1975
2.333.00
FINANCIAL REPORT
Rate of Int .
6p er:cent
OF TOWNSHIPS

·-~--·_.........,

____

•"

molt

/ft.....*'

will be 111ft

llfl"lillotl
IIIII oO/umn

.,.d will raealtle coplee ol

JACOBV MODERN.)

�•

20 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday,March 17,1976

Papa Hearst be~ieves
Patty 'is strong willed
By DONALD B. THACKREY

dependent and strong-willed,
and
far
from
the
prosecution's description of
her as a confused rebel who

SAN FRANCISCO (UP! )Patricia Hearst's father has
testified his daughter is in·

could easily be converted to
terrorl1111.
Publisher Randolph
Hearst, testifying in the final
phase of Miss Hearst's bank
robbery trial, took the stand
Tuesday to rebut testimony
by prosecution psychiatrist
Dr. Harry Kowl that she was
a "rebel in search of a caW!e"
who willlngly embraced the
hatred and violence of the
Symblonese Liberation
Army.
"Did you ever see any signs
of the kind of resentment and
anger and bitterness against
her family, and the other
derogatory things that Dr.
Kowlattributed to her dW"ing
that period (before her kid·
naplng)?" asked chid
defense counsel F. Lee
Bailey.
"No," replied Hearst.
Hearst was one of seven
witnesses put before the jury ·
Tuesday by the defense In a
last-ditch effort to weaken the
prosecution's psychiatric
case against the 21.-year-old
newspsper heiress.
The trial Is expected to go
to the jury Friday.
"What kind of a girl was
she?" Bailey asked Hearst,
president of the San
Francisco Examiner and aon
of
publisher
Wllllam
1\andolph Hearst.
"Well, she was a very
!right girl, pretty, she was
strongwllled - and Is, I
think," Hearst replied. ~ 'And
she'sfun to be with -or was
fun to be with."
He said the defendant, third
of five daughters, "had a
strong personality and was
pretty "independent."
Also taking the stand were
Patricia
Tobin,
the
defendant's best friend·
before the kidnaping, and
Albert Johnson, one of her
attorneys. Five others also
testified briefly to rebut
portions of testimony by
Kozol
and · another
government psychiatrist, Dr.
Joel Fort.
Miss Tobin, 22, a friend
since fourth grade who

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Pomeroy.Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, March 18, 1970

•

e

a1y

en tine

Firteen Ce nts
Vol. 27, No. 2:17

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

01

TWO FORFEIT BOND
Fined in the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night was
Ernest Writesel, Jr., Dexter,
$15 and costs, on convicUon of
larceny. Forfeiting bonds
were Dennis Smith, Mid·
dleport, $20, posted on a
charge of traveling the wrong
direcUon on a one-way street,
and Lester Foreman, Mason,
$25, ·for failing to maintain
assured clear distunce.

Germans will try to remove
gas from Ohio shale deposits
By .J.R. KIMMINS
COLUMBUS (UP!)

POST 140 HAS BIR'I'HDA Y DINNER - New ffaven
American Legion Post 140 held its amual birthday dinner
this week with Jilek Miller, West V~rgin ia Department
Commander, as guest speaker. Shown here are officials of
the district and post with Miller. Front row, 1-r. are

SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy E-R squad
went to Bailey Run at 2:16
a.m. Wednesday for Leona
Strom, who was ill. She was
taken to Veterans Memori8.1
Hospital.
MR. MOORE ILL
The Middleport E-R squad
Tueaady morning took Harry
Moore, South Third Ave.,
Holzer
Middleport, to
M dl 1 Ce te He was ill .
e ca
n r·

F ord. Carter
-

system

•
IS

-

~-----:-------- -- -------------

: Hospital News ·

I

I veteraasMemortaiHospttai
I
MADMITTED - Luther
1 Coleman, Cheshire; Edna

COlor code :

Area Deaths

• PauiEarnestSpencer
Bnd Mrs . tlarence Hayman,
Infant Paul
Earnest Sr.,
Racine ; !he maternal
Spencer, Jr ., Rt . 7, Cheshire, great-grandparents, Mr. and
died Tuesday In Pleasant Mrs. Rober! Warlh, Harf.
Valley Hospita l.
lord ; the great-grandparents,
Graveside rl fes will be held Mr . and Mrs. Charles lewis,
al 11 a.m. Thursday at the Jr ., Pomeroy. and greatGraham Cemelery with the
Charles Gibbs
MASON, W. Va.'- Eighty- Rev. Bill Campbell of- grandfather,
of HarHord.
five representatives of area ficiating . The body Is at !he
fire
departments and Foglesong Funeral Home In
.
MEETING SET
emergency units attended an Mason
The ll ·day ·old son of Paul
The
regular Democrat
area fire department and Earnest Spencer, ·sr ., and
Emergency Squad's Reda Faye Warth was born meeting will be held Thursassociation meeting Tuesday March 5 In Pleasant Valley day, March 18 at 7:30p.m. at
night here.
Hospital. His parents survive the Episcopal Parrish House,
along
with maternal grand· Pomeroy. Judge Hottle,
With President Bob Byer,
parents, Mr. and Mrs , David
Middleport presiding, a color Warth, Hartford, W. Va .; candidate for appellate court
cOde system was worked out oafernal grandp~renfs , Mr. will be the guest speaker.
for each department to use a
·,
particular color for its small
eqwpment so that ownership
can · be determined when
more than one department
!Continued frorn page I)
is working at .the scene of the million of the nation 's 71.1 million households-are occupied
same fire or emergency.
by two people or less. By contrast, the bureau said, the number
The next session was set for of households with five or more members has declined steadily
April 20. Groups ·of the over the same period. '
8ssocia'tion were asked to
complete their equipment
CINCINNATI - AN .AUDIT OF PAY RECORDS at
sheets and sent them to Gary General Hospital indicates a few employes may have been
Wolfe, secretary-treasurer, illegally manipulating their annual incomes from $8,000 to
Racine Fire Dept., so that $20,000.
information needed by the
Although lhe audit has not been completed yet, the loss
association will be updated. from the tax-funded hospital in the alleged scheme could be
Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles from $50,000to $100,000. Three employes have been arrested In
Legar reported an excellent connection with the investigation, which was started after a
response by the public to the routine check of employes' working time and payroll records
fund drive for the purchase of showed "possible discrepancies."
,
an aerial ladder truck. Films
on fire fighting techniques
COLUMBUS - OHIO AGRICULTURE DIRECI'OR John
were shown and the Mason M. Stackhouse says food items sold in the state should contsln
Dept. served refreshments . . the weight listed on the package, even If there has been
shrinkage after packaging. Stackhouse, who insists a "pound
is a pound," said Tuesday he will tske steps to protect Ohio
consumers against two federal court decisions allowing
·
Lows tonight in the upper "re~aonable shrinkage."
Stackhouse,
as
state
sealer
of
weights
and
meaSW"es,
i8
20s. Mostly cloudy and
concerned
U.
S.
Appeals
Court
opinions
In
Sacramento,
Calli.,
warmer ThW"sday, highs in
the mid 50s. Probability of may take away Ohio's ability to prevent short weights. ~ a
precipitation is I 0 per cent result of two Ninth Urcuit Court declslons rendered for Rath
and 20 per cent tonight and Bacon Packing Co. and General Mills, Ohto has joined with 31
other states in petitioning the U. S. Supreme Court to hear
Thursday.
appeals allowing packagers to sell products weighing less than
the listed arnOlDII on the jlilckage.

agree on

(Continued from page I)
the Democratic delegate race
with 70, followed by Wallace
with 58, Sen. Henry M.
Jackson with 55, Rep. Morris
Udall with 23, Shriver with II
and Harris 6. The nominee
must get 1,505 delegates.
Before Illinois, Ford led .
Reagan 96 to 41, with 1,130 .
needed to nominate.
Despite the outcome, both
Wallace and Reagan tried to
put up a brave front.
Reagan said he had "met
his goal" of a 40 per cent plus
lhowlng in Illinois and still
rated himself a 50-00 chance
to win the GOP nomination In
Kansas City. He lashed out at
Ford saying "I have never
been under ariy illusions that
our grass roots campaign
could successfully buck both
tlie Illinois Republican
organization
and
the
lli"Omises being issued by the
White House." ·
Wallace declared himself
happ~ with second place
because he had enjoyed only
"minimal organization" In n.
llnolll. Significantly, he aban·
cloned his policy of ignoring
rivals. Watching the returns FAVORS SETTLEMENT
In North Carolina, their next
SHREVEPORT, La. tUPI)
bettleground, Wallace called - Jack Favor, rodeo star
Carter "a wanned:.over who spent Seven years in jail
McGovern:''
for a murder he did not
Although
Ford
and commit, has agreed to settle
Stevenaon won majorities of his $7 million damage suit
the 96 Republican and 155 . against four parish officials
Democratic delegates at involved In his prosecution.
stake In voting separate from
Favor has received ~.ooo
the "beauty contest," Dllnols from two of them In return for
law did not bind the delegates a statement saying they were
to the winning candidates.
Innocent of wrongdoing in the
Despite Stevenson 'a case.
winning the largest share of
The suit charged that
the delegate votes, Daley also Favor's conviction was the
had his troubles Tuesdsy. His result of collusion between
organizaUon had to strain the four officials - Bossier
mightily to win the Parish
Sheriff
Willie
Democratic gubernatorial Waggoner, his chief deputy;
nomination lor Sea"etary of Vol Dooley, former district
State Michael Howlett in a attorney Louis Padgett, and
llitter race against incumbent O.E. Price, who presided at
Daniel Walker.
Favor's first trial.
And Daley got an unaccusPrice is now a state appeals
tomed slap In the city Itself court judge and Padgett is a
when black Democrats district judge.
refused to unseat Rep. Ralph
Favor, acqulted in a second
Metcalfe · In favor of the trial after seven years in
mayor's choice, Erwin Louisiana's Angola State
France.
· Penitentiary, sells used cars
Carter and Ford put In Fort Worth, Tex.
together victories that
neecl.ed no deep analysis. ·
ENTRANCES SEALED
They both had margins of two
PARTRIDGE, Ky. UP! to one or better In Qlicago,
A beefed-up mJner. crew
and maintained strong today continued sealing
ltlowlngsln the heavily popu· entranees to the ScoUa Coal
lowlsublU"bs and In the 1111811 Co. Mine where 26 miners
town and farm country of were killed last week and 11
downstate Dllnols.
remained entombed. Somber
miners worked through the
night In sub freezing tern·
peraturea B!ld had nearly
completed sealing three "'
the. nine entrances at the
Tonilothru Thvr&amp;.
mine.
MAR. 11-11

MEIGS THEATRE

News •• in Briefs

Deem, · Raclne; Rena Me·

p u1 Schul
Daniel, Maaon ; a
er,
Portland; Joseph Thompson,
Cheshire; Kimberly Hutton,

Middleport
Legion post

Pomeroy ; Robert Lawson,
K 1
la" Tu
. Racine; y e lC lr,
P·

s·

pers Plains .
DISCHARGED - . Alice
Curtis, Colleen Hoffman,
Tammie Klein, Betty Wise,
Chester Knight, David
Decker, George Carter,
Jennifer White, Opal Taylor,
Etollla Cassell.

party held ·

FINAL SIGN·UP
Final sign-up day for ali
Syracuse Baseball and
Softball teams will be
SsiW"day, March 20 10 a.m. to
noon at the Syracuse
Municipal Buiiding . A
registration fee of $3 is being
charged. Anyone who can not
register Saturday should call
Barry McCoy at 992.so82.

mander.

The ..,,t leads In ·con·
trlbutlons to the program In
the Eighth District, Casel
reported.

DANCE PLANNED
TUPPERS PLAINS - A
square dance will be held
from 8:30 p.m. Saturday to
midnight at the Tuppers
Plains Elementary School
under the sponsorship of the
Orange Township Fire
Department.

CHARTER MEMBERS OF
Feeney-Bennett Post 128 ,
orgalllzed In 1921, and the
Auxiliary. organized in 1922,
were recognized at the bir·
,

to classify
Mobile Ho me s for Sa le

U x 65 MOBILE home for sale .

spread of ftghlmg and hltle prospect for a speedy settlement to
the country's multisided civil war.
Police reported 34 dead during the pasl24 hours, including
18 in Beirut, to raise the toll for the latest weeklong round of
fighting to nearly 200 dead and 450 wounded . Heavy exchanges
of rocket and mortar fire flared Wednesday across the
Christian-Moslem "eonfroni.1jtion lines" of Beirut's e.i.•tern
suburbs, 1n the luxury hotel district and in the countryside
north , south and east of the capital.

For more Informat ion call
99'2 · 1256.
J . JJ .4tp

Elberfelds ·In Pomeroy
"'

Men's Department, 1st Floor

Men's Leisure Suits

Pants, 511.95
Shirts, s16.95

'28.90

Style is pictured: 100 per
cent Trevlra polyester knit
pants have slash front
pockets · double reece
back pockets · 20 inch flare
bottom . Sizes 29 to 42 waist'
. length up to 34 inches.
Matching
jacket has
bellows pocket with flaps.
banded collar top center
back yoke · three panel
back vented sides
contrast stitching.
Sizes small, medium.
large and .extra large.
Solid colors- dark brown.
dark green, navy, medium
green, tan, medium blue
and coral.

\

!

COMING!
Fri .. M.or. tt.thru
M.lrch 25

..

JAWS

tTocmlcotorl
Show starts al7r00 p.m .

Elberfeld$ In Pomeroy

consideration by VW are sites
In Michigan and Pennsyl-

them ."

Duerk would not reveal the
substance of his discussions
with VW officials, but said
taX incentives in the state
was one of their first
questions.''
He said a decision on which
of several sites a VW
assembly plant would be
located would be made later
this spring. Also under

vania.

Duerk said his office, as
well as Ohio's trade office in
Brussels, Belgium, would
continue
to
forward
industrial information to
European firms to try and get
them to move or expand to
Ohio.
He said he could forsee the
export of Ohi&lt;Hnanufactured

11

CLEVELAND - THE GIANT DAVIS-BESSE Nuclear
Power Plant being built on Lake Erie at Port Clinton had I ,488
defects in safety-related electric wiring that were uncovered in
an unannounced reinspeetion, officials of the U. s. Nuclear
Regulatory Agency (NRAJ have acknowledged.
Officials of Toledo Edison, which owns the plant jointly
· with the Cleveland Electric niuminating Co. but is solely
responsible for building it and will operate it, estimate the cost
of ·reinspection and repair at $400,000. James G. Keppler,
regional director of the NRA, said the reinspectlon done on the
wiring last year upheld his agency's concern that there were
widespread defects in the wiring.
·

The Meigs counly aerial
ladder truck fund "ill get
another hoost from the Big
Bend Ci lizens Band IWdio
Club wlrich will sponsor a
county-wide gospel variety
show at 7:30 p. m. onApril30
at the Meigs Juni or High
School in Middleport
·
A number of individuals
and singing groups wiD be
taking part and local fire
departments will be on hand
' to sell soft drinks and other
refreshments.
.
Guy Hysell, president of the
club , invites all local talent to
take part in the variety show
to help with the fund raisi ng
activity . All person s in teres ted in participating
should call 992-7349 or 992·
5758 for more information .

the1r ch01ces for expans10n,
and that 15 other ftnns had
ir
expand

Court asked
for j'u.l......... ent,
~.Ill

forecloSureS

REAL.ESTATE DEAL - The Red Carpet Inn near
Point Pleasant was sold to two Ironton bustnessmen
Wednesday afternoon for $400,000. Above are tlie buyers
· with representatives of the real estate firm of J. G. Sheets

Jury to .
g~t case
Friday
ByDONALDB.THACKREY
SAN FRANCISCO {U!'I) With a syillpathetic vote of
confidence from her mother
and a possibly incriminating
jailhouse tspe recording, tes·
timony ended in the bank
robbery trial of newspaper
heiress Patricia Hearst.
After the lawyer.s ' one last
chance at persuasion In their
closing arguments today, the
fate of the 22-year-old Miss
Hearst will be put Friday in
the hands of the jury of seven .
women and five men which
must decide:
Did she willingly take part
in the robbery of the Hibernia
Bank in San Francisco April
15, 1974, or was she forced to
go along under threat of
death?
(Continueq on page 12)

The Pomeroy National
Bank has filed suit for
$1278 .20 against James D.
Saffell and Francis 0 . Saffell,
in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court.
The Athens County Savings
and l.ilan Co. filed four ac·
lions to foreclose mortgages
ATHENS
Charles
against Fred B. and Barbara McAfee, veteran basketball
coach who has retired after a
A. Goeglein, et ai.
WASHINGTON - THE CIA, IN EFFECT, has closed the
The
mar
riage
of
Margie
E.
35-year
career including the
hook on Americans still missing and unaccounted for in
jllst
22
seasons at Athens
Schoonover
and
Norman
J
.
Southeast Asia. Lt. Gen. Vernon Walters, deputy director of
Hlgh
School,
will be the main
Schoonover
was
dissolved
the CIA, told the House Select Committee on Missing Persons
speaker
and
Margie
E.
Schoonover
at
the annual
Wednesday:
Ohio
Athletic
Southeastern
was
restored
to
her
former
"We have no confirmed or confirmable information that
League
Basketball
Banquet
name
of
Marjorie
E.
Thomas
.
additional American prisoners are still being held in
Lows tonight around 45.
captivity in Southeast Asia." Walters said periodic rumors Mostly sunny Friday with Willlam Morris was granted in Ironton Thursday, April I.
Tickets for the 6:30 p.in .
about men still living had been investigated and "they are not highs in the 60s. Probability a divorce from Robin Wills
event
honoring members of
Morris
on
charges
of
gross
based on fact and do not warrant further lnteliigence . of precipi tali on is 10 per cent
neglect
of
duty
and
extreme
the
all-league
basketball
community effort at this tlme. "
today , tonight and Friday. &lt;ruelty. ·
team are $4 each and are on
PARTRIDGE, KY. - CAUTIOUS FEDERAL and stste
mining officials say they hope to begin operations within three
months to recover the bodies of 11 men who died in the second
of two explosions at the Scotia Coal Co. mine last week.
Before the bodies can be taken out of the mine, deadly
gases believed to have resulted in the two explosions - and the
By RICK VANN SANT
deaths of 26 men - will have to be pumped from the deep
No. I enemy is inflation,"
He was the featured
CINCINNATI (UP!)
Simon
said.
"Over speaker at a $50 dollar per
tunnel.
Treasury"Secretsry William everything else, we must get plate fund raising breakfast
ROME - THE GOVERNMENT OF PREMIER Aldo E. Simon said to&lt;la America 's inflation down to 2 or 3 per for Rep. W!Uia Gradison, R·
Moro trying to stop a tailspin of the Italian lira, today raised top economic goal should be cent.
Ohio, which attracted 921
gasollne prices for the second time in six days and increased to reduce the current 6 per
"We can get it down to this persons and brought in more
purchase taxes on automobiles, liquor and restaurant meals. It cent inflation rate to 2 per level · within three years than $46,000 for Gradison's
·
also raised the Bank of Italy's discount rate - the interest it cent.
through fiscal responsibility , re-&lt;&gt;lection campaign.
"'We must remember the
charges for loans to private banks - from 8 to 12 per cent.
Simon also talked about
but it's going to take
Government aources said other austerity measures were :::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:: patience. .
inflation at a mid-morning
coming up,lncludlng sharply increased tsxes on meat to curb
"We are not going to pay news conference and later in
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
beef Imports. The cabinet adopted the measures in a session
for the sins of a decade by a · a speech to the Cincinnati
Saturday
through
that extended Into the early hours today after frantic
month of "penance. Neither Rotary Club.
Monday,
a
chance
of·
consultations with government parties and the powerful
man ,
business
nor
0urfederalgovernment ls '
showers Saturday and
Communist opposition.
government can continue to spending $1 billion every
spend more than it takes in. single day and going into debt
The Communists, who gained 2:5 million votes In regions I Suiulay and fair Monday.
Highs Saturday wiU be in
elecUonlin June and nearly outpolled Moro'a long-dominant
That ultimately ends in another $1 billion every
the 70s, but cooling by
ChristlaWDemocrats, officially were included In the premier's
week," Simon told Rotarians.
financial collapse."
Monday to highs Ia the 50s.
consult.BUons for th~ first time.
Holding back inflation was
'"If American continues
Low• wiD be Ia the 40s
Simon's main theme in down the road toward greater
throughout the period.
CLEVELAND- WORK ON THE Trans-Alaska Pipeline is
s e v e r a I C i n c i n n a t i governmental spending and
.{Continued on page 12)
appearances today .
:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:
great er
governmental

products rtsmg from $2.3
billioh this year to $3.5 billion
within two or three years. He
said 100,000 Ohio jobs depend
on foreign trade.
Ohio is second only to
Michigan in the United States
in the export of goods and
services. Location of the VW
plant in Ohio would put Ohio
tops in the country, said
Duerk.

and sOn which handled the auction for the Economic
Development Administration. From left are Steve Sheets
· and Gariand Sheets of the real estate firm, and Fred
Staton and Merril Triplette, Sr., the new owners, and BiU
Sheets, auctioneer.

:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

Dateline 1776
BOSTON, March 18
Gen. Washington visited
the evacuated city for the
first lime In 20 years and

c

Red Carpet sold
to Ironton men

POINT PLEASANT--Two
Ironton men Wednesday
bought the Red Carpet Inn, a
pe"Cted." During his lu· 135-room motel complex two
spection, he misplaced his miles north of here at a public
sword and advertised a auction for $400,000.
reward
for
anyone
Merril Triplett Sr., 918 S.
returning it.
5th St., and Fred Staton, 2025
:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: Woodland Drive, are equal
partners in the deal, which
Bidwell man in
netted them the 31-acre
traffic misha}l
complex in Mason County on
The Meigs County sheriff's W.Va. 62
Triplett last night said il
dept. investigated a single
had
not been decided what
car accident today at I :45 a.
would
be done with the
m. at the intersection of SR
facility,
which formerly was
124 and CR 28. Leroy McCoy,
known
as
the Pleasant Point
ll, Bidwell, traveling south
Resort
.
.
on CR 28 applied his brakes
He siad that he .and Staton
and skidded across SR 124,
would
make a decision in 30
through a field and creek, a •
days
about
whal they would
distance in all of apdo
with
the
land.
)I"Oximately 60 yards before
good piece of
'
'That's
a
coming to a stop.
JI"Operty,
and
there are a lot
McCoy was taken to Holzer
of
possibilities
open to us,"
Medical Center by the Racine
Triplett
said.
ER squad. His car was
Opened in 1965, the facility
demolished .
found the town uln not so
bad shape as I bad e~·

has been sold five times in its

11-year history . The latest
ba~kruptcy involved witi1 the
complex was .in October 1975
and bids submitted at that
time to the Economic
Development Administration
{EDA) were rejected.
Triplett said the complex
and the land could cost as
much as $2 million il it were
developed today . He added
the building could be converted into a rest home or
possibly a resort type of
complex.
The facility originally was
planned to be a resort
complex.
"We'll be taking a look at
those plans before we come to
any decision, " Triplett said.
According to Triplett. this
is the first time the complex
. was ever sold at a public sale
ur auction. Wednesday's sale
wa-; approved by the EDA.

McAfee is banquet speaker

Weather

sale at league schools. The
banquet · will be held in the
high school cafeteria.
Heading the list of honorees
will be Coach Buddy Bell and
Dean Fitzpatrick of the
league champion Ironton
Tigers, chosen as coach of
the year and most valuable
Jiayer respectively. Among
the other honorees will be
Mike McBroom, who won this
}ear's free throw accuracy
award.

McAfee , whose 22·year
tenure is the longest in the
league's history in basketball, compiled an overall
record of 571 wins and 196
losses in his 31&gt;-ye ar coaching
career { .744 percentage ),
including a 311Hi8 record at
Athens. He coached at AmesBern 13 }ears prior to coming
to Athens.
One of the leading coaches
in the state in overall vic(Continued on page 12)

MCAFEE

Simon's goal. is inflation rate of 2% .per year

Be sure to see all the other
styles mens leisure suits
and the big selection of
mens leisure shirts that go
so well with the suits.

I

thday party. In atlendance in Charter Auxiliary members
the plclure above, were, ~r . nol presenl were Irene Cross
Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Fowler, and Ull!an Sticff.
and Marion French. Other
A dinner prepared by the
living charter members of Auxiliary members a1Jd
the p06t who were unable to served by the juniors nf the
attend are Dale Allensworth, unit preceded the program of
Charles McElhinney, WIUiam · music by the strlngdusters.
Bolin and Ben Turner.

hibited a sincere interest in
the problem, and said they
would be willing to make an
ind e penden t an a lysis.
Perhaps they will be able to
. provide some real guidance
in our search for a solution,"
he said.
Federal energy officaials
estimate that the shale holds
enough natW"al gas to supply
midwes tern and eastern
industries for the next · 50
years. Scientists have been
wiable to find a way to
release the gas, however, but
many research agencies are
attacking the problem.
Congress has appropriated
$10 . million for shale
research . Columbia Gas of
Ohio, Inc., and the Battelle
Memoria I In s ti I u t e,
Co lumbus,
are
also
conducting extensive
research.
Duerk said that the Ohio
Trade Delegation trip to
Europe
had
already
generated $250,0oo. in new
business
Ohio firms,
and
tnat
he for
expected
between

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· · · ····· ··.··.···.·.·.·.·.·.·.-.··.·.-.·.-.
·. ..............-........ .........
. ...•.•:··.············
. . . ·.·· · ·· ···············
· · · · · · · ...· ··.....·.-.··;,;;·.·· Gospe} sh ow
,.......,.·.·... ·... ..··.•
•
B rze
• f S~:i:;: b f" 5,000
and 10.000 new jobs
::;:;:u: 7\T
leWS. . .zn
would be created as a result
::~ to
ene It of Hethe s3ld
tr~p. .
By United Press1nlernatlonal
etght European
BEIRUT LEBANON - LEBANON SLID DEEPER into
d
firms had . " definitely"
anarchy t?d~y, with no effective authority to control the }adder fun
indicated Ohio was one of

Too late

already talked to one of

' 'The German scientists ex-

POST HONORED - A
highlight of the annua I blr·
thday party of FeeneyBeMett Post 128, American
Legion, held Wednesday
nighl at the Middleport hall
was the presentation of a
certificate
from
the
Department of Ohio In
recognition of $920 In con·
trlbutlons to the CUlts to the
Yaaks Who Gave. At the
party was Paul Cascl, left,
Depurtment Gifts to the
Yanks
clialnnan, In the
picture al· right, whu
presented the certlflcale to
WilHam Criner, post · com·

NOT OPEN

TAYLORTOSPEAK .
EAST MEIGS - The
Eastern Hlgh School Spring
Balketball Banquet will be
held at 8:30 p.m. Friday.
O"als Taylor, captain of the
Ohio State Balketblll Team,
will be the speaker. Donation
Is $1.

somewhere in the United
A States.
German energy research lab
Location of a Volkswagen
has agree d to look into assembly plant in Brook
possible ways to release up to Park, near Cleveland, ·is a
900 trillion cubic feet of major goal of Duerk and
natural gas locked in shale Rhodes.
deposits underneath parts of
" Location
of
the
9 hio and other Appalachian Volkswagen plant here would
areas.
mean much more than just
James Duerk, director of VW itself," he said. "Certain
the the state Economic and types of otber suppliers would
Community Development locate near the plant. I have
Department, said Wednesday
that Gov. James A. Rhodes
met with officials of the lab
during his visit to Europe last
week.
The lab, Stelnkohlenberg·
bauverien, of Essen, · West
Germany, conducts research
into all types of coal and
hydrocarbon energy sources.
Samples of Devonian shale
will be sent to the lab within a
week.
Duerk said the initial re.
search would be conducted at
no cost to the state.

Richard Danbury, post chaplaln; Mr. Miller, Emo Wood,
post commander; second row, Danny Workman, post
adjutant; Denver Gandee, past department commander:
Charlie Jones, fourth district commander, and Hsrold
Vinnlngs, fourth district vice commander.

Weather

ASinger Dealer in Your Neighborhood
STARTS: Monday, Mar. 15th

.'

visited Miss Hearst at the Ssn
Mateo County Jail two days
after her arrest, said
government tape recordings
of the conversation had been
edited and deletions made.
Among the deletions, she
said, was a remark by Miss
Hearst that the SLA tapes In
which she professed her allegiance to the tiny terrorist
band were staged n - "like,
Jt wasn't me."
Miss Tobin was questioned
about Kowl's testimony that
the defendant was a "rebel In
search of a cause." What was
her reaction to that, Bailey
asked.
"I'd say it was totally
false," replled Miss Tobin,
whose father "Is president ol
the Hlbernla Bank, a !ranch
of which Miss Hearst i8
accuaed of robbing.

''

'.
i

0

.

I~

controls over our economy
and our lives - a road we
have been moving steadily
down for several decades then our children will be
robbed of their personal and
economic freedoms," Simon
said.
11
And,' ' he added, " in the
meantime all of us will be
condemned to an economy
riddled by chronic inflation
a ·nd
incurable
unemployment."
However, Simon said there
have been optimistic signs in
U1e past 18 months.
"The year 1975 opened with
inflation raging at more than
12 per cent," he said. "That
rate has been cut nearly In
half to between 6 and 611, per

.y

cent.
"'Last
spring,
unemployment had reached 9
per cent. Today it has
dropped to 7.6 per cent and
our forecasts indicate a
continuing downward trend.
And yet this is no time for
complacency," Simon said.
"The jobless rate i8 far
higher than we are wiUing to
iolerate and inflatlon is by no
means under control."

CofCMEET
The Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce will meei Mon day, March 22, at noon at the
Meigs lm . All members are
urged io attend .

ROTOTILLER.
Sold Right Off
First Night
"Phone rang 13 more
times" after she already
sold the rotltlllcr says Mrs .
Paul ·Cardone of Racine.

You Too, Can
Get Quick Results
With ASentinel

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