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•

16 - The Daily Sentinel Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, April28, 1976

F alco~s win 4-0
BY GARY CLARK

Although .the temperature
was In the low 40's In Bachtel
Stadium.Tuesday evening it
proved to be considerably
warmer lor the visiting
Parkersburg Big Reds after
junior Oljll\e ftlrower Tim
Davis l!n1ilPd them to just
one hlt enroute · to. a 4-1
Wahama White Falcon win.
Davis went the distance In
chalk!n~ up his fourth mound
vk1ory of the Y.ear against
two losses. The slxth foot
diamond star stymied the
Big Red Banner with a
vicious curve and a blazing
fast ball while st striking out
four and walking five.
Tim Litchfie ld joined
Davis in the center circle
with a fine showin~ In hls

The true story that has
captivated over
8,000.000 ~~~"{.,~j

' '.'IE~-­
s'fl\lt1'? \.:-.

lHE

HIDING

PlACE'PG,
S"'mng JUUE HARRIS

EILEEN HECKART
ARTHUR 0' CONIIEU.
Jntroducmg

- --.

.IEAMIIETTE CUFf

.........- .. ,_,
.. ......
___ ......

~-.. -,

MEIGS THEATRE
PO MER OY, 0 .
AP RIL28·79
7 · 00 Noghtly

first varsity start after being
moved up from coach
Richard Colnes reserve
squad. The sophomore right
fielder came to bat for the
first time In his career In the
bottom half of the second
inning with the bases loaded
and delivered a run scoring
single to put the White
Falcons out In front with the
first run of the game.
Wahama broke out on top
with three unearned runs In
the second to take ~ lead
over the Wood County school
and that proved to be all they
would need.
.
Terry Tucker began the
inning with a single to left.
Mike Goldsberry popped out
to second followed by a
single to right by freshman
shortstop Mark Smith. Davis
went down swinging the
second out before Ken Riggs
walked to load th.e bases.
Utchfields' Infield · single
scored Tucker leaving the
sacks still full. T\m Sayre
hit a fly ball to short left
which was droppid by the
left fielder allowing Smith
and Riggs to score with the
second and third runs of the
frame .
Both : teams added a run
In the fourth to complete the
scoring with Davis checking
the visitors through the final
three frames, preserving a 4l win.
The White Falcons sport a
I~ record with two games
on tap for today. A return
match with Point Pleasant
was scheduled to begin tt
1:15 p.m. at Wahama with a
visit to Southern slated for
4:30 p.m. In Racine, 0.
Tomorrow and Friday find
the locals In Spencer and
Poca for single games to
complete the week.
Wahama: 0 3 0 I 0 0 X-4+2
Parkersburg: O 0 0 I 0 0 01-1-4
The Wahama Reserve
Baseball team took a 5-j)
decision over the Logan
Reserves Saturday af-

. the~
are w1th qoui..
'

I

When you save for
retirement with an
I.R.A. plan- Now.
A Home Bank
For
Mei,!Cs County

People

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL
BANK
RACINE

f

OHIO

Falcon band rated tops at fe~tival
' MASON , W. Va . .:.. TheWahama " White Falcon"
band under the direction of
Charles Ycago and Assistan t
Tom Phillips received "I" or
Superior Ratings from each
of the four judges at the
RavenswOOd Band Festival
Saturday, April 24. Bands
were judged on the five rating
plan with a "!" or Superior
being the highest and "V" or
poor the lowest.
Among the judges' comments were:
.
Mr . Duvall , Bethany
College: ' ' ... An absolutely
slunning performance and
one that can compare with
most college bands (including my own ) that I have
heard . Balance, intonation,
blend, articulatiOn, phrasing,
spacing just superb ... " His
main criticism was that there
should be more dynamic
contrast. He gave the band A
pluses.
Mr. Hamilton : "Excellent
performance! nice balance fine articulation - what else .
can I say - an outstandlllg
band - well trained ! Keep up
the good work ... A real
pleasure to listen to such a
fme organization." He gave
the band all A's.
Mr. O'Connell, Marshall
University : "A good job but
could be improved ... It still
needs more attention to
dramatic dynamics." He
gave the band many fine
constructive criticisms which
should help improve the
band 's performance for the
Huntington band ratings on
May 7, 8.
Mr . Large, Marshall
University : "Some rhythm
problems ... an excellent
reading ... interpretation was
generally very good, musical

effecl very gOOd, very fine
instructions."
Wahama and RavenswOOd
were the only two bands to
receive all Superior or "I"
ratings.
Music the band was graded
on was Overture to Colas
Breaugnon and Symphony In
Bb. Both selections were

HOSPITAL NEWS
VeteraDS Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Stella
Slone, Leon, W. Va.; Samuel
Williams, Shade; Gregory
Tyree, Middleport; Cora
Lcltis, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED - Debby
Greathouse, Angela Farley,
Elizabeth Frederick, Edith
Welch.
In 1975, North Vietnamese

troops assaulted parts of
saigon's suburbs as the Communists tightened a noose
around the south VIetnamese
capital city.

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Shirley
Edwards, Mason; · David
Kayser, Point Pleasant;
Helen Tripplett, Lakin;
Charles Ungerfelt, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Kenneth
Carter, Hartford; Eula
Glover, Henderson; Mrs.
Harold Nelson, New Haven;
Doris Dalton, Polllt Pleasant;
Mrs. Ernest Leeport, Henderson; Barbara Saunders,
Point J.'leasant.; M1'. and~· ­
Marion Riffle and daughter,
Mt. Alto; Albert Rhodes,
Point Pleasant; · Jessica
Tredway, Point Pleasant.

Ford asks congress to
pass tough ·drug law

WASHINGToN (UPI) President Ford . asked
Congress
Tuesday
to
pass
a
stringent
narcotics law which would
require judges to im·
prison hard drug dealers
and clear the way for more
domestic and lllternational
cooperation in curbing the
growing and distribution of
drugs.
In a special message to
ternoon behind a four hitter Congress, Ford said some
by Tom Thomson. The wln 5,000 young Americans die of
upped the Uttle Falcons drug abuse each year. For
record to 2-1 on the year with each of those persons,
Thompson figuring In on all thousands more "merely go
three decisions.
through the motions of
Wahama placed five runs living."
on slx hits In registering the
He also said drug users
win.
commit about half the robCalvin Honaker paced the
beries, burglaries and other
attack with two run scoring property crimes In America
singles, Tom Thompson annually.
Signing the message in the
delivered a triple with Kreig
Oval
Office, Ford said be had
Sayre, Tim Litchfield and
been
asking Congress to take
Kurt Sayre adding one base
the
a.
c
tion for nearly a year.
each.
But
tbe
measure, Included In
Coach Richard Clines
an
overall
anti-crime bill, has
reserve team was to ennot been passed.
tertain Point Pleasant today
So Ford said he was
following he varsity tUt and sending the drug program by
Warren local tomorrow In
itself to the lawmakers In
double header to complete hopes they give It speedy
the home schedule for the passage.
1976 · season. Four game
"It's a good message and
remain after tomorrow's hopefully it will produce
twin bill for the reserves, all some action," Ford told
on the road.
Attorney General Edward
Wahama:
Levi and Health, Educatim
2 1 0 2-U--4
Logan :
and Welfare Secretary David
0 0 0 0--0+1
Mathews who witnessed the
signing.
The bill would allow federal
BONDS FORFEITED
judges
to deny bail In some
Four defendants forfeited
narcotics
cases-including
bonds and was fined by
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews Tuesday night.
!NV AHOSPITAL
Forfeiting were Brian Knapp,
SYRACUSE
Paul
Syracuse, $32, spee~ing; Eugene Burton was removed
David Long, Henderson, W. from hls residence In the
Va., $30, running a stop sign;
Thomas Wilson, Pomeroy, Syracuse area to the
Administration
$30, passing on a double Veterans
Hospital in Huntington, W.
yellow line, and Keith Va., Tuesday night for obPickens, Pomeroy, $50, open
fla§k . Fined $25 and costs for servation and treatment.
may be sent to him at
speeding charge was Ronald Cards
the hospital, Ward 2-A.
Arms of Pomeroy.
THREE JAILED
Three defendants were
fined $Ui() and costs each and
were given lhre~t day jail
sentences when they appeared before Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night on charges of
driving while intoxicated.
They are Mike Harrison, 19,
Middleport; Richard E.
Martin, · 22, Pomeroy, and
Hubert C. Pullins, 37, Mid. aleport.

grade 6 which means that this
is the most difficult music
that could be chosen. Since
Wahama Is a small AA school
they are only required to play
music of either grade 3 or
grade t
Many parents and friends
traveled to hear the band's
performance at RavenswOOd.

those where a defendant
,already has been convictedof
trafficking in hard drugs, is
free on parole, or is a
nonresident alien.
In his message, the aides
said Ford told Congress that
he has endorsed MeJlican
President Luis Echeverria's
proposals for establishing
mechanisms for formal
exchange of Information and
Ideas at high levels of
government to curb the
illegal flow of drugs into the
United States from south of
the border.

Weather
Clear tonjght with lows in
the upper 305. Fair, warmer
Thursday, highs in the mld
60s.
Probability
of
precipitation near zero per ·
cent today, tonight and
Thursday.
BUS SAFETY
CXlLUMBUS (UPI) .:... A bill
requiring mass
transportations systei'ns for
public school students to
meet state safety standards
was sent to. Gov. James A.
Rhodes Monday.
The blll, Introduced by Rep.
Thomas J. carney, 0-Youngstown, ·provides for certain
criteria for bus driver
training, and confonns Ohio
law with federal standards 111
the use of rear-view mirrors
oo mass transit buies. The
buies must also be subjected
to periodic safety lnspectlons.
The House gave final
legislative approval in
unanimously agreeing to
Senate amendments to the
bill:

Blakeslees at
board meeting
Mr. and Mrs. C, E. Blakeslee of Pomeroy attended the
recent annual meeting of the
Corporate aoard of the
Automobile Club of Southern
Ohio In Marietta when
merger of tbe Waahlllgton
County Automobile Club was
ratified, adding Washlngton
and Morgan counUes and
offices at Martella and
Belpre to ihe territory served
from local club headquarters
In Portsmouth.
Service offices are also·
maintained - In Athens,
Gallipolis, Ironton, Jackson
and Logan. The compleUon of
this merger brings the club .
membership to nearly 45,000
and assures It 5fntinued
leadership in the promotion
of touriam under the Ohio's
Southland banner.

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

:-----A~~;- Deaths

'
· SALES REPORT
Ohio Valley LIVIIkiCk Co.
Gallipolis, April24, tm .
STOCKER CATTLE Steen: 250 to 300 lbs. 41
Down; 300 to 400 Jbs, 44; «ll to
500 lbs., 4S; SOO to 600 lbs., 45;
600 to 100 lbs., 41.50. 700 lbs.
and Over, 43. ·
HEIFER CALVE$- 250 to
JOO lbs, 34 down; 300 to 400
lbs, 32; «ll to 500 lbs., 33; 500
to 600 lbs., 33; 600 to 700 lbs.,
35; 700 lbs and Over, 36.50.
STOCK CAWS, - BULLS
-By the Head- Stock Cows
185 to 285; Stock Cows and
Calves 210 to 345; Stock Bulls
190 to 275; Baby Calves ~s
down ; (By the Pound) Canners &amp;,Cutters Cows 25 to
29.50; Holstein Cows 28 to 32;
Commercial Bulls 29 to 37.
PIGS - 17 to 42.50.
VEAL CALVES, TOPS 200
lbs. to 250, 58 to 65; Medium
200 to 300 lbs., At.50 to st;
Culls 32.50 down.
Sows over 400 lbs., 38.75 to

1965.
.
Denton said the Increase over the past three years from a
low of 7 698lnmates In 1973 has created a serious shortage of
imnate housing ~pace throughout the prison system. He said
the increased commilments are the apparent result of hlgber
cririle rates and added that prison systems throughout the
nation are experienclilg population In ceases similar to Ohio's.

Athens livestock Soles, Inc.
Saturday, Aprll24, 1976
Feeder Sleers (400 to BOO
lbs. ), 25 to 40:50; Feeder
Heifers (400 to 100 lbs.),·20 to
34; Feeder Bulls (400 .to BOO
lbs.) 25 to 36.50. Slaughter
Cows: Utility, 25 to 33.25;
Conner-Cutler 20 lo 25.
Veals (Cholce·Prlme)- 40
to 51; Hogs No. l, 41.70 to 48;
Sows 40.25 to 41.90; Pigs (by
the Head l 25 to 46.
Point PINson! Markel
Aprll14, 1976
Slaughter Heifers - Good
and Choice 700 to tOQO_lbs.
32.50; Standard, 700 to 1000
lbs. 28.75.
Slaughter Cows - Utility
27.10; Canner and Cutler
21.95 to 23.50; Bulls over 1000
lbs. 33.90;
Yearling Steers - Good
and Choice, 500 fo 600 lbs,
36.25; 600 to 700 lbs., 38.
Yearling Heifers - Good
and Choice, SOD to 600 tbs.
30.90; 600 to 7 o lbs. 32.50.
Steer Calves - Good and
Choice, Under 300 lbs. 40; 500
to 600 lbs. 36.25.
•
Bull Calves - Good and
Choice «ll to 500 lbs., 33;
Veal - Choice and Prime,
190 to 225 lbs. 57.50; 226 to 265
lbs., S-4.50;
Heifer Calves - Good and
Choice, o to 400 lbs., 29.25;
Cows and Cavies (by head),
304.50; Cows by head, 175 to
195.
'
Baby Calves by head Beef 28 to 34; Holstein &amp;
Brown Swiss 14 to .29. ,
HOGS - 190 to 240 lbs.
41.50; 240 to 260 IllS. 46; JOO to
500 lbs. 37.25: 300 to .00 lbs.
31 ; Pigs by Head 60 lbs up,

SINGER
MAmMESALE

btJttonhollf that ttopt 1vto.,.

tiCIIf't', thtf!jp~• 2·WIY

CHESTER, OHIO

ST. RT. 7
All during the month of May '76. Jake and Mid will be
offe ring specials on different sandwiches, baskets and
dinners. The "Spirit of '16" special will run all month.
Door prizes for those 16 years or under and 16 years or

over. RegiStration will begin on May lsi and end May
list with drawings al9 :00 p.m. You need not be pre•ent
to win .
Many, many, thanks to all who have made ours years

in business very special to both of us .

Joke &amp; Mid

Gaul

"Spirit of
76 Special"
Reg. Hot Dog,

Sauce. F. F.,
Small

Drink ..

76e

UtWJt fOIInt.tlnt 'ff'll •rn'

IMitlf ol cuffs, pantfttl, tltlwn

The Tri-County's M&lt;!,st
Exciting Night Spbl

lf1d othlr hlfd to rt.:h •••· ·
tMrying case 01 C41bintt fltrl .

SM '30 ZIG-ZAG MACHINE WITH

11 HW- IAIY fUTURU

Built·ln blind tliteh, IJICIOiiwl~ dnll'*l

front dro,.tn bobbin, u1r1 wldl tlt·lli u•·

THE MEIGS INN
Phone 992·3629

Pomeroy, Ohio

See our excellent
selection of work
~nd dress western
Jackets
wear - western shirts
- jeans - leisure
suits - all well
known maker.
Sizes from extra
small to extra
large - Plenty of
pre-washed
denims.

in

Harry
Meshel,
DYoungstown, one of Me Kenna's chief critics.
Meshel, chairman of the
Senate Finance committee
and a member , of the
Controlling Board which
McKenna
has
asked
repeatedly for additional
appropriations, said the
director has .failed to seek
proper solutions to hls
fiancial problems.
"He has taken the easy way
out and has attempted to
blame tbe legislature," said
Meshel.
Sen. Thomas A. Van Meter,
R·Ashland,
said
the
legislature deserved to take
the
blame
for
not
appropriating enough money for welfare programs,
"If It's not the legislature's
fault, whose is it?'~ asked Van
Meter. "It's not the
director's."
McKenna's rejection came
as the General Assembly
began clearing the decks for
a preprimary recess.

Ftnalleglslatlve action was
scheduled on a controversial
·utility rate-making bill, state
retirement reforms, a
conswner pricing measure
and a host of secondary
measures to be sent to the
governor's desk.
A joint Senate-House
conference committee paved
the way for the adjournment
by reaching unanimous
agreement shortly before
midnight Wednesday on tbe
utility leglalatlon limiting the
investment funds public
utlllties may seek to offset
through customer billing.
Also scheduled was a
Senate vote on a heavily·
revised property tax relief
blll, but legislative leaders
held out little hope a
settlement coUld be reached
for final ratification before
the lawmakers go home .Conference comml~tee ,
work is expected to proeeed
on that proposal during the
recess In hopes of a
(Continued on page 12)

right

away, try on an

outfit or two buy what
need.

you

Men's and Boys'
Department

1st Floor

at y

lverlf

.

-.~

ByUultedPresslnteruatlonal
WASHINGTON - Fr~DERAL ENERGY Administrator
Frank G. Zarb says there should be plentiful supplies of
gasoline this summer and fuel oil next winter.
"We went through, last year, a period of intense concern,"
Zarb told the Senate Gilvernment Operations C.ommittee
Wednesday . "That is no problem this year." Demand is up,
Zarb said, but so is the supply.

admit one

:::~:

:-:::~~

~~l~l~~l~l;~~;~J~~~ill;;l~l~i~i~l;~~~i~~~~~ilii;lm~l;m~;i~~~~;~l1li~i~l~~~;j~;;;;;i;mm~;~~m~;~m~~m~~;m~:~g

Parade to open
3 regatta days

phone call

.
.
: ~ m Metgs County June 5th·: :
:~~

;:~:

A parade from Middleport
to Pomeroy, a free
Two juveniles came before professional-type musical
Meigs Coun ty Probate Judge production and the presenManning Webste r Wednesday tation of rededication scrolls
WASHINGTON - FEDERATED DEPARTMENT Stores on charges of delinquency to signed by local residents will
of Cincinnati, Ohio, was one of two large chains indicted b)' a which each pleaded guilty. highlight a vis1t of the
fed~ral grand jury Wednesday on charges of conspiring to f1x
The charges derive from bicentennial wagon train to
prices of women's c·lothes in the San Francisco area. Attorney phone calls made to Meigs Pomeroy on June 5.
General Edward H. Levi said the federal Indictment against Junior High in Middleport
Headed by Johli., Rice,
Federated and Saks and Co. of New York was returned in U.S. that there was a bomb in the chairman of the Meigs
District Court" in San Francisco. He said the Justice school. Each youth admitted County Bicentennial Co.mDepartment has also filed a civil suit seeking an injunction to one call, one on April 15 mission, a meeting was held
against price-fixing .
and otie on April 22.
at the county extension office
Saks and Co:"'operates Sl!ks Fifth Avenue specialty stores
Penalties on the charges on Wednesday afternoon to
In the area and Federated Department Stores _operates I. will be made Friday at a plan for the forthcoming
Magnln and Co., a chain of women's specialty stores based in dispositional hearing.
event.
San Francisco. The parent companies were charged with
In all 13 telephone
Middleport Mayor Fred
conspiring from 1963 to April, 1974, to fix their retail prices for messages were received by Hoffman said the Middleport
women 's clothing by adopting uniform markup lists, the schools of th.e Meigs Local Community Park will be
Indictment said.
District last week: The calls available for the assembling
cost the district thousands of of the parade which will inCHARLESTON, W. VA. - PEABODY AND Consolidation dollars in lost class time that
Coal groups continued to hold their No. 1 and 2 positions has to be made up and extra clude three state wagons
respectiwly in the coal Industry last year. Peabody 's coal bus runs, according to school pulled by mules. Rice will
invite the Ohio Valley Horse
production for 1975 was 73 million tons of coal, increasing by officials.
Show
Association to have its
7.2 per cent over 1974. It has been the nation's top producer
No bombs were round any
since 1970, according to "Coal Age", an industry magazine, of the times.
.:::::::::::::::::::·:·:::::·:·:·:::::::::::·:::;:::::·:·:;:::::::::::·:::·:::
which reported the production statistics.
Consol, ranked No. 2 since 1970, mined 54.9 million tons of
coal last year, increasing production by 6.!'per cent. Others in
order were: AMAX., 21.8 million, 9.4 increase; Island Creek,
WARTOWN , Mass.,
19.4 million, 6.9 decrease; Pittston, 18.5 million, 6.6 increase ;
April
29
The
U.S. Steel, 17.1 million, 4.4 increase; Arch Mineral group, 1~ .4
Massachusetts General
million, 2.9 decrease; Bethlehem Mines, 13.3 million, .05
Court voted that the
Increase; Peter Kiewit group, 11.7 million, 20.9 increase.
colony's uniforms for ofRanking In the second 10 was American Electric Power, 8.2
fleers be green and white
million tons, a 29.5 increase.
and that the colors be a
Plans for the road rally to white flag with a green pine
MOSCXlW - THE SOVIET UNION TODAY called for the be held all p.m. Sunday were tree Inscribed "Appeal to
when
the Heaven." At Bunker Hill,
setting up of a two-stage Geneva peace conference to head off completed
what it says is the lllcreasing danager of war in the Mid,dle Pomeroy-Middleport Uons five men were given 20
East.
Club met for a luncheon at the lashes each for desertion.
But Western diplomats said that since the SOvlet5 still Meigs Inn Wednesday.
Bruce Teaford outlined the :::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:·
insisted on the participation of the Palestllle Liberation
Organization, there seemed little chance of success Ill setting event which will feature a
up the conference. Israel has stated it will not sit down at a route for vehicles to follow,
negotiating table with the PLO.
determining the various stops
through a short verse. En try
CXlLUMBUS - MAJOR ADOPTION LEGISLATION, fee is $5 a car and prizes will
three years In the making, has cleared the Ohio Senate, be awarded the winners.
includlllg strict disclosure rules aimed at ending what one
Time is not the essence,
senator called "child buying . "1l t~ "'"asure was unanimously however, as club members
approved Wednesday by the Senate and returned to the House have outlined the lime
for concurrence In minor amendments. The House passed the schedule and
drivers
bill 94 to !last July.
reaching any station early or
The bill updates the state's adoption and foster-care laws, late will be penalized.
requiring each private and public adoption agency to submit to
Workers on the rally will
an annual court review of each child in 115 custody. "There are mclude Karl Krautter, Ralph
hundreds of children who are literally lost In the foster care Graves, Wendell Hoover,
system each year," said Sen . Neal F. Zinuners, Jr., 0-Dayton. Frank Herald, the Rev .
"The financial disclosure requirement will, I hope, end the Wilham Middleswarth,
'grey market' of child buying in which an attorney charges a Robert Jacobs, Larry
fmder's fee of upwards of $10,000 to secure an adoptable child Brogan, Lou Osborne, Bill
lor prospective parents," Zinuners said. ,Any fees charged in Nease, Bruce Teaford,
Jrivate or puhllc adoptions would have to be disclosed to the Clarence Struble and N. W.
court, and the court would in turn make periodic reports to the Compton. Workers will meet
General Assembly.
at the senlo;· citizens center
at 12 noon Sunday.
LOUISVll.LE, KY. -!T WAS I.JKE A PONY beating two
The observance of the 30th
big thoroughbred horses - this 13th annual Kentucky Derby anniversary of the 'Athens
Festival Great Steamboat Race. Not even the presence of club was announced for May
Hollywood stars John Wayne and "Tarzan" Ron Ely aboard 14.
the Belle of Louisville, nor "Grandpa Walton", Will Greer, on
the Clnclnnall-based Delta Queen made any difference.
The JUlia Belle Swain, of Peoria, Ill., much the smallest of .
HOME CONTRACTORS
the three craft, moved into the lead at the outset and there was
COLUMBUS (UP!) no catching her over the six-mile Ohio River course despite a . Legislation requiring the .
closing surge by the Belle of Louisville. Her margin over the licensing of home con tractors
Belle of Louisville was one to two lengths with the Queen and salesmen; and regulating
another three lengths to the rear. The Belle carried the largest home improvement contracts
passenger load, more than 400 riders. There were more than was given 54-41 approval by
300aboard the Queen·and about 100 on the Julia Belle.
.
'
the Ohio House Wednesday

Uons review

Dateline 1776

member clubs participate. will go to the Meigs BlcenRiders will be asked to w~ar tennial Commission.
appropriate costuming,
The five mayors of the
especially outfits featuring county and the c.ounty
red, · white and blue colors. commissioners will present
Schools will be contacted the scrolls signed by local
for their bands to take part res ide n l s pled ~ i n g
and school queens as well as rededication to the United
other local queens will be States . These scrolls will be .
asked to take part in the made available In the near
parade. Other entries will be future to schools, churches
invited butitis being stressed and organiza lions. The
that other entries should :~Crolls are to be taken by the
carry out the bicentennial wagon train group to Valley
theme.
Forge to be placed in a time
The parade is scheduled to capsule.
1eaveMiddleportat9:30a. m.
In conjunction with the
for Pomeroy where W will wagon train visit, Pomeroy
disband at the rear of the old firemen .iill· stage a chiCken
junior high school building. barbecue on the upper
Meantime, a barge loaded parking lot and will provide
with wagons representing dinner for the some 25
various states will arrive in members of the wagon train
Pomeroy about 4 a. m. on organization. A June I
June 5. Residents can view - deadline has been set for
the wagons from the parking parade entries.
lot but will not be permitted .;:::::::::::::::::·::::;.:,:·:·:·:::·:,:-:-:,:,:::,:::::::·:::::::::·:::::::'
on the barge.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
At 11 a. m. the free musical
Saturday through
will be presented by Penn
Monday,
chance of showers
University students on the
Saturday
and Sunday and
upper parking Jot which will
clearing
Monday. Highs
be closed to traffic. The
mostly
will
be In the 60s
musical ca rrying out a
bicentennial theme will and lows will be In the 40s
feature not only well-trained to the low 5tls.
: 5 ::::::::::-:;:::':·::::::;~~'it~~::::::::::,:·::::;;;;;.:::::·
performers but an extensive
sound system. It will last for
Clear , and not as cool
40 minutes.
tonight, lows in the mld ~ ­
A souvenir store will be Increasing cloudiness ·
q)eratcd during the bicen- Friday, highs in the tilE.
ten .. lP. 1 vbservance and 10 Probability of precipitation
percen ; of the proceeds from near zero today and tonight,
the sale of "approved" Items 20 per cent Friday.

{
'

and shilJI" 'd 1 n lh1..• .1cnate.

blllty. llllnV othlr CDnVII'Iitncts~ Clrrvlnt
tilt or ctblnet utr1.
·

LEGS BROKEN
A Hereford cow's two hind
legs were broken when it
walked into the path of a rar
driven by Gene R. Mulhurn ,
it

33, Humden , Wednesday at
11 :30 a. m. on SR 143 in
Columbis Township. The
animal wac owned by Everett
Holcomh, the sheriff's
department said.

The
&lt;' &lt;Jnlraclors
and
salesmen would be licensed
by the state Deparlment of
Commerce starting in 1977
under the liill ,' sponsored by
Rep. John D. Thompson Jr .,
D-Cleveland.

THf:SE ARE THE "Americans" In the Meigs High School senior class play, "The

M~ouse tha t Roared" to be presented .&amp;p.m. Friday In the school auditorium. The modern,

two-act comedy is directed by faculty member, Cella McCoy. The group includes, front, l to
r, Crystal Glaze, Angie Sisson, Debbie MatSon, Esther Lowery, Sandy Carleton; second
row, Jlnuny D. Qualls, Ed Sisson, Kenny -Wyant, Jim Howard; back row, Mick•y Lyons,
Jackie Doczi, Jeff Reuter, David Cole, Bruce Reed and Ginger Cullwns.

.. . .

00

en tine

Sunday's road
rally plans

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

~ili~*

m

fN;:;~~:r~ Juve~es r'Bi~::;:;;w,::;~;,;;;'i:""l

·enctdlflfl
Select YOI.II' nltch, towdt 1 butt~
n:t •• iNt~nttv1 1 Actv1n0ed •It·

•2.95

estern looks
that really work

Stop

•

e

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

.roLUMBUS (UPI) - Tbe
. Ohio Senate today rejected on
a 21-12 party~ine vote the ap·
pointment of Raymond F.
McKenna as director of the
state Public Welfare Department. ·
It was the first dismissal of
3!1Y ·of the cabinet members
of Gov. James A. Rhodes
since Democrats took control
of the Senate in January,
1975, and Rhodes returned as
governor for a third term.
Senate Republicans sought
to uphold the governor's
nomination of McKenna, who
has headed the department
since last year.
·
They were outnwnbered by
the
Democrats
who
complained McKenna has
been unresponsive on welfare
needs and mismanaged the
deparlment.
"Mr. McKenna simply has
not been the effective
administrator that
is
required to operate such an
important department of
state government," said Sen.

~~~~i1

···•·•··
.......
:;;;:;:;
WASHINGTON (t:IPI) - Hubert H. Humphrey Is ~li~
i~i;i "very seriously considering" announcing today that:;:;:;,
m:: he will actively seek the Democratic presldentlal li:::::
""· nomination, accorellng to Sen. Wa Iter "on
''I dale, 0- '·"-'
{:;:;::
;-:·:-~
:::::::: Minn
~~:~
:·:~:::
.
.
:·.·!·~
8:::::
Mondale attended a nearly 21&gt; hour C8pitol Hill :;:;:~
~:;;;;; meeting Wednesday evening with his Minnesota' ~;:;;i;;
%~ Senate colleague and several Hun1phrey advisers from i~!!!l
:;:;:&lt;: around the country. Humphrey told reporters he would ~:;:;::
!:!:t announce his decision today - "hopefully sometime :;:;:;~
:~~;;; before noon ." At 10 a. m. he called a news conference @~
~::~::: for 1:30 p. m.
.
~;~~~
~~;::;
At least two other Humphrey associates sa!d U&gt;ey ~;:§
$l!~ believed Hwnphrey would begin compalgnlng for the ;i:J~
~-- nomination.
t;;&lt;~
~::
Asked on the CBS Morning News whether t~~~
~ Hurnphr~ had reached a decislon,Mondale replied, "I ~*
don't know. I think he is very seriously conslderlrllt ~m
fu! announcing hls candlda~y. but when I lefthun early ;~:;:~
~~ last evening he had not yet decided ."
m::

The 1976 Big Bend Regatta
will officially kick off at 6 p.
m. Friday, June 18, with the
12th Annual Regatta Parade
through Middl eport and
Pomeroy. The parade will
form at 5:30 p. m. on South
Second Avenue In Middleport
·before moving out using the
theme , "200 Years or
Progress Along the River ."
All area rsldcnl.s, groups,
and companies are Invited to
VOL. XXVIII NO.9 _
participate. for
Prizes
wlll be
PR'ICE FIFTEEN CENTS awarded
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
THURSDAY, APRIL 29, 1976
floats
'"
...:...-------------,.-----~-----'----------------;__-----------.,--------'-----'----- ~ategorles of Best Theme,
IN TRADITIONAL ROLES ·- Kim Birchf1eld will he Betsy Ross, Judy Alexander, !fie
Statue of Liberty, Mike Edwards the Navy and Paul Michael the Army in "America in
SOng" this evening at Rutland Elementary School. See Page 6.

··'

duti'ftl ind"* 1 buttonfilln"'V

GAULS SHAKE HAVEN

,,

(Continued from page l)

43.15.

SPECIAL

Visit Our Salad Bar
Lasagna
Vegetable
Hot Rolls
Coffee, Tea or Milk

r

News •• in Briefs

Market Report

THURSDAY NIGHT

th

US-ITS OUR

at the funeral home after '7

p.m. today.

JAMES CALDWELL ·'
James N. Caldwel,l, 83, a
native of Gallla County, died
Monday
at
Vel.erana
Hospital. Chillicothe. He waa
a son of the late Jasper N. al)ll
lutllla Clark Caldwell.
.
He married the former
Clara Byers of Middleport.
They were the parents of two
daughters, Mrs. Rolph ( LOial
Johnson. Louisville, Ky . and
Mrs. Dale IRetol little o1
Dayton.
Besides
lht
daughfers, he leaves fl.mil)gs, Rt. 3 Racine ; two grandchildren and one
slep.g&lt;andchlldren , lwo brother, Clark CaldWell of 25
brothers, Edward. Columbus. Vinton St., Gallipolis.
and John of Patriot, Ind., and
Mr. Caldwell was rellreil
two sisters ,
Florence from the C&amp;O Railroad shOPI
Thunburg, and Ethel Rowan, In Huntington where he
both of New Brighton, Pa.
worked as a boilermaker. :
Funeral services will be
Funeral services will be
held Friday at 1 p.m. at held at Chapman Morluarr In
Ewing Chapel with the Rev. Huntington Thursday a 2
Howard Shiveley officiating .. p.m. Burial will be In
Burial will be In Letart Falls Ridgelawn Cemetery at
Cemetery: Friends may call Mercerville.

7'TE1V1'10Ni

CELEBRATE

I

HENRY"/&gt;\, PHELPS
RACINE - Henry 'M.
Phelps, IS, Rt. 2, Racllie, died
this morning at Fairview
Manor Nursing Home In
Beverly, Ohio.
1-h. Phelps was preceded In
death by his parents, John
and Nancy Spencer Phelps;
one son, Ronald, and two
daughters, Mildred and Ida
Mae Phelps.
He Is survived by his wife,
VIvian; a daughter, Donna
Lewis, Rt. t, Letart, W. Vo.;
three grandchildren, one
slep·daughter, Opal Cum -

CHER RELEASED
HONOLULU (UPI)
44.50.
Entertainer Cher Bono ' Harry Wallis, reporter.
Allman has been released
from Kapiolani Hospital after
suffering premature labor
pains there for a week.

THE INN PLACE

Democrats take
McKenna's job

;!

I

p~H~--~~hre~
~~~\d
'@t:~~g:~d
!i!~~!i!iii!i~!~!i!~io
~~t~i~i~i~i~:t~i~:~:~:ia~
da
~~
ump y eel es t y m~
:s-:.~ . f he'll enter primary lists ::::?-:%:=:~ i
11::~

F'rog, Commorclul, Non-

commercial, Bicycle and a
special Bi-Centennial class .
Trophies will be awarded fur
best marching and mounted
unit . Those Interested In
laking
part,
having
questions, or planning any
other eve nts In conjunction
with the Regatta shoultl
contact
the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce, Box
526, Pomeroy, Ohio 457119 or
RegattaArnott
Co -Managers
George
(992-57941 or
Kcnn Gilkey (tlll2-7157 ).

r-·~1--------------~------~-----

1!171i lUG UENl&gt; HEGATTA

PAHAl&gt;l;; ENTitY FOHM

NAME------------~-------,\Dl&gt;ltESS

---------------------CITY
--------------------PHONE ----'------------------TYPE OF ENTRY~----------STATE ZIP

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

Return to: Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce; Box 526,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789 99z.soo5

Instant winners
•
m newest game·
CLEVELAND (UP!) - A
new "instant" lottery game,
In which players will be able
to determine Immediately
whether they have won Jrlzes
ranging from $2 to $10,000 or a chance to !l'ln $15,000 to
$1 mllllon - may begin about
June 15.
Proposed rules for the
game were flied this week
with Secretary of State Ted
W. Brown. The rules are
subject to amendment during
a public hearing May 25 at the
Ohio Lottery Commission
headquarters.
Tickets for the Instant
kame, which will run eight to
10 weeks, will cost $1.
Lottery officials have not
announced the name of the
new game or the ticket
design. Officials; however,
said the game will Involve
matching single-digit
"target" numbers to a "key"
nwnber on the ticket.

All ticket numbers will be.
covered. with a substance
which can be scraped off with
a coin. The three "target"
numbers wUI be either the
same of different.
If the target nwnbers are
different, · and one matches
the key number, the ticket
holder may win $2; $5, $200,
$500, $1,000 or $10,000,
depending upon which of the
prize amounts !s concealed In
the ticket's prize statement
section.
If the target numbers are
the same and match the key.
number, the ticket holder
qualifies for a jackpot
drawing and is guaranteed at
least $15,000. Other prizes in
the jackpot drawing will be
$250,000, $500,000 and $1
million.

Construcbon
.

workers go to
' '''''':':':'='=::=~::= ::~~;::::,:::·:::-:-: :,: $~ 4.85 per hr.
Area residents can
soothe some of their
frustrations- al25 cents a
whack - Saturday when
Pomeroy Boy Scout Troop
249 stages a "Car Bash" on
the upper parking lot in
downtown Pomeroy.
The scouts will provide·a
car and a " blunt Instrument" for patrons who
can, for %5 cents, strike the
vehicle to relieve any
frustrations they may
have.

Landmark
taken in
Vinton fire
A Gallla County historical
landmark, and probably the
last known mlll on Raccoon
Creek, The Old VInton Mill,
burned Wednesday af.
ternoon.
Cause of the blaze has not
been determined. According
to Vinton viUage officials,
electrical lines In the vicinity
of the mill were burned
causing an outage in the
vlllage water system .

CLEVELAND (UPI) The hourly rate for about
20,000 area construction
workers will go from about
$12.30 to about $14.85 In a new
contract signed Wednesday
by the Cleveland Bullding
and Construction Trades
Council and the Building
· Trades Employers Association.
Beginning Saturday,
coostructlon workers. wiD get
a 7 per cent pay raise with a
6\2 per teJJI hike May 1, 1977,,
and another 6 per cent
lllcrease May I, 1978.
"The Increase Is In lllle
with the Urnes," Council
Executive Secretary 0\arlea
R. Plnzone ssld. "If work was
real good, we might have
asked for more."'
The contract, which took
about two weeks to negotiate,
~-overs 11 local trade unions,
Several other construction
unions are bargaining
separately with employers.
Unions covered by the con·
tract represent sheet metal
workers , p!pefltters,
plumbers , laborers, tlle
setters, boilermakers,
lathers, asbestos workers,
tile and marble helpers,
' terrazzo grinders and t-ement
masons.

�3- The Daily Sentinel Middleport Pomeroy 0 ThW'IIIay Apri129 1976

TOM TIEDE

Watch out, Hollywood The stars are rn D.,C.
Anyway tdea s to hegtn
lmmed ale wrtt ng and
f lmmg new TV sertes
featurmg sexy JOurnal st No
more batt~red hat an\1
ramcoat Th s guy outfitted
by Lebow and has hatr done
by Warren Beatty who s
sometunes stdekick Got his
start by exposmg CIA In
flu ence In Beaver utah
school system and rockeU!d
to fame thanks to kindly
network menlton by Walter
Cronkite Sexy don t forget
sexy he wears Spauldmg
sweat band whtle dtctatlng
stones to secretary who qwt
JOb at Playboy to come o
exc rtr ng Washin gton news

to negotiate volWIIary steel
agreemepfs w th our foretgn
trad ng partners U that lalla
wcreased quotas will be
mposed by June of this year
On the footwear proposal the
Prestden has chosen to
Although the Untted States provtde qu cker trade
cont nues o show a strong adJUS menl asststance to
pos on n ts overa I foreign workers rather than impose
rade and balance of h gher Uinffs or quotas In
payments ptcture certatn both wstances I have
segments of Amer can m commumcated my strong
dustry are be ng severely support for American In
hurt by tmports These n dustry to he President
Certainly the Un ted St.les
dustrtes deserve help etther
n he form of htgher tar !Is should avotd becOming In
on selected mports o a volved n a trade war which
would beneftt no one On the
tougher quota system
Rehel fo domesltc tn other hand many foreign
dustrtes harmed by mports tnduslrtes whtch export Ia the
ts prov ded for under the Umled States recetve sublenns of the Trade Reform s dtes n one form or another
Act of 1974 Under he law s from hetr own governments
provts ons workers pu out of These substd es can allow
work by mports quahfy for fore gn ndustrtes to keep
ad]usltnent programs They employment up but wages
leading to a product
would be e g ble for weekly low
benefits of 70 percent of thetr th at American manufac
average weekly wage for 52 turers have a diff cull time
weeks In addtt on they could competing w th In effect
quahfy for ra n ng JOb hese foreign government
search and relocatiOn subs d1es provtde an unfatr
allowances However t s far advantage over the Amencan
more destreable Ia avo d thts free market system We
s tuahon ent re y by nsurmg canno continue to tolerate
the An er can ndus r es are such lneqwties tn the world
not put n the pos tton where radtng system wtlhout
they must ay off workers due taking remedtal action The
o unfa mport co npel t on alternaltve 1s to stand by and
Recently the Amer can watch the end of slgn!Dcant
sU!el and footwear ndus es domesltc 1ndustrtes putting
have been espec ally ha tl h t thousands of Americans out
by fo re gn competttlon The of work and onto the unem
U S Internal onal Trade ployment rolls
Co n m ss on has recom
The Trade Act of 1974 was
mended to the Pres dent hat des gned to assure a swift
he ncrease tar If rates tn and certatn response to
order to equahze the com fore gn tmport restrictions
petlttve balance The Trade export subs dtes and price
Act g ves the Pres dent 60 d scr m nalton and other
days to act on the lTC unlatr foretgn trade prac
recommenda on In the case t ces We have now reached
ct the footwear ndustry the a po nt where the Act is hemg
ecommendahon was o atse tested for he ftrst time The
he mport dulles by up to 35 proper response should be
percent For the stee n one that wtll protect
duslry the !TC proposed American workers and In
hmttmg mports to 146 000 dustry from unfair com
tons n 1976 some 12 percent peht on whtle at the same
be ow the 1974 level The trne preserv ng an eqwtable
Pres den has nd cated tha
and v able system of In
he Un ed States wtll at temp~ lerna onal trade

tenms players chased after
by wtves of senators coun
selors to lonely presidents I
see one eptsode where star
gets $100 000 loan from
Rockefeller wh1ch is exposed
by lousy conservat ve
Have socko dea for new
bureaucrat and audrence only
telev s on sertes that w II
learns
n last 30 seconds
make us both rich Well me
money !!" for new Public s
r ch and you rtcher
Right to Know !oundat on
Disregard at your own per I
Star works for hugely n
Can always go to ABC
fluent
al newspaper of
Everybody else Is I hear
course
Has crummy old
Proposal s a r der to the
editor
who
ts throwback to
new status of newspaper
days
of
nverted
pyram ds
JOurnal sts formerly known
and
other
Egypt
al lore
as reporters Medta cr tic Dr
Crummy
edtlor
can
l un
Ralph Lowenstein says we
derstand
Journaltsts
who
ride
are n a reporter personality
n
280
SL
s
drtven
by
W
arren
era Woodward and Bern
Beattey He says Whatever
ste tn Evans and Novak scene
Age
no
matter
Uttle
gray
happened to H L Mencken
Redford and Hoffman Media
flecks
n
ha
r
mtght
help
and
keeps bottle of rye tn
chtc s here You I reca
actua
lly
Older
cats
are
drawer
w th fr ed baloney
dur ng Iowa pohltcal caucus
c1t zens bought tickets to see making 1t hese days Black sandwtch Charles Laughton
nat onal journah sls cover guy maybe I m thtnking would have heen r ght How
ballohng Scrtbes are new sex prelim nar ly Ryan 0 Neal or about Art Carney Crummy
symbol Bill Pal of IJUne wtth Sidney Po I er Someone who ed tor has son who s
New York T mes says can rea y co nvey the threaten ng to run away from
group es somettrnes fo low frustrahons and rewards of home f he can t take JOur
press bus attached to J mmy Journal sm ndustry today nal sm n college
You know pals to famous
Ser es should be smash way
Carter campa gn
to show grass roots concern
of star journal sts today No
U S nvolvement anywhere
I love a parade
except Alabama Lunch at
~
Longworth bwld ng ca!eter a
wtth progress ve memers of
House of Representat ves
Dram at c phone calls to
hapless mdustrtal moguls on
the lake or gtve Guest shots
by J mmy Bresl n Jmuny
Reston and Jtmmy F dler All
By Ray Cromlev
the wh le crummy ed tor ts
WASHINGTON Pohtrcally a lot of us have been looking worr ed about w fe who ts
at he wrong horses
caugh readmg star s column
We ve been analyzmg each pres dential cand date - warts alone n her bathroom
and all and each of thetr prom ses We should be looking
B ll n a lime of Rona
more sertously at who we re gong to elect to the Senate and Barrett and G B Trudeau
House of Representahves
the ser es can not mtss When
Most presldenttal cand dates are proms n~ change But newspape ra ses ts news
most prestdents who have attempted change have been stand pr ce star wr tes
hamstrung by Congress except m times of war or the Great fur ously about mflat onary
A sl p of the 1p has sunk more than one
and reqwred to read a ttrnely and Depresston
rend aga nsl people who can
presidential candtdate s shtp and f h s
authorltaltve new book on the his ory and
J rnm) Carter makes much ado about how many afford t leas and crummy
remark abou ethn c pur ty doesn
present stat"" of Amer1ca s wh le ethn c
dupl cattng and overlymg layers of bureaucracy he would ed tor tr es to take away hts
scuttle Jtrnm e Car er t won t be for wan
Purswng the Amer can Dream by eltrn nate George Wallace makes equally cutting
of h s rivals try ng to make the most of tt
Richard Krtckuy (pubbshed by Anchor statements about the bureaucrats who run he federal govern mlernat onal atr travel card
Pub sher steps n however
Interest ngly enough the peop e who
Books also ava able In hardcover from ment often wtth I ttle control from the Wh te House
She
IS 11onderful won an and
presum ably should have heen most offended
Ind ana Umvers ty Press)
Pres dent Nrxon whatever his other weaknesses prom ses a compro se poor
by the Georgtan s statement
black
He was moved to wr te the book says developed and pr ~ented to Congress !"me of the most
peop e wll get 10 pe cent
Amer cans - are no the ones who are
Kr ckus by the appallmg Ignorance
revolutionary proposals for cuttmg the s ze of the federal discoun on subscnpt1on
keep ng the controversy al ve
about working Amerrcans (wh ch most government we d seen n many years
pr ce Star lea ns of th s
For he record wha Car er sa d n
ethn cs are among academ cs pollt c ans
Mr Ntxon s progr81)1 for shifttng and comb rung wh le accompany ng
Soutth Bend lnd the other day was
government bureaucrats Cap tol Hill aides departments and bureaus made anyth ng Carter and other
I have noth ng aga nst the commun ly
and radical community act v sts And one preSjdenllal candtdates proposed seem lame n compartson Caltlorn a governor to Zen
that s made up of people who are Pohsh or
mtght add among George Wallace s The NIXon proposals are f led away in the cab nets of retreat and pa r of them
C~echoslovakian or French-Canadian or
pomty headed ltberals who are seldom Congress onal commttlees The Senate and House ne ther watch B g Sur a sundown
backs who are try ng to rna nUun the ethn c
affected by the wrenchmg soc al changes adopted the Ntxon concepts nor came up wtth agreed-on wtth Itt le more hope I have
m II on deas hke th s
purtty of the r ne ghborhoods Thts s a
they demand of others
counter legtslatton
I see extraord nary spmoffs
atural nclmat on on the part of people
One th ng Krtckus attempts to do ts set
Even when Congress has voted decentraltzatlon from
show Your mar'ketmg
the ecord stratght on alleged wh te ethntc programs the end result seems to be a heaVIer ccncentralton
l.ater n lnd ana polls he added I would
execut
ves w ll understand
never though condone any sort of
rae sm and he c1tes abundant evidence to of federal bureaucracy not a reduct on
How
about
30 dash tee shtrts
discrtmmatton agamst say a black family
dispute the wtdespread nohon that wh te
There was talk a while back of the new federal sm
or any othr lam ly from mov ng nto \hat
workers n general and certatn ethnic Revenue sharmg was mtended to shift a hefty porlton of what s Kill box wastebaskets Soon
neighborhood But I don t thmk govenunenl
groups n part cular are more likely to ppose funded n Washington back to the states Achunk of money was everyone wtll want to own
ought del berately to try to break down an
black bids for ractal just ce than other voted But the federal bureaucracy proceeded to expand n bo le of rubber cement
ethmcally or ented commun ty
segments of the whtle populattonn
maJor areas the decentraltzahon t was supposed to affect autographed by 0 Neal or
del! be ately by nJecbng nta t a member of
S nee the New Deal he wr tes the wh te Th s federal expans on of course was approved by Congress Po t er Already I understand
ano her race Thts ts contrary to the best
eUtn cs have gtven the bulk of hetr votes to
Carter and some fellow candidates have also talked of zero a Jack Anderson noU!book ts
mterest of the commun ty It creates
the Democraltc party and have supported budge ng looking at every federal program and agency from worth a small fortune We re
tm ted on y by publ c taste
disharmony It creates hatred
leg slat on vttal to the welfare of needy scratch each year
Arch e Bunker has had t
Had Carter used any other word than
Americans Wtlhout the r support the
It ts well tn this respect to remember that a number of
Btll
Carol Burnett wouldn t
purtty
had he satd ethmc character
progress ve coalttton necessar) to come to pres dents mcluding Mr Ford and Mr N xon have sen the
know
Watergll'te from
or ethn c ntegr ty
at most a smal
gr ps wtth our nat on s most pressmg Senate and House long I sts of programs and agencies Utat no
W
ebster
s
Jornaltsm s the
squall rather than a hurrtcane would have
problems s doomed to failure
longer serve a useful purpose Mr Ntxon and Mr Ford m ght
kick
get
tt
on
Full detatls on
broken over h s head and those who were so
One reason a lot of blacks st ll 1ke have saved everyone a lot of bOther by forgetting the exeretse
reply
Name
of show
qwck to denounce htrn m ght even have
J mmy Carter may he that they real ze what before tt was started
Forgive
Us
Our
Press
reDected that what he really sa d ws
soc al anchor potnts to use Kr ckus
The number of agenctes programs and funct ons cut was so
Passes
Tom
ernmenUy worth saymg
term the white ethmc urban concentrat ons small tt s hard to track
What a departure tt would have been If
are and that the development of the same
One agency head testifted that he had nothing to do for years
excep
amuse himself His staff members were busy only when
some of the other Democrabc asptrants had
sense of communtty cohesrveness and
nsen just a b t above poltt cs-as usual to
cultW'al pnde among blacks will go a long they could find personal errands to occupy themselves He was
po nt out that everybody makes verbal goofs
way toward solvmg thetr and the country s successful as I recall tn gettmg his agency abolished but t
took a great deal of personal effort on hts part
~
MONTREAL UP!
and that Carter s unfortunate chorce of
problems
We ve seen what s happened to energy The PreSident Gene Games a 5-foot 7 1~
words should be understood n the ontext n
In any event t s gomg to take more
whtch they were made
than an error n phraseology to stop any has a program Numerous senators and representatives have pound defenstve back
Wednesday s gned a one year
All those wh o Jumped on Jtmm e Carter
cand date who can wtn the allegtance of both thetrs but not Congress
Hav ng fatled n welfare domest c economtcs and contract as player..:oach w th
should be g ven ten lashes w th a wet kuski
groups
assorted programs Congress IS now movmg energetically mto the Montreal Alouettes of the
foretgn affatrs In a negative way Congress has come up wtth Canadtan Football League
Sen Hubert Humphrey who sounds
N1xon s massive re -e lectton plu a y obstacles on a sertes of prestdential proposals - on Angola on
Ga nes a graduate of
more I ke a pres den tal cand dale every
Ftnally n 1974 n voter reachon to achons m Southeas As a and on trade agreements w th the UCLA wtll be startmg h s
day Jet fly recently wtth some stingmg
Watergate the Democrats swept to a two SoVIet Union Checks on a pres dent are a good th ng but 16th CFI season hts etghth m
cnt c sm of the present crop of candidates
thtrds majority In the 435-seat House and negative blocks wtth no pos live set of similar programs leave an Alouette umform
lnclud ng no only Prestdent Ford and h s
almost the same majOr ly tn the 100-seat a prestdent rudderless
The Alouettes
a so
chtcf nval Ronald Reagan but those fellow
Sena e
In ttrnes of great depress on as m the Franklm Roosevelt announced the stgnmg of
Democrats who are try ng to out
The Democrats have not always or even era a chartsmatic pres dent can carry Congress along for place-kicker Don SWeet to a
Republtcan the Repubhcans by runn ng
frequenUy been able Ia moblUze these awh le - but study sometunes the number of Roosevelt vetoes three-year contract
against b g government
maJOr ties of course and both Nixon and
The ssue he told an enthus ashe
Ford have made generous use of the
audience at the annual convention of
presidential veto
Vlrgmta Young Democrats m Arhngton the
But exceedmgly few vetoes were ever
other day 1s not government b g or small
cast because Congress was spending less
It s government that works
than the preSident wanted or bacause some
If Democra s liFe go ng to ask to govern
new program Congress had set up was too
the country he sAl they had batter begin
modest
believ ng n the government they seek to
To clatm tbat the Republicans have
occupy
occup ed the government for eight con
As for the Repubhcans They didn t
secul ve years and thlll! should have heen
p obensuvng Indvduas
cross the Potomac JUSt ast week In the past
able to mold It closer to thetr destres ts By Lawrence E Lamb MD Ia e the hanges a e ap
DEAR DR LAMB - My proxtma ely the same I don t lose the ab Illy o cope with
24 years he Republicans have been m 16
grossly to overstate the powers that res de
mother at age 61 an m need to deta I these because newproblems Sta ed stmply
They ve been n e1ght consecuttve years
m the Oval Office
hey are all too fam har n they lose th etr prev ous
smce 1969 No.. I there was a mess when
The President of the Un led Stales does tell gent act ve woman
what
was our soc ety In med cal c r capactty to learn even though
they came tn they ve had etght years to
mdeed command unmense power and deve oped
clean tt up If he government was tao big
prestige But he ts also the pnsoner of a dtagnosed as cerebra des we call hese dementia they may s ll be able to
somet mes sen le handle old lam liar tasks
when they came n they ve had etght years
vas~ unmoveable mpervtous bureaucracy atrophy Four years later she and
We do not know what
to make tl smaller If there are too many
that could dr ve even such a forceful ch ef had gradual y deteriOrated to dementia although t must be
stated
tha
th
s
condrt
on
can
causes
th s cond ton but
rules and regulations they ve had etghl
execut ve as Lyndon B Johnson up the wall the po nt where she Is a body
occUI
at
a
relat
vely
young
these
d
sorders
are usuaally
w thout a mmd unable to
years to clear them out
on occaston
Included
as
part
of the picture
age
spec
f
ca
lly
tn
later
Thts Is effective campa gn rhetor c
The president can push a button and speak or feed herself and
mtddle
age
n
some
people
of
agmg
However
med ctne
Unfortunately however tt fa Is to wtthstand
launch World War Ill and end ctvil zat1on as apparently
unable
to
Women
seetn
to
be
more
has
long
had
a
U!ndency
Ia
even casual scrutmy Under the peculiar
we know tt He can abo ssue an order and recogn ze us. There s no
pol t cal system we have n th s country the
have t effectively countermanded by some lam ly h story of such an tll suscepttble o hts dtsorder at classtfy drsorders that are not
party occupy ng the Wh U! House ts not
faceless deputy asststant unqersecrelary or ness so we assumed perhaps an early age than are men well understood as ag ng
Mosl of these d sorders are only tof nd later that they are
necessarily the party m power Not
admtn!Btrator somewhere down th~ lme
a head tnJury was behind tt
compete power anyway
The candidates Republican and However another member of assoctated 11 th actual true dtseases A good
Take those last e ght years Humphrey
Democraltc altke are correctly reading the the lam y s now showtng changes n th~ cells of the example here s the common
speaks of In 1968 wh le Richard Nixon
popular pulse when they campaign agamst s1mtlar symptoms Can you bratn and he cond t on can hea attack We now know
narrowly defeated him for the prestdency
b g government It Is not the candidates tell us what causes th s occur tn tnd vtduals w th that heart disease can bag n
bratn nJury as may be seen tn young men m the r early
the Democrats managed to retain control of
but the people - the people who lime and cond t on
both Houses of Congress According to the
again have voted for more government
DEAR READER
I un some tmes n boxers who had twenties and thus s hardly a
World Almanac Ntxon was the f rst
larger government more activist govern ders and thoroughly your repea ed excess ve head d sease of agmg
Somettmcs d sease of the
prestdent smce Zachary Taylor n 1848 o
men but who are now dlsllllll! oned because d stress I w sh there were n1urtcs The development of
begin his ftrst term with the opposition purl)
not all problems are solveable tiy some good ans.. er to gtve symploms may be gradual or arler es o the btatn con
m control of Congress
Washington and because Utere Is no free y u Your mo her s cond !ton more rap d One r he r bu es to thts problem In
In the 1970 off year elections thE
lunch - these are the ones Hubert Humph ts I e sa c as ha wh ch carl es s gns s l c other nstances the deger
occurs n n an) older people d m n sl cd ab I I) fo nat on of e bram cells
Democrats aga n retatned control of
rey should be taking to task
seems to be mdependen of
Whether
begms early o
Congress and ve aga n n 1972 desp le
By Tom Tiede
WASHINGTON - Over
mght wtre to Wtlham S
Paley chatrm an of the
board CBS

~

RAY CROMLEY

Wrong horses, bad

Editorial comment,
opinion, features

races, weak issues

Cultural pride a possible solution

Non-candidate's non sequitur pitch

DR. LAMB

In February Gov Rhodes
announced the hegmn ng of
the Golden Buckeye card
program for senior c tlzens
wh ch would allow Ohtoans 65
and olde to get dtscounts at
State parks trans t systems
and bus nesses tha agreed to
pa t c pa e Representat ves
from he State Comm sston
on Ag ng have been con
ta c ng bus nesses
throughout the state asking
them to parhc pate
In a progress report th s
week E eanor Thomas
d rector of he Me gs County
Counc I on Ag ng sa d
The coopera on and
enthustasm shown by most of
the bus nesses n Metgs
County toward the program
has been very rewardmg
Most sen or cttizens

IVe

on a

ftxed ncome Thts program
can be of great help to them
even a few penn es saved
means a lot f for example
your ncome Is less than $200
a month It s wonderful to
hve m a place where people
care abou others When all
bus nesses m the stale have
been contacted a directory
w ll be published of those who
are part c pahng n the
program
We hope to see 100 percent
parltc pat on
n Me gs
County Th s would not only
help sen or cit zens but t
would a so keep buy ng
dollars m Metgs County
Eleanor Thomas D rector of
the Metgs County Counctl on
Agmg said
She further expla ned that
to date the fo owtng
bus nesses m Metgs County

•

•

dtsease to the artenes
What we really need s a
better understand ng of the
fundamental process of agtng
and how to prevent tl The
truth ts we are very clo~e to
bemg able to control
b ologtcal agm g That
statement may startle some
people but we already un
derstand a great deal of the
regenerahon process how
cells are replaced and even
how to make duplicates of
frogs from the nucleus of an
mteshnal cell (popularly
called clomng) Those who
want m!ormatlon on what we
understand about aging can
send 50 cents for The Health
Letter number I 7 Perpetual
Youth Agmg Send a long
stamped
self addressed
envelope for matltng Ad
dress your letter to me m
care of this newspaper P 0
Box 1551 Rad o Ctty Statton
New York NY 10019

•

have agreed to parltctpate m
the program New York
Clothing Store Elberfelds
Chapman Shoes Marguerite
Shoe Shop Semor Citizens
Craft Shop Stmon s Grocery
and The Fabrtc Shop m
Pomeroy
and
Bahr
Clothters The Sewmg Center
and the New Mtddleporl Cab
Company 1!1 Middleport
Busmesses Interested and
not contacted can call the
Sentor Cihzens CenU!r for
mformalton
Busmesses
wh ch participate wtll be
g ven a decal to place tn their
wmdows If there ts no decal
semor ctl zens should check
wtth the owner or manager to
fmd out I he ts part ctpatmg
n the program
Over 900 senior ctt zens n
Metgs County have made
appl cations for the Golden
Buckeye Card Volunteers
w h the Retired Senior
Volunteer Program are
f lhng out applications at the
Semor Cttizens Center In
Pomeroy from 10.2 Mondays
through Frtdays and on
Wednesdays at the Senior
Cthzens Club n Rutland
Other locahons from 10.2
are Reedsvllle
Ftre
Department Wednesday
Apnl 28 Long Bottom Hensley Store Apr 1 26
through
Aprtl
30
Harrtsonvtlle - Semor
C t zens Club Room at the
Elementary School Tuesday
Apnl ?:1 Racme - Vtllage
Counctl Bwldmg Thursday
Apr 1 29
0 her locations wiii be
announced later If a senior
ctttzen Is phySically Wlable to
get to one of these locations
he should call the Semor
Ctt1zens Center 992-7888 or
992-7884 and a volunteer or
staff member will go to theperson s home

Brooks ts gomg as good as nmson to relax somewhat
mtst guys on the team after Baltunort erupted for a
maybe bette~ said Weaver sea!Kln-!ngh I! hits Including
Wednesday nrght after four doubles
RobiiiSOn batting just 153
The Orioles put the game
entering the game smashed away m the I fth when Paul
a run-scormg double that Blatr smgled moved up 011 a
cltrnaxed a three-run ftlth walk to Bobby Gr1ch and
mnmg tn the Or oles 4-2 scored on a throwtng error by
VIctory over the Cal fornta ex.()riole catcher Andy Etch
ebaren Rookie Andreas
Angels
As a team the Orioles were Mora Uten scored Grieb with
hittmg 183 before the game- a scarifice Dy and after Tony
an ommous I gure that Muser singled Robinson dou
obvtously gave Weaver bled off the leftfteld wall for

For any other player on any
other team a 153 batting
average m ght eastly be
looked upon as a one-way
ticket to Sheboygan thts time
of year
Brooks RobiiiSon however
s no other player And
netther at this point In time
are Ute Baltunore Ortoles
Just ask thetr manager Earl
Weaver

By DIU MADDEN
UPISporla Writer
Dave Roberts (3-0) hurled
his second two-ltltter of the
season since be~ acqutred
by Detrott m a winter deal
wrth Houston The Tigers
backed Roberts w th six runs
In the Utlrd Alex Johnson
drove home two runs wtth a
triple and a single for an 8-1
WID

Seniorless Eagles take

~

Marauders third

lumps with 10-0 score
ARCHIE GRIFFIN

Archie heads hike-bike
Arch e Griff n has accepted
the honoraQ cha rmanshtp of
the Fourth Annual Hike
Btke for Retarded Ctltzens
tt was announced today
The slate w de fund rals ng
event sponsored by he
Me gs Assoc at on for
Retarded C hzens will be
held on Sa turday May 15
accord ng to Frank Messana
resource
development
plann er for the Ohto
Assoc at on for Retarded
Cttizens Messana sa d the
Me gs Assoc a on hopes to
a se $3000
Gr ffm former Ohto Slate
Buckeye All Amer ca n
unn ng back and twtce the
country s Hetsma n tr ophy
w nner was recently drafted

by the Cmcmnat Bengals and
w II JOtn the team m the fall
You know a lot of team
work fight and deter
nunat on goes mto bu ldmg a
champ onshtp team and tt s
great to be a wmner sa1d
Gr ff n n a statement W th
that same kind of U!amwork
we can all make Htke Btke
76 a great Sl!Ccess and
make some spectal people
w nners
Hank Cleland of Rt I Long
Bottom s coordlnatmg the
H ke Btke m Metgs County
Further nformat on on how
the publ c can partictpale can
he obta ned by calbng Rea
Roush 992 3232 Jesste
M ght
742 3089
Hank
C eland 985-4112 or R ck
Crow 247 3737

Golden Buckeye Card
progress is reported

Her mother grows senile

•

Roberts hurls second two-hitter,
picks up third win for Tiger '9'

Washington
Column

With the semors gone on the
sen or trip the Eagles of
Eastern I elded a relatrvely
nexper enced team and
travelled to Belpre Wed
nesday even ng but came
home on the wrong end of a
10-ll score
Belpre outhlt the VIB tors
only 6-3 but the hosts com
IJUited no errors and thetr
pttcher McKinney tssued no
walks wh le fanning s xleen
to IW'n n a fine performance
Be pre p eked up all the
runs they needed n the th rd
when they plated three runs
Their lead ng h Iter was
S zemore who tnpled and the

In a guadrangular meet at
Athens Wednesday the MHS
Marauders came home wtlh a
thtrd place ltmsh Athens won
the meet w th 77 po nts
Wellston was second with
58
Meigs had 36 and
Jackson got 15 po nts
Once
aga n
Bobby
Wthamson showed h s
prowess tn the dashes as he
won the IOOand 200yard runs
Me gs next meet s Tuesday
when Athens hos ts the
SEOAL neet
Followmg s a hst of Me gs
scorers and thetr nd vidual
marks
100 yard dash
W1ll amson 1 1n A

other ftve Belpre htls were all
s ngles
Catcher Bruce Rtffle had a
s ngle n three lrtps for
Eastern wh le sophomore
Joe Kuhn led the hrtt ng
deparltnent wtth as ngle and
double m three trtps
Eastern p lchers comb ned
to gtve up four walks wh le
str king out three but the
defense coughed up stx
errors The Eagles hos t
Trtmble FridAy mght
Eastern 000 000 0-- 0 3 6
Belpre
003 610 X 10 9 0
Evans (LP) LaComb (4
and Riffle McKmney and
Ingold

440 lard dash - Rawhngs
(3rd ) 56 9
880 Relay
2nd I 39 3
(Scttes Stanley Simpson
WII arnson
880 run - Granda! 3rd) 2 10 4
180 low hurdles - Sclles
(3rd 22 6
220 dash - Wlhamson I )
- 24 I tic (3rd S mpson
and Grover (Athens) 24 9
M1le Relay 3rd 3 47 8
S mpson Jeffers Granda
Rllwl ngs
Shot put (Stewart 3rd)
43 7
D scus - Slew art 3rd) 1196

Falcons are errorless in 8-3 win
Behmd errorless defense
the Wahama Wh le Falcons
went away from Rae ne
Wednesday even ng w th an
8-3 victory
Two double plays got the

as he came rn to second The
Tornadoes mounted a threat
tn the second w1th the bases
full and two out but rei ever
and ~tnner T Tucker got
Cundtff o go down sw ng ng

Falcons out of bases loaded
Jams - one m the fourth
mn ng came on a bouncer to
th rd near the bag The thtrd
sacker sU!pped on the base
and then got he other runner

. the SCOREBOARD
Ma o League Stancl ngs

By Un ted P ess In e na ona

Standmgs
Averages
Results

Wahama struck n the first
w th hree b1g runs on on ly
one h t Sayre drew a base on
balls Reed was safe on an
error Goldsberry reached
the same way and Dav s
ollowed with the h t
In the sec~d the F 1lcons
scored what 1lfOved to be the
wlnmng rWI on three s ngles
Scott led tt off Sayre also
connected and fhompson
knocked In Scot w th h s base
knock

Nat onal League

Eas

Sport Parade

W

Pet

GB

6
8 6
88
8 9
8
9

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
NEW YORK UP!) Gene Bearden s jet black hatr ts as
dark as ever and he rsn t sure why that should be except maybe
tt has someth ng to do wtth hts latruly tree He s part Cherokee
lnd an He also 11e ghs exactly what he d d p tching for the
Cleveland lnd ans more than 20 years ago but he knows the
reason for that Not too much food nottoo much beer
Ftfly ftve now Bearden st II has that soft natural easy way
about htm and after you meet htm and talk wtth htrn if
someone should come up and ask you would you buy a used car
from a man like hmn your answer most likely would be yes
That would be good for Gene Bearden because that s the way
he makes his hVIng now
He s general manager for Plaza Auto Sales m West Helena
Ark but unless some customer starts talking baseball he
never brmgs tl up Drst and another thing he never talks about
s how an a urn num plate had to be put tn hts skull after h s
sh p the USS Qu ncy was btl off Guadalcanal dur ng WorJd
War II
What Gene Bearden would much rather lttlk about 18 h s
w fe Lots whom he s been marr ed to for 32 years and who has
been wr tmg songs the past f ve
She s good very good says Bearden Every year the
Memphis Song Wnters Assoc at 011 p cks out what tt cons ders
the 10 outstanding songs Two of hers were p1cked last year
and two more th s year None of her songs have been pubi!Bhed
ye but shes taking 011e of them When Love Walked
Away to NashVIlle next Wednesday and we re keepmg our
f ngers crossed
A rar y n that he was a lefthander who threw a knuckler
Bearden pttched nearly 200 games w1th the Indians Senators
T gers Browns and White Sox yet he s generally remembered
for only one
Thai one was the playoff game he pttched for Cleveland
agaiiiSt Boston m 1948 In those days the only tune they had a
playoff was if two clubs ended the regular season m a t e
There was none of th s Utree-out-of ftve It was sudden death
You played only one game and the winner automatically was
m the World Seres
The day he!ore the regular season ended that year was a
Saturday and Bearden blanked the Ttgers 11~ for hts 19th
VIctory Gomg mto the !mal day Sunday the Indians were m
f rst place w th a one-game lead over the Red Sox but the
T gers heal Bob Feller and the Red Sox defeated the Yankees
creatmg a ue
Th s mean there would he a playoff for the pennant m
Boston the followtng day
Lou Boudreau the Indians manager held a meeting In the
clubhouse after Feller was beaten The Cleveland players
gathered around sens ng he was about to name his plJiyoff
game p tcher They felt he d go wtth Bob Lemon who had last
p tched on Frtday and would be worktng with two days rest
Boudreau got r ght to the pomt
Bearden wtll p tch he sad U there s anyUtmg you
wanna dtscuss let s discuss rt r ght now
You ve been peking em all year piped up second base
man Joe Gordon So f you sa) t s Bearden Uten it s Bear
den
The lrtp to Boston wasn t eventful
We bad a httle crap game on the Ira n m the men s room
recalls Bearden !lost my $10 and went to bed Next morning
they told me ,Satchel Patge won about $35-$40 While the game
was go ng 011 Boudreau passed by and saw what we were
doing He dtdn t say anything He knew it was just a way of
break ng the tension
Pitch ng w h only one days rest and m Fen way Park
whtch Is like death row for most left-ltanders Bearden
eltrnmated the Red Sox 8-3 wtth a ftve h tter the followmg
day In the World Sertes he shut out Ute Boston Braves m the
thtrd ga111e and relteved Lemon n the s xth to save Utat game
and wtap up the world champ oMhtp for Cleveland
Gene Bearden seldom talks about Utat though He d much
rather tell you about those songs his wlfP. wrl es He says she s
gond ve•y good He alsb says you II be hearmg about her soon

L

5
5002
4
2
46
2~
400 3

A

an a

GB

C nc nna
Hous on
A an a
San D ego
Los Ange es

Ame an Leagu~
New Yo k a lex ppd an

o d we

Bs on a K C ppd

M

Amer can League

East

W L Pet
9 3 50
3 21

a

5

545

2

6 500

J

429

Pet

5JS
500

Texas
Oak and
Kansas C v
Ch cago
M nneso a

4

5

20 240

583

ooo- 9

4

Rose still upset
with Tug McGraw
PHILADELPHIA (UPI)
Ill get htm says Pete
Rose
The Cine nnat1 Reds star
was referrmg to Philadelphia
Ph Is relief pitcher Tug
McGraw who drew Rose s
tre wtth a high hard pttch In
Tuesday rught s game
Later In the game won 7-3
by Cmcmnati Rose ran
toward the Phlllles dugout
apparently after McGraw
but was restrained before he
got there by teammate
Johnny Bench
Afterwards m the Reds
locker room Rose was stll
th nkmg about McGraw
I m not gomg to forget It
he said Ill get him I ve
been playmg this game too
lon g not to know what was
gomg on
McGraw
called the
disputed pitch a purpose
p tch
I thought Rose would be
lookmg for a screwball away
from him so I pitched him
ns de sa d the little lefty
I did what I wanted to do 011
the next pitch struck hun
out with a shder on the
outside
Rose agreed It was a
purpose
pitch
but
disagreed with McGraw s
del niUon of the term
II d be bard for me to win
a batting trtle this year If that
ball had hit me In Ute head
ftgured Rose who picked up
two hits Tuesday night
brmging his red hot total to 31
hlts In 15 games for a sizzling
477 average
The disputed pllch was
made n the top of Ute ninth
Inning and Rose headed for
the Phlls dugout just after
taking the field for the bottom
of the ninth
McGraw was standing in
the dugout wtth a finger
po nted toward his head
satd Rose
Explained McGraw
I
didn t do that until afler Rose
made an obscene gesture at
me Anyway when I pointed
a finger at my head I was

telling Pete he was crazy not
that I trted to hit him In the
head with a pitch
Reds first base coach Ruu
Nixon was concerned about
any possible future Incidents
We II be watching Pete
he said We don t want him
getting hurt In any ~
all and betng out for part of
Ute season
The Reds dropped Ute Ultrd
and final game of the aerlel
7-6 Wednesday nlgl!t

TAGDAYSET
RUTLAND
Rutland tag
dey will he held Saturday
May I All pony league lltUe
league players and pareqta
are to mcc tat the high school
In Rutland at 9 a m

BIU FLEltHER
1258

Powell St

Middtopo t
PH 99i 7155

"See me for

llomeowaen
Insurance frod
State Farm- till
world\~~

~

Lilteaaooclaei&amp;.bbor,
S!Jte nrm is there:

t························..·

4 90

Ch ago
00 000 000
9
T ave s Rod guez 9 and
Po e Wood 2 3 and Ess an
GB WP T ave s 2 0

5
8

waukee OOJ 000 00

the f nal run of the Inn ug
Utree-run Brewers th~
II s mce to get loW' runs
lrutlng Utat did In While &amp;II
said southpaw Ken Holtzman starter Wilbur Wood now :lot
who was the beneftctary of Robin Yount and Gortltlln
the Orioles bat revival He Thomas drove home Ute other
scattered etght hits Including Brewer runs The game was
three by Rusty Torres
played before only 11« fans
Elsewhere In the American Indios I Tw1111 0
League Clevela nd routed
Rick MaMing sparked a 14Minnesota ~ Milwaukee hlt Cleveland attac~b
put away Chicago 4 I and driving home Utree runs
Detro t
romped
over a homer and a double
Oakland 8-1 Boston Kansas Eckersley (:1,.2) worked the
City and Texas New York f1rst six lMinf!S to gain 1\18
were rained out
victory for the Indlltll
stnkmg out six walking ~
and yielding two Infield
Brewers t While Sox 1
Don Mone) smacked a two singles Don Hood flnL!Iied
run single to highlight a UP

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356

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Compact model1
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Heavy duty models
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M1110 l.eague Leaders
By Un ed P ess nte nat ona
Lead ng Ba te s

(based on 20 at bats
Na onal League

G AB R
3 43
Rose c n
6 68
Craw rd S L
26
Rader SO
4
S a ge 'P
i4
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3

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NY

Monday Ch

ooo 205 ooo-

6

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2 488
33 485
2 462

7 45
8 •o9
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395

G ley Cn
59
23 390
G 0 e NY
4
8 38]
Jhns ne Ph
3 47 0 8 383
Ame can League
G AB R H Pet
P n e a NY
0 3
7 6 432
Lynn Bos
9 33 5 j 424
Pa ek KC
0 30 4 2 400
HoonDe
2460839
Rando ph NY 2 36 9
389
BeCev
244 9
a6
Chamblss NY 2 5J B 9 358
F sk BM
40 0
350
1 9 1 Har ah Tex
0
2
344
Fou p aye s td w h J'JJ
Hon Runs
Na ona League
S hm d
Ph
K ngman
NY 9
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Ame ican League H6 on
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2 5 Chamb ss and Munson NY
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t-

Today ts Thursday Apr!
29 the !20th day of 1978 wlUt

~~~tiolforllio;~o:r~~~eil:=~, I.

-

YrN duptlcat. noluro • """ molhod ot bullcllna 1011 11r
I ty wltll 1 Gllaon llllt&lt; Hlrt'l wily Glllall'a par1oct
al c ng and b-"t ocllon ml- up 1011 and ,,..niC
molter tlloroutlh y
forma a - -•~oo~~.-... AI
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IUIIIbiO 1111 llt Wdlllo
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T1re Pr1ces
In the Area

Its

BEND
nRE CENTER

Ebersbach Hardware
Everything In Hardware

llOW MAIN

POMEROY

OPEN FRI TIL 8- SAT TIL 5

~

......................... ~.
\"1

I

�3- The Daily Sentinel Middleport Pomeroy 0 ThW'IIIay Apri129 1976

TOM TIEDE

Watch out, Hollywood The stars are rn D.,C.
Anyway tdea s to hegtn
lmmed ale wrtt ng and
f lmmg new TV sertes
featurmg sexy JOurnal st No
more batt~red hat an\1
ramcoat Th s guy outfitted
by Lebow and has hatr done
by Warren Beatty who s
sometunes stdekick Got his
start by exposmg CIA In
flu ence In Beaver utah
school system and rockeU!d
to fame thanks to kindly
network menlton by Walter
Cronkite Sexy don t forget
sexy he wears Spauldmg
sweat band whtle dtctatlng
stones to secretary who qwt
JOb at Playboy to come o
exc rtr ng Washin gton news

to negotiate volWIIary steel
agreemepfs w th our foretgn
trad ng partners U that lalla
wcreased quotas will be
mposed by June of this year
On the footwear proposal the
Prestden has chosen to
Although the Untted States provtde qu cker trade
cont nues o show a strong adJUS menl asststance to
pos on n ts overa I foreign workers rather than impose
rade and balance of h gher Uinffs or quotas In
payments ptcture certatn both wstances I have
segments of Amer can m commumcated my strong
dustry are be ng severely support for American In
hurt by tmports These n dustry to he President
Certainly the Un ted St.les
dustrtes deserve help etther
n he form of htgher tar !Is should avotd becOming In
on selected mports o a volved n a trade war which
would beneftt no one On the
tougher quota system
Rehel fo domesltc tn other hand many foreign
dustrtes harmed by mports tnduslrtes whtch export Ia the
ts prov ded for under the Umled States recetve sublenns of the Trade Reform s dtes n one form or another
Act of 1974 Under he law s from hetr own governments
provts ons workers pu out of These substd es can allow
work by mports quahfy for fore gn ndustrtes to keep
ad]usltnent programs They employment up but wages
leading to a product
would be e g ble for weekly low
benefits of 70 percent of thetr th at American manufac
average weekly wage for 52 turers have a diff cull time
weeks In addtt on they could competing w th In effect
quahfy for ra n ng JOb hese foreign government
search and relocatiOn subs d1es provtde an unfatr
allowances However t s far advantage over the Amencan
more destreable Ia avo d thts free market system We
s tuahon ent re y by nsurmg canno continue to tolerate
the An er can ndus r es are such lneqwties tn the world
not put n the pos tton where radtng system wtlhout
they must ay off workers due taking remedtal action The
o unfa mport co npel t on alternaltve 1s to stand by and
Recently the Amer can watch the end of slgn!Dcant
sU!el and footwear ndus es domesltc 1ndustrtes putting
have been espec ally ha tl h t thousands of Americans out
by fo re gn competttlon The of work and onto the unem
U S Internal onal Trade ployment rolls
Co n m ss on has recom
The Trade Act of 1974 was
mended to the Pres dent hat des gned to assure a swift
he ncrease tar If rates tn and certatn response to
order to equahze the com fore gn tmport restrictions
petlttve balance The Trade export subs dtes and price
Act g ves the Pres dent 60 d scr m nalton and other
days to act on the lTC unlatr foretgn trade prac
recommenda on In the case t ces We have now reached
ct the footwear ndustry the a po nt where the Act is hemg
ecommendahon was o atse tested for he ftrst time The
he mport dulles by up to 35 proper response should be
percent For the stee n one that wtll protect
duslry the !TC proposed American workers and In
hmttmg mports to 146 000 dustry from unfair com
tons n 1976 some 12 percent peht on whtle at the same
be ow the 1974 level The trne preserv ng an eqwtable
Pres den has nd cated tha
and v able system of In
he Un ed States wtll at temp~ lerna onal trade

tenms players chased after
by wtves of senators coun
selors to lonely presidents I
see one eptsode where star
gets $100 000 loan from
Rockefeller wh1ch is exposed
by lousy conservat ve
Have socko dea for new
bureaucrat and audrence only
telev s on sertes that w II
learns
n last 30 seconds
make us both rich Well me
money !!" for new Public s
r ch and you rtcher
Right to Know !oundat on
Disregard at your own per I
Star works for hugely n
Can always go to ABC
fluent
al newspaper of
Everybody else Is I hear
course
Has crummy old
Proposal s a r der to the
editor
who
ts throwback to
new status of newspaper
days
of
nverted
pyram ds
JOurnal sts formerly known
and
other
Egypt
al lore
as reporters Medta cr tic Dr
Crummy
edtlor
can
l un
Ralph Lowenstein says we
derstand
Journaltsts
who
ride
are n a reporter personality
n
280
SL
s
drtven
by
W
arren
era Woodward and Bern
Beattey He says Whatever
ste tn Evans and Novak scene
Age
no
matter
Uttle
gray
happened to H L Mencken
Redford and Hoffman Media
flecks
n
ha
r
mtght
help
and
keeps bottle of rye tn
chtc s here You I reca
actua
lly
Older
cats
are
drawer
w th fr ed baloney
dur ng Iowa pohltcal caucus
c1t zens bought tickets to see making 1t hese days Black sandwtch Charles Laughton
nat onal journah sls cover guy maybe I m thtnking would have heen r ght How
ballohng Scrtbes are new sex prelim nar ly Ryan 0 Neal or about Art Carney Crummy
symbol Bill Pal of IJUne wtth Sidney Po I er Someone who ed tor has son who s
New York T mes says can rea y co nvey the threaten ng to run away from
group es somettrnes fo low frustrahons and rewards of home f he can t take JOur
press bus attached to J mmy Journal sm ndustry today nal sm n college
You know pals to famous
Ser es should be smash way
Carter campa gn
to show grass roots concern
of star journal sts today No
U S nvolvement anywhere
I love a parade
except Alabama Lunch at
~
Longworth bwld ng ca!eter a
wtth progress ve memers of
House of Representat ves
Dram at c phone calls to
hapless mdustrtal moguls on
the lake or gtve Guest shots
by J mmy Bresl n Jmuny
Reston and Jtmmy F dler All
By Ray Cromlev
the wh le crummy ed tor ts
WASHINGTON Pohtrcally a lot of us have been looking worr ed about w fe who ts
at he wrong horses
caugh readmg star s column
We ve been analyzmg each pres dential cand date - warts alone n her bathroom
and all and each of thetr prom ses We should be looking
B ll n a lime of Rona
more sertously at who we re gong to elect to the Senate and Barrett and G B Trudeau
House of Representahves
the ser es can not mtss When
Most presldenttal cand dates are proms n~ change But newspape ra ses ts news
most prestdents who have attempted change have been stand pr ce star wr tes
hamstrung by Congress except m times of war or the Great fur ously about mflat onary
A sl p of the 1p has sunk more than one
and reqwred to read a ttrnely and Depresston
rend aga nsl people who can
presidential candtdate s shtp and f h s
authorltaltve new book on the his ory and
J rnm) Carter makes much ado about how many afford t leas and crummy
remark abou ethn c pur ty doesn
present stat"" of Amer1ca s wh le ethn c
dupl cattng and overlymg layers of bureaucracy he would ed tor tr es to take away hts
scuttle Jtrnm e Car er t won t be for wan
Purswng the Amer can Dream by eltrn nate George Wallace makes equally cutting
of h s rivals try ng to make the most of tt
Richard Krtckuy (pubbshed by Anchor statements about the bureaucrats who run he federal govern mlernat onal atr travel card
Pub sher steps n however
Interest ngly enough the peop e who
Books also ava able In hardcover from ment often wtth I ttle control from the Wh te House
She
IS 11onderful won an and
presum ably should have heen most offended
Ind ana Umvers ty Press)
Pres dent Nrxon whatever his other weaknesses prom ses a compro se poor
by the Georgtan s statement
black
He was moved to wr te the book says developed and pr ~ented to Congress !"me of the most
peop e wll get 10 pe cent
Amer cans - are no the ones who are
Kr ckus by the appallmg Ignorance
revolutionary proposals for cuttmg the s ze of the federal discoun on subscnpt1on
keep ng the controversy al ve
about working Amerrcans (wh ch most government we d seen n many years
pr ce Star lea ns of th s
For he record wha Car er sa d n
ethn cs are among academ cs pollt c ans
Mr Ntxon s progr81)1 for shifttng and comb rung wh le accompany ng
Soutth Bend lnd the other day was
government bureaucrats Cap tol Hill aides departments and bureaus made anyth ng Carter and other
I have noth ng aga nst the commun ly
and radical community act v sts And one preSjdenllal candtdates proposed seem lame n compartson Caltlorn a governor to Zen
that s made up of people who are Pohsh or
mtght add among George Wallace s The NIXon proposals are f led away in the cab nets of retreat and pa r of them
C~echoslovakian or French-Canadian or
pomty headed ltberals who are seldom Congress onal commttlees The Senate and House ne ther watch B g Sur a sundown
backs who are try ng to rna nUun the ethn c
affected by the wrenchmg soc al changes adopted the Ntxon concepts nor came up wtth agreed-on wtth Itt le more hope I have
m II on deas hke th s
purtty of the r ne ghborhoods Thts s a
they demand of others
counter legtslatton
I see extraord nary spmoffs
atural nclmat on on the part of people
One th ng Krtckus attempts to do ts set
Even when Congress has voted decentraltzatlon from
show Your mar'ketmg
the ecord stratght on alleged wh te ethntc programs the end result seems to be a heaVIer ccncentralton
l.ater n lnd ana polls he added I would
execut
ves w ll understand
never though condone any sort of
rae sm and he c1tes abundant evidence to of federal bureaucracy not a reduct on
How
about
30 dash tee shtrts
discrtmmatton agamst say a black family
dispute the wtdespread nohon that wh te
There was talk a while back of the new federal sm
or any othr lam ly from mov ng nto \hat
workers n general and certatn ethnic Revenue sharmg was mtended to shift a hefty porlton of what s Kill box wastebaskets Soon
neighborhood But I don t thmk govenunenl
groups n part cular are more likely to ppose funded n Washington back to the states Achunk of money was everyone wtll want to own
ought del berately to try to break down an
black bids for ractal just ce than other voted But the federal bureaucracy proceeded to expand n bo le of rubber cement
ethmcally or ented commun ty
segments of the whtle populattonn
maJor areas the decentraltzahon t was supposed to affect autographed by 0 Neal or
del! be ately by nJecbng nta t a member of
S nee the New Deal he wr tes the wh te Th s federal expans on of course was approved by Congress Po t er Already I understand
ano her race Thts ts contrary to the best
eUtn cs have gtven the bulk of hetr votes to
Carter and some fellow candidates have also talked of zero a Jack Anderson noU!book ts
mterest of the commun ty It creates
the Democraltc party and have supported budge ng looking at every federal program and agency from worth a small fortune We re
tm ted on y by publ c taste
disharmony It creates hatred
leg slat on vttal to the welfare of needy scratch each year
Arch e Bunker has had t
Had Carter used any other word than
Americans Wtlhout the r support the
It ts well tn this respect to remember that a number of
Btll
Carol Burnett wouldn t
purtty
had he satd ethmc character
progress ve coalttton necessar) to come to pres dents mcluding Mr Ford and Mr N xon have sen the
know
Watergll'te from
or ethn c ntegr ty
at most a smal
gr ps wtth our nat on s most pressmg Senate and House long I sts of programs and agencies Utat no
W
ebster
s
Jornaltsm s the
squall rather than a hurrtcane would have
problems s doomed to failure
longer serve a useful purpose Mr Ntxon and Mr Ford m ght
kick
get
tt
on
Full detatls on
broken over h s head and those who were so
One reason a lot of blacks st ll 1ke have saved everyone a lot of bOther by forgetting the exeretse
reply
Name
of show
qwck to denounce htrn m ght even have
J mmy Carter may he that they real ze what before tt was started
Forgive
Us
Our
Press
reDected that what he really sa d ws
soc al anchor potnts to use Kr ckus
The number of agenctes programs and funct ons cut was so
Passes
Tom
ernmenUy worth saymg
term the white ethmc urban concentrat ons small tt s hard to track
What a departure tt would have been If
are and that the development of the same
One agency head testifted that he had nothing to do for years
excep
amuse himself His staff members were busy only when
some of the other Democrabc asptrants had
sense of communtty cohesrveness and
nsen just a b t above poltt cs-as usual to
cultW'al pnde among blacks will go a long they could find personal errands to occupy themselves He was
po nt out that everybody makes verbal goofs
way toward solvmg thetr and the country s successful as I recall tn gettmg his agency abolished but t
took a great deal of personal effort on hts part
~
MONTREAL UP!
and that Carter s unfortunate chorce of
problems
We ve seen what s happened to energy The PreSident Gene Games a 5-foot 7 1~
words should be understood n the ontext n
In any event t s gomg to take more
whtch they were made
than an error n phraseology to stop any has a program Numerous senators and representatives have pound defenstve back
Wednesday s gned a one year
All those wh o Jumped on Jtmm e Carter
cand date who can wtn the allegtance of both thetrs but not Congress
Hav ng fatled n welfare domest c economtcs and contract as player..:oach w th
should be g ven ten lashes w th a wet kuski
groups
assorted programs Congress IS now movmg energetically mto the Montreal Alouettes of the
foretgn affatrs In a negative way Congress has come up wtth Canadtan Football League
Sen Hubert Humphrey who sounds
N1xon s massive re -e lectton plu a y obstacles on a sertes of prestdential proposals - on Angola on
Ga nes a graduate of
more I ke a pres den tal cand dale every
Ftnally n 1974 n voter reachon to achons m Southeas As a and on trade agreements w th the UCLA wtll be startmg h s
day Jet fly recently wtth some stingmg
Watergate the Democrats swept to a two SoVIet Union Checks on a pres dent are a good th ng but 16th CFI season hts etghth m
cnt c sm of the present crop of candidates
thtrds majority In the 435-seat House and negative blocks wtth no pos live set of similar programs leave an Alouette umform
lnclud ng no only Prestdent Ford and h s
almost the same majOr ly tn the 100-seat a prestdent rudderless
The Alouettes
a so
chtcf nval Ronald Reagan but those fellow
Sena e
In ttrnes of great depress on as m the Franklm Roosevelt announced the stgnmg of
Democrats who are try ng to out
The Democrats have not always or even era a chartsmatic pres dent can carry Congress along for place-kicker Don SWeet to a
Republtcan the Repubhcans by runn ng
frequenUy been able Ia moblUze these awh le - but study sometunes the number of Roosevelt vetoes three-year contract
against b g government
maJOr ties of course and both Nixon and
The ssue he told an enthus ashe
Ford have made generous use of the
audience at the annual convention of
presidential veto
Vlrgmta Young Democrats m Arhngton the
But exceedmgly few vetoes were ever
other day 1s not government b g or small
cast because Congress was spending less
It s government that works
than the preSident wanted or bacause some
If Democra s liFe go ng to ask to govern
new program Congress had set up was too
the country he sAl they had batter begin
modest
believ ng n the government they seek to
To clatm tbat the Republicans have
occupy
occup ed the government for eight con
As for the Repubhcans They didn t
secul ve years and thlll! should have heen
p obensuvng Indvduas
cross the Potomac JUSt ast week In the past
able to mold It closer to thetr destres ts By Lawrence E Lamb MD Ia e the hanges a e ap
DEAR DR LAMB - My proxtma ely the same I don t lose the ab Illy o cope with
24 years he Republicans have been m 16
grossly to overstate the powers that res de
mother at age 61 an m need to deta I these because newproblems Sta ed stmply
They ve been n e1ght consecuttve years
m the Oval Office
hey are all too fam har n they lose th etr prev ous
smce 1969 No.. I there was a mess when
The President of the Un led Stales does tell gent act ve woman
what
was our soc ety In med cal c r capactty to learn even though
they came tn they ve had etght years to
mdeed command unmense power and deve oped
clean tt up If he government was tao big
prestige But he ts also the pnsoner of a dtagnosed as cerebra des we call hese dementia they may s ll be able to
somet mes sen le handle old lam liar tasks
when they came n they ve had etght years
vas~ unmoveable mpervtous bureaucracy atrophy Four years later she and
We do not know what
to make tl smaller If there are too many
that could dr ve even such a forceful ch ef had gradual y deteriOrated to dementia although t must be
stated
tha
th
s
condrt
on
can
causes
th s cond ton but
rules and regulations they ve had etghl
execut ve as Lyndon B Johnson up the wall the po nt where she Is a body
occUI
at
a
relat
vely
young
these
d
sorders
are usuaally
w thout a mmd unable to
years to clear them out
on occaston
Included
as
part
of the picture
age
spec
f
ca
lly
tn
later
Thts Is effective campa gn rhetor c
The president can push a button and speak or feed herself and
mtddle
age
n
some
people
of
agmg
However
med ctne
Unfortunately however tt fa Is to wtthstand
launch World War Ill and end ctvil zat1on as apparently
unable
to
Women
seetn
to
be
more
has
long
had
a
U!ndency
Ia
even casual scrutmy Under the peculiar
we know tt He can abo ssue an order and recogn ze us. There s no
pol t cal system we have n th s country the
have t effectively countermanded by some lam ly h story of such an tll suscepttble o hts dtsorder at classtfy drsorders that are not
party occupy ng the Wh U! House ts not
faceless deputy asststant unqersecrelary or ness so we assumed perhaps an early age than are men well understood as ag ng
Mosl of these d sorders are only tof nd later that they are
necessarily the party m power Not
admtn!Btrator somewhere down th~ lme
a head tnJury was behind tt
compete power anyway
The candidates Republican and However another member of assoctated 11 th actual true dtseases A good
Take those last e ght years Humphrey
Democraltc altke are correctly reading the the lam y s now showtng changes n th~ cells of the example here s the common
speaks of In 1968 wh le Richard Nixon
popular pulse when they campaign agamst s1mtlar symptoms Can you bratn and he cond t on can hea attack We now know
narrowly defeated him for the prestdency
b g government It Is not the candidates tell us what causes th s occur tn tnd vtduals w th that heart disease can bag n
bratn nJury as may be seen tn young men m the r early
the Democrats managed to retain control of
but the people - the people who lime and cond t on
both Houses of Congress According to the
again have voted for more government
DEAR READER
I un some tmes n boxers who had twenties and thus s hardly a
World Almanac Ntxon was the f rst
larger government more activist govern ders and thoroughly your repea ed excess ve head d sease of agmg
Somettmcs d sease of the
prestdent smce Zachary Taylor n 1848 o
men but who are now dlsllllll! oned because d stress I w sh there were n1urtcs The development of
begin his ftrst term with the opposition purl)
not all problems are solveable tiy some good ans.. er to gtve symploms may be gradual or arler es o the btatn con
m control of Congress
Washington and because Utere Is no free y u Your mo her s cond !ton more rap d One r he r bu es to thts problem In
In the 1970 off year elections thE
lunch - these are the ones Hubert Humph ts I e sa c as ha wh ch carl es s gns s l c other nstances the deger
occurs n n an) older people d m n sl cd ab I I) fo nat on of e bram cells
Democrats aga n retatned control of
rey should be taking to task
seems to be mdependen of
Whether
begms early o
Congress and ve aga n n 1972 desp le
By Tom Tiede
WASHINGTON - Over
mght wtre to Wtlham S
Paley chatrm an of the
board CBS

~

RAY CROMLEY

Wrong horses, bad

Editorial comment,
opinion, features

races, weak issues

Cultural pride a possible solution

Non-candidate's non sequitur pitch

DR. LAMB

In February Gov Rhodes
announced the hegmn ng of
the Golden Buckeye card
program for senior c tlzens
wh ch would allow Ohtoans 65
and olde to get dtscounts at
State parks trans t systems
and bus nesses tha agreed to
pa t c pa e Representat ves
from he State Comm sston
on Ag ng have been con
ta c ng bus nesses
throughout the state asking
them to parhc pate
In a progress report th s
week E eanor Thomas
d rector of he Me gs County
Counc I on Ag ng sa d
The coopera on and
enthustasm shown by most of
the bus nesses n Metgs
County toward the program
has been very rewardmg
Most sen or cttizens

IVe

on a

ftxed ncome Thts program
can be of great help to them
even a few penn es saved
means a lot f for example
your ncome Is less than $200
a month It s wonderful to
hve m a place where people
care abou others When all
bus nesses m the stale have
been contacted a directory
w ll be published of those who
are part c pahng n the
program
We hope to see 100 percent
parltc pat on
n Me gs
County Th s would not only
help sen or cit zens but t
would a so keep buy ng
dollars m Metgs County
Eleanor Thomas D rector of
the Metgs County Counctl on
Agmg said
She further expla ned that
to date the fo owtng
bus nesses m Metgs County

•

•

dtsease to the artenes
What we really need s a
better understand ng of the
fundamental process of agtng
and how to prevent tl The
truth ts we are very clo~e to
bemg able to control
b ologtcal agm g That
statement may startle some
people but we already un
derstand a great deal of the
regenerahon process how
cells are replaced and even
how to make duplicates of
frogs from the nucleus of an
mteshnal cell (popularly
called clomng) Those who
want m!ormatlon on what we
understand about aging can
send 50 cents for The Health
Letter number I 7 Perpetual
Youth Agmg Send a long
stamped
self addressed
envelope for matltng Ad
dress your letter to me m
care of this newspaper P 0
Box 1551 Rad o Ctty Statton
New York NY 10019

•

have agreed to parltctpate m
the program New York
Clothing Store Elberfelds
Chapman Shoes Marguerite
Shoe Shop Semor Citizens
Craft Shop Stmon s Grocery
and The Fabrtc Shop m
Pomeroy
and
Bahr
Clothters The Sewmg Center
and the New Mtddleporl Cab
Company 1!1 Middleport
Busmesses Interested and
not contacted can call the
Sentor Cihzens CenU!r for
mformalton
Busmesses
wh ch participate wtll be
g ven a decal to place tn their
wmdows If there ts no decal
semor ctl zens should check
wtth the owner or manager to
fmd out I he ts part ctpatmg
n the program
Over 900 senior ctt zens n
Metgs County have made
appl cations for the Golden
Buckeye Card Volunteers
w h the Retired Senior
Volunteer Program are
f lhng out applications at the
Semor Cttizens Center In
Pomeroy from 10.2 Mondays
through Frtdays and on
Wednesdays at the Senior
Cthzens Club n Rutland
Other locahons from 10.2
are Reedsvllle
Ftre
Department Wednesday
Apnl 28 Long Bottom Hensley Store Apr 1 26
through
Aprtl
30
Harrtsonvtlle - Semor
C t zens Club Room at the
Elementary School Tuesday
Apnl ?:1 Racme - Vtllage
Counctl Bwldmg Thursday
Apr 1 29
0 her locations wiii be
announced later If a senior
ctttzen Is phySically Wlable to
get to one of these locations
he should call the Semor
Ctt1zens Center 992-7888 or
992-7884 and a volunteer or
staff member will go to theperson s home

Brooks ts gomg as good as nmson to relax somewhat
mtst guys on the team after Baltunort erupted for a
maybe bette~ said Weaver sea!Kln-!ngh I! hits Including
Wednesday nrght after four doubles
RobiiiSOn batting just 153
The Orioles put the game
entering the game smashed away m the I fth when Paul
a run-scormg double that Blatr smgled moved up 011 a
cltrnaxed a three-run ftlth walk to Bobby Gr1ch and
mnmg tn the Or oles 4-2 scored on a throwtng error by
VIctory over the Cal fornta ex.()riole catcher Andy Etch
ebaren Rookie Andreas
Angels
As a team the Orioles were Mora Uten scored Grieb with
hittmg 183 before the game- a scarifice Dy and after Tony
an ommous I gure that Muser singled Robinson dou
obvtously gave Weaver bled off the leftfteld wall for

For any other player on any
other team a 153 batting
average m ght eastly be
looked upon as a one-way
ticket to Sheboygan thts time
of year
Brooks RobiiiSon however
s no other player And
netther at this point In time
are Ute Baltunore Ortoles
Just ask thetr manager Earl
Weaver

By DIU MADDEN
UPISporla Writer
Dave Roberts (3-0) hurled
his second two-ltltter of the
season since be~ acqutred
by Detrott m a winter deal
wrth Houston The Tigers
backed Roberts w th six runs
In the Utlrd Alex Johnson
drove home two runs wtth a
triple and a single for an 8-1
WID

Seniorless Eagles take

~

Marauders third

lumps with 10-0 score
ARCHIE GRIFFIN

Archie heads hike-bike
Arch e Griff n has accepted
the honoraQ cha rmanshtp of
the Fourth Annual Hike
Btke for Retarded Ctltzens
tt was announced today
The slate w de fund rals ng
event sponsored by he
Me gs Assoc at on for
Retarded C hzens will be
held on Sa turday May 15
accord ng to Frank Messana
resource
development
plann er for the Ohto
Assoc at on for Retarded
Cttizens Messana sa d the
Me gs Assoc a on hopes to
a se $3000
Gr ffm former Ohto Slate
Buckeye All Amer ca n
unn ng back and twtce the
country s Hetsma n tr ophy
w nner was recently drafted

by the Cmcmnat Bengals and
w II JOtn the team m the fall
You know a lot of team
work fight and deter
nunat on goes mto bu ldmg a
champ onshtp team and tt s
great to be a wmner sa1d
Gr ff n n a statement W th
that same kind of U!amwork
we can all make Htke Btke
76 a great Sl!Ccess and
make some spectal people
w nners
Hank Cleland of Rt I Long
Bottom s coordlnatmg the
H ke Btke m Metgs County
Further nformat on on how
the publ c can partictpale can
he obta ned by calbng Rea
Roush 992 3232 Jesste
M ght
742 3089
Hank
C eland 985-4112 or R ck
Crow 247 3737

Golden Buckeye Card
progress is reported

Her mother grows senile

•

Roberts hurls second two-hitter,
picks up third win for Tiger '9'

Washington
Column

With the semors gone on the
sen or trip the Eagles of
Eastern I elded a relatrvely
nexper enced team and
travelled to Belpre Wed
nesday even ng but came
home on the wrong end of a
10-ll score
Belpre outhlt the VIB tors
only 6-3 but the hosts com
IJUited no errors and thetr
pttcher McKinney tssued no
walks wh le fanning s xleen
to IW'n n a fine performance
Be pre p eked up all the
runs they needed n the th rd
when they plated three runs
Their lead ng h Iter was
S zemore who tnpled and the

In a guadrangular meet at
Athens Wednesday the MHS
Marauders came home wtlh a
thtrd place ltmsh Athens won
the meet w th 77 po nts
Wellston was second with
58
Meigs had 36 and
Jackson got 15 po nts
Once
aga n
Bobby
Wthamson showed h s
prowess tn the dashes as he
won the IOOand 200yard runs
Me gs next meet s Tuesday
when Athens hos ts the
SEOAL neet
Followmg s a hst of Me gs
scorers and thetr nd vidual
marks
100 yard dash
W1ll amson 1 1n A

other ftve Belpre htls were all
s ngles
Catcher Bruce Rtffle had a
s ngle n three lrtps for
Eastern wh le sophomore
Joe Kuhn led the hrtt ng
deparltnent wtth as ngle and
double m three trtps
Eastern p lchers comb ned
to gtve up four walks wh le
str king out three but the
defense coughed up stx
errors The Eagles hos t
Trtmble FridAy mght
Eastern 000 000 0-- 0 3 6
Belpre
003 610 X 10 9 0
Evans (LP) LaComb (4
and Riffle McKmney and
Ingold

440 lard dash - Rawhngs
(3rd ) 56 9
880 Relay
2nd I 39 3
(Scttes Stanley Simpson
WII arnson
880 run - Granda! 3rd) 2 10 4
180 low hurdles - Sclles
(3rd 22 6
220 dash - Wlhamson I )
- 24 I tic (3rd S mpson
and Grover (Athens) 24 9
M1le Relay 3rd 3 47 8
S mpson Jeffers Granda
Rllwl ngs
Shot put (Stewart 3rd)
43 7
D scus - Slew art 3rd) 1196

Falcons are errorless in 8-3 win
Behmd errorless defense
the Wahama Wh le Falcons
went away from Rae ne
Wednesday even ng w th an
8-3 victory
Two double plays got the

as he came rn to second The
Tornadoes mounted a threat
tn the second w1th the bases
full and two out but rei ever
and ~tnner T Tucker got
Cundtff o go down sw ng ng

Falcons out of bases loaded
Jams - one m the fourth
mn ng came on a bouncer to
th rd near the bag The thtrd
sacker sU!pped on the base
and then got he other runner

. the SCOREBOARD
Ma o League Stancl ngs

By Un ted P ess In e na ona

Standmgs
Averages
Results

Wahama struck n the first
w th hree b1g runs on on ly
one h t Sayre drew a base on
balls Reed was safe on an
error Goldsberry reached
the same way and Dav s
ollowed with the h t
In the sec~d the F 1lcons
scored what 1lfOved to be the
wlnmng rWI on three s ngles
Scott led tt off Sayre also
connected and fhompson
knocked In Scot w th h s base
knock

Nat onal League

Eas

Sport Parade

W

Pet

GB

6
8 6
88
8 9
8
9

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
NEW YORK UP!) Gene Bearden s jet black hatr ts as
dark as ever and he rsn t sure why that should be except maybe
tt has someth ng to do wtth hts latruly tree He s part Cherokee
lnd an He also 11e ghs exactly what he d d p tching for the
Cleveland lnd ans more than 20 years ago but he knows the
reason for that Not too much food nottoo much beer
Ftfly ftve now Bearden st II has that soft natural easy way
about htm and after you meet htm and talk wtth htrn if
someone should come up and ask you would you buy a used car
from a man like hmn your answer most likely would be yes
That would be good for Gene Bearden because that s the way
he makes his hVIng now
He s general manager for Plaza Auto Sales m West Helena
Ark but unless some customer starts talking baseball he
never brmgs tl up Drst and another thing he never talks about
s how an a urn num plate had to be put tn hts skull after h s
sh p the USS Qu ncy was btl off Guadalcanal dur ng WorJd
War II
What Gene Bearden would much rather lttlk about 18 h s
w fe Lots whom he s been marr ed to for 32 years and who has
been wr tmg songs the past f ve
She s good very good says Bearden Every year the
Memphis Song Wnters Assoc at 011 p cks out what tt cons ders
the 10 outstanding songs Two of hers were p1cked last year
and two more th s year None of her songs have been pubi!Bhed
ye but shes taking 011e of them When Love Walked
Away to NashVIlle next Wednesday and we re keepmg our
f ngers crossed
A rar y n that he was a lefthander who threw a knuckler
Bearden pttched nearly 200 games w1th the Indians Senators
T gers Browns and White Sox yet he s generally remembered
for only one
Thai one was the playoff game he pttched for Cleveland
agaiiiSt Boston m 1948 In those days the only tune they had a
playoff was if two clubs ended the regular season m a t e
There was none of th s Utree-out-of ftve It was sudden death
You played only one game and the winner automatically was
m the World Seres
The day he!ore the regular season ended that year was a
Saturday and Bearden blanked the Ttgers 11~ for hts 19th
VIctory Gomg mto the !mal day Sunday the Indians were m
f rst place w th a one-game lead over the Red Sox but the
T gers heal Bob Feller and the Red Sox defeated the Yankees
creatmg a ue
Th s mean there would he a playoff for the pennant m
Boston the followtng day
Lou Boudreau the Indians manager held a meeting In the
clubhouse after Feller was beaten The Cleveland players
gathered around sens ng he was about to name his plJiyoff
game p tcher They felt he d go wtth Bob Lemon who had last
p tched on Frtday and would be worktng with two days rest
Boudreau got r ght to the pomt
Bearden wtll p tch he sad U there s anyUtmg you
wanna dtscuss let s discuss rt r ght now
You ve been peking em all year piped up second base
man Joe Gordon So f you sa) t s Bearden Uten it s Bear
den
The lrtp to Boston wasn t eventful
We bad a httle crap game on the Ira n m the men s room
recalls Bearden !lost my $10 and went to bed Next morning
they told me ,Satchel Patge won about $35-$40 While the game
was go ng 011 Boudreau passed by and saw what we were
doing He dtdn t say anything He knew it was just a way of
break ng the tension
Pitch ng w h only one days rest and m Fen way Park
whtch Is like death row for most left-ltanders Bearden
eltrnmated the Red Sox 8-3 wtth a ftve h tter the followmg
day In the World Sertes he shut out Ute Boston Braves m the
thtrd ga111e and relteved Lemon n the s xth to save Utat game
and wtap up the world champ oMhtp for Cleveland
Gene Bearden seldom talks about Utat though He d much
rather tell you about those songs his wlfP. wrl es He says she s
gond ve•y good He alsb says you II be hearmg about her soon

L

5
5002
4
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400 3

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C nc nna
Hous on
A an a
San D ego
Los Ange es

Ame an Leagu~
New Yo k a lex ppd an

o d we

Bs on a K C ppd

M

Amer can League

East

W L Pet
9 3 50
3 21

a

5

545

2

6 500

J

429

Pet

5JS
500

Texas
Oak and
Kansas C v
Ch cago
M nneso a

4

5

20 240

583

ooo- 9

4

Rose still upset
with Tug McGraw
PHILADELPHIA (UPI)
Ill get htm says Pete
Rose
The Cine nnat1 Reds star
was referrmg to Philadelphia
Ph Is relief pitcher Tug
McGraw who drew Rose s
tre wtth a high hard pttch In
Tuesday rught s game
Later In the game won 7-3
by Cmcmnati Rose ran
toward the Phlllles dugout
apparently after McGraw
but was restrained before he
got there by teammate
Johnny Bench
Afterwards m the Reds
locker room Rose was stll
th nkmg about McGraw
I m not gomg to forget It
he said Ill get him I ve
been playmg this game too
lon g not to know what was
gomg on
McGraw
called the
disputed pitch a purpose
p tch
I thought Rose would be
lookmg for a screwball away
from him so I pitched him
ns de sa d the little lefty
I did what I wanted to do 011
the next pitch struck hun
out with a shder on the
outside
Rose agreed It was a
purpose
pitch
but
disagreed with McGraw s
del niUon of the term
II d be bard for me to win
a batting trtle this year If that
ball had hit me In Ute head
ftgured Rose who picked up
two hits Tuesday night
brmging his red hot total to 31
hlts In 15 games for a sizzling
477 average
The disputed pllch was
made n the top of Ute ninth
Inning and Rose headed for
the Phlls dugout just after
taking the field for the bottom
of the ninth
McGraw was standing in
the dugout wtth a finger
po nted toward his head
satd Rose
Explained McGraw
I
didn t do that until afler Rose
made an obscene gesture at
me Anyway when I pointed
a finger at my head I was

telling Pete he was crazy not
that I trted to hit him In the
head with a pitch
Reds first base coach Ruu
Nixon was concerned about
any possible future Incidents
We II be watching Pete
he said We don t want him
getting hurt In any ~
all and betng out for part of
Ute season
The Reds dropped Ute Ultrd
and final game of the aerlel
7-6 Wednesday nlgl!t

TAGDAYSET
RUTLAND
Rutland tag
dey will he held Saturday
May I All pony league lltUe
league players and pareqta
are to mcc tat the high school
In Rutland at 9 a m

BIU FLEltHER
1258

Powell St

Middtopo t
PH 99i 7155

"See me for

llomeowaen
Insurance frod
State Farm- till
world\~~

~

Lilteaaooclaei&amp;.bbor,
S!Jte nrm is there:

t························..·

4 90

Ch ago
00 000 000
9
T ave s Rod guez 9 and
Po e Wood 2 3 and Ess an
GB WP T ave s 2 0

5
8

waukee OOJ 000 00

the f nal run of the Inn ug
Utree-run Brewers th~
II s mce to get loW' runs
lrutlng Utat did In While &amp;II
said southpaw Ken Holtzman starter Wilbur Wood now :lot
who was the beneftctary of Robin Yount and Gortltlln
the Orioles bat revival He Thomas drove home Ute other
scattered etght hits Including Brewer runs The game was
three by Rusty Torres
played before only 11« fans
Elsewhere In the American Indios I Tw1111 0
League Clevela nd routed
Rick MaMing sparked a 14Minnesota ~ Milwaukee hlt Cleveland attac~b
put away Chicago 4 I and driving home Utree runs
Detro t
romped
over a homer and a double
Oakland 8-1 Boston Kansas Eckersley (:1,.2) worked the
City and Texas New York f1rst six lMinf!S to gain 1\18
were rained out
victory for the Indlltll
stnkmg out six walking ~
and yielding two Infield
Brewers t While Sox 1
Don Mone) smacked a two singles Don Hood flnL!Iied
run single to highlight a UP

:•
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2

4

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Swt . .t
garden thla way•••
end

Witch !t arowl

m

400
356

0~ r2' ~

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TILLERS
Compact model1
- for sma gardens
Heavy duty models
- For • ge gardens

a

2 5

M1110 l.eague Leaders
By Un ed P ess nte nat ona
Lead ng Ba te s

(based on 20 at bats
Na onal League

G AB R
3 43
Rose c n
6 68
Craw rd S L
26
Rader SO
4
S a ge 'P
i4
Hende sn A
3

M

ne

NY

Monday Ch

ooo 205 ooo-

6

H Pet
2 488
33 485
2 462

7 45
8 •o9
s •os

JO

395

G ley Cn
59
23 390
G 0 e NY
4
8 38]
Jhns ne Ph
3 47 0 8 383
Ame can League
G AB R H Pet
P n e a NY
0 3
7 6 432
Lynn Bos
9 33 5 j 424
Pa ek KC
0 30 4 2 400
HoonDe
2460839
Rando ph NY 2 36 9
389
BeCev
244 9
a6
Chamblss NY 2 5J B 9 358
F sk BM
40 0
350
1 9 1 Har ah Tex
0
2
344
Fou p aye s td w h J'JJ
Hon Runs
Na ona League
S hm d
Ph
K ngman
NY 9
Cedeno Hot1 6 Monday Ch

J'

and Ma hews SF 5
Ame ican League H6 on
De 4 Fsk Bos3 Mo a Sa

( lti nn ngs)
S

LOU S

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San F Bn C SCD

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Denny
mussen

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Evans R ce and Vas zemsk
Bas He rmann Ca Down ng
and Va ney Ch
Hend ck
C ev Rod gue2 and S aub De
4
Mar nez.
KC
Money
M
Fo d and Wynege
M nn
2 5 Chamb ss and Munson NY
Ras Bando Bay o and Rud Oak
2 Bu oughs and G eve Tc i

t-

Today ts Thursday Apr!
29 the !20th day of 1978 wlUt

~~~tiolforllio;~o:r~~~eil:=~, I.

-

YrN duptlcat. noluro • """ molhod ot bullcllna 1011 11r
I ty wltll 1 Gllaon llllt&lt; Hlrt'l wily Glllall'a par1oct
al c ng and b-"t ocllon ml- up 1011 and ,,..niC
molter tlloroutlh y
forma a - -•~oo~~.-... AI
o null pllnl , _ ......,.,. llld rtlcll rNI Hilly
moht"'rtll- ....... - l y .... ~-.,""'
mlnorOII lnd -ftC Wlllt
pi- . , . _ ' f IJirdon .,... off "' • ,..... and , ....... and
_,._ · - blftor - - bot... 01- tllln J
IMtvro ••tra ltoovy COilltrvcllon. . . , . , _ "'troplocod ,,.. I " " br...W!) eMI lr.., ..., caM, of. it;
IUIIIbiO 1111 llt Wdlllo
j

T1re Pr1ces
In the Area

Its

BEND
nRE CENTER

Ebersbach Hardware
Everything In Hardware

llOW MAIN

POMEROY

OPEN FRI TIL 8- SAT TIL 5

~

......................... ~.
\"1

I

�J

t - The Daily Sentinel, Middl~port-Pomeroy, 0., Thursd~y, April 29, 1976

'

umpire Billy Williams said
the Bowa case was "severe"
and said a telephone report
was being filed with the
league office immediately.
Chances are good that Bowa
will receive a suspension.
Bow a had singled and
scored the Phils first run in
the bottom of the first after
the Reds had jumpe(l out to a
3-&lt;l lead on Joe Morgan's
three-run homer. Johnstone
doubled to send home Bowa
and Mike Schmidt who had
walked, then scored himself
on a single by Garry Maddox .
Philadelphia scored the
winning run in the fifth on a
three-run homer by catch·
er Bob Boone. Johnstone
_him.
doubled in the fifth and
Coaches Ray Ripplemyer Cincinnati Manager Sparky
and· Bobby Wine and Ander so n ordered Bobby
rightfielder Jay Johnstone Tolan walked . Boone,
then physically carried Bow a however, spoiled the strategy
to the Phils dugout.
with his second homer of the
After the · game , senior year to make it 7-3.

Fight plans similar,
'except for the finale
By STEVE WILSTEIN
UPI Sports Writer
LANDOVER, Md . I UP() Here is a preview, courtesy of
Muhammad Ali and Jimmy
Young, of Friday night's
nationally televised heavyweight championship fight:
"I'll let him throw all the
punches the first five
rounds, " Ali said. "I just
want to make him shoot,
blast. From then on I've
weakened him, then I start
hitting.
" If I dance for five rounds
and go punch for punch, I
might be ahead , but I'm tired
as hell. I'd rather him be
ahead , bein' tired and I'm

not."
"I think the first half of the
fight I'll be ahead," Young
said. ''He'll start to open up
after about six rounds .
During the middle of the fight
it'll be about even. I think the
fans will be able to tell the
difference after about nine
rounds. I think you'll be able
to tell who's going to win this
fight after the ninth ."
Young said .he's going to
fight a "smart fight. "
"I'm going to work on him
from his head to his heart to
his ·stomach, up and down.
I'm not going to just
concentrate on his head, just
try to knock him out and blow
what f've got. But I think
there'll be a knockout, one
way or the other."

Young apparently knows
and is training for Ali's fight
plan but that may not help
him win . Ali, trying to age
gracefull y at 34, has
developed a completely new
style from the days when he
floated like a butterfly and
stung like a bee. Now he hits
straight from the shoulder
with either hand, with jabs
stiff as an iron pole. He has
learned
to
minimize
movement and maximize
defense. Timing, as always,
is the essence and it is
perhaps the quickness of his
mind and reflexes that have
given him back his crown and
glory.
Young appeared to be
small threat for Ali's title as
he wound up training
Wednesday , losing two out of

three rounds to his sparring
partn er, Mike Koranicki.
Koranicki performed vaguely
in the manner of Ali, and
Young showed himself to be
vulnerable to jabs to the head
and quick combinationstwo of Ali's favorite weapons .

EXPECT NEW MARK
COLUMBUS I UPI ) - Ohio
hunters are headed for a
record turkey kill this year.
The Department of Natural
Resources
Division of
Wildlfe reported Wednesday
that 48 turkeys were killed
the first two days of the 1976
season Monday and Tuesday.
If inclement weather conditions improve, the division
expects 1975's reCQrd turkey
kill of 95 to be surpassed.
The 12-&lt;lay turkey season
continues through May 7.
1

r;o\\No\-"(
T~

f~ ~ We Fill
All New And Refill
Prescriptions
HRS.: 9-5 DAILY
.. CLOSED SUNDAY

VILLAGE PHARMACY
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
NEW HAVEN, W. VA.
,,

were lionored Wednesday during the annual banquet sponsored by the Athletic Boosters
Club. Receiving trophies were: left to right, Ralph Baylor, Best Offensive Player and CoRebounder; Tim Lucas, Best Free Throw Shooter; Bill Metzner, Co-Best Rebounder; Jim
Armbruster, Best Defensive Player ; Mitch Salem, Co-Most Improved Player and Doug
Sands, Co-Most Improved Player.

By FRED DOWN
UP! Sports Writer
The young lions are Dave
Kingman and Mike Schmidt
and it appears they're going
to stage the most exciting
home run race the National
League has seen in more than
a quarter of a century .
Kingman, known as
"Kong" by his New York Met
teammates, has hit nine
homers this season while
Schmid t.
who,
his
Philadelpnia Phillies teammates. say , has "no limitations," has hit 11.
Schmidt went holl)erless in ·

the Phillies' 7-6 victory over
the
Cincinnati
Reds
Wednesday night, but
"Kong" hit his ninth, a threerun blast · into the clouds
overhanging New York's
Shea Stadium as the Mets
downed the Atlanta Braves,
3-0.
Kingman
hit
his
" rainmaker " off Andy
Messersmith with two on in
the first inning and that was
all Cr~ig Swan needed to
breeze to the victory, the
Mets' fifth in a row . Swan
allowed five hits, struck out
II and walked one as he
evened his record at t -1.

Honest Pleasure and
Bold Forbes favored
position always has a little
edge because the rider can
look over and see what's
happening, whereas the
inside rider has to commit."
Usually post position is not
that critical in the Derby
becaU.se there is a quarter of
a mile down the stretch to the
first turn.
The winner of nine straight
races and ' holder of career
earnings of more than
$600,000, Bert Firestone's
Honest Pleasure will go off. as
an odds-on favorite in the J¥,.
mile American classic with
Braulio Baeza aboard.
His chief rival appears to
be E. Rodriguez Tirol's Bold
Forbes, who will be ridden by
Angel Cordero. Still, the allout running styles of the two
3-year-old colts might allow a

failed . Rookie John Shwnate
tipped Nelson's shot at the
buzzer and it fell short of the
basket, sealing Buffalo's 124122 victory.
Randy Smith was the
Braves' hero as he hit a 2Sfoot jump shot with three
seconds left to win the game
at Buffalo. The fifth game
will be played In Boston
Friday night.
Smith, who scored 28
points, said of the low
percentage shot: "I found
myself In a one-on-one
situation and tried to
penetrate but couldn't. So I
went up with the shot."
Buffalo's Bob McAdoo led
ail scorers with 30 points but
Stewart named
fouled out with I: 11 left.
.Ernie DiGregorio scored 21
Middie mentor
points, Shumate 20 and Jim
MIDDLETOWN, Ohio McMillian 18 for the Braves
(UP! l _ After five years In while Dave Cowens had 29
an assistant's slot, Ted points, Jo Jo While 28 and
Stewart has been named to Charlie Scott 16 for the
replace the retiring Paul Celtics.
Walker as basketball coach of
in the other NBA semifmal,
Middletown High School . . All-Star f?rward Rt~ Barry
Stewart, 35, a graduate of had 25 potnts, II asstllls and
Union College (Ky.), coached seven steals to ~wer the
the Middie junior varsity the Golden Stale Wamors to ~
past two seasons, compiling a 128-109 rout of the _Detrotl
35-1 record. He started in the Pistons and go up 3-2 m their
Middletown system in 1969 as Western . Conference ~rles .
a freshman coach.
The s~th gam~ wtll be
Walker's 1975-76 team fin. play,ed tn Detrotl · Frida!
ished with a IS-2 regular rugh . and a seventh game, tf
season record and was beaten necessary • is scheduled for
in the finals of the Class AAA Oakland Sunday.
State Tournament
by
The Warnors never trailed
Barberton.
after breaking a Hi-IS tie with
Walker coached-30 years at a. 13-7 spree at the end of ~he
Middletown, compiling 696 ftrst q~arter. Phil Smtth
victories and five state sCQre~ etght of h~ game-htgh
championships.
28 pomts tn th.;t spurt as

"What's it all about 1 "
That was the theme of a
talk given by former Mar·
shall basketball standout Leo
Bryd durin g the annual
banquet honoring members
of the Kyger Creek High
School boys and girls' teams

adv isors, Maurice Mayes and
Mrs. Fay Sauer.
The affair was potluck.
DJie Roth~e b , Jr. served as
emcee and offered the invocation.
Honored were :
GIR LS VOLLEY BALL '-,
Sh ll ' Y Cl ay. Co nnie

WednesdaY night.

Ht•skms, Charily Amos, Vic k i

I'

the importance of teamwork

Mart in. Donna Flint an d Usa

ahd concentration. Byrd told
the players to not become
complacent.
Head Coach Keith Car ter
thanked everyone who helped
with the season especially the
KC Athle tic Boosters Club for
providing a new rebounding
machine. He sa id the pasl
season, 'Could have bee n
better but not necessaril y
should have been better."
. Hesaidhewas pleased with
the team's progress an d cited
two of his season's high
points, victories over Southwestern and Eastern.
Coach Carter announced
that the players will be in,
vited and urged to participate
in a summer ba sketball
program. "We will ha ve a
winner here at Kyger Creek if
you want it badly enough. We
mustwork hard this sammer ." He also urged players
to go to basketball camps this
summer .
Other
coaches
participating in last night' s

Elli s.
.
Reserve - Tammy Ri fe,
Rob1 n
Fr al ey ,
T1 na
Hil mmond, Carol Stidha m,
Debbi e Clevenger, Monica
Fisher and Robm R.i fe . '
Jr ·, Hlqh -- De bb1e Bales,
Contmued on page· ~

.

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Cavs host
Bullets
tonight

Army's elite like sad sacks
on last flight from Da Nang

'.

Byrd, a member of the Stroud, Mary Roll ins. Jan
West Virginia Hall of Fam e, Springer, Judy Darst, Brenda ·
overcame polio at age . 12 to Fi le. Gloria Amos and Sherry
Harr ison .
become one of _ the most
JR . HIGH BASKETBALL
outstanding bas ketb a ll
Greg
Po lcy n, Bru ce
players
at
Marsha ll Gi lmore, Tom Springer, John
Westf (l l l, Victor VanSickle,
University.
Rusty Russ ell, Bill Swisher, ·
In his talk , Byrd , a All a n
Shee ts,' Robby
management tr ain in g Goucher , Henr y McCoy , Mike '
executive, reviewed the Shoem ake r , Robbie Cod er
and Dan sa·nds .
changes in laday's world FRESHMAN BASKETBALL
through knowledge gained,
Den nis Molloha n. Luke
the continual lea rning Amo s, Phil Ba ir d, Stacy
process and how to be sue- John ston , Dan Cha pman ,
'.
.
~ Kei th
Vei th, Jim Misner ,
cessful tn sports , bustness, Terry Rothgeb and Davi d
life and family .
· Payne.
He urged the athletes to
CHEER LEADE';RS
dream dare and do and go
Varsity -:- Jan Stidham .
. ' .
,
Ddwn Mar h n. Becky Polcyn ,
for dtrectton. He also stressed Lisa ~io m mond, Kell y

the big blow for the Phillies,
who dealt the Reds' Pat
Darcy his second loss agaihst
one victory. Jim Lonborg
went five innings, yielding
four .runs and eight hits, to
receive credit for his seCQnd
straight win. Pete Rose, Joe
made.'' said Messersmith, Morgan and Doug Flynn had
referring to Kingman's two hits each for the Reds:
·St. Louis defeated San
homer. "It was a hanging
slider and that was the game. Francisco, 4-2, in 16 innings,
But it still comes down to Montreal beat Houston, 8-7,
throwing the ball past the after a 6-4 loss; .the Chicago
sticks and I'm not doing Cuba topped San Diego, ~.
an.d Los Angeles downed
that."
Bob Boone's three-run Pittsburgh, 2-1, in other
homer in the fifth inning was National League games.
now costs less
In the American League, it
was Baltimore 4 California 2,
than the original.
Cleveland 9 Minnesota 0,
Milwaukee 4 Chicago I and
Detroit 8 Oakland 1. Boston at
Kansas City and New York at
Texas were postponed
because of inclement banque t were reserve
weather.
mentor, Gary Minton; freshCardinals 4, Giants 2:
men and junior high coach
Doug Clarey, batting for
late runner to spring a major
Tom Weaver; and the ~ iris'
the second time in the
. surprise.
coach Miss Palsy Fields.
majors,
hit a two-run homer
At least, that is the hope of
The girls' volleyball team
Originally in 14 K w hite
the opposing seven trainers . in the 16th inning, giving the which went to 'the State
or yell ow gold
Cardinals
their
triumph
over
Other hopefuls in the 102nd
Regional Tournam en t at
the
Giants.
Clarey's
homer
Kentucky Derby are Eugene
Otterbein College was also
Cashman's Elocutionist, off Mike Caldwell came after honored.
Now in 1OK wh ite or
Elmendorf's Play The Red, Willie Crawford opened the
Highlight of the banquet
yellow gold
Balmak Stable's On The Sly, inning with his fifth single of was the presentati on of
En tremont's Cojak, Dr. the game. Mike Proly, the trophies sponsored by the
Charles Jarrell's Inca Roca, fifth of six St. Louis pitchers, athletic boosters club . Tim
Or in fa shionab le sterling
James C. Irvin's Amano and was the winner while Lucas, senior member of the
silver
Caldwell suffered his third
Sared Stable's Bidson.
Bobcat
team,
was
the
club's
If ali nine start in the straight defeat.
Best Free Throw Shooter .
[)erby, the groSs purse will he Astros .S-7, Expos 4-l!:
Each is custom cre ated
. Co-rebounders were senior
Leon Roberts' three-run
$217,700witha winn.er's share
Bill
Metzner
and
junior
by fine j ewelry crohshomer was the big blow of a
of $165,200.
Ralph
Baylor
.
center,
men robe a che rished
Jolley will be trying to four..-un first-inning outburst
Baylor , a second team
symbol of devotion
that
sent
Hooston
on
its
way
become only the fourth
selection All..SVAC, was the
forever. Twin bonds
trainer in Derby history to to victory in the opener. team's Best Offen sive
Pinchhitter
Jose
Morales
representing
husb and
win in successive years . He
Player.
singled
home
Nate
Colbert
and
wife
o
re
jo.
ined by
would join trainers H. J .
Jim Armbruster , a senior,
with
one
out
In
the
ninth
to
brilli an t synthetic birth- .
"Derby Dick" Thompson ,
was honored as the club 's
Ben Jones and Jones' son climax a two-run rally which Best Defensive Player.
stones ... one for each
enabled Montreal to gain a
Jitruny,
Mitch Salem and Doug child. Give her nothing
split. J. R. Richard won his
less than The Orig inal.
third game for the Astros in Sands, both junior members
of the Bobcat squad , were
the opener.
voted the Most Improved
Caba 8, Padres o:-·
Player.
Rick Monday drove in four
Cheerleading awards were
runs, two with tiis fifth
presented
by Mrs. Roberta
homer,and Bill Bonham went
Court St .
Zdepski,
junior
high advisor,
81-3 innings for the Cubs, who
Porn eroy, Ohio
handed 1975 20-game winner and varsity and reserve
· Randy Jones his first 1976
Golden State took a 28-22 lead loss after four straight
into the second period.
victories. Bonham, staked to
Detroit's only threat came anearly7-Qlead,allowedfour
at the end of the third quarter San Diego runs, including a
when Al Eberhard and Bob three..-un homer by Willie
Lanier teammed for 10 points Davis.
in an 1~ spurt that cut the Dodgers 2, Pirates 1:
lead to 93-80 entering the final
Ron Cey homered off Jerry
period.
Reuss with one out in the
Warriors center Clifford ninth inning to lift the
Ray, k,nown better for his Dodgers over the Pirates and
defense, came through with stretch their wfnning streak
18 points and a game-high 15 to five games. Burt Hooton
rebounds while helping hold pitched a six-hitter to raise
Lanier to 15 points.
his record to 1·2 for Los
Middleport, Ohio
In the ABA, rookie forward Angeles while Reuss' record
David Thompson SCQred a dropped to 2-2. Richie Hebner
Ph. 992-53 21
game-high 40 points and homered for Pittsburgh.
paced a third-quarter
offensive explosion that led
the Denver Nuggets to a 133110 victory over Kentucky
and a spot in the playoff
finals .
GENERAL REVENUE SHARING PLANNED US E RE P O RT
Th ~ victory gave the Nug'
This
gets, the league's regular
season champion, a 4·3
triumph over the defending
league champions in the
semifinal. The finals against
the second place New ' York
Nets will begin Saturday in
Denver.
MtiGS COUNTY 909
COUNTY AUDITOR
The Nuggets, playing
POMEROY, OHIO 45769
before a standing-room-only
crowd of 18,821, the largest
ever to see an ABA game, had
a see-saw battle with the
Colonels before unleashing a
37-point thirdquarter attack.
ID) S ubm~ ~~~apotel• IC~r hmd lrl~ , 00 1id 111110n b~ June 25 , 197&amp;
"I just want to enjoy this,"
tD Office of Rev . Sharing·
·
said Nugget Coach Larry
..,F'perllng docu mt~~ lt, 1, 1 open 101 pub;' l tr ulln j • A ccp~ of lhle ••~ 1.,.!
.
.
?02~ 6 ,
Brown. "This is the first time
in Den.v er's history that
we've gotten into the finals.
I'm looking forward to New
York, but right now I want to
savor this win for a while.''
ti10TAU
Messersmith has now made
four appearances for Atlanta
without wiMing a game. He
allowed six hits and the Mets'
three runs in seven innings
and now stands at 0-1.
"Now that I think of it, it
was the only bad pitch I

Celtics sputtering at 2·2
in playoffs without Hondo

~~~-~
1

K£ TROPHY WINNERS - Members of the Kyger Creek boys and girls' cage teams

Kingman belts ninth home run

.By CHRIS SCHERF
UPI Sports Writer
LOUISVILLE, Ky. I UP!)
- Honest Pleasure and Bold
Forbes are expected to leave
. a small Kentucky Derby field
in their wake coming out of
Generous Contribution
the gate Saturday, but trainer
LeRoy J olley said po st
CINCINNATI I UPfi - J . positions could be extremely
Ralph Corbett, president of important to the two
the Corbett Foundation and favorites .
well-known local arts patron ,
"Post positions are going to
Wedn esday presented a have a little effect on the
$100,000 check to the Cin· race," said Jolley, who hopes
cinnati Symphony Or· Honest Pleasure responds to
cheslra 's pension fund . The the role of favorite as well as
gift, largest ever made to the Foolish Pleasure did last
five-year old fund that year . "That may be even
benefits retired orchestra more important than in the
members , virtually doubled larger field of the past few
years."
the fund .
"I think the horse who
draws an outside post
THISTLEDOWN
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
1 UPI )- Mad Emmet won his
race of the year at
Thistledown Wednesday by
laking the featured ninth
event in I :36 2-5 for the 71&gt;,
furlongs .
The four-year-{)ld, ridden
by Rick Sackett, paid $7.80,
$3 .60 and $3 .80. Scott 's
By CHRIS TURKEL
Swapped was second and
UPI Sports Writer
Gallant Tube fini shed third.
The Boston Celtics just
The 10·9·2 tenth race aren't the same without John
perfecta of Sea Art, Conflict Havlicek.
and Part Western was worth
Since losing the services of
$884.10 and the 5-3 daily their perennial All -Star
double of Clarinda 's Star and forward with a foot injury
Easy Commandelte returned after the second game of their
$689.80.
NBA · Eastern Conference
semifi.nal playoff series,
Boston has lost both of its
games to Buffalo, tying the
series 2-2.
Don Nelson, Havlicek's replacement, made a valiant
attempt Wednesday night to
fill his teammate 's sneakers,
scoring 27 points, but when it
came to the clutch, Nelson

[

. tlO

"I don't expect to hit a lot of
homers but I do expect to hit
the ball harder," said Boone,
whose II RBI's this season is
half his total for ali of last
year.
''I was too tense last year
and I had a bad RBI year. I'm
try(ng to relax more in those
situations."
The Reds got one baak in
the sixth and knocked out
starter Jim Lonborg with a
walk to Mike Lum and singles
by Cesar Geronimo and Doug
Flynn. Morgan singled, Tony
Perez tripled and Johnny
Bench doubled as ancinnati
made it 7-ii in the seventh.
Bench was on third with
two outs in the ninth but
reliever Tug McGraw struck
out Bob Bailey to end the
game.

S- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, April 29, 1976

KC athletes
are honored

Bowalosestemper,
Phillies ·win tilt
PHILADELPHIA (UP[) Philadelphia won a dramatic
game over the Cincinnati
Reds Wednesday night but
Larry Bowa lost his temper
and the Phillies probably lost
a· shortstop for awhile .
The Bowa incident, which
occurred in the sixth inning,
almost overshadowed what
turned out to he. a 7-ii thriller
that ended with Ci ncinnati
having the tying run on third.
The skinny shortstop
became Involved in a heated
argument with home pia le
wnpire Jim Quick and was
ejected. He then bumped
Quick and press box
observers said it appeared
Bowa threatened to punch

.........

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By RICK DU BROW
left .
OAKLAND, Calif. (UP!) "The rest were the crack
It was one year ago that division of elite trying to save
grufftallting World Airways their own lives," Daly, S3,
president Ed Daly, pistol in recalls, still angry. "I was
hand as he tried to help torn apart. My face was
\von\en and children on to the battered. I looked like Dorian
last flight out of Da Nang, Gray."
gave the
world
an
UP! correspondent Paul
unforgettable picture.
Vogle, who was aboard the
Soldiers of South Vietnam's flight, wrote: "People died
e.lite Black Panther division ll'ying to get aboard and
pqshed aside civilians others died when theY fell
violently and got themselves thousands of feet in!o the sea
aboard Daly 's " mercy because even desperation
mission" flight despite the could no longer keep their
heroic resistance of the fingers clasped to the
American executive.
undercarriage."
Us~g his boot, his fists,
Daly, a multimillionaire
anythmg he could, the mave- known for his Good
rick charter plane pioneer Samaritan acts, won such
tried to load his craft with headlines as "The Bravest
refugees . But, though he was Man In South Vietnam,"
beaten up in the proe11ss, "Mr . Ed Lifts Out War
there were only three Babes" and "Daly's Airlift
civilians on the flight when it Slives Orphans."
His rescue missions saved

_Polyester
and
Cotton Knits

1

thousands · of - South helping evacuate refugees.
Vietnamese through airlifts. Since then, he personally has
And Daly, a tough, stocky ex- given aid to hundreds of them
Chicagoan known for his · "without governmen\ aid of
fund·raising for black, any kind. ".
Jewish
and · Catholic
"Many are in high schools
organizations, still is helping and universities, and we have
out where he thinks help is a continuing contact and
needed .
assistance program with
After the recent Guatemala them," he said. "But it's
earthquake, he flew more phenomenal how many are
than 100 key persons to the taking care of themselves."
stricken country "to find out
Tough-talking as ever, he
the real needs."
says: "I'd rather visit with
"What was needed were any one of these kids from
hammers , nails, lumber . Vietnam or Cambodia or any
There was enough food," he of the nations that have fallen
said.
.
than accept an Invitation
Recalling events of a year . from the White House, where
ago , he says the American I was recently."
government had, in his
If he had it to do again,
opinion, written off South would he do anything
Vietnam six months before it differently than he did a year
fell. He does not have kind ago?
words for Secretary of State
"Yeah," he says. ' l'd kick
Henry Kissihger :
more of ti!Ose elite soldiers
As the nation was falling, off the ramp.' :
Daly had his planes there,
1

Guam was the first refuge
.

'

CLEV~LAND

I UPI )

RACINE - Fifty -seven
pupils a·t Racine Elementary
School have been named to

the fi fth sl• weeks

~onor

VANMETER.
Grade 3- VIncent Cleland,
Alan Cr isp. Sandra Deem .

roll. Ralph · Fisher,

A student must ma·lnta ln a

" B" or better grade to be
named to the roll. Those

Sandra

Harden , Del:xJrah ,Holter , Lois

lhl e, Dav id Powe ll , Lori
Simpson , Marlftno Wagner,
students whose names are In Lori Wolfe, Kevin Dugan.
all ca pita l fetters received all
Grade 4 - James ~ush ,

Wolfe, Tony Wolfe .
KATHY
Gra ce S BAKER , Ang le Glenn ,
BE CKY LEE, Cla ir Morris.
Terry

Patterson ,

John

Porter. David · Sa lm ons.
Tonia Salser, Lori Warden,
Melanie Weese.
Grade 6 -

Kim Bickers,

VIcky Deem, Kim Follrod. '
Scott Frederick. Lor i Powell.
Jay
Rees , MELI NDA
SAL MON S, Rita Sto ler .
Laura Wolfe. KE NT WOLFE .

Coach Bill Fitch has gone on
record, In a somewhat left- A's. Nam ed to the roll were : Kevin Curfman , Becky
1
Damon Johnson , linda Proffitt ,
handed fashion, as saying his Grade
Fisher
,
MATTH
EW
Cleveland Cavaliers could JEWELL.
RACHEL
win the National Basketball. REIBER, DIMa Simpson,
Association championship. Tammy Theiss, Tammy
The Cavs · and the Wolfe , Wendy Wolfe.
Grade 2 - LOR t ADAMS .
Washington Bullets have won
Kerd Beeg le. Jay Bostick ,
three apiece In their playoff Dl&gt;le
Dugan, Mandy Hill.
series, which will be decided Melissa lhl e. Kelly Rize r.
tonight on Clevelimd's home Kenda Rlzer. Robin Savage,
Chad Sayre, REBECCA
court at the Coliseum.
Fitch believes both teams
have played well through the
first six games.
WINS SCHOLARSHIP
· "I think that if either one of
MARIE'ITA
- Marietta
these teams keeps playing as
College
senior
Jo
Ellen Diehl
It has played in this series, it
can go on and win the whole of Pomeroy was awarded the
Frank R. Ford Scripp s·
l!ling," Fitch said.
H
oward
Foundation
The Cavaliers have won
.
Scholarship
at
the annual
two of the three playoff
Spring
Honors
Assembly
on
games held at the Coliseum,
April
20.
The
scholarship
which has been completely
sold out for the rubber game. honors Mar·ietta alumnus
They will have the advantage Frank R. Ford, a former
of ~he home court and the editor of th e Scripps-Howard
deafening support of 21,564 Newspaper Alliance . Mi ss
fans , another NBA playoff Diehl, an English major and .
a 1972 graduate of Meigs HS,
record crowd.
On the debit side, Cleveland is ihe daughter of Mr . and
may have to mimage without Mrs . James Diehl of
much help from . Bobby Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy .
(Bingo) Smith, the team's top
scorer. He and top rebounder
Jim Brewer have knee
In 1945, American troops
problems but Brewer is
liberated
32,000 prisoners
expected to play most of the
from
the
Dachau
game.
concentration
camp
in Nazi
Open Fri. &amp;Sat. Til 8:00
· Smith was in for only 21
Germany.
minutes in Monday ninght's
102-98 loss, to Md.
the Bullets
at • ,_.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,
Landover
Brewer

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AND PARTIES

•LONG DRESSES

"'

...

•CROCHETED
SHAWLS

'1.69 YD.

Su
· n .Dancers·
bv Thom McAn· ,

Cushioned leather
innersvles

Handwoven
leather uppers

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"

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CURITY DIAPERS

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GOESSLER
Jewelly Store

REG.

12 GAUGE.. ...................~~~-~~ .. $850
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0

Blown Into Your Walls
"Free Estimates"

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

FOREMAN AND ABBOTT

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Perfect
far the
graduate

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Birdies to mark tourney

'

By GARY TAYWR
UPI Sports Writer
WOODLANDS, Tex. (UP!)
- For a number of reasons,
the 156 starters in the fourday, $200,000 Houston Open
golf tournament expected
birdies to fall in record
numbers today.
Bruce Crampton's 15·
under-par was good enough
last year to win at the new
Woodlands Country Club
course. That
number
probably will not cut it this
year, the defending champion
said, if for no other reason
than this Is the second
straight year of play there.
The course itself was in
excellent condition,
"The fairways are firm,
and the course is set up just
fine," said young Texan Ben
Crenshaw, the second leading
money winner on the tour and
a favorite to win his third title
this year.
Scores may go lower
because the list of golfers is
considered the toughest in
seven years.

Besides Crenshaw, entries
include top money · winner
Hubert Green, . Masters
champion Ray Floyd, JohMy
Miller and Lee Trevino.
· Arnold Palmer was there
also, looking for another
charge. And although he did
not set any records during the
pro-am event Wednesday, he
· did shoot a 2-under 70.
"The greens are slick, and
I'm asswning they'll put
some water on them if they
wanttokeepthemfromgoing
totally out," he said. "I ran it

RAIL PLAN
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - The
Ohio Rail Transportation
Authority would be given
until March I, 1977, to come
up with a plan for a rapid
transit rail system linking
Ohio's major cities under
legislation approved Wednesday by the House and sent
to the Senate .
CYSTIC FIBROSIS
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A
$3,600 supplemental appropriation tli provide extended state medical care for
about 70 cystic fibrosis
patients more than 21 years
old was passed by the Senate
WednesdaY.

KC
(Conlll!ued fro~ page 4)
my Plants, Nancy
Foster, Kim Wroblewski and
Linda Wheeler.
RESERVE BASKETBALL
Jon Thompson, Fred
Helms, Von Taylor. Todd
Taylor, Yance.y Halley,
Eddie Mollohan, James
Westfall, Steve Darst and
Randy Brown.
GIRLS BASKETBALL
, Shirley Clay, VIcki Stroud,
Mary Rollins, Gloria Amos ,
Sherry Harrison, B•enda
Fife, Judy Dorst, Angle
Abshire, Cathy Baylor.
VARSITY BASKETBALL
Tim Lucas, Bill Metzner,
Ji m Armbruster, Ratpn
Baylor , Mitch Salem. Doug
.Sands, ,Andy Fisher, Randy
Brown, Steve Baird and Jon
Thompson.
Stailstl~lans
Fred
Weslfall
and
George
Thompson.
Manftgers - Keith Metzner
and Robbie Coder.
T~m

Whatever the
occasion, we
hove the gifts
for teen .men.
Big selection.

"

·PRETl'JEST!
FOR THE PROM

By DICK WIIJ..IAMS
tropical island is much like home provided by the Guam
AGANA, Guam (UP! )
that of Vietnam and the diet government !llld into a smart
More
than
100,000 is similar - fish, spicy food apartment. They pay no rent
Suitable for
Vietnamese refugees arrived and rice three times a day. or utilities and receive a
on this American island one
There was another reason, small salary for taking care
T-Shirts,
year ago but today only about too. G.uam is only five hours of the 20-unlt apartment
1,000 remain.
·
by air from Saigon should complex.
1~ummer Ur~isse1s,1
The first refugees arrived there ever be an opportunity
Other former refugees
here April 23, 1975, aboard a to go home.
work
as store
clerks, auto
mechanics,
electricians
and
U.S. Air Force Cl41 jet. For
Despite serious unemploythe next 90 days the refugees ment on Guam, as in the rest
station attendants . played all but seven minutes
came in a steady stream by of the United States, all service
Vietnamese businessmen · but Fitch has said he should
air and by ship.
have opened a nightclub , a · have rested him more.
employ~ble VIetnamese have
Some carried wealth and jobs or business ventures of roadside snackbar and a
Washington wlll be playing
some had only the shirts on their own.
landscaping business.
for more than a continiied
their backs; some were
Pan American World
Refugee farmers and shot at the title, according to
1
REGULARS 2.00 yd.
physically fit while others Airways
hired
ten fishermen are doing what is some observers. It has be en
were nearly dead ; there were Vietname~ men and wOinen, described as a profitable said that Bullets coach K.C .
babies and there were the with a combined total of 40 business.
Jones is in danger of losing
REAL VAWES
aged.
The exact number of his job because of this year's
dependents,
They all had one thing in
All ten, like their American refugees here is in dispute . loss of the division title to
mind - safety.
counterparts, are memljers The U.S. Inunigration office aeveland and last year's loss
An outbound airlift was of the Teamsters Union and says 589 with possibly of the NBA title to Golden
started that was nearly as the lowest paid Vietnamese another 20 who have not State in a four.game sweep.
frequent as the Inbound and employee on Pan ·Am's registered. The governor's
"l just think it's a lousy
the Vietnamese were sent on payroll earns $5.70 per hour. office has no exact figure but shame the whole thirlg"--is
to hastily opened relocation
happening,'" said Bulleis
One success story is that of · estimates 1,000.
camps on the mainland.
"We
must
remember
that
center
Wes Unseld, adding
·Dinh Van Minh, once a cargo
MIDOlEIIOIT
Those who stayed did so sales agent for Pan Am in those first few days was that he has stopped reafng
OHIO
because the climate on this Saigon.
really a shotgun operation," the local newspapers .
Starting at the bottom here said Inspector Darrel Fasset · "The first month of the
a year ago Minh was of the U.S. immigration season or so it did bother
me ,n said ~ones. "now lt
promoted to lead agent, the office.
''The only . concern at the doesn't.
highest rung before reaching
time .was to get the people to
"All! care about is how my
management level.
The enterprising former .safety, get ,them some food players pel'form. 1 will leave
the hiring·· and firing to ·
... \'1' I
refugee moved his wife and .·and shelter."
others."
brother out of the temporary
,. ..().

-; il
...
:,...

.

'

LOOK YOUR

MILL ENDS

..:

Katr ina Snodgrass, Laren

Racine honor pupils listed

"

by the hole a lot, so the greens
will determine it."
If the pro-am was any
indication, a host of very low
scores can be expected.
Dallas resident John Schlee
fired a 7.-under 65. Green and
Allen Miller shot 67, while
Trevino, Tom Kite and Jim
Colbert came in with 611s.
Despite 48 golfers beating
par last year, an official of
the sponsoring Houston Golf
Association said the PGA
asked them to make the
course a little easier.
"I' expect to See
rounds in the low 60s," said
PGA Executive Secretary
John Davis. "The PGA
ordered us to · widen the
fairways on some holes , and
that's sure to help the

same

scoring."

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platform

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MIDDLEPORT, 0.

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�J

t - The Daily Sentinel, Middl~port-Pomeroy, 0., Thursd~y, April 29, 1976

'

umpire Billy Williams said
the Bowa case was "severe"
and said a telephone report
was being filed with the
league office immediately.
Chances are good that Bowa
will receive a suspension.
Bow a had singled and
scored the Phils first run in
the bottom of the first after
the Reds had jumpe(l out to a
3-&lt;l lead on Joe Morgan's
three-run homer. Johnstone
doubled to send home Bowa
and Mike Schmidt who had
walked, then scored himself
on a single by Garry Maddox .
Philadelphia scored the
winning run in the fifth on a
three-run homer by catch·
er Bob Boone. Johnstone
_him.
doubled in the fifth and
Coaches Ray Ripplemyer Cincinnati Manager Sparky
and· Bobby Wine and Ander so n ordered Bobby
rightfielder Jay Johnstone Tolan walked . Boone,
then physically carried Bow a however, spoiled the strategy
to the Phils dugout.
with his second homer of the
After the · game , senior year to make it 7-3.

Fight plans similar,
'except for the finale
By STEVE WILSTEIN
UPI Sports Writer
LANDOVER, Md . I UP() Here is a preview, courtesy of
Muhammad Ali and Jimmy
Young, of Friday night's
nationally televised heavyweight championship fight:
"I'll let him throw all the
punches the first five
rounds, " Ali said. "I just
want to make him shoot,
blast. From then on I've
weakened him, then I start
hitting.
" If I dance for five rounds
and go punch for punch, I
might be ahead , but I'm tired
as hell. I'd rather him be
ahead , bein' tired and I'm

not."
"I think the first half of the
fight I'll be ahead," Young
said. ''He'll start to open up
after about six rounds .
During the middle of the fight
it'll be about even. I think the
fans will be able to tell the
difference after about nine
rounds. I think you'll be able
to tell who's going to win this
fight after the ninth ."
Young said .he's going to
fight a "smart fight. "
"I'm going to work on him
from his head to his heart to
his ·stomach, up and down.
I'm not going to just
concentrate on his head, just
try to knock him out and blow
what f've got. But I think
there'll be a knockout, one
way or the other."

Young apparently knows
and is training for Ali's fight
plan but that may not help
him win . Ali, trying to age
gracefull y at 34, has
developed a completely new
style from the days when he
floated like a butterfly and
stung like a bee. Now he hits
straight from the shoulder
with either hand, with jabs
stiff as an iron pole. He has
learned
to
minimize
movement and maximize
defense. Timing, as always,
is the essence and it is
perhaps the quickness of his
mind and reflexes that have
given him back his crown and
glory.
Young appeared to be
small threat for Ali's title as
he wound up training
Wednesday , losing two out of

three rounds to his sparring
partn er, Mike Koranicki.
Koranicki performed vaguely
in the manner of Ali, and
Young showed himself to be
vulnerable to jabs to the head
and quick combinationstwo of Ali's favorite weapons .

EXPECT NEW MARK
COLUMBUS I UPI ) - Ohio
hunters are headed for a
record turkey kill this year.
The Department of Natural
Resources
Division of
Wildlfe reported Wednesday
that 48 turkeys were killed
the first two days of the 1976
season Monday and Tuesday.
If inclement weather conditions improve, the division
expects 1975's reCQrd turkey
kill of 95 to be surpassed.
The 12-&lt;lay turkey season
continues through May 7.
1

r;o\\No\-"(
T~

f~ ~ We Fill
All New And Refill
Prescriptions
HRS.: 9-5 DAILY
.. CLOSED SUNDAY

VILLAGE PHARMACY
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
NEW HAVEN, W. VA.
,,

were lionored Wednesday during the annual banquet sponsored by the Athletic Boosters
Club. Receiving trophies were: left to right, Ralph Baylor, Best Offensive Player and CoRebounder; Tim Lucas, Best Free Throw Shooter; Bill Metzner, Co-Best Rebounder; Jim
Armbruster, Best Defensive Player ; Mitch Salem, Co-Most Improved Player and Doug
Sands, Co-Most Improved Player.

By FRED DOWN
UP! Sports Writer
The young lions are Dave
Kingman and Mike Schmidt
and it appears they're going
to stage the most exciting
home run race the National
League has seen in more than
a quarter of a century .
Kingman, known as
"Kong" by his New York Met
teammates, has hit nine
homers this season while
Schmid t.
who,
his
Philadelpnia Phillies teammates. say , has "no limitations," has hit 11.
Schmidt went holl)erless in ·

the Phillies' 7-6 victory over
the
Cincinnati
Reds
Wednesday night, but
"Kong" hit his ninth, a threerun blast · into the clouds
overhanging New York's
Shea Stadium as the Mets
downed the Atlanta Braves,
3-0.
Kingman
hit
his
" rainmaker " off Andy
Messersmith with two on in
the first inning and that was
all Cr~ig Swan needed to
breeze to the victory, the
Mets' fifth in a row . Swan
allowed five hits, struck out
II and walked one as he
evened his record at t -1.

Honest Pleasure and
Bold Forbes favored
position always has a little
edge because the rider can
look over and see what's
happening, whereas the
inside rider has to commit."
Usually post position is not
that critical in the Derby
becaU.se there is a quarter of
a mile down the stretch to the
first turn.
The winner of nine straight
races and ' holder of career
earnings of more than
$600,000, Bert Firestone's
Honest Pleasure will go off. as
an odds-on favorite in the J¥,.
mile American classic with
Braulio Baeza aboard.
His chief rival appears to
be E. Rodriguez Tirol's Bold
Forbes, who will be ridden by
Angel Cordero. Still, the allout running styles of the two
3-year-old colts might allow a

failed . Rookie John Shwnate
tipped Nelson's shot at the
buzzer and it fell short of the
basket, sealing Buffalo's 124122 victory.
Randy Smith was the
Braves' hero as he hit a 2Sfoot jump shot with three
seconds left to win the game
at Buffalo. The fifth game
will be played In Boston
Friday night.
Smith, who scored 28
points, said of the low
percentage shot: "I found
myself In a one-on-one
situation and tried to
penetrate but couldn't. So I
went up with the shot."
Buffalo's Bob McAdoo led
ail scorers with 30 points but
Stewart named
fouled out with I: 11 left.
.Ernie DiGregorio scored 21
Middie mentor
points, Shumate 20 and Jim
MIDDLETOWN, Ohio McMillian 18 for the Braves
(UP! l _ After five years In while Dave Cowens had 29
an assistant's slot, Ted points, Jo Jo While 28 and
Stewart has been named to Charlie Scott 16 for the
replace the retiring Paul Celtics.
Walker as basketball coach of
in the other NBA semifmal,
Middletown High School . . All-Star f?rward Rt~ Barry
Stewart, 35, a graduate of had 25 potnts, II asstllls and
Union College (Ky.), coached seven steals to ~wer the
the Middie junior varsity the Golden Stale Wamors to ~
past two seasons, compiling a 128-109 rout of the _Detrotl
35-1 record. He started in the Pistons and go up 3-2 m their
Middletown system in 1969 as Western . Conference ~rles .
a freshman coach.
The s~th gam~ wtll be
Walker's 1975-76 team fin. play,ed tn Detrotl · Frida!
ished with a IS-2 regular rugh . and a seventh game, tf
season record and was beaten necessary • is scheduled for
in the finals of the Class AAA Oakland Sunday.
State Tournament
by
The Warnors never trailed
Barberton.
after breaking a Hi-IS tie with
Walker coached-30 years at a. 13-7 spree at the end of ~he
Middletown, compiling 696 ftrst q~arter. Phil Smtth
victories and five state sCQre~ etght of h~ game-htgh
championships.
28 pomts tn th.;t spurt as

"What's it all about 1 "
That was the theme of a
talk given by former Mar·
shall basketball standout Leo
Bryd durin g the annual
banquet honoring members
of the Kyger Creek High
School boys and girls' teams

adv isors, Maurice Mayes and
Mrs. Fay Sauer.
The affair was potluck.
DJie Roth~e b , Jr. served as
emcee and offered the invocation.
Honored were :
GIR LS VOLLEY BALL '-,
Sh ll ' Y Cl ay. Co nnie

WednesdaY night.

Ht•skms, Charily Amos, Vic k i

I'

the importance of teamwork

Mart in. Donna Flint an d Usa

ahd concentration. Byrd told
the players to not become
complacent.
Head Coach Keith Car ter
thanked everyone who helped
with the season especially the
KC Athle tic Boosters Club for
providing a new rebounding
machine. He sa id the pasl
season, 'Could have bee n
better but not necessaril y
should have been better."
. Hesaidhewas pleased with
the team's progress an d cited
two of his season's high
points, victories over Southwestern and Eastern.
Coach Carter announced
that the players will be in,
vited and urged to participate
in a summer ba sketball
program. "We will ha ve a
winner here at Kyger Creek if
you want it badly enough. We
mustwork hard this sammer ." He also urged players
to go to basketball camps this
summer .
Other
coaches
participating in last night' s

Elli s.
.
Reserve - Tammy Ri fe,
Rob1 n
Fr al ey ,
T1 na
Hil mmond, Carol Stidha m,
Debbi e Clevenger, Monica
Fisher and Robm R.i fe . '
Jr ·, Hlqh -- De bb1e Bales,
Contmued on page· ~

.

'

'

,'
'

Cavs host
Bullets
tonight

Army's elite like sad sacks
on last flight from Da Nang

'.

Byrd, a member of the Stroud, Mary Roll ins. Jan
West Virginia Hall of Fam e, Springer, Judy Darst, Brenda ·
overcame polio at age . 12 to Fi le. Gloria Amos and Sherry
Harr ison .
become one of _ the most
JR . HIGH BASKETBALL
outstanding bas ketb a ll
Greg
Po lcy n, Bru ce
players
at
Marsha ll Gi lmore, Tom Springer, John
Westf (l l l, Victor VanSickle,
University.
Rusty Russ ell, Bill Swisher, ·
In his talk , Byrd , a All a n
Shee ts,' Robby
management tr ain in g Goucher , Henr y McCoy , Mike '
executive, reviewed the Shoem ake r , Robbie Cod er
and Dan sa·nds .
changes in laday's world FRESHMAN BASKETBALL
through knowledge gained,
Den nis Molloha n. Luke
the continual lea rning Amo s, Phil Ba ir d, Stacy
process and how to be sue- John ston , Dan Cha pman ,
'.
.
~ Kei th
Vei th, Jim Misner ,
cessful tn sports , bustness, Terry Rothgeb and Davi d
life and family .
· Payne.
He urged the athletes to
CHEER LEADE';RS
dream dare and do and go
Varsity -:- Jan Stidham .
. ' .
,
Ddwn Mar h n. Becky Polcyn ,
for dtrectton. He also stressed Lisa ~io m mond, Kell y

the big blow for the Phillies,
who dealt the Reds' Pat
Darcy his second loss agaihst
one victory. Jim Lonborg
went five innings, yielding
four .runs and eight hits, to
receive credit for his seCQnd
straight win. Pete Rose, Joe
made.'' said Messersmith, Morgan and Doug Flynn had
referring to Kingman's two hits each for the Reds:
·St. Louis defeated San
homer. "It was a hanging
slider and that was the game. Francisco, 4-2, in 16 innings,
But it still comes down to Montreal beat Houston, 8-7,
throwing the ball past the after a 6-4 loss; .the Chicago
sticks and I'm not doing Cuba topped San Diego, ~.
an.d Los Angeles downed
that."
Bob Boone's three-run Pittsburgh, 2-1, in other
homer in the fifth inning was National League games.
now costs less
In the American League, it
was Baltimore 4 California 2,
than the original.
Cleveland 9 Minnesota 0,
Milwaukee 4 Chicago I and
Detroit 8 Oakland 1. Boston at
Kansas City and New York at
Texas were postponed
because of inclement banque t were reserve
weather.
mentor, Gary Minton; freshCardinals 4, Giants 2:
men and junior high coach
Doug Clarey, batting for
late runner to spring a major
Tom Weaver; and the ~ iris'
the second time in the
. surprise.
coach Miss Palsy Fields.
majors,
hit a two-run homer
At least, that is the hope of
The girls' volleyball team
Originally in 14 K w hite
the opposing seven trainers . in the 16th inning, giving the which went to 'the State
or yell ow gold
Cardinals
their
triumph
over
Other hopefuls in the 102nd
Regional Tournam en t at
the
Giants.
Clarey's
homer
Kentucky Derby are Eugene
Otterbein College was also
Cashman's Elocutionist, off Mike Caldwell came after honored.
Now in 1OK wh ite or
Elmendorf's Play The Red, Willie Crawford opened the
Highlight of the banquet
yellow gold
Balmak Stable's On The Sly, inning with his fifth single of was the presentati on of
En tremont's Cojak, Dr. the game. Mike Proly, the trophies sponsored by the
Charles Jarrell's Inca Roca, fifth of six St. Louis pitchers, athletic boosters club . Tim
Or in fa shionab le sterling
James C. Irvin's Amano and was the winner while Lucas, senior member of the
silver
Caldwell suffered his third
Sared Stable's Bidson.
Bobcat
team,
was
the
club's
If ali nine start in the straight defeat.
Best Free Throw Shooter .
[)erby, the groSs purse will he Astros .S-7, Expos 4-l!:
Each is custom cre ated
. Co-rebounders were senior
Leon Roberts' three-run
$217,700witha winn.er's share
Bill
Metzner
and
junior
by fine j ewelry crohshomer was the big blow of a
of $165,200.
Ralph
Baylor
.
center,
men robe a che rished
Jolley will be trying to four..-un first-inning outburst
Baylor , a second team
symbol of devotion
that
sent
Hooston
on
its
way
become only the fourth
selection All..SVAC, was the
forever. Twin bonds
trainer in Derby history to to victory in the opener. team's Best Offen sive
Pinchhitter
Jose
Morales
representing
husb and
win in successive years . He
Player.
singled
home
Nate
Colbert
and
wife
o
re
jo.
ined by
would join trainers H. J .
Jim Armbruster , a senior,
with
one
out
In
the
ninth
to
brilli an t synthetic birth- .
"Derby Dick" Thompson ,
was honored as the club 's
Ben Jones and Jones' son climax a two-run rally which Best Defensive Player.
stones ... one for each
enabled Montreal to gain a
Jitruny,
Mitch Salem and Doug child. Give her nothing
split. J. R. Richard won his
less than The Orig inal.
third game for the Astros in Sands, both junior members
of the Bobcat squad , were
the opener.
voted the Most Improved
Caba 8, Padres o:-·
Player.
Rick Monday drove in four
Cheerleading awards were
runs, two with tiis fifth
presented
by Mrs. Roberta
homer,and Bill Bonham went
Court St .
Zdepski,
junior
high advisor,
81-3 innings for the Cubs, who
Porn eroy, Ohio
handed 1975 20-game winner and varsity and reserve
· Randy Jones his first 1976
Golden State took a 28-22 lead loss after four straight
into the second period.
victories. Bonham, staked to
Detroit's only threat came anearly7-Qlead,allowedfour
at the end of the third quarter San Diego runs, including a
when Al Eberhard and Bob three..-un homer by Willie
Lanier teammed for 10 points Davis.
in an 1~ spurt that cut the Dodgers 2, Pirates 1:
lead to 93-80 entering the final
Ron Cey homered off Jerry
period.
Reuss with one out in the
Warriors center Clifford ninth inning to lift the
Ray, k,nown better for his Dodgers over the Pirates and
defense, came through with stretch their wfnning streak
18 points and a game-high 15 to five games. Burt Hooton
rebounds while helping hold pitched a six-hitter to raise
Lanier to 15 points.
his record to 1·2 for Los
Middleport, Ohio
In the ABA, rookie forward Angeles while Reuss' record
David Thompson SCQred a dropped to 2-2. Richie Hebner
Ph. 992-53 21
game-high 40 points and homered for Pittsburgh.
paced a third-quarter
offensive explosion that led
the Denver Nuggets to a 133110 victory over Kentucky
and a spot in the playoff
finals .
GENERAL REVENUE SHARING PLANNED US E RE P O RT
Th ~ victory gave the Nug'
This
gets, the league's regular
season champion, a 4·3
triumph over the defending
league champions in the
semifinal. The finals against
the second place New ' York
Nets will begin Saturday in
Denver.
MtiGS COUNTY 909
COUNTY AUDITOR
The Nuggets, playing
POMEROY, OHIO 45769
before a standing-room-only
crowd of 18,821, the largest
ever to see an ABA game, had
a see-saw battle with the
Colonels before unleashing a
37-point thirdquarter attack.
ID) S ubm~ ~~~apotel• IC~r hmd lrl~ , 00 1id 111110n b~ June 25 , 197&amp;
"I just want to enjoy this,"
tD Office of Rev . Sharing·
·
said Nugget Coach Larry
..,F'perllng docu mt~~ lt, 1, 1 open 101 pub;' l tr ulln j • A ccp~ of lhle ••~ 1.,.!
.
.
?02~ 6 ,
Brown. "This is the first time
in Den.v er's history that
we've gotten into the finals.
I'm looking forward to New
York, but right now I want to
savor this win for a while.''
ti10TAU
Messersmith has now made
four appearances for Atlanta
without wiMing a game. He
allowed six hits and the Mets'
three runs in seven innings
and now stands at 0-1.
"Now that I think of it, it
was the only bad pitch I

Celtics sputtering at 2·2
in playoffs without Hondo

~~~-~
1

K£ TROPHY WINNERS - Members of the Kyger Creek boys and girls' cage teams

Kingman belts ninth home run

.By CHRIS SCHERF
UPI Sports Writer
LOUISVILLE, Ky. I UP!)
- Honest Pleasure and Bold
Forbes are expected to leave
. a small Kentucky Derby field
in their wake coming out of
Generous Contribution
the gate Saturday, but trainer
LeRoy J olley said po st
CINCINNATI I UPfi - J . positions could be extremely
Ralph Corbett, president of important to the two
the Corbett Foundation and favorites .
well-known local arts patron ,
"Post positions are going to
Wedn esday presented a have a little effect on the
$100,000 check to the Cin· race," said Jolley, who hopes
cinnati Symphony Or· Honest Pleasure responds to
cheslra 's pension fund . The the role of favorite as well as
gift, largest ever made to the Foolish Pleasure did last
five-year old fund that year . "That may be even
benefits retired orchestra more important than in the
members , virtually doubled larger field of the past few
years."
the fund .
"I think the horse who
draws an outside post
THISTLEDOWN
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
1 UPI )- Mad Emmet won his
race of the year at
Thistledown Wednesday by
laking the featured ninth
event in I :36 2-5 for the 71&gt;,
furlongs .
The four-year-{)ld, ridden
by Rick Sackett, paid $7.80,
$3 .60 and $3 .80. Scott 's
By CHRIS TURKEL
Swapped was second and
UPI Sports Writer
Gallant Tube fini shed third.
The Boston Celtics just
The 10·9·2 tenth race aren't the same without John
perfecta of Sea Art, Conflict Havlicek.
and Part Western was worth
Since losing the services of
$884.10 and the 5-3 daily their perennial All -Star
double of Clarinda 's Star and forward with a foot injury
Easy Commandelte returned after the second game of their
$689.80.
NBA · Eastern Conference
semifi.nal playoff series,
Boston has lost both of its
games to Buffalo, tying the
series 2-2.
Don Nelson, Havlicek's replacement, made a valiant
attempt Wednesday night to
fill his teammate 's sneakers,
scoring 27 points, but when it
came to the clutch, Nelson

[

. tlO

"I don't expect to hit a lot of
homers but I do expect to hit
the ball harder," said Boone,
whose II RBI's this season is
half his total for ali of last
year.
''I was too tense last year
and I had a bad RBI year. I'm
try(ng to relax more in those
situations."
The Reds got one baak in
the sixth and knocked out
starter Jim Lonborg with a
walk to Mike Lum and singles
by Cesar Geronimo and Doug
Flynn. Morgan singled, Tony
Perez tripled and Johnny
Bench doubled as ancinnati
made it 7-ii in the seventh.
Bench was on third with
two outs in the ninth but
reliever Tug McGraw struck
out Bob Bailey to end the
game.

S- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, April 29, 1976

KC athletes
are honored

Bowalosestemper,
Phillies ·win tilt
PHILADELPHIA (UP[) Philadelphia won a dramatic
game over the Cincinnati
Reds Wednesday night but
Larry Bowa lost his temper
and the Phillies probably lost
a· shortstop for awhile .
The Bowa incident, which
occurred in the sixth inning,
almost overshadowed what
turned out to he. a 7-ii thriller
that ended with Ci ncinnati
having the tying run on third.
The skinny shortstop
became Involved in a heated
argument with home pia le
wnpire Jim Quick and was
ejected. He then bumped
Quick and press box
observers said it appeared
Bowa threatened to punch

.........

.•

.

..

By RICK DU BROW
left .
OAKLAND, Calif. (UP!) "The rest were the crack
It was one year ago that division of elite trying to save
grufftallting World Airways their own lives," Daly, S3,
president Ed Daly, pistol in recalls, still angry. "I was
hand as he tried to help torn apart. My face was
\von\en and children on to the battered. I looked like Dorian
last flight out of Da Nang, Gray."
gave the
world
an
UP! correspondent Paul
unforgettable picture.
Vogle, who was aboard the
Soldiers of South Vietnam's flight, wrote: "People died
e.lite Black Panther division ll'ying to get aboard and
pqshed aside civilians others died when theY fell
violently and got themselves thousands of feet in!o the sea
aboard Daly 's " mercy because even desperation
mission" flight despite the could no longer keep their
heroic resistance of the fingers clasped to the
American executive.
undercarriage."
Us~g his boot, his fists,
Daly, a multimillionaire
anythmg he could, the mave- known for his Good
rick charter plane pioneer Samaritan acts, won such
tried to load his craft with headlines as "The Bravest
refugees . But, though he was Man In South Vietnam,"
beaten up in the proe11ss, "Mr . Ed Lifts Out War
there were only three Babes" and "Daly's Airlift
civilians on the flight when it Slives Orphans."
His rescue missions saved

_Polyester
and
Cotton Knits

1

thousands · of - South helping evacuate refugees.
Vietnamese through airlifts. Since then, he personally has
And Daly, a tough, stocky ex- given aid to hundreds of them
Chicagoan known for his · "without governmen\ aid of
fund·raising for black, any kind. ".
Jewish
and · Catholic
"Many are in high schools
organizations, still is helping and universities, and we have
out where he thinks help is a continuing contact and
needed .
assistance program with
After the recent Guatemala them," he said. "But it's
earthquake, he flew more phenomenal how many are
than 100 key persons to the taking care of themselves."
stricken country "to find out
Tough-talking as ever, he
the real needs."
says: "I'd rather visit with
"What was needed were any one of these kids from
hammers , nails, lumber . Vietnam or Cambodia or any
There was enough food," he of the nations that have fallen
said.
.
than accept an Invitation
Recalling events of a year . from the White House, where
ago , he says the American I was recently."
government had, in his
If he had it to do again,
opinion, written off South would he do anything
Vietnam six months before it differently than he did a year
fell. He does not have kind ago?
words for Secretary of State
"Yeah," he says. ' l'd kick
Henry Kissihger :
more of ti!Ose elite soldiers
As the nation was falling, off the ramp.' :
Daly had his planes there,
1

Guam was the first refuge
.

'

CLEV~LAND

I UPI )

RACINE - Fifty -seven
pupils a·t Racine Elementary
School have been named to

the fi fth sl• weeks

~onor

VANMETER.
Grade 3- VIncent Cleland,
Alan Cr isp. Sandra Deem .

roll. Ralph · Fisher,

A student must ma·lnta ln a

" B" or better grade to be
named to the roll. Those

Sandra

Harden , Del:xJrah ,Holter , Lois

lhl e, Dav id Powe ll , Lori
Simpson , Marlftno Wagner,
students whose names are In Lori Wolfe, Kevin Dugan.
all ca pita l fetters received all
Grade 4 - James ~ush ,

Wolfe, Tony Wolfe .
KATHY
Gra ce S BAKER , Ang le Glenn ,
BE CKY LEE, Cla ir Morris.
Terry

Patterson ,

John

Porter. David · Sa lm ons.
Tonia Salser, Lori Warden,
Melanie Weese.
Grade 6 -

Kim Bickers,

VIcky Deem, Kim Follrod. '
Scott Frederick. Lor i Powell.
Jay
Rees , MELI NDA
SAL MON S, Rita Sto ler .
Laura Wolfe. KE NT WOLFE .

Coach Bill Fitch has gone on
record, In a somewhat left- A's. Nam ed to the roll were : Kevin Curfman , Becky
1
Damon Johnson , linda Proffitt ,
handed fashion, as saying his Grade
Fisher
,
MATTH
EW
Cleveland Cavaliers could JEWELL.
RACHEL
win the National Basketball. REIBER, DIMa Simpson,
Association championship. Tammy Theiss, Tammy
The Cavs · and the Wolfe , Wendy Wolfe.
Grade 2 - LOR t ADAMS .
Washington Bullets have won
Kerd Beeg le. Jay Bostick ,
three apiece In their playoff Dl&gt;le
Dugan, Mandy Hill.
series, which will be decided Melissa lhl e. Kelly Rize r.
tonight on Clevelimd's home Kenda Rlzer. Robin Savage,
Chad Sayre, REBECCA
court at the Coliseum.
Fitch believes both teams
have played well through the
first six games.
WINS SCHOLARSHIP
· "I think that if either one of
MARIE'ITA
- Marietta
these teams keeps playing as
College
senior
Jo
Ellen Diehl
It has played in this series, it
can go on and win the whole of Pomeroy was awarded the
Frank R. Ford Scripp s·
l!ling," Fitch said.
H
oward
Foundation
The Cavaliers have won
.
Scholarship
at
the annual
two of the three playoff
Spring
Honors
Assembly
on
games held at the Coliseum,
April
20.
The
scholarship
which has been completely
sold out for the rubber game. honors Mar·ietta alumnus
They will have the advantage Frank R. Ford, a former
of ~he home court and the editor of th e Scripps-Howard
deafening support of 21,564 Newspaper Alliance . Mi ss
fans , another NBA playoff Diehl, an English major and .
a 1972 graduate of Meigs HS,
record crowd.
On the debit side, Cleveland is ihe daughter of Mr . and
may have to mimage without Mrs . James Diehl of
much help from . Bobby Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy .
(Bingo) Smith, the team's top
scorer. He and top rebounder
Jim Brewer have knee
In 1945, American troops
problems but Brewer is
liberated
32,000 prisoners
expected to play most of the
from
the
Dachau
game.
concentration
camp
in Nazi
Open Fri. &amp;Sat. Til 8:00
· Smith was in for only 21
Germany.
minutes in Monday ninght's
102-98 loss, to Md.
the Bullets
at • ,_.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,
Landover
Brewer

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AND PARTIES

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SHAWLS

'1.69 YD.

Su
· n .Dancers·
bv Thom McAn· ,

Cushioned leather
innersvles

Handwoven
leather uppers

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CURITY DIAPERS

''

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GOESSLER
Jewelly Store

REG.

12 GAUGE.. ...................~~~-~~ .. $850
12 PRE-FOLD ................~~·~0••~1099
.

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INSULATION

$575

$1()99
12 STRETCH DIAPERS. .... ~~~:~ .;
REG.
0

Blown Into Your Walls
"Free Estimates"

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

FOREMAN AND ABBOTT

•

•

•

.'

Perfect
far the
graduate

•I

'

.

Birdies to mark tourney

'

By GARY TAYWR
UPI Sports Writer
WOODLANDS, Tex. (UP!)
- For a number of reasons,
the 156 starters in the fourday, $200,000 Houston Open
golf tournament expected
birdies to fall in record
numbers today.
Bruce Crampton's 15·
under-par was good enough
last year to win at the new
Woodlands Country Club
course. That
number
probably will not cut it this
year, the defending champion
said, if for no other reason
than this Is the second
straight year of play there.
The course itself was in
excellent condition,
"The fairways are firm,
and the course is set up just
fine," said young Texan Ben
Crenshaw, the second leading
money winner on the tour and
a favorite to win his third title
this year.
Scores may go lower
because the list of golfers is
considered the toughest in
seven years.

Besides Crenshaw, entries
include top money · winner
Hubert Green, . Masters
champion Ray Floyd, JohMy
Miller and Lee Trevino.
· Arnold Palmer was there
also, looking for another
charge. And although he did
not set any records during the
pro-am event Wednesday, he
· did shoot a 2-under 70.
"The greens are slick, and
I'm asswning they'll put
some water on them if they
wanttokeepthemfromgoing
totally out," he said. "I ran it

RAIL PLAN
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - The
Ohio Rail Transportation
Authority would be given
until March I, 1977, to come
up with a plan for a rapid
transit rail system linking
Ohio's major cities under
legislation approved Wednesday by the House and sent
to the Senate .
CYSTIC FIBROSIS
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A
$3,600 supplemental appropriation tli provide extended state medical care for
about 70 cystic fibrosis
patients more than 21 years
old was passed by the Senate
WednesdaY.

KC
(Conlll!ued fro~ page 4)
my Plants, Nancy
Foster, Kim Wroblewski and
Linda Wheeler.
RESERVE BASKETBALL
Jon Thompson, Fred
Helms, Von Taylor. Todd
Taylor, Yance.y Halley,
Eddie Mollohan, James
Westfall, Steve Darst and
Randy Brown.
GIRLS BASKETBALL
, Shirley Clay, VIcki Stroud,
Mary Rollins, Gloria Amos ,
Sherry Harrison, B•enda
Fife, Judy Dorst, Angle
Abshire, Cathy Baylor.
VARSITY BASKETBALL
Tim Lucas, Bill Metzner,
Ji m Armbruster, Ratpn
Baylor , Mitch Salem. Doug
.Sands, ,Andy Fisher, Randy
Brown, Steve Baird and Jon
Thompson.
Stailstl~lans
Fred
Weslfall
and
George
Thompson.
Manftgers - Keith Metzner
and Robbie Coder.
T~m

Whatever the
occasion, we
hove the gifts
for teen .men.
Big selection.

"

·PRETl'JEST!
FOR THE PROM

By DICK WIIJ..IAMS
tropical island is much like home provided by the Guam
AGANA, Guam (UP! )
that of Vietnam and the diet government !llld into a smart
More
than
100,000 is similar - fish, spicy food apartment. They pay no rent
Suitable for
Vietnamese refugees arrived and rice three times a day. or utilities and receive a
on this American island one
There was another reason, small salary for taking care
T-Shirts,
year ago but today only about too. G.uam is only five hours of the 20-unlt apartment
1,000 remain.
·
by air from Saigon should complex.
1~ummer Ur~isse1s,1
The first refugees arrived there ever be an opportunity
Other former refugees
here April 23, 1975, aboard a to go home.
work
as store
clerks, auto
mechanics,
electricians
and
U.S. Air Force Cl41 jet. For
Despite serious unemploythe next 90 days the refugees ment on Guam, as in the rest
station attendants . played all but seven minutes
came in a steady stream by of the United States, all service
Vietnamese businessmen · but Fitch has said he should
air and by ship.
have opened a nightclub , a · have rested him more.
employ~ble VIetnamese have
Some carried wealth and jobs or business ventures of roadside snackbar and a
Washington wlll be playing
some had only the shirts on their own.
landscaping business.
for more than a continiied
their backs; some were
Pan American World
Refugee farmers and shot at the title, according to
1
REGULARS 2.00 yd.
physically fit while others Airways
hired
ten fishermen are doing what is some observers. It has be en
were nearly dead ; there were Vietname~ men and wOinen, described as a profitable said that Bullets coach K.C .
babies and there were the with a combined total of 40 business.
Jones is in danger of losing
REAL VAWES
aged.
The exact number of his job because of this year's
dependents,
They all had one thing in
All ten, like their American refugees here is in dispute . loss of the division title to
mind - safety.
counterparts, are memljers The U.S. Inunigration office aeveland and last year's loss
An outbound airlift was of the Teamsters Union and says 589 with possibly of the NBA title to Golden
started that was nearly as the lowest paid Vietnamese another 20 who have not State in a four.game sweep.
frequent as the Inbound and employee on Pan ·Am's registered. The governor's
"l just think it's a lousy
the Vietnamese were sent on payroll earns $5.70 per hour. office has no exact figure but shame the whole thirlg"--is
to hastily opened relocation
happening,'" said Bulleis
One success story is that of · estimates 1,000.
camps on the mainland.
"We
must
remember
that
center
Wes Unseld, adding
·Dinh Van Minh, once a cargo
MIDOlEIIOIT
Those who stayed did so sales agent for Pan Am in those first few days was that he has stopped reafng
OHIO
because the climate on this Saigon.
really a shotgun operation," the local newspapers .
Starting at the bottom here said Inspector Darrel Fasset · "The first month of the
a year ago Minh was of the U.S. immigration season or so it did bother
me ,n said ~ones. "now lt
promoted to lead agent, the office.
''The only . concern at the doesn't.
highest rung before reaching
time .was to get the people to
"All! care about is how my
management level.
The enterprising former .safety, get ,them some food players pel'form. 1 will leave
the hiring·· and firing to ·
... \'1' I
refugee moved his wife and .·and shelter."
others."
brother out of the temporary
,. ..().

-; il
...
:,...

.

'

LOOK YOUR

MILL ENDS

..:

Katr ina Snodgrass, Laren

Racine honor pupils listed

"

by the hole a lot, so the greens
will determine it."
If the pro-am was any
indication, a host of very low
scores can be expected.
Dallas resident John Schlee
fired a 7.-under 65. Green and
Allen Miller shot 67, while
Trevino, Tom Kite and Jim
Colbert came in with 611s.
Despite 48 golfers beating
par last year, an official of
the sponsoring Houston Golf
Association said the PGA
asked them to make the
course a little easier.
"I' expect to See
rounds in the low 60s," said
PGA Executive Secretary
John Davis. "The PGA
ordered us to · widen the
fairways on some holes , and
that's sure to help the

same

scoring."

Natural wood
platform

Flexible wedge

Sundancers by Thorn MeAn. You can choose them on plalform s of
natural wood. Or with a comforlable flexible wedge. Or even in an
Exersole®design . All with cushioned leather innersoles and reinforced
straps of real leather. Sundancers, woven by hand for beautifl!l feet.

$15

99 TO

Sl799

~~1"-1hc.An...

heritage house
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

"

,,

�..... .

,rf"IA&gt;.

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, April29, 1976

Whittington .
Second Grade
Kenda
Elementar y School lor the Donahue Melissa Howard
I all AI . VIn cent King. Br idget
fifth si )( weeks:
First Grade - Jeff Arnold. Largent, Lisa Riggs , Rlchelle
.
Susan Arnold I all A), Charles White .
Third Grad e ~ Debra
Ba rrett Ill, Marly Cl ine I all
Boring , Katrina Donohue,
~ ) . Lois Ebl in, Bobby Hal l,
HARRI SONVIL LE - The

Chr is

Han i ng ,

Lorena

Jas on

Social Notes

SINGING SCHOOL SCENE - Front, 1-r, Herbi e
Grate, Darrin Cremeans, Bobby Geyer, Ryim Hall, Susan

Bryan, Willie Halfhill, and Doug Priddy, director ; second
row, Larry Parsons, Ernie Cross, Betlyann Loftis, David
Hysell and Dennis Hysell.

Peavley,

Rita ·williamson •.

We offer all mechanics work - tires - tune- '
ups - brake jobs - oil change - major
overllauls - minor transmission repair?
Hours 8 to 5 Monday through Saturday
except Thursday 8 to noon.

Sunday School attendance
on April 25 was 53, the offerin g was $21.92. Worship
services were held at 11 a.m.
with Ihe iay speaker, Duane
Sydenstricker speaking from
Acts 19 :1-7 "Jesus, same
yesterday,
today and
forever" . Holy Spirit leads
and helps us overcome . Allendancc was 34.
Garner Griffin was honored
on hts sbth birthday lasl
The moon is new.
Wedn esda y evening after
The
morning stars are
prayer meeting with refreshVenus
and
Jupiter.
men Is in lhe church
The
evening
stars are Merbasement. Twelve attended.
This reporter wishes to cury, Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this date are
correcl a Statement made
under
the sign of Taurus.
las l week, the baby born to
Mr. and Mrs . Biily White of
Swn ner, 0., was a daughter ,
not a son , as stated in Alfred
News lasl week .
Among Ihose attending the
birthday surprise open house
held for ' Lucy Gaul's 80th
birthday at lhe Roger Ga ul
home Sunday, April 25 from
here were Mr. and Mrs.
Charles D. Woodc, Nin a
Robinson and Clara Follrod.
Duane Sydenstricker, lay
speaker of Alfred Ch urch,
· called on Iris Carr ias t
Sunday .
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D.
Woode , Ni na Robi nson,
The lma Henderson, and
Marlha Pullins attended the
hymn sing at South Bethel
Church on Si lver Ridge
Salurday evening.
Marlha Elli ott recently
called on Genevieve Guthrie.
Mr . and Mrs. Robert
Robinson and family of
Belpre, 0. , visited at the
home of Nina Robin son and

ROY LYONS.

TR~INED

MECHANIC

VISTA
SERVICE CENTER
949 2150

RACINE, OHIO

BREAI&lt; CHANNEL 19
FOR DOUBLE R BASE

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Parents of high achievers
invited to Athens open house

CD 0C?

~

CHORUS AND DANCERS - Front, 1-r, Cindy
Musser, Tina Miller, Lisa Gardner, Patty Wyatt, Betty
Murphy, Christy Imboden, April Ellis, Connie Murphy;

second row, Rhonda Mitchell, Karla Brown, Lynn Smith,
Lisa Smith, Crystal Jacobs, Christy Ward and Ricky
Edwards.

.

MILLER

P!'·

ROUND POINT SHOVEL

for yord or gtrden. 47" handle. .REG. 5.79

BOW RAKE

IHi,..s. 4\1 ft. l"'l handle.

REG . 5.59

GARDEN HOE

DEBT REFUNDING
The Duke of Wellington, the
COLUMBUS I UPI) - A bill British general who defeat
giving loca l governments Napoleon at Waterloo, was
new powers to refund out- born April 29, 1769.
standing
bo nded
indebtedness was passed by the
Senate Wednesday. The ·bill,
which was returned to the
House 27 to I for the lower
chamber's review of an
amendment, would allow
municipal government to sell
general obligation bonds
ra ther than mortgage
revenue
bon ds,
and
guarantee the financial instruments by the "full faith "
d the local government.

366
EACH

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See our fine selection of yard and gardening h. AMES
tools made by the people who build quality ... ~. , N c • 11 , .

A. SQUARE POINT SHOVEL

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5 66
C. GARDEN SPADE
Serioted edve. hondle.
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REGULAR 8.69........6• 44 ·
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27"

· Honors listed at Salisbury
School ' s

fif th

six -week s

Second

V rade - - John

Arnold , Apri l Brlckles, Jodi

Harr ison. Barbara Hatfi eld ,
Da r ren
Hayes ,
Kev in

Mowery. Angie patterson ,
Scott Pullins, Cindy Sauters.
Anita Smi1 h. David Warth ,
Timmy Sloan.
Third Gr'ade - Ruth Fry,
Sandy Hoyt, Char lotte Lyons,
Den ise Slegall. Jack ie
Welker . Jimmy Parker ,
Teresa Pratt .
Fourth Grade - Rhonda
Jeffers , Mike Ke nn edy, Angie
Pratt ~

Craig Si nclair, ,Paul

,,

Swi ndell.
Fifth Gra de
Sco tt
Harrison , Bill Hol comb ,
Ang ela Hatfield , Va lerie
Jeffers , Nat,lie Lambert.
John

Lyons,

John

Smi th ,

Greg Taylor .
Si• th Gra de -- Dale
Bri ck les, Dicky Ki ng , Eric
Lipscomb, Kathleen Parker,
Laura . Smith, Fred Young .
In 1931, President Herbert
Hoover received the King of
Siam, first absolute monarch
10 visit t.l)e United Stales.

E. POST HOLE DIGGER

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ring to three organizations
Moore's
reCHARLESTON, W. Va . boosting
(UPI) - Gov. Arch Moore's election.
executive secretary told a · But in response to a query
U.S. District Court jury by Special U.S. District
Wednesday the
chief Judge Joseph YOWlg, she said
executive. kept two money no receipts were obtained
funds - one political and one when the money was turned
.
personal- in his capitol suite over.
Mrs.
Davidson
also said no
In the fall of 1972.
daily
records
of
donatiot ~s
Mrs. Elaine Davidson told
were
made
and
"some
·of the
the jury In Moore's extortion
cash
was
unidentified."
trial she maintained the
Theodore Price, former
political contribution fund
and the personal fund In the president of the nowmonths.prior to Moore's 1972 bankrupt Diversified
Moun\aineer Corp ., has
landslide re-election.
Moore , a
two-term testified he made three
Republican governor, and his deliveries of cash to the
former administrative governor at his capitol
assisl110t, William Loy, are office.
Mrs. Davidson said . she
charged with conspiring \0
never
made an appointment
extort $2~,000 from a
for
Price,
but hedged on the
collapsing loan company In
meaning
of
a cbeckmark
r~turn for a state bank
beside
Price's
name on the
Charter. The charter never
governor's
telephone
call
was awroved.
sheet
of
Oct.
26,
1972.
On
U.S. Attorney John Field
another
visitor's
.name,
she
m, who repeatedly sought an
estimate of the amount of testified the checkmark
money collected, asked Mrs. meant the visitor had been
DavidSon If the money to \a led seen by the governor.
more than $130,000 over a
five-week period prior to the
·November elecUon.
"I have no way of knowing
during that time. period,"
Mrs. DavidSon responded .
Unsuccessful in prompting
Mrs. Davidson to 'estimate
TEXAS
the amount of money
SHEBOYGAN
retained In the two funds kePI
JUSTIN
In the governor's office, Field
asked If she ever counted it.
Belts, Buckles,
"I counted It and routinely
Leather .
passed it al01)8 to the political
committees," she said, referIN MIDDLEPORT

ID-Yll
fERRDUI
Reg. 89c::

.,. 47•..

1/f.ll.

Reg. s 1.09

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l·lrf.

1188

97•..
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HERE'S ANOTHER SHOUT-ABOUT SALE! SMASHING BARGA~IN~iS~A~T~~;:.~:~r~~~~~::f
CLIP THESE COUPONS

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT
TO LIMIT QUANTITIES

SHOP EARL V WHILE
ASSORTMENT IS
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52.25 Value

lUIS '·

PMTII'f PACIIS
Reg: 49c
9.VOLT

Cor DSIZE

lrmCt/fd

JM.I

33~ 38~ 48~

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Reg . 93c 75ft. roll Reynolds Wrap

Reg . 79c pr . knee Hi Hose

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Reg. 99c t2Kf2 Wash Cloths

Spec . 2 pr, aoc

Reg . 4Sc 12xl2 Wash Cloths

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I Reg. 99C pr. seam Fre Pant Hase
Spec . .47c pr.
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Size Ziploc Bags
Spec. S7c
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pee . 67 c
I Reg.
Reg. s 1,97 6 inch Hanging Planters
Spec. SI.SJ
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Spe'c_SJ.:J:7
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$1 .39 4 oz. Wintuk Yarn
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Cotton Briefs
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I RReg. 5999c Womens
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I Reg.
$1 .00 pr. Men Terry Crew Socks- Spec. 77c pr.
79cpr. BoysTerryCrewSocks- -Spec.57cpr.
I Reg.
Reg. $t.498'h in. Plastic Pet Oioh
Spec. 87c
Valuoslo 79c Dog Chew Sticks and Toys
I Reg . 5-St.OOllS-vd . Polves.ter Thread _ Spec. 5_1938cc
1
Qt .

STAR
SUPPLY

m3POMEROY CEMENT
TrnFr-y~s
BLOCK CO.

Racine, Ohio

Since 1915
f

.'

FRI. Tll8
SAT. UNTIL!

OPEN

Reg. S2.49 Officia I Baseball

POMEROY 100·102

E.

MAIN ST.

·- .

MASON FURNITURE
..
"

Mason, W.Va .
f

,,

Pomeroy
Yol':r
Snoppmg
Center

, I

Herman Grate

I

Spec. 57.97

SPec . s 1.97
Spec. 97c
Spe-=. 2 for63c

87~~

r

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM
773-5592

61~

k.1Jl

Reg . 8.9Houih Ball Glove

C HWI

The Department Store of Building

Spec. 99c
Spec. 99c

,..._"·=

I
1I '""·,~'---~
I

~----------------------------·

Spec. 54 . 95

EIEN,FRAN
KLIDI
PH. 992-3491
.

THURSDAYtiL12NOON

Pi, ll~tw~

ec . 52.97

Reg . 59c 15)(25" Print Kitchen Towels-Spec. 2 for,,,
Values to $1.69 Pyrex &amp; Fire King Gluswere Spec. 97c
Reg . 53c 14Dcount Paper Napkins
Spec. 44c
Values to Sl .49 Plastic Housewa res
nc
Reg. S1.338 roll Bath Room Tissues
s 1.27

M1kt

·

3 for 99c

Reg . S1.49 Zippered Pillow Cover

o\YAILAIU FOR IINTAl

Mon., Tue's., Wed. I, Sat.-8:30tll5:00, ·

77c

Clllrllo fiiiMIHT

AC

.

3·99 Bed Pillows
Reg. 'Sl.29
Re9.
14 in. Decorator

$1.27

I
Reg . $1.29 Duncan Yo Yo's
I
Reg . 39c Asst . Books.
Reg . 69c Envelopes
. Speo. 3 pkg.St.OO
Reg . 67C Boxed Greeting Cards
Spec. 44C I
R&amp;g. 51 . 19 Spray Enamel
Spec.. B8c
R 69 24 " 8 c
I
eg. c tn ox rayons
.pee. 37c
Reg . 51.4922" Foam Glider .
Spec. 97c I
Values to Sl.49 1-l'h:·Z ln. Pamt Brus~es-Spec. 47c ea. , J

4

B

;:.

Reg . S1.791Sx25" Hand Towels

Spec. 76c

Reg · 52 ·09Tinkles Davl1'me 30 Dt' apersspee. st ·67
Reg. 52.49 40 In plcg. Trash Ca. n Linors--Spec. 51.77
Fils Up To 26 Gal. Can

Green.

SAtE PRICE

67•.•

Reg. s 1.69

BOOTS

[I,:M~

tlif....,

FRIDAY MORNING-·
Sale! MASICINO TAPE

DAN'S

.

·'Swodish steel blooe.

~

LEGAL NOTICE
SECOND GRADERS - Lucille Grover, seated, will portray Betsy Ross, Robbie Eads,
left, Abe Lincoln, and Robbie Sisson, George Washington.

5 33

REGULAR 7.49.... .. • •

'·

1 /2" I 50'

The Public Utllhles Comm~­
slon of Ohio ~as set for publ ~
hearing Case No. 76·161-EL·
FAC. Io ravlewlhe ooeratlon of
Ihe luel adjuslment clause and
lhe luel procuremenl pracllces
and policies ol the Ohio Power
Company, on May 3, 19./6. at
9:30A.M. at the Hall ol Jus·
lice, Room 202, 109 North
Union , Lima, Ohio.
All lnlerested persons will
be given an opportunlly to be
heard. Further info rmallon1111'/
be obtained by contacling the
Commission.
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO .,_
By Randall G. App~gato,
Secrelary

D. ROUND POINT SHOVEL

forward turned step. ~7" hondle.

SALE STARTS

By KAY CHRISTENSEN

Shonk pattern hoe. 48" handle. REG. 4.49

·youR
CHOICE

FRA

·- Moore kept two
pots of money

E.

period honor pupils listed:
First Grade - Melanie
Arnold, Jeff Basham, Pau l
Brickles, Lin Chase, April
Clark , Heather Cullum s,
Todd Cullums, Harl ey Ebl in,
Darla King, Ph illip King ,
Michl King , Li sa Pullins,
Sa ll y Radford , Brenda
Sinclair, Cathy Stotts.

FATI

MARGUERITE'S SHOES

FOURTH GRADE CHORUS GROUP - Front, 1-r,
Shawn Eads, Uncle Sam, Tammy Black, Charlene
Patterson, Terri Thoma, Paula Norman, Penny
Dewhurst, Robin Camp~ll. Mary ·• Jacobs, Susie
Imboden; second row, Jeanne Welsh, Sonya Wise, Rhonda
McDaniel, Jan Rife, Gloria Grover, Chad Williams, Tina
Goode, lA!n Sayre. Absent were Mike Vance, Johnny
Clonch, Regina Smith and Mae Nakamoto.

Elementary

I

KI~OWER .

" America in Song,"
a bicentennial
program from 1776 to
1976, will be presented
this evening at Rutland
Elementary School at
7:30p.m.
The event is under
the direction of Mrs.
Maurita Miler . All
pupils of the school will
participate.
The accompanying
pictures above and
below on this page by
Katie Crow relate to
the presentation
tonight.

Sa li sbury

FRANCIS
FLORIST

WHY
CALLED

'

Feds show small concern for Bill of Rights

OR

- Perm itted th e state
auditor to examine the books
of a bingo operator in any
investigation by the attorney '
general.

Also scheduled was a to briilg · ~p and defea! the blocking adjournment was syndi cated casi no-type as defined by the IRS Service
Senate vote on a heavily- governor 's appointment of disposed of Wednesday as the · gambling .
Code. ·
Your " E)(t ra T&lt;X.Jch"
As sent to the governor, the
revised property tax relief Raymond F. McKenna as General Assembly approved
Florist Sl ncel957
Rep. C.J . MeLlo , Dbill, but legislative leaders state public welfare director . finally and sent to Rhodes a · legisl ation allows bingo Dayton, floor manager of the .
Both the Education and revised version of legislation games to be conducted by any btl!, trted to broaden the
held out little hope a
settlement could be reached Welfare Committee and the pennitting bingo and other religious , fraternal , service, purposes for which proceeds
for final ratification before 21-member Democratic games of chance for educational or veteran s' could be us ed, such as
the lawmakers go hom.e.
caucus recommended charitable purposes · but organization which is tax- nursing homes operated for
Conference committee disapproval of McKenna oil • curbing organized gambling exempt under the U.S. profit. But his ame9dment
Internal Revenue Service was trounced, 83 to 10, after
• work Is expected to pracee4• grqunds he had oot properly for profit.
Code.
on that (I'Oposal during the managed department money
The measure was passed 81
House members warned it
.PH. 992-2644
This
would
include would- impose "an enormous
recess in hopes . of a and was threatening to kll2 on an .emergency basis
settlement before th e reduce Medicaid payments by the House. The Senate volunteer rescue service and burden" on th e attorney
35 ~ E. Main, Pomeroy
legislators reconvene In .next month.
unanimously agreed to the firemen's groups , and general's office to find out
Your FTD Florist
medi c al where the money was going.
June.
The Democrats were un- substantial Hol!5e changes nonprofit
organizations.
Still another conference deterred by McKenna's an- ·several hours later.
The chamber also voted 62
A license would have to be
committee had reached nouncement of Wednesday , · The Qingo bill had been
to 3) against 8 proposal to
agreement on five of seven . ordered by the governor from undt:r study in the House obtained from the state attor- permit the us e of an
points of difference between Japan, that the Medicaid since last month. The House ney general 's office, which additional 10 per cent of the
the Hol!5e and Senate on curtailment would he delayed J u d i c i a r y Co mmi ttee would enforce the law with gross receipts of a bingo
teacher .tenure legislation by two weeks to see if the inserted language to preserve the cooperation of local game for the maintenance
and
the gaming at special events held authorities .
late Wednesday night, but a legislature
and operation of a game on
Proceeds would have to be
completed negotiation was administration could solve by chllJitable groups , such as
premises owned by the
stlll up In the air.
the troblem.
church social. functions, while used for charitable purposes charitable group.
Senate Democrats planned
Another major measure deterring the threat of
Rep. Harry C. Malott, DMt . Drab, . said his
ame ndment would have
benefitted
ve terans '
organizations contributing to
scouting and Little lA!ague
'
movement also ·came under programs.
By DANlEL F. Gll.MORE
designed by the framers of ~mputerized index of nearly 1975.
CUSHIONED ARCH
Under the bill , bingo games
WASHINGTON (UP!) . the Constitution to assure · 1.5 milljon names of AmeriIt estimated that 100,000 intelligence scrutiny, the·
DURABLE LINING
Senate investigators now accountability have not been cans.
would be limited to t.wo per STEEL SHANK
Americans were the su~jects report said.
ELONGATED CUSHIONED
have published the full applied," it said.
It said millions of private of U.S. Army intelligence
TONGUE
Two of the 11 commlttee telegrams sent from, to, or files between the mid-1960's
results of their 15-month
study of •buses by U.S members disagreed and through the United States and 1971 and said the IRS had
Intelligence agencies at home refused to sign the document, were obtained from three intelligence files on more
111d abroad and made 183 saying the charges against private co~munications than ll,OOO indlviduals and
l!ePBI'&amp;te recommendations the agencies and the companies by the National groups between 1969 and 1973.
LONG WEARING
on what to do about them.
proposed refonns were too Security Agency from 1947 to
The women's liberation
TOE CAP
A 396-page report on sweeping and would result in
"Intelligence Activities and more harm than good.
Wheel Chairs
the Rights of Americans,"
Sen. John Tower, .1!-Tex.,
released Wednesday night, and Sen. Barry Goldwater, RWalkers
said .constitutional Ai:iz., said the commlttee's
guarantees of millions of recommendations "are
Crutches and Canes
KID POWER
JJ,
Americans were violated by either Wtsupported by the · ATHENS - Persons in- handicaps, speech and
IDENTIFYING
the FBI, CIA and other , factual .record or unduly terested in exceptional language, and programming
Back Braces
x~fl·
MARK
agencies during Democratic restrict attainment of valid children are invited to an for .talented and gifted
Bedside l:ommodes
and
R e p u b I i c a n Intelligence objectives."
open house Sunday, May 2 at children will be at the center
PADDED COLLAR
administrations.
The report portrayed a the Southeastern Ohio Special to answer que stions and
Support
St1Jckings
The report supplemented a "Big Brother" role of Education Regional prov ide assistance.
REINFORCED STITCHING
Monday report that offered 86 intelligence agencies in Resource Center here .
SURE GRiP
Trusses
suggestions on U.S. foreign interfering with American Agency Director Robert L.
HIGH ABRASIVE
SOLE
and mllitaryintelllgence. The constitutional rights.
OUTSOLE
Traction Equipment
Weinfurtner said the open
96 reconinlendatlons in the
"Too many people have house will be held from 2 to 4 GEI'RIDOF
Elastic Supports
later one are designed to been spied upon by too many p.m. at the center located at
control or restrain domestic government agencies and too 52 University Terrace , ad- Nobody really wants to be
Surgical Dressings
Intelligence operations.
much information has been jacent to the Church of the fa1-and some peopl e nee d
help
.
Here's
a
simple
way
to
"There Is no Inherent collected," the report said. Good Shepherd.
"The Kid -Proof Sneaker"
lose weight. MONADE )(helps
constitutional authority for · FBI headquarters, It said,
The major purpose is to curb your appet ite . You eat
the president or any developed rnore than ~.ooo acquaint parents of ex- less - you weigh lessl Start
your MonadeK reducing plan
Intelligence agency kl violate · domestic intelligence files on ceptional children with what today
- yOu ' ve a new way of
·the law," the report said.
Americans and opened and services are available to life ahead . II you don't lose
Open Friday Ti I 8- Sat. TiiS
that ugly, tat - we 'll refund
"The · committee ' s photographed nearly 380,000 them and their school your
money - na qu estions
fundamental conclusion is first ·class letters between districts through the center. asked. Also try AQUA TABS that intelligence activities· 1950 and 1973. At ooe point, it SpeCialists in pre-sc hool a water pill that works genttv
help you lose water bloa t.
have undermined
the said, the FBI had a list of education, l e arnin g to
Swisher &amp;' Lohse Pharmacy,
lle'tty Ohlioger
constitutional rights of 26,000 persons to be rounded disabilities, mental retar- 112 e. Main, Pomeroy &amp;
Pomeroy, Ohio
102 E. Main
Dutton
Drug
store,
Mid
citizens and that they have up In the event of a "national dation , phsyically-related dleport . Mail Orders Fille~ .
done so primarlly because emergency."
~ch ~ks . and
balances
The
It said, had a
OOLUMBUS !UPI) -.- The
Ohio General ~bly was
to clear the decks for a preprimary recess today by
\&amp;king flnallegl.slative action
Clll a · controversial utillty
ra~e.mag bill and sending
to
.ames A. Rhodes a
ho
QDdar.y.'measiU'es.
and Senate floor
sessions at 10 a;m. were to
begin what promised to be a
day-long
meeting
In
preparation for a spring
lreak until early June.
· A joint Senate-House
conference commlttee paved
the way for the adjournment
by reaching unanimous
agreement short.ly before
midnight Wednesday on the
· utility leglalatlon limiting the
Investment ··funds public
utilities Jll&amp;Y seek to offset
through customer billing.

Kri stin

Clara FollrOd last Tuesday
evening .
Atlending the U.M.W.
meeting at the home of
Florence Spen cer last
Tuesday were June Stearns,
Nellie Parker, Emma Finch,
Thelma Henderson, Glara
Folirod, Nina Robinson, Kate
Rodehaver, and Helen
Woode.
Charles and Helen Woode
· called on Robert White at the
Vc lerans Memorial Hospital
Sunday evening .

week and could not last
beyond midnight. Prizes
would he restricted to $3,~.
The bingo group would
have to own ' its fac ilities and
equipment or lease theni
from another organization for
reasonable rent.
Before passing the .biil, tiMJ
House
tightened
the
definition of charities to
which the proceeds would go,
and defeated amendntents
which would have :
. - Permitted ho spital
auxiliaries to conduct bing0.
- Authorized payment of
the $2.60 oourly minimum
wage for workers at the
game. Any help must be on a
volunteer basis.

Assembly gearing up for pre-primary recess

Hebner, Cathy Jones, Vicky

Morm a n . To mmy Stove r ,
Ga ry Til lis, Jody Wells. Clc'\ ret

Alfred

Donohue,

Retha Yost .
Fourth Grade
Sherry
Arnold (all A) , Dawnette
Norris . Euoene Phill ips ,
Chr istine R!ggs, Tina Wh ite.

•

'!..-The DaUy Sentlnel,Mlddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Apt H29, 1976

Fltth Grade - Brent .
Flnlaw. Brad Largent, Renee
Will is (all A) .
Sixth Grode - Mark Cline
{all A) , VIcky DoBord,
Patr ic ia Grounds , Angela
Harmon , Brenda Will iams ,
Troy Willis.

Harrisonville honor pupils are.announced
honor rol l a t Harr isonvill e

~

·'

IN lHE

STORE
ASK FOR A
SALE BILl

.,.,.,..

IINR SPRM

...

Mil

--

Clelrll$ lllee ·-

IIMI eoLOitllll

�..... .

,rf"IA&gt;.

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, April29, 1976

Whittington .
Second Grade
Kenda
Elementar y School lor the Donahue Melissa Howard
I all AI . VIn cent King. Br idget
fifth si )( weeks:
First Grade - Jeff Arnold. Largent, Lisa Riggs , Rlchelle
.
Susan Arnold I all A), Charles White .
Third Grad e ~ Debra
Ba rrett Ill, Marly Cl ine I all
Boring , Katrina Donohue,
~ ) . Lois Ebl in, Bobby Hal l,
HARRI SONVIL LE - The

Chr is

Han i ng ,

Lorena

Jas on

Social Notes

SINGING SCHOOL SCENE - Front, 1-r, Herbi e
Grate, Darrin Cremeans, Bobby Geyer, Ryim Hall, Susan

Bryan, Willie Halfhill, and Doug Priddy, director ; second
row, Larry Parsons, Ernie Cross, Betlyann Loftis, David
Hysell and Dennis Hysell.

Peavley,

Rita ·williamson •.

We offer all mechanics work - tires - tune- '
ups - brake jobs - oil change - major
overllauls - minor transmission repair?
Hours 8 to 5 Monday through Saturday
except Thursday 8 to noon.

Sunday School attendance
on April 25 was 53, the offerin g was $21.92. Worship
services were held at 11 a.m.
with Ihe iay speaker, Duane
Sydenstricker speaking from
Acts 19 :1-7 "Jesus, same
yesterday,
today and
forever" . Holy Spirit leads
and helps us overcome . Allendancc was 34.
Garner Griffin was honored
on hts sbth birthday lasl
The moon is new.
Wedn esda y evening after
The
morning stars are
prayer meeting with refreshVenus
and
Jupiter.
men Is in lhe church
The
evening
stars are Merbasement. Twelve attended.
This reporter wishes to cury, Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this date are
correcl a Statement made
under
the sign of Taurus.
las l week, the baby born to
Mr. and Mrs . Biily White of
Swn ner, 0., was a daughter ,
not a son , as stated in Alfred
News lasl week .
Among Ihose attending the
birthday surprise open house
held for ' Lucy Gaul's 80th
birthday at lhe Roger Ga ul
home Sunday, April 25 from
here were Mr. and Mrs.
Charles D. Woodc, Nin a
Robinson and Clara Follrod.
Duane Sydenstricker, lay
speaker of Alfred Ch urch,
· called on Iris Carr ias t
Sunday .
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D.
Woode , Ni na Robi nson,
The lma Henderson, and
Marlha Pullins attended the
hymn sing at South Bethel
Church on Si lver Ridge
Salurday evening.
Marlha Elli ott recently
called on Genevieve Guthrie.
Mr . and Mrs. Robert
Robinson and family of
Belpre, 0. , visited at the
home of Nina Robin son and

ROY LYONS.

TR~INED

MECHANIC

VISTA
SERVICE CENTER
949 2150

RACINE, OHIO

BREAI&lt; CHANNEL 19
FOR DOUBLE R BASE

________________ ...

l

'

•

t ... -..

:--

CBmOG~V6JGCDQJ0

.

'

Parents of high achievers
invited to Athens open house

CD 0C?

~

CHORUS AND DANCERS - Front, 1-r, Cindy
Musser, Tina Miller, Lisa Gardner, Patty Wyatt, Betty
Murphy, Christy Imboden, April Ellis, Connie Murphy;

second row, Rhonda Mitchell, Karla Brown, Lynn Smith,
Lisa Smith, Crystal Jacobs, Christy Ward and Ricky
Edwards.

.

MILLER

P!'·

ROUND POINT SHOVEL

for yord or gtrden. 47" handle. .REG. 5.79

BOW RAKE

IHi,..s. 4\1 ft. l"'l handle.

REG . 5.59

GARDEN HOE

DEBT REFUNDING
The Duke of Wellington, the
COLUMBUS I UPI) - A bill British general who defeat
giving loca l governments Napoleon at Waterloo, was
new powers to refund out- born April 29, 1769.
standing
bo nded
indebtedness was passed by the
Senate Wednesday. The ·bill,
which was returned to the
House 27 to I for the lower
chamber's review of an
amendment, would allow
municipal government to sell
general obligation bonds
ra ther than mortgage
revenue
bon ds,
and
guarantee the financial instruments by the "full faith "
d the local government.

366
EACH

a

See our fine selection of yard and gardening h. AMES
tools made by the people who build quality ... ~. , N c • 11 , .

A. SQUARE POINT SHOVEL

Holl ... ·bock shovel. 47" hondle.

4 66

REGULAR 5.79. ........ ,

B. PERFORATED BLADE HOE
Versotile•mor1Qf/gordtnhoe.

5 66
C. GARDEN SPADE
Serioted edve. hondle.
..
REGULAR 8.69........6• 44 ·
REGULAR 7.49........ ,
27"

· Honors listed at Salisbury
School ' s

fif th

six -week s

Second

V rade - - John

Arnold , Apri l Brlckles, Jodi

Harr ison. Barbara Hatfi eld ,
Da r ren
Hayes ,
Kev in

Mowery. Angie patterson ,
Scott Pullins, Cindy Sauters.
Anita Smi1 h. David Warth ,
Timmy Sloan.
Third Gr'ade - Ruth Fry,
Sandy Hoyt, Char lotte Lyons,
Den ise Slegall. Jack ie
Welker . Jimmy Parker ,
Teresa Pratt .
Fourth Grade - Rhonda
Jeffers , Mike Ke nn edy, Angie
Pratt ~

Craig Si nclair, ,Paul

,,

Swi ndell.
Fifth Gra de
Sco tt
Harrison , Bill Hol comb ,
Ang ela Hatfield , Va lerie
Jeffers , Nat,lie Lambert.
John

Lyons,

John

Smi th ,

Greg Taylor .
Si• th Gra de -- Dale
Bri ck les, Dicky Ki ng , Eric
Lipscomb, Kathleen Parker,
Laura . Smith, Fred Young .
In 1931, President Herbert
Hoover received the King of
Siam, first absolute monarch
10 visit t.l)e United Stales.

E. POST HOLE DIGGER

strong, ~~~ht too . 9" b~tle. .

]

REGULAR 14.50....

O.
• 88

F. 21" BOW SAW

Chrome-plated bow.

3,99 .

REGULAR s:29........

REINFORCED
VINYL HOSE

5/8" •.. 50'
RUBBlR HOSE'

Reinforced, 3j&gt;ly

Low ._,.""" t~xl·

W~therguord llexi·

bllily. Reinforced.

billty.Green.

REGULAR 10.25

666

ring to three organizations
Moore's
reCHARLESTON, W. Va . boosting
(UPI) - Gov. Arch Moore's election.
executive secretary told a · But in response to a query
U.S. District Court jury by Special U.S. District
Wednesday the
chief Judge Joseph YOWlg, she said
executive. kept two money no receipts were obtained
funds - one political and one when the money was turned
.
personal- in his capitol suite over.
Mrs.
Davidson
also said no
In the fall of 1972.
daily
records
of
donatiot ~s
Mrs. Elaine Davidson told
were
made
and
"some
·of the
the jury In Moore's extortion
cash
was
unidentified."
trial she maintained the
Theodore Price, former
political contribution fund
and the personal fund In the president of the nowmonths.prior to Moore's 1972 bankrupt Diversified
Moun\aineer Corp ., has
landslide re-election.
Moore , a
two-term testified he made three
Republican governor, and his deliveries of cash to the
former administrative governor at his capitol
assisl110t, William Loy, are office.
Mrs. Davidson said . she
charged with conspiring \0
never
made an appointment
extort $2~,000 from a
for
Price,
but hedged on the
collapsing loan company In
meaning
of
a cbeckmark
r~turn for a state bank
beside
Price's
name on the
Charter. The charter never
governor's
telephone
call
was awroved.
sheet
of
Oct.
26,
1972.
On
U.S. Attorney John Field
another
visitor's
.name,
she
m, who repeatedly sought an
estimate of the amount of testified the checkmark
money collected, asked Mrs. meant the visitor had been
DavidSon If the money to \a led seen by the governor.
more than $130,000 over a
five-week period prior to the
·November elecUon.
"I have no way of knowing
during that time. period,"
Mrs. DavidSon responded .
Unsuccessful in prompting
Mrs. Davidson to 'estimate
TEXAS
the amount of money
SHEBOYGAN
retained In the two funds kePI
JUSTIN
In the governor's office, Field
asked If she ever counted it.
Belts, Buckles,
"I counted It and routinely
Leather .
passed it al01)8 to the political
committees," she said, referIN MIDDLEPORT

ID-Yll
fERRDUI
Reg. 89c::

.,. 47•..

1/f.ll.

Reg. s 1.09

.,.
l·lrf.

1188

97•..
.,.
Reg . 12.2Y
.
,.,.
tn
.,. ..

1·1/1-t..

HERE'S ANOTHER SHOUT-ABOUT SALE! SMASHING BARGA~IN~iS~A~T~~;:.~:~r~~~~~::f
CLIP THESE COUPONS

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT
TO LIMIT QUANTITIES

SHOP EARL V WHILE
ASSORTMENT IS
COMPLETE
52.25 Value

lUIS '·

PMTII'f PACIIS
Reg: 49c
9.VOLT

Cor DSIZE

lrmCt/fd

JM.I

33~ 38~ 48~

PEPSOIEiff •
TOOIIIPASTE

·66•

.

r••••••·--------------------~
I
Reg. su oz. bag M&amp;Ms
Spec. c
Reg. S2.4922x42•' Bath Towels
51.77 I

II

9 16

99

R eg . SL27 Bic Butane lighters

Reg . 93c 75ft. roll Reynolds Wrap

Reg . 79c pr . knee Hi Hose

Spec. 78c

Reg. 99c t2Kf2 Wash Cloths

Spec . 2 pr, aoc

Reg . 4Sc 12xl2 Wash Cloths

I
I Reg. 99C pr. seam Fre Pant Hase
Spec . .47c pr.
77c
Size Ziploc Bags
Spec. S7c
I Reg.
Reg. e4c Gal. Sir:e Ziploc Bags
pee . 67 c
I Reg.
Reg. s 1,97 6 inch Hanging Planters
Spec. SI.SJ
.97 1011 in. Hanging Planters
Spe'c_SJ.:J:7
I DigitS3Mini
Calculator
Spec. $11.95
I Reg.Adapter
$1 .39 4 oz. Wintuk Yarn
Spec. 99c
Cotton Briefs
. Spec. 77c
I RReg. 5999c Womens
H'de A 5o k s
eg, ~ pr. 1
c pori Socks-Spec. 2 pr. 51.00
I Reg.
$1 .00 pr. Men Terry Crew Socks- Spec. 77c pr.
79cpr. BoysTerryCrewSocks- -Spec.57cpr.
I Reg.
Reg. $t.498'h in. Plastic Pet Oioh
Spec. 87c
Valuoslo 79c Dog Chew Sticks and Toys
I Reg . 5-St.OOllS-vd . Polves.ter Thread _ Spec. 5_1938cc
1
Qt .

STAR
SUPPLY

m3POMEROY CEMENT
TrnFr-y~s
BLOCK CO.

Racine, Ohio

Since 1915
f

.'

FRI. Tll8
SAT. UNTIL!

OPEN

Reg. S2.49 Officia I Baseball

POMEROY 100·102

E.

MAIN ST.

·- .

MASON FURNITURE
..
"

Mason, W.Va .
f

,,

Pomeroy
Yol':r
Snoppmg
Center

, I

Herman Grate

I

Spec. 57.97

SPec . s 1.97
Spec. 97c
Spe-=. 2 for63c

87~~

r

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM
773-5592

61~

k.1Jl

Reg . 8.9Houih Ball Glove

C HWI

The Department Store of Building

Spec. 99c
Spec. 99c

,..._"·=

I
1I '""·,~'---~
I

~----------------------------·

Spec. 54 . 95

EIEN,FRAN
KLIDI
PH. 992-3491
.

THURSDAYtiL12NOON

Pi, ll~tw~

ec . 52.97

Reg . 59c 15)(25" Print Kitchen Towels-Spec. 2 for,,,
Values to $1.69 Pyrex &amp; Fire King Gluswere Spec. 97c
Reg . 53c 14Dcount Paper Napkins
Spec. 44c
Values to Sl .49 Plastic Housewa res
nc
Reg. S1.338 roll Bath Room Tissues
s 1.27

M1kt

·

3 for 99c

Reg . S1.49 Zippered Pillow Cover

o\YAILAIU FOR IINTAl

Mon., Tue's., Wed. I, Sat.-8:30tll5:00, ·

77c

Clllrllo fiiiMIHT

AC

.

3·99 Bed Pillows
Reg. 'Sl.29
Re9.
14 in. Decorator

$1.27

I
Reg . $1.29 Duncan Yo Yo's
I
Reg . 39c Asst . Books.
Reg . 69c Envelopes
. Speo. 3 pkg.St.OO
Reg . 67C Boxed Greeting Cards
Spec. 44C I
R&amp;g. 51 . 19 Spray Enamel
Spec.. B8c
R 69 24 " 8 c
I
eg. c tn ox rayons
.pee. 37c
Reg . 51.4922" Foam Glider .
Spec. 97c I
Values to Sl.49 1-l'h:·Z ln. Pamt Brus~es-Spec. 47c ea. , J

4

B

;:.

Reg . S1.791Sx25" Hand Towels

Spec. 76c

Reg · 52 ·09Tinkles Davl1'me 30 Dt' apersspee. st ·67
Reg. 52.49 40 In plcg. Trash Ca. n Linors--Spec. 51.77
Fils Up To 26 Gal. Can

Green.

SAtE PRICE

67•.•

Reg. s 1.69

BOOTS

[I,:M~

tlif....,

FRIDAY MORNING-·
Sale! MASICINO TAPE

DAN'S

.

·'Swodish steel blooe.

~

LEGAL NOTICE
SECOND GRADERS - Lucille Grover, seated, will portray Betsy Ross, Robbie Eads,
left, Abe Lincoln, and Robbie Sisson, George Washington.

5 33

REGULAR 7.49.... .. • •

'·

1 /2" I 50'

The Public Utllhles Comm~­
slon of Ohio ~as set for publ ~
hearing Case No. 76·161-EL·
FAC. Io ravlewlhe ooeratlon of
Ihe luel adjuslment clause and
lhe luel procuremenl pracllces
and policies ol the Ohio Power
Company, on May 3, 19./6. at
9:30A.M. at the Hall ol Jus·
lice, Room 202, 109 North
Union , Lima, Ohio.
All lnlerested persons will
be given an opportunlly to be
heard. Further info rmallon1111'/
be obtained by contacling the
Commission.
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO .,_
By Randall G. App~gato,
Secrelary

D. ROUND POINT SHOVEL

forward turned step. ~7" hondle.

SALE STARTS

By KAY CHRISTENSEN

Shonk pattern hoe. 48" handle. REG. 4.49

·youR
CHOICE

FRA

·- Moore kept two
pots of money

E.

period honor pupils listed:
First Grade - Melanie
Arnold, Jeff Basham, Pau l
Brickles, Lin Chase, April
Clark , Heather Cullum s,
Todd Cullums, Harl ey Ebl in,
Darla King, Ph illip King ,
Michl King , Li sa Pullins,
Sa ll y Radford , Brenda
Sinclair, Cathy Stotts.

FATI

MARGUERITE'S SHOES

FOURTH GRADE CHORUS GROUP - Front, 1-r,
Shawn Eads, Uncle Sam, Tammy Black, Charlene
Patterson, Terri Thoma, Paula Norman, Penny
Dewhurst, Robin Camp~ll. Mary ·• Jacobs, Susie
Imboden; second row, Jeanne Welsh, Sonya Wise, Rhonda
McDaniel, Jan Rife, Gloria Grover, Chad Williams, Tina
Goode, lA!n Sayre. Absent were Mike Vance, Johnny
Clonch, Regina Smith and Mae Nakamoto.

Elementary

I

KI~OWER .

" America in Song,"
a bicentennial
program from 1776 to
1976, will be presented
this evening at Rutland
Elementary School at
7:30p.m.
The event is under
the direction of Mrs.
Maurita Miler . All
pupils of the school will
participate.
The accompanying
pictures above and
below on this page by
Katie Crow relate to
the presentation
tonight.

Sa li sbury

FRANCIS
FLORIST

WHY
CALLED

'

Feds show small concern for Bill of Rights

OR

- Perm itted th e state
auditor to examine the books
of a bingo operator in any
investigation by the attorney '
general.

Also scheduled was a to briilg · ~p and defea! the blocking adjournment was syndi cated casi no-type as defined by the IRS Service
Senate vote on a heavily- governor 's appointment of disposed of Wednesday as the · gambling .
Code. ·
Your " E)(t ra T&lt;X.Jch"
As sent to the governor, the
revised property tax relief Raymond F. McKenna as General Assembly approved
Florist Sl ncel957
Rep. C.J . MeLlo , Dbill, but legislative leaders state public welfare director . finally and sent to Rhodes a · legisl ation allows bingo Dayton, floor manager of the .
Both the Education and revised version of legislation games to be conducted by any btl!, trted to broaden the
held out little hope a
settlement could be reached Welfare Committee and the pennitting bingo and other religious , fraternal , service, purposes for which proceeds
for final ratification before 21-member Democratic games of chance for educational or veteran s' could be us ed, such as
the lawmakers go hom.e.
caucus recommended charitable purposes · but organization which is tax- nursing homes operated for
Conference committee disapproval of McKenna oil • curbing organized gambling exempt under the U.S. profit. But his ame9dment
Internal Revenue Service was trounced, 83 to 10, after
• work Is expected to pracee4• grqunds he had oot properly for profit.
Code.
on that (I'Oposal during the managed department money
The measure was passed 81
House members warned it
.PH. 992-2644
This
would
include would- impose "an enormous
recess in hopes . of a and was threatening to kll2 on an .emergency basis
settlement before th e reduce Medicaid payments by the House. The Senate volunteer rescue service and burden" on th e attorney
35 ~ E. Main, Pomeroy
legislators reconvene In .next month.
unanimously agreed to the firemen's groups , and general's office to find out
Your FTD Florist
medi c al where the money was going.
June.
The Democrats were un- substantial Hol!5e changes nonprofit
organizations.
Still another conference deterred by McKenna's an- ·several hours later.
The chamber also voted 62
A license would have to be
committee had reached nouncement of Wednesday , · The Qingo bill had been
to 3) against 8 proposal to
agreement on five of seven . ordered by the governor from undt:r study in the House obtained from the state attor- permit the us e of an
points of difference between Japan, that the Medicaid since last month. The House ney general 's office, which additional 10 per cent of the
the Hol!5e and Senate on curtailment would he delayed J u d i c i a r y Co mmi ttee would enforce the law with gross receipts of a bingo
teacher .tenure legislation by two weeks to see if the inserted language to preserve the cooperation of local game for the maintenance
and
the gaming at special events held authorities .
late Wednesday night, but a legislature
and operation of a game on
Proceeds would have to be
completed negotiation was administration could solve by chllJitable groups , such as
premises owned by the
stlll up In the air.
the troblem.
church social. functions, while used for charitable purposes charitable group.
Senate Democrats planned
Another major measure deterring the threat of
Rep. Harry C. Malott, DMt . Drab, . said his
ame ndment would have
benefitted
ve terans '
organizations contributing to
scouting and Little lA!ague
'
movement also ·came under programs.
By DANlEL F. Gll.MORE
designed by the framers of ~mputerized index of nearly 1975.
CUSHIONED ARCH
Under the bill , bingo games
WASHINGTON (UP!) . the Constitution to assure · 1.5 milljon names of AmeriIt estimated that 100,000 intelligence scrutiny, the·
DURABLE LINING
Senate investigators now accountability have not been cans.
would be limited to t.wo per STEEL SHANK
Americans were the su~jects report said.
ELONGATED CUSHIONED
have published the full applied," it said.
It said millions of private of U.S. Army intelligence
TONGUE
Two of the 11 commlttee telegrams sent from, to, or files between the mid-1960's
results of their 15-month
study of •buses by U.S members disagreed and through the United States and 1971 and said the IRS had
Intelligence agencies at home refused to sign the document, were obtained from three intelligence files on more
111d abroad and made 183 saying the charges against private co~munications than ll,OOO indlviduals and
l!ePBI'&amp;te recommendations the agencies and the companies by the National groups between 1969 and 1973.
LONG WEARING
on what to do about them.
proposed refonns were too Security Agency from 1947 to
The women's liberation
TOE CAP
A 396-page report on sweeping and would result in
"Intelligence Activities and more harm than good.
Wheel Chairs
the Rights of Americans,"
Sen. John Tower, .1!-Tex.,
released Wednesday night, and Sen. Barry Goldwater, RWalkers
said .constitutional Ai:iz., said the commlttee's
guarantees of millions of recommendations "are
Crutches and Canes
KID POWER
JJ,
Americans were violated by either Wtsupported by the · ATHENS - Persons in- handicaps, speech and
IDENTIFYING
the FBI, CIA and other , factual .record or unduly terested in exceptional language, and programming
Back Braces
x~fl·
MARK
agencies during Democratic restrict attainment of valid children are invited to an for .talented and gifted
Bedside l:ommodes
and
R e p u b I i c a n Intelligence objectives."
open house Sunday, May 2 at children will be at the center
PADDED COLLAR
administrations.
The report portrayed a the Southeastern Ohio Special to answer que stions and
Support
St1Jckings
The report supplemented a "Big Brother" role of Education Regional prov ide assistance.
REINFORCED STITCHING
Monday report that offered 86 intelligence agencies in Resource Center here .
SURE GRiP
Trusses
suggestions on U.S. foreign interfering with American Agency Director Robert L.
HIGH ABRASIVE
SOLE
and mllitaryintelllgence. The constitutional rights.
OUTSOLE
Traction Equipment
Weinfurtner said the open
96 reconinlendatlons in the
"Too many people have house will be held from 2 to 4 GEI'RIDOF
Elastic Supports
later one are designed to been spied upon by too many p.m. at the center located at
control or restrain domestic government agencies and too 52 University Terrace , ad- Nobody really wants to be
Surgical Dressings
Intelligence operations.
much information has been jacent to the Church of the fa1-and some peopl e nee d
help
.
Here's
a
simple
way
to
"There Is no Inherent collected," the report said. Good Shepherd.
"The Kid -Proof Sneaker"
lose weight. MONADE )(helps
constitutional authority for · FBI headquarters, It said,
The major purpose is to curb your appet ite . You eat
the president or any developed rnore than ~.ooo acquaint parents of ex- less - you weigh lessl Start
your MonadeK reducing plan
Intelligence agency kl violate · domestic intelligence files on ceptional children with what today
- yOu ' ve a new way of
·the law," the report said.
Americans and opened and services are available to life ahead . II you don't lose
Open Friday Ti I 8- Sat. TiiS
that ugly, tat - we 'll refund
"The · committee ' s photographed nearly 380,000 them and their school your
money - na qu estions
fundamental conclusion is first ·class letters between districts through the center. asked. Also try AQUA TABS that intelligence activities· 1950 and 1973. At ooe point, it SpeCialists in pre-sc hool a water pill that works genttv
help you lose water bloa t.
have undermined
the said, the FBI had a list of education, l e arnin g to
Swisher &amp;' Lohse Pharmacy,
lle'tty Ohlioger
constitutional rights of 26,000 persons to be rounded disabilities, mental retar- 112 e. Main, Pomeroy &amp;
Pomeroy, Ohio
102 E. Main
Dutton
Drug
store,
Mid
citizens and that they have up In the event of a "national dation , phsyically-related dleport . Mail Orders Fille~ .
done so primarlly because emergency."
~ch ~ks . and
balances
The
It said, had a
OOLUMBUS !UPI) -.- The
Ohio General ~bly was
to clear the decks for a preprimary recess today by
\&amp;king flnallegl.slative action
Clll a · controversial utillty
ra~e.mag bill and sending
to
.ames A. Rhodes a
ho
QDdar.y.'measiU'es.
and Senate floor
sessions at 10 a;m. were to
begin what promised to be a
day-long
meeting
In
preparation for a spring
lreak until early June.
· A joint Senate-House
conference commlttee paved
the way for the adjournment
by reaching unanimous
agreement short.ly before
midnight Wednesday on the
· utility leglalatlon limiting the
Investment ··funds public
utilities Jll&amp;Y seek to offset
through customer billing.

Kri stin

Clara FollrOd last Tuesday
evening .
Atlending the U.M.W.
meeting at the home of
Florence Spen cer last
Tuesday were June Stearns,
Nellie Parker, Emma Finch,
Thelma Henderson, Glara
Folirod, Nina Robinson, Kate
Rodehaver, and Helen
Woode.
Charles and Helen Woode
· called on Robert White at the
Vc lerans Memorial Hospital
Sunday evening .

week and could not last
beyond midnight. Prizes
would he restricted to $3,~.
The bingo group would
have to own ' its fac ilities and
equipment or lease theni
from another organization for
reasonable rent.
Before passing the .biil, tiMJ
House
tightened
the
definition of charities to
which the proceeds would go,
and defeated amendntents
which would have :
. - Permitted ho spital
auxiliaries to conduct bing0.
- Authorized payment of
the $2.60 oourly minimum
wage for workers at the
game. Any help must be on a
volunteer basis.

Assembly gearing up for pre-primary recess

Hebner, Cathy Jones, Vicky

Morm a n . To mmy Stove r ,
Ga ry Til lis, Jody Wells. Clc'\ ret

Alfred

Donohue,

Retha Yost .
Fourth Grade
Sherry
Arnold (all A) , Dawnette
Norris . Euoene Phill ips ,
Chr istine R!ggs, Tina Wh ite.

•

'!..-The DaUy Sentlnel,Mlddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Apt H29, 1976

Fltth Grade - Brent .
Flnlaw. Brad Largent, Renee
Will is (all A) .
Sixth Grode - Mark Cline
{all A) , VIcky DoBord,
Patr ic ia Grounds , Angela
Harmon , Brenda Will iams ,
Troy Willis.

Harrisonville honor pupils are.announced
honor rol l a t Harr isonvill e

~

·'

IN lHE

STORE
ASK FOR A
SALE BILl

.,.,.,..

IINR SPRM

...

Mil

--

Clelrll$ lllee ·-

IIMI eoLOitllll

�;

(

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Thursdav. Aoril29, 1976

!~r~:::m::::::G;~,;;;~i~:'''''R:';;='= =-:·=·:·=·=·=·=1:1
\\\\

By

Charte r draped

&lt;

~u~: :; ,:l s:~ :~~~~~~::r~;!ottd :~l b~1/
aux
.
z'lz'af~"1}
J
J

O.,ar Helen and Sue :
I'm 15 and pre~nant. Alfred , the father, doesn't know
about it.
·
He asked me to marry him and his folks don't really care,
but my parenl• wouldn't approve, since he 's jtL't 18 ' and
without much of a job.
We want to elope, but if Alfred finds out I'm pregnant he
may change his mind . 1don 't want to lose him.
Should !listen to my parcniS and not get married'! Should 1
tell Alfred about the baby before or after we elope? Or
should 1 tell my parents lii·st before 1 do anything else? CONFUSIW AND PREGNANT
Dear C and P:
Tell your parents first 1 Then tell Alfred he's headed for
fatherhood ... which may influence your nex t decision
considerably.
We doubt eithe r your or Alfred are ready for marriage.
You need adult guidance before you make any more wrong
moves. - HELEN AND SUE
-1 ++

D&lt;&gt;ar Rap:
The girl who wrote you about biking cross-&lt;:ountry is not
the first to think a bout it. Agrou p of people in Missoula, Mont.,
are working on a bike route that is called "Bikecentennial. "
ls11't that a ~real way to see the U.S. in this historical year?
'l1lt' gr oup has nwppetl five bike trails that connect Hcross
the country , and it will &lt;Jccept &lt;:my younH person who has a
medical and a p&lt;ir.rnt.al okay .

Almost any bike club could sta rt a similar pliin, with the
help of parents or other interested adults. Hope this girl biker
finds (or organizes] a travel club before swnmer. - HANDY
AND CATHY

The uharter was draped in
memory of Fern Brad bury at
the Wednesday night meetinK
of the American Legion
Auxiliary of Feeney-Bennett
Post 128 at the hall .
Mrs. Erma Hen drix
preside d at the meeting
during which time delegates
and allcrnates we&amp;e named to
the state und district swnmer
convenlions. '(he delegates
are Mrs. HendriK, Mrs . Gerry
Kessinger and Bonnie Dailey,
with the alternates being
Velsi a Roush, Mary Hoover
and F'reda Clark . The district
summer convention will be
held in Athens on June 3.
The unit voted to contribute
$5 to the Eas ler Seal Fund
anrl voted to endorse the one.
half mill levy for the mental
health sei;Vices to be voted on
in ll1e June primary .
Poppy Day sale will be
conduclcd in Midd let&gt;Orl May

·Polly's Pointers

llcar lie len and Sue:
Om son is supposed to get engaged to Dora in May. Yet he
got an l':astcr card from her parents signed, "Morn and Dad
Brown.''
Don't yuu lbink this is presumptuous'! They arcn't even his
\
" pre" in -laws iinl il Dora gets the ring 1 -- THE REAl. MOM lly Polly Cramer
M.;n nAn
l&gt;e;w Heal.
PresW11ptuous'! -- No!
I think this b acccpling ... which is rea lly more than I ca n
sav for vou 1 wo . --'- HELEN

nca r Ileal:
-1--1 --1
Why make a b i ~ thing out of a friendly gesture'' You might
('all it presumptuous, but I' d call your reaction - jealous 1 SU I\
I+ I

Dcm· Hap:
I was at a friend's house.today and every time the kids did
sumething wrong - not even very much -- the mother wou ld
hit or threaten them . It seemed to make tl1~m so nervous that
they were constantly in trouble, which upset the mother into
more yelling and hit ting fils . What a madhouse!
II this is where spanking leads, l will never spank my
ch ildren! At our house, my par en/,&lt;; get quiet and thoughtful if I
ge t out of line. '111en I know it 's time to strai ghten .up. A little
silent treatmen t, foll owed by a real "ge t it out of your system"
la lk, does wonders. Y0u ca n't rea lly keep on making a foo l of
)'IIIH'self when yo ur pm·enl just looks at you regretfully. So you
· sinlmcr down in your room, and then at the right moment
I Mom always s""ms to know ill lhete's a knock on the door,
and you 're 'disc ussi ng just what ha ppened and why.
·You asked us how many were in favo r of spanking, Helen
and Sue. Seme of my fri end' think they're good because
lhcy're soon ove r and easily forgotten, but I'll choose my
parents' way. They aren't ·'gettin g even," they're trying to
leach me about - GE'rl'!NC IT STRAIGHT

HERE'S THE SANDAL LOW-DOWN

The "Thrush"

-

~'.'1' 1 "-1 ...··~·

1

White
Brown

21 and 22 and a proclamation
will be signed by Middleport
Mayor F'red Hoffman at a
later time. A rwnmage sale
will be held on the same dates
at the hall .
Reported. ill were Mr . and
Mrs. D"W Kennedy, Mrs .
Rosa· Searls, Mrs. Patty
Might, Mrs. Velsia Roush,
Mrs. Edith Spencer, Usa
Lemley , Mrs ..Freda Krautter
and post members Bernard
Gilkey, Orville Graham and
Charles McElhinny.
Mrs . Etta Will served as
chaplain and there was silent
prayer for the war dead . It
was announ ced that new
officers wi ll be elected at the
May meeting . All auxiliary
members are urged to attend.
A chicken dinner preceded
the meeting with legionnaires , juniors and senior
auxiliary mem bers at.
tending.

Pruning shears
save old broom

not al all offended by my
INFLATION FIGHTER
DEAR POLLY - Good thrift. Many are doing it
quality brooms are su ex- themselves. I used to disca·rd
perlsive luclay, and ~uos t wear the envelopes until I needed
down on one side and are then an odd size, so I carefully
di sca rded . With pruning opened the sealed parts with
shears I cui CICI'Oss the worn a letter opener, reversed the
part of min e anclthen put the sides and fastened the enbroom in a pa il of very hot velop~eth er on the inside
water wi th bleach in it. I with c~r plastic tape . To
leave this overnigh t, rinse the seal it l wet the mucilaged
broom and let it dry in the flap and slip it inside the seal .
bathtub. This was so suc- But if this does not work I can
cessful the fir st time that 1 always tape it together. Flaps
did another the same way and on unsealable envelopes are
usc it as an outside an d snow salvaged for labeling opaque
plastic refrigerator conbr oom . ~ HAZEL.
tainers . Names and adDEAR POLLY - Since dresses are used i1~ return
everything seems to have add resses an d cancelled
mure than doubled in price, I stamps are sent to charitable
have a way to get double o r g anizations .
wear out of rnv ironing board JOSEPHINE.
DEAR POLLY - When
covers. Befor€ I dischard an
tops
or sides of my son's
old one 1cut two 10-inch by 12·
streteh
rubbers tear, I mend
inch patches from the good
them
with
a black plastic
part and lay these unrubber
.
First,
fa sten the tear
derneath the new cover to
together
with
a needle and
inforce it where the iron
thread
so
as
to
hold
it in place
rests. So i get longer wea r out
and
then
apply
a
generous
of the new cover. - MRS. L.
DEAR POLLY - When coating on both sides of the
kneading bread or preparing tear so it is doubly strong . My
pastries. I put the excess son wore lhese r epaired
flolll' and small bits of dough rubberts to camp last swnin a plastic container and mer and he is still using
have this to use for thickening them . 1also repaired a pair of
gravy . Otherwise this would women's shoes where the
be thrown away , since one upper part came away from
would not want to put it back the sole by putting the rubber
with !he fresh fl our . - between and then using a vise
to hold it while it dried about
METIA.
DEAR POLLY - I am on a twenty-four hours. - MRS.
Social Security disability G. B.
You can receive a dollar If
pension and must watch my
Polly
uses your favorit e
finances. 1 am on the mailing
hom
emaking
Idea, Pet
list of many companies who
use high quality paper to Peeve, Polly's Problem or
make their sales pitch . When solution to a problem. Write
you are dependent on others Polly In ca re of this news·
for so much, even paper paper.
disposal is a problem. I have

re-

Social
Calendar

THURSDAY
GIRL SCOUT Day Camp
planning session, 1 p.m.
Thursday at the home of .Mrs.
Judy Werry, camp director.
Service unit meeting to
follow.
·
FREE CLOTHING day at
Salvation Army, Butternut
Ave., Pomeroy, Thursday, 10
a.m. to 12 noon. All area
re~idents in need of clothing
welcome .
SPECIAL MEETING,
Racine American Legion
Post 602 Thursday, 8 p.m.
ALL MINISTERS of area
churches served by Racine
Fh'e O.,partment meet 7 p.m.
Thursday
at
Racine
Wesleyan United Methodist
Church annex to plan for
combined bicentennial July
4th service.
FRIDAY
"WHAT A LIFE," a three
act .comedy ~y seniors of
·Southern High School 8 p.m.
Friday at a uditor ium in
Raaine ; directed by Carla
Shuler. Admission, $1 adults,
50 ce nts students.
PAST
MATRONS,
Evangeline Chapter, Order of
the Eastern Star,' 7:30 p.m.
Friday at the Middleport
Masonic Temple.
SATURDAY
HYMN SING Sa turd ay,
7:30 p.m. at Hazel Communi!)• Church with Bissell
Brothfrs as featured singe rs.
Public welcome .
BEDFORD TOWNSHIP
trustees Saturday, 6:30p.m.
at Ihe home of Helen Swartz,
clerk.
SUNf.•AY
VOCAL
AND
INSTRUMENTAL spr ing
concert Sunday, 3 p.m. at
Southern High Sc hoo l in
Racine under the direction of
Mrs. Lee J.ee and Mrs. Joy
Norris. Publi c invited. No
admission charge.
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT GARDEN
Club, home of Miss Nellie
Zerkle and Miss Hallie
Zerkle, 7•30 p.m. Monday.
Fortieth birthday of the .club
to be observed. Mrs. Homer
Russell will. be co-hostess.

Showers fete Mrs. Redmond
Two layette showers were
tv!ld recently honoring Mrs .
Robert (Karen) Redmond .
The first was held at the
home of Mrs . Paula Haynes ,
Syracuse, with the hostesses
being Ruth Bnbo, Sharon Pratt and Tamra Stanley.
Cake . punch, ice
cream and coffee were
· served. Games were played
and prizes won by Joann
Council, Char layne Crisp and
Jane Bobo. The . door prize
was won by Florence Bearhs.
Others attending were
Mary Workman, Janet Tillis,
Bonnie Dillon, Barbara
Black, Pearl Sigman, Lelia
Haggy, Susan Burgess,
Thelma
Lytle,
Marty
Hackett, Mabel Michael and
Carrie.Jleth Bearhs. Sending
gifts were Betty Ohlinger,
Janet Sigman , Dorothy
Ritchie and Betty Spencer.
The second shower was
held at the home of Mrs .
Mary Workman, New Haven,
with Phyllis As hley a nd
Pauline Smith as hostesses.
Cake, punch , ice , cream
and coffee were se rved.
Games were played and
prizes won by Ann Alderson ,
Sllerry Buskirk and Evelyr
Danbury with Mary Burton
winning the door prize.
Others attendi ng were
Dorothy Walker, Dorothy
Hartley, Alice Humphrey ,

\

ANT

TERMITE

FR~E

FREE

PARKING

PAP~ING
405 North :.,:lond

'·

'

members attended the Tuesday night
meeting of the Loyal Bereans
Class of the Middleport
Church of Christ held at the
·
church.
Mrs. Ca thryn Erwin
ope ned the meeting with
devotions using Psalm 7 and
readings entitled, " Arbor
Day", "Confession of a
Mi ssionary" and an excerpt
from an article on appropriate ness of celebrating
the bicentennial in the
church. The Lord's Prayer
was given in unison.
Mrs . Louise McElhinney
thanked the class lor a book
of poems sent during her
illness, correspondence was
read from Elsie Steffy and
Bill Morgan, Julie Russell
and
Kenneth
'Davis,
missionaries. Reported ill
were George Meinhart and
O.,bbie Gerlach. A silent
auction will be held at the
next meeting.
Mrs . Gertrude Miller and
Mrs. Ella Mae Daugherty
were hostesses.

VISITING FAMILY
Mrs . Bernice Evans ,
Gallipolis, has spent the past
week here visiting her
family . She has visited with
Mr . and Mrs. Don Runnel,
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Ohlinger,
Mr . and Mrs. Charles Warth
and families. A son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs . Mike Evans qf Portland,
visi led here with her one
evening, and on Wednesday,
Mrs . Evans was joined by
Mrs . Jean Blazewicz for a
visit with Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Evans and Megan of
Harrisonville.

TAXES RETURNED
State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson's office reported
today the Aprll distribution of
gasoline taxes with $9.043,000
going to Ohio counties,
townships,, cities
and
villages. Each ~~ the 1,320
townships received $1,000 and
each of the 88 counties
receive d $30,000. Amounts
received by villages include:
Middleport, $1,957; Pomeroy,
$2,202;
Ra cine,
$524;
Rutland, _$471, and Syracuse,
CHAIRMAN NAMED
COLUMBUS rUP!) - An $527.
Ironton anesthesiologist, Dr.
A. Burton Payne, !las been
named chairman or the
Physicians for President
Ford Committee in Ohio.
Payne, a former Lawrence
Co unl y commissioner, at'
tended Ohio State University
and in terned at Grant
Hospital in Col umbus.

•

Ca pehart, Diane Hickel ,
Goldye Johnson , Sandi
Roush, Emma Forthe, Amy
Hwnphrey , Dorothy Roush ,
Wrenna and Ruth Lauder·
milt, Ruth Walker, Millie
Westfall , Sheila Howard ,
Ruth Gilbert, Jenny Dodd
and Della New land.

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Sunday May 9th

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"KERM'S

KORNER"

Struble urged all persons,
and young, to learn Ute
te le;phi&gt;I~e nwnbers of the fire
and the local
squad. He
bmportance of
information as to the
of a fire in order to
time in reaching the
. , cene. Struble further stated
a fire alarm system in
the home is one way of fast
lion noting that most
people die from fires in
dwellings and that most fatal
llr.es occur during the night
when people are asleep. Fire
JI dwellings are silent killers
~ ith nearly 75 percent of
~e aths ca used by smoke
rather than burn injuries.
He flll'ther stated that all
fam ili es shou ld have an
escape plan making sure
eac h member of the family
~no w s the plan. Struble
&lt;!I stributed literature on
home safety and a safety
rllcck list covering many
1tems that can be done to
preve nt fi res. fie spoke
briefly on ways of helping
persons suffering heart attacks or strokes. On behalf of
the unit, Mrs. Davis
presented him with a gift.
Miss Erma Smith, foreign
t'elations chairman , spoke of
ll elige , former British
Honduras, stating that it is a

small country within an area
of 9,000 !quare miles with a
pop.ulation of 136,000. The
people of the country, their
way of life. the industry , and
the desire \Ogain their indtpendence Irom Britian
were dlsc_ussed by Miss
Smith ,
Presiding at the business
meeting was Mrs . Grace
Pratt. Mrs. Paul Casci served

as chaplain in the a~sence of
Mrs. Edith Sauer. Thank-you
notes were read from Pam
Powers, junior district
president, thanking the unit
for the conference and
reception held in her honor
Saturday. Thank-you cards
were also read from the boys
at the Xenia Orphans Home
for Eas~r remembrances .
.Mrs. Davis also reported on

PRELl
SHAMPOO

Assorted·
Colors

16

Bicentennial
musical
scheduled

,.

..

'

musical, will be presented by
1he
Tuppers
Plains
~ leme ntary students Friday
evening, April30, at 8 p'clock
'" the school auditoriwn .
Grades one through six will
be featured in songs and
dances as they trace our
coun try's past 200 years.
N arratoro~ will be Scott
Skinner, Cassie Sheets and
Charles Massar, sixth grade
students.
Lavi n.a Brannan 's third
gr" de will open the program
with a special bi~entennial
ma rch, followed by an
• rrangeme nt of " Yankee
Doodle" by the elementary
chorus and the fourth grade
recorder class.
Barbara Tripp's second
grade
will
represe nt
"Revolutionary America"
with the songs " George
Was hington and "Greensleeves" and will dance the
mi nue t in appropriate dress
comp lete with wigs worn by
the boys. The third grade will
again appear with the dancing of the Virginia Reel and
a medley of pioneer songs.
Tom Gwnpl's fourth grade
will be · featured in songs .
popular during the western
eKpansion and a square
dance. The fifth graders of
Robert Sanders will dance
and sing to "Take Me Out to
the Ball ·Game" and
Mississippi riverboat songs.
Bea Douglas' sixth graders
will present the spirituals
"When the Saints Go Marching In " and "He's Got the
Whole World" and the pop
dance tune "Rock Around the
Clock."
Chrisiy Caldwell's first
grade will be fea tured in
'Sesame Street' songs. The
elementary chorus wiD be
heard during the evening
with the si nging of "America,
the Beautiful" and Civil War
songs .
The progr.am is under the
direction
of
Maxine
Whitehead, elementary vocal
mus ic teacher and the
class room teachers. Mrs .
Brannan will accompan'y
several of the members on
the piano.
Room rriothers are
supervising the costuming for
Friday evening's production.
Admission charged at· the
door wlll be used to cover
eKpenses and school supplies,
The public is cordially invited
to attend .

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$2995

REEN

HANGERS

convention was announced
for JtU1e 3at Athens with Mrs .
Florence Richards, Eig hth
District president , to have
charge. Mrs. Pratt gave a
repor t on the Friday games
sponsored by the Au~iliary
and announced ,U1at Miss
Smi th and Mrs. Fraok
Powers will be hostesses for
the May 19 meeting ,
Mrs. Goett and Mrs. Iva
Powell served ice cream,
cake and coffee from tables
carrying out the bicentennial
motif. Favors were small red
hats filled with candy ,

CREST
TOOlliPASTE

NOVUS
MEN'S ELECTRIC
WATCH

America," a bicentennial

Kenneth McCullogh, R. Ph. Charles Riffle, R. Ph .
Mon. thru Sal. 8:00a .m. to 9:.00 p.m.
\
SundaY 10:30 to 12 : JO and llo 9 p.m.
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH. 992-2955
Friendly Service
112E.MAIN
OpenNightsHI9 POMEROY, O. .

To suit
the.

Pome roy Firemari Joe
was guest speaker at
Tuesday night meeting of
he
American
Legion
•1uxu••• y of Drew Webster
39 at the hall.
Introduced by Mrs. Harry
Struble spoke on Ute
13z.a,rds of fire to children
that 12,000 pe&lt;l[Jle in
"" ,, ...·.""died as the result or
last year, 300,000 surfrom smoke inhalation,
approximately 8,000 Of
who died were children.
stated that smoke
; nn:a~a 1cwn is the major source
death.
Struble reported that fire
in the community an'd
sur1rounding area in recent
have been tremenand commented on what
""" ·"", can do to help curb

00&lt;1t for tht• Memorial Day
parade by Mrs . Pratt. Poppy
Day was announced for May
28 and 29 by Mrs. Marge
· Reuter. Mr s. Wildermuth,
the Easier and birthday gifts for !he mentally rel&lt;lrded Mein hart were named to the community service cllairtaken to the veterans at program and the unit voted to nom lnia ting committee. Mrs . man, reported on the success
Arcadia and Syracuse con tribute $15. The unit also Davis, Mr s. Prutt, Mi ss of the ca ncer drive . Mrs .
Nursing Homes. The Girls went on record as endorsing Smith and Mrs. Marjorie Davis gave a resume of the
State tea was announced for the one-half mill levy for the Goett were elected delegates jupior conference and
May 16 at Thornville with · mental health program of the to the fall conference and the displayed the trophies won by
Paula .Eichinger to be the 648 Board.
state conventi on, ,with Mrs. the juniors . She also ex·
.delegate from !he unit.
Mrs. Davis reporte9 on the Catherine Wels h, Mrs. Pearl pressed thanks for a gift
It was voted to purchase a luncheon which she attended Knapp, Mrs . Mary Martin prcsentod her .
flag pole for the mini-park. on mental retardation . Mrs. and Mrs. Gladys Cumings "s
Mrs, Paul Casci distributed
Mrs . Pratt read a com- Gera ld Wildermuth, Mrs. · the alfernates. · .
litera ture on nati onal
munication. on the bike-hike Davis and Mrs . Phillip . Reports were given on the sccurity .The Eighth Di strict

TUPPERS _-FILA·INS .
"Fro m Sea to Sea

I
I
I
I
I1

class meet

r Fourteen

•

Officers

Officers for the 1976-77 year
were installed at a recent
meeting of the Racine PTO.
They are Ubby Fisher,
president; Linda Holter, vice
president ; Jean Clela nd ,
secretary, a nd Barbara
Dugan , treasurer. The PTO
extended thanks to Don
Beegle for building tables and
shelves for a work area for
the teachers. It was decided
to give Jack Slavin a token in
appreciation for judging the
cultural ariS program . Final
plans were made for the
s morgasbord
hel d
at
Southern
High School
recently.
II was voted to pay lor the
materials needed for the
kindergarten grad uation
robes and to buy fourth
graders ice cream cones for
WILKESVILLE - O.,anna making posters advertising
Tribe, Sally Robison and the smorgasbord.
Freda
Johnston
were
The pledge to the flag and
initiated into the Wilkesville the Lord's Prayer opened the
Pythian Sisters Temple 591 meeting. Reports were given
at a meeting held recently at by Sue Hager, secretary, and
the temple.
Barbara Dugan, treasurer.
Plans were made for inRefreshments were served
spection on May 28 with a by the second grade. Next
practice being set for Sunday, meeti ng will be a band
May 16 at 1:30 p. m. and on program with the first grade
May 21 at 7 p. m. All staff to have refreshments.
members are asked to be
present · for both practices.
Twenty-three members were
presen t for the meeting.
The Knights will serve a
pancake supper on May I
from II a. m. to 7 p. m. and
everyone was invited to attend . Refr eshmen' s were '
served during a concluding
social hour.

Pythian Sisters
hold initiation

Cathy. Batey, Narsa Van
Meter, Pam Frye, ,Peggy
Russell·, Thelma Reitmire ,
Madge Weaver, Carol
Russell , Esther Simpson ,
Evelyr Danbury and Vera
Thompson.
Sending
gilts
were
Florence Workman, Thelma

~}}~~fi~l::~!fi~~ {~~;1 .. ,:;: : :;: : ~:4:':;::;:: : : : :\_,·:,._1_,.:'=·.
to friend s and family who are {

-• ireman Struble speaks to .American Legion Auxiliary
The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Thursday, April29, 1976

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8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Thursdav. Aoril29, 1976

!~r~:::m::::::G;~,;;;~i~:'''''R:';;='= =-:·=·:·=·=·=·=1:1
\\\\

By

Charte r draped

&lt;

~u~: :; ,:l s:~ :~~~~~~::r~;!ottd :~l b~1/
aux
.
z'lz'af~"1}
J
J

O.,ar Helen and Sue :
I'm 15 and pre~nant. Alfred , the father, doesn't know
about it.
·
He asked me to marry him and his folks don't really care,
but my parenl• wouldn't approve, since he 's jtL't 18 ' and
without much of a job.
We want to elope, but if Alfred finds out I'm pregnant he
may change his mind . 1don 't want to lose him.
Should !listen to my parcniS and not get married'! Should 1
tell Alfred about the baby before or after we elope? Or
should 1 tell my parents lii·st before 1 do anything else? CONFUSIW AND PREGNANT
Dear C and P:
Tell your parents first 1 Then tell Alfred he's headed for
fatherhood ... which may influence your nex t decision
considerably.
We doubt eithe r your or Alfred are ready for marriage.
You need adult guidance before you make any more wrong
moves. - HELEN AND SUE
-1 ++

D&lt;&gt;ar Rap:
The girl who wrote you about biking cross-&lt;:ountry is not
the first to think a bout it. Agrou p of people in Missoula, Mont.,
are working on a bike route that is called "Bikecentennial. "
ls11't that a ~real way to see the U.S. in this historical year?
'l1lt' gr oup has nwppetl five bike trails that connect Hcross
the country , and it will &lt;Jccept &lt;:my younH person who has a
medical and a p&lt;ir.rnt.al okay .

Almost any bike club could sta rt a similar pliin, with the
help of parents or other interested adults. Hope this girl biker
finds (or organizes] a travel club before swnmer. - HANDY
AND CATHY

The uharter was draped in
memory of Fern Brad bury at
the Wednesday night meetinK
of the American Legion
Auxiliary of Feeney-Bennett
Post 128 at the hall .
Mrs. Erma Hen drix
preside d at the meeting
during which time delegates
and allcrnates we&amp;e named to
the state und district swnmer
convenlions. '(he delegates
are Mrs. HendriK, Mrs . Gerry
Kessinger and Bonnie Dailey,
with the alternates being
Velsi a Roush, Mary Hoover
and F'reda Clark . The district
summer convention will be
held in Athens on June 3.
The unit voted to contribute
$5 to the Eas ler Seal Fund
anrl voted to endorse the one.
half mill levy for the mental
health sei;Vices to be voted on
in ll1e June primary .
Poppy Day sale will be
conduclcd in Midd let&gt;Orl May

·Polly's Pointers

llcar lie len and Sue:
Om son is supposed to get engaged to Dora in May. Yet he
got an l':astcr card from her parents signed, "Morn and Dad
Brown.''
Don't yuu lbink this is presumptuous'! They arcn't even his
\
" pre" in -laws iinl il Dora gets the ring 1 -- THE REAl. MOM lly Polly Cramer
M.;n nAn
l&gt;e;w Heal.
PresW11ptuous'! -- No!
I think this b acccpling ... which is rea lly more than I ca n
sav for vou 1 wo . --'- HELEN

nca r Ileal:
-1--1 --1
Why make a b i ~ thing out of a friendly gesture'' You might
('all it presumptuous, but I' d call your reaction - jealous 1 SU I\
I+ I

Dcm· Hap:
I was at a friend's house.today and every time the kids did
sumething wrong - not even very much -- the mother wou ld
hit or threaten them . It seemed to make tl1~m so nervous that
they were constantly in trouble, which upset the mother into
more yelling and hit ting fils . What a madhouse!
II this is where spanking leads, l will never spank my
ch ildren! At our house, my par en/,&lt;; get quiet and thoughtful if I
ge t out of line. '111en I know it 's time to strai ghten .up. A little
silent treatmen t, foll owed by a real "ge t it out of your system"
la lk, does wonders. Y0u ca n't rea lly keep on making a foo l of
)'IIIH'self when yo ur pm·enl just looks at you regretfully. So you
· sinlmcr down in your room, and then at the right moment
I Mom always s""ms to know ill lhete's a knock on the door,
and you 're 'disc ussi ng just what ha ppened and why.
·You asked us how many were in favo r of spanking, Helen
and Sue. Seme of my fri end' think they're good because
lhcy're soon ove r and easily forgotten, but I'll choose my
parents' way. They aren't ·'gettin g even," they're trying to
leach me about - GE'rl'!NC IT STRAIGHT

HERE'S THE SANDAL LOW-DOWN

The "Thrush"

-

~'.'1' 1 "-1 ...··~·

1

White
Brown

21 and 22 and a proclamation
will be signed by Middleport
Mayor F'red Hoffman at a
later time. A rwnmage sale
will be held on the same dates
at the hall .
Reported. ill were Mr . and
Mrs. D"W Kennedy, Mrs .
Rosa· Searls, Mrs. Patty
Might, Mrs. Velsia Roush,
Mrs. Edith Spencer, Usa
Lemley , Mrs ..Freda Krautter
and post members Bernard
Gilkey, Orville Graham and
Charles McElhinny.
Mrs . Etta Will served as
chaplain and there was silent
prayer for the war dead . It
was announ ced that new
officers wi ll be elected at the
May meeting . All auxiliary
members are urged to attend.
A chicken dinner preceded
the meeting with legionnaires , juniors and senior
auxiliary mem bers at.
tending.

Pruning shears
save old broom

not al all offended by my
INFLATION FIGHTER
DEAR POLLY - Good thrift. Many are doing it
quality brooms are su ex- themselves. I used to disca·rd
perlsive luclay, and ~uos t wear the envelopes until I needed
down on one side and are then an odd size, so I carefully
di sca rded . With pruning opened the sealed parts with
shears I cui CICI'Oss the worn a letter opener, reversed the
part of min e anclthen put the sides and fastened the enbroom in a pa il of very hot velop~eth er on the inside
water wi th bleach in it. I with c~r plastic tape . To
leave this overnigh t, rinse the seal it l wet the mucilaged
broom and let it dry in the flap and slip it inside the seal .
bathtub. This was so suc- But if this does not work I can
cessful the fir st time that 1 always tape it together. Flaps
did another the same way and on unsealable envelopes are
usc it as an outside an d snow salvaged for labeling opaque
plastic refrigerator conbr oom . ~ HAZEL.
tainers . Names and adDEAR POLLY - Since dresses are used i1~ return
everything seems to have add resses an d cancelled
mure than doubled in price, I stamps are sent to charitable
have a way to get double o r g anizations .
wear out of rnv ironing board JOSEPHINE.
DEAR POLLY - When
covers. Befor€ I dischard an
tops
or sides of my son's
old one 1cut two 10-inch by 12·
streteh
rubbers tear, I mend
inch patches from the good
them
with
a black plastic
part and lay these unrubber
.
First,
fa sten the tear
derneath the new cover to
together
with
a needle and
inforce it where the iron
thread
so
as
to
hold
it in place
rests. So i get longer wea r out
and
then
apply
a
generous
of the new cover. - MRS. L.
DEAR POLLY - When coating on both sides of the
kneading bread or preparing tear so it is doubly strong . My
pastries. I put the excess son wore lhese r epaired
flolll' and small bits of dough rubberts to camp last swnin a plastic container and mer and he is still using
have this to use for thickening them . 1also repaired a pair of
gravy . Otherwise this would women's shoes where the
be thrown away , since one upper part came away from
would not want to put it back the sole by putting the rubber
with !he fresh fl our . - between and then using a vise
to hold it while it dried about
METIA.
DEAR POLLY - I am on a twenty-four hours. - MRS.
Social Security disability G. B.
You can receive a dollar If
pension and must watch my
Polly
uses your favorit e
finances. 1 am on the mailing
hom
emaking
Idea, Pet
list of many companies who
use high quality paper to Peeve, Polly's Problem or
make their sales pitch . When solution to a problem. Write
you are dependent on others Polly In ca re of this news·
for so much, even paper paper.
disposal is a problem. I have

re-

Social
Calendar

THURSDAY
GIRL SCOUT Day Camp
planning session, 1 p.m.
Thursday at the home of .Mrs.
Judy Werry, camp director.
Service unit meeting to
follow.
·
FREE CLOTHING day at
Salvation Army, Butternut
Ave., Pomeroy, Thursday, 10
a.m. to 12 noon. All area
re~idents in need of clothing
welcome .
SPECIAL MEETING,
Racine American Legion
Post 602 Thursday, 8 p.m.
ALL MINISTERS of area
churches served by Racine
Fh'e O.,partment meet 7 p.m.
Thursday
at
Racine
Wesleyan United Methodist
Church annex to plan for
combined bicentennial July
4th service.
FRIDAY
"WHAT A LIFE," a three
act .comedy ~y seniors of
·Southern High School 8 p.m.
Friday at a uditor ium in
Raaine ; directed by Carla
Shuler. Admission, $1 adults,
50 ce nts students.
PAST
MATRONS,
Evangeline Chapter, Order of
the Eastern Star,' 7:30 p.m.
Friday at the Middleport
Masonic Temple.
SATURDAY
HYMN SING Sa turd ay,
7:30 p.m. at Hazel Communi!)• Church with Bissell
Brothfrs as featured singe rs.
Public welcome .
BEDFORD TOWNSHIP
trustees Saturday, 6:30p.m.
at Ihe home of Helen Swartz,
clerk.
SUNf.•AY
VOCAL
AND
INSTRUMENTAL spr ing
concert Sunday, 3 p.m. at
Southern High Sc hoo l in
Racine under the direction of
Mrs. Lee J.ee and Mrs. Joy
Norris. Publi c invited. No
admission charge.
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT GARDEN
Club, home of Miss Nellie
Zerkle and Miss Hallie
Zerkle, 7•30 p.m. Monday.
Fortieth birthday of the .club
to be observed. Mrs. Homer
Russell will. be co-hostess.

Showers fete Mrs. Redmond
Two layette showers were
tv!ld recently honoring Mrs .
Robert (Karen) Redmond .
The first was held at the
home of Mrs . Paula Haynes ,
Syracuse, with the hostesses
being Ruth Bnbo, Sharon Pratt and Tamra Stanley.
Cake . punch, ice
cream and coffee were
· served. Games were played
and prizes won by Joann
Council, Char layne Crisp and
Jane Bobo. The . door prize
was won by Florence Bearhs.
Others attending were
Mary Workman, Janet Tillis,
Bonnie Dillon, Barbara
Black, Pearl Sigman, Lelia
Haggy, Susan Burgess,
Thelma
Lytle,
Marty
Hackett, Mabel Michael and
Carrie.Jleth Bearhs. Sending
gifts were Betty Ohlinger,
Janet Sigman , Dorothy
Ritchie and Betty Spencer.
The second shower was
held at the home of Mrs .
Mary Workman, New Haven,
with Phyllis As hley a nd
Pauline Smith as hostesses.
Cake, punch , ice , cream
and coffee were se rved.
Games were played and
prizes won by Ann Alderson ,
Sllerry Buskirk and Evelyr
Danbury with Mary Burton
winning the door prize.
Others attendi ng were
Dorothy Walker, Dorothy
Hartley, Alice Humphrey ,

\

ANT

TERMITE

FR~E

FREE

PARKING

PAP~ING
405 North :.,:lond

'·

'

members attended the Tuesday night
meeting of the Loyal Bereans
Class of the Middleport
Church of Christ held at the
·
church.
Mrs. Ca thryn Erwin
ope ned the meeting with
devotions using Psalm 7 and
readings entitled, " Arbor
Day", "Confession of a
Mi ssionary" and an excerpt
from an article on appropriate ness of celebrating
the bicentennial in the
church. The Lord's Prayer
was given in unison.
Mrs . Louise McElhinney
thanked the class lor a book
of poems sent during her
illness, correspondence was
read from Elsie Steffy and
Bill Morgan, Julie Russell
and
Kenneth
'Davis,
missionaries. Reported ill
were George Meinhart and
O.,bbie Gerlach. A silent
auction will be held at the
next meeting.
Mrs . Gertrude Miller and
Mrs. Ella Mae Daugherty
were hostesses.

VISITING FAMILY
Mrs . Bernice Evans ,
Gallipolis, has spent the past
week here visiting her
family . She has visited with
Mr . and Mrs. Don Runnel,
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Ohlinger,
Mr . and Mrs. Charles Warth
and families. A son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs . Mike Evans qf Portland,
visi led here with her one
evening, and on Wednesday,
Mrs . Evans was joined by
Mrs . Jean Blazewicz for a
visit with Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Evans and Megan of
Harrisonville.

TAXES RETURNED
State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson's office reported
today the Aprll distribution of
gasoline taxes with $9.043,000
going to Ohio counties,
townships,, cities
and
villages. Each ~~ the 1,320
townships received $1,000 and
each of the 88 counties
receive d $30,000. Amounts
received by villages include:
Middleport, $1,957; Pomeroy,
$2,202;
Ra cine,
$524;
Rutland, _$471, and Syracuse,
CHAIRMAN NAMED
COLUMBUS rUP!) - An $527.
Ironton anesthesiologist, Dr.
A. Burton Payne, !las been
named chairman or the
Physicians for President
Ford Committee in Ohio.
Payne, a former Lawrence
Co unl y commissioner, at'
tended Ohio State University
and in terned at Grant
Hospital in Col umbus.

•

Ca pehart, Diane Hickel ,
Goldye Johnson , Sandi
Roush, Emma Forthe, Amy
Hwnphrey , Dorothy Roush ,
Wrenna and Ruth Lauder·
milt, Ruth Walker, Millie
Westfall , Sheila Howard ,
Ruth Gilbert, Jenny Dodd
and Della New land.

••
,.'

.

L.!.~

The··perfect gift for.

MOTHER'S· DAY
.
Sunday May 9th

...

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..
.,

J(.,

.,

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installed

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,&lt;

~\ -,..._.:&gt;..\':
.-

'1ZliM£ffi 8~~,

'.

•'

~, CANDIES

.'•

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TUX RENTAL
I'

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Select an elegantly styled
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of formal wear. In Summerweight fabrics. Value rates.

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POMEROY, 0 .

"KERM'S

KORNER"

Struble urged all persons,
and young, to learn Ute
te le;phi&gt;I~e nwnbers of the fire
and the local
squad. He
bmportance of
information as to the
of a fire in order to
time in reaching the
. , cene. Struble further stated
a fire alarm system in
the home is one way of fast
lion noting that most
people die from fires in
dwellings and that most fatal
llr.es occur during the night
when people are asleep. Fire
JI dwellings are silent killers
~ ith nearly 75 percent of
~e aths ca used by smoke
rather than burn injuries.
He flll'ther stated that all
fam ili es shou ld have an
escape plan making sure
eac h member of the family
~no w s the plan. Struble
&lt;!I stributed literature on
home safety and a safety
rllcck list covering many
1tems that can be done to
preve nt fi res. fie spoke
briefly on ways of helping
persons suffering heart attacks or strokes. On behalf of
the unit, Mrs. Davis
presented him with a gift.
Miss Erma Smith, foreign
t'elations chairman , spoke of
ll elige , former British
Honduras, stating that it is a

small country within an area
of 9,000 !quare miles with a
pop.ulation of 136,000. The
people of the country, their
way of life. the industry , and
the desire \Ogain their indtpendence Irom Britian
were dlsc_ussed by Miss
Smith ,
Presiding at the business
meeting was Mrs . Grace
Pratt. Mrs. Paul Casci served

as chaplain in the a~sence of
Mrs. Edith Sauer. Thank-you
notes were read from Pam
Powers, junior district
president, thanking the unit
for the conference and
reception held in her honor
Saturday. Thank-you cards
were also read from the boys
at the Xenia Orphans Home
for Eas~r remembrances .
.Mrs. Davis also reported on

PRELl
SHAMPOO

Assorted·
Colors

16

Bicentennial
musical
scheduled

,.

..

'

musical, will be presented by
1he
Tuppers
Plains
~ leme ntary students Friday
evening, April30, at 8 p'clock
'" the school auditoriwn .
Grades one through six will
be featured in songs and
dances as they trace our
coun try's past 200 years.
N arratoro~ will be Scott
Skinner, Cassie Sheets and
Charles Massar, sixth grade
students.
Lavi n.a Brannan 's third
gr" de will open the program
with a special bi~entennial
ma rch, followed by an
• rrangeme nt of " Yankee
Doodle" by the elementary
chorus and the fourth grade
recorder class.
Barbara Tripp's second
grade
will
represe nt
"Revolutionary America"
with the songs " George
Was hington and "Greensleeves" and will dance the
mi nue t in appropriate dress
comp lete with wigs worn by
the boys. The third grade will
again appear with the dancing of the Virginia Reel and
a medley of pioneer songs.
Tom Gwnpl's fourth grade
will be · featured in songs .
popular during the western
eKpansion and a square
dance. The fifth graders of
Robert Sanders will dance
and sing to "Take Me Out to
the Ball ·Game" and
Mississippi riverboat songs.
Bea Douglas' sixth graders
will present the spirituals
"When the Saints Go Marching In " and "He's Got the
Whole World" and the pop
dance tune "Rock Around the
Clock."
Chrisiy Caldwell's first
grade will be fea tured in
'Sesame Street' songs. The
elementary chorus wiD be
heard during the evening
with the si nging of "America,
the Beautiful" and Civil War
songs .
The progr.am is under the
direction
of
Maxine
Whitehead, elementary vocal
mus ic teacher and the
class room teachers. Mrs .
Brannan will accompan'y
several of the members on
the piano.
Room rriothers are
supervising the costuming for
Friday evening's production.
Admission charged at· the
door wlll be used to cover
eKpenses and school supplies,
The public is cordially invited
to attend .

NELSON'S
REG. $39.95

oz .

Nelson's
Reg. 83c

1; li
I i...~11.
NELSON'S
REG. 77c

67'

100 Ct .
With 30
FREE
NELSON'S
REG. $2.84

$2995

REEN

HANGERS

convention was announced
for JtU1e 3at Athens with Mrs .
Florence Richards, Eig hth
District president , to have
charge. Mrs. Pratt gave a
repor t on the Friday games
sponsored by the Au~iliary
and announced ,U1at Miss
Smi th and Mrs. Fraok
Powers will be hostesses for
the May 19 meeting ,
Mrs. Goett and Mrs. Iva
Powell served ice cream,
cake and coffee from tables
carrying out the bicentennial
motif. Favors were small red
hats filled with candy ,

CREST
TOOlliPASTE

NOVUS
MEN'S ELECTRIC
WATCH

America," a bicentennial

Kenneth McCullogh, R. Ph. Charles Riffle, R. Ph .
Mon. thru Sal. 8:00a .m. to 9:.00 p.m.
\
SundaY 10:30 to 12 : JO and llo 9 p.m.
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH. 992-2955
Friendly Service
112E.MAIN
OpenNightsHI9 POMEROY, O. .

To suit
the.

Pome roy Firemari Joe
was guest speaker at
Tuesday night meeting of
he
American
Legion
•1uxu••• y of Drew Webster
39 at the hall.
Introduced by Mrs. Harry
Struble spoke on Ute
13z.a,rds of fire to children
that 12,000 pe&lt;l[Jle in
"" ,, ...·.""died as the result or
last year, 300,000 surfrom smoke inhalation,
approximately 8,000 Of
who died were children.
stated that smoke
; nn:a~a 1cwn is the major source
death.
Struble reported that fire
in the community an'd
sur1rounding area in recent
have been tremenand commented on what
""" ·"", can do to help curb

00&lt;1t for tht• Memorial Day
parade by Mrs . Pratt. Poppy
Day was announced for May
28 and 29 by Mrs. Marge
· Reuter. Mr s. Wildermuth,
the Easier and birthday gifts for !he mentally rel&lt;lrded Mein hart were named to the community service cllairtaken to the veterans at program and the unit voted to nom lnia ting committee. Mrs . man, reported on the success
Arcadia and Syracuse con tribute $15. The unit also Davis, Mr s. Prutt, Mi ss of the ca ncer drive . Mrs .
Nursing Homes. The Girls went on record as endorsing Smith and Mrs. Marjorie Davis gave a resume of the
State tea was announced for the one-half mill levy for the Goett were elected delegates jupior conference and
May 16 at Thornville with · mental health program of the to the fall conference and the displayed the trophies won by
Paula .Eichinger to be the 648 Board.
state conventi on, ,with Mrs. the juniors . She also ex·
.delegate from !he unit.
Mrs. Davis reporte9 on the Catherine Wels h, Mrs. Pearl pressed thanks for a gift
It was voted to purchase a luncheon which she attended Knapp, Mrs . Mary Martin prcsentod her .
flag pole for the mini-park. on mental retardation . Mrs. and Mrs. Gladys Cumings "s
Mrs, Paul Casci distributed
Mrs . Pratt read a com- Gera ld Wildermuth, Mrs. · the alfernates. · .
litera ture on nati onal
munication. on the bike-hike Davis and Mrs . Phillip . Reports were given on the sccurity .The Eighth Di strict

TUPPERS _-FILA·INS .
"Fro m Sea to Sea

I
I
I
I
I1

class meet

r Fourteen

•

Officers

Officers for the 1976-77 year
were installed at a recent
meeting of the Racine PTO.
They are Ubby Fisher,
president; Linda Holter, vice
president ; Jean Clela nd ,
secretary, a nd Barbara
Dugan , treasurer. The PTO
extended thanks to Don
Beegle for building tables and
shelves for a work area for
the teachers. It was decided
to give Jack Slavin a token in
appreciation for judging the
cultural ariS program . Final
plans were made for the
s morgasbord
hel d
at
Southern
High School
recently.
II was voted to pay lor the
materials needed for the
kindergarten grad uation
robes and to buy fourth
graders ice cream cones for
WILKESVILLE - O.,anna making posters advertising
Tribe, Sally Robison and the smorgasbord.
Freda
Johnston
were
The pledge to the flag and
initiated into the Wilkesville the Lord's Prayer opened the
Pythian Sisters Temple 591 meeting. Reports were given
at a meeting held recently at by Sue Hager, secretary, and
the temple.
Barbara Dugan, treasurer.
Plans were made for inRefreshments were served
spection on May 28 with a by the second grade. Next
practice being set for Sunday, meeti ng will be a band
May 16 at 1:30 p. m. and on program with the first grade
May 21 at 7 p. m. All staff to have refreshments.
members are asked to be
present · for both practices.
Twenty-three members were
presen t for the meeting.
The Knights will serve a
pancake supper on May I
from II a. m. to 7 p. m. and
everyone was invited to attend . Refr eshmen' s were '
served during a concluding
social hour.

Pythian Sisters
hold initiation

Cathy. Batey, Narsa Van
Meter, Pam Frye, ,Peggy
Russell·, Thelma Reitmire ,
Madge Weaver, Carol
Russell , Esther Simpson ,
Evelyr Danbury and Vera
Thompson.
Sending
gilts
were
Florence Workman, Thelma

~}}~~fi~l::~!fi~~ {~~;1 .. ,:;: : :;: : ~:4:':;::;:: : : : :\_,·:,._1_,.:'=·.
to friend s and family who are {

-• ireman Struble speaks to .American Legion Auxiliary
The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Thursday, April29, 1976

~j:::~::x®:::o::x::r~~w~~:

PAINT ROLLER SET

LAWN 'N LEAF
B~G$

NELSON'S
REG. $1.29

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NELSON'S
REG. $1.29

AUSTIN

SUPER HERD

FOAIYI~-'!~

WINDSHIELD
WASHER

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NELSON;S

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Nelson's
REG. $1.19

JOHNNY BENCH
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Durable. Heavy

Out~

Assorted Colors
NELSON'S

PRO
•

I J

39'

HORSE SHOE SET
Great Outdoor
Fun for the
Entire Family.

-NELSON'S
REG. $1.19

99~

Ill ELSON'S
REG. $3.49

6-PACK

INSULATED COOLERS
'

$·299

PATIO
DECOR

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BELLS

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Miller, Schlitz,
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Decorative
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your patio. Great
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a:=
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diarrhea

�11 - The Daily ISI!nlme!, Middle!J!lri-Pomerov. 0 .• Thursday. April29, 1976

DICK TRACY

•

J~

•

Televis.ign log for easy viewing

Situations Wanted
gone
While others ore l eft ro Slay
But 1f we hod o garden
W1th roses fotr and brtg kt
We'd often pick the loveHest
And tktn k 11 to be nght
In ht s earthly gorden here
He of len ptck s the f01 rest tlowe rs
The one we loved so dear
The fl owers that ore ptcked by
hm1
W1l l never lode owoy ,
We know ke wtll hve forever ,
And we wtll see h1m some swear

IOS{'rtiQO
RATES
F or W an 1 A CI Sen,,c e
s cenrs per word one
msert1on
Mtn tmum Charge $1 00
14 cents per word three
consec u t , vc
mscrt1ons
16 cc n ts per w ord St~
con sec u t rve
tnserltOn 5
75 P er Ce nt 01scoun ton
Pil i d ad s and ad s oa1d
w•lhtn 10 day s

day

oi

BLIND AD S
Addt fl onal 7Sc Chnrgc

FABRIC Spec tal sl ! Now through

NOTICES

ATTN · "
All HOUSEWIVES
All Y~trd Sa l es Rummage ,
Por c h and Ba se m ent Por ch
r~nd Ba semen t Sa les , et: .
must be patd tn advance .
Get your In tn earl y by
stopp1ng by our oft tce at
Th e Da rry Se nt ine l, Ill
Co urt St or wr tttn g Box
729 , P om eroy , Oh to 4576 9
With you r r emtlt ance

GARAGE SALE Satu rday , May I
one day only t 9 o m. ttll 5 p.m
FOUND small blo ck a nd w k1te ter
Cloth tng
baby bed , mtsc
r1e r dog on Sou th Second M td ·
Ro nald
Cloy
resrdence ,
dlep o rt
Phone
992 59 10
Che ster , Ok1o Turn at Ches ter
onyt1me or 992·5427 af ter 6
F~r e Stat1 on 4th house on left
pm
wa tch for stgns

AUXILIARY POLICE FOR
THE VILLAGE OF MID·
DLEPORT
Be rt ordtl!n ed by th e
Council of th e Vllle~ge of
Mrddleport as follow s
Sec I Tha t an au)(tlra r y
pol 1ce un rt be estab l ished
wtt h m the Vi lla ge Po t 1ce
De partment , pur s uant to
Sec l 10n 37 161 of th e Oh to
Rev1Sed Code
Sec II Be 11 furth er or
dalned
that
the
polt ce
aux ll tar y sh all be su br ec t to
th e rul es and regulaltons fil ed
wtth the Mayor of th e Village
Se c 1r I
Th is Ordrnanc e
Sha ll ta Ke e ff ec t and be rn
forc e f rom a nd aft er April 12.

1976
Pass ed th e 12th dil y of Ap ril

1976

Attest

M L Ke lly
Pre stdent of Co un cil
Gene Grat e
Clerk.

(4) 22 , 29, 2rc

AstroGrapM
• Bem•c• Bode Osol
For Friday , April JO, 1976
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Althoug h yo u re e)(tr a sha rp
bu srnes swr se todaJ you II A'Otk
harder lor o tners, es pec1a Hy
the lamr ly than you w1 ll for
YOLtrsell

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Thr s 1s a d ay you mu st teiiJ t ltkc
11 IS and avord sell -sound1ng
phr as es Set an e&gt;&lt;ample
Stan d behrnd you r word

GEM INI (May 21 -June 20) Go
after wha t 16 owed you and no
more You 11 onl y defeat you r
purpose by lookmg for a free
rrde

CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Whrle you v rew th rngs
rea lr st1 cally to da y da re to hope
for a brrg ht er l omorrow A n·
trc1 pate th e obs tacles to you r
d1ea ms

LEO (July 23-Aug 22) T•me

&gt;S

on ~our s1 de so whrl e you have
the reserve stren gth don t th inK
of qur ttrng Pu sh pus t1 push'

VIRGO (Aug

2J-Sep1 . 22)

lhere tS no thmg really new un.
der the sun so pro f1t by e&gt;&lt;
pe r1 en ce Once you get a
toehold today you can cl1mb
thm ladder of success

'

LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0cl. 23) You
ca n see thtngs t oday that
another can t an d can help her
so rt out her afl at rs However
don I let her belreve she ca n
get.more th an shes en t11tect to

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22)
'r'ou

won t

s h rrk

t ou gh

PORCH

kashnd Found

SAL E

Wed&gt;

Thursday, r01n or sh tne

and
413

Spnn~ ~ve_ Pom~ roy

LOST tn v1C1 ntly of Sy racuse Ro ll
Pa rk Monday rnon 5 Wtl son ST PAU L Unrted Metkod tst Chur
ch ot Tuppers Plom s wrll have
ba seball glove
reward 1f
o rummage ond yard sale
found Ca 11992 207 1
Frtd oy Apr il 30th and Sotur·
LOST Man 5 wa llet wtth valuable
day , May l si q to 4 pm
papers between Pomeroy and
Fnday and 9 to ? Saturday lot s
Racme If fou nd co ll949·2144
of d o th1ng and miscellan eo us
1tems

~!!fA
_-- an!ed-~--

"f

Y-ARD SALEr;;d-;,;s.lu"7do~ .~d

-

. ---:-~
_ ___
=:--;._::
Sunday on St ory s Run Rood,
south of M.~
'dc:dc:c
le"po:._r_:I.~--DO YOU HAVE PARTY PLAN EX
PERIENCE? FRIENOL Y TOY BASEMENT Sale, Syracuse, across
PAR TIES HAS OPENINGS FOR
from Hubbard s Greenhouse
MANAGERS IN OUR AREA
Thursday . Frrdoy and Saturday
RE CRUITING IS EASY BECAUSE
9 ta ll 4 p m Ntce clothrng ,
OEM S HAVE NO CASH IN VES,Td1 shes . m15c tool s, ele c cook

MENT , NO COLLECliNG OR
DELIVERINGS CALL COL LECT

&gt;love

week ly addressmg env elopes
RIJ sh self-address ed , stomp ed AKC Regt slered Co llte Stud Ser·
envelope
Sou th ern D1 ver ·
v1ce
Stardus t Kmg
Phone
s1l1ed 1206 Camden Dn ve,
(6 " )985 4248
~~ mo~d , VtrgtniO 2322Q
AKC Reg1sfered co lin~ pups 10
$25 PER HUNDRED &gt;lulling
weeks o ld Phone 843 2753
, e n ve l opes
Se nd
se lf
addressed ,
sta mped
en ve lope Edroy Moils Box
18~. Albonr :....Mo_b4~2

...,.!:!~~!:!~~er~y-

~

FU RNI SHED apt . coupl e only a ll
ut1IF1tes po1d $130 pur month
Phone 992 3Q75 or 992·'257 1

APP LICA liO NS ore bemg ac- 2- BEDRM t r;t l~r full! carpeted
located on Rt 1A3, c ose to Har
ce pted fo r a 4·H Program
nsonvdl e 1 chrld Pho ne 742
A ss lsloflt Immediately through
3122
May 15 1976 Deodlme wdl be
ex tended tf necessary unl tl the ENJOY g roc~
Vt llag e
pos1tton 1s fr lled WHERE TO
Manor tn Middl eport fo r as low
APPLY - Job opplicoltons and
as $130 per montk wit h oil
1nl or mott o n pe r ta1n 1ng lo
utd111es po1d These ore brand
du t1es , qualdt cot •ons preferred
new k1gh qual1ty apartments ol
and 10b e)(pecla t1on s may be
pr~ces you con aff ord Your rent
obtarned by contocltng th e
mcludes month to mo nth
Merg s County Ex ten ston Off1ce
leases , all e lec
ltvmg
basemen t of the County Home
carpett n g
range
and
Butldmg on Mulberry Hetghts tn
refrtgerotor , free trash p1ckup,
Pomeroy Off1 ce hours ore B 30
cable TV at your expense. and
a m to 4 30 p m Monday thru
on-s1te laundry fcet liltes ConFr1day Telephone 992 3895
ventent to shopptng on Thtrd
WORKING HOURS 20 hours pe r
and Mdl Streets 1n Mtddleporl
week to be arranged wt th•
See t ke manag er or R1vers1de
~mploye.':._
Aportments or ' coli 992 3273
Furn1shed aporlments ore also
available

1-;;ng-;

FURNISHED , 2 bed rm apartment ,
adults only tn Middleport
Phone 992-387-4
deCISIOns today but wha t you II
dec10e 1s not for yO itr "&gt;o ll 11s l or
th e good of someone else

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 2J-Oec .
21) Thts Is th e day they tally I he
sco re II you were rndust rr ous.
the returns w1ll favo r you If not
e&gt;&lt;pec t paym ent rel ative to
you r eff orts

CAPR ICORN (Dec 22-Jan.
19) People you know soc1ally
may be 1n a posrtton to help
you m other areas today Don I
be a!ra1d to spea k abou t
serous sub1ects

AQUARIUS (Jen . 20-Feb 19)
. W ar~ on protects today that
you ve prev rous ly se l astde
Nothrng 1s too 10ltgh tf you ve
set your m1nd to rt

PISCES (Feb 20-March 20)
Take over QUICkly and manage
s• tua110n s today If you see
others lallcrr nq Yolt have the
strengtlt of chr~ra c ter and body
others may la ck

ft'\ Your

~Birthday
Apr~l 30, 1976

lou won t be loo k1ng l ot an
easy road thrs com1ng ye ar
That s bett er lor y ou You II get
wh a t yOIJ go a!to r because
you re yvtll1ng to pay your dues
,,

.

WANTED

CHIPWOOD
Poles maximum diameter 10 inches on
largest end .

'7 PER TON
BUNDLED SLABS "6 PER TON
Deliver To

OHIO PALLET COMPANY
Rt. 2, Pomeroy, Ohio
Ph . 992-2689

3 BEDRM house wtth bath In
Rut land Phone 992-5858

3 AND -4 RM . f urn ished and un ·
furntshed

opts

Phone

992-

543~

COUNTRY Mobtle Home Parle. , Rt
33, ten mtles north of Pomeroy
large lots wtth concret patios,
srdewolks, runners and olf
street porktng Pho ne 992 7479
3 ROOM furn ished opt . ut1ll ttes
potd 356 N Fourth, Mid
dleport

We 'bulle! new and remodel
ttte old. All types of
building ana remodeling
from tt'te foundation up
Addttions,
carpefing ,
pa intmg, siding, roofing ,
paneltng, paper hanging,
etc .. ..

992-6167
OPEN4 p M. DAILY
CLOSED MONDAY
We sp eci a l ize rn home
made P IZUh Spagh e tt i,
Baked Lillsagna . &amp; Sand·
wl cnes
Qutck carry Out Service.
4 2 1 mo

Ph 949·2023 or 84l · a67
4, 13 1 mo .

small

i ·· I

l'lll ·
·

~

~tr'
~

;
1953 Ford Jubtlee tractor (ex ·
ce ll enl). $1 ,650 Ford 9N troc ·
tor overhauled , $1 ,000, New 5
It 3 pl . rotary mower (stump
umper) $3B5; Four used rldtng
awn mowers, 7 and 8 h p $200
to $230. Luckett Form Equtp ·
men t . Wesr Washrngton Sr ,

1969 O ldsmob tl e 442 , new 400

Albany Phone (614) 698-3032
or 696-7681.

1970 ltncoln Conllnental , good
condit1on , new point rob, exhaust , battenes and t1res

j

GA S RANGE , avocado 1 yr old ,
Sun Roy deluxe model $175
hcellent condll1on
Phone

992-5820.

ON£ 130 000
nace

BTU gas ftred fur ·
never used, pnced to

sell Coll9'12 2974
1975 )(S 650 B Yamaha , like new ,
low mtleage For more tn ·
formal ton . co ntact Me1gs Auto
Parts Phone 992-7711
1973 350 Kawosokt Btg Horn ex ·
pons ton chambe r , knobby
t •res , 3 btke trader Call 992

7110
..:c._-:-c:-:----::

1972 Hondo 750 , exce llent condt ·
t ron edras $950 Phone 992·

351:.:
7 -:-::-...,.,---~
FR IGIDAIRE Atr condtt1oner ,
15 ,000 BTU Pn ced $200 See
Rev C J Wtse , or call m.
1974 Honda 750 Headers . ex cellent condttton Phone 7-42·

2659

engine , 4 speed transm 1ss1on,
new mag whee ls, $1150 Phone

992-3259.
1968 Amencan 6 cy l. std. 23 mpg,

--

1973 Monte Carlo, excellent con ·
d rlton, V-8 automot1c, power
steerrng power brakes , 01r ,
tape , sw rvel buckets, tt lt
wkee l, block w ttk black vtnyl
top
block mlenor, JO,()(X)
mrles. Pnced below book at

CUSTOM bur l! 22 250 rtfle wtth
scope Phone (614) 667 -3958
Prtee $200

BEAN POSTS. Coll247·3077
CAMPER , wtl l Ill 6 It Datsun bed

Phone 1614) 985 3924
CHEST of 6 drawers wolnul Call
_2~301 after 4 30p m
1973 Harley Davtdson Electrogllde Phone 949-2656 .
4

Cemetery plots rn Mergs
Mem orrol Gardens Wtll se ll
se porote Also , for ren t, toboc·
co base 530 lbs . at 25 cents lb

Phone (614) 98S-4146

1975 Choteau camper 28 feet,
sleeps 8 ltke new, equ tpped
with Flexsteel sofa bed . 2 twm
beds
2 bunks, 2 door
refrtgerotor , o1r condi t to ned ,
forced otr furnace . 21 ft. awn ·
mg wate r heater Pnced to
sell Mus! see to apprectate .

Phone 742-2954
SHASTA comptng trotler orr con ·
dlltoned 5leeps 6. Phone 992-

3901

Safes and Installation
R1. 3, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone day or night
014 991.220~
, 14 1 rno

Certified technician ..
Briggs &amp;
Stratton
Engines.
Pickup &amp; Delivery

.

3 BEORM home for sale near
Eastern Higfl Schoo l Has Iorge
ltvmg room with f ireplace , 2
balks, fom rly room , laundry, 2
car garage , fu ll basement, and
s1ls on large lot Reasonable.
Phone 614 -985 ·3867
2 BEDRM home, spactous rooms.
nrce yo rd . Phone 992-7394
3 bedrm home Co ll 992 -7033 .

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

•

PH. 992-3746

BUY, SELL or TRADE
F1nd burled treasure .
Cotns, rangs, Stiver, gold.
Cotn &amp; Metal
Detectors
For Rent

Need new roof or old
repatred? House , roof.
Darn , shmgles, burld up ,
paintmg, electrrcal '(fOrk ,
gutters &amp; downspbuts ,
furnaces , water heaters,
water softners, Installed &amp;
repatred , Sewage
Call us at 949·1882
or 949-2203
3 28 1 mo .

For Sale

R&amp;J COINS

Septic Systems
Installed

ARE AVAILABLE
AT

by
Licensed ln•taller

Sales &amp;Rental
TRAVEL TRAILERS
OPEN
FRI. SAT.-SUN.

.

PR ICED for qu tck sal e by owner
Two bedroom frame house,
new kttcken and both , new
carpet kt!chen and l tving room ,
electnc heat utility room , dou
ble garage , Iorge lot, buildtng.

TP . Coli (614) 667-3065 or 667:!360

Ll'f"fLI:

We Deltver

4-25-1 mo.

'~-~~~
-

.

Courteous
Service

3-31 ·1 mo .

r---~--~-----,

FREE ESTIMATES

BRADFORD Aust 1oneer
Com·
plote Servtce. Phone 949· 2487
or 949-2000. Roctne, Ohto , Cntt
Bradford.
Sweepers, focster5 , trans , all
small appliances lawn mower,
next to State Htg hwoy Goroge

on Route 7. Phone (614) 9B5:JII25
REMODELING Plumbing healing
ond oil types of general reparr.
Work guara nteed 20 years expertence. Phone 992·2409

Blown
Insula tio11'Services
Ftnunctng Available
Blown 1nto Wallt•&amp; Atries
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS

I614)69B-7257 Albany.
SEWING MACHINE Repairs, service all makes, 992.2284. The
Fabrrc
Shop , Pomeroy .
Au thorized Srnger Sales and
Servtce We sh arpen Setssors.

-

NEED a plasterer?
Custer, 992 -3550

Coli

Joe

~
.,..

.•
... ,_,""..

GASOUN)i: AlLEY

• 1
..,'

5232 .

farm w tth ~o a cres of
tractor lan d Some timber ,

Th1s bnck hom e has had
much r emode lrng

CLOSE

IN -

$22,000

About 3

ac res, Love l y 3 Br home,
n1ce k. ttche n wi t h extras ,

full

basemen!.

2 water

we ll s and pumps, a lso ha s
wa ter tap paid Very large

block workshop. Carport
Other extras

POMEROY -

2 stor y

frame , 3 9 R, bath, carpo rt ,
roof and stdtng al most new

$8.500 .
30 ACRES -

1'11 story

frame hom e, 3 BR

Water

but no balh, ba rn and othe r
butldtng s
Good c lean
g ro und , mo st l y fenced

$17.500
ABOUT 1"• ACRE - Rou1e
7 tn Pome roy

Or1grnally

had 2 houses

Ideal for

hom e or

tratle r

Asktng

$3,000
WE , CAN SE LL YOUR
PROPERTY - HERE 'S
WHY - EXPER IEN CE,
SERV ICE.
HONESTY
AND ACTION .
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
992-2259 or 992-2568

2 fa rm pbnds and good 8
rm . House . $60,000
TOP LOCATION - Sturdy
6 rm

frame hom e. Mod

k1t w1th . cook and bake
un1ts Ga's,hot water heat,

2

porches $29.500
A REAL BUY - One floor 6
rm bungalow, 2 Brs , ba1h,
mod er n ki t, level lot

Just

$12,900
GROW YOUR OWN - Ni ce
12 Yr old, 3 Br . home,
bath , s h•ny oak fl oors.
ufllity. fronl porch, and 67
of an acre Only $19,500
RIVER FRONT- 77'x 119'
With water, sewage, and
small building $4,000.
EXTRAS - Large 8 rms .,
1111 baths, cook &amp; bake
untts,
dtsposal,
frrep lace, basement

gas
wtth

garage $20.000
HERE'S A BUY - 70'x160'
lof Good 9 rms wl1h 11/z
baths. gas hot water heal
Alum1num stdlng and nice

fronl porch . Only $16,500.
NEW LISTING - New 3
Br ranch home . !;lining,
full basement. w· to w
carpet1ng, carport with
Ut1l114' and 2 acres Of land
$3S,OOO

3

BEDRM. house
Phone 992-5858 .

1n

Rutlond.

HOUSE for sal e 26 acres, newly
fenced pasture,
2 a cres
ttlloble . house carpeted and
remodeled. freshly po1nted ,
basement, smoll born , porch,
crty water , forced air heat,
rural, conven tent location near

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
Mildwood Estates located on. Flatwoods
Road, six miles from Pomeroy. With all
utilities available, zoned for your
protection, offering 1 acre or more lots for
sale. If interested call or see Ge'!rge S.
Hobstetter, P . O. Box 101, or Phone 985-4186.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

742-234B
EXCAVATING

lOVELY 2 story older home In
Raci ne 11x24 hvrng rm . ~mrng
room , new butlt· tn kitchen with
cherry cabinets , deo, bedrm
and one·hoff both down wtlh
ook llordwood floors. 3 bedrms. New full bath, urilrty roorii
upsloirs full basement, large
front and reor porches . unattached garage. 2 s loroge
buildings, all set upon Iorge lot
w rth addiltono l lot available
Must 50criftce for S21 ,000. Coli

949-2883.

ROOMY 7 yr old one story wood
frame , two bedrm
home
located between Coo lville and
Tuppers Plorns One acre lot,
two cora garage, cily water, gas
heat,
hardwood
floors
carpeted
living room, n ice

1

·,~

·'do,er

backhoe

and dltcher Charles R. Hot ~..~
freld , Back Hoe Serv1ce ,
,
Rutland, Ohro Phone742-2008.

!:::'""'~.. -~-= a~;;x~r..:,;J vouR 'TX xxr

bery Phone 949-254S or 7423167

I

(A.wen la..orraw)

IUmbl"' HABIT QUESS TONQUE EMERGE
THE MOST OFTHINGS

'

ACROSS
I Imprudent
5 Doggone 1t 1
9 Thoul!ht
10 88 keY'!;
II TeKas
City
(2 wds. J
IJ With (Ger.)
14 Male rummant (2 wds.)
20 Abnegalion
21 Seasoned
recruit
23 Seemg
red
21 Backbone
2&amp; Sty
of 27 Fellow m
- - - . ~~I Den 1
stitches
A:~~::.:.;.;· 28 Type of
doll
12 wds.)
31 Managed
32 Honest
fellow
(2 wds I
39 Measure
of pre ·
ventwn

5 LikewiSe

6 Hooray '
7 Babyloman
god
8 Craggy
hill
10 Bluenose
12 Starch
14 Cap style
IS Silly
16 lgmted
17 New Gumea
town
18 Spamsh
province
19 Carelli or
Domingo
20 Pickpocket
(sL)
22 Thrice
I Lat.)

\'cslerday's Answer
24 Hack
5 Hasten
27 Enghsh

river
29 Stern
Athenian
lawgiver
30 Challenge
32 Refurbish
a lawn

:1:1 On the VIVe

:14 And I Ger I
:15 Traffic
problem
36 Great Lakes
cargo
:17 Hawk
parrot
38
- Kmg Cole

'
!
l

.-1

-S
•

..
~

•

•&lt;

~

J

NlltlTif

• 7 ti I
tA R7ti

"'" 10 5:1

f-4--i--+-+---t l •

!I fJ
t i iU Va

• 10 6 fl

t K(l4 2

• KQR~
Ltu th vu ll!cr.IIJ II:!

HFPHHF,

'
~·
!;

E p .l

.,

TUNE IN AT 10:15 A.M. .
FOR KALEIDOSCOPE
ON W.M.P.O.

LC K F

c

HF C .JW'fWQ

A l. F'

T FWM F

ALF'

BPDA

DPNJMF

F' Y H F .J •

NWUWPSW

...•

I

~

Sou th

P.rs"

1 N T !'ass

l'.tss

A

By Oswald &amp; James Ja coby

WC ANJ CH

•I

''

North l•:as l

Opcrttn~ h.~&lt;td - 4

•
EJPB

,,

l

Wt•st

PtJss

AXYDLBAAXR
I. 0 N G F E I, L 0 W

CR\'PTOQUOTE

'
...'
I

• J

• AK

is

CARPENTER will do sidrng, roofing , remodeling, room add itions
Also garages . Free
Estimates . Call992.2659

.FRIDAY'S GUESTS
ARE OHIO POWER CO.
REPRESENTATIVES WIWAM LIVBY
AND RICHARD WILSON
AND APPALACHIAN POWER CO.
REPRESENTATIVE DICK ROUSH.

EAST

·• K(I
• Q.1 Ill R4

... .197 4
snU1'tt lfll

One letter samply stands f or another In thts samp le A IS
used for th e thrr&lt;' L' s, X fnr th e two o·~ . etc Stn[!lc lett ers.
apostrotlhcs, the len gth and forrnalinn o f the \\Mfls are all
hmts Eat h da v 1h e co de lctl&lt;'rs nr c dtflercn t.

Phone J67 -7614.

29

•""

DAILY CRYPTO(}UOTE - Here's how to work ll:

...

The 11 rst bad news lo hit
Sou lh was when ihe four of
:-;pddes Wds opened The se·
cond bad news when East
pldved lhc queen and then the
king and West dropped the
deul.'e
Then carne some good news
l::a sl slufled LO the liUCCn or
hearts
South won and cashed h1s
k1ng dOd queen of diamonds
onlv to get som e more bad
news ~:asl showed ou1 on the
second dt a mond

DO 1./E RECKON LEETLE
TATER WILL FOLLER IN
\fORE MAN SNUFFY's
FOOTSTEPS?

...

''
'"

'~

•

AT BRIDGE

I NT

EXCAVATING , BACKHOES AND ',~,
DOZER, LARGE AND SMALL, . !
SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLED. BILL
PULLINS, PHONE992-247B, DAY
OR NIGHT.

.'

-+--+-+-+-i South takes the full count

highlight
II Mischievous
act
42 The entree,
usually
DOWN
I Sunder
2 Turmoil
3 lnd1an
we1ght
4 Item m
the ring

PORTABLE weldtng service, night • ••'
ordoy . Phone742-2798
' ~

Mabi le home and lot •n Cheshire

WIN

~~~~~~::;;:;::::~~~~~~~-,~~~;;~~~~~~;;~~::::~::::::~IOOpera

!

WILL trrm or cut trees and shrub·

Chesler Phone (614) 985-4248 Will DO extenor paint1ng,
or992-5975 .
l-louses and roofs Phone 9925684 or 9'12-3J74
3 BEDRM HOUSE 1n M1ddlerorl
Forced 01r furnace, cent ro olr. GREG'S CB SALES , locolod ol ErPhone 992-205B
win's Gulf Service, Mid ·
dleport, Ohto. Phone 992I 72 ACRES Phone 742-2359.
2438

view $21,000. Phone (614)
667-3519.
AT TEAFORD REALTY
PEOPLE COME FIRST.

'

WILL do roof1ng, corstructron,
plumbmg and heating. No job
too large or too small Phone

~

by THOMAS JOSEPH

~

rmo

5968.

No"........,. the el,..led lotlerw
to rom tht IIIII'Prioe IIIIIWOr, u
. ouueo1ed bJ tho ohoYew1oon.

~

·~

lARRY
lAVENDER
Syracuse, Oh 10

EXCAVATING dozer , loader and
bockhoe work , dump trucks
and lo·boys for hrre , w 1ll haul
frll drrt , top so tl , limestone and
grovel. Call Bob or Roger Jeffers, day phone 992-7089
mgkt phone 992-3525 " or 992·

. :;- ,

~

I

n

Auwen Mat a magntrulnf1 glaa• helfJI "ou to make-

REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SID ING· SO F F ITT
GUTT ERS· AW NINGS

Ph 992 -3993
4 tO

~IJ

ICEEPIA
n I
Yeeterrdar'•

0&amp;0 TREE Tr rmmt'1g , 20 years ex
perrence . In su red
free
est1moles Call 992 -238.4 or

TEAFORD

ITELPOI

4 1 1 mo

·PH. 992-6010

rJ I

IK

ANNIE

or by contacttng

R Codner, Owner

24 Hour Serv1ce

17 Cole S1reet
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Telephone 1614) 992-376B

more ~n formotlon•

•

•

CAB CO•.

lWIN ·CITY
MACHINE SHOP

$22 ,900. Phone 992-7523 for ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR

8722 .

' I
I I

NEW
MIDDLEPORT

Medica l Oxygen
and Supplies

1l7 ACRES - A good h1 ll

per month Large 3 br. apt .,
2 smaller furn tshed apts

9 00-Nol for Women Only 3, Phil Donahue 4,15, Lucy
Show 8; Mike Dougfos 10; Morning wl1h D J 13;
Phil 0
9 31l--A M 3, One Lite to Live 6 : Tatffetales 8; Mike
Douglas 13. 10 00-Celebrily Sweepstakes 3,4,15;
Edge of Night 6; Price Is Righi 8,to.
10 :31l--High Rollers 3.4.15; Dinah 6.
11 :00-Wheel of For1une 3;15; Weekday 4; Gambit
8,10, Farmer's Doughier 13.
11 :31l--Hol (ywood Squares 3,4,15; J;iappy Days 13; Love
of Lite 8,10; Sesame 51 . 20,33.
11 55-Take Kerr 8; Dan !mel's World 10
12 :00-Magnlflcent Morble Machine 3, 15; Let's Milke a
Deaf 13; Bob Braun 4; News 6.8, 10
12 31l--Take My Advice 3.15, All My Children 6.13,
Search tor Tomorrow 8,10.
12 45- Efec Co. 33.
12 55-NBC News 3, tS.
1:00-News 3; Ry11n 's Hope 6,13 ; Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; No1 For Women Only 15.
1 31l--Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15, Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13;
As lhe World Turns B,10.
2·00-Doclors 3,4,15; Brook fhe Bank 6.13; Guiding
Light 8.10.
3:00-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospl1al6,13; All
In The Family 8,10; Crockett's Victory Garden 20.
3:31)-Qne Life to Live 13; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Mafch
Ga me 8, 10; Book Beat 20.
&lt;·Oil--Mister Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Somerset 15;
Bewitched 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Rogers
20,33 : Movie "A Lion Is In the Streets" 10; Dinah t3.
4 31l--Bewltched3; Mod Squod6, Beverly Hillbillies 8;
Sesame St . 20,33 ; Fflnt•tones IS
5·00-Bonanza 3; Partridge Family 8; S1ar Trek 15.
5 31l--Adam-12 4,13 ; News 6 , Family Altair 8; Efec .
Co. 20,33.
6:00-News 3.4,8.10,13,15; Zoom 20,33; ABC NewS6;
6 31l-- NBC News 3,4 ,15, BC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20 ;
Carrascolendas 33
7:00-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Space: 1999 8; Avfa11on Weather 33;
News 10; Don Adams Scree Tes113; Family Affair
15; Ohio .IJ&gt;ur.nof 20 .
7 3o-Porter W•nnnor 3; 'freasure Hunt 4; ~ana1a
Camera 6, Evening Edition with Marlin Agronsky
20, S2S.OOO Pvtamld 10· To Tell the Truth 13; Wild
Kingdom 15; Black Perspective on the News 33.
8 00-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4 .1 5. Donnv &amp; Marie 6,13, Sora
B,10; Washington Week In Review 20,33.
B:31l--The Prac11ce 3,4,15; Wall Street Week 20,33.
9 00-Rocklord Flies 3,4,15, Boxing 6,13; Pilot 8,10;
Firing Line 20; Masterpiece :rheatre 33.
10·00-Pollce Sfory 3.4.15; NBA Play ·Oif 8, 10; News
20; Paul Nuchlms 33
10:31l--Avlaffon Weo1her 20.
11 ·00-News 3,4,'15; ABC News 33
11 :30-Johnny Car•on 3,4,15. New• 6.13; Janakl 33.
12:00-Kentucky Derby 6,13.
12 15-News 8, 10.
12 :45-Movle "The Ml5slng Are Deadly" 8: Movie
"The Curse of the Bigfoot" 10
1 OO-Midnl9ht Special 3,4 ,15, Don Kirshner's Rock
Concert 6; News 13 .
2: 15-Movfe "The Pit and the Pendulum" 10.
2 31l--New• 3, Movie "Td Kil l a Mockingbird" 4.
3:00-Movfe "Chino Girl" 3.
4: 15-Moyfo "Sitting Pretty " 3.
4.31l--Movle " Hide and Seek" 4.
6:00-IY\ovle " Mr . Moto Takes a Vacation" 3.

Unocnmble theae four Jumblo1,
one letter to eaeh squue. to
form (our ordinary worda.

MD 'OJ'r&lt;€

.

RAINBOW RIDGE
I Bash an Areal
LONG BOTTOM

Ractne , Ohto

or

3 BEDRM . house , 2 yrs. old,
carpeted 2 ba ths , centro ! atr
condrt1on lng, basement and
goroge tn Albany, Ol-lio. For ap·
poinlment, pllone (614) 698·

~IJOFE.

Codner's Campers

Racine Plumbing
&amp;Heating

n

6:00-Sunrlse Semester JO.
6: 15-FarmReporl 13
6 20-Biue Ridge Quartet 13
6:30-Columbus Today 4, News 6; Sunrise Semester 8;
Farmtlme 10
6 4ll--Ounce of Prevention 10.
6: 45-Mornlng Reporl 3.
6"51l--Good Mornfng .. Wesf VIrginia 13
6 55-Chuck White Reports 10; Good Morning, Trl
Stale 13.
7:00-Today 3,4, 15, Good Morning, America 6.13, CBS
News 8. Bugs Bunny &amp; Frllends 10.
7:31l--Schoolles 10.
8 00-Lassle 6, Capl. Kangaroo 8,10, Sesame Sl 33.
8.31l--Big Volley 6; .

~HIS IS 1\IE: SI:WI-!D J,!..~\.UAl-1&lt;1~"'q
Tll.l&lt;fr rve ~IJEN

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned . Modern
Sonttorton. 992 3954 or 992·

MULBERRY AVE
Income property , $265 DO

6. 13.

FRIDAY, APRIL 30,1916

'DU lWS II.Ui&lt;.!

V1rg1l B. Sr., Reaf1or
110 Mechanic Pomeroy, 0.
Phone 992-3325

$89.95

--.....---r

! · ~News

lloliN LOSER

4·5-76

cattle , has Iorge barn pond
and frutt ~ trees Included rs 7
rm house. 24)(60 Ekona double
wrde 'trorler Tro1ler rs rust 1
one-half yrs old Totol elec , 3 3 BEDROOM lotol elec home,
bedrms, 2 full baths , kttchen ,
garage large lot on Rusltc
den , and Iorge living room All
H1ll s, Syrac use
Sale price

TURF TRIM
PUSH MOWERS
30", 3 HP, B&amp;S Eng.

POMEROY LANDMARK
Y.- Jack W. Carsey , Mgr.
·~
Phone 992-21B1

how you can really
save
Mrk e Young, Manager

4-26-1 mo

742-2867.

Gl.EEVE~ AND
R:l!lA~ . M~.I$ H ...

. THI$ SERUM 1\/IL.L. HSL.P TO RIOMOVI:
THE MEt.ITAL At.ID EMOTIONAL BLOCK$
THAT KEEP YOU FROM RSMEM&amp;eR:IIIIo
THIO FOR:MUL.Ai .,----1

MAC'S
LAWN
MOWER
SERVICE

20 acre farm , well su1 ted for beef

for $29 500 Cofi9'12-7S90 •

If' YOU'LL. JUST
ROLl. UP 'lOUR ,

Pomeroy

Ph . 992 -2114,

home with no obligatton

Phone 742 -2409
Box 28A
Rutland , Oh.

4 acres , undeveloped, ~ , 000 ,
Metgs County , Vtnton ma1l
route clo ut to m1nes Phone

CAJ&gt;tAIN EASY

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

car

See

Shepard Contractors

1975 Suzuk t GT 750 motorcycle,
~odco nd t! ton Coll 742-2997 .

TURF TILL
TILLERS
3';, H. P., B&amp; S Eng
$163.95

on

Tractors.

24 Hour Phone Servtce

1972 Chevrolet wagon . 1971
Tnumpk , mole Pektnges e

P"one 992 719B

;~ ... \..,.....,.

estimates

MowersTillersR1dlng

· C" •

Nathan B1ggs
Radralor Special~ st

--- - --+

peting and installation
We'll bnng sarrfp f~s to your

Rutland 742 · 2lll
Roger Wamsley
.t 1 1 mo

$25 Phone Shade (614) 69612 3 4:::__--~-~__,

GRAVELY tractor , 32 mch mower ,
7 6 h p , r ecently O\'erhauled .
$.450 Col l 992-7205evenrngs

~n

'

11 Free

SawoLawn

COINS

$2,795,00 Phone 742 JOOB

·----:----c--

STEREO-RADIO rpodern destgn.
om -lm rodto, 8 frock tope com .
b1nolton Balance $101 20 or
t erms Coli 992 -3965 .

f-- -,: Chain

1'":t·:·'

~

From the larges t Truck or
Bul l doze ,......Rad lator to the
sma ll est Heat er Core.

SLQAN'S
CAIPETING

Eng

Repatr

992 -3092

ofrer5pm

Price$1 ,695 Phone992-6173 .

1

~

NEW · Lawn Boy mowers,
Proneer
cttatn
uws,
Bolen ' s Mowers, Merry
Tillers, MTD Mowers .
498 Locust St.
Middleport, Ohio

good condillon. Co if 992-5190

POLLED Hereford bujl , '2 yrs old
$300 7 weeks old nanny goat ,

~ _ ~ne (304)682 2407 .

,.

295 S 2nd Sl

~·:f.....Ar
• ;.,/~ 'I

2 opts , 1-4 rm and both, one 3
rm and both , specta l rates to
peop le on set mcomes To see. AUCTION SALE , Sal ., Moy I, 1
ca ll992-2259 or m -2568 .
p.m . on U S. Rl 33 mtdwoy bet ween Athens and Pomeroy ,
ONE bedrm furnrshed opts 13-4
' just soutk of Pratts Fork. Mr
Mulberry Ave Phone 992·5436
Burson ho5 sold his form and
wdl sell, moch tnery and m isc.
Items . Good case 5 ft cut com ·
blne wtth good canvass has
cu t less t han 200 acres , good In
VEGETABLE plants of all kinds 10
I 12 d&gt;Sk drill 7 fl . Af l11
different varret1es of tomatoes
Chalmers 18 m tandem disk
tnclud 1ng non -actd whtte
w tth cut- olwOys tn front , lrke
tomato . Very Iorge se lect1 on of
new , Oltver flat bed wagon
b eddtng
plan ts
Also
w 1th brakes , one o ther wogon,
Gerontums qnd other potted
good N t No 14 A , 50 bu shel
plants
Hanging baskets .
manure spreader AC sem t·
Cleland Farms and Green ·
mounted 7 ft mower, horse
house
Geroldtne Cleland , dt sk, Sears shallow well water
Rocrne .
pump . Turfmoster s1x rrdmg
mower
good self-propelled
MODERN wolnut console , AM ·FM
la wn mower , 4 rn belt . mtsc
radro , -4 speed changer
tools plasttc pipe, 10 metal
Ba lance $103 40 or terms Call
ch1cken
nests 15 holes 50
992 -3%5 .
'
metal ch1cken feeders , 6 egg
GARDEN Supply Headquarters
boskel5 , hand sprayer , metal
Cobboge, cauli flower , broccoli ,
bed wtth spnngs , porch awn
head lettuce and pansy plants
1ng round stand door ch imes
Also , onion sets , seed potatoes Dormeyer mixer porch girder,
of all variettes ond a ful l hne of
etc Old ttems kandmode cup
bulk garden seeds . Heod·
board with beveled pan~i l s
quarters also for flne produce
old Ky Home treadle sewtng
M1dway Mkl , Pomeroy '192
mochme Iron ke tt le, 2 gloss
2582
ch urns
oak
comb and
brushholder, qu1h1ng frames, 2
Co-Al , l•mestone and oil types ol
blanket chests , rocker , chai r,
sol i an d rock sa lt l or tee and
round wood and coal heating
~now remo't'ol Excelsior Soh
stove
trunk prtcher pump, 5
Works East Mom St., Pomeroy
gal. jug. Terms Cast-. or Ck w ·
Oh1o. Phone 992-3691 .
10 Not res pon sible for ac.
FREEZER BEEF Corn fed steers
ctden ts . A small sole • be on
W1ll deli ver to local dressing
time Fronk Burson. owner.
plants Phone843 - ~1 ~ 1
Phone 614·696· 1104, C E.
Sherr dan, Aucl ., Amesvrlle ,
COAL, lrmes ton&amp; and calcium
Ohio
chloride ond calcium bnne for ------·-~-~--­
dust control and all types of AUCTION , Mason Auction House,
salt. Excelsior Sail Works , Eo51 " Meson W . Vo . Friday, Aprll30,
Motn Street Pomeroy Ohio
7 p m Consrgnments welcome

" - ~~ne 992-J~91.

CONSTRUCTION

Middleport, Ohio

-...

5.00-Bonanza 3; Partridge Family B; Slar Trek 15.
S:31l--Adam -12 4; News 6 ; Fam ily Affair 8: Elec Co
. 20,33; Adam -12 13
6.00-News 3,U ,10,13, 15, ABC News 6; Zoom 20, lTV
Utilization 33
6:31l--NBC News 3,4 ,15; ABC News l3; Andy Grlflllh 6,
CBS News 8,10. HQdgepodge Lodge 20; Li lias Yoga
&amp; You 33.
7·00-Tru1h or Cons . 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling tor
Dollars 6; Lawrence Wefk 8, News 10; Let's Make
A Deal13; Fam ily Affair 15; Anyone for Tennyson?
20; Family at War 33.
7.31l--Hollywood Squares 3; ,4: Ohio State Lottery 6,
Evenl~g Edl11on wllh Mart in Agronsky 20; Wild
Kingdom 10; To Tell the Tru1h 13; Music Clly
U.S.A. 15.
8:00-Mac Davis 3,4,15, Welcome Back . Kotter 6,13;
Walfons8, 10; Since the American Way of Dealh 20;
Mark of Jazz 33
8·3o--Barney Miller 6,13; Lowell Thomas Remembers
33.
9:00-Movle "Law of the Land" 3,4 ,15; Streets of San
Franc lsco6,13; Hawaii Flve-08; Movie " Dying" ;
20.33, Movie "Who's Been Sleeping In My Bed? " 10
10:00-Harry 0 6,13; Barnaby Jones 8.
11 :00-News 3,4,6.8.10,13 .1&gt;,20 ; ABC News 33.
11 :31)-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Mann ix 6,13, Movie " The

D&amp;D

OONELLI'S
PIZZA

complete

..

Last Escape " 8; Movie " Battleground" 10. Janak'
33.
.

THURSDAY, APRILl9, 1m

12 . ~1l--Maglclan

WILKINSON'S

7331

ALBANY N Y 12205
HOME WORKERS, ' earn $60

GRill Cook and w01tres s wonted
App\y tn person (row 's Steak

73 INTE RNA TIONAL 2 TON
$3895
Bcy I . 5 speed, 16.500 2 spe ed rear axle, good hres.

~---

CAROl DAY (5 1B) 489. 8395 or 4 Fom1ly Yard Sole , frtdoy and
WRITE FRIENDLY I10ME PAR _Saturday . Mom St . Rutla nd
TIES
20 RAILROAD AVE
Sp~res resi dence

14) 22 , 29 (5) 6, Jt c

ORDINANCE NO. 1041 16
An Ordrnancc to E~TABLISH

' ""lirra

"

I.OOC.Tomorrow 3,4.

$3495

Cheyenne Super 350 V 8, automa tic, power sfeerr ng
brakes, w w lire s, wh cove r s, st ep bumper,
c hrom e mtrror s, AM rad 1o, white and moss green ,
sharp and many other op tt ons.

OLD fu rnt tu re tee boxes , brass
bed s o ld wall telepho nes and
ports. o r complete households
Wrrte M . D. Mtller Rt 2
Pom ~oy ~~~~~11992 7760_

1.ost -and Found

NOTICE OF APPO I NTMENT
Case No 21784
Es tate of Ltda Swa in , aka
Lidda Swarn De ce ase d
Notrce FS hereb y gtven that
Joseph A lton Swa m of Route L
Box 145 , Ra ci ne Ohto ha s
been duly appotntM E )(ecutor
of th e Estate of L tda Swa1n ,
a ka L ldd a Swarn d ece as ed ,
lat e of Sunon Town Ship , Me1gs
Coun t y, Oh ro
Credttor s a r e re qutred to
file thet r c la tms Wtlh sa td
fi dU ci ary Wllh tn four mo nths
Dat ed lh rs 16th day of Apnt

Judge
Comm on Pleas Cou r t.
P r obat e DI VISIOn
Metgs CoUnty , Oht o

1974C HEVROLETC-10

Will 00 odd tabs , roofing . patn·
ling, hauling t reework and
mow tn g Pkone 992 7-409

, top prtce l or standing
61h of May D&amp;h ~ O U SE OF TIMBER
f1mber Cal l (614) 446-8570
FABRICS It 1 mtle sou th of Mtd
dleport
Po ly double kntt CASH potd for oil mak es and
models of mobde kames
Reg $2 98 yard now S2 49 Po
Phone a reo code 614 -423 9531
ly and ca tron for T Shir ts, Reg
$1 98 now 98 cents yard I table
WANTED-Good used ka y baler
of po lyester and cotton 45 tnch
Coli Q:'!(enmgs olt er 5 p m. 992wtd e 20 ~. off
Shop our
7318 or 992 3859
bcrgotn room
.
SSCoshSSS for 1unked auto Frye s
( HICKEN Bar B Que noon Sun ·
Truck Auto Paris Rutland
day at Ftre Stot• on tn Rocme 1
Phone 742· 2081
p m Gorden Tre e Pul l Spon
sored by the Rocrn e F~r e Dept

per Adve r!l sement
OFFl.CE HOU R S
ll 30 i1 m IO S 00 p Ill
Oa t ly 8 JO am to 17 00
Noon Saturday
Phone today 991 7156

Man ntng 0 Webster

Will DO buildmg and remodel•ng, roolmg, plumbing fur·
noce re po1r, gas or otl or
genera l repotr Free es ltmotes
and reosonoble roles Phon e
Charles Stndotr (61-4 ) 985 4121
or992 222 1

1972 CHEV. 2 TO N
$2995
102" C A 15.000 lb 2 speed rea r axle, 292 Six 4 speed
1
trans , good trres

RACINE F ~re Deportment wtll
ho ve 0 hom shqo t Satu rday at
6 30 p m
thelf new butldrng
off Bo sh an Rood

Business Services

2 SIGNS Pomeroy
OF
QUALITY Motor Co.

9922595

Notices ·

&amp; OBITUAR Y
$1 00
for
SO
w o r cJ
nHr11111u rn
Eiich aOOittonn l word 3
cents

1976

DOZER wo rk - 440 dozer with 7
ft blade Wll~ build ponds or
dean forms for ttmber Call

Sadly massed by Father Mo ther
Sisters and Fam1hes

r.ARDOFT~ANKS

.I

South paused for a wh1le to
Lhmk about the club su1t
Then h.s face rela xed mto a

MA'I'f:IE I SIIOULD SI..EEP
WITH ONE e'l'E OPEN ...

ONE fi(E CAN SLEEP
WHILE lHE OTHER E'f'E
STANDS GUARD..

t11 oad smile West lwd shown

up

Wt th

SIX.

spddes

rour

diamonds and one heart He 11
could nul hold more than two
club s Suppose he held just
one ' Then East wou ld hold
loUr .md South would pick
i11cm up
Could South l1nd uu t if East
dul hnlrl four '' Yes he could
So uth cashed h1 s other high
hea rt. When Westlollowed . he
•·ould nul hold more th&lt;ln one
tlub So South led " cl ub to
dumm y s ac•• led ba ck the 10
nl cl ubs and showed F:ast his _,
hand It didn 't mailer what "
Eo~sl d1d &lt;1t this stage of Ihe "
J&gt;rocecthngs South had hiS
&lt;'O ntract locked

~Q~~
t\

Wisconsrn reader wants to

knuw how you respond ~o
partn e r s opcmng t hr eenotrump bid wh en you hold
• K ~1YQ j . XX X. AUX XX

P lay mg Simple standard
Amcr1ca n yo u should just bid
SIX nolrump Otherwi se . you ,,
use some sci entific method

or , ,

other and eventually get Lo s1x
notrurnp anyway
1

,,

(Do you have a question
lor the experts? Wrlfe "Ask "
lhe Jacobys" care ol lhls •·
newspaper The Jacobys will ,
answer md1vidual questions "
11 sramped. self-addressed-:
envelopes are enclosed. The "'
niosl interestmg questions ;:
will ba used in this column •
and w111 raca1ve copies ol :;
JACOBY MODERN.I
~

.."
•"'
....
01

§

j

�11 - The Daily ISI!nlme!, Middle!J!lri-Pomerov. 0 .• Thursday. April29, 1976

DICK TRACY

•

J~

•

Televis.ign log for easy viewing

Situations Wanted
gone
While others ore l eft ro Slay
But 1f we hod o garden
W1th roses fotr and brtg kt
We'd often pick the loveHest
And tktn k 11 to be nght
In ht s earthly gorden here
He of len ptck s the f01 rest tlowe rs
The one we loved so dear
The fl owers that ore ptcked by
hm1
W1l l never lode owoy ,
We know ke wtll hve forever ,
And we wtll see h1m some swear

IOS{'rtiQO
RATES
F or W an 1 A CI Sen,,c e
s cenrs per word one
msert1on
Mtn tmum Charge $1 00
14 cents per word three
consec u t , vc
mscrt1ons
16 cc n ts per w ord St~
con sec u t rve
tnserltOn 5
75 P er Ce nt 01scoun ton
Pil i d ad s and ad s oa1d
w•lhtn 10 day s

day

oi

BLIND AD S
Addt fl onal 7Sc Chnrgc

FABRIC Spec tal sl ! Now through

NOTICES

ATTN · "
All HOUSEWIVES
All Y~trd Sa l es Rummage ,
Por c h and Ba se m ent Por ch
r~nd Ba semen t Sa les , et: .
must be patd tn advance .
Get your In tn earl y by
stopp1ng by our oft tce at
Th e Da rry Se nt ine l, Ill
Co urt St or wr tttn g Box
729 , P om eroy , Oh to 4576 9
With you r r emtlt ance

GARAGE SALE Satu rday , May I
one day only t 9 o m. ttll 5 p.m
FOUND small blo ck a nd w k1te ter
Cloth tng
baby bed , mtsc
r1e r dog on Sou th Second M td ·
Ro nald
Cloy
resrdence ,
dlep o rt
Phone
992 59 10
Che ster , Ok1o Turn at Ches ter
onyt1me or 992·5427 af ter 6
F~r e Stat1 on 4th house on left
pm
wa tch for stgns

AUXILIARY POLICE FOR
THE VILLAGE OF MID·
DLEPORT
Be rt ordtl!n ed by th e
Council of th e Vllle~ge of
Mrddleport as follow s
Sec I Tha t an au)(tlra r y
pol 1ce un rt be estab l ished
wtt h m the Vi lla ge Po t 1ce
De partment , pur s uant to
Sec l 10n 37 161 of th e Oh to
Rev1Sed Code
Sec II Be 11 furth er or
dalned
that
the
polt ce
aux ll tar y sh all be su br ec t to
th e rul es and regulaltons fil ed
wtth the Mayor of th e Village
Se c 1r I
Th is Ordrnanc e
Sha ll ta Ke e ff ec t and be rn
forc e f rom a nd aft er April 12.

1976
Pass ed th e 12th dil y of Ap ril

1976

Attest

M L Ke lly
Pre stdent of Co un cil
Gene Grat e
Clerk.

(4) 22 , 29, 2rc

AstroGrapM
• Bem•c• Bode Osol
For Friday , April JO, 1976
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Althoug h yo u re e)(tr a sha rp
bu srnes swr se todaJ you II A'Otk
harder lor o tners, es pec1a Hy
the lamr ly than you w1 ll for
YOLtrsell

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Thr s 1s a d ay you mu st teiiJ t ltkc
11 IS and avord sell -sound1ng
phr as es Set an e&gt;&lt;ample
Stan d behrnd you r word

GEM INI (May 21 -June 20) Go
after wha t 16 owed you and no
more You 11 onl y defeat you r
purpose by lookmg for a free
rrde

CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Whrle you v rew th rngs
rea lr st1 cally to da y da re to hope
for a brrg ht er l omorrow A n·
trc1 pate th e obs tacles to you r
d1ea ms

LEO (July 23-Aug 22) T•me

&gt;S

on ~our s1 de so whrl e you have
the reserve stren gth don t th inK
of qur ttrng Pu sh pus t1 push'

VIRGO (Aug

2J-Sep1 . 22)

lhere tS no thmg really new un.
der the sun so pro f1t by e&gt;&lt;
pe r1 en ce Once you get a
toehold today you can cl1mb
thm ladder of success

'

LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0cl. 23) You
ca n see thtngs t oday that
another can t an d can help her
so rt out her afl at rs However
don I let her belreve she ca n
get.more th an shes en t11tect to

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22)
'r'ou

won t

s h rrk

t ou gh

PORCH

kashnd Found

SAL E

Wed&gt;

Thursday, r01n or sh tne

and
413

Spnn~ ~ve_ Pom~ roy

LOST tn v1C1 ntly of Sy racuse Ro ll
Pa rk Monday rnon 5 Wtl son ST PAU L Unrted Metkod tst Chur
ch ot Tuppers Plom s wrll have
ba seball glove
reward 1f
o rummage ond yard sale
found Ca 11992 207 1
Frtd oy Apr il 30th and Sotur·
LOST Man 5 wa llet wtth valuable
day , May l si q to 4 pm
papers between Pomeroy and
Fnday and 9 to ? Saturday lot s
Racme If fou nd co ll949·2144
of d o th1ng and miscellan eo us
1tems

~!!fA
_-- an!ed-~--

"f

Y-ARD SALEr;;d-;,;s.lu"7do~ .~d

-

. ---:-~
_ ___
=:--;._::
Sunday on St ory s Run Rood,
south of M.~
'dc:dc:c
le"po:._r_:I.~--DO YOU HAVE PARTY PLAN EX
PERIENCE? FRIENOL Y TOY BASEMENT Sale, Syracuse, across
PAR TIES HAS OPENINGS FOR
from Hubbard s Greenhouse
MANAGERS IN OUR AREA
Thursday . Frrdoy and Saturday
RE CRUITING IS EASY BECAUSE
9 ta ll 4 p m Ntce clothrng ,
OEM S HAVE NO CASH IN VES,Td1 shes . m15c tool s, ele c cook

MENT , NO COLLECliNG OR
DELIVERINGS CALL COL LECT

&gt;love

week ly addressmg env elopes
RIJ sh self-address ed , stomp ed AKC Regt slered Co llte Stud Ser·
envelope
Sou th ern D1 ver ·
v1ce
Stardus t Kmg
Phone
s1l1ed 1206 Camden Dn ve,
(6 " )985 4248
~~ mo~d , VtrgtniO 2322Q
AKC Reg1sfered co lin~ pups 10
$25 PER HUNDRED &gt;lulling
weeks o ld Phone 843 2753
, e n ve l opes
Se nd
se lf
addressed ,
sta mped
en ve lope Edroy Moils Box
18~. Albonr :....Mo_b4~2

...,.!:!~~!:!~~er~y-

~

FU RNI SHED apt . coupl e only a ll
ut1IF1tes po1d $130 pur month
Phone 992 3Q75 or 992·'257 1

APP LICA liO NS ore bemg ac- 2- BEDRM t r;t l~r full! carpeted
located on Rt 1A3, c ose to Har
ce pted fo r a 4·H Program
nsonvdl e 1 chrld Pho ne 742
A ss lsloflt Immediately through
3122
May 15 1976 Deodlme wdl be
ex tended tf necessary unl tl the ENJOY g roc~
Vt llag e
pos1tton 1s fr lled WHERE TO
Manor tn Middl eport fo r as low
APPLY - Job opplicoltons and
as $130 per montk wit h oil
1nl or mott o n pe r ta1n 1ng lo
utd111es po1d These ore brand
du t1es , qualdt cot •ons preferred
new k1gh qual1ty apartments ol
and 10b e)(pecla t1on s may be
pr~ces you con aff ord Your rent
obtarned by contocltng th e
mcludes month to mo nth
Merg s County Ex ten ston Off1ce
leases , all e lec
ltvmg
basemen t of the County Home
carpett n g
range
and
Butldmg on Mulberry Hetghts tn
refrtgerotor , free trash p1ckup,
Pomeroy Off1 ce hours ore B 30
cable TV at your expense. and
a m to 4 30 p m Monday thru
on-s1te laundry fcet liltes ConFr1day Telephone 992 3895
ventent to shopptng on Thtrd
WORKING HOURS 20 hours pe r
and Mdl Streets 1n Mtddleporl
week to be arranged wt th•
See t ke manag er or R1vers1de
~mploye.':._
Aportments or ' coli 992 3273
Furn1shed aporlments ore also
available

1-;;ng-;

FURNISHED , 2 bed rm apartment ,
adults only tn Middleport
Phone 992-387-4
deCISIOns today but wha t you II
dec10e 1s not for yO itr "&gt;o ll 11s l or
th e good of someone else

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 2J-Oec .
21) Thts Is th e day they tally I he
sco re II you were rndust rr ous.
the returns w1ll favo r you If not
e&gt;&lt;pec t paym ent rel ative to
you r eff orts

CAPR ICORN (Dec 22-Jan.
19) People you know soc1ally
may be 1n a posrtton to help
you m other areas today Don I
be a!ra1d to spea k abou t
serous sub1ects

AQUARIUS (Jen . 20-Feb 19)
. W ar~ on protects today that
you ve prev rous ly se l astde
Nothrng 1s too 10ltgh tf you ve
set your m1nd to rt

PISCES (Feb 20-March 20)
Take over QUICkly and manage
s• tua110n s today If you see
others lallcrr nq Yolt have the
strengtlt of chr~ra c ter and body
others may la ck

ft'\ Your

~Birthday
Apr~l 30, 1976

lou won t be loo k1ng l ot an
easy road thrs com1ng ye ar
That s bett er lor y ou You II get
wh a t yOIJ go a!to r because
you re yvtll1ng to pay your dues
,,

.

WANTED

CHIPWOOD
Poles maximum diameter 10 inches on
largest end .

'7 PER TON
BUNDLED SLABS "6 PER TON
Deliver To

OHIO PALLET COMPANY
Rt. 2, Pomeroy, Ohio
Ph . 992-2689

3 BEDRM house wtth bath In
Rut land Phone 992-5858

3 AND -4 RM . f urn ished and un ·
furntshed

opts

Phone

992-

543~

COUNTRY Mobtle Home Parle. , Rt
33, ten mtles north of Pomeroy
large lots wtth concret patios,
srdewolks, runners and olf
street porktng Pho ne 992 7479
3 ROOM furn ished opt . ut1ll ttes
potd 356 N Fourth, Mid
dleport

We 'bulle! new and remodel
ttte old. All types of
building ana remodeling
from tt'te foundation up
Addttions,
carpefing ,
pa intmg, siding, roofing ,
paneltng, paper hanging,
etc .. ..

992-6167
OPEN4 p M. DAILY
CLOSED MONDAY
We sp eci a l ize rn home
made P IZUh Spagh e tt i,
Baked Lillsagna . &amp; Sand·
wl cnes
Qutck carry Out Service.
4 2 1 mo

Ph 949·2023 or 84l · a67
4, 13 1 mo .

small

i ·· I

l'lll ·
·

~

~tr'
~

;
1953 Ford Jubtlee tractor (ex ·
ce ll enl). $1 ,650 Ford 9N troc ·
tor overhauled , $1 ,000, New 5
It 3 pl . rotary mower (stump
umper) $3B5; Four used rldtng
awn mowers, 7 and 8 h p $200
to $230. Luckett Form Equtp ·
men t . Wesr Washrngton Sr ,

1969 O ldsmob tl e 442 , new 400

Albany Phone (614) 698-3032
or 696-7681.

1970 ltncoln Conllnental , good
condit1on , new point rob, exhaust , battenes and t1res

j

GA S RANGE , avocado 1 yr old ,
Sun Roy deluxe model $175
hcellent condll1on
Phone

992-5820.

ON£ 130 000
nace

BTU gas ftred fur ·
never used, pnced to

sell Coll9'12 2974
1975 )(S 650 B Yamaha , like new ,
low mtleage For more tn ·
formal ton . co ntact Me1gs Auto
Parts Phone 992-7711
1973 350 Kawosokt Btg Horn ex ·
pons ton chambe r , knobby
t •res , 3 btke trader Call 992

7110
..:c._-:-c:-:----::

1972 Hondo 750 , exce llent condt ·
t ron edras $950 Phone 992·

351:.:
7 -:-::-...,.,---~
FR IGIDAIRE Atr condtt1oner ,
15 ,000 BTU Pn ced $200 See
Rev C J Wtse , or call m.
1974 Honda 750 Headers . ex cellent condttton Phone 7-42·

2659

engine , 4 speed transm 1ss1on,
new mag whee ls, $1150 Phone

992-3259.
1968 Amencan 6 cy l. std. 23 mpg,

--

1973 Monte Carlo, excellent con ·
d rlton, V-8 automot1c, power
steerrng power brakes , 01r ,
tape , sw rvel buckets, tt lt
wkee l, block w ttk black vtnyl
top
block mlenor, JO,()(X)
mrles. Pnced below book at

CUSTOM bur l! 22 250 rtfle wtth
scope Phone (614) 667 -3958
Prtee $200

BEAN POSTS. Coll247·3077
CAMPER , wtl l Ill 6 It Datsun bed

Phone 1614) 985 3924
CHEST of 6 drawers wolnul Call
_2~301 after 4 30p m
1973 Harley Davtdson Electrogllde Phone 949-2656 .
4

Cemetery plots rn Mergs
Mem orrol Gardens Wtll se ll
se porote Also , for ren t, toboc·
co base 530 lbs . at 25 cents lb

Phone (614) 98S-4146

1975 Choteau camper 28 feet,
sleeps 8 ltke new, equ tpped
with Flexsteel sofa bed . 2 twm
beds
2 bunks, 2 door
refrtgerotor , o1r condi t to ned ,
forced otr furnace . 21 ft. awn ·
mg wate r heater Pnced to
sell Mus! see to apprectate .

Phone 742-2954
SHASTA comptng trotler orr con ·
dlltoned 5leeps 6. Phone 992-

3901

Safes and Installation
R1. 3, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone day or night
014 991.220~
, 14 1 rno

Certified technician ..
Briggs &amp;
Stratton
Engines.
Pickup &amp; Delivery

.

3 BEORM home for sale near
Eastern Higfl Schoo l Has Iorge
ltvmg room with f ireplace , 2
balks, fom rly room , laundry, 2
car garage , fu ll basement, and
s1ls on large lot Reasonable.
Phone 614 -985 ·3867
2 BEDRM home, spactous rooms.
nrce yo rd . Phone 992-7394
3 bedrm home Co ll 992 -7033 .

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

•

PH. 992-3746

BUY, SELL or TRADE
F1nd burled treasure .
Cotns, rangs, Stiver, gold.
Cotn &amp; Metal
Detectors
For Rent

Need new roof or old
repatred? House , roof.
Darn , shmgles, burld up ,
paintmg, electrrcal '(fOrk ,
gutters &amp; downspbuts ,
furnaces , water heaters,
water softners, Installed &amp;
repatred , Sewage
Call us at 949·1882
or 949-2203
3 28 1 mo .

For Sale

R&amp;J COINS

Septic Systems
Installed

ARE AVAILABLE
AT

by
Licensed ln•taller

Sales &amp;Rental
TRAVEL TRAILERS
OPEN
FRI. SAT.-SUN.

.

PR ICED for qu tck sal e by owner
Two bedroom frame house,
new kttcken and both , new
carpet kt!chen and l tving room ,
electnc heat utility room , dou
ble garage , Iorge lot, buildtng.

TP . Coli (614) 667-3065 or 667:!360

Ll'f"fLI:

We Deltver

4-25-1 mo.

'~-~~~
-

.

Courteous
Service

3-31 ·1 mo .

r---~--~-----,

FREE ESTIMATES

BRADFORD Aust 1oneer
Com·
plote Servtce. Phone 949· 2487
or 949-2000. Roctne, Ohto , Cntt
Bradford.
Sweepers, focster5 , trans , all
small appliances lawn mower,
next to State Htg hwoy Goroge

on Route 7. Phone (614) 9B5:JII25
REMODELING Plumbing healing
ond oil types of general reparr.
Work guara nteed 20 years expertence. Phone 992·2409

Blown
Insula tio11'Services
Ftnunctng Available
Blown 1nto Wallt•&amp; Atries
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS

I614)69B-7257 Albany.
SEWING MACHINE Repairs, service all makes, 992.2284. The
Fabrrc
Shop , Pomeroy .
Au thorized Srnger Sales and
Servtce We sh arpen Setssors.

-

NEED a plasterer?
Custer, 992 -3550

Coli

Joe

~
.,..

.•
... ,_,""..

GASOUN)i: AlLEY

• 1
..,'

5232 .

farm w tth ~o a cres of
tractor lan d Some timber ,

Th1s bnck hom e has had
much r emode lrng

CLOSE

IN -

$22,000

About 3

ac res, Love l y 3 Br home,
n1ce k. ttche n wi t h extras ,

full

basemen!.

2 water

we ll s and pumps, a lso ha s
wa ter tap paid Very large

block workshop. Carport
Other extras

POMEROY -

2 stor y

frame , 3 9 R, bath, carpo rt ,
roof and stdtng al most new

$8.500 .
30 ACRES -

1'11 story

frame hom e, 3 BR

Water

but no balh, ba rn and othe r
butldtng s
Good c lean
g ro und , mo st l y fenced

$17.500
ABOUT 1"• ACRE - Rou1e
7 tn Pome roy

Or1grnally

had 2 houses

Ideal for

hom e or

tratle r

Asktng

$3,000
WE , CAN SE LL YOUR
PROPERTY - HERE 'S
WHY - EXPER IEN CE,
SERV ICE.
HONESTY
AND ACTION .
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
992-2259 or 992-2568

2 fa rm pbnds and good 8
rm . House . $60,000
TOP LOCATION - Sturdy
6 rm

frame hom e. Mod

k1t w1th . cook and bake
un1ts Ga's,hot water heat,

2

porches $29.500
A REAL BUY - One floor 6
rm bungalow, 2 Brs , ba1h,
mod er n ki t, level lot

Just

$12,900
GROW YOUR OWN - Ni ce
12 Yr old, 3 Br . home,
bath , s h•ny oak fl oors.
ufllity. fronl porch, and 67
of an acre Only $19,500
RIVER FRONT- 77'x 119'
With water, sewage, and
small building $4,000.
EXTRAS - Large 8 rms .,
1111 baths, cook &amp; bake
untts,
dtsposal,
frrep lace, basement

gas
wtth

garage $20.000
HERE'S A BUY - 70'x160'
lof Good 9 rms wl1h 11/z
baths. gas hot water heal
Alum1num stdlng and nice

fronl porch . Only $16,500.
NEW LISTING - New 3
Br ranch home . !;lining,
full basement. w· to w
carpet1ng, carport with
Ut1l114' and 2 acres Of land
$3S,OOO

3

BEDRM. house
Phone 992-5858 .

1n

Rutlond.

HOUSE for sal e 26 acres, newly
fenced pasture,
2 a cres
ttlloble . house carpeted and
remodeled. freshly po1nted ,
basement, smoll born , porch,
crty water , forced air heat,
rural, conven tent location near

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
Mildwood Estates located on. Flatwoods
Road, six miles from Pomeroy. With all
utilities available, zoned for your
protection, offering 1 acre or more lots for
sale. If interested call or see Ge'!rge S.
Hobstetter, P . O. Box 101, or Phone 985-4186.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

742-234B
EXCAVATING

lOVELY 2 story older home In
Raci ne 11x24 hvrng rm . ~mrng
room , new butlt· tn kitchen with
cherry cabinets , deo, bedrm
and one·hoff both down wtlh
ook llordwood floors. 3 bedrms. New full bath, urilrty roorii
upsloirs full basement, large
front and reor porches . unattached garage. 2 s loroge
buildings, all set upon Iorge lot
w rth addiltono l lot available
Must 50criftce for S21 ,000. Coli

949-2883.

ROOMY 7 yr old one story wood
frame , two bedrm
home
located between Coo lville and
Tuppers Plorns One acre lot,
two cora garage, cily water, gas
heat,
hardwood
floors
carpeted
living room, n ice

1

·,~

·'do,er

backhoe

and dltcher Charles R. Hot ~..~
freld , Back Hoe Serv1ce ,
,
Rutland, Ohro Phone742-2008.

!:::'""'~.. -~-= a~;;x~r..:,;J vouR 'TX xxr

bery Phone 949-254S or 7423167

I

(A.wen la..orraw)

IUmbl"' HABIT QUESS TONQUE EMERGE
THE MOST OFTHINGS

'

ACROSS
I Imprudent
5 Doggone 1t 1
9 Thoul!ht
10 88 keY'!;
II TeKas
City
(2 wds. J
IJ With (Ger.)
14 Male rummant (2 wds.)
20 Abnegalion
21 Seasoned
recruit
23 Seemg
red
21 Backbone
2&amp; Sty
of 27 Fellow m
- - - . ~~I Den 1
stitches
A:~~::.:.;.;· 28 Type of
doll
12 wds.)
31 Managed
32 Honest
fellow
(2 wds I
39 Measure
of pre ·
ventwn

5 LikewiSe

6 Hooray '
7 Babyloman
god
8 Craggy
hill
10 Bluenose
12 Starch
14 Cap style
IS Silly
16 lgmted
17 New Gumea
town
18 Spamsh
province
19 Carelli or
Domingo
20 Pickpocket
(sL)
22 Thrice
I Lat.)

\'cslerday's Answer
24 Hack
5 Hasten
27 Enghsh

river
29 Stern
Athenian
lawgiver
30 Challenge
32 Refurbish
a lawn

:1:1 On the VIVe

:14 And I Ger I
:15 Traffic
problem
36 Great Lakes
cargo
:17 Hawk
parrot
38
- Kmg Cole

'
!
l

.-1

-S
•

..
~

•

•&lt;

~

J

NlltlTif

• 7 ti I
tA R7ti

"'" 10 5:1

f-4--i--+-+---t l •

!I fJ
t i iU Va

• 10 6 fl

t K(l4 2

• KQR~
Ltu th vu ll!cr.IIJ II:!

HFPHHF,

'
~·
!;

E p .l

.,

TUNE IN AT 10:15 A.M. .
FOR KALEIDOSCOPE
ON W.M.P.O.

LC K F

c

HF C .JW'fWQ

A l. F'

T FWM F

ALF'

BPDA

DPNJMF

F' Y H F .J •

NWUWPSW

...•

I

~

Sou th

P.rs"

1 N T !'ass

l'.tss

A

By Oswald &amp; James Ja coby

WC ANJ CH

•I

''

North l•:as l

Opcrttn~ h.~&lt;td - 4

•
EJPB

,,

l

Wt•st

PtJss

AXYDLBAAXR
I. 0 N G F E I, L 0 W

CR\'PTOQUOTE

'
...'
I

• J

• AK

is

CARPENTER will do sidrng, roofing , remodeling, room add itions
Also garages . Free
Estimates . Call992.2659

.FRIDAY'S GUESTS
ARE OHIO POWER CO.
REPRESENTATIVES WIWAM LIVBY
AND RICHARD WILSON
AND APPALACHIAN POWER CO.
REPRESENTATIVE DICK ROUSH.

EAST

·• K(I
• Q.1 Ill R4

... .197 4
snU1'tt lfll

One letter samply stands f or another In thts samp le A IS
used for th e thrr&lt;' L' s, X fnr th e two o·~ . etc Stn[!lc lett ers.
apostrotlhcs, the len gth and forrnalinn o f the \\Mfls are all
hmts Eat h da v 1h e co de lctl&lt;'rs nr c dtflercn t.

Phone J67 -7614.

29

•""

DAILY CRYPTO(}UOTE - Here's how to work ll:

...

The 11 rst bad news lo hit
Sou lh was when ihe four of
:-;pddes Wds opened The se·
cond bad news when East
pldved lhc queen and then the
king and West dropped the
deul.'e
Then carne some good news
l::a sl slufled LO the liUCCn or
hearts
South won and cashed h1s
k1ng dOd queen of diamonds
onlv to get som e more bad
news ~:asl showed ou1 on the
second dt a mond

DO 1./E RECKON LEETLE
TATER WILL FOLLER IN
\fORE MAN SNUFFY's
FOOTSTEPS?

...

''
'"

'~

•

AT BRIDGE

I NT

EXCAVATING , BACKHOES AND ',~,
DOZER, LARGE AND SMALL, . !
SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLED. BILL
PULLINS, PHONE992-247B, DAY
OR NIGHT.

.'

-+--+-+-+-i South takes the full count

highlight
II Mischievous
act
42 The entree,
usually
DOWN
I Sunder
2 Turmoil
3 lnd1an
we1ght
4 Item m
the ring

PORTABLE weldtng service, night • ••'
ordoy . Phone742-2798
' ~

Mabi le home and lot •n Cheshire

WIN

~~~~~~::;;:;::::~~~~~~~-,~~~;;~~~~~~;;~~::::~::::::~IOOpera

!

WILL trrm or cut trees and shrub·

Chesler Phone (614) 985-4248 Will DO extenor paint1ng,
or992-5975 .
l-louses and roofs Phone 9925684 or 9'12-3J74
3 BEDRM HOUSE 1n M1ddlerorl
Forced 01r furnace, cent ro olr. GREG'S CB SALES , locolod ol ErPhone 992-205B
win's Gulf Service, Mid ·
dleport, Ohto. Phone 992I 72 ACRES Phone 742-2359.
2438

view $21,000. Phone (614)
667-3519.
AT TEAFORD REALTY
PEOPLE COME FIRST.

'

WILL do roof1ng, corstructron,
plumbmg and heating. No job
too large or too small Phone

~

by THOMAS JOSEPH

~

rmo

5968.

No"........,. the el,..led lotlerw
to rom tht IIIII'Prioe IIIIIWOr, u
. ouueo1ed bJ tho ohoYew1oon.

~

·~

lARRY
lAVENDER
Syracuse, Oh 10

EXCAVATING dozer , loader and
bockhoe work , dump trucks
and lo·boys for hrre , w 1ll haul
frll drrt , top so tl , limestone and
grovel. Call Bob or Roger Jeffers, day phone 992-7089
mgkt phone 992-3525 " or 992·

. :;- ,

~

I

n

Auwen Mat a magntrulnf1 glaa• helfJI "ou to make-

REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SID ING· SO F F ITT
GUTT ERS· AW NINGS

Ph 992 -3993
4 tO

~IJ

ICEEPIA
n I
Yeeterrdar'•

0&amp;0 TREE Tr rmmt'1g , 20 years ex
perrence . In su red
free
est1moles Call 992 -238.4 or

TEAFORD

ITELPOI

4 1 1 mo

·PH. 992-6010

rJ I

IK

ANNIE

or by contacttng

R Codner, Owner

24 Hour Serv1ce

17 Cole S1reet
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Telephone 1614) 992-376B

more ~n formotlon•

•

•

CAB CO•.

lWIN ·CITY
MACHINE SHOP

$22 ,900. Phone 992-7523 for ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR

8722 .

' I
I I

NEW
MIDDLEPORT

Medica l Oxygen
and Supplies

1l7 ACRES - A good h1 ll

per month Large 3 br. apt .,
2 smaller furn tshed apts

9 00-Nol for Women Only 3, Phil Donahue 4,15, Lucy
Show 8; Mike Dougfos 10; Morning wl1h D J 13;
Phil 0
9 31l--A M 3, One Lite to Live 6 : Tatffetales 8; Mike
Douglas 13. 10 00-Celebrily Sweepstakes 3,4,15;
Edge of Night 6; Price Is Righi 8,to.
10 :31l--High Rollers 3.4.15; Dinah 6.
11 :00-Wheel of For1une 3;15; Weekday 4; Gambit
8,10, Farmer's Doughier 13.
11 :31l--Hol (ywood Squares 3,4,15; J;iappy Days 13; Love
of Lite 8,10; Sesame 51 . 20,33.
11 55-Take Kerr 8; Dan !mel's World 10
12 :00-Magnlflcent Morble Machine 3, 15; Let's Milke a
Deaf 13; Bob Braun 4; News 6.8, 10
12 31l--Take My Advice 3.15, All My Children 6.13,
Search tor Tomorrow 8,10.
12 45- Efec Co. 33.
12 55-NBC News 3, tS.
1:00-News 3; Ry11n 's Hope 6,13 ; Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; No1 For Women Only 15.
1 31l--Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15, Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13;
As lhe World Turns B,10.
2·00-Doclors 3,4,15; Brook fhe Bank 6.13; Guiding
Light 8.10.
3:00-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospl1al6,13; All
In The Family 8,10; Crockett's Victory Garden 20.
3:31)-Qne Life to Live 13; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Mafch
Ga me 8, 10; Book Beat 20.
&lt;·Oil--Mister Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Somerset 15;
Bewitched 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Rogers
20,33 : Movie "A Lion Is In the Streets" 10; Dinah t3.
4 31l--Bewltched3; Mod Squod6, Beverly Hillbillies 8;
Sesame St . 20,33 ; Fflnt•tones IS
5·00-Bonanza 3; Partridge Family 8; S1ar Trek 15.
5 31l--Adam-12 4,13 ; News 6 , Family Altair 8; Efec .
Co. 20,33.
6:00-News 3.4,8.10,13,15; Zoom 20,33; ABC NewS6;
6 31l-- NBC News 3,4 ,15, BC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20 ;
Carrascolendas 33
7:00-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Space: 1999 8; Avfa11on Weather 33;
News 10; Don Adams Scree Tes113; Family Affair
15; Ohio .IJ&gt;ur.nof 20 .
7 3o-Porter W•nnnor 3; 'freasure Hunt 4; ~ana1a
Camera 6, Evening Edition with Marlin Agronsky
20, S2S.OOO Pvtamld 10· To Tell the Truth 13; Wild
Kingdom 15; Black Perspective on the News 33.
8 00-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4 .1 5. Donnv &amp; Marie 6,13, Sora
B,10; Washington Week In Review 20,33.
B:31l--The Prac11ce 3,4,15; Wall Street Week 20,33.
9 00-Rocklord Flies 3,4,15, Boxing 6,13; Pilot 8,10;
Firing Line 20; Masterpiece :rheatre 33.
10·00-Pollce Sfory 3.4.15; NBA Play ·Oif 8, 10; News
20; Paul Nuchlms 33
10:31l--Avlaffon Weo1her 20.
11 ·00-News 3,4,'15; ABC News 33
11 :30-Johnny Car•on 3,4,15. New• 6.13; Janakl 33.
12:00-Kentucky Derby 6,13.
12 15-News 8, 10.
12 :45-Movle "The Ml5slng Are Deadly" 8: Movie
"The Curse of the Bigfoot" 10
1 OO-Midnl9ht Special 3,4 ,15, Don Kirshner's Rock
Concert 6; News 13 .
2: 15-Movfe "The Pit and the Pendulum" 10.
2 31l--New• 3, Movie "Td Kil l a Mockingbird" 4.
3:00-Movfe "Chino Girl" 3.
4: 15-Moyfo "Sitting Pretty " 3.
4.31l--Movle " Hide and Seek" 4.
6:00-IY\ovle " Mr . Moto Takes a Vacation" 3.

Unocnmble theae four Jumblo1,
one letter to eaeh squue. to
form (our ordinary worda.

MD 'OJ'r&lt;€

.

RAINBOW RIDGE
I Bash an Areal
LONG BOTTOM

Ractne , Ohto

or

3 BEDRM . house , 2 yrs. old,
carpeted 2 ba ths , centro ! atr
condrt1on lng, basement and
goroge tn Albany, Ol-lio. For ap·
poinlment, pllone (614) 698·

~IJOFE.

Codner's Campers

Racine Plumbing
&amp;Heating

n

6:00-Sunrlse Semester JO.
6: 15-FarmReporl 13
6 20-Biue Ridge Quartet 13
6:30-Columbus Today 4, News 6; Sunrise Semester 8;
Farmtlme 10
6 4ll--Ounce of Prevention 10.
6: 45-Mornlng Reporl 3.
6"51l--Good Mornfng .. Wesf VIrginia 13
6 55-Chuck White Reports 10; Good Morning, Trl
Stale 13.
7:00-Today 3,4, 15, Good Morning, America 6.13, CBS
News 8. Bugs Bunny &amp; Frllends 10.
7:31l--Schoolles 10.
8 00-Lassle 6, Capl. Kangaroo 8,10, Sesame Sl 33.
8.31l--Big Volley 6; .

~HIS IS 1\IE: SI:WI-!D J,!..~\.UAl-1&lt;1~"'q
Tll.l&lt;fr rve ~IJEN

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned . Modern
Sonttorton. 992 3954 or 992·

MULBERRY AVE
Income property , $265 DO

6. 13.

FRIDAY, APRIL 30,1916

'DU lWS II.Ui&lt;.!

V1rg1l B. Sr., Reaf1or
110 Mechanic Pomeroy, 0.
Phone 992-3325

$89.95

--.....---r

! · ~News

lloliN LOSER

4·5-76

cattle , has Iorge barn pond
and frutt ~ trees Included rs 7
rm house. 24)(60 Ekona double
wrde 'trorler Tro1ler rs rust 1
one-half yrs old Totol elec , 3 3 BEDROOM lotol elec home,
bedrms, 2 full baths , kttchen ,
garage large lot on Rusltc
den , and Iorge living room All
H1ll s, Syrac use
Sale price

TURF TRIM
PUSH MOWERS
30", 3 HP, B&amp;S Eng.

POMEROY LANDMARK
Y.- Jack W. Carsey , Mgr.
·~
Phone 992-21B1

how you can really
save
Mrk e Young, Manager

4-26-1 mo

742-2867.

Gl.EEVE~ AND
R:l!lA~ . M~.I$ H ...

. THI$ SERUM 1\/IL.L. HSL.P TO RIOMOVI:
THE MEt.ITAL At.ID EMOTIONAL BLOCK$
THAT KEEP YOU FROM RSMEM&amp;eR:IIIIo
THIO FOR:MUL.Ai .,----1

MAC'S
LAWN
MOWER
SERVICE

20 acre farm , well su1 ted for beef

for $29 500 Cofi9'12-7S90 •

If' YOU'LL. JUST
ROLl. UP 'lOUR ,

Pomeroy

Ph . 992 -2114,

home with no obligatton

Phone 742 -2409
Box 28A
Rutland , Oh.

4 acres , undeveloped, ~ , 000 ,
Metgs County , Vtnton ma1l
route clo ut to m1nes Phone

CAJ&gt;tAIN EASY

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

car

See

Shepard Contractors

1975 Suzuk t GT 750 motorcycle,
~odco nd t! ton Coll 742-2997 .

TURF TILL
TILLERS
3';, H. P., B&amp; S Eng
$163.95

on

Tractors.

24 Hour Phone Servtce

1972 Chevrolet wagon . 1971
Tnumpk , mole Pektnges e

P"one 992 719B

;~ ... \..,.....,.

estimates

MowersTillersR1dlng

· C" •

Nathan B1ggs
Radralor Special~ st

--- - --+

peting and installation
We'll bnng sarrfp f~s to your

Rutland 742 · 2lll
Roger Wamsley
.t 1 1 mo

$25 Phone Shade (614) 69612 3 4:::__--~-~__,

GRAVELY tractor , 32 mch mower ,
7 6 h p , r ecently O\'erhauled .
$.450 Col l 992-7205evenrngs

~n

'

11 Free

SawoLawn

COINS

$2,795,00 Phone 742 JOOB

·----:----c--

STEREO-RADIO rpodern destgn.
om -lm rodto, 8 frock tope com .
b1nolton Balance $101 20 or
t erms Coli 992 -3965 .

f-- -,: Chain

1'":t·:·'

~

From the larges t Truck or
Bul l doze ,......Rad lator to the
sma ll est Heat er Core.

SLQAN'S
CAIPETING

Eng

Repatr

992 -3092

ofrer5pm

Price$1 ,695 Phone992-6173 .

1

~

NEW · Lawn Boy mowers,
Proneer
cttatn
uws,
Bolen ' s Mowers, Merry
Tillers, MTD Mowers .
498 Locust St.
Middleport, Ohio

good condillon. Co if 992-5190

POLLED Hereford bujl , '2 yrs old
$300 7 weeks old nanny goat ,

~ _ ~ne (304)682 2407 .

,.

295 S 2nd Sl

~·:f.....Ar
• ;.,/~ 'I

2 opts , 1-4 rm and both, one 3
rm and both , specta l rates to
peop le on set mcomes To see. AUCTION SALE , Sal ., Moy I, 1
ca ll992-2259 or m -2568 .
p.m . on U S. Rl 33 mtdwoy bet ween Athens and Pomeroy ,
ONE bedrm furnrshed opts 13-4
' just soutk of Pratts Fork. Mr
Mulberry Ave Phone 992·5436
Burson ho5 sold his form and
wdl sell, moch tnery and m isc.
Items . Good case 5 ft cut com ·
blne wtth good canvass has
cu t less t han 200 acres , good In
VEGETABLE plants of all kinds 10
I 12 d&gt;Sk drill 7 fl . Af l11
different varret1es of tomatoes
Chalmers 18 m tandem disk
tnclud 1ng non -actd whtte
w tth cut- olwOys tn front , lrke
tomato . Very Iorge se lect1 on of
new , Oltver flat bed wagon
b eddtng
plan ts
Also
w 1th brakes , one o ther wogon,
Gerontums qnd other potted
good N t No 14 A , 50 bu shel
plants
Hanging baskets .
manure spreader AC sem t·
Cleland Farms and Green ·
mounted 7 ft mower, horse
house
Geroldtne Cleland , dt sk, Sears shallow well water
Rocrne .
pump . Turfmoster s1x rrdmg
mower
good self-propelled
MODERN wolnut console , AM ·FM
la wn mower , 4 rn belt . mtsc
radro , -4 speed changer
tools plasttc pipe, 10 metal
Ba lance $103 40 or terms Call
ch1cken
nests 15 holes 50
992 -3%5 .
'
metal ch1cken feeders , 6 egg
GARDEN Supply Headquarters
boskel5 , hand sprayer , metal
Cobboge, cauli flower , broccoli ,
bed wtth spnngs , porch awn
head lettuce and pansy plants
1ng round stand door ch imes
Also , onion sets , seed potatoes Dormeyer mixer porch girder,
of all variettes ond a ful l hne of
etc Old ttems kandmode cup
bulk garden seeds . Heod·
board with beveled pan~i l s
quarters also for flne produce
old Ky Home treadle sewtng
M1dway Mkl , Pomeroy '192
mochme Iron ke tt le, 2 gloss
2582
ch urns
oak
comb and
brushholder, qu1h1ng frames, 2
Co-Al , l•mestone and oil types ol
blanket chests , rocker , chai r,
sol i an d rock sa lt l or tee and
round wood and coal heating
~now remo't'ol Excelsior Soh
stove
trunk prtcher pump, 5
Works East Mom St., Pomeroy
gal. jug. Terms Cast-. or Ck w ·
Oh1o. Phone 992-3691 .
10 Not res pon sible for ac.
FREEZER BEEF Corn fed steers
ctden ts . A small sole • be on
W1ll deli ver to local dressing
time Fronk Burson. owner.
plants Phone843 - ~1 ~ 1
Phone 614·696· 1104, C E.
Sherr dan, Aucl ., Amesvrlle ,
COAL, lrmes ton&amp; and calcium
Ohio
chloride ond calcium bnne for ------·-~-~--­
dust control and all types of AUCTION , Mason Auction House,
salt. Excelsior Sail Works , Eo51 " Meson W . Vo . Friday, Aprll30,
Motn Street Pomeroy Ohio
7 p m Consrgnments welcome

" - ~~ne 992-J~91.

CONSTRUCTION

Middleport, Ohio

-...

5.00-Bonanza 3; Partridge Family B; Slar Trek 15.
S:31l--Adam -12 4; News 6 ; Fam ily Affair 8: Elec Co
. 20,33; Adam -12 13
6.00-News 3,U ,10,13, 15, ABC News 6; Zoom 20, lTV
Utilization 33
6:31l--NBC News 3,4 ,15; ABC News l3; Andy Grlflllh 6,
CBS News 8,10. HQdgepodge Lodge 20; Li lias Yoga
&amp; You 33.
7·00-Tru1h or Cons . 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling tor
Dollars 6; Lawrence Wefk 8, News 10; Let's Make
A Deal13; Fam ily Affair 15; Anyone for Tennyson?
20; Family at War 33.
7.31l--Hollywood Squares 3; ,4: Ohio State Lottery 6,
Evenl~g Edl11on wllh Mart in Agronsky 20; Wild
Kingdom 10; To Tell the Tru1h 13; Music Clly
U.S.A. 15.
8:00-Mac Davis 3,4,15, Welcome Back . Kotter 6,13;
Walfons8, 10; Since the American Way of Dealh 20;
Mark of Jazz 33
8·3o--Barney Miller 6,13; Lowell Thomas Remembers
33.
9:00-Movle "Law of the Land" 3,4 ,15; Streets of San
Franc lsco6,13; Hawaii Flve-08; Movie " Dying" ;
20.33, Movie "Who's Been Sleeping In My Bed? " 10
10:00-Harry 0 6,13; Barnaby Jones 8.
11 :00-News 3,4,6.8.10,13 .1&gt;,20 ; ABC News 33.
11 :31)-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Mann ix 6,13, Movie " The

D&amp;D

OONELLI'S
PIZZA

complete

..

Last Escape " 8; Movie " Battleground" 10. Janak'
33.
.

THURSDAY, APRILl9, 1m

12 . ~1l--Maglclan

WILKINSON'S

7331

ALBANY N Y 12205
HOME WORKERS, ' earn $60

GRill Cook and w01tres s wonted
App\y tn person (row 's Steak

73 INTE RNA TIONAL 2 TON
$3895
Bcy I . 5 speed, 16.500 2 spe ed rear axle, good hres.

~---

CAROl DAY (5 1B) 489. 8395 or 4 Fom1ly Yard Sole , frtdoy and
WRITE FRIENDLY I10ME PAR _Saturday . Mom St . Rutla nd
TIES
20 RAILROAD AVE
Sp~res resi dence

14) 22 , 29 (5) 6, Jt c

ORDINANCE NO. 1041 16
An Ordrnancc to E~TABLISH

' ""lirra

"

I.OOC.Tomorrow 3,4.

$3495

Cheyenne Super 350 V 8, automa tic, power sfeerr ng
brakes, w w lire s, wh cove r s, st ep bumper,
c hrom e mtrror s, AM rad 1o, white and moss green ,
sharp and many other op tt ons.

OLD fu rnt tu re tee boxes , brass
bed s o ld wall telepho nes and
ports. o r complete households
Wrrte M . D. Mtller Rt 2
Pom ~oy ~~~~~11992 7760_

1.ost -and Found

NOTICE OF APPO I NTMENT
Case No 21784
Es tate of Ltda Swa in , aka
Lidda Swarn De ce ase d
Notrce FS hereb y gtven that
Joseph A lton Swa m of Route L
Box 145 , Ra ci ne Ohto ha s
been duly appotntM E )(ecutor
of th e Estate of L tda Swa1n ,
a ka L ldd a Swarn d ece as ed ,
lat e of Sunon Town Ship , Me1gs
Coun t y, Oh ro
Credttor s a r e re qutred to
file thet r c la tms Wtlh sa td
fi dU ci ary Wllh tn four mo nths
Dat ed lh rs 16th day of Apnt

Judge
Comm on Pleas Cou r t.
P r obat e DI VISIOn
Metgs CoUnty , Oht o

1974C HEVROLETC-10

Will 00 odd tabs , roofing . patn·
ling, hauling t reework and
mow tn g Pkone 992 7-409

, top prtce l or standing
61h of May D&amp;h ~ O U SE OF TIMBER
f1mber Cal l (614) 446-8570
FABRICS It 1 mtle sou th of Mtd
dleport
Po ly double kntt CASH potd for oil mak es and
models of mobde kames
Reg $2 98 yard now S2 49 Po
Phone a reo code 614 -423 9531
ly and ca tron for T Shir ts, Reg
$1 98 now 98 cents yard I table
WANTED-Good used ka y baler
of po lyester and cotton 45 tnch
Coli Q:'!(enmgs olt er 5 p m. 992wtd e 20 ~. off
Shop our
7318 or 992 3859
bcrgotn room
.
SSCoshSSS for 1unked auto Frye s
( HICKEN Bar B Que noon Sun ·
Truck Auto Paris Rutland
day at Ftre Stot• on tn Rocme 1
Phone 742· 2081
p m Gorden Tre e Pul l Spon
sored by the Rocrn e F~r e Dept

per Adve r!l sement
OFFl.CE HOU R S
ll 30 i1 m IO S 00 p Ill
Oa t ly 8 JO am to 17 00
Noon Saturday
Phone today 991 7156

Man ntng 0 Webster

Will DO buildmg and remodel•ng, roolmg, plumbing fur·
noce re po1r, gas or otl or
genera l repotr Free es ltmotes
and reosonoble roles Phon e
Charles Stndotr (61-4 ) 985 4121
or992 222 1

1972 CHEV. 2 TO N
$2995
102" C A 15.000 lb 2 speed rea r axle, 292 Six 4 speed
1
trans , good trres

RACINE F ~re Deportment wtll
ho ve 0 hom shqo t Satu rday at
6 30 p m
thelf new butldrng
off Bo sh an Rood

Business Services

2 SIGNS Pomeroy
OF
QUALITY Motor Co.

9922595

Notices ·

&amp; OBITUAR Y
$1 00
for
SO
w o r cJ
nHr11111u rn
Eiich aOOittonn l word 3
cents

1976

DOZER wo rk - 440 dozer with 7
ft blade Wll~ build ponds or
dean forms for ttmber Call

Sadly massed by Father Mo ther
Sisters and Fam1hes

r.ARDOFT~ANKS

.I

South paused for a wh1le to
Lhmk about the club su1t
Then h.s face rela xed mto a

MA'I'f:IE I SIIOULD SI..EEP
WITH ONE e'l'E OPEN ...

ONE fi(E CAN SLEEP
WHILE lHE OTHER E'f'E
STANDS GUARD..

t11 oad smile West lwd shown

up

Wt th

SIX.

spddes

rour

diamonds and one heart He 11
could nul hold more than two
club s Suppose he held just
one ' Then East wou ld hold
loUr .md South would pick
i11cm up
Could South l1nd uu t if East
dul hnlrl four '' Yes he could
So uth cashed h1 s other high
hea rt. When Westlollowed . he
•·ould nul hold more th&lt;ln one
tlub So South led " cl ub to
dumm y s ac•• led ba ck the 10
nl cl ubs and showed F:ast his _,
hand It didn 't mailer what "
Eo~sl d1d &lt;1t this stage of Ihe "
J&gt;rocecthngs South had hiS
&lt;'O ntract locked

~Q~~
t\

Wisconsrn reader wants to

knuw how you respond ~o
partn e r s opcmng t hr eenotrump bid wh en you hold
• K ~1YQ j . XX X. AUX XX

P lay mg Simple standard
Amcr1ca n yo u should just bid
SIX nolrump Otherwi se . you ,,
use some sci entific method

or , ,

other and eventually get Lo s1x
notrurnp anyway
1

,,

(Do you have a question
lor the experts? Wrlfe "Ask "
lhe Jacobys" care ol lhls •·
newspaper The Jacobys will ,
answer md1vidual questions "
11 sramped. self-addressed-:
envelopes are enclosed. The "'
niosl interestmg questions ;:
will ba used in this column •
and w111 raca1ve copies ol :;
JACOBY MODERN.I
~

.."
•"'
....
01

§

j

�..

•

•

12 - The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, April ~ . 1976

f}

'Bum' said
he'sHughes

Local news, ·in briefs
lH E

SOUlHt~ N

Local

Board of Educa tion will mee t
th is evening rlf the high
sc hool at 1 p.m .

A PUBLIC benefit auction
t or Mrs . Ava Greenlee!:!
wh ose husband died recen tl y
will be staged by residen ts of
th e Carpenter Community a t

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Mei gs County Common Pleas
Court .

THE POMEROY E R unit
was

catte d

l or

Will ie

taken to HMC.

A QUARE dance will be
3 p.m. Sa turday at the held at the Chester Grade
Dolphus Burke residence , Schoo l beginning at 8
sou th ot the school lot on CR . Sa turday night under the
I . Res iden'ls wishing to help sponsorship of fhe Ches ler
arc to take i terns for the Volunteer ·Fire Dept. Ad·
auction or call the · Burke

residence, 696 -7244 . Food wil l

THE MIDDLEPORT E.R
unit was called to308 Page St.
RAC IN E'- Racine PTO at 8:38 a.m. Thursday for

\
'

I I I

charg e of lhe prog ram . The

firs I grade wil l serve r ef re shments .

.-RAC IN E -- The

Racine
Basebal l Ass n.. wil l hold tag
day Saturday , May 1. All pee
week , It tile league and pony
league players are to meet at
Racine Junior High basebal l
field at 9 a.m .
·

I' .

JE NNIF ER BERKH IM ER
a nd
Lewis
Berkhimer,
Middl eport , ha ve fi led for
d issolu tion of marriage in

l'HEP!I Im FOil F'OUN DEHS DAY - Cheryl Crow
and Lynne Crow, 1-r, made prcparallons Wednesday for
the l'ounders Day program for the three chapters of Bela
Signw Plu Chapter to be held at the Meigs Inn this evening
at 6:30p.m. In charge of the sktl to be presented are the
recently tniatiatcd members of Bela Sigma Phi Sorority.
Llwryl and Lynne mad e the backdrop for the program

!

JOHN AOAMS SCHILLING
WILKE SVILLE - John
Adams
Sc hilling ,
76 ,

Wilkesvil le, di ed Wednesday
at the Hol zer Med ical Center
following a year 's illn ess .
N\r . Sch illing was born
April 9, 1900 in Au stin , Ohio,
Ross County, I he son of the
late Jacob and Ro sina Adarns

Hulh Ann Goody, J4 , IU. I, Samson siud the brakes on hi s
Gallipolis, wa s injured in a ca r fai led cau sin g the
traffic accident Wednesday ·collision. There was minor Sc hill ing.
He mar ried on June 25,
evening on Ht. 7 in front of dam e:~ge. No one wa s cited.
1927, th e fo rm er Flo ssie
Kmg's Arms.
Cr abtree who survives, a s do
Accordin~ to the Meigs
three sons, Jacob. of Lan .
lloll!•r Medical Center
easier ; Davi d of Gallipol is ,
County sheriff 's department ,
1Disrhargcs, Apri128)
d Gary , a t hom e ; a
Mrs. Goody was a passenger
Evere\1 Ang les, Mrs. an
daughter , Mr s.
Homer
in a ca r operated by Paul J. Darrell Roggess and son; (Dori s) Hartsook, Colum
bus ;
Goody, 25, Middleport. Their Lydh1 Can trell, Maxi ne Clay, ~bro th er, Jacob B. Sc hilli ng.
cat wHs struck in the rear by M&lt;-~cy Coi:ILes , John Colllns,
a vehicle 'driven by Carl 1.. i\da linc D;·tvis, Orville Davis,

Mass illon ; a sister . Mr s. Lee
(H aze l) Br own , Givens,
Oh io: six grandchildren , and
several nieces , nephews and
cousin s.
Before his r etiremen t in
1962, Mr . Schilling was a
heavy equipm ent operator .
All er h is ret ir em ent he
served six years as a tru stee
of Wilke ~;v i ll e Town ship . He
had resided in Vinton County
slnce 1933 .
•
Fun eral ser v ices will be

Smnson, 55, Ill. 4, Pomeroy. Mina Euba nk s, Jo Ann e
Fillinger, Betty Jean Finlay,
Goldie
Frederick, Et·nesline
The true story that has
Gt lliam, Sherry Gross, Lona
captivated ove r
Hardma n,, Ida Hicks. Mrs.
B.OOO.OQQI" " ~
, t' hnrl cs
.Je nkin s
and
daughter, Ha ndall Kent,
Ferne

1\blher , Gracie McCnrn.1ick,
Hosa Minnis, Mrs. Slanl!!y
MooiH!Y and d e~ u g ht e r ;

lHE

HIDING

PlACEp(;
JUUE HARRIS
EILEEN HECKART
ARTHUR 0 ' CONNEll
!':ll d llll llJ

(Continur.d from page I)
settleme nt before the
leg islaloi'S reconvene in

ln!roducmg

JEANNETTE CUFT

·--"'·-·- '" --·
Mei~ Theatre
Pomeroy , 0 .
7:00
P111 Litl

Jun e.
,
StiII another co nference
com mittee had reached
agreement on five of seven

points of difference between
the House and Senate on
teacher te nure legislation
late Wednesday night, but a
completed negotiation was
still up in the air .

Nite Club for Mr . and Mrs .

Carl Sampson w ho were hurt
in an auto accident. Mr . and

Mrs. Sampson of Route

I

Pleasant Valley Hospital
D!SCHAHGES - Mrs.
Thomas Jones, Cheshire ;
William Ho6inson, Frazier's
Bottom; Michael McGowan,
Point Pleasant; Shawn
Masters, Gallipolis; Joseph
Lively , Letart ; Mrs. Harold
Fry, Letart; Hazel Johnson,
Mrs. Gary Paxton, both Point
Pleasant.
BIHTHS - April 26, a
daughter to Mr . and Mrs.
Marion Biffle, Mt. Alto.

TRUCK LOAD SALE
PLASTIC SEWER AND
DRAIN PIPE

M emor ial

•

6=~AU fi'!TINGS AVAILABLE

Frida(. un til tim e of services
on Sa urday. Th e family will
recei'w'e frien ds from 2 to 4
and from 7 to 9 Friday .

Fla .. and Ruby Pickens,

Pomeroy ; a son , Leo Taylor,
Racin.e; one brother , CNven

Ta ylor , Seville, Ohio ; 21
grandchildren, nine great
grandchildren, and sev eral
nieces and nephews .
Fun eral servi ces wi ll be

funeral hom e anytime .

Activities of the past year
and program plans for 1976-77
were reviewed at the annual
dinner meeting of the South
East Ohio Lung Association
at The Sportsman in Athens,
t!Jis week.
Ci led among the past
year 's accomplishments
were the professional
education programs condueled by the Association in
coopera tion with ·various
agencies such as the Ohio
Lung Association , the Ohio
Department of Health and
some area hospitals.
Robert Frey of Athens was
elected president for the
coming year; Charles S.
Cupp, Thornville, 1st vice
pres ident, Lawrence G.
Worstell , Athens, 2nd vice
president, Mrs. Fae Chappelear, New Lexington,.
secretary , and Mrs~ Lois
Sharpe, Marietta, treasurer.
Additional
members
Iele cted to serve .on the

Also taking part in the Big
Bend CB country and gospel
variety benefit show for the
Meigs County Aerial Ladder
Truck Fund to be held
Friday, April 30, at Meigs
Jun ior High in Middleport
will be the Pratt sisters,
Phantom rider (Joe Christy)
Armond Turley at lhe organ ,
women folli es, Barbara
Bratt, Bonnie Dailey, Linda
Schultz, Mary Christy, Kale
White, Ellen Johnson, Ella
Roush, Etta Will, Elsie Jones,
Dottie Nelson , Ruth Hysell
and Shirley Gibbs.
LOCAL TEMPS
Ten1perature in ,JowJJfU\'. n

Pomeroy Thursday at 11 a.
was 57 degrees under
sunny skies.

PICKENS HARDWARE
773-.5583

MASON, W, VA.

NOW YOU KNOW

In 1919, U.S. airplane
passenger se rvi ce began
when Robert Hewitt Rew
Mrs. J. A. Hoagland and Miss
Ethel Hodges from New York
City to Atlan tic City.

Jeans
Jeans
Jeans
Jeans

-

4.65
5.45
6.25
6.95

Valu .

Southern has
drugs policy

BARGAIN DAYS SALE!

MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS

O~r entire stock of men's knit shirts · tank

tops - crew necks - schooi name shirts n~mber shirts . Rugly styles - novelty prints
·collared styles.
Sizes small · medium - large and extra
large.

·I
I

.

RACINE - A drug abuse
policy was adopted Thursday
night by the Sou.thern Local
School District Board of
Education in a special
session.
Accordi!lg to the police, any
student who intentionally
sells, gives, possesses, uses
or is illicitly under the in. fluence of drugs, narcotics or
alcohol in or on school
property during regular
school hours and.or school
sponsored · activities including school buses shall be
expelled for the maxlmwn
, lime j)ermitled by law. The
student shall also be reporled
to the appropriate law enforcement agency.
The board also discussed
promotion of a $420,000 bond
issue to be voted upon in the
dislrlct at the June 8 election.
Proceeds from the issue

~

SALE PRICES
r-------------------~
BARGAIN DAYS SALE!
~----~--------~----·:

I .
I
II

WOMEN'S DRESSES
Reduced for final Clearance.

I
I

SAVE OVER 50%
'

I

(All Sales Final)

1

BARGAIN DAYS SALE!

II

JACKSON AND PERKINS
FIELD GROWN ROSES

BOYS' KNIT SHIRTS

1
1
I

I
I

r------------------...1
BARGAIN DAYS SALE!
I
Regular sizes 29 to 42 and extra large sizes
44, 46 and 48 . Solid colors and patlerns ·_

-- w

•

100 Pcf. double knit
-

- .
- - ..
- - - -

.

2.34

Boys 3.95 Knit Shirts
Boys 4.95 Kn~t Sh~rts
Boys 5.95-Knrt Shtrts

-

•
-

.
.
-

•
•
-

.
.
.

3.14
3.94
4.74

BY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
KINSHASA, ZAIRE - SECRETARY OF STATE Henry A.
Kissinger, apparently recovered from a one-&lt;lay stomach
aliment, !]!ild a final jlrief meeting with Zaire President
MobutuSeS'e Si!lfciFrlliay and !hen left for Liberia on Ute fifth
. leg of his African tour.
Kissinger and Mobutu talked for half an hour over
breakfast on a terrace of the J)residential Marble Palace
overlooking Ute surging Zaire Congo River. Then Kissinger
traveled 20 miles by helicopter to Ute airport and left for the
Liberian capital of Monrovia.

---Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

5.89
5.49
4.09
3.29
2.99

. • • .. . 8.21
- - - - - 8.91
. - - •• 9.71
. - - - 10.51
- - - - 11.21
- - - - 11.91
. - - - 12.71

rl

BARGAIN DAYS SALE .

~
I
I
I
I
I
I

CAMERA DEPARTMENT

,

1 Only j29.50 Kodak Sound Movie Projector
Model 245.

SALE '23000

I Only 219.95 Kodak Ektasound Movie
Outfit.
_

!'

Sfze 36 to 46 in regular and longs - fine
selection of colors and styles - Polyeste ~

:~:- 39.95 Leisure Suits

Mens 45.00 Leisure Suits Mens 49.95 leisure Suits Mens 59 .95 leisure Suits -

.•..
- - - -- - - - - -

29 .90
33.70
37.40
44.90

_.._.._..~---- .. ---_.~_.._.._...__.., . . k r l . . .

-·

~ARGAIN DAYS S"ALE!

leisure
Leisure
leisure
leisure
leisure
leisure
leisure

Tops
Tops
Tops
Tops
Tops
Tops
Tops

-

- - .. - - - - - - - - . - . - - - - ..
- - - . .
•• - . .

!I

1
1

1

I

Si zes smal l · medium . la rge and extra large . Sol id
colors - patterns - good .selection of styles.

12 .70
13.40
14.20
14.90
16.40
17.20
22.40

Select Slack s to mix or match these tops - your
correct size - on sale Friday, Saturday and Monday .

Select your
select ion ' '

favorite

from

our

large

$1.29 YD. • $1.39 YD. - $1,49 YD.

YARD GOODS

r

I·'

1:

99e YARD

l

l-n'A.R'G~mlli¥8TniR-G'.4i!VD"A¥s

I
I
I
I

·

!

SALE!'

~1.49 WINTUK I

RED HEART I
YARN
I
~ef~~fi~nske~~s ~o~:~
colors - variegated
and sp~rkle.

I
I

SALE!

BICYCLE .
SALE•
$149.95 Ten S;eed
Boys

I·

•80.oo

5119 -95 Three Speed
Bovs'70.00
$89.95 Standard
26 inch Boys

$119
. '55.00
.
Limited
quantity
:
while they last.
--..------..----.----.-.-----.t;..___.._..._.._.._..._.,.__ --·- .

2 f or 25 e
'

1

·-

-----.-~

ELBERFELD$ IN POMERO.Y

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

H.·u.'.gh·e.s ·WI
··
,

·

·~~
·

1

·

.

.

-

By MYRAM BORDERS
LAS VEGAS ,Nev. (UPI) The hand-written, yellowing
document could be the will
and a bluep~int for division of
Howard Hu.l!hes' $2 billion
empire. Or it could be a fake .
Experts are divided on the
issue.
.I
Noah Diell'lch, 87, Hughes'
top aide for 32 years and the
designated· executor, said
alter seeing a photocopy of
t!Je will shown him by UPI
Utat "I would have to testify
that
that's
Hughes'
handwrftlng
and
his
signature. :1 don't believe
anybody Ciluld have. forged

it..,

...

But a· sJ~okesman for · the
Summa Corp., holding
company ,{_or most of the
Hughes empire, said the
I

I

document appeared to be
"another hoax." He noted its
many errors in spelling
simple words, including
"Lommls" for Hughes'
Houston cousin, William

cabled off
nighttime

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

FRIDAY, APRIL 30, 1976

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

stumps experts

headquarters of the Mannon
Church In Salt Lake City.
- Drew sharply conflicting
opinions of its worth from
Hughes associates and hand~
writing experts, ranging
Lununis.
from obviously fake to
True to his tradition of probably authentic.
secrecy
and
quirky
- Would bestow an
individuality ' the hand- estima led $125 millioij on a
written document:
desert miner and mechanic
- Appeared "out of no- who gave a ride eJght years
'where" on · a desk in the ago to a shabby, bleeding
hitchhiker who "looked like a
bum" but said he was
Hughes.
- Used only 287 words to
dlaburse t!le fortune of the
second richest 'American
after J . Paul Getty,glvlng the
largest share to the Hughes
· Medical Research Institute of
Miami and dividing Ute rest

Cemetery ·

en tine

among his two focmer wives,
four universities , Ute
Mormon church, the Boy
Scouts, a cousin in Houston,
his top aides and fWlds to
establish scholarships and an
orphanage.
- Seemed certain to
complicate the settlement of
Ute estate, already tled up in
steadily growing legal
disputes.
Wilford Kirton Jr., lawyer
for the Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-Day Saints- the
Mormons flied the
document Wednesday
afternoon In Clark County
Court. He said a public
· relations man in the church's
headquarters lound It on h!a
desk Tuesday afternoon when
he returned from a

meeting.
Inside an outer envelope, of
t!Je kind available to tourists
visiting Ute church's Temple
Square, Wl)S a second manila
envelope "appearing to show
the yellowing stains of time"
apparently addressed to
David 0. McKay, church
president tlnill he · died in
1970:
"Dear Mr. McKay, Please
see that this wlll is delivered
after my deaUt to the Clark
County Courthouse, Las
Vegas, Nev., Howard R.
Hughes."
A Mormon spokesman said
"clrcilmstances 'surrounding
the delivery of Ute envelope
frankly J)uzzle us. Whetlter
the will Ia the actual wUI of
Mr. Hughes or a hoax ....

There WBII enough' Indication
it could possibly be real" to
turn It over to .the court.
The document refen to
"the Spruce Goose" · for
Hughes huge flying boat.
BoUt the summa spokesman
and Dietrich said Hughes
despised the derisive
nickname and never used It.
But Leslie King, a
handwriting expert from
Bountiful, Utah, was called In
by the Mormon church.
Based on a comparison with
known examples of Hughes
hantlwrltlilg, she said, her
tentative conclusion was that
"there Ia a very good chance
that Mr. Hughes did write the
wlllln question."
Probate Judge Russel
. (Continued on page 12)

.

Vandalism in the MinersCOLUMBUS - OHIO TAXPAYERS, DURING fiscal1975 ,
ville cemetery on Minersville
paid an estimated" $1.411 in taXes for each $1 in federal aid
Hill will be curbed if
grants received, the Ohio Public Expenditure Council said
measures taken this week
today, That 41H!ent "premium," the council said, ranked Ohio
through the cooperation of
The Meigs County 'Democrat party didales for President: James Plumthird among the 20 states whose tax contributions toward
Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach will honor Ohio Lt. Governor Richard mer, Jackson, and Kennit. Gatten,
federal . aid exceeded their state and local govenunents'
and the Sutton Township Celeste with a buffet dinner May 5, at Marlett§, for congress; Bon James
income from grant payments. ,
unopposed for ' Stale Representative,
lrustees are effective.
the Meigs County Fairgrounds.
Federal grants-tn-aid to Ute state, along with local govern- ,
The sheriff disclosed that
H.oush and James Bailey for '
James
E. A. Wingett, chairman of Ute
ments, totaled nearly $1.8 billion during fiscal year 1975 oo April 26 vandals went into Democrat executive committee, said commissioner, and James Proffitt for
approxlma,tely $35 million higher than during t!Je previous .
the Minersville Cemetery and congres8num Jim Stanton, candidate sheriff.
year, Ute cotu1cil said. Buckeye state taxpayers, liowever, are
Members of Ute Pomeroy pushed over 12 to 14 for U.S. Senator, and Wayne Hays, a
Lt. Gov. Celeste was elected in 1974
estimated to have paid federal taxes of ~.5 billion toward the Fire Department left Thurs- gravestones, ran a vehicle favorite son, have said Utey expect to be by defeating long lenn office holder
$48.2billion in such grants distributed nationally.
day for Springiield, Ill., over several graves, and into present.
John Brown.
where they •will pickup an one grave marker and
Those who wish to attend the dinner
Thirty-six lOth Dls\rict delegates will
COLUMBUS - TilE OffiO HOUSE has agreed witlt aeriar lad~r truck which has loosened it.
be 'on the Primary ballot, but none which is at 7 p.m. muy secure a ticket
Senate changes and sent to Gov , James A. Rhodes a bill been pur ~hased . from that
This Is the first time from Meigs County, Wingett said.
by notifying David Grr. trd at527 N. 2nd
boosting Ute state's minimum wage to $2.30 per hour by Jan. I, ·city for use by Meigs County vandals had gone into the
On the Jwte 8 Democrat primary i\ve., Middleport as soon as possible.
1978. House approval of the Senate version of the bill came !Ire deparlment.
graveyard and caused severe ballot will be Henry Jackson, Jinuny Gerard and Chester Wells head the
Thursday on a 58 to 31 vote.
·
Pomeroy Fire Chief damage, but previous to this Carter, Frank Church, Congressman committee .
The Senate had restored a provision requiring restaurants Otarles Legar said earlier particular case, they had Wayne Hays, favorite son; George
In case of rain, abundant shelter will
to post on a prominent place and In Uteir menus the percentage t!Jat men making the !rip will littered Ute grounds and done Wallace and Morris Udall, all can- be available Wingett said. ·
RICHARD CELESTE
of waitresses' and•waiters' trips.which are applied to their receive training in operation considerable damage to Ute
base pay to meet the minimum wage standard.
of the veliicle before return- lots located outside of the
U Rhodes sigm Ute bill, the minimum wage for ing to Pomeroy where Ute fence area. The sheriff said
agrlculturalworkerswillgofrom$1.30anhour to $2 in 90 days, Wlit will be housed.
due to the increase in crime
'to $2.20 In January, 1977; to $2.30. a year later. For nonThe truck was purchased that his department doesn't
WILMINGTON, N. C,,
agrleultural workers, it will go from $1.60 to $1.90 in three for $10,000 as the result of a have a chance, as it has tn the
April 30 ..._ Gen. James
montlts, to $2.101n 1977 and Uten to $2.30.
public fund drive begun after past, to patrol particular
Moore sent word to
the StirRer Store fire when areas where cemeteries are
Wasblnglon that two
HONG KONG - AN EXPLOSION ntAT ldlled two t!Je .value ,of such a vehicle left open,
deserters from the newly
CHARLESTON, W. Va .
Chinese guatd:t at Ute Soviet Embassy In Peking Thursday was was noledoiil fighting blazes · Sheriff Hartenbach said
arrived British fleet (UP!) - Gov. Arch Moore
Sheriff
Robert
C.
HarClayton
waived·
extradition
"an act of sabotage by a counter-revolutionary," Chinese at 'taller bUildings. The fund that on April 28 he met witlt
claimed Gen. Henry testified Uta! he "never got a
Foreign .Ministry officials said today. A twtlilaragraph Tass now stands at $16,933. the trustees of Sutton ·tenbach said today Robert and has been retW'ned to
Clinton wao 'planning to thing" from a convicted
news agency report from Moscow said Ute explosion occurred Firemen had also noted Township to discuss having Sterling Clayton, 22, Rt. 3, Meigs Colinty by-Ute sheriff's
attack
Wilmington. Clinton investor who charged that the
at Ute enlrance to the embassy and killed two guards.
earlier tliat they would need the cemetery entrance Farmv.ille, W. Va ., who Dept.
hlmoelf
~·ported to Gen.
West Virginia chief executive
Clayton will come before
The brief Chinese Foreign Ministry statement did not more than the $10,000 pur- secured at night so that no allegedly broke Into the home
William
Howe
that extorted f25,000 for a s"te
of
Dana
Baily,
in
Meigs
•
County
Judge
Robert
Buck
confirm the deaths of Ute two guards, according to Peking chase figure In order to one would be able to get into
although eight naval tranl"
contacts who read the statement to UPI in a telephone call. repair and ' equip Ute truck. t!Je graveyard area.,Thurs- ColUlty on April 26, was today on charges of burglary . ports bad arrived off ·the bank charter that was never
granted.
· There were no other details in the Chinese statement, issued by
The latest contributors to day, Ute sheriff said Ute picked up by Charlesollt city and possession of stolen
Cape
Fear
River,
he
bad
no
In 4'h hours of testimony
· properly. 'Missing were
Ute ministry's infonnation department, the Peking sources the fund Include Edison Jruslees put a cable across police April '1:/ .
instructions
of
how
to
Thursday,
Moore often was
numerous items from Ute
said.
Hobstetter, Young Adult the road and passed a
proce~d. ·
visibly
angry
at questions by
home Including guns and a :::;:::::::::!::::::::::::::::~::~::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::;:::::::
~'
Class , .Bradford Church, resolution that no one would
U.S.
Attorney
John Field Ill
radio. The radio has been
COLUMBUS - TilE OHIO SENATE THURSDAY Joseph &amp; Lola Zwilling, St. be pennitled In Ute cemetery
LOCAL TEMPS
and
loudly
denied
charges
recovered.
unanimously confinned 41 appointments of Gov, James A. Paul SWJday School, William onlY as hours Utey have set
Temperature In downtown · that he rebelved the money in
The Sheriff's Dept. in· Pomeroy Friday at 11 a.m .
Rhodes, including Richard L. Krabach as director of the Downie, Crow's Steak House, . that the cemetery will be
vestigated an accident was 63 degrees under sunny 1972 from Theodore Price, ',
Department of Administrative Services, and :William W. Stiffler's S!ores, Mr. and open. The cemetery will be
(ConUnued on page 12)
Thursday at 3:30p.m. on SR skies.
Wilkins as director of the Office of Budget and Management. Mrs. Richard Warner, opened at 8 o'clock In Ute
q,
Charles
0.'
Neal,
Ht.
4
Confirmation of Ute two cabinet members left only two of Trinity Church You th morning, seven days a week,
Pomeroy, went to sleep at his
Rhodes' calinet.level nominees still unconfirmed. They are FellowshiP,, Chester Knight, and closed at 8 o'clock in Ute
Richard D. Jackson, director of Ute Department of Trans- Nina Cummings, Earl evening.
Sign-up day for all boys wheel ; the car went across
portation, and Robert W. Teater, director of Ute Department of Thoma, ~etty Baronick,
Sheriff Hartenbach sai u who want to play Meigs Route 7 and struck an emNatW'al Resources.
Evangelin~ Chapter No. 172 anyone caught In
the American Legion Baseball is banknienl. Neal had an in·
OES, Hdmer E. Abele, cemetery during Ute closed SWlday at 2 p.m. at the Drew jury to his mouth but was not
THE BUSES ARE STILL IDLE, TilE SEWAGE PLANT Shamrock 1 Motor, Maurice hours will be prosecuted.
Webster Post 39, American Immediately 'treated. No
has run out of chlorine and litter ts accumalatlng on, many Durst, Middleport Legion,
citation was Issued.
During the first half 1975 tax can be paid In partial
He said he appreciates the Legion Post home.
streets in San Francisco, but both sides in the31-day city crafts Louise Rosenbaum, Emma cooperation given to him and
real estate collection period, payments and wilt be acThe American Legion
workers dispute are beginning to smile. In Cleveland, United Clatwortl\y, · Pete and the public by Sutton Town- Baseball competition in 1976
$88,520.21 in delinquent taxes cepied any time at · the
Rubber Workers negotiators walked out on negotiations and Avenelle Bass, Johnnie ship trustees.
OWNERS WARNED
is open only to players who
was collected, George M. treasurer 's office. •
talks broke off.
Nwnerous calls are being Collins, county treasur~r,
Foreclosure proceedings
will not have attained Uteir
' Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. FrankConciliatory gestures were made In San Francisco by both lin Hepp, Fannie Phllllps,
,· 19t!J birthday before Aug . 1, received at Pomeroy village said today.
can be instituted any time
sideslateThursdayasacommon ground was sought to end the Drew American Legion ,Post
A large part of this after tax has been certified as
1976. Players signing to play hall complaining about dogs
strike. Proposals and counterproposals were made by both 39, Anonymoud Donor,
must pay a $5 fee, not running loose In town ac- delinquent tax was collected delinquent for one year , The
sides. Municipal railway officials said they were poised to call Athens County Savings &amp;
Cloudy, chance of showers refund a b 1e,
up on cording to Pollee Chief Jed through the "excellent county treasurer's office
back mechanics and drivers within three hours of an I~ oan, Disabled American klnight and Saturday. Lows registration. Coaching the Webster who wamed dog cooperation and work of the personnel extends Utanka to
agreement that would reinove picllets from city factlities .
Veterans - Meigs, Hobert klnight In 'the upper 40s and Meigs learn Utis year will be owners that their animals office of Meigs Prosecutor Meigs County real estate
Buck, Racine American htghs Saturday . in the 60s. , George Nesselroad and must be kept tied or confined. Bernard Fultz," Colllns owners for their "fine
CHARWTTE, N.C. - BLACK LEADEfiS from across the Legion, c:lty Council Beta Probability of ratp 10 per cent Charles Hamilton with James If·not , owners are in violation stated . Acontinue~ effort will · cooperation" during the first
nation coriverged on Charlotte today for wltat they called an Sigma Phi , Fritz Buck, Fred today, 30' per cent tonight, 50 . M. soulsby, business of a village ordinance, he be made to.collect delinquent half, 1975,. collection.
(Continued on page 12)
said.
,tax. Delinquent real estate
·
W. Crow 1!1, Edith Spencer. per cent Saturday. .
. manager.

Celeste to he honored

get~mck

Clayton returned

Dateline 1776

Governor

got nothing

Deadline is

!

!

NO. 10

at ·y

to Meigs court

Includes 100 per cent cotton prints polyester and cation prints - solid colors percales · gingham checks - calicos and
. solid and patterened cotton plisses.
Your Choice

r--'BA'Rc:4iN_ru_¥SsA'i"E!___1
15e CANDY BARS

BARGAIN DAYS SALE!

1

I

MEN'S LEISURE SUIT TOPS
Mens 16.95
Mens 17.95
Mens 18.95
Mens 19.95
Mens 21.95
Mens 22 .95
Mens 29.95

1

•

llliriois to

-----------·-----1
SALE '16000
BARGAIN DAYS SALE!
1·--------------·---t:

MEN'S LEISURE SUITS '

VOL XXVIII

·-

1sf Floor

1

'

Dummar said.
Dwnrnar recalled driving
to Los Angeles In January
1968 when "I picked up Utis
guy out In the middle of ,
nowhere between Tonapah
and Beatty."
He said he had pulled to the
side of Ute road on his trip
Utrough the desert to go to the
batltroomand found the man
''laying out there ."
1 "He was just thisoldskiMy
man. They only thing I can
underground cable this week along Pomeroy's Main
LAYING UNDERGROUND CABLE - Employes of
remember was that he had a
Street beginning at Butternut Ave . ,
Ge neral Telephone Company have been la ying
big scar on Ute left side of his
cheek and he was bleeding
ou! of his ear," said the
mechanic. "He had blackish
gray hair, had on some kind Ute Sands," he said. "He he was injured.
Dwrunar, a Mormon, lived calllilg him shortly af·ter i he
of baggy pants and wore didn't tell me what happened.
A wii1left at the headquar- in Gabbs in 1968 and worked document was filed witlt the
tennis sl\oes."
He dldn 't · say notltlilg and ters of the Mormon Church In in a magnesium mine there. Clark eounty Clerk in Las
Dwrunar said he offered to wouldn't talk until we got Into Salt Lake City said one He !110Ved to Willard, U!ah , 18 Vegas by Mormon Oturch
drive him to a hospital but the Vegas. That's when he told sixteentlt of Ute Hughes es- montlts ago and bought a officials.
Hughes lived in Las Vegll8
man asked to be driven to the me he was Hughes."
timated $2 billion estate - service ·station.
from
1966 until1972, allegedly
Sands Hotel on the Las Vegas
Dwnmer said the man about $125 million - should
He said he had no
staying
In a suite atop the ·
"strip" instead.
offered no explana ~on of !tow go to "Melvin DuMar" of knowledge of Ute purported
Desert
Inn.
"I dropped him off behind he gotoulln the desert or how Gabbs, Nev.
will until reporters be~an

·e

Firemen in

! -~:..~~~ o~:~: ~~e_::c._es_._ , . . .

MEN'S DRESS SLACKS
SLACKS
SLACKS
SLACKS
SLACKS
SLACKS
SLACKS
SLACKS

.

Regular 6.9o sx1o - - - - ....
Regular 6.59 Type 108 - - - - - .
Regular 4.75 Type 88 - • - - •••
Regutar4.10 Type107 - . . . . .
Regul~r 3.49Type87 - - - - - - -

lrd Floor - A' .in Store

10.95
11.95
12.95
13.95
14.95
15.95
16.95

.

II POlAROID CAMERA FILM

Entire Stock Reduced 20%

MENS
MENS
MENS
MENS
MENS
MENS
MENS

.

appointed
full time
Mrs. Phyllisa Harris
was
custodian as of May I.
The next re~ular meeting
will be on May 18at 7:30p.m.
Attending last night's session
were Supt. Bobby Ord, Clerk
Jane Wagner, ·and board
members Jack Bostick,
Robert Sayre, Denny, Evans,
Roger Adams and Dallas
Hill.

IJvews. . .in !Jriefsl

'

1 ~-----------.
.......
1
BARGAIN DAYS SALE

Traditiona,
Contemporary or
Early American

save -

.

L

Furniture Department 3rd Aoo1

~~~~t~~~lly

Boys 2.95 Knit Shirts

would go towards building an
addition to the high school
and installation of bleachers
in the gymnasiwn.
The board approved
graduation of 65 seniors on
May 24 and a trip to King's
·Island on May 8 by the
French Cltib witli money to be
taken from the club treasury
for the trip.
Projects of Band Boosters
were discussed with the
Booster representatives .

·:::::::::~::::~:=::~:;::::::;:;:::;:;:;~:·!·!·!-!·:·:·:·:·:-:~:~:~::~::::::::::~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~=::::::::::~

Sizes 3 to 7 for juveniles and 8 to 20 for
regular size boys.
.. .
.
Tank tops · school name shirts - rugby's number shirts.
Includes Our Entire Stock
Boys 1.95 Knit Shirts - - • • . 1.54

3.79
3.49
3.29
U9 . t

BARGAIN DAYS SALE!
TABLE LAMPS
FLOOR LAMPS
SWAG LAMPS

BOYS' BWE DENIM JEANS

Y.------.-.w. - ~-----

BARGAIN DAYS SALE!
SALE!

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

.

SALE PRICES

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

Reg. 5.95 Rose Plants . . . . •.
Reg . 5.45 Rose Plants
- .... .
Reg . 4.95 Rose Plants - . - . ..
Reg. 3.95 Rose Plants - - - . - •

BARGAIN DAYS SALE

Wranglers - Ely - and Mr . Leggs Brands.
Regular denims and pre-washed styles in
regulars - slims and huskies. Sizes 8 to 18.

_._._..._.....,.....,.........,._..,__._._..._._..._,__.....__.J

Activities of
Lung group for
year reviewed

Fashion
Fashion
Fashion
Fashion

June Murphy, employe of

tit Community Mental Health Center, is now able to
rticlpate In the Hike Bike for retarded citizens on May
15, since she won a bike in a drawing at Powell's Super

Some s_tyles have tops to matc;:h Sate Prices.

I

SALE PRICES

Mr. Taylor was born Aug .
1899, the son of the late

Paulene Ros e,
Ra c ine ;
Btondena Hudson, Racin e.;
Dor i s Wilson , Brook sv ill e,

II

Boys 5.95
Boys 6.95
Boys 7.95
Boys 8.95

·~ E;NTERS lUKE BIKE -

~----------·~--· .--....;.,._....;t

Sprin9 Coat in girls sizes.

17,

Taylor; four daughter s,

I
I

,.~~~~"'s~h~~~~. ~~"'" ~

Ta yl or , 76, Ra c ine , died
Wedn es day at Veterans
Memorial Hos pital .

John and Cecelia Mil ler
Tay lor He was al so preceded
in death by four sisters and
tw o brothers .
Mr . Tay lor is surv ived by
his wife, Velma Casto

Si:zes 8 to 1 8 in regu lars and sllms - a fine new
se lection . Flare legs . 100 per cen t cotton . co1ton
polyest er blends and denims.

I

BARGAIN DA Y.S SALE

ALLEN W. TAYLOR
RACINE - Allen W.

111.

"

BOYS' FASHION JEANS

Parle .

benefit event

e~~.,

lI

Friends may ca ll at the
cha pel any t ime after 2 p. m.

More listed in

'250

WOMEN'S SPRING SPORTSWEAR

..,._.._..._..~._.._.....,.._. __ ~----------..-.~

I

cluded Mrs. Charles Grant,
Gallipolis, and Mrs. Charles
Hayes, Pomeroy. New
members elec ted on the
Board of Directors inducted
Mrs.
John
Dobbins,
Gallipolis.

JOINTS

. BARGAIN DAYS SALE!

Y2 PRICE

!

executive committee in-

4"XUt FT.

1

Coordinates and se parates selected fre5m
our reg ular stock. Misses - Wom ens - Jun ior
sizes. Wh ile they last ...

Pomeroy , we r e tak en to
Veterans Memorial Hos pi tal.

Vin ton

BARGAIN DAYS SALE

4,

held a\ 2 p. m. Saturday at Ihe held Friday al 3 p.m. at
Wilkesv ill e Chapel of the Ewino Chaoet. Buri•l wil l be
Walker Funeral Home wi th ln Mei9s Memory Gardens .
lhe Rev. Ches ter J. Lemley Friends may call at lhe

Murri s Nea l, Sy bil Olin , Be tty
Hees, Lill ian Roush, Eddie off iciati ng . Burial wi ll be in
1\usse tl , Grover Slwc m ~ kcr,
Kar en Siders, Hcrbet·t Sitns, Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Andrew
Mrs. James Sims and son;
Micha el Tac kett , Ga ry Manning, Hutland; Mary Van
Thoma s. Diane Tomlin , Netta Me ter, M.iddl eport; Brian
l\1abel
Warn er , Le na
Welch , Diehl , Ra cin e;
Neimeyer, Letart, W. Va .;
M ~1rg are l. Wilson.
Harold Clark , Athens;
1Births, Aprll 28 1
Mr . e~nd Mr s. Jerr y Frances Sampson, Pomeroy;
Joh nson, daughter, Hulland ; Adeltne Heilman, Pomeroy;
Mr. ancl Mrs. David Ross, Wanda Swartz, PQmeroy.
DISCHARGED - Judith
daughter, Middleport .
Buckley, Martha Jesse, V. D.
Edwards, Cora Lollis.

De1nocrats

pallent, who was lak en lo
HMC. At 7: 10 p.m. Wed·
nesday, ,the squad went . lo

Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, for
the Pomeroy uni t which was
making a hospital run to
Parkersburg, and pi cked up
Adelin e Heilman , a medical
patient, who was taken to
VMH where she was ad .
mltted. At 5: 14 p.m. the
Middleport unit was called to
Route 7 near the Kin gs Arms

'

~-~--~~~---~-~-~--~-T--~~------~~-~~---~~ -

a medical

Area Deaths

I

One hurt in collision

Mf-trkin s,

Payne.

SALT LAKE CITY (UPI)
- Service station operator
Melvin D.munar might be
heir to $125 ,qtltlion because
he picked up a scruffy,
bleedlilg "bum" in Ute middle
of the Nevada ~sert eight
years ago.
"He said he was Howard
Hughes, bull thought he was
some bum," said Ute 31-yearold mechanic. " When I
dropped htmoffln Las Vegas,
he asked if I could loan him
some money and I think I
gave him a quarter."
Durrunar's helping hand
and Ute quarter apparently
wasn't forgotten.
On
Thursday,
a
handwrilten will purported to
be by Hughes left onesixteentlt Of the billionaire 's
estate to Dummar, now a
service staljon .operator in
the small norUtem Utah town
of Willard. ·
"! just hope it's true ,"

', ;

Saturday, May 1, 9:30 to 5 - Monday, May 3, 9:30 to 5

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

Wedne!-iclay aftern oon.

Pea r l

Bonnie

,:

·'

FRIDAY, APRIL 30, 9:30 TO 8 PM

mission will be $1 a person.

be avai l able during the sa le .

wi ll hold its re gular month ly
m ee ting Monday , May 3, 7. 30
p .m . at th e el em entary
sc hool . The band wi ll be in

•
;.

BARGAIN DAYS SAI.E

Robinson . Pomer oy. at 11·01
a.m . Thursday . She was

.1 '

Sunday for
legion hall

$88,520 collected from
delinquent tax lists

,

,,•

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