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                  <text>&amp;-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Feb. 21, 1977
r--- -- ----------------- - ---~

Carbon tet flak raising questions
Ualted Pft•IDtenalloal
the matter.
it's not necessary."
Dr. James Symoos. chief of
The threat Memed to be
Cincinnati EPA officials
An EPA figure quoted to the physical and chemical
over before it ever arrived. answered Lucen's charge by Fike shows that there had contaminants removal
Late Friday, the Environ· saying they could not possibly been 190 paris per billion of branch, in EPA's .Water
ment Protection Agency put mooitor the river for the the chemical in the water at Supply Research Divisioo in
'I'll the alert that 70 toos of hundreds of chemicals it one time, he said.
Cincinnati, said Sunday the
carbon tetrachloride were might cootain at any one
" If that's accurate, we'd city's water supply would be
flowinR down the Ohio River time.
have to drink 1,000 galloos of "checked throughout the week
at 12 miles a day from
In contrast, Elmer Fike, water to get one gram of the to determine how much of the
Huntington
W.
Va ., owner of the Fike Chemical material," he said. "In years pollutant entered the system.
threatening the water Co. in the industrialized past, we used to use carbon
He said testing so far, has
supplie:~ of cities throughout
Kanawha Valley of W. Va. tetrachloride for control of shown higher than normal
southern Ohio.
where EPA officials believe hookworkand tapeworm, aud con centra t ions of
By Saturday afternoon, the floating contagion began, things such as that."
tetrachloride . But the
however, the EPA waa saying said Sunday, "It's just like
Fike said caroon tetrachlo· increase ' is not considered
that the colorless, orderless the man who predicts the . ride posed nearly the same l]auordous and no boiling
poison had already passed by world's going to end. One day hazards as fluorid~ . An directive has been issued.
Cincinnati,
that
the he will he right. He'll never allowable ratio of one part
The federal EPA has
carginogenic chemical had be wrong. One day it will per millioo is dumped into declined to pinpoint the
been borne away by a end."
water supplies .daily as a source of the chemical.
suddenly fast.flowing current
"I'm not sure why we're tooth decay retardant - five However, the FMC Corp. was
in the river fed by melting getting so excited about it," times the amount of carbon sued more than a wee~ ago by
soow and rain.
Fike $aid about the carbon tetrachloride allegedly in the' the EPA for allegedly failing
By Sunday, EPA directions tetrachloride warblng. "It's water..
to test the water near its
to boil water before dril'lking all blown olit of proportion,
Still, Ohioans took precau· . South Charleston operation.
or cooking with it were and unfortunately, it's going lions this weekend. In Ports-.
An FMC spokesman noted
withdrawn In lrontoo and . to scare a lot of pe(&gt;pie when !llluth, grocery store owners that a teehnical crew and
Portsmouth . Moreover,
reported brisk sales of bottled helicopter were used to
officials in Louisville, Ky.,
distilled
water
and sample water this weekend.
'where the invisibile, floating
authorities were flooded with
" But," h~ added, 11 We
killer was supposed to strike
calls about under what continue to be confused about
next, said Sunday dilution
conditions and how long the details of the problem."
and evaporation had ended Veteram Memorial Hoepltal water pught to be boilt'rl .
•
Saturday Admissions any threat by now.
'
The · result is that some Vmas Lee, Racine; Barbara ·
Rose
officials are woodering if the Pierce, Racine;
EPA sounded a false alarm Hoover, Athens; Edna
aud sorrie Ollio townspeople Reeves, Albany; Minnie
Eric Diddle, son of Mr. and High School Tuesday, Feb.
are wondering if the EPA Johnson, . Pomeroy; Evelyn N'rs. Robert Pooler, Mid· 22, at 4 p.m.
didn't warn them a week too Hartley, Pomeroy; Harley dleport. Is a patient at
Children ' s Hosp it a l.
Hutton, Rutland.
ROCK SPRINGS - The
late.
Columbus. where he is regular meeting Qf the Meigs
Saturday Discharges -· Robert Rhodes, supervisor
scheduled to undergo surgery Band Boosters will be held
of the Portsmouth water Brian Taylor, Howara \Yednesday morning. Eric rs this evening at 7:30 p.m . in
treatment plant said Sunday Philiipa, Orne HyseD, Brenda a sophomore al Meigs High the band room at the hlgh
·
school.
.
he remembered a strange White, Clarence L!lngstreth, School.
taste and odor In the water Edna Wiggins, Rolland
The American Association
RACINE- Mllly Fisher, a
about 10 days ago, suggestio; . Terril.
of University Women will freshman at 01iQ University ,
Sunday Admissions - Ann meet at 7: JO p.m. Tuesday at daughter of e&lt;&gt;nnle Fisher for
the poison may have made it.
deadly trip earlier and Fleming, Long Bottom ; the home of N'rs. Carl Horky, the fall, quarter earned a 3.8
Delila Curtis, Pomeroy; 278 S. Fifth St., Middleport. average.
undetected.
Teresa Carci will present the
Rep. Tom Lucen, Mhio, Virginia Musser, Long ' program on " Bloom Where
The Candystrlpers will
from Cincinnati said Sunday Bottom; Eva Lawson, You're Planted ." A ·board meet
at 7 this evening at
he thinks the federal EPA Racine; George Morris, meeting will be held at 7.
Veterans Memor ia l Hospital.
and the offending industrial Pomeroy; John Mayes, New
The Middleport Literary
pollutor may have been Haven; Edna Wilcoxen, Oub will meet at 2 p.m.
N BA Stand ings
criminal negligent in the Pomeroy; Vera Congo, Port· Wednesday at the home ot By United Press International
Eastern conference
N'rs. Dwight Wallace. Mrs.
whole carbon tet affair. He land.
A11antic Division
Sibley Slack will ' review,
said he · wiD call for a
Sunday Discharges w. L Pet. GB
"
The
Letters
of
Rupert
Ph iladelphia 35 21 .625
Coogressional investigation Dawn Greene, James Durbin, Brook :"
Boston
29 / 8 . 509 61.1:1
and White House inquiry into Richard Duckworth,
NV Knicks
26 31 .456 9 11~
There will be a girls' Buffalo
Delmarva . Kirk, Roberta
21 35 .375 14
gymnasti C meet between NY Nets
18 40 .310 18
Marshall, Ethel Collins.
Central Division
\\\&gt;Ii ston and Meigs at. Meigs

Hospital News

Local news, in briefs,

Four more

· (Continued from page I)
Georgia Y. Smith, 28, Hillsooro, loot control of her car on
ice. The vehicle slid off the
left side · of the highway
striklng a tree. There was
moderate damage; no one
was Injured or cited.
A final accident occurred at
7:50 p.m. on US 35, where
Tina L. Riffle, 19, Leon, W.
Va, traveling east, lost
control of her car on ice. The
vehicle spun around striking
a concrete bridge. There was
moderate damage.

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Terry
Boggess, Gallipolis ; Cecil
Duncan, New Haven ; Mrs.
Loraine Crump, Leon; Mrs.
Robert Hawley and son,
Addison; James Love, .
Letart ; Mary Van Horn,
Point Pleasant; J.ames
Jeffers, Glenwood; Harmon
Scaggs, Dmlow, w. Va.:
Mrs. Cecil Sines, Point
Pleasant; Myrtle Neville,
Point Pleasant, and George
Lanier, Southside.
Birth - A daughter .to Mr.
llld Mrs. Michael Book, Point
Pleaaant.

News •• in Briefs
(Continued from page I)
liquor by the glass, beer and wine for consumption on and off
the rcemises, and location of state liquor stores. AU questions
must be answered ''yes" or "no." Mrs. Pope's bill would allow
any or aU of the questions to be placed on the ballot; some
could be left off.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -..
'

!

Area Deaths . l
I

1'RINA MARtE JOHNSON
LONG BOTTOM - Grave·
side rifts were conducted
tnday at 3 p.m. In the Sand
Hll cemetery here for Trlna

Marie Johnson. Infant
dough tor of Ronnie Dale and
Gino Marie Fleming John·
son, Rt. 3; l'l&gt;meroy, who died
at birth Fricloy evening In
Aeasant Valley Hospital.
Surviving are thf! patefnal

grandparents, IW . and Mrs.

.6rnenon Johnson, Portland ;

maternal grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs . John Fleming,
Columbus; paternal great.
·grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.

Barnett Sayre.
A retail merchant In Cot·
tagevll le and New Hoven tor
71 years. he was a member of
the New Haven United
Methodist Church and Lodge
No. 176 JOUAM.
He was preceded In death
by his wile, Cynthia May
Sayre In 1963.
Survivors Include three

daughters, Dora Margaret
Batley, Portland, Mich . ;
W.vle Leme Jaques, Beryl
Eileen Lawton, 'both of New
Haven; four sons, Ralel qh
Blaine, Elkins; Darrell

Layton, Lehigh Acres, Fla.;
Ointon Johnson. Portland, Dw ight Keith and Ralph
and N'rs. Ethel Larkins, Long · Maynard. both ot New
Bottom ; maternal great - Haven ; one brother, Virgil
grandmothers. Mrs. Ber tha
Deibert Sayre. Evans; 19
Harrison , Apple Grove, W. grandchildren. 11 · great·
Va., and N'rs. Milinle Carroll. grandchildren and two great.
Long Bottom.
great.grandchlldren.
Arrangements Yt1're under
Funeral services will be
dlrectl.on of thf White held Wednesday at the
Funeral· Home Jn . Coolville. Foglesong Funeral Home.
1: 30 p. m., with the Rev.
Ralph Mahoney. and Rev.
NELLIE MOSSMAN
John
oHlclotlng.
Nellie
Mossman, 80, Burial Campbell
will follow In the Qt.
POrter, died at the home of terbeln
Cemetery, Evans .
her daughter in New Marsh·
Friends
may call at the
fie!~ , Ohio at 11 p.m.
funeral home on Tuesday
Saturday.
2 to 4 p. m . and 7 to 9 p.
Born July 4, 1896 to the late !tom
m. A servia! will be con.
01arles and Kathryn Levlsay llucled
on Tuesday at 7:30 p.
Sprague, she was preceded In m. by Lodge No. 176.
death by her husband, Homer
Wossman .
She is survived by one
daughter, Mrs . Edward

IKothryn) Sable, New
Marshfield ; 1r1e sister, Mrs.

Helen Barnette, Marlon ; and
several nieces and nephews.

A member of the POrter
lkllted Nethodlst Church and

Fairview
News Notes

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
the church woman's society,
Edward,
Diana and Eric
she also . belonged to ·the
Hazel
Lawson,
Lawson,
Vinton Chapter, O'der ot
daughter Wilda, Michelle
Eastern Star No. 375.
Funeral services will be Lawson were Sunday guests
11.\&gt;dnesday. 11 a.m. at the fi Ji'lr. and Mrs. Harold
McCoy -Moore
Funeral
Home. Vinton, with the Rev. Lawson and son at Letart, W.
John Bryant officiating. Va.
Burial will be In Vinton
Mrs. Joe Manuel, son Sid
Memorial Park. Friends may visited . Mrs. Gary Wilford
call trom 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. and children, Mrs. Glorl!l
Tuesday at the funeral home. ,
Eastern Star servi ce will be Manuel at Racine. Lisa
conducted Tuesday evening Wilford accompanied the
all.
Manuels home . for a visit
Wednesday
afternoon.
SABRA CLARK
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Joe Manuel,
Sabra A. Clark, 82, Porter, .
died at the home of Mrs. Tim and Sid visited Mr. and
Robert Hemby at Evergreen Mrs. Marvin McGuire and
Sunday morning .
She was born July 6. 1895 In family at Middleport Sunday.
Oay Twp .. Gallia County, to Mrs. Manuel visited Mr. and
the late William Stewart and Mrs. Lewis Hudson, Mr. and .
Roma Anne Hamilton Craft. Mrs. Harry Roush recently.
W. L. Pet. GB She was preceded In death by
Mr. and Mrs. Russell
her husband. Guy Baird
Washington
33 24 ,579
Roush visited Mrs. Edna
Houston
31 /4 .5o.! 1
Oark.
Missionaries to
San Antonio
3 1 26 .544 2
Survivors Include two
Roush, Gladys Shields at
Cleveland
30 26 .536 2112 daughters.
M,rs.
Joe Racine Sunday evening.
New
Orleilns
24
32
:429
8,12
ak
!Beverly) Clark. Gallipolis;
A.t lenta
23 36 .390 11
David . Roush, Edward
spe in Racine
N'rs. Max IBetty Ann) Irion.
Western Conference
Rousb,
Rocky Hupp spent
Bradenton,
Fla
.;
one
Midwest
Divisio!l
.
W. L. Pc1. · Gli cfoughter.Jn.Jaw. Mrs. Bettie Sunday evening with Mr. and
RACINE - The Rev. and Denver
37 19 .661
Oark, Rt. 3, Gallipolis; eight Mrs. Dana Lewis Sunday
Mrs. Berge Najarian, Detroit
35 25 .583 4
grandchildren ; . one great11
evening.
Kansas Ci ty
30 29 .508 8 2 grandchild ;
a
niece,
missionaries to Jerusalem, Indiana
27 31 .466 11
Mr . . and Mrs. David
El
izabeth
Maclnturfl.
Jordan will speak at the Chi c ago
2A ] .4 .41A 14
Porter,
arid
several
other
Beaver,
son Abram of New
Milwaukee
20
42
,323
20
Olurcb of the Nazarene in
nieces and nephews. One son, Matamoras visited Sharon
Pacific Division
Racine, Feb. 22, at 7:30p.m.
William . three
W. L. Pel. GB Joseph
br:others and two sisters Roush Wednesday.
The Rev. Najarian was LOS Angeles 36 20 .6A3
Po rtl and
36 2.4 .600 2
Mrs. Edith Manuel visited
preceded her In death.
oom In Cairo, Egypt, at· Golden
State 32 26 .552 5
A
member
of
the
Porter
Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Bailey,
tended Nazarene Day School Seattle
30 30 .500 8
Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Bailey and
Phoenho::
26 31 .456 10 112 United Methodist Church and
in Jerusalem and graduated
a p~~st president of the church new baby at Long Bottom
. Saturday's ReSults
woman's society, she was a
fran Nazarene Theological NY Nets 86 NY Knlcks 85
retired employee of the recently.
Clevelilnd 92 Phoen ix 88
Seminary In Kansas City, Mo. washington
Detro it 95
Gallipolis State Inst itute. a
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Miller,
In 1960, alter pastoring six Kansas City 105
115 Houston 109
retired matron ot the Middleport, visited Sharon
years on the Florida district, Buffalo 10l Seattle 100
children's home and had
133 Portland 124
the couple began missionary Denver Sunday's
ooned and operated Clark's and CUidy Rou.sh Sunday.
Results
Restaurant In Gallipolis.
careers at Beirut, Lebimon. NY Knicks 100 NY Nels 80
Funeral services will be
Philadelph ia 112 Cleveland Ill
San Antonio 129 New Or leans 2:30 p. m. Wednesdav at the
109
FOUR CAW TAKEN
NcCoy·WetherhoJt.Moore
Los Angeles 108 Wash ington 101 Funeral Home, Gallipolis,
RACINE - The Racine ER Denver
111 Atlanta 95
with the Rev . John Bryant
Squad answered four calls Boston lU Golden State 112
officiating
. Burial will be In
109 PhOeni~e 107
over tbe weekend : On Detroit
Mound Hill Cemetery.
Indiana 135 Seattle 115
saturday at 9 a.m. they
Friends . may call at the
Monday's Game
Ind iana at Buffalo
fl.&lt;lerol home from 2 to 4 and 7
Games
fo 9 p, m. Tuesday .
transported
Barbara
Pierce PhoenixTuesdly's
to Veterans
Memorial
at Buffalo
Hospital with a possible New Orleans at NY Kn icks
ARTHUR E. TUCKER
Ange!es at San Antonio
lroken ankle and at 4:55p.m. Los
Arthur
Edward Tucker, 62,
Golden State at Chicago
Route 1, Rutland, died
Joseph Swain, 92, a medical Houston ilt Denver
Saturday at St. Joseph
patient, was' taken to Camden : Boston at Por tla nd
Hospital, Parkersburg, W.
aark Hospital. Sunday at
Va.
Those born on this day are
I :21i a.m. Ann Fleming, 41, a
Mr. Tucker was preceded
under
the sign of Pisces. .
In death by his parents,
medical patient, was taken to
American educator Allee George E. and Vlrg InIa E.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Tucker ;
three
Freequ~n Palmer was born Estep
&amp;!! was Sarah Congo.
a
sister,
his
wile,
trothers,
Feb. 21, 1856.
Helen Smith Tucker; a step·
lrofher, and illS stepmother.
N'rs. Hattie Tucker.
Surviving are a brother.
Arvll Tucker, Columbus; a
sister, Nrs. Luther Imboden.
Rutland ; two ste~sons .
01ar les and Kenneth Boggs.
two stepbrothers. Donald
Covert, Pomeroy, and Dana
Covert, Laurel Cliff; three ,
stepsisters, Mrs. Ethel
Johnson , Columbus; Mrs .
William Hubbard, Syracuse.
and Mrs. Leona Sickle,

Vanilla sweetens
sour refrigerator. .
DEAR POLLY - Tbe door

to my upright freezer was left
open for two days when the
freezer w~s full of food.
Naturally everything was
spoiled and had to he thrown
away. This left the freezer
with an odor that will not go
·away, even though I have
washoo it with baking soda
and vinegar several times. I
do hope you or one of the
readers can help rne. -ANN.
DEAR ANN ·· Place
several open bowls of vanilla
in various parts of the
freezer, close the door and
leave for a few days. That
should help,·or have you tried
charcoal? ·POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - I am an
elderly lady nearing 80. When
shopping · aL Lhe super·
market, even if I ask them to
please nul put too much in
me -bag, they simply do not
liBten. I often ask for another
lag and change them myself.
I wonder why they persist in
putting all tin cans in one bag
and even add a half gaDon ol
milk.
- Also I have five pairs of
cuticle scissors that have
come apart. I wonder if someone can tell me how I cim
put them together again. WRETTA.
DEAR WRETTA - I am
sure some.one will come to
your rescue and have some
ideas as to how you may fix
your scissors.- POLLY.
DEAR POLLY -Instead of
having to wash all ¥Our
dishes at house cleanin~

JUST RECEIVED
.

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Automatic portable
electric Heaters - Fan

Forced Heat . Operate
on 110 Volts.
Choose baseboard style
with thermostat control
or portable type with
dial control heat
. selector and automatic

thermostat .

~ Farmers
ooar

Bank

MEIGS THEATRE
Q.OSED FOR

POMEROY, OHIO

$40,000.00 Maxi mum · Insurance lor Each
Depositor . Member Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation.

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0.

VACATION
WAltH FOR
OPENING DATE

Feb. 6 when the family heard
her screaming. Her night·
gown had caught fire , ap·
parently from a firepla ce.
She ran from the den into the
living room where she was
caught by her grandfather
who put out the lite. Albert
Roush, the grandfather, was
con fined
to
Veterans
Memorial Hospital for a time
with second degree burns of
ooth hands suffered in saving
the life of this granddaughter.
It is not known ,·at this tiine,
oow much money will · be
needed to pay for Christina's
oospitalization. Skin grafting
is expected to be required.
However, the room at the
center is $140 a da y and there
are four doctors and twd
specialists visiting L'hristina
oo a regular basis.
Mr. and Mrs. Roush have
attempted to ascertain some
information on the coots to he
involvea. At th is time, they

INews. . .in Briefsl\
w

~

By United Press International
PHILLIPSBURG, KAN. - SOME PEOPLE think sighting
the first rolin of the year Is a sure sign of spring, but not Henry
~.

Top shelf 16" '8".
Step shelves 16" x 5".

SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA - A TEAM OF THREE
physicians said Monday a whiff of vinegar haa a ''miraculous"
effect on vlctlma of carbon mononde poisoning. The team said
victims of the toxic g&amp;S - numerous In Korea because of
reliance on coal briquets to.heat rooms -can be revived In two
to 10 minutes by waving a few drops of vinegar under their
noses.
The method w&amp;S 100 per cent effective In . 40 tests
performed on humans, dogs and rabbit.! who had fainted alter
being exposed to carbon monOiide for an extended period, the
docton aald. The medical team said lt did not know exactiy.
how the cure wor\18, but that acetic acid In the vinegar
IIJIPBI'enUy Increases the blood's ability to carry o:zygen to
vital organs.

$3395 .
95
,,

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on hand! Space for all your flowery friends
and cherished curios. Choose from three styles
in walnut or map le finish. Made of simulated
wood·grainec,1 vinyl-veneer laminated to particle
board. All with solid wood turnings.

INGELS FURNITUR£
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MIDDLEPORT, 0.

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Satellite shelvee gv," diomotel;
No tools necessary to atsemblt.

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.•.. .
•

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The northw~rn Kansas fanner says a sure sign of
spring hops, not Olea, and II he's correct aprlng aoon may be
here. Kalaer said he's fouud his first grasshopper of the
aeaaon, a sturdy lhree-lncher. Kaiser said he is keeping his
harbinger of aprlng in a glass jar with a moistened paper
towel.
·

27" x 29" high overall.

1116 N. 2ND AVE.

A public fund drive,
sponsored by the Women 's
Auxiliary of the Middleport
Fire Department, got un·
derway today for 11-year-&lt;!ld
Christina Smith who was
severely burned on Feb. 6.
Christina, a fif\IJ grader at
the Pomeroy Elementary
School, is confined to the
Burns Clink of Children's
Hospltaj in Columbus. She is
now In isolation and is expected to remain there for six
.weeks hefore being moved
into Q private room, .as
required due to the nature of
her injuries. A nurse is with
her arolind the clock.
Christina is gaining som e
feeling sensation in the ends
ri her fingers. It was at first
· feared that the hands might
have to be amputated. ·
Christina was in the den of
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Roush, near Pomeroy,
with whom she resides, on

·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::;;:::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::~::::::!:::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::;:::::::

$39

at y

en tine

have only been told by ihe
center personnel that
treatment will be uvery
expensive.'' .
The Roushes are expected
to confer with hospital per·
sonnet again this ·week to get

ll)me

idea

on

money in-

volved. Mr. and Mrs. Roush
are ·currently staying in
Columbus, alternating when
possible, to he near their
granddaughter. It is required
by the center .that a member
of the family stay close by 24
hours a day.
Mr. and Mrs. Roush have
some insurance which will
help cover expenses for
Christina and the Shriners
which support the Burns
Center have applied for help
for Christina. The extent of
help which might be given is
not known at this time.
However, Mr. and Mrs.
Roush have indicated that
they do not want arty of t~e

.

funds raised through the
public fund drive to help with
the extra expenses they are
incurring to be near
Christina. They want any
public contributions ear·
marked solely for Christina's
hospital fund. They have also
indicated they hope to set
some accurate figures soon
so that funds given by the
public will not go over the
amount actuaUy needed.
Serving as chairman of the
fund drive for the auxiliary is
Mrs. Marilyn Epple and Mrs.
Phyllis Baker is serving as
cochairman . Residents
wishing to contribute to the
fund ll}ay send their
oonations to Mrs. Epple at 48
North Fourth St., Middleport,
45760.
Cards may be sent to
Christina at the Center but
Dowers are not accepted.
Christina has third degree
IJ,trns over 50 percent of her

1110re often.
Kindergarten bus drivers
The third person to be resigned last November and
employed in the central office the board refused to accept
should hold a supervisors' the resignations. A com·
certificate or a local promise was reached though,
superintendent's certificate, with subltitute drivers taking
Dowler advised. He satd that the routes 111til Feb. I. When
the position will be advertised Feb. I came, however, there
inmediately. In his new role, were no drivers for the
Morris will be directly kindergarten buses. Two
responsible to Dowler.
other drivers did not resign
Before moving Into the earlier and will remain on
executive session, which was their routes .
recommended by board
The board failed to hire
member Robert Snowden, the Faye Manley as a kin·
OOard look a number of ac· dergarten bus driver last
tloos on other matters.
night. Mrs. Manley had been
Among them was raising ooe of the six drivers who had
the pay for kindergarten bus submitted resignations last
&amp;-Ivers from $3.02 an ·hour to November. Board members
.$4.56 an hour, the rate which Snowden and Virgil King said
is paid for driving regular that they would not hire Mrs.
achool bus routes. The ooard Manley until she appeared
then awarded the kin· · before the board and tnld
dergarten bus during jobs them why she bid for the Job
which had been put' up for she had resigned from last
bids among the drivers.
Novemher. The board agreed
Hired were Norman Wood, to use a substitute on the
replacing Esther Black; route until Mrs. Manley of·
Ernest Wood, replacing fers the explanatioo.
Letha Cotterill; Teresa
Laot night the board aho
Cremeans for the route of paned
a
resolution
Olarlotte Dillard; Mary King autborlling Supt. Dowler to
for the route of Linda Morris, proceed with placlag a 7.5
and BiD Ratliff for the route mill tax levy renewal on the
of Pauline Snowden.
J1D1e ballot. Dowler pointed

CHRISTINA SMITH

oody and second degree
oorns over five percent of her
oody.
Checks written to help with
the fund are to be made out
payable to "Christina Smith
Hospital Fund." Mrs. Epple
wiD establish an account at
the Citizens Bank under the
fund name and will dispense
the money on behalf of the
auxiliary.

out that unless the levy Is
renewed then the diStrict will
mt he ellgtble to receive.state
foundation funds. Without
such funds, of oourse, the
district would not be able to
operate.
The resignation of Lynne
Crow as . assistant to the
clerk, effective today, was
accepted and she was em·
(ioyed as a part-time em·
(ioye in the office to work a
minlmom of 20 hours a·week
at $3 .21i an hour. Mrs. Jane
Wagner, clerk-treasurer of
the district, spake highly of
Mrs. Crow's work.
Rebecca L. King was udded
to the substitute teachers list
· for elementary work and
Mildred Long, Middleport,
was employed as a regular
cook at Bradbury. She has
been serving as a substitute
cook In the district. The ooard
hired Karen Merritt, Dexter
City, Ohio, as Spanish
teacher for the remainder of
the year at the high school.
She Is a graduate of Miami
University.
Theooore T. Reed, Jr., was
reappointed to a seven year
term on the Pomeroy·
(Continued on page 12)

.Four firms -to testify

· CHARLESTON, W. Va.
(UPI) - Statements today
from four chemical firma in
the Kanawha Valley were
expected to help · West
Virginia ~Water resource
officialll plnpolni the origin of
WNOON -DR: DAVID OWEN, AN UNTRIED and a carbon tetrachloride mass
relatively unlmown min!llter In the Foreign Office, stepped into uiat a federal agency claims
the pr111111&amp;1ous job of foreign aecretary today, only 10 years Boated down the Ohio River.
after he entered poDIIcs. At 38, he Is the youngest person to
No harmful effects were
hold the poll alnoe Anthony Eden In 1938.
reported in any towns on the
Prime Minlllter JIIIIIes Callqhall named him 19 the Job Olllo, but the Environmental
late MClllday In a small cabinet reehuffle forced on him by the Protection Agency threw
death Sltla'day of Ferelgn Secretary Anthony Crosland. them into a state of alarm
Q'olland had aulfered a lltroke sb: days earlier and never Friday by reporting that 70
reclined oolllciousnela. Private fiUleral aervicea were held tons of the chemical were
Mmdly. Owen'• appointment was a major surprise.
rce!H!IIt In the river in a 75mile 11188S .
BERkELEY, CALIF. - A STRONG EARTHQUAKE
-Neither the EPA nor state
Mmdly rigbt llruck the Sierra Nevada about 60 miles aouth· officials would blame any
111111 of Lake 'l'ahoe, the University of California apeciflc plant lor the alleged
Se~aDG~r..,tlic Laboratory reported.
spiU.
.
The lr«Dor regiltered U on the Richter acale and was
John HaD, director of the
llllltered 1110 miles ·~ of llelteley.....near Bridgeport, Calif., water resources division for
(Continued on page 12)

the West VIrginia Natural
Reaources Department, said·
the chemical had to come
frlllll ooe of .four places- two
plants on the Ohio above the
mouth of the Kanawha, an
FMC Corp. plant, or Diamond
Shamrock Corp. at nearby
Be De.
"I think I have the thing
pretty well wrapped up, but I
haven't seen all the
statements and so forth and I
won't see them until
tomorrow ," Hall said
Tuesday.
see resulta . of water
samplings by tbe EPA's
office in Wheeling.
Over the weekend, the FMC
plant conducted its own
investigation, sending a
teehnical crew and helicopter
unit out to test water. The
finn has been named in a
lawault by the EPA for

Fifteen Cents
Vol 28, No. 218

More gas cOming
to large users

Hospital fund launch
for Christina Smith

Immediate action to the quality of instruction, the
14&gt;grade the quality of in· curriculum, and look into
structioo and the curriculum participetion in more federal
as well &amp;!! investigate ways of ji'Ogr~ms .
A third person will be hired
!lllre participation In federal
rcograms was taken by the who will work with the non·
Meigs Local School District .certified employes of the
Board of Education Monday district that is, handling
maintenance, cafeterias and
right.
transportation
problems
Following an "executive"
sessloo, Charles L. Dowler, which Morris has been dolhg.
superintendent, reported that The new employe will also
the position of assistant deal with non certified lllbor
superintendent of the district, negotiations. Dowler said the
now held by Dan Morris, will third employe will allow him,
be abolished and that Morris as superintendent, to get into
wiD go to work on Improving the schools of the district

Memorial

Hospital In Pomeroy.
Born September 18. 1887, In
Cottageville, he was the son
of the late Jasper and Martha

.TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22,1977

Carter total of UIU bllllon would still be atmoot ''~ billlon
higher than the current Pentagon budget.
In addition to cutting back Initial development of the Bl from
eight to five planes, be called for slowdowns In strategic
mlaalles, weapons rcocurement and production of Fl5 fighter
jets and asked· Congress to reduce the size of the Naval
&amp;serve by 40,1100 persona ''without Impairing effectiveness."
In the energy field, Carter rejected long-term research ana
development for nuclear projects In exchange for Immediate
COillei'Vatlon, consumer-aid and petroleum storage eflorts. He
aaked for $800 mlllloo more than Ford did.
He said a long-range program would be sent to Congress by
spring. But in the meantime, Carter said be wanted initial
funding for $2 bllllon In loan guarantees to encourage energy
conservation me&amp;Sures, Including home Insulation for lowincome persons and grants to states to represent c0118111ller
interests at hearings on utility rate Increases.
"The propoaed acceleration in the petroleuwn storage program wiU provide earlier protection from poeslble future
disruptions In world petroleum supplies," Carter said.
The petroleum industry haa ~rojected that the United Sta•es
(Continued on page 12)

'

•

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

there was not enough time to make major changes in the GOP
proposal.
Carter's proposed $19.4 bllllon Increase would boost the
budget deficit only $10.7 bllllon because he rejected FQrd's
plan for a permanent tax cut. Carter's econOIIIic plan features
a onHhot $50 rebate for every American thla April which wiU
impact the current, or fillcal 1977 budget.
The President said he is opUmlsttc the economy wiU grow~
fast enough to compensate for contlmdng, baslcaUy, the
current tax structure.
Carter said the western drought and record cold east of the
Rocky Mountains thla winter had caused higher
unemployment and factory cloaqs,-which slow the nation's
economic recover}'.
But, he said, the "overaD adverse effects of the severe cold
weather will be relatively moderate and temporary."
·Carter proposed $1.6 bllllon to Increase the number of subs!·
dlzed housing units by about 50,000 next year. In a supplement
to current spending, Carter asked for $9.6 billion to Increase
housing units for low Income Americans by 165,000 - 60 per
cent - hefore ChristiJUIS.
While he cut $300 million from the Ford defense package , the

Schools administration reorganized

Elberfelds In ·Pomeroy

RALEIGH 8. SAYRE
NEW HAVEN, W. Vo. Raleigh Butcher"'Sayre, 89, of.
New Hoven, died Sunday at
ffle ' Veterans

proposala "Important fli'Sl steps toward a federal government
that is more effective and responsive to ow: people's needs."
In other Important changes, Carter proposed :
replace the $440 blllion package submitted by his predecessor
a month ago.
- holding Medicare premimuma at their current level fi
In one of his most controversl!ll dectslons, Carter proposed $'1.20 inatead of allqwlng them to climb to $7.70 In July and $8.10
halting 19 water resource projects Including one In his home · next year as required by law.
- adding 1100 employes at the Envlroomental Protection
state of Georgia. Carter said the projects were ton expensive
Agency for supervision of poisonous sulat.ancea and $0lld
and enviroomentally unsound,
··
·
Although Carter dl8cussed a llmit of about 9 per cent a year w&amp;Stes.
- cootinulng for another year rcov!Jlons for unemployment
for Increased hospital fees, HEW Secretary Josepb Califano
.
aald the size of the celling Is "negotiable;"
' benefita up to 26 weeks.
- a $458 JiJIIIion Increase in aid to the Middle Eaat with an
The naUon's health bill mere than tripled in the past decade
and now averages $8311 a year fer every man, woman and chUd. undetermined amount going to Israel, and phasing out of the
"Much of the Increase has reiu!ted from health cost Cuban refugee program.
"The 1978 budget Ia essentially still President Ford's
Inflation," Carter said. "Without cost restraints, federal
spending for Medicare and Medicaid alone would climb 75 per budget," said Carter, who stumped on a promise to balance
federal spending and Income by 1981. He previously announced
.cent be.tween 19?8 and 1~ from $38 billion to $66 billion."

billion budget lor the fillcal year, which begins Oct. I. It would

Houaewarn - 1st Floor

Ewing Funeral Home with
the Rev . Amos Tillis of.
flclatlng . Burial wltl be In
Gilmore Cemetery. Friends
mey call at the funeral home
at any time.
·

don't ~~n M~ to sce?J one loor inside the ~nkl So neJII time
you wAnr tOSdve rime. co m e i\S)'OU .\te, to our drille -ln window!

.

SHIPMENT
ELECTRIC HEATERS
--

Funeral services will be
held at 1 p.m. Tuesday at the

slneror put on your best dress. So for your con11enH!nce. we ot~r
d~· ln b.v~klng. Just drive up ..• or W.llk Ufl ... to our window,
Md we 'll process your deposit or withdrc1wal ii.S quick as a wink I
No mor~ st.mdlng on lines whe n )'Ou're pu;•ssed foi rime. You

time, cut pieces of plastic
1rom dry cleaners bags. Use
them to cover the dishes so
they stay clean. I am always
looking for ways to save
work. Thls does It for me aud
even keepa the shelf paper
clean.-GAYNELLE.
DEAR POLLY - The. imly
piece of my children's habv
clothes I ever kept was a lacy
shirl that I have had for 2li
years. I did not want to do
away with it, ·so I bought a
deep picture frame of the cor·
rect size. I framed it to hang
over my daughter's bed. I
have had so many compliments on this that I
thought It might give some. me else an Idea for saving
sentimental pieces of baby
clothes.- YUANNE,
DEAR POLLY - I put
homemade cookies in the
crisper In my refrigerator to
keep them moist and fresh,
rather than storing them in a
cookie jar where they Wl&gt;uld
dry out and lose their flavor.
(PoUy's note.- This is not for
cookies \haL should stay crisp
but the moist ones.) EVELYN. .
DEAR POLLY- Use a well
washed discarded toothbrush .
to smooth out ·make-up
around the hairline and to
remove any \hat clings to the
edge of the hair. The
toothbrush will also ·smooth
every wispy hair around the
face after you use hair spray,
and gives it alinished profes·
slonallook. ·MARY B.

Elberfelds .In Pomeroy

sergeant major at the time of
Ns retirement.

We 're not fussy. We reoi\lite that you don't hnve -'II day to spend
on br~nklng. And mc\ny time s you don't hc\ve the time to hire il

He said controla would cut hospital bills by $2.4 bllllon In

ByLJOONARDCURRY

WASHINGTON (UPI)- President Carter proposed a $19.4 1978, whether paid by federal, state or private insurance or by
billloo in&lt;nUe In the 1978 Ford budget, with less emphasis on lndlvidualll who have no Insurance.
Calling for slowdowns in development of the controversial
defense and more oo energy, houstng and health - including
Bl Bomber and stralegJc missiles, Carter libeled hls budget
llrice cootrola on h011pltals.
Carter 8ent a message to Congress today, requesting a $459.4

Akron, and a number of
nephews and cousins.
Mr. Tucker was a veteran
of World War tl and the
I&lt;Drean Contllct and was a

Come As You Are.

Carter budget $19.4 billion more than Ford's

Polly's Pointers

allege&lt;I!Y falling to routinely
sample the water. A triallB to
be held in Huntington.
One veteran cbemlst in the
Kanawha Valley Said the
amount
of
carbon
tetrachloride the EPA
claimed waa In the water
amounted to one-fifth the
amount of fluoride purposely
put Into drinking water.
In the aftermath ol the
EPA's grim warnq, some
people, Inc I u dIng Ironton
and Chesapeake, Ohio,
residents continued to boU
water before consumption.
Water samples taken by the
EPA at Huntington, at the
mouth ol the Kanawha and
above the mouth of the
Kanawha at Pomeroy, Ohio,
lndjcated only nonnal trace
amounts of the chemical,
Hall said.

Subst.antlal conservation
by r esidential and small
commercial gas customers,
an~ some improvement In
gas supply, will enable
Colwnbia Gas of Ohio to
make more industries that
cannot use alternate fuel.
The company said today
that heginning March I and
until further ' notice, curtailment of commercial
customers that use more than
a million cubic feet of gas a
month will be reduced from
tiS per cent to 50 per cent.
Curtailment of large in·
dustrial users without
alternate fuel capability will
be reduced from 85 per cent
to 70 per cent.
Other curtailment the
company currently has in
effect wUl not change.
Today's action is being
taken under new curtailment
gyidelines established
Friday, February 18 by the
Ohio Public Utilities Com·
mission at the request of
Colwnbla Gas .
White,
Marvin
E.
Colwnbus, Chairman of the
e&lt;&gt;ard of Colwnbia Gas of
Cl!lo, Said it would be im·
possible for Columbia to
jl'edict what impact this
change will have on
operations of individual
schools, businesses, and
industries.
"Each customer will have
to evaluate the amount ri gas
made available by this
change and how it affects
facilities and operations.
Some may be able to resume
operations immediately;
others may not be able to
reopen at all,';· White said.
White praised Columbia's
me million residential and
small commercial gas
customers throughout the
state for their conservation
efforts. He said Ohioans
should be proud of the way
they have pulled together to
help overcome severe energy

Big 3 in
best of
all years
DETROIT (UPI) - The
U.S. auto industry's "Big
Three" - General Motors,
Ford and Chrysler
climaxed their long ctimb up
frlllll a two-year slump with
record profits totaling $4.3
billion In 1978.
Fllianclal analysts are predicting even higher profits
from the industry this year in
the order of nearly $5 bllllon II
new car sales continue to
strengthen.
Chrysler, whose six
=secutive quarterly !oases
totaling $3311 million were
nearly a U.S. corporate
record, was the last of the
"Big Three" to report
improved eainlngs fer 1978.
Ita financial report Issued
Monday showed a record
$422.6 million profit - the
Industry's biggest
turnaround frlllll the previous
year.
.
&lt;llrysler Chairman John
Riccardo and President
(Continued on Pll' 12)

shortages brought about by
the coldest winter in the
history of Ohio and the
nation.
He stressed, however, that
it would be necessary ·for
Columbia customers to

continue to keep thermostats
turned lack If the company is
to be able to continue to
provide the additional gas to
\hose schools, businesses,
and industries that need it so
desperately.

Profit figure
is misleading
says Columbia
CHARLESTON, W. Va.
(UPI) - Federal Power
Commission records reveal
that
Colwnbia
Gas
TraiiSQlission Corp. coDected
more than twice Its usual net
income last December, but
the utility says the figures are
misleading.
A spokesman for Columbia
G&amp;S, which supplies more
tl)an 80 utilities • In seven
states, ~lalms the profits will
be offset by drastic rollbacks
in supplies to customers
during the abnormally 'cold
winter.
Published Monday by
Scripps-Howard newspapers,
the FPC recorda show profits
of $41.2 million for Colunibia
last December. In the same
month a year ago, the
corporation accrued $17.5
million.
Considering profits of one
month alone, however,
ooesn't present a true picture
of Columbia's finances, the
,spokesman said.
"BasicaUy ," he said, ''you
start out with ao much gas
and we're just getting the
income earlier, because of
the cold weather."
Colwnbia · h&amp;S about the
same amount of gaa to seD
this winter as last year, the
spokesman said. The firm
probably wiU have to invest a
huge chunk of the additional
funds In replenishing storage
fielda this spring and surruner
to prepare for next winter, he
added.
Columbia Transmission
marketed 121 billion cubic
feet of natural gas in

River's ice
about gone
Press
By
United
lalel'lllltlonal
The National Weather
Service ·reports that nearly
aU the Ice oo the Ohio River
that halted traffic sever~
· weeks ago, has melted away.
Officials aald Monday ice in
nearly aU of the Ohio River
tributaries remalna poised
above the main stem with
reported thickness of up to
two feet.
Tributary lee Is expected to
weaken and begin moving as
the very warm air forecast to
move into the Ohio Valley
arrives from the .southwest
today.
..
Some large trains of the
remaining thick lee probably
will enter the Ohio River later
thia week as garges and jams
on the tributaries begin to

move .

December, 1975, and 139.5
billion cubic feet during the
same month last year, tbe
FPC records showed.
An earlier check of FPC
records Indicated that
Columbia's profits for last
October and November were
$21i million, .but were $3.2
million for the same months
in 1975, according to Scripps·
Howard.
Scripps-Howard quoted a
company official, Thomas
Ryan, as saying the near-$25
million
boost
during
December included some $18
million through increased
saies produced by the severe
weather and about $6 million
via higher rates.
.
, Colwnbia Transmission ac·
quired nearly $58o million in
revenues in the fourth
quarter of 1976, compared
with $393 million for the aarne
period of 1975, according to
an earnings statement issued
by Columbia's office in
Wilmington, DeL

Young man

killed by
Timberhead
MASON, W. Va. - A 19year-&lt;!ld Mason man was
lil\lllly injured in a freak
large accident on the Ohio
River near Cincinnati
Monday evening.
Prmounced dead at the ·
scene by a Clermont County
coroner was Jerald Loper, a
deckhand for the IndianaMichigan Barge Line Co. of
Cedar Grove, W. Va. According to reports from
Cincinnati Radio Statlonl
WLW Loper was killed when
he w&amp;S,struck In the head by a
ttmber-llead while his boat
was traveling through the
Mendahl Locks near Moscow,
Cl!lo. His death has been
ruled accidental.
Funeral arrangements,
mder the direction of the
Foglesong Funeral Home,
are incomplete.
A IW76 graduate of Wahama
111gb School, Loper's survivors .include his mother,
Susie Hall, Mason; a sister,
Susan Coleman, Rutland;
grandmother, Dorothy
Queen, Mason, with whom he
11111de his borne and a great·
grandmother, Elizabeth
Jeffers, Mason.
His father , John F. Loper,
ll'eceded him in death.

�2-'lbe Dilly Sllnllnel. Mlddle!'O~W 0 .. 'l'ueldly, Feb. 22, 19TI

Wiloiife· Week
Editorial comment, . •
IS March 20-26
opinion, features
-

He's bound to come out sooner or later
Reports of uie return to public llle of
Hlchard Nixon will, it is hoped, prove to be
greatly exagge111ted.
The Republicans need him like they need
to l&lt;~~e another d()Z(!n seats In Concress. The
country needs him like it needs another Russian wheat deal.
There is, to be sure, little prospect that
Nixon will ever again seek or hold elective
office, or ever again exercise any influence
in the party he so grievously wounded. But a
nwnber of friends of the disgraced president
have been dropping hints that he may make
at least a limited comeback.
Kansas Sen. Robert Dole; for instance,
who wu President Ford's running mate,
suggests that Nixon might filld some acceptable role in .the field of foreign affairs
because even his adversaries admit that
"he elida lot of good ill this area."
·
But it is hard to imagille .Jinuny Carter
employing Nixon's services, even though he
did invite the former president to the inauguration u a protocol courtesy.
According to other sources, Nixon is setting great store by a series of four 90-mlnute
television interviews with David Frost that
are to be aired this spring. He believes the
public is ready to put the "mistakes" he
made in perspective and to listen to his side
of the Watergate story.
Yet he had plenty of opportunities to teU
his side of the story while he was stiU president, but chose instead to continue tO try to

P~h

con

tl)e American people. Can the public,
which is stlll recovering from Watergate,
swaUow six more hours of Nixon on television, even if it wiU be rerun time?
Then there is Mr. Nixon's book, which he
his been working on since he went into exile
at San Clemente and which is scheduled oo
be published next fall, with earlier seriallzaUon in the New York Times - the same
newspaJ,er he tried to prevent from
publishing the Pentagon Papers.
"It's inevitable he's going 00 come out at
some time," says Rep. Charles Wiggins of
Calllornia,oneofNixon'sfaithful-t&lt;rthe·~md

defenders on the House Judiciary Conunittee during the 1974 impeachment hearings.
"I don't expect him to remain a recluse."
Neither does anyone else. Neither, unfortunately, do many people expect
anything resembling true penitence from
Mr. Nixon, or look for anything but the same
self-serving statements that characterized
his tast dismal days in office.
If Richard Nixon does return to public life,
it will be on the order of the late Duke of
Windsor, another pathetic and useless
figure whose comings and goings were solely of curiosity value. Or like the Russian
emigree nobility who inhabited the social
salons of Europe after the revolution.
They, too, had their little circles of retaillers and admirers. They, too, dreamt of
past days of glory. And they, too, were never
able to admit they did anything to cleserve
their fate .

button stopping pain

By CHARLES S. TAYLOR
ATLANTA (UPI) - Some
types of pain can now be
stopped with the push of a
button.
The push-button control of
pain is made possible by the
use of a poCket-&amp;zed electric
· generator that can be easily
carried around in tbe
clothing. It reduces by . aa.
much as 75 per cent the need
for drugs, according to
Atlanta surgeon Dr. Joseph
Bussey Jr.
The device is caUed the
Transcutaneous Electrical
Nerve Stimulator and is sold
by seven medical supply
houses.
BasicaUy, a patient using
the TNS pushes a button when
he hurts and an electrical
charge confuses the affected
nerves into not sending a
"hurt" signal oo the brain.
Manufacturers say TNS relieves
pain
without
interfering with other
functions of the brain an~ the
patient can
maintain
complete molility, mental
• acuity and the use of all five
senses. There are no harmful
side effects, they said, ezcept
for occasional allergenic
reaction to the cmducting gel
placed m the skin.
• Bussey said twin electrodes
·• are placed m the surface Of
· : the skin in designated areas
. · of the body or over major
nerve trunks. A batteryope rated transistorized
generator delivers a variety
of electrical plises through
•. the skin. Adjustable dials m
the generator regulate the
strength, pulse width and
pulse rates.
Busaey bas been using TNS
as the primary method Of
pain relief following surgery.
He believes be is the only
surgeon in the ·Atlanta area
usillg the device to treat. postoperative pain.

He calls TNS a "significant
·development in the control of
pain. He said it is the first
thing that's come out in a long
time" In that field.
In addition to a 75 per cent
reduction in the use of drugs
to control pain, Bussey said,
TNS "reduces post-operative
cOnlplications." If adjusted
properly, he says, the device
is capable of interrupting any
kind of pain cycle.
Because of its mobility,
some persons who have a
continuing type of pain wear
the device during their dayto-day activities aod keep it
on constantly. Others,
according to BUIIIIey, use it
for up to six hours daily and
then are free of pain for hours
afterwards.
The Department of Health,
Education and Welfare has
approved TNS as an
acceptable form of therapy
and Medic~e patients can
now be treated with lt at
government expense.
Cost of the device ranges
from $325 to $400 and can be
purchaaed by prescription
only. Some patients are
Irea ted with lt at their
docoor's office while others,
after Instructions from their
physlclai)S, may operate it
themselves.
The British Medical
Journal, while citing its
benefits, said there were
certain ~lsadvantages to
TNS. " The apparatus Is
expensive, · and lt ls a
nuisance to have to carry it
around and to wear
electrodes attached to the
skin. Some people have
refuaed oo take the apparatus
as they are frlibtened of
electricity. Patients tend to
be disappointed for they
expect a cure and are given
aUevia tlon. "
• One manufacturer said
TNS may interfere with

certain demand-type cardiac
pacemakers and was not
recommended for use in
patients who have this
equipment implanted.

By OTTIE M. SNYDER JR.
The National Wildlife
Federation and lts Ohio
affiliate, the League of Ohio
Sportsmen, have started
distributing material for
National Wildlife Week
March 20-26.
·
Wildlife week is llpOllSOred
by the federation and lis 50
state affiliates each year to
spark interest in the nation's
wildlife resources and
problems threatening thoae
· resources.
Each year an educational
packet is compiled by the
NWF and distributed by state
affiliates for use in schools
and by
organizations
concerned w l t h
envlronmentalconservatlon
education. The theme for this
. year's packet is "We aU need
clean water."
Included in the packet is a
fuU color poster of a female
' lrown bear with two cuba in a
rushing stream searching for
spawning salmon.
The League recently
mailed kits to all Ohio
schools, free of charge.
A teacher's ldea booklet
suggests such topics as: The
theme ad poster; Where does
your town get its drinking
water? How does your town
treat sewage?: Clean water
through involvelJlent; and
group activlites.
The · group activities
include: How oo make a
cloud; Water flow charts;
Water cyclemobiles and
construction of a water
quality game.
The educational packets
are designed to develop
student interest and concern
in water quality and the
wildlife clean water supports.

TV..•in Review
NEW YORK (UP!) -The actresses who make the big lime
are not necessarily the most beautifal, the sexiest or even the
most talented.
What they have is an ability to capture and hold an
audience's attention in some subUe way that civilians find it
difficult to define.
Ilori Brenner, who plays Rhoda on NBC's Best SeUer
"Seventh Avenue," hu that kind of quality.
As Rhoda she appears slighUy plump, mostly solemn and as
adventurous as a divan.
In person she is small, aUm, pretty in a tousled blond way,
fuMy, with a long list of adventures that range from arriving
in Jerusalem on the aeventh day of the Six Day War to renting
a room in a rundown section of Madrid. It was only after meri
kept knocking on her ,door aU night that she began to
understand what kind of a hoase she was rooming in.
Her career began in the fifth grade when she sang "Molly
Malone" in a school Jroductlon. She became somehow entrapped in her wheelbarrow and had to be wheeled off stage.
"I must have sung 'alive, allve-oh' !4 times," she said In an
interview. "!liked it oo the stage and I did not want to go."
Miss Brenner grew up In the suburbs of New York aty, the
youngest of three daughters in a nontheatrical family . She
attended Sarah Lawrence, one of the "seven sisters" of
Eastern girls' colleges, and Yale Drama ScOOol. One of her
classmates at Yale was Steve Keats, who does a masterful job
as her lllsband in "Seventh Avenue."
Her cr!ldlts include episodes in a number of series and a role
last year in he television movie, "I Want To Keep My Baby."
When the heroine couldn 'I keep her baby after aU, lt was Misa
BreMer who adopted it.
·
Discussing how she came oo get the role of Rhoda, she said:
"Usillllly you audition and then you sweat it out. This time I
got a caU one night about midnight, with a lot of heavy
lreathing, and then a voice says, 'I'm keeping my fingers
cr088ed.'
.
1 said, 'Who? What? Who is this?"
It turned out 00 be ber old Yale chum Kea'ts, who had
overheard talk at Universal that Dori Brenner might play his
11

wife.

She loved the script and the character of Rhoda, who made
her cry. "But then I cry at musical comedies," she said.
Agood performance and good reviews have led to the next
step in her career. She's doing a pilot for CBS - "Sileila
· Levine,"~ on the book "Sheila l.evine Ia Dead and Uving
in New York," which could become part of ll1e fall achedllle
since CBS certainly ls on the lookout for new situation
COOledies. ·

•

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday , Feb. 22, 1977

Marauders end season at 9-9, Whipping Athens
Dy Greg Batley
Athens' third quarter proved . the Meigs defense held lhe
.After three very big upset to be the pins that punctured crew of Coach Fred Gibson to
Mns Ill a row, the Athens' the Bulldog bubble.
just · three points while the
Bulldo~ · bubble finally burst
The firnt half was wild and J,iarauders of Coach Ron
when the Meigs Ma rauders wooly, the first quarter en- logan were tossing in 14. In
invaded Athens territory ding in a 17-17 tie, but Athens · ·the last quarter, Meigs at one
Monday night and came held oo to a slip 34-32 lead at time had a 16 point lead, the
home with a 67-55 victory.
the halftime intermission . result of AtheiiS having to lou!
Athens lost its first 13 The Bulldogs' Mark Wallace .to play catch-up . Meigs made
~mes of the season, then kept his team in the game in
11 free throws in that last
crnne back last week to that first half as he netted six peri od.
record wins over League d six field goals and two foul
The Bulldog · defense
champion Ironton, third lilots for a 14 point first half roncentrated on shutting out
place Gallipolis, and strong performance.
the Meigs' guard s, but
Jackson. Strong individual
-But then came that playmaker Steve Randolph
efforts by Meigs and a frozen disastrous third periorl whPn settled that problem by

The Wllcllife Week material
Is dllligned for fifth and sixth
grade classroom activities
and not the individual.
However 1 the ideas
suggested are for student
activities and projects which
may be completed at home.
Since supplies are limited,
teachers are requested to
II'Ovide the school name and
address for mailing of the
packets.
AU requests for National
Wildlife Week educational
packets should be sent to :
NWW Conunittee, League
of Ohlo Sportsmen, 2404
Cleveland Avenue,
Columbus, Ohio, 43211.

IN CHARLESTON
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. Mrs. David Fields, Jr., State
President of West VIrginia
Women of the Church of God,
attended an executive
committee meetlrig held at
the Main Street Church of
God in Charleston Monday
and Tuesday of last week.

c,

-

;;...

,~,-

A

..

r.rr'l¥.9
{:._(,
.... ~

h\,..
...-

(' ~·. -.:.:::y

.....__,

' ''--'-: -

"Open ill Since our thermostat has bean turned
down, maybe the bill won 't be as high as you
think/"

~

Eh~NEA

4&gt;9,

Women in St. Louis will lose
'

their hair, bui get it back
By Goldie Clendenin
PORTLAND -How many read my most recent column
revealing someofthepredictlonsofthejoys and tragedies that
await the world In years to come? The latest book by best
seUing author Irving WaUace and son, David, couple years ago
is interesting.
'
"The People's Ahnanac" has 1,001,300 words, containing
predictions from 1975 to 2050 by many who 'Claim oo see far into
the futlire things that most mortals can't see. If you are a
skeptic (r not, it's fascinating reading.
·
'
These psychics often hlt the naU on the head. There's
Chriswell, fonner mortician, now newscuter, who says he is
rlibt 86 pet. of the time, and claims to know the future to 1999.
Here are 1975-1980:
A woman physicist in Nebraska will discover
antimagnetic forces that will make space travel without jet
propulsion possible in the late 197ll9.
1977 will be disutrous. No rain will fall for 10 months.
Tides will end. Ships will run aground. A "black death" will
wipe out thousands of peclpie. Available water from snow and
lee will bring migrations of desperate people to the North and
South Poles. After this drought, oorrentlal rain will come,
foUowed by floods.
Awoman In Pratt, Kans., irlll save the llves Of 500 people
and become a national heroine. The next three years will he
peaceful as 1)8tions rebuild.
(Is he saying peclple need bad times, and be forced to work
to keep out of devilment, and to let eachother alone? ... )
In 1978 Lake Michigan will be drained for land use, and by.
1980, diHt-yourseH face Ufts wiD be on the market. Between
Feb. 11 and May 11, 1983, all women in St. Louis will lose their
ha.II' .'
''Anew, superior human species will be developed outside .
the female body." (Perhaps another Frankenstein, only with a
normal, instead of an insane brain, like he used years ago.)
In November through December 1980 people in
Pennsylvania will be afflicted with an outlreak of cannibalism
caused by an ezperiment that goes awry.
By 1981 birth control substances will be put into the water
system by .the U.S. government. To conceive, people may go to
the government f!JI' a pill.
· In 1981 Montana Will house aU the sentenced criminals and
become a penal state.
In February, 1981, a foreign power will attempt to bumb
the U. S. with aoomic weapons. It will fail, but 50 people in
Vermoot will die.
In 1982, a dYing planet named Bullanon will come so close
to earth as to affect earth's gravity, shifting the poles, causing
a lost continent to rise, and bridge South America and West
Africa, trigger earthquakes and destroy cities, cause eruption
of volcanoes, storms and tidal waves, even a 40-&lt;lay snow
storm resulting in ''white death" .. (Perhaps it came early and
this is II.)
Oh, yes, women in St. LDuts losiug their balr will grow
aome more only after a panic that produces divorces, murders,
law suits, suieldes and massacres (mainly hair dressers).
Jean Dixoo says: An earlixJuake in mid-East will inspire

otherwise, there is no complete agreement among experts that having the graft
wiU prolong your life. It may
relieve your symptoms if you
are having chest pain.
With the ·one exception
(blockage of the main left
coronary artery) I usually
prefer that the patient try a
medical program. But that
program means a lot more
than just taking pills.
Remarkable results can
·sometimes he achieved by g&lt;r
ing on a strict diet to
eliminate every ounce of excess body fat li pe,-son may
have. II should be a low-fat,
low-cholesterol diet of about
1200 . •·alurie• a day or
restricted enough to produt-e
• gradual l~&lt;.s uf lat. A!! the
fat ~isappears the chest pain
will begin to ot'&lt;:ur less often
andmayfinallydisappear.
TI1cre are some studies lhal
sug~e~t that as you reduce
yuuwlllalsohelptoclearthe
mtcries. Thi• Jli'Oblem most

people h~ve Ill that they do
not stay on a diet. They do not
lose aU the weight they need
to lose. If you need to lose 40
pounds, losing 15 may help
but 11 is far short of the
results that could be realized.
Of course, smoking, alcohol
andprobablycoffeeshouldbe
eliminated. Incidentally the
patients who do eJi:minale
weight and follow a good program after surgery are the
ones who get the best results
from surgery - or the
associated medical program.
· 1 am sending you The
Health tetter nwnber 4-7,
Weight Losing Diet as that is
probably where yo~ need the
must help. I can't overemphasize the importance of
losing any weight you can.
others who want this diet can
send 50 cents for it with a
long , stamped, selfaddressetl envelope. Writeto
me in care of this newspaper,
P.O. Box 1561, Radio aty,
New York.

enemies of Israel to invade it and result In an eight-year war.
In 1981-1990The U.S. will have the first woman president;
in 1988 at the end of the long Israel-Arab War, Ru.ulans and
their satellite annies will occupy lands Of all the participants.
Bloodshed will continue f!JI' seven more years. The S.
will be "too weakened economicaUy and militarily to

'fhe Meigs Marauders,
sectional champions and top-seeded in
year's: basketball Cl\lss AA tournament
Federal Hocking High School at Stewart.
open post season ,competition on February
against Belpre, which is 2-8 on the year. Th
week the Sentinel will publish pictures
individual varsity Marauders. Today,
starters Alan Dodson and Dale Browning,
forwards. Ron Logan is Meigs High head
basketball coach.

v.

intervene".
In 1995, the U.S .. with England, France, Germany, Japan
as allies, ~ set op headquarters in Rome to begin a counter
offensive against Russia in .the Middle East. A great a)lled
leader will emerge In Rome.
In 1999 the U. S. and Its allies will he at war with Russia
and I~ satellite Russian rnisaUea "will rain down a nuclear
holocaust" on U.S. coastal cities, east and west, and devastate
the cities of Europe.
Then there will occur "a Jjlenomenon" slmllar to "the
stand of M08es at the Red Sea". The Russians will find the
lnterven,Uon of GOO superior to their armies I
The following year (2,000), •Russian forces in Israel will be
destroyed by the U. 8. and its allies based in Rome. Israel will
be sav!'(l. Peace will come. The leader in Rome will be bailed
as a savior, ruler and great conquering hero. This leader in
Rome, "bum in 1962 and now growing up somewhere in the
Arab world" will JI'Ove to be a "falBe prophet of evil."
Shawn Robins predicts In 1975-11!110 somewhere an
. earthquake will cause great damage some place within 300
miles of New York aty.
.
.
Alan Vaughan says there'D be no presidential election in
1980 for a Constitutional Convention will change the four year
term to 5 or 8 years. '
· But doo't worry much about Shawn Robina crystAl baU.
·She said, "Sen. Ed (don't know where they get that Teddy
stuff) ·KeMedy would be President in 1976."
Gol her wires crosaed up somewhere and must have
reckoned without "Mr. Who". Dr. David Bubar says by 1998
Bible prophesies will have been proved true (fulfilled).
Chriswell says:
In 1985 a Caucasian woman, caUed the LadY of Light, will
beeoo~e leader, first of the Orient, then of the world. Under her
leadership, men will become slaves and women wlll hold the
power. War will end; the world will beC1lflll! a near Paradise.
Her end will cOme after she is raped, and dies in childbirth.
~r things to watch for :
In 1985, pollgamy will become legal in North Dakota, and
Texas wiU apUt lnoo three states.
May II, 1W 00 M8rch 30, 19119, the Aphrodisiacal Era will
flourish. ,Semal craziness will float over the U.S.A. and •
overcome the populace. The streets will be used for bed and
bathrooms. Florlds will become a huge nudist camp. The ·
Secretary of State wiU be caught in acts of perversion. Tbe
invention of an antidote will end the era.
1975-1980, Detroit will be the capital of a SIJl&amp;Uer nation,
which will be a pollee state.
Queen Ellzabeth will be the last monarch of England.

Ed. Note: While not .one of Mrs. Clendenin's stable of
paychlcs guarantees a thing (talk always hu and always will
be cheap), they generaUy are united In taking a dislressingly
morbid View of the last quarter of 1il1s centw'y. ·
Readers are advlaed to relu. The 'Rorld hu had Ita
psychics ilnce the art of oral communication appeared,
mllleniiDDS ago m our planet. History prOW!B pretty well that
ayltal baUs have been showing the future pretty bad since the
first man on his first day predicted thlnga would be tough down
the road a piece.
And they haven't been, have they?

.
•

'

f

The Marauders were again
hot from the field as they one
mo~e time shot over 50
percent, this time 26 of 48 for
54 per cent. They sank 15 of 25
from the charity stripe.
Athens was led by

TOTALS
Pet., 54

12·21
3-J
•.J
4-8
0·1
o.o
1,2
0·1
0-1
00

4.) 14
67 9
26 4
24 5
o.o 3
00 2
o.o 0
1·1 2
0·0 0
o.o 0
00 0

26 -49

15 -25

ToppiiJg
Chonko

2-1
6-10
1-6
1-I
9-18
1·1
2·5
o.o
0-0
0-0
0-1
0-3
22-52

1· 1 J
0·1 11
1-2 1
1-1 0
3·4 0
0-1
7
4·5 4
00 0
0-2 0
11 2
00 0
00 0
11-20 23

5.8

Browning
Dodson
S1ewart
Randolph
Young
Hamilton
Scites
Follro,d
Granda I

ONen

•.

WiHe

girls, 54 to 51

•-n

GAHS- (51 j

F1111quale 3-2-1; Nibert 1-0.2/
Spr"'lue 5-2·12; Edtlmann 63-15; Grovtsl-0-2; Young 0.2-

2.

.
MEIGS (541- P. Vaughn 7.
9·23; B. Vaughn 7-3-17;
MNdows&lt;t-2-10; Burdtttw 0.2.
2; Brown 0.2-2; Totall lt-1154.
Seen by quarltrl:

Mtlgs

GAHS

Coach Carl Wolfe's heavily Wildcats must still play
favored Sout hc ,. '"ornados, Eastern and Symmes Valley.
frei!h off an unbeaten regular · North Gallia has an overall
season, an~ owners of the re cord of 6-8 going into
1976-77 South ern Valley Thesday's game at KC . Last
Athletic Conference Cham- ll!aSOn, the Pirates advanced
ponship, begin the first leg oo the Class A Oistrict at
Friday night of what area OJilllcothe where they lost 86fans hope ls the long road to 68 to Alexander.
St. John's Arena.
Should Southern win
Southern 1~. top seeded in Friday night, the Tornados
the Class A Sectional Tour- will play lightly regarded
nament at Meigs High 's Eastern which had a first
Larry Morrison Memorial · round bye before advancing
Gymnasium, will tangle with to the championship game of
North Gallla, the 1976 Meigs the tourney.
Sectional champ.
The Tornados have a
Coach Ron Twyman's powerful bench which should
Pirates are still In the run- rome in handy against the
ning for a third place finish in · tough competition provided
the SVAC. North Gallia hu by the Ross County schools,
Kyger Creek and Eastern left . which will no doubt be
on its regular season Sout!lern's main opponents at
a!hedule. HaMan Trace also dl!Uicothe, should the SVAC
lilares third place honors champs win the Meigs Secwith a 5-li league mark. The Uonal.

SV AC standings
OP
988
1030
992
909
1.04.4

0 16 676 1068

SVAC

Abels 2......

,._.1.4

11 11 12
9 12 15 15-51

Wheal y
Blower

TOTALS
Pet.: 42

Elk ins 4-0-8, Yeauger 0-3-3,
Andrews 2-1-5, Kennedy 0-0-0,

Triplett 0·0-0. Totals IS-12-42.
ATHENS - Benlley 4-7·15,
Br uning 3-4-10 ,

Hart

0-2. Smalhers 0-1-1, Black 1-1·
3, Smith 0·0-0. Totals 14·16·44.
165

By quarters:
l'l'e igs
Athens

pound

ONLY

TEAM
W L
X Southern
12 . 0
svm . val!ev
8 J
North Gallla
5 5
Hannan Trace 5 5
Kyger Creek
4 7
southwestern 4 8
Enstern
0 ll

P OP
1033 702
688 659
631 665
599 710
582 627
772 76-4
417 647

SVAC OESEOVES

TEAM

W
11

x SOuthern
North Ga ll Ia
Sym . Val ley

8
7
5

L P OP
1 6~ 436
2 512 393
5 .t74 53 1
5 394 369
9 393 520
8 401 454
9 342 412

Eastern
southwestern ~
Hannl!lf1 Trace 2
· t&lt;vuer: Creek l
X - CIInched
c ham pionships.
Thls wuk's games :
TueSdl'r' - North Gall Ia .'Jt
Kyger ' Creek l!lnd Svmmes
Vatter Vs Green Lo cel In
Class A Sectional at Ironton .
Wednesday _. Easter n at
Hannan Trace .
Thursday - Hannan Tra ce
at Symmes vauev .
Frldly - North Gall la vs
SOuthern In Ctau A Sectional
at Me las H lgh School .
Siturday - Kyger Creek vs

Southwutern at Clan A
Sectional, MeigS ti iOh SChOOl,
and North Gallla host s
Eat tern of Pike County .
-

Nort h Ga 111 .
'l,

E'astern

at

At this point, not many
odds-makers are betting
against them.
The Tornados, packed with
talent, are . balanced of·
fenslvely. While the club has
oo player in the oop 10 of aU
teams In southeastern Ohio,
Tornado middle rna n Chip
Brauer leads his club and was
second In the Southern Valley
Athletic Conference with an
18.2 points per game record.
This point total Includes only
all games through Feb. 12.
If the Tornados don 't have
the one big guy that seores aU
the points, they do have a lot
ri fellows who put In lots of
JDinls.
The club has the league's
eighth, ninth, and tenth place
scorers in Eri Dunning at
12.8, Joe Brown at 12.7, and
Richard Teaford at 11.1
JDinls per game.

39

2 14
5 30
1 8
3 4
3 8
2 0
0 0
3
I
0
0
0 0
0 0
17 67
J
5
4 12
3
3·
0 3
I
21

2

·uSED CARS

73 CUTLASS
· 4 DR. SEDAN
Red with red vinyl lop, V-8.
P.S.. P.B., air, radio .

2

4 8
I 0
0 0
0 1
0 0
0 0
18 ll

i

'2495

Karr &amp; VanZandt
You ' ll Like our Quality

992-5342

BY

17

M
A

Pomeroy

Openi ng Evenings '1il6 :00

QUARTERS
32

46 67

Til S p.m. Sat.

17 34 31 55

BOYS
OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
BASKE TB A LL RESULTS
United Press lnt erna ti onr~l
Mond ay
Bloo m Carroll 70 L iberty
Union 61
Amanda Clearcrc ek 62 Canal
W inchester 51
Manst ield St P etN 7d Co l
Crawford 72
West Holmes 41 Tri Way 40
Meigs 67 Athens 55
Nelsonville
York
71
A l ex and er 56
Ledgemont 68 Grand Vall ey

63

Ea st lt~k e

II your insurdnce agent can't give you
"worry free " service, fire him and hire
Mick.

"let Mick Do It!"

North

"

Elyria Cath 74 Ment or L ake
Ca th 72
Elyria 70 Ma nsfield 47
Oak Glen n (W Va ) 65
Bridgeport 59
Huntington (W Va) Bl South
Po int 70

1-2-4,

Da iley 4-1-9, Schenzenbach 1-

DALE BROWNI NG,
senior forward

handle. Meigs flmshed at 7-7
inside the SEOA I., and ne xt
Monday they start tournament act ion at Fede ral
Hocking against Belpre .
Meigs is top-seeded in that
sectiooa!, with Warren Local
being second. Meigs is the
defending champ.

way Of Doing Bu si ness
GMAC FINANCING

14 22 31 42
6 17 36 J4

GIRLS
OH IO HIGH SCHOOL
BASKETBAL L RE SU LT S
Uni1 ed Press ln1ernafional
South Port 63 Chesapeak e 50
On t ario
69
Man s f iel d
Malabar 16
f i nora 45 Hi c ksvi lle 31
Madison 61 Asht abula Harbo r
33
Camb r idge 41 CosMct"on 28
East Liverpool 40 Well sv i ll e

P eavily-favored Tornadoes
open Class A tourney Friday :F,~l:'.lil:·~~~,~.:

Eastern

f.'ade pmee aboUt e:ao.

Walla ce
Pennell
Walt on
Holter
Kingham
Me ade

Medina 74 Midview 19
Waver l y 5B Ironton 47
c.;a;rd. inat Mdfld 37 Ric~1mond
HI s 26
Youngs Mooney 57 Camp b el l
M emorial 55
Pola n d 41 West Bran ch 37
Mineral Ridge 34 Southington
19
.

Southwestern 6 11 1086 1161

the glllie with four foula
•cb. Catb.v Melldowa fouled
out with 30 - d a left In the
lfiDle for the Melp team.
· The Angela now lltlnd at 64
IIIII have three lllllet on lip
tbla week. The Anlell travel
to South Pold Tuelday for •
8:ll1amemd hOIIIApn on
Wedneadar and Flirland on
Thuraday followlnc elghlh

Meek.

Mayfield 56

MEIGS - Sian ley 0-2·2, T.
Coals 6·5·11, Blake, 3-1-7,

from the free throw stripe.
Mei~ s fin ished its season
~ith that win. and their 9-9
re cord is very resped able,
considerin g they gave !he big
teams like Iron ton, Waverly,
and Logan all they L,uid

Marauders-Athens statistics

22

SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P
SOuthern
18 0 1474
Sym . VaHey 10 1 994
Hannan Trace 7' 8 898
Kyger creek
6 8 878
North Gllllla
6 a 955

Meigs edges GAHS
The Melp Glrll' -BUketball team held on in a last
minlie comeback to defeat
the Blue Anlltll S!-61 at
Melp
It wu awett revence for
the Melp five after an early
lo• at GAllS, 48-47.
P1111 VaUihn led the Melp
glril with 23 points, but wu
IIUPJIOrted by Beth Vaughn .
111d Cltby MNdoWI both In '
double flguree.
Blrb EdelmaM led the
Angell with 10 polnla with
Klren Sprague adding 11
The Angell plagues by their ,.
highest num bei o·f fouls
of
the
nuon
lost
Janet Groves ind Kar.. Spngue to fouls In the
fourth qurtel' llld kept '1'11111
Nibert and Pam Puquale in

ALAN DODSON. 6'3", 155 pound senior
forward

Mender

'

Wallace's 21 total points.
II!Jile Chonko had 12. No
Bulldog had more than four
rebounds. The Athens lads
hit a lukewarm 42 per cent
(22 of 52) from the floor and
manH~ed to sink just 11 of 2V

~me.

The
Baby
Meigs
Mar aud ers blew a 22-17
hatrlime lead enroute to a 4442 loss . to the Athens
Bullpups. Host Athens outscored Mei gs 19-9 in the third
quarter, and th e Meigs
County team just couldn'I
catch up.
Meigs actually scored one
more field goal lhan the
oosts, but lost th e game at .thefoul line as Athens sank 16 of
31 tosses while Meigs cashed
in on just 12 of 24. Meigs' Tim
Coats led ail scorers as he
netted 17 while Billy Elkins
had eight. Meigs made 15 of
Jl shots from the field for 40
per cent
. Athens was led by Bentley
and Bruning with 15 and 10
points , respe cti vely. The
Bull pups hit 14 of 47 shots for
just 211 per cent, but those free
tllrows were just too much.

Frozen Assets!

•
questions, it is just that I am
so confused, I don't know
whatto lhlnk br believe.
DEAR READER -I am not
surprised that you are confuseel. Medicine is not an exact
scient-e and scientists often
disagree over more exad
mailers - such as nuclear
energy. In medicine, new
techniques or new medicines
are tested and t.liey have their
proponents who think they
have had good SUCX.'ess in using them and their oppo~ents
who have had less .satiSfac- '
tory expe~i~nt'eS with the
slime medic111es or techn1·
ques.
. Whether a person should
have a graft pul '" to detour
blood around a block Ill one or
more arteries lo lhe . heart
muscle depends a lol on lhe
individual case. There kre
some co~binations where
surgery w1ll ~ro!ong hfe but
your descnptwn uf lhe localiOn uf your ucdUSHIIIS does
nut flllllalc"tcg\'I'Y .

sational night as he netted a
career hi gh 30 points,
although he fouled out with
about two minutes to go,
Dodson undoubtedly could
haye scored more, but his
unselfish play of passi ng off
w the open man netted him
nwnerous assists to, go along
~ith that hot scoring.
Rebounding playcda major
rote in the Meigs win as they
literally eontrolled the hoards

by collecting 39 caroms,
compared to just 23 for the
oosts. Senior forward Dale
Browning hauled in a big 14
rebounds to lead that
category, and Dodson got
nine. Browning also had a
good ni ght in the score book
as he netted 14 markers to go
along with the super board

Goldsberry

Reader asks about surgery
By Lawreace E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB -I am a
37-year-old male. I had a very
severe heart attack when I
was 35. A heart catheterization showed one heart artery
was 95 per cent occluded at
the front of my heart and an
artery on the back was 25 per
cent blocked.
Abuut two months ago 1had
another catheterization and
the artery at the front of my
heart was only 80 per cent ocCluded but the one on the back
was 75 per cent occluded.
I have ~n to four different
speclallsts since then and
some advise an inunediale
coronary artery .opera lion
and otherll advise laking my
medicines and waiting to see
if my condition improves.
How in the wor.ld does a lay
person know whal is the best
decision ? Is there any
evidence lhal the operation
prolongs life?
I am not tryinK to put you
on a Spot in answ~riJJg these

fine assists. Senior forward
Alan Dodson had a sen·

Reserves lose
close contest

DR. LAMB

Berrys World

simply passing elf with sume

You may never have to worry about
insurance again .
.

DOWNING CHILDS . r;ji}J
INSURANCE AGENCY INC.
Middleport , 0 .

992-2342

of the SV AC standings.

A high sco ring

outfit.
Southern thr ough Feb. 12
clicked off points at an
average of 82.1 per game to
their op(ionents' 54.9.
Seco nd- seeded Ky ge r
Creek will battle Southwestern . in Saturday s
tournament action. During
llle regular season, the two ·
Gallia County schools split
their two-game series. Both
finished in the lower section

The winner of the SouthernNorth Gallia contest will play
Eastern, March 2. The KCSouthwestem winner tangles
with HaMan Trace, March.
The championship tilt is set
for Saturday, March 5.
All tournament games will
begin at 7::.! p.m.

1

•
TilE DALY SENTINEL
DEVOTED TO THE

lNrEIIESTOF
MEIGS-MASON AREA

CH&amp;!TERL. TANNEHill.
Eltt. Ed.

ROBERT HOEFUCH
City Editor
Published doily except Saturdlly
by The Qhio Valley Publishing Comany, lll Court Sl., Pomeroy, Ohio

SPOKANE, Wash . (UP!) John Felske has replaced
Frank Howard as manager of
the Spokane Indians baseball
team of the Pacific Coast
League, the AAA team 's
president, Bill Cutler, annoWJced Monday.

45769. Business Oftiee Phont! m
2156. Editorial Phooe99'H157.,
Second c!.a&amp;, postage pald a1

p~,!~I:;.;.Ohla~vertUing

represtn·'

tatl ve Ward - Griffith Company, Inc., BottintW and Gallagher Div.,
757 Third Ave:., New York, N.Y.
10017.
SUbscription rates: Delivered by

carrier where available 75 centJ per
week. By Motor Route where carrier
service not available, OM month,
$3.25. By maU In ObJo and W. Va.,

Dons still on top in ratings

One Year, $22.00 ;· Six months,

NEW YORK (UPI) - San
Francisco and Kentucky
maintained their positions
.atop the United Press
lnternationar Board of
Coaches' college basketball
ratings this week, but· last
Saturday's string of upsets
caused a major reshuffling of
the rest of the nation 's top 20
teams.
.
Top-ranked San Francisco
beat Loyola (Calif.) aod Pepperdine to run its unbeaten
streak to 25 ~mes. The Dons
gained 37 of 39 first-pl~ce
"votes and received 387 points.·
No. 2 Kentucky (20-2)
· oopped Florida and Louisiana
State and picked up 295 points
and O!IO first-place vote.
Bul of the 18 remalnlpg
ranked teams, only No. 9
Wake Forest, one of
Saturday's victims, held lts
position. Flve of the top 10
teams - No , 3 UCLA, No. 5
Louisville, No. 6 Marquette,
No. 8 Alabama and No. 9
Wake Forest - were· upset
Saturday .
Michigan moved from No. 4
to No. 3 when UCLA dropped
to No . ~ following its ~5loss
to Oregon. The Wolverine~
,i

also got the other first-place
vote. Nevada-Las · Vegas
improved from No.7 to No. 4
and.Tennesse moved into No.

SlLW : Three montha,
Elsewhere PJ.OO year; Six
$13.50·: Three month!J,
SubScription price Includes
rJ'i6nu-SenUnel.

18. Detroit !22-21
12
W. (t ie) Houston (22-6)
11
19. (t iel Oral Robert s (20-5 ) 11

S7.00;
monili&lt;'
$7 .$0.
SWlday

5.

Arkansas, which clinched
the Southwest Conference
title and threatens oo be the
first team oo go unbeaten in
the conference in 21 years,
jumped from No. 10 to No. 7.
North Carolina took the No . 8
spot and Louisville, upset by
Memphis State, 67-77,
dropped from No . 5 oo No. 10.
NEW YORK IUP I ) TM
U n it e d Press Internat iona l
Board of Coaches ' college
bftslcetbell rallngs wit h won lost

records

through

games

.

.

"

·c Twelfth w,ek 1
Teem
Points
I. San Frlllntlsco l37i (25-01 387
2. Keotvc~v (1) (20-21
295
J. M ichigan ( l) (20-31
278
~ - Nevada -Las Vega s {12 -21 204
5. Tennessee 09-·il
170
6, UCLA (20-4)
T4.t
1. Arkanus {24-1)
1-43
I. North Carolina ( 18-4)
106
9. WakeForest (20 -4 )
103
10. Louisville ( 19·41
90
11 . Alab~ma {19-ll
so
12. Providence f17 -J)
A6
13 . svrecuw {21-31
16

1&lt; . Utoh ll9 Sl
15. Creighton (21 Jl

16. Minnesota (70 3.1
11, Cin ci nn ati {19 -41

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.'

�. • - The llaiiY~ntlnel , Middleport-Pon::"'y, o:, Tuesday, Feb. 22, 1977

.R io Redmen retain MOC .tournam2:!! crown,"
iface Central State next in' District 22 play
~

It will be Rio Grande looked back. The Pioneers,
College (2~3) vs. Central delpite the IOP'&lt;lided loss,
State ( 1~10) In the first round remained alive for District 22
t:A the 1977 NAIA District 22 post season competition
Tournament at Lyne Center becaUse they have one of the
on Monday, Feb. 28.
four best records in the
In tile ~er District 22 district.
qJener nut week, Malone
Should tfi~neers defeat
(16-10) will battle Findlay's Findlay and RIO beat Central
&lt;XIers (IU ).
State, these same two teams
Winner ~ the touraameat ..,uld clash for the District 22
will advance to Kwu City, (!'OWn nert week at Lyne
Mo., lor lhe NAIA llnalt the Center. Rio beat Central
following week.
State 84-72 back on Dec. 12.
· Monday night, Coach Art
Monqy, Rio's Jimmy Noe,
Lanham's Rio Grande . scoring on a variety of
(bllege Redmen rolled over twtsUng, leaping and driving
visiting Malone 115-74 to layu.- aad tip-las, scored 41
capture their second con- polats to poice the Redmen Ia
secutive post-season Mid; their 12th coDBe&lt;utlve vi&lt;Olio Conference tournament tory.
title.
Noe's 49-Point effort was a
In one of their finest per- new Lyne Center record.
formances of the campaign, Previous mark was 48, set by
the Redmen jumped off to an Noe against Tiffin In the 197$early 12-4 lead and never 76 campaign.

·"

Noe IS . came with I: 13 remaining. It

Bit it wasn't all
teammate Gil Price cll!pped
in with 16 points, Greg James
added 12, Dale Royse 10 and
Mark Swalri nb!e.
Doo Gillson came off the
- bench to tally eight lll&amp;rkers
for the winners. Dan Btse and
George Vickroy each had
four polrits.
Ray Tatum led the
Pioneers attack with 18
points. Ed Yarbrough added
15 and Coleman Link 11 .
Alter Rio zoomed to a 34-21
IKivantage during the first 15
minutes of play, Malone
dosed the gap to eight po\nts,
:M-26, with 3:51 left in the first
half. Rio ripped off 10 consecutlve points during the
next two minutes of play. It
was aU over. Rio Jed 49-30
during the · h'alftime intermission.
,
Noe's record-breaking goal

Malone bit 33 ol76 field goal •
attempts fer 43.4percent. The
Pioneers were elgbt of 19 II ;
the foul line for 42 percent :
Malone had 3S rebOundll, 10 "
by Tllmn. Malone committed
25 turnovers.
Noe was 22 of 29 from the
8eld for 76 percent. Although
Noe did not better his 90 '
percent field goal mark set
Feb. ~against Malone; he did
set another Lyne Center
mark with tile most field
goals, bettering his Jan. 10,
1976 mark of 19 against
Malone.
Price set a new Lyne
Centef assist. record last
night with 12. The old fecord
ol 11 was shared by Jim
Marshall, set Feb. 3, 1970
against Berea, and Ray
Jordan , Feb. 7, 1971, agotnst
Cumberland.
Box score:

the foul line for II pereeaL
gave the Redmen a 114-70 'lbe Redmen picked oil 4Z
advantage.
· ·
rebounds, IS by Greg James.
The Redmen sallk 52 of 83 Noe and Price each had nine
field coal attempts lor 82.6 caroms. Rio bad 11 turnporreat. Rio weo 11 of 18 at oven.

MALONE (74)- Burkes 10-2; Hershberger 2-2-6; Link

Decision _close in SE·· ·

5-1-11 ; Sommen 3-1-1; Tatum
9-0-18 ; VolarlcM J-3-9; Yar brough 7-1-16 ; Menltfletd 2-04; Waters 0-0-0; Kuecber 1-0TOTALS - 33·8·74 .
RIO GRANDE (1151 Gibson o6 -0-8; James 6-0-12 ;

Conference cage race

5-0-10: Sweln 4-·1-9; Vlckr'py 12-4; Purcell 0-1-1; Lee 0-2-2.

TOTALS 52·!.U)L
Halftime

." '

~'

By GREG AIELLO
points and· Reginald King 2oth victory against four
UPI Sports Writer
added 18 to lead Alabama defeats.
They are fast approaching past Georgia. Alabama ,
Elsewhere, _ it
was
the game which should decide trailing, ~2, at the half, Louisialll! State 95 Vanderbilt
the Southeastern Conference overcame Georgia's scrappy 74, Auburn 80 JaCksonville 66,
championship and, judging attack and finally put the Furman 88 South Carolh\a·80,
from Moodsy night's games, game out of reach · with six MarQuette 73 Wisconsiri ' 58,
there shoold he concern in minutes
left.
Jimmy and St. John 's 92 Howard 69.
Kentucky and optimism in Daughtry had 20. points for
Tennessee.
Georgia.
Second-ranked Kentucky
The only .other top team in
NOW YOU KNOW
struggled to beat Mississippi, action Monday night 'was
In New York.an embalmer,
81-89, while No. 5 Tennessee Cincinnati, ·which beat by law, must he an American
had an easi~r tlme defeating Buffalo State0 7~, for its ., citizen.
..
a tougher Mississippi State
"
team, 76-88. Tennessee's .
victory kept the Vols (14-1 in
league
play and 21).4 overaU )
PRICE HAS GOOD NIGHT- Rio's Gill Price (34)
a
hal'!
game ahead of
~ had another good night for the Redmen with 16 points.
Kentucky
(13-1, 20-2) and 2¥..
~ Price also set a Lyne Center record for assists, 12, in the
games
ahead
of Alabama ( 11Redmen's m-74 victory over Malone. Price collected nine
3, 20·3), which topped
rebounds. On left are Pioneers Ed Yarbrough (30) and
Georgia, 78-811, Monday night.
Weymuth Burkes (32).
Tennessee, a 92-119 winner
at Alabama Saturday, hosts
BUFFALO, N.Y. (UP! ) - technical foul.
Kentucky on March 5 in the
Billy Knight wants the , · "!*'~'I thinkJ;m, §oin~ ~ ,
contest
that
should.
d~teide the
"
M ~
conference title. ·But National . Basketball ~ pay 11, ·he .addep. ,. :h\eylj
Kentucky, which has ivon' or Association !o take him to l!ave to take .me to court or
•
something.''
,
shared the SEC title seven of court.
He was slapped with a . Knight's theory about how
the last 10 years, also must
get past Alabama next . technical foul in the third the Pacers lost the game was
quarter by' referee Mike ~e~!ed somew~t in the
Saturday.
; AMARILLO, Tex. (UP! ) - without being stopped by the
KentuCky rallied from a Mathis Tuesday night as the, final statistics. Buffalo went
Pefense attorneys for Ernie pohC&lt;l.
.
seven-point halftime deficit Pacers drOJ!ped a 117-106· tO the foul line 36 times durbi~
Holmes hope to take the jury
Defense attorneys plannedk 4 to heat Mississippi, 4-11 in the NBA decision to the Buffalo the game, compared with.
in his cocaine possession trial to file a mot1on asking to ta e conference and 1().14 overall. . Braves. To say Knight was Indiana's 20 trips to the
to the motel restroom where the Jury to the scene, Mike Phillill'! hit two straight disturbed with the o!flctating charity stripe.
'
Holmes was arrested last apparently to show how baskets in the opening in the game may be
Buffalo's big oflensive
year.
difficult 11 would be .for a moments of the second half to somewhat of an under- weapon again w~s rqokie
, Holmes' trial on charges of person to . rush fr~m the start the comeback. The statement. ,. ·
Adrian DanUey, who scored a
possession of 250 milligram~ restroom Without. hemg seen Wildcats moved ahead 47-46
"We felt tile refs took It career-high 39polrits, hiS' fifth
.
.
.
• . •
•Of cocaine was sCheduled to or stopped by off1cers.
Pretrial motions were w•th 16 .17 left, when Rick away from us," said Knight, game of the season over 30.
begln today.
who led the Pacers with 31 John Shumate chipped in
Holmes, a key member in expected to take. up mo~ of ~~Y made two straight points. "That's no way for a • with 22 points and Randy
the Pittsburgh Stee1ers the morno"g session and JUry
Kentucky cli nched the pro game to be officiated. It's Smith added 19.
"Steel Curtain" defense for &gt;e«. ~"11 equid lake up the game with eight straight draining u) the team. They
Buffalo led, !NH4, after
the past five seasons, fac-es n rest of the day,
· t
ba k ts by Philli
would take a basket away three quartero, but the
Prosecution testimony, pom son s. e
ps from us or we'd get a bad Pacers had cut into the
2-to-20 year prison sentence
which
will
feature
the
two
.
and
Jack
Givens
and
two
and as much as a $10,000 fine
Braves' lead and had the
officers and lab experts, is layups by Lar~ Johnson to call."
if convicted.
Knight's
personal
problems
margin d9wn to seven, 109He was arrested in a motel likely to begin on Wednesday. Wldenlllithe margm to 66-M.
with
the
officials
began
when
102, with a minute and a half
Defense attorney Charles
Ph ps topped Kentucky
restroom more than a year
he
was
called
for
a
traveling
remaining.
Baskets by
. 'ago by two plainclothes Rittenberry has said Holmes wtth 20 pomts, followed by violation wlth three minutes Dantley and George Johnson
Several !:'~y and Givens With 18
'officyrs who said they saw will . testify.
left in the third quarter. He put it out of reach.
Holmes ihrow a silver character witnesses also are
E,.;ue Grunfeld, one of four dropped the ball and ran to
John Williamson added 30
container toward a toilet expected to be called by the Tennessee players scoring in lake his position on defense poinl!l for the Pacers and Wil
when they entered.
defense.
d bl f'
had 24 - ts after Mathis. made the call. Jones had 23.
AlthOugh Rittenberry has ou e tgures,
pom '
Holmes has contended he
Mathis· then called the
.") am-very happy with the
declined
to
give
ari
exact
12
of
them
from
the
free
''Was "set up?' while attending
technical
after
he
apparently
.
way
every on~ has Qeen
. t'mg of the throw lme, to spark the Vols
a wedding party and that a num ber or I1s
. t M' 1 . . Stat :HI asked Knight to throw bini perf~rmlng," said Braves'
e,
man handed him the packet witnesses, they are thought to agams ISS SSlPPl
the ball.
Coaeh Joe Mullaney; , who
include
Pittsburgh
Coach
m
the
SEC
"!ld
13-10
overaU
..
'just before the officers
"I'm not going to pay them won his third game .. ln ' four
walked in. He said the man Chuck NoD, team owner Art Bern~rd Kmg added 15, for dropping the ball," Knight starts since tal!lng over the
Reggie Johnson 13 and Terry
who gave him the substance Rooney and a nwnber of Crosby
said of the automatic league job from General Manager
10.
then ran out of the restroom Steelers players.
Rickey Brown srored 21 fine which goes along with the Bob MacKinnon.

RIO

49 •

20%0FF
- Cash 'n carry

A living gill to
brighten someone's
day .

~~~·
~
1:

-·· ·· RIO'S Jimmy Noe (22, in white) eludes Malone's
Craig Herr,flherger (22) for two of hjs record &gt;1!1 points
against the Pioneers during Monday night's MOC
championship tournament tilt at Lyne Center. On right is
Rio's Greg James (40).
Int er national
-.

Hoc~ev

Leagu e ·

'

Kalam az oo

1

t

· ·

pts . gf ga

,, 21 11 67 258 229

Fl int
28 23 7 63 265 730 '
Sag inaw 27 23 10 6d 250 23 1
Muskegon

~"

•

South

•

w I t pts . gf ga
Toledo

29 26

6 lill 249 267

Dayton

27 28

d 58 246 2311

Columbu s

22 27 13 57 237 2d9

Fort Wayn e

24 21 a 56 223 246
,, 1\:\on,cf;fY ' s Re sults
No games sch edu led
Today'S Game s
Columbus at Kalamazoo
Port Huron at M uskegon
Wedn esday's Games
F l in t at Fort Way ne
To ledo at Davton

"

·~···~lol+

an error on
your taxes,
we pay the penalty.
.And the inter~st~'

23 27 10 56 235 2•5
P.o ~ r Huron
.
2l 30 5 55 209 235
·

... ~

''If.we
' .~ . m
.. . ' '~e»

. Un ited P r ess lnternation•lw

992-5560

0

Reason No. 14 why H&amp;R Block
should do your taxes.
H&amp;R Block doesn 't make many mistakes.
Our people are trained not to, But if we
~hou ld make an error that costs you
additional tax, you pay only the additional
tax. Block pays any penalty and interest.
We stand behind our work.

'

MEANY STAYING
MIAMI BEACH, Fla.
(UP!) - AFL-CIO President
George Meany, 82, gave no
ltint Monday ,wht:n asked by
reporters when he might
retire.
"AS oF noW," he said, "I'm
not thinking about it-ask me
tomorrow."
·
He said he could not '
r~list!~lty pr"!lict he would
serve as labor's top
spokesman 'for another 20
years. But he added, "maybe
six, eight, nine... "

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Ex-Packer Henry Jord~ dies
. MILWAUKEE (UP! ) _ when asked if Lombardi had Bowls and was the mosl
Henry Jordan, 42, Green any favorite s. Jordan valuable lineman in the 1!164
Bay's All-Pro defensive answered, "No, he treats us Pro Bowl.
during
Vince all like dogs."
tackle
· "He was one of the great.eat
Lombardi's glory years,
Another time , shortly people I've ever been
collapsed during a workout before the 1965 championship around/' said current
Monday and di ed of an game against the Cleveland Packers' Coach and General
apparent heart attack.
Browns, Jordan was asked Manager Bart Starr, a
"It's a real shock " said how he planned to stop teammate of Jordan's. "He
Willie Davis, the reu.:OO AU- Cleveland running back was such an effervescent
Pro defensive end who played Jimmy Brown.
person.''
with Jordan on· the the
"I've got a perfect plan,"
"There was never a dull .
Packers' championship Jordan drawled. "I'll just moment with him around," ,
teams In the 1~ .
step aside and let Willie Wood said Packers' defensive
"It's just so ironic that it get him."
coordinator Dave Hanner.
would be Henry .... physical
Jordan, who in recent years "He was always happy, never
conditioning
was
so . bad been a popular dinner a grumbler."
~portant to him," Davis speaker and director of Mil"It's just such a stri!dng,
smd.
waukee's Summerfest , shocking thing," said former
Known as much for his wit completed his pro career in AU-Pro
guard
Fuzzy
as for his actions on the field, 1969 after 13 seasons. Besides Thurston. 11 1 can't even I
Jordan was credited with a winning allNFL honors fi ve visualize it. He was oo happy
widely publiclted remark times, he playe&lt;j in four Pro and alive . It's the last thing
you'd expect."

Record is still perfect
By
Uolted
Press
Internatloaal
The Cincinnati Bearcats
closed out their home season
Monday night the only way
they know how - with a
victory.
The 17th-ranked Bearcats
whipped Buffalo State 79-69 to
wrap up their third
consecutive home season
without a loss.
Cincinnati extended its
home court win streak to 60
games with the help of tllree
seniors including little used
guard Paul Fazekas, who
scored 10 points and pulled
down 11 rebounds in his first
start this season.
The other two seniors,
regulars Gary Yoder and
Brian
Williams, also
contributed heavily.
Williams dumped in 18
points to put him over the
1,000 mark for his college
career, whUe Yoder added 11
points for tile Bearcats.
Bearcat coach Gale Catlett,
eiated with his team 's 20th
win against four losses this
season, provided
the
questions as well as the
answers in a post-game
meeting the media.

r-----------..,
: Pro 1I
I
!Standings 1
•

NBA .findings

_19 .
!'

"How many teams in the
country win 20 games in a
season?" asked Catlett,
" We've done it three
consecutive seasons.
' 'Those
three
guys
(Williams, Yoder, Fazekas)
tonight left here never having
lost a home game. How many
players can say th&amp;t and how
many players get to score
1,000 points in their college

points. lt·may not have been
important tonight but 20
years from now it will be
Important to them."
Junior center Bob Miller
also added 18 markers to the
Bearcat cause and Bueky
Strong scored the same
num\)er for Buffalo State.
Elsewhere, West Virginia
blasted Cleveland State 10769; Akron whipped Gannon
career?" ~
(Pa.) 91-79; Rio Grande
The Cincinnati victory overwhelmed Malone 11~75;
wasn't assured from the top, Steubenville
tripped
though.
Wilberforce 80-64 ; and
· The Bearcats had to battle Xavier edged Transylvania
baCk from an eight-point (Ky.) 74-73 in overtime.
deficit midway through the
The Ohio Conference
first half to take a 36-25 lead playoffs get under way
at intermission. However, tonight with Heidelberg
they were in control the rest tangling with Baldwinof the way and during the Wallace at Berea; Kenyon at
fmal six minutes Catlett even Ohio Northern and Oberlin at
gave orders to allow only two Mount Union in the nortll
of the seniors to shoot.
division action. In the solitll,
"I ,told the guys I didn't Otterbein hosts Denison; Maw;mt anybody but Fazekas · rietta plays at Muakingwri;
and Yoder to shoot the bail, I and Capital travels to Ohio
wanted them to have their Wesleyan.

Today's

Spori Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor

1

Unlttd Prtu lnternollonol
NEW YORK (UP!) - The clock was running out oo Joe Roth
Eollern Conference
and he knew 11, the way any good quarterback instinctively
Atlentlc •Division
w uld m
· a football game
W. L. Pet. GB
0
.
Pn ll.. elpnlo 35 21 .625
Only tlliswas no game, this was for life itself, and what made
~st~lcks
~ 5~ : !~ ::~; it all so terribly futile was that it was terminal, there wasn't
Buffalo
22 3l .386 13'h any hope whatsoever, no chance at all for one of those lastNY NelS
18 &lt;O .310 18
minute miracles that would save him . Joe Roth knew that, too,
Ctntral Dfvlslon
w. L. Pet. G a but kept it locked up inside him until his very last heartbeat
wosnlng1on 33 2&lt; .l79
because that simply was the nature of his Characier, the kind
Houston
31 2.tl .564 1
son Antonio 31 26 .5., 2 of thoughtful, courageous kid he was. He always put others
Cleveland
30 26 .536 2'1&gt; before himself. He wouldn't think of burdening anybody with
New
Orleo"'
2&lt; 32 .&lt;29 8'1&gt; ooe of his problems, even if that problem happened. to be a
Atlanta
2J 36 .390 1l
Western conference
matter of life or death.
Midwest Division
Two seasons back, Joe Roth was the finest passer in all
w.
L.
Pet.
GB
·
Denver
37 19 .661
coIIege I OQtbaU •
Ottrolt
35 25 .583 • ·
As quarterback for the California Bears in hls junior year, he
Kansas
c;ty
30
29 .508 B'h
was
a carbon copy of Joe Namath, the original Joe Namath of
tnG iana
21 32 .458 11 117
Chicago
2&lt; 3&lt; .m 1&lt;
13 years ago, the one who had all the pros drooling over him.
Mllwaukoe
20 &lt;2 .323 20
Had Joe Roth stayed healthy this past season and not died of
Pacltlc Division
w. L. Pet. GB cancer Saturday night, he probably would've been this year's
Los Angeles 36 20 .643
No, 1 draft choice, ahead of even Pittsburgh's Tmly Dorsett.
Portland
J6 24 .600 2
Golden state 32 26 .m s
That's how good he was as a baUplayer. As a human being, he
Seattle .
30 30 .500 8
was right up there at the very top also.
Phoeni
x
26
31
.&lt;56 10•;,
Joe Roth could he dying, and know he was, and still be more
. , Mand•y's Rtsult
Buffalo 111 Indiana 106
concerned about others than about himself. Last Wednesday 's
Tuordov•s Gomes
episode at the University of California Medical Hospital in San
Phoenix at Buffalo
New Orleans at NY Knlcks
Francisco iS a good example.
Los Angeles at Son Antonio
' The roaching staff and his fellow players at California had
~~·s~ns~~tg:~.~lcago
such a deep personal feeling for 21-year.OIQ, Joe Roth that
Boston at Porllond
many of them made regular trips to the hospital merely to slt
Wednesdov's
Gomes
alongside
his bed and stay with him. They did that in shifts so
Denver at NY Nets
Milwaukee at New Orleons
he.'d never be by himself.
.
Ind iana at Washington
Father Michael Hunt, the Catholic priest at Berkeley's
Los Angeles at Detroit
-·-•~- nt
~ Seotlle ol ~ ansos Cltv
campus cha pe1, an d AI Saund ers, one o1 t he Bears• .........
HHL stindlngr
coaches, were the ones alongside Roth 's bed last Tuesday
By unltu Pru• lnternotlonol night. They sat by him all night and wben the first signs of
C1mpbtll Confer.. ce
dawn began to appear, Joe Roth asked:
Pltrlcle DIVIIIOn
"What time .15 (t?."
W L T Pis. GF GA
'PI1 no
36 12 12 u 2"" 165
"It's slx o'clock, Joe," Saunders told him.
NY
lslondrs
35
16
9
79
20l
U7
"Gee, you and Father Hunt should get some rest," worried
Atlanta
25 2.4 11 61 194 197
NY Rangers 22 2613 57 212 221 Joe Roth.
'
Smythe Dlvlrlon
The former California quarterback was like that.
W L T Ph. GF GA
.st . Louis 21 21 6 60 18&lt;201
"I remember some of tile newspaper fellows had the Idea of
cn 1cago
21 31 10 52 194 22&lt; a nickname for him," says John McCasey, the Bears' Sports
.Colorado
&lt;a 182218
.
•r,llnn
...ta 193110
u 31 1~ •l
tso 239 Inf
. ormatlon D'!feetor . ''They came up with'Tl
e egraphAvenue
•vancouver 17 38 6 •o 165 235 · Joe,' and when I talked to him about it, he said, 'I don't care lor
;
W11u contort11co
titles. I don't need that. I just wannabe Joe Roth.' God, I dun't
Norris Division
w .L T Pt,. GF GA ever m:pect to ever meet another person like him in my life .
•Montreal « 710 91 293142 Yciuknow,inthiabustness,alotofltldll,alotofathletea,don't
63 192 191
Ia the media , but from a ]IUbllc relallona 1118R•s poInt
:•Pittsburgh
Los Angelos 26
21 23
27 11
11 53 188 187 apprec te
washlng1n 16 33 13 •s 164 20 of view, this boy was an absolute dream, the moll cooperative
•Oetrolt Adams
15 3S
I lS 149 215 ltld you'd ever find at any level. He was also the moat
Division
,
w L T Pt•. GF OA organized one I've ever dealt with. So meticulous about
, Buffalo
llll 6 76 21&lt; 162 everythlng 'he did."
'
'/:~:!7.
~ l~ ~1 ~ l:~ The fil'lt time Roth had any ll)kllng there was anything
!cleveland 1111 10 AI 173 210 wrong wlth him came last September following a game with
; Montro:l"3~~r~~.:·r"•
Oklahoma in which he broke Steve Bartkowski's school record
, st. Louis'&lt;v.. ~ouvor o
by completing 'll (l&amp;8lel against the SoOners. On the plane
: ColoroJ.":r:fn.:~~;~
, coming back, Dr. Jerome Patmont, the team physician, told
PIHtburgh ot wuttlngton
Roth X-Rays had revealed a spot on his lung and that further
', st . Louis et 1-01 A(lgeles
•--'s would be made
'
WtdMidiY'l Oomtl
""''
.
'
'
•NY Aongors at Toronto
Around Thankaglvtng, bowever, Roth dlacovered a couple of
' Montrulot Atlanta
growths on his chest and shoulder and was sent to the hospital
. Ootroll 11 Chlcogo
for examination and treatment.
• 8os ton et Mlnnnott
Buffoto tt Cleveland
"I've got theM lumps on my chest,'' he told the doctor. "I
want the full story. Give It to me stnicht. I can live with It."
One of the growths was removed from hll shoulder and found
•
tAl be maUsnant. Joe Roth lnalsted on the truth, so he wu told
the truth. He want.ed to know bow bad It was, and he wu told
tllat alao. It waa terminal .
• DENVER (UPl) - The
Joe Roth'sfrlendaali knew a month ago he did not have loog
;Denver BI'OIICOS Jllonday an· to 11,ve, but they didn't know he knew it. They never mentioned
JIOIIIICid the signng of free the word cancer around him, hoping to keep it' from him.
agent Cbuclt Brlallne, a &amp;.:1,
"Joe knew the lull score," one of his frlenda says. "U he wu
2$6-pound offensive guard trlght.ened, he never showeq it. He was suCh a remarkable
lroq1 MtlliNippl 9\ate.
py."
By

:

~

I

..

FOLIAGE
GARDENS

·game:.

may
Motelroont
..
he Exhibit 'A'

~

SCOff":

Malone 30 .

Player charges.
refs lost

VIETTI

1

· Noe 22 -5-49 ; Blse 2-0-"' ; Price
8-0-16 ; Robinson 0-0-0; Rovs~:

5- The DaUy ~'!line!, Mlddleport·Pomerey,O., Tuesday,Feb. 22, 1977

;

MOll. 11tiU w.
9 AM TO UM

®

OPEN
SUibAY 9 AM TO t I'll

BASKETBALL·

RIG~

College Bukttball ~Hults
Bv U111ted Pres s lntern11tional
E.ut
Army 7~ Colgate 56
Barrington 85 Nichols 80
Babson 90 Lowell u. 85
Boston St . 83 Fltchbg St . 68
Brooktvn Coii7S John Jay 59
Bridgepor t 70 Wagner 68
Buff&amp;lo 78 Cenislus 11
Clarion 81 Calif . P a . 79

RESERVED
WE ACCEPT FEDERA.L FOOD STAMPS
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU FEBRUARY 26, 1977

NO DfNEISftfWI

E . Strdsbg 93 Cort lnd St . 71

Ed inboro 95 Pitt .Jhnstn 90
Hartwick 60 ltl'lace 55
Hofstra 89 Amer ic an U . 78
Merlst 7A Tr enton St . 61
Niagara 85 St . Fran Pa . 81
Pitt 76 Indian.; Pa . 59
Plattsbgh St . 77 Clrksn 73
RIU 61 Nf!W H&amp;mp . U . 60
Seton Hall 98 Cath u . 75
St . Bonnie 98 Si ena 74
St . Vince 78 Frostbg St . 71
St . John's 92 Howard 69 •
W'mnstr Pe . 12 Alliance 62
W. va . 107 Cltvtlend St. 69

USDA

CHOICE

SIRLOIN
TIP

South

Alllbama 78 Georgia 68
Aust in Peiy 73 W . Ky . 59
Auburl'! ao Jacksonvll!e 66
Campbell 76 Pembroke 69
Charleston 67 Wofford 64
Citadel 19 Madison 72
De Pa ul 93 Marsha ll 1•
E . l&lt;y . 66 E. Tenn . 65
Furman 88 Sout h Car . 80
Grdnr-Webb 91 Svani!h St. 82
Ga . Tech 63 UNC .wll m . 57
Ga. Southern 81 Ga . St. 75
GreensbOro 83 Atl. Chris 69
Ky . St . 86 L incoln Pa . BS
Kentuck,y 81 MiSSISSippi 69
LSU 95 Vanderbilt 7.4
McNeese St . 55 Ark. St . 50
Mil ligan 78 Carson .Newi'nan 66
Mid d. Tenn . 74 Murrey St . 70
Mn tevllo 7.8 Auburn ·M 'g mry 68
f!Mrr ls 70 Francis Marton 65
Morehead St : 90 Tenn. Tech 78 ·
NW La . 75 S E La . 63
N .C.. Charlotte 95 Samford 81
Old Dom in ion 82 Wm . &amp; Mary

68

Presbyterian 84

u SC·Sprtnbg

STEAK
USDA CHOICE

CUBE
STEAK
LEAN

FRESH

GROUND
LB.

71

So . Carolina St . 116 Bapt is f'SO
South Alabama 100 R. Morris 80
Southwestern La . 73 Larner 61
Tennessee 76 M iss . St. 68

Tennessee St. 61 Knoxvil le 61
Xavier La . 90 Jackson St . 89

Midwest
Akrcn 91 Gannon 79
Cent. Mo . 79 NW Missouri 72
Cinci 79 Buffalo St . 60
Indiana St . 17 51. Lou is 72
Lake Suprior 81 No. ¥ich . 75
Marquette 73 Wisconsin 58
M illikin 75 Elmhurst 67
Ros~ .Hulrran 73 McMurray 59
SW Mo . 82 N E Missouri 74
SI U ·Edwdsvl80 Roosevelt· 62
SIU ·Carbndle 12 Evansvl 60
SfeuDnviBOWIIbenorce 64
Wis .. Milw 86 Pan Am 71
Xavier 0 . 74 Trnslvan la 73
Southwest
Austin 98 Prairie View 78
BishOp 73 Texas SOu thern 70
E . Tex. St . 74 S.F . Austin 71
Howard Payne 87 Ab. Chris 82
St Mary's 82 St . Edward's SS
' Tex ..Arl. 92 La . Tech 90
Tr inity Tex. 74 Tex . Coli 72

west

Cent . We!lh .52 E . Ore. Sf . _.1
Colo. Mines 69 westrn St , 56
Colorado St . 75 Utah St. 67
George Fox 99 NW Nazarene 85
Pacifi c Ore . 101 Linfield 98
se'a ttte Pee. 7.5 Idaho ..,_.
Southern Colo. 73 Regis 62
• Whitworth e2 wsn . wasn 69

DAYTON, Ohio. (UPI) Jack Walker, president of the
Dayton Gems, said Monday
that Ken Wilson has heen
relieved of his duties as
general manager of the
!ilternational Hockey League
club.
He named Gems Coach
Larry MICkey as interim
general manager until a
"package which would totally
r~tructure the management
and capitalization of the club
can be concluded."

We're oUering t):'lis watch
lwo ways . ll's an excellent
"Value. Precision jeweled.
Classic In style. With
textured goldlone case,
sweep second , full numeral

dial and unbreakable
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GOESSLER
·JEWELRY STORE
Pomeroy, 0.

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WHITE OR PINK

DELICIOUS

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APPLES
3 LB. BAG

gge

�8- The DlllySent!Jiel,Mlddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday,Feb. 22,1977

Fonner President wary of ·
.contenders for his crown

7- The U.lly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Feb. 22,1977

Dairy interests hit by milk subsidy ·proposal

BERNAKu dRENNER 1978 fiscal year which begins
Oct. I.
WASHING'roN (UPI ) Csrt.r's new version ofthe
President
Carter,
in
a
' NEW YORK {UP!) - Gerald Ford Is a privare
budget restored moat of the
surprise
move
certain
tD
citizen oow, but he makes It clear that be still considers
bring protests from dairy $2.3billion Ford had proposed
himself a contender in the politlcalsreria and be warns
farmers, today endorsed a . trimming !rom federal food
other While H0111e upirants tD keep their hands &lt;if
proposal by former President aid programs, including food
"the 1111111le of !elder" In the Republican party.
Ford to cut spending on a slamPII and a bundle of child
In a pre-taped Interview, slated for airing today by
program of milk subsidies for nutrition progrima ranging
ABC's "Good Moralng America," Ford !Did holt David
from. school lunches and
school children.
Hariman be intends to remain politically aCtive,
The program Ct)SIS $154 breakfasts to summer
meeting lrequenUy with the Republican leadel'lhip. He
rnlllion in the current fiscal f~g operations.
added, "I just don't want any one person at this stage
Both Democratic and
year but receive $35 million
of the game to prt!JI!mpl the nell Republican
Republican
administrations
under lbe budget proposal.
nomination. n
·
Carter also reversed
"R's possible things might develop where I would
another
Ford proposal ,
have an· inte:est and the party would want me tD do
asking
Congress
tD continue a
10," be ssld of his own chances d wlnnlng the
popular
$190
million
farm
nominalioo. "I certainly don't want someone todBy to
conservation
subsidy
1111)', 'I'm the ordy potential nominee and I'm going to
program in 1978.
run the &amp;bow lor the next four years.'"
Both proposals were
Ford said he and his wife wiD be in WashJnston on
included
in Carter's package
March 24-26 to talk with GOP House and Senate
of
suggested
changes in the
leaders.
· budget which Ford had sent
1.-_ _ _ __..:.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __j to Congress earlier for tlieClEVELAND ( UPI) - An
emergency room physician
charged with aggravated
murder in the reported
beatiru! death of bls mistress'
eight·year·old son !!iced
,,
arraignment today• in
'
CUyahoga County Common
Pleas Court.
Dr. Stuart S. Kuller~ 30,
Brecksville, has . been
'
'
accused by Ann M. NOsl&lt;e, 32,
·l!y RAYMOND WILKJNSON custody.
Unity, he said, "Any who lived with Kuller, of
... NAIROBI, Kenya (UP!)Nairobi's Daily Nation government is welcome to killing her son, Arthur,. by
Uganda President ldi Arnin newspaper, which bas the send a delegation tD Uganda "slapping and backhanding"
has invited all goverrunents largest circulation in East to see what has ta~en place." · . the boy Feb. 7.
'to send delegations to. Africa, said in an editorial
Britain, canada and
.Prosecutor John T.'
~Ia to investigate the today, "Independent Africa is Australia !Unong others have · Corrigan was expected to ask
cjlntroversial deaths of lbe in dsnger of losing any right demanded an international the judge for a continuance in
~,ountry ' s
Anglican she may bsve in attacking investigation into the deaths. order to further prepare •lbe
archbishop and two govern- countries like Rhodesia and
Aminsaid Uganda was now case against Kutler, .who
South Africa over issues calm again after a "group of . works
ment minist~.
at · · Suburban
· Tanzania charged in its which pale intD insignificWJce desperate men (including lbe Community .. Hospital,
g11vernmenl newspaper when compared with the archbishop and the two Warrensville Heights.
Monday the archbishop, widespread killings that have cabinet minisrers) inrended
Meanwhlle, sheriff's invesJanani Luwum, was kllled been reported from Uganda. " ID wipe out a large number of tigalors - holding the twice
"Arnin does a dastardly Ugandans" in a !oiled coup . divorced woman in protective
personally by an eiU'aged
Amln who Shot .him twice in deed," the editorial said, "yet atrempt.
custDdy -say they expect tD
the chest afrer the clergymsn delegates pour into Kampala
Amin personally blasted present evidence in the esse
an
international Canon Burgess Carr, general tD the county grand jury
refused tD confess to a plot tD for
conference on ·economic secretary of the All Africa within a few days.
overthrow him.
In Lundon, Luwum's .prede· affairs" - despite 11n appeal Conference of Churches, who
The doctor was arrested at
~esssor,
Bishop Leslie from African churches for an had branded the three deaths his home ~~ Friday night
Brown, said Monday he had immediate worldwide as murders and had ·after Miss Nos~e, a
been told by someone II'JIO boycott of Amin's regime. · demanded an· international respiratory therapist at
had seen the archbishop's
Amin dismissed all critics boycott of the Arnin regil)le. Woman ' s · H o s pi Ia I,
body that Luwum had been Monday as a ''microphone lor
Amin said carr was "in the · Cleveland, broke down
shot.
Zionism.'
same caregory as (South earlier in lbe day during
Uganda said lbe three died
In a letter tD William Eteki, African Premier . John ) exhaustive questioning and
last week in an auto accident secretary general of the Vorster and (Rhodesian !Did law enforcement officials
while trying to escape Organization of African Prime Minister Ian) Smith." Kutler, lrith whom she· has
lived with since last Jan. 29,
·
·
killed the boy a!rer finding
~

Doctor in
court for
child death

Amin invites all nations to

have atrempted tD cut lbe
milk subsidy program in lbe

past, but have usually been

served as part of the lunch grants, $100 million more million below the current
and th~ ellra servings .th!n F...-.1 requuted but $87 · filcal year's budget.
ii
authorized by the separare .,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....,_ _ _ _ _ _ _.;...-iit

overridden by dairy-state "special" milll: PI'OgraiiJ. can
laW1118kers.
be .dispensed with, olficials .
Ford actually had offered said.
two alternate proposals.Carter's budget message
Under one plan rejected by warned that, while he
Carter, all present child proposing restoration of most ,
nutrition programs which of Ford's food cuts for ftscal
currently cost a total of about 1978, tbe new administration 1
$3.5 billion would be · would study possible future
abolished and replaced with a "alternatives" for present
single $2 billion block grant. food programs.
That
would
have
The '
$190
. mlllion
eliminated the school mill; Agricultural Conservation
subsidy as a seperaie entity . 1 Payment program which
The second Ford plan as- Ford wanted to eliminste and
sumed congressional which Carter proposed
rejection of the block grant restoring for 1978 offers
proposal and asked for an farm.e rs cost-sharing
appropriation of only $35 · payments when lbey carry 1
million for the .separate out awroved conservation
school milk program.
practices.
Officials said this proposal,
Carter also asked Congress
which Carter left•' Intact, tD cancel Ford's $16 million
would provide funds to cutback proposal in the Great
continue the milk subsidies in Plains conservation aid proschools which do not serve gram.
r,gular lunches.
In
addition, Carter
In schools where lunches proposed a $200 Million outlay.
are provided, milk is always for rural water and sewer

REUTER-BROGA_N
."The

lnJur~nce

. Auto lnsunnce

Store"

1. Jewelry ·and Other

2. Homt Insurance

VIIVItllts
t. luslri11s P1Ckl9t
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11 . Farm lnsurenct

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•

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Fri endl~

vinyl

.,.,

.. ,

0

~~

Press

By
United
International
A warrnlng trend that shot
temperatureS into the 70s and
80s in Nebraska and Kansas
pushed eastward today while
tDurists in south Florida ·shiv·
e:ed in record cold.
Dry, fair weather brought
forest fires to a portion of lbe
South. A cold front carried
snow into the California
Sierra and scattered showers
dampened the West Coast
states inland as far as Idaho
and Nevada. Tbe northern
coastal mountains got two
inches of rain.
Six inches of snow Monday
saved opera!D!'ll at Or,gon's
Timberiane Lodge from

Honor list
announced

.sing at rru·d~
. ·k. It aU
Clo
helped b
"=
.
ut wasn't enough tD
end the Western drought.
Cloud seedh.a
-., tD bring .snow
and rains tD Colorado was
ready to begin.
·
Even Hawail, 2,400 rnlles
from San Francisco, had
problems with only .77 inches
of rain so far this year
compared tD a normal 6.25
inches.
In south Florida , with
tourists januning hotels and
restaurWJis for a long holiday
weekend, temperatures feU
to 41 degrees in Miami, three
degrees below the previous
record for the date. In the
Florida panhandle, it was 32
in Apalachicola. Tallahassee
had a low of 23 degrees, three
degrees below the record for
the date.
~ut in Kansas, Russell has
a high of 81 and it was 80 in
Salina. Record highs for Feb.
21 were reported in Pueblo,
Colo ., Omaha, Neb., and
Council Bluffs, Iowa.

at Southern

·
In Louisiana, a state
forestry official bemoaned
"this socailed beautiful
wea ther, .. which was blamed
in pa,rt for 349 fires on
Sunday ·
"Many of these fires are
caused by people who have
been indoors most of the
winter,"
said Robert
Romero, chief of the
Louisiana
Forestry
'Conunission fire control divi·
sion, "and they're getting out
now and cleaning up around
the house. They're burning
off fence rows and old fields.
This stuff just takes off."
In Alabama the han on
open burning 'of trash was
extended to include 20
counties. More than 120,000
acres of dry timberland bsve
burned
this
month
prompting Gov., Georg~
Wallace tD declare the state
in a "forest wildfire
emergency."
High winds whipped
through the Las Vegas
Valley, closing U.S. 95 north
of indian Springs Monday
afrernoon, shutting down Las
Vegas '
McCarran
lnrernational airport for an
hour and triggering power

:~~~ers. ;:ash

plcku~

''

'
DIRECTOR NOMINEES
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
Four men and a woman have
been nominated for the
annual best direction award
of the Directors Guild of
America . .
The · n&lt;minees are Alan
Pakula for " All the
President's Men "; John
Avildsen for " Rocky";
Martin Scorcese for "Taxi
Driver" ; Sidney Lumet for
"Network ," and Lina
Werbnuller for "Seven Beautl es. "
The :winner will be
announced ·at the Guild's
awards dinners in Los
Angeles and New York
March 12.
'

, RACINE Jennings
Beegle, principal of the
Southern Jwlior High School,
failures.
has announced the school's
third siX! weeks · grading
period.
Making a grade of '.'B" or
Galllpalls, Ohio
- PRESIDENTS' DAY SALE
above in ali their subjects to
2·19-77
be listed on the roll, with
ObloValleyUvestockCo.
names in capital letters
Stocker Cattle -Steers, 250
receiving all A's were:
tD :llO liB. :12.50 to 36.50; 300 to ·
SAVE A HAT FULL OF MONEY
SEVENTH GRADE - 400lbs.23.25to36.; 4001o500
Brian Armes, Vicki Arnold , lbs. 23.50 to 35.25; 500 to 600
Brian Ash, Robert Brown, 1 lbs. 2!. to 37.; 600 tD 700 lbs.
Cindy Cross, Melodi Cundiff, 22.75 to 34.50; 700 lbs. and
Alicia Evans, Kim Follrod, over 23.50 to 34.
Joe Bob Hemsley, Krista
Heifer Calves - 250 fD ·300
Johnson , Kelly Pickens, Lori Ibs. 21. to zr.oo; 300 to 400 lbs.
•
Powell, Jay · Rees, Tom :12.00 to 28.25; 400 to 500 lbs.
Roseberry, Randal TUCker, 23. to 30.; 500 to 600 lbs. 21.75
and
DENISE
DEEM, to 29.50; 600 to 700 lbs. 22. to
CEDAR CHEST, LOVESEAT,
J E N NY
M AN U E L, 311.50.; '100 lbs. and over. 21.50
MEUNDA SALMONS, RITA tD 31.
UVING ROOM SUITES,
SLOTER, KENT WOLFE
Stock Cows &amp;Bulls (By The
and LAURA WOLFE.
Head) Stock Cows 135. to
TABlfS, FLOOR C1lVERI NG,
EIGHTH GRADE
210.; Stock Cows and Calves
Bonnie Boso, Peggy Bush, 240. to 285.; Stock Bulls 190. to
.Paul Cardone, Steve Circle, 265.; Baby Calves 5.00 tD
HAMPERS, CHAIRS, BOOK CASES,
Terri Crouch, Robin Fortune, f().OO.
Jody Grueaer, Eric Harris, · (By lbe Pound) Canners
DINETTES, STORAGE .CHESTS,
Armintha Holter, Becky end cutters cows 18.50 to 24.;
Koehler, Bob Lee, Terri "tlol.ltein Cows 24.50 to 26.25;
Manuel, Janet Mlddleswart, Commercial Bulls 25.50 to
HOOVER SWEEPERS.
Carl Morris, Mary Beth 33.00.
ObiU, Mary Beth Slavin,
Pigs - 8.00 top 26.00.
Danny Talbott, Bryan Wolfe,
Veal Calves - Tops 2ro lb•
MeU. . Yonker, and MARK to 250 t1 to 76.; Medium 200
SIMPSON
and
JACK lbs. to 300 52 to 66.50; Culls 50.
WOlFE.
to down.
SPECIAL EDUCATION Sows s350 lbs . up 3I.flfl to
MIDDI.EPORT,.0.
~er Jones, V6nda Wolfe. 34.50

Market Report

SAVINGS ON MANY
•

0

.... :"*

Baker furniture

Mognetk

1·118" un'finlshed pOOderosc ' pine doors
screen without blockif'!O. Choose from 2
size!.

2' • 6'8" • 1·3/8"

· ·-

SALE
PRICE

.. 1288

YOUR
CHOICE

3144

REGULAR 29.25

2197

2'6" X 6'8" X 1·3/8"

~C:LQPAV

SALE
PRICE

.....

3.4~

.

''

PR.

'

Schumacher

TY,I:.Q ·ay,hfiim. ,
•

.

'

~

....

PASSAGE lOCKSET

Plein knob on either side with

no locking mechanism.
'

SALE PRICE

,,

DIE CAIT

•

COLONNADE PULL
• Weathered !Steel pull

• 51/," long
• AntiQue Eng lish finish

• 3 Yo'' center

REG.
47f

33('
'I'

REG. 77f

.{;;}

55 ~

i@Jecoratil/e
4../
J rardware· .~.:~·.;~~~~ ~
Dl! em

TYLO By btiistt
PRIVACYLOCISn •
lntertor tumbutton ond plain
ex1erior with emergency by·

COLONIAL !(NOB
• 1 'J." d iameter

• Smart . Distir.ctive

woy .

I \..

...

POLIIItiD
IUSS

~~~E

COLONNADE KNOB

-BLACK

''.1merock
:a:. ' ' '

POLIIIflD IUSS
&amp;C.I

333 ~~~E 311

COLONNADE HINGE

FOI OVIIIA,.NG DOORS
• Bl11ck weathered tteel

• FOf 3 / 8" imHn doors

TYLO By illiJslt•

• An tiQ tJe English fini sh

STEEL

BLACK

COLONIAL HINGE

.

REG. .
1.13

POl INSET
OYIILJ,PPING 00015
• An1iqu!' English f inish

87~

ENTRY LOCISET
Tumbutton interior . Exterior
key in knob.

SA(E PRICE

(annon (raft
7"120"

71NCih 20 INCH

LOUYEIID SHumtS

' INSERTPANR

Irr.deptfidenl Lock

NIGHT lATCH
R:e"Jersibla lotch for doors

. IW' to 2V•".

REG.09

Pint ftltt111 ora lowtrtd to
ponnlt llfll Gild olr cifculo·
tlatt RIGdy to paint et 'stain .
(Lou hardware).

IBONUS(· ~E.~

277

244

•u

SHU1TERS
wlntklw. , Un·

._

FOf "'~~board ot
flnlahed ~ne. lou fabric , herd·

wore.

•·

AmtriCGn Door
)jOU.O¥( CORE
LAUAN

FLUSH DOORS

V«101ile door con olso be .used
for t,.~, desk top. Ready 10
point 01" stal~ .

2' ...... 11·1/1"

2''" I 6'1" 11-i/1"

SHUnER H'RDWARE
'AVAILABLE ·

AMERICAN Association of
University Women, 7:30
Tuesady st th~ h&lt;me of Mrs.
Carl Horky, 278 S. Fifth St.,
Middleport. Teresa Casci tD
present program on "Bloom
Where You're Planted."
Board meeting at 7 p.m.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Lirerary
Olib, 2 p.m. Wednesday at
the home of Mrs. Dwight
Wallace. Mrs. Sibley Slack to
review "The Letters of
Rupert Brook.''

over 19 years old or under 13
and mast be a member of the
International Order of Job's
Daughters or lbe Rainbow
Girls, or a blood relative of 8
Master Mason or Eastern
Star not to exceed two
generations hack. She must
also be able to travel around
Ohio for various appearances
if selected.
J
Further infonnalion on the
conrest can be secured from
Bill Quickel, chapter advisor.

fund raising activities

~z

Rap:
I am 16 and in lbe middle of a family fins~~Cial mess.
Dod gives M&lt;m $40 a week for food, clothes Wld olber
expenses for me, my younger brother and them.
M&lt;m bas stupidly resigned herself tD the fact we'D an
starve. Sbe doesn'leven try getting a job. Dad's got the money,
ootlately he's turned nilser.
I've tried to find work. Nolucksolar.
What can I do to relieve this awful silaalion? My parents
compound the problem by fighting constantly. -D. L.
D.L.:
We suspect money (or the lack of it) isn 'I the real problem
here. Your parents' financial basales give them an opportunity
tD ftght, feel abused, get even. If the weekly stipend weren't an
issue, they'd find something else.
Naturally, $1714190 per month can't cover food, clolbes
and other expenses for four, unless !bey go the beans, potatoes
and thrift store route. Your dad surely knows this, so perhaps
he's "teaching bis wife a lesson," paying' her back for
whatever she does to needle him.
·
And she uses his chintziness as a wedge in turning his
chlldren against him. II appears she'd rather "let you starve"
than hunt for a job.
What a miserable way of battle - making the kids suffer
to prove a point. Why oot tell your parents so in a strslghl-&lt;!ul
·confrontation? They need a shot of truth, and you young
peoplemightadrnlnlsterithesl. -HELEN AND SUE

By Polly Cramer

DEAR POLLY - Several
years ago I read of way to
remove formula stains from
baby clothes thai really work·
ed. I remember it contained
dishwasher detergent, but I
do not remember what was
used with it. I hope someone
cantellme.-MRS. L.W.C.
DEAR MRS. L.W.C.- I am
sure you will be hearing from
some of the readers who can
pass on the desired informa·
lion. -POLLY
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is with those who
package three patterns in one
package. Often l have to buy
a blouse and pants pattern as
well as the desired skirt pal·
tern. Seems to me l'OSis could
be cut considerably for the
customer if each pattern was
packaged and sold alone, as
they were years ago. I realize
all prices have skyrocketed
but in Ibis case the saving in
paper would be considerable.
-MRS. J 'A.F.
DEAR POLLY - Sometime
·ago we had a fire in our home
and were left with the smoke
odor all over. A store that
sells chemical sprays and so
forth suggested that we pour
anunonia over charcoal, put
Ibis in containers and place
one in each room. They were
right. This was the cheapest,
and it really worked. El.'iiE.
DEAR POLLY - After the
legs on pantyhose that have

a

Becky Reed .
is

church·meeting

NEW HAVEN • W V
. .
• . a. The New Haven Wome11 of
Meigs Inn noon Wednesday. the'Church of God held lbeir
OIDO Valley Commsndery, Felruary meeting at the
~led convocation, 7:30p.m., home of Becky Reed.
All Sir Knights should bring lilalesaes were Mrs. Reed,
rltusls.
Delores Taylor and Margaret
~WLDeWdnOOdD Ga rdthen hClub, Dodson·
7: ""
08 ay a1 e orne
•Roll'·.caU· wu- wwered
cl. Mrs. Vernon Nease. Mrs. witb each one's "'Favorite
Dwight Milhoan, assisting , HDbby." Spiritual Life
hostess .
Director, Delores Taylor,
ASH Wednesady Service, gave a !llport on the Christ's
Grace Episropal Church 7 Birthday Obae~vance and
p.m. Wednesday · in parish Prayer· Vigil in . which total
hall. Holy communion. '
received iiu $245.33.
TIRJRSDAY
Members 9Gted to continue
THE LOYALMEN and 1be ooin holden for Christ's
Women's Class Middleport lirtbday offering. A report
Cllurc~ ol Christ, Thursday was given by members ·
1:30 p.m. at church.
taking Christmas gifts to a
JUVERVIEW Garden Club [ll!tlent at Lakin State
•
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the ul..ttai'. •
·home of Mrs. Claremont
It ,... annouilced that the
Harris with Mrs. Herman state convention will be held
Grossnickle as co-hostess. in Dunbar on Aprlll5 and 16
The program topic Is sue- and that the first national
ceasful gardenil)g and an oonvenUon for Church of God
auction will be held.
Women will 1)\l held in Louisville, Kentucky on September
23-25. Members were urged to
attend.
An eucutlve committee
meeting wlll be held Thur•
day at the hme of .Bonnie
Felds. All dficers were urged
to attend.
The nominating committee
p-eunled
the bsllot for the
CARPENTE~ The
election
of
Group n officers
Temple United Methodist
for the new year beginning in
Women's group met with
Mra. Carl Crabtree. Mrs. April. Elected were vice
p-ealdent, Roberta Maynard;
Mendal Jordan, president,
eecretary,
Eleanor Davis;
prelided 81 e busineu IM!IISion treasurer, Fay Carpenter;
end led devotions with Leah
Crabtree, Kevin Crabtree apirltualllfe, Delores Taylor
llld missionary education,
end Mra. Paul Yeun having
special aong~ and prayer, Becky Reed. Hostesses to
acripture and a reading, · eerve for lbe March meeting
''Follow His Way'' being used will be Su~ Erwin and
Eleanor Davis.
to develop the theme.
iledDo Reed combined the
Plana were made for lbe
programs
on "Thailand I final paymaat rl Crusade For
Hlatory
and Hope and
Pensions pledge and Upper
'lballand n - Light to the
Room subscriptions were
Enlllhtened," asalsted by
renewed.
Grace Cunningham, Bonnie
Fie~ and Orpha Fields.
Delicious refreshments
. were aerved by the hostesses,
pi11881l118881l118881l118881l118881l1ll!llllit Mrs. Reed, Mrs. Taylor and
Pomeroy
·
Mrs. Dodson to Iva Capehart,
Grace C!mnlncham, Bonnie
Fleldll, Patty Maynard,
U~
Nonna Greene, ·sarah Gibbs,
•
(kopha Fields, Pansy Fry and
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Kane, !Iacer Reed. ·
Emily and Heather, Msriet·
' 'Ia, spent lbe weekend here
APPEARING AGAIN
:viajting her parents, Mr. and
The
Rev. end Mrs. Berge
; Mrs. Harold Blackston.
Najsrien
d Jordan, who bsve
Mrs. Marcia · Keller and
made
a
number of ap·
Mrs. Olive Weber were repearanceslocaliy
lbe last two
' cent visitors In Flerruning
lfteks,
will
be
guest
speakers
with Mr. and Mrs. Bill
at
a
special
miasionary
Strauss and family.
Mrs. Olive Weber on vaca· 16rviceto be held it 7:30p.m.
\ion from her employment at Friday at the Middleport
Foote Mineral for the put Olurch of !be Nuarene. The
week vtsited Friday find public Is litvlted to the Friday
·
, Saturday in · WUllamsto\m, ~ei'Vlce:
• W. Va. wllb her brother 111111
HOSPiTALIZED
llller·ln-law, .Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Thelma Orr Is confin·
Dean Hlll. She also visited In 4ld to the Camden Clark
Athanl with •her daUjjhler,
II«&lt;DDIal al "-'kmburll. W.
II. . ., and 1011.
Va.?ollowingMheart»ttlt:k . .

Need laundry fotmula
for jotmula swins
I

Slabbo111lleu Harts Everyoue

Periect attendance awards
were presented at the Rock
Springs United Metho&lt;lli;t
Church recently by Harold
Blackston, SUJ1day school
superintendent, assisted by
+++
Paul Rice , assistant · Dear Helen and SUe:
superintendent.
I'm 14 and love my parents a lot. Mom and I are close and
. Rece1vmg awards for 21 can talk freely most of the time. But once in a whlle she gets
years ol . perlect attendance mad when I do something wrong and gives me the silent
were Mrs. Beuna Grueser . treatment. She won't talk tD me for hours.
and Mrs. Lottie Leonard.
If she does this to her grownup friends, I wouldn't want to
Amos Leonard receiyed be one of them.- LOVES MY M&lt;YI'HER BUT
recognition for 19 years of
perieel attendance and Betty Dear LMMB :
Conkle for 10 years.
Your last senrence, I think, may shake up many others
• Others recognizf\1 and pre- · {including me!). All too ofren we treat our children in a way
sent awards were Rita Eblin, that rnlght cost us friends if we tried the same methods on
seven years; Christy and &amp;dulls.
Pam Evans a~d Susanne
True, "silent" punislunent can be effective- especially if
Richmond, s1x years ; parent and chlld are close and it's used no more than several
William Grueser, five years; limes a year -on matters of dire importance.
Jay Evans, two years; and
But even so, it'u poor way tD solve a problem, unless the
Nell Richmond, Dupe, Kim, , , period of reserve is followed by honest, in-&lt;iepth talk. Right,
Tracy and Tammy Eblin, and Sue? ~ HELEN
Helen Partlow.
+++
Right, Mom!
Thefewtimesyou'dgosilentonme,l'd know I was in deep
serious, and I'd straighten up fast.
But when parents use lbe silent treatment as a weapon .
("If you don 1t conform, I'll close you out") that 's no good! It
cah become a way of avoiding issues and aUenatlng kids. hos~~S.'S fnN
u:; JVI
SUE

POMEROY • Middleport

·-P

Women
ofTempk
Church meet

Personal N,_.es·

EACH

.,

Competition for th~
DeMolay Sweetheart has
been scbeduled for March 5at
7:30 p.m. at the Middleport
Masonic temple.
Sponsored by Meigs
Chapter, Order of lleMolay
competition is held annually
to select a DeMolay
Sweetheart. Judging is on the
basiS of personal interview
with a judging panel, talent
presentation, and poise and
personality.
Contestants must not be

By Helen and Sue Hottel

Polly's Pointers Bradbury women pkJn

,:. :?(&lt; ,.

abdommat control are worn
out, I cut off the legs at the
bottom of the reinforced seclion just below the start of the
sheer pari. The top that is left
is great to wear under a
bathing suit and will drip dry
just as fast as the suit does
and is easy to rinse out, too. ELIZABETH.
DEAR POLLY - I got so
tired of getting runs in my
pantyhose and finally notieed
that most of them started in
the feet. They were doubtless
caused by the hose rubbing
against my shoes. The next
time I bought a new pair, I
put them on and outlined the
feel (.ju;1 below the line of my
shoe) with clear nail polish.
Now when a run starts in the
foul it will not go beyond the
nail polish line. I have used
nail polish for years io stop
runs, but this other idea is
new.
This summer· I started
hanging my clothes out of.
doors to dry, instead of using
the dryer. But I did not like

Activities to raise funds for
conununity activities were
&lt;lli;cussed during the Thursday meeting of the Bradbury
Variety Club held at the home
of Mrs. Bernice Winn.
Ahousewares party was set
for the March 17 meeting
which will be held at the
home of Mrs. Kathr.yn
Werner beginning at 10:30
p.m. Program bwks were
&lt;lli;trJbuted and the afternoon
was spent completing them
and discussing projects to be
undertaken in the cornlng
months.
New officers presiding at
the meeting were Mrs. Winn,
president , Mrs . Jackie
Hoover, vice presidenti Mrs.
Arlene Davis, secretary ·
treasurer : Mrs. Evelyn Mur·
ray, flower fund, and Mrs.
Virginia Whitlatch, publicity.
Mrs. Winn had · scripture
and Mrs. Davis read the
minutes of a previous
meeting and conducted roll

the inconvenience of havinJ::

CLUB TO MEET
The Meigs County Shepherds 4·H Clu b will meet
Wednesday eve ning,
February 23 at 7:30 p.m. at
the Meigs County Extension
Office. Anyone interested in
joining the club this year Is
invited tD attend the meeting.
The to!lc for the evening's
ll'Ogram will be "How To
Select Lambs.''
TOP SCORER
Kyger Creek's Ralph
Baylor, a 6-ll senior guardforward , continues to lead the
top scorers in Southeastern
Cltio. Baylor has 326 points in
14 games, a 23.3 average. He
was one of the best inside
shooters in the SV AC.

MASON,....,...

STORE I-lOURS
Moii., ,T-..;~.; ~.•

to go hack and forth to the
clothespin bag. Finally I had
the idea of making a tern·
porary pouch in my T·shirt by
using two cli[Hln clothespins.
I fill this pou ch with
clothespins and just reach in·
to it every time I need one.
The T·shirt is not harmed
either.- LORELEI.

. . .• .

call. There was a potluck dinner at noon with Mrs. Hilda
King giving grace. AnothOr
member attending was Mrs.
Olevia Cottrill.

.....,... S:W

THURSOAY fiL 12100ft

FRIDAY L'Mill M

MASON FURNITURE
Mlnllan Ghte

,Special . .·

MIIOn,W.\'&amp;

.·.

·· lOr tills week's sore noses:·
7ConPuffs®

+++

(Not to speak of earning yourself the reputation for sullen
moodiness.) - HELEN

lions Club, regular meeting,

•

televiSion past
The youth's body has not
be~ found ~· according tD
Shel'llf's ' def~ctive Peter
Becker,whosatdKutler -on
the advice of counsel repeatedly has refused tD
issue any statement or give
investigators
the boyis.bolly.the location of
"He had a lot of time tD
&lt;lli;pose of the body anywhere
within a w.ipile radius of his
jlouse," Becker said of
Kutler's alleged actions ,
"The body could be in a pond,
a snowbank, a culvert, an·
incinerator or one of those

fir~ish .

CAFE DOORS

Two.pooel louver design door
of 1·318" tllick vnfinislled pino .
Provides ventilated privocy.·

REGULAR 16:98·

warm air pushing eastward offering:'~~";8
litt· le re. Jief to drie d . up remons.

LOUVER ·DOOR

lotch. lntludfl hafdwote .
2'~'' x 6'8". Saves spoce .

1

·

2'6" x 4' x2'1'' 1 ••
LOUVERED

Ptrmonent contour st"l
door with heavy~ll' ·

~
.Q

SOUght •

1UESDAY
POMEROY Chamber of
O!mmen:~ Tuesday, noon at
the Meigs Inn.
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary, Racine Post 602,
7:30 Tuesday at the hall.
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary, Drew Webster
, Post 39, 7:30 Tuesday at the
hall.
Program
on
Americanism to feature Joe
struble, speaker.
OIDO Eta Phi Chapter,
.Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at lbe,.
.O!lmnbus lind Soulbem Ohio
Electric Co. social room. ·

C HWI

FOLDING DOOR

~Ontestants

. "Ttte Insurance Stone"

,.,

VINYL LAMINATED
FRUITI¥000- STEELlTE

rj$~~=G;;;~i~~==~=,n;;,,, , ,,,.,{.,,,~~

Calendar presented

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE

;investigate 3 deaths

Mr.

DeMo!ay Sweetheart

SociaT~ Awards

Somo Of Our Other Services:

Copy Servtce-Noltry Sorvtce-car Leasi119

!'PrvirP. .

.

.

Carpenter .Personals
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Cheadle gave devotions.
Woodnun, McArthur, called Election of officers for 1977
on her mother, Mrs. Murl was held. New officers are
Galaway.
. . president, Mrs. Emma
- Mr. and Mrs. Mike Law~. ,, Whiltlhg!Ori; · vice jlrflident, ,
Columbus, were weekend Belilab Perry; secretary,
guests of their parents, Mr. ·Kathy FrWlks and treasurer,
and Mrs. Gene Jeffers and Af!!tta Fiaher. Projects that
family and Katherine Lawson are underway include
and Cheryl.
making .s quill and having
' Mr.s. Herman Cordray, ~mre cookbooks printed.
Athens Route, visited Mrs.
Mr . and Mrs. Richard
Beulah Cordray and Mr. and Jeffers, New Boston, IU. were
Mrs. Reed Jeffers.
guests of their pares~ts, Mr,
The Busy Bee Society cl.the and Mrs. Reed Jeffers and
Carpenter Baptist Church Mr. and Mrs. Dana Bslley
mel at the home of · Mrs. and other relatives.
·
R•ulah P~rry : Mrs. Rex

CANCER

Answer line
Amerlcen CIIICer Socllty

TAKE THIS COUPON TO YOUR STORE

PROCTER &amp; GAMBLE
9676XF

.
Special
for next week's son noses:
Sne another 7C on more PuHs.·
''

'·

:1X9L96

TAKE THIS COUPON TO YOUR STORE
· A .regular feature, prepared by lbe Alnerican Cancer
Society, to help save your life from cancer.
A middle-aged·woman writes: "I use a face cream that
contains estrogen, and I know that there is talk about that
hormone and cancer. But can it hurl me to just use the cream
oo my skin?''
ANSWERiine: Hormonecreamshave!Dbe carefully used,
and your own individual situation is something to discuAs with
your [ilysiclan. You should know that the estrogen in lbe
cream can be abaorbed into your body where its action wlll be
the same u if you swallowed an estrogen pill by mouth. Tbls
kind of cream IB not a good idea for anyone with a cancer
history.
A college student writes: "I sm planning to do a tenn
paper on the emotional and social effects ol different diseases.
Can you suggfli 8011le reading for me about cancer?"
. ANSWERiine : There are a nmnber ol moving and
informative ~ written by people who have bad cWJcer.
Among them are ."Reach to Recovery," by Mrs. Terese
Lasser, founder of the American Cancer Society's program ol
that name for women who have had breut cancer; "Why
Me?" by actor WUliam Gargan, who IOit his vojce to cancer.
Anolber compelling book was recently written by Dr. Ernest
H. Rosenbamn, a cancer specialist. It is entitled, ''Uving With
Cancer" and can provide you with much insight. Your local
ACS Unit also will be glad to ~R~Uest other material, and
perhaps arrange for you to speak with people who work with
cancer patients and their famllles.
Areeder asks: "Dobllck ~pie get skin cancer?"
ANSWERiine: MDII akin cancer is directly related to
overapollll'8 to the sun's damaging ultraviolet rsya, and
while black people ,do indeed develop akin cancer, lbey do so
much leu frequently than Caucasians because ol lbe
protective. plcmentation In lbelr skin. Very fair people are
especially ~~~t~ceptlble to skin cance:.
.
Apoliceman writes: "I am a heavy cigarette smoker and
up until now, I have'nt been Impressed by the anti-cigarette
people ef10UI!h to quit. But now a friend tells me that be read
' thatclgatelte!! have poison gas in them. Ia that true?"
ANSWERiine: Yes. Approximately 92 percent of cigarette
smoke is composed mostly of a number ol lethal g includlng carbon mono:dde. Thil means that eVell though s
·cigarette II low in damaaing tar and nicotine, it can still be
dangerooa.to health. ln fact, Swedsn, a nation with ahigh rate
ol ciprelte.related diS"'IVI, haa just puaed a law requiring
• the Ustlng ~ carbon IIIOIIOilde content on clgsrelte packa&amp;U
·to let the 11110ldng public: llniiW jut what It lB gellinC. Cigarette
1188 bas been getting incrt¥ed attention IInce lbe Third World
Conference on Smoking and Health which wu held in 19'10 In
the U. S. with the support d the American Cancer Society. This
is just one more reuon for a cigarette smoker like yourself tD'
live tboqbt to quJUU.. Your local ACS Unit.can help. For
~~ Qtllllletlbl Gallla UJllt at f4&amp;.7449or Meigs
Unit at •'1&amp;31.
~

PROCTER &amp; GAMBLE

lnoney.slvlng

softest tissue

967iXF

for

caniHIJ.

�•-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o.. Tuesday, Feb, 22, 1977

•-::Tile DallY Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Feb. 22•.1977

Church takes

Pl,ants, not aspirin, causing

option on old
Holzer building

more deaths of children now
_/" By ARNOW DmBLE

ST. PAUL, Minn. (UP!) The little girl filled with pride
at the play lunch she had
arranged In the backyard 1111 apple, a radish and some
berries she had picked from a
shrub in her mother's garden.
Four hours later she went
Into a coma. Three hours
after tbat she was dead .
The chlld died frOm the
berries from a daphne plant,
which is cultivated in home
ornamental gardens and
IP'OWB 1rild throughout the
country. It is one of more
than 700 flowers and plants
that can cause · death or
sev~~e

illiless.

The Minnesota Safety
Council has warned that
plants have replaced aspirin
as the most common cause of
polaoning to children.
"Their colorful leaves and
bright flowers are a magnet
to children, who often can't
reaist the temptatioo to put'
them into their mouths,'' said

the council, which urged
parents to teach children not
to eat plants or flowers.
"If you have small
children, place houseplants
·out of their reach. Keep an
eye on your children in the
garden, too, since the leaves
of pol!lto and tomato plants
are highly poisonous."
.
The lily.of-the valley, long
a gentle symbol of
springtime, can be fatal. The
dieffenbachia, a popular
house plant, can be a killer.
And the leaves of rhubarb the most dangerous plant in
the vegetable garden contain oxalic acid, which
crystallizes in the kidneys
and can cause convulsions,
coma and quick death.
The leaves of the colorful
oleander contain a heart
stimulant that could kill a
child. The Ciba-Geigy
chemical firm in Ardsley ,
N.Y., said there have been
adults who have died from
eating barbecued steaks

It was learned today tbe

skewered on oleander twigs. or serious Illness Include
Castor bean seeds - fre- hyacinth, narcilluo, daffodil,
quenUy made into necklaces · elepbtnt ear, ·larkspur,
for children - are deadly if mookahood, irla, foxglove,
chewed or swallowed. Sage bleeding hard, dutchman 'a
breeches, wisteria, laurels,
berries also can be fatal.
Other common plants and rhodendron, azaleas, wild
flowers that can cause death and cultivated cherries, oaks,

Dangerous plants and
flowers--to children
th e Ciba -Gelgy chemical
company
of
common
household ·plants and flower.s

Wildflowers, Plinl5 .
Jack-in,pylpll: All parts.
Chi bvrnlng, lrrlfatlon .
May apple : All Parts.

that tan be ' ·d angerous and

Di arrhea.

Here Is a list prepared by

of ten fatal - If Ingested by
children:
House Plants

Hyacinth, Narcissus : Bulbs
Nausea, vom iting, diarrhea.

Daffodil: IWJy be fataL

Olender : Leaves , branches
Extremely dangerous . Af -

·

·

ButtercupS ! All parts.
Severe qlgestlve In fury .
Nightshade: All . parts.
Fatal . Dlgestiv,e disturbance.
nervous symptons.

Jimson weed ' All .parts.
Can be fatal.

vestry of St. Peter's
Episcopal Olurch, 541 Second
Ave., Gallipolis has taken a
IJl~y option on the old
Holzer Hospital building
located on Second Ave. and
Cedar St.
Current plans call for the
church to keep part of the
ptoperty and, If successful,
sell part of it. The option was
taken with future purchasing
in mind frwn the Holzer
&amp;spital Foundation.
Local real estate dealers
are bel~ &amp;liked to assist the
vestry In obtaining ·a
prospective buyer for part of
the property.
'

'

elderberry , jack-in-the·
pulpit,
may
apple,
buttercups, nightshade,
water am polson hemlock
. and jimson weed (thorn
apple).

Expansion of Betsy Ross
•

Btiy, Sell or Trade Through The Want Ads

Bakery plant is announced
uUerl, aw.n.tlc Ptoo11nc
ayatem, 41 trar oil
psiflcation oven, additional
Gl fired boiler. addltiCIIal
l!lllke·up, wrappinl and
codln&amp; equipmlnt, pl111 a
new aad modem plutle tray
waaber, all totallnl $1.3

lq. foot ldditllll to
lncreue capacity 1111d Improve efllclency la part of a
panned redevelopmlnl lllld

ASHLitND, Ky. - Ground 21,500
breakina wlll begin im·
mediately for the first part of
an ezpansi111 program of
Betsy Rou Bakeries that
eventually wOJ add 21,500
aquare leet to the e:Wtlng
!tructure at 3300 Winchester
Ave.
Co~y Vice President
Lawrence Co!tilow said the
WAGE DISPUTE
FINDLAY, Ohio (UP!) Workers at two National
Lime and Stone Co. plants are
on stike In a wage dlapute.
Company officials said 155
workers were off the job at
the Carey plant Monday and
40 employees were on strike
at the fil;m's plant near

BUcyrus.

.

Workers were still on the
job at the company's sb:
other plants ·here and In
Bucklam, Delaware, uma,
Marion, and Rimer. The
company is headquartered

BOARD OF
SUTTON TOWNSHIP
TRUSTEES

modernl•ltlon program
begun by Belly Roll 24
~ago.

The purcha1ing of the
newellt Baker Perklnl bakery
equipment now available
includes two new 2,000 pound

Notice
30786

cuse

new plant will make

~j

~
·.~

•

~.~'
,.

9 -

Diffenbachla , Elephant

Flowers

Crocus: Bulbs, Vomiting,

rervous elCc i 1ement .

Lily -Of -valley:
Leaves,
flooers. Irregular heart beat
i11d
pulse, upset m~mtal

IT!
•

•
•

.... -

IJntil

18,500 lbs . 2-speed rea r

-=--------.·

~OF QUALITY Motor Co.

REGULATIONS

1976 CHEVELLE MALIBU CPE ,
Green finish, good tires. v.a,
1975 FORD TOR INO 4 DR.
1
·

12895

1975 CHEVELLE

evenings .
Blown in fiberglass walls
and aHics. 20 Pet Savings
on Vinyl and Steel Sidings.
Replacement and storm
windows . 3J years actual

Quality Work At
Reasonable Rates

14195

Estate Wagon , locall owner car, white radia l tires, air
cond itioning, V-8, automatic, po.wer steering and
brakes, radio, dark red finish, black vinyl Interior.

Al. TROMM CONST.

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
OPEN EVES. 8:00P. M.
POMEROY, OHIO

OFFICE HOURS

8:30 a .m . to 5:00 p .m .
Dally , 8 :30 a. m . to 12 00
Noon Saturday .
Phone today 992 -2156.
1

AI! Yard Sales, Rummage.,
Por~h

and Basemen t Porch
and ' Basem ent Sales, et c.
must be Pttid in advance .
Get yours in earl_y by
stopping by our office at
The Dally Sentinel. 111
Court St . or writing Box
729 , PomerOy, Ohio .tl57tiQ
with your remittance .

~·
~.

1969 CHEVR OLET 81squoine ; 1966
BUICK El ectro, 225 ; 2 Rokon
triolbik es . Phone 94q ·2.tl32

EAR OR shelled corn . Ph one
Elmer Newel l, 985 -3 537 belore
IOa .m.

1975 FORD 1 ton pickup. Phone
843-2QOJ.

MOBILE HOME, 1972 Rebel 12
50 . Co li 985 -353 1 alter b p.m .

x

'•

'BIOW'n
Insulation Serrices
. SIORM
WIII1XIWilOOORS

'

WIIIIIOIIl
AlUMINUM
SIDING-SOflm

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

••

'

FIND IT IN THE

WANT ADS!
'

.

.

&lt;.

Whatever It Is you're looking for, you're likely to ftnd ·I t

GUTTE~WitiN~

(414)98S·4155
Che•ter, Ohio
10-17,1 mo(Pdl

.j .LARR~;~~~~D~~~

SWAIN'S

NOTICE! ! !

.__1 ---------....;.J

STRIPPING, REPAIRING
REFINISHING &amp;
UPHOLSTERING

~

QEMINI CMoy 21-Juno 20) The
road will be rough enough today

withou~ taking on the b~rdens of
· others. You could box yourself
into a corner.

~

CANCSR CJunt 21·July 22)
Disagreements with pals could
eruAt O\ler small misunderstandings today. Take care where
everybody's paying a share.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 Persons

WANT AD ORDER
•

CLIP and MAIL This Handy Order To

The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy, Ohio

Phone 992-2156

•

ts Word Minimum
15 Wtnl c..h Rate
3 DAys
$1.17
6 DAys
$3.92
16 Ww!lt, • O.ya 12.12
16 Ww!lt, I O.ya SUI
17 Ww!lt, 6 O.ya 12.11
17 Wwda, I DAya $1.70
11 Worda, I O.ya lt.lt
19 Wo,., • DAn n.10· 19 Worda, I DAya St.f9
21Worda,6 Daya Q.fG
20 W.rda, 1 O.ya 12.10

Landmark had a good year
•

Instrumental In your plans may
be surprisingly uncooperative
today. It will take a heap of sell·
.. lng tp tur o them around .

••

'•.

•"•
••
•
••·
•

•••
•

•

•
~

•

•••
••
•
•••

•

••"'

..
N- - - - - - - - - - - - - - Street ·or R. F. D. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
l'olt Offiee

-----!liMine----

•'
"

Qllll~tkloa -·------~---_;_
N-bor o1 c-u•th• .,.,_~,;,....__...____
~tEndOMd$ ___~----~----~~

..

'
~

~
~

.
.'••.

I

way of backllrlng

~odoy .

Do

~m~
~~

-

·~ ~.l-T.~

, l'lt !U.zt74

r

r----------,
fOR SALE

Kin~ury

Home
Sales Inc.
We handle only the .belt in
manufactured

hoUsing .
&amp; modular
homes by Skyline &amp; Fuqua ,
Homes Inc .

Double wides
1100 E.

Sentinel Carrier
Wanted In
Syracuse Area.

Free Prizes.
Phone 992-2156.

'
RI SING

STAR Kennel Boar di ng ,
lndoorrOutdoor run s. groom '1ng
all breeds , clean ~anitorv
facilities . (hf'shire . Phone (614 )

367-0292.

HOOF HOLLOW . Buy . sell , trode
or train horses . RUTH REE VES,
tra iner . Phone (614) 698 -3290.

Tbe Almaaac

Bar &amp; 2 bar 5tools , has podding 3 BEDROOM house. carpeted e~~:. ­
cept kitchen, utilily room , total
around edge , 8 I( long , 4 doors
ele c. , aluminum siding, fenced
for staroge out of new tro iler ,
bock yard , fully insulated,
$75 . Also . double o ~~: l e . wheels
washer and dryer . Hook·ups.
ond tir es lrom tra iler. good l or
See at I 69 Beech St., Midmaking tra iler to hau l heavy
dlep ort or cal l 992-7170 or
equipmen t'.
$75 .
Ph one
949-2150 from 8 till 5.

985·&lt;290,

7 ROOM HOME , Spring A11e ..
AKC COLLIE Pu ppies , sable and CARPET . BREAKFAST Set . clt.Jb
Pomeroy . Phone 992 ·2216 .
choirs.
Magnovox
elec.
organ
,
whit e. I mole and 2 females.
'2 end tables . Phone 992 -74 76.
MOBILE _HOME, 12 w. bO . 3
Hove been wormed ond shots
bedroom , underpinned, with
s ta rted .
Call
94 9-257 1 1967 NAMCO Mobile Home , 12 :o:
ce ment drive and walk . 10 • 10
weekdoys after 4 p.m . or
57 . two bedrooms , gos fur nace ,
metal building in cluded an 1
anytin:e So turdo11 ond Sunday.
olr conditioner . part lv lurni•h·
1·10 acres. 3 miles off Rt. 7 on
ed and carpeted . $4 ,300 . Ph one
Co . Rd . 3. Phone 742 -2028 .
(3o&lt; 1'l73-.513L

f'ur Rent
3 AND 4 RM . furnished and un ·
furnished aph . Phone 992·
5434 .

REDUCE SAFE &amp; Fast with Go8ese
Tablets 8. E-Vop ''water pi ll ~ "
, Nel5on Drug.

.

LOOK TRIM! Toke Alginess diet
plan and Aquoii'Op ··woter p i ll ~ '"
Village Phormocv 271 N . 2nd
A ve . Middleport , Ohio.

mainland China.

In 1973, lsrrell flgh\er
planea lhot down a unarmed
Ubyan commercial airliner,
killing 108 of the 113 persona
aboard.

COAL for" sole, Open 6 days per
week ond evenings. For further
information coli {61-4 ) 31b7·73J8.

APPLES , FIIZPATRICK ORC~ARD ,
STATE ROUTE 66~ , PHONl
WILKESVILLE, (al &lt;I oo•·3765,
FULLER Bru$h Products lor !Ole
Phone 9'1~ · 34 1 0 .
CAMPER . $bOO . Also , hor se
1raiter S-450. Phone (61 4\ 698

32'10.
':I rt:H:t:O. n&amp;w am fm hn
tllriUI
l(l r

tn ~

" tt-'ICI.\

rombl•lutJon ~ ! 2? ~ ~ ""
l ut1 11'4"J :J""(j!"l

TEAFORD
Virgil 8. Sr., Rullor
216 E. Second Street

~ p('t · ~1 h 1 1

Wo
Pl1••'1t'

ttptlols.l4tl l l ' ~

.,, oniiiiUt'~

'f'f'l :1:11 I 1u IJJ., • 4/ 14 on .,d 1,, , ,

Into the office.
MOBILE HOME - With 'I&gt;

992-7034
Hrs . 9:00a .m .

To Dusk
1·9-771 mo.

and garden in Rutland . . ·

MIDDLEPORT - Nice 3
bedrooms with closets,
dining room , nice kitchen

with dishwasher. disposal
and breakfast nook. Full
basement , screened porch

and garage. $29,500.
RESTAURANT -

Now

operating in an excellent

location . All equl pment
needed for the operetlon.
Want only $13,5110.

WOULD YOU - Buy five
aero• with ·~ old 2
bedroom house, with fvll
basement, cistern, electric,

BUILDING

LOTS

Water, eledr lc available at

REMODELING . Plumbing . heating
and all types of general repa ir .
Work guarant eed 20 years ex per ience. Phone 992-2409.
SEW ING MACHINE Repair s, service . oil mo ~e s . 992 ·2284 . Tile
Fabric Shop , •pome ro y . .
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We sharpen Scissors.
EXCAVATING , dozer, loader and
backhoe work ; du mp trucks
and lo·boys for hire; will haul
fill dirt , to soil , limestone and
grovel . Call Bob o r Roger Jef·
fers, day phone 992 -7089 ,
night phone 992 -3525 or 992·

5232,

bldg. 12x60 and ready to

ground .
2
large l iving
room , very nice dine In
k ltchen. meta I storage

Lovely l 'h story frame.
Excellent
neighborhood,

lot. Look lust 523,935.110.
DOUBLE LOT - Ranch
type , 3 large bedrooms.

RT. 124 WEST - Older
home. 4 bedrooms, bath,
level lot, gas heat, carport

3825.

SEPTIC Sys tems installed b11
licensed i n~toller .
Shepard
Con tractors. Phone 742-2.409 .

of

forced air furnace. Corner

stove, utility room. large

~
Sweepers. toasters , irons, all
small appl iances . Lown mower ,
nexl to State Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (014 ) 985-

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR

b~drooms.

acre

NEW LISTING - Like new
3 bedroom home. Beauflfvl
kitchen with Dbl. sink,
garage, workshop. space,
near Tuppers Plains. 21 ,M

BRADFORD . Au ctioneer. COmplete Service . Ph on e 949·2487
ar 949·2000. Racine. Ohia. (rift
Br adford.

EXCAYA TING , dozer , backhoe
and di tche r. Charles R. Hoi ·
field , Bo ck Hoe Serll' ice ,
Rt.Jt lond , Ohio . Phone 7.4 2-2008.

Phone 9f2.332S

Rock Springs, Five Points

l •,ll. l 'I'Vb ol

established
bus iness,
owner retiring , Home and
Auto
business.
For
information please drop

I'll baths, 3 bedrooms,
family room , carpeted. NG

Pomeroy , Ohio.45769

HAVE YOUR lo:o:es don• by on a( ·
coun lant , Al$0. now accepting
bookkeeping , Phone 992 ·620tlo
Of 992-lbl73.

'I'll 71'18 ,

Excellent for building
sites, see It today. $6,667,110.
NEW LISTING - Old

move into 57 !500 .00 .

In the sticks for $5,000?

lA X Setvke . Wallace
H u~ ~ @ll
S r.t~db u, y .
(all

Route 33 - 5.64 acres of
ground , utilities available.

SPIRAL STAIRCASE, -

PORT ABll . Wl:LOEH, Iorge dnd
small jobs ' Can also thaw
fr aten ~ater pipes . Phone
949 ·26..6.

tNCOM~

Main St.

Pomet oy, Ohio

o"

fur

A thought for the day:
"George Washington uld,
"The baaill ol our political
~This year y'ou will have 1 greater
l)'ltem
Ia the right ol the
range of Interests than In the
people
to
malle and to alter
past. Your prospects look en'couraglng 11 you don't opreod their' conatltutions of
• •'
"yourself too thin,
gowrnment."
~ ~ . . .;'(' ~..z ~
, . ""'""'
•
,..,, u, 11n

~

EXPERIENCED_

RATES

Ullited Preullllemailonal
, VIRGO CAug. 23-Stpl. 22}
Today ia Tuesdiy, Feb. 22, COUNTRY Mobile Home Park , Rt.
• You're a very difficult person to
33, ten miles north of Pomero~ .
the
53rd day of 1977 with 312 to
'p lease today, due to your
Lorge lor ~ with co ncrete patios .
negative attitude. You anticipate follow.
sidewalks , runners and off
problems before they occur.
The moon is approaching
street parking. Phone 992-7479.
N[ED A
' LISRA (Stpl. 23-0ct. 23) Be Its first q~r .
AVAILABLE AT Riverside Apts . I
caretul In joint -wentures today.
The morning stars are
bedrm . opaflmen t , S100 p~r
WATER SOFT£N£R 7
h · ~ ' An aspoclate or evan your mate Mercury and Mars.
mqnth , 2 bedroom opts , $133
could cause you to lose money
per month. Equal Oppor.tun i t·~
Let Pomeroy Landmark
The evening s!ars are
li),'Ough \h~lr bad judgment
Housing . Phone 992 -3273.
soften &amp; condition your
Venus, Jupiter, and Saturn.
SCORPIO {Oct. '2'•·Nov. 22}
Those born on this day are 2 BEDROOM house in Rutland . wattr and a Co -op water"
Coli 992·5858.
solt,ener, Model UC·XVI . .
• Unless y'our t alternatl\les are
under the sign of Piscea .
- clearly spelled out, don't make
TRAILEt, $30 week. Now only '279,95
George Washington was 2 BEDROOM
any important decisTons today .
Al l utilitie s paid. Phone
Your reasoning Isn't all that born Feb. 22, 1732.
992 -3324.
Let "us test your water
sharp .
·
On this day In history:
SMAll APT . In Middleport. Call
Free.
In 1819, Florida was ceded
' " 'IAGinARIUI (Nev. 23·Dtc.
992,S2o2, Kay cecil .
, · Pomeroy Landmark
21) Harit feelings will resull \0· to the United States In a 3 BEDROOM opt . furnished , un- ~-~Jack W. Clrsey, Mfr.
, day If you let persons ·down. Put treaty with Spain.
furnished . 128 Mill St ., Mid- ··· 1 ~
Phone "2-2181
dutY before "pleasure.
In
1879,
Franklin
dleport . Cantact Ben Dav idson
over Spencer's Markel or
,:, CAP~iCORN CDec. 22-Jan. 1t} Woolworth opened his first
,.friends cannot be manipulated
"five-cent" store In Utica, · phone (S13 )73 1 · ~ 1&lt;2.
od•Y• 1n~ yo~r
benetll. IfIllyou try, N. Y, Sales for the f!rJt week
~ , L!
,
·te¥era complications w ensue .
Will do odd jobs , roofing , poin·
averaged $2.50 a day.
ling. gt.JIIer work . Phone 992AQUARIUS CJtn. 2D·Ftll. 1t(
In 19'12, President Nixon
.
7409
COAL
.
limestone
,
or~d
calc
ium
' Fldors ' o\ler which you have met with Communist leader
chloride and calcium brine for SEWING · AL !ERA liONS :
· small· control tend to lnfi!Jence
Mao Tse-twia within hours
dust co ntrol and special mixing
lrriportant e¥ents the nel(t few
Upho l!tt er ln g ,
drapes
salt lor formers . Ma in Str&amp;et ,
after hla arrival in Peklncl for
reoso•1oble . 572 South Thud
qays. Be on yo~r guard.
"Pomeray , Ohio ar phone 992 ·
A 11e ., M id dlep or t . Phone
PIICII (Fob. 20-Morch 20) an unprecedented vlalt to
3891,
Y92 6JOb
Poorly conceived plans have a

..

Ph . (6141 742·2409
We Deliver
12·22 -4 mos.

PARTS - lABOR
GUARANTEED

.

will catch it from all sides today If
you're too sell·servlng. Protect
your interests, but also be aware
of the rights of others.

~

Ruti and, Ohio 45775

REASONABLE

TAURUS CAprll 20-Moy 20) You

listed In today's Want Ads.
Write your complete ad
in the space below. One
word to be written· in
each space (each initial
in
considered
one
word.) BE SURE TO
INCLUDE AS MUCH
OF YOUR NAME,
ADDRESS OR PHONE
NUMBER AS IS TO
APPEAR IN . THE AD.

Located in Langsville
Box 28-A

N"•

"

'

Southeastern Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.

REPIACE~ENI

:

•

•
•

TRUSSES
ANY PlllCH
ANY SIZE

Finlntl•a•v•ill~le

Blown intd trfllls &amp; AHits

::. .,.. ~.. ..·..~

•'

•

1-30-1 mo:

.

~'

•

•

Free Estimates

No Sunday cans Please

l:~
~-:
~~RN-~

FREE ESTIMATES

PROFESSIONAL
Aerial
Commercial
Schools
Weddings '

fur :;ale

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860

C. A. .Newman , Pns.
1,25-1 mo.. pd ,

PHOTOGRAPHY

Auto Sales

BISSELl SIDING CO.

financing Available

Free Estimates
Worlc Guaranteed

I

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding,
Storm
Windows
&amp;
lns.ulation .
Call Professionals

ex~irence.

742-2328

Additional 25c Charge
per Advert isement.

NOTICES
ALL HOUSEWIVES

power

Local car, clean vinyl interior , green finish , good t ires,
radio, 351 V-8, automatic, power steering and brakes .

BLIND AD$

A1'TN . :! I

13195
au to ma tic,

ECONOLINE HOME
INSULATION, INC.
IllS Washington Blvd .
Belpre. Phone 16141 423,
7564 day , or 992-4039

Roofing &amp; Siding
Room Additions
Garages
Homes Built

steering, rad io, tadory air .

RATES

c~ nts .

Business Services

13\.2SIGNS Pomeroy

The PUbliSher reser v es
the right to edlt or reiect
&lt;)ny ads aeem~d _Ob ·
i ectiona l. The publisher
w in not be responsible tor
more than ·one incorrect
insertion .
For Want Ad Service
5 cents per word one
insertion .
Min imum Charge $1.00.
14 cent5 per word tnre e
consecutive Insertions.
26 cents r,er word six
ccnse cu five nserttons.
25 Per Cent Discount on
paid a Cis and ' ads paid
wit hi n 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
52 .00
tor
50
word
\£" 1g1mKm
·
- ac .aCiaTttonal ·word J

Salco

landmark

•

''

45779,

Auto

WANT ADS
INFORMA1'10N
DEADLINES
S P .M .
Day
Btfor t!
Publication .
Cancellations ,
correc
lions accepted fln.t day ot
publlc&amp;tlon .

1972 PLYMOUTH Fury with air. ONE
SIDE -BY -SIDE
Gibson
mo.
p.b., p.s.. good condi tion .
refrigerator . 1' '1 yrs. old . e~~:
Phone 8.43 -29!:13
cell cn t condition . Ph one (304 )
an -23&lt;0
1974 PLYMOUTH GOLD Ou ster, 6
cyl. automqtic , power steering , $25.00 PER Hun dred stulfing
less than 22.000 mi les. ex ·
se ll .
env e lop eo;. .
Send
ce ll enf co ndttlon . Phone
addressed. stomped envelope.
Automatic
992,77 97.
Edroy Mil ls. Bo~~: 188 . Albany .
Transmission Service
1971 CHE~ROL ET IMPALA, AIR Mo. 64402.
COND ., Aut o .. Good cond ., I BEAMS and H B ea m ~ . B. 9 and
NOW o,~: cepting piano students ,
$8SO .·Ph. 742·24 88.
10 inch. Coll 992 -7034
beginners , intermediates , ad ·
vonced stu dents. Call · 992 FIREWOOD , $25 pickup load .
Phone
De l ivered at
rea sonable
2200.
MODERN
CHEMICAL
Wanted
to Uuy
distan ce. Phone 9.4 9-2590.
NOT ICE , Prott"s Meat Mkt .
614·992·2798
(Pleasan ton Meat Processing , OLD furniture, ke bo~~:es , bras s ENGINE, tra nsmiss ion and
Inc .) Custom sloug t1fering , and
rad iator for 1969 Dodge, 318:
bed5 . wall telephones and
At 100 Kerr St.
processing . Retail, wholesale .
also ttn&lt;~ Buick Regol2 door , "•
pcrh , or complee households.
Pomeroy , 0 .
Reedsville, 0. Ph. 378·4250
No oppainment necessary. Co li
viny l roof. 32.000 miles. ex ·
Write M. 0 . Miller . R!. -1,
1-17-1 mo.
f,2J·1mo. Pd.
(614 ) 593 -SbSS , hours , q:oo till
ce llen t co ndit ion . Built ·1n tope
Pomer oy , Oh io. Coli 992 -7760.
b:OO 7 Pamero,- Road Athens ,
player , cruise control. tilt
CASH paid lor all makes and
Oh.
'
~- ·
wheel. oper a windows. 455
models of mobile homes .
engine , S2850 . Phon e qq2.2280 . . Real Estalf! or Liiue
GUN s·HOOT at the Racine Gun
Phone area code 614 -.:123-9531 .
Club e-Jery Sunday , 1 pm
HOMES!TES lor sole , 1 acre cind HOUSE "PAINTING , interior and
e ~ te r ior .
Quality work -at
TIMBER , Pomeroy For es t Pro.
up. Middlepor t. near Rutland .
Assor ted meats.
dueis . Top price for standing
Co11992 -7481 ,
reo s·onoble r ate s
Phone
RACINE FIRE ' Dep; . Will . have a
sawt imber . Call Kent Hanby ,'
74'2 -2328.
Gun Shoa t everY Saturday night
1·446·8570.
NEW 3 bed• oom hou•e 2 bath, ,
~ p.m . at thei r building in
One good used Gibson side oil elec., I acre, Middleport . EXCAV ATING, !lockhoes, Do1er ,
COINS , CURRENCY , token s, old
by -si de refrigerator .. . SIH
close to Rutland . Phone 992 trencher , Low Bov , dump truck .
Boshon . Ohio.
New Co -Op water sof .
7451
pocket watches and chains ,
trucks , sep tic sys tems . Bill
PICTURES ARE forever. Call The
silver and gold, Wa Reed 1964
teners , model VC-SVI.
Pullms . Ph one 9'n-2478 day or
Phot o P.lac e (Bob Hoeflich) - and older sil ver coin~ . Buy , sell ,
Only SH 9 ,9S SMAL L form fo r sole, 10% down ,
night .
or trade ' Coli Roger Woms tev ,
991·5292.
One good chain Hom elite
owner financed. Monroe Coun 742 -2331.
Chain Saw .. . .
S130 .00
ty . w. va . Phone ~ 304 ) 772Sa...-e SSO . OO on a new
3102 or (304)772-3227 .
CASH!! I lor junk cars . Frye 's
Hotpoint Refrigera1or
.;
~
.
Truck and Aut o. 24 HOUR
1 Good Used Hotpoint COUNTRY farmland with seclud- 6'1 ACRE form , 7 rooms , bot h .
121 15, 22, 2tc
Range
SlOO
ed woods . water or d good ocA CANE lost Friday , Feb . 10th , in
W RECKER SERVICE ·I Ph one
bor n, pond , and fur niture prk ·
ce!is m Monroe County . W. Vo.
7 2 2081
ed all for $18,500. One mile
th e vicinity of Elberfelds._Will
.tl ·
·
POIIIIIIW
SI ,OOO down . co li (304 ) 772 I rom Lon ·svil!e.Ohio
C. R 10
.
v•'?
3I02or (304 ) 772·3n7 .
identily , May ho ve left 1t by POMEROY AUTO RECYCLING .
Phone 742 -2068.
electrici
ty
pole
.
Ke~p~alo.e
.
NOW
B
.UYING
SCRAP.
Turn
·
~
~ck
W:·
,·
!Jo~v.
~gr
.
1
~.
.I
~ •. ,.. &gt;
•· Phane 985-3952 .
.
junk Qutos ,(nto cash . Al so buv ·
-' ehone ~91 - 218
Commercial property appr o• . 17
-...,.., • o,. :•-: fl!'~ .::;,c~.:
-u.~~ ··'' 1- •
··
'i&gt;
.,. • ...,.
' I 1
bo
~'l't~~
' at re5 , le.vel land , located Of
-.(
NEW BED maHress , ·tw l n-si~e . lost
ing me, as,
tteries. etc .. l~!!:::!:..-------1
~ '
Tuppers Plp fns on Ohio , Route
0 per'! M_on d a," . Tue sdo y .
instr et!tneorCrow"s. Fell from
tru ck PhoneqQ2·3265 .
Wed~ .. Fnday , 9:00 . 4:30; . ONE Robyn 23 channel tub e tYpe
I Phone (614).b67·6304.
Sa turday 8:00
12 :00. ~hone
bos e or mobile unit , 3 mos. old 3 bedr ooms , l''l both!., Iorge liv ""MR . DO Hi '" is missing . Part
992 -b337 . Old Rl . 33 just across
with31 h . bla ck 1" pipe . l jom ·
ing room , din ing room and kit hound . white wi th br own and
Rom antenna . 1·01 · IO.tl power
chen . tull 11 carpeted . Phon e
Grueser's Chipper .
block - 50
Coli 992 -5290· or
992 -3129, or992-5434.
mike , about 75 or 80ft . of COK ·
992 -S-414 . Sa&amp;,. missed 'by Bue
ial cable all tor $300 or will con·
and
N~ l lie Brown .
\ard'Sale
sider trad e for older cur of NEW 3 bedroom house, bui!t -in
,•
MAIN
,,
581 0
k itchen, both and •,, Phone
TWO COON Dogs in Racine area ,
Phone
992
·
·
_
or
contact
MilO
B.
Hut
·
equal
value.
POMEROY, 0.
742 2306
lo st Friday nigh t. Phone IF YOU ho ve o ~e rv ice to offer ,
chiso n, Ru tl and , Ohio
wont to buy or sell someth ing , CONVENIENT HOUSE . antique
742·2217 .
NEW LISTING - I floor
buflet, building a· K 7'. Phone 1
oe 1oolo.ing for work ... or
plan, 2 bedrooms, din ing
Far WednlldiJ, ' "· 23, 1177
(304) 882 -2852.
ONE LO T in Syracuse. Phone
whatever ... you 'll get re~ ults
992 3'l l4 .
room , bath, nic:e kitchen ,
ARIES jMtrch 21·Aprll 11) Help.Wan!~d _ .
, foster with a Sentinel Wont Ad. 1975 HONDA 750. Good condirange &amp; oven, lot of
Don't let expenses get out ol
Co11992-2156 .
h
843 2963
TUPPER S PLAINS, Ohio New
ti9:n . P one
·
·
three bedroom house , liv ing
hand the next couple of days. SOMEONE NEEDED to take down
cabinets ,
carpeting ,
' , YOu coUld · spend .well beyond
OAK
FIREWOOD
.
Phone985-3920.
room
,
Iorge
kitchen,
ceramic
paneling,
basement
&amp;
lree in exchange lor firewood.
your means it you give In to im·
FARMALL SUPE'R A Cult iva tor 's
both , ca rpeted , otto c h~d
garage, porches . Lovely at
Phone 992·3196 .
pulses.
mower, plow . Co li alter 7 p.rn ,
ga rage . Iorge lot. $22,900·
just S16.SOO.IIO.
l't1e
Sale
949·2870 .
Pilone (614) 66"1 -0304 .
NEW LISTING - Old

&gt;

Digestive upset, nervous
excitement .

.aug'

Building ,

10 ·- 5-spee d sy n chromesh
transm ission, d ire c t in f ifln
11 360 cu . in , V -8 gas
enQine or la rg er .
11 - .ti ,OOO lbs. m in i mum
front spring capacity .
13 - 11 ,000 lbs . mi n imu m
rear spring capa ci t y .
14 - Aluci liar y rea r spr ings
15 _ , Combina ti on rear and
front directional signa l l ights
16 - Traffi c hazard swi tcn .
17 ~ Dua l electric horn s.
18 _.. Hea ter and def ro ster .
19 - Two speed wind shi eld
'w ipers and wa shers .
'20 - Pow er steering .
21 - 900 X 20 10 pl_y front
tireJ highway tread , 7" rims .
22 - 900 X 20 10 pl y rear
tires on and off roa d trea d, 7"
rims .
23 - One add i t ional 7" rim .
2-1 - Cast spoke wheels .
25 - H eavy duty clutch .
26 Heavy d u t y brake
booster with 7" rear brak es .
27 . . .,. Hea vy duty bumper
and fron t tow hooks.
28 - L . H . and R . H . seriior
w est co ast mi rror s.
29 - 70 amp battery .
30 ""'"' 50 amp o,r larger
alternator,.
..
31 - Cab grab··handi E!s, L .
and R.
32 - Full qep·tn fo ~m bencn
sea t , heavy duty tr im .
33 He&amp;vy duty f&amp;ctory
re (nforced frame .
3&lt;~ Co tor : Yellow
35 - A . M . Rad io.
36 - The tronJ of tne en .
, .. ···..
,.. ...._
Velope. _e1nclasint;~ &gt;fhe bid must
,!'
........
';'"•be mal'ked " Dump Trucks .
1
,.. •
... ~.A ' 'Pra-po-.B I No . 1." •

EASY
DOES

--

Larkspll': Plant , seeds.
May be fatal .

Food also increased volume.
McLaughlin said. net
earnings represented only
about 1.6 cents per dollar o1
sales, or .9 cents per dollar
after t9J!es.
~ndmark gained several
new facUlties In 1916; a new
five-acre warehouse, part
ownerihip In a 126,000 barrel
per day refinery, new office
facliiUes, and a 44-acre lite In
Clncimati for building an
Glio River port.
"Statewide
growth
nepresenls the sum total ol
many, many outstandlnR
performances compiled by
the
local
Landmark
8530Ciatlons throughout the
state," Mel
said.

Munic ipal
Ohio

Syrt~ ·

.the

a~~: le .

ear : All parts - Intense
burning and irritation of the

Rosary pea, Castor bean :

farm cooperatives it serves.
· It provides farm supplies,
feed,
fertilizer,
seed,
petroleum and various
lltrvlces to Its member,
cooperatives, and market&amp;
wain and food products.
The dollar volume of $454
mlllloo was 16 percent above
i975 1111d net earnings totaled
f/ ,600,000, Landmark said
patronage refunds totaling
u.m,ooo to member
cooperative• for the year.
All flve major divisions
Increased volwne over 197$.
Grain hit an aU-time high of
10 m!Uion bushels marketed.
Feed dollar volume hit an all·
time high of 37.5 million.
. Fertlllzer, F,arm Supply and

Rev ise d

a~~:le .

Monkshood: Fleshy roots.

"1978 waa a good year for
Lindmark, Inc.," according
to
Frea
McLaughlln,
· aecutlve vice president and
generallnanager. McLaughUn
addreaaed . · local
coopenllv~ managers,
, dlrecton and guesll it
• I.admerlt'a annual meeting
: lllld Feliruai'J :D-23 at the
; M s - i n Columbull.
'• Ita llld Landmark had the
•Neet:rulumeaadthethlrd
blat IMt •minea In the
CDOpll'lli-'IUiory, In spite
: al IoRI' prices on twine,
' dJemlcala, gnln, fertilizers
and many other iteJIII:
L1111dmark, Inc. is a
l'fllcinel cooperative owned
'~d yontroUed by ~he r1 Ohio

Oil io

8 :00P .M . on Marc; h lsi , 197?;
at ,which lime lind place the
bids' wit! be opened and read
aloud for the
follow i ng
vehicles .
Bids must be submitted In
separate proposals ; eac h
proposal to meet the con .
d ilions and speci fi cations , as
tot tows :
PROPOSAl NO . 1
l - One 1977 model du mp
truck with a fleabody Gal ion
or equivalent dump body ,
108 "x 84 "xJO" head and tail ga te w i th cen ter door in ga te,
minimum size 16 " )( 10 "
openi ng
2- - Heavy dUty 8' 1 hoist wiln
P.T .O. and le v~rs .
3 - J,~ cab protector witn 2"
w ings .
-4 Cab lights , 4 corher
lignt s and 6 reflect ors .
5 ---:- Mud flaps .
6 -c-· Wheel base 7'1" ca b to
a~~: l e or suifilb le for body
7 ~ 2.4 ,000 lbs . G .V .W . or
heavier .
8 - 7,000 lbs 1 Beam I ron!

fects heart. Can cause death .

Zblgniew Brzezinski,
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Carter's national security oonfusioo .
Iris: Underground stems.
Prime Minister Pierre Elliott adviser, professed no Digestive
uspet.
Trudeau told President knowledge
of
the
Foxglove : Leaves . May be
Carter that while canada conversation.
fatal .
Bleeding heart: Foliage,
endorses Carter's human
The White !louse statement
roots.
May be poisonous .
rights objectives it prefers to did not even include human
Vegetable
Plants
work more qliietly, off the rights among the subjects
Rhubarb : , Leaf blade.
front page, toward those that were discussed am said Fatal.
Ornamental Plants
goals.
"the talks were cordial and
Daphne
: Berries. Fatal. A
Carter and Trudeau · friendly.''
few berries c:an kill.
'
planned to meet again in the
carter said the u.s. kit\ship
WiS te ria : Seeds, pods:
Oval Office late today. The with "...anada "transcerxlS the Digestiv_e up"set .
President also scheduled a political realities of a . Golden c hain : Bena· ltke
meeting
will!
the modern, fast-changing cap sules. Severe . .poisoning .
May be fatal.
congressotial leadership, his technological world."
laurels , ~ Rh"odendron,
committee on selection of an
"We are now beginning to Azalea : All parts Fatal.
FBI director, am Attorney see that many of the things Nausea , vomiting ,
General Griffin Bell and that we took for granted, the prostration , coma .
Jessamine : Berries Fatal.
representatives of state purity of water in the Great
Red Sage : Green berries
attorneys general.
Lakes, an unlimited supply of Fatal.
Carter and Trudeau met oil and gas, security in our
Trees and Shrubs
Cherries : Twigs, foliage .
Mooday In the Canadian's borders free of pussible direct
courtesy call to a new U.S. attack in a time of war, those Fafal.
Oaks : Foliage, acorns .
president duriilg a period of things are now no longer T~ke large amount to polson .
few , problems between the S4fe,'~ Carter said.
Elderberry : Bark, ' shoots,
·
two countries. But a sharp
"I think, in a way. that has leaves . Nau sea, digestive
.
difference in strategy over brought us even closer toge- upset
Bla ck
lot ust :
Bark ,
foreign policy · emerged Uler ,"
sprouts, leaves . Nausea ,
during
their
first
-Neaknes s, depression .
Trudeau replied:
conversation.
"We are going through a
Ivan Head, Trudeau's period now when discipline, BANKRUPT VILLAGE
sP.,cial
adviser
for self-discipline, is being
WEST MILTON, Ohio
International relations who understood as the only (UPI)- Frozen water pipes
· was present for the meeting, substitute for discipline from and sewers will bankrupt
told UP! that Carter the outside or discipline from West Milton unless federal
diacusaed his human rights the state. I personally was funds are made available
initiatives am his intention to very, very enthusiastc to see says
Mayor
W.G ,
end Henry Kissinger's "lin· the measure of discipline that O'Callaghan.
kage" mrategy.
appears in your though\S, in
O'Callaghan Monday urged
Under that theory, every your approach to problems · residents to contsct federal
part of U.S. policy toward the and in your way of life."
officials In an attempt to
Soviet Union is related to
secure federal fums for the
every other part. carter has
Miami County community.
sought to criticize Soviet
He said it would cost the
treatment of dissidents while
village nearly $W6,000 to fix
seeking to enrich detente in
winter damage done to pipes
such areas as arms control.
and
sewers.
The
Carter asked Trudeau for
community's annual hodget
hia opinion, according to WINGED CATCH
Is only $800,000.
Head's account.
About 219 homes in the
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) Head said Trudeau replied Thieves dropped in through a toWn of 5,000 residents are
that he was encouraged by transom and spent two hours still without water because of
U.S. Interest In human rights, early Monday morning frozen water lines. Many
but that Canada, for one rounding up a catch of at homes have been without
reason or ~other, preferred least 24 rare birds worth water since Jan. 12.
to work In a more quiet way. $2,300 from the Toledo Zoo
Trudeau said Canada aviary.
shared the U.S. goal of
Zoo officials said the KANE MAY BE IN
human rights, Head said, but birdnapers must have spent
TOLEDO, Ohio' (UP!)
there was a question about about .two hours rounding up Walter, Kane, 42, executive
the best way to achieve it. their haul of finches and director of the' Colorado
Emphasizing that Trudeau myna birds.
Housing Finance Authority,
had not used those exact
They passed over some has won unanimous approval
words, Head said the prime more expensive varieties that from a city council screening
. minister told Carter that he would probably be hard to committee ·to become
• preferred to do it " off the sell. Police have warned pet Toledo 's new city manager.
front page.''
If approved by the full
shop owners in the area to be
The Carter adminlstra· on the alert for persons council Tuesday, Kane may
lion'• statements about selliilg birds.
begin in the $4$,001).a.year job
Soviet dissidents have
H the birds are not recove· . March 28.
lhwn worldwide headlines red, the zoo may have to dct
Kane has served as. city
and lbarp rebukes from the without. The cost and new manager in Loveland and
Soviet Union.
strict impurt laws make them Lakewood, Colo., and in Ea11
Head's counterpart, diffcult to replace.
Qaire, Wis.

the

in

Sy.racuse,

available to Bet1y Ross
aufflcient capacity (10,000
here.
Ibl. wlllte brad per bour) In
Employees negotiated their a modem, efficient, bJCh
contract in February, 1975, apeed fac~ to Improve
with a wage opening clause existing operation• and
for this February. The provide for futurt "growth."
deadline
for
wage The forllllla proceu creating
negotiations was Saturday. our very popular "real
The company was reported tread'.' .nn not be dllturbed.
to have offered an 8 per cent
Loading and tran1port
pay Increase whlle workers facilities will be canpletely
said they wanted al5 per cent tH!lped, allowing thlrly
hike.
(30) route trucu UDder roof
company spokesman - plua - nine (e) tractor
Robert Annesser said no trailer.. Parkin~ fadlltlee for
future bargaining sessions vlslton and employees are
have been scheduled.
alated for lmprvvement.

Seeds Fatal.

By WESLEY G. .PIPPERT

or

oftlce

fataL

said different .

Vehicl e

Code , seated bids will be
received by
the
Sulton
Township Trustees in tt'l elr

mouth and tongue. Can be

· Trudeau's style

Motor

Dealers :
·
In accOr dance with Section

ri'imm douan.
The

to

1

closet space galore, bath,

lovely

kitchen w,dfnl ng bar

and air cond., Sewing
room , full basement w·
shower and 2 car garage .
NG
forced
air heat .

$19.5110,110,
HOW TO SELL YOUR
HOME PROMPTLY ... AT
FULL MARKET VALUE
LIST WITH CLELAND
REALTY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
HANK CLELAND
ASSOCIATE
992-2259 . 992·25611
HS·4112

SEPTIC TANK S cleaned. Modern
Sanita tion , 9Q2.3954 .
WILL do roof ing, constru cti on ,
plumbing and heati ng. No job
too large or too small. Phone
742-23.48 .
CARPENTER , floor ing , ceiling,
pane ling . Phone 992 -i?_sq .
MOBILE Home Repair, Elec.,
plumbing ond heating. Phone

992·5858
ELECTRONIC T.V. "CLIN IC. N~w
T.V. shop, Electronic T.V. Clin ic
Service call , $5 .95 . Co!a r, 6 &amp; W
ontenno systems stere o~ . etc.
572 South Third , Middlepart . .
Phone 9~2-6306 . Corry In and
SOli'&amp; money.

-

·-·~

Oi l , -GAS Furnaces, oil burners ,
repa ir, ond parts far trailers
and homes. 24 haur service .
Phone 843-2165 .

BUY, SELL .OR TRADE?
LISTEN TO THE

SW~P

SHOP

and Syracuse. '

HOUSE
FULL
OF
FURNITURE. UL OR
PART. NEW LISTINGS
WELCOMED,
WATCH THIS AD TO SEE
THE NEW CHANGE .

t

'I
I

..

HOWERY AND MARTIN Excovo tin g, septic systems ,
dozer, backhoe , dump truck ,
limestone, gravel. blacktop
pavi ng, Rl. 143. Phone 1 (614)
b98-7331 .

1 PM - WMPO • 92.1 FM
92 in tht Count,

�~'nle Dally Sentinei,MJddleport-Pomer~y. 0., Tuesday,Feb,22, 1977
"''"" 'I'RAt:V . .

'

.

•

Cooking with a Continental Flavqr 20; American ;;:

Issues Forum 33.
I : 3~Hollywood Squares _3,4;

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22,1977
S:oo-Big Valley 3; My fhree Sons~; Brady Bunch 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Star Trek IS.
S:3G-Adam-12 4; News 6; Family Affair 8; Electric
Comppany 20,33; Adam-12 13.
6:oo-News 3.4.8.10,13,15; ABC News 6; loom 20.
6:Jo-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Grlffdlth
6; CBS News 8.10; Vegetable Soup 20; Studio See 33.

Dear With 116; Match :
ame PM 8; 1,\acNeii-Lehrer Report20,33; In The
Know 10; Wild Klnp dom 13; TV Honor Society 15. •

8:0G-Baa_Baa Black~ Sheep J-4,15; Happy Days 6.13;
ACBS Reports 8, TO; This For By Faith 20 j3
8:3G-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13.
' ·
J:OG-Pollce Woman 3,4, 15; Rich Man, Poor Man 6,13;
M-A-S-H 8, 10; Mark Russell 20,33.
9 3
' G--One Day At A Time 8,1Q; Anyone for Tennyson&gt;
20; Oasis In Space 33.
·
IO:·oo-pollce Story 3,4,15/ Family 6,13; Kojak 8,1Q;
News 20; Decades of Decision JJ.
10:3G-Biack Journal 20.
11 ··OG-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; MacNeil-Lehrer
·
Report
33.
II :Jo-Johnny Carson 3,4, IS; Mov ie "Savages" 6 13 ·
MBoCvle "The_Dirty Dozen" 8; Mary Hartman 'to:·
A News 33.
'
12 : ~Movle " The Great Bank Robbery" 10; Jasnakl

1:00--Truth or Consequences 3; To Tell The Truth ,.;

Bowling For Dollars 6; Let's Go \o the Races 8;
News 10; To Teil The Truth 13i My Three Sons 15;

CAPTAIN EASY
PLEASE~ WAIT UP!... I'M NOT'
ALL THAT EA&lt;SE"'- TO f!oE MS5

IF YOU' RE 50
ANl\IOU5 TO RUN

OF Mc KEE INDUST"'-1E5l

ALL YOU 'V~ GO TTA WO~J&lt;.Y A80UT
AI&lt;.E THE COMPAN'I DIRECTORS'
A5 • OR US--IT 'S !!orE'" ioJICE '
KioJOWI"'' 'lA PA t.!

THE COMPANY--RUJ,J

IH

OUR.

FRIENDSHIP

MEAN5 MOI&lt;.E
THA~

ALl.

TO~

WIN AT BRIDGE
Sontag struggles for draw
22

NORTH
• AJ 6

THAT!

•QJ

tAl0 543

• K 9%

EAST

WEST
• 53
.A 7652
• Q982

•Q5

• Q 10 8
• K1084
• 76

.J 813

SOI,JTH iDI
• .KHI2
• 93

+KJ
• A 10 7 6

w.. .WHAT'l.L.
WE DO,

MOMMA?

WELL, SINCi' IT'S OBVIOUS

YOU BO'&lt;S CAN'T HANDLE
'ThAi' DUDE BY 'IOLJil- •

West

O&gt;JE 'THING -rO Rl!

Pass 3 •

SELVES, THERE'S

,.

North.SOuth vulner.ibte
North East

ONt.V

Pass

Soutb

Pass 4 •

Pass

Pass

Opening lead - A•

LI'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

LITTLE

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
There is nothing sensatio"al
about this hand played by Alan
Sontag in a team match. It
just happened that he was
playing against Benito Garozzo and Pietro Forquet. one of
the strongest pairs in the
world , and they found the
toughest possible defense.
ORPHAN ANNIE-ROUSING WELCOME
They sl.arted with three
~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;rounds of hearts. Alan ruffed
BUl HE OIDN' T
WELl., DR ZEE, IT WAS
1 &gt;1'\P ~ou the third lead in dummy ,
GET HER ·-- AH
THE GRfATEST
S&lt;'ARED·-- came to his hand with the king
NELLIE ··· SHE's'
LUCK 1HAT YQLI
~:i~i~ccs~E of diamonds and lost a trump
APPEARED IN TIME TO
WAKING UP, EH?
ThAT TRUCK fmesse to East's queen. Back
SAVE AN!II IE- - -~
r-...&lt;OMIN'·- . came a fourth heart. Alan had
to trump this one in his own
hand. Then he led a spade to
dummy's ace, returned to his

hand with the ace of dubs , led
his king of trumps lo pull
East's 10 spot and played the
jack of diamonds.
We'll let Alan finish the
story , "I needed the last four
tricks to make the contract. I
could rise with dummy 's ace
of diamonds, trump a dia·
mond and be home if
diamonds , were 3-3 or the
queen had dropped doubleton.
Usually I am a fast player .
But this time I thougM ten
minutes, finally decided that
West had been dealt four
diamonds to the queen , let my
jack ride and made the hand.
It was a split board. At the
other Lable a diamond was
opened and declarer had no
problems."

1:00- Tomorrow 3,4.

W~~R 1'-I~DS

NJD A MI&gt;.Rr! ~H,
NJD 000 Cf 11-IESE:
Cli-.L/5 I MI~T
JUS'( llJAL.K CXJr C+l
t.{OIJ 1 L(Qu 6\l.o BN&lt;:o

111.,; 1\!i-ARII-lb
,I.ID.

W5~~FI3'7T!:=R?

GASOLINE AlLEY

have amind. Slimr
don't IJOU use it?

40U want

to~ndthe

A Vermont reader wants to
know the correct response to
partner's three-spade opening
bid with:
• - •AQxxx tAQxxx•Jxx.

'rne correct response is a
pass. You aren't happy with
three spades, but anything
else is likely to lead to real
trouble.

••
'
•&lt;

..'•

...

•
••
•

•

••
PRES,IDENTIAL PRESS SECRETARY Jody Powell isn't .worried about the
President sban on chauffeuring of top administration figures . H~ plans to continue using his
, veteran Volkswagen, if he can keep It nmning.

California gorilla using
300 words with sign talk
By AL ROSSITER Jr,
ui&gt;i Science Editor
DENVER
(UPI)
Francine "Penny" Patterson
has spent much of the past
four and half years talking to
a gorilla.
· As a result, the Sl.anford
University doctoral student is
beginning to question the
widespread beUef that the
chimpanzee · is the most
Intelligent of all nonhwnan
primates.
Miss Patterson , said at an
American Association for the
Advancement of Science
symposium Monday th~
. female gorilla, Koko, now has
a sign language vocabulary
approaching 300 words.
"She has Invented signs
and names for novel objects,
she talks to herself, engages
in imaginative play, has used
language to lie, to express her
emotions and to refer to
things displaced in time and
space," said Miss Patterson.
She began working with
Koko wqen the gorilla was a
year old. Koko is the first
gQrilla to be taught American
Sign Language.
Koko, now ~I&gt; and weighing
100 pourds, lives In a special

I:Go-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6, 13; News 8; Not
. for Women Only 15; Young &amp; the Restless 10.
1:3G-Days of our Lives 3.4,15; Family Feud 6.13;. As
the World Turns 8,10.
l :OG-$20,000 Pyramid 6,13,
2:3G-Doctors 3,4,15; One Lite to Live 6,13; Guiding
Llaht 8,10.
·
3:0G-Another World 3,4, IS; Allin the Family 8, 10; On
Aging 20.
3:15-General Hospital 6,1·3.
3:3G-Match Game 8,10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
4:0G-Mister Cartoon 3; Little Rascals 4; Gong Show
15; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Lucy Show 8; Sesame St.
20.33; Movie "The ound of the Baskervllles" 10;
Dinah 13.
~:15-Little Rascals 4.
4:.30:--Mv, Three Sons 3; Partridge Family ~;
Emergency One 6; Partridge Fam lly 8; FllntstOnes
15.
S:OG-Big Valley 3; My Three Sons 4; Brady Bunch 8;
Mister Rog0rs' Neighborhood 20,33 ; Star Trek 15.
S:Jo-Adam-12 4; Family Altair 8; News 6; Adam -12
' 13.
.
6:0G-News 3.4,6.8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:Jo-NBC News 3,4, IS; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6·
· CBS News 8.10; Vegetable Soup 20; Lilias Yoga 8,
You 33.
·
7:0G-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Pop Goes the Country 8; News 10; To Tell
the Truth 13; Mayor's Report 15; Consumer Survival Kit 20; Big Green Magazine, 33.
7:3G-Dolly 3; $100.000 Name ·That Tune 4; Match
Game PM 6; $25,000 Pyramid 8; MacNeil-Lehrer
Report20,33; The Judge 10; Break the Bank 13.
8:oo-:Grlzzly Adams 3,43, 15; Bionic Woman 6,13;
Gunsmoke 8; Nova 20,33; Good Times 10.
8:3&lt;&gt;-·Jacksons 10.
9:oo-cPo Sharkey 3.4.15; Bareffa 6, 13; Movie "The
Parallax VIew" 8,10; Childhood 33; Soundstage 20.
9:3G-We Think You Should Know 3; Mclean
Stevenson 4,15 .
' lO:oo-Tal~s of ihe u Unexpected 3,4,15; Chilrlle's
AngelS~. 13; Albert Paley : Metalsmith 33; News 20.
10:3G-Montage 20; Book Beat 33.
11 :Go-News 3,4,6,8,10, 13, 15; MacNeil-lehrer Report
33; Monty Python's Flying Circus 20.
11 :3G-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Rookies 6,13; Columbo 8·
: BC News 33.
'
12:0G-Movle "The Stripper" 10; Janak I 33.
12:4G-Mystery of the Week 6,13.
1:oo- Tomorrow 3,4 .
2: IG-News 13.

.
(For a copy or JACOBY

MODERN. send $1 to: "Win
at Br'idge, ' ' clo this
nelf(spaper, P. 0 . Box 489,
Radio City s·tation, New York,
N. Y 10019)
.

I Do?"

29 Girl's
name ·

30 See 31
across
31 John Silver
had one,
with 30
across
34 Electrical

trailer on the Stanford
campus, but she Is owned by
the San Francisco Zoo and
that presents a problem.
Miss Patterson wants to
continue st~dying Koko as the
gorilla grows up and raises a
family. But the zoo waijts
$12,500 for Koko and Miss
Patterson's research team

needs at least $25,000 a year
to keep the project going. A
National Geographic Society
grant that largely funded the
pro jed ts about to run out.
"I think right now the big
roadblock is money,~~ ·she
said. uwe ne·ed help. 0
The Gorilla Foundation of
Menlo Park , Calif., was
recently establls)led to help
finance the project.
Some of the sign talk has
been videol.aped. Here Is a
sample that hegan at 9 a.m.
Jan . 31.
(It ts time for Koko 's
breakfast, which normally
consists of a square of rice
bread ard a glass of milk.)
Penny : What do you want?
Koko: Apple drink.
Penny: How about ... (Miss
Patterson was about to
suggest rice bread but Koko
interrupts).

lj}1fij~ ]ii)'ft \'jl THAT SCRAMBLED WOflD CWIE
~ t.!:1} ~~ ~
byHenriArnoldandBobloe

unit
35 Ending for

f~~~~~~~~~~~~~RS~~~~~li~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·

''•

Braun 4; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10.

rest of

life pum"""'

•

Continues 10.

· Ye~terday's .Answer
21 Be loeated 30 Man's
22 Cow's
name
mouthful
31 "- porridge
23, "Funny
hot. ., "
Girl" star 32 Outcast
24 Young hare 33 "The
25 Tasty
Sisters" .
mollusk
playwright
zti Prop for
38 Writer
Gtoucho
Anais 28 "Clair - " 39 Comedian
. (2 wds.)
Conway

OF VJ\IJDl VJK,I.T~
MA.TIE&gt;R I 00 WMMW!',

•••
•

10 :Do-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15; School Wlt~out Schools 6;
Price Is Right 8; Mike Douglas 13.
10 :3G-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15 ; Winter School
Continues 10.
11 :Go-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Elementary Science 4;
Double Dare 8; Morning Show 13; Elec. Co, 20 20.
11 : 3G-Shll0t tor the Stars 3, 15; Happy Days 6, 13; Love
of Lite 8,10; Sesame St. 20,33.
11 :55-CBS News 8; Ms. Flxiii012:0G-News 3,4,6,10;
Don Ho 13; NamelhatTuneiS; Divorce Courts.
12 :3G-Lovers &amp; Friends 3,15; Ryan 's Hope 6,13; Bob

I f10f'8 HE;
1-tlD A 6UUH

•'

4

•

1: IG-News 13 .
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY23, 1977
6:0G-Sunrlse Semester 10.
6: 15-Farm Report 13.
6:2G-Not tar Women Only 13.
6:3G-AG-USA · 4; News 6; Sunrise Semester 8;
Christopher Closeup lQ.
6:45-Mornlng Report 3.
6:5o-Good Morning, West VIrginia 13.
6: 55-Good Morning, Trl State 13.
7:0G-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Chuck White Reports 10.
7:05-Porky Pig 10.
7:3G-Winter School 10.
&amp;:Go-School Without Schools 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8·
Sesame St. 33.
'
8:Jo-Winter School Continues l(i.
9:oo-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,13,15; School without
Schools 6; Andy Griffith 8.
9:3G-Cross-Wits 3; Concentration 8; Winter School

..-t-+-1

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square to form
. fourordinarywords .
'

spat
36 rormor
English
river
37 Symbol of
Communist
rule
(2 wds.)

I

~-+--1

a

II

~ltnl,-n.."""""T.- 011 1..... -oool

There'll be
· no elections
while I'm
lnchargel

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It: l_!~~~7'"'&lt;f---r-_:;
AXy DL B AAXR
J:·~""'-·.. LONGFELLOW
·

tl

I

t]'

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the two O's. etc. Single letters, ~ERKUT
apostrophes, the length and . formation of the words are all
h1nts. Each day the code letters are different.
. ·__
CRYPTOQUOTES
.
~ai·-l:&gt;....L..J&gt;...d.._J
KC
AS SOON A5 OUR tAWYEfi
100K6 OJER.1HE PAPER&amp;

eEING DRAWN

CJ NY M

IPSQ

lHE

PGYA

SKT U

c s ,P
J

cE K

TDM

cAy y- J

PVCMKUY
I

'

JTU

cp

I~HOTLE I~

E y J G X.

UYRJ

K T M K U Y. - J A C ' M K M M P T

In

(]

x ~r

.

I [X]

HE ''D~EW THE L.INE 11
Ai FREE POL.ITICAL
IN6TITUTIO~I

Now arrange lhe circled Ionero to

xrriJ ~Txx xrJ''
I

(AniiWOII tomorrow)

Yesterday's Cryptoqoote: REASON, TOO LATE, PERHAPS, Yesterday's Jumblft: STEED RIGOR UNLOAD CASHEW
MAY CONVINCE YOU OF TilE FOLLY OF MISSPENDING
An•.- = What a v.utlle chel might be expected to
TIME. - GEORGE WASHINGTON
have when preparing food-A "WIDE
RANGE"
e l911 KJn1 Fealun• SYndlca&amp;e, Ine.
BARNEY

GLORY BE!! THAT
IF L{O\J M ~OOR SUPPER
DISH TO !(OUR EAR, '(QU
CAN HEAR THE SOUNDS
OF A RESTAURANT...

FRIED
SO

SH WUZ
GOOD-- --I THINK
I'LL GiT ME:
A SECONT

HELPIN'

'

I

'

riu,s WORST WINTER of recent memory for most of
the country occasionally has a ·brighter side. A
photographer captures one such ln.a Malden, MaliS., park
when the sun i;!Snle out after a ro.lnch snowfall.

Koko: Apple.
Penny : I've got something
good for gorillas ... right here
breakfast (Penny offers rice
bread to Koko .
Koko: Bottle there apple
(Koko indicates a bottle of
apple juice in refrigerator ).
(Penny closes refrigerator
door and gets the rice
breakfast out of tbe bag).
Koko: Mean,
(After Koko eats breakf!ISt
and hands Penny an empty
milk glass, the gorilla looks
at a new doll a few feet
away) .
Koko: Hurry, gimme.
Penny: What'
(Koko reaches for the doll
but Penny slops her and after
another exchange gives Koko
the doll).
Koko : Good happy. (Koko
lies down on floor with doll in
her arms .)
Koko : Sleep.
NEW COACH
WOOSTER, Ohio (UPI) Tom Hollman, defen sive
coordinator at Ohio Northern
University, has been mimed
head football coach at the
College of Wooster.
Hollman succeeds Don
Hunsinger who resigned last
December for personal
reasons after completing two
seasons at Wooster.
Hollman is a 1968 graduate
of Ohio Northern and
received his masters degree
in physical education from
Xavier University in 1971.
He was head coach at
Greenville High Scbool in
1971 and 1972 and was head
~oach at Fremont Ross in
1973, 1974 and 1975. He
compiled a 41~-4 record at
the two schools.
A native of St. Marys,
Holiman was selecU!d from a
field of over 70 applicants.

By JIM ANDERSON
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Secretary of SLate Cyrus
Vance, back from a firsthand
look at the Middle East, ts
laying out, a diplomatic
cam paign to bring the
problems of the troubled area
to the peace table .
Vance
arrived
in
Wa shington Monday ·night
after a sixnatioo, one=week
tour. He reports to President
Carter Wednesdsy about his
trip and his impressions of
the Middle East ieaders and
their ideas .
Beginning in early March
there will be an almost steady
stream of Middle East
visitors to Washington.
Israeli Prime Minister
Yitzhak Rabin will be the
first , to be followed by
President Anwar Sadat of
Egypt, Deputy Prime ·
Minister Prince Fahd of
Saudi Arabia, and King
Hussein of Jordan.
Vance said Carter probably
will meet President Hafez
Assad of Syria somewhere in
Europe in May . It is likely
Vance will then head back to
the Mideast in June to tie up
loose ends and complete what
is hoped will be the fin al
preparations for resuming a
Geneva conference on tbe
Middle East.
Still unsettled, acording to
Vance,ts how lo deal with the
Palestine Liberation
Organization in a complex
equation. Israel says it will
have nothing to do with the
PLO - lit the conference
table or anyplaCe else - until ·
the PLO changes iis charter
to recognize the right of
Israel to exist. ·
The United SLates supports
that position.
The Arab nations have
designated the PLO to represent the Palestinian people, ·
but there are signs since the
Palestinian defeat in
Lebanon that the PLO may be
losing its influence.
One possible solution is to
make the PLO into a govern·
ment-in-exlle, based in Cairo.
That appears to have only a ·
slim charu;e because Assad,
who has mintary control over
the Palestinians , said
Monday he opposes the idea
"at this time .n
At the erd of his tour,
Vance said, The main
conclusion I draw is that we
must be careful not to be
over-optimistic."
He said he found a "desperate need for peace" among
the leaders to whom he
talked.
This, he said, is the basis
for some encouragement, but
he said the problems that still
lie ahead are difficult and
complicated.
11

WILSON OUT
DAYTON, Ohio (UPI)
Ken
Wilson has been fired as
TROPHY WINNER
general
manager of th e
ClllCAGO ( UPI) - The
Dayton
Gems,
Chicago Bears have awarded
Jack Walker, president of
their Brian Piccolo Rookie of
the
International Hockey
!!le Year award to their No. 3
League
club, Monday named
. draft pick last year, Ohio
Gems
Coach
Larry Mickey as
State's Brian Baschnagel.
interim
general
r;nanager
He will pick up his trophy at
until
a
"packege
which
would
the Piccolo Cancer Research
totally
restructure
the
golf · tournament at the
management
and
Playboy Club in Lake
capitalization of the club can
Geneva; Wise., June 6.
Baschnagel, the seventh be concluded."
Attendance at Gems games
player to win the trophy,
has
been way down despite
started 12 games last season,
returned 29 kickoffs for a :Ill high standings in the IHL .
•yard average, caught 13
passes for 22li yards and
made 15 special teams humor." Piccolo, a tunning
tackles.
back who died of cancer in
Tiie award goes to the 1970, played nine games in
rookie who "best exemplifies 1969 before the malignant
Piccolo's courage, loyalty, growth was discovered,in his
dedication and sense of chest.

form the surprtee anewer, as , sug~

gestod by !he above ca~oon ,

SUPER
MARKET

Mideast
•
peace IS
possible
to Vance,_...,

Television .log for: easy viewing:

Hidden gas is proving hard to find
By ELMER W. LAMMI

'WASHINGTON (UPI)
Congreaamen find It's no easy
task to learn whether major
oil companies hide natural
gaa In olllbore fields leased
from ~e federal goverrunent.
r The overal~ht and
lltvestlga ling subcorrunl ttee
of the House Commerce·
Conunlttee plans to take a
crack at It today after
Houae subcorrunlttee
tried and failed Monday.
"It's obvlowl that we're not
aoltC to find the answer
todly ," Rep. John SelberUng,
OOiio,llld after noting that
Interior Secretary Cecil
Andrul had predicted a new
got6i tiiletll lltudy might take
up to eight ~Ills,

another

in reserves reported by oil Department's investigation
companies and
those "does not give usa clue" as to
determined by the u.S. why 980 billioo cubic feet of
proved reserves In the leases
~logical Survey.
However, the Bettenberg were not being lapped.
Chairman Abraham Kazen
also noted that AndruS said
there mighl be "acceptable Jr ., D-Tex., said the mining
woUld
reasons" for production subcommittee
answ~rs. 1 '
continue its hearings and
Acting Assistant Interior declines.
Rep. Phlllp E. Ruppe, R· officials of oil COJIIpanies
·Secretary WiiUam D. Bettenberg IISid he did not know Mlch., was critical of the bolding offshore leases In the
wbether oil companies are department for confining the Gulf would be ' called ,In to
"shutting .In" gas reserves in study to llelda in which it testify .
"If the allegations are true,
offshore federal leases.
knew production was falling.
But be said an investigating
To come back and report the people should know this,
tum whose findings were production was declining, he and if there are valid and
reported last week confirmed Jl8id, was Uke saying "two legal reasons for not
productloo was falling in five · times two Is four because two develJJPing the leases and
producing gas from them at
gas fle!da in the Gulf of and two Is four."
Mexico and there were
The Michigan Repubncan tl)ls time, the people should
"significant dls&lt;;repancies" said
the
Interior know that," Kazen said.
Interior Department
officials appearing before the
House mining subcommittee
merely echoed earlier
statements by Andrus that
their studies thus far had
raised "more questions than

OPEN DAILY
9 TO 10

SUNDAY

10 TO 10

SUPERIORS

PICNIC

HAM ..............•L.~.•
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FRESH SLICED
PORK LIVER ............... ~: ... 39e BEEF ..5.:~~.~~.~?~~...~~DEL MONTE
COCONUT CREAM, LEMON CREAM

MR. COFFEE

PUDDING
CUPS

COFFEE
FILTERS

69"'. .
. ._,

50 COUNT

FAVORITE

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3 LOAVES '1 00
MR.

HORMEL

POTTED
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DAIRY SPECIALS
BROUGHTON

BROUGHTON

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2%
MILK

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BANQUET

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ICE MILK

FUDGE BARS

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.,09

8-16 oz. bottles

COKE
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�12-Tbe Dolly Sentinel. Middleport-POOllll'oy, 0., Tue!day, Feb. 22,1971

News~.

in Briefs

Schools
(Continued from ·page I)
Middleport Ubrary Board
and a financial report from
the libraries was given.
A letter from the Meigs
Local Teachers Assn. was
presented asking the board to
set a meeting date for the
~ntng of negotiations.
A number of fonns ·were
adopted for implementing
due process for handicapped'
children and youth as
developed
by
the
Southeastern Ohio Special
Edu cation Regional
Resource Center. All informatim on the forms is to
be held confidential.
A letter was read from the
Almeroy Youth League, Don
Hunnell, presid e nt ,
requesting use of Salisbury
and Meigs High·· School
facilities this summer .
Dowler said the league had
done excellent work last year
and an agreement will be
worked out.
Minutes of the Del!. 14, 1976
meeting, at which John
Triplett was not rehired as
derk, were amended with
live pages deleted because
they were not the type of
notes common in board
minutes. The minutes were
adopted after the pages were
deleted.
Mrs. Wagner reported that
she did oot have the financial
report ready because the

(Conunuea tram 111ge I)
llld the caJifornla·Nevada bOrder. tt OCC\I1TEid at 10:24 p.m.
PST and luted only a few seconds. A spokeoman of the Mono
Ccunty llher!ff'sofflce said there were oo reported damages or
injuries.
SAN DIEGO - RICHARD WESSON, 49, was battered to
death Monday in a giant food blender,
Wessm, a maintenance man at Food Maker Inc., was
working lnslde the seven-loot-long blender when a coworl!er
tripped and !ell against the button activating the machine,
authorities said.
NEW ORLEANS - BEER KEGS, .PAINTED faces, five·
bour parades and mostly orderly crowds were among the hall·
1118rks of this year's Mardi Gras celebration.
·
Canal Street was a solld mass of revelers Monday night for
the Krewe of Proteus parade, the last before today's "Fat
Tue!day" celebration which ends Mardi Gras. On Bourbon
Street, beer kegs stretched 10 and :II in a row on sidewalks,
waiting to be tapped for the crowds.
Pollee said the crowds were mostly quiet and orderly,
though there were more than IDl arrests in the eight-day
period preceding Mardi Gras on such chaiges as public
Intoxication, selling without a permit and theft. ''I wouldn't
want to call it unusually quiet," said Sgt. George Bourgeois.
"It's relatively quiet, though."
PITI'SBURGH - THE STATE MINIMUM RETAIL price
for milk is scheduled to drop two centa a gallon next Tuesday in
the l:kounty Western PeMsylvanla ar... However, the
PeMsylvania Milk MarkeUng Board ]l1ans a hearing the
following day that could result in higher prl~s by mid-Aprll.
Peter EUsh, mUk board chairman, said profit margins in the
mUk industry are "not too healthy" because of declining
!I'Ofits and Increased costs. He cited the cloaings of two area
dairies, Menzie Dairy and Beverly Fanns. The hearing will be
at 10 a.m. March 2 in Room 301, Slate Office . Bullding,
Downtown. Consumers, milk dealers and farmers are invited
to testify.
.

company which is receiving

. Carter budget

mmey for a comp~ler has not
ji'ovided instruction. It was
agreed that Dowler will file a
!I'Otesi with the company.
The board gave Martha
Vennari permission to attend

(Continped from page I)
will import more than ou~lf of Itsgas and on during 1977,
the first lime this country has depended on foreign energy
sources for more than half of its needs.
In other actions, Carter withdrew Ford's legislative
proposals to reduce food stamp and school lunch benefits and
to increase payroll taxes for low and moderate income
workers.
Ford's proposals mel strong resistance on Capitol Hill and
were given little chance of enactment by a Democratic
Congress.

a work session for local

Wrestlers
Big 3 m finish jn
(Continued from page
Eugene Cafiero warned that, last place:
despite the record profits, the
•

'

I)

No, 3 automaker's 1977-modei
car and truck prices do not
cover aU the rising costs for
materials, labor
and
services. They did not rule
out a. further price increase
on current models.
The automakers are
gearing up for an expected
strong lljll'ing and plan to
build 916,000 new cars in
March, higher for any montli
since October, 1973, when the
Arab oil embargo triggered
the slump.
·
Continuing labor ji'Oblems
at GM and Chrysler,
however, could dampen
March production plans.
Some 8,600 GM workers are
striking at plants in Parma,
Ohio, and · Clark, N.J .
· Chr}'lller was faced with a
threatened walkout today by
3,000 workers at its Warren,
Mich., stamping plants.
· The 916,000 cars planned
for March includes some
storm· recovery production
lost in January, but aloo is
designed to bulld up dealer
inventories for spring and
summer.

THREE RUNS MADE
RACINE - The Racine
Emergency Squad answered
three calls Monday. Taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
were Maggie Gilmore at 10
a.m.; Dana McCain, 6:35
p.m., and Tammy Tallent,
10:30 p.m .

Results of the Southeastern
Ohio Athletic
League
Wrestling meet last Saturday
resulted in victory for
Athens. Meigs finished last.
Results of the Logan-Meigs

matc~~an41,MeigsZ7

.
Britton

roordinators on handicapped
at Nelsonville Friday and
Dwight Goins, steering
committee chairman. to
attend aNorth Central School
Assn. meeting in Ironton on
March 2and 3. Meigs Local is
.., for evaluation this spring
by the North Central
organization.
Attending the meeting were
Supt. Dowler, Morris, the
assistant; Mrs. Wagner, and
lloard members, Wendell
Hoover, Dr. Keith Riggs,
Virgil King, Robert Snowden,
and Ptincipals John Mora
and Robert Morris.

.-------------------------- 1

:
I

Area Deaths

HAROLD D. ROBINSON
CARPENTER - Friends
here have learned of the
death of Harold D. Robinson.
60 , Lancaster , Ohio, Mr .
Robinson, sooi ' of the iote
Vesta and Nora Stanley
Robinson, was born near

C.rpenter and was reared to

m;~nhood here, graduating
from Columbia Local High
School .
He married the former Ada
Belle Trainer, also of this
area , after the death of his
first wife In 1965.
Beol des hIs wife, he Is
survived by three sons by his
first marriage/ and a stepdaughter, Monica Maynard,
and a brother , Stanley
Robinson , Columbus . Ser vices were held In Lancaster
wi'fh burial in Columbus.

OPAL DUNHAM
ALBANY - Services were
held here Sunday at the
Blgony . Jordan Funeral
Home for Opal Dunham , 65,
who passed away In Rock
tsland, Ill ., where she had ,
been flown about three weeks
before 1o be near her son and
family.
Mrs. Dunham was born In
Leon, W, Va .. the daughter of
~ late . John -and Sophia
Yauger Sines .
Survivors Include her
husband ; Carl, of near
Carpenter ; a son, John B.,
Md daughter.ln-law, Jl!lnel
(Jeffers) Dunham ; two
granddaughters, Connie and
Yvonne Dunham , and two
grandsons , John Carl and
Richard Dunham , all of New
Boston ,
Illinois ;
two
brothers, Clarence Sines ,
leon, W. Va . and Raymond
Sines, Lesage, W: Va .; and a
sister , Mrs . Gladys Bauer,
Arcadia, Calif .
Services were conducted br.•
Rev.. Wllbuf Baxter of letar ,
W. Va ., with burial In School
lot Cemetery near here.
Those from a distance here
for the serVI c:es were the John
t:&gt;Jnham family, Mr. and
Nrs. Charles Baldwin and
Jocty, Mrs . June De Roo, Mr .
and lks. James Giles and
llr. and Mrs. Richard Jeffers, all of New Boston , ill .;
llr. and Mrs . Clarence Sines,
Leon: Mr . and Mrs. Donald
Sines, Qolando, Fla .; Mr . and
llrs. Raymond Sines, Mr .
and Mrs. Walter Chapman
and children, Mr. and Mrs .
George Rice and family, Le
Sage, W. Va ., and Mrs .
Melinda Lewis, Mr . and Mrs .
Qoland Seils and James and
Herman
Lewis, atl of
C&lt;&gt;iumbus .

OLIVIA McCORMICK
Ol ivia Miller McCormick-,
91 , widow of the la te Robert

(L) won by forfeit.

(M), 11-2.

112 pound Class - Kelly
Helber (L) · pinned Jack
Hwnphrey (M) in Ist period.
119 pound class - Geiger
(L) won by forfeit.
126 pound class _ Carl
Green (M) pinned Miller (L)
in 1st periOO.
. 138 pound class _ Gary
Priddy (M) decisioned
Griggs (L), 5-4.
145 pound class _ Duane
McLaughlin (M) pinned
Myers (L) in first period. ·
155 poimd class - Emerson
(L) pim\e~ Sieve Kinzel (M)
in 1st period.
167 pound class _ Robert
Hakamont (M) pinned
Spence (L ) in 2nd period.
175 pound class _ Cullison
(L) pinned Dennis Donahue
(M) in 3rd period. ·
185 pound class _ Woltz (L)
decisimed Ray WiUord (Ml.
7•2.
Heav eight By
(L)
yw
ers
piMed David Davis.
The Bulldogs whipped
Logan ",.,.!5, Meigs 52_-15 and
Ironton 46-18 to easUy take
first place with 142 points.
Th e lronton Ti gers f1'nished
·g
second • Wl'th 85 pom'ts ' nosm
Out host Logan With 83 · Meigs
linishedwith65forlastplace._.
•

THE INN PLACE
Wednesday Nrght Special

a

,

By RICK VAN SANT
C!NCINNATI (UPI )- Two
of eight persons held hostage
earlier this month at a home
for unwed mothers testified
today that accused kidnaper
Jessie · L. Coulter put tbe
barrel of a sawed-off shotgun
into the mouth of a woman
hostage and that accused
accomplice Rita Gibran held
a knife to the neck of another
hostage. ·
It was the first time any of
the hostages had testified' in
court ahout what happened
during the lf&gt;.bour ordeal
Feb. 11 and 12 at the
Catherine Booth Home for
unwed mothers.
Also today , Hamilton
County Municipal Court
Judge Sandra Beckwith
rejected pleas from defense
atlorneys to reduce bond and
said. that both Coulter, 42, of
Detroit, and Ma. Gibran, his
37-year-old ex-wife, will
continue to be held under $1
million bond each while their
cases go to the grand jury.
One of the hostages, Mary
Owens, 30, a nurse at the
home, testified that Coulter
held a sawed-off shotgun
against a hostage identified
only as "Selly."

. "Mr. Coulter grabbed Sally

CALL ANSWERED
The Pomeroy E-R Sq~ad
answered a call to 226 Union
Ave. , at 3:55p.m. Monday for
Edna S. Hart, who was Ill.
She was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
CLASSES RESUME
Baton classes of Mrs. Judy
Riggs held at the recrealion
building at Royal Oak Park
will resume at the regularly
scheduled times on Wed·
nesd~y evening.

Visit Our Salad Bar
Pepper Steak
Mashed Potatoes
and Gravy .
Vegetable
Hot Roils

Coffee, Tea or Mil!&lt;

MEIGS lHEATRE'
Plus Tax

THE MEIGS INN

' Pomeroy, o:

Phone 992·6304
PIZZA SHACK Phone 992-6304

I

a.DSED FOR

VACATION ·
WATaf FOR
OPENING DATE

by the hair of her head and
put the shotgun in her
mouth," .said Miss Owens,
who also testified she was
bandcuffed while she was
held in the locked,
windowless room.
"I was handcuffed twice,"
she said. "Miss Gibran handcuffed me the seeond time
·1vlth my hands bOhind me."
· She also testified that at one
other point, "Mr. Coulter
slapped me in the face. "
Another hostage, John
Fisher, 19, a student at
Antioch College and a parilime worker at the home,
testified Miss Gibran at.one
timelieldalmifetohisthroat.
" Mr. Coulter asked Miss
Gibran to watch me," he
said. "She put a blade to my
neck aod said, 'Don't make
me kill you honey, cause I
will."'

Coulter and Miss Gt'bran 's
cases were heard separately
today, and the testimony
came a t M'ass G'b
1 ran ,s
preliminary hearing when
ber attorney, Tom Miller,
contended thai Miss Gt'lran
was not an accomplice.
Asked by Miller l'f Coulter's
instructions to Mtss Gilran
came as a "command" or a
41
request," Fisher answered,
"a request."
,
Fisher also testified that at
one point Coulter "asked"
Miss Gibran to hold the
shotgun, "and she dld,"
Prosecutor J . Anthony
Sewyer, who contends that
Miss Gibran was an
accomplice, asked Fisher,
"When Miss Gibran had the
·.gun, did she at that tbne point
the gun at Mr. Coulter and
shoot him?"
Replied Fiaher, "No."
Declared Sewyer, ''There
is absolutely oo doubt in my
mind that Miss Gibran will be
indicted on multiple counts
by the grand jury."
Coulter, who had come to
the home searching for
information about hi.! son
born there 20 years ago and
put up for adoption, and Miss
Gilran curt'enUy are charged
rn one count of kidnaping
each.
Mis1 Owens, in her
testimony today, said that
Coulter pointed the sawed-off
sHOigun at her llhortly after
he and Misa Gllran entered
the home.
"f!e told me be wanted a
room without any windowa,"

Grader bought on 2-1 vote

I

(Bob) McCorm ick, a resident ·
of 1332 Tenth Ave., Hun ~ngton, W. Va., died around 2

p.m . Monday en route to
Cabell County Hospital. She

resided with her onl y child. a

son,

Robert, In Huntington.
lks. McCorm ick was a
former teacher in the
GOIIIpoils City Schools . She
was the daughter of the late

John and aarbara· Benner
Miller, born June 2, 187'1, In

Green Twp. She marrted
Robert McCormick around
1920. He preceded her In
death in 1975.
She was a member of St .
Louis Catholic Church of
Gallipolis .
.
One grandchild survives .
Grav61de services wll l be
held 10 a.m. Thursday at
Mound Hili Cemetery . Father
A. J . Golubiewsk l will of .
ficiate.

Friends ri1ay call at
Miller' s Home for Funerals
between 1 and 9 p.m. Wed ·
nesday .
.

MASON , W. VA.
Wahama ·White Falcon Band
musicians received 13 of the
17 superior ratings given at
Region II Solo and Ensemble
Contest held at the Marshall
University School of Music on
Seturday.
Adjudicators for the event
included Robert Clark and
John Mead, both memberS of
the music faC!Jity a\ the
University.
.
Students were judged on
the five rating scale with a I
or superior rating being' the
highest.
Receiving I ratings on solos
were Debbie . Starr, Lisa
Yeago,. John Froendt, Terri
Johnson, Karen Brown, Lisa
Davis, Mary McFarland,
Cheryl Adams and Unda
Test.
Students receiving superior
ratings on, ensembles included flute duet, Terri
Johnson and Karen Brown;
flute quartet, Jennie James,
Rhonda Kay, . Teresa Jones
and Debbie MacKnight;
clarinet quintet, Lisa Gilland,

PEARL t;. JACOBS
Pearl Clifford Jacobs, 86,
Rt. 2, Pomeroy, In the coal
mining business for a number
ot years, died Tuesday at St. .
Joseph's Hospital, Parkers·
burg.
Born Dec. 8, 1890 to the late
Gilbert and Nell ie Powell
Jacobs, he was also pr:eceded
in death by six children .
Surviving are his wife. Tina
Buck Jacobs ; two sons.
Oifford, Pomeroy, and Paul.
South Shore, Ky .; four
daughters, Mrs . Theo Davis
and Miss Betty Jacobs, both
ot C&lt;&gt;lumbus , and lks . Donna
Gilmore and Mrs. Wanda
Eblin, both .of Pomeroy ; 16
grandchildren 20 great grandchildren , and three
great -great.g randchildren.
Mr . Jacobs was· a member
of the Laurel Ci iff Free
Methodist Church for 53
years. l-ie v.10rked in Pomeroy
coal m i nes his entire life and
Two persons were injured
for 18 years, operated the
in a traffic accident ·at 10:32
Jacobs Coal Co. He was a
fo rmer
Salisbury
Twp . a.m. Monday on SJ;t 35 on the
Gallipolis by-pass.
trustee.
Funeral service S will be
The Gallia·Meigs Post
2:11 p.m , Thursday at the State Highway Patrol said an
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
auto driven by Collis E.
Church with the Rev . Floyd
Shook officiating. Burial will ' Adkins, 45, Vinton, came off
be ln Rock Springs cemetery . the exit ramp to the Silver
Friends may call at the
Memorial Bridge and crossed
Ewing Funeral Horne from 7
the
lane in the path of a truck
to 9 this evening and from 2 to
~rated by Leroy H. Carter,
4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday .
The body will be taken to the
32, Chillicothe.
church where it will lie 'in
Adkins and a passenger,
state one hour prior to ser ·
Elizabeth
Adkins, age nine,
vices .
were
taken
to the Holzer
In lieu of flowers, the
family
prefers
that Medical Center by SEOEMS
contributions be m~de to the for treatment of various
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist injuries.
Church building fund.

Two

injured in

auto wreck

woman hostag·e threate,ned

h
h
h
ld
(Ll)OSdec~!~~ssJohnCa~~~~ Wit s .otgun e . .
98 pound class -

.

: Wahama musicians take
·13 of 17 excellent ratings

~

mouth

she said. "Miss Gilran was
following along beside hbn.

Eastern's
honor list

'
d
announce
EAST MEIGS - The first
semester hooor roll has been
announced for the Eastern
Junior and Senior High
Schools by Principal c. A.
Gooding.
Named to the roll were:
Seventh - Scott Skinner, A
roll; Kila Young, John Ribel,
Terry Snowden, Tim Ryan,
Rllger Gaul, Jeff Jones, B
roll.
Eighth - Melanie Root,
Tracy Sayre• A roll·• JIITI'
Bahr, Carla Chichester,
Richard Bearhs, Tony
Kennedy, April parker,
Kathy Pooler, Brenda
Rucker, Greg Wigal, Ray
Werry, Barbara Wells,
Tammy Starcher, Marcy
Sexson, B ro11 •
Freshman - B&lt;l'ky Ed·
wards, Teresa Spencer, Uta
Young, A roll; Jeff Kimes,
Kaleen Millhone, Laurie
Provence, Sheila White, B
roll.
Sophomores
Kay
Balderson, ·Cindy Pitzer,
Lawrence Pooler, Karen
Probert, Dawn Sorden,
Debbie Spencer, Sherr I
Starcher, Vida Weber, A roll;
Shirley Bennett, Joy Boyles,
Terry
Brown,
Sheri
Buchanan, Susan Hannum,
La uri Matthews, James
Ryan, Rusty Wigal, B roll.
Juniors - Becky Windon,
Dorothy Runyon, David
Brown, A roll; Mary Mora,
. Tammy Pitzer, Rocky Van
, Meter, Diana Massar, Lori
Young, Sonia Beaver, Sheila
Buchanan, Karen Fick,
Mickie Holloo, Joe Kuhn,
Den~ll Rucker, B roD.
Seniors- Teresa Buckley,
Carolyn Harper, Jeff
Hedrick, Jayne Smith, Juli
Whitehead, A roll; Kevin
Burton, Teresa Carr, Pam
Congrove, Debbie CoMolly,
Teresa · Edwards, Marlin
Evans, Kathy Follrod, Susie
Goebel, Mike Smith, R roll.

·There was heavy damage
to Adkins' car and light
damage to the truck. Adkins
was cited to Municipal Court
for changing lanes without
caution.
Frank W. Porter, 72,
Gallipolis, was charged with
failure lo slop within the
assured clear distance
following an accident at 8: sa
a.m. on SR 7 at CR 2.
The patrol said Porter's
vehicle struck the rear end of
an auto operated by Michael .
R. Willis, 19, Bidwell. There
was minor damage.
No charges were filed In an
accident at 2:35p.m. Monday
m SR 35, one mile west of SR
325. State troopers said an
.auto driven by James D.
Bush, 22, Dayton, slid into a
parked vehicle . owned by
Kenneth E. Folden, 20, Rio
Grande. There was minor
damage.

Actions filed

Mary McFarland; woodwind
trio, Jennie James, Mary
McFarland, and Terri
Proffitt; and woodwind
quintet, Usa Davia, Cheryl
Adams, Carolyn Rickard,
April Parsons, and Uncia
Test.
Three soloists were given
applications which makes
them eligible to audition for
the honor of being one of the
10 or 12 "honor finallBts" for
the Slate of West VIrginia:
The three students were
Linda TeSt, Mary McFarland
and Cheryl Adams.
•
Piano accompanists for the
students were Lynn Kitchen
and Pat Yeago.

Judy Needs, Edie Shepherd,
Lora Smith, and Donna
Marr; and the briiBB en·
semble, Keith Goldsberry,
Kathy Test, David RNe, Lisa
Reynolds, CarUyn Rickard,
Sarah Zuspan, · Melanie
Sisson, John Froendt, Pam
Roush, Bob Jarrell and Brent
Hart.
Those students who
received th.e second highest
rating, or n, on solos were
Kathy Test, Jennie James
and Karen Stodola. Rhonda
Kay received a IT! on her
solo.
Students receiving a II for
ensembles were clarinet
duet, Cheryl Adams and

•

Veterans Memorbli Hospital '
Admitted _;. Wilbur Smith,
LangsviUe; Kenneth Muliins,
Cheshire; Bessie Oliver,
Middleport; Maggie Glbnore,
Racine; Kay Hockman,
Cheshire; George Frederick,
Long Bottom ; Maxine
Brumley,
Middleport;
Charles Pennington, Middleport; Bernice Molden,
Pomeroy; Amy Eynon,
Syracuse; Beulah Oehler,
Belpre; Nara Hariman, Long
Bottom;
Edna
Hart,
Pomeroy.
Discharged - Vivian
Jones, Lois Schoonover:
Marjorie Gibbs, John Newell,
Ann Fleming, Joann Conkle.

Wells and lloosh said if the county intended to buy a new
grader within the next year or two it should be bought since
prices would escalate, They apparently agreed a new grader
was needed in a year or two.
Jones stated that he voted no as he felt they should not buy
any additional equipment unW other problems at the countY
garage were worked out.
The commissioners also discussed the county highway
depa~nt appropriation for 1977, No agreement was
reached, and the matter was again tabled pending further
review with the engineer, Buehl.
Larry Hivnor, CETA field representative, and Naomi
Brinker, local administrator, r~viewed with the

•

at y

e

HOSPITAL NEWS
Carley, Vickie L. Metheney,
· Mrs. Cleon R. Pratt and soil,,
Treba L. Russell, Jennifer J.
Showman, Anna M. Slm·
puns, Danny J. Tenopplous,

VOl. XXVII NO. 219

Pleasant Valley
Discharges - Jack Smith,
Letart; Fred Nibert, Point
Pleasant; WIUlam Phelps,
Letart ; Albert Middleton,
Point Pleasant; Anthony
Cemlni, Point Pleasant; ·
Everett Thacker, Point
Pleasant; Herbert King ,
· Letart; Richard Dyer, Point
Pleasant ; Mrs. Robert
Chattin, Clifton; Gordon
Handley, Buffalo; Mrs.
David Flowers, Robertsburg;
Holzer Medical Center
Mary Seyre, Point Pleasant;
(Diocbarges, Feb. ZI 1
Leslie Marcum , Kenova;
Sedie C. Adner, Wesley E. Isabelle McLaughlin ,
Alien, Gerry M. Cain, Shawn Kanauga ; Vertie Blain,
A. Capehart, Marjorie E. , Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs.
Carhart, Hazel R. Combs, ' Rnnnie Johnson, Pomeroy;
Lawrencene Cordell, Mrs. Shannon Tucker, !,eon; and
Albert Ehman and daughter, Beverly Dingus, Mason.
Katherine C. Harris, John H.
Births - A son to Mr. and
Henderson, · Marlin E. Mrs. William Edwards,
Johnson, Allee J. Marcum, Racine, and a da~ghter to
Anna . M. Massie, Barbara Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Oxyer,
Ann McCalla, Joe C. Me- Galli polls.

YOU'RE ALWAYS
SAFE. ••

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I

DAN TIIOMAS
Dan Thomas, 15-year-old
aon of Mr. and Mrs. Don
Thomas, Pomeroy, will
receive the Eagle Scout
Award, at 2 p.m. Sunday at
tbe Trinity Cburcb In
Pomeroy. Dan Is the
youngelt member of
Pomeroy Boy Scout Troop
2ft to have earned this
bonor, the bigbest given In
S~oatlng. All of Dao's
friends are Invited to attend the ceremony and the
reception wblcb wlll follow
In tbe cbareb social room.

:s;lll
:~

Plans are being completed
to add a coronary care unit at
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
Scott Lucas, administrator,
told the Pomeroy chamber of
Commerce at its noon lunch·
eon meeting Tuesday at the
Meigs Inn.
Lucas said plans call for
two beds in the coronary care
unit and two beds in an in·
tensive . care unit. Th e
coronary section will be
located where the obatetric
department once was
located.
It is expected specific plans
will be completed by March I
and bids will he let in tale
Marci), construction to gel
underway by May I, and
completion by Aug. I.
Lucas told The Daily
Sentinel only unforeseen
events would cancel out plans
for the hospital expansion:
Specifications in the blue
prints are subject to change
too, but evert these are of a
firm nature. Lucas indicated
ll!e expansirn will be made
without federal funding .
Lucas explained that the

coronary unit i§long overdue
as there is a definite need for
such a .service since most
people prefer to stay al
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The fa cility will of course
hav e to m.eet slate and
federal requir€men~s . Lucas

FROM NAME BANK
Lock-up your valuables In a safety
deposit box. Several sizes available
to accommodate Jewelry and special
documents. You shouldn't be with·
out one.

• • •

By PAMELA REEVES
WASHINGTON (UP!)
President Carter got . a
from
Mideast
report
Secretary of Slate Cyrus
Vance today and said he was
more convinced than ever "this is a good year" for a
lasting peace between Arab
and Jew.
Vance met with Carter and
top military and dilopmatic
advisers at the White House
to discuss his recent trip to
Israel and several Arab
countries. He carried

J 0 ··;:,~l&lt; sages
we have seen. show we
should play a cruCial role,"

NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J. -THE BOY SOOUTS, caught
up ill a modernday identity crisis, are changing the name they
were born ~th 67 years ago. Bowing to the tnteresta of women
and mlncrity grou111, the Boy Scouta of America said today the
wcrd "boy"la old-fallhloned and even offensive to many of its
members.
The crganizatton, headquarlered here, said it Ia changing
the name to Scouting USA. The new name will appear In
advertiaementa, literature and on calling cards. ''The word
'boy' is objectionable to minorities, our young adult male and
female }eaden and naturally to the young women enrolled in
our coed· Exploring program," the organization said.

"THE

FRIENDLY BANK"

WASHINGTON - A GIRL BORN IN 1975 can expect to
llw to be 76.5 years oil, National Center for Health Stallatlcs
said today , A 1975 boy can live on the average 68.7 y~rs.
Without regard to - . the llfe expectancy of a child born in
1975 is 72.5 yean -a record high rate exceeding slighUy the
72.4 year life expectancy rate projected In provlalonal
estimates last aununer,
Flnal1975llfe and death statistics llhow the death rate also
wu a record low, and lower than predicted earlier, Death
ralelinc:reued In 1975, the latest year reported, for only three
of the 15leadlng causes of death, the center said; Influenza and
pneumonia, reflecting an epidemic last winter; cancer, which
remainllhe second leading killer; and suicide.
·
'!be cancer increase waa not aa great, however, as the
(Continued on page 12)

MtttFPoRY,..oHIO
Member Federal Deuosit lnsul'lilce eo.wniliW.
DEPOSITS INSUR.ED TO ~40,DO!Q ·
•

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
.
\

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Full bed size with •Ingle or dual controls.
twin bed size.
Automatically odluots to chang• tn room
.:.. II per cent poly•ter, 20 per
oayllc with all nylon binding.
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Home F1111ihil11 - lit flolr
Open Mondoy, Tueldoy, Wtdnnday, Tllurldoy and Selurclay f1IO A.M. te s P'.M.
Frldoy 9:30 A.M. to I P.M.
.

ELIERFELDS .IN POMEROY

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

FMC Corp. charged in
carbon tet discharge
CHARLESTON, W. Va . attempting to hla• a
(UP!) -The FMC Corp, has dangerous situation and also
deliberately hidderr waa possibly violating stall!
dlacharges of , carbon and federal water pollution
tetrachloride and Jepcrdlzed control acts and regulations.
public health, according· to Ia this your example of
Natural Resources corpbrate responalbllltf?"
Departmelll Director David Callaghan wrote in the letter.
Carbon tetrachloride is
c. c:aJIIPn.
.
used
tn many cleaning fluids
'11let.. the gilt of a letter
llld
has
been found to cauae
Callagban haa sent to John
cancer
and
liver and kidney
Hcito, Jlllll8&amp;8l' of the South
damage.
Ollrlnlan CGIIIpaiiY'
FMC has not officially
Clllqbln claimed the finn
accepted
responsibility for
falllld to report oulfalla ol the
the
70-ton,
75-mlle chemical
c:blml,..l that occurred on ·
spill,
which
has moved out ol
Feb.lO and Feb. II, and
West
Virginia
but could
nlwtld to let DNR and EPA
endanger
communltlea
along
•Jdallsample the !!Iter on
the
Ohio
River
In
Kentucky
Feb. 7.
.
''Oiul can only conclude llld Ohio.
••t the company was

staled.
Lucas said that in 1976 the
hospital had 2,m admissions, served 5,103 people
in the emerge ncy room,
performed 1,500 operations
and had an annual payroll of
a little over a million dollars.

NITA WISNISKI

Action against
hypertension '

"For a small hospital we do more to do with the relaxing
a lot of work," he said. Asked of the curtailment than
if an obstetric unit would ever anything else.
The Ohio Chamber of
be opened again at the
Everybody talks about the over a three week perho spital Luca s replied, Commerce will meet in weathe but nobody does iod and if the problem
"ptobably not ," since the one Columbus on March 15 and 16 anything about it. A popular exists after that time, a
they had was not financially when Fred Morrow will at· topic these days also is high referral will be made to a
.sound. He indicated people tend. Crow will attend a blood pressure (hyper- physician who will attempt to
did not use the department meeting of the Ohio Chamber tension ) and it's encouraging determine the cause of the
when it was at the hospital, in Athens on March 8.
problem and . prescribe
Attending were Crow, to know that the Meigs medication, if needed.
that only one to two babies
County
Health
Department
IS
were delivered a month . Barbara Chapman, doing something about that.
The program has been
"People of the area did not secretary , Leo Vaughan,
funded by the Ohio Depart·
The
department
loda
y
take advantage of the service Robb, Lucas, Mayor An· announced that it has been ment of Health through
when it was offered," Lucas drews , Vera VanMeter, funded for a nine-month federal funds and is designed
Morrow, Vernon Weber, John
said.
program which is designed to to establish an ongoing fight
Fred Crow. president, Anderson, N. W. Compton, deal exclusively with high against hypertension which is
announced
thai
the Mayer, Koebel and Thereon blood pressure. The program a major cause of deaths.
Johnson .
celebrities
banquet
honoring
will include educational Personnel of the local health
a good year, " lowara
Robert
Wingett,
Charles
aspects,
clinics, hom e department realizing the
reaching a peace settlement,
Legar and Pete Shields and
visitations
and free blood need for . a program to
said the President, who .
others
will
be
held
March
9
at
EXTENDED
OUTLOOK
pressure
service
to the public educate the public on the
previously got an inforl)lal
the Meigs Inn.
Friday through Sunday,
dangers of hypertension and
of
Meigs
County
.
briefing from Vance on the
Crow, of the upcoming a chance« ralo Friday and
find
persons afflicted with the
Named
to
carry
out
the
trip.
Regatta,
said
nothing
is
Saturday
and
fair
Sunday.
ailment
applied for the
program
through
the
Meigs
In a busy morning, Carter
definite on Sunday boat Highs will be In the 50s
funding
.
County
Department
of
Health
also arranged a meeting with
In i)er work with the
Rep. Jonathan Bingham, D- races. He suggested perhaps Friday and Seturday and in is Mrs. Nita Wisniski, R.N.,
they could have john boat, the 40s Sunday. Lows wiU Addison , who will
program,
Mrs. Wisniski will
be
N.Y., who recently spent
skiff,
and
crew
races.
raoge
from
lite
upper
!Is
to
go
into
homes
of the county if
available
to
speak
before
any
seven hours with Cuban
Roger
Davis
of
Kingsbury
the
mid
30s.
persons
who
are
ill are unable
Meigs
County
organization
on
leader Fidel Castro, Bingham
Homes
attended
the
meeting
to
visit
the
health
department
the program. She can be
said earlier he found Castro
and
Crow
asked
if
the
office.
She
also
will
recruit
contacted al the he alth
ready to talk about rehe
had,
Hurricane
boats
to
work
as
personnel
department office, 992-3723.
establishing closer ties with
(Hurricane
boats
go
on·
land
volunteers
in
ll!e
program.
·
Mrs. Wisniski will be taking
the United States,
Rain, possible thun·
and
water)
could
be
used
in
a
Anyone
concerned
with
An!ong those sitting in on
dershowers tonight and the blood pressure of hunthe session with Vance were race and Dav,is thought this Thursday. Lows tonight in the dreds of M;eigs County hi gh blood pressure or
wishing Mrs. Wisniskl to
Air .Force Gen. George CQuld be arranged.
mid 40s, highs Thursday in residents over the next nine speak before an organization
Wall
er
Robb
of
the
Brown, chairman of the Joint
lower 60s. Probability of month period and she
Chiefs of Staff, Vice Pomeroy Citizens Action precipitation 50 per cent stresses that the service is should contact the health
President Waller Mondale, Group disclosed thai the today, ill per cent tonight and free. A person discovered to department at the earliest
Defense Secretary Harold action group was not among Thursday.
have an abnormal reading convenience.
the
top
10
chosen
by
the
Small
Brown
and
Treasury
will be scheduled for a check
Secretary Harold Business Administration and
the Farmers Home AdBlumenthal.
ministration for development fudning . Robb explained that the group will get
back to the cleanup projfC( as
Meigs County engineer order of the board of Meigs
This order will be operative
soon as the weather permits. Wesley Buehl said today load County Commissioners, have from Feb. 21 to June 1. The
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence limits on county roads, by been reduced 25 percent.
present limit is 19,000 pOunds
Andrews said the village w.as
•ross weight; the 25 percent
hoping to secure a grant
through the Housing Urban
Development for funds to
repair village streets.
'11 roads in the county have
Bill Mayer, representing
oeen posted and violators will
the Pomeroy Pastry Shop, a
be
prosecuted
under
"It would take something new member, sta ted that he
authority of Ohio Revised
like the record rapid warmup was interested in the
Code No . 5577:
we had in March of 1960," be chamber and commended it
Persons having reasonable
said. "One day then in for doing an outstanding job.
requests
or find it necessary
•· f th be d
,
Red Carpet IM.
western Pennsylvania the
John Koebel of the Rest'den..,
o e n area m
A group proposes to on occasion to carry a weight
temperature went . to 55 Columbia Gas of Ohio Ma~n County, W· Va· a.nd establi•h an indoor tennis
degrees, then to 65. the next outlined relaxed gas curtail' Gallta _Coun~y and Me1gs club and indoor swimming over the posted Umlt must
day, followed by tWo more ments, said tbe situation was County m Ohto are invited to pool club in the tri-county secure a pennit for their
vehicle io exceed the limlt. in
days of 75.."
better, but not as good as they a meetmg to ~xplore a area. The swimming pool and case of having to move a
Relyea ·said rivers that still would like to see it. He said pr~posal to prov1d~ indoor tennis courts are · already trlliler, -or of high water, for ·
could become swollen by the warming trend and swunmmg and tennas Thurs· constructed at the Inn. The example, Buehl said.
snowpack melt include the conservati on effort s had day at 7 p.m. at the Point object is to learn if there is
Allegheny in Pennsylvania
enough interest to warrant
and the Cheat and Greenbrier
having the areas covered to
tn West Virginia .
allow use of the pool and
"The clues to where the
courts in winter months.
Ohio River might flood will
Persons interested are
come from its tributaries,"
Two defendants were tmea
asked
to call any of the
he added. "But, we do have 70
and two others forfeited
following
co-chairmen,
Dr.
flood control reservyirs along
Labor's lobbyists also will David Cole, Dr. Richard bonds in the court of Pomeroy
MIAMI BEACH, Fla,
various
Ohio
River
Mayor Clarence Andrews
tributaries that we didn't (UP!) - Big lahor promises be well financed. The AFL- SimpsOn, J. J. Wedge, Cindy Tuesday night. Fined were
Park,
Billy
Johnson,
Carol
have when we had the big to fight big business In an CIO executive council voted
during
its Shadle, Dr. E. S. Villanueva Mae Fairchild, Pomeroy, $30
expensive, emotional bailie Tuesday,
flood of 1937."
and costs, !allure to yield the
Relyea said Lake Erie before Congress this year midwinter meeting, to and Jack Fowler.
right of way at an intributaries such as the over the basic law governing imp()se a temporary, onetersection,
and Paul Hatfield,
Sandusky, Mawnee, Chagrin, ·the right of workers to cent-a.fllonth assessment on
Dexter,
$:.10
and costs and
Grand, Vermilion, Cuyahoga, bargain collectively with all union members to raise an
three
days
in
jall for driving
eslimated $800,000.
Black, Huron · and Rocky their employers,
while
intoxicated.
The AFL.-CIO will seek to
AFL-CIO President George
rivers have the same flood
Forfeiting bonds were
revise
federal labor law in a
r'ined in the court of
potential as the Ohio Meany precipitated the bailie
Thomas
Roush, Columbus,
Tuesday by launching .an single omnibus bill, which Middleport Mayor Fred
tributaries.
$50,
for
squealing
tires and
Meanwhile, officials of tbe historically ambitious one spokesman described as Hoffman Tuesday night were Dale Teaford, Racine, $30,
U.S. Interior Deparbnent's legislative campaign to stop labor's most ambitious effort Kenneth R. White, 34. assured clear distance.
Mining Enforf:1!ment and what be deserilled a, the since the Wagner Act was Almeroy, $200 and costa and
Safety Administration, erosion of w~ers ' rights passed in 193S . Most three dars in jail on a
saying they are concerned under the National Labor subsequent revisions have dtarge o driving while inbeen piecemeal.
toxicated, and $25 and costs
about the possibility of floods Relations Act.
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The
most
controversial
on a disorderly manner
He predicted the lime was
from melting snows in
SYRACUSE
The
item
will
be
repeal
of
the
Raymond
C.
charge;
Appalachian mirling regions, right for the pockage to be
Syracuse
E-R
squad
Friday
right-to-work
provision
mder
Douglas, 51, Tuppers Plains,
have ordered emergency In- enacted by a heavily
spections of coal waste im- Democratic Congresa ·and a which 20 states have $200 llld costs and three days transported Mrs. Ralph
new Democratic President. abolished union shops, where in jail, driving while In- Radcliffe from Veterans· •·
poundments.
"Floods can place a major He said be knew no reason all workers are required to toxicated ; Ryan K. Dill, 19, Memortaf Hospital to a
stral n on some im· why President Carter would join a union. Labor last Pomeroy, $1S and costs, Marietta rest rome. Saturday
poundments, especially in not sign every piece of challenged the law In 19115, speeding, and Donald E. Mrs. Edna Wlggbts wu tala!n
areaa of West Virginia and legislation in
labor's but failed to get It repealed by Stobart, 35, Pomeroy, $10 and from Veterans Memorial
Hospital to her ·home.
Congreas.
costs, illegal license. .
Pennsylvania," said MESA package.
AFL-CIO officials believe
Forfeiting bonds were Monday at 6:30 a.m. Velma
administrator Robert E.
But he acknowledged that
he expected tough opposition the batUe must be waged nmothy A. Ellis, 18, Mid· Panons was taken to Holler
Barrett.
Five years ago, 125 peroons froln the "right to work'' again because ·some states dleport, $22, Denzil L. !.led! cal Center where she
were killed when a coal waste lobby, which has pia~ a have UBed right-to-work tq · Proctor, 43, Middleport, S27, was admitted. Monday at 1
Impoundment near Buffalo multbnillion dollar campaign lure IndustrY with promises and Martin E. Seellg, 19, p.m. Amy Eynon wu taken
Q-eek, W.Va., gave way.
to resist any changes in the of cheap labor.
Pumeroy, $37, all posted on to . Veterans Memorial
Hospital and admitted.
law.
charge&amp; of speetling.

Vance had
goodnews

By Uolted Press InlmlllUoaal
Carter said before the formal
BALTIMORE -MONEY CONTRIBUTED to help re-elect triefing, "But tbe d&lt;~!isions
fermer President Nixon in 1972 will now go to four men who · have to be made by the people
participated in the Watergate burglary that led to Nixon's in the Middle East."
resignation.
"I believe there is a
Baltimore attorney Daniel SChultz, who represents four unanimous feeiin~ that this i.•
Wateraate burglars, said Tuesday that a ~ million civil suit
filed by the lour against the Committee to Re-elect the
President was settled for $:110,000. Schultz, representing
.Watergate burglars Bernard Barker, Eugenio Martinez,
Vlrgillo Gonzalez and Frank Sturgis, said the money- $50,000
to each man- will be paid from a trust fund left over from the
1872 Nixon campaign co.:llllittee.
·

SAFE DEPOSIT BOX

en tine

WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 23, 1977

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WITH A

commissioners changes in the CETA program, which will lake
effect soon.
Bill Taylor, executive director of SEOEMS; Ted Turner,
finance director, and Mrs. Joanne Stewart, meniber of
SEOEMS board of directors, requested a renewal of the
contract that Rutiand station ha• forE-Rand transfer service .
The commlssloners agreed to study the request. No action was
taken.
Jones asked for information available in regard to the
Unemployment Office being relocated in Pomeroy. Wells
agreed to check into the matter.
Freeland Norris and John Rice were appointed to the 848
board and Fred Hoffman was appointed to the board of
Buckeye Hills.

Hospital to expand services

..

in Meigs court
The Packaging Corp, of
America, Ev~nston, Ill., has
filed suit for money in the
amount of $6,1195.70 against
Clifford Hill, Rt. 2, Racine, in
Common Pleas Court.
Patricia E. Martin ,
Elk~rt. Ind., filed for support under the R&lt;~!lprocal
Agreement Act against
Clifford Ray Smith, Middleport, as did Barbara
Purdy against Robert L.
Purdy. Patricia Clehind,
Rutland, filed suit for divorce
again•t Wayne Cleland,
Langsville.

The Meigs County comml.ulon oo 1 split vote Tuesday
approved purchase of a $53,500 road grader, the majority
convinced escalating prices should be beaten with the
IIW'Chale oow, not later.
W PredpltaUng the action was a letter from county engineer
l!8ley Buehl urging act!Qn on hla earlier request for a new
road grader fer the higbway department. The cotrunl8slon
voted 2-1 to purchase, with Richard Jones voting "no," Henry
Wella and James RQullh "yes."
The grader ,listed at $53,500, callle less trade-Ins of f21),000
for the county's old grader and two used scrapers at a net cost
~the county of $33,440. Tbe seller is South~stern Equipment

No relaxation
in flood watch
By RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI (UPI)- The
Ohio River, its tributaries
and Lake Erie tributaries
remain flood threats, a river
expert warns. .
"Because some of the snow
is gone alid because the ice is
going, some people feel the
flood potential is all over,"
says Carl Relyea. "Well, it's
not.
" March is our most
frequent month for floods.
The flood prospect now
depends on how much rain we
get and when we get it. We
have to. watch out for those
spring rains,"
Relyea, chief hydrologist at
the Ohio River Forecast
Center, points oot there have
been small floods along
several
Ohio
"lver
tributaries each of the past
eight years.
"We probably can be fairly
sure of som~ minor tributary
flooding this $pring, but
where and to what extent
depends on bow heavy the
local rain is. However, it
would take a !ieries of heavy
rainstorms throughout the
Ohio Valley to produce major
flooding and it's unusual for
that to happen.
"But it's bad to have a
p&amp;ychologlcal letdown and
figure for sure we won't get a
b!g Oood·," he added. "It's
still a wait and see situation
because of the rain.
"It depends on how Sji'lng
comes tn. WID It come·in with
concentrated, heavy rain or
willlt come in with gradual
rain spaced apart?"
Relyea aLso said ''enough d:
a snqwpack remainl in the
mountalng of western
Pennsylvania and West
Virginia to produce Ooodlng
there If we get a rapid
temperature wannup,

Weather

Load limits reduced

Group proposes ;~~i"~!~usu:;:u~~s t:.:

~~~~~ _P!2i~~! ..

Two fined, two
forfeit bonds

Labor, business
battle uexpected

Several fined
in Middleport

,

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