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                  <text>Tnursaay, March 25, 1976

• . ~ .__ .. , .• ._... onua.._. ,

PO

ELBERFELD$ I

E

Bartels fifth-candidate for commission seat

Y

Patty's nwther
explains why
case WIIS lost

STOREWIDE END OF THE MONTH SALE
END OF THE MONTH SALE

END OF THE MONTH SALE

MISSES/JUNIORS
JEANS
Regular or pre -washed denim : Our

·MEN'S SHIRTS

entire stock is included.

SALE PRICES
END OF THE MONTH SALE

END OF THE MONTH SALE

All of our mens shirts are included in this
sa le. Western shirts · knit shirts - dress
shirts · ·leisure s hirts . A line selection of
solid colors, stripes and patterns.

Blue Chambray Shirts

Sizes small (15· 14'12), medium (15-15'12 ),
large ( 16·16'h ), extra large ( 17· 17'12 ) and
dress shirts in sizes 14'12 neck tp 17'12.

Permanent press - long tails . two
pockets. 50 per cent polyester, 50 per
cent cotton. Sizes small, medium,
large and extra large.

SALE PRICES

Entire stock of spring styles in
Misses and Womens sizes included.

END OF THE MONTH SALE

END OF THE 'MONTH SALE

BOYS SHIRTS

BICYCLES

END OF THE MONTH SALE

WOMEN'S DRESSES
Special group of Juniors, Misses and
Half sizes. From our regular stock.

SALE

~

PRICE

END OF THE MONTH SALE

KNIT TOPS
Big selection of Spring styles .

SALE PRICES
END OF THE MONTH SALE

WOMEN'S PANTS
Spring colors - sol ids and fancies.

SALE PRICES
END OF THE MONTH SALE

GIRLS TOPS
Our entire stock of girls 4-6x and 7-1 4
shirts, blouses and knit tops is
inc.luded .

·SALE PRICES

Includes all of our boys shirts. Knit
shirts, western shirts, school name
shirts, leisure shirts. and sport
shirts. Sizes 3 to 7 and 8 to 20.
·

Boys
Boys
Boys
Boys
Boys
Boys
Boys

2.95
3.50
3.95
4. 95
5. 95
6. 9S
7. 9S

Shirts
Shirts
Shirts
Shirts
Shirts
Shirts
Shirts

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

2.39
2.84
3.20
4.00
4.82
.5.63
6.44

SPRING SLEEPWEAR
Our entire stock of Womens and
Junior Spring Sleepwear included .
Gowns - Robes - Pajamas.

SALE PRICES

Discontinued patterns and colors
from our regular stock. All first
quality.

10 speed bikes, 3 speeds, standard
bicycles.
·
Sale limited to stock on hand. All
American made bicycles .

'89.00 Bicycles .............. Sale '55.00
'99.00 Bicycles ............... Sale '60.00
s109.00 Bicycles ............. Sale '65.00
'119.00 Bicycles............. Sale '70.00
'149.00 Bicycles............. Sale '80.00

END OF THE MONTH SALE

END OF THE MONTH SALE

MEN'S DRESS SLACKS

SERTA
MATTRESSES

Hundreds of pairs in this new
selection. 100 per cent double knit
polyester. Solid colors and patterns.
Sizes 29 to 42 waist.
Mens 10.95
Dress Slacks
~ns 11.95
Dress Slacks
Mens 12.95
Dress Slacks
Mens 13.95
Dress Slacks
Mens 14,95
Dress Slacks
Mens 15.95
Dress Slacks
Mens 16.95
Dress Slacks

Sale 8.43
Sale 9.20 .
Sale 9.97
Sale .10.74

-

SALE - BOTH PIECES

MEN'S BANDANA HANDKERatiEFS

2

FOR

89~

END OF THE MONTH SALE
Sale! Mens and Boys

TUBE
SOCKS
Mens sizes 9 to 15- Boys sizes 7 to 11 and ·

Our entire stock of vinyls, leathers, .
straws is included.

Men's and Boys' Belts

• 4 Only Ca lo~ic Gas Ranges

•

WINTUK YARN
SALE sl09
END OF THE MONTH SALE

STEREO RECORDS

REG. '307.95 70,000 BTU GAS .. .... 1215.00
REG. 1276.95, ·50,000 BTU GAS ...... 1195.00
REG. 1164.95, 35,000 BTU GAS....... 1115.00
REG. '286.95,. 50,000 BTU OIL ........1199.00

END OF THE MONTH SALE

SALE s3JU

END OF THE MONTH SALE

WALL PLAQUES
AND ACCESSORIES

25% OFF

END OF THE MONTH SALE

CORELLE LIVINGWARE
BY CORNING
Reg . $34 .95
20 Piece set in blue. gold, green or white.

Sale '2711

END OF THE MONTH SALE

END OF THE MONTH SALE

BERKLINE RECLINERS
AND ROCK.O.LOUNGERS

Small Appliance Sale

Sizes 32 to 44 waist. 10 ounce blue denim .
Sanforized shrunk. For this sale .

Vinyl , cloth and combination cloth and
vinyl.
Regular Price $167.00 - $179.00 - Sl89.oo.

'6"

Sale '129
.

.

00

Irons - Mixers - Griddles - Waffle
Irons - Toasters • Fry Pans _ Deep
Fryers - Blenders . Can Openers _
Crock Poto; - Roasters . Knife
Sharp~ners - .Coffee Mixers Corn
Poppers - Hatr Dryers.

MAIN STORE, ANNEX AND MECHANIC STREET WAREI«&lt;USE OPEN FRIPAY 9:30 TO 8 PM AND SATURDAY 9:30 TO 5 PM

FEL
/

~§::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :::::;;:;;;;:.;::::::.:·: ~:·:·:::·:·:·::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::~~

INews. . . in Briefgl
By United Presolntematiooal
WASIUNGTON - UNLESS CONGRESS acts within 20
days to veto the plan, the United States will sell six Cl30 trans- ·
port planes to Egypt for an estimated $40 million cash. The
White House and the Pentagon announced late Thursday that
President Ford had decided to lift a 2Q.year boycott on military
trade with Egypt and approve the sale which had been under
consideration for weeks.
The decision is controversial, since leading American
Jewt.sh groups and the Israeli government have opposed it
otroogly. Ford reportedly has assured Jewish leaders that the
sale of I!Je planes would in no way alter the U. S. commitment
to la'ael's security. He was said to feeii!Jal by helping Egypt,
the United Stales would encourage "moderate forces" in the
Middle East and advance I!Je search for peace.
·
DETROIT - FORD MOTOR CO. WilL begin the complex
task of stopping its auto assembly lines next week because of a
otrlke at a key manufacturing plant that eventually could idle
more than 150,000 workers. The first assembly plants to be
closed are the Dearborn, Mich., and Metuchen, N. J ., idling
4,675 workers. They will be closed all of next week even if the
labor dispute is settled.
The remainder of Ford's 14 auto assembly plants could be
closed by the end of next week if I!Je strike at the Sterling
Heights, Mich ., axle plant is not settled, according to sources
wii!Jin the United Auto Workers. The Ford shutqowns, a
threatened strike at a key General Motors and continued slow
sales of small cars at American Motors could I!Jreaten I!Je auto
Industry's plans to build 800,000 cars next month, the best
p-oduction since record-breaking April of 1973.

.&gt;

nomination to run for Uleir present posts on Jtu1e 8 are
virtually assured of being elected in I!Je fall . They are Larry E.

Spencer, Racine, for clerk ol courts: John C. Bacon, Route 4,
Pomeroy, for common pleas judge ; Eleanor Robson, Minersville, for county recorder; George M. Collins, Reedsville, for
county treasurer i Wesley A. Buehl, Pomerpy, for county

engineer, and Ra!Jkin Ray Pickens, Pomeroy , for county
coroner.
Central committees of both parties are elected at the June 8
election rather than in I!Je fall. The Democrats have three
races involved in three precincts but have no candidates in
six of I!Je 30 precincts. Presincts in which there are no
candidates are East Bedford, Columbia, Rutland Village, East
Rutland, Rock Springs and Pageville. The precincts in which .
there are races are Letart, l.Dia J . Proffitt and Pauline Wolfe ;
Olive, Clifford l.Dngenette and Francis H. Andrew; Minersville, Virginia A. Fisher a nd Marilyn Sue Rice.
· Other Democrat candidates, unopposed in their respective
precincts, are: Henry L.. Hunter, Norli) Chester; David M.

•

Brickles, West Bedford; Celia Bailey, Soui!J Chester; Vicki
Proffitt, Lebanon; Chester E. Wells, Reedsville; Norman 0.
Weber, Orange ; Norman C. Will, West Rutland ; Sam Hicks,
Jr. , Salem; John David Gerard, Middleport First ; Ken nei!J E.
Imboden, Middleport Second; Lewis Long. Middleport Third ;
Lawrence H. Stewart, Middleport Fourth ; Audrey Young,
Pomeroy First ; Olin D. Boothe, Pomeroy Second ; Virginia V.
Blazewicz, Pomeroy Third; Catherine L. Welsh , Pomeroy
Fourth; Evelyn B. Thomas, Bradbury ; Eliza Powell,

Harrisonville; Ernest A. Win gett , Racine Village; Woodrow T.
Zwilling, Syracuse Village; Edwin S., Cozart, Racine Pet.
Republicans have eight races in that many precincts come
June 8 for I!Je central committee of that party, Those precincts
and the candidates are Helen M. Quovey and Richard W.
Sargent, E. Bedford; Donald F. Johnson, Gary Dennis Evans,
' Clarence Lawrence, Lebanon; Harry HUI , Kathryn Philson,
Letart: 0 . J . Pennington and William H. Chapman, Orange; .
Robert G. Swick and James R. Sheets. West Rutland; George
A. Meinhart and Raymond A. Kloes, Middleport First Ward ;
George Nesselroad, Jr ., and George H. Warner, Rock Springs;
Earold Dean and Harold C. Norris, Page ville; Otis F. Knopp
and Douglas Wickline, l\ilcine Precinct.
Unopposed Republicans for central committee and their
respective precincts are : Robert L. Jones, West Bedford ;
Robert Wood, North Chester ; David Koblentz, South Chester ;
Granville Lyons, Columbia; Paul F . Andrews, Olive; Alvin
Reed, Reedsville ; Elizabeth Hobstetter, Rutland Village ;
Pearl E. Little, East Rutland ; Alva Swick, Salem ; David
Continued on page 5

en tine

at

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
.

Sign up
begins
Monday
Final arrangements for

signups for the Golden
Buckeye Cards in Meigs
County were completed this
week.

Signup will start March 29
WASHINGTON - R~P . JOHN ASHBROOK, R.Ohio, has and continue until all eligibl~
been commended by I!Je American Conservative Union ( ACU J persons in the county are
for his votes to "stem inflation" by cutting excessive govern- . contacted. Applications for
, ment spending, reduce the federal bureaucracy and lile Golden. Buckeye Cards
can be filled out at the Senior
otrengthen national defense."
Ashbrook received a 97 per cent conservative rating on the Cili~ens Ce nter Monday
group's key issues index. "At a time when concern for I!Je late lilrough Friday from 10 a.m.
and fundamental direction of I!Je American political process is to 2 p.m.
Other signup locations will
10 great, the voting public deserves to know where their
elected representatives stand, unequivocally and without be set up at the following
hesitation," ACUChairman M. Stanton Evans said Thursday . local ions also from 10 to 2: On
Tuesdays at the Senior
Cllizen · Room in ' the
NEW YORK- MAYOR BEAME HAS UNVEILED a new
"tough" budget-balancing plan which includes I!Je elimination Harrisonville Elementary
o( 8,500 city jobs, a 50 per cent cut in air pollution funds and the School; on Wednesdays at the
withdrawal of most municipal workers from the Social Rutland Senior Citizen Club,
Security plan.
.
~eedsville Fire Department
The mayor Thursday told a joint session of I!Je Board of and Hensley Grovery at Long
Estimate and City Council that his new city solvency plan Bo.ttom; and on Thursdays at
called for spending cuts of $379 million in the coming fiscal the Racine Council Room .
year. ln addition, Beame's new timetable provides for cuts of
The signup at the above
$442mlllion in the 1977-78 fiscal year for a total of $821 million locations will run I!Jrough
- the city's current estimated deficit.
April.
"This Is a tough plan," Beame said. " It means a further
To fill out any application,
reduction of I!Je work force and it offers nothing in the way of one muSt be 65 years of age
wage increases over the next two years."
· and show proof of age. Proof
of age can be a birth cerWASHINGTON - THE RECENTLY FORMED tificate, a valid Ohio's driver
unauthorized John Glenn for President Committee Is ceasing license, a Medicare card, a
operations at the request of the Democratic senator, according baptismal certificate, or an
to former Ohio Gov. Michael V. DiSalle.
entry in a family Bible.
Glenn asked DiSalle and other supporters to halt the draft,
Anyone unable to get to any
saying he does not want to jeopardize his position at the of these locations, call the
Democratic National Convention, where he is a keynote Senior Citizens Center 992speaker, and hamper his Scn~te duties.
7886 or 992-7884 and
arrangements will be
made to get the card.
Signup for the Golden
Buckeye Card will be handled
by 40 members of the Retired.
•
Senior Volunteer Program in
Meigs County. A training
session was held Tuesday by
Jim
Harder,
field
represe ntative for Meigs
Judge John C. Bacon said cooperative," Judge Bacon County. Harder wjll also be
today that the Bureau of said. "In such cases as prove making contacts with
Support, establlshe.d in I!Je to be exceptions, the Bureau businesses in the county
Common Pleas Court March will seek a remedy in the requesting discounts to
I, has completed preliminary Court." The deadline for holders of the Golden
studies, reviewed files and is federal and state income Buckeye Card.
The Golden Buckeye Card
prepared to begin en- taxes •pproaches, and it will
will
be honored at stores
forcements of child support be appreciated . if both
giving
I!Je discount anywhere
as ordered in the court's com p 1 a in an Is a n.d
in
Ohio,
at Stale Parks, and
domestic relations cases . delinquent.!! will attempt to
on
city
transit
buslines. The
Those delinquent under such adjust differences prior to
orders must endeavor to necessity for Bureau action. Golden Buckeye Card can
"The Bureau was not also be used for idenmake their pal'!Dents current
to harass anyone, tification .
created
by April I.
simply to Insure that child
The parent having custody
by divorce decree wherein support is paid promptly as
default under the support ordered," he sald.
order exists wlll be entitled to
appropriate action by the
Bureau of Support. ComThree calls were answered
plainants are advised to Grant approved
Thursday and Friday by the
IChedule an intervieW with
E-R unit; at 9:25
COLUMBUS - Gov, James Pomeroy
Mrs. Vickie Cummins,
a.m. Friday, to the Pomeroy
executive of the Bureau , A. Rhodes has announced Elementary School for the
whose telephone number is approval of a $14,500 grant to secretary, April Smii!J who
992-5031. Initial. complaints Gallia County for continued was taken to a local doctor for
·improvements to juvenile treatment of a fool injury ; at
may prove numerous.
The Court's order affects service program in the 2:41 p.m. Thursday to
all support payments in-, county.
Hemlock Grove for Bert
The juvenile bureau works Romine , a medical patient,
eluding I!Jooe now paying
direct to the mother or with youths to reduce the taken to Holzer Medical
of
juvenile Center, and at 9:36 a.m. to
custodian. Mrs. Cummins is Incidence
In the process of. notifying delinquency through com- Long Bottom lor Kathy
I!Jese persons by mall to munity youth programs and Spencer, a medical pallienl,
.
make
future
support counseling ,
also taken to Holzer Medical
This grant will be suppairnents to Larry Spencer,
Center.
Clerk of the Court, and to plemented locally with $806.
The State of Ohio awarded
Include one percent poundage. Checks or payments the grant under I!Je federally
LOCAL TEMPS
not including poundage wlll approved provisions of Ohio's
Temperature in downtown
be rejected and the payor $21 million Comprehensive Pomeroy Friday at II a.m.
Criminal Justice Plan for was 67 degrees under sunny
considered delinquent.
"Most of our residents are 1976.
skies .

.)·

June will nominate either Robert C. Hartenbach, incumbent,
or Bruce Davis, Rutland, with the nominee to be opposed by
James J . Proffitt, Route 4, Pomeroy, a Democrat, in the fall
election.
There was no Democrat filing for prosecuting attorney. As
a result, the Republican nominee on June 8 is aU but assured of
being elected next fall . The two Republican candidates are
Bernard F . Fultz, Middleport, incumbent , and Frederick W.
1Rick) Crow, III, Route 2, Racine.
Six Republican candidates, all incumbents, seeking

e

E·R unit had
three aid runs

'

Furniture Dept., Jrd Floor.

CHARLES IIARTEIB

be enforced no·w

STUDENT GUITARS

Warehouse on Mechanic Street

.,

Child support to

Reg. s4~

REG. '123.95, 38,000 BTU OIL ........ 188.00

SALE PRICES
WORK DUNGAREES

END OF THE MONTH SALE

SALE PRICES

Boys sizes 24 to 28. Mens sizes 30 to 46 .
Excellent quality in leathers, vinyls ,
denims.

Mens S7 .95 Blue Denim.

• Reg. $39.95 Mi II End Rugs
Rubber back - patterns - sizes 6x9 ·
and 7x10.
Sale S28.99

PERFECTION HEATERS

pair

END OF THE MONTH SALE

1169

with grass catcher lawn mower
Modei82S3.
Sale $199.00
• Save up to $100.00 on RCA Color TV
sets, 1976 models.
• Reg . $10.9S Spred Satin Latex wall
paint
SB.BB Gallon ·
White Only

END OF THE MONTH s,.,LE

END OF THE MONTH SALE

Pair

WAREHOUSE ON
MECHANIC
STREET
• Reg. Si29.oo· Lawn Boy self propelled

Pop - Country Western - Vocals Rock - Instrumentals. Entire stock
is included.

END OF THE MONTH SALE

END OF THE MONTH SALE

2

END OF THE MONTH SALE

lWIN SIZE - REGULAR 89.00 MATTRESS
ANI) '89.00 BOX SP.RING
Sale BOTH PIECES

Sale 13.05

WOMEN'S HANDBAGS

Ole size fits all sizes 10 through 13. Choose
bulky knit orlons or panel banlon. Big
selection of co lors .

PRICE

1

Sale 12.28

aa~

MEN'S $100 DRESS SOCKS

~

On Sale AI The
Home Furnishings Annex

Bicentennial ' special - Once every · 200
years supremely lu xurious, uniquely
beautiful. Designeq to ~ perfe:ct .sleeping
comfort and firm healthful support.

FULL 'SIZE .REGULAR 1109.00 MATTRESS
AND '109.00 BOX SPRING

Sale 11.51

END OF THE MONTH SALE

Famous Brand

SALE

Main Store on the lsi Floor .

Junior boys sizes 6 to 10. White with color
tops.

SALE PRICES

BATH llMELS, HAND TOWELS,
.WASH a.oTHS, SHEETS AND
PILlOWCASES.

Final Clearance - Sale Prices.

Size 22 inches square. 100 per cent cotton.
Red or blue.

END OF THE MONTH SALE

CANNON
ROYAL FAMILY

Mens $4 .95 Short Sleeve

·WOMEN'S BLOUSES
SALE PRICES

END OF THE MONTH SALE

SAN FRANCISCO
(UP I)
Patricia
Hearst's mother said it
""' lmpoootble for her
daughter to get a fair
lrlal because the public
luu failed to understand
lbe potency of terrorism
Ill the United States.
Mrs. Catherine Hearst
nidi Thursday In an
Interview that her
Con linued on page 5

When Charles H. Bartels. Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, filed
his petitloo Thursday as a Republican candidate for the Meigs
County Commissiqner term beginning Jan. 2, 1977, he became
I!Je fifth Republican seeking the nomination of his party for
that term.
The others who have filed for the term are Ralph W. Ours,
Route 1, Long Bottom, incumbent; James R. Frecker, Route 3,
Pomeroy; Robert F .Snowden, Rutland, and Charles R. Hysell,
Route I, Middleport .
The deadline for filing for I!Je June 8 primary election was at
4 pm. Thursday.
Bartels is a member of the Pomeroy Fire Department and
the Emergency Squad. He is a past chief of the squad. He
serves on Pomeroy Village Council and is employed in the civil
engineering laboratory of I!Je American Electric Power
Service Corp. at New Haven, W. Va.
·
Anative of Pomeroy, he is the son of Mrs. l.Duise Bartels,
Rock Springs. He and Mrs. Bartels and their two children,
Joshua, 2, and Megan, 11 moni!Js, live in Pomeroy.
Whichever of I!Je five candidates is nominated for the Jan . 2
term, he wlll be opposed in I!Je fall by James E. Roush, Dexter,
a Democrat.
Two Republicans, Bernard D. Gilkey, Middleport, and
Richard E. Jones, Pomeroy, will vie for the nomination as the
Republican candidate for I!Jecommissioner term which beRins
on Jan. 3, 1977. Tbe nominee will be 'opposed by James Batley,
Democrat, Long Bottom, in I!Je fall .
There also will be two candidates, Republicans, for the
nomination to run for I!Je office. of .county sheriff. Voters in

I

'i'i:=· · · · · · ;:;;:;·· =:::··=::=~::··= =· = =· =;'(
:-:·

:: in being ready to campaign

Opposition
will
f
show .at hearing

~~
ti
::::
United Press International
•·&gt;
:::;
Sen. Hubert il. Humphrey, D-Minn., said today If no :)
:::: Democratic presidential candidate has a clear lead by ;::
} early summer It would be ''wise on my part" to make ;::::
:;:: preparations for seeking the nomination at the national :::::
:::: convention.
:::::
{
Humphrey also said II a stalemate did exist It was a :}
:;:: "possi bility" he might actively campaign for ;:;:
:;:: uncommitted delegates during the ·month between I!Je ·::;:
} final primaries and I!Je New York City convention, which );:
;:;: runs from July 12-16.
;:;,
;:;:
The active Democrallc candidates were camaplgnlng ,::::
/ today in Wisconsin and New York, the sites o.l bfportant ( ;
::;: primaries Aprll6. Humphrey, who was interviewed on the :::
:::: CBS Morning News, said If any Democrat bas ''teal ::::
:::' momentum and a commanding lead" after .the primaries
:::: "then llhink one oughtlo get out ofthe way."
:;:
1
;:;:
"But II k looks Uke it Is kind ol blocked, that there Is :=::
} no way anyone can proceed to tie It together," Humphrey (
:::: said, "I!Jen !think It would be wise on my part, In light of }
·::: the Interest that has been shown in me, to go to the )
;::: convention prepared to seek tbe nomination."
(

=:=:

·::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:·

Plans were completed for
the testimony to be given at
the April 7 Interstate Commerce Commission hearing
in Gallipolis protesting the
abandonment
of
the
Chesapeake
and Ohio
Railway 's line between
Logan and Pomeroy at a
public meeting last night at
Middleport Village Hall.
At I!Je meeting called by
George Arnott and Ken
Gilkey of the Meigs County
Rail Scr.vice Committee was
Attorney Bernard Fultz who
will be at I!Je April 7 meeting
wii!J the Meigs , Countians

there to protest the abandonment.
Arnott said he had received
a letter from State 'Rep. Clair
Ball of Athens advising that
he would either be at the
hearing or send a written
statement. He also said State
Rep. Ron James and State
Senator Oakley CoUlns are
expected to be present.
Present ,were Jack Carsey
of Landmark; John Wemer,
Middleport Chamber of
Commerce, Kenneth R. King,
Middleport; Tom Serey,
Midwest Steel; H. H. Tipton,
Middleport; Marvin Glaago,

Modern Supply; Meigs
Coun ly Engineer Wesley A.
Buehl, Middleport Mayor
Fred Hoffman ; A. . R.
Adelmann of AdelmannClark,lnc., McArthur, and F.
B. Wilson chairman of the
Broi!Jerhood ·of Locomotive
Engineers.
Wilson; associated with
Penn Central, which is tentatively scheduled to be taken
over by ConRail on April I,
talked to the group on the
service which can be offered
by I!Jat line if customers
peti lion the Rail Service
Reorganization Agency in
Washington, D. C. through
the Interstate Commerce
Commission attorney, Ron

NEW TEMPLE IN USE - A new temple bas been
erected by Harrisonville Lodge 411, F&amp;AM, in the village
next to the elementary school. Brick veneer is being

placed over the attractive concrete block structure which
was put into use last moni!J b) both the lodge and the
Harrisonville Chapter, Order of the Eastern Star.

Nixon, in final days as President,
shown obsessed by drink, suicide
.

I

,

NEW. YORK (UPI J Richard Nixon, in the final
phase of his days as l
President of the United
Sl.a tes, was portrayed in
newspaper and magazine accounts today as a man who
drank to excess and was
obsessed wii!J suicide.
His wile, the quiet First
Lady, also was reported to
have sought solace in alcohol
and began slipping· down to
I!Je servants quarters at night
and returning to her private
bedroom wii!J glasses full of
bourbon.
The New York Dajly News
and Time magazine based
their reports of the final days
of Nixon's reign at I!Je White
House on a soon to be
published book by Bob
Woodward
and
Carl
Bernstein, the Washington
Post reporters credited with
breaking the Watergate scandal.
SUBSIDY COMES
Meigs County's three local
school districts received a
total of $195,595.73 in the slate
school foundation s ubsidy
payments
for
March .
Following deductions , for
retirement, Eastern Local
received $39,620.38; Meigs
·Local, $114,930.31 and Southern local , $41,045.04 . In
addition the county board of
education received a direct
allotment of $13,567.27.

.,,

Both publications repprted
I!Jal Nixon's drinking became
a big problem in the summer
of 1974 and the Daily News
said Pal Nixon had confided
to someone in · I!Je While
House physician's office I!Jat
she and her husband had not
had sexual relations for the
last 14 years of their
marriage.
The reports said I!Jat Nixon
became
erratic
and
despondent and began
drinking heavily despite a
low tolerance for alCohol.
The former President's
sonin-law,
David
Eisenhower, ac~ording to the
Daily News, was the source of
a report in Time magazine
that Nixon wandered through
the White House saying
"goodbye" to lile portraits of
his predecessors.
Time said that Nixon;s
family was deeply alarmed
by his visible deterioration
and that young Eisenhower
feared that his father-in~aw
might go mad.
·
David, according to the
News, was so concerned that
he called Gen . Alexander
Haig, I!Jen White House chief
of staff, and told him he was
worried that the President
might
be
having
a
breakdown :
Nixon reportedly would sit
lor hours in his office and
drink, often alone and
sometimes with his press

Nathan .
Adelmann, concerned
about the effect of the loss of
rail service to his lumber
business near McArthur,
advised that he plans to
prepare a statmenl of rail use
and projected use for
presentation at I!Je hearing .
Most of those attending
indicated I!Jey plan to testify
at the hearing and Arnott
reported there are several
oi!Jers who have indicated
they either will attend or send
a statement in protest of the
abandonment.
Payroll
losses,
in convenience to businesses,
loss of tax revenue, were
again cited by Arnott and
Gilkey as reasons why people
need to become concerned
about I!Je proposed loss of C.
and .0. rail service here .
Questions concerniilg the
hearing should be directed to
the Meigs County Rail Service
Committee,
480
Broadway St., Middleport.

secretary Ron Ziegler. The . said , "and sometimes
former President also sought concealed his loathing only
LOTIERY WINNERS
seclusion on the presidential with difficulty when they
This
week's winning
yacht Sequoia to gel away were together." Privately
numbers:
from I!Je "goddam press" Kissinger referred to Nixon
Three-digit number and those he considered his as "our meatball President,"
894
(eight-nine-four).
the magazine said.
enemies.
Four-digit
number Woodward's
and
Time reported that Nixon
0019
(
zer,.zer,.one-nlne).
cried as Secretary of Stale Bernstein 's new book ' 'The
Flve·dlglt number Henry Kissinger tried to Final Days" is a sequel to
95904
1nlne-flve-nlne-zer,.
u AU the President's Men"
reassure him that his foreign
lour).
policy accomplishments which dealt with the
Six-digit number would survive the tragedy of Watergate Scandal. "Final
595417
(five-nine-five-fourDays," for which the authors
Watergate.
one-seven).
, Close to I!Je end, Time already have received a
Spirit of '76 winning
reported, Nixon broke doWn $300,000 advance, will be a
numbers:
and asked Kissinger to join May Book-of-the-Month Club
Tw,.diglt numbers - 62
him on his knees in I!Je little selection .
(slx·two),
31 (three-one),
office just off the Oval Office. :::::::;:::::::::;:::::::::::::·:::::::·:::-:·:·:·:·:·:·::;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;
37
1
three-severi)
and 65
"You are not a very ortlwdox
EXTENDED
OUTLOOK
1
six-five).
Jew and I am not an ori!Jodox
Sunday through
Four-digit number Quaker, but we need to
Tuesday,
fair
and
mild
7657
1seven-six-fivepray," Nixon was quoted as
Sunday
and.
Monday.
seven),
saying.
Chance
of
showers
Five-digit number " Kissinger prayed,
In
the
Tuesday.
Highs
·
23640
(two-three-six-fouralthough he often sneered at
upper
50s
and
low
60s
zero)
,
Nixon behind his back," Time
Sunday and mid 68s and
Six-digit number low 70s Monday and
664413 (six-six· four-fourTuesday. Lows In the 40s
one-three).
and low 50s.
TWO UNITS CALLEIJ
The Middleport E-R unit
,. _f
Veterans Memorial Hospital
was called at 8:55 a.m.
&lt;' .
DISCHARGES - Nancy
Friday for 10-monlh-o ld
Cole,
Goldie Roberts, Mary
Brian Hoffman , Middleport,
Deren
berger , Daniel NorCloudy , windy , showers
who was having difficulty
1
man,
Louise McElhinney,
breathing. He was taken to and thunderstorms likely
Elola
Sellers , Margaret
Pleasant Valley Hospital. Al tonight. Lows in the low 50s.
Thompson,
Mae Price, Mary
4: 21 the fire department went Showers and windy SaturMachir
,
Betty
McKnight,
lot he mobile home of Charles day . Highs to low 70s.
Audria
Arnold,
Pearl
Probability of rain 10 per cent
Jones, 81 Elm St., where a
Medors,
John
Krnwsczyn,
today, 60 per cent tonight, 80
fire threatened in the kitchen.
Sr ., Lewis Hudson.
There was minor damage. per cent Saturday.

Weather

"

'

�i
2- The DaUy Sentinel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Fr1day March 26 1976

RAY CROMI.EY

TOM TIEDE

Montana's pride:
how he suffered fools

•

By Tom Tiede
Washmgton - I met M•ke
Mansfield a decade a~o m a

press1on of solemm ty and

hstened while I e~plamed my
concern for h1s V1etnam
hotel room n Helena Mont oppos bon
He was the states semor
I sa1d that I had seen a
senator on a visit to home I great deal of the combat as a
'
blew in on a reporting correspondent and was
'
ass1gn nent A mutual fnend worried that the mcreasmg
offered an nlr!Jfluctwn and I lack of support for tl m
se1zed the opportunity for Amenca mtght eventually
narrow reasons 1t was the place U S so ldiers m
t me of V1etnam wh1ch I then jeopardy I was overly blunt
embraced and I wanted to one mtght even say m
argue Mansfield s antiwar sufferable I satd I had seen
enemy leaflets quobng
views
The door to the senator s George McGovern s con
room was open and he was demnat10n of the war and
wa1ttng ror me n sharlsleeves had talked w1th men m the
on the edge of the bed I was ranks who were becommg
offered the only chair in the confused wtth the similar
room He ht a p pe, crossed remarks be ng made by
h1s arms over h•s._chest and Mansfteld Naturally I added
explained that t~e small that such talk here could only
plam very ugly room was encourage the enemy and
adequate for h1s stay He prolong even Is
d1dn tllke swtes he sa1d He
Have you been m Vtet
had no entourage H1s needs nam • I asked
were simple Say ng th1s
Not recently he sa1d
wh1ch was a lot for h1m he
Then how can you JUdge t!
retreated behind an ex at all•
I learned later of course
that my equatmg h1s
tgnorance of Southeast Asta
MIMIC COPS
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The wtlh h1s lack of expenence
House Thursday gave unam was not only natve but m
mous approval to leg1slat•on error Mansfield had heen a
creating a new crune of hfelong scholar on As1an
1mpersonat10g a pohce affa1rs a untverstty m
off1cer
or private security structor m such before
That s a start I suppose but someone should tell h1m
becom ng a lawmaker a man
guard
there s more to the pose'
whose
Far
Eastern
The bill sponsored by Rep
Helen F1x R-Cinc10nat1 was knowledge was thought so
sent to the Senate It 1s valuable that Franklin
des1gned to prevent persons Roosevelt sent h1m there on a
~-o-&lt;:"&lt;=&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;:,....:::&gt;-o::;&gt;..o-o.o..o0-.G~"&lt;&gt;'&lt;::&gt;-c:&gt;&lt;:&gt;-O..o-..--&gt;""&gt;..-::"""&gt;.:;:&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;d&lt;~~ from comm1 tt10g crtmes strateg c war missiOn m the
• while poSJng as a policeman 1940s
Mansfteld satd none of thts
Penalt es
for
unpersonat10n would be up to by the way For much of our
30 days 10 Jail or a fUle of up to conversatiOn actually he
$250 Penalties would be more satd very httle of anythmg
severe 1f another cnme were He nodded He shook hts
committed
head He sa1d yes or no
where apphcable I suppose I

..

·~

Editorial comment,
opinion, features

Too-lenient courts mock law .enforcement
Life Imitates art they say and that
caper dubbed The Sting pulled off the
other day by Washmgton D C police and
FBI agents was Indeed like somethmg out
of the movies
Durmg a ftve-month mvest gallon
undercowr agents posing as out-of-town
syndicate members and operatmg out of an
abandoned warehouse bought more than
3,500 pteces of stolen property from various
dentzens of the crunmal world - the frmt of
countless muggmgs lreak&lt;ns hlJackings
and auto thefts
The goods estunated to be worth more
than $2 4 miUton mcluded teleVlston sets
kitchen appliances automobtles credit
cards goverrunent checks and eqwpment
and even an electrocardiogram machme
stolen ptece by ptece from Prmce George s
County Hospttal
To celebrate the enterprtse s success
and to show thetr apprec1alton the phony
fences threw a party to which they inVIted
all thelf frtends Tben came the st ng
the arrest of 108 persons and 1sswng of
warrants for 75 more It was the biggest
such roundup m FBI and Dishrct of
Columbia history
Unfortunately however life has a way
of stowmg shotfl of art Or mayhe 11 s the
other way around In moVleS or on
televtSJon the cracking of a case ts usually
the end of the story and the VIewer ts left
wtth the satisfying knowledge that justice
has triumphed and the eVII-&lt;ioers wtll
rece1ve thetr :~pproprlate desserts at the
hands of the cour Is
It s not like that m the real life cops and
robbers game
Of the 108 arrested at the party 70 had
preVlously been arrested and charged wtth
similar cnmes - some of them repeatedly
- and 21 were out on parole followmg
convicttons One man had been arrested at
least Six tunes for burglary forgery and
other crimes and m each mstance had been

released wtthout ball
In keepmg wtth thts sorry pattern
federal magistrates unmediately released
several of those setzed m the haul on their
own recogmzance
Claiming that 600 persons mdiCted on
felony charges m Washmgton are now
~tltves asstslant US attorney Charles
Rotstacher complamed btlterly that most
crtmes are by people out on ball The
maJortty of those arrest (at the party) were
hard-core criminals People who comm1t
crunes whtle out on parole or proba!ton are
making a mockery of the system They are
thumbing thetr noses at the e&lt;&gt;urts
But lest anyone think this ts a problem
mvoiVIng only your ordinary street mugger
or burglar or thief constder the case of the
great gram npoff whtch was commg to a
conclusion tn New Orleans about the same
time as the Washmgton aflatr
Charged on 36 counts of consplfmg to
steal oome $1 7 million worth of gram over a
four year pertod two large export com
pontes - Garnac Gram Inc and Archer
Dan1els Mtdland Co - pleaded no con
test m U S D1stnct Court and were fmed
$10 000 each
This was not even a slap on the wnst It
was more hke a gently stroking wtth a
leather The costs of the two year m
wsbgatton no doubt were far more than the
puny $20 000 In fmes
When a felon ts sent back onto the street
to resume plymg his trade even before the
arresting officer has completed hts
paperwork or corporate crunmals are
l!IWn rrunuscule hnes representing the
merest fraction of the illegal proftts
something ts sertously wrong wtlh our
system of JUSttce
One of these days law enforcement
dftctals who work hard months or years on
an mvesttgation or who daily nsk thetr lives
to prole.:! ooclety are gomg to stop and ask
themselves Why bother•

Common passport for common market
It wUI be many years before the great
..,eam of a United States of Europe the
complete pohhcal umflcalton of the
demoa-ati&lt; nattons of Western Europe
becomes a reality Nevertheless significant
steps contmue to be taken towards un
plemenlmg the ftrst line of the treaty which
eatabllshed the European Common Market
aome two decades ago to lay the
fomdattoo of an ever closer umon among
the peoples of Europe
In one of the most recent of those steps
the nine members of the European Com
mmtty have decided to replace notional
Jlllllports with a single untwrsal European
Jlllllport by 1978
1
Thia means that ~lttzens of the Nine
-France Germany Italy Belgium Den
nurk HoDand Luxembotrg the United
~dom and Ireland - wUI be able to
travel from one end of the Common ty to the
other without passing through customs For
Americans and other foretgners 11 will
mean a single Cllltoma check upon entering
the first EC country VISited and one on
leaving the last
A Etropean passport could be In use
even sooner slnce this change needs only
1

legislatiOn m Germany Other parts of a
planned passport union will take longer to
work out according to Economtc Com
muntty Informahon SerVIce because they
mvolve changes tn nat10nal laws setting
condtttons of entry length of stay and
meeks of luggage currency and cars
Eventually the Nme will have to negotiate
agreements wt!h nonmember countnes to
treat every holder of an EC passport the
same r~ardless of nattonallty
The passport dectslon was made m
Rome last December at a meeting of the
Etropean Council composed of heads of
states of Community countries fore•gn
ministers and EC CommiMion officials At
this same meetmg the council also paved
the way for the elechon of a new European
P.-liament by direct untversal suffrage
At present the Etropean Parliament
has 198 members appointed by and from the
nattonal legislatures This was always
considered a temporary arrangement
By VIrtue of the agreement reached m
Rome the citizens of the Commumty may
vote for their first directly elected
Parliament sometime In May or June m
1978

took h1s s1tnple reticence as a

BIDDING REVISED
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
;;enale passed Thursday 23 w
'6 and sent to the House
legtslal10n revtslng the
procedure used by state and
local govermnents to recetve
b1ds and award contracts for
construction proJects
The btl! sttpulates that
goverrunents award contract
wtthm 60 days of the recetpt
of b1ds on a proJect It also
would allow governments to
accept a btd even tf t ts 10 per

weakness as have many over
hts 34 years tn pubhc hfe (10
as a congressman 24 as a
senator 15 as a maJonty
leader)
Hts lack of
dynamism has been a
Washmgton
1ssue
for

decades Colleagu•s have for
years urged h1m to come
ahve to which hts response
has been
I am not a
nngmaster
He certamly tsn t Born 72
years ago m Manhattan sent
to Montana to be reared by m
laws a one lime runaway
who JOmed the Navy at age 14
and a former mme worker
who became a college
professor Mansfield 1s
merely Mansfield whtch Is
qwte enough He IS perhaps
as fine a pohbctan as lhts
nahan can hope to produce
Gentle generous honest he
IS an elected offiCial who
serves the pubhc rather than
hunself He has never had a
press secretary reads every
ptece of constituent ma1l and
works I2-14 hour days A rare
officer mdeed
And now that he has an
nounced hts retirement I m
remmded of h s finest
qualtty That day m the hotel
room he let me speak as tl I
had somethmg to say I was
there for an hour or more a
crusadtng zealot before the
talk closed In the end he satd
that tf the Umted States
stopped tn V1etnam the
suffermg would slop Then he
said he had a great deal of
respect for the mthtary ex
cept ,.hen 1! was wrong H1s
ptpe was empty We shook
hands I left
Downstairs m the lobby the
mutual fnend asked how the
mtervtew went I satd 1t was
d sappt!lntmg How so Well
11 was frustrating I sa d I couldn t get through to the
old man at all
Mtke Mansfield wtll leave
the Senate at the complelton
of lh1s term He has been m
the body for one-stxth of the
natton s htstory smce 1n
dependence He has served
longer as majonty leader
than any other man Of all
that he has been however I
w11l remember htm most and
most humbly for h1s abthly
to suffer fools

Berrys World

cent above cost estnnates

GAS LINES
COLUMBUS (UP!) The
House Thursday passed 85 to
I a btl! requtrmg the Pubhc
Utiltties Commtsston of Ohio
to mspect gas and petroleum
p1pel10es owned and operated
by mumc1pahlles and
nonprofit utthties
The measw-e sponsored by
Rep Ronald H James D
ProctorVIlle now goes to the
Senate for cons1derat10n

NOW YOU KNOW
Two of the nat10n s first
ladtes - the w ves of
Prestdents Andrew Jackson
and Zachary Taylor
have
been pipe smokers Dolly
Mad1son wtfe of the f6urth
prestdent of the U S took
her tobacco m the form of
snuff

•

l-,

i) 9 6byN~A

Look Look There s another car that doesn t
have a CB rad o antenna

By Ray Cromley
WASHINGTON - The relative declme m research m this
country threatens more than nahooal defense U the trend
continues we face stagnatton In our livmg standards
continued high unemployment and an unfavorable balance of
trade Moreover at some uncertam date we wtll be at the
mercy of those who supply us with raw materials
Research and development has been so profitable for the
Ututed States that the 1974 favorable balance In Research and
Developmentmtenstve products was large enough to offset the
e&lt;&gt;st of petroleum unports that year desp1te the high oil prices
By contrast over the years there has been an mcreastngly
negat1ve balance m manufactured products which were not
research mtenSJve
We have m the past depended on new industrtes and
products to provide the steady mcrease tn jobs requiTed for our
growmg populalton and for the mcreasmg numbers of women
JOtnmg the work for ce Normal industrtal growth Is not
sufftctent to meet these needs
Hlstortcally a National Science Foundation study shows
that u S SCientists have recetved a bon s share of the Nobel
prtzes m the phySical sCiences Our share has declmed thts
past 15 years
In the past decade and a half the Untied States has been
second m published sctenttftc bterature wthe Sovtet Unton on
chemtstry and mathematics
A ma}ortty of the maJor techntcal lJUlovations of the past
20 years were of Untied States ortgm but the Untied States
share has declmed from 110 per cent In the late 1950s to 55 per
cent 10 the years s10ce 1965
The Increasing number of U S patents awarded to
mventors m foretgn countrtes Is Illustrative - 44 per cent of
the patents m drugs and medicUle m 1973 39 per cent m the
field of atrcraft and parts 35 per cent m chemicals 34 per cent
m prunary metals 29 per cent 111 professiOnal and sctentiftc
instruments 28 per cent m rommuntcation equipment and
electromc romponents -a far cry from I 0years before
The United States today ts ahead m eoough areas and our
productlVIIY ts great eoough e&lt;&gt;mpared with that of our rna )Or
competitors so that we need not worry m the 1970s But the
cumulattve effects of our latlure to mruntam our unposmg lead
enJoyed m the past may shp up on us like the buildup of cancer
or cholesterol We could awaken too late to our danger
The problem ts not merely one of spendmg There ts
mcreaSJng eVldence m government m prtvate research labs
and m mdustry of a super cauttousness - a tendency to
unprove slightly not take chances with way-out research
There sa marked tendency that ts to bet on the sure thmg to
spend time and effort on cosmettc unprovements thus puttmg
an msufflctent number of ch1ps mto gambles which could pay
off handsomely
Part of the problem s the financtal squeeze on compames
which develop produce and sell new products Because many
of these new Items go sow- t ts essenhal that profits on the
successes be great enough to balance off the losses wtth dollars
to spare In recent years the cost of money has been so high
and the cost of o)lfratlons so great m part because of the
growmg burden of govenunent superv s1on and costly
regulations and the dommatlon of credit sources and markets
so complete that compantes w1th major research departments
have become exceedmgly cautious about new research
One frtend pres1dent of a small research and development
ftrm tells me he has lately placed a e&lt;&gt;nstderable number of
new tdeas on tee Between e&lt;&gt;ntrols hght credtt h•gh costs
makm~ a proflt1s so chancy I rouid lose my shirt m no tune
wtlh a failure or tow he says So he s st1ck10g to hts trted and
true products makmg unprovements on already-&lt;ieveloped
ttems that are sellmg well

District's Democrats select
four delegates to convention
LANCASTER - Four
delegates and two alternates
to the Democratic Nahonal
ConventiOn were selected
Mar 13 at a Tenth Dtstrlct
Democratic caucus held m
Lancaster on behalf of
Congressman Wayne L Hays
and State Senator Robert
Secrest
These delegates and
alternates were flied with the
Board of Elections In Zanes
ville on March 25 so thetr
names wtll appear on the
June 8th prtmary ballot
pledged to vote for
Congressman Hays and State
Senator Secrest as their first
and second choice for
President
Congressman Hays and
State Senator Secrest are
enlertng their names as
Favor! te Son candidates from
the loth District Hays said
recently he wtll swmg his
support to Hubert Humphrey
al the convention He ts also
entenng a favortte son slate
In five other dlstrtcts besides
the lOth These mclude the
5th lith 16th 17th and his
own 18th District
The alternates chosen at

the caucus were Mary
Hanley Fatrlteld County and
James Cavanaugh of Perry
County The delegates chosen
were Wtlham Mtller Fatr
f1eld County Don Moyer
Musktngum County John
Ayers Hocking County and
Shirley Hultgren Athens
County
The delegates and alter
nates support a favorite son
candtdate because they thmk
the time lapse between the
present filing date and the
June 8th primary rrught
leave Ute dtstrtct pledged to a
candidate who ts no longer m
the race They also feel the
dtslrtc! needs to be free to
support a candidate who
would best represent the
pohhcal philosophy Of the
country as a whole

Ohio H S G r s

Tourno~ment Scores
Un ted Press lnlernat on1

CLASS AA
At C&lt;~nton
Warren Champ on 6• Dovtes
own 42
Akron E ms 54 Campbe

Memor al 38

At Bowl ng Green
Obe n 32 A c hbo d 3
Oregon S
ch 38 Upper
Sandusky 28

At Westerv lie

DR. LAMB

RverVews R:verVa ey.o19
Co um bus Her ley 47 Tr
Val ey 45
At Dayton

Liver disease can develop

Bellbrook

53

Tavtor 42

C n c nna

U bana 42 Waver y 40

CLASS AA
At Columbus
Day on Ro h 79 We ISV I e 54

By Lawrence E Lamb M D
DEAR DR LAMB- I need
your help I have cirrhOSIS of
the hver and can t find out
anythmg about It I am 76
years old female and have
never used alcohol m any
form The doctor said my
hver ts one half larger than
normal
Whtle I was
hospttahzed they dtd a biopsy
to exmmne the liver I am 5fee t-4 and wetgh !50 pounds
and have had arthrttls for 35
years Does clrrhosts shorten
ones life? Can It be arrested'
Is any special diet helpful?
What are the symptoms•
Would taking Iron capsules
over a penod of three years
cause cirrhosis' Should I
take any special medicine for
It? I only take Indocm for
arthrltts now
DEAR
READER
CirrhOSIS refers to scarring of
the hver The scar tissue
replaces normal hver cells
The hver n ay be enlarged
dependu g t he type of
ctrrhOtlls and the stage 11 s In

or It may actually be small damaged wtUtluts of scarrmg
and contracted Indtvtduals that replaces too many liver
who drink lots of alcohol cells then serious changes
commonly develop liver can occur These Include
dtsease leading to clrrhosla serious Interference with
but many people with metabolism of your food
cirrhosts like you have never changes tn the blood proteins
which may lead to ac
touched a drop of alcohol
Cirrhosis of the liver can be cumulation of enormous
callSed by a variety of In amounts d lluld In the abfeclions PO!I8tbly even viral dominal cavity loss of aphepatitis It can alao be petite and even body wasting
callSed by obstruction of the becawse of the tn~rlerence
metabolism
and
dratnage of bile from the with
liver as seen wtth gall nutrition
A well-balanced relatively
bladder disease It may alao
be associated with certain high protein high car
hohydrate diet with plenty of
nutritional problems
The effect of cirrhosis vitamins Is helpful In sup
depends on how much porting patlenta with
damage to liver function It clrrhoela of the liver .Pf
causes The liver has a wide cour~e a patient who reaches
safety range for Its funrllons the stage of Uver failure as
Mtld damage may not have might occur In advanced
any significant Impact upon cirrhosis will require an
an Individual a health When entirely different modified
symptoms do occur they are diet but this Ia In the h0t1pltal
more often related to fatigue and I don t think you need to
or mild ayitlpwms of In worry yourself about that
I doubt that taking Iron had
digestion If the liver Is badly
anything at all to do with your

tllness There are few very
rare diseases m which Iron
storage In the llver can cause
this problem but your liver
biopsy and mtcroscoptc
exammatton of It would have
revealed this 10formatton
Your doctor hasn t given
you any medicines probably
because your condition lsn t
that serious and no Important
medicines
other
than
vitamins minerals and
general nutritional support
need be provided In mild
cases Your cirrhosis Is
probably unrelated to your
arthrt Us or the medicines you
have been taking for It
For Information on gall
bladder dlseaae send 50 cents
for The Health Latter
number 4-9 Gallstooes and
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mailing Addrua your letter
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i

Lorain Catholic, Roth promise great matchup

BY GREG BAILEY
When the buzzer sounded to end the last basketball game
of the season for the local teams many fans wtll put away their
cheermg hats m the closet and stt around dreammg about next
season
Bu1 - why not keep cheering'
It seems a shame that wtth so much emphasts put on the
ptgskm (football) and the roundball (basketball) that sports
nuts forget about the horsehide (baseball) and other sprmg
sports After all baseballts our natiOnal pastune and tt ts shU
constdered a maJor sport by our high schools
Fans do you realtze that the baseball programs at the
area h1gh schools spend a lot of money but take 10 pracllcally
none• Don t you reahze that a high school baseball game ts
one of the few sports contests that you can attend and cheer
your team on Without bavmg to pay admiSSIOn' Afew schools
charge a nommal fee but as far as I know none of our three
area schools charges a smgle dtme And I KNOW that a lot of
you are baseball nuts the same as I am So don t qmt cheer ng
yet
But baseball s not the only sport altve and well m the
sprmg
Track s the second sport Uta! deserves some of our
attention D1d you reahze that JU st as m basketball the gtrls of
the county are now fleldmg track teams• All three htgh schools
are gomg to have gtrls track teams th s year and Metgs and
Eastern are gomg to field a boy s team
Track and fteld may not be your bag and you may even
turn your nose up at 11 But heheve me unt1l you ve tr ed to run
a 440yard dash or a two mtle run don t knock the ktds that do
It takes a spectaltype of athlete to tram mght after mght
runnmg m1le after mile JUSt to lay all the~r marbles on the
table for a smgle race 111 wh1ch no teammate can help Utem as
they can In the other sports
So 1f you re a true sports fan don I let the echoes of your
cheers die away yet - "e st1U have baseball aod track and
they can both be thrillmg As soon as I get schedules of these
local teams they II he pubhshed so keep watch I II also keep
you up to date wtth results and remmd you of the contests w1th
a Sports Calendar All these sports w11l begm the first of Aprtl
So 1tf I may borrow a well known phrase ) if you hke the
element of human drama
the thnlt of VIctory and the
agony of defeat keep m tune because there s lots to come yet
thts sprmg

By GENE CADDES
UPI Spons Writer
COl UMBUS I UPI )
Judgmg by Thursday n ght s
Class AA Ohio high school
basketball tournament
sem1fmalsgames Saturday s
ltnals between I or am
Cathohc and Dayton Roth
could he a good old lash oned
shootout
Thtrd ranked
I or am
Catholic practically rewrote
the record book m 1ts 108~4
romp over Brookfteld and
Roth 121-5) exploded m the
second half for a 79 54
declSlon over prevwusly
unbeaten Wellsville

Thi..it v.a s the best gm1e

we ve played all year sa d
J.oram coach J1m Lawh ead
whos e tea m ramm ed 63

programs Ho\\ever mstead

of stttmg around the bench
learning the college game
they got the chance to pla)

~ac h

became a
ron trtbutor to ht s team s
success lh s year
Now Greenwood of UCLA
Hubbard of Mtchtgan and
Ba1ley and Anderson of
Rutgers are the four key
freshman among the sem
finalists m Ihe NCAA
basketball champ10nsh1ps
who are start ng or play10g as
and

much as the starters

W1th the two freshmen
we ve had playmg thiS
season we would never be
where we are rtght now
Without them smd Rutgers

Outdoor Wa t Ch
By Greg Bailey
dealers with the result bemg
( PartT.. o)
unreasonable prosec ution of
SUB H B 441 pr~v 1des that dealers and the end to hand
the purchaser of a handgun gun sales m Ohio Sub H B
wtll be reqwred to !urn sh lo 441 by Assemblyman T
the dealer h1s name ad
James et at was passed by
dress dale of btrth and Soc tal a House vote of 11 to 22 and
Securtty number (a n n has been assigned to the
fractton of the 1974 Prtvac) Se•ate Jud1c1ary Comm1ttee
Act) and slg• a statement March 16 Assemblyman
authortzmg the dealer to Wm Batchelder ( R 93rd
obtam h s crtmmal record tf d1 stnct ) made a mollon
any from the Bureau of before the House to recon
Crtmmal ldenhltcatlon and s1der Sub H B 441 11te
lnvesttgallons which ts part House motioned to reconstder
of the State Attorney Sub HB 441
General s Off ce The pur
Sub H B 441 becomes very
chaser must also stgn a tmportant m that the House
watver of hab•hty agreeing could gel the bill back from
not to hold the Bureau !table the Senate Thus calls to both
for supplymg h1s records to your Assemblyman and
the dealer In add1t on the Senator are mperative
dealer would be reqwred to
Contact your Oh10 State
mamtam records of the Representative and Senator
handgun bemg sold mcludmg today by pe1 sonal vtslt
the sertal number type telephone call letter or
cahber and brand name ma1Jgrarn You can reach
Also he must supply to the your Assemblyman s State
B C I a bnef descr phon of Cap1tol offtce by lelephomng
the purchaser and any other 1614) 466-2312 and your State
mformatlon reqwred by the Senator by call ng (614) 466
Bureau
8842 or use (800) 282-&lt;!253 tl
Also the dealer may not those hnes are busy You can
transfer a handgun unttl the wr1te to your Representahves
ltflh business day after he at the State Capttol Bwldmg
furntshes B C I wtlh the Columbus Oh o 43215
above lnformallon The
Both Sub H B 388 and Sub
dealer Is not then reqwred to H B 441 were passed wtlhout
sell the gun m fact he must much notice because most
first determme that no legtslators and thetr con
dtsabthty exists The dealer st1tuents believed these b11ls
vtolates the law f he transfer to be (as ongmally wr1tten )
the gun before recetvmg a only mandatory penalty btlls
negallve report from B C I and not attempts at back
Also the dealer must make a door gun control It ts
reasonable nqmry
to therefore tmperattve that
determme If the buyer ts you contact your Oh10 State
under any dtsabthty This senator tmmedtalely and
would Include flndmg out mform htm that as a law
whether a person ts drug ab1dmg gun owner you
dependent
a
chrontc unalterably oppose these btlls
alcoholic or I he ts under for the above reasons
adjudication of mental m
Please remember when
competence
Reasonable communicating with your
mqwry Is not defined and legislators to be clear con
leaves the dealer In danger of c se and above all cour
possible mfractlon Also this teo us
For further mformallon on
btU does not provide that
B C I must ever respond to the btlls please contact
the
dealer
thereby Wtndell F Ftsher Vtce
ehmmatlng handgun sales Prestdent of the Ohio Rille
Sportsmen should be and Pistol Association 50
against Sub H B 441 as now 1 West Broad St Columbus
wrtlten because Its mtent Ohto 43215 or call (614) 228among other things Is to 4210
These v1ews are mme not
discourage the legtltmate
sale of handguns by tmpos ng necessarily of this news
legal nsks on ftrearms paper

we e also a nev. record and
pu

Mets lose 1-0, but Seaver
pitches like his old self
Untied Press International
When Tom Seaver pushed
himself mto the m1ddle of the
heated labor negollattons be
tween players and owners

and poss1bly cost hunself a
place on the New York
Mets - there was some
specutatwn how all the
turmOil would affect h s
pt!Chtng
The three-tune Cy Young
Award wmner tr1ed to assw-e

one and all that there was no
need to worry When the work
was there to be done the war

of words would be left behind
Seaver got hts ftrst chance
to prove h s pomt Thursday
and he responded adm1rably
by alloWlllg only two htts and
no runs m four mmngs durmg
a 1-&lt;l loss to the St Loms
Cardinals at St Petersburg
F1a
It was very good Seaver
sa d It wasn t hke a ftrst
eame 11 felt more hke mv

Coach Tom Young m echmng
the sentunents of h1s rival
coaches m Saturday s semi
fmal doubleheader at the
Spectrum
Greenwood a 6-10 center
entered the startmg lmeup
for the Brums m late January
and has started thetr last 13
games UCLA now 26-4 was
12 1 m that stretch
However the ;ender 217

pound Greenwootl wtll be
gtvtng away an mch and
almost 30 pounds when he
pa rs off agamst Indtana
center Kent Benson m the
mghtcap of Saturday s
doubleheader
The 6-7 Hubbard was the
highest scormg freshman m
B g 10 conference action tlt1s
season w th a 14 3 pomt-per
game average and averaged
II 3 pomts overall He also
ftntshed thtrd tn the
conference m reboundmg and
field goal percentage
He has moved right m at
center on what Mtchtgan
coach Johnny Orr calls the
smallest team ever to make
the fmal four
The surpnsmg Bailey
started 26 of the unbeaten
Knights 31 games The 6-9

.state selt.--&lt;: t o
scored t s
pomts m spurts gettmg n ne
m the ftr st per od and 16 n

the c b ned total of 192 t e lee s ve th rd quarter
nts fractured lhe old mark
I Hwh c a I whose team
of 145 by Columbus Read) scored 114 pomts n 1ts f rst
The run and gun Spartans
and Delphos St John s n sec 10nal gam e expla ned
led by All Ohwans Ron 1973
why he left th1s starters m as
W1lczak and M1ke Horne w1th
OUr k ds are such good long as he d d by notmg that
32and 29 pomts respectively s hoote rs s a d I awh ead
Brook! etd rail ed from a 20led 4~34 at halft1me and then
thai we g ve them the green po n lef1c t " one of ts
had quarters of 31 and 32 hght all the tune It breeds tournament con tests
pomts to send Brookfteld to conftdence
W lczak a G
But Brookf eld coach Larry
the tourney stdehnes wtth a 5 center was the I ott est of Seafert wasn buymg
23-2 record
the Spartans hilt ng 15 of 19
I ion t thmk they had to
The 108 pomts broke the old shots from the f etd m a run tl up that bad sa1d
Class AA mark of 87 set m spectacular display or n edl
Seafert who adrmtted we
1953 by Mariemont and also urn-range f1rmg
knew U ev were an explos ve
surpassed the 99 scored by
Horne a thtrd-team all
nts through the nets m the
!mal 16 mmutes of play
pu

third I felt I l'Ould have Ron Bryant who comb ned' to
p1tched seven nmngs I shut out Ph !adelph ia 7-&lt;l at
wasn t trymg to reach back Vero Beach Fla Sutton who
but the fa st ball was there "as 16-13 last year y1elded
even tltough I wasn t trymg to on ly tno h1ts and struck out
overpower a nyone

Seaver ha s yet to s gn a
contract for 1976 and last
word from Met management
sttll had the ace nght-hander
up for tradmg b1ds
Another mportant pitching
spot was turned m durmg that
exhibition game as Pete Fat
cone makmg h s Cardinal
debut after h1s trade from
San Francisco struck out
seven batters m the first

three mnmgs He allowed
three hits and walked one
The only run of the game
was scored m the stxth mmng
after Lou Brock opened w th
a s ngle off Bob Apodaca and
Bake McBr de tnpled
l:.os Angeles rece1ved two
encourag ng p tch ng perfor
mances from Don Sutton and

Freshmen pacing weekend show
By JOE JULIANO
PHILADELPHIA (UP!)
At th1s tune last year Dav d
Greenwood Phil Hubbard
James Baley and Abdel
Anderson were all walking
around htgh school hallways
wtth dreams of leading thell'
future college teams to the
NCAA baske tba ll
champ10nsh1p
The four entered schools
With
top
basketball

Jerry t .t~ra s ~ed Middletown
t 1956 l.oram s 46 fwld goals

center 1s averagmg nme
pomts and seven rebounds
per game and has blocked 93
shots thts season
Anderson a 6-7 forward
has been the stxth man the
entire season for the Kn•ghts
and came off Ute bench to
score 19 pomts m Rutgers 93
79 wm over Connect cut m the

E:astern sem1 fmals
Indiana coach Bobby
Knight has ted h s team to a
30 0 record wh1le gomg
mamly wtth exper ence but
has mserted 6 5 freshman
Rtch Valav1c us m spots
He has played qmte a lot
for us and w1ll be the
freshman who w11l make the
largest contribution for us
Knight satd
In addttton to Hubbard
Mtchtgan 24-G) has some
other outstanding freshman
talent m 6-G forward Alan
Hardy and 6-3 guard Tom
Staton
Staton IS probably
..,.ponstble for us bemg here
the way he played agamst
Wtchtta and Notre Dame
Orr sa1d

three n s x mnmgs and
B yan a 24-game wmner for

the G ants four years ago
also was touched for only two
h ts n three nnm gs

A1 F1tzmorr s worked hve
shutout nnmgs and Kansas

City took advantage of two
unearned runs m the thtrd
mn ng to beat the Ch1cago
Wh1te Sox 2-&lt;J F1tzmorr s
allowed only two nf etd
smgles
In other exlub t ons l'hurs
day John E:lhs h t a two-run
homer n the seventh mn ng

to hft Texas to a I~ v ctory
over
Baltimore
E:d
Hernnann drove m two runs

w1th three smgles as
Ca hforma beat Oakland 4 I
a two-run double by rookie
outfielder Gene Richards and
run-scormg smgles b] Bob
Dav1s and Dave Wmf eld
highlighted a s x-run stxth
nnmg that carr ed SanD ego
to an 8-5 tr umph over the
Chtcago Cubs
Pinch4 Iter Jose Morales
drove home an unearned run

w1th a bases loaded sacnf ce
fly to enable Montreal to
s queeze bv Houston 5 4

Dw ght E:vans htt a three..-un
homer and John Balaz a two
run blast to power Boston to a
7 2 v ctory over Mmnesota
AI Ohver h t a two-run double
n lhe sixth and n ade a

sav mg catch m the bottom or
Ute mnmg to help Pittsburgh
beat Detro t 4 2
Dave May scored from
second on a double error by
th rd baseman Ed Brmkman
n the lOth mmng to gtve a
spht squad of Atlanta Braves
a 2 I vtc!or] ove t1 e New
York Yankees Bob Ohver
seekmg a JOb w th the Wh1te
Sox hlt his second I omer of
the sprmg to lead Iowa of the
Amen can Assoc1at1on to a 5 2

gOOd-shootmg ball club
Although h s team tra led
by II po nts at hatft me
Sealer! swd he felt h s team
was still completely m the
game

Lora n scored e ght of the
r rst 10 thtrd.quarter pomts
however and the rout was on

They had a tremendous
mght and we had a poor
one
satd Seafert m
surnm ng up the game
Seafert called the Spartans
one of the best teams we
played th1s year adding
they shot the best of
anybody we ve played but
he refused to call them the

best
I eadmg

AsSOctallOn VlCiory and liS
fourth wm durmg that span
Man how I hke to see
these guys play when tltey
are healthy satd Wllk ns I
saw 1t £or seven games to
begm the season and I have
seen 11 for the last five If
that s any ndical on we
could really be powerful
The

most

promtnent

add1hon durmg those last f1ve
games has been 6 11 center
BtU Walton who missed 21
games w1th a stress fracture

Tigers were outscored 28-a
games
It was a typ cal game for

us
satd first year Roth
coach Mtke Haley who
pla]ed
on
a
state
championship team m 1961 at
Portsmouth
Haley followed h1s usual
pattern of usmg his enllre
squad mne players led by
" Toney Peters wtth 18 po10ts
'"' Dw ght Anderson wttlt 15 and
Greg Crafter wtth 12 gettmg
mto the sconpg column
The game ts too fast w
depend on five or s1x
By MILTON RICHMAN
players
sa d Haley
UPI Sports Ed1tor
espectally when you ve got
I AKE:LAND Fla (UP I) - Rusty Staub has somethmg he d hungry kids stttmg on the
I keto say n behalf of Cleon Jones He doesn t thmk the New bench ready to go m
Haley sa d he feels hts team
York Mets are Illy whtle That s the ftrst thing he wants to
ts
nearmg tts peak after a
sa) and Ute second ts that a lot of people are all wrong about
late
season slump m whtch tl
Clean Jones
Ne !her Sta ub nor Jones are With the Mets any more but lost Ulree games m a row
We ve been playmg real
they certa nly aren t m the same boat
good
ball SBld Haley and
Staub s w th the Detrmt T gers now He has a n ce new
three year contract w th them at $140 000 a year and the rtght we should peak Saturday I
f eld JOb 1s h1s automatically because the Ttgers gave up couldn t thmk of a better
Mtckey Lohch who won more games for them than any other ttme
Wellsv ille coach Bobby
lefthander n their history and B lly Baldwm a fme looking
Dawson
who felt commg mto
voung out! elder to get him from the Mets three months ago
the
tournament
he also had
The Chicago Wh1te Sox got Cleon Jones for a cheese
depth
on
hts squad
decent
sandwich He cost them nothmg because they re not sure he
had
some
of
that
depth
taken
can do them any good and unt I they are he II remam under a
of
tllness
away
because
rumor teague contract working out wtth the Whtte Sox and
One of Dawson s starters
hopmg to land a JOb w th them
and
another of h1s top etght
Jones assoc1atwn w1th the Mets suddenly ended last
players
came down wtth
summer when he lost a showdo"n "lth Yogt Berra You could
some
sort
of ailment thts
say they both lost Jones drew hts release from the Mets after
week
leavmg
hun bastcally
refusmg to go to the outfield upon bemg 10structed to do so by
playmg
wtth
stx
people
Berra and Yog lost h1s JOb as manager of the Mets not long
We
haven
t
played
a team
after that
deep
all
year
sa 1d
that
It s unfortunate he had to have 11 happen says Staub
Dawson
We
Just
got
beat
talking of the way Jones left the Mets
There are no lis because
I love Cleon He s one of the mcest guys you d ever want to
of
1llitess
We JUst made a lot
meet and I enjoyed be ng on the same club wtth hun and
of
mental
m
stakes Dawson
play ng ball w1th him He s a good ballplayer much better
Satd
than he s gene rally g ven credit for Unfortunately he has a
Dawson asked to a ptck a
ceria n gatt a certam way of walkmg and runmng that
wtnner
of
Saturday s
prompts people to think he sn I g1v10g 1! everythmg he has At
champwnshtp
tussle
smd he
the end of 1973 nobody put 11 out there any better than he d d
feels
the
team
whtch
plays
He was sunply phenomenal at bat n the fteld everywhere
Ute
best
defense
wtll
WIO
and l don t forget that I hope hts bemg wtth the Whtte Sox now
Qumny Carter was the only
turns out to be somethmg good for him
conststent
scorer for the
When Jones reported to the White Sox trammg camp a
Tigers
endmg
up With 20
couple of weeks back a reporter asked hun how he felt about
pomts
Steve
Bobahk
and
the Mets and their pohcy wward black players It was a loaded
Mtke
Wrtght
who
fouled
out
quest on because the Mets have exactly the same pohcy for
early
n
the
fourth
quarter
black players they do for white ones
Feelmg reJected though Jones struck back He accused the each had 10
Mets of bemg lly whtte making somethmg over the fact the
only black plavers they have now are outfielder first baseman
John M lner and reliever Tom Hall
Cleon Jones hasn I changed hts mtnd He still believes what
he sa1d was true but I thmk basiCally he was taUung out of a

Sport Parade

FranCisco OOsmessman and

Bud Herseth a Phoemx meat
packer The new owners are
keeping the team m San
Francisco
With the addttlons of
Toronto makmg 1ts first

appearance 10 the rna )Or
leagues and Seattle whtch
had a one year fhng m the
Amencan League m 1969 the
Amertcan League will
balloon to 14 teams for the
first time n 1ts history
The National League
meantune w ll be left w1th 12
learns unless 1t dec1des to
change tis present posttlon
agamst expanston Currently
every team must be m favor
before a new fran~htse can be
awarded
In the American League
only mne of 12 votes are
needed to admit a new
franchise and the owners m
the JUntor ctrcutt took
advantage of th s relaxed
postuon to stake a qmck
clatm to Toronto Ali but one
team voted for the new
expansion
When the Nattonal League
voled for expansiOn to
Toronto the Ph lad&lt; Iph a
Ptulhes and C ncmnall H I

'

'

,.
I

"'~•
I

ce•
••

sense of frustration

Rusty Staub can t go along wtth Clean Jones thmkmg here
e1ther
r honestly don t th nk you can accuse the Mets of bemg Illy
wh te he says Certamly Cleon can pomt out where the
Mets don t have too many black players rtght now but if you
show them a way of gettmg a Dave Parker or any other good
success over the parent club
black ballplayer they d Jump I koow they would
Alan Ashby homered to l!(JUie
Staub Is happy wtth the Ttgers and they re happy wtth hun
a f ve run nmth nmng rally
OUr ballpark s made for a left-handed httter ltke hun
to hft Cleveland over savs Ralph Houk the T~gers long ball mmded manager As a
Milwaukee 8-7 and Tom team we had onl) 30 homers by left-handed hitters last year
Pacwrek and Ctto Gaston had We had to go out and get some hilt ng because they stopped
scormg s ngles for Atlanta s p1tch ng to Wllhe Horton last year they pttched around hun
other spit squad n a 7-G wm We had nobody behmd hun E:arly m the year they respected
over C nc nna ll
Colbert enough but later Nate was havmg all kmds of
problems

Agamst the Bullets he had
mn e pomts and four rebounds
but helped the Blazers shut
off Washmgton s fast break m
the fmal penod
Washmgton whtch tratled
by as many as 11 pomts m the
thtrd per od reeled off a 13-4
outburst early m the !mal
pertod and took the lead 94
93 w•th 5 l4 left on Len
Robmson s three-po nt play
Then w tt Walton add ng
three free throws and rookie
guard !Janel Hollms four free

American League goes north, west
By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor
TAMPA F1a (UP! ) -The
Amertcan League reaches
out to the north and west
today by awarding expanston
franchtses for 1977 to Toronto
and Seattle
In reachmg outstde the
Uruted States for the ftrst
tune the Amertcan League
thus won a brtef terntortal
war with the National League
smce both ctrcutts announced
thetr mlenlton last week of
expanding to Toronto
Both Toronto and Seattle
had btd for the existmg San
Francisco Gtants when that
earn was for sale but they
lost out when the club was
sold to Robert Lurte a San

for

durmg the next e ght mmutes
and lost for the ftrst time m 23

F·7 175 Enduro

Walton key to Blazers' victory over Bullets
United Press International
The dreams that fill
Portland Coach Lenny
Wilkins head these days are
not of wmmng National
Basketball Assoctatton
champ•onshtps
They are simply of seemg
his team healthy
H1s Trail Blazer squad
playing as a healthy untt for
ts fifth stratght game
Thursday mght held off the
Washmgton Bullets for a 108105 Na!tonal Basketball

scorer

Brookfield was Tom Volartch
w1th 24 pomts Ramon Carson
had 17 and Larry Patsy 16
The second game was a
contest unt1l the m•ddle of the
thtrd quarter when Roth
depth took ts toll on fourth
ranked Wellsville
Tratlmg only 39-38 the

voted negative The Phllhes
satd they would change their
vote tf the Reds "ould also
but Cine nnah offtclals satd
they would not vote for
expansion
under
any
ctrcumstances

throws the Blazers stormed
back mto the lead wtth an 8-2
bur~t

lloyd Neal s three-pomt
play wtth 2 03 left gave
Portland a 106 100 lead 1t
never lost Neal another of
the Blazer casualttes thts
year plays w th a face mask
w protect a fractured cheek
bone that caused hun to m1ss
10 games earher m the
season

Wtth Neal and Walton we
have he ght strength and
movement added W lkms
And Holl10s why he may
JUSt become one of the NBA s
fmest guards before he s
through
Sidney Wtcks led Portland
With 25 pomts and Neal added
I 7 Hollms and Geoff Petr e
each had 16 Phtl Chemer had
24 Len Robmson 20 and Dave
B ng 17 for Wash10gton
In other games Buffalo

rtpped Cleveland 109 94
Phoemx trtpped Atlanta 107
98 and Hduston smothered
Golden State 123-104 There
were no games m the
Amencan Basketball
Assoctation
Braves 109 Cavaliers 94
Bob
McAdoo
Jtm
McM than and Randy Smtth
combmed for 86 pomts
mcludmg 28 m the fourth
penod to spark Buffalo
McAdoo led all scorers wtth
36 pOints while McM1lhan
added 25 and Smtih 25 Dtck
Snyder led Cleveland With 21

before Amer can League oflt
Ctais Wday With Labatt S
Brewery expected to wmd up
With the new franchiSe
Comedian Danny Kaye s
mvolved m the group wh ch
w1ll brmg baseball back to
Seattle
OWLS WON T MO\ E
DETROIT UP! ) - 1\1
Savill owner and pres dent of

Ue

Columbus Owls franch se
n the lnternatwnal Hockey
League sa1d Thursday he has
w thdrawn h1s request to
move the team to Grand
Rap1ds After extens ve
diSCUSSIOn w th the IHL
Board of Governors Sav II
sa d he would temporartly
scrap h s plans to relocate
despite heavy losses from low
attehdance m Columbus

N. WoW~J:JR.ft·

&gt;

OFFICE HOUt&lt;~ 9 30 to 12 2 to S (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS l-EAST COURT
ST POME OY

• Ad us ab e o k and shocks
• S mdesg n

gh we gh

Sudy

ame

Pr ces Plus Fre gh1

And Dealer Preparat on

J&amp;R SPORT
SHOP
Pomeroy 0

ON SALE NOWI
THE 'OFFICIAL'

CB

Two groups from Toronto
were to make presentat ons

• Powe and ""''"'"'"
ake on any e

SLANGUAGE
LANGUAGE
DICTIONARY
C1t1zens Band Jargon from A to
and Coast to Coast

v

z

by Lanle Dills

MlDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
ON THE T IN MIDDLEPORT

-

"'
"I

·~

�i
2- The DaUy Sentinel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Fr1day March 26 1976

RAY CROMI.EY

TOM TIEDE

Montana's pride:
how he suffered fools

•

By Tom Tiede
Washmgton - I met M•ke
Mansfield a decade a~o m a

press1on of solemm ty and

hstened while I e~plamed my
concern for h1s V1etnam
hotel room n Helena Mont oppos bon
He was the states semor
I sa1d that I had seen a
senator on a visit to home I great deal of the combat as a
'
blew in on a reporting correspondent and was
'
ass1gn nent A mutual fnend worried that the mcreasmg
offered an nlr!Jfluctwn and I lack of support for tl m
se1zed the opportunity for Amenca mtght eventually
narrow reasons 1t was the place U S so ldiers m
t me of V1etnam wh1ch I then jeopardy I was overly blunt
embraced and I wanted to one mtght even say m
argue Mansfield s antiwar sufferable I satd I had seen
enemy leaflets quobng
views
The door to the senator s George McGovern s con
room was open and he was demnat10n of the war and
wa1ttng ror me n sharlsleeves had talked w1th men m the
on the edge of the bed I was ranks who were becommg
offered the only chair in the confused wtth the similar
room He ht a p pe, crossed remarks be ng made by
h1s arms over h•s._chest and Mansfteld Naturally I added
explained that t~e small that such talk here could only
plam very ugly room was encourage the enemy and
adequate for h1s stay He prolong even Is
d1dn tllke swtes he sa1d He
Have you been m Vtet
had no entourage H1s needs nam • I asked
were simple Say ng th1s
Not recently he sa1d
wh1ch was a lot for h1m he
Then how can you JUdge t!
retreated behind an ex at all•
I learned later of course
that my equatmg h1s
tgnorance of Southeast Asta
MIMIC COPS
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The wtlh h1s lack of expenence
House Thursday gave unam was not only natve but m
mous approval to leg1slat•on error Mansfield had heen a
creating a new crune of hfelong scholar on As1an
1mpersonat10g a pohce affa1rs a untverstty m
off1cer
or private security structor m such before
That s a start I suppose but someone should tell h1m
becom ng a lawmaker a man
guard
there s more to the pose'
whose
Far
Eastern
The bill sponsored by Rep
Helen F1x R-Cinc10nat1 was knowledge was thought so
sent to the Senate It 1s valuable that Franklin
des1gned to prevent persons Roosevelt sent h1m there on a
~-o-&lt;:"&lt;=&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;:,....:::&gt;-o::;&gt;..o-o.o..o0-.G~"&lt;&gt;'&lt;::&gt;-c:&gt;&lt;:&gt;-O..o-..--&gt;""&gt;..-::"""&gt;.:;:&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;d&lt;~~ from comm1 tt10g crtmes strateg c war missiOn m the
• while poSJng as a policeman 1940s
Mansfteld satd none of thts
Penalt es
for
unpersonat10n would be up to by the way For much of our
30 days 10 Jail or a fUle of up to conversatiOn actually he
$250 Penalties would be more satd very httle of anythmg
severe 1f another cnme were He nodded He shook hts
committed
head He sa1d yes or no
where apphcable I suppose I

..

·~

Editorial comment,
opinion, features

Too-lenient courts mock law .enforcement
Life Imitates art they say and that
caper dubbed The Sting pulled off the
other day by Washmgton D C police and
FBI agents was Indeed like somethmg out
of the movies
Durmg a ftve-month mvest gallon
undercowr agents posing as out-of-town
syndicate members and operatmg out of an
abandoned warehouse bought more than
3,500 pteces of stolen property from various
dentzens of the crunmal world - the frmt of
countless muggmgs lreak&lt;ns hlJackings
and auto thefts
The goods estunated to be worth more
than $2 4 miUton mcluded teleVlston sets
kitchen appliances automobtles credit
cards goverrunent checks and eqwpment
and even an electrocardiogram machme
stolen ptece by ptece from Prmce George s
County Hospttal
To celebrate the enterprtse s success
and to show thetr apprec1alton the phony
fences threw a party to which they inVIted
all thelf frtends Tben came the st ng
the arrest of 108 persons and 1sswng of
warrants for 75 more It was the biggest
such roundup m FBI and Dishrct of
Columbia history
Unfortunately however life has a way
of stowmg shotfl of art Or mayhe 11 s the
other way around In moVleS or on
televtSJon the cracking of a case ts usually
the end of the story and the VIewer ts left
wtth the satisfying knowledge that justice
has triumphed and the eVII-&lt;ioers wtll
rece1ve thetr :~pproprlate desserts at the
hands of the cour Is
It s not like that m the real life cops and
robbers game
Of the 108 arrested at the party 70 had
preVlously been arrested and charged wtth
similar cnmes - some of them repeatedly
- and 21 were out on parole followmg
convicttons One man had been arrested at
least Six tunes for burglary forgery and
other crimes and m each mstance had been

released wtthout ball
In keepmg wtth thts sorry pattern
federal magistrates unmediately released
several of those setzed m the haul on their
own recogmzance
Claiming that 600 persons mdiCted on
felony charges m Washmgton are now
~tltves asstslant US attorney Charles
Rotstacher complamed btlterly that most
crtmes are by people out on ball The
maJortty of those arrest (at the party) were
hard-core criminals People who comm1t
crunes whtle out on parole or proba!ton are
making a mockery of the system They are
thumbing thetr noses at the e&lt;&gt;urts
But lest anyone think this ts a problem
mvoiVIng only your ordinary street mugger
or burglar or thief constder the case of the
great gram npoff whtch was commg to a
conclusion tn New Orleans about the same
time as the Washmgton aflatr
Charged on 36 counts of consplfmg to
steal oome $1 7 million worth of gram over a
four year pertod two large export com
pontes - Garnac Gram Inc and Archer
Dan1els Mtdland Co - pleaded no con
test m U S D1stnct Court and were fmed
$10 000 each
This was not even a slap on the wnst It
was more hke a gently stroking wtth a
leather The costs of the two year m
wsbgatton no doubt were far more than the
puny $20 000 In fmes
When a felon ts sent back onto the street
to resume plymg his trade even before the
arresting officer has completed hts
paperwork or corporate crunmals are
l!IWn rrunuscule hnes representing the
merest fraction of the illegal proftts
something ts sertously wrong wtlh our
system of JUSttce
One of these days law enforcement
dftctals who work hard months or years on
an mvesttgation or who daily nsk thetr lives
to prole.:! ooclety are gomg to stop and ask
themselves Why bother•

Common passport for common market
It wUI be many years before the great
..,eam of a United States of Europe the
complete pohhcal umflcalton of the
demoa-ati&lt; nattons of Western Europe
becomes a reality Nevertheless significant
steps contmue to be taken towards un
plemenlmg the ftrst line of the treaty which
eatabllshed the European Common Market
aome two decades ago to lay the
fomdattoo of an ever closer umon among
the peoples of Europe
In one of the most recent of those steps
the nine members of the European Com
mmtty have decided to replace notional
Jlllllports with a single untwrsal European
Jlllllport by 1978
1
Thia means that ~lttzens of the Nine
-France Germany Italy Belgium Den
nurk HoDand Luxembotrg the United
~dom and Ireland - wUI be able to
travel from one end of the Common ty to the
other without passing through customs For
Americans and other foretgners 11 will
mean a single Cllltoma check upon entering
the first EC country VISited and one on
leaving the last
A Etropean passport could be In use
even sooner slnce this change needs only
1

legislatiOn m Germany Other parts of a
planned passport union will take longer to
work out according to Economtc Com
muntty Informahon SerVIce because they
mvolve changes tn nat10nal laws setting
condtttons of entry length of stay and
meeks of luggage currency and cars
Eventually the Nme will have to negotiate
agreements wt!h nonmember countnes to
treat every holder of an EC passport the
same r~ardless of nattonallty
The passport dectslon was made m
Rome last December at a meeting of the
Etropean Council composed of heads of
states of Community countries fore•gn
ministers and EC CommiMion officials At
this same meetmg the council also paved
the way for the elechon of a new European
P.-liament by direct untversal suffrage
At present the Etropean Parliament
has 198 members appointed by and from the
nattonal legislatures This was always
considered a temporary arrangement
By VIrtue of the agreement reached m
Rome the citizens of the Commumty may
vote for their first directly elected
Parliament sometime In May or June m
1978

took h1s s1tnple reticence as a

BIDDING REVISED
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
;;enale passed Thursday 23 w
'6 and sent to the House
legtslal10n revtslng the
procedure used by state and
local govermnents to recetve
b1ds and award contracts for
construction proJects
The btl! sttpulates that
goverrunents award contract
wtthm 60 days of the recetpt
of b1ds on a proJect It also
would allow governments to
accept a btd even tf t ts 10 per

weakness as have many over
hts 34 years tn pubhc hfe (10
as a congressman 24 as a
senator 15 as a maJonty
leader)
Hts lack of
dynamism has been a
Washmgton
1ssue
for

decades Colleagu•s have for
years urged h1m to come
ahve to which hts response
has been
I am not a
nngmaster
He certamly tsn t Born 72
years ago m Manhattan sent
to Montana to be reared by m
laws a one lime runaway
who JOmed the Navy at age 14
and a former mme worker
who became a college
professor Mansfield 1s
merely Mansfield whtch Is
qwte enough He IS perhaps
as fine a pohbctan as lhts
nahan can hope to produce
Gentle generous honest he
IS an elected offiCial who
serves the pubhc rather than
hunself He has never had a
press secretary reads every
ptece of constituent ma1l and
works I2-14 hour days A rare
officer mdeed
And now that he has an
nounced hts retirement I m
remmded of h s finest
qualtty That day m the hotel
room he let me speak as tl I
had somethmg to say I was
there for an hour or more a
crusadtng zealot before the
talk closed In the end he satd
that tf the Umted States
stopped tn V1etnam the
suffermg would slop Then he
said he had a great deal of
respect for the mthtary ex
cept ,.hen 1! was wrong H1s
ptpe was empty We shook
hands I left
Downstairs m the lobby the
mutual fnend asked how the
mtervtew went I satd 1t was
d sappt!lntmg How so Well
11 was frustrating I sa d I couldn t get through to the
old man at all
Mtke Mansfield wtll leave
the Senate at the complelton
of lh1s term He has been m
the body for one-stxth of the
natton s htstory smce 1n
dependence He has served
longer as majonty leader
than any other man Of all
that he has been however I
w11l remember htm most and
most humbly for h1s abthly
to suffer fools

Berrys World

cent above cost estnnates

GAS LINES
COLUMBUS (UP!) The
House Thursday passed 85 to
I a btl! requtrmg the Pubhc
Utiltties Commtsston of Ohio
to mspect gas and petroleum
p1pel10es owned and operated
by mumc1pahlles and
nonprofit utthties
The measw-e sponsored by
Rep Ronald H James D
ProctorVIlle now goes to the
Senate for cons1derat10n

NOW YOU KNOW
Two of the nat10n s first
ladtes - the w ves of
Prestdents Andrew Jackson
and Zachary Taylor
have
been pipe smokers Dolly
Mad1son wtfe of the f6urth
prestdent of the U S took
her tobacco m the form of
snuff

•

l-,

i) 9 6byN~A

Look Look There s another car that doesn t
have a CB rad o antenna

By Ray Cromley
WASHINGTON - The relative declme m research m this
country threatens more than nahooal defense U the trend
continues we face stagnatton In our livmg standards
continued high unemployment and an unfavorable balance of
trade Moreover at some uncertam date we wtll be at the
mercy of those who supply us with raw materials
Research and development has been so profitable for the
Ututed States that the 1974 favorable balance In Research and
Developmentmtenstve products was large enough to offset the
e&lt;&gt;st of petroleum unports that year desp1te the high oil prices
By contrast over the years there has been an mcreastngly
negat1ve balance m manufactured products which were not
research mtenSJve
We have m the past depended on new industrtes and
products to provide the steady mcrease tn jobs requiTed for our
growmg populalton and for the mcreasmg numbers of women
JOtnmg the work for ce Normal industrtal growth Is not
sufftctent to meet these needs
Hlstortcally a National Science Foundation study shows
that u S SCientists have recetved a bon s share of the Nobel
prtzes m the phySical sCiences Our share has declmed thts
past 15 years
In the past decade and a half the Untied States has been
second m published sctenttftc bterature wthe Sovtet Unton on
chemtstry and mathematics
A ma}ortty of the maJor techntcal lJUlovations of the past
20 years were of Untied States ortgm but the Untied States
share has declmed from 110 per cent In the late 1950s to 55 per
cent 10 the years s10ce 1965
The Increasing number of U S patents awarded to
mventors m foretgn countrtes Is Illustrative - 44 per cent of
the patents m drugs and medicUle m 1973 39 per cent m the
field of atrcraft and parts 35 per cent m chemicals 34 per cent
m prunary metals 29 per cent 111 professiOnal and sctentiftc
instruments 28 per cent m rommuntcation equipment and
electromc romponents -a far cry from I 0years before
The United States today ts ahead m eoough areas and our
productlVIIY ts great eoough e&lt;&gt;mpared with that of our rna )Or
competitors so that we need not worry m the 1970s But the
cumulattve effects of our latlure to mruntam our unposmg lead
enJoyed m the past may shp up on us like the buildup of cancer
or cholesterol We could awaken too late to our danger
The problem ts not merely one of spendmg There ts
mcreaSJng eVldence m government m prtvate research labs
and m mdustry of a super cauttousness - a tendency to
unprove slightly not take chances with way-out research
There sa marked tendency that ts to bet on the sure thmg to
spend time and effort on cosmettc unprovements thus puttmg
an msufflctent number of ch1ps mto gambles which could pay
off handsomely
Part of the problem s the financtal squeeze on compames
which develop produce and sell new products Because many
of these new Items go sow- t ts essenhal that profits on the
successes be great enough to balance off the losses wtth dollars
to spare In recent years the cost of money has been so high
and the cost of o)lfratlons so great m part because of the
growmg burden of govenunent superv s1on and costly
regulations and the dommatlon of credit sources and markets
so complete that compantes w1th major research departments
have become exceedmgly cautious about new research
One frtend pres1dent of a small research and development
ftrm tells me he has lately placed a e&lt;&gt;nstderable number of
new tdeas on tee Between e&lt;&gt;ntrols hght credtt h•gh costs
makm~ a proflt1s so chancy I rouid lose my shirt m no tune
wtlh a failure or tow he says So he s st1ck10g to hts trted and
true products makmg unprovements on already-&lt;ieveloped
ttems that are sellmg well

District's Democrats select
four delegates to convention
LANCASTER - Four
delegates and two alternates
to the Democratic Nahonal
ConventiOn were selected
Mar 13 at a Tenth Dtstrlct
Democratic caucus held m
Lancaster on behalf of
Congressman Wayne L Hays
and State Senator Robert
Secrest
These delegates and
alternates were flied with the
Board of Elections In Zanes
ville on March 25 so thetr
names wtll appear on the
June 8th prtmary ballot
pledged to vote for
Congressman Hays and State
Senator Secrest as their first
and second choice for
President
Congressman Hays and
State Senator Secrest are
enlertng their names as
Favor! te Son candidates from
the loth District Hays said
recently he wtll swmg his
support to Hubert Humphrey
al the convention He ts also
entenng a favortte son slate
In five other dlstrtcts besides
the lOth These mclude the
5th lith 16th 17th and his
own 18th District
The alternates chosen at

the caucus were Mary
Hanley Fatrlteld County and
James Cavanaugh of Perry
County The delegates chosen
were Wtlham Mtller Fatr
f1eld County Don Moyer
Musktngum County John
Ayers Hocking County and
Shirley Hultgren Athens
County
The delegates and alter
nates support a favorite son
candtdate because they thmk
the time lapse between the
present filing date and the
June 8th primary rrught
leave Ute dtstrtct pledged to a
candidate who ts no longer m
the race They also feel the
dtslrtc! needs to be free to
support a candidate who
would best represent the
pohhcal philosophy Of the
country as a whole

Ohio H S G r s

Tourno~ment Scores
Un ted Press lnlernat on1

CLASS AA
At C&lt;~nton
Warren Champ on 6• Dovtes
own 42
Akron E ms 54 Campbe

Memor al 38

At Bowl ng Green
Obe n 32 A c hbo d 3
Oregon S
ch 38 Upper
Sandusky 28

At Westerv lie

DR. LAMB

RverVews R:verVa ey.o19
Co um bus Her ley 47 Tr
Val ey 45
At Dayton

Liver disease can develop

Bellbrook

53

Tavtor 42

C n c nna

U bana 42 Waver y 40

CLASS AA
At Columbus
Day on Ro h 79 We ISV I e 54

By Lawrence E Lamb M D
DEAR DR LAMB- I need
your help I have cirrhOSIS of
the hver and can t find out
anythmg about It I am 76
years old female and have
never used alcohol m any
form The doctor said my
hver ts one half larger than
normal
Whtle I was
hospttahzed they dtd a biopsy
to exmmne the liver I am 5fee t-4 and wetgh !50 pounds
and have had arthrttls for 35
years Does clrrhosts shorten
ones life? Can It be arrested'
Is any special diet helpful?
What are the symptoms•
Would taking Iron capsules
over a penod of three years
cause cirrhosis' Should I
take any special medicine for
It? I only take Indocm for
arthrltts now
DEAR
READER
CirrhOSIS refers to scarring of
the hver The scar tissue
replaces normal hver cells
The hver n ay be enlarged
dependu g t he type of
ctrrhOtlls and the stage 11 s In

or It may actually be small damaged wtUtluts of scarrmg
and contracted Indtvtduals that replaces too many liver
who drink lots of alcohol cells then serious changes
commonly develop liver can occur These Include
dtsease leading to clrrhosla serious Interference with
but many people with metabolism of your food
cirrhosts like you have never changes tn the blood proteins
which may lead to ac
touched a drop of alcohol
Cirrhosis of the liver can be cumulation of enormous
callSed by a variety of In amounts d lluld In the abfeclions PO!I8tbly even viral dominal cavity loss of aphepatitis It can alao be petite and even body wasting
callSed by obstruction of the becawse of the tn~rlerence
metabolism
and
dratnage of bile from the with
liver as seen wtth gall nutrition
A well-balanced relatively
bladder disease It may alao
be associated with certain high protein high car
hohydrate diet with plenty of
nutritional problems
The effect of cirrhosis vitamins Is helpful In sup
depends on how much porting patlenta with
damage to liver function It clrrhoela of the liver .Pf
causes The liver has a wide cour~e a patient who reaches
safety range for Its funrllons the stage of Uver failure as
Mtld damage may not have might occur In advanced
any significant Impact upon cirrhosis will require an
an Individual a health When entirely different modified
symptoms do occur they are diet but this Ia In the h0t1pltal
more often related to fatigue and I don t think you need to
or mild ayitlpwms of In worry yourself about that
I doubt that taking Iron had
digestion If the liver Is badly
anything at all to do with your

tllness There are few very
rare diseases m which Iron
storage In the llver can cause
this problem but your liver
biopsy and mtcroscoptc
exammatton of It would have
revealed this 10formatton
Your doctor hasn t given
you any medicines probably
because your condition lsn t
that serious and no Important
medicines
other
than
vitamins minerals and
general nutritional support
need be provided In mild
cases Your cirrhosis Is
probably unrelated to your
arthrt Us or the medicines you
have been taking for It
For Information on gall
bladder dlseaae send 50 cents
for The Health Latter
number 4-9 Gallstooes and
Gall Bladder Dlseaae Send a
long
stamped
self
addreaaed envelope for
mailing Addrua your letter
to me In care of this
newtpaper P 0 Box 1~1
Radio City Slatton New
York NY 10019
(,

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Sundly Times Sentinel

i

Lorain Catholic, Roth promise great matchup

BY GREG BAILEY
When the buzzer sounded to end the last basketball game
of the season for the local teams many fans wtll put away their
cheermg hats m the closet and stt around dreammg about next
season
Bu1 - why not keep cheering'
It seems a shame that wtth so much emphasts put on the
ptgskm (football) and the roundball (basketball) that sports
nuts forget about the horsehide (baseball) and other sprmg
sports After all baseballts our natiOnal pastune and tt ts shU
constdered a maJor sport by our high schools
Fans do you realtze that the baseball programs at the
area h1gh schools spend a lot of money but take 10 pracllcally
none• Don t you reahze that a high school baseball game ts
one of the few sports contests that you can attend and cheer
your team on Without bavmg to pay admiSSIOn' Afew schools
charge a nommal fee but as far as I know none of our three
area schools charges a smgle dtme And I KNOW that a lot of
you are baseball nuts the same as I am So don t qmt cheer ng
yet
But baseball s not the only sport altve and well m the
sprmg
Track s the second sport Uta! deserves some of our
attention D1d you reahze that JU st as m basketball the gtrls of
the county are now fleldmg track teams• All three htgh schools
are gomg to have gtrls track teams th s year and Metgs and
Eastern are gomg to field a boy s team
Track and fteld may not be your bag and you may even
turn your nose up at 11 But heheve me unt1l you ve tr ed to run
a 440yard dash or a two mtle run don t knock the ktds that do
It takes a spectaltype of athlete to tram mght after mght
runnmg m1le after mile JUSt to lay all the~r marbles on the
table for a smgle race 111 wh1ch no teammate can help Utem as
they can In the other sports
So 1f you re a true sports fan don I let the echoes of your
cheers die away yet - "e st1U have baseball aod track and
they can both be thrillmg As soon as I get schedules of these
local teams they II he pubhshed so keep watch I II also keep
you up to date wtth results and remmd you of the contests w1th
a Sports Calendar All these sports w11l begm the first of Aprtl
So 1tf I may borrow a well known phrase ) if you hke the
element of human drama
the thnlt of VIctory and the
agony of defeat keep m tune because there s lots to come yet
thts sprmg

By GENE CADDES
UPI Spons Writer
COl UMBUS I UPI )
Judgmg by Thursday n ght s
Class AA Ohio high school
basketball tournament
sem1fmalsgames Saturday s
ltnals between I or am
Cathohc and Dayton Roth
could he a good old lash oned
shootout
Thtrd ranked
I or am
Catholic practically rewrote
the record book m 1ts 108~4
romp over Brookfteld and
Roth 121-5) exploded m the
second half for a 79 54
declSlon over prevwusly
unbeaten Wellsville

Thi..it v.a s the best gm1e

we ve played all year sa d
J.oram coach J1m Lawh ead
whos e tea m ramm ed 63

programs Ho\\ever mstead

of stttmg around the bench
learning the college game
they got the chance to pla)

~ac h

became a
ron trtbutor to ht s team s
success lh s year
Now Greenwood of UCLA
Hubbard of Mtchtgan and
Ba1ley and Anderson of
Rutgers are the four key
freshman among the sem
finalists m Ihe NCAA
basketball champ10nsh1ps
who are start ng or play10g as
and

much as the starters

W1th the two freshmen
we ve had playmg thiS
season we would never be
where we are rtght now
Without them smd Rutgers

Outdoor Wa t Ch
By Greg Bailey
dealers with the result bemg
( PartT.. o)
unreasonable prosec ution of
SUB H B 441 pr~v 1des that dealers and the end to hand
the purchaser of a handgun gun sales m Ohio Sub H B
wtll be reqwred to !urn sh lo 441 by Assemblyman T
the dealer h1s name ad
James et at was passed by
dress dale of btrth and Soc tal a House vote of 11 to 22 and
Securtty number (a n n has been assigned to the
fractton of the 1974 Prtvac) Se•ate Jud1c1ary Comm1ttee
Act) and slg• a statement March 16 Assemblyman
authortzmg the dealer to Wm Batchelder ( R 93rd
obtam h s crtmmal record tf d1 stnct ) made a mollon
any from the Bureau of before the House to recon
Crtmmal ldenhltcatlon and s1der Sub H B 441 11te
lnvesttgallons which ts part House motioned to reconstder
of the State Attorney Sub HB 441
General s Off ce The pur
Sub H B 441 becomes very
chaser must also stgn a tmportant m that the House
watver of hab•hty agreeing could gel the bill back from
not to hold the Bureau !table the Senate Thus calls to both
for supplymg h1s records to your Assemblyman and
the dealer In add1t on the Senator are mperative
dealer would be reqwred to
Contact your Oh10 State
mamtam records of the Representative and Senator
handgun bemg sold mcludmg today by pe1 sonal vtslt
the sertal number type telephone call letter or
cahber and brand name ma1Jgrarn You can reach
Also he must supply to the your Assemblyman s State
B C I a bnef descr phon of Cap1tol offtce by lelephomng
the purchaser and any other 1614) 466-2312 and your State
mformatlon reqwred by the Senator by call ng (614) 466
Bureau
8842 or use (800) 282-&lt;!253 tl
Also the dealer may not those hnes are busy You can
transfer a handgun unttl the wr1te to your Representahves
ltflh business day after he at the State Capttol Bwldmg
furntshes B C I wtlh the Columbus Oh o 43215
above lnformallon The
Both Sub H B 388 and Sub
dealer Is not then reqwred to H B 441 were passed wtlhout
sell the gun m fact he must much notice because most
first determme that no legtslators and thetr con
dtsabthty exists The dealer st1tuents believed these b11ls
vtolates the law f he transfer to be (as ongmally wr1tten )
the gun before recetvmg a only mandatory penalty btlls
negallve report from B C I and not attempts at back
Also the dealer must make a door gun control It ts
reasonable nqmry
to therefore tmperattve that
determme If the buyer ts you contact your Oh10 State
under any dtsabthty This senator tmmedtalely and
would Include flndmg out mform htm that as a law
whether a person ts drug ab1dmg gun owner you
dependent
a
chrontc unalterably oppose these btlls
alcoholic or I he ts under for the above reasons
adjudication of mental m
Please remember when
competence
Reasonable communicating with your
mqwry Is not defined and legislators to be clear con
leaves the dealer In danger of c se and above all cour
possible mfractlon Also this teo us
For further mformallon on
btU does not provide that
B C I must ever respond to the btlls please contact
the
dealer
thereby Wtndell F Ftsher Vtce
ehmmatlng handgun sales Prestdent of the Ohio Rille
Sportsmen should be and Pistol Association 50
against Sub H B 441 as now 1 West Broad St Columbus
wrtlten because Its mtent Ohto 43215 or call (614) 228among other things Is to 4210
These v1ews are mme not
discourage the legtltmate
sale of handguns by tmpos ng necessarily of this news
legal nsks on ftrearms paper

we e also a nev. record and
pu

Mets lose 1-0, but Seaver
pitches like his old self
Untied Press International
When Tom Seaver pushed
himself mto the m1ddle of the
heated labor negollattons be
tween players and owners

and poss1bly cost hunself a
place on the New York
Mets - there was some
specutatwn how all the
turmOil would affect h s
pt!Chtng
The three-tune Cy Young
Award wmner tr1ed to assw-e

one and all that there was no
need to worry When the work
was there to be done the war

of words would be left behind
Seaver got hts ftrst chance
to prove h s pomt Thursday
and he responded adm1rably
by alloWlllg only two htts and
no runs m four mmngs durmg
a 1-&lt;l loss to the St Loms
Cardinals at St Petersburg
F1a
It was very good Seaver
sa d It wasn t hke a ftrst
eame 11 felt more hke mv

Coach Tom Young m echmng
the sentunents of h1s rival
coaches m Saturday s semi
fmal doubleheader at the
Spectrum
Greenwood a 6-10 center
entered the startmg lmeup
for the Brums m late January
and has started thetr last 13
games UCLA now 26-4 was
12 1 m that stretch
However the ;ender 217

pound Greenwootl wtll be
gtvtng away an mch and
almost 30 pounds when he
pa rs off agamst Indtana
center Kent Benson m the
mghtcap of Saturday s
doubleheader
The 6-7 Hubbard was the
highest scormg freshman m
B g 10 conference action tlt1s
season w th a 14 3 pomt-per
game average and averaged
II 3 pomts overall He also
ftntshed thtrd tn the
conference m reboundmg and
field goal percentage
He has moved right m at
center on what Mtchtgan
coach Johnny Orr calls the
smallest team ever to make
the fmal four
The surpnsmg Bailey
started 26 of the unbeaten
Knights 31 games The 6-9

.state selt.--&lt;: t o
scored t s
pomts m spurts gettmg n ne
m the ftr st per od and 16 n

the c b ned total of 192 t e lee s ve th rd quarter
nts fractured lhe old mark
I Hwh c a I whose team
of 145 by Columbus Read) scored 114 pomts n 1ts f rst
The run and gun Spartans
and Delphos St John s n sec 10nal gam e expla ned
led by All Ohwans Ron 1973
why he left th1s starters m as
W1lczak and M1ke Horne w1th
OUr k ds are such good long as he d d by notmg that
32and 29 pomts respectively s hoote rs s a d I awh ead
Brook! etd rail ed from a 20led 4~34 at halft1me and then
thai we g ve them the green po n lef1c t " one of ts
had quarters of 31 and 32 hght all the tune It breeds tournament con tests
pomts to send Brookfteld to conftdence
W lczak a G
But Brookf eld coach Larry
the tourney stdehnes wtth a 5 center was the I ott est of Seafert wasn buymg
23-2 record
the Spartans hilt ng 15 of 19
I ion t thmk they had to
The 108 pomts broke the old shots from the f etd m a run tl up that bad sa1d
Class AA mark of 87 set m spectacular display or n edl
Seafert who adrmtted we
1953 by Mariemont and also urn-range f1rmg
knew U ev were an explos ve
surpassed the 99 scored by
Horne a thtrd-team all
nts through the nets m the
!mal 16 mmutes of play
pu

third I felt I l'Ould have Ron Bryant who comb ned' to
p1tched seven nmngs I shut out Ph !adelph ia 7-&lt;l at
wasn t trymg to reach back Vero Beach Fla Sutton who
but the fa st ball was there "as 16-13 last year y1elded
even tltough I wasn t trymg to on ly tno h1ts and struck out
overpower a nyone

Seaver ha s yet to s gn a
contract for 1976 and last
word from Met management
sttll had the ace nght-hander
up for tradmg b1ds
Another mportant pitching
spot was turned m durmg that
exhibition game as Pete Fat
cone makmg h s Cardinal
debut after h1s trade from
San Francisco struck out
seven batters m the first

three mnmgs He allowed
three hits and walked one
The only run of the game
was scored m the stxth mmng
after Lou Brock opened w th
a s ngle off Bob Apodaca and
Bake McBr de tnpled
l:.os Angeles rece1ved two
encourag ng p tch ng perfor
mances from Don Sutton and

Freshmen pacing weekend show
By JOE JULIANO
PHILADELPHIA (UP!)
At th1s tune last year Dav d
Greenwood Phil Hubbard
James Baley and Abdel
Anderson were all walking
around htgh school hallways
wtth dreams of leading thell'
future college teams to the
NCAA baske tba ll
champ10nsh1p
The four entered schools
With
top
basketball

Jerry t .t~ra s ~ed Middletown
t 1956 l.oram s 46 fwld goals

center 1s averagmg nme
pomts and seven rebounds
per game and has blocked 93
shots thts season
Anderson a 6-7 forward
has been the stxth man the
entire season for the Kn•ghts
and came off Ute bench to
score 19 pomts m Rutgers 93
79 wm over Connect cut m the

E:astern sem1 fmals
Indiana coach Bobby
Knight has ted h s team to a
30 0 record wh1le gomg
mamly wtth exper ence but
has mserted 6 5 freshman
Rtch Valav1c us m spots
He has played qmte a lot
for us and w1ll be the
freshman who w11l make the
largest contribution for us
Knight satd
In addttton to Hubbard
Mtchtgan 24-G) has some
other outstanding freshman
talent m 6-G forward Alan
Hardy and 6-3 guard Tom
Staton
Staton IS probably
..,.ponstble for us bemg here
the way he played agamst
Wtchtta and Notre Dame
Orr sa1d

three n s x mnmgs and
B yan a 24-game wmner for

the G ants four years ago
also was touched for only two
h ts n three nnm gs

A1 F1tzmorr s worked hve
shutout nnmgs and Kansas

City took advantage of two
unearned runs m the thtrd
mn ng to beat the Ch1cago
Wh1te Sox 2-&lt;J F1tzmorr s
allowed only two nf etd
smgles
In other exlub t ons l'hurs
day John E:lhs h t a two-run
homer n the seventh mn ng

to hft Texas to a I~ v ctory
over
Baltimore
E:d
Hernnann drove m two runs

w1th three smgles as
Ca hforma beat Oakland 4 I
a two-run double by rookie
outfielder Gene Richards and
run-scormg smgles b] Bob
Dav1s and Dave Wmf eld
highlighted a s x-run stxth
nnmg that carr ed SanD ego
to an 8-5 tr umph over the
Chtcago Cubs
Pinch4 Iter Jose Morales
drove home an unearned run

w1th a bases loaded sacnf ce
fly to enable Montreal to
s queeze bv Houston 5 4

Dw ght E:vans htt a three..-un
homer and John Balaz a two
run blast to power Boston to a
7 2 v ctory over Mmnesota
AI Ohver h t a two-run double
n lhe sixth and n ade a

sav mg catch m the bottom or
Ute mnmg to help Pittsburgh
beat Detro t 4 2
Dave May scored from
second on a double error by
th rd baseman Ed Brmkman
n the lOth mmng to gtve a
spht squad of Atlanta Braves
a 2 I vtc!or] ove t1 e New
York Yankees Bob Ohver
seekmg a JOb w th the Wh1te
Sox hlt his second I omer of
the sprmg to lead Iowa of the
Amen can Assoc1at1on to a 5 2

gOOd-shootmg ball club
Although h s team tra led
by II po nts at hatft me
Sealer! swd he felt h s team
was still completely m the
game

Lora n scored e ght of the
r rst 10 thtrd.quarter pomts
however and the rout was on

They had a tremendous
mght and we had a poor
one
satd Seafert m
surnm ng up the game
Seafert called the Spartans
one of the best teams we
played th1s year adding
they shot the best of
anybody we ve played but
he refused to call them the

best
I eadmg

AsSOctallOn VlCiory and liS
fourth wm durmg that span
Man how I hke to see
these guys play when tltey
are healthy satd Wllk ns I
saw 1t £or seven games to
begm the season and I have
seen 11 for the last five If
that s any ndical on we
could really be powerful
The

most

promtnent

add1hon durmg those last f1ve
games has been 6 11 center
BtU Walton who missed 21
games w1th a stress fracture

Tigers were outscored 28-a
games
It was a typ cal game for

us
satd first year Roth
coach Mtke Haley who
pla]ed
on
a
state
championship team m 1961 at
Portsmouth
Haley followed h1s usual
pattern of usmg his enllre
squad mne players led by
" Toney Peters wtth 18 po10ts
'"' Dw ght Anderson wttlt 15 and
Greg Crafter wtth 12 gettmg
mto the sconpg column
The game ts too fast w
depend on five or s1x
By MILTON RICHMAN
players
sa d Haley
UPI Sports Ed1tor
espectally when you ve got
I AKE:LAND Fla (UP I) - Rusty Staub has somethmg he d hungry kids stttmg on the
I keto say n behalf of Cleon Jones He doesn t thmk the New bench ready to go m
Haley sa d he feels hts team
York Mets are Illy whtle That s the ftrst thing he wants to
ts
nearmg tts peak after a
sa) and Ute second ts that a lot of people are all wrong about
late
season slump m whtch tl
Clean Jones
Ne !her Sta ub nor Jones are With the Mets any more but lost Ulree games m a row
We ve been playmg real
they certa nly aren t m the same boat
good
ball SBld Haley and
Staub s w th the Detrmt T gers now He has a n ce new
three year contract w th them at $140 000 a year and the rtght we should peak Saturday I
f eld JOb 1s h1s automatically because the Ttgers gave up couldn t thmk of a better
Mtckey Lohch who won more games for them than any other ttme
Wellsv ille coach Bobby
lefthander n their history and B lly Baldwm a fme looking
Dawson
who felt commg mto
voung out! elder to get him from the Mets three months ago
the
tournament
he also had
The Chicago Wh1te Sox got Cleon Jones for a cheese
depth
on
hts squad
decent
sandwich He cost them nothmg because they re not sure he
had
some
of
that
depth
taken
can do them any good and unt I they are he II remam under a
of
tllness
away
because
rumor teague contract working out wtth the Whtte Sox and
One of Dawson s starters
hopmg to land a JOb w th them
and
another of h1s top etght
Jones assoc1atwn w1th the Mets suddenly ended last
players
came down wtth
summer when he lost a showdo"n "lth Yogt Berra You could
some
sort
of ailment thts
say they both lost Jones drew hts release from the Mets after
week
leavmg
hun bastcally
refusmg to go to the outfield upon bemg 10structed to do so by
playmg
wtth
stx
people
Berra and Yog lost h1s JOb as manager of the Mets not long
We
haven
t
played
a team
after that
deep
all
year
sa 1d
that
It s unfortunate he had to have 11 happen says Staub
Dawson
We
Just
got
beat
talking of the way Jones left the Mets
There are no lis because
I love Cleon He s one of the mcest guys you d ever want to
of
1llitess
We JUst made a lot
meet and I enjoyed be ng on the same club wtth hun and
of
mental
m
stakes Dawson
play ng ball w1th him He s a good ballplayer much better
Satd
than he s gene rally g ven credit for Unfortunately he has a
Dawson asked to a ptck a
ceria n gatt a certam way of walkmg and runmng that
wtnner
of
Saturday s
prompts people to think he sn I g1v10g 1! everythmg he has At
champwnshtp
tussle
smd he
the end of 1973 nobody put 11 out there any better than he d d
feels
the
team
whtch
plays
He was sunply phenomenal at bat n the fteld everywhere
Ute
best
defense
wtll
WIO
and l don t forget that I hope hts bemg wtth the Whtte Sox now
Qumny Carter was the only
turns out to be somethmg good for him
conststent
scorer for the
When Jones reported to the White Sox trammg camp a
Tigers
endmg
up With 20
couple of weeks back a reporter asked hun how he felt about
pomts
Steve
Bobahk
and
the Mets and their pohcy wward black players It was a loaded
Mtke
Wrtght
who
fouled
out
quest on because the Mets have exactly the same pohcy for
early
n
the
fourth
quarter
black players they do for white ones
Feelmg reJected though Jones struck back He accused the each had 10
Mets of bemg lly whtte making somethmg over the fact the
only black plavers they have now are outfielder first baseman
John M lner and reliever Tom Hall
Cleon Jones hasn I changed hts mtnd He still believes what
he sa1d was true but I thmk basiCally he was taUung out of a

Sport Parade

FranCisco OOsmessman and

Bud Herseth a Phoemx meat
packer The new owners are
keeping the team m San
Francisco
With the addttlons of
Toronto makmg 1ts first

appearance 10 the rna )Or
leagues and Seattle whtch
had a one year fhng m the
Amencan League m 1969 the
Amertcan League will
balloon to 14 teams for the
first time n 1ts history
The National League
meantune w ll be left w1th 12
learns unless 1t dec1des to
change tis present posttlon
agamst expanston Currently
every team must be m favor
before a new fran~htse can be
awarded
In the American League
only mne of 12 votes are
needed to admit a new
franchise and the owners m
the JUntor ctrcutt took
advantage of th s relaxed
postuon to stake a qmck
clatm to Toronto Ali but one
team voted for the new
expansion
When the Nattonal League
voled for expansiOn to
Toronto the Ph lad&lt; Iph a
Ptulhes and C ncmnall H I

'

'

,.
I

"'~•
I

ce•
••

sense of frustration

Rusty Staub can t go along wtth Clean Jones thmkmg here
e1ther
r honestly don t th nk you can accuse the Mets of bemg Illy
wh te he says Certamly Cleon can pomt out where the
Mets don t have too many black players rtght now but if you
show them a way of gettmg a Dave Parker or any other good
success over the parent club
black ballplayer they d Jump I koow they would
Alan Ashby homered to l!(JUie
Staub Is happy wtth the Ttgers and they re happy wtth hun
a f ve run nmth nmng rally
OUr ballpark s made for a left-handed httter ltke hun
to hft Cleveland over savs Ralph Houk the T~gers long ball mmded manager As a
Milwaukee 8-7 and Tom team we had onl) 30 homers by left-handed hitters last year
Pacwrek and Ctto Gaston had We had to go out and get some hilt ng because they stopped
scormg s ngles for Atlanta s p1tch ng to Wllhe Horton last year they pttched around hun
other spit squad n a 7-G wm We had nobody behmd hun E:arly m the year they respected
over C nc nna ll
Colbert enough but later Nate was havmg all kmds of
problems

Agamst the Bullets he had
mn e pomts and four rebounds
but helped the Blazers shut
off Washmgton s fast break m
the fmal penod
Washmgton whtch tratled
by as many as 11 pomts m the
thtrd per od reeled off a 13-4
outburst early m the !mal
pertod and took the lead 94
93 w•th 5 l4 left on Len
Robmson s three-po nt play
Then w tt Walton add ng
three free throws and rookie
guard !Janel Hollms four free

American League goes north, west
By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor
TAMPA F1a (UP! ) -The
Amertcan League reaches
out to the north and west
today by awarding expanston
franchtses for 1977 to Toronto
and Seattle
In reachmg outstde the
Uruted States for the ftrst
tune the Amertcan League
thus won a brtef terntortal
war with the National League
smce both ctrcutts announced
thetr mlenlton last week of
expanding to Toronto
Both Toronto and Seattle
had btd for the existmg San
Francisco Gtants when that
earn was for sale but they
lost out when the club was
sold to Robert Lurte a San

for

durmg the next e ght mmutes
and lost for the ftrst time m 23

F·7 175 Enduro

Walton key to Blazers' victory over Bullets
United Press International
The dreams that fill
Portland Coach Lenny
Wilkins head these days are
not of wmmng National
Basketball Assoctatton
champ•onshtps
They are simply of seemg
his team healthy
H1s Trail Blazer squad
playing as a healthy untt for
ts fifth stratght game
Thursday mght held off the
Washmgton Bullets for a 108105 Na!tonal Basketball

scorer

Brookfield was Tom Volartch
w1th 24 pomts Ramon Carson
had 17 and Larry Patsy 16
The second game was a
contest unt1l the m•ddle of the
thtrd quarter when Roth
depth took ts toll on fourth
ranked Wellsville
Tratlmg only 39-38 the

voted negative The Phllhes
satd they would change their
vote tf the Reds "ould also
but Cine nnah offtclals satd
they would not vote for
expansion
under
any
ctrcumstances

throws the Blazers stormed
back mto the lead wtth an 8-2
bur~t

lloyd Neal s three-pomt
play wtth 2 03 left gave
Portland a 106 100 lead 1t
never lost Neal another of
the Blazer casualttes thts
year plays w th a face mask
w protect a fractured cheek
bone that caused hun to m1ss
10 games earher m the
season

Wtth Neal and Walton we
have he ght strength and
movement added W lkms
And Holl10s why he may
JUSt become one of the NBA s
fmest guards before he s
through
Sidney Wtcks led Portland
With 25 pomts and Neal added
I 7 Hollms and Geoff Petr e
each had 16 Phtl Chemer had
24 Len Robmson 20 and Dave
B ng 17 for Wash10gton
In other games Buffalo

rtpped Cleveland 109 94
Phoemx trtpped Atlanta 107
98 and Hduston smothered
Golden State 123-104 There
were no games m the
Amencan Basketball
Assoctation
Braves 109 Cavaliers 94
Bob
McAdoo
Jtm
McM than and Randy Smtth
combmed for 86 pomts
mcludmg 28 m the fourth
penod to spark Buffalo
McAdoo led all scorers wtth
36 pOints while McM1lhan
added 25 and Smtih 25 Dtck
Snyder led Cleveland With 21

before Amer can League oflt
Ctais Wday With Labatt S
Brewery expected to wmd up
With the new franchiSe
Comedian Danny Kaye s
mvolved m the group wh ch
w1ll brmg baseball back to
Seattle
OWLS WON T MO\ E
DETROIT UP! ) - 1\1
Savill owner and pres dent of

Ue

Columbus Owls franch se
n the lnternatwnal Hockey
League sa1d Thursday he has
w thdrawn h1s request to
move the team to Grand
Rap1ds After extens ve
diSCUSSIOn w th the IHL
Board of Governors Sav II
sa d he would temporartly
scrap h s plans to relocate
despite heavy losses from low
attehdance m Columbus

N. WoW~J:JR.ft·

&gt;

OFFICE HOUt&lt;~ 9 30 to 12 2 to S (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS l-EAST COURT
ST POME OY

• Ad us ab e o k and shocks
• S mdesg n

gh we gh

Sudy

ame

Pr ces Plus Fre gh1

And Dealer Preparat on

J&amp;R SPORT
SHOP
Pomeroy 0

ON SALE NOWI
THE 'OFFICIAL'

CB

Two groups from Toronto
were to make presentat ons

• Powe and ""''"'"'"
ake on any e

SLANGUAGE
LANGUAGE
DICTIONARY
C1t1zens Band Jargon from A to
and Coast to Coast

v

z

by Lanle Dills

MlDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
ON THE T IN MIDDLEPORT

-

"'
"I

·~

�.·
~- Tbe Dally Senllnel.Middleoort-Pumel-ov. 0 .. Fritlav. March 211.19'16

! - The Daily Senlanel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Fraday, March 26,1976

Defend chap~ps
in semi-finals
COLUMBUS t UP! ) - Defen dm g Class AAA state
C'luunpton C o 1 u m b u s
l•nden McKmley put its Ohio
high school utle on the hne
today agaanst Middletown an
one of two senuhnC:tls games.
Tin.· Panthers u£ t'Oach Jene

Davis, who won last year
after a medaocre l ().ll regular
season, brought a 21 -:1 record
mto today's 11 :m am game
aga mst the Middies

Led b) All.&lt;Jlno guard Todd
Penn , the onl y re turnm g
starter , Linden had won nme
games m a row a nd was

lookang for ats third state title
111 the last 10 years. The
Panthers also won m 1967.
Middletown, wltich brought
a 22-2record mto the game, is
pa ced by 6-5 AAA Player of
the Year Butch Carter, who
a ve raged 24.5 points per
ga me dw·mg the season .
TI1e Middies were making
thea flrst a ppearance m the

fmal four sance 1959, but their
etghth in eoach Paul Walker's
30
ye ar s
The second AAA semifinals
contest , scheduled for 2:30

p m . ma tched Barberton ,
unbea ten In 24 ga mes,

against Toledo Scott, ~ Second.;anked Barberton,
whach knocked off No. !-rated
Canton McKmley to get to I he
semas , is the smallest team m
the tournament. The Magics
are led by the 6-1 Bodnar
twms, Mark and Marty, and
Carter Scott, also 6-1.
Toledo Scott, meanwhile, is
the btggest team m the AAA
held, headed by IKi Donald
Collms and 6-4 Greg Pope.
The Bulldogs were making
th e ar fifth lnp to the
seamfmals but stall looking for
th eir first tttle.
The Class A semifinals
games are scheduled for 6
and 9 30 p m.
The first ma tches unbeaten

Arcanum t 23-0 ) against
Pettisvtlle (24-1 ). Indtan
Valley South, making Its ftfth
straight appearance, takes on

Windham in the nightcap.
Indian Valley South
captured the 1972 smallschool title and was runner-

up to Marton Local last year.
Arcanum 1s also a former
state Class A titleholder, in
1956 and 1969, bul Windham
and Pettisv1lle will be making
their ftrst appearance.

, -----------,

:I
Pro
:
.
I
:StaPtlings !
Ea st ern Confer ence
Atlanhc Otvis 1on
W L Pet G B
Bos l on
48 22 686
P htl ad el ph ta 41 32 562 91,
BUffa lo
41 32 562 8 1 1
N ew York.
33 40 452 161 ,
Central DI VISIOn
W l
Pel GB
Wa sh mg ton
44 29 603
42 29 592
Cl ev el and
H ou ston
37 37 500 7 1 1
N ew Orlean s 33 40 452 ll
A tla n ta
28 44 , J89 151 2

B) UAVID MOFFIT
UP! Sports Writer
HILTON HEAD, S.C
I UP[) - Bob Murphy IS a
movie buff.
Not your ordmary buff,

GB

1
21

n so

'~

9

GB
15
lSI

1

15 1 ~

19

Thunday 's Results

Bu ffalo 109 Cl e'J e land 94
Por t land 108 Wa shmg ton 105
Ph oen 1x 107 A tlan ta 98
Houston 123 Gold en Stat e 104
Fnday ' s Games
D e tro d at Ch icago
Clev eland at Boston
Buffalo at Milwau k ee
A tlanta at Los Ang e les
Wa sh ington at New Orl ea ns

Basion

saturday ' s Games

at New York
Portland at Detr&lt;n t
Ch1 cago at washmgton
Kansas C1t y a t Phoen 1x
Milwaukee at Cle ve land
Ph ll ad elpt11a at Houston
Los Angeles at Gold en Stat e

ABA Standmgs
W
54
49
43
43
38
34

L
22
27
33
34
39

Pet

GB

D enver
711
N ew York
64 4 5
566 11
San Anton1o
K entuc ky
558 ll '1
lnd 1ana
494 J6l ~
St LOUIS
4]
442 2011
Vtrg1n1a
13 63 171 41
Thursday's Results
(No games schedul ed )
Fnday's Games
tnd1ana at Denver
Kentucky at New York
San Anton iO at Sf L OU IS
Saturday's Games
Kentucky a1 San Anton to
Denver vs V tr g tnta
a t Norfolk

including Hubert Green who
won at Dora! two weeks ago
and won last week at
Jacksonville.
Gibby Gilbert, Dave
Stockton, John Schroeder,
NHL Standtngs
By Untied Press lnternattonal
Peter
Baird,
mmd you He makes moVIes Butch
Campbell Conference
of hunself whenever he has Oosterhuis, Danny Edwards,
Patnck DIVISIOn
w I. I. pts gl ga
trouble wtth his golf swing. and Marty Fleckman all
X Phlla
49
11 15 113327 194
Tha t , explams Murphy , IS shared third place w1th Green
N Y I sl and er s 39 19 16 94 275 176
ho w he cured himself of at the start of today's play. Atlanta
32 32 11 75 249 223
s 25 4 1 9 59 245 315
drt vmg the ball too far left.
Hale Irwin, this year's N Y Ranger
SmyftU.' DIVISIOn
And that 's why he's the leading money winner and
w 1 t pts gf ga
29 29 17 75 228 24 4
leader gomg mto today's champton here in 1971 and Ch1 c ago
couv er
30 3114 74250 25 6
second round of the star- 1973, was 1n a huge group at 2- Van
27 35 13 67 232 212
5 1 LOlliS
ftlled, $215,000 Heritage Golf under 69 that mcluded Gary Mtnnesola 20 49 6 46 182 281
C!IV 12 50 l r.! 36 174 31 5
Classtc at Uus lurury tsland Player, J C. Snead, and Tom KansasWales
Conference
Wetskopf. Lee Trevmo was at
resort .
Norns DIVISIOn
w I. t. pts . gf ga
"I'd been hittmg three , four even-par 71.
x Monlrea l 5&lt;1 11 10118 31016 1
shots a round to the left and it
Defendmg champion Jack Ptttsburgh 33 30 12 78 319 281
Ntcklaus was upset with him- L os Ang el es 34 31 9 77 236 246
wa.c; really frustratmg me,"
Detrotl
25 40 9 59 203 27 6
the portly Flondian srud "I self after openmg wtth a l- Washington
9 55 10 28 207 365
went home after my fmish over 72 "wh1ch could just as
Adams D•v'"'""
w
. I t. pis gf ga
last weeli 1at Jacksonville) easily have been a 68. " But he Bos ton
47 \ &lt;I lJ 107 295 216
and took some stop-actiOn was a lot better off than Buffalo
42 20 12 96 :JlJ 174
33 28 14 80 279 25 5
former Hilton Head resident · Toronto
pictures
C allf~rnta
26 40 10 62 239 264
·'J htl balls for about five Johnny Mtller, winner here in IIclinched d1v1ston fttle
Thursday's Results
straight hours before I 1972 and 1974, who opened
Bos ton 4 ChiCago 2
flgured out what was wrong . w1th a 4-(lver 75
51 LOUIS 5 PittSburgh 2
My left hand was gnppmg the
Schroeder lay claun to the Philadelphta 4 NY Rangers 1
Fnday's Games
club too strong I was httting wtldest first round of all those
Buffalo at Washmg t on
the ball farther, but I had lost who shot in the 60s Thursday. NY
Islanders at Ca l 1tornta
Schroeder bogeyed four of Los Angeles at Van cou\l er
my rhythm "
Games
Murphy was nght on target the first sax holes to go 4 over, AtlantaSaturday's
at Detrott
Thursday when he shot a then birdied eight of the last Buffalo at Toronto
NY Rangers at Cht cag o
hv e-tnrdie, no bogey 66 in the 12. "The first six holes," said M
1nnesota al S t Lout s
opening round of the Hentage Schroeder w11h a shrug, "I Ph iladelphia at Boston
Classtc. That gave him a one- put the ball in the center of Kansas Ctly at Mon t r eal
stroke lead over veter an Don every fatrway and then V ancou ver at Los Ang eles
January and two ove r a large couldn 't hit the green "
group of 68 shooter s,
WHA Standmg!&gt;

The Almanac
United Press International
Today is Friday, March 26,
the 86th day of 1976 wtth 280 Io
follow.
The moon is approaching
its new phase
Ella F Anderson, dec . to
The mornmg s tars are
Curtis A Anderson , Paul Mercury and Venus.
De nver Anderson, Dorothy
The evening stars are
Ma r1 e Frum , formerly Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
Do rothy Mari e Anderson,
Those born on this date m
Harnsonv1lle
history are under the stgn of
Curtis A Anderson, Velma Aries
L Anderson to Paul Denver
Amencan poet Robert
Anders on, Dorothy Marte Frost was born March 26,
Frwn , Lots, Harrisonville. 1875.
John T Grueser, Juanita P.
In 1973, Sir Noel Coward,
Grueser to Edmond Grueser,
playwright,
actor and song1 2 acres. Sutton
writer,
died
at his home 10
Fred B Gqe glein , Barbara
Jamatca at the age of 73.
A. Goeglem to Ciltzens Nat!
In 1975, Senate and House
Bank, Lot 9, Rtggs Crest
conferees
finished action on a
Manor. Orange.
$22
8
bilhon
tax cut bdl. It
Alvm Reed, Roxte Reed to
was
signed
the
following day
Alvm Reed, Roxae Reed ,
by
Pres1den1
Ford.
111.37 acres, Ohve

Property
Transfers

By Un1ted Press International

East
w . I . t pts . gf ga
Cmcmnalt
Clev e land
New EngiM
lndpls s

3441 1 69274320
32 37 5 69 252 262
31 37 7 69 242 275
31 37 6 68229232
West
w. Lt . pts gf ga
Hou ston
47 26 0 94 301 244
Phoentx
36 32 6 78 276 259
San Otego
34 33 6 74 288 262
x Mmn
30 25 4 64 211 212
Canad1an
w 1. t pts gl ga
W tnntpeg
49 25 2 100 326 238
Quebec
44 27 4 92 330 296
Calgary
38 32 4 80 284 260
Edmon ron
26 46 5 57 255 321
Toronto
23 45 5 51 307 356
x Ottawa
14 26 1 -r:/1J4 17 2
X· Team dtsbanded
Thursday's Results
Quebec 7 Edmonton 5
lndtanapolls 4 Houston 3, ot
San Otego 9 Cincinnalt 1

Fr.day•s Games ·

Cmcinnat1 .;~t Houston
San Diego a! Phoenix
lnd1anapoi1S at Clev eland
Edmonton at Toronto
Calgary at New England
Saturday's Games
Edmonton at Toronto
San Diego at Phoen1x
Ctn c tnnaft a! Houston
Calgary at N ew England
lnd 1anapoi1S at Cleveland

Pollution control delays charged to
American Electric Power at Sporn

.'
I

CHARLESTON , W. Va
{AP J - The Aar Polluhon
Control Commtssion voted
Thursday to take Amencan
Electric Power Co. to court
for undue delay tn pollution
con trol compliance at Its
Phthp Sporn plant m Mason
County.
A request to the attorney
general to seek courtunposed penalttes was part of
a mollon in whtch the APCC
retected a proposed comphance schedule submitted
by the company .
The commtssion granted a
60-day stay, however, which
gives the f1rm that much time
to dec1de whether to appeal to
a court, submtt a new compliance schedule or close
down the four Sporn plant
Wlits involved m the action .
;

In its pleadings to the
APCC the giant utihty satd
air pollutwn control compliance at tls Sporn plant
depends on the outcome of
pendmg rate cases
Company attorneys told the
APCC construcllon, mcluding
mstallatwn of pollution control devices at the Mason
County plant, maght have to
be cut back II the state " " blic
Service CommissiOn at 11 the
Federal Power Commisston
require substantial refunds to
customers in pendmg rate
cases.
The Sporn plant origmally
was under APCC orders to
comply by last July I wtlh
particulate em1ss10n standards, bul the work has not
been done . Thur sday's
sesswn was a heannfll un ll

Contributions
stand close to
$14,000 goal

Wesfern confere nc e

By Un1ted Press lnternaltonat

Murphy out front
•
m Heritage play

CLEVELAND (UPI) Ci ty officials m Mansfield
and Northfield and the Ohio
Highway Patrol have been
sued in U.S District Court for
$3.5 million by two Cleveland
women wrongfully arrested
for auto theft.
The suit was filed by

NBA Sfa ndmg s
B y Umted Press Internationa l

Mtdwest Ol vi s1on
W L , Pet
M dwallk ee
31 4 1 431
D etro i t
29 4J 403
Kansas Ct t y
29 44 397
C1'1 tca go
306
Pacific OtVI SIOn
W. L Pet.
x Go ld en St at e 52 21 712
Sea ttle
J7 36 507
Los Ange les
37 37 500
P l'10eM.;
36 36 500
Por t land
JJ 40 452
li-Citnched diVISIOn tlfiC

Workmen's compensation
termed an utter failure

$3.5 million asked for
wrongful arrest action

SPEAKER AND MUSICIAN - The Rev. Donald Glass of Cambridge, Ohio will be guest
speaker and musictan at the Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church Monday, March 29 through
Son day, Apnl4, 7 30 p.m Friday, Saturday and Sunday rughts his wife and two daughters
wall be assastmg hun m the musical program. He wtll be usmg scene.(l-felt pictures with the
color wheel and black light each mght. Rev . Glass serves as Pastor at the Cambridge Free
Methodist Church, as well as Admintstrator of the cambridge Christian School. Before
entermg the evangehstic singmg field m 1960, he was an insurance execubve 17 years

.· •' '

the 'Poet's comer .

A thought for the day ·
Amencan poet Robert Frost
smd, "A chald mtsses the
unsaid goodmght, and falls
asleep with heartache."

THE IMPOSSIBLE PICTURE
I should llke to be an artist
Greater than this world has known .
I would want to pam! a ptcture
Of all thmgs m nature growmg
I would want to paint a picture
Of brtght heavens over these,
But however good thlli pacture,
Forbid 11 be my masterptece

·.· ·:·:··:-:-:-:-:·:·:·:·:,·:.-.

•'

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....

Contributions tp the aenal
ladder fire truck which has
been
purchased
from
Springfield, Ill ., have
reached approximately
$14,000 Pomeroy Ftre Chief
Charles Legar reported
today.
Addttional contrtbutors to
the fund drive include:
Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Blaettnar, Happy Harvester
Class of Trinity Church,
Eleanor Robson, Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Kloes, Mr and
Mrs . H C. Bnckles, Nellie
Tracy, Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Moore, Mr. and Mrs Richard
Poulin, P. R. Root Heating &amp;
Ventilating, Meigs Inn, Mr.
and Mrs. Harley R1ggs, Mrs.
Olan Genheimer, Mr and
Mrs . Hayman Barmtz, Mr .
and Mrs. Wilham Russell,
Mmersvtlle Umled Methodtst
Church Women, Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Frank, Mr. and Mrs.
James L. Fry, Asbury Umted
Methodtst Church , Earl H.
Elberfeld, Logan, Ohio, Twin
City Machine Shop, Mason
Ftre Dept , Metgs County
Jaycees, Pomeroy National
Bank, Robert Jones, Garnet
Wtlhamson, G. &amp; J Auto
Parts Co

Stanley E . Tolliver and
Kenard McDuffie of the
National Conference of Black
Lawyers on behalf of Glordia
D. Moorer, 28, and her
mother, Marion Pipkins.
They ask $2 million in
pumtive damages and $1.5
million in compensatory
damages.
The women were arrested
with Mrs. Moorer's husband
James by patrolmen last
September on Interstate 71
nea r
Mansfield. They
charged that the license plate
number of the automobile m
which they were riding when
arrested was erroneously
listed among those of stolen
cars on a computer index.
According to the suit, the
three were taken to the
Mansfield Jail, where police
pointed at and labeled them
as car thieves before a group
of elementary school children
visiting the jail.
The plaintiffs were held for
transfer to a jail in
Northfteld, where, according
to the computer, the car was
stolen. Charges were dropped
Oct 6 when they produced
proof of ownership in
Cuyahoga Falls Muncipal
Court.

WASHINGTON iUPJ) An environm ental group
Thursday lasted HOUS,!l
Hepubla can Le a der John
Rhodes and II oth er
congressmen as the "Dirty
Dozen" and saad 1t wall fight
thetr 1976 43-election efforts
"These men have ndden
roughshod over the natlon 's
envLronmental mterests for
too long," satd Demus Bass,
director of the Dtrty Duzen
Campatgn
He satd the g1 oup, the
p o liti c al c ampaagn
committee of Environmental
Actwn Inc , has retamed a
fulltune orgamzer and will
produce radio and ne\lspaper
ad s for use agamst the 12.
The 12 lawmakers , chosen
on the bas1s of the1r votes on
14 environmental issues in
1975 and oth er factors,

So that all could understand.
I would pamt a glorwus picture
Of the moWitams and the sea s,
But however good these ptctures,
Still I'd want a maslerptece
I should like to pamt a picture
Of the noblest k111d of home,
Of a friend that never fails one
When all else an hie as gone ;
Of the mercy drops of heaven,
Of a dew of golden deeds

Should they be earth 's greatest ptctures
Yet, I'd want a masterpiece
I would want to paint a picture
L1ke no man has ever seen
To portray the awful suffenng
Caused by war so cruel and mean .
I would want to paint this ptcture
O'er a fallen demon 's grave
I would wnte wtth blood upon Il
"Thts the pnce we mortal pay "
I would touch v.1th hfe the stones

key House commtttees, are :
Rhodes and Reps Goodloe
Byron , D-Md ; Donald
Clancy , B.&lt;Jh10 : James
Cleveland, ,R.N H.; Samuel
Devme, R.&lt;Jhto , John Flynt,
D-Ga ; Charles Grassley, RIowa ; Albert Johnson, RPenn. , Gene Snyder, R-Ky.;
Steve Symms, R-Idaho : Burt
Talcott, R-Cohf ; and
Richard White, D-Tex.
Rhodes called the list "a

Then to canopy this picture
T'wixl the earth and azure .sky
I would hang a peaceful dream
Of the years saihng by .
I'd paint a beam of Godly love
Gallmg out m words hke these
"We must bmld a better world
If we want enduring peace."

cheap pubhe1ty gunm1ck "

Alas, but these are tdle thoughts,
For the best of us are weak;
And the greatest artist even
Could not make his pamtmgs speak
Hence, heartaches and desolation,

And the bhght of human ktnd
Never make the nght 1mpress10ns
On our frall deluded mmds.
Only God the ommpotent
Could the sum total tell.
Only God the omniscient
Knows all pa111s of such a hell
Only God the ommpresenl
Sees the whole of human gnef
Only God could paint the picture,
My much demed masterpiece.
-Carney C Ball, P 0 . Box 119, Btdwell , Ohio 45614
" WHEN THE PAPER DOESN'T COME"
My father says the paper he readsam'tput up nght:
He finds a lot o' fault too, he does, pursuing it all m&amp;!J!;
He says there ain't a single thing in it fit to read.
And that it doesn't print the kindo ' stuff the people need;
He tosses it astde and says 1t 's strictly on the bum,
But ya ought to hear him holler when the paper doesn't come.

proposed new comphance
program submitted by AEP
It called for contract letting
by Oct. I for installatton of
electrostatic prectpttators m
four Sporn plant units and He reads about the weddin's and he snorts hke all get-out ;
complebon on dates in the He reads the social doin's with a most derisive shout.
And says they make the paper for the women folks alone
last four months of 1979.
He'll
read aboutthe parties, and he'll fume and fret and groan .
APCC Dtreclor Carl G
He
says
of information, it doesn't have a crumb.
Beard II said the plan
But
ya
oughta
hear hlm holler, when the paper doesn't come.
depended on "too many
He
IS
lhe
first
to
grab 1t and he reads it plumb clean thro•tgh,
conhngen&lt;.. ~" and was "no
He
doesn't
miss
an
item, or a want ad - !halts true
•
compliance ·hedule al all ."
He
says
they
don't
know
what
we
want,
the
darn
newspaper
Company Mtorney David
guys,
Flannery said because of the
I'm
gonna take a day, sometime and go and put 'em wise ;
pendmg rate cases "we can't
"Sometimes
1t seems as though they must be deaf and blind
say uneqwvocably that the
and
dumb
."
money 1s going lo be there
But ya ought ta hear him holler when the paper doesn't come
Oct. 1.
- Autbor unknown .
The plant on the Ohio River
Sounds hke I feel sometimes, when the paper seems full of
is owned jointly by AEP
Sports
and adyertisements, 'ca~ I don 't know about sports,
substdaaries Oh10 Power Co .
am
't got no money to buy nuthm' any way - nohow, 'cept I
and
and Appalachian Power Co
JUSt aalka myself! - Goldie Clenderun, Portland, Ohto

Bass sa1d there are
"aroWJd 50 other members of
C ongress
whose
environmental volmg records
are as bad or worse" than the
dozen . The 12 were smgled
out, he said, because they
have ''vtable opponents" m
primanes or the general
election .
Among the 14 votes
tabulated were those on strtp
mining ,
solar
energy
development, pestacide
regulation, water resources

and
automobtle
and
appliance effictency ralmgs.
Env1ronmenlahsts ' 'won''

HUNTINGTON, W Va Publiealwn of a report
illustrating and detailing both
past and future flood
problems and hazard areas
along the Oh10 River m
Meigs County was revealed
Wday by the U. S. Army
Corps of Engmeers.
The report, prepared for
the Ohto Department of,
Natural Resources, contams
maps , graphs and data whieh
show areas along the nver
subject to major floodmg,
although flood heights have
been substanhally reduced
by 32 existing upstream
The report is hlled, " FloOd
Plam anformataon , Ohio
Rtver, Athens County-Metgs
County, Ohw " The entare
rea ch of the Ohio River
bordenng the State of Ohio
has now been covered by H
such reports These reports
represent nearly $100,000 an
report prepar a liOn cos ts
exclusive of field and
hydraulic studies
In annoWlcing publicatiOn
of the Athens County - Metgs
County Report, Col. Scott B.
Smtth, Huntmgton Dtstnct

DeWalt 740
10" Powershop
With Leg Stand

Rhodes, an a statement,
chara cterized the list as "a
and Quick Set II
cheap pubhcity gunmtck and
a phony test of envtronmental
Dado
cont,-ern." He said he and
several other of the congress·
$362 if Purchased
men signed a letter asking
Separately.
the Fmr Campaagn PractiCes
Reg. $309.95
Committee to investigate the
"ethical questions ratsed by
such ratmgs .''
Now
The Drrty Dozen .group said
95
Only
Rhodes has used hif power as
Repubhcan leader "to oppose
nearly every measure
s upported
by
environmentalists" and only
TRUE VAWE
voted "correctlt' on one of
the 14 ballots, includmg votes
CHESTER, OHIO
on energy conservation, I ' - - - - - - - - - - - - '
pestictdes and the supersomc
tra
rt.

$279
BAUM

"Dinner Dotes"

'

MEAT
Fned

ch•clcen , roast
beef, hamburger steak ,

Hounder fish. ham.
l

VEGETABLES
Green

beans,

noodles,

corn, potatoes (baked,
ma s hed , ho"le fnes, ,

"If

must be geHmg near
lunch -time!
There goes
another pilot hurrying over to

The Steot mboat Inn!"

SALADS

PIE

r

Macaroni , tossed, slaw,
cottage cheese.

Strawberry, peach.

Delicious Char-Broiled Steaks

.

'

OPEN WEEKDAYS 6 A.M to 7·00 PM

~teamboat Inrz
" Re.l/ 01&lt;1 -f ' as/u oncc/ll owe C"Okill ~ " '

3rd St., Racme , OhiO

Daal 949 · 2515

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:•

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SEED CORN
By Funk's and Pioneer

FERTILIZER
By W. R. Grace

,.

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•

I

i'-•••••••••••·-~HI....H~....HI.................................
0

New crime
created by
House bill

SUNDAY
MAR. 28
8 A.M. to 2 P. M.

eight of the votes, Bass said.

:

·.
'

Engineers publish report
showing flooding hazards
Engineer, said the report was
prepared for the coun ty at the
request of the Ohto Department of Natural Resources
and the Meigs County
Comm1ss10ners A pamphlet
swnmartzmg the report also
has been published for
general dtstrtbuhon lo the
pubhc.
Copies of the pamphlet may
be obtamed free of charge
from the Metgs County

available free to all persons
havmg a "reasonable need "
for one.
The pubhcattons are meant
to provtde a better understanding of the flood
hazards in the area and to
lead to appropnate land use
management to reduce future
flood damage.
Persons desirmg floodtng
mformatwn should contact
the Flood Platn Management
Commtsswners' office at the Serv1ces Sectton of the Corps
courthouse or from the Ohto of Engmeers at the Federal
Department of Natural Office Buildmg in HunResources an Columbus . tmglon, W. Va.
Coptes of the report also are

reservoirs .

includmg their posillons on

Thai the mothers lam would tell ;
l would reproduce the battles
Wtth therr .burstmg screammg hell ,
All the suffermg and deslructwn ,
In a way that we might see;
All the hurt and gloom of war
And Its lingermg misery.

. NEW STORE - This Is the new Radio Shack store being operated on Pearl St. in
M~ddleport as_ a pari of Big Jtm's Plaza at Mtll and Locust. The store lS offermg spectal
prtc~s on Radto Shack eqmpment and accessories this week as a part of 1ts grand opening.
Radto Shack offers 2,450 different but related items in its merchandise.

DeWALT

Dirty dozen opposed by
environmentalist group·

I would want to pamt a ptcture
Of the very soul of man,
Of the greatest iruths of hfe

·-

·-

'l

COLUMBUS (UPI ) - The
Ohio House has reV1sed and
sent lo the Senate a btll
creating a new crime of
endangering occupants of
vehicles by shooting or
throwmg substances at them
The proposal was revived,
amended and passed on an 815 vote Thursday. It cleared
the chamber last January in
d11ferent form but was
immediately held up while
changes were contemplated.
As written, the legtslation
would apply to any shooting
or " substance " thrown
purposely at a motor vehtcle,
atrcraft, train or watercraft,
whether the vehicle 1s moving
or not.
One of the prevtous provtswns, whtch would have
established a new crune of
shoollng or throwing objects
from, rather than at, motor
vehicles, was taken out of the
bill Thursday. Such crones
are covered under other
sections of law.
House members also voted
to reduce the penalty from a
second-degree felony to a
first-degree misdemeanor
Conviction would have carried a penalty of two to 15
years in prison and a max·
imwn $7,500 line. Under the
new language, it would carry
a maximum six-month jail
term and $I,OOO fine.
Rep. Alan El. Norris, RWesterville, explained that a
death from a shooting or
rock-throwing incident
involving a motor vehicle
would automatically call for
a manslaughter charge.
The legislation stems from
an inculent on the Ohio
Turnpike 1n which an Oh10
State University student dted
from mjurles sustained when
a chunk C!f asphalt was
thrown from an overpass and
struck her automobile.
The House rewrote the
language to make the new
crime apply to throwing
rocks, bricks, acid, paint,
mud, water balloons and
snowballs. It refused to
accept an amendment that
would have exempted stray
mllllllles from a snowball
fight.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holzer Medical Center
)Discharges, March 25)
Mark Beekman, Dtonee
Brace, Charles Burt, Arthur
Cam, Franklin Chatlleld,
Ginny Day, Ehzabeth Dotson,
Ehjah Estep, John Francis,
Bermce Frazee, Jenmfer
Gtllispte, Fern Holbrook,
Wilma Houck , Mrs. Thomas
King and mfanl son, Kathleen
Lawless, Grace Lewis, Della
McCoy. Mrs Robert McGuire
and infant son , Samuel
McKinney , Bruce Neal, Mary
Neville, Russell Notter, Roy
Pollock,
Gladys
Roy,
Marjorie Rutherford, Linda,
Ricky and Roger Scharttger,
Ehzabeth Schneider, Russell
Slayton, Brenda Stewart, Ira
Watson , Albert Webb, Mrs.
Roger White and anfant
daughter, Belly Woodall,
Monetta Woo druff and James
Wyckoff.
(Births, March 251
Mr. and Mrs. John R Dohn,

son, Langsvalle , Mr and Mrs.
Mark
Pterce ,
son ,
Middleport ; Mr. and Mrs.
Rtchard L Roush, daughter,
Pt. Pleasant, W Va.

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Demse
Cox, Roy Eilts, Edna Durst,
Mrs. James Hartley, Nellie
Kent. Gertrude Bateson ,
Anthony Cemtm, all Pomt
Pleasant, James Hammick,
Cltfford MW1cy, Pomeroy;
Mrs . Cecal Bales, Leon; Mrs
William Flora, Apple Grove;
Mrs. John Vance, Jr., Bidwell; Mrs. Herbert Whithngton , son, Robertsburg;
Mrs.
Greg
Kennedy ,
daughter, Pomt Pleasant ;
James Napter, Ashton: Mrs
Andrea Phalen , New Haven;
Mrs.
Harvey
Lipton,
Galllpohs :
Wandaleen
Glover. Mason, and John
Parsons, Buffalo.

Flood report released
by corps of engineers

COLUMBUS iUPI ) - A g•ves n se to a buse and
joint legtslallve committee preferential treatment. "
ended
a
five-month
''Workmen's compensation
investigation of
state tsoneofthe largest msurance
Workmen's
Compensation companies 111 the state, If not
Thursday and coocluded the the largest," satd Headley.
system was an " utter " We need guidelines so any
practitioner or any employe
failure. "
State Sen . David L . would know what his chances
He adley, D-Barberton , are of recovery of a claim."
chairman of the Joint Select
In addition to the lack of
Committee on Workmen 's administrative guidelines in
clatms,
Compensatton ,
sa1d handhng
the
admmistration of
the committee
also
cited
multimillion-dollar insurance "evidence (which J shows
system " swings like a that rehabilitation is handled
pendulum, depending on who now on a haphazard basis and
is in control."
that incentives often dnve the
" It appears that if you get a clatmant
away
from
certain ( Workmen's rehabilitation ioto permanent
Compensabon ) examiner or disa bihty, never to work
a
certam
exammmg again."
physician, you can gwde your
Also , the committee cited
claim," Headley said. 11 We duahty m admin1strat10n of
recommend that be done on a the system between the
'lot' basis."
Bureau of Workm en's
Headley
said
the Compensation and the Ohio
committee 's staff is still
pursuing possible criminal
charges stemmmg from
evidence the committee
heard from 67 witnesses since
October 11. He said the
Legislative Servi c e
Commission is in the process
of drafting a bill to correct
some of the madequactes of
By GENE CADDES
the system, as outlmed 111 the
UPI Sports Writer
special committee ' s 205
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! ) recommendations.
Headley said he hopes the Eldon Miller, who guided
bill to correct the system wall Western Michigan to the Midbe heard simultaneously in Amertcan Conference chamboth the House and Senate pionship and a 25-3 overall
and be passed 111 thts session record the past season, today
of the Oh10 General was named head basketball
coach at Ohio State.
Assembly.
Foremost among the 205
Miller. 36, a native of
shortcommgs in Workmen's Gnadenhutten, Ohio, and a
Compensation, as outlined in Wittenberg
University
the final, 89-page report, was graduate, succeeds Fred
"the utter fatlure of the Taylor, who announced his
present system to provtde resignation Feb 5 after 18
adequate regulations, " which years as Buckeye coach
"destroys the effective
The nammg of Miller ends
operatwn of the system and a seven-week search by Ohio

Indus tri a l Co mn11 s s w n ,
which th e report s atd
~ ·cc rta ml y md!Cate that the
h~o o &lt;JgeJ1Ctcs compete ns
often as U1ey coopera te ."
"In the fa ce of the poh cy
confl tct, the result ts often a
sta ndoff
between
the
agencies rather than orderly
resolutton of dtfferences ,"
aecordm g to the report
The comprehensive study
was authorized by a JOint
legtslative resolution.
Th e Ge neral Assembly 1s
mqUiry was prompted by
publis hed
reports
of
widespread waste, meqmt1es
wathm the system and
dif£ ere n ces b et w een
operation of the bureau and
lndustrtal CommtSSion.
''There hasn 't been any
conststency," satd Headley,
"and l attnbute that to a lack
of guidelines."
The final report was s ~n ed

Bartels fifth
(Continued from page I)
Ohlinger , Midd leport Second ; Bernard D. Gtlkey, Mtddleport
'11urd; Dorothy I. McGuffm, Middleport Fourth ; Eldon
Morris, Bradbury, Lola Clark, Harnsonvall e, Cora B. Beegle,
1\aune Vtllage, Ernest E Sisson, Jr , Sy racuse: W1U1am F
ll arns, Mmersvtllc; Evelyn Clark, Pomeroy First; Robert
Hysell, Pomeroy Sel'Ond , Charles W. I.egar , Sr ., Pomeroy
Third . IA!slie F Fultz, Pomeroy Fourth.

by all eight members of the
spectal co mmitte e, but
Head le y sa1d " not ever y
members agreed With ever y
rCt'OmtJiendation ' 1
'1' am proud of the
anda vadual effort ea ch
member of the L'U mmtttee
and the &lt;:Omm ittee staff put
forth to come up wtth this
com pr ehe nsive
report ,''
HeaaUey saad to leg astatave
leaders m D tra nsm1ttal letter
Wtth the report.

Buy Your
Easter Shoes

Now!
While Selection
Is Good

heritage house
1 .

Middleport. Ohio

BUY NOW
AND
SAVE
Miller named
ON
Bucks' coach

P~t}&gt;~'·;~th~;· ·: :·.·d~~g~ter. ~- ~'~. ·;i~·h·; .. ;~··:
(Continued from page I)
daughter was "the first
civilian casually of the
terrorist assaults In this
country."
Mrs. Hearst, whose
husband, Randolph, Is the
president of the San
Franeiseo Examiner, said
bombings of the Hearst
Castle at San Simeon and
mountain retreat In norlhern California prove her

fearing the SLA while she
was underground with the
terrorist group. The SLA
had kidnaped Miss Hearst
In February 1974.
She also said the bornbings of the Hears!
properties show "Polly
never dared come home
because she knew 'thai her
terrorist captors were
capable of bombing and
killing."

Rio thine/ads at
Marshall Saturday
HUNTINGTON, W. Va Track and field continue to
hold the spotlight on the
Marshall Umverstty sprmg
sports scene with the v1s1t of

Rio Grande {Ohio) College
and West Liberty ( WVA)
College here Saturday for a
triangular meet wtlh the
Thundermg Herd.
The meet, whtch begins at 3
HUNTINGTON
8 of charge lo all persons
Pubhcallon of a report having a reasonable need for p.m ., is the only home Intercollegiate event on the
illustrating and delatlmg both a copy.
The publications are meant weekend schedule, although
past and future flood
problems and hazard areas to provtde a better un- the Herd baseball team has
along the Ohw River m Galha derstanding of the flood its home debut scheduled the
County was announced today hazards m the area and to followmg Monday (March 29 )
by the U. S. Army Corps of lead to appropnate land use against Maraetta College.
Early events this week had
management to reduce future
Eng meers.
the baseball team vtsiting
The report , whtch was flood damages
Persons destrmg noodmg Morehead State for a
prepared for the Ohio
Department of Natural mformation should contact doubleheader and the tenms
Resources, contatns maps, the Flood Plain Management team at home wtth Morehead
graphs and data which show Services Sectton of the Corps State, both Tuesday ( Ma~ch
areas along the Ohio whtch of Engineers at the Federal 23) .
The women 's track team ,
are subject to major floodmg, Offtce Bualding in Hunwhich
made ats debut m the
tington,
W.
Va.
although flood hetghts have
been substantially reduced
by 35 extshng upstream
reservOirs
The report 1s titled "Flood
Washington.
Plain Information, Ohio
General Manager Alex DelLOS ANGELES iUPI) - vecchio said club doctors
R•ver, GaJHa County, Ohio. 11
The entire reach of the Ohw Playboy superstar George reported only that the
River bordermg the State of Best of England will make his league's leading rookie goal
Ohio has now been covered by Southern Gahforma debut scorer
was
resting
l4 such reports . These this weekend when the Los comfortably al Detrott
reports represent nearly Angeles Aztecs face the Osteopathtc Hospttal. The cut
$100,000 m report preparation Seattle Sounders in a pair of on Bergeron's eyelid required
costs exclustve of field and North Amencan Soccer four stitches to do,., .
League exhibitions.
hydraulic sludaes.
The teams are scheduled to
In announcing pubhcation
play
at the Santa Ana Bowl
of the Galha County report,
Friday
night and at the Rose
Colonel Scott B. Smtih,
Bowl
in
Pasadena Sunday.
Huntington District
The
Aztecs
opened !hear
Engmeer, satd the report was
season
on
the
road
last week
prepared for the coWJiy at the
against
Seattle.
Best
had an
request of the Ohio Depart·
assast
in
each
game,
helpmg
ment of Natural Resources
and the Gallia County Los Angeles to 1-{) and 3-{)
Commisstoners. A pamphlet victories
swnmarizmg the report also
Baskets~.~~~$~~
has been published for
general distribution to the
Sprays.~~?~.'l500
pubhc
DETROIT iUPI) - The
Copies of the pamphlet may
Call: 992-5560
Detroit
Red Wings heard
be obtained free of charge
encouraging
from the Galha County nothlllg
Thursday
on
the
condatwn of
Commissioner's offtce in the
thear
star
rook1e
forward,
Courty Courthouse or from
Michel
Bergeron,
who
the OhiO Department of
suffered
a
serious
cut
above
59 N. Second St.
Natural
Resources,
Columbus, Ohao. Copies of the hts right eye in a game
Middleport.
Ohio
Wednesday night against
report also are available Ire~

SYMPATHY
FLOWERS

Vases ..~~.~~. 'ltr

Hall of Fame Relays last
Saturday, visits Morehead
State \h as Saturday. Also on
the road thts weekend Is the
tennis team wh1ch vts1ts
llree Kentucky schools Transylvama and Centre on
Saturday and the Umverstly
of Kentucky on Sunday.
The men's golf team
doesn't have another In·
tercollegtate match until
Aprtl 2-3 when the Herd
linksters host the Marshall
Untversily Jnvttahonal at the
Guyan Golf and Country
Club. However, Coach Joe
Feaganes' team wtll slay m
competlltve form wtlh two
exhibi t10n matches lhls
. weekend, playing the Guy an
Club all-stars in an exhlbthon
match Saturday at Guyan
and the Sleepy Hollow
Country Club all-stars
SWJday on that club's course
m Hurncane, W. Va

State, reportedly delayed by
an attempt to lure Bobby
Knight away from Indiana .
Other candidates who had
been cons1dered strong
candtdates for the post
mcluded form er Buckeye
players Don DeVoe, released
recently •by Vtrgmaa Tech,
and Ball Hosket, who played
professional ball with New
York and Buffalo of the NBA
but had no coa ching

Massey-Ferguson
lawn/garden
tractors
and mowers!

expenence .

Miller, a former player at
Wtttenberg, served as an
assistant to Tiger llily Mears
upon graduation and took
over the head coachmg JOb at
his alma mater when Mears
moved to the Universit~ of
Tennessee . Mlller was only 23
at the time.
He held the head job at
Wtttenberg for etght yea rs,
compiling a 142-55 mark , won
five
Ohio
Conference
champiOnships and was
runnerup m the NCAA
College DiV1sion Tournament
m 1963, when his overall
record was 26-2
When Miller took over at
Western m 1970, the Broncos
had suffered through seven
straight lostng seasons ,
mcludmg 6-17 the year
before.
In Mtller's sJX years at
Western, he had four winmng
seasons, includmg the last
three , and a combmed 86-68
mark.

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! - The Daily Senlanel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Fraday, March 26,1976

Defend chap~ps
in semi-finals
COLUMBUS t UP! ) - Defen dm g Class AAA state
C'luunpton C o 1 u m b u s
l•nden McKmley put its Ohio
high school utle on the hne
today agaanst Middletown an
one of two senuhnC:tls games.
Tin.· Panthers u£ t'Oach Jene

Davis, who won last year
after a medaocre l ().ll regular
season, brought a 21 -:1 record
mto today's 11 :m am game
aga mst the Middies

Led b) All.&lt;Jlno guard Todd
Penn , the onl y re turnm g
starter , Linden had won nme
games m a row a nd was

lookang for ats third state title
111 the last 10 years. The
Panthers also won m 1967.
Middletown, wltich brought
a 22-2record mto the game, is
pa ced by 6-5 AAA Player of
the Year Butch Carter, who
a ve raged 24.5 points per
ga me dw·mg the season .
TI1e Middies were making
thea flrst a ppearance m the

fmal four sance 1959, but their
etghth in eoach Paul Walker's
30
ye ar s
The second AAA semifinals
contest , scheduled for 2:30

p m . ma tched Barberton ,
unbea ten In 24 ga mes,

against Toledo Scott, ~ Second.;anked Barberton,
whach knocked off No. !-rated
Canton McKmley to get to I he
semas , is the smallest team m
the tournament. The Magics
are led by the 6-1 Bodnar
twms, Mark and Marty, and
Carter Scott, also 6-1.
Toledo Scott, meanwhile, is
the btggest team m the AAA
held, headed by IKi Donald
Collms and 6-4 Greg Pope.
The Bulldogs were making
th e ar fifth lnp to the
seamfmals but stall looking for
th eir first tttle.
The Class A semifinals
games are scheduled for 6
and 9 30 p m.
The first ma tches unbeaten

Arcanum t 23-0 ) against
Pettisvtlle (24-1 ). Indtan
Valley South, making Its ftfth
straight appearance, takes on

Windham in the nightcap.
Indian Valley South
captured the 1972 smallschool title and was runner-

up to Marton Local last year.
Arcanum 1s also a former
state Class A titleholder, in
1956 and 1969, bul Windham
and Pettisv1lle will be making
their ftrst appearance.

, -----------,

:I
Pro
:
.
I
:StaPtlings !
Ea st ern Confer ence
Atlanhc Otvis 1on
W L Pet G B
Bos l on
48 22 686
P htl ad el ph ta 41 32 562 91,
BUffa lo
41 32 562 8 1 1
N ew York.
33 40 452 161 ,
Central DI VISIOn
W l
Pel GB
Wa sh mg ton
44 29 603
42 29 592
Cl ev el and
H ou ston
37 37 500 7 1 1
N ew Orlean s 33 40 452 ll
A tla n ta
28 44 , J89 151 2

B) UAVID MOFFIT
UP! Sports Writer
HILTON HEAD, S.C
I UP[) - Bob Murphy IS a
movie buff.
Not your ordmary buff,

GB

1
21

n so

'~

9

GB
15
lSI

1

15 1 ~

19

Thunday 's Results

Bu ffalo 109 Cl e'J e land 94
Por t land 108 Wa shmg ton 105
Ph oen 1x 107 A tlan ta 98
Houston 123 Gold en Stat e 104
Fnday ' s Games
D e tro d at Ch icago
Clev eland at Boston
Buffalo at Milwau k ee
A tlanta at Los Ang e les
Wa sh ington at New Orl ea ns

Basion

saturday ' s Games

at New York
Portland at Detr&lt;n t
Ch1 cago at washmgton
Kansas C1t y a t Phoen 1x
Milwaukee at Cle ve land
Ph ll ad elpt11a at Houston
Los Angeles at Gold en Stat e

ABA Standmgs
W
54
49
43
43
38
34

L
22
27
33
34
39

Pet

GB

D enver
711
N ew York
64 4 5
566 11
San Anton1o
K entuc ky
558 ll '1
lnd 1ana
494 J6l ~
St LOUIS
4]
442 2011
Vtrg1n1a
13 63 171 41
Thursday's Results
(No games schedul ed )
Fnday's Games
tnd1ana at Denver
Kentucky at New York
San Anton iO at Sf L OU IS
Saturday's Games
Kentucky a1 San Anton to
Denver vs V tr g tnta
a t Norfolk

including Hubert Green who
won at Dora! two weeks ago
and won last week at
Jacksonville.
Gibby Gilbert, Dave
Stockton, John Schroeder,
NHL Standtngs
By Untied Press lnternattonal
Peter
Baird,
mmd you He makes moVIes Butch
Campbell Conference
of hunself whenever he has Oosterhuis, Danny Edwards,
Patnck DIVISIOn
w I. I. pts gl ga
trouble wtth his golf swing. and Marty Fleckman all
X Phlla
49
11 15 113327 194
Tha t , explams Murphy , IS shared third place w1th Green
N Y I sl and er s 39 19 16 94 275 176
ho w he cured himself of at the start of today's play. Atlanta
32 32 11 75 249 223
s 25 4 1 9 59 245 315
drt vmg the ball too far left.
Hale Irwin, this year's N Y Ranger
SmyftU.' DIVISIOn
And that 's why he's the leading money winner and
w 1 t pts gf ga
29 29 17 75 228 24 4
leader gomg mto today's champton here in 1971 and Ch1 c ago
couv er
30 3114 74250 25 6
second round of the star- 1973, was 1n a huge group at 2- Van
27 35 13 67 232 212
5 1 LOlliS
ftlled, $215,000 Heritage Golf under 69 that mcluded Gary Mtnnesola 20 49 6 46 182 281
C!IV 12 50 l r.! 36 174 31 5
Classtc at Uus lurury tsland Player, J C. Snead, and Tom KansasWales
Conference
Wetskopf. Lee Trevmo was at
resort .
Norns DIVISIOn
w I. t. pts . gf ga
"I'd been hittmg three , four even-par 71.
x Monlrea l 5&lt;1 11 10118 31016 1
shots a round to the left and it
Defendmg champion Jack Ptttsburgh 33 30 12 78 319 281
Ntcklaus was upset with him- L os Ang el es 34 31 9 77 236 246
wa.c; really frustratmg me,"
Detrotl
25 40 9 59 203 27 6
the portly Flondian srud "I self after openmg wtth a l- Washington
9 55 10 28 207 365
went home after my fmish over 72 "wh1ch could just as
Adams D•v'"'""
w
. I t. pis gf ga
last weeli 1at Jacksonville) easily have been a 68. " But he Bos ton
47 \ &lt;I lJ 107 295 216
and took some stop-actiOn was a lot better off than Buffalo
42 20 12 96 :JlJ 174
33 28 14 80 279 25 5
former Hilton Head resident · Toronto
pictures
C allf~rnta
26 40 10 62 239 264
·'J htl balls for about five Johnny Mtller, winner here in IIclinched d1v1ston fttle
Thursday's Results
straight hours before I 1972 and 1974, who opened
Bos ton 4 ChiCago 2
flgured out what was wrong . w1th a 4-(lver 75
51 LOUIS 5 PittSburgh 2
My left hand was gnppmg the
Schroeder lay claun to the Philadelphta 4 NY Rangers 1
Fnday's Games
club too strong I was httting wtldest first round of all those
Buffalo at Washmg t on
the ball farther, but I had lost who shot in the 60s Thursday. NY
Islanders at Ca l 1tornta
Schroeder bogeyed four of Los Angeles at Van cou\l er
my rhythm "
Games
Murphy was nght on target the first sax holes to go 4 over, AtlantaSaturday's
at Detrott
Thursday when he shot a then birdied eight of the last Buffalo at Toronto
NY Rangers at Cht cag o
hv e-tnrdie, no bogey 66 in the 12. "The first six holes," said M
1nnesota al S t Lout s
opening round of the Hentage Schroeder w11h a shrug, "I Ph iladelphia at Boston
Classtc. That gave him a one- put the ball in the center of Kansas Ctly at Mon t r eal
stroke lead over veter an Don every fatrway and then V ancou ver at Los Ang eles
January and two ove r a large couldn 't hit the green "
group of 68 shooter s,
WHA Standmg!&gt;

The Almanac
United Press International
Today is Friday, March 26,
the 86th day of 1976 wtth 280 Io
follow.
The moon is approaching
its new phase
Ella F Anderson, dec . to
The mornmg s tars are
Curtis A Anderson , Paul Mercury and Venus.
De nver Anderson, Dorothy
The evening stars are
Ma r1 e Frum , formerly Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
Do rothy Mari e Anderson,
Those born on this date m
Harnsonv1lle
history are under the stgn of
Curtis A Anderson, Velma Aries
L Anderson to Paul Denver
Amencan poet Robert
Anders on, Dorothy Marte Frost was born March 26,
Frwn , Lots, Harrisonville. 1875.
John T Grueser, Juanita P.
In 1973, Sir Noel Coward,
Grueser to Edmond Grueser,
playwright,
actor and song1 2 acres. Sutton
writer,
died
at his home 10
Fred B Gqe glein , Barbara
Jamatca at the age of 73.
A. Goeglem to Ciltzens Nat!
In 1975, Senate and House
Bank, Lot 9, Rtggs Crest
conferees
finished action on a
Manor. Orange.
$22
8
bilhon
tax cut bdl. It
Alvm Reed, Roxte Reed to
was
signed
the
following day
Alvm Reed, Roxae Reed ,
by
Pres1den1
Ford.
111.37 acres, Ohve

Property
Transfers

By Un1ted Press International

East
w . I . t pts . gf ga
Cmcmnalt
Clev e land
New EngiM
lndpls s

3441 1 69274320
32 37 5 69 252 262
31 37 7 69 242 275
31 37 6 68229232
West
w. Lt . pts gf ga
Hou ston
47 26 0 94 301 244
Phoentx
36 32 6 78 276 259
San Otego
34 33 6 74 288 262
x Mmn
30 25 4 64 211 212
Canad1an
w 1. t pts gl ga
W tnntpeg
49 25 2 100 326 238
Quebec
44 27 4 92 330 296
Calgary
38 32 4 80 284 260
Edmon ron
26 46 5 57 255 321
Toronto
23 45 5 51 307 356
x Ottawa
14 26 1 -r:/1J4 17 2
X· Team dtsbanded
Thursday's Results
Quebec 7 Edmonton 5
lndtanapolls 4 Houston 3, ot
San Otego 9 Cincinnalt 1

Fr.day•s Games ·

Cmcinnat1 .;~t Houston
San Diego a! Phoenix
lnd1anapoi1S at Clev eland
Edmonton at Toronto
Calgary at New England
Saturday's Games
Edmonton at Toronto
San Diego at Phoen1x
Ctn c tnnaft a! Houston
Calgary at N ew England
lnd 1anapoi1S at Cleveland

Pollution control delays charged to
American Electric Power at Sporn

.'
I

CHARLESTON , W. Va
{AP J - The Aar Polluhon
Control Commtssion voted
Thursday to take Amencan
Electric Power Co. to court
for undue delay tn pollution
con trol compliance at Its
Phthp Sporn plant m Mason
County.
A request to the attorney
general to seek courtunposed penalttes was part of
a mollon in whtch the APCC
retected a proposed comphance schedule submitted
by the company .
The commtssion granted a
60-day stay, however, which
gives the f1rm that much time
to dec1de whether to appeal to
a court, submtt a new compliance schedule or close
down the four Sporn plant
Wlits involved m the action .
;

In its pleadings to the
APCC the giant utihty satd
air pollutwn control compliance at tls Sporn plant
depends on the outcome of
pendmg rate cases
Company attorneys told the
APCC construcllon, mcluding
mstallatwn of pollution control devices at the Mason
County plant, maght have to
be cut back II the state " " blic
Service CommissiOn at 11 the
Federal Power Commisston
require substantial refunds to
customers in pendmg rate
cases.
The Sporn plant origmally
was under APCC orders to
comply by last July I wtlh
particulate em1ss10n standards, bul the work has not
been done . Thur sday's
sesswn was a heannfll un ll

Contributions
stand close to
$14,000 goal

Wesfern confere nc e

By Un1ted Press lnternaltonat

Murphy out front
•
m Heritage play

CLEVELAND (UPI) Ci ty officials m Mansfield
and Northfield and the Ohio
Highway Patrol have been
sued in U.S District Court for
$3.5 million by two Cleveland
women wrongfully arrested
for auto theft.
The suit was filed by

NBA Sfa ndmg s
B y Umted Press Internationa l

Mtdwest Ol vi s1on
W L , Pet
M dwallk ee
31 4 1 431
D etro i t
29 4J 403
Kansas Ct t y
29 44 397
C1'1 tca go
306
Pacific OtVI SIOn
W. L Pet.
x Go ld en St at e 52 21 712
Sea ttle
J7 36 507
Los Ange les
37 37 500
P l'10eM.;
36 36 500
Por t land
JJ 40 452
li-Citnched diVISIOn tlfiC

Workmen's compensation
termed an utter failure

$3.5 million asked for
wrongful arrest action

SPEAKER AND MUSICIAN - The Rev. Donald Glass of Cambridge, Ohio will be guest
speaker and musictan at the Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church Monday, March 29 through
Son day, Apnl4, 7 30 p.m Friday, Saturday and Sunday rughts his wife and two daughters
wall be assastmg hun m the musical program. He wtll be usmg scene.(l-felt pictures with the
color wheel and black light each mght. Rev . Glass serves as Pastor at the Cambridge Free
Methodist Church, as well as Admintstrator of the cambridge Christian School. Before
entermg the evangehstic singmg field m 1960, he was an insurance execubve 17 years

.· •' '

the 'Poet's comer .

A thought for the day ·
Amencan poet Robert Frost
smd, "A chald mtsses the
unsaid goodmght, and falls
asleep with heartache."

THE IMPOSSIBLE PICTURE
I should llke to be an artist
Greater than this world has known .
I would want to pam! a ptcture
Of all thmgs m nature growmg
I would want to paint a picture
Of brtght heavens over these,
But however good thlli pacture,
Forbid 11 be my masterptece

·.· ·:·:··:-:-:-:-:·:·:·:·:,·:.-.

•'

.·. · ...· ·:

....

Contributions tp the aenal
ladder fire truck which has
been
purchased
from
Springfield, Ill ., have
reached approximately
$14,000 Pomeroy Ftre Chief
Charles Legar reported
today.
Addttional contrtbutors to
the fund drive include:
Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Blaettnar, Happy Harvester
Class of Trinity Church,
Eleanor Robson, Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Kloes, Mr and
Mrs . H C. Bnckles, Nellie
Tracy, Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Moore, Mr. and Mrs Richard
Poulin, P. R. Root Heating &amp;
Ventilating, Meigs Inn, Mr.
and Mrs. Harley R1ggs, Mrs.
Olan Genheimer, Mr and
Mrs . Hayman Barmtz, Mr .
and Mrs. Wilham Russell,
Mmersvtlle Umled Methodtst
Church Women, Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Frank, Mr. and Mrs.
James L. Fry, Asbury Umted
Methodtst Church , Earl H.
Elberfeld, Logan, Ohio, Twin
City Machine Shop, Mason
Ftre Dept , Metgs County
Jaycees, Pomeroy National
Bank, Robert Jones, Garnet
Wtlhamson, G. &amp; J Auto
Parts Co

Stanley E . Tolliver and
Kenard McDuffie of the
National Conference of Black
Lawyers on behalf of Glordia
D. Moorer, 28, and her
mother, Marion Pipkins.
They ask $2 million in
pumtive damages and $1.5
million in compensatory
damages.
The women were arrested
with Mrs. Moorer's husband
James by patrolmen last
September on Interstate 71
nea r
Mansfield. They
charged that the license plate
number of the automobile m
which they were riding when
arrested was erroneously
listed among those of stolen
cars on a computer index.
According to the suit, the
three were taken to the
Mansfield Jail, where police
pointed at and labeled them
as car thieves before a group
of elementary school children
visiting the jail.
The plaintiffs were held for
transfer to a jail in
Northfteld, where, according
to the computer, the car was
stolen. Charges were dropped
Oct 6 when they produced
proof of ownership in
Cuyahoga Falls Muncipal
Court.

WASHINGTON iUPJ) An environm ental group
Thursday lasted HOUS,!l
Hepubla can Le a der John
Rhodes and II oth er
congressmen as the "Dirty
Dozen" and saad 1t wall fight
thetr 1976 43-election efforts
"These men have ndden
roughshod over the natlon 's
envLronmental mterests for
too long," satd Demus Bass,
director of the Dtrty Duzen
Campatgn
He satd the g1 oup, the
p o liti c al c ampaagn
committee of Environmental
Actwn Inc , has retamed a
fulltune orgamzer and will
produce radio and ne\lspaper
ad s for use agamst the 12.
The 12 lawmakers , chosen
on the bas1s of the1r votes on
14 environmental issues in
1975 and oth er factors,

So that all could understand.
I would pamt a glorwus picture
Of the moWitams and the sea s,
But however good these ptctures,
Still I'd want a maslerptece
I should like to pamt a picture
Of the noblest k111d of home,
Of a friend that never fails one
When all else an hie as gone ;
Of the mercy drops of heaven,
Of a dew of golden deeds

Should they be earth 's greatest ptctures
Yet, I'd want a masterpiece
I would want to paint a picture
L1ke no man has ever seen
To portray the awful suffenng
Caused by war so cruel and mean .
I would want to paint this ptcture
O'er a fallen demon 's grave
I would wnte wtth blood upon Il
"Thts the pnce we mortal pay "
I would touch v.1th hfe the stones

key House commtttees, are :
Rhodes and Reps Goodloe
Byron , D-Md ; Donald
Clancy , B.&lt;Jh10 : James
Cleveland, ,R.N H.; Samuel
Devme, R.&lt;Jhto , John Flynt,
D-Ga ; Charles Grassley, RIowa ; Albert Johnson, RPenn. , Gene Snyder, R-Ky.;
Steve Symms, R-Idaho : Burt
Talcott, R-Cohf ; and
Richard White, D-Tex.
Rhodes called the list "a

Then to canopy this picture
T'wixl the earth and azure .sky
I would hang a peaceful dream
Of the years saihng by .
I'd paint a beam of Godly love
Gallmg out m words hke these
"We must bmld a better world
If we want enduring peace."

cheap pubhe1ty gunm1ck "

Alas, but these are tdle thoughts,
For the best of us are weak;
And the greatest artist even
Could not make his pamtmgs speak
Hence, heartaches and desolation,

And the bhght of human ktnd
Never make the nght 1mpress10ns
On our frall deluded mmds.
Only God the ommpotent
Could the sum total tell.
Only God the omniscient
Knows all pa111s of such a hell
Only God the ommpresenl
Sees the whole of human gnef
Only God could paint the picture,
My much demed masterpiece.
-Carney C Ball, P 0 . Box 119, Btdwell , Ohio 45614
" WHEN THE PAPER DOESN'T COME"
My father says the paper he readsam'tput up nght:
He finds a lot o' fault too, he does, pursuing it all m&amp;!J!;
He says there ain't a single thing in it fit to read.
And that it doesn't print the kindo ' stuff the people need;
He tosses it astde and says 1t 's strictly on the bum,
But ya ought to hear him holler when the paper doesn't come.

proposed new comphance
program submitted by AEP
It called for contract letting
by Oct. I for installatton of
electrostatic prectpttators m
four Sporn plant units and He reads about the weddin's and he snorts hke all get-out ;
complebon on dates in the He reads the social doin's with a most derisive shout.
And says they make the paper for the women folks alone
last four months of 1979.
He'll
read aboutthe parties, and he'll fume and fret and groan .
APCC Dtreclor Carl G
He
says
of information, it doesn't have a crumb.
Beard II said the plan
But
ya
oughta
hear hlm holler, when the paper doesn't come.
depended on "too many
He
IS
lhe
first
to
grab 1t and he reads it plumb clean thro•tgh,
conhngen&lt;.. ~" and was "no
He
doesn't
miss
an
item, or a want ad - !halts true
•
compliance ·hedule al all ."
He
says
they
don't
know
what
we
want,
the
darn
newspaper
Company Mtorney David
guys,
Flannery said because of the
I'm
gonna take a day, sometime and go and put 'em wise ;
pendmg rate cases "we can't
"Sometimes
1t seems as though they must be deaf and blind
say uneqwvocably that the
and
dumb
."
money 1s going lo be there
But ya ought ta hear him holler when the paper doesn't come
Oct. 1.
- Autbor unknown .
The plant on the Ohio River
Sounds hke I feel sometimes, when the paper seems full of
is owned jointly by AEP
Sports
and adyertisements, 'ca~ I don 't know about sports,
substdaaries Oh10 Power Co .
am
't got no money to buy nuthm' any way - nohow, 'cept I
and
and Appalachian Power Co
JUSt aalka myself! - Goldie Clenderun, Portland, Ohto

Bass sa1d there are
"aroWJd 50 other members of
C ongress
whose
environmental volmg records
are as bad or worse" than the
dozen . The 12 were smgled
out, he said, because they
have ''vtable opponents" m
primanes or the general
election .
Among the 14 votes
tabulated were those on strtp
mining ,
solar
energy
development, pestacide
regulation, water resources

and
automobtle
and
appliance effictency ralmgs.
Env1ronmenlahsts ' 'won''

HUNTINGTON, W Va Publiealwn of a report
illustrating and detailing both
past and future flood
problems and hazard areas
along the Oh10 River m
Meigs County was revealed
Wday by the U. S. Army
Corps of Engmeers.
The report, prepared for
the Ohto Department of,
Natural Resources, contams
maps , graphs and data whieh
show areas along the nver
subject to major floodmg,
although flood heights have
been substanhally reduced
by 32 existing upstream
The report is hlled, " FloOd
Plam anformataon , Ohio
Rtver, Athens County-Metgs
County, Ohw " The entare
rea ch of the Ohio River
bordenng the State of Ohio
has now been covered by H
such reports These reports
represent nearly $100,000 an
report prepar a liOn cos ts
exclusive of field and
hydraulic studies
In annoWlcing publicatiOn
of the Athens County - Metgs
County Report, Col. Scott B.
Smtth, Huntmgton Dtstnct

DeWalt 740
10" Powershop
With Leg Stand

Rhodes, an a statement,
chara cterized the list as "a
and Quick Set II
cheap pubhcity gunmtck and
a phony test of envtronmental
Dado
cont,-ern." He said he and
several other of the congress·
$362 if Purchased
men signed a letter asking
Separately.
the Fmr Campaagn PractiCes
Reg. $309.95
Committee to investigate the
"ethical questions ratsed by
such ratmgs .''
Now
The Drrty Dozen .group said
95
Only
Rhodes has used hif power as
Repubhcan leader "to oppose
nearly every measure
s upported
by
environmentalists" and only
TRUE VAWE
voted "correctlt' on one of
the 14 ballots, includmg votes
CHESTER, OHIO
on energy conservation, I ' - - - - - - - - - - - - '
pestictdes and the supersomc
tra
rt.

$279
BAUM

"Dinner Dotes"

'

MEAT
Fned

ch•clcen , roast
beef, hamburger steak ,

Hounder fish. ham.
l

VEGETABLES
Green

beans,

noodles,

corn, potatoes (baked,
ma s hed , ho"le fnes, ,

"If

must be geHmg near
lunch -time!
There goes
another pilot hurrying over to

The Steot mboat Inn!"

SALADS

PIE

r

Macaroni , tossed, slaw,
cottage cheese.

Strawberry, peach.

Delicious Char-Broiled Steaks

.

'

OPEN WEEKDAYS 6 A.M to 7·00 PM

~teamboat Inrz
" Re.l/ 01&lt;1 -f ' as/u oncc/ll owe C"Okill ~ " '

3rd St., Racme , OhiO

Daal 949 · 2515

.
'

, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . j

:•

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i

'

SEED CORN
By Funk's and Pioneer

FERTILIZER
By W. R. Grace

,.

II

•

I

i'-•••••••••••·-~HI....H~....HI.................................
0

New crime
created by
House bill

SUNDAY
MAR. 28
8 A.M. to 2 P. M.

eight of the votes, Bass said.

:

·.
'

Engineers publish report
showing flooding hazards
Engineer, said the report was
prepared for the coun ty at the
request of the Ohto Department of Natural Resources
and the Meigs County
Comm1ss10ners A pamphlet
swnmartzmg the report also
has been published for
general dtstrtbuhon lo the
pubhc.
Copies of the pamphlet may
be obtamed free of charge
from the Metgs County

available free to all persons
havmg a "reasonable need "
for one.
The pubhcattons are meant
to provtde a better understanding of the flood
hazards in the area and to
lead to appropnate land use
management to reduce future
flood damage.
Persons desirmg floodtng
mformatwn should contact
the Flood Platn Management
Commtsswners' office at the Serv1ces Sectton of the Corps
courthouse or from the Ohto of Engmeers at the Federal
Department of Natural Office Buildmg in HunResources an Columbus . tmglon, W. Va.
Coptes of the report also are

reservoirs .

includmg their posillons on

Thai the mothers lam would tell ;
l would reproduce the battles
Wtth therr .burstmg screammg hell ,
All the suffermg and deslructwn ,
In a way that we might see;
All the hurt and gloom of war
And Its lingermg misery.

. NEW STORE - This Is the new Radio Shack store being operated on Pearl St. in
M~ddleport as_ a pari of Big Jtm's Plaza at Mtll and Locust. The store lS offermg spectal
prtc~s on Radto Shack eqmpment and accessories this week as a part of 1ts grand opening.
Radto Shack offers 2,450 different but related items in its merchandise.

DeWALT

Dirty dozen opposed by
environmentalist group·

I would want to pamt a ptcture
Of the very soul of man,
Of the greatest iruths of hfe

·-

·-

'l

COLUMBUS (UPI ) - The
Ohio House has reV1sed and
sent lo the Senate a btll
creating a new crime of
endangering occupants of
vehicles by shooting or
throwmg substances at them
The proposal was revived,
amended and passed on an 815 vote Thursday. It cleared
the chamber last January in
d11ferent form but was
immediately held up while
changes were contemplated.
As written, the legtslation
would apply to any shooting
or " substance " thrown
purposely at a motor vehtcle,
atrcraft, train or watercraft,
whether the vehicle 1s moving
or not.
One of the prevtous provtswns, whtch would have
established a new crune of
shoollng or throwing objects
from, rather than at, motor
vehicles, was taken out of the
bill Thursday. Such crones
are covered under other
sections of law.
House members also voted
to reduce the penalty from a
second-degree felony to a
first-degree misdemeanor
Conviction would have carried a penalty of two to 15
years in prison and a max·
imwn $7,500 line. Under the
new language, it would carry
a maximum six-month jail
term and $I,OOO fine.
Rep. Alan El. Norris, RWesterville, explained that a
death from a shooting or
rock-throwing incident
involving a motor vehicle
would automatically call for
a manslaughter charge.
The legislation stems from
an inculent on the Ohio
Turnpike 1n which an Oh10
State University student dted
from mjurles sustained when
a chunk C!f asphalt was
thrown from an overpass and
struck her automobile.
The House rewrote the
language to make the new
crime apply to throwing
rocks, bricks, acid, paint,
mud, water balloons and
snowballs. It refused to
accept an amendment that
would have exempted stray
mllllllles from a snowball
fight.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holzer Medical Center
)Discharges, March 25)
Mark Beekman, Dtonee
Brace, Charles Burt, Arthur
Cam, Franklin Chatlleld,
Ginny Day, Ehzabeth Dotson,
Ehjah Estep, John Francis,
Bermce Frazee, Jenmfer
Gtllispte, Fern Holbrook,
Wilma Houck , Mrs. Thomas
King and mfanl son, Kathleen
Lawless, Grace Lewis, Della
McCoy. Mrs Robert McGuire
and infant son , Samuel
McKinney , Bruce Neal, Mary
Neville, Russell Notter, Roy
Pollock,
Gladys
Roy,
Marjorie Rutherford, Linda,
Ricky and Roger Scharttger,
Ehzabeth Schneider, Russell
Slayton, Brenda Stewart, Ira
Watson , Albert Webb, Mrs.
Roger White and anfant
daughter, Belly Woodall,
Monetta Woo druff and James
Wyckoff.
(Births, March 251
Mr. and Mrs. John R Dohn,

son, Langsvalle , Mr and Mrs.
Mark
Pterce ,
son ,
Middleport ; Mr. and Mrs.
Rtchard L Roush, daughter,
Pt. Pleasant, W Va.

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Demse
Cox, Roy Eilts, Edna Durst,
Mrs. James Hartley, Nellie
Kent. Gertrude Bateson ,
Anthony Cemtm, all Pomt
Pleasant, James Hammick,
Cltfford MW1cy, Pomeroy;
Mrs . Cecal Bales, Leon; Mrs
William Flora, Apple Grove;
Mrs. John Vance, Jr., Bidwell; Mrs. Herbert Whithngton , son, Robertsburg;
Mrs.
Greg
Kennedy ,
daughter, Pomt Pleasant ;
James Napter, Ashton: Mrs
Andrea Phalen , New Haven;
Mrs.
Harvey
Lipton,
Galllpohs :
Wandaleen
Glover. Mason, and John
Parsons, Buffalo.

Flood report released
by corps of engineers

COLUMBUS iUPI ) - A g•ves n se to a buse and
joint legtslallve committee preferential treatment. "
ended
a
five-month
''Workmen's compensation
investigation of
state tsoneofthe largest msurance
Workmen's
Compensation companies 111 the state, If not
Thursday and coocluded the the largest," satd Headley.
system was an " utter " We need guidelines so any
practitioner or any employe
failure. "
State Sen . David L . would know what his chances
He adley, D-Barberton , are of recovery of a claim."
chairman of the Joint Select
In addition to the lack of
Committee on Workmen 's administrative guidelines in
clatms,
Compensatton ,
sa1d handhng
the
admmistration of
the committee
also
cited
multimillion-dollar insurance "evidence (which J shows
system " swings like a that rehabilitation is handled
pendulum, depending on who now on a haphazard basis and
is in control."
that incentives often dnve the
" It appears that if you get a clatmant
away
from
certain ( Workmen's rehabilitation ioto permanent
Compensabon ) examiner or disa bihty, never to work
a
certam
exammmg again."
physician, you can gwde your
Also , the committee cited
claim," Headley said. 11 We duahty m admin1strat10n of
recommend that be done on a the system between the
'lot' basis."
Bureau of Workm en's
Headley
said
the Compensation and the Ohio
committee 's staff is still
pursuing possible criminal
charges stemmmg from
evidence the committee
heard from 67 witnesses since
October 11. He said the
Legislative Servi c e
Commission is in the process
of drafting a bill to correct
some of the madequactes of
By GENE CADDES
the system, as outlmed 111 the
UPI Sports Writer
special committee ' s 205
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! ) recommendations.
Headley said he hopes the Eldon Miller, who guided
bill to correct the system wall Western Michigan to the Midbe heard simultaneously in Amertcan Conference chamboth the House and Senate pionship and a 25-3 overall
and be passed 111 thts session record the past season, today
of the Oh10 General was named head basketball
coach at Ohio State.
Assembly.
Foremost among the 205
Miller. 36, a native of
shortcommgs in Workmen's Gnadenhutten, Ohio, and a
Compensation, as outlined in Wittenberg
University
the final, 89-page report, was graduate, succeeds Fred
"the utter fatlure of the Taylor, who announced his
present system to provtde resignation Feb 5 after 18
adequate regulations, " which years as Buckeye coach
"destroys the effective
The nammg of Miller ends
operatwn of the system and a seven-week search by Ohio

Indus tri a l Co mn11 s s w n ,
which th e report s atd
~ ·cc rta ml y md!Cate that the
h~o o &lt;JgeJ1Ctcs compete ns
often as U1ey coopera te ."
"In the fa ce of the poh cy
confl tct, the result ts often a
sta ndoff
between
the
agencies rather than orderly
resolutton of dtfferences ,"
aecordm g to the report
The comprehensive study
was authorized by a JOint
legtslative resolution.
Th e Ge neral Assembly 1s
mqUiry was prompted by
publis hed
reports
of
widespread waste, meqmt1es
wathm the system and
dif£ ere n ces b et w een
operation of the bureau and
lndustrtal CommtSSion.
''There hasn 't been any
conststency," satd Headley,
"and l attnbute that to a lack
of guidelines."
The final report was s ~n ed

Bartels fifth
(Continued from page I)
Ohlinger , Midd leport Second ; Bernard D. Gtlkey, Mtddleport
'11urd; Dorothy I. McGuffm, Middleport Fourth ; Eldon
Morris, Bradbury, Lola Clark, Harnsonvall e, Cora B. Beegle,
1\aune Vtllage, Ernest E Sisson, Jr , Sy racuse: W1U1am F
ll arns, Mmersvtllc; Evelyn Clark, Pomeroy First; Robert
Hysell, Pomeroy Sel'Ond , Charles W. I.egar , Sr ., Pomeroy
Third . IA!slie F Fultz, Pomeroy Fourth.

by all eight members of the
spectal co mmitte e, but
Head le y sa1d " not ever y
members agreed With ever y
rCt'OmtJiendation ' 1
'1' am proud of the
anda vadual effort ea ch
member of the L'U mmtttee
and the &lt;:Omm ittee staff put
forth to come up wtth this
com pr ehe nsive
report ,''
HeaaUey saad to leg astatave
leaders m D tra nsm1ttal letter
Wtth the report.

Buy Your
Easter Shoes

Now!
While Selection
Is Good

heritage house
1 .

Middleport. Ohio

BUY NOW
AND
SAVE
Miller named
ON
Bucks' coach

P~t}&gt;~'·;~th~;· ·: :·.·d~~g~ter. ~- ~'~. ·;i~·h·; .. ;~··:
(Continued from page I)
daughter was "the first
civilian casually of the
terrorist assaults In this
country."
Mrs. Hearst, whose
husband, Randolph, Is the
president of the San
Franeiseo Examiner, said
bombings of the Hearst
Castle at San Simeon and
mountain retreat In norlhern California prove her

fearing the SLA while she
was underground with the
terrorist group. The SLA
had kidnaped Miss Hearst
In February 1974.
She also said the bornbings of the Hears!
properties show "Polly
never dared come home
because she knew 'thai her
terrorist captors were
capable of bombing and
killing."

Rio thine/ads at
Marshall Saturday
HUNTINGTON, W. Va Track and field continue to
hold the spotlight on the
Marshall Umverstty sprmg
sports scene with the v1s1t of

Rio Grande {Ohio) College
and West Liberty ( WVA)
College here Saturday for a
triangular meet wtlh the
Thundermg Herd.
The meet, whtch begins at 3
HUNTINGTON
8 of charge lo all persons
Pubhcallon of a report having a reasonable need for p.m ., is the only home Intercollegiate event on the
illustrating and delatlmg both a copy.
The publications are meant weekend schedule, although
past and future flood
problems and hazard areas to provtde a better un- the Herd baseball team has
along the Ohw River m Galha derstanding of the flood its home debut scheduled the
County was announced today hazards m the area and to followmg Monday (March 29 )
by the U. S. Army Corps of lead to appropnate land use against Maraetta College.
Early events this week had
management to reduce future
Eng meers.
the baseball team vtsiting
The report , whtch was flood damages
Persons destrmg noodmg Morehead State for a
prepared for the Ohio
Department of Natural mformation should contact doubleheader and the tenms
Resources, contatns maps, the Flood Plain Management team at home wtth Morehead
graphs and data which show Services Sectton of the Corps State, both Tuesday ( Ma~ch
areas along the Ohio whtch of Engineers at the Federal 23) .
The women 's track team ,
are subject to major floodmg, Offtce Bualding in Hunwhich
made ats debut m the
tington,
W.
Va.
although flood hetghts have
been substantially reduced
by 35 extshng upstream
reservOirs
The report 1s titled "Flood
Washington.
Plain Information, Ohio
General Manager Alex DelLOS ANGELES iUPI) - vecchio said club doctors
R•ver, GaJHa County, Ohio. 11
The entire reach of the Ohw Playboy superstar George reported only that the
River bordermg the State of Best of England will make his league's leading rookie goal
Ohio has now been covered by Southern Gahforma debut scorer
was
resting
l4 such reports . These this weekend when the Los comfortably al Detrott
reports represent nearly Angeles Aztecs face the Osteopathtc Hospttal. The cut
$100,000 m report preparation Seattle Sounders in a pair of on Bergeron's eyelid required
costs exclustve of field and North Amencan Soccer four stitches to do,., .
League exhibitions.
hydraulic sludaes.
The teams are scheduled to
In announcing pubhcation
play
at the Santa Ana Bowl
of the Galha County report,
Friday
night and at the Rose
Colonel Scott B. Smtih,
Bowl
in
Pasadena Sunday.
Huntington District
The
Aztecs
opened !hear
Engmeer, satd the report was
season
on
the
road
last week
prepared for the coWJiy at the
against
Seattle.
Best
had an
request of the Ohio Depart·
assast
in
each
game,
helpmg
ment of Natural Resources
and the Gallia County Los Angeles to 1-{) and 3-{)
Commisstoners. A pamphlet victories
swnmarizmg the report also
Baskets~.~~~$~~
has been published for
general distribution to the
Sprays.~~?~.'l500
pubhc
DETROIT iUPI) - The
Copies of the pamphlet may
Call: 992-5560
Detroit
Red Wings heard
be obtained free of charge
encouraging
from the Galha County nothlllg
Thursday
on
the
condatwn of
Commissioner's offtce in the
thear
star
rook1e
forward,
Courty Courthouse or from
Michel
Bergeron,
who
the OhiO Department of
suffered
a
serious
cut
above
59 N. Second St.
Natural
Resources,
Columbus, Ohao. Copies of the hts right eye in a game
Middleport.
Ohio
Wednesday night against
report also are available Ire~

SYMPATHY
FLOWERS

Vases ..~~.~~. 'ltr

Hall of Fame Relays last
Saturday, visits Morehead
State \h as Saturday. Also on
the road thts weekend Is the
tennis team wh1ch vts1ts
llree Kentucky schools Transylvama and Centre on
Saturday and the Umverstly
of Kentucky on Sunday.
The men's golf team
doesn't have another In·
tercollegtate match until
Aprtl 2-3 when the Herd
linksters host the Marshall
Untversily Jnvttahonal at the
Guyan Golf and Country
Club. However, Coach Joe
Feaganes' team wtll slay m
competlltve form wtlh two
exhibi t10n matches lhls
. weekend, playing the Guy an
Club all-stars in an exhlbthon
match Saturday at Guyan
and the Sleepy Hollow
Country Club all-stars
SWJday on that club's course
m Hurncane, W. Va

State, reportedly delayed by
an attempt to lure Bobby
Knight away from Indiana .
Other candidates who had
been cons1dered strong
candtdates for the post
mcluded form er Buckeye
players Don DeVoe, released
recently •by Vtrgmaa Tech,
and Ball Hosket, who played
professional ball with New
York and Buffalo of the NBA
but had no coa ching

Massey-Ferguson
lawn/garden
tractors
and mowers!

expenence .

Miller, a former player at
Wtttenberg, served as an
assistant to Tiger llily Mears
upon graduation and took
over the head coachmg JOb at
his alma mater when Mears
moved to the Universit~ of
Tennessee . Mlller was only 23
at the time.
He held the head job at
Wtttenberg for etght yea rs,
compiling a 142-55 mark , won
five
Ohio
Conference
champiOnships and was
runnerup m the NCAA
College DiV1sion Tournament
m 1963, when his overall
record was 26-2
When Miller took over at
Western m 1970, the Broncos
had suffered through seven
straight lostng seasons ,
mcludmg 6-17 the year
before.
In Mtller's sJX years at
Western, he had four winmng
seasons, includmg the last
three , and a combmed 86-68
mark.

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�6- The Daily Sentinei,Middleport.Pcaeroy. 0., Friday, )Wch 2£, 1976

Two boys
named by
legion

SINGERS COMING - " Everlasting Love", a gospel
singing group from Reno, Ohio, w1ll be appearing at the
Laurel Chff Free Methodist Church at 7:30p .m. Sunday.
The group presents contemporary and traditional gospel
music. Compnsing Ule group are Steve McCoy, tenor and
pianist; Ralph Weekly, bass guitarist ; Don Full who sings
the baritone part, and Don Silliman, manager, who smgs
Ule lead and does the emcee work . The public is inVIted to
attend the presentatiOn .

Louisiana areas
under high water
United Press International

Water sloshed through
homes m portions of
LoUISiana and tornadoes
raked other port10ns of the
stale.
Wmd-whipped snow swept
the mountains of Utah
Floods fed by seven -inch
rains drove several hundred
persons from their homes in
Louisiana
Thursday.
Tornadoes also stabbed at the
slate.
"We have a couple hundred
people that have been
evacuated here, " satd
Deputy Sheriff Joe Brown at
DeQ11incy, La. "Their homes
are under four to live feet of
water.' '
Floodwaters surged
through homes m and around
DeQuincy. and rescue crews
used boats and amphibiOus
vehtcles to carry people to
safety.
Brown reported
the
northern part of DeQumcy, in
Ca lcasieu Parish, ' was
"flooded bad ." Htgh water
mvaded the City Hall.

poles Htgh winds npped off a
section of roof at Jefferson
Downs racetrack in Kenner,
La.. and damaged mobile
homes and buildings in
several other commwuhes.

A powerful storm whipped
the West With snow and
strong winds.
Nine inches of snow ptled
up m Ule mountams of Utah
and power fatlures were
reported in wide areas of the
state.
Wmds up to 80 miles an
hour whipped mountamstde
~~bench " areas in the suburbs
of Salt Lake City. The
winterlike storm ended-at
least for a day- what Utah
residents laughingly called
spring.
Temperatures dropped to
the 20s and 30s m 'the
intermountain area and the
Rockies , and high wmd
warmngs were up in the

Colorado Rockies and the
eastern slope.
Storm warnings were
posted from the Rocktes to
Southern Califorrua .
Two tor nadoes swarmed
High winds also battered
over Ule Elton. La., area, the Pactfic Northwest lor a
destroymg
barns
and second stratght day. Oregon
downing trees and utility state police closed Interstate
SON to mobtle home traffic
across most of the state.
Wmds were blamed lor a dust
'storm that caused an 18vehtcle accident on !~ON that
left one person dead and 19
mjured Wednesday.
Wmds also stranded two
ships along the Oregon coast,
ENID, Okla. (UP! ) - A tore a hangar from its
woman believed to be the last foundation at Madras, Ore.,
of the ho'ltesteaders m the a nd caused many po'rer
h1stonc Cherokee Stnp lam! failures.
Winds up to 112 m.p.h.
rush d1ed Thursday m a
punished
western Nevada.
nursing home. She was 10~.
The
hurricane-force
blasts
Laura Crews, a school
tea roher , rode in the 1893 land overturned several trrulers
rush and staked a tlaim 20 and ripped down power and
telephone lines.
miles east of Emd.
The land was not good for
larmmg , but w1th discovery
of the lush Garber-Covington
ml pool m 1917 11 became one LOBBY CONTROL
of the most valuable clatms in
COLUMBUS (UP! )
the Cherokee Strip.
Common Ca use of Oh1o
She was born m Pierce Thursday appealed to state
Ctty, Mo., m 1871 after her Senate President
Pro
parenL' were dnven from Tempore Oliver Ocasek, 0thetr
Kansa s frontier Akron , to "exerctse" his
homestead by :Odian ratders. leadersh ip in lreetng a
The family returned to lobbymg control bill from the
Kansas in 1872 and Laura Judiciary Committee to the
grew up m Chautaqua upper chamber floor
County. Her father dted the
The "people's lobby" satd
following year , lea'"ng seven Sen Neal F Zimmers Jr., 0children.
Dayton , committee vice
In 18Ul her mother staked a chairman, was delaymg
claJm east of Guthne, Okla., movement of the b1ll .
on Sac and Fox land and Miss
We dne s da y, Zimmers
Crews became a teacher at ignored mottons to take a
Ule Pleasant Valley School, vote on the bill whtle he was
where she taught the children acting as chairman of the
of the notonous Doolin gang. panel.

Last Oterokee
homesteader

dies, age 105

· RACINE - Carl Johnston
and Kevin Willford have been
named to attend Boys State
bv Racine Legion Post 602,
Elmer Pickens, commander
announced today
Carl is the son of Mr and
Mrs. Lawrence JohnstOn ,
RD , Ractne, and Kevin
is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Willford, Racine.
First alternate is Dave
Roush , son of Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Roush , Rt. 2, Racine,
and second alternate IS Scott
Wolfe, son ol Mr. and Mrs.
Hilton Wolle, Jr., Racine.
In other busmess the Post
donated $25 to the aerial
ladder truck fund and $24 to
the Legwn sponsored cancer
fund .
Making $1 donations to the
cancer lund were Charles
Curry, Elmer Pickens, Jack

L Wolfe, Wilbur McClain,
John Stobart, Fnlz Teaford,
Ed Wagner, Roger E.
Brauer, Carroll L. Teaford,
Charley Mathews, Pauhne
Wolfe, John C. H1te, Ethel
Sarsons, Stella Sarsons,
Ralph Shain , Charles L.
Muggrage, Jack Ables, Virg1l
Roush, Dick Lee, Charles M.

REUTER AT WORK - Scott Reuter, a senior Distributive Education student at Meigs
Htgh School, works under the experienced directiOn of Dale Dutton. at the D~tton Drug
Company in Middleport. Scott's career obJective IS m Ule health lteld and hts work at
Dutton 's will prove valuable to him . Distributive Education Is a program open to all semors
in Meigs Cotmly who have a career objective in a business ma rketmg area . Tins program

relies heaVIly on the partiCipation of busmessmen such as Dutton to supply the needed
experience which is demanded by the program. A junior mterested in the program for next
year should call the guidance offtce at the school where he or she IS presently enrolled.

Retarded Marine recruit
is killed during training

By GARY TAYLOR
LUFKIN, Tex . (UP!)
Lynn McClure was 'mentally
retarded and had trouble
finding a mche in this East
Texas town.
McClure, 20, was a high
TO MEET TUESDAY
school dropout and confined
RUTLAND - A bicen- to a mental hosp1tal lor a
tenmal meeting will be held short tinne in 1974. He had no
Tuesday , March 30, at 7:30 permanent home and had a
p.m. at Rutland ' Amencan long arrest record showing
Legion, Beech Grove Rd . minor infraetions.' '
Members of all committees
" He was not violent ,
and mterested persons are though, " sa id a relative "He
urged to attend
JUst did not know what other

boys hts age knew."
Despite hts retardatiOn he
managed to enhst m the
Marme Corps. Nine days
alter being sent to San Diego,
Calif., McClure was fatally
injured during traming
"He always took it easy I
talked to him about going to
work. 1 told him everybody
had to work . But he satd

th ey Ulrew hinn out of the
motel up there He got to
throwmg rocks at the motel
sign, and when the law came
they picked h1m up and
brought tum here They told
us if we would try to get hun
help, they would leave hinn."
The Marine Corps has not

working was not for him,''

say Ule young man suffered
head InJuries during practice
with a pugil stick , a pole
padded at each end used in
bayonet traming and hand-tohand combat.
"That's not how he got
hurt," Calhoun said. "I saw
h1m . H1s head was caved 10 .
He had bad bruises all over.
His teeth were out. I don 't
believe what the Marines told

sa1d his stepfather Hubert
Calhoun
" Then there was the ltme

Jackson and Udall promote bigger
role for Washington; Carter won't
address planned for next
week .

Jackson acknowledged h1s
program lor the cities would
cost many billions of dollars
but sa1d it would be financed
"from income out of the
economic growth of the na-

tion. !!
'
"Every tinne you lower the
Jackson , a senator, announced a six-point program unemployment rate by one
in New York Thursday to per cent, that means $16
have the federal government billion in revenues," Jackson
"save America's cities." He said .
Carter sa id m the general
satd he , for one, doesn't
election
he wouldn't raise an
intend to " run agamst
1ssue
the
GOP would like to
Washington."
forget
Watergate.
Udall, a congressman. re" Th e Ameri can peo ple
minded residents of a Milunders
ta nd Wa terga te,"
waukee senior citizens center
Carter
told the Madison
that their meals were substCapital
Times
m Wt~CQn sin .
dized by th'e federal govern"!
thmk
they
are
sick or 1t.
ment. "When you think of

They are embarrassed by 11. 1
don 't ever intend to raise
Watergat e as an issue.''

Udall cnllcized President
Ford for vetomg a1d to school
lunch programs He told
voters in an upsta te
Wlsconsm town hard h1t by

un e mpl oy m e nt
that
mcreased federa l actiOn
could drop its jobless rate to
an "almost tolerable level.''
Udall as ked a federa l

appeals co urt for an
injunction to permit him to
remam in the Ind iana
pnmary . Stale offi ctals
removed hun from t he stale-

wide ballot recently because
ra1se enough voter
signatures m one of h1dtana 's
II congressional distrtcls.

he didn 't

Washmgton," ' Udall said,

reorganize

fed e ral

government would hurt the
poor and minorities.
11
! resent it," Carter said.
" It's a departure from
ratwnality and the truth I
believe I am sensitive enough
to th e atttludes of the
people .' '

Carter and Jackson today
are campaigmng for New
York 's April 6 Democratic
primary, while Udall and
George Wallace concentrate
on Ule Wisconsin balloting,
whtch will be held the same
day.
President Ford is spending
today and Saturday seeking
GOP votes in Califorma .
Challenger Ronald Reagan
remamed off the campaign
tratl, apparently working on
a nati onwide television

Four Clevelanders will
fight .for nomination
COLUMBUS I UP!) - Four and has no Republican
men from Cleveland will oppos1t10n m the pnmary.
No lan,
a
perennial
battle in Ohio's June 8
primary e leclw n for the cand ida te who collec ted
Democratic nommatwn to almost 30 per cent of the vote
run for the Senate sea t now agamst former Gov. John J.
occupied by Sen. Robert Taft Gilligan in the Democratic
gubern atot·ial primary of
Jr ., R.Ohio .
James D. Nolan, a nurs ing 1974, has also run for
home operator, and Rtchard secretar y of s tate ami
B.
Kay, a prevtous lieutenant governor but never
Independent Senate for Ule Senate.
Kay, ) previously
a
candtdate, filed nominating
petitions Thursday with Ohio candidate for the Se nate
Secretary of State Ted W. under the banner of the
Brown. They JOined former American Independent party,
jomed
the
Sen.
Howard
M. recently
Me tzenbaum , 0-0hiO, and Democrats. He was allowed
Rep. James V. Stanton , 0- to enter Ule 1976 Senate
0hto, who preVIously filed lor pnmary through a court
the Democratic nom mat ion. order but could subsequently
Taft, the
Cincinnati be disqualified.
Republican who has served
one s1x-year term , fil ed
preVIously for renomination

commented on McClure's re-

cruitment. The Marines did

n1e ''

McClure dted m the
Vet eran s Administration
Hospital in Houston March
13. An autops y was
performed, but the Harris
County Medical Examiner's
offtce sa1d it was awaittng
results of a toxicology test
before releasmg the report
Rep. Charles Wilson, 0Te x.,
IS investigating
McClure's recruitment.
" It
appears to be
co nclustve Lynn McClure
was unproperly r ecrwted ,"

sa1d Wilson . "Now 1t remains
to be discovered who
recruited him and why he
wns

no t

stopped

UTILITY RATES
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Legtslative leaders indicated
Thursday Ulat the House
Rules Committee would
schedule a floor vote next
Wednesday on controversial
utility rate-&lt;eform legtslation
recommended out of the
House Utilities Committee
earlier this week .
The Senate-passed bill has
been heavily amended by the
committee and will be
carried on the House floor by
Rep. Vernon F . Cook, !.).
Cuyahoga Falls.

I'

'

BATON ROUGE, La. '
t UP! l - Fred Sclunertz, 87,
for 41 years Ule director of the
Millrose Games in New York,
died Thursday at the Baton
Rouge Medical Center alter a
Ion~ Illness.

From

TWIST

RUGS

sauce has soared. I use so
much of it that I now put a
large can of tomatoes in my
blender, add abOut half a cup
of catsup and perhaps a small
amount of oregano and make
my own. - MRS. J .G.H.
DEAR POLLY - Wander
thr ough the second-hand
stores in your town and you
-wtll be amazed at what you
wtll find at very low prices.
You may even run into your
wealthy neighbor who Is
looking for a very special
1tem, or it may be that she,
too likes a bargain. IRENE.
You will receive a dollar If
Polly uses your favorite
homemaking Idea, Pet
Peeve, Polly's Problem or
solution to a problem. Write
Polly In care of tbls
newspaper.

::a:.::..::•••...•!...:....:.•.•.:.

~::::;.:•••.•.•:: . :!,1.!••.•

The better way
to buy your
school ring.
Now you can buy your sc hool
nng wh ere you d buy othe r
I me J8wel ry- al a lme ,ewelry
siOre
Becau se now we have John
Roberls. I he schoo l rmg made

by the co mpany th at speclal tzes m d iamon d rmgs wed ·

d1ng 11ng s, and other l1ne
jewelry
John Robe rts g1ves yo u a
great setect1on ol slyle s and
tots ol custom fea tures. as
well as l1ne craftsmans hi p.
Come 1n any da y and try on
ou r so tecl ,on ol John Roberls
Sc hoo l R1ngs You 'll ha ve all
the 11me 10 the worl d to choose

DEAR POLLY - Before
retiring at mght I put drted
prunes and raisins in a small
pot with water and place it
over the lop of the kitchen
stove pilot hght lid. In the
morning they are nice and
plump for eating and the
water has turned into prune your ring
juice overnight - MARIE
DEAR POLLY - I do like Because here , every day
those sheets of labnc softener rm g day.
that one puts in the dryer, h ut
I get two uses out of one
sheet. After first being used
in the dryer w1th important
clothing I use 11 a second ttme
with not so important things
such as towels. Then I use the
sheets again to hang in
closets, put tn drawers , shoe
bags, etc. as the fragrance
hngers lor quite a time after
use. They act as an air freshener, too. - MRS. R. B.
DEAR POLLY - During
these days of high prices we
have to cut costs wherever
possible. The cost of tomato

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9xl2
SHAG or

INFLATION FIGHTER
DEAR POLLY - 1 have a
lew little Pointers that have
helped me. I hope Uley will
help others beat the high cost
of eating these days When I
need just a bit of fresh par·
sley for a special recipe. I
have to buy a large bunch.
What is not used is washed
thoroughly, the florets pulled
!rom the stems and spread on
a cookie sheet that I put in the
oven. The heat from llle pilot
light dries the parsley in from
24 to 36 hours. The dried
parsley 1s pulled from any
remaining stems and put In a
tighUy closed jar. The same
is done with celery leaves,
and the end result is a much
fresher
tasting, more
llavorful product than the
commercial variety.
When shopping lor canned
vegetables and frwts , 1t pays
to compare store brands and
lesser known ones. I have
found that by shaking the
cans I can quickly discover
wh1ch have more liquid and
lllerelore less solid food . I
buy the one that is going to
gtve more ser.vings per can
regardless of the difference
1n price . Quite frequenUy I
find a lesser known brand IS a
constderable saving.
When I roast a chicken or
beef roast, I chill llle juice
and sk1m off the fat. Any not
used Immediately is frozen tn
tiny cube trays and used later
for flavoring vegetables. OPAL.

from

entermg boot camp when he
went to San Otego."
Wilson satd he was told live
offi cer s connected to the San
Diego inctdent have been
, IL, pended from their posts

Another Good Buy

IN THE MUSIC SCENE ready for a sound Ill is heavy~ Ed Wozniak ol Chicago has a go
at the world's biggest guitar - !06 inches long and weighing 80 pounds. It was built to test
productton capabilities at Wozniak's musical instrument firm .

By Charlene Hoeflich
AMeigs County service unit meeting lor leaders, assistant
leaders, and committee members will be held Monday from 7
to 8:30pm. at the Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co.,
Middleport, Mrs. Pat Thomas, direcor, has announced.

By Polly Cra mer ·

Mathews , Jr., Elson Spencer,

"lllmk of these kmda of
programs.''
Carter took issue with a
suggestion his promise to

t'

Easy to make
drid parsley

\

Gerald Simpson, Lester
McKenze, Harry Willford,
Larry Roush and Steve
Wagner

By LEWIS LORD
United Press International
Henry Jackson and Morris
Udall, who both work m
Washington , have discovered
that one way to knock Jtrnmy
Carter, who doesn 't, is to
promote a bigger role for the
federal government

Girl Scout Diary

Polly's Pointers

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IS

POMEROY 1ROOP 1016
Plans for a tzip to Huntington to appear on Mr. Cartoon
WSAZ-TV on April 6 were made during Tuesday night 's
meeting of Troop 1076. The girls worked on egg carton
wastebaskets and scheduled a visit to the beaver dam at
Kingsbury for Tuesday. Parents are to pick Uleir children up
at the Pomeroy Elementary School at 4:30 next week . The
Brownie promise and pledge of allegtance was led by Diana
White.
POMEROY 1ROOP 1271
Meeting Monday night at the school, the scouts planned a
hike at the Zuspan fann in Mason from 3 to 5 p.m. Monday.
Parents are asked to be at the school at~ p.m. to p1ck up their
children.
It was noted lllat a first aid k1t has been donated to the
tzoop by Swlsher-IAhse, sponsor ol the troop. The girls
practiced bandana tricks. The pledge was led by Debbie
Murphy, and Darlene Neece led Ule promise.
HARRISONVILLE BROWNIES
Sit-upons were completed during the Tuesday meeting of
the Harrisonville Brownies. The girls decorated the sit-upons.
They discusll&lt;!d what items are needed for a first aid kit, and
each girl iB to take something for the kit next week.
The meeting was held outside. Mrs. Susan Hebner, leader,
led In the flag ceremony and the promise. Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Hebner assisted by Lisa Riggs and Darla
Hatfield.
RACINE BROWNIES 1247
A skating party was planned for April 20 from 7 to 9 30
p.m. at the Skate-A-Way Rink when llle Ractne Brownies met
this week. The Syracuse Brownies will join them lor the
skating party. Robm Sauvage led in Ule pledge to the flag and
Carol Cross led Ule Brownie promise. The girls sang the
Brownie Smile song. Lori Wolle served refreshments.
SALISBURY JUNIOR 1ROOP 100
Participation in Ule bicentennial contest was discussed at
the Thursday meeting olthe SaliSbury Juniors. The girls also
discussed fruit baskets to be made for elderly residents of the
community. Refreshments were served.

present concert
RACINE - Tuesday mght
a concert was presented by
the Southern Junior High
School and Southern High
School Bands under the
direction of Mrs. Joy Norris.
Selections by the seventh
and eighth grade bands were
two

marches

from

th e

" Pirates of Penzance" by
Sullivan ; "Concordium '' by
M. L Daniels; "Erie
Canal " arranged by John
Kanyon. and " Rockin ' the
Blues" a number contaming
two traditional folk songs,
"Every Ntght When the Sl)ll
Goes Down," and "SOmeone
Road " and " We Kn ow
ChaCha" by Eric Osterling .
The htgh sc hool band
selections included an
arrangement of Brah111s'
" Academic Festival ''
followed by "Gavotte'' from
J. S. Bach's Sjxth English
Swte and "The Spint of '76"
by Jim Curnow. The band
also played a short novelty
for trumpets enhtled "Three
Trumpets in Three-Quarter
Time," and an arrangement
of " Feehngs ," . "Venus,"
''Sesame
Street''
and
" Peanut Vendor."
In the junwr high band are
Amy Ftsher, Amy Souder,
Mary Belli Slavtn and Tma

Gtbbs, nutes ; Carrie GuinFRIDAY
ther. Meg Amberger, Carol
SPRING
CARNIVAL
Gtbbs, Jeff Lyn ch, Della Friday, 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. al
Johnson , Armin tha Hoiter, Harrisonvt ll e School by
clarinets: Christa Beegle and school PTO.
Mark
Stmpso n,
alto
MIDDLEPORT LITTLE
saxophones; Cmdy Warden , League meellng, Friday, 7
Donna Rice, Becky Rhodes, p.m. at Middleport Ftre
Mary Belli Ob1tz, Melissa Station. Election ol officers,
Yonker, Dean na White, selec tion ol coaches and
Paula Wolle , Sonja Hill , discussion of bustness for
Donna Hubbard, Wilma Cook approaching season; public
and Becky Koehler, trum- welcome.
pets; Brian Johnson, Richard
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453
Furbee and Carl Morris, F&amp;AM Chester, annual intrombones, and Kenny spection Friday 7·30 p.m. All
Parsons and Tom Sprouse, master masons mvited.
percussion.
SOUP BEAN and cornMaking up the high school bread supper Friday from 4
band are Penny Sm1th, to 7 at Semor Citizens Center.
piccolo; Bobbi Chapman, Dinner ·is $1 with dessert
Lois Bailey, Usa Warner , extra. Ttcket.. available at
Penny Smith, flutes , Molly the door. Entertamment to be
Fisher, Carol Moms, Anna provided.
Frank,
Darla
Whtte,
MEETING of all interested
clarinets; Carina Rhodes, Meigs Countians on the
Teresa
Ervin,
alto preservatiOn of old buildmgs
saxophones; Kim Taylor, at I · 30 p. m. Friday at the
French horn ; Heidi Ashley, Meigs Museum. Butternut
Jay Ord, trumpets; Becky Ave., Pomeroy .
Harris, Bnce Hart and Lori
YOUTH SERVICE of
Guinther, trombones; Alisa Middleport Umted PenHarrts, Marie Pickens ,
tecostal Church transferred
baritones; Brenda Lawrence, to area youth rally to be held
Suzy Scarberry, percussion, 8 p. m. Friday at Gallipolis
and Kim Taylor, Lots Batley Apostolic Gospel Church .
and Penny Smtth , Latm Church bus w11l not be runpercussion .
mng.
SATURDAY
PANCAKE SUPPER ,
Saturday, 5 to 8p.m. $125 for
adults , 7~ cents for children
at the Salem Center
Elementary School.
SIGN UP DAY for Rutland
boys baseball and gtrls softmander ol the post, was ball Saturday from 10 a.m.
presented as was Wtlliam lfntil noon at Rutland High
Stewart, a past commander. School.
Bicentenmal Mmuteman
SUNDAY
Ke1th Circle gave a talk and
PARENTS WITHOUT
showed slides on the grow th PARTNERS Chapter 838 will
of Ohw and its contribution to hold a potluck dinner Sunday
the development of America . !rom 6 to 9 at Syracuse
He was presented a gilt.
Elementary School Bring
Games were played . Jamte two covered dishes ~ beverage
Wolfe won the door prtze. and place setting. Coffee will
Mrs. Norris baked the birth- be provtded. New members
day cake which was served and families' are invited.
w1th sandwiches, salad and
HYMN SING Sunday, 2
coffee. Attendmg bestdes
p.m.
at oMt. Hermon U. B.
those named were Mrs.
Church,
Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
'Elmer Pickens and son, Mrs.
Texas
CommuniJy
Everyone
Pauline Wolfe and son, Mr.
welcome.
and Mrs. Jack Ables, Mr and
SONGFEST, Sunday, 2
Mrs. Cat;rQII Norris, Mrs.
Eula Wolle, Fritz Teaford, p.m. at Seventh-Day AdMrs. Thelma Walton, Mrs. ventist Church All singers
Betty Van Meter and grand- and public mvited.
children.
POMEROY
Baseball
Assoctallon Sunday, I p.m. at
Pomeroy Legton Hall. Any
youth, age 6 to 15, wishing to
sign up lor the summe r
program should contact Don
Hunnel at 992-2604 or Alice
Wamsley at 992-3938 before
Sunday tn order that they
Mrs. Ruth Gosney gtving the may be assigned to a team
A TEENAGE dramatic
prayer. Hostess lor the April
meeting will 'be Mrs. Alma color film, "Misli t" will be
Newton, Mrs . Margaret shown at the Burlingham
Martm, Mrs. Nellie Brogan Southern Baptist Church, 7
p.m. Sunday. Public mvited.
and Mrs. Gosney .
Games were played w1th
MONDAY
pnzes going to the wmners.
SPECIAL
SERVICES at
St. Patrick's Day theme was
Cliff
Free
MethodiSt
Laurel
earned out in the table
Church,
Monday
through
decorations lor refreshments
Sunday,
7:30
each
evemng
served by Mrs. Velsia Roush,
with
the
Rev
.
Donald
Glass,
Mrs Etta Will, Becky Roush
Cam
bridge
,
speaking.
and Mrs. Betty Christopherson
Others
at- Special singing and scene~·
tending were Mrs Lucille felt each evemng. Public
Letlhett, Mrs. Bertha Parker, invited.
Mrs. Ellie! Grueser, Mrs.
Leona Karr, Mrs. Clara
Burns, Mrs. Mtldred Fry,
Mrs. Shorty Wright, Mrs.
Eva Hartley and Mrs. Fneda
BIRTH ANNOUNCED
Mossman.
Mr . and Mrs
Lynn

American Legion
has 57th birthday

RACINE - The 57th birthday of the American Legion
was celebrated by Racine
Pos t 602 and its Auxiliary
ill
w1th a party Saturday mght
at the hall.
Mrs. Louise Stewart was
B} Ht·lcnBottrl !i;l nustress of ceremonies for
~
~
llle program and introduced
Let's Weigh Ule Problem!
past president Mrs. Mary
DEAR HELEN :
Roush , Mrs. Leora Young,
I have just come from my doctor and I am furious.
Mrs. Eunie Bruiker and Mrs.
Uke a large portion of our population, I am overweight. Frances Roberts . Mrs .
My doctor insists that il I eat less Ulan 1,000 calortes a day I Stewart was the first
will lose pounds . But I don't! He unplies, then , that I'm president of the auxiliary
Hcheating."
&lt;"~
•
organtzed tn 1948 She also
The only tinne I've lost appreciable weight is With shots, recogmzed the present ofand I don't approve olthem. I do not have a thyroid problem, ficers,
Mrs .
Norris,
but I insist that my body chemistry is out of balance. My doctor president; Mrs Young,
won 't believe the problem comes from anything but second vtce president ; Mrs .
overeating, or the wrong kinds of food.
Roush , secretary ; Mr s.
I've tried every "diet" imaginable, from Stillman to Roberts, chaplain and Mrs.
"nothmg but lrml" (and I DID lose a little weight after a Brmker, sergeant at arms.
month on that one, but tt made me feel gukky ). No luck. Agam.
Elmer Ptckens, comI repeat, calories aren 't the culprits.
Isn't it possible that chenucal imbalance prevents weight
loss, just as surely as body chemistry prevents weight GAIN in
certain lucky people who can eat everything m stght and gam
nothmg?- AVID FAN
P.S. Since January, my husband I and our children have
been on the " Eat and Stay Slinn" diet. He and our two sons
have lost 10 pounds each. My daughter and I (who neeq 11
most) have not lost a pound!
DEAR FAN:
Purchase
of two new
It's true, some people loll&lt;! we1ght much more easily than
wheelchairs lor Veterans
do others, just as body chemistry, or whatever, prevents some
Memorjal HOspital was
from gaining weight no matter what they eat.
approved when the Auxiliary
But I can't believe a continued diet of under 1,200 calones
met there recently .
(unless you're under~ feet tall) won't eventually show results.
Mrs. Jamce Damels and
The.emphasis is on "continued "! You must make heallllful,
Mrs Jessie White reported on
low-calorie food your way of life, and forget about those often- a visit to the gtft show in
dangerous crash diets, which, ilthey work at all, only operate
Columbus recently. It was
on the yo-yo principle. - H.
noted that shelves for the
supply room purchased by
DEAR HELEN :
llle Auxiliary have amved
I've never seen my problem in your column. It started Mrs. Daniels prestded w1th
Innocently. My wife was changing clothes when I walked into
the bedroom . The camera was nearby and I snapped her
picture, mostly nude.
She got mad and said I acted like a chtld, so I should be
spanked. She wouldn't speak to me until! agreed.
EGG SALE SET
, Ever since, If I get out of line, she insisists I need a
Decorated Easter ~ggs
spanking . I'm a little younger than she 1s, and th1s ll)akes me
will be sold by Beta Sigma
feel babyish. Should I go along? - BOTTOMS UP?
Phi Sorority April 17 !rum
10
a.m. to 5 p.m. in front of
DEAR B.U.:
If· you have never seen this "problem" in HHU, lllen you
the New York Clothing
haven't been reading carefully. Adult spanking questions turn
House. The eggs are $1 a
up often In my mail, and I print a sample perhaps once a year
box. Advance orders may
on the theory that when you've answered one you've answered
be placed by calllng Cheryl
'em all.
Crow at 992-2628 or Lynne
Husband-wife paddlings are ususlly a form ol sex play. If
Crow at 247-3737.,
they don't get out of hand (no pun intended ) and both enjoy
them - well, whatever turns you on.
But if the spanking makes you feel "babyish" , your wife
had better NOT switch than light. She isn't accomplishing her
purpose. - H.
VISIT HERE
Recent visitors of Mr. and
DEAR HELEN :
Mrs.
Ches ter
Kmght ,
Your recent columns of the plight of the middle-aged Pomeroy , were Mr . and Mrs .
"fired wile", (i.e., she who finds herself divorced and useless) Dick Knight of Wintersville,
has inspired me to change my will.
and Mr. and Mrs Terry
I plan to leave an endowment to alocal college,_provtding a Kmght a nn son Stevie,
·yearly scholarship for an over-4~ divorcee who IS presently Caledonia . They came
untrained as a self-supporting worker. I'll direct that no especially to vtstt Chester
Dowers be sent to my funeral. Instead, the money should go to Knight who is recuperating at
'the scholarship fund. - A.J.
home from recent surgery.
PEAR A. :
Wednesday Mr. and Mrs.
'
Terrific! Let's hope that similar scholar~h1p funds are Dick Kmght moved from
' being started all over the country. - H
Wintersville to Bellatre
where he has been transferred to llle Mitchell Plant
and the American Electnc
Power Co.

" Helen Help

Social Legion auxiliary contributes
Calendar to aerial ladder fire truck

:::j:::::::::::::~*::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:::::=:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:::·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::;:::.:=:·:·:·:·:.-s

~

:~:

II Us. • •

A S2~ donation to the Meigs VIllage Pharma cy .
Cou nt y ~" iremen's Acknowledged
wa s
"
Association for the aenal monetary dona tiOn from Mrs.
ladder !Ire truck was made !.eo Walker of Spnngf1eld, a
by the Amencan LegiOn member
A report was g1ven on the
Auxiliary ol Feeney-Bennett
Post 128 at a meeting Wed- recent birthday party with a
vote of than ks betng extended
nesday mght at the hall .
to
the committees . F.nThe Peck of Wee ONes, a
home for handt cap ped tertawment was provided by
children in Columbus, was K1m Batey and the Stnngdiscussed and Mrs . Bonnie dusters. Mr. and Mrs Ilosc&lt;l&lt;)
Oatley reported on a recent Fowler, charter members,
visi t there to dehver gifts and were recogmzed .
The bulletm fr om Mrs
food fr om the local aux1liary.
She reported lllat plans are Arnold R1chards announced
underway to build a new Hospital Day May 2 at
home m Reynoldsburg for the Chtllicothe; Gtrls State tea,
29 children. The land has May 16 at Thornville, and the
been secured and a grant swnmer distnct convention ,
a pproved Donati ons to June 3 at Athens.
The door prize dona ted by
match the federal granl are
now being taken. As for the
needs of the home, she sa1d
shampoo, Show er-to-Shower
powder, bath ml , soap and
washcloths are particularly
useful .
Mrs. Dailey also reported
on the commumty serv1ce
party last week at the Athens
Mental Health Center. Three
members of the unit went to
Athens for the party taking
gifts and food valued at $165.
A thank you note for several
g1ft Items will be se nt to the

Youth group reorganizes

Enterprise United
Methodist Church youth
group reorganized recenUy
Wider the direction of Candy
Brothel'll , Youth advisor Is ·
Rodney Pulllns.
Officers of the group are
Vanessa Folmer, preside~!;
Patty
Edwards,
vtce
president, and Lori Pullins,
secretary - tzeasurer. The
group attendance has grown.

.

from nine at the first meeting
to 2£ five meetings later. The
young people meet each
Tuesday at 6 p.m. at the
church and any youth II
years of age to senior in high
school in the Pomeroy area is
inviied to attend the
meetings. Transportabon to
and from the meetings oan be
arranged if necessary.
Activities being planned

mclude a spec tal -Easter
service and a trtp this
summer to King 's Isla nd
Name selected by the group
1s " The SOn Worshipers." The
young people recenUy enjoyed a weekend retreat at
Camp Francis Asbury near
Rio Grande where confirmatlon classes were held.

Delegate
selected
RACINE - A dele~ate to
Buckeye Girls' State was
selected at the Tuesday night
meeting of the American

Legion Auxiliary of Racine
Post 602 at the hall.
Mrs. Julta Norris presided
at the meeting during which
time it was dec1ded to increase the dues from $3 to $4.
Meetings were changed from
7 to 7:30 on the fourth
Tuesday of each month. A
get-well card will be sent to
Mrs. Grella Simpson who
remains in a Flonda hospital.
Prayer to open the meetmg
was g1ven by Mrs. Frances
Roberts.
The
pledge,
preamble to the Auxtliary
constitution, and a silent
prayer lor the dead were
given in unison The traveling
prtze donated by Mrs. Norris
was won by Mrs . Leora
Young. Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Norris to
those named and Mrs.
Thelma Walton, Mrs. Eunie •
Brinker, Mrs. Martha Lou
Beegle, Mrs. Beulah Ncigler
and Mrs Mary Roush
"'

Rae me , are

HUDSON ILL
Lewis Hudson, Pomeroy, is
a patient at Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
underw ent minor surgery
His room
Wednesday
number IS 143.

992-2039

Pomeroy flower Shop
Mrs. Mill•rd V•n Meter
Ph _ 992 ·20l9
Ph . ff2· 5711

Early
Am ertcan
de s1g n
c red e nza
cab in et o f t empered
hard boa rd and selec t
solids ftnts hed 10

Am e r tc a n
Tr a dt tm n al
Maple
grain
Oecoratlve

of

m ol ded

stm u late d

accents

wood

m a te r t al
6"x 4 "
Spe aker , JPa" H ,

w

]4 J .. "
( add

17 1 7 "
0
for t ube

5"

c ap )
Model WU9 132KS

WERNER RADIO &amp; T.V.
Middleport, Ohio

''· ·· .~ '

.1976 NEW-CAR TIRESI
GUARANTEED NATIONW

•14 *22
.LESS
$
so,
20

55

ta

than our February prices
on same tires if
Deluxe Champion
Sup-R-Belt
·~l lll l lf ol

\S Sd .. t.ldo •
\11 lt r d fw ~t n lll!;!h t~nd

as

'"ll j.! l lll ll• llj.!l '
•l 'r ii, I SI I Ho o nlhnoh

A78-13

low

f,,, .. 1111"'' 11 rnl.

as

Plus

S1 75 F E T

and o ld tr re

Hurry•.. Supply is limited!
WHITEWALLS

SIZE

an-

Feb pnc e
unblemrshcd

AIB- 13

$40 00

E78 14

44 liO

Prr ce NOW
uniJh: rnr shed

S28

Pnc e NOW
blemrshed

50

524 .50
27.50
30.50
32 50
34 .50
36 .50
31.50
32.50
35 .50
36.50
38.50

32 .50
35 50

48 95

FIB-14
GIS 14
HIS-14
JIB 14
FI B-15
G78 15
HIB-15
J78 15
LIB 15

mfant weighed seven pounds.

51 05

37 50

,,o 50

- 54 95

57 60
50 30
52 35
56 25

42

so

36 50
38 50
J]

50

•12 50
44 50

58 40
61 OS
All pnces plus ~ 1 7!) to 3 1&lt;1 FE 1 ;md old tn c•

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT
I
1

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I II

,J

1111
•I
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BLEMISH TIRE LIMITED WARRANTY
I I H~oro ~ l n n&lt;Jlll•"' 'lll{&lt; rll r• hr Muloil

r oKol

hHunltl~""ll' " ' rh•

l ~ l l \1

1-

nor•un••tll&lt;oolol

'"n•lll• "" h• r•ol l ~ l"' ' " '" ~1!• • 1 ~·

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"'II " plat o It "'' ''uri oo ho t 1\ lo rn 1 """'Ill/ &lt;'"'"' • ""rt' dutm l( lh• f1t~' )lr
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11~&lt;olll • ro' t ll~o o tlunatll"IMHI!tNd"'"'l'n~o ~ o hnol( lltl( l " ' ' ' "' "'"'' (fir

'"' " "'''"''"~" ' ll'.,., .,.,u r. I'" ""' nn th•• thtn rum 111 •d t"""" "' 1""' f,,,

SEND SOMEONE
THE BEAUTIFUL

We Wiro Flo-.

BLEBELTED
FACTORY

nouncing the btrlh of their
first child, a daughter ,
Brandi Joy, March 19 at the
Holzer Medical Center. The
14 ounces. Maternal grandparents are Mrs. Jan Lellle,
Wilmington, Calif.; and Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Salser,
Racine, and the paternal
grandparent is Mrs Mayme
Mallory, Racine. Maternal
great-grandparents are Mrs.
Freda Turley, Hartford, W.
Va. and Mr. and Mrs. L1ge
Shields, Syracuse .

FLOWERS

Model WIJ9 132 KS
Early Amoncan r:radsnzlJ stylsn!J

Auxiliary approve~
wheelchair purchase

Mallory,

Mrs Freda Clark was won by
Mrs. Marvm Kelly . A steak
dmner was served preceding
the meeting with Ule junior
and senior auxiliary members and the Legionnaires
attendmg

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$750 ''""'"'"
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BREATH
SPRING
BOUQUET

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NO 4L\Oil r(1 r.lo\l C HAAfH
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59 N. Second St.

Middleport. Ohio
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�6- The Daily Sentinei,Middleport.Pcaeroy. 0., Friday, )Wch 2£, 1976

Two boys
named by
legion

SINGERS COMING - " Everlasting Love", a gospel
singing group from Reno, Ohio, w1ll be appearing at the
Laurel Chff Free Methodist Church at 7:30p .m. Sunday.
The group presents contemporary and traditional gospel
music. Compnsing Ule group are Steve McCoy, tenor and
pianist; Ralph Weekly, bass guitarist ; Don Full who sings
the baritone part, and Don Silliman, manager, who smgs
Ule lead and does the emcee work . The public is inVIted to
attend the presentatiOn .

Louisiana areas
under high water
United Press International

Water sloshed through
homes m portions of
LoUISiana and tornadoes
raked other port10ns of the
stale.
Wmd-whipped snow swept
the mountains of Utah
Floods fed by seven -inch
rains drove several hundred
persons from their homes in
Louisiana
Thursday.
Tornadoes also stabbed at the
slate.
"We have a couple hundred
people that have been
evacuated here, " satd
Deputy Sheriff Joe Brown at
DeQ11incy, La. "Their homes
are under four to live feet of
water.' '
Floodwaters surged
through homes m and around
DeQuincy. and rescue crews
used boats and amphibiOus
vehtcles to carry people to
safety.
Brown reported
the
northern part of DeQumcy, in
Ca lcasieu Parish, ' was
"flooded bad ." Htgh water
mvaded the City Hall.

poles Htgh winds npped off a
section of roof at Jefferson
Downs racetrack in Kenner,
La.. and damaged mobile
homes and buildings in
several other commwuhes.

A powerful storm whipped
the West With snow and
strong winds.
Nine inches of snow ptled
up m Ule mountams of Utah
and power fatlures were
reported in wide areas of the
state.
Wmds up to 80 miles an
hour whipped mountamstde
~~bench " areas in the suburbs
of Salt Lake City. The
winterlike storm ended-at
least for a day- what Utah
residents laughingly called
spring.
Temperatures dropped to
the 20s and 30s m 'the
intermountain area and the
Rockies , and high wmd
warmngs were up in the

Colorado Rockies and the
eastern slope.
Storm warnings were
posted from the Rocktes to
Southern Califorrua .
Two tor nadoes swarmed
High winds also battered
over Ule Elton. La., area, the Pactfic Northwest lor a
destroymg
barns
and second stratght day. Oregon
downing trees and utility state police closed Interstate
SON to mobtle home traffic
across most of the state.
Wmds were blamed lor a dust
'storm that caused an 18vehtcle accident on !~ON that
left one person dead and 19
mjured Wednesday.
Wmds also stranded two
ships along the Oregon coast,
ENID, Okla. (UP! ) - A tore a hangar from its
woman believed to be the last foundation at Madras, Ore.,
of the ho'ltesteaders m the a nd caused many po'rer
h1stonc Cherokee Stnp lam! failures.
Winds up to 112 m.p.h.
rush d1ed Thursday m a
punished
western Nevada.
nursing home. She was 10~.
The
hurricane-force
blasts
Laura Crews, a school
tea roher , rode in the 1893 land overturned several trrulers
rush and staked a tlaim 20 and ripped down power and
telephone lines.
miles east of Emd.
The land was not good for
larmmg , but w1th discovery
of the lush Garber-Covington
ml pool m 1917 11 became one LOBBY CONTROL
of the most valuable clatms in
COLUMBUS (UP! )
the Cherokee Strip.
Common Ca use of Oh1o
She was born m Pierce Thursday appealed to state
Ctty, Mo., m 1871 after her Senate President
Pro
parenL' were dnven from Tempore Oliver Ocasek, 0thetr
Kansa s frontier Akron , to "exerctse" his
homestead by :Odian ratders. leadersh ip in lreetng a
The family returned to lobbymg control bill from the
Kansas in 1872 and Laura Judiciary Committee to the
grew up m Chautaqua upper chamber floor
County. Her father dted the
The "people's lobby" satd
following year , lea'"ng seven Sen Neal F Zimmers Jr., 0children.
Dayton , committee vice
In 18Ul her mother staked a chairman, was delaymg
claJm east of Guthne, Okla., movement of the b1ll .
on Sac and Fox land and Miss
We dne s da y, Zimmers
Crews became a teacher at ignored mottons to take a
Ule Pleasant Valley School, vote on the bill whtle he was
where she taught the children acting as chairman of the
of the notonous Doolin gang. panel.

Last Oterokee
homesteader

dies, age 105

· RACINE - Carl Johnston
and Kevin Willford have been
named to attend Boys State
bv Racine Legion Post 602,
Elmer Pickens, commander
announced today
Carl is the son of Mr and
Mrs. Lawrence JohnstOn ,
RD , Ractne, and Kevin
is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Willford, Racine.
First alternate is Dave
Roush , son of Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Roush , Rt. 2, Racine,
and second alternate IS Scott
Wolfe, son ol Mr. and Mrs.
Hilton Wolle, Jr., Racine.
In other busmess the Post
donated $25 to the aerial
ladder truck fund and $24 to
the Legwn sponsored cancer
fund .
Making $1 donations to the
cancer lund were Charles
Curry, Elmer Pickens, Jack

L Wolfe, Wilbur McClain,
John Stobart, Fnlz Teaford,
Ed Wagner, Roger E.
Brauer, Carroll L. Teaford,
Charley Mathews, Pauhne
Wolfe, John C. H1te, Ethel
Sarsons, Stella Sarsons,
Ralph Shain , Charles L.
Muggrage, Jack Ables, Virg1l
Roush, Dick Lee, Charles M.

REUTER AT WORK - Scott Reuter, a senior Distributive Education student at Meigs
Htgh School, works under the experienced directiOn of Dale Dutton. at the D~tton Drug
Company in Middleport. Scott's career obJective IS m Ule health lteld and hts work at
Dutton 's will prove valuable to him . Distributive Education Is a program open to all semors
in Meigs Cotmly who have a career objective in a business ma rketmg area . Tins program

relies heaVIly on the partiCipation of busmessmen such as Dutton to supply the needed
experience which is demanded by the program. A junior mterested in the program for next
year should call the guidance offtce at the school where he or she IS presently enrolled.

Retarded Marine recruit
is killed during training

By GARY TAYLOR
LUFKIN, Tex . (UP!)
Lynn McClure was 'mentally
retarded and had trouble
finding a mche in this East
Texas town.
McClure, 20, was a high
TO MEET TUESDAY
school dropout and confined
RUTLAND - A bicen- to a mental hosp1tal lor a
tenmal meeting will be held short tinne in 1974. He had no
Tuesday , March 30, at 7:30 permanent home and had a
p.m. at Rutland ' Amencan long arrest record showing
Legion, Beech Grove Rd . minor infraetions.' '
Members of all committees
" He was not violent ,
and mterested persons are though, " sa id a relative "He
urged to attend
JUst did not know what other

boys hts age knew."
Despite hts retardatiOn he
managed to enhst m the
Marme Corps. Nine days
alter being sent to San Diego,
Calif., McClure was fatally
injured during traming
"He always took it easy I
talked to him about going to
work. 1 told him everybody
had to work . But he satd

th ey Ulrew hinn out of the
motel up there He got to
throwmg rocks at the motel
sign, and when the law came
they picked h1m up and
brought tum here They told
us if we would try to get hun
help, they would leave hinn."
The Marine Corps has not

working was not for him,''

say Ule young man suffered
head InJuries during practice
with a pugil stick , a pole
padded at each end used in
bayonet traming and hand-tohand combat.
"That's not how he got
hurt," Calhoun said. "I saw
h1m . H1s head was caved 10 .
He had bad bruises all over.
His teeth were out. I don 't
believe what the Marines told

sa1d his stepfather Hubert
Calhoun
" Then there was the ltme

Jackson and Udall promote bigger
role for Washington; Carter won't
address planned for next
week .

Jackson acknowledged h1s
program lor the cities would
cost many billions of dollars
but sa1d it would be financed
"from income out of the
economic growth of the na-

tion. !!
'
"Every tinne you lower the
Jackson , a senator, announced a six-point program unemployment rate by one
in New York Thursday to per cent, that means $16
have the federal government billion in revenues," Jackson
"save America's cities." He said .
Carter sa id m the general
satd he , for one, doesn't
election
he wouldn't raise an
intend to " run agamst
1ssue
the
GOP would like to
Washington."
forget
Watergate.
Udall, a congressman. re" Th e Ameri can peo ple
minded residents of a Milunders
ta nd Wa terga te,"
waukee senior citizens center
Carter
told the Madison
that their meals were substCapital
Times
m Wt~CQn sin .
dized by th'e federal govern"!
thmk
they
are
sick or 1t.
ment. "When you think of

They are embarrassed by 11. 1
don 't ever intend to raise
Watergat e as an issue.''

Udall cnllcized President
Ford for vetomg a1d to school
lunch programs He told
voters in an upsta te
Wlsconsm town hard h1t by

un e mpl oy m e nt
that
mcreased federa l actiOn
could drop its jobless rate to
an "almost tolerable level.''
Udall as ked a federa l

appeals co urt for an
injunction to permit him to
remam in the Ind iana
pnmary . Stale offi ctals
removed hun from t he stale-

wide ballot recently because
ra1se enough voter
signatures m one of h1dtana 's
II congressional distrtcls.

he didn 't

Washmgton," ' Udall said,

reorganize

fed e ral

government would hurt the
poor and minorities.
11
! resent it," Carter said.
" It's a departure from
ratwnality and the truth I
believe I am sensitive enough
to th e atttludes of the
people .' '

Carter and Jackson today
are campaigmng for New
York 's April 6 Democratic
primary, while Udall and
George Wallace concentrate
on Ule Wisconsin balloting,
whtch will be held the same
day.
President Ford is spending
today and Saturday seeking
GOP votes in Califorma .
Challenger Ronald Reagan
remamed off the campaign
tratl, apparently working on
a nati onwide television

Four Clevelanders will
fight .for nomination
COLUMBUS I UP!) - Four and has no Republican
men from Cleveland will oppos1t10n m the pnmary.
No lan,
a
perennial
battle in Ohio's June 8
primary e leclw n for the cand ida te who collec ted
Democratic nommatwn to almost 30 per cent of the vote
run for the Senate sea t now agamst former Gov. John J.
occupied by Sen. Robert Taft Gilligan in the Democratic
gubern atot·ial primary of
Jr ., R.Ohio .
James D. Nolan, a nurs ing 1974, has also run for
home operator, and Rtchard secretar y of s tate ami
B.
Kay, a prevtous lieutenant governor but never
Independent Senate for Ule Senate.
Kay, ) previously
a
candtdate, filed nominating
petitions Thursday with Ohio candidate for the Se nate
Secretary of State Ted W. under the banner of the
Brown. They JOined former American Independent party,
jomed
the
Sen.
Howard
M. recently
Me tzenbaum , 0-0hiO, and Democrats. He was allowed
Rep. James V. Stanton , 0- to enter Ule 1976 Senate
0hto, who preVIously filed lor pnmary through a court
the Democratic nom mat ion. order but could subsequently
Taft, the
Cincinnati be disqualified.
Republican who has served
one s1x-year term , fil ed
preVIously for renomination

commented on McClure's re-

cruitment. The Marines did

n1e ''

McClure dted m the
Vet eran s Administration
Hospital in Houston March
13. An autops y was
performed, but the Harris
County Medical Examiner's
offtce sa1d it was awaittng
results of a toxicology test
before releasmg the report
Rep. Charles Wilson, 0Te x.,
IS investigating
McClure's recruitment.
" It
appears to be
co nclustve Lynn McClure
was unproperly r ecrwted ,"

sa1d Wilson . "Now 1t remains
to be discovered who
recruited him and why he
wns

no t

stopped

UTILITY RATES
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Legtslative leaders indicated
Thursday Ulat the House
Rules Committee would
schedule a floor vote next
Wednesday on controversial
utility rate-&lt;eform legtslation
recommended out of the
House Utilities Committee
earlier this week .
The Senate-passed bill has
been heavily amended by the
committee and will be
carried on the House floor by
Rep. Vernon F . Cook, !.).
Cuyahoga Falls.

I'

'

BATON ROUGE, La. '
t UP! l - Fred Sclunertz, 87,
for 41 years Ule director of the
Millrose Games in New York,
died Thursday at the Baton
Rouge Medical Center alter a
Ion~ Illness.

From

TWIST

RUGS

sauce has soared. I use so
much of it that I now put a
large can of tomatoes in my
blender, add abOut half a cup
of catsup and perhaps a small
amount of oregano and make
my own. - MRS. J .G.H.
DEAR POLLY - Wander
thr ough the second-hand
stores in your town and you
-wtll be amazed at what you
wtll find at very low prices.
You may even run into your
wealthy neighbor who Is
looking for a very special
1tem, or it may be that she,
too likes a bargain. IRENE.
You will receive a dollar If
Polly uses your favorite
homemaking Idea, Pet
Peeve, Polly's Problem or
solution to a problem. Write
Polly In care of tbls
newspaper.

::a:.::..::•••...•!...:....:.•.•.:.

~::::;.:•••.•.•:: . :!,1.!••.•

The better way
to buy your
school ring.
Now you can buy your sc hool
nng wh ere you d buy othe r
I me J8wel ry- al a lme ,ewelry
siOre
Becau se now we have John
Roberls. I he schoo l rmg made

by the co mpany th at speclal tzes m d iamon d rmgs wed ·

d1ng 11ng s, and other l1ne
jewelry
John Robe rts g1ves yo u a
great setect1on ol slyle s and
tots ol custom fea tures. as
well as l1ne craftsmans hi p.
Come 1n any da y and try on
ou r so tecl ,on ol John Roberls
Sc hoo l R1ngs You 'll ha ve all
the 11me 10 the worl d to choose

DEAR POLLY - Before
retiring at mght I put drted
prunes and raisins in a small
pot with water and place it
over the lop of the kitchen
stove pilot hght lid. In the
morning they are nice and
plump for eating and the
water has turned into prune your ring
juice overnight - MARIE
DEAR POLLY - I do like Because here , every day
those sheets of labnc softener rm g day.
that one puts in the dryer, h ut
I get two uses out of one
sheet. After first being used
in the dryer w1th important
clothing I use 11 a second ttme
with not so important things
such as towels. Then I use the
sheets again to hang in
closets, put tn drawers , shoe
bags, etc. as the fragrance
hngers lor quite a time after
use. They act as an air freshener, too. - MRS. R. B.
DEAR POLLY - During
these days of high prices we
have to cut costs wherever
possible. The cost of tomato

YOU CAN SAVE
HUNDREDS
EVEN THOUSANDS
OF DOLLARS
WITH ALUMINUM OR VINYL SIDING
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FOR AN AVERAGE SIZE HOME

MAJOR BRANDS .USED
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BOTILING COMPANY
Middleport

- -'

Baker's Budget Shop

9xl2
SHAG or

INFLATION FIGHTER
DEAR POLLY - 1 have a
lew little Pointers that have
helped me. I hope Uley will
help others beat the high cost
of eating these days When I
need just a bit of fresh par·
sley for a special recipe. I
have to buy a large bunch.
What is not used is washed
thoroughly, the florets pulled
!rom the stems and spread on
a cookie sheet that I put in the
oven. The heat from llle pilot
light dries the parsley in from
24 to 36 hours. The dried
parsley 1s pulled from any
remaining stems and put In a
tighUy closed jar. The same
is done with celery leaves,
and the end result is a much
fresher
tasting, more
llavorful product than the
commercial variety.
When shopping lor canned
vegetables and frwts , 1t pays
to compare store brands and
lesser known ones. I have
found that by shaking the
cans I can quickly discover
wh1ch have more liquid and
lllerelore less solid food . I
buy the one that is going to
gtve more ser.vings per can
regardless of the difference
1n price . Quite frequenUy I
find a lesser known brand IS a
constderable saving.
When I roast a chicken or
beef roast, I chill llle juice
and sk1m off the fat. Any not
used Immediately is frozen tn
tiny cube trays and used later
for flavoring vegetables. OPAL.

from

entermg boot camp when he
went to San Otego."
Wilson satd he was told live
offi cer s connected to the San
Diego inctdent have been
, IL, pended from their posts

Another Good Buy

IN THE MUSIC SCENE ready for a sound Ill is heavy~ Ed Wozniak ol Chicago has a go
at the world's biggest guitar - !06 inches long and weighing 80 pounds. It was built to test
productton capabilities at Wozniak's musical instrument firm .

By Charlene Hoeflich
AMeigs County service unit meeting lor leaders, assistant
leaders, and committee members will be held Monday from 7
to 8:30pm. at the Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co.,
Middleport, Mrs. Pat Thomas, direcor, has announced.

By Polly Cra mer ·

Mathews , Jr., Elson Spencer,

"lllmk of these kmda of
programs.''
Carter took issue with a
suggestion his promise to

t'

Easy to make
drid parsley

\

Gerald Simpson, Lester
McKenze, Harry Willford,
Larry Roush and Steve
Wagner

By LEWIS LORD
United Press International
Henry Jackson and Morris
Udall, who both work m
Washington , have discovered
that one way to knock Jtrnmy
Carter, who doesn 't, is to
promote a bigger role for the
federal government

Girl Scout Diary

Polly's Pointers

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IS

POMEROY 1ROOP 1016
Plans for a tzip to Huntington to appear on Mr. Cartoon
WSAZ-TV on April 6 were made during Tuesday night 's
meeting of Troop 1076. The girls worked on egg carton
wastebaskets and scheduled a visit to the beaver dam at
Kingsbury for Tuesday. Parents are to pick Uleir children up
at the Pomeroy Elementary School at 4:30 next week . The
Brownie promise and pledge of allegtance was led by Diana
White.
POMEROY 1ROOP 1271
Meeting Monday night at the school, the scouts planned a
hike at the Zuspan fann in Mason from 3 to 5 p.m. Monday.
Parents are asked to be at the school at~ p.m. to p1ck up their
children.
It was noted lllat a first aid k1t has been donated to the
tzoop by Swlsher-IAhse, sponsor ol the troop. The girls
practiced bandana tricks. The pledge was led by Debbie
Murphy, and Darlene Neece led Ule promise.
HARRISONVILLE BROWNIES
Sit-upons were completed during the Tuesday meeting of
the Harrisonville Brownies. The girls decorated the sit-upons.
They discusll&lt;!d what items are needed for a first aid kit, and
each girl iB to take something for the kit next week.
The meeting was held outside. Mrs. Susan Hebner, leader,
led In the flag ceremony and the promise. Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Hebner assisted by Lisa Riggs and Darla
Hatfield.
RACINE BROWNIES 1247
A skating party was planned for April 20 from 7 to 9 30
p.m. at the Skate-A-Way Rink when llle Ractne Brownies met
this week. The Syracuse Brownies will join them lor the
skating party. Robm Sauvage led in Ule pledge to the flag and
Carol Cross led Ule Brownie promise. The girls sang the
Brownie Smile song. Lori Wolle served refreshments.
SALISBURY JUNIOR 1ROOP 100
Participation in Ule bicentennial contest was discussed at
the Thursday meeting olthe SaliSbury Juniors. The girls also
discussed fruit baskets to be made for elderly residents of the
community. Refreshments were served.

present concert
RACINE - Tuesday mght
a concert was presented by
the Southern Junior High
School and Southern High
School Bands under the
direction of Mrs. Joy Norris.
Selections by the seventh
and eighth grade bands were
two

marches

from

th e

" Pirates of Penzance" by
Sullivan ; "Concordium '' by
M. L Daniels; "Erie
Canal " arranged by John
Kanyon. and " Rockin ' the
Blues" a number contaming
two traditional folk songs,
"Every Ntght When the Sl)ll
Goes Down," and "SOmeone
Road " and " We Kn ow
ChaCha" by Eric Osterling .
The htgh sc hool band
selections included an
arrangement of Brah111s'
" Academic Festival ''
followed by "Gavotte'' from
J. S. Bach's Sjxth English
Swte and "The Spint of '76"
by Jim Curnow. The band
also played a short novelty
for trumpets enhtled "Three
Trumpets in Three-Quarter
Time," and an arrangement
of " Feehngs ," . "Venus,"
''Sesame
Street''
and
" Peanut Vendor."
In the junwr high band are
Amy Ftsher, Amy Souder,
Mary Belli Slavtn and Tma

Gtbbs, nutes ; Carrie GuinFRIDAY
ther. Meg Amberger, Carol
SPRING
CARNIVAL
Gtbbs, Jeff Lyn ch, Della Friday, 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. al
Johnson , Armin tha Hoiter, Harrisonvt ll e School by
clarinets: Christa Beegle and school PTO.
Mark
Stmpso n,
alto
MIDDLEPORT LITTLE
saxophones; Cmdy Warden , League meellng, Friday, 7
Donna Rice, Becky Rhodes, p.m. at Middleport Ftre
Mary Belli Ob1tz, Melissa Station. Election ol officers,
Yonker, Dean na White, selec tion ol coaches and
Paula Wolle , Sonja Hill , discussion of bustness for
Donna Hubbard, Wilma Cook approaching season; public
and Becky Koehler, trum- welcome.
pets; Brian Johnson, Richard
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453
Furbee and Carl Morris, F&amp;AM Chester, annual intrombones, and Kenny spection Friday 7·30 p.m. All
Parsons and Tom Sprouse, master masons mvited.
percussion.
SOUP BEAN and cornMaking up the high school bread supper Friday from 4
band are Penny Sm1th, to 7 at Semor Citizens Center.
piccolo; Bobbi Chapman, Dinner ·is $1 with dessert
Lois Bailey, Usa Warner , extra. Ttcket.. available at
Penny Smith, flutes , Molly the door. Entertamment to be
Fisher, Carol Moms, Anna provided.
Frank,
Darla
Whtte,
MEETING of all interested
clarinets; Carina Rhodes, Meigs Countians on the
Teresa
Ervin,
alto preservatiOn of old buildmgs
saxophones; Kim Taylor, at I · 30 p. m. Friday at the
French horn ; Heidi Ashley, Meigs Museum. Butternut
Jay Ord, trumpets; Becky Ave., Pomeroy .
Harris, Bnce Hart and Lori
YOUTH SERVICE of
Guinther, trombones; Alisa Middleport Umted PenHarrts, Marie Pickens ,
tecostal Church transferred
baritones; Brenda Lawrence, to area youth rally to be held
Suzy Scarberry, percussion, 8 p. m. Friday at Gallipolis
and Kim Taylor, Lots Batley Apostolic Gospel Church .
and Penny Smtth , Latm Church bus w11l not be runpercussion .
mng.
SATURDAY
PANCAKE SUPPER ,
Saturday, 5 to 8p.m. $125 for
adults , 7~ cents for children
at the Salem Center
Elementary School.
SIGN UP DAY for Rutland
boys baseball and gtrls softmander ol the post, was ball Saturday from 10 a.m.
presented as was Wtlliam lfntil noon at Rutland High
Stewart, a past commander. School.
Bicentenmal Mmuteman
SUNDAY
Ke1th Circle gave a talk and
PARENTS WITHOUT
showed slides on the grow th PARTNERS Chapter 838 will
of Ohw and its contribution to hold a potluck dinner Sunday
the development of America . !rom 6 to 9 at Syracuse
He was presented a gilt.
Elementary School Bring
Games were played . Jamte two covered dishes ~ beverage
Wolfe won the door prtze. and place setting. Coffee will
Mrs. Norris baked the birth- be provtded. New members
day cake which was served and families' are invited.
w1th sandwiches, salad and
HYMN SING Sunday, 2
coffee. Attendmg bestdes
p.m.
at oMt. Hermon U. B.
those named were Mrs.
Church,
Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
'Elmer Pickens and son, Mrs.
Texas
CommuniJy
Everyone
Pauline Wolfe and son, Mr.
welcome.
and Mrs. Jack Ables, Mr and
SONGFEST, Sunday, 2
Mrs. Cat;rQII Norris, Mrs.
Eula Wolle, Fritz Teaford, p.m. at Seventh-Day AdMrs. Thelma Walton, Mrs. ventist Church All singers
Betty Van Meter and grand- and public mvited.
children.
POMEROY
Baseball
Assoctallon Sunday, I p.m. at
Pomeroy Legton Hall. Any
youth, age 6 to 15, wishing to
sign up lor the summe r
program should contact Don
Hunnel at 992-2604 or Alice
Wamsley at 992-3938 before
Sunday tn order that they
Mrs. Ruth Gosney gtving the may be assigned to a team
A TEENAGE dramatic
prayer. Hostess lor the April
meeting will 'be Mrs. Alma color film, "Misli t" will be
Newton, Mrs . Margaret shown at the Burlingham
Martm, Mrs. Nellie Brogan Southern Baptist Church, 7
p.m. Sunday. Public mvited.
and Mrs. Gosney .
Games were played w1th
MONDAY
pnzes going to the wmners.
SPECIAL
SERVICES at
St. Patrick's Day theme was
Cliff
Free
MethodiSt
Laurel
earned out in the table
Church,
Monday
through
decorations lor refreshments
Sunday,
7:30
each
evemng
served by Mrs. Velsia Roush,
with
the
Rev
.
Donald
Glass,
Mrs Etta Will, Becky Roush
Cam
bridge
,
speaking.
and Mrs. Betty Christopherson
Others
at- Special singing and scene~·
tending were Mrs Lucille felt each evemng. Public
Letlhett, Mrs. Bertha Parker, invited.
Mrs. Ellie! Grueser, Mrs.
Leona Karr, Mrs. Clara
Burns, Mrs. Mtldred Fry,
Mrs. Shorty Wright, Mrs.
Eva Hartley and Mrs. Fneda
BIRTH ANNOUNCED
Mossman.
Mr . and Mrs
Lynn

American Legion
has 57th birthday

RACINE - The 57th birthday of the American Legion
was celebrated by Racine
Pos t 602 and its Auxiliary
ill
w1th a party Saturday mght
at the hall.
Mrs. Louise Stewart was
B} Ht·lcnBottrl !i;l nustress of ceremonies for
~
~
llle program and introduced
Let's Weigh Ule Problem!
past president Mrs. Mary
DEAR HELEN :
Roush , Mrs. Leora Young,
I have just come from my doctor and I am furious.
Mrs. Eunie Bruiker and Mrs.
Uke a large portion of our population, I am overweight. Frances Roberts . Mrs .
My doctor insists that il I eat less Ulan 1,000 calortes a day I Stewart was the first
will lose pounds . But I don't! He unplies, then , that I'm president of the auxiliary
Hcheating."
&lt;"~
•
organtzed tn 1948 She also
The only tinne I've lost appreciable weight is With shots, recogmzed the present ofand I don't approve olthem. I do not have a thyroid problem, ficers,
Mrs .
Norris,
but I insist that my body chemistry is out of balance. My doctor president; Mrs Young,
won 't believe the problem comes from anything but second vtce president ; Mrs .
overeating, or the wrong kinds of food.
Roush , secretary ; Mr s.
I've tried every "diet" imaginable, from Stillman to Roberts, chaplain and Mrs.
"nothmg but lrml" (and I DID lose a little weight after a Brmker, sergeant at arms.
month on that one, but tt made me feel gukky ). No luck. Agam.
Elmer Ptckens, comI repeat, calories aren 't the culprits.
Isn't it possible that chenucal imbalance prevents weight
loss, just as surely as body chemistry prevents weight GAIN in
certain lucky people who can eat everything m stght and gam
nothmg?- AVID FAN
P.S. Since January, my husband I and our children have
been on the " Eat and Stay Slinn" diet. He and our two sons
have lost 10 pounds each. My daughter and I (who neeq 11
most) have not lost a pound!
DEAR FAN:
Purchase
of two new
It's true, some people loll&lt;! we1ght much more easily than
wheelchairs lor Veterans
do others, just as body chemistry, or whatever, prevents some
Memorjal HOspital was
from gaining weight no matter what they eat.
approved when the Auxiliary
But I can't believe a continued diet of under 1,200 calones
met there recently .
(unless you're under~ feet tall) won't eventually show results.
Mrs. Jamce Damels and
The.emphasis is on "continued "! You must make heallllful,
Mrs Jessie White reported on
low-calorie food your way of life, and forget about those often- a visit to the gtft show in
dangerous crash diets, which, ilthey work at all, only operate
Columbus recently. It was
on the yo-yo principle. - H.
noted that shelves for the
supply room purchased by
DEAR HELEN :
llle Auxiliary have amved
I've never seen my problem in your column. It started Mrs. Daniels prestded w1th
Innocently. My wife was changing clothes when I walked into
the bedroom . The camera was nearby and I snapped her
picture, mostly nude.
She got mad and said I acted like a chtld, so I should be
spanked. She wouldn't speak to me until! agreed.
EGG SALE SET
, Ever since, If I get out of line, she insisists I need a
Decorated Easter ~ggs
spanking . I'm a little younger than she 1s, and th1s ll)akes me
will be sold by Beta Sigma
feel babyish. Should I go along? - BOTTOMS UP?
Phi Sorority April 17 !rum
10
a.m. to 5 p.m. in front of
DEAR B.U.:
If· you have never seen this "problem" in HHU, lllen you
the New York Clothing
haven't been reading carefully. Adult spanking questions turn
House. The eggs are $1 a
up often In my mail, and I print a sample perhaps once a year
box. Advance orders may
on the theory that when you've answered one you've answered
be placed by calllng Cheryl
'em all.
Crow at 992-2628 or Lynne
Husband-wife paddlings are ususlly a form ol sex play. If
Crow at 247-3737.,
they don't get out of hand (no pun intended ) and both enjoy
them - well, whatever turns you on.
But if the spanking makes you feel "babyish" , your wife
had better NOT switch than light. She isn't accomplishing her
purpose. - H.
VISIT HERE
Recent visitors of Mr. and
DEAR HELEN :
Mrs.
Ches ter
Kmght ,
Your recent columns of the plight of the middle-aged Pomeroy , were Mr . and Mrs .
"fired wile", (i.e., she who finds herself divorced and useless) Dick Knight of Wintersville,
has inspired me to change my will.
and Mr. and Mrs Terry
I plan to leave an endowment to alocal college,_provtding a Kmght a nn son Stevie,
·yearly scholarship for an over-4~ divorcee who IS presently Caledonia . They came
untrained as a self-supporting worker. I'll direct that no especially to vtstt Chester
Dowers be sent to my funeral. Instead, the money should go to Knight who is recuperating at
'the scholarship fund. - A.J.
home from recent surgery.
PEAR A. :
Wednesday Mr. and Mrs.
'
Terrific! Let's hope that similar scholar~h1p funds are Dick Kmght moved from
' being started all over the country. - H
Wintersville to Bellatre
where he has been transferred to llle Mitchell Plant
and the American Electnc
Power Co.

" Helen Help

Social Legion auxiliary contributes
Calendar to aerial ladder fire truck

:::j:::::::::::::~*::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:::::=:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:::·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::;:::.:=:·:·:·:·:.-s

~

:~:

II Us. • •

A S2~ donation to the Meigs VIllage Pharma cy .
Cou nt y ~" iremen's Acknowledged
wa s
"
Association for the aenal monetary dona tiOn from Mrs.
ladder !Ire truck was made !.eo Walker of Spnngf1eld, a
by the Amencan LegiOn member
A report was g1ven on the
Auxiliary ol Feeney-Bennett
Post 128 at a meeting Wed- recent birthday party with a
vote of than ks betng extended
nesday mght at the hall .
to
the committees . F.nThe Peck of Wee ONes, a
home for handt cap ped tertawment was provided by
children in Columbus, was K1m Batey and the Stnngdiscussed and Mrs . Bonnie dusters. Mr. and Mrs Ilosc&lt;l&lt;)
Oatley reported on a recent Fowler, charter members,
visi t there to dehver gifts and were recogmzed .
The bulletm fr om Mrs
food fr om the local aux1liary.
She reported lllat plans are Arnold R1chards announced
underway to build a new Hospital Day May 2 at
home m Reynoldsburg for the Chtllicothe; Gtrls State tea,
29 children. The land has May 16 at Thornville, and the
been secured and a grant swnmer distnct convention ,
a pproved Donati ons to June 3 at Athens.
The door prize dona ted by
match the federal granl are
now being taken. As for the
needs of the home, she sa1d
shampoo, Show er-to-Shower
powder, bath ml , soap and
washcloths are particularly
useful .
Mrs. Dailey also reported
on the commumty serv1ce
party last week at the Athens
Mental Health Center. Three
members of the unit went to
Athens for the party taking
gifts and food valued at $165.
A thank you note for several
g1ft Items will be se nt to the

Youth group reorganizes

Enterprise United
Methodist Church youth
group reorganized recenUy
Wider the direction of Candy
Brothel'll , Youth advisor Is ·
Rodney Pulllns.
Officers of the group are
Vanessa Folmer, preside~!;
Patty
Edwards,
vtce
president, and Lori Pullins,
secretary - tzeasurer. The
group attendance has grown.

.

from nine at the first meeting
to 2£ five meetings later. The
young people meet each
Tuesday at 6 p.m. at the
church and any youth II
years of age to senior in high
school in the Pomeroy area is
inviied to attend the
meetings. Transportabon to
and from the meetings oan be
arranged if necessary.
Activities being planned

mclude a spec tal -Easter
service and a trtp this
summer to King 's Isla nd
Name selected by the group
1s " The SOn Worshipers." The
young people recenUy enjoyed a weekend retreat at
Camp Francis Asbury near
Rio Grande where confirmatlon classes were held.

Delegate
selected
RACINE - A dele~ate to
Buckeye Girls' State was
selected at the Tuesday night
meeting of the American

Legion Auxiliary of Racine
Post 602 at the hall.
Mrs. Julta Norris presided
at the meeting during which
time it was dec1ded to increase the dues from $3 to $4.
Meetings were changed from
7 to 7:30 on the fourth
Tuesday of each month. A
get-well card will be sent to
Mrs. Grella Simpson who
remains in a Flonda hospital.
Prayer to open the meetmg
was g1ven by Mrs. Frances
Roberts.
The
pledge,
preamble to the Auxtliary
constitution, and a silent
prayer lor the dead were
given in unison The traveling
prtze donated by Mrs. Norris
was won by Mrs . Leora
Young. Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Norris to
those named and Mrs.
Thelma Walton, Mrs. Eunie •
Brinker, Mrs. Martha Lou
Beegle, Mrs. Beulah Ncigler
and Mrs Mary Roush
"'

Rae me , are

HUDSON ILL
Lewis Hudson, Pomeroy, is
a patient at Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
underw ent minor surgery
His room
Wednesday
number IS 143.

992-2039

Pomeroy flower Shop
Mrs. Mill•rd V•n Meter
Ph _ 992 ·20l9
Ph . ff2· 5711

Early
Am ertcan
de s1g n
c red e nza
cab in et o f t empered
hard boa rd and selec t
solids ftnts hed 10

Am e r tc a n
Tr a dt tm n al
Maple
grain
Oecoratlve

of

m ol ded

stm u late d

accents

wood

m a te r t al
6"x 4 "
Spe aker , JPa" H ,

w

]4 J .. "
( add

17 1 7 "
0
for t ube

5"

c ap )
Model WU9 132KS

WERNER RADIO &amp; T.V.
Middleport, Ohio

''· ·· .~ '

.1976 NEW-CAR TIRESI
GUARANTEED NATIONW

•14 *22
.LESS
$
so,
20

55

ta

than our February prices
on same tires if
Deluxe Champion
Sup-R-Belt
·~l lll l lf ol

\S Sd .. t.ldo •
\11 lt r d fw ~t n lll!;!h t~nd

as

'"ll j.! l lll ll• llj.!l '
•l 'r ii, I SI I Ho o nlhnoh

A78-13

low

f,,, .. 1111"'' 11 rnl.

as

Plus

S1 75 F E T

and o ld tr re

Hurry•.. Supply is limited!
WHITEWALLS

SIZE

an-

Feb pnc e
unblemrshcd

AIB- 13

$40 00

E78 14

44 liO

Prr ce NOW
uniJh: rnr shed

S28

Pnc e NOW
blemrshed

50

524 .50
27.50
30.50
32 50
34 .50
36 .50
31.50
32.50
35 .50
36.50
38.50

32 .50
35 50

48 95

FIB-14
GIS 14
HIS-14
JIB 14
FI B-15
G78 15
HIB-15
J78 15
LIB 15

mfant weighed seven pounds.

51 05

37 50

,,o 50

- 54 95

57 60
50 30
52 35
56 25

42

so

36 50
38 50
J]

50

•12 50
44 50

58 40
61 OS
All pnces plus ~ 1 7!) to 3 1&lt;1 FE 1 ;md old tn c•

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT
I
1

l
HI

o

I II

,J

1111
•I
I rn

BLEMISH TIRE LIMITED WARRANTY
I I H~oro ~ l n n&lt;Jlll•"' 'lll{&lt; rll r• hr Muloil

r oKol

hHunltl~""ll' " ' rh•

l ~ l l \1

1-

nor•un••tll&lt;oolol

'"n•lll• "" h• r•ol l ~ l"' ' " '" ~1!• • 1 ~·

\lflln&lt;

''"'' , , d&lt;tlo&lt;

"'II " plat o It "'' ''uri oo ho t 1\ lo rn 1 """'Ill/ &lt;'"'"' • ""rt' dutm l( lh• f1t~' )lr
,. f \n ,.,) "'no •I I flo ln ~l 11'101 oi Ht, •I "" I f" ••I ,.r I" n ioH " co 'l'"'' ol&gt; I h• r •h• 1
11~&lt;olll • ro' t ll~o o tlunatll"IMHI!tNd"'"'l'n~o ~ o hnol( lltl( l " ' ' ' "' "'"'' (fir

'"' " "'''"''"~" ' ll'.,., .,.,u r. I'" ""' nn th•• thtn rum 111 •d t"""" "' 1""' f,,,

SEND SOMEONE
THE BEAUTIFUL

We Wiro Flo-.

BLEBELTED
FACTORY

nouncing the btrlh of their
first child, a daughter ,
Brandi Joy, March 19 at the
Holzer Medical Center. The
14 ounces. Maternal grandparents are Mrs. Jan Lellle,
Wilmington, Calif.; and Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Salser,
Racine, and the paternal
grandparent is Mrs Mayme
Mallory, Racine. Maternal
great-grandparents are Mrs.
Freda Turley, Hartford, W.
Va. and Mr. and Mrs. L1ge
Shields, Syracuse .

FLOWERS

Model WIJ9 132 KS
Early Amoncan r:radsnzlJ stylsn!J

Auxiliary approve~
wheelchair purchase

Mallory,

Mrs Freda Clark was won by
Mrs. Marvm Kelly . A steak
dmner was served preceding
the meeting with Ule junior
and senior auxiliary members and the Legionnaires
attendmg

oh•o .. u nl 1"' hl o•rnlt " ·~ o1 o• ~t l 11h lt )o lu ~ ' "~' ' I I lol• "" M• un ~ '~ •l•l •l • rl,. &lt;iull• r
om.. unl •f rr ~•lll h•"'d ''" l it mo ,~ol fltll~ " 'II 1~ " llllh• d ~~~" '" ''' lh• o ' ' , f hn
unl•lrmo~h•'&lt;lt oro• '"' oil •tf wd m ••nt' ~ -.;" u •' rh~tl( '""' I• m~tl· "''' r• r •'"'"
uu t &gt;l "oil I•· "'8•11• fno t •ndah'"' ot•u"' orc-"1 It! f"P " "Ihlo• I""" I tt to u)tl" '" '

lOo t n&lt;l

lo ~lanro

&lt;

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\·

r-.

-~ . ~~~

"' "'" ol lo•urd rlo rn •I(P

$750 ''""'"'"
'•"'

BREATH
SPRING
BOUQUET

I t'l, " • I•

t

tl

&lt; •

1'11"1 1

NO 4L\Oil r(1 r.lo\l C HAAfH
l eo o,..t o• • ~" lu """'~" b a• ~ · ·~

OF

J

$ 7~1ivered

59 N. Second St.

Middleport. Ohio
. --I
\

\

�""'" in,ol Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Fnda)', March 26, 1976
..
THE SALVA TION
jJ ,It&lt;
11 ~ Bu ll c ,-nu t

POM
POMEROY
Rev
W H
Perr1n paStor
Roy Mayer , Sunday sc t,oot
sup!
Church schoo l. 9 15
am
worsh rp serv•ce 10 1.1
am Youth c bo rr r etl r ilr Si11
Mond a y
J 30 p m
undf'r
d treciton of Mary Slun lll' l
sef'l10r ch o r r£&gt;h eu rsa l
l 30
p m Thursday w tth Mrs Pttul
Nease d 1re'ctor
PO M EROY CHUR CH OF
THE NAZARENE Corner
Un1on and Mulberry
R~v
Clyde v H end erson pClsl or
Sunday schoo l 9 30 a rn Gll'n
McClung
s upt
1110rrr 111 9
worst11p 10 :J O a m
cvt' l1u1 q
SCr\ir Ce
7 30
Ill d W('('k
se rv 1ce Wedne sday 7 30 JJ m
GRACE EPISCOPAL - Th e
Rev
Harold Deeth
re c tor
Church serv1ces 10 JO a m
Holy cornmu n ron lrrst SundiiY
of month church school 10 JO
am f or n ur se r y t h r ouo t1 17
POMEROY CHURCH OF
CHRIST - R rc hard Ev a n son ,
pastor
B1ble s c ho ol
9 30
a m
worship
10 30 a m
adult worsh p serv1ce and
you ng peop l e 's meelrng 7 JO
p m
Comb1 n ed Brbl e s1udy
and prayer meetrng
Wed
nesday 7 30 p m
THE SALVATION ARMY Envoy Ray W Wtnr n\) o f ficer
1n ct1arg e SundBY 10 a 111
Ho l 1ness meetrng 10 JO a m
Sunday
Sc hoo l
Young
Peopl es Lecnon
7 p m
Thursday 1 to J p 111 L ildr es
Home L eague 1 p 111 Pr ep
classes
ST
PAUL LUTHERAN
CHURC H
Corn e r
of
Sv ca rnore and Second St5
Pomeroy The R ev Wrll•am
Mrdd les w&lt;'lrt h Pa s tor Sun day
Sc hool al 9 -15 a m
and
Ch u rch Ser v 1ces II a m
SACR E D HEART Rev
F alhe r
Pa ul
D
Welton
pas tor
Ph one
99 2 ?8:?5
Saturday evenrng Mass 7 30
Sunday Mass R and 10 .1m
Confession
Saturd a y 7 7 30

CHUR
1tnr rrsonv1IIC ~ cv
M ante y Pol Stor Il l nry E'b hn
!:,unday ~C I1 0ol \u p!
~ unc:lay
c;ch oot Y JO .am
Even111ct
wor shr p 7 10 p 1H
Pray er nnd
Prcl !)l' se rvr ce TtlU rsday I JO
prn
SYRACU S E
FIRST
CHURCH OF GOD -- Rev
G ~orqe O rl er. J,Ja stor
~ unday
SC hOOl 9 -1 5 &lt;l m
mornr n q
PI Cd Ch rll CI
11
am
ev"n q c loS I IC scr vr ce. 7 JO p n1
Prayer m cc t rnq
Thur sday
7 JO p m
POMEROY
WESTS ID E
C HUR CH OF CH R I ST , 700 W
Ma111 Sl
J e rr y Paul
nrrn rSIC r
pllOIH' 9Q2 1666
Conserv al vc
no n
rns lr ume n t a t
Sund a y war
!,11r r 10 a Ill
Brb l c study 11
a 111
worshrp 6 p m
Wed
ll f'S do'ly Brblc .s t udy 7 p m

ARMY
Ave
Pomeroy
Envoy and Mrs
Ray W n tnQ
otfte,crs tn
c h&lt;HfiC
s unday hoi mess
rpc c tmQ
tO a m , Sundav
!&gt;ch oo l 1 t O JO a m
IMdcr
YP ~ M EIOrSC Adams
7 30
p m
sa lvat 1on meet .ng
Lddt es Hom e L eague 17 noon
to 7 p 1, ,
Thur sd ay prayer
mecttn Q and B t bl e s tudy
Thur sday 7 10 p m

MIDDLEPORT
MORIA H BAPTIST

MT

Co r11C r

rourth

and Mau1

Mrddlcpo rl Rev H en r y Key
Jr
pnstor
Sunday Sc hool
9 J O a 111
Mrr:.
Er vrn
Orw nHJMdrH!r supt Morn rn q
worsh iP 10 IS a Ill
•
JE HO VAH 5 WITNESSES
- Larry Carn ahan presrd nq
mm1stcr
Sunday
01bre
l t;c i u r·~
9 JO am
W al ch
to wer s t u dy
10 JO a r11
1 U (IS d ~1 Y
P. rbl e s tud y
7 JO
p m
Thur s d ay
m1n slry
schoo l , 7 30 P rn , serv1ce
mee t rng 6 J O p m
MID DLE PORT
CH URC H
OF CHRIST IN CHRISTIAN
UN I ON - LaWr ence Man l e y ,
pa s tor Mrs Russell Young ,
Sunday Sch oo l Su p t Sunday
RUTLAND
FREEWILL Schoo l 9 JO am
Evenrng
BAPTIST Roqer l ur ne r , worshrp
7 30 We dnesday
pi!STor : :o up er m ren d e nt Doyle pray e r r11 ee t rng 7 30 P m
Hudson
Sunday schoo l
10
MT MORIA H CHURC H OF
a 111
Morn1nq worsh p
11 ~O D - Racrne Route 2 the
Cl 111 ~u nday evenmg se r v ce
Rev
J am es M
Muncy
7 30 We dn esd ay B1b le Study p as tor Sunday school. 9 .lS
730 ~rn
il m
mornrng worshrp
11
OLD
DEXTER
B I BLE a 1l1
e venrng worsh1p 7 30
C HRI ST I AN C HU~CH - Rev
Pray er mcct1ng i u e!&gt;day
Ron 1 er ry
p.1 s tor
Sunday 7 30 p m
Young peop l e's
sc h oo l !0 Cl 111
Mr~ Worl e y
m ee t 1ng 7 JO pm Thursday
r r e'II1CIS
s u pc r rnl e ndent
MIDDL EPOR T
~ IR ST
Morn n(J v.or shr p
11 am
BAPTIST - CornerS )(!ha n d
Sund&lt;Ty eventng st:rv fce 7 JO Palm e r
th e Rev
Pet e r
GRAHAM
UNITED G randat
pa s tor
D anny
METHODIST Preachrng Thomp so n
su p e rrnt e n dent
9 30 a m
lrrsl nnd SC'C Ond Sunday Sc ho o l WMPO Rild o
Sundays of ea ch month lh1rd p r o~ra m 7 IS a m
Sunday
and l our t h Su nday s eClch Sc hool q l S a m
Mornrng
mo rlth worshrpservrce at 7 JO W orship
10 15 am
Yout h
p ' " Wednes day e vcnrngs a t a ct1vrtres and f e llow sh rp l or
7 JO Prayer and Btble Study
t un or
and
se nror
htg h
SEVE NTH DAY
A D
st udents
6 p
m
Sun day
VE NTI ST Mul b err y H erg hiS evcnmg worsh rp 7 30 p m
Road
Pomeroy
P ast or
M 1d week prayer se rv1 ces
Ge rar d Set on Sa bbath Sc hool We dn es day 7 30 p rn
S uper1 n Jenden 1
Clara
C HU RC H
OF
C HRIST ,
M ci n ty r e S 1bba1h Sc hool
Mrddl e port
5th a n d Marn ,
Sa1urday a ll e rnoon a t 2 00
G e orq e
G la ze
m rnrster
wrt t1
'A'o r S; h p
se r vrcc
J am es
Sheets
s uper 1n
om
f
n
ll
ow
nq
at
3
IS
POMEROY
FIR ST BAP
t e nden l
B1b le sch ool
9 30
TIST R ev Ralph Zund e l
o&lt;U TLAND FIR ST
B AP
a 111
morning worShiP 10 30
pastor
W 1ll ram
IAalson
TI ST C HU RC H - Rev Roger
am
even ng wor shtp 7 30
Su nday sc ho ol supt
Sund ay
prayer se rv rce 7 p m Wed
F' o rd
Jr
pastor
Dr E::wy
schoo l
930 am
BYt
6 Go r e su p l
nesday
..
Sunday sc hoo l
Wca
p m
B ble study
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH
9 JO il m
mo rnmg worship
nesday 7 p m chorr practrce
OF T H E NA Z AR E NE - R ev
10 J ~ ;;, '"
Wednesday A ~0 p m
.Jo n Co te pas tor Mr s Ma r y
THE
HI LA ND
CHAPE L
La they Sunday sct10ol su p I
BUJiLINUHAM CHURCH
Gcorqc CaS ' O p a sror Sundav
Sunday schoo l
9 30 am
- R ev Bobby Elk 1ns pasto r
"c hool
Q 10
a m
£11. C'n1ng
mornmg wo r shrp 10 30 am
Su nd ay sc h ool
10 am
v o r sh p
7 10
Thursday
Sunday eva ngelistic meet1ng
worslltpserv rc e 11 a 111 and 7
r1.eno n q pr&lt;'lve r sen rc c 7 JO 7 JO p rn
Prayer meetr ng ,
Wednesda y even ng
p 111
p 111
We dnesday 1 7 30 p m
~~....__l___Q_;_m
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN
POMEROY
FIRST
APOSTO LI C M INI ST RY
R A CINE
OF
MEIGS
SO UTH ERN BAPTIST - '282
CHURC H
Thomas
L
COUNTY - Dw1ght L Zav1ll
Mu l ber r Y A ve
alf I a te d
H olme s pi!S'Or E vilnae t Sl c
dtrector
~ _
wrlh S B C Gary Basha m
servtce ".u nd ay 7 _}0 p m
HARR I SONVILLE
PRES
Sun day sc hool sup!
Sun da y
prCll'e r n\E.' e 1l flQ Tuesd ay 7 30
BYTERI A N
Rev
sch ool 9 30 am
rn o rn rng
p ll1
l'oble Slu dy Tt- u r sd ay
Ern e st
St r 1ck t n
pastor
worsh p 10 30 am
even 1n g
•
(l P m
, ,.day ch ur ch schoo l 9 30
worsr11p 6 JO p m
B rb le
d m Mrs H omer Lee supt
M ID WA Y
'&gt;..VMMU NI TY
study Wednesda y 7 Jll p m
morn 1ng worsh 1p 10 30
C H urc h
a1
L angSvill e
C H APE L
MIDDLEPORT Sun day
F A IRPL AY
Sunday Sc hool 10 a m Br bl e
schoo l
9 30 a m
R cha rd
lo c at ed on Mergs Co u n t ~
StU dy Wednesday 7 JO p m
Vaugha n
supt
Mo rnrn g
Ro ad 1 off etlhe r 325 or 12-1
Chu r c h se rvr ce s Saturday a t
worshrp 10 JO am
P asto r
R ev
T he r on
7 JO p m You 1h meetrng s a 1
Durham Sunda y Sc hool 10
7 p
m
w lh Roscoe and
SYRACUSE Mor n1 ng
a m
worsh p serv 1ce 7 30
Be l nda F1fe l eaders
worshtp
9 am
Su nd ay
p m
Sunday
Pr ayer
sc hoo l 10 a m Mrs Sampson
mee1 n g Tu esda y 7 JO p m
FA I TH
T ABERNA.C L E
. H alt su pt
youth se r viC e
1 JO p m
C H URCH Barley Run
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
F r rday
Road R ev Emmell Rawson
G OD ~
Rev
James D
pas 1o r Handley Dunn supt
Guynn
pastor
Sunday
Su nday school
10 am
school
10 a m
Sunday
Sunday e v e nrng se r v• c e
wo r sh 1p
11 am
Sunday
7 JO
8 bl e leachrng
7 JO
e venrng se rv1 ce
7 p m
p m Thu r sday
Wednesday worsh1p serv rce
7 30 P m
t-tAt EL
C OMMUNil y
C HUR C H
Near
Long
!3 ottom Edse l H a rt pastor
Su nday schOo l
10 t1 m
Ch ur c h
7 30 p m
praye r
meetr ng 7 30 p m T h u r sd ay
THE CALM BEFORE THE STORM
MIDDLEPORT
PE N
Many of you remember the old saymg, " The Calm Before TECOSTAL
- Th rd Ave t h e
the Storm "
Rev W dlr am Knrlle l pastor
Ro n a ld D ugan s u n.day Scho ol
Tins b1t of philosophy holds true not only w1th most
Supt Cla ss es l or all ages
weather storms that we encounter, but also m the upheava ls eve n1ng se r v1ce 7 30 B bl e
7 30
that affect our da1Iy lives. When J esus had to be a wakened by s tudy Wednesaday

the Sermonette

the diSCiples m the ship tha t day , He commanded the elements,
and they obeyed, thus the ragmg sea was calmed However , He
rebuked the action of the diSCiples, a nd remmded them that 1f
they had enough fa1th they could have overcome the danger by
themselves
Many tunes our hves may be mterrupted w1th some
tragedy unexpectedly and, perhaps, w1thin ourselves, we are
unable to cope with 1t But 1f we have Jesus Chr1st m our heart
and hfe, then he can provide the necessary help we need to
overcome. He 1s the calm before the storm, the strength we
need durmg a CriSIS a nd then He can agam be our calm after
the storm
If you are a smner and haven't experienced H1s love and
devotion to H1s people, then you need to try Hun and fmd that
He IS real, and when tragedy strikes, or If suddenly Christ
should return, then you too w1ll be able to reap the reward of
eternal hfe
That IS what IS gomg to make 1t all worthwhile, and the
storms and traged1es of th1s hfe w11l seem as mere bum ps m
the road, May God Bless - Re v Dr Robert L Persons

Stiversville News Notes
Dale Lee a t !\acme
Mr and Mrs R1chard
Mrs R R Durst went
Abels, Bashan Road v1s1ted
Felahves m Spencer, W Va , Wednes day fo r an a ft e r ·
s urge ry c he c kup , and IS
::On SWlday
recuperatmg
mcely
Mr and Mrs Gar; Wells,
!.Aeola
Btrch
v1s1 ted Mr a nd
p ortland , have moved mto a
Mrs
Harold
Roush
at Portmobile home near Long
land
on
Sunday
afternoon
Bottom
F'hnt Greer, Long Bottom,
! Mrs Louase De i uz IS
an overmgh t guest of
was
~urrently Wlder gomg weekly
!realments a t St Jose ph 's Pa ul Dean Evans SWlday
Mrs Ruby B1yant called on
Hosp1lal m Parkers burg, W
Mr an d Mrs J1m Middle·
Va.
Mr
and Mr s
Har r y swart on Thursday mornmg
V1s1lmg the E H CarRichard , Barba r a
an d
j'!obert, have
rece ntl y penters recently were Robert
t eturned from a F londa Mc Kelvey, Gene Lemle y,
Mrs Ruby Bryant, Dav1d
~acat10n
! Mrs Maxme Durs t, Mrs Br; ant, Duke Dalley, Bryan
'1111ke Evans and R; an, N1ck1 i.t-Jwr ence, Sam Persons ,
Van Meter, Mrs Mae Van Tr &lt;J) BogJ.!:-; Da v 1d Talbott,
Me ter and Ruby, Tr oy Boggs, Lestc 1 Ht t: hat d Tom Ours l
:FhntGreer a nd Dan ny Black , Ric hard Abels, l{udy Dw s l,
.VISited Mrs Merle Evans and Haye s McMurray, Mr s
Lowe ll Greer , Fred S
Paul Dean last week
i Mrs Gladys Bryant and Blaettnar , Gene Carpe nter,
Marshall, Charles ton, W Va , Har old Grayson, Mrs Me rle
!:vans and Carol carter
Mrs VIOlet Ri tChie Mrs
V1cki Proff1 tt a nd daughte1 s,
Mrs Bill M1ddleswar t, Mrs
LOS ANGE LES I UP! ) Barbara: Talbott and fam1l y,
Frank
Gansz, 37, a recrultlng
local, were callers at the
rdmat
or an d re ce ive r
coo
home of Mr and Mrs Bill
cu&lt;~ch
,,L
Oklahoma
State last
Bryant, recently
season,
has
been
a dded to
Mrs
Neva
F reder ick
UCLA
head
football
new
Chester, v1s1ted Mrs Sylvia
Coach
Terr)
Don
ahue's
staff,
Carpenter and Mr and Mrs
1
1
was
a
Mounced
tod•Y
Gene Carpenter on Monday
Gansz, a graduate of the
Jack R1tch1e and Bill
U
S. Naval Academy and a
Bryant have accepted emAir Force Jet pilot,
formet
ployment at Wheeling, W Va
will
handle
UCLA 's offens1ve
Mrs Ada Van Meter IS
tackles and t1ght e nd s,
ass1shng 111 the ta re of M1 s
accordmg to Donahue

'

~ ~~

o

y~u t h

servrces

Friday

MIDDLEPORT
FREEWILL BAPTIST Co rn er As h and Plum Noel
H errmann p a sl or Sa t urd ay
evenrng se r vrce 7 30 p m
Su nd a y schoo l
10 a m
Su nday eve n n g wor sh1p 7 30
p m
MEIGS
COOPER ATIV E PARISH
THE UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
Rob ert T Bumgarn er,
D•rec tor
POMEROY CLUSTER
R ev RobertHayden
R ev o wm Syd e nstnck er
CHESTER - Wo r s hrp 9 15
am Chur c h School 10 am
POMEROY Worsh rp
10 30 a m Churc h Sc hool 9 15
am UM¥ F 630 pm
ENTERPRISE - W orShi p
9 am Ch ur ch Sch ool 10 a m
RO C K ,
SP RIN GS
Wo r stup
10 am
Ch u rc h
School 9 am
UMYF 6 30
p m
FLATWOOD S ~ W orship
11 am Ch urc h Sch oo l l Oam
MIODLEPORTCLUSTER
R ev Rob e rt Bumgarner
HEATH ~ Wo r sh 1p 10 30
am Churc h School 9 30 a m
UMY F 6 p m
RUTLAND
Je ffr ey
Ger b e r
Pa sto r
Wors h t p
10 30 am Chur c h Sc ll0o l 9 30
am
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
R e v R1 chard E Jarv1 s
ASBURY W or sh rp 11
am Churc h School 9 50 am
UMW f1r s t Tu es day
FORST RUN - Wo r shrp 9
am Church Scho o l 10 am
UMW thrrd Wednesday 1 30
p m
MINERSVILLE - Wo r shrp
10 a m Church Sc h oo l 9 am
U MW lhrrd Monday 7 30p m
SY RACUSE
Ctiu r c h
Sc h oo l 9 30 a m
Wo r sh rp
serv1ce 7 30 P m
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
R ev Howard Sh1v e ley
Re v Ste ve n Wrlson
R ev Ze lia Krust e w skl
BETHANY (Dor c as I
Wo r s hiP Q JO a m
Ch urc h
Sch oo l 10 30 am
CARMEL - Chur ch Sc hool
9 30 am Wo r sh rp 10 30 am
2nd a nd 4t h Sundays
APPLE GROVE - SUI"] day
~c hool9 30a m worsh1p7 JO
p m
lSI and 3r d Sundays
Praye r meet1ng Wednesd ay
7 30 p m r ellowShip su pp er
frrst Sat u rday 6 p m UMW
2n d T ues d ay 7 30 p m
EAST LETART Chu r ch
Sc h oo l l si :lnd Jr d Su ndays
9 30 am
rourt h
Sunday
10 30 am
Wors hi p 2nd
Sunday 7 30 p m 4th Sunday
9 30 am
Prayer Meetmg
Wed n es d ay 7 JO p m
UMW
1st Tuesd ay 7 30 p m
WESLEYAN - ( Ra c m el
Sunday
Sc hool
10
am
Wors hip 11 am
Jr UMYF
Wed n es d ay 3 30 rpm
Bib l e
S tudyThursday7pm Chtur
Praci1Ce Thursday 8 p m
LETART fALLS - Churc h
Sc hool 1st 7nd 3r d •, unda ys
10 15 a m 41h 5unday 9 15
am
Worsh1p l SI '1 nd Jrd
su ndays 9 I S a rn " .Jth
Sund ay 7 JO p m
MORNING
STAR
Worst11p 9 30 a nr
Church
Sc hoo l 10 30 a 111 M,)d Wcelr.
Ser vrce We dnesda y a P m

MORSE
C HAP EL
Wur stup
II am
Ctw r ct1
\c hoo l 10 ,1m
PORTLA ND WorShtp
1 tOp rn
Ch u r ct' ~( twot Y JO
•l

m

SUTTON - Church ~c hoo l
9 )0 cl llt WorSI''II P lSI i'tnd J rd
l., undays 10 30 am
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev Robert M eece ,
Pa stor

Dennt s Crecgar ,
Assoc Mtntstcr

JOPPA -- Worshtp 10 am ,
Cllur chSc hool9am
Pray er
M cc lm~ Wednesday 8 p m
LONG BOT TOM Wor
st11p 9 am
Sunday School
9 t j am
Pray er Meetmg
W~d ne s day 7 JO p m
NORTH
BETHEL
Worshrp
II om
Church
Sc hOOl 10 am
ALFRED - s unday Sc hool
9 45 a rn , Wor s h 1p \I am
Pray er mc e t 1ng W ednesday
7 J5 p m
UMW Jr d Tuesday
8 p m
REEDSV I L LE Sunday
Sc hOol 9 JO am WorShiP 7 JO
p m
Prayer Meet1 n g 7 30
p m
Tuesday
UMW 7 30
p m tst Thursday
SIL VER RID GE wor
shrp 10 am Churc h Sc hool 9
am
TUPPERS
PLAINS
Wors h rp 9 am Chu r ch School
10 am
KENO
C HU RC H
OF
C HRI ST - Ge orge F r eder rclr.
su pt
Se rv rcc w ee kly
Q JO
., n
on ~ unday
Pre aching
trr s l nnd ! h 1ru Sundeys of
mon th by Cl rlford Sm1 t h 9 JO
,, m
HOB SO N
C HRI ST I A N
UNION Du r r ell DQddr II
pastor
Sundily Schoo l 9 30
n n1
L eonard G ilm ore ftrst
eld er
eve nmg servi ce , 7 30
p rn
weqnesday
praye r
m ee t rlg 7 30 p m
MT MOR I A H CHURCH OF
GO O - Rae ne Roule 2 The
R ev
Charl es Hand
pas to r
Sundlly sc hool
9 .15 am
rnornol(.l worshtp
11 am
Ev en rng se rvrce s
Tuesday
and I rrday 1 30 P m
BE ARWA LLOW
RIDGE
CHURCH OF C HRI ST
Doug
~ cflm&lt;Ht
nrr n 1s t e r
B rb l e
s tudy
9 10 a m
mornrng
worsiHP 10 10 ,, m
e venrng
worsh1p H p n1
W ednesdily
1ocrh1 !lrb l ~ s tudy A p 111
' MT
OLIVE CHURCH
Lo n Q nottom Sunday Sc hoo l
10 a m w !lh W1 1t ard Prgoll
sup t
Evanqe i JS I IC message
eacl') ~ unday even m q 1 30 by
Eld er Russell Cl tne mrn rs ter
of the Apostolrc I a1t h B bl r
&lt;- tudy Wednesday 7 JO p m
S TIVERSVILLE
COM
MU NITY C HURCH - Sunday
sc hool s e rv1 c e
10 am
Prayer rllcctrng Thursday 7
pIll
Sunday e venr n g serv1ce
7 PIll
Z ION
CHURC H
OF
C HR IS T
Pomeroy
H arr so n v r ll e Road
M 1ke
Grr1on pastor B rt l McE lroy
Sun day SC hOOl sup! Sunday
sc hoo l 9 30 a m
mornmg
wo r shrp and c.o mmun ton
10 30 a m
Sund ay eventng
yo ut h Chn sl tan End e avor
6 30 p m
w o r sh 1p serv 1ce
7 30
p
m
Wednesday
even rng p r pye r mee t1n g a nd
Btb l e st ud y 7 30 p m
ST
JO HN
L UTHERAN
C HU RC H , p 1n c Grove
The
Rev W rll am Mrdd l eswa rl h
Pa st or Chur c h Scr,v rces 9 30
a n 1 &lt;; unday Scho o l 10 30 a m
BRADBURY CHUR C H OF
CHRIST - Brb l e Sc hoo l 9 30
a rn
mornrng worsh rp tO 30
a r\1 ~ unday eiien 1nQ worshrp
sc r v cc 7 p m chorr praclrce
W ednesday 7 p m Re v Jeff
Ran son Pa stor
A NTIQUITY BAPTIST ·R ev 1 reela n d No r rts pa st or
'&gt;u nday
schoo l '1 0 am
Ch[l r c h
scrv ce
1
P m
We dnesday Brble Stud y
P 111
RACINE CHURCH OF Tt-JE
NAZARENE - R ev Jo hn 1\
Co lf ma!'l
pasto r
Sunday
Sc h oo l 9 30 a m
Ge r ald
We ll s sup ! Morn1 n g WorShip
10 JO a m
Sunday even tn g
wor s h rp
7 30
Pra ye r
rn e etmg Wed n esday 7 30 p

m RACINE FIRST BAPTtSl'Don L
Wa l ke r
P asto r
Ronnre Sal se r Su nday sc h oo l
sup !
Sunday sc hoo l
9 30
am morn rng wors h rp 10 ,lQ
a m
Su nd a y
even rng
worshrp
7 JO
Wed n es d ay
eve n mg 8 1ble s tu d y 7 JO
D A N V ILLE WESLEYAN R ev Lelon Glas JJr (' pas to r
:--o unday Schoo l
9 JIJ c1 m
youth and t un tor you th se r
v1ce
6 1S p m
eve n f1 9
worShip
7 JO p m
p rayer
&lt;~ n d pr a1se
We dn es d ay 7 30
o n1
SILVER
RUN
FREE
BAPTIST M1 tes Tr o ut
pa s t or
Su nd ay sch ool , 10
am
S teve L1t t le
s up t
Evenr n g servrce, 7 p m
prayer m ee llng Th ursday , 1
Pm
C Ht :, t t~&lt;
C..HUR C H OF
G OD-R ev
Bobby Parl er ,
pns 1o r
Sun d ay SChOOl
9 JU
,, 111
worShip s e r vice
11
am 1 evcnmq scrvtce 7 30
youth serv1ce Wednesday
7 30 p m
L ANGSV ILL E CHRI ST IAN
CHURCH
l ed
Jo n es
pas1o r
Sun day sc hoo l 9 :w
u m
Roy Sig man
sup l
mo rn tnQ
worshrp
10 JO
, unday evenr ng scrvrce 7 30
n 1rd week
se r v tce
We d
nesday 7 JO p m
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF
THE N AZARE N E
R ev
Dale
Bas s, p as lo r,
Bo b
Moore , Su nday school su pt
Sunday school c l asses for all
ages
9 30 a m
morn tng
worsh tp 10 45 am , NYP S,
6 30 p m
eva n ge lr st te ser
v 1ce 7 30 p m Prayer an d
fas trn g Tu es da y 10 a m
Mrd
week prayer se rv1 c e , Wed
nes d ay
7 30 P m , men'S
p ray er m eett n g , Saturday 7
p m
miS SI Onary meel1ng ,
sec ond Wednesd a y, 7 JO P m
UN 11 E 0
F A II H
N0 N
DENOMINATIONAL -- R ev
Robert mr t h p.ls tor r, und a y
sc h oo l
v 10 ,, rn
c l ass
leildcr
1 c o Hi l l
wo r Ship
sr r vr Ce
IU 30 .1 m
ch ur c h
1 10 iJ 11 1
E 0 E N
U N I T E 0
BR ET HR E N IN CH URI ST E l den
R
Blake
pastor
Sunday Sc hool
10 am
Howard
Mc Coy
su pl
Morn1ng se rmon
tt d m
~ unday
n 1gh l
se r vtces
Chr rS ii flll
Endeavor
7 JO
p m
oonq Sf: rvrce t p m
Prr ac hrnq 8 JO p m
M rel
1/ f't'~
j")raycr
m etl rng
~..: dncsd~ty
7 p m
Ray
, (l,l niS lay leadE.'r
C HUR C H
OF
JE SU S
CHR 1ST
I (JCa f P.d
al
Rut l and on N E:: w 1 rm a Road
n e)( f to 1 or es t /\ ere Park
R ev
k ay Rou se
past or
1-?ob erl Musser Sun day Sch oo l
sup t
Sunday sc hOol
10 J O
&lt;lrn
wo r ship 7 30 p tl 1'.1bi C
st udy Wcdrr~sday 1 1 0 p m
·.rt1 rd,ly n rtrl , t 11r r} 1 ';)(' r
1 'II p '"
,. ,
HEMLOCK
GROVE
CHRISTIAN
Roger,
W ats o n , pastor
Walla ce
Bra dford , su p ! , morn ing
worshiP 9 30 , church school ,
10 30,
young
people ' s
meetmg, ll 30 p m, evening
worsh i p , 7 30 p m , Bible
study, Wednesdey l 730pm
MT U NION lt AP TI$T
Rev
R
0
tJ row n
sup pl v
pas t or , Sund ay sc hool suet ,

Y 1~ a 11 1
•,und.:ty e v cn 111q
wonh tp J p m
TUPPERS
PL AIN S
CHRISTIAN
CHURC H
I IIlii III I lu ll• r woorl Pr•!tlor
l •ow.rru totiOY.IIt I
• lmcJ,ly
'r llool orpt
1111dUy ~ ChOOI
~ 111 "1 11
/lt1orn1nQ ~e rn 1 011 ,
I() tU "11 1
~ und.ly 1 v cn1nq
'o!'(" V Il( I f) I ll
LETART F/\LLS UNITED
l't&lt;ET HH EN
R tll
I r• d.1nd
Norrr\ , J.)&lt;.~~lor
1 loyd r&gt;~orr1s
supt
' unday
~lho ol
Y 10 ,, m
mornrnq
o;~ rn10n
10 30 &lt;l m
Prayer
se rvrcr Wc.•dncsday 7 3U p m
CHES HIRE CHURCH OF
C.OD OF P ROPHE CY - G P
'• nlrlh pastor 'o unday School ,
to , 111
1\ rth ur Hen so n
~ upl
Mor nmg Worship
11
;::~ n•
Youn~:~ Peopl es ~erv~ec,
7 p 111
Evenrnq scrv1ce 7 30
p 111
W r dncsday M1d Wcelo.
Praye r &lt; crvrce , 7 30 p m 1
Youth 111CCI1nq
6 '3 0 p m
Evenmg wnrsh 1p
1 30 p m
C H ESTER CHURCH OF
THE NA2ARENE
Rev
Herb e rt
Grate
pas tol'"
Wo rsh p servrce . I I am and
7 JO p n1
s unday
Sunday
Sc hool
q 30 a m
RIChard
Ba r t on sup! Prayer mce t rng
Wednesday, 7 30 p m
BRAD FORD CHURCH OF
CHRIST
Jack
Per r y,
m.n1ster Sunday School 9 30
am
mornmg church 10 30
a m
Sunday even1ng serv rce,
7 30 p 111 Wednesday serv1cc
Rpm
LA Ut(EL CLIFF FREE
METHODIST C HURCH Rev f l oyd r Shook pastor
LJoyd W r i ght Su nday Sc hool
Supt
Mor nrn g Worshr p 9 30
a m
Sunday Schoo l 10 70 a
m
Wed n es da y Prayer and
B1b lt&gt; &lt;; lu d y 7 30p m
Sund ay
eve n ng wo r stpp 7 30 p m
Cho i r Pra ctrce Thursday 7 p

Less Drudgery •••
••• More Li11ing

Television log for easy viewing
FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 1976

That's wha1 rct trernenl has meanl to Fred and Frances Of cuu r 1&lt;.e,
they spent close to forty year~ geumg thems~lves reotdy

5 00-Bonanza J, Famtly Affa tr

T hey learned the nchnes1&lt;1 of ltvmg
the adventures of
and serv mg and sacnftc JOg. ihey surro unded themselves
wuh people who C&lt;ire, who ;AfC concerned, who like he lpmg o thers
T hey ba&gt;cd the~r lives on trulhs and 1deals thai do not c hange w1th
every pa&gt;smg oppor1u nny or dlSappomlment They found God

5 30--Ada m 12 4, 13, N ews 6,

CAPJ'AIN EASY
WE'L~L WHAT DID
YOU ~ I ND Our Ar

1he yea rs nut ye t lived
Rather 7HE REST ,
the unfo ldmg cu lmm af1 o n of our dest• ny as ch1ldre n ol God

THE' ~UilEAU OF
ClliMIN AL

~·

MASON ASSE MBLY OF
GO O, D u ddmg L iln f' /" ,,son
W
Vn
Ch es t er I • ntlrl nl
P .:.s to r
~ unday '&gt;ch&lt;.oo l Y 15
a 111
Ch 1ldre n ~ Ch u rc h 6 ! ',
p no
Younq P eop les SC'rv1ce
6 1~
p m
Eva1H ~c l S11c
Se rv rcc I :10 p 111
Women s
Mrssronary Co un c il 10 t1 m
f1 r st and !h1rd 1 ucsclays
Pray er and Urbtc ~ t udy
W edne sday ' 30 p m

H AR irQI( l.J ( Hir r
If
CHRIST 11 1 ( hrl 51&lt;11\ lJ 11 0 11
1 h e Pev lVI IItam (dtllJ)b!!l_l_~ ·
p.ISIM 'on day :ichoo t Y 10
d p1
JiH IICS ll liQh(S ~lt pl
evcn rnq servi ce , 7 30 p 111
W~e dnr•:;. dfly
evcn 1ng pray er
lll f'&lt;lh n Q 7 10 p m
Yo uth
pr ctv cr s~ r v 1 c.e ~ac h TuesclayE
FAIJ&lt;VIEW
BIBL
CHURCH ( c l il rt W Va , Rt
11 R f' V
Gl:or~n:
llo scha r .
paslor
' ounday ... c hoOI 9 JO
a ' " Praypr and l11bl c st u dy
7 HI Jl 111
Cottaq c Prayer
~ ervlc&lt;: l ucs day
"' ll n•
W orshiP ' ' r vrcc
11 1111 ', day

7 30 p

Il l

BUT NOW lE'T ME' PE-EL OFF
THE' FAKE- WHI51&lt;E'R$ - !

20, Masterpiece Theatre 33

Play is tougher at table
NORTH
.K7

Copyr (lhl 1976 l&lt;eosle AdYertrf.mg Servr~e lf'l(

n1a
by Tl\e Amerrcan B

ID 00-Pollce Story 3.4. Bill y Graham Crusade 15.
News 20, Educational Implications 33
10 31}-Avl atlon Wealher 2D
II 00-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 33
II 31}-Johnny Carson 3,4,1 5, Rookies 6, 13. Movie
" Red Line 7000" 8, Movie " Lightning Bolt" 10,
Janakl 33

\

WIN AT BRIDGE

IZE:CO~DSt

In the la ves of Fred and Frances, retiremen t has b~en o ne more
Chnsllan adventure And a bless mg to the1 r church, the tr commumty
and the1r fam1Iy They ha ve more ume nnw for1h1ngs they ALWAYS
valued mOst
.

26

y K 54

ble Soc (IIV

+J 1094 3
•K 7 2

WEST

EAST

•QJ 9a6

.10 3 2
• J 10 7 6

• 832

• Q65

LOSER
~~5

tA7
•QJI09

.65

f1!'U.O~ ~t;S, nl~t-16.~ ...

••
....
=
..;...

AM AWARf.. OF

·-~~S.~~~~ .
I'lL TW.. ~OJ.

.. UW -HUH

Rt::QU~ST

SOUTH IDI

~OUI&lt;

• A 54
¥A Q9
t K 82
"'A 8 4 3

FOR A RAIS€ IN

PI\'I AI$&gt; AM TAKI Nb IT
0~

ma ke in a bridge column It IS
much tougher at lhe table, yet
I a ny expert worth h1s salt
would make it.
He can see that the only way
to beat three notrump Will be
for hts partner to score some
spade tncks He can also see
that West can 't hold much in
h1gh cards But he can be look·
mg at the kmg or queen of
d1amonds and 11 1s up to East
to tel him keep lhat h1gh diamond m h1s hand until the ace
of spades IS knocked out

12 40-0on Kirshner 's Rock Concert 6, Ironside 13

1 00-Midnlghl Special 3,4, 15; Movie " Dr Renault's
Secre t " 10
1 41}-News 13
2 Jo-News 3. Movie "The Hanged Man " 4.
J OQ--Movle " Psycho" 3
4 15----Movle "Island of Terror" 3.
4 JG-Movle "Freud" 4

s 00-Movle

SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 1976

Both vu lnerable

WllSiDE'
Wesl

North East

South

Treellouse Club 10, Kentucky Afield 13
7 00-Saturday Report 3, AG-USA 4. Eddie Saunders
6; TreehouseC iub8 . US . Farm Report ID; Groovle
Goalies 13
7 JD-Bullwlnkle 3, I Dream of Jeannie 4, Jetsons 6,
Vegetable Soup 15, Harlem Globetrotters Popcorn
Machine 8, Man From C O.S. L. 10, Make A Wish 13;
Mlsfer Rogers 20
8 DD-Emerggency Plus 4 3,4,15, Hong Kong Phooey
6,13. Pebbles and Bamm Bamm 8,10; Sesame
Streel 20
8 3D-Josle and the Pussycats 3,4, 15, Tom and Jerry
Grape Ape 6. 13, Bugs Bunny-Road Runner a, Bugs

•

The same Iowa reader
wants to know what we bid
next after respondmg two
clubs to partner's spade open·
mg w1th
• • • YAKxx +xxx
•AQxx 1f he reb1ds two
spades
W1th one of our favorite
partners we would raise to
three spades With olhers we
would b1d two notrump
E1ther call 1s generally
satisfactory

INT
Pass 3 N T Pass
Pass
Openmg lead - Q •

Pass

.

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

West's queen of spades 1s
allowed to hold the first tr1ck
He contmues the s u1t and
dummy 1s m w1th the kmg
A low d1amond 1s led and It
IS up to you to play from the
._, _~ East hand What do you play '
r-::o'--C/.
lf you have been readmg
th1s week ' s articles , you
should have no problem You
play your ace of diamonds Se·
cond hand high 1
Th1s play 1s not a t all hard to

MD - BUT HE

Bt\LO!rr&amp;EV- At4Y

LAWVER CA N
BE H~D FOR A
PRICE -· WHAT'S
WRDfiG IYilH
HIM9 BORN
RICI-t ?

GOT RICH

B&lt;I ~G

HOIU:ST
"fooD DECEt'(T
a HO SMART -

Bunny and f'rlends 10

9 00-Secret L1ves of Waldo Klffy 3,4,15, Electric
Company 20
9 30-Pink Panther 3,4, 15. Adventures of Gilligan 6.13.
Scooby Doo 8.10; M1sfer Rogers 20.

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN, sencl $1 to "Wm
at Bndge, " c •l o th1s
newspaper, P 0 Box 489,
Rad1o C1ty Station, New York,
N Y 10019)

ID Do-Land ollhe Losf 3,4, 15; Hot Dog 6, Shazam ' -Isis
8,10; Sesame Sfreef 2D. High School Basketball 13.
1D .JO-Run, Joe, Run 3,4, 15, Big Blue Marble 6.
11 DO-Return fo fhe Planet of fhe Apes 3,4, 15; Speedy
Buggy 6. Space Nuts 8, 10; Electric Company 20.
11 ·Jo-Westwlnd 3,4,15, CBPA Bowling 6, Ghost
Busters 8, 10, Mister Rogers 2D.
12 00-Jetsons 3,4,15; Valley of the Dinosaurs 8,1D;
Vegetable Soup 20
12 3D-Tennis 3,15; Blcentennla News Documentary 4.
VIewpoint 8, Fal Albert 10
1 00-Champlons 4, Soul Train 6. Children's Film
Festival B. 10. Lowell Thomas Remembers 33
I 3D-What's This Race For The Presidency About?
8,1D, Biography 33
2 00-NCAA Basketball 3,4, 15, Donny and Marie 6:
Champions a. High School Basketball 33. Urban
League 10, World Missions 13
2 30-Movle "Half Angel " 1D.
J oo-outdoors wtth Julius Boros 6, To Be Announced

W1th the hope 1t will , 1n some measure, foster and help sus tam that ,
wh1ch ,5 good m family and community )1fe, this feature IS sponsored by
the bus mess f1rms and organ1zations whose names appear below

WilKINSON'S

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

HEINER'S BAKERY

2 Convement Lo ca t10n s

MIDWAY MARKET Pomeroy Ph 992 2S82
BOB'S MARKET Mason , Ph m -S721

Baker s o f Gopd Bread
Huntington W Va

-----

Two Locations
59 N Second St
Mtddleport, 0
46 Court Sf
Gallipolis , 0

Grocenes &amp; Gener a l Mcrchand tse
R:ac1ne
Ph 949 S772

------------------REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE

-

Clovia,
we'll

W e F1l l All Doc tors Presc rtph ons
992 29SS
Pom!roy

Pomeroy

----SEAR'S CATALOG MERCHANT

SUNDAY TIMES SENTINEL
Pomeroy

K&amp;C JEWELERS

miss

is

LjOU

ihe

so

last

much'

load!

Lour s W Osborne
22 0 E Mam
Pomeroy
Ph 9'9'2 2118

992 2156

It's not ld.;e I'm
1t's not li~e she won't be
movinq to the end "--~
tw1ce a week
of the world. Mom r
wtth her
dirt4
l
laundr4!

!J

Bakers of
Middle port

Ph 992 1785

RUTH'S MARKET

Gay 90

22-CAN

I

HER22

~

~~~

MEIGS TIRE CENTER
700 E Mam

Pomeroy

D1al 992-2101

Ra e me

.,;~~~~~~~JOe=~~~~

The St ore with A Heart
Ph 949 3342

WENDY

TEL~ ME

SHE'S A VERY

TALENTED
FASHION
DE51oNER,

ROSEBERRY'S SERVICE STATION

Dial992 3284

Mrddleporl

- --

Middle pori, Oh10

form four ordinary words .

BIG JIM'S PLAZA
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

-----~~~--------~
Meigs County Branch

THE ATHENS COUNTY SAVINGS
&amp; LOAN CO.
296 W Second

Pomeroy

GAUL'S MARKET
'

Chester, Ollto

it:

AXVDLBAAXR
Is

J. 0 N G F E J. L 0 W

O ne lette r stmpl~ slands for omothcr ln thts sample A Is
u:;ed for lhe three 1.':,, X ftJr the tY.o O'.s, l'lr Stogie letters
apostrophes, the length nnd form allon o( the \\ords are all
hints F.ach dav t he code letters arc different

TUGZQBYO

-1

l!:!.!--------"""7"-'::-:::-::-;:c:..r--; r-'------,--r--------"T----..
S TOP
PAW!! TATER KNOCKED
JAWIN'
OVER 'lORE JUG AN SPILT
AN'MOP
CORN· SQUEEZIN'S ALL
OVER TH'
FLOOR-AN'--·
'

•

Unscramble the&amp;e four Jumbles.
one letter to each square, to

VECJVMB

AUZVMJ

Pom ero y , Ohto

HALL'S BEN FRANKLIN STORE

F'orm1 c

actd
source
Sacred
pledge
lS Fathenng
a Ia

NCM ' W

GOEGLEIN READY MIX
f- - - - - - - - - -

111 Court St

umon
37 Descry

CRVPTOQUOTES

----------------1

THE DAILY SENTINEL

··sass"

1·00-Movle "The Sunshine Patriot" 4. Sammy and
Company 6
1 15--Movle 11 Monster on the Campus" 13
I 3Q-Don Kirshner's Rock Concerl 8. Movie " A Girl
Named Tamlko" 1D
2 00-Telethon Continues 3
3 00 - Movie "Zifa" 4. ABC News 13
3 JQ-Movle "M,r Skeffington" 10
4 45--Movle "That Funny Feeling " 44
5 00-Telethon Contln ues 3

Ph 949 9S91

Ractne

Basketball 33; God

6·Jo-NBC News 3,4,15 , News 6, To Be Announced 8;
CBS News 10
7 00-World At War 3; Lawrence Welk 4, 15; Hee Haw
6, Hee Haw 8. In The Know 1D. Newsmaker '7613
1 30-Treasure Hunt 3, Lasf of the Wild 10, Nashville
on fhe Road 13.
8 00-Emergency' 3.4,15. Almost Anything Goes 6.
P1nocchlo 8,10, High School Basketball 13; Rivals
of Sherlock Holmes 33
9·00-Movle "I Spy" 3,15; Rona Barrell Looks Af The
Oscar 6, Movie " A Man Called Gannon" 4, Austin
Clfy Llmlfs 33
9 3D-Bob Newharl a, 10;
10 ·0D-Bert D' Angelo 6,13; Carol Burnell 8,10,
Soundstage 33
11 DO-News 3,34,8,10, 13, ABC News 6; Wally's
Workshop 15. Janakl 33
11 15--Movle "Blood on fhe Sun" 6
11 Jo-E aster SeaiTelefhon 3, Track Meel4, 15 ; Movie
"Allin a Night' s Work" 8. Movie "Hud" 1D; Movie

36 Dock·
workers·

L.....:::!!:~:........J DAILY CRYPTOilUOTE - Here's ho" to work

·-··----~

" The Fnendly Fol ks ' '
Pomeroy , Oh1o

29 Church
law
3D Scandlna·
vtans
31 Well-known

tanat

RACINE FOOD MARKET

Mtddle po rt

POWELL'S SUPER VALU

27 Ravenous

li Withered

F in e F ood &amp; Serv tce

FOR ONLY 12.50 PER WEEK

12 Mtsstve

16 Au nature!
19 Joust
22 Wh1rrmg
sound
23 Hot off the
presses
24 Spam a nd
Portugal
25 Tradmg
center

Secre-

Ph . 949 5961

McCLURE'S DAIRY ISLE

Sports Speclacular
33.
Golf 8, 10; World

Has The Answer 15

I'll'\ VIO'?KNG F{)RT/f'S.'!- I

'

" H e ll ' Dealer

YOU CAN RENT THIS SPACE

Yesterday's Answer

25 Pay-d1rt
seeker
26 Border

HAMBURGERS, IN THE LOW-RENI ,__--,1 THAT
HAVGNTMAO£: A 0/M£ IN
DISTRIC!BE' ' .''-----1 RV£ WEEkS ._._

Middleport , Ohio

RACINE PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

•

"Jungle Captive" 13

'

Otal992 S248

8

3 Jo-Pro Bowling 6
4 00-NCAA Basketball 3,4, 15.
8,10; High School Basketball
5 00-Wide World of Sports 6;
Missions Continues 13
6 ()(' -News 3,4,8, 10; High School

Bread
Ph 992 3030

MARK V STORE

(Former ly S.a dte's M arke t)
Syracu se
Ph 992 3986

Locust Sf

.!H Twe lfth
U S PresIdent •
39 Gaehc
40 Some
ll Watched
DOWN
1 Weave
together
2 French riVer
J Everythmg
13 wds I
4 Golfer' s
gadget
5 Japanese
wild dog
6Poem
; To the pomt
10 Everybody
13 wds.)
II Contented
12 wds.)

threa~

••'I
"

1 ~---1 SHE$ A CARHOP AT

Thu-d Sf

ACROSS
Cry, as£~
ca lf
5 Bohea or ..)
Isla
8 F unc tion
9 Fascmat10n
13 Wmged
r her 1
14 Make
an
·ntr)
15 1 thor
Le n
16 AtJ ..rCtOUS
l7 That 1Fr 1
IH Toothed
20 Kmd of
hockey
·trick "
21 Dreadful
22 Cowardly
23 Stockmg

BETSY ROSS BAKERY

Keepsake D•amond Rings
Mam St , Pomeroy

GASOJ.JNE AU,EY

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY

SERVICES

212 E

---

DUDLEY'S

WAID CROSS SONS STORE

Ph 992 SilO

by THOMAS JOSEPH

TALK T ' YOU .

Dial992 2318

FRESH PRODUCE &amp; PLANTS

E Mam

~

TAKE" TT EfoSf, BUSTER!
A LL I WANTA 00 IS

Na ft onw tde InSurance Co o f Col umbus , 0
101 Spring A~e
Pom ero y

Small Engme Sa tes &amp; Se r v1ce
498 locu st St
Middleport
Ph 992 3092

214

HOLO ON

" Slightly Ternflc" 3

6 00-Sunrlse Semester 8,10
6 3().-F tlm 4; Fun for Everyone 6. TV Classroom 8 ;

~

--c

pIl l

GREAT SCOTT~.
IT 5 DR FL.OOGEL!

W ea ther 33 . N ews 10; Don Adams Screen Test 13.
Famtly Alfa1r 15, Oh1o Journal 20
JG-Porter Wagoner J. Treasure Hunt A; Candid

Camera 6, Evening Edlflon with Marfln Agronsky
20. S25,000 Pyram id ID; To Tell The Truth 13. Wild
K i ngdom 15. Black Perspective on the News 33
8 00 - Sanford and Son 3.4.15. Donny and Marie 13;
Billy Graham Crusade 6,8; Wash ington Week In
Review 20,33, Sara 10,
8 3o-Jubl lee 3,4,15, Wall Stree1 Week 20,33
9·00-Movle "The Lords of Flafbush" 6, 13; Mov ie
" Brink's The Great Robbery" 8, 10. Firing Line

Lawrence Welk 8 , Bowltng for Dollars 6, Avtatlon

"' DEXTER

CHURCH OF
C H R I ST Cha rl es R\JS Se ll
Sr nun1 s 1er Norman C W rll
supl
~ unday
sc hool
9 JO
a m
wo r ship se r v1ce 10 30
a m
Urble study Tuesday
73 0pr.1
REORGANIZED C HU RC H
OF
JE S US
CHRIST OF
LATTER
DAY SAINTS Portland
Racme R oad
William Ro ush pastor Denny
Evans
Sunday
Scho ol
Drrec: l or Sunday Sc hoo l 9 JO
am
Mornmq worshrp 10 JO
a 111
Sunday even tng service
7 p m
Wedn e&gt;sd ay evcnmg
p rayer se r v1crs 7 30 p m
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Rev
Earl Shuler
pas t o r
Wo r sh rp scrvtce 9 30 am
~ unday
schoo l
10 30 am
B1ble
sr uo y
d rr u
J.lf '!.(.e!
serv •c e Thu rsday 7 30 p m
CARLETON CHURCH I&lt; rngsbury Road Ga r y K 1ng
pas tor
Sun day scnool
9 30
a m
e venrng wo r shrp 7 30
p m
Prayer meetrng , We d
nesday 7 JO p m
LONG
BOTTOM
CHRISTIAN Bruce Smr lh
pastor Wallace D amewoo d
Supt B1bt e Sch oo l 9 30 a m
P reach mg servrce 10 45 am
No eve n rng se rv ce
HYSELL
RUN
FREE
METHODIST CHURC H - Rev
Paul
N ev il le
pa stor
~ und"Y
Schoo l 9 JO il m
Mo rn mg se r vtCe 10 30 il m
yout h se rvrce
6 IS p m
EvnnqE.' I Si re scrvt ce 7 30 p m
Prayer mec t 1nq
Thurs d ay
7 30 p m
FREEDOM
G O SPE L
M I SS ION al Bald Knob Rev
E J Gr ffrtl1 supt o f chu r ch ,
R ev
L
R
G l ucsencarnp
pas t or
Roger Wll lfr cd 'i r
Sunday School su pl
~ unday
Sc hool 9 JO a 111
prayer
meet 1nQ Tuesday 7 ~ 30 p m
you th mce 1tn q 6 p m Sunday
l eaders /\ da Van Me t er and
Grella '1ut ll e Sunday (I VCnrnq
wo r sh p
7 p m
1hrough
w n! c r month~
MT
HERMON CHURCH
OF
THE
UNI1EO
BRETHREN IN CHRIST Rev James H Leac h pastor
Sundoy sc hoo l 9 30 a
m
R u ssell
S pe n c er
s up!
Wor'shrp se rv ce 10 45 a m
Evenmg worsh p alternatrng
wrth C E at 7 30 p m on
Su nday Pr ayer meelrng 7 30
p
m
We dne sday
1\lf r e d
Wo l f e lay l eader
WHITE 5
C HAPEL
Coolville
RD
Rev
Roy
D ee te r pasto r ':. unda y sch ool
9 30 a 11 1
wor sh rp scrv1cC,
10 10 .1m
Brb l e s t udy and
p raye r sc r v1ce
Wedne sday
7 JO p m
RUTLAND
RUTLAND C HUR C H OF
CHRIST
Rod
Kas l er
pas to r v t- t Bra l ey Sunday
sc hool sup t Sundoy sc hool
9 30 a 111
worshrp scrvrce
and c ommun o n 10 30 a 10
youth meetrnq 6 p m
'ounday
evcn rnq se r vrce 7
rcqu l a r
hn a r d 111 ~..:t: lor. q l~ 1rr1 '. cl!Ur
day 1 p 'll
RUTLAND
COMMUNITY
CHURCH
Sunday Schoo l;
9 JO a m , worshrp servrce 11
a
m , Wednesday pr aye r
meet 1ng 7 30 p 111
you t h
serv1ces , Sunday
7 p m ;
Sun day n 1ght worsll1p 7 30.
RUT LA N'tf
H U R C.., ,
THE NAZAREN E
Rev
Ll oyd 0 Grimm Jr pasto r
'&gt; undny sc hoo l
9 JO am
wo r sh p servrce 10 JO a I ll
b r oadcas t l 1v e over WMPO
vounq pe opl e~ ~c r vrc e o 15
I'V ,lt1r::J CIISII C S(' r VIC() 7 ] Q p 111
Prayer mee t rng Wedn es day
l JO
p rn
Mr ssro nary
meet , nq
7 30 p 111
llr s l
We dn es day of mont h
~~ASON COUNTY
1\1 1 :-. u ,
'.i T OAPTIST ·
' • co ntl an d 1 v.1•,-. roy Sts
~ lan Crarq
pastor
i urr~ ay
Sc hool
9 1'&gt; a rn
worsh1p
serv rce , 11
am
lrarn rng
un10n
6 JO p m , eve n tng
worshrp servrce
7 30 p m
Mrd week prayPr se r vrce
We dn es d ay 7 30 p m
M ASO N
CHURCH
OF
CHR 1ST P 0 BO'o( 187 Mr ll er
'• t
Mason
W Va
~unday
I\ Jb te '• I Udy 10 am
Wo r shr p
11 a 111 ;,nd 7 p m R1b l c " tudy
Wed n C!'.day 7 p m
Voca l
m us rc
FIR ST
SO UTHERN
BAPTIS T
Corner of ~ cc o n d
and 1\nderson Mason Pas l or
Wa ll er Ctou d Sunda y schoo l
worshrp St' r vrcc II
9 1 ~ a nr
a n • und 7 10 p m
week l y
O•b l c study Wednesday 7 JO

7

7 00-:- Truth or Conseq uences J , To Te ll The Truth 4,

Not the REST Who loo ks forward to idleness?

setccrea

8,

6 00 - News 3.4.8. 10, 13, 15. ABC News 6, Zoom 20,33
6 JQ- NBC News 3,4, 15, ABC News 13, Andy Grlff1 lh 6,
CBS News a,I D, Carrascolendas JJ, Hodgepodge
Lodge 2D

Now they arc prepa red to enJOY the reSI of l1fe

Scroplure s

Star Trek 15
Beverly H 1llb1lltes

Eleclrtc Company 20,33

beltevmg

SI&lt;Bsburg Vng

a,

UM

I

SUFOA.M

I

YIHRTI'

~

CMTWPVMJ

WPCM
WPB

X C WNPVMJ
QNZBBM

BWPBY
ACZZTEUZB
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: WHAT THIS COUNTRY NEEDS IS
EARLY AMERICAN FURNITURE THAT CAN BE BOUGHT
AT EARLY AMERIC.!&gt;N PRICES. - ANON
(C) U761Unc Jl't•l.wes

HECKTl

~yndleate,

lac.•

v J~

.

~

r~ I
h J

~~~.-~~.=w=~~n~m~]A(II)(lllj

(Aa.wera to•orrow)
Jumtdt:1. SYNOD

'Ytllt rd•f •
..

I

ACTUALL'(, HE 6R£1KE Hl5STUf'lO
FOOT WHEN HE T~lf'f'EO OVEI&lt;
HIS
N SUPPER DISH 1

DOILY

ASYLUM

NEWEST

A•wu; What Chose 11ons of toil u:ere u-orldng-TONS OF

SOIL

I

ltl TELL 't'OU THE TRUTH .
HE WASNi A HERO AT ALL

Now arrance the clrelod !etten
the IUrpriH uawer. . .
ourretled bythe obove clll1oon.
to form

THIS CONCLUDES OUR PORTION
OF 'SHOW AND TELL "

�""'" in,ol Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Fnda)', March 26, 1976
..
THE SALVA TION
jJ ,It&lt;
11 ~ Bu ll c ,-nu t

POM
POMEROY
Rev
W H
Perr1n paStor
Roy Mayer , Sunday sc t,oot
sup!
Church schoo l. 9 15
am
worsh rp serv•ce 10 1.1
am Youth c bo rr r etl r ilr Si11
Mond a y
J 30 p m
undf'r
d treciton of Mary Slun lll' l
sef'l10r ch o r r£&gt;h eu rsa l
l 30
p m Thursday w tth Mrs Pttul
Nease d 1re'ctor
PO M EROY CHUR CH OF
THE NAZARENE Corner
Un1on and Mulberry
R~v
Clyde v H end erson pClsl or
Sunday schoo l 9 30 a rn Gll'n
McClung
s upt
1110rrr 111 9
worst11p 10 :J O a m
cvt' l1u1 q
SCr\ir Ce
7 30
Ill d W('('k
se rv 1ce Wedne sday 7 30 JJ m
GRACE EPISCOPAL - Th e
Rev
Harold Deeth
re c tor
Church serv1ces 10 JO a m
Holy cornmu n ron lrrst SundiiY
of month church school 10 JO
am f or n ur se r y t h r ouo t1 17
POMEROY CHURCH OF
CHRIST - R rc hard Ev a n son ,
pastor
B1ble s c ho ol
9 30
a m
worship
10 30 a m
adult worsh p serv1ce and
you ng peop l e 's meelrng 7 JO
p m
Comb1 n ed Brbl e s1udy
and prayer meetrng
Wed
nesday 7 30 p m
THE SALVATION ARMY Envoy Ray W Wtnr n\) o f ficer
1n ct1arg e SundBY 10 a 111
Ho l 1ness meetrng 10 JO a m
Sunday
Sc hoo l
Young
Peopl es Lecnon
7 p m
Thursday 1 to J p 111 L ildr es
Home L eague 1 p 111 Pr ep
classes
ST
PAUL LUTHERAN
CHURC H
Corn e r
of
Sv ca rnore and Second St5
Pomeroy The R ev Wrll•am
Mrdd les w&lt;'lrt h Pa s tor Sun day
Sc hool al 9 -15 a m
and
Ch u rch Ser v 1ces II a m
SACR E D HEART Rev
F alhe r
Pa ul
D
Welton
pas tor
Ph one
99 2 ?8:?5
Saturday evenrng Mass 7 30
Sunday Mass R and 10 .1m
Confession
Saturd a y 7 7 30

CHUR
1tnr rrsonv1IIC ~ cv
M ante y Pol Stor Il l nry E'b hn
!:,unday ~C I1 0ol \u p!
~ unc:lay
c;ch oot Y JO .am
Even111ct
wor shr p 7 10 p 1H
Pray er nnd
Prcl !)l' se rvr ce TtlU rsday I JO
prn
SYRACU S E
FIRST
CHURCH OF GOD -- Rev
G ~orqe O rl er. J,Ja stor
~ unday
SC hOOl 9 -1 5 &lt;l m
mornr n q
PI Cd Ch rll CI
11
am
ev"n q c loS I IC scr vr ce. 7 JO p n1
Prayer m cc t rnq
Thur sday
7 JO p m
POMEROY
WESTS ID E
C HUR CH OF CH R I ST , 700 W
Ma111 Sl
J e rr y Paul
nrrn rSIC r
pllOIH' 9Q2 1666
Conserv al vc
no n
rns lr ume n t a t
Sund a y war
!,11r r 10 a Ill
Brb l c study 11
a 111
worshrp 6 p m
Wed
ll f'S do'ly Brblc .s t udy 7 p m

ARMY
Ave
Pomeroy
Envoy and Mrs
Ray W n tnQ
otfte,crs tn
c h&lt;HfiC
s unday hoi mess
rpc c tmQ
tO a m , Sundav
!&gt;ch oo l 1 t O JO a m
IMdcr
YP ~ M EIOrSC Adams
7 30
p m
sa lvat 1on meet .ng
Lddt es Hom e L eague 17 noon
to 7 p 1, ,
Thur sd ay prayer
mecttn Q and B t bl e s tudy
Thur sday 7 10 p m

MIDDLEPORT
MORIA H BAPTIST

MT

Co r11C r

rourth

and Mau1

Mrddlcpo rl Rev H en r y Key
Jr
pnstor
Sunday Sc hool
9 J O a 111
Mrr:.
Er vrn
Orw nHJMdrH!r supt Morn rn q
worsh iP 10 IS a Ill
•
JE HO VAH 5 WITNESSES
- Larry Carn ahan presrd nq
mm1stcr
Sunday
01bre
l t;c i u r·~
9 JO am
W al ch
to wer s t u dy
10 JO a r11
1 U (IS d ~1 Y
P. rbl e s tud y
7 JO
p m
Thur s d ay
m1n slry
schoo l , 7 30 P rn , serv1ce
mee t rng 6 J O p m
MID DLE PORT
CH URC H
OF CHRIST IN CHRISTIAN
UN I ON - LaWr ence Man l e y ,
pa s tor Mrs Russell Young ,
Sunday Sch oo l Su p t Sunday
RUTLAND
FREEWILL Schoo l 9 JO am
Evenrng
BAPTIST Roqer l ur ne r , worshrp
7 30 We dnesday
pi!STor : :o up er m ren d e nt Doyle pray e r r11 ee t rng 7 30 P m
Hudson
Sunday schoo l
10
MT MORIA H CHURC H OF
a 111
Morn1nq worsh p
11 ~O D - Racrne Route 2 the
Cl 111 ~u nday evenmg se r v ce
Rev
J am es M
Muncy
7 30 We dn esd ay B1b le Study p as tor Sunday school. 9 .lS
730 ~rn
il m
mornrng worshrp
11
OLD
DEXTER
B I BLE a 1l1
e venrng worsh1p 7 30
C HRI ST I AN C HU~CH - Rev
Pray er mcct1ng i u e!&gt;day
Ron 1 er ry
p.1 s tor
Sunday 7 30 p m
Young peop l e's
sc h oo l !0 Cl 111
Mr~ Worl e y
m ee t 1ng 7 JO pm Thursday
r r e'II1CIS
s u pc r rnl e ndent
MIDDL EPOR T
~ IR ST
Morn n(J v.or shr p
11 am
BAPTIST - CornerS )(!ha n d
Sund&lt;Ty eventng st:rv fce 7 JO Palm e r
th e Rev
Pet e r
GRAHAM
UNITED G randat
pa s tor
D anny
METHODIST Preachrng Thomp so n
su p e rrnt e n dent
9 30 a m
lrrsl nnd SC'C Ond Sunday Sc ho o l WMPO Rild o
Sundays of ea ch month lh1rd p r o~ra m 7 IS a m
Sunday
and l our t h Su nday s eClch Sc hool q l S a m
Mornrng
mo rlth worshrpservrce at 7 JO W orship
10 15 am
Yout h
p ' " Wednes day e vcnrngs a t a ct1vrtres and f e llow sh rp l or
7 JO Prayer and Btble Study
t un or
and
se nror
htg h
SEVE NTH DAY
A D
st udents
6 p
m
Sun day
VE NTI ST Mul b err y H erg hiS evcnmg worsh rp 7 30 p m
Road
Pomeroy
P ast or
M 1d week prayer se rv1 ces
Ge rar d Set on Sa bbath Sc hool We dn es day 7 30 p rn
S uper1 n Jenden 1
Clara
C HU RC H
OF
C HRIST ,
M ci n ty r e S 1bba1h Sc hool
Mrddl e port
5th a n d Marn ,
Sa1urday a ll e rnoon a t 2 00
G e orq e
G la ze
m rnrster
wrt t1
'A'o r S; h p
se r vrcc
J am es
Sheets
s uper 1n
om
f
n
ll
ow
nq
at
3
IS
POMEROY
FIR ST BAP
t e nden l
B1b le sch ool
9 30
TIST R ev Ralph Zund e l
o&lt;U TLAND FIR ST
B AP
a 111
morning worShiP 10 30
pastor
W 1ll ram
IAalson
TI ST C HU RC H - Rev Roger
am
even ng wor shtp 7 30
Su nday sc ho ol supt
Sund ay
prayer se rv rce 7 p m Wed
F' o rd
Jr
pastor
Dr E::wy
schoo l
930 am
BYt
6 Go r e su p l
nesday
..
Sunday sc hoo l
Wca
p m
B ble study
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH
9 JO il m
mo rnmg worship
nesday 7 p m chorr practrce
OF T H E NA Z AR E NE - R ev
10 J ~ ;;, '"
Wednesday A ~0 p m
.Jo n Co te pas tor Mr s Ma r y
THE
HI LA ND
CHAPE L
La they Sunday sct10ol su p I
BUJiLINUHAM CHURCH
Gcorqc CaS ' O p a sror Sundav
Sunday schoo l
9 30 am
- R ev Bobby Elk 1ns pasto r
"c hool
Q 10
a m
£11. C'n1ng
mornmg wo r shrp 10 30 am
Su nd ay sc h ool
10 am
v o r sh p
7 10
Thursday
Sunday eva ngelistic meet1ng
worslltpserv rc e 11 a 111 and 7
r1.eno n q pr&lt;'lve r sen rc c 7 JO 7 JO p rn
Prayer meetr ng ,
Wednesda y even ng
p 111
p 111
We dnesday 1 7 30 p m
~~....__l___Q_;_m
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN
POMEROY
FIRST
APOSTO LI C M INI ST RY
R A CINE
OF
MEIGS
SO UTH ERN BAPTIST - '282
CHURC H
Thomas
L
COUNTY - Dw1ght L Zav1ll
Mu l ber r Y A ve
alf I a te d
H olme s pi!S'Or E vilnae t Sl c
dtrector
~ _
wrlh S B C Gary Basha m
servtce ".u nd ay 7 _}0 p m
HARR I SONVILLE
PRES
Sun day sc hool sup!
Sun da y
prCll'e r n\E.' e 1l flQ Tuesd ay 7 30
BYTERI A N
Rev
sch ool 9 30 am
rn o rn rng
p ll1
l'oble Slu dy Tt- u r sd ay
Ern e st
St r 1ck t n
pastor
worsh p 10 30 am
even 1n g
•
(l P m
, ,.day ch ur ch schoo l 9 30
worsr11p 6 JO p m
B rb le
d m Mrs H omer Lee supt
M ID WA Y
'&gt;..VMMU NI TY
study Wednesda y 7 Jll p m
morn 1ng worsh 1p 10 30
C H urc h
a1
L angSvill e
C H APE L
MIDDLEPORT Sun day
F A IRPL AY
Sunday Sc hool 10 a m Br bl e
schoo l
9 30 a m
R cha rd
lo c at ed on Mergs Co u n t ~
StU dy Wednesday 7 JO p m
Vaugha n
supt
Mo rnrn g
Ro ad 1 off etlhe r 325 or 12-1
Chu r c h se rvr ce s Saturday a t
worshrp 10 JO am
P asto r
R ev
T he r on
7 JO p m You 1h meetrng s a 1
Durham Sunda y Sc hool 10
7 p
m
w lh Roscoe and
SYRACUSE Mor n1 ng
a m
worsh p serv 1ce 7 30
Be l nda F1fe l eaders
worshtp
9 am
Su nd ay
p m
Sunday
Pr ayer
sc hoo l 10 a m Mrs Sampson
mee1 n g Tu esda y 7 JO p m
FA I TH
T ABERNA.C L E
. H alt su pt
youth se r viC e
1 JO p m
C H URCH Barley Run
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
F r rday
Road R ev Emmell Rawson
G OD ~
Rev
James D
pas 1o r Handley Dunn supt
Guynn
pastor
Sunday
Su nday school
10 am
school
10 a m
Sunday
Sunday e v e nrng se r v• c e
wo r sh 1p
11 am
Sunday
7 JO
8 bl e leachrng
7 JO
e venrng se rv1 ce
7 p m
p m Thu r sday
Wednesday worsh1p serv rce
7 30 P m
t-tAt EL
C OMMUNil y
C HUR C H
Near
Long
!3 ottom Edse l H a rt pastor
Su nday schOo l
10 t1 m
Ch ur c h
7 30 p m
praye r
meetr ng 7 30 p m T h u r sd ay
THE CALM BEFORE THE STORM
MIDDLEPORT
PE N
Many of you remember the old saymg, " The Calm Before TECOSTAL
- Th rd Ave t h e
the Storm "
Rev W dlr am Knrlle l pastor
Ro n a ld D ugan s u n.day Scho ol
Tins b1t of philosophy holds true not only w1th most
Supt Cla ss es l or all ages
weather storms that we encounter, but also m the upheava ls eve n1ng se r v1ce 7 30 B bl e
7 30
that affect our da1Iy lives. When J esus had to be a wakened by s tudy Wednesaday

the Sermonette

the diSCiples m the ship tha t day , He commanded the elements,
and they obeyed, thus the ragmg sea was calmed However , He
rebuked the action of the diSCiples, a nd remmded them that 1f
they had enough fa1th they could have overcome the danger by
themselves
Many tunes our hves may be mterrupted w1th some
tragedy unexpectedly and, perhaps, w1thin ourselves, we are
unable to cope with 1t But 1f we have Jesus Chr1st m our heart
and hfe, then he can provide the necessary help we need to
overcome. He 1s the calm before the storm, the strength we
need durmg a CriSIS a nd then He can agam be our calm after
the storm
If you are a smner and haven't experienced H1s love and
devotion to H1s people, then you need to try Hun and fmd that
He IS real, and when tragedy strikes, or If suddenly Christ
should return, then you too w1ll be able to reap the reward of
eternal hfe
That IS what IS gomg to make 1t all worthwhile, and the
storms and traged1es of th1s hfe w11l seem as mere bum ps m
the road, May God Bless - Re v Dr Robert L Persons

Stiversville News Notes
Dale Lee a t !\acme
Mr and Mrs R1chard
Mrs R R Durst went
Abels, Bashan Road v1s1ted
Felahves m Spencer, W Va , Wednes day fo r an a ft e r ·
s urge ry c he c kup , and IS
::On SWlday
recuperatmg
mcely
Mr and Mrs Gar; Wells,
!.Aeola
Btrch
v1s1 ted Mr a nd
p ortland , have moved mto a
Mrs
Harold
Roush
at Portmobile home near Long
land
on
Sunday
afternoon
Bottom
F'hnt Greer, Long Bottom,
! Mrs Louase De i uz IS
an overmgh t guest of
was
~urrently Wlder gomg weekly
!realments a t St Jose ph 's Pa ul Dean Evans SWlday
Mrs Ruby B1yant called on
Hosp1lal m Parkers burg, W
Mr an d Mrs J1m Middle·
Va.
Mr
and Mr s
Har r y swart on Thursday mornmg
V1s1lmg the E H CarRichard , Barba r a
an d
j'!obert, have
rece ntl y penters recently were Robert
t eturned from a F londa Mc Kelvey, Gene Lemle y,
Mrs Ruby Bryant, Dav1d
~acat10n
! Mrs Maxme Durs t, Mrs Br; ant, Duke Dalley, Bryan
'1111ke Evans and R; an, N1ck1 i.t-Jwr ence, Sam Persons ,
Van Meter, Mrs Mae Van Tr &lt;J) BogJ.!:-; Da v 1d Talbott,
Me ter and Ruby, Tr oy Boggs, Lestc 1 Ht t: hat d Tom Ours l
:FhntGreer a nd Dan ny Black , Ric hard Abels, l{udy Dw s l,
.VISited Mrs Merle Evans and Haye s McMurray, Mr s
Lowe ll Greer , Fred S
Paul Dean last week
i Mrs Gladys Bryant and Blaettnar , Gene Carpe nter,
Marshall, Charles ton, W Va , Har old Grayson, Mrs Me rle
!:vans and Carol carter
Mrs VIOlet Ri tChie Mrs
V1cki Proff1 tt a nd daughte1 s,
Mrs Bill M1ddleswar t, Mrs
LOS ANGE LES I UP! ) Barbara: Talbott and fam1l y,
Frank
Gansz, 37, a recrultlng
local, were callers at the
rdmat
or an d re ce ive r
coo
home of Mr and Mrs Bill
cu&lt;~ch
,,L
Oklahoma
State last
Bryant, recently
season,
has
been
a dded to
Mrs
Neva
F reder ick
UCLA
head
football
new
Chester, v1s1ted Mrs Sylvia
Coach
Terr)
Don
ahue's
staff,
Carpenter and Mr and Mrs
1
1
was
a
Mounced
tod•Y
Gene Carpenter on Monday
Gansz, a graduate of the
Jack R1tch1e and Bill
U
S. Naval Academy and a
Bryant have accepted emAir Force Jet pilot,
formet
ployment at Wheeling, W Va
will
handle
UCLA 's offens1ve
Mrs Ada Van Meter IS
tackles and t1ght e nd s,
ass1shng 111 the ta re of M1 s
accordmg to Donahue

'

~ ~~

o

y~u t h

servrces

Friday

MIDDLEPORT
FREEWILL BAPTIST Co rn er As h and Plum Noel
H errmann p a sl or Sa t urd ay
evenrng se r vrce 7 30 p m
Su nd a y schoo l
10 a m
Su nday eve n n g wor sh1p 7 30
p m
MEIGS
COOPER ATIV E PARISH
THE UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
Rob ert T Bumgarn er,
D•rec tor
POMEROY CLUSTER
R ev RobertHayden
R ev o wm Syd e nstnck er
CHESTER - Wo r s hrp 9 15
am Chur c h School 10 am
POMEROY Worsh rp
10 30 a m Churc h Sc hool 9 15
am UM¥ F 630 pm
ENTERPRISE - W orShi p
9 am Ch ur ch Sch ool 10 a m
RO C K ,
SP RIN GS
Wo r stup
10 am
Ch u rc h
School 9 am
UMYF 6 30
p m
FLATWOOD S ~ W orship
11 am Ch urc h Sch oo l l Oam
MIODLEPORTCLUSTER
R ev Rob e rt Bumgarner
HEATH ~ Wo r sh 1p 10 30
am Churc h School 9 30 a m
UMY F 6 p m
RUTLAND
Je ffr ey
Ger b e r
Pa sto r
Wors h t p
10 30 am Chur c h Sc ll0o l 9 30
am
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
R e v R1 chard E Jarv1 s
ASBURY W or sh rp 11
am Churc h School 9 50 am
UMW f1r s t Tu es day
FORST RUN - Wo r shrp 9
am Church Scho o l 10 am
UMW thrrd Wednesday 1 30
p m
MINERSVILLE - Wo r shrp
10 a m Church Sc h oo l 9 am
U MW lhrrd Monday 7 30p m
SY RACUSE
Ctiu r c h
Sc h oo l 9 30 a m
Wo r sh rp
serv1ce 7 30 P m
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
R ev Howard Sh1v e ley
Re v Ste ve n Wrlson
R ev Ze lia Krust e w skl
BETHANY (Dor c as I
Wo r s hiP Q JO a m
Ch urc h
Sch oo l 10 30 am
CARMEL - Chur ch Sc hool
9 30 am Wo r sh rp 10 30 am
2nd a nd 4t h Sundays
APPLE GROVE - SUI"] day
~c hool9 30a m worsh1p7 JO
p m
lSI and 3r d Sundays
Praye r meet1ng Wednesd ay
7 30 p m r ellowShip su pp er
frrst Sat u rday 6 p m UMW
2n d T ues d ay 7 30 p m
EAST LETART Chu r ch
Sc h oo l l si :lnd Jr d Su ndays
9 30 am
rourt h
Sunday
10 30 am
Wors hi p 2nd
Sunday 7 30 p m 4th Sunday
9 30 am
Prayer Meetmg
Wed n es d ay 7 JO p m
UMW
1st Tuesd ay 7 30 p m
WESLEYAN - ( Ra c m el
Sunday
Sc hool
10
am
Wors hip 11 am
Jr UMYF
Wed n es d ay 3 30 rpm
Bib l e
S tudyThursday7pm Chtur
Praci1Ce Thursday 8 p m
LETART fALLS - Churc h
Sc hool 1st 7nd 3r d •, unda ys
10 15 a m 41h 5unday 9 15
am
Worsh1p l SI '1 nd Jrd
su ndays 9 I S a rn " .Jth
Sund ay 7 JO p m
MORNING
STAR
Worst11p 9 30 a nr
Church
Sc hoo l 10 30 a 111 M,)d Wcelr.
Ser vrce We dnesda y a P m

MORSE
C HAP EL
Wur stup
II am
Ctw r ct1
\c hoo l 10 ,1m
PORTLA ND WorShtp
1 tOp rn
Ch u r ct' ~( twot Y JO
•l

m

SUTTON - Church ~c hoo l
9 )0 cl llt WorSI''II P lSI i'tnd J rd
l., undays 10 30 am
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev Robert M eece ,
Pa stor

Dennt s Crecgar ,
Assoc Mtntstcr

JOPPA -- Worshtp 10 am ,
Cllur chSc hool9am
Pray er
M cc lm~ Wednesday 8 p m
LONG BOT TOM Wor
st11p 9 am
Sunday School
9 t j am
Pray er Meetmg
W~d ne s day 7 JO p m
NORTH
BETHEL
Worshrp
II om
Church
Sc hOOl 10 am
ALFRED - s unday Sc hool
9 45 a rn , Wor s h 1p \I am
Pray er mc e t 1ng W ednesday
7 J5 p m
UMW Jr d Tuesday
8 p m
REEDSV I L LE Sunday
Sc hOol 9 JO am WorShiP 7 JO
p m
Prayer Meet1 n g 7 30
p m
Tuesday
UMW 7 30
p m tst Thursday
SIL VER RID GE wor
shrp 10 am Churc h Sc hool 9
am
TUPPERS
PLAINS
Wors h rp 9 am Chu r ch School
10 am
KENO
C HU RC H
OF
C HRI ST - Ge orge F r eder rclr.
su pt
Se rv rcc w ee kly
Q JO
., n
on ~ unday
Pre aching
trr s l nnd ! h 1ru Sundeys of
mon th by Cl rlford Sm1 t h 9 JO
,, m
HOB SO N
C HRI ST I A N
UNION Du r r ell DQddr II
pastor
Sundily Schoo l 9 30
n n1
L eonard G ilm ore ftrst
eld er
eve nmg servi ce , 7 30
p rn
weqnesday
praye r
m ee t rlg 7 30 p m
MT MOR I A H CHURCH OF
GO O - Rae ne Roule 2 The
R ev
Charl es Hand
pas to r
Sundlly sc hool
9 .15 am
rnornol(.l worshtp
11 am
Ev en rng se rvrce s
Tuesday
and I rrday 1 30 P m
BE ARWA LLOW
RIDGE
CHURCH OF C HRI ST
Doug
~ cflm&lt;Ht
nrr n 1s t e r
B rb l e
s tudy
9 10 a m
mornrng
worsiHP 10 10 ,, m
e venrng
worsh1p H p n1
W ednesdily
1ocrh1 !lrb l ~ s tudy A p 111
' MT
OLIVE CHURCH
Lo n Q nottom Sunday Sc hoo l
10 a m w !lh W1 1t ard Prgoll
sup t
Evanqe i JS I IC message
eacl') ~ unday even m q 1 30 by
Eld er Russell Cl tne mrn rs ter
of the Apostolrc I a1t h B bl r
&lt;- tudy Wednesday 7 JO p m
S TIVERSVILLE
COM
MU NITY C HURCH - Sunday
sc hool s e rv1 c e
10 am
Prayer rllcctrng Thursday 7
pIll
Sunday e venr n g serv1ce
7 PIll
Z ION
CHURC H
OF
C HR IS T
Pomeroy
H arr so n v r ll e Road
M 1ke
Grr1on pastor B rt l McE lroy
Sun day SC hOOl sup! Sunday
sc hoo l 9 30 a m
mornmg
wo r shrp and c.o mmun ton
10 30 a m
Sund ay eventng
yo ut h Chn sl tan End e avor
6 30 p m
w o r sh 1p serv 1ce
7 30
p
m
Wednesday
even rng p r pye r mee t1n g a nd
Btb l e st ud y 7 30 p m
ST
JO HN
L UTHERAN
C HU RC H , p 1n c Grove
The
Rev W rll am Mrdd l eswa rl h
Pa st or Chur c h Scr,v rces 9 30
a n 1 &lt;; unday Scho o l 10 30 a m
BRADBURY CHUR C H OF
CHRIST - Brb l e Sc hoo l 9 30
a rn
mornrng worsh rp tO 30
a r\1 ~ unday eiien 1nQ worshrp
sc r v cc 7 p m chorr praclrce
W ednesday 7 p m Re v Jeff
Ran son Pa stor
A NTIQUITY BAPTIST ·R ev 1 reela n d No r rts pa st or
'&gt;u nday
schoo l '1 0 am
Ch[l r c h
scrv ce
1
P m
We dnesday Brble Stud y
P 111
RACINE CHURCH OF Tt-JE
NAZARENE - R ev Jo hn 1\
Co lf ma!'l
pasto r
Sunday
Sc h oo l 9 30 a m
Ge r ald
We ll s sup ! Morn1 n g WorShip
10 JO a m
Sunday even tn g
wor s h rp
7 30
Pra ye r
rn e etmg Wed n esday 7 30 p

m RACINE FIRST BAPTtSl'Don L
Wa l ke r
P asto r
Ronnre Sal se r Su nday sc h oo l
sup !
Sunday sc hoo l
9 30
am morn rng wors h rp 10 ,lQ
a m
Su nd a y
even rng
worshrp
7 JO
Wed n es d ay
eve n mg 8 1ble s tu d y 7 JO
D A N V ILLE WESLEYAN R ev Lelon Glas JJr (' pas to r
:--o unday Schoo l
9 JIJ c1 m
youth and t un tor you th se r
v1ce
6 1S p m
eve n f1 9
worShip
7 JO p m
p rayer
&lt;~ n d pr a1se
We dn es d ay 7 30
o n1
SILVER
RUN
FREE
BAPTIST M1 tes Tr o ut
pa s t or
Su nd ay sch ool , 10
am
S teve L1t t le
s up t
Evenr n g servrce, 7 p m
prayer m ee llng Th ursday , 1
Pm
C Ht :, t t~&lt;
C..HUR C H OF
G OD-R ev
Bobby Parl er ,
pns 1o r
Sun d ay SChOOl
9 JU
,, 111
worShip s e r vice
11
am 1 evcnmq scrvtce 7 30
youth serv1ce Wednesday
7 30 p m
L ANGSV ILL E CHRI ST IAN
CHURCH
l ed
Jo n es
pas1o r
Sun day sc hoo l 9 :w
u m
Roy Sig man
sup l
mo rn tnQ
worshrp
10 JO
, unday evenr ng scrvrce 7 30
n 1rd week
se r v tce
We d
nesday 7 JO p m
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF
THE N AZARE N E
R ev
Dale
Bas s, p as lo r,
Bo b
Moore , Su nday school su pt
Sunday school c l asses for all
ages
9 30 a m
morn tng
worsh tp 10 45 am , NYP S,
6 30 p m
eva n ge lr st te ser
v 1ce 7 30 p m Prayer an d
fas trn g Tu es da y 10 a m
Mrd
week prayer se rv1 c e , Wed
nes d ay
7 30 P m , men'S
p ray er m eett n g , Saturday 7
p m
miS SI Onary meel1ng ,
sec ond Wednesd a y, 7 JO P m
UN 11 E 0
F A II H
N0 N
DENOMINATIONAL -- R ev
Robert mr t h p.ls tor r, und a y
sc h oo l
v 10 ,, rn
c l ass
leildcr
1 c o Hi l l
wo r Ship
sr r vr Ce
IU 30 .1 m
ch ur c h
1 10 iJ 11 1
E 0 E N
U N I T E 0
BR ET HR E N IN CH URI ST E l den
R
Blake
pastor
Sunday Sc hool
10 am
Howard
Mc Coy
su pl
Morn1ng se rmon
tt d m
~ unday
n 1gh l
se r vtces
Chr rS ii flll
Endeavor
7 JO
p m
oonq Sf: rvrce t p m
Prr ac hrnq 8 JO p m
M rel
1/ f't'~
j")raycr
m etl rng
~..: dncsd~ty
7 p m
Ray
, (l,l niS lay leadE.'r
C HUR C H
OF
JE SU S
CHR 1ST
I (JCa f P.d
al
Rut l and on N E:: w 1 rm a Road
n e)( f to 1 or es t /\ ere Park
R ev
k ay Rou se
past or
1-?ob erl Musser Sun day Sch oo l
sup t
Sunday sc hOol
10 J O
&lt;lrn
wo r ship 7 30 p tl 1'.1bi C
st udy Wcdrr~sday 1 1 0 p m
·.rt1 rd,ly n rtrl , t 11r r} 1 ';)(' r
1 'II p '"
,. ,
HEMLOCK
GROVE
CHRISTIAN
Roger,
W ats o n , pastor
Walla ce
Bra dford , su p ! , morn ing
worshiP 9 30 , church school ,
10 30,
young
people ' s
meetmg, ll 30 p m, evening
worsh i p , 7 30 p m , Bible
study, Wednesdey l 730pm
MT U NION lt AP TI$T
Rev
R
0
tJ row n
sup pl v
pas t or , Sund ay sc hool suet ,

Y 1~ a 11 1
•,und.:ty e v cn 111q
wonh tp J p m
TUPPERS
PL AIN S
CHRISTIAN
CHURC H
I IIlii III I lu ll• r woorl Pr•!tlor
l •ow.rru totiOY.IIt I
• lmcJ,ly
'r llool orpt
1111dUy ~ ChOOI
~ 111 "1 11
/lt1orn1nQ ~e rn 1 011 ,
I() tU "11 1
~ und.ly 1 v cn1nq
'o!'(" V Il( I f) I ll
LETART F/\LLS UNITED
l't&lt;ET HH EN
R tll
I r• d.1nd
Norrr\ , J.)&lt;.~~lor
1 loyd r&gt;~orr1s
supt
' unday
~lho ol
Y 10 ,, m
mornrnq
o;~ rn10n
10 30 &lt;l m
Prayer
se rvrcr Wc.•dncsday 7 3U p m
CHES HIRE CHURCH OF
C.OD OF P ROPHE CY - G P
'• nlrlh pastor 'o unday School ,
to , 111
1\ rth ur Hen so n
~ upl
Mor nmg Worship
11
;::~ n•
Youn~:~ Peopl es ~erv~ec,
7 p 111
Evenrnq scrv1ce 7 30
p 111
W r dncsday M1d Wcelo.
Praye r &lt; crvrce , 7 30 p m 1
Youth 111CCI1nq
6 '3 0 p m
Evenmg wnrsh 1p
1 30 p m
C H ESTER CHURCH OF
THE NA2ARENE
Rev
Herb e rt
Grate
pas tol'"
Wo rsh p servrce . I I am and
7 JO p n1
s unday
Sunday
Sc hool
q 30 a m
RIChard
Ba r t on sup! Prayer mce t rng
Wednesday, 7 30 p m
BRAD FORD CHURCH OF
CHRIST
Jack
Per r y,
m.n1ster Sunday School 9 30
am
mornmg church 10 30
a m
Sunday even1ng serv rce,
7 30 p 111 Wednesday serv1cc
Rpm
LA Ut(EL CLIFF FREE
METHODIST C HURCH Rev f l oyd r Shook pastor
LJoyd W r i ght Su nday Sc hool
Supt
Mor nrn g Worshr p 9 30
a m
Sunday Schoo l 10 70 a
m
Wed n es da y Prayer and
B1b lt&gt; &lt;; lu d y 7 30p m
Sund ay
eve n ng wo r stpp 7 30 p m
Cho i r Pra ctrce Thursday 7 p

Less Drudgery •••
••• More Li11ing

Television log for easy viewing
FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 1976

That's wha1 rct trernenl has meanl to Fred and Frances Of cuu r 1&lt;.e,
they spent close to forty year~ geumg thems~lves reotdy

5 00-Bonanza J, Famtly Affa tr

T hey learned the nchnes1&lt;1 of ltvmg
the adventures of
and serv mg and sacnftc JOg. ihey surro unded themselves
wuh people who C&lt;ire, who ;AfC concerned, who like he lpmg o thers
T hey ba&gt;cd the~r lives on trulhs and 1deals thai do not c hange w1th
every pa&gt;smg oppor1u nny or dlSappomlment They found God

5 30--Ada m 12 4, 13, N ews 6,

CAPJ'AIN EASY
WE'L~L WHAT DID
YOU ~ I ND Our Ar

1he yea rs nut ye t lived
Rather 7HE REST ,
the unfo ldmg cu lmm af1 o n of our dest• ny as ch1ldre n ol God

THE' ~UilEAU OF
ClliMIN AL

~·

MASON ASSE MBLY OF
GO O, D u ddmg L iln f' /" ,,son
W
Vn
Ch es t er I • ntlrl nl
P .:.s to r
~ unday '&gt;ch&lt;.oo l Y 15
a 111
Ch 1ldre n ~ Ch u rc h 6 ! ',
p no
Younq P eop les SC'rv1ce
6 1~
p m
Eva1H ~c l S11c
Se rv rcc I :10 p 111
Women s
Mrssronary Co un c il 10 t1 m
f1 r st and !h1rd 1 ucsclays
Pray er and Urbtc ~ t udy
W edne sday ' 30 p m

H AR irQI( l.J ( Hir r
If
CHRIST 11 1 ( hrl 51&lt;11\ lJ 11 0 11
1 h e Pev lVI IItam (dtllJ)b!!l_l_~ ·
p.ISIM 'on day :ichoo t Y 10
d p1
JiH IICS ll liQh(S ~lt pl
evcn rnq servi ce , 7 30 p 111
W~e dnr•:;. dfly
evcn 1ng pray er
lll f'&lt;lh n Q 7 10 p m
Yo uth
pr ctv cr s~ r v 1 c.e ~ac h TuesclayE
FAIJ&lt;VIEW
BIBL
CHURCH ( c l il rt W Va , Rt
11 R f' V
Gl:or~n:
llo scha r .
paslor
' ounday ... c hoOI 9 JO
a ' " Praypr and l11bl c st u dy
7 HI Jl 111
Cottaq c Prayer
~ ervlc&lt;: l ucs day
"' ll n•
W orshiP ' ' r vrcc
11 1111 ', day

7 30 p

Il l

BUT NOW lE'T ME' PE-EL OFF
THE' FAKE- WHI51&lt;E'R$ - !

20, Masterpiece Theatre 33

Play is tougher at table
NORTH
.K7

Copyr (lhl 1976 l&lt;eosle AdYertrf.mg Servr~e lf'l(

n1a
by Tl\e Amerrcan B

ID 00-Pollce Story 3.4. Bill y Graham Crusade 15.
News 20, Educational Implications 33
10 31}-Avl atlon Wealher 2D
II 00-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 33
II 31}-Johnny Carson 3,4,1 5, Rookies 6, 13. Movie
" Red Line 7000" 8, Movie " Lightning Bolt" 10,
Janakl 33

\

WIN AT BRIDGE

IZE:CO~DSt

In the la ves of Fred and Frances, retiremen t has b~en o ne more
Chnsllan adventure And a bless mg to the1 r church, the tr commumty
and the1r fam1Iy They ha ve more ume nnw for1h1ngs they ALWAYS
valued mOst
.

26

y K 54

ble Soc (IIV

+J 1094 3
•K 7 2

WEST

EAST

•QJ 9a6

.10 3 2
• J 10 7 6

• 832

• Q65

LOSER
~~5

tA7
•QJI09

.65

f1!'U.O~ ~t;S, nl~t-16.~ ...

••
....
=
..;...

AM AWARf.. OF

·-~~S.~~~~ .
I'lL TW.. ~OJ.

.. UW -HUH

Rt::QU~ST

SOUTH IDI

~OUI&lt;

• A 54
¥A Q9
t K 82
"'A 8 4 3

FOR A RAIS€ IN

PI\'I AI$&gt; AM TAKI Nb IT
0~

ma ke in a bridge column It IS
much tougher at lhe table, yet
I a ny expert worth h1s salt
would make it.
He can see that the only way
to beat three notrump Will be
for hts partner to score some
spade tncks He can also see
that West can 't hold much in
h1gh cards But he can be look·
mg at the kmg or queen of
d1amonds and 11 1s up to East
to tel him keep lhat h1gh diamond m h1s hand until the ace
of spades IS knocked out

12 40-0on Kirshner 's Rock Concert 6, Ironside 13

1 00-Midnlghl Special 3,4, 15; Movie " Dr Renault's
Secre t " 10
1 41}-News 13
2 Jo-News 3. Movie "The Hanged Man " 4.
J OQ--Movle " Psycho" 3
4 15----Movle "Island of Terror" 3.
4 JG-Movle "Freud" 4

s 00-Movle

SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 1976

Both vu lnerable

WllSiDE'
Wesl

North East

South

Treellouse Club 10, Kentucky Afield 13
7 00-Saturday Report 3, AG-USA 4. Eddie Saunders
6; TreehouseC iub8 . US . Farm Report ID; Groovle
Goalies 13
7 JD-Bullwlnkle 3, I Dream of Jeannie 4, Jetsons 6,
Vegetable Soup 15, Harlem Globetrotters Popcorn
Machine 8, Man From C O.S. L. 10, Make A Wish 13;
Mlsfer Rogers 20
8 DD-Emerggency Plus 4 3,4,15, Hong Kong Phooey
6,13. Pebbles and Bamm Bamm 8,10; Sesame
Streel 20
8 3D-Josle and the Pussycats 3,4, 15, Tom and Jerry
Grape Ape 6. 13, Bugs Bunny-Road Runner a, Bugs

•

The same Iowa reader
wants to know what we bid
next after respondmg two
clubs to partner's spade open·
mg w1th
• • • YAKxx +xxx
•AQxx 1f he reb1ds two
spades
W1th one of our favorite
partners we would raise to
three spades With olhers we
would b1d two notrump
E1ther call 1s generally
satisfactory

INT
Pass 3 N T Pass
Pass
Openmg lead - Q •

Pass

.

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

West's queen of spades 1s
allowed to hold the first tr1ck
He contmues the s u1t and
dummy 1s m w1th the kmg
A low d1amond 1s led and It
IS up to you to play from the
._, _~ East hand What do you play '
r-::o'--C/.
lf you have been readmg
th1s week ' s articles , you
should have no problem You
play your ace of diamonds Se·
cond hand high 1
Th1s play 1s not a t all hard to

MD - BUT HE

Bt\LO!rr&amp;EV- At4Y

LAWVER CA N
BE H~D FOR A
PRICE -· WHAT'S
WRDfiG IYilH
HIM9 BORN
RICI-t ?

GOT RICH

B&lt;I ~G

HOIU:ST
"fooD DECEt'(T
a HO SMART -

Bunny and f'rlends 10

9 00-Secret L1ves of Waldo Klffy 3,4,15, Electric
Company 20
9 30-Pink Panther 3,4, 15. Adventures of Gilligan 6.13.
Scooby Doo 8.10; M1sfer Rogers 20.

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN, sencl $1 to "Wm
at Bndge, " c •l o th1s
newspaper, P 0 Box 489,
Rad1o C1ty Station, New York,
N Y 10019)

ID Do-Land ollhe Losf 3,4, 15; Hot Dog 6, Shazam ' -Isis
8,10; Sesame Sfreef 2D. High School Basketball 13.
1D .JO-Run, Joe, Run 3,4, 15, Big Blue Marble 6.
11 DO-Return fo fhe Planet of fhe Apes 3,4, 15; Speedy
Buggy 6. Space Nuts 8, 10; Electric Company 20.
11 ·Jo-Westwlnd 3,4,15, CBPA Bowling 6, Ghost
Busters 8, 10, Mister Rogers 2D.
12 00-Jetsons 3,4,15; Valley of the Dinosaurs 8,1D;
Vegetable Soup 20
12 3D-Tennis 3,15; Blcentennla News Documentary 4.
VIewpoint 8, Fal Albert 10
1 00-Champlons 4, Soul Train 6. Children's Film
Festival B. 10. Lowell Thomas Remembers 33
I 3D-What's This Race For The Presidency About?
8,1D, Biography 33
2 00-NCAA Basketball 3,4, 15, Donny and Marie 6:
Champions a. High School Basketball 33. Urban
League 10, World Missions 13
2 30-Movle "Half Angel " 1D.
J oo-outdoors wtth Julius Boros 6, To Be Announced

W1th the hope 1t will , 1n some measure, foster and help sus tam that ,
wh1ch ,5 good m family and community )1fe, this feature IS sponsored by
the bus mess f1rms and organ1zations whose names appear below

WilKINSON'S

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

HEINER'S BAKERY

2 Convement Lo ca t10n s

MIDWAY MARKET Pomeroy Ph 992 2S82
BOB'S MARKET Mason , Ph m -S721

Baker s o f Gopd Bread
Huntington W Va

-----

Two Locations
59 N Second St
Mtddleport, 0
46 Court Sf
Gallipolis , 0

Grocenes &amp; Gener a l Mcrchand tse
R:ac1ne
Ph 949 S772

------------------REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE

-

Clovia,
we'll

W e F1l l All Doc tors Presc rtph ons
992 29SS
Pom!roy

Pomeroy

----SEAR'S CATALOG MERCHANT

SUNDAY TIMES SENTINEL
Pomeroy

K&amp;C JEWELERS

miss

is

LjOU

ihe

so

last

much'

load!

Lour s W Osborne
22 0 E Mam
Pomeroy
Ph 9'9'2 2118

992 2156

It's not ld.;e I'm
1t's not li~e she won't be
movinq to the end "--~
tw1ce a week
of the world. Mom r
wtth her
dirt4
l
laundr4!

!J

Bakers of
Middle port

Ph 992 1785

RUTH'S MARKET

Gay 90

22-CAN

I

HER22

~

~~~

MEIGS TIRE CENTER
700 E Mam

Pomeroy

D1al 992-2101

Ra e me

.,;~~~~~~~JOe=~~~~

The St ore with A Heart
Ph 949 3342

WENDY

TEL~ ME

SHE'S A VERY

TALENTED
FASHION
DE51oNER,

ROSEBERRY'S SERVICE STATION

Dial992 3284

Mrddleporl

- --

Middle pori, Oh10

form four ordinary words .

BIG JIM'S PLAZA
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

-----~~~--------~
Meigs County Branch

THE ATHENS COUNTY SAVINGS
&amp; LOAN CO.
296 W Second

Pomeroy

GAUL'S MARKET
'

Chester, Ollto

it:

AXVDLBAAXR
Is

J. 0 N G F E J. L 0 W

O ne lette r stmpl~ slands for omothcr ln thts sample A Is
u:;ed for lhe three 1.':,, X ftJr the tY.o O'.s, l'lr Stogie letters
apostrophes, the length nnd form allon o( the \\ords are all
hints F.ach dav t he code letters arc different

TUGZQBYO

-1

l!:!.!--------"""7"-'::-:::-::-;:c:..r--; r-'------,--r--------"T----..
S TOP
PAW!! TATER KNOCKED
JAWIN'
OVER 'lORE JUG AN SPILT
AN'MOP
CORN· SQUEEZIN'S ALL
OVER TH'
FLOOR-AN'--·
'

•

Unscramble the&amp;e four Jumbles.
one letter to each square, to

VECJVMB

AUZVMJ

Pom ero y , Ohto

HALL'S BEN FRANKLIN STORE

F'orm1 c

actd
source
Sacred
pledge
lS Fathenng
a Ia

NCM ' W

GOEGLEIN READY MIX
f- - - - - - - - - -

111 Court St

umon
37 Descry

CRVPTOQUOTES

----------------1

THE DAILY SENTINEL

··sass"

1·00-Movle "The Sunshine Patriot" 4. Sammy and
Company 6
1 15--Movle 11 Monster on the Campus" 13
I 3Q-Don Kirshner's Rock Concerl 8. Movie " A Girl
Named Tamlko" 1D
2 00-Telethon Continues 3
3 00 - Movie "Zifa" 4. ABC News 13
3 JQ-Movle "M,r Skeffington" 10
4 45--Movle "That Funny Feeling " 44
5 00-Telethon Contln ues 3

Ph 949 9S91

Ractne

Basketball 33; God

6·Jo-NBC News 3,4,15 , News 6, To Be Announced 8;
CBS News 10
7 00-World At War 3; Lawrence Welk 4, 15; Hee Haw
6, Hee Haw 8. In The Know 1D. Newsmaker '7613
1 30-Treasure Hunt 3, Lasf of the Wild 10, Nashville
on fhe Road 13.
8 00-Emergency' 3.4,15. Almost Anything Goes 6.
P1nocchlo 8,10, High School Basketball 13; Rivals
of Sherlock Holmes 33
9·00-Movle "I Spy" 3,15; Rona Barrell Looks Af The
Oscar 6, Movie " A Man Called Gannon" 4, Austin
Clfy Llmlfs 33
9 3D-Bob Newharl a, 10;
10 ·0D-Bert D' Angelo 6,13; Carol Burnell 8,10,
Soundstage 33
11 DO-News 3,34,8,10, 13, ABC News 6; Wally's
Workshop 15. Janakl 33
11 15--Movle "Blood on fhe Sun" 6
11 Jo-E aster SeaiTelefhon 3, Track Meel4, 15 ; Movie
"Allin a Night' s Work" 8. Movie "Hud" 1D; Movie

36 Dock·
workers·

L.....:::!!:~:........J DAILY CRYPTOilUOTE - Here's ho" to work

·-··----~

" The Fnendly Fol ks ' '
Pomeroy , Oh1o

29 Church
law
3D Scandlna·
vtans
31 Well-known

tanat

RACINE FOOD MARKET

Mtddle po rt

POWELL'S SUPER VALU

27 Ravenous

li Withered

F in e F ood &amp; Serv tce

FOR ONLY 12.50 PER WEEK

12 Mtsstve

16 Au nature!
19 Joust
22 Wh1rrmg
sound
23 Hot off the
presses
24 Spam a nd
Portugal
25 Tradmg
center

Secre-

Ph . 949 5961

McCLURE'S DAIRY ISLE

Sports Speclacular
33.
Golf 8, 10; World

Has The Answer 15

I'll'\ VIO'?KNG F{)RT/f'S.'!- I

'

" H e ll ' Dealer

YOU CAN RENT THIS SPACE

Yesterday's Answer

25 Pay-d1rt
seeker
26 Border

HAMBURGERS, IN THE LOW-RENI ,__--,1 THAT
HAVGNTMAO£: A 0/M£ IN
DISTRIC!BE' ' .''-----1 RV£ WEEkS ._._

Middleport , Ohio

RACINE PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

•

"Jungle Captive" 13

'

Otal992 S248

8

3 Jo-Pro Bowling 6
4 00-NCAA Basketball 3,4, 15.
8,10; High School Basketball
5 00-Wide World of Sports 6;
Missions Continues 13
6 ()(' -News 3,4,8, 10; High School

Bread
Ph 992 3030

MARK V STORE

(Former ly S.a dte's M arke t)
Syracu se
Ph 992 3986

Locust Sf

.!H Twe lfth
U S PresIdent •
39 Gaehc
40 Some
ll Watched
DOWN
1 Weave
together
2 French riVer
J Everythmg
13 wds I
4 Golfer' s
gadget
5 Japanese
wild dog
6Poem
; To the pomt
10 Everybody
13 wds.)
II Contented
12 wds.)

threa~

••'I
"

1 ~---1 SHE$ A CARHOP AT

Thu-d Sf

ACROSS
Cry, as£~
ca lf
5 Bohea or ..)
Isla
8 F unc tion
9 Fascmat10n
13 Wmged
r her 1
14 Make
an
·ntr)
15 1 thor
Le n
16 AtJ ..rCtOUS
l7 That 1Fr 1
IH Toothed
20 Kmd of
hockey
·trick "
21 Dreadful
22 Cowardly
23 Stockmg

BETSY ROSS BAKERY

Keepsake D•amond Rings
Mam St , Pomeroy

GASOJ.JNE AU,EY

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY

SERVICES

212 E

---

DUDLEY'S

WAID CROSS SONS STORE

Ph 992 SilO

by THOMAS JOSEPH

TALK T ' YOU .

Dial992 2318

FRESH PRODUCE &amp; PLANTS

E Mam

~

TAKE" TT EfoSf, BUSTER!
A LL I WANTA 00 IS

Na ft onw tde InSurance Co o f Col umbus , 0
101 Spring A~e
Pom ero y

Small Engme Sa tes &amp; Se r v1ce
498 locu st St
Middleport
Ph 992 3092

214

HOLO ON

" Slightly Ternflc" 3

6 00-Sunrlse Semester 8,10
6 3().-F tlm 4; Fun for Everyone 6. TV Classroom 8 ;

~

--c

pIl l

GREAT SCOTT~.
IT 5 DR FL.OOGEL!

W ea ther 33 . N ews 10; Don Adams Screen Test 13.
Famtly Alfa1r 15, Oh1o Journal 20
JG-Porter Wagoner J. Treasure Hunt A; Candid

Camera 6, Evening Edlflon with Marfln Agronsky
20. S25,000 Pyram id ID; To Tell The Truth 13. Wild
K i ngdom 15. Black Perspective on the News 33
8 00 - Sanford and Son 3.4.15. Donny and Marie 13;
Billy Graham Crusade 6,8; Wash ington Week In
Review 20,33, Sara 10,
8 3o-Jubl lee 3,4,15, Wall Stree1 Week 20,33
9·00-Movle "The Lords of Flafbush" 6, 13; Mov ie
" Brink's The Great Robbery" 8, 10. Firing Line

Lawrence Welk 8 , Bowltng for Dollars 6, Avtatlon

"' DEXTER

CHURCH OF
C H R I ST Cha rl es R\JS Se ll
Sr nun1 s 1er Norman C W rll
supl
~ unday
sc hool
9 JO
a m
wo r ship se r v1ce 10 30
a m
Urble study Tuesday
73 0pr.1
REORGANIZED C HU RC H
OF
JE S US
CHRIST OF
LATTER
DAY SAINTS Portland
Racme R oad
William Ro ush pastor Denny
Evans
Sunday
Scho ol
Drrec: l or Sunday Sc hoo l 9 JO
am
Mornmq worshrp 10 JO
a 111
Sunday even tng service
7 p m
Wedn e&gt;sd ay evcnmg
p rayer se r v1crs 7 30 p m
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Rev
Earl Shuler
pas t o r
Wo r sh rp scrvtce 9 30 am
~ unday
schoo l
10 30 am
B1ble
sr uo y
d rr u
J.lf '!.(.e!
serv •c e Thu rsday 7 30 p m
CARLETON CHURCH I&lt; rngsbury Road Ga r y K 1ng
pas tor
Sun day scnool
9 30
a m
e venrng wo r shrp 7 30
p m
Prayer meetrng , We d
nesday 7 JO p m
LONG
BOTTOM
CHRISTIAN Bruce Smr lh
pastor Wallace D amewoo d
Supt B1bt e Sch oo l 9 30 a m
P reach mg servrce 10 45 am
No eve n rng se rv ce
HYSELL
RUN
FREE
METHODIST CHURC H - Rev
Paul
N ev il le
pa stor
~ und"Y
Schoo l 9 JO il m
Mo rn mg se r vtCe 10 30 il m
yout h se rvrce
6 IS p m
EvnnqE.' I Si re scrvt ce 7 30 p m
Prayer mec t 1nq
Thurs d ay
7 30 p m
FREEDOM
G O SPE L
M I SS ION al Bald Knob Rev
E J Gr ffrtl1 supt o f chu r ch ,
R ev
L
R
G l ucsencarnp
pas t or
Roger Wll lfr cd 'i r
Sunday School su pl
~ unday
Sc hool 9 JO a 111
prayer
meet 1nQ Tuesday 7 ~ 30 p m
you th mce 1tn q 6 p m Sunday
l eaders /\ da Van Me t er and
Grella '1ut ll e Sunday (I VCnrnq
wo r sh p
7 p m
1hrough
w n! c r month~
MT
HERMON CHURCH
OF
THE
UNI1EO
BRETHREN IN CHRIST Rev James H Leac h pastor
Sundoy sc hoo l 9 30 a
m
R u ssell
S pe n c er
s up!
Wor'shrp se rv ce 10 45 a m
Evenmg worsh p alternatrng
wrth C E at 7 30 p m on
Su nday Pr ayer meelrng 7 30
p
m
We dne sday
1\lf r e d
Wo l f e lay l eader
WHITE 5
C HAPEL
Coolville
RD
Rev
Roy
D ee te r pasto r ':. unda y sch ool
9 30 a 11 1
wor sh rp scrv1cC,
10 10 .1m
Brb l e s t udy and
p raye r sc r v1ce
Wedne sday
7 JO p m
RUTLAND
RUTLAND C HUR C H OF
CHRIST
Rod
Kas l er
pas to r v t- t Bra l ey Sunday
sc hool sup t Sundoy sc hool
9 30 a 111
worshrp scrvrce
and c ommun o n 10 30 a 10
youth meetrnq 6 p m
'ounday
evcn rnq se r vrce 7
rcqu l a r
hn a r d 111 ~..:t: lor. q l~ 1rr1 '. cl!Ur
day 1 p 'll
RUTLAND
COMMUNITY
CHURCH
Sunday Schoo l;
9 JO a m , worshrp servrce 11
a
m , Wednesday pr aye r
meet 1ng 7 30 p 111
you t h
serv1ces , Sunday
7 p m ;
Sun day n 1ght worsll1p 7 30.
RUT LA N'tf
H U R C.., ,
THE NAZAREN E
Rev
Ll oyd 0 Grimm Jr pasto r
'&gt; undny sc hoo l
9 JO am
wo r sh p servrce 10 JO a I ll
b r oadcas t l 1v e over WMPO
vounq pe opl e~ ~c r vrc e o 15
I'V ,lt1r::J CIISII C S(' r VIC() 7 ] Q p 111
Prayer mee t rng Wedn es day
l JO
p rn
Mr ssro nary
meet , nq
7 30 p 111
llr s l
We dn es day of mont h
~~ASON COUNTY
1\1 1 :-. u ,
'.i T OAPTIST ·
' • co ntl an d 1 v.1•,-. roy Sts
~ lan Crarq
pastor
i urr~ ay
Sc hool
9 1'&gt; a rn
worsh1p
serv rce , 11
am
lrarn rng
un10n
6 JO p m , eve n tng
worshrp servrce
7 30 p m
Mrd week prayPr se r vrce
We dn es d ay 7 30 p m
M ASO N
CHURCH
OF
CHR 1ST P 0 BO'o( 187 Mr ll er
'• t
Mason
W Va
~unday
I\ Jb te '• I Udy 10 am
Wo r shr p
11 a 111 ;,nd 7 p m R1b l c " tudy
Wed n C!'.day 7 p m
Voca l
m us rc
FIR ST
SO UTHERN
BAPTIS T
Corner of ~ cc o n d
and 1\nderson Mason Pas l or
Wa ll er Ctou d Sunda y schoo l
worshrp St' r vrcc II
9 1 ~ a nr
a n • und 7 10 p m
week l y
O•b l c study Wednesday 7 JO

7

7 00-:- Truth or Conseq uences J , To Te ll The Truth 4,

Not the REST Who loo ks forward to idleness?

setccrea

8,

6 00 - News 3.4.8. 10, 13, 15. ABC News 6, Zoom 20,33
6 JQ- NBC News 3,4, 15, ABC News 13, Andy Grlff1 lh 6,
CBS News a,I D, Carrascolendas JJ, Hodgepodge
Lodge 2D

Now they arc prepa red to enJOY the reSI of l1fe

Scroplure s

Star Trek 15
Beverly H 1llb1lltes

Eleclrtc Company 20,33

beltevmg

SI&lt;Bsburg Vng

a,

UM

I

SUFOA.M

I

YIHRTI'

~

CMTWPVMJ

WPCM
WPB

X C WNPVMJ
QNZBBM

BWPBY
ACZZTEUZB
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: WHAT THIS COUNTRY NEEDS IS
EARLY AMERICAN FURNITURE THAT CAN BE BOUGHT
AT EARLY AMERIC.!&gt;N PRICES. - ANON
(C) U761Unc Jl't•l.wes

HECKTl

~yndleate,

lac.•

v J~

.

~

r~ I
h J

~~~.-~~.=w=~~n~m~]A(II)(lllj

(Aa.wera to•orrow)
Jumtdt:1. SYNOD

'Ytllt rd•f •
..

I

ACTUALL'(, HE 6R£1KE Hl5STUf'lO
FOOT WHEN HE T~lf'f'EO OVEI&lt;
HIS
N SUPPER DISH 1

DOILY

ASYLUM

NEWEST

A•wu; What Chose 11ons of toil u:ere u-orldng-TONS OF

SOIL

I

ltl TELL 't'OU THE TRUTH .
HE WASNi A HERO AT ALL

Now arrance the clrelod !etten
the IUrpriH uawer. . .
ourretled bythe obove clll1oon.
to form

THIS CONCLUDES OUR PORTION
OF 'SHOW AND TELL "

�.,
..

10 - The Datly Senttnel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Frtday, Marj!h 26.1976

WantNI

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
.,
P M
Day
Before
Publ ca t•on
M o nday Dcadl1ne y

NEEDED , Stok.ely canned
labels oy weekend Send to
Long Bot tom

3 14 Jtp

Help Wanted

Ca n cc llat t o n
Corrc ctt ons w tll be ac
re pl ed unt 1 9 am for
Dav of Pub l •cat1on
REGULATIONS
Th e Publ iShe r r eserves
•h e r 1qh1 10 edt or rct t:(.l
an.,. ads deemed ob
teCIIOnal The publiSher
wdl not be responstble lor
mor e th an one tncor re c J
nscrt1on
RATES
For Want Ad Ser\ltc c
1
ce nt s per w ord Ollt'
1nser!ton
M1n 1mum Charq e-S1 00
It c en 1s per word thre e
consecut ve
nscrttons
'l ~ cen t s per word SIX
co n secu t1ve
nsert•ons
7 ~ Per Cent D 1sc ount on
pa1d ads and ads pa •d
w lh n 10 days
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
~ '2 00
f or
so word
rn1n mum
E ac h add1t to nal word 3
ce n•s

LADY

to li ve m el(ce!le nt
t• v•n g condtflon plus salary
Ph one 949 2433 alrer 6 p m
3 24 hl c;

Not•ce ot Appotntment
Case No 21158

g1ven that

w

Columbus OhtO has
been duly appomled Executor
of t he Estate or James R
Eads deceased ta te of M etgs
Oh 1o

Cred itors are reQutred to
le the ir cla tms w tlh satd
f ductarv wllhtn four m on ths

t

Dated thts 23rd day of
March 1976
Manning D Webster. Judge

Court of Common Pleas ,
Probi1e O tvts•on

13) 26, (4) 2. 9, Jtc

BLIND ADS

/\ dd• ••on al 2Sc Charg e
pe r /\ dv crt1Scmcn t
OFFICE H OURS
8 30 a n ~ •o ~ 00 p n1
Dally 8 JO a m to I} oo
Noon Saturday
Phone or:lay 99 7 71~6

IN T H E

COM MON G PLEAS COURT
PROBA T E DI VIS I O N
M E IGS COU NTY, OH IO

IN THE MATTER OF

AC

PROBA TE COUR T,

ME I GS COUNTY OH IO
Accounts and vouchers

t he

of
named

followmg

frduc ar es have been til ed m
the Probate Cou r t
Me 1gs

Co un t y Ohro for
and settlement
CASE

NO

Cu rrent

21 484

Account

Raymond

approval
of

Frrst

Dena

Admmrstratr lx of

the Estate
of
Paul
E
Raymond Deceased
CASE NO
21 641
Frrsl
Account of C Robert Frsher
Guardran of the person and
esta t e of W l lram Thomas
Frshe r
CASE N O 71 552 F rrst a n d
Frna t Account o f Curtrs A

Anderso n Executor of the
Esta t e of Ella F Ande r son
deceased
CASE N O 2 1 567 Frrst a n d
F rna l Account of Leland
Turner
E}(ecutor o f the
Esta t e of Robert s Tu r n er
Deceased
Unless e~~;ce p tro n s a r e f ried
thereto sar d a ccounts wil t be
tor hearmg be f ore s a rd Court
on t he 26th d a y of Ap r rl 1976
at w htch t• me sad accounts
Wi ll be c onstdered an d co n
tl nued fro m d ay to d ay u ntll
t ma tly Cltsp ose d of
Any per son m te r este d may
ft le wrtt t en except tons to sat d
acc ounts or t o matters p er
ta m mg to t he ex.ec u tt on of the
tr u st n ot less t ha n f 111e d a ys
pr to r to th e da t e se t for
h earin g
M ann1ng D Web st er , J u dge
Common Plea s Co urt
P r obat e DI VISIOn
Metg s Coun ty Oh•o
( 3) 26 ltc

LE G AL NOTIC E
STERL IN G G NEVILLE
has been or dered to appear or
plead by April 18 1976 to a
complatnt fl ed tn Ctv tl Act on
No C2 76 100 m I he Uni!ed
Sta t es D ts t t~c t Cou r t for the
Southe rn D ts tr c t of OhiO
Easte rn DIVISIOn
Uniled
States of Ame r~ ca Pl atnt tff &lt;J
STERLI N G G N EVI L LE el
al
D efenda n ts p r ayt n ~ f or
fo r ecl osur e o f a mortgage
recordf'd •n Vo l ume 123 p age
143 of the mortgage rec or d s of
Me gs County
Oh to wh1ch
mort gage deed •s a l•en on the
followt n g descrtbed
re a l
pr ope r ty St tua t ed 1n the Stale
o f Oh o Coun t y of Metgs and
further descrtbed as t a l lows
St tuate •n the VIllage of
M•ddleport Me gs Coun t y
Ohto
Betng Lot No 79 and the
southerly ~0 t eet of L ot N o 80
tn Lower Pomeroy
now
M d d leport Oh•o Also
th e
easte r ly one ha lf of thai
port10n of the alley wh1ch 15
coni g uous wt t h the weste rl y
bounda r y o f
the above
descrt bed rea l est a te
Su b 1ec t
to
wat e r
ltne
ea seme n t
Deed Re f erence
Volum e
242 P age 1011 Me1gs County
Deed Records
Th e mortgagor and mor
tgagees agree that
any
ranges
ref r •gerators
or
ca r petmg
pu r chased
or
financed m whole or 10 part
Wtth loan f unds wr ll be c on
s1de r ed and co nstrued as a
pa r t of the prop erty covered
by the mor tgage
PROPERTY
102 Pa r k
Stree t Mtddleporl Ohro 45760
s Rober t M Duncan
Un 1ted States
D slrtcl Judge

(3]5 1219 26(4)2 9 6tC

Card of Thanks
t W I SH tO extend my s ncere
thanks t or the many deeds
of k1ndness shown me whtl e
a pat•ent at H olzer Medtcal
Cen1er I stncerely thank th e
Pomeroy
Em e rge n cy
Sq uad
the doctors and
nurses at Holzer Med •ca l
Center them 101ster and all
my frtends and relaltves
who remembered me wtth
c ards and flowers
Your
~und thoug h t w il l never be
forgo t ten
Mrs Thee K1mes
3 26 lie

Not1ce

WILL
do
smal l
garden
plowtng
w th
Grave l y
tracto r Phone 992 7492 or
992 3716
3 26 18tp
SHOO TI NG Match
Amertcan Leg on
March 28 12 noon

Ru t lan d
Sunday
J 26 2tp

------~- ---

t AM request •ng whoever d d
or a n y one no t to du mp any
more t r as h
etc
on t he
p r opert y o f the l ate Floy d
W tse ol ace on Batl ev Run
R d Sig ned by owner Pa ul
Wtse an d h 1s mot her M r s
F loyd Wtse
3 24 31 c
AUCT I ON
Mason AlJct10n
H ouse
Mason
w va
Frtday March ~ 6 7 p m
Co n s1gnments
welcome
Phone (J04) 882 2407
J 25 2fc
WA NT Vac a tto n ? N eed ch or es
Fo r
m ore
10
d o n e?
t ormttt10n ca ll (6 14 } 9E}5
428 1
3 21 6t p
W I L L g 1ve pta n o lessons tn m y
home Ca ll 742 2131
3 ~ I 6tc
-- ---~--------

POMEROY

MAJOR CHEMICAL
MEETING
Tuesday, March 30
7:45 p.m. '
Gra c e Ept scopal Pansh
Ho use, Ea st Matn Sfreet
Pom eroy , Ohto ( Bestde Old
Pomeroy Jr Htgh School)

Speakers ·
Robert
Hutchmson and Joe
Reed
REFRESHMENTS
DOOR PRIZES
INFORMATION
DOOR PRIZES
POMEROY LANDMARK
Jack W Carsey, Mgr
Phone 992 2181

Wanted To Buy

I

sa l e by prtvat e
J ,
ac r es
4
barn on blacktop
and water Phone

- - -- --

J 1 26tp

r-..._1R OOM house w•th bafh

good
toc a t 1on f ull basement 391
Sou t h Second M rddleport
P hon e 992 2265
3 21 12tp

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

\

9 1\C RE S } QOOd Wlii S 7
bcdr m Ira fer Wdt sell w1th
1ra!ler or wt tho ul Call 7.J ?
7'J I 7 af t er t p m Pr1cc S/ .500
t or bo th
] 17 171p

OLD fu rn lur e
1ce boxes
brass
bed :;
old
wa ll
te lephones an d pa rt s or
complete ho u seholds Wn te
M
D
Mt l t er
Rt
2
Pom e roy
Ohto Ca ll 992
•

10 7

]4

T I MBER
lop Prtcc f or
s tandtng ltmber Ca ll {614)
&gt;ld6 8570
3 7 tf c
20
BUSHEL
ea r
co rn
Here ford he•fers 20 mon ths
old locust posts Phone 7-l~
~441

3 25 3tc
MO N EY tn yo ur cella r " at t •c"
ea rn ? P ay up to Sl 000 each
fo r ce rt atn o ld bo ttl es a l so
wa n t German w W 11 fl ags
med als sw or ds etc P non e
992 2592 e ft er 5 p m
3 26 Jtc

7648

I

3 26 26tc

------------L ARGE f r ame mode r n h ome
wit h t hree acres lan d on
Li n co ln Hill $25 000 P hone
992 2720
3 26 31c

I

mode ls of mob tl e homes
Phone area code 614 423
9531
d 13 lfc

Misc. Sales

P ORC H SALE on C Rd 28
above E a stern H1g h Sch ool
at Gordon Holter L ots o f
ch ild re n s c lo l h tn g w a tc h
s 1g n s
Fr~ d ay
an d
for
Saturday Ma r ch 26 an d 27
any 11m e

Duster 1
a~r
Phon e
J 23 6tc

FURN I SHED
2
bedrm
apa r tment a d ults only tn
M•dd l epor t Phone 992 3874
3 12 ttc

'

HOU SE 1n Ch es t er
OhtO
N ew l y re d eco r ated t u ll y
ca r peted mos tl y furn•shed
Shown 12 to d March 27th
Reason a b l e r ent
Call l
(6 1d} 866 1731
3 25 2tc

3 AND .d RM fu r n tshed and
un f urn iShed apts Phone 99 2
54 34
11 9 ttc
COUNTRY Mob•le HomP
Parle Rt JJ len m•les north
of Pomeroy Large lois wllh
c on c r ete pattos Stdewalks
run ners and o f f s t reet
par k ng Phon e 992 7479
2 31 ttc
J 13EDRM house w• t h bat h 1n
Rutland Phone 9Y2 5858
J 9 lf c
r eal n•ce

ENJOY g r acious l lvtng at
V1 tl age Mano r Jn Mtd
d le por t f or as low a s S\30
p er
mon t h
wllh
all
u tt lllt es
pa td _ _l.IJ.ill.
ar e brand new h tg h q ua l fl y
ap artme nts at pn ces yo u
ca n a ffo rd You r ren t 10
elu d es mo n th to m o n th
t eases
all e t ec
l tv tng
carpetin g
range
a nd
ref rt ge r a tor
f r ee t ra sh
p 1ckup cab le T V at your
ex.pe n se
an d
on stle
lau n d r y tac ll t tt es
Con
ve n ren t to shop p rng on Th •r d
an d M i ll Stree t s tn M 1d
d tepo r t See th e m~nager a t
R P.,&lt;&gt;r &lt;; •de ,Apar tmen ts or
c all 992 3273
Fu r n 1she d
apar t ments
ar e
als o
ava tla b le
2 2 78 tc

For Sale
NIM RO D Fold ou t Ca mper
s teeps 7 3 prtv at e beds g as
stove smk tee box d m ett e
area wtre d fo r e tec tnc tl y
SIOOO P hone 992 5421
3 25 3tp
---~----------

~

--- ------

p tcK u p
comple t e
new
e)l(h au st system Car b uretor
ove r ha u le d P hon e 992 7149
3 21 6tc

19 10 CUTL/\ ~ "
Phon e 9V'l JIIO

Watc h for List
Item s Later .

_______ _

YAMA~A

360 MX SBOO

or best off er Phone (614)
667 3759 or 667 3652
3 26 SI C

..
.......
A

..
~....

Now accepting cl ients
for bookkeeping and
ta x se rv1ce.

...••
..•...
::

3 18 1 mo

ROGER HYSEUS
GARAGE

SMALL
SE PTIC TANK S
INSTALLED
B I LL
PULLIN S P HONE 992 2478
DAY OR NIG H T
2 22 52tp
From t he largest T ru c k or
Bu ll dozer"' Radtator to the
sma l l est Hea te r Core

Real Estate For Sale

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Broker

3

i.....

I

Automobile and
Truck Repair
State Rt . 124
Toward Rutland
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone . 992-5682

Pome ro y

P h 992 217 4

3 BR

CUAL ~OR ~1\ LE C/\13 Coa t
Com pany
1 mile nor1h of
Che sh tre on R t 7 P c k your
own S20 p er t on Open 6 day s
per w ee k o r call (611 367
7)3 0 lor furl he r 1n f ormat•or'l
1 1l 71l tc

REG P OLLED&gt; Hereford herd
bull
5 yrs
old
HC
d spostt1on exc producer
R R S Farms Phone 992 5565
or 992 2826
3 25 6tc
NANNY GOAT for sale and
Border Coll•e 9 months old
to gtve away Phone ( 614)
965 3878
3 25 3tc
GOOD HAY ne1.1 er wet Phone
949 2523
3 25 lite
V SH APgO a l umm u rn row
boa t comple te W1lh oars
Used t w1ce $150 00
cop
pert or, e 30 r ang e hood I k e
new S2 0 00 wrought Iron
f tre p!ace screen 55 00 Cal l
992 5666
3 25 Jt r
STEREO r adto
mod
n
des gn
AM FM rad1 c
B
t r ac k tape co mb1n at n
Bal an ce $10 1 60 or t er ms
Call 992 3965
3 28 lfc
AU "TO !Jarts - '100 CUbiC Inch 6
cy l tnder Ford en g 1n e and 3
SlOO
speed t r ansmiSSIO n
390 CUb i C l OCh Me r c u ry
E ngtne
an d
auloma i 1C
tr an sm tss •on $150 Call 9 9~
712 0
3 23 51 p
15 CU FT uprigh t f r eezer
exce ll en t cond 1t 1o n
Phone
247 n os or 247 2731
3 23 71c
------~'"'-----.---

1975 360 HO N DA
ex c ell en t
condtl ton $875 Ph one 949
267 4
3 23 41C

COAL l tmestone an d a ll types
of salt an d roc k sail tor ICe
a nd s n ow r e mova l
Ex
ce lstor Sai l Wo r ks
Eas t
Ma m Sl
Pomeroy Ohto
Phone 992 389 1
1271fc
S T RAWBER R Y
plan t s,
Charles Foster R t 338 n ~a r
Rac •n e L oc k s and D am
Ph one 247 ~309
3 2d 6tc
RUGS of all stzes Ca l l M ason
I JO di 773 5626
3 21 6tc

J 19 7tc
CH A NN EL C B
Rad tO S
$109 95 up ante n na, Sl -'195
up 4 t ill 9 Tues d ay thru
F r 1day 12 f! ll6 Sat urd ay 60
Cen tral Ave, At h e n s On to
3 2 1 lO tp

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

r-----------------~
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO POLLED

HEREFORD SALE
FRIDAY, APRIL 2nd

7:00p.m.

S mce ca r pe t tng tn
hvmg &amp; family Rms On l y 4

yrs old $24 500
MODERN - 3 Brs
k tt wt th
s lt d in g
ceram tc
basem en t
$38 00 0

RIVER FRONT LOT

324 31p . . . . . . . . . . . . . ., .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~. .~. .--~

~

Wa t er e l ectriC a nd sma ll
bu tldlng $4 000
LARG E - 9 rm s 3 Brs
11 1 bath s hot wa fer hea t
L tvt ng across fro n t of
hou se
L ots of closets
L arge lot a nd beautifu l
II ICW $ 16 500

MUST SE LL -

.•
·j
..•
..•..
-•.•
:•
..:z
••
--.••
....••

3 23 1 mo

22' ~

acres

ha s t ree gas a nd own
water s ystems 1 Mob tl e
H om e A ll rented at a ll
t tmes" S420 00 per m on t h
plus gas we ll
Ask m g

$25 000
MAKE
OFFER
MIDDL EPOR T -

AN

5 BR ,
1 1 bat hs •nsula ted storm
doors &amp; w tndows
N G
heat
garage &amp; car~rt
Good condlfton ! 2 g lassed
porches sma ll ba sement)
$ 12 000

Brs a ll pa neled lge bat h
ga r age and lge lot $~5.500

F tshtng ca bm 3 r ooms 2
por ches and a path (n~eds
some repa trl $2 800

Nice

3

Brs

large ktt
dt n tn g
fu ll
basem en t 111 ba ths Ob i
ga r age plus Almos t l 1
ac r es S3 1 500

49 ACR ES - 3 yrs old 2

bedr oom heme ba lh btrc h
ktfchen carport a nd fu ll
basemen l $31 ,500

WANT
IF
YOU
PROFESSIONAL
ADVICE, HI RE ONE IT
WILL PAY YOU

POMEROY -

bu r~ed
t re asur e
F•nd
(D in S, nng !., sliver, gold
Co m&amp; M et a l
D et ector s
F or R en t

or

7 room

fra m e NE W f urnace
carpe ft ng
lt le pane lmg
s tdt ng
st or m doors &amp;
wt n dows
Porc h es
fu ll
basemen t 2 car gara ge
Budge t gas btl I $35 00

EXCELLENT
CONDITION $18 500
WE NEED NEWER
HOME S
992 2259 or 992 2568

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
KIDS IN YOUR HAIR - LOOK HERE story home

2
10
the coun tr y 3 l arge be drm s large spactous l t v mg
roo m d tnt ng room kt tc hen wt th b u 1lt Ins ba th a nd
uttltt y r oom 2 car concrete block garage garden space
a nd s tr awber ry pa t ch a lm ost 1 acre of land Wh er e'
A bout 5 m 1n u t es from Pomer oy on Co Rd 30 P r 1ced

onl y Sll ooo

S BE OROOMS - T h ts ntce 11? st o r y h ome has a la rg e
l tv ng roo m wt l h sh in y oak fl oon ng dt nmg roo m , n tce
kttc hen wt th but It tns 2 ba th r ooms 2 bedrooms on f tr s t
fl oor 3 n tce ly panele d bedrooms o n the 2nd floor a l so 2
large porches and a sun por c h ga r a g e Nat ura l gas
furnace ts very econ om tcal Locate d on Scout Road tn
Chest e r Oh 1o Wou ld you believe $12 BOO

R&amp;J COINS
Rutla nd 7 42 2Jl l
Ro g er Wam sley
J I 1m o

her e w hen you see th ts wtde g r een valley w tfh a b r ook
runn tng th roug h tf 1usl perf ect t or a lar ge l a k e
He r es
woo ded h ii1 Stde JU st cr ym g for a ca bi n
scen er y a nd sec lus ton
at less tha n $300 per ac r e

ELWOOD BOWE~S REPA I R
Sweepers toaste r s Irons
all small appltances Lawn
mowe r next to Sla te H•gh
way Ga r age on Rout e 7
Phon e tll 5 3875
4 16 lfc
SEPTIC T A NK S c~; ned b
Modern Santtat•on 992 3954
or 992 7J J9
9 lB lfc
REMODE LI N G
Plumbm y
heatrng and all ty pes of
ge n era l
repatr
Work
guarante ed
~0
yea r s ex
p ertence
Phon e 992 7409
5 1 1fc
W I LL TR IM or c ut trees and
sh r Ltbbery
Phon e 949 2545
or 712 3167
1 27 261c
W I LL do Odd tabs rOofing
patntmg hau l mg treework
and mowtng Ca ll 992 7409
3 1 26tc
WILL
do
st ru c t 1o n
heat•ng No
too sma ll

What?

5

BICENTENNIAL SPECIAL -

56Q N Second Sl

M tddl eport Sit on th e la rg e f r on t pokh and wa t ch th ~
wo rld go by st ep msld e th e la r ge f o ye r a nd fe e l t he
spa et ousn ess o f th ts th 1ck wa ll ed b rtck h om e op en
statr way la r ge lt vt ng r oom w ith f treplace h ug e
form a l dm lng roo m , btg kt t chen Upsta tr s 1s 4
be drooms wd h a sun por ch Pl enty of room l or real
lt v m g a t a pr1ce y ou can a fford
J ust $29,500 Yo u w 11l
have a hom e w1 th pr es t ige

9 ACRES OF WOODED AREA - Ju st off Un1on Ave A
lttt le dozer w ork a nd ha ve a few hom e st tes POMEROY -.
be dr oom hom e
w tth ftr epl ace
goes too
one

$4, 000 00

H tg h v tew
l ow pr ice, c heck tht s 3
w1 th large d lntng r oom l tv tnQ roo m
k it chen and bath, nat gas fu rntture
low pr tce $7500 00

S6 000 00 - DON'T FLIP OUT - This the nght price
for tht s m o dern t wo b edroom home In the country
near B ash a n Ctty wa t er a nd na tu r al gas Even a

garden

C. II

For AppOontment

Want that FOR SAL£
ad to read SOLD?

REALTOR

Call: Jimmy Deem
949-2388.

ro o fin g
con
p l umbmg an d
tab too l arge or
Pho n e 742234 8
3 19 26 t c

ExcAVAT IN-G~er To~Ct. ­
an d back hoe wo r K se pti c
! a n ks
m stalled
d u mp
trucks an d to boys for h tr e
wt ll h aul f li t d lft top so tl ,
l l meslone and grave l Ca ll
Bob or Roger Jeffer s d ay
pho n e 992 7089 n1g h t ph on e
992 3525 or 992 523~
2 11 t fc

t he co u n tr y con ta mtng 2 bed roo ms, l tv mg toom
lc.t fchen , sm a ll dt ntng r oom bath , n 1ce sun por ch Al so
ce l la r and ce ll ar house 2 garages and barn
That s
not a ll
37 acres goes w tf h tf
a ll over lookt n g th e
beau t tf ul Ohto R tver
Better call qu1ck
, Only

bedroo m s love l y kttc hen wit h a ll b u1lt tns d tntng roo m
wt th sltdmg glass d oor s open mg to a hugh deck , f a m i l y
r oom lower level p at to, cent r a l a tr tot al e lectn c,
mter com syst em som e f m ts htng work requt red on
Rlggscres t M a n or near Tupp ers
f tr st f loor Wh er e?
Plams One of th e f ines t hom es in th e area a t a
r eason ab le price Ca ll t or a ppomtment

STOR M

WINDOW S &amp; DOO RS
R E PlA C EM ENT
WINDOW S
S IDIN G SO FFITT
G UTT E R S AWN I N G S

LARRY LAVENDER

S'f r iCUSe OIHO
P h 99~ 399l
4 \0 1 mo

-

PIZZA SHOP
Ca ll in orders and pi ck up
'" tw e nt &lt;t m 1nut n
Lo cat ed at 329·3 rd Str ee t
R~e l ne , OhiO

OPEN lUES THRU SAT
6 JO T l1 110 00
3 17 1 mo

0 DEL L A lln ement located
be h 1n d
Rutlan d
Gr a d e
T un eup
b r ake s
Sc h o ol
whee l bat an cmg alme m en t
Phone 742 2004
11 16 tt c

..... --

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

Real Estate For Sale
NEW bl lev e l hom e J bedr m
b uil t •n k 1t c h e n , c ar pet,
b asem en t
g arag e
1n
b ase men t l oc at ed b ehmd
gr a d e sc ho o l
Lon g S t
Rutl a nd, Oh io
See M tl o
Hut c h ison
or phone 742
2306
3 23 tt c

f•

•
~

___

tr
.~

SAVE ON
CARPETING

'

,

•

1

.'!

., '

Beauftful colors
Do •t
yourself •11d save Regular

'"' r

S6 95 sq yd

r

Yd

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

.

12 or 15 FT

"'

...

501 NYLON

Green QDid r ed b l u e rust
Do It YOur se lf wt th pad
d tn g l7 95 sq vd
W ith padd i ng In stalled
S8 95 square y ard

CALL742 22 11
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

I

.' "'Jr'

lU I"

\\;

.,

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

'"

,..

',"

R ut11nd

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

•••••••••••••••••••••••
Shopptnq Hour

•• ••••Mill.••
..
..
i.:.. FRIDAY TIL 8 .::: :~:
.: ..··•••••··.. ..
---:::

onvcnir~nt

i•

,.

•

••

•

•

Mon., Tues., Wad .

• •

8:00ti15:00

•

••

t·..v

• "

Close Sat. At 5 'P.m.

• •

e•

RUTLAND FURNITURE

742-2211

' ARNOLD GRATE

RUTLAND

1...

..

~

•

:

'"'

ee

Thursday 8 11112 noon

• •
• •

, •

-.F

,\

.•.

\:

:,"

\q,to I

•'

1

•• '' '"

~·······················~

l lh

brotherhood, love, carmg and
shartng" embodied In their
songs
The group of boys and gtrls
vtstted a nd petiormed tn the
Statehouse and attended a
House sess1on .

V root beaultful betge

AM FM

roof , perfec t

local on e

1972 CHEVY IMPALA. 4 DR .....11495
1971 PONTIAC BONNEVlLLE .....$395
Dr
1971
PONTIACP SCATALINA
....... ~ll95
4
P B, V
1969 MUSTANG 2 DR FASTBACK $895
1968 FORD 2 DR HT................. $495
1965 MERC. 4 DR .................... szg5
1961 LINCOLN CONT. ............... ..'500
Fact a1r

P S, P B, V roof Come Qutck

4

Dr Sed , t ac t atr

roof

s

P S

P B Shenff's ca r

Excepttona l cond

1973 FOR D MAVER ICK

$2495

acy l 2 dr sedan , P S, AT Rea l ly sharp low m 1leage

1975 FO RD GRAN TO RINO

$AVE

4 dr Sedan at r cond , drtver's t ra tnt ng car , low m tleage

1974 FORO FIOO 1J2 TON PI CK UP - - - - - - - $3495
302 V 8 P S , low ml~eage
1974F ORD Ft004 WH EE L DRIVE --.,..-----S3995
Good ti res Shows excellent ca r e

1973 GMC 'h TON

1972 DO DGE V-B CHARGER - - - - - - - - - $ 2295
2 Dr H T Very clean A T , P S

1971 FORD V 8 TORINO- - - ' - - - - - - - - - $1495
2 Dr Hardtop

1971 VOLKSWA GEN 2 OR

S EOAN ~------S l695

Ex1ra ntce

4 Dr

d

Dr

'"•

..

hard1op, ex tra good for model

loca ll y owned F tnest sertes DOdge

1972 CHEVY VEGA ...........'995

MANY MORE
SEE Fred Blaettnar, Pat H1ll, Melvin Ltttle,
or Dan Thompson
Open Evenmgs Ttl6 : 00
Exce pt Thurs. and Sat. Til 5:00

runs good

'

A T, P S

1970 DODG E V 8 CUSTOM POLARA - - - - - - -51395

auto

,,

,.

SJ495

V 8 Sterr a G r ande P1ckup Spotless tns 1de and ou t

Ga s sa vmg. wo r kmg m a n 's cars !

au t o G 1

•o

'

.'
'••"

----TRUCK·s - - - - -

1974 CHEVY C-30 .. .................. $AVE

SJ895

1600 Sen es, 102' cab t o ax le, 2 speed R ax le 6 speed
good 900)1(20 f tres f r ame rein for ced VB eng• ne hea t er
r eady to work

1 Ton long whee l base f lat bed w th racks, d spd
tra ns, 20 000 mile , tru&lt;;k , l ike new

1973 CHEVY CUSTOM 10 ........ $2495

Lon g wtde bed 307 V 8 st a tran s
clea n

350 V 8 P B

AMBULANCE LICENSING
COLUMB US (U P! )
Ambulances and ambulance
attendants would he subJect
to state ltce nsmg under
provtstons of a btU sent to the
House Thur sday by the
Senate 23 to 6
The btll, authored by Sen
Neal F Zuruners Jr , DDayton, would authortze the
governor to appomt a mnemember board to set up rules '
a nd
regulati ons
fo r
emergency medtcal care

stand

st and trans

trans

Se ve ral othe r ca r s m stQck al R1gg s
Se e Ray R1ggs or Roger Riebel

RIGGS USED CARS
LOBBYISTS BARRED
COLUMBUS ( UP! )
House Speaker Vernal G
Rtffe Jr • D-Ne\1 Boston,
dts turbed wt th excesstve
nmse m the rear of the lower
cham ber
durmg
flo or
sesstons, Thursda; dtrected
lobbytsts to stay m an

992-2196

long wtde bed

long st epstde be d

7

461 s.
Middleport

radto &amp; t ape ex t ra

1973 CHEVY......................... :s1995
1968
CHEVY ........................... 1400
6
FLASHERS AlLOWED
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
House Thursday passed
unarumously and sent to the
Senate leg tslatton addtng
garbage trucks to the ltst of
vehicles permi' ted to use
flashmg amber hghts while
traveling at slow speeds
Clue! sponsor Rep Marcus
A. Roberto, 0-Ravenna. said
the billts necessary because
slow-movmg trash collection
vehicles subject garba ge men
to danger on the road \

"

1970 BUIC K EL EC TRA- - - - - - - - - - SI595

6 cy l

102" C A, heavy duty spnngs 292 6 cy l e ngtne 1 15 000
lb 7. sp eed rear ax. le foam seat, m tr rors clean cab

~1 9'15

1974 FOR 0 4 DR SE DAN
AT

at

Runs perfect ever ythmg wo r k s wor t h took tng

1972 AM HORNET........... '995

S2995

Crutsmatlc,

Chesler, 0 .

adJommg room and stattoned
a page to keep them there
The page, Joseph Zvosecz,
guarded the closed door to
preve nt lobbytsts from
wandermg tnto the rear of the
chamber They ltstened to the
sesston on a loudspea ker

COUPON

Good

j

Through Apnl 2, 1976

FRONT END ALIGNMENT
-SPECIALReg. $12.00
NOW . ,
FREE WASH INCLUDED

000

Smith Nelson992Motors,
Inc.
Pomeroy
2174
Ph

..
Ohoo

All Work Done by NIASE Mechs

"Your Friendlv Dealer"

...
"
"

GOP regulars in Ohio House stall bedsheet ballot against Gov. Reagan

•
••

Candy Stripe

742 ~ 2211

SING Otrr
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
House Thursday honored a
"Sing Out" group from Salem
wtth passage of a resolutton
commending them for "truly
llvm g the message of

··: J

SEWI N G MACH IN E Repairs
serv •ce all makes 9921284
The Fabric ShOp Pomeroy
A uthon:ed Smger Sates an d
Se rvice
we
Sh arpe n
Setssors
3 79 trc

Sale J.flSq

" Yo u' ll Lll&lt;e Our Qualify Way
of Do1ng Business"
992-5342
GMC FINANCING
Pomeroy
Open Eventngs Untii6 :0o-Til 5 p.m . Sat

P 8

$2995

(Hatchback), on l y 6 886 easy mtles, a1r co nd
vmy l top

owner

cy l

..

D 8. D TREE Tnmm 1no 20
yean. expertence I nsured
fr ee estlmalt;'S Ca ll 992 '238 4
or ( 614) 698 7257 Albany
10 15 tfc
____

1974 FO RD PI NTOJ DR RUNABOUT

12895

Whtt e 2 dr , 4 sp eed tr ans , r a dto body mould tngs, w

$2195

1973 FORD GRAN TORINO-- .... 12395

1972
FORD LTD 4 DR HT........
1995
Fact atr P S P B , V
body

See on·e of these courleous salesmen : Pete·
Burris . Lloyd Me Laughlin or Matvtn
Keebaugh .

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

1973 FOR O PIN T
2 Dr Sedan, 4 sp , low mt leage One careful local owne r

1

72 Dodge 1 ton Trpck, flat bed- --- '2695

i

4 Or ., one owner .

Sla wag, 4 cyl, auto , fac t atr lug ra c k wood grain
tnm fancy wheels

Hat chba ck .:1 cy l

1973 1NTERNATIONAL

4 Or , less than l5,000 miles . l tke new

Or Sport Coupe loca ll y own ed, fu lly equtp1 Sharpest
around

w t ires I ts l tke new w 1t h less tha n 5,200 m tl es

13 000 mtles , one owner

1975 Ford LTD .................... 53995
1974 Ford Gran Torino ......... '2795

1972
BUICK RIVIERA ........... ..S3295
2

Pomeroy
OF
QUALITY Motor Co•

1972 CH EVROL ET 2 TON C&amp;C

6 cyl

Brouqham tnt

Vtsta Crutser . 9 pa ss wagon, sun roof a tr
stereo rad ta l ttres fully equtpt

Gal hpolts, 0

1975 PINTO MPG

1974 Plymouth Duster......... '2995

1972 OLDS ............................s2695

68 Pontiac Station Wagon-------- 1795

•

cyl , auto ,

tn color

13\ 2 SIGNS
j

opera wl ndows , tully

Ltke new

4 Or Sed , fa c t atr P S

DON WAlTS VOLKSWAGEN
RIVERSIDE AMC.JEEP

-~

spd

dr sed

FREE soft tops on 1976 Jeep CJ 's thru May
10, 1976.

446 9800

roof

1973
FORD
MAVERICI(.
............$2295
4
6
P S
1973 PINTO SQUIRE ..............$2295

FREE A.C. on 1976 Pace r s thru Apnl 30,
1976

Ph

----SPECIALS-----,
THIS WEEK ONLY

l~!~brm~~e~~~~.~~~~ yl! ;: ~~~-~~~.195

V.W. Dasher, 4 door sedan,
dealers
car ,
yellow,
auto .,
leatherette seats , radio, rad ial tires .
Price $3639
Our Cost $3889.26

67 Che¥elle 4 Door 6 cyl. auto. __ ._ __1695

j..

Ph. 949-2404

cvl ,

74

70 Olds 98 HT Sed., pow., F. air---.... 1095
69 P~. 4 Door, V-8 auto.--------'895
68 Dodge Dart Cpe., V-8 auto.----- 1995
67 VW 2 Door Bug ___________ l695

:·
..•
::..

I

ready to

19743 VEGA HATCHBACK..........s2295
4

V .W. Beetle
automati c,
company car, light blue, leatherette
seats, radio &amp; U-C, 11 ,630 mil es,
balance of N.C. warranty .

1

•

llalian·Style Pizza

:::~..

71 Buick S.L 4 dr., pow., a1r ----- '1995
70 Chev. Monte Carlo, pow., air __ __ .'1995
70 Chevelle Coupe, V-8 auto.- _____ '1595

Toronado Cust om 1 1
eQUIPf , radtal t~res

75

Upper Rt 7

Sprt Coupe 22 000 m tie s, sharp

13895
1974 OLD$...........................
V

Gr een or orange
dr iver ed . cars, 304 V-B, auto ., viny l
roof, individual frt. seats, w-w t1 res,
P.S. , P.B., rad io &amp; other ext ras.
Cost $3565 .77 Less $200.00.
Driver Ed. Allowance-Net $3365.77

'

i...

SAM'S

BRAD F ORD Auclio n ee;
Complete Ser v •c e
P hone
949 2487 or 949 2000 R ac tne
Ohto Cntt Bradford
10 9 Jf c

CAL L QU ICK
SCENIC COUNTRY HOME - Well ca red tor home 1n

$15,000
COUNTRY LIVING AT ITS BEST -

F •n an c •ng A1.1a1 l a bt e
Blo w ntnto W alls &amp; Alf tc s.-11

RE A DY MIX CON~~~~~
deltvered rtght 10 your
protect Fast and easy Free
es1 1mates Ph one _.,9~ 3~84
Goeg lern Re ady M 1x ·co
M ldd l cpo r 1 Oh•o
6 30 lfc

C

90 ACRES VACANT LAND - yo u wou ld k now sp n n g IS

Blown
lnsulat1on Se r v1ces

ALUMINUM

For Sale

FORKED RUN LAKE -

RACINE -

BU Y, SEL L or T R AD E

ltfe 2 dr

go

2- '75 4 Doors -

72 Olds 98 HT Sed., power, air ---- 12695
72 Chev. Imp. Cus. Cpe., full power, air'2295
72 Olds Lux. Sed., full power, fact air'2895
71 Olds 98 Lux. Sedan, pow., air ----'1195
71 Mercury Comet 2 Dr., 6 cyl. std.__ _'ll95
71 Ford Tor. Cpe., V-8, auto., air_ ____ 11595

•
...
..•..

USED CARS
BUY NOW FOR
EXTRA VALUE

1974
FORD GRAN TORINO ....&amp;$4295
t:

' HORNETS

NEW '75' 2 Door Sedan- yellow 258
'6' , auto., wh it e-wall s, U-C, full new
car warranty .
Our Cost $3101 .49

72 Buick Electra, V·top, pow~ air ___ 12695

...

FREE ESTIMATES

COINS

1 home &amp; 2 apart ments

FIVE POINTS - Modern 3

23 FEMALES

For information contact : Carl
Birney, Sec., Buckeye PHA, RD 1,
Freeport, Ohio 43973.

lge

bar dm ng w tf h
glass
dr s
2
tt le ba th s
l u ll
and dbl gar~1ge

Rock Sprmgs Fairgrounds
Pomeroy , Oh1u

15 BULLS

i......

REAL OAK FLOORS - In

For Sale

2J

wl

BACKHOES

TEAFORD
B,
Sr

A

AMC

'75'

76 Olds Cut. Sup. Sal. Cpe., pow., air--'5795
75 Olds Cut. Sup. Sal. Cpe., pow., air - !5195
75 Olds Royale 4 Dr., power, air·----'5195
75 Dodge Dart Swinger, slant 6, auto.• _13495
75 Ford Granada 4 Dr., pow.,,air ___ _ '4195
75 Chev. % t. C-20 PU, 4 wh. dr.___ 15395
75 Maverick 4 Dr., auto., P.S., P.B.-- '3195
74 ~ Bus, 9 pass. __ ________ _' 3695
73 Nova 2 Dr., V-8 auto. PS ------ '2595
73 Buick Luxus 4 Dr., pw., air -----'3395
73 Volkswagen Bus, 9 pass. ______ 13295
73 Olds 98 Lux. Sedan, pow., air ----'3495
72 Chev. Vega HB Cpe., 4 speed, radio 11495
72 Buick LS Cus. Con., power, air___ 12895

..."'
::

PH. 992-6173

N ath a n Btg gs
R ad la to r Sp ec•a llst

Vtrgtl

i..

lARRY WHOBREY
PUBUC
ACCOUNTANT

The following ca rs will be sold at or
below DEAL ER INVOI CE. Invoice
wi II be shown on equest .

73 Cadillac Eldelado Cpe., pow., air__ '5495
73 Cadillac Cpe. DeVille, power, air-- 14795
71 Cadillac Cpe. DeVille, power, air __ 12495

!

Ph 949 2023 or 143 2661

J 17 1 m o

Phon• 992 3325

742 220 1

LEAV IN G AREA
turn 1ture
fo r sa l e P hon e 992 74 76
3 26 31 1':

of

AND DOZER LARGE AND

-------------..
IN TERNAT IONAL

1969

Oran~ e T w p
Vo luntee r
F 1re Depa rtm en t w tll hold
a constg nmen t au chon af
th e ft re house located m
Tuppers P la ms, Oh io on
Ap rtt 17th begtn mng a t
10 00 a m

Free esti m ates on car pe t in g a nd 1n s t a llahon
We II b n ng sa mples to you r
hom e w tth no o b hgat10n
See how you ca n r eally
save
M 1ke Yo ung , Manager
Sales a nd ln sta lla h on
Rt 3 Po m eroy , Oh1o 45769
Ph one day or ntght
614-992 2206
\ \4 I TO
EXCAVATING

TUPPERS PLA I N S New 3
bedrm
houses
carpeted
ra nge garage large lois
F H A fmanc•ng available
$21 900
Phone ( 614 ) 667
6304
3 14 261p

P UREBRED SA LE
Wes t
Vtrgtn1 a Po ll e d He r ef o rd
Ass oc1aflon wdl hold 9th CUB Farm a ll Wtth m o w er and
An nu al Sale Ma r c h 17 1976
p low Ca mpe r tha t w il l t il a
at Ja ckson's M tll Sta t e 4 H
6ft bed t ru ck Ph one (6 1.4 1
Cam p at Westo n Off erm g 68
985 )924
hea d 30 bu 11s mostly
3 21 61p
br eedrng age an d 38 he lters
Fo r tn f o rm at1 o n c on t a c t
1973 H O N DA JSO r oa d btke,
Jtm wes tf all Rt 2 Box 11 5
e)l(ce ll en l c on ditio n 3 900
Sp en cer, W Va 25276or ca ll
m il es, tot of ex tr as P hQn e
(3 04) 927 ~ 10 4
742 n 11 a ft er 5 p m ca ll
3 26 ltc

1974

1969 C 60 CHEVROLET Dump
truck t 4 ff bed and c heat er
a x le Good con d •l•on Phone
(614 ) 667 6304
3 26 12tp

AUCTION SALE

110 Mechantc Pomeroy 0

4 ROOMS and ba t h plus ut tl tty
room
screened •n porc h
forced atr h eat Phone 992
5630
J 13 61c

-

J
Ph one 742 1190
3 26 6t c

Real Estate for Sale

1975 OLD SMOBILE Sta rt re
mus t sel l Phon e 992 7692
3 23 6tp

-

Ph one 992

1963 roR D E c onot ne van

~

From a sh elf t o ill house, a ll
types of b u tld•ng a n ~
rem od •li n g
fr o m
th •
tou nd att on up A d dtlton s,
urpeting, patnling, std m t,
r oo ting, pi nelii1D• pa per
hang•ng etc

2 19 1 mo

SLOAN'S
CARPETING

3 26 31p
speed

Open all the T tme
for your con ven•ence '
J I lmo

.."'

;

CONSTRUCTION

\

BARGAIN HUNTER?

USED CARS

"'

~

1968 CO RVETTE
5746

wa ter

D&amp;D

2 12 1 mo

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

For Rent

O:lll) H pa1a for a l l makes and
HOU SE On Ltncoln H gts 2
be dr ms
la r ge kitchen
larg e basement exce ll ent
bu y for $9 200 Wtl h f ur
n tf ure $10 700 Phone 992

1972 P L YMOUTH
dr automal tc
992 5737

1 12 fc

2 22 l f c

7760

HOME tor
owne r
bedrooms
road gas
949 2023

U N F UR N I SH E D 14 x 70
mobile hom e tota l e lec
3
ton central a•r condtl•one r
exce ll en t condtl1on Phone
247 2684 or 247 2664
3 10 1fc

2288

--:._-----~-- - ----. -

3 25 3t p

14 x 65MOBILE home lor sale
For more n f ormat1on call
9'ii2 7256
3 21 7t p

UNFURN I SHED
apt
tn
Pome r oy 2 bect r m ne~ t y
redecor at ed fu ll y carpeted
Ca l l tn the ear l y am 992

poss tble dedu c t ton th ts yea r
Have your Fede r al a n d
St at e Incom e Tax return by
an accountant P hon e 992
6173
I ~ I 52tc

99 2 7394

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

3 21 lfc

~iAKE·SuR_E_y~;;e-;--;~ r y

H OME tor sa te h v ng room
d tn •n g r oom
2 bedrooms
ktlc hen fam lly room an d
b at h Pr1ced to se ll Ph one

1970 MOB I LE home 12 )( 44 2
bedrm
gas Phone (304 ]
773 5460 or 992 5001
3 ~3 61p

2 B EDRM tr ader
P hone 99~ 3324

NIG HT HAWKS wd l be ba ck
al T all T1 mber s no m or e
tunk ban d s Rod ney Grover
3 23 3tc

Real Estate For Sale

Mobile Homes For Sale

1971 DU STER 6 cyl 3 speed
fa•r condtl ton Phone 992
7126 or c ontact 218 Condor
St Pomeroy
3 24 61p

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

W I LL ca r e for pa t 1ent male
or female n my home 1
have references
Pho n e
Sh trley Jones
Tuppers
Platns Oh to (6 14) 667 340~
3 26 Jtc

~

PAINTING 1ns1de out and
roofs P hone Mason (304)
773 5626
3 21 6tc

1966 FORD Coun t r y Sq u ~re
Sta t 10n Wagon ask . ng $300
Don Van Meter
Chester ,
(614) 985 3951
J 24 410

BULK WATER
AVAILABLE
Tuppers Pla1ns Chester
Water 01strte t now setltng
bul k • water to tanks on
! Ducks at our new offtee 1
Located on St Rt 7
1 Mile North Of
E astern•H •g h Sc hool
Serve Yourself Dispenser
Tak in g quarters only , one
a t a It me for 250 gallons of

Ph (61-tl 985-4 102

POM0~~?!vE~?~~~- CO. l(l\
POMEROY, OHIO

..,.•f

BISSELL BUILDERS

St995

4door V 8 automat tc P steenng and brakes, factory
atr crut se control, sharp, 1 owner loc al car dark
green

Employment Wanted
EXPER I E NCED
au t o
mechantc look ,ng for work
1n my own ga r age Quality
work and reasonab le ra t es
Call 992 7120
3 23 4tp

$1095

P 8, atr , pollee car

1972 DODGE POLARA CUSTOM

AKC Reg tste r ed Coll•e Stud
Se rvt ce
Stard us t K •ng
Phone (61-l) 98 5 42 48
:l 16 tic

_

OF

Auto, P S

WANT TO
Take advantage of our
preces
Qu a hty
b u tlf
homes N tce lots ava ilabl e
m ntce location s

a.

1974 CHEV BELAIR4 DR

A KC R eg Ch •huahua dogs , 3
femal e 1 male Phone 742
2962
J 25 3tc

4

,

SETT L E M E NT
C O U NT S,

TWO c oon hound p ups Phone
992 7810
3 21 61 C

Business Services

•I&lt;(

DAN
THOMPSON
ARE YOU A

VALUE
RATED

:·

..

SAVE MONEY?

S339S

auto P S radto w w radtals delu xe
trtm pkg and moldmg del bumpers
guards 6,600
mtles by local owner Clean as new car

-~------~-

_

County

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

4 door 6 c yl

COON HOUND dog II months
old PhOne 992 71J9
3 23 6tc

•"••
•

1975 FORD MAVERICK

-

Oakl~y

QUALITY

Pets

-

Moore of 84

-

her~by

Thorn as l

Eads .

~

Deceased
Nof tce •s

I

Auto Sales

@ 2~:Ns

1 HUR SD A Y
Fr•day and
Saturday Rotot il ler 1 wmd
m i lls tap e p l ayer baby and
boy th1ngs c lo t hes walker
ba c k pack
bed frames
m 1sc .tems 1 m ile from
Chester BrldQe
Rt
7-'18
Phone ( 614 ) 98 5 3335
3 23 ~lp

-

Estate of James R

Auto Sales

Yard Sale

•m

-

Kathy Stone
Oh iO

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

..

11- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Friday, March 26, lt78

By LEE LEONARD
lJPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI) - A
dozen
Ohio
House
Republican s, apparently
concerned over a late
challenge to Prestdent Ford
m the s tate by Rona ld
Reagan, have stalled, at least
temporarily, an attempt to
shorten
the
Ohto's
presidential prunary election
ballot next June
An emergency clause
needing 66 votes to ensll'e the
shortened ballot form by the
June 8 primary received only
58 votes Thursday as the
House concurred witlt Se1111te
amendments to a btll
elimlnatmg the "~eet "
ballot.
Only 15 Republicans

opposed emergency priority
11hen the bill ortgmally
cleared the House March 2
Twenty-seven opposed tl
Thursday.
Rep . Don S Maddux. !)..
Lancaste r , chief sponsor,
satd he would try to get the
House to reconstder the vote
next Tuesday.
Maddux
blam e d
Repubhcan regulars for the
defeat. He satd they want the
names of promment Ohio
Republi c an
delegate
candidates to appear on the
GOP primary ballot to offset
a possible challenge to Ford
by the former Callforma
governor, whose Ohio
delegates would not be as
well known.
•
Gov. James A Rhodes and

Sen Robert Taft Jr , R.Ohio,
head the list of statewule
delegates for the President.
Under the Maddux bill , their
names would not appear on
the prunary ballot.
House Minor! ty Leader
Charles F Kurfess, RBowlmg Green , a Ford
delegate, vtgorously dented
that polttics were involved
"This was not a partisan
matter and had nothing to do
wtth the electlon," said Kurfess. "There was no thought
that Republicans were going
to go out and ktll that btll
today "

Kurfess declined to be
quoted on his theory about
defeat of the emergency
clause.
U Maddui fatls In his btd

for recons tderatton nex t
week, th e matter would
probably go to a JOmt HouseS e nat e
co nf e r e n ce
comrmttee
The tssue must he dectded
by the time Ohio ballots are
prmted next month. It has
heen hangmg ever smce 1972,
when
a
"bedshee t"
Oemocrattc prtmary ballot
contamed up to 600 names of
delegates m some areas of
the state, causmg long delays
m votmg and cotmtmg
Prima ry results were
delayed ftve days
The Maddux bill would
es tablish a " pillowcase"
ballot, with delegate names
appeanng
only
m
congressoonal dtstrtcts. Ohio
Secretary of State Ted W

Brown has satd the btll would The Se nate unammously
elunmate 80 per cent of the passed the legtslatton August
\tme and expense caused by I
Ita llot length
The measure would reqwre
The measure also would spectal drtve r educatton proeltmin ate the names of grams for the handicapped,
prom ment Oh to poltttcal forbtd dtscrumnation in the
leaders m both parttes fr om offermg of msurance, lines of
credtt and publtc housmg and
the statewtde ballot.
Meanwhtl e, the Se nate offer tax credt ts
to
agreed 29 to I wtth House corporattons tha t modtfy
amendments and sent to the extstmg brnldmgs for use by
governor a handtcapped the handicapped
ct ttzens " btll of rtg hts"
Before JOlntng the House m
prohtbttmg dtscrunma!ton m
weekend
adJOurnment, the
employment, housmg, credit,
Senate
also
passed and sent
and
pu bhc
msur ance
to the lower chamber a btll
transp!H'talton
Sen Harry Meshel, 0- descrtbed by tis sponsor, Sen
Butts, DYoungstown, satd the amend- Charles L
ments, adopted with House aeveland, as the "ftrst step"
passage of the
btll toward combattng crurunal
arson m Ohto
Wednesday, strerrgthened tt

Imprisoned sergeant charged with heroin smuggling
RALEIGH N c (UPI) _ A

50-year~ld 'reitr~ master
aer eant has been charged
rUMing _ frol)l hts
federal prison cell _ 8 $100
million heroin smuggling
eratlon ustng military
0
aft
:thorltles &amp;MOun~ one
of Ute largest heroin rings in
Ute world was broken
Wedneaday with the arrest of
rsons In North Carolina ,
14
Vl.!:inla
Georgia and
California
'
According
to
the
lndlctmenlB the Thailand-toAmerica rlfig was headed by

w1:

J:.

.-~•

Lesll " Ike" Atkinson ' even
altere he was senten~ to
federal prtson In AUanta last
year on herbln charges
.. would say this organlzatlon1 would have to be

unsuspecting Air Force
transport crews and funneled
through Atkinson's home at
Goldsboro,
N c , for
dlstrtbu\ton on tHe East
Coast
classtfied as one of the
The stupments allegedly
heroin smuggling came Into the country at
1
1
;~~~zatlons
In the world, SeymoiD' Johnaon Air Force
which directly aflects- lhe base m Goldsboro, Travis Air
Uruted States, particularly Force base In california and
tlte East Coast," said Don Langley All' Force baae 1n
Ashton , the chief Drug Virginia.
Enforcement Admlnlotration
Ashton said the operation
agent In North carolina .
had been going on "roughly
The s1Ki18ge lndlctment seven years - since 1987
charged the heroin was Oown We've been working on It for
tn from Thailand by some tune. Over the years
~

we've been knockmg little
chunks out of• tt vartous
places
The heroin bougnt by th~
••Atkinson org amzatton,
said the mdtctment, cwne
from a Thai nattonal
tdenttlied as Luchai Ruvtwat,
known as "Chat "
Ashton satd two of those
char ged , Jam es Wa rr en
Smedley, 53, and J asper
Myrtck Jr .. 23, both among
the mthtary personnel
allegedly Involved, we re
jailed earlier by Tha t
authorlttes and were held at
Khlang Prtson m Bangkok

T

J.eshe Atkinson Arrmgton,
Atkinson's daughl er, and her
husband, Michae l Otts
Arrt ngton, bot h 24, of
Raletgh, we re Jatled tn
Raletgh on $2!&gt;0, 000 bon ds,
!?r• the lndtctment stated,
transmtttmg messages to
an4 from
members of the
orgamzatton and asststmg tn
runntn g
the
Atkinson
organtzatton tafter Atkmson
was Jailed), actmg under the
advtce and orders of Leshe
Atkinson "
Wtlham Kelly Brown, a
soldter . was arr ested at
Augusta, Ga • and another

sol dter , Wilham King Wrtght,
30, was jatled at at Ft Lee,
Va
Others ~rrested were
Freddte Oa) Thornton , 40, o~
Oetrott, re ttred Air Force ,
Rudolph Valentino ~ennmgs,
49, Goldsboro, N C , ~tlham
Thomas, 42, Goldsboro, N C •
Monroe Lorenzo Martm Jr •
43, umg Beach, Cab~ . Atr
Force.
Robert Ernest
Patterson, 34, Hampton, Va,
acttvc Air Force, James
McArthur , 40, Fayettevtlle,
N C • Charles Murphy Gtllis,
36, Goldsboro, N C • act tve
Air Force

Butts' btU would reqwre
msur ance compa nies to
forward the results of thetr
mvesttgattons mto ftres to the
state ftre marshall or local
ftre depa rt me nts It also
would gtve the compa rues
ltm tted 1mmumty aga mst
prosecutto n
tf
th etr
in!!H'mation lea ds to an arson
charge but not convtctton
"The evtdence frequently
burns up wtth the cn me, 11
satd Butts "Thts btU would
re m ove I ns u ra n ce
comparues' fea rs they may
be hit wtth a lawsutt because
of their mvesttgattons ''
The House gave unanirrious
approva l to emer gency
legtslatton permttltng the
state to self-msure tis 20,000
self-propelled motor vehtcles,
mcludt ng automobtles,
atrplanes, watercraft and
farm equtpment
The bill now goes to the
Senate It ts necessary
Notice of A pp o •n t ment
Case No 217S4
E state of I sa bel St'" pson
D ecease d
Noltce 1S he r eby given t ha t
Josep h E Beci&lt;.With Of Apl
20JA
Lakevtew
Es t ates
Parkersburg west Vl r gl n ta
has been duly appotnted
Execu t or of the Estate of
I sa b el Stmpson deceased
late of Rac .ne , Me1gs County
Oh10
Cred 11o r s are requ~red to
tile the r cla•ms wtth said
f tduc1ary w lt hm fou r months
Dated th1s 15th day of March
1976
Ma nn 1ng D W e bst er , Ju dge
Court of Co m m on P t ea~
Probate D IVISIOn
OJ 19, ~6 , (4) ~ 3tc

because the old Insurance
poltcy lapsed last week and a
Mmnesota ftrm wanted a $2.8
mtllton
premtum
for
coverage
-NOTICE OF SALE -

The per sona l p rop ert y In the
Estate of th e la t e Wayn e
Ch evalie r , D ecease d , wh o was
a co l lector and dea l er In an
11 q ues w ill be off e r ed f or 'Sale
at auct1on a t h 1S r esid enc e In
t h e V•llage o f R ee d svi lle
Oh to commencing a t 10 00
AM on Tuesd a y A pri l 6th ,
1976 an d wttl con tt nue daily
the r eafte r until sol d
Nu me r o u s g a rd en toots ,
ha nd ttlle r s la w n mowers ,
p l an t e r s,
r o ta
fi ll e r ,
cu l llvato r
saws, l adders ,
wheelba rr ows tub s, Iar s ,
refrtgera t or g a s r an g e, oak
k1 t chen table pl a nk chair s,
ha ll rack
c tH n a c abinet,
pttct1ers plates bo wl s, spoon
ho l de r s a n t1que g l 8ss ware
both cut an d pre s sed br ass
wh1Stle
.nsut a tors, powder
horn boot rack b r a ss bell ,
cow bell sch.ool bell s butter
mol d sad tran s, cherr y p ie
safe , 15 oil l amps, clock s,
l1 br ar.y tab l e g un r ack , 12
caltber rev ol ver 22 bolt acti on
r 1fl e tnvets 2 lam ps and
brackets , o l d t h e rmometer
stone tars and tug s oil lamps ,
co ll eclron of bottles, antique
d •shes, bott le ca ps, th ousands
of ot h er tfems of household
goods
e ff ects
f urnitur e.
eQu tpmen t an d br lc a b r ae ,
an d a 1972 P tck up T ruc k with
campe r t op In e xc ettent
co nd lt •on
T erms of sa le Cash I n t he
even t of .ncte m ent w eather
the sale may b e pos tponed
from day to d ay
Ed w ar'd Chev alier
Ad mtn lstralor of
th e est1te
of Way n e Ch evalier ,
D eceased
Carnahan Auc t•on serv ice
Aucttoneers
D l 19 26 ( 4) 2 Jtc

.·--.
'

.

�.,
..

10 - The Datly Senttnel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Frtday, Marj!h 26.1976

WantNI

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
.,
P M
Day
Before
Publ ca t•on
M o nday Dcadl1ne y

NEEDED , Stok.ely canned
labels oy weekend Send to
Long Bot tom

3 14 Jtp

Help Wanted

Ca n cc llat t o n
Corrc ctt ons w tll be ac
re pl ed unt 1 9 am for
Dav of Pub l •cat1on
REGULATIONS
Th e Publ iShe r r eserves
•h e r 1qh1 10 edt or rct t:(.l
an.,. ads deemed ob
teCIIOnal The publiSher
wdl not be responstble lor
mor e th an one tncor re c J
nscrt1on
RATES
For Want Ad Ser\ltc c
1
ce nt s per w ord Ollt'
1nser!ton
M1n 1mum Charq e-S1 00
It c en 1s per word thre e
consecut ve
nscrttons
'l ~ cen t s per word SIX
co n secu t1ve
nsert•ons
7 ~ Per Cent D 1sc ount on
pa1d ads and ads pa •d
w lh n 10 days
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
~ '2 00
f or
so word
rn1n mum
E ac h add1t to nal word 3
ce n•s

LADY

to li ve m el(ce!le nt
t• v•n g condtflon plus salary
Ph one 949 2433 alrer 6 p m
3 24 hl c;

Not•ce ot Appotntment
Case No 21158

g1ven that

w

Columbus OhtO has
been duly appomled Executor
of t he Estate or James R
Eads deceased ta te of M etgs
Oh 1o

Cred itors are reQutred to
le the ir cla tms w tlh satd
f ductarv wllhtn four m on ths

t

Dated thts 23rd day of
March 1976
Manning D Webster. Judge

Court of Common Pleas ,
Probi1e O tvts•on

13) 26, (4) 2. 9, Jtc

BLIND ADS

/\ dd• ••on al 2Sc Charg e
pe r /\ dv crt1Scmcn t
OFFICE H OURS
8 30 a n ~ •o ~ 00 p n1
Dally 8 JO a m to I} oo
Noon Saturday
Phone or:lay 99 7 71~6

IN T H E

COM MON G PLEAS COURT
PROBA T E DI VIS I O N
M E IGS COU NTY, OH IO

IN THE MATTER OF

AC

PROBA TE COUR T,

ME I GS COUNTY OH IO
Accounts and vouchers

t he

of
named

followmg

frduc ar es have been til ed m
the Probate Cou r t
Me 1gs

Co un t y Ohro for
and settlement
CASE

NO

Cu rrent

21 484

Account

Raymond

approval
of

Frrst

Dena

Admmrstratr lx of

the Estate
of
Paul
E
Raymond Deceased
CASE NO
21 641
Frrsl
Account of C Robert Frsher
Guardran of the person and
esta t e of W l lram Thomas
Frshe r
CASE N O 71 552 F rrst a n d
Frna t Account o f Curtrs A

Anderso n Executor of the
Esta t e of Ella F Ande r son
deceased
CASE N O 2 1 567 Frrst a n d
F rna l Account of Leland
Turner
E}(ecutor o f the
Esta t e of Robert s Tu r n er
Deceased
Unless e~~;ce p tro n s a r e f ried
thereto sar d a ccounts wil t be
tor hearmg be f ore s a rd Court
on t he 26th d a y of Ap r rl 1976
at w htch t• me sad accounts
Wi ll be c onstdered an d co n
tl nued fro m d ay to d ay u ntll
t ma tly Cltsp ose d of
Any per son m te r este d may
ft le wrtt t en except tons to sat d
acc ounts or t o matters p er
ta m mg to t he ex.ec u tt on of the
tr u st n ot less t ha n f 111e d a ys
pr to r to th e da t e se t for
h earin g
M ann1ng D Web st er , J u dge
Common Plea s Co urt
P r obat e DI VISIOn
Metg s Coun ty Oh•o
( 3) 26 ltc

LE G AL NOTIC E
STERL IN G G NEVILLE
has been or dered to appear or
plead by April 18 1976 to a
complatnt fl ed tn Ctv tl Act on
No C2 76 100 m I he Uni!ed
Sta t es D ts t t~c t Cou r t for the
Southe rn D ts tr c t of OhiO
Easte rn DIVISIOn
Uniled
States of Ame r~ ca Pl atnt tff &lt;J
STERLI N G G N EVI L LE el
al
D efenda n ts p r ayt n ~ f or
fo r ecl osur e o f a mortgage
recordf'd •n Vo l ume 123 p age
143 of the mortgage rec or d s of
Me gs County
Oh to wh1ch
mort gage deed •s a l•en on the
followt n g descrtbed
re a l
pr ope r ty St tua t ed 1n the Stale
o f Oh o Coun t y of Metgs and
further descrtbed as t a l lows
St tuate •n the VIllage of
M•ddleport Me gs Coun t y
Ohto
Betng Lot No 79 and the
southerly ~0 t eet of L ot N o 80
tn Lower Pomeroy
now
M d d leport Oh•o Also
th e
easte r ly one ha lf of thai
port10n of the alley wh1ch 15
coni g uous wt t h the weste rl y
bounda r y o f
the above
descrt bed rea l est a te
Su b 1ec t
to
wat e r
ltne
ea seme n t
Deed Re f erence
Volum e
242 P age 1011 Me1gs County
Deed Records
Th e mortgagor and mor
tgagees agree that
any
ranges
ref r •gerators
or
ca r petmg
pu r chased
or
financed m whole or 10 part
Wtth loan f unds wr ll be c on
s1de r ed and co nstrued as a
pa r t of the prop erty covered
by the mor tgage
PROPERTY
102 Pa r k
Stree t Mtddleporl Ohro 45760
s Rober t M Duncan
Un 1ted States
D slrtcl Judge

(3]5 1219 26(4)2 9 6tC

Card of Thanks
t W I SH tO extend my s ncere
thanks t or the many deeds
of k1ndness shown me whtl e
a pat•ent at H olzer Medtcal
Cen1er I stncerely thank th e
Pomeroy
Em e rge n cy
Sq uad
the doctors and
nurses at Holzer Med •ca l
Center them 101ster and all
my frtends and relaltves
who remembered me wtth
c ards and flowers
Your
~und thoug h t w il l never be
forgo t ten
Mrs Thee K1mes
3 26 lie

Not1ce

WILL
do
smal l
garden
plowtng
w th
Grave l y
tracto r Phone 992 7492 or
992 3716
3 26 18tp
SHOO TI NG Match
Amertcan Leg on
March 28 12 noon

Ru t lan d
Sunday
J 26 2tp

------~- ---

t AM request •ng whoever d d
or a n y one no t to du mp any
more t r as h
etc
on t he
p r opert y o f the l ate Floy d
W tse ol ace on Batl ev Run
R d Sig ned by owner Pa ul
Wtse an d h 1s mot her M r s
F loyd Wtse
3 24 31 c
AUCT I ON
Mason AlJct10n
H ouse
Mason
w va
Frtday March ~ 6 7 p m
Co n s1gnments
welcome
Phone (J04) 882 2407
J 25 2fc
WA NT Vac a tto n ? N eed ch or es
Fo r
m ore
10
d o n e?
t ormttt10n ca ll (6 14 } 9E}5
428 1
3 21 6t p
W I L L g 1ve pta n o lessons tn m y
home Ca ll 742 2131
3 ~ I 6tc
-- ---~--------

POMEROY

MAJOR CHEMICAL
MEETING
Tuesday, March 30
7:45 p.m. '
Gra c e Ept scopal Pansh
Ho use, Ea st Matn Sfreet
Pom eroy , Ohto ( Bestde Old
Pomeroy Jr Htgh School)

Speakers ·
Robert
Hutchmson and Joe
Reed
REFRESHMENTS
DOOR PRIZES
INFORMATION
DOOR PRIZES
POMEROY LANDMARK
Jack W Carsey, Mgr
Phone 992 2181

Wanted To Buy

I

sa l e by prtvat e
J ,
ac r es
4
barn on blacktop
and water Phone

- - -- --

J 1 26tp

r-..._1R OOM house w•th bafh

good
toc a t 1on f ull basement 391
Sou t h Second M rddleport
P hon e 992 2265
3 21 12tp

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

\

9 1\C RE S } QOOd Wlii S 7
bcdr m Ira fer Wdt sell w1th
1ra!ler or wt tho ul Call 7.J ?
7'J I 7 af t er t p m Pr1cc S/ .500
t or bo th
] 17 171p

OLD fu rn lur e
1ce boxes
brass
bed :;
old
wa ll
te lephones an d pa rt s or
complete ho u seholds Wn te
M
D
Mt l t er
Rt
2
Pom e roy
Ohto Ca ll 992
•

10 7

]4

T I MBER
lop Prtcc f or
s tandtng ltmber Ca ll {614)
&gt;ld6 8570
3 7 tf c
20
BUSHEL
ea r
co rn
Here ford he•fers 20 mon ths
old locust posts Phone 7-l~
~441

3 25 3tc
MO N EY tn yo ur cella r " at t •c"
ea rn ? P ay up to Sl 000 each
fo r ce rt atn o ld bo ttl es a l so
wa n t German w W 11 fl ags
med als sw or ds etc P non e
992 2592 e ft er 5 p m
3 26 Jtc

7648

I

3 26 26tc

------------L ARGE f r ame mode r n h ome
wit h t hree acres lan d on
Li n co ln Hill $25 000 P hone
992 2720
3 26 31c

I

mode ls of mob tl e homes
Phone area code 614 423
9531
d 13 lfc

Misc. Sales

P ORC H SALE on C Rd 28
above E a stern H1g h Sch ool
at Gordon Holter L ots o f
ch ild re n s c lo l h tn g w a tc h
s 1g n s
Fr~ d ay
an d
for
Saturday Ma r ch 26 an d 27
any 11m e

Duster 1
a~r
Phon e
J 23 6tc

FURN I SHED
2
bedrm
apa r tment a d ults only tn
M•dd l epor t Phone 992 3874
3 12 ttc

'

HOU SE 1n Ch es t er
OhtO
N ew l y re d eco r ated t u ll y
ca r peted mos tl y furn•shed
Shown 12 to d March 27th
Reason a b l e r ent
Call l
(6 1d} 866 1731
3 25 2tc

3 AND .d RM fu r n tshed and
un f urn iShed apts Phone 99 2
54 34
11 9 ttc
COUNTRY Mob•le HomP
Parle Rt JJ len m•les north
of Pomeroy Large lois wllh
c on c r ete pattos Stdewalks
run ners and o f f s t reet
par k ng Phon e 992 7479
2 31 ttc
J 13EDRM house w• t h bat h 1n
Rutland Phone 9Y2 5858
J 9 lf c
r eal n•ce

ENJOY g r acious l lvtng at
V1 tl age Mano r Jn Mtd
d le por t f or as low a s S\30
p er
mon t h
wllh
all
u tt lllt es
pa td _ _l.IJ.ill.
ar e brand new h tg h q ua l fl y
ap artme nts at pn ces yo u
ca n a ffo rd You r ren t 10
elu d es mo n th to m o n th
t eases
all e t ec
l tv tng
carpetin g
range
a nd
ref rt ge r a tor
f r ee t ra sh
p 1ckup cab le T V at your
ex.pe n se
an d
on stle
lau n d r y tac ll t tt es
Con
ve n ren t to shop p rng on Th •r d
an d M i ll Stree t s tn M 1d
d tepo r t See th e m~nager a t
R P.,&lt;&gt;r &lt;; •de ,Apar tmen ts or
c all 992 3273
Fu r n 1she d
apar t ments
ar e
als o
ava tla b le
2 2 78 tc

For Sale
NIM RO D Fold ou t Ca mper
s teeps 7 3 prtv at e beds g as
stove smk tee box d m ett e
area wtre d fo r e tec tnc tl y
SIOOO P hone 992 5421
3 25 3tp
---~----------

~

--- ------

p tcK u p
comple t e
new
e)l(h au st system Car b uretor
ove r ha u le d P hon e 992 7149
3 21 6tc

19 10 CUTL/\ ~ "
Phon e 9V'l JIIO

Watc h for List
Item s Later .

_______ _

YAMA~A

360 MX SBOO

or best off er Phone (614)
667 3759 or 667 3652
3 26 SI C

..
.......
A

..
~....

Now accepting cl ients
for bookkeeping and
ta x se rv1ce.

...••
..•...
::

3 18 1 mo

ROGER HYSEUS
GARAGE

SMALL
SE PTIC TANK S
INSTALLED
B I LL
PULLIN S P HONE 992 2478
DAY OR NIG H T
2 22 52tp
From t he largest T ru c k or
Bu ll dozer"' Radtator to the
sma l l est Hea te r Core

Real Estate For Sale

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Broker

3

i.....

I

Automobile and
Truck Repair
State Rt . 124
Toward Rutland
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone . 992-5682

Pome ro y

P h 992 217 4

3 BR

CUAL ~OR ~1\ LE C/\13 Coa t
Com pany
1 mile nor1h of
Che sh tre on R t 7 P c k your
own S20 p er t on Open 6 day s
per w ee k o r call (611 367
7)3 0 lor furl he r 1n f ormat•or'l
1 1l 71l tc

REG P OLLED&gt; Hereford herd
bull
5 yrs
old
HC
d spostt1on exc producer
R R S Farms Phone 992 5565
or 992 2826
3 25 6tc
NANNY GOAT for sale and
Border Coll•e 9 months old
to gtve away Phone ( 614)
965 3878
3 25 3tc
GOOD HAY ne1.1 er wet Phone
949 2523
3 25 lite
V SH APgO a l umm u rn row
boa t comple te W1lh oars
Used t w1ce $150 00
cop
pert or, e 30 r ang e hood I k e
new S2 0 00 wrought Iron
f tre p!ace screen 55 00 Cal l
992 5666
3 25 Jt r
STEREO r adto
mod
n
des gn
AM FM rad1 c
B
t r ac k tape co mb1n at n
Bal an ce $10 1 60 or t er ms
Call 992 3965
3 28 lfc
AU "TO !Jarts - '100 CUbiC Inch 6
cy l tnder Ford en g 1n e and 3
SlOO
speed t r ansmiSSIO n
390 CUb i C l OCh Me r c u ry
E ngtne
an d
auloma i 1C
tr an sm tss •on $150 Call 9 9~
712 0
3 23 51 p
15 CU FT uprigh t f r eezer
exce ll en t cond 1t 1o n
Phone
247 n os or 247 2731
3 23 71c
------~'"'-----.---

1975 360 HO N DA
ex c ell en t
condtl ton $875 Ph one 949
267 4
3 23 41C

COAL l tmestone an d a ll types
of salt an d roc k sail tor ICe
a nd s n ow r e mova l
Ex
ce lstor Sai l Wo r ks
Eas t
Ma m Sl
Pomeroy Ohto
Phone 992 389 1
1271fc
S T RAWBER R Y
plan t s,
Charles Foster R t 338 n ~a r
Rac •n e L oc k s and D am
Ph one 247 ~309
3 2d 6tc
RUGS of all stzes Ca l l M ason
I JO di 773 5626
3 21 6tc

J 19 7tc
CH A NN EL C B
Rad tO S
$109 95 up ante n na, Sl -'195
up 4 t ill 9 Tues d ay thru
F r 1day 12 f! ll6 Sat urd ay 60
Cen tral Ave, At h e n s On to
3 2 1 lO tp

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

r-----------------~
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO POLLED

HEREFORD SALE
FRIDAY, APRIL 2nd

7:00p.m.

S mce ca r pe t tng tn
hvmg &amp; family Rms On l y 4

yrs old $24 500
MODERN - 3 Brs
k tt wt th
s lt d in g
ceram tc
basem en t
$38 00 0

RIVER FRONT LOT

324 31p . . . . . . . . . . . . . ., .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~. .~. .--~

~

Wa t er e l ectriC a nd sma ll
bu tldlng $4 000
LARG E - 9 rm s 3 Brs
11 1 bath s hot wa fer hea t
L tvt ng across fro n t of
hou se
L ots of closets
L arge lot a nd beautifu l
II ICW $ 16 500

MUST SE LL -

.•
·j
..•
..•..
-•.•
:•
..:z
••
--.••
....••

3 23 1 mo

22' ~

acres

ha s t ree gas a nd own
water s ystems 1 Mob tl e
H om e A ll rented at a ll
t tmes" S420 00 per m on t h
plus gas we ll
Ask m g

$25 000
MAKE
OFFER
MIDDL EPOR T -

AN

5 BR ,
1 1 bat hs •nsula ted storm
doors &amp; w tndows
N G
heat
garage &amp; car~rt
Good condlfton ! 2 g lassed
porches sma ll ba sement)
$ 12 000

Brs a ll pa neled lge bat h
ga r age and lge lot $~5.500

F tshtng ca bm 3 r ooms 2
por ches and a path (n~eds
some repa trl $2 800

Nice

3

Brs

large ktt
dt n tn g
fu ll
basem en t 111 ba ths Ob i
ga r age plus Almos t l 1
ac r es S3 1 500

49 ACR ES - 3 yrs old 2

bedr oom heme ba lh btrc h
ktfchen carport a nd fu ll
basemen l $31 ,500

WANT
IF
YOU
PROFESSIONAL
ADVICE, HI RE ONE IT
WILL PAY YOU

POMEROY -

bu r~ed
t re asur e
F•nd
(D in S, nng !., sliver, gold
Co m&amp; M et a l
D et ector s
F or R en t

or

7 room

fra m e NE W f urnace
carpe ft ng
lt le pane lmg
s tdt ng
st or m doors &amp;
wt n dows
Porc h es
fu ll
basemen t 2 car gara ge
Budge t gas btl I $35 00

EXCELLENT
CONDITION $18 500
WE NEED NEWER
HOME S
992 2259 or 992 2568

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
KIDS IN YOUR HAIR - LOOK HERE story home

2
10
the coun tr y 3 l arge be drm s large spactous l t v mg
roo m d tnt ng room kt tc hen wt th b u 1lt Ins ba th a nd
uttltt y r oom 2 car concrete block garage garden space
a nd s tr awber ry pa t ch a lm ost 1 acre of land Wh er e'
A bout 5 m 1n u t es from Pomer oy on Co Rd 30 P r 1ced

onl y Sll ooo

S BE OROOMS - T h ts ntce 11? st o r y h ome has a la rg e
l tv ng roo m wt l h sh in y oak fl oon ng dt nmg roo m , n tce
kttc hen wt th but It tns 2 ba th r ooms 2 bedrooms on f tr s t
fl oor 3 n tce ly panele d bedrooms o n the 2nd floor a l so 2
large porches and a sun por c h ga r a g e Nat ura l gas
furnace ts very econ om tcal Locate d on Scout Road tn
Chest e r Oh 1o Wou ld you believe $12 BOO

R&amp;J COINS
Rutla nd 7 42 2Jl l
Ro g er Wam sley
J I 1m o

her e w hen you see th ts wtde g r een valley w tfh a b r ook
runn tng th roug h tf 1usl perf ect t or a lar ge l a k e
He r es
woo ded h ii1 Stde JU st cr ym g for a ca bi n
scen er y a nd sec lus ton
at less tha n $300 per ac r e

ELWOOD BOWE~S REPA I R
Sweepers toaste r s Irons
all small appltances Lawn
mowe r next to Sla te H•gh
way Ga r age on Rout e 7
Phon e tll 5 3875
4 16 lfc
SEPTIC T A NK S c~; ned b
Modern Santtat•on 992 3954
or 992 7J J9
9 lB lfc
REMODE LI N G
Plumbm y
heatrng and all ty pes of
ge n era l
repatr
Work
guarante ed
~0
yea r s ex
p ertence
Phon e 992 7409
5 1 1fc
W I LL TR IM or c ut trees and
sh r Ltbbery
Phon e 949 2545
or 712 3167
1 27 261c
W I LL do Odd tabs rOofing
patntmg hau l mg treework
and mowtng Ca ll 992 7409
3 1 26tc
WILL
do
st ru c t 1o n
heat•ng No
too sma ll

What?

5

BICENTENNIAL SPECIAL -

56Q N Second Sl

M tddl eport Sit on th e la rg e f r on t pokh and wa t ch th ~
wo rld go by st ep msld e th e la r ge f o ye r a nd fe e l t he
spa et ousn ess o f th ts th 1ck wa ll ed b rtck h om e op en
statr way la r ge lt vt ng r oom w ith f treplace h ug e
form a l dm lng roo m , btg kt t chen Upsta tr s 1s 4
be drooms wd h a sun por ch Pl enty of room l or real
lt v m g a t a pr1ce y ou can a fford
J ust $29,500 Yo u w 11l
have a hom e w1 th pr es t ige

9 ACRES OF WOODED AREA - Ju st off Un1on Ave A
lttt le dozer w ork a nd ha ve a few hom e st tes POMEROY -.
be dr oom hom e
w tth ftr epl ace
goes too
one

$4, 000 00

H tg h v tew
l ow pr ice, c heck tht s 3
w1 th large d lntng r oom l tv tnQ roo m
k it chen and bath, nat gas fu rntture
low pr tce $7500 00

S6 000 00 - DON'T FLIP OUT - This the nght price
for tht s m o dern t wo b edroom home In the country
near B ash a n Ctty wa t er a nd na tu r al gas Even a

garden

C. II

For AppOontment

Want that FOR SAL£
ad to read SOLD?

REALTOR

Call: Jimmy Deem
949-2388.

ro o fin g
con
p l umbmg an d
tab too l arge or
Pho n e 742234 8
3 19 26 t c

ExcAVAT IN-G~er To~Ct. ­
an d back hoe wo r K se pti c
! a n ks
m stalled
d u mp
trucks an d to boys for h tr e
wt ll h aul f li t d lft top so tl ,
l l meslone and grave l Ca ll
Bob or Roger Jeffer s d ay
pho n e 992 7089 n1g h t ph on e
992 3525 or 992 523~
2 11 t fc

t he co u n tr y con ta mtng 2 bed roo ms, l tv mg toom
lc.t fchen , sm a ll dt ntng r oom bath , n 1ce sun por ch Al so
ce l la r and ce ll ar house 2 garages and barn
That s
not a ll
37 acres goes w tf h tf
a ll over lookt n g th e
beau t tf ul Ohto R tver
Better call qu1ck
, Only

bedroo m s love l y kttc hen wit h a ll b u1lt tns d tntng roo m
wt th sltdmg glass d oor s open mg to a hugh deck , f a m i l y
r oom lower level p at to, cent r a l a tr tot al e lectn c,
mter com syst em som e f m ts htng work requt red on
Rlggscres t M a n or near Tupp ers
f tr st f loor Wh er e?
Plams One of th e f ines t hom es in th e area a t a
r eason ab le price Ca ll t or a ppomtment

STOR M

WINDOW S &amp; DOO RS
R E PlA C EM ENT
WINDOW S
S IDIN G SO FFITT
G UTT E R S AWN I N G S

LARRY LAVENDER

S'f r iCUSe OIHO
P h 99~ 399l
4 \0 1 mo

-

PIZZA SHOP
Ca ll in orders and pi ck up
'" tw e nt &lt;t m 1nut n
Lo cat ed at 329·3 rd Str ee t
R~e l ne , OhiO

OPEN lUES THRU SAT
6 JO T l1 110 00
3 17 1 mo

0 DEL L A lln ement located
be h 1n d
Rutlan d
Gr a d e
T un eup
b r ake s
Sc h o ol
whee l bat an cmg alme m en t
Phone 742 2004
11 16 tt c

..... --

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

Real Estate For Sale
NEW bl lev e l hom e J bedr m
b uil t •n k 1t c h e n , c ar pet,
b asem en t
g arag e
1n
b ase men t l oc at ed b ehmd
gr a d e sc ho o l
Lon g S t
Rutl a nd, Oh io
See M tl o
Hut c h ison
or phone 742
2306
3 23 tt c

f•

•
~

___

tr
.~

SAVE ON
CARPETING

'

,

•

1

.'!

., '

Beauftful colors
Do •t
yourself •11d save Regular

'"' r

S6 95 sq yd

r

Yd

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

.

12 or 15 FT

"'

...

501 NYLON

Green QDid r ed b l u e rust
Do It YOur se lf wt th pad
d tn g l7 95 sq vd
W ith padd i ng In stalled
S8 95 square y ard

CALL742 22 11
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

I

.' "'Jr'

lU I"

\\;

.,

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

'"

,..

',"

R ut11nd

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

•••••••••••••••••••••••
Shopptnq Hour

•• ••••Mill.••
..
..
i.:.. FRIDAY TIL 8 .::: :~:
.: ..··•••••··.. ..
---:::

onvcnir~nt

i•

,.

•

••

•

•

Mon., Tues., Wad .

• •

8:00ti15:00

•

••

t·..v

• "

Close Sat. At 5 'P.m.

• •

e•

RUTLAND FURNITURE

742-2211

' ARNOLD GRATE

RUTLAND

1...

..

~

•

:

'"'

ee

Thursday 8 11112 noon

• •
• •

, •

-.F

,\

.•.

\:

:,"

\q,to I

•'

1

•• '' '"

~·······················~

l lh

brotherhood, love, carmg and
shartng" embodied In their
songs
The group of boys and gtrls
vtstted a nd petiormed tn the
Statehouse and attended a
House sess1on .

V root beaultful betge

AM FM

roof , perfec t

local on e

1972 CHEVY IMPALA. 4 DR .....11495
1971 PONTIAC BONNEVlLLE .....$395
Dr
1971
PONTIACP SCATALINA
....... ~ll95
4
P B, V
1969 MUSTANG 2 DR FASTBACK $895
1968 FORD 2 DR HT................. $495
1965 MERC. 4 DR .................... szg5
1961 LINCOLN CONT. ............... ..'500
Fact a1r

P S, P B, V roof Come Qutck

4

Dr Sed , t ac t atr

roof

s

P S

P B Shenff's ca r

Excepttona l cond

1973 FOR D MAVER ICK

$2495

acy l 2 dr sedan , P S, AT Rea l ly sharp low m 1leage

1975 FO RD GRAN TO RINO

$AVE

4 dr Sedan at r cond , drtver's t ra tnt ng car , low m tleage

1974 FORO FIOO 1J2 TON PI CK UP - - - - - - - $3495
302 V 8 P S , low ml~eage
1974F ORD Ft004 WH EE L DRIVE --.,..-----S3995
Good ti res Shows excellent ca r e

1973 GMC 'h TON

1972 DO DGE V-B CHARGER - - - - - - - - - $ 2295
2 Dr H T Very clean A T , P S

1971 FORD V 8 TORINO- - - ' - - - - - - - - - $1495
2 Dr Hardtop

1971 VOLKSWA GEN 2 OR

S EOAN ~------S l695

Ex1ra ntce

4 Dr

d

Dr

'"•

..

hard1op, ex tra good for model

loca ll y owned F tnest sertes DOdge

1972 CHEVY VEGA ...........'995

MANY MORE
SEE Fred Blaettnar, Pat H1ll, Melvin Ltttle,
or Dan Thompson
Open Evenmgs Ttl6 : 00
Exce pt Thurs. and Sat. Til 5:00

runs good

'

A T, P S

1970 DODG E V 8 CUSTOM POLARA - - - - - - -51395

auto

,,

,.

SJ495

V 8 Sterr a G r ande P1ckup Spotless tns 1de and ou t

Ga s sa vmg. wo r kmg m a n 's cars !

au t o G 1

•o

'

.'
'••"

----TRUCK·s - - - - -

1974 CHEVY C-30 .. .................. $AVE

SJ895

1600 Sen es, 102' cab t o ax le, 2 speed R ax le 6 speed
good 900)1(20 f tres f r ame rein for ced VB eng• ne hea t er
r eady to work

1 Ton long whee l base f lat bed w th racks, d spd
tra ns, 20 000 mile , tru&lt;;k , l ike new

1973 CHEVY CUSTOM 10 ........ $2495

Lon g wtde bed 307 V 8 st a tran s
clea n

350 V 8 P B

AMBULANCE LICENSING
COLUMB US (U P! )
Ambulances and ambulance
attendants would he subJect
to state ltce nsmg under
provtstons of a btU sent to the
House Thur sday by the
Senate 23 to 6
The btll, authored by Sen
Neal F Zuruners Jr , DDayton, would authortze the
governor to appomt a mnemember board to set up rules '
a nd
regulati ons
fo r
emergency medtcal care

stand

st and trans

trans

Se ve ral othe r ca r s m stQck al R1gg s
Se e Ray R1ggs or Roger Riebel

RIGGS USED CARS
LOBBYISTS BARRED
COLUMBUS ( UP! )
House Speaker Vernal G
Rtffe Jr • D-Ne\1 Boston,
dts turbed wt th excesstve
nmse m the rear of the lower
cham ber
durmg
flo or
sesstons, Thursda; dtrected
lobbytsts to stay m an

992-2196

long wtde bed

long st epstde be d

7

461 s.
Middleport

radto &amp; t ape ex t ra

1973 CHEVY......................... :s1995
1968
CHEVY ........................... 1400
6
FLASHERS AlLOWED
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
House Thursday passed
unarumously and sent to the
Senate leg tslatton addtng
garbage trucks to the ltst of
vehicles permi' ted to use
flashmg amber hghts while
traveling at slow speeds
Clue! sponsor Rep Marcus
A. Roberto, 0-Ravenna. said
the billts necessary because
slow-movmg trash collection
vehicles subject garba ge men
to danger on the road \

"

1970 BUIC K EL EC TRA- - - - - - - - - - SI595

6 cy l

102" C A, heavy duty spnngs 292 6 cy l e ngtne 1 15 000
lb 7. sp eed rear ax. le foam seat, m tr rors clean cab

~1 9'15

1974 FOR 0 4 DR SE DAN
AT

at

Runs perfect ever ythmg wo r k s wor t h took tng

1972 AM HORNET........... '995

S2995

Crutsmatlc,

Chesler, 0 .

adJommg room and stattoned
a page to keep them there
The page, Joseph Zvosecz,
guarded the closed door to
preve nt lobbytsts from
wandermg tnto the rear of the
chamber They ltstened to the
sesston on a loudspea ker

COUPON

Good

j

Through Apnl 2, 1976

FRONT END ALIGNMENT
-SPECIALReg. $12.00
NOW . ,
FREE WASH INCLUDED

000

Smith Nelson992Motors,
Inc.
Pomeroy
2174
Ph

..
Ohoo

All Work Done by NIASE Mechs

"Your Friendlv Dealer"

...
"
"

GOP regulars in Ohio House stall bedsheet ballot against Gov. Reagan

•
••

Candy Stripe

742 ~ 2211

SING Otrr
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
House Thursday honored a
"Sing Out" group from Salem
wtth passage of a resolutton
commending them for "truly
llvm g the message of

··: J

SEWI N G MACH IN E Repairs
serv •ce all makes 9921284
The Fabric ShOp Pomeroy
A uthon:ed Smger Sates an d
Se rvice
we
Sh arpe n
Setssors
3 79 trc

Sale J.flSq

" Yo u' ll Lll&lt;e Our Qualify Way
of Do1ng Business"
992-5342
GMC FINANCING
Pomeroy
Open Eventngs Untii6 :0o-Til 5 p.m . Sat

P 8

$2995

(Hatchback), on l y 6 886 easy mtles, a1r co nd
vmy l top

owner

cy l

..

D 8. D TREE Tnmm 1no 20
yean. expertence I nsured
fr ee estlmalt;'S Ca ll 992 '238 4
or ( 614) 698 7257 Albany
10 15 tfc
____

1974 FO RD PI NTOJ DR RUNABOUT

12895

Whtt e 2 dr , 4 sp eed tr ans , r a dto body mould tngs, w

$2195

1973 FORD GRAN TORINO-- .... 12395

1972
FORD LTD 4 DR HT........
1995
Fact atr P S P B , V
body

See on·e of these courleous salesmen : Pete·
Burris . Lloyd Me Laughlin or Matvtn
Keebaugh .

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

1973 FOR O PIN T
2 Dr Sedan, 4 sp , low mt leage One careful local owne r

1

72 Dodge 1 ton Trpck, flat bed- --- '2695

i

4 Or ., one owner .

Sla wag, 4 cyl, auto , fac t atr lug ra c k wood grain
tnm fancy wheels

Hat chba ck .:1 cy l

1973 1NTERNATIONAL

4 Or , less than l5,000 miles . l tke new

Or Sport Coupe loca ll y own ed, fu lly equtp1 Sharpest
around

w t ires I ts l tke new w 1t h less tha n 5,200 m tl es

13 000 mtles , one owner

1975 Ford LTD .................... 53995
1974 Ford Gran Torino ......... '2795

1972
BUICK RIVIERA ........... ..S3295
2

Pomeroy
OF
QUALITY Motor Co•

1972 CH EVROL ET 2 TON C&amp;C

6 cyl

Brouqham tnt

Vtsta Crutser . 9 pa ss wagon, sun roof a tr
stereo rad ta l ttres fully equtpt

Gal hpolts, 0

1975 PINTO MPG

1974 Plymouth Duster......... '2995

1972 OLDS ............................s2695

68 Pontiac Station Wagon-------- 1795

•

cyl , auto ,

tn color

13\ 2 SIGNS
j

opera wl ndows , tully

Ltke new

4 Or Sed , fa c t atr P S

DON WAlTS VOLKSWAGEN
RIVERSIDE AMC.JEEP

-~

spd

dr sed

FREE soft tops on 1976 Jeep CJ 's thru May
10, 1976.

446 9800

roof

1973
FORD
MAVERICI(.
............$2295
4
6
P S
1973 PINTO SQUIRE ..............$2295

FREE A.C. on 1976 Pace r s thru Apnl 30,
1976

Ph

----SPECIALS-----,
THIS WEEK ONLY

l~!~brm~~e~~~~.~~~~ yl! ;: ~~~-~~~.195

V.W. Dasher, 4 door sedan,
dealers
car ,
yellow,
auto .,
leatherette seats , radio, rad ial tires .
Price $3639
Our Cost $3889.26

67 Che¥elle 4 Door 6 cyl. auto. __ ._ __1695

j..

Ph. 949-2404

cvl ,

74

70 Olds 98 HT Sed., pow., F. air---.... 1095
69 P~. 4 Door, V-8 auto.--------'895
68 Dodge Dart Cpe., V-8 auto.----- 1995
67 VW 2 Door Bug ___________ l695

:·
..•
::..

I

ready to

19743 VEGA HATCHBACK..........s2295
4

V .W. Beetle
automati c,
company car, light blue, leatherette
seats, radio &amp; U-C, 11 ,630 mil es,
balance of N.C. warranty .

1

•

llalian·Style Pizza

:::~..

71 Buick S.L 4 dr., pow., a1r ----- '1995
70 Chev. Monte Carlo, pow., air __ __ .'1995
70 Chevelle Coupe, V-8 auto.- _____ '1595

Toronado Cust om 1 1
eQUIPf , radtal t~res

75

Upper Rt 7

Sprt Coupe 22 000 m tie s, sharp

13895
1974 OLD$...........................
V

Gr een or orange
dr iver ed . cars, 304 V-B, auto ., viny l
roof, individual frt. seats, w-w t1 res,
P.S. , P.B., rad io &amp; other ext ras.
Cost $3565 .77 Less $200.00.
Driver Ed. Allowance-Net $3365.77

'

i...

SAM'S

BRAD F ORD Auclio n ee;
Complete Ser v •c e
P hone
949 2487 or 949 2000 R ac tne
Ohto Cntt Bradford
10 9 Jf c

CAL L QU ICK
SCENIC COUNTRY HOME - Well ca red tor home 1n

$15,000
COUNTRY LIVING AT ITS BEST -

F •n an c •ng A1.1a1 l a bt e
Blo w ntnto W alls &amp; Alf tc s.-11

RE A DY MIX CON~~~~~
deltvered rtght 10 your
protect Fast and easy Free
es1 1mates Ph one _.,9~ 3~84
Goeg lern Re ady M 1x ·co
M ldd l cpo r 1 Oh•o
6 30 lfc

C

90 ACRES VACANT LAND - yo u wou ld k now sp n n g IS

Blown
lnsulat1on Se r v1ces

ALUMINUM

For Sale

FORKED RUN LAKE -

RACINE -

BU Y, SEL L or T R AD E

ltfe 2 dr

go

2- '75 4 Doors -

72 Olds 98 HT Sed., power, air ---- 12695
72 Chev. Imp. Cus. Cpe., full power, air'2295
72 Olds Lux. Sed., full power, fact air'2895
71 Olds 98 Lux. Sedan, pow., air ----'1195
71 Mercury Comet 2 Dr., 6 cyl. std.__ _'ll95
71 Ford Tor. Cpe., V-8, auto., air_ ____ 11595

•
...
..•..

USED CARS
BUY NOW FOR
EXTRA VALUE

1974
FORD GRAN TORINO ....&amp;$4295
t:

' HORNETS

NEW '75' 2 Door Sedan- yellow 258
'6' , auto., wh it e-wall s, U-C, full new
car warranty .
Our Cost $3101 .49

72 Buick Electra, V·top, pow~ air ___ 12695

...

FREE ESTIMATES

COINS

1 home &amp; 2 apart ments

FIVE POINTS - Modern 3

23 FEMALES

For information contact : Carl
Birney, Sec., Buckeye PHA, RD 1,
Freeport, Ohio 43973.

lge

bar dm ng w tf h
glass
dr s
2
tt le ba th s
l u ll
and dbl gar~1ge

Rock Sprmgs Fairgrounds
Pomeroy , Oh1u

15 BULLS

i......

REAL OAK FLOORS - In

For Sale

2J

wl

BACKHOES

TEAFORD
B,
Sr

A

AMC

'75'

76 Olds Cut. Sup. Sal. Cpe., pow., air--'5795
75 Olds Cut. Sup. Sal. Cpe., pow., air - !5195
75 Olds Royale 4 Dr., power, air·----'5195
75 Dodge Dart Swinger, slant 6, auto.• _13495
75 Ford Granada 4 Dr., pow.,,air ___ _ '4195
75 Chev. % t. C-20 PU, 4 wh. dr.___ 15395
75 Maverick 4 Dr., auto., P.S., P.B.-- '3195
74 ~ Bus, 9 pass. __ ________ _' 3695
73 Nova 2 Dr., V-8 auto. PS ------ '2595
73 Buick Luxus 4 Dr., pw., air -----'3395
73 Volkswagen Bus, 9 pass. ______ 13295
73 Olds 98 Lux. Sedan, pow., air ----'3495
72 Chev. Vega HB Cpe., 4 speed, radio 11495
72 Buick LS Cus. Con., power, air___ 12895

..."'
::

PH. 992-6173

N ath a n Btg gs
R ad la to r Sp ec•a llst

Vtrgtl

i..

lARRY WHOBREY
PUBUC
ACCOUNTANT

The following ca rs will be sold at or
below DEAL ER INVOI CE. Invoice
wi II be shown on equest .

73 Cadillac Eldelado Cpe., pow., air__ '5495
73 Cadillac Cpe. DeVille, power, air-- 14795
71 Cadillac Cpe. DeVille, power, air __ 12495

!

Ph 949 2023 or 143 2661

J 17 1 m o

Phon• 992 3325

742 220 1

LEAV IN G AREA
turn 1ture
fo r sa l e P hon e 992 74 76
3 26 31 1':

of

AND DOZER LARGE AND

-------------..
IN TERNAT IONAL

1969

Oran~ e T w p
Vo luntee r
F 1re Depa rtm en t w tll hold
a constg nmen t au chon af
th e ft re house located m
Tuppers P la ms, Oh io on
Ap rtt 17th begtn mng a t
10 00 a m

Free esti m ates on car pe t in g a nd 1n s t a llahon
We II b n ng sa mples to you r
hom e w tth no o b hgat10n
See how you ca n r eally
save
M 1ke Yo ung , Manager
Sales a nd ln sta lla h on
Rt 3 Po m eroy , Oh1o 45769
Ph one day or ntght
614-992 2206
\ \4 I TO
EXCAVATING

TUPPERS PLA I N S New 3
bedrm
houses
carpeted
ra nge garage large lois
F H A fmanc•ng available
$21 900
Phone ( 614 ) 667
6304
3 14 261p

P UREBRED SA LE
Wes t
Vtrgtn1 a Po ll e d He r ef o rd
Ass oc1aflon wdl hold 9th CUB Farm a ll Wtth m o w er and
An nu al Sale Ma r c h 17 1976
p low Ca mpe r tha t w il l t il a
at Ja ckson's M tll Sta t e 4 H
6ft bed t ru ck Ph one (6 1.4 1
Cam p at Westo n Off erm g 68
985 )924
hea d 30 bu 11s mostly
3 21 61p
br eedrng age an d 38 he lters
Fo r tn f o rm at1 o n c on t a c t
1973 H O N DA JSO r oa d btke,
Jtm wes tf all Rt 2 Box 11 5
e)l(ce ll en l c on ditio n 3 900
Sp en cer, W Va 25276or ca ll
m il es, tot of ex tr as P hQn e
(3 04) 927 ~ 10 4
742 n 11 a ft er 5 p m ca ll
3 26 ltc

1974

1969 C 60 CHEVROLET Dump
truck t 4 ff bed and c heat er
a x le Good con d •l•on Phone
(614 ) 667 6304
3 26 12tp

AUCTION SALE

110 Mechantc Pomeroy 0

4 ROOMS and ba t h plus ut tl tty
room
screened •n porc h
forced atr h eat Phone 992
5630
J 13 61c

-

J
Ph one 742 1190
3 26 6t c

Real Estate for Sale

1975 OLD SMOBILE Sta rt re
mus t sel l Phon e 992 7692
3 23 6tp

-

Ph one 992

1963 roR D E c onot ne van

~

From a sh elf t o ill house, a ll
types of b u tld•ng a n ~
rem od •li n g
fr o m
th •
tou nd att on up A d dtlton s,
urpeting, patnling, std m t,
r oo ting, pi nelii1D• pa per
hang•ng etc

2 19 1 mo

SLOAN'S
CARPETING

3 26 31p
speed

Open all the T tme
for your con ven•ence '
J I lmo

.."'

;

CONSTRUCTION

\

BARGAIN HUNTER?

USED CARS

"'

~

1968 CO RVETTE
5746

wa ter

D&amp;D

2 12 1 mo

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

For Rent

O:lll) H pa1a for a l l makes and
HOU SE On Ltncoln H gts 2
be dr ms
la r ge kitchen
larg e basement exce ll ent
bu y for $9 200 Wtl h f ur
n tf ure $10 700 Phone 992

1972 P L YMOUTH
dr automal tc
992 5737

1 12 fc

2 22 l f c

7760

HOME tor
owne r
bedrooms
road gas
949 2023

U N F UR N I SH E D 14 x 70
mobile hom e tota l e lec
3
ton central a•r condtl•one r
exce ll en t condtl1on Phone
247 2684 or 247 2664
3 10 1fc

2288

--:._-----~-- - ----. -

3 25 3t p

14 x 65MOBILE home lor sale
For more n f ormat1on call
9'ii2 7256
3 21 7t p

UNFURN I SHED
apt
tn
Pome r oy 2 bect r m ne~ t y
redecor at ed fu ll y carpeted
Ca l l tn the ear l y am 992

poss tble dedu c t ton th ts yea r
Have your Fede r al a n d
St at e Incom e Tax return by
an accountant P hon e 992
6173
I ~ I 52tc

99 2 7394

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

3 21 lfc

~iAKE·SuR_E_y~;;e-;--;~ r y

H OME tor sa te h v ng room
d tn •n g r oom
2 bedrooms
ktlc hen fam lly room an d
b at h Pr1ced to se ll Ph one

1970 MOB I LE home 12 )( 44 2
bedrm
gas Phone (304 ]
773 5460 or 992 5001
3 ~3 61p

2 B EDRM tr ader
P hone 99~ 3324

NIG HT HAWKS wd l be ba ck
al T all T1 mber s no m or e
tunk ban d s Rod ney Grover
3 23 3tc

Real Estate For Sale

Mobile Homes For Sale

1971 DU STER 6 cyl 3 speed
fa•r condtl ton Phone 992
7126 or c ontact 218 Condor
St Pomeroy
3 24 61p

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

W I LL ca r e for pa t 1ent male
or female n my home 1
have references
Pho n e
Sh trley Jones
Tuppers
Platns Oh to (6 14) 667 340~
3 26 Jtc

~

PAINTING 1ns1de out and
roofs P hone Mason (304)
773 5626
3 21 6tc

1966 FORD Coun t r y Sq u ~re
Sta t 10n Wagon ask . ng $300
Don Van Meter
Chester ,
(614) 985 3951
J 24 410

BULK WATER
AVAILABLE
Tuppers Pla1ns Chester
Water 01strte t now setltng
bul k • water to tanks on
! Ducks at our new offtee 1
Located on St Rt 7
1 Mile North Of
E astern•H •g h Sc hool
Serve Yourself Dispenser
Tak in g quarters only , one
a t a It me for 250 gallons of

Ph (61-tl 985-4 102

POM0~~?!vE~?~~~- CO. l(l\
POMEROY, OHIO

..,.•f

BISSELL BUILDERS

St995

4door V 8 automat tc P steenng and brakes, factory
atr crut se control, sharp, 1 owner loc al car dark
green

Employment Wanted
EXPER I E NCED
au t o
mechantc look ,ng for work
1n my own ga r age Quality
work and reasonab le ra t es
Call 992 7120
3 23 4tp

$1095

P 8, atr , pollee car

1972 DODGE POLARA CUSTOM

AKC Reg tste r ed Coll•e Stud
Se rvt ce
Stard us t K •ng
Phone (61-l) 98 5 42 48
:l 16 tic

_

OF

Auto, P S

WANT TO
Take advantage of our
preces
Qu a hty
b u tlf
homes N tce lots ava ilabl e
m ntce location s

a.

1974 CHEV BELAIR4 DR

A KC R eg Ch •huahua dogs , 3
femal e 1 male Phone 742
2962
J 25 3tc

4

,

SETT L E M E NT
C O U NT S,

TWO c oon hound p ups Phone
992 7810
3 21 61 C

Business Services

•I&lt;(

DAN
THOMPSON
ARE YOU A

VALUE
RATED

:·

..

SAVE MONEY?

S339S

auto P S radto w w radtals delu xe
trtm pkg and moldmg del bumpers
guards 6,600
mtles by local owner Clean as new car

-~------~-

_

County

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

4 door 6 c yl

COON HOUND dog II months
old PhOne 992 71J9
3 23 6tc

•"••
•

1975 FORD MAVERICK

-

Oakl~y

QUALITY

Pets

-

Moore of 84

-

her~by

Thorn as l

Eads .

~

Deceased
Nof tce •s

I

Auto Sales

@ 2~:Ns

1 HUR SD A Y
Fr•day and
Saturday Rotot il ler 1 wmd
m i lls tap e p l ayer baby and
boy th1ngs c lo t hes walker
ba c k pack
bed frames
m 1sc .tems 1 m ile from
Chester BrldQe
Rt
7-'18
Phone ( 614 ) 98 5 3335
3 23 ~lp

-

Estate of James R

Auto Sales

Yard Sale

•m

-

Kathy Stone
Oh iO

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

..

11- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Friday, March 26, lt78

By LEE LEONARD
lJPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI) - A
dozen
Ohio
House
Republican s, apparently
concerned over a late
challenge to Prestdent Ford
m the s tate by Rona ld
Reagan, have stalled, at least
temporarily, an attempt to
shorten
the
Ohto's
presidential prunary election
ballot next June
An emergency clause
needing 66 votes to ensll'e the
shortened ballot form by the
June 8 primary received only
58 votes Thursday as the
House concurred witlt Se1111te
amendments to a btll
elimlnatmg the "~eet "
ballot.
Only 15 Republicans

opposed emergency priority
11hen the bill ortgmally
cleared the House March 2
Twenty-seven opposed tl
Thursday.
Rep . Don S Maddux. !)..
Lancaste r , chief sponsor,
satd he would try to get the
House to reconstder the vote
next Tuesday.
Maddux
blam e d
Repubhcan regulars for the
defeat. He satd they want the
names of promment Ohio
Republi c an
delegate
candidates to appear on the
GOP primary ballot to offset
a possible challenge to Ford
by the former Callforma
governor, whose Ohio
delegates would not be as
well known.
•
Gov. James A Rhodes and

Sen Robert Taft Jr , R.Ohio,
head the list of statewule
delegates for the President.
Under the Maddux bill , their
names would not appear on
the prunary ballot.
House Minor! ty Leader
Charles F Kurfess, RBowlmg Green , a Ford
delegate, vtgorously dented
that polttics were involved
"This was not a partisan
matter and had nothing to do
wtth the electlon," said Kurfess. "There was no thought
that Republicans were going
to go out and ktll that btll
today "

Kurfess declined to be
quoted on his theory about
defeat of the emergency
clause.
U Maddui fatls In his btd

for recons tderatton nex t
week, th e matter would
probably go to a JOmt HouseS e nat e
co nf e r e n ce
comrmttee
The tssue must he dectded
by the time Ohio ballots are
prmted next month. It has
heen hangmg ever smce 1972,
when
a
"bedshee t"
Oemocrattc prtmary ballot
contamed up to 600 names of
delegates m some areas of
the state, causmg long delays
m votmg and cotmtmg
Prima ry results were
delayed ftve days
The Maddux bill would
es tablish a " pillowcase"
ballot, with delegate names
appeanng
only
m
congressoonal dtstrtcts. Ohio
Secretary of State Ted W

Brown has satd the btll would The Se nate unammously
elunmate 80 per cent of the passed the legtslatton August
\tme and expense caused by I
Ita llot length
The measure would reqwre
The measure also would spectal drtve r educatton proeltmin ate the names of grams for the handicapped,
prom ment Oh to poltttcal forbtd dtscrumnation in the
leaders m both parttes fr om offermg of msurance, lines of
credtt and publtc housmg and
the statewtde ballot.
Meanwhtl e, the Se nate offer tax credt ts
to
agreed 29 to I wtth House corporattons tha t modtfy
amendments and sent to the extstmg brnldmgs for use by
governor a handtcapped the handicapped
ct ttzens " btll of rtg hts"
Before JOlntng the House m
prohtbttmg dtscrunma!ton m
weekend
adJOurnment, the
employment, housmg, credit,
Senate
also
passed and sent
and
pu bhc
msur ance
to the lower chamber a btll
transp!H'talton
Sen Harry Meshel, 0- descrtbed by tis sponsor, Sen
Butts, DYoungstown, satd the amend- Charles L
ments, adopted with House aeveland, as the "ftrst step"
passage of the
btll toward combattng crurunal
arson m Ohto
Wednesday, strerrgthened tt

Imprisoned sergeant charged with heroin smuggling
RALEIGH N c (UPI) _ A

50-year~ld 'reitr~ master
aer eant has been charged
rUMing _ frol)l hts
federal prison cell _ 8 $100
million heroin smuggling
eratlon ustng military
0
aft
:thorltles &amp;MOun~ one
of Ute largest heroin rings in
Ute world was broken
Wedneaday with the arrest of
rsons In North Carolina ,
14
Vl.!:inla
Georgia and
California
'
According
to
the
lndlctmenlB the Thailand-toAmerica rlfig was headed by

w1:

J:.

.-~•

Lesll " Ike" Atkinson ' even
altere he was senten~ to
federal prtson In AUanta last
year on herbln charges
.. would say this organlzatlon1 would have to be

unsuspecting Air Force
transport crews and funneled
through Atkinson's home at
Goldsboro,
N c , for
dlstrtbu\ton on tHe East
Coast
classtfied as one of the
The stupments allegedly
heroin smuggling came Into the country at
1
1
;~~~zatlons
In the world, SeymoiD' Johnaon Air Force
which directly aflects- lhe base m Goldsboro, Travis Air
Uruted States, particularly Force base In california and
tlte East Coast," said Don Langley All' Force baae 1n
Ashton , the chief Drug Virginia.
Enforcement Admlnlotration
Ashton said the operation
agent In North carolina .
had been going on "roughly
The s1Ki18ge lndlctment seven years - since 1987
charged the heroin was Oown We've been working on It for
tn from Thailand by some tune. Over the years
~

we've been knockmg little
chunks out of• tt vartous
places
The heroin bougnt by th~
••Atkinson org amzatton,
said the mdtctment, cwne
from a Thai nattonal
tdenttlied as Luchai Ruvtwat,
known as "Chat "
Ashton satd two of those
char ged , Jam es Wa rr en
Smedley, 53, and J asper
Myrtck Jr .. 23, both among
the mthtary personnel
allegedly Involved, we re
jailed earlier by Tha t
authorlttes and were held at
Khlang Prtson m Bangkok

T

J.eshe Atkinson Arrmgton,
Atkinson's daughl er, and her
husband, Michae l Otts
Arrt ngton, bot h 24, of
Raletgh, we re Jatled tn
Raletgh on $2!&gt;0, 000 bon ds,
!?r• the lndtctment stated,
transmtttmg messages to
an4 from
members of the
orgamzatton and asststmg tn
runntn g
the
Atkinson
organtzatton tafter Atkmson
was Jailed), actmg under the
advtce and orders of Leshe
Atkinson "
Wtlham Kelly Brown, a
soldter . was arr ested at
Augusta, Ga • and another

sol dter , Wilham King Wrtght,
30, was jatled at at Ft Lee,
Va
Others ~rrested were
Freddte Oa) Thornton , 40, o~
Oetrott, re ttred Air Force ,
Rudolph Valentino ~ennmgs,
49, Goldsboro, N C , ~tlham
Thomas, 42, Goldsboro, N C •
Monroe Lorenzo Martm Jr •
43, umg Beach, Cab~ . Atr
Force.
Robert Ernest
Patterson, 34, Hampton, Va,
acttvc Air Force, James
McArthur , 40, Fayettevtlle,
N C • Charles Murphy Gtllis,
36, Goldsboro, N C • act tve
Air Force

Butts' btU would reqwre
msur ance compa nies to
forward the results of thetr
mvesttgattons mto ftres to the
state ftre marshall or local
ftre depa rt me nts It also
would gtve the compa rues
ltm tted 1mmumty aga mst
prosecutto n
tf
th etr
in!!H'mation lea ds to an arson
charge but not convtctton
"The evtdence frequently
burns up wtth the cn me, 11
satd Butts "Thts btU would
re m ove I ns u ra n ce
comparues' fea rs they may
be hit wtth a lawsutt because
of their mvesttgattons ''
The House gave unanirrious
approva l to emer gency
legtslatton permttltng the
state to self-msure tis 20,000
self-propelled motor vehtcles,
mcludt ng automobtles,
atrplanes, watercraft and
farm equtpment
The bill now goes to the
Senate It ts necessary
Notice of A pp o •n t ment
Case No 217S4
E state of I sa bel St'" pson
D ecease d
Noltce 1S he r eby given t ha t
Josep h E Beci&lt;.With Of Apl
20JA
Lakevtew
Es t ates
Parkersburg west Vl r gl n ta
has been duly appotnted
Execu t or of the Estate of
I sa b el Stmpson deceased
late of Rac .ne , Me1gs County
Oh10
Cred 11o r s are requ~red to
tile the r cla•ms wtth said
f tduc1ary w lt hm fou r months
Dated th1s 15th day of March
1976
Ma nn 1ng D W e bst er , Ju dge
Court of Co m m on P t ea~
Probate D IVISIOn
OJ 19, ~6 , (4) ~ 3tc

because the old Insurance
poltcy lapsed last week and a
Mmnesota ftrm wanted a $2.8
mtllton
premtum
for
coverage
-NOTICE OF SALE -

The per sona l p rop ert y In the
Estate of th e la t e Wayn e
Ch evalie r , D ecease d , wh o was
a co l lector and dea l er In an
11 q ues w ill be off e r ed f or 'Sale
at auct1on a t h 1S r esid enc e In
t h e V•llage o f R ee d svi lle
Oh to commencing a t 10 00
AM on Tuesd a y A pri l 6th ,
1976 an d wttl con tt nue daily
the r eafte r until sol d
Nu me r o u s g a rd en toots ,
ha nd ttlle r s la w n mowers ,
p l an t e r s,
r o ta
fi ll e r ,
cu l llvato r
saws, l adders ,
wheelba rr ows tub s, Iar s ,
refrtgera t or g a s r an g e, oak
k1 t chen table pl a nk chair s,
ha ll rack
c tH n a c abinet,
pttct1ers plates bo wl s, spoon
ho l de r s a n t1que g l 8ss ware
both cut an d pre s sed br ass
wh1Stle
.nsut a tors, powder
horn boot rack b r a ss bell ,
cow bell sch.ool bell s butter
mol d sad tran s, cherr y p ie
safe , 15 oil l amps, clock s,
l1 br ar.y tab l e g un r ack , 12
caltber rev ol ver 22 bolt acti on
r 1fl e tnvets 2 lam ps and
brackets , o l d t h e rmometer
stone tars and tug s oil lamps ,
co ll eclron of bottles, antique
d •shes, bott le ca ps, th ousands
of ot h er tfems of household
goods
e ff ects
f urnitur e.
eQu tpmen t an d br lc a b r ae ,
an d a 1972 P tck up T ruc k with
campe r t op In e xc ettent
co nd lt •on
T erms of sa le Cash I n t he
even t of .ncte m ent w eather
the sale may b e pos tponed
from day to d ay
Ed w ar'd Chev alier
Ad mtn lstralor of
th e est1te
of Way n e Ch evalier ,
D eceased
Carnahan Auc t•on serv ice
Aucttoneers
D l 19 26 ( 4) 2 Jtc

.·--.
'

.

�\

l&gt;

'II~

Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., rriday , March 26, 1976

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

:Rh etoric is tough with Cuba
lly JOilN

~IILN E

1\'i\SIUNGTON &lt; UPII 'il 1c Sta te Dcparunenl is am·
higuous. th e Pent~1 go n il-i

not bluffing."

du!ed weapons r efrP she r

After a meeting of congres·
sional conservatives with

training. The nearest aircraft
l'ar r ier is at sea near
.I:JcksonviiJe, Fla.
TI1e tough talk apparen tly

rt"\ l f'Win~
~;n cllll'

!lay. Cuba, on normally sche·

l"Ontingrncies, and
is spelling out what -

is Se&lt;:retary of State Henry

anything - the United
[-..t;ll.t"S wil1 do about Cuba's
'nrl'ign milit ary adventures .
Tougl1 rheloril' is heard
from tlw· White House , the
St;.tc IJepmtment and the
Ddell St· Oepertment. with
i!.

Kissinger 's idea, supported
by President Ford. In Dallas
Monday , Kissinger sa id : "We
ha,,e mad e it clear we are

opposed to and cannot accept
any ' further Cu ban military

adven tur es ... What we will do
JJtl h~ or no obj~ dion from a
\ 'on ~, rl'ss whil'i1 hilS, ~ fur · in ('Q ncrete circwnstances. I
this )'"''" '· bt~· n queasy abo ut don't want to say."
It is unclear whether any.
an ything that could let:ld to
thing
new triggered the state.
\lnPrieans i11 l'Ombat.
mcnl.
which was followed
N•J wms uo.J l militarv e~ lcrts
11mrsday
by these others :
lu11·e h&lt;·cn ca lled. 'niree dePenta
go
n s poke sman
stro~ 'f'rs are at Guantanamo
William L Greener Jr .: "The
Joint Ch iefs of Staff are
31~mm-------participating in a Na tional

...
MEIGS THEATRE

Security Council review of

possible actions which might
be taken with regard to
Cu ba ." Asked for more ,

TO NITE THRU SUN .
MAR . 26-28
WaIt Oi 5ney 's

Greener said, · '' we never

ONE OF OUR
DIN OS AURS
IS MISS ING

disctL'5 contingency plans.
A high-ranking State
Departmen t official : "We are

( Tcc hnico lor) " G"
Also

___..........
Walt Di sney 's

CIND ERELLA

! Tec hn ico lor) " G"

saying,

deliberate

· cunbiguity, we are not going
to tolerate any more Cuban

Show sta rt s at 7 :00 p .m .

~""""""'

r

with

adventurism. No more , no
less ... We are serious. We ' are

-----.:...~WHERE
IT.GOES.

President Ford Wednesday ,
Sen. Richard B. Stone, !).
F1.a ., said on the subject of the
wa rnings to Cuba : " The
President 's tone of voice
dropped. lle said ·we mean
it. ."

At some undisclosed time
this week, Ford met with
Kissinger, Defense Se&lt;:retary
Donald .A. Rumsfeld and
security adviser Brent
Scowcroft. Kissinger had
discussed his Dallas speech
with them beforehand but
had gone further than his
prepared remarks .

Dateline 1776
Wt:~TMOREI.AND

H.umsfeld was c autious,
having been critical of

previous rhetoric on Angola
that could not be backed up
with actions.
But after that meeting, the
word went down to the top
military leaders to make sure
the contingency plans were
up to dale, to review the
possible options.
On Thursday, officials said
the range of actions probably
is !united. "My guess is our
most likely military action
would be to move a carrier or
something," said one. "We
might act in other fields , like
putting on some kind of

By ROBERT B. GUNNISON
PLACERVILLE , Calif.
(UP!) - The family and
friends of skier Vladimir
"Spider" Sabich Thursday
buried the downhill racer who
died in a Colorado shooting
incident involving his lover,

COUNTY, Va., March 26 The coun ty commiltee
voted to censure Henry

Glass for claiming that an
il~used slave was justified
In burning his master's
house

and

for

pric e-

gouging and condemnation
of the commtttee.
;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::

economic or diplomatic
pressure.•'
One State Department
sourl-e said all the talk · on
Cuba should be read as a
signal to the Soviet Union to
ease off, that there might be
other talk or other moves
before military action was
contemplated.
"Henry's a great one for
signals," said a White House

source. "During tbe Vietnam

Statewide. slate

War he was moving carriers

for Reagan filed

Spider Sabich buried .

around as a signal to the
North Vietnamese. And don't
forget everything he's done SALT, China, the Middle East
negotiations, the Vietnam

"Few of us will live as
much in our lifetime as

French-born entertainer 'Spider' did in 3! years,"
Claudhie Longe!.
Kidd told about 250 mourners,
Miss Longe!, form er wife of including Vladimir Sabich
singer Andy Williams, re· Sr ., a retired California
mained. in seclusion in Aspen, mghway Patrol offiCer, and
Colo :, where Sabich was his wife, .Francis.
killed Sunday. No formal
Mourners packed the small
charges have been flied funeral home chapel , spilling
against her .
into the halls 8lld out the
Stars from the pro tour, door . After the servic e,
Sabich 's body was buried on a
sunny hillside in a small
SQUARE DANCE SET
The Middlepor t Police cemetery .
Miss Longet was free on
Department Auxiliary will $5,000
personal bond, but she
hold a square dance from 8 to
remained in Colorado.
11 p.m. Saturday at the
After the killing, she moved
Middlep ort El eme ntary
. into a guest cottage owned by
&amp;hool, Pearl St. with music singer John .Denver in the
by the ~ Stringdusters and same subdivision wl1ere she
callers Glenn Lambert and 1!lld Sabich had lived.
Cora Hilton . 'Admissipn is $1

with children·under 12 free if
peace talks - had the Soviets . they accompany their

Ry J .R. KIMMINS
primary.
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A
In addition, a "favorite· . in mlnd."
frantic race against the clock daughter' • . slate
of
by Peter Voss of Canton and uncommitted delegates
state Rep . Robert E. Netzley, pledged to state Treasurer
R-Laura, ended Thursda y Gertrude W. Donahey
with the filing of petitions in brought the Democratic
at least 19 congressio nal presidentialfieldtoa possible
districts and a statewide slate seven candidates.
pledged to Republican
A Harris spokesman said
presidential hopeful Ronald he did not believe his
Reagan in the June 8 Ohio representatives had obtained
primary eledion.
the 1,000 signatures required
" It was like WE;! were lost in to get the former senator's
time. It was like a time name on the Ohio ballot.
tunnel," said Voss, who got
In addition, Udall, Carter,
the go.ahead from national Jackson, Wallace and Church
Reagan coordinators late also filed slates of delegates
Tuesday evening to mount a in many district races, which
drive to file petitions by will produce 114 of the 152
Thursday's 4 p.m. deadline . delegates attending the
U the petition signatures · Democratic
National
are validated by Ohio Convention starting July 12 in
Secretary of State Ted W. New York.
Brown, Reagan will have at
Ellen McCormick, an
least 85 delegates running in antiabortion candidate from
the GOP primary against a New York, filed no statewide
full slate of 97 delegates slate but filed in five districts
pledged to President Ford . containing 24 delegates.
Nominating petitions on be·
Rep. Wayne L. Hays, !).
half of three Reagan Ohio, filed as a favorite-son
delegates were apparently candidate in his home 18th
not filed in the 20th DistriCt District and the lOth, lith and
(Cuyahoga County ), the 2nd 16th districts with a total OJ 19
District in Cincinnati, the 9th delegates.
District around Toledo and
A favorite·I;On candidacy
the 14th District around also was filed in his home 19th
Akron .
District by Rep. Charles J .
"We're not in this to lose," Carney, D-Youngstown.
sa id Voss, who said he
Netzley, who was credited
informed Reagan national by Vor;s with spearheading
ca mpaign coordinator John the major Reagan' effort in
Sears of the success of the Ohio , said the former
Ohio nominating drive .
governor's petitions
Voss quoted. Sears as contained '1,200 signatures,
saying the eleventh-hour 200 more than the minimum
.campaign to place the former required by Ohio law.
California governor's name
Voss said there was
on the hallot was prompte&lt;1 "always a concern" that the
by "munerous calls fron'l Reagan petitions , which

Sabich's family and friends
from his home town heard ski
racer Billy Kidd eulogize the
former Olympian, slain in \be
exclusive Aspen residence he
shared with Miss Longe!.

parenls.

which Sabich helonged While
be attended the University of
Colorado.
&amp;me of the mourners were
members of the World Cup
tour, who halted training in
Sun Valley, Idaho, and
chartered an airplane to
attend the funeral.
A mern~t of the 1961
Olympic team, Sabict
captured World Cup titles in
1971 and 1972, winning more
than $71,000. But recent
injuries plagued his career
and he earned only $800 this ·
season.
Colorado authorities said a
formal charge, probably
negligent homicide, will he
filed against Miss I.onget
when she appears at a
hearing April 8.
Investigators said Sabich
died within 10 minutes after

bein g shot once in the
stoma ch by a .22-caliber
pistol. Miss Longet told
fr ie nd s the weapon acciJoioing Kidd as pall· dentally discharged while Sa·
bearers were Olympic ski bkh was showing her how to
coach Bob Beattie and load it.
members of the U.S. team to

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Remember when "ready made
drapery" meant solid beige
in a choice of two widths
and
•
three lengths?
Now Gartley's "special order"
ready-made draperies gives you a

chance of showers in west.
Jljghs in the 60s.

pc)nlfii'Oy

rutland

tuppera plain•

pomeroy

natlona

bank

the bankd
the century

eatablllhed 1872

Member FDIC

require 150

state and Reagan's upset
victory in Tuesday's North
Carolina GOP primary.
"He (Sears) was very plea·
sed," s.aid Voss.
Representatives of fonner
Georgia Gov. Jimmy Carter,
Ala bam a Gov, George C.
Wallace , Rep. Morris K.
Udall, D·Ariwna, Sen. Frank
Church, D·ldaho, Sen. Henry
M. Jackson , D-Washington,
and former Sen. Fred Harris,
D.Okla., filed slates of 28 at·
large statewide delegates for
the
Ohio
Democratic

would not be validated, thus
voiding a Reagan slate in
district primary elections.

New
Group
and

SATURDAY

~''Sirender'

At The
Inn Place!
Enjoy

PAUL
FRED

Beautiful

PHIL

Sounds!

10:00 TIL 2:00

name ~S

Reagan supporters'' in the

GALL!POLIS·POINT PLEASANT

VO. 11 NO. 9

SUNDAY, MARCH 28, 1976

MIDDLEPORT-F OM EROY

PRICE 25 CENTS

·:f:·:::·:::·.:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::·:;:::::::;:;::::=:.:::::;:::;:::::;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::·:·:;:·:::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·

::: r-----------------

----,

I

II Dateline
Gallia
&gt;:

1

DO school
affiliated
to hospital

!j!

i eiectionlJ

:::: 1
:::

Special

.~:~

I.

Tuesday : :

By Hobart Wilson Jr.

TUESDAY, Gallia County residents
NOW, it's up to the voters. EAS is not
will go to the pollS to decide the fate of the operated by the federal government
proposed 0.4 of a mill levy for a nO&lt;harge anymore (hasn't been since March !)
ei1Ulrgency ambulance service.
although it must meet all regulations
+++
established by the government. Fact is,
A lot has been said and done by hun- EAS is a Gallia County operation for all
dreds of concerned citizens for EAS since Gallia Countians.
the initial levy (which carried a $25 service
+++
charge ) was defeated last Nov. 4.
S(,)ME opponents say the emergency

POMEROY - An agreement of af:
filiation making Veterans Memorial
Hospital in Pomeroy a teaching hospital of
the Ohio University College of Osteopathic
Medicine, Athens, was signed Friday at
the hospital.

ambulance service's coronary equipment

that are coordinated with the university
for the training of students of the new

+++

Under the , agreement,

+++

need of this service.

++ +

NO stone hss been left unturned .
Every civic and service club, lodge,
school, grange, church and fraternal

organh:ation has been offered an, op.
portumty to observe a vehicle demonstration, view fiims and film strtps and
study brochures promoting the levy .

!"f

+++

..:..~

ALSO, local funeral directors who
individual involvement by more than 300 performed this service for years will not
·citizens who are volunteering their efforts be able to resume such activities because
to help save ·the EAS. During the past of federal regulations established in 1972.
munth, more than M programs have bee n The sum it would cost individual funeral .
presented throughout the city and county dire~to~s attemptlng this service today,
in an effort to educate all residents on the eve n If they met all government
regulations, would be prohibitive.

+++
THERE are more facts and figures to
study before Tuesday's special election:
Gallia County's share of the headquarters
operation is $10,000, which is 12 percent of
Gallia's total station budget of $84,420 .

I
AGREEMENT · MADE -

mak~ng

An affiliation agreement

Veterans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy a teaching

hospital of the Ohio University College of Osteopathic
Medicine was signed Friday . Seated from the left are Dr.

1-:wis D. Telle, W. S. Lueas, hospital administrator;
Prosei:uting Attorney Bernard Fultz, aod Dr. John Ridgway;
stitnding from the left, Andrew Cross, chairman of the local
hospital's board; Or. Gerald A. Faverman, acting dean of the
t'Ollege, and Dr. R. R. Pickens.

In picture

(Continued on page 2)

·at the right:
A. Faverman,
acttng
dean
of
the Ohio University College of
Osteopathic Medicine, receives a check
lor a scholarship given lor a student,
one from Southeaslern Ohto If possible,
to attend the college, given by the
Veterans Memorial Hospital Board of
Dr.
Jell,

Gerald

Trustees. Others from the left are
Prosecuting Attorney Benard Fulh:,

Andrew Cross, chairman of the hospital
board, and W. S. Lucas, hospital admtnlstrator.

DEBATE REKINDLED
ST. PETERSBURG BEACH, Fla.
!UP! I - Rekindling the breast cancer
treatment debate, .a radiologist said

each,

Saturday preliminary results of a Harvard
study suggest radiation plus lump removal
may control cancer occurrence and spare
women the need for breast amputation .

VEHICLE DEMONSTRATED - Emergency medical teclmicians Robert
Bailey, left, and Craig Johnson demonstrated a SEOEMS ambulance Friday
evening at the VFW hall In GalllpoUs. The demonstration was part of a community
meeting held to better inform Gallia Cou~ty residents on the need for guaranteed

.GOVERNOR APPOINTS
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov.
James A. Rhodes Wednesday
named Henry E. Shaw, Dela-

emer.gency ambulance service.

The advantages of therapy that omits
breast removal include better cosmetic
results, along with improved arm and
shoulder movement. But the big question
remains whether such treatment is as
~ffective in arresting the disease.

dering a more complete service to the

Importance ofEAS stressed in Gallia
RY SARAH CARSEY
GALLIPOLIS - The importance of a
guaranteed emergency ambulance service
for Gallla Colii\IY was stressed at a

6.

~'

The governor also named
John T. Rittenour of Piketon
to the board of trustees of
Shawnee State General and
Technical College, and
Rodney J. Harrison of
Worthington to the Ohio
Stuqent Loan Commission.
TAFT DEBUTS
COLUMBUS(UPI) - State
Rep. Robert A. Taft II, R·
Cincinnati, son of U.S. Sen.
Robert Taft Jr., R·Ohio,
made his malden floor speech
in the House Wednesday and
experienced tough going with
a pair of amendments to a
bill.
Ironically, Taft tried to
amend legislation improving
enlorcement,of the prevailing
wage law. His grandfather,
the late Sen. Robert A. Taft,
R.Qhlo, was co-author of the
Taft-Hartley labor law.
Young Taft's amemknents
were flattened following his
brief presentation, and the
bill went on to pass, 86 to 9.

'

'

Four lull time and eight part time EMT's
are available in Gallia County.
Roderick

pointed

aut

revenue

generated from the levy will range from
community meeting Friday evening at the $135,000 t.O $170,000, and will be handled
VFW Hall here.
through the SEOEMS governing board in
Representatives of Concerned Citizens cooperation with the county comfor El]'lergency Ambulance Service were · missioners. The SEOEMS board, a group
In charge of the session which was of individuals representing each county,
designed to better Inform residents on the will be ~ppointed by the commissioners
need of emergency ambulance servtce. and one of Uie members will be a comAtty. Richard Roderick, ~r ., main spokes- missioner.
man for the group, urged passage Of a 0.4
There will be no charge to Gallia
of a mtll levy to be voted on Tuesday, CoWity residents to use the service other
March 30 for EAS.
than the property tax payment, Roderick
Roderick said'a SEOEMS ambulance said. For a home with a market value of
is in constant radio contsct with the $12,000; the annual cost or the levy, for the
hospital to receive instructions. Trained homeowner will be $1.68. A home worth
eq1ergency medical technicians devote $50,000 will cost its owner $7 per year. The
their time to the sPrvice and they have the no charge service will begin Jan. I, 1977,
necessary equipment for expert care. Roderick noted. Gallia County will pay

"

.

$10,000 annually into the SEOEMS
headquarters and the county commissioners will decide how the money will
be spent.
The three Gallia vehicles will be
owned by the county commissioners and
SEOEMS has a back-up of 25 vehicles
outside the county which can be ca,lled
upon in times of disaster Or when the Other
ambulances are busy.
A movie;

~~r

love You Frank," was

shown. A irue story, the fiim depicted a
man who suffered a heart attack and later
died because he was unable to obtain
ambulance service . The movie, a

production of the American Medical
Association, was loaned to the Concerned
vehicle demonstration
(Continued on page 2)

Home Furnishings Annex

SAVE DURING OUR STOREWIDE
END-OF-THE-MONTH SALE
BARGAINS IN EVERY DEPARTMEN i IN THE
MAIN STORE, ANNEX AND MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE
SHOP SATURDAY 9:30 TO 5 PM

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

ROBERT SNOWDEN

JAMES M. MONTGOMERY

Snowden wants seat

Montgomery one

on Meigs' hoard

of five Democrats

of commissioners

in race for sheriff

RUTLAND - Robert Snowden is one
by of fjve persons who have filed for the

Survey reveals EAS vote to be close
On Sale At The

Hike-Bike set

Citizens organization by the Hearl
AssociatiOn.

A

EDITOR'S NOTE - Jim Ross, Crown strongly or mildly . Abo.ut :iO percer.t were $40 for an emer~ency rw1. 11 the levy
City, is a . senior at Ohio University, opposed, while 16 percent said they passes , SEOEMS will continue to charge
majoring in journalism. During the spring planned to vote, but were still undecided . $25 a run until Jan . I, 1977, when the new
break last week Ross wrote several Another 16 percent said they were county taxing year begins. Patients transferred
feature articles for the Ohio Valley residents, but not registered to vote.
from Holzer Medical Center to a hospital
"I think it's someUling we need in this outside Gallia County would, however, be
Publishing Co. for practical experience
hefore graduation later this year. His final area." was the typical response among charged a mileage fee .
topic completed Friday was a "man on the supporters. One woman added, "It's a
Some opponents objected to the,
street interview," the topic, the 0.4 of a vital thing in the community and I think we salaries of local SEOEMS officials. Those
mill levy proposed for the emergency ought to have an ambulance. The town is people, however, usually overestimated
ambulance service which will be voted on progressive and it needs more progressive those salaries by $5,000 to $10,000. ,.
dw-lng a special election In Gallla County things."
Most elderly resident• opposed the
on Tuesday, March 30. Twenty-five per- · Most opponents did not think the levy, while younger voters were more
'sons were Interviewed (mainly because of benefits of the modern equipment offered likely to support it, though many were not
store closings on Thursday ailerhOons and by SEOEMS outweighs the Increased tax. registered to vote. Middle aged voters
"I think I pay enough tax," one man were about evenly split on the issue .
the time element) b,ul It does give some
inliication on how P.ople feel about the said, addll)g, "Most of my friends I've
Here are resulls of the survey :
talked to are against lt."
upcoming election Tuesday.
"Do you plan to vote on the SEOEMS
Some thought SEOEMS unnecessary levy, and if so , how? ''
with the VolWiteer Emergency Squad For
BY JIM ROSS
8
GALLIPOLIS - The 0.4 mill already established. One undecided person Probably for
2
Southeastern Ohio Emergency Medical said, "We already have thls,ntce volunteer
Service levy should pus, accortllna to an service. Why get another?"
Against
5
"As long as I c8ll get the other (VES) Probably against
informal poll, but opponents seem more
2
and pay $10 I'm not going to pay $25
determined than supporters 10 vote.
In a "Man In the Street" survey (SEOEMS's temporary charge)," one Undecided
4
conducted Thursday on Gallipolis woman said.
Some peopl~ overeslimll!~d the &lt;'ost of Not registered
sidewalks and parking lots, 37 percent of
I
the re'f'ondents •overed the levy, either the service, thlnkl~g It would charge them Totals
25
.il

medical college.
At the signing Friday, Dr. Gerald A.
Faverman, acting dean of the college, said
he is "delighted" with the board of the
Meigs CoWity Hospital for the cooperation
it has shown. The board has eornlliitted a
yearly scholarship of approximately $1,345
for a student at the new medical schooi.
Dr. Favennan said the new medical
school will encourage more physician~ to
practice in southeastern Ohio and il\·
dicated that among the many applicants to
be received, .southeastern Ohio students
will be given preference.
There are 24 students accepted to
begin their training at the Ohio University
facility in September. Six of them are from
slllitbeastern Ohio. Use of the local facility
lor training purposes will provide the
graduates of the school with insight into
the rewarding aspects of life and service in
a community hospital, Dr. Favennan said.
Dr. Favennan also announced Friday
that Dr. U.wis Telle of the Veterans
Memorial Hospital staff has been ap·
pointed a cllnical associate professor of
SID'gery. Other staff members are ex·
peeled tq receive similar appointments.
Dr. Telle is the first appointee, however.
Dr. Faverman represented the
medical school at the signing of the
agreement while Veterans Memorial was
represented by W. S. Lucas, ad·
rnlnistrator, and Andrew Cross, chairman ·
of the hospital's board or trustees.
Veterans Memorial will be· an In·
•tructional center for one of the slx regions
~esignoted around the state by the
&gt;sleopathic college .. The affiliation
:&gt;eeomes effective July I.
According to Dean Faverman,
.1tudents will receive medical training at
· (elerans Memorial during a portion of ·
Jleir last two years at the medical college .
At the hospital they will be supervised by
physicians who are faculty members of the
college.
Students will rotate among the
regional medical centers to receive a
maximum exposure to specialty and
family practice in Ohio. The affiliation
agreement will be coordinated by a joint
committee of representatives of the
hospital and the college.
The agreement states that the medical
college may assist the hospital in ren·
community by enlarging its activities anc!
categories of patient care. Other
provisions Include:
·- The college will appoint a director
of clinical clerkshop training with the
agreement of the hospital.
The college will retain the sole
(Continued on page 2)

ware County prosecutor since

1970, as judge of ~!aware
County Common Pleas Court,
succeeding Judge Oatfield W,
Whitney, who died March 3.
Rhodes also appointed Mrs.
Katherine C. Rose of
Cleveland to the Ohio Arts
Council, succeeding Iris J.
Vail, who resigned last Nov.

Veterans

Memor ial Hospital will develop and
operate teaching programs In health care

CONCERNED citizens, in five mon. Is useless and that the local station is short
ths, raised approximately $4,000 through on manpower . These people are misingenerous donations for educational formed. Too, the SEOEMS foundation was
programs , brochures, paper work and completed in Washington long before other
advertising campaigns to promote the groups became . involved here in Seplevy.
tember, 1972.

on ·Sale

Save

Your Invited Guat
Reaching More
Than 12,000
Families

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

ciiOice of 18 Pleated Widtl1s ·

Now

mthtt

tmts

Mostly sunny Sunday.
mghs from the upper 40s and
low 50s northeast to the low
60s south. Fair Sunday night.
Lows in the 30s. Increasing
cloudiness Monday with a

MORE impor.tan.tly, however, is the

OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 8 PM

•

Weather

Republican nomination for

Mei~s

Countv

Commissioner for the Jan. 2, 1977 term.
Snowden, 51, ·was born in Rutland
Township, graduated from Rutland High
&amp;hool and a~tended Ohio State University.
He served six years with the U. S. Naval

GALLIPOLIS -

James M. Mont.

gomery, Patriot Star Route, is one of five

Gallia County Democrats seeking the
sheriff's nomination during the June 8
.
.
Primary Election.
A graduate of Mercerville High
&amp;hool, Montgomery is the son of Earl and
Doris Montgomery, Rt. I, $cottown. He is

Air Force during and following World War !.· married to the former Norena K. Wooten,
II. He served on Rutland Village Council daughter of Gordon and Nora Wooten, Rt.
for eight years, four years on the school 588, Gallipolis. They have three chtldren.
board at Northwestern and three years on Montgomery Is a semi truck driver and
the Meigs Local &amp;hool Board.
heavy equipment operator with Carter &amp;
Employed at Kaiser Aluminum Co., he Evans Construction. He is a member of the
is a member of the Amerlcan Legion , Gallipolis K of P Lodge.
Rutland Post 467, Harrisonville Masonic
Lodge F&amp;AM, and the Rutland Volunteer
Fire Department.
.
His wife is the former Judy Lambert;
OHIO GOES FRIGID
they are parents of five children.
A cold front swept across Ohio
Saturday, setting off showers and winds
. which gusted up to 68 mph at the Youngs·
town Airport. The UPI said temperatures
nNED $tOO, COSTS
dropped
into the upper 30's in the northPOMEROY - John Grueser, Miners·
west
portion
of Ohio by late afternoon and
ville, was fined $100 and costs, in the court
snow
flurries
fell . Early morning lows bad
of Pomeroy Mayur Clare!1ce Andrews
heen
in
the
50's
and 60's before the cold air
Friduy night on conviction of a reckless
arrived.
operation. Harold Leach, Pomeroy, for·
feited a $40 bond posted for speeding.
HOUSEWIVES APPROVE
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (UP!) AT JACK'S CLUB
Argentine housewives gave their new
HARRISONVILLE - The president o' three-man military junta a nod of approval
the Southeast Ohio Black Lung Association Saturday. Hoards of shoppidg basket·
will be at Jack's Clue, located at the in· toting housewives flocked to market . as
tersection of SR 7 and 143 Sunday, April!, word o&lt; packed grocery shelves · and
at I !&gt;\{"· to speak on black lung . 11te sli~l·
'"· n•e &lt;~j&gt;d prices spread through
m~eling is open to all interested persons. ut·
I 's ,_,. . ~ hborhoods and suburbs .

for

M~y

15th

. GALLIPOLIS - Michael Kamman, of
·the Gallipolis Area Jaycees has been
named chairman of Gallla County's 1976
Hike•Bike lor Retarded Cltlzens.
· "On May 15, 1976," Kamman said,
"residents of Gallia County will have an
opportunity to take part in this worthwhile
event. We hopeeveryone wbo can will join
us in the 'Hike-Bike' either as participants
or sponsors.''
The Hike-Bike campaign calls on
volunteer citizens to either hike or bike for
re4lrded citizens over a measured course.
Businesses and individuals are asked to
pledge so much per mile for each mile
walked or ridden by participants.
The walk or ride wlll take place on
'll!ay 15, Participants who walk Will begin
at 10 a.m. while those who ride will begin
at 1 p.m. Six prizes will be awarded to the
participants who obtain the most money
from pledges. As an added Incentive any
participant who walks all 17 miles will
receive a Bicentennial Sliver Dollar,
Hikers and bikers will rally at the City
Park, and the measured course will be 17
iniles long. Check points will be set up at
intervals along the route, to accurately
clock the miles wulked or ridden by par·
ticipants. "Walks and bike" rides have
been very successful In other parts of the
country,'' Kamman stated, "and have
raised thousands of dollars for lhe men· ·
tally retarded. I know we can count on the
citizens or Gallia County to make the
campaign here an outstandint success. 11
Interested walkers or riders or
sponsors are urged to contact Michael
Kamman at 446-8275 or Melvin Tabor at
446-1293.
Information and sponsor sheets may
be picked up at : Bob Saunders Quaker
State; Tabor's Floor Covering; the
Otamber of Commerce Office; Gallipolis
S\l!te Institute P.V.A. Volunt~l" Services
Office or Guiding Han1 &amp;hooL ' \

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