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                  <text>12-Thel_?aUySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. 23,11177

r--------------------------,

:
I

Area Deaths
'

THELMA G. KISER
RACINE - Mrs. Thelma
Gladys Kiser, 62, Rt . 2,
Racine. died Tuesday at
Holzer Medical Center .
She was born Dec. 19, 1915
to lhe late Stephen and
Minnie Devrlck Hayes. She
was also preceded In death by
her husband, Freddie Erwin
Kiser, two sisters, and two
brothers.

Surviving are seven sons.
Okev. James, Howard and

~ROUTE

DRIVER NEEDED
IN
WEST VIRGINIA

!I Dust

storm rips through
Press ·- wrapped it around a omaU

By
United
Inte1118Uoul
Sprlngllke weather gave
way to ,snows In the great ,
Plains today and resldenta In
west Tens dus out from the
year:s first destructive dust
storm.
W. Va .; Mrs. Bonnie Varian,
"Dust Devil" winds ripped
Clifton, W. Va .; Mrs. Bar·
bar a Compton , Van5anl, Va .; through the Texas panhandle
two brothers, Holly Hayes. town of Speannan Tuesday,
Clendenin. W. Va . and Ray heavUy damaging eight bust·
Hayes, Dunbar, w. Va .; a nesses In a Shopping mall..
sister , Mrs . Ellie Scarbrough.
Long Bottom ; 28 grand - Gusta toppled the :!:!Moot
children and three great- traiiSI!IItting tower of radio
grandchildren .
station KBMF -FM and

Devld, all of Racine ; Char les.
Nel•onv ll le ;
Harol d.
Napoleon; and Roy, Grand
Forks, N. D.; sl • daughter s.
Mrs . Mar ie Norr is . Joan
Kl5er . Mrs . Phyll i s Randolph, all of Racine ; Mrs.
MaHle Rippetoe, St. Albans,

Mrs. Klsef was a member
of the Racine Baptist Chur ch.
Funeral services will be 2
p.m. Friday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev.
Freeland Norris officiating.
Burial will be i.n Letart Falls
Cemtery . Friends may call at
the funeral" home any time.

Across
from
Pomeroy-Middleport
area by · the Daily
Sentinel ..

CAll.
992-2156
For Appointment

SWARTZIU.
Pomeroy Emergency
Squad went Ill Mulberry Ave.,
Ill . 6:23 p.m. Tuesday for
Archie Swartz. who was ill.
He was taken to Holzer
Medi.cal Center. At 8:22a.m.
Wednesday, ·the squad went
Ill Bailey Run for Brenda
Templeton who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Th~

THE INN PLACE
ThursdJJy Nrght Special

'

building housing the station.
Winds guatlng to 'Ill miles
an hour were repqrted In
'"IQrl;, Teo., and winds
shattered · windows in
Amarillo.
~ow and blowing snow
spread from the Rockies Into
the ·Certtral Plains where
lejnperatures had reached
Into the .71111 on Mmday.
Heavy snow wamlnp were In
effect for northern Wisconsin
and Upper Michigan.
Travelers advlaorleo were

HOSPITAL NEWS
Velen• Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Tamara
Tallent, Racine; Ernest
· Stewart, Minersville; John
Gilland, .New Haven;
Dorothy Collins, Pomeroy;
Kimberly Kennedy, Middleport; Anna Russell,
Middleport; Victoria Cundiff,
Syracuse ; Mary Wallace,
Middleport. ·
Discharged
Brian
Haning, Martha Chambers,
Lori Wood, Emalene Johnson, Patricia Plumley, Paul
Dodson, Ava Gilkey, Nan
Moore and Naomi Bentley.

posted for IIOIIthWest South IUburban Miami al'ell hotels
Dakota, the southeutern two with shivering, grumbl)ng
thlrda of Mlnne~~gta and tourlata had Ill go without
northwest Nebraaka where water for 18 hours because r4
!!lockmen's advisorieo alao a broken water main.
were In effect.
Melting 1!110W and Ice In
The National Weatber West VIrginia produced the
Service warned of the possibility ' of Ice Jain
possibility
of
severe ftoodlng, and JrOmpted a
thunderstorms In northwest Rash Rood watch for portions
Kansas, northwest·and west- of eastern West VIrginia
central Mlsuui-f, utreme through tonight.
southeast Nebraska and
Californians prayed for
soutltwest Iowa. Tulaa, Okla., more rain and ski reoort
hail .70 of an InCh of rain by I operators In Utah began
a.m.
·
recalling 2,320 seasonal
The warming trend kept employes after a 30-lnch
ilhead of the snows, raising 8111lwfall. Only five reoorts
temperatures to 70 degrees stayed open during the winter
Tuesday in Louisville, &lt;Ky., droUI!ht but several r4 the
and 81 In Cln~ti, for the closed ski areas announced
wannest day since last Oct. plana to reopen for the
15.
weekend amid forecuts II.
Unseaoonable cold plagued more snow.
Florida again, with Tampa · The Utah Ski Asaoclatlm
reporting a rec...d low of 32 estimated recreation .centers
. for the date Tuesday and bad all'elldy lost $17 mlllioo
West Palm ileJich 41, to break compared to last year.
a 37-year record. Several

PLEASANT VAlLEY
DISCHARGES - Robert
Waldnlg, Sr., Racine, 0.;
Larry Crum, Glenw~od:
Mrs. Mall'Vin Bennett, Point
Pleasant; Andrew Campbell,
Gallipolis; Mrs. Ronald
Cromley, Point pleasant;
Homer ·oavls, Buffalo: .
Daniel King, Point Ple8S8nt;
Mrs. Lawrence Gerlach,
Pl&gt;int Pleasant; Von Stewart,
Jr., New Haven; Mrs. Elnier
McFarland, New Haven:
Nancy McDade, . Evans;
William Dye, New Haven;
Karim Jenkins, Marietta, 0.;
Mrs. Bernard Moeller,
GaUipoUs; Mrs. David Davis,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Kenneth
&amp;nitb, Pomeroy; Reba Sines,
Pl&gt;lnt Pleasant; Mrs. Thomas
Hunt, Thurman, 0.; Mrs.
Ronald Bostic, Apple Grove;
Mrs. Roy Ellis, Point
Pleasant and Irene Cline,
Pl&gt;int Pleasant.
•, .

Plus Tax

THE MEIGS INN
992-3629

Pomeroy, 0 .

Kiln 2006.

WDGE TO MEET
'!be Twin City Sbrlnettes
will meet at 7:30p.m. Thur&amp;day at ·the home of Mrs.
Henry Ewing, Mulberry
Ave., Pomeroy.

HOMEMADE HAM SALAD.••••••••••••••••••• ~~ 99'
SUPERIORS

ASSORTED WNCH MEATS. ••••••••••••••• ,.n~~gr
SUPERIOR BULK WIENERS ••••••••••••

I

5 lb. RDRIDA Bag 89~
ORANGES············

RAIL PLAN
COLUMBUS (UP!) Legi.slatioo was Introduced In
the Ohio House Tuesday
requiring the Ohio Rail
Transpor\.atlon Authority Ill
come up with a high.apeed
rail plan for major cities by
Dec. 31.
The bill, sponsored by Rep.
Arthur R. Wilkowski, DToledo, would alao name two
legislators to the fivemember ORTA board and
allow the legislature to ratify
or rewct any changes In the
plan.
The plan was to have been
due last July 10 but ORTA has
e~perieneed difficulty In
getting started. It has lacked
funds, and Wilkowski has
been ita cblef critic.

Cuyahoga Cowlly.
Caucus
COLUMBUS (UP!) ·
Cuyahoga
County
Democratic Representatives
Tuesday chose Rep. Edward
F. Feighan of Cleveland as
chairman of their 14-member
delegation.
Rep. TroY Lee James was
elected vice chairman and
Rep. Virginia Aveni of.
Lyndhurst was chosen
secretary.
After they chose their leaders, \)le delegation endorsed
a $25 million mass
transportation appropriation
In the biennial budget, $15
million more thari the amount
JrOposed by Gov. James A.

32 Oz. Ore-Ida

KRINKLE CUT POTATOES

Bag

20 oz. Welchs Grape Jelly••• ~ •••••• ~ ••••••••7"'
16 oz. Kraft Cheese Whlz ............ nAtlar

32 oz. Dark Karo Syrup., ••••••••••••••••••••
.

".

16 oz.

SHIELD LAW

COLUMBUS (UP!)
Bipartisan legislation was
submitted Ill the Ohio Senate
Tuesday extending the
Jrovisions of tbe neWI!nien's
"shield law" to public
lroadcast reporters.
Sen. Paul E. Gillmor, RPort Cllnllln, said he and Sen.
Neal IF&gt;.. Zlnuners Jr., DDaytOli', offered the bill at the
request II. an educaUonal
television station In Bowling
Green.
the "shield law," which
protects reporters from
revealing their sources of
biormatloo, applies mly Ill
the print media and non-

Aunt Jemima ·Pancake Mix:, plain ........ 45•
5 lb.
Martha White Plain White Meal···89' box
2 lb. Granulated Suaar••••• ······•···· 49• ltox:

lnst. Coffee·

lroadca""rs.

CONSUMER REFUNDS

COLUMBUS (UP!) Legi.slatioo offered In the
Ohio House Tuesday ·would .
disallow the practice of :
making refunds In the form of
On 90-Day
merchandise credits unless
notice were prominently
Certificates
posted in the store.
The bill was Introduced by
5.75 per cent pal~ on Reps. James L. Baumann, D90 day Certificates of Columbus, and Terry
Deposit. $1,000.00 ' Tranter, o.clnclnnatl.
If the proposal becomes
Ml nl mum. Interesl
law,
COIIIIII!IOra would be
Payable Quarterly.
empowered to seek recovery
al the actus I value II. the Item
.A substantial ,en•lfy Is
If
notice were not posted.
Invoked , on 111 eertlflute
eccounts Wlthdr1wn •prior
to the dift of m•furity.

.Meip Co. Branch

~
Tht Athens county
Savintl &amp; Loan Co.
2M Second St.
Pomtroy, Ohio

McLaughlin brothers
·are league champions

MEETING CANCEU.ED

ELBERFELD$ IN .POMEROY

MENS WORK.UNIFORMS
...

PANTS

'7'5
Matching Shirts

'6'5

Solid colors, charcoal; navy.
suntan, forest green and olive.
Pants In slzes 29 to 50 walst.matchlng long sleeve shir-ts, sizes
14'12 to 20.
50 per cent polyester, 50 per cent

cotton, permanent press.

Just received I big shipment,
mtn'i lndl1napolls work
gloves, cottons, jerseys,
cotton
1nd
ltathtr
combinations 1nd 111 ltallltr
glovts.

ELIERFELDS IN POMEROY

Duane, a senior, wrestling
in the 145 pound class, went
undefeated on the season.
Earlier this season he was
voted the most valuable
grappler in the Fairland
Invitational Tournament. He
also brig(ltened Meigs' day as
he won his weight division
last 'Saturday.
Robert Nakamoto, 167
pound class, received a
second place trophy as he
went 2·1 on the afternoon.
Ray Willford, a 166 pounder,
also had a 2-1 record in bls
class, but due to the tourney
roles which provided a
winner· in case of a tie, Ray
was not presented the trophy.
He was tied with two other
wrestlers who also went 2-1 in
bls division. Meigs finished
fourth in the tournament.

Bruce Beach, 19, Langsville, was found guilty on a
cbarge of tampering with
evidence Wednesday afternoon following a two day
jury trial.
Beach was charged with
lreaklng and entering the
Rnbert Fetty farm residence
()II Jan. 23. on the charge of
lreaklng and entering he was
fQund not guilty by the jury
and the eharge of receiving
and concealing stolen
property was dropped.
Rid&lt; crow, prosecutor, was
the attorney for the state and
Charles Knight rO.,resented
the defendant, Beach.
This morning Meigs County
Common Pleas Judge John C.
Bacon sentenced Beach to not
less than 18 months or more
than 10 years to the Ohio
State Reformatory in Mansfield. Knight iflformed The
Daily Sentinel the defense
plans to ask for a new trial.
The prosecutor said Beach
removed and concealed
evidence on the night of
robbery from Fetty residence
knowing that an official investigation would likely he
Instituted, with the purpose Ill

Impair its value as evidence.
Crow had to elect which
He returned to the scene two marge to convict on as
days later and did the same conviction could not be on two
1hing, Crow said.
similar charges, if they have
same import. Receiving and
stolen property
Aid squad makes concealing
was
a
misdemeanor
pW1ishable by .six months in
several runs
jail; breaking and entering is
I'Jllishable by six months to
The Pomeroy Emergency ·five years, and tsmpering .
Squad answered several calls with evidence carries a
Wednesday evening and sentence of 1 to 10 years.
Thursday morning. At 5:47
Crow said he elected to
p.m. Wednesday the squad drop the charge of receiving
was called to the home of and ron cealing stolen gonds
Dona Covert near the Hiland and the jury found Beach not
Church. Covert who had guilty of breaking and enreceived a back injury was tering but guilty oftampering
lsken to Veterans Memorial with evidence.
Hospital where he was adJurors were Mildred
mitted.
Zeigler, Kay Sayre, Louis
At 7:53 p.m. the squad went Osborne. Rodney Pierce,
to near Chester for Eher Ruth
Erl ewine,
Iona
Gillilan who was also taken to Bri ckles, llortnie Willford,
Veterans Memorial Hospital Mary Lee Ma~ie, Ebno F.
where he was admitted. At &amp;!lith, Wanda Wolfe, Avanel
4:46 a.m. Thursday, the unit Halliday, Lllrothy Cashdollar
went to Mechanic St. for and Nola Swisher alternate.
Pauline Derenberger who·
GOOD SCENERY- An encouraging sight in Pomeroy's business seclllr is construction
was taken to Veterans
worker&amp; setting forms at the Stiffler Department Store location on W. Main St. The store
Memorial Hospital and was
was demolished by fire In January, 1976, and several legal entanglements have been cleared
Brewing
of
beer
was
known
in 5:30 a.m. transferred to
Holzer Medical Center by the as early as 6,000 B.C. in up in preparing to rebuild the structure. The Court St. section of Ute store already has been
remodeled and is in operation.
Mesopotamia .
squad .

Now You Know

•

at y
VOL XXVII NO. 220

PO~EROY-MIDDLEPORT,

OHIO

•

enttne

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1977

PRICE Fl FTEEN CENTS

Pomeroy man electrocuted
George (Bud) Young,. '27, was electrocuted near his
P.omeroy Route 3 home just after II am. Wednesday whUe
installing a citizens band radio antenna on a hill beiJind his
home.
With Mr. Y01mg atthe lime of the accident were Ed Nelaon.
and Rnger Chaney of Rnute I, Minersville. The department of
Meigs Sheriff James Proffitt said the victim got the antenna
Into a 7200 volt line of the Ohio Power Co.
The Middleport Emergency Squad, called to the scene

because the Pomeroy Squad was on another 'call, arrived at
11:24 am. Mr. Young was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where he was pronounced dead at 11:56 a.m. The area
In whiCh the accident oc=ed Is known as Dark Hollow.
On the scene also Ill complete reports on the accident were
personnel of the Ohio Power Co. and Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric ()).
Aveteran of the Korean Cooffict, Mr. Young was preceded
in death by his father, George J. Young; a sister, Delores Jean

By United Preas International
, COLUMBUS - EFFEctiVE SUNDAY, load limits on
transportation of fuel oU, salt and gaoollne will be reduced
from 90,000 pound&amp; to the regular 80,000 pounds. State Trans•
portatlon Dlreclllr David Weir said Wednesday the special
NAiiiOBI, Kenya (UP1) -Radio Ugaada said todaY
overload limits were lasued Ill alleviate the heating emergency
Tamanlau
troops bave massed near the border with
In Oblo when severe weather hit.
Uganda
and
President Idl Amln's forees are ready to deal
Overloaded !rucks would Increase damage to highways
wllh
any
Invasion.
A Tamanl•n spokesman called lhe
during the spring thaw, he said. "Because of the prolonged
report
"abaolule
balderdash."
cold spell the daniage Ill our highways already is estimated In
'!be broadcast aald Taii2Jlnian troops were stationed
the millions of collars," liaid Weir. "We see no reason Ill
By
EDWARD
K.
DeWNG
six
mlles from the Ugaodail border aud warned If an
submit our roads to further dlimage with overloads."
. WASHINGTON (UP!) attempt was made to take "even an lacb" of Ugandan
HOPEWELL, Va . (UPI) COLUMBUS - THE NUMBER OF UNEMPLOYED President Carter . says
:errttory, Ugandan marines and the air Ioree would rebnlf
The sulphur carrier Marine
them.
&lt;»Uoans filing cootinued claims for unemployment benefits natural gas producers are
Floridian today smashed Into
The broadcast followed by a day AmiD's
during the ~eek of Feb. 19 declined by a slight.8 per cent from holding gas off the market
the
. Benjamin Harrison lift
anuouncemeat that a military uprlaiDg IDvolviDI!
the previous week.
and he might do the same if
bridge, collapsing one section
"Zionists and lmerlallsts" In his at;my bad been c11111bed
Albert G. Giles, administrator of the state Bureau of . be were in their shoes.
and d~plng four vehicles
and that a couP, iD which American, BriUsb or Israeli
Employment Services, said the figures indicated that ?J\,358
That, says Carter, is one
intO ·the James River.
paratroopes were to have taken part, bad beeu lolled.
newly unemployed workers filed Initial claims whlle 232,248 result of a "horrible
A Coasi Guard spokesman
'!be United Slates called the allegations ''absurd" aad
peraons unemployed a week or more filed for continued CO!Igiomeration of coo fusion"
said
two survivors were
c1a1ma
surrounding present energy
a State Department spokesman In Wublngton called lor
pulled
from the water and
·
policies. He liays his energy
au lnvestigaUOD into human rigbis violaUoDll iD the east
two
cars
and two !rucks were
be
African country.
·
MIAMI BEACH, FLA. -PRESIDENT CARTER has reorganization, to
found.
The vehicles had been
assured AFL-CIO President George Meany he will not force submitted next week, and his
waiting on the span for the
labor to swallow a distasteful and-inflation program for comprehensive energy plan,
ship
to pass when they were
the future if the policies do
monitoring wage Increases, according to .Meany's aides. to be unveiled In April, should Instances where natural gas change."
dumped
into the murky
is withheld from the
Meany received private assurances from the President this end the confusion.
waters
of
lbe
James.
Carter said he will work for
The President !Did a news market," he said. "That's
week after he announceqJabor will not cooperate with the
It
was
n.ot
known
whether
a trial deregulation-for four
administration's stlggested )J'ogram for overseeing wage and CO!Iference Wednesday his understandable. If I was or five year!!--{){ new natural there were any casualties.
plan, calling for sacrifices running an on company, 1
price Increases. Carter later made his pledge pUblicly.
gas prices. He said he does
In Washington, administration economist Charles Schultze from all Americans, can would reserve the right Ill not know how he will do It, but
release
or
reserve
soine
supWednesday continued to defend the need for an antl.(nflatlon succeed. mly if people are
EXTENDED OurLOOK
pledged he will not back out
program. Federal Reserve Board Chairman Arthur Burns, CO!Ivinced they w111 get a plies of natural gas.
Saturday through
"If we can let the oD on the pre-election promise Ill
meanwbUe, struck,a rare note of accord with Meany. Bums rapid payoff. He believes
Monday,
a chance of
companies know In a work for deregulation he •
told a congressional committee the government should avoid they wm.
showen
Saturday
and to
Carter was asked why the predictable. way what our made to the governors of
dlscusalng any anti-lnftation mechanism at this point because
norlhem
Ohio
Sunday.
It
public should accept policy will be two mmtbs or Oklahoma, Texas and will be fair Monday. Highs
It could generate ~ lack of confidence in the economy.
sacrifices when the oil two years or ?Jl years In ihe Louisiana.
"I helleve we've now got will be In tbe 40s and lows
YONKERS, N. Y. -AT LEAS!' $1.3 MILI.JON from the Industry is suspected of future ... then I think they'll such· a horrible con- will he In the 30s early
Yonilel'll Raceway harness track was stolen by robbera who holding natural gas off the be much les~ likely to glomeration of confusion Saturday and In the upper
surprlaed early arriving Hudson VaUey National Bank bank market In hope of higher withbold supplieo of on and in the energy field that
!Os or lower 30s early
natural gas from the market
employes colllllng the receipts. Although bank officials Jrices.
"I think it'sobvlous to all of just hoping they'D get lllme nobody knows what's going to Sunday and Monday.
refused to say how much money was taken In the Tuesday
happen next," Clirter said.
morninl! holdup, II was learned Wednesday that a WeDs Fargo us that there are some bonanza ilicreased price In
manifest showed the $1.3 mll1lon total.
,- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , - ' - - - - -- -- - - - - - - - - - - - -1
The Yonkers money, turned over to a bank vice president
at midnight Monday, Included the track's take frcim Friday
and Saturday night racing programs and a Washington's
Birthday session. '!be FBI said the boldupmen apparently bid
In the basement of a !lve-alory office building housing the bank
and beld up two employes wbo reported to work ahead of
nilrmal office boura to count the Yonkers money and clean up a
meeting room.
fleldli and' is the arrival point of 538
By DAVID L. LANGFORD
elite of New York's art world,
trains a day. Its defenders say it
NEW· YORK (UP!) - Jacqueline
campaigned for ]reservation of
DETROIT -MID-FEBRUARY DOMEsTIC new car sales
would cost almost $1 bUUon tQ build
' Kennedy Onassls Wednesday
Grand Central - which she called
feU U per cent from a year ago because many Americans
the same structure lllday.
unfurled the banner of "class" amid
"a universal symbol between New
lllayed lndoora cmtng the harsh winter weather rather than
Designed In the Ecole des Beaux
forces arrayed between New York
York City's past and present"- at a
venture oul In a.rch of a new automobile, according to
Arts
style of architecture and
aJy's Grand Central Sislion and the
news conference in the. Oyster Bar
lncllultry sources. The four U. S. auto companleo reported
constructed
of Connecticut granite,
wrecking ball with which Penn
restaurant, deep In the· heart of the
Wednelday they sold only 192,077 can In the Feb. 11-?Jl period.
its
main
concourse
is 275 feet long,
Central Railroad hopes to bring it
cavernous station.
Delpite the decline In the F•b. 11-?Jl period, strong early
120 feet wide and 125 feet tall.
tumbling doJ'II.
Beame called Grand Central ''the
February aalea -partly catchup from late January - pushed
· In 1967, the · copper-t9pped
"Grand Central is like our beaches
grandest, most~oved train station in
aaleo In the tint mdays of the month up 4 per cent over last
terminal, with its sculptures,
. and our foresta. It Is a .natural
the WO(id."
,.,ar In line with Industry eaUmates.
marbeled floors and ornaments, was
resource," she told bl!ckera of a
Philip Jobnson, architect and
declared a landmark by the New
court battle Ill save the historic 64another impasslooed defender,.aald,
MOSOOW- TWO ~VIET COSMONAUTS flnlahed their
Vork City Landmarks Preservation
year~ld landmark. "This is the
"Grand Central is to New York what
million In
today and prepared Ill return to Earth after
Commission. Sill years later Penn
marshaling of the last charge, and I
Notre Dame is Ill Paris."
111 UIIIIIIIIDy brllf7-&lt;lay atay aboard the Salyul 5 l(lace statim.
think we will prevail."
Central sued to strike the landmark
Penn Central, which owns the old
c-t'lll Vlklor Gort.lko and Yurl Glultov were reported
Manhattan Borough President
status and in 1975 the railroad won
terminal, is unimpressed with the
to be felllnl weD u they packed up the reaulta of two weeks of
Percy Sutton added a footnote to the
its case. .
historic significance of the place.
~ cm the orlitlng lab.
battle cry.
After a long and complicated legal
1Jie railroad wants Ill lear It down
The 1'111 newa agency reported Wednesday the
''Grand Central is like Jackie
battle with the Committee to Save
and raise a 5klllry office building
COIIIIOIIIull were l'tllltor~ Salyul 5 to ·~~~~om&amp; tic !Ught," as
Onassls -a place of class - and it
Grand Central Station, the case will
on the site.
111f1 faand the cnft wileD they 1lnlred up Feb. 8. They then
.ought Ill be preserved," he aald.
go this spring hefore the New York
Grand Central Station was built in
moved the ..-reb materlala Into the 8o)'uz 24 apacec;raft that
Mrs. Onasals, Ranked by Sutton,
·19l6at a cost of 165 million. It boasts
Court of Appeals.
CII1TY them back to llirlb. In tbe Pill the tranafe~ave
MaiOr Abraham Beame and the
a f~~de Ionge~ than lwo lwtball
..
(Continued on page 10)
'

Holding Border war threatens·
gas off
admitted

WASHINGTON - GENERAL FOODS, the country's
largeat aeller II. ground coffee, told Congreaa.today It 10011 W1l1
be forced to ralae coffee prices again.
B1l1 Tower, prealdenl of llle ccmpany's Maxwell HoUle
Division, aald akyrocketing Import prices haw trimmed
profits ''to 111e1r Joweet level In many years." !fe deocrlbed It
as tbe lowest Jroflhltuat,lon a1nce the early 111'/0nhen federal
price and wage emtroll were In effect.

WORK GLOVES
MEIGS lHEATRE
ansm FOR
VM.ATION
WA'Iai FOR
OPENING DATE

Coach John Bentley's
Meigs High School wrestling
team, c.ompletlng its ab-.
breviated season last
weekend at Logan in the
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
Conference Tournament,
produced · two
league
· c!Jampions in the brothers
Kevin
and
t;luane
McLaushlin. They are sons of
Mr. and ·Mrs. Kenneth
McLaughlin, 862 East Main
St., Pomeroy.
Kevin, a junior, left, was
champion In the 132 pound
class and highlighted his day
by helng voted the co-most
valuable wrestler In the
tournament, with Loran!
Ipacs of Athens. Both boys
pnned all three of their OJr
ponents. Kevin has lost only
ooe mat contest Ibis season.

News •• in Briefs

P om e roY c o u n c II' s
Feighan said he hoped the regularly scheduled meeting
delegation .would work as a Mooday night was canceUed
"cohl'aive unit" In the 112th because of President's Day ,
holiday. ·
·
General ~bly.

5.75%

12 oz. Jlf Creamy Peanut Butter •••••••••• 13•

By JOAN HANAUER
UPI TeieYIIIGB ~
,
NEW YORK (UP!) -A eerlee rl evenll bu llllmd .
~ about wt.t'a what with "Wbo'a Who," bill a ·~ ·
IIJXlileape!Wlll for CBS llid neither low ratlnp, prHIIIIItiGD, •
nor 11ecutive lhufllell poled a threat for the IIIWI map•"• •
format Jll'OIIIWll.
·
;
"""-'a Wbo " or "Sao of 80 Minutes" u It wu called bt •
~:..went o~ the air earlier tbla year With Dill Rather, "
Otlrles Kuralt and Barbara Howar empbui&amp;IJII tbe ~'people" ,
. upect of the - · Eseculive producer wu D!lt HeWitt, who
a1ao Ia 11ecutive producer of ''80 Mlnuteo."
•
Now Hewitt hal decided the double chore~ were more than •
he could halldle and be wa.i neg~ ''80 Mblllu." He wW ••
drop "Who's Wbo" to concentrase m ''al Mlnutel."
~
John Sblmlk, CBS vice pre8ident I« public affaln •
troadcaatlng, w1to hal been tbe vice prtlldenllal,-nnk ; ·
overseer for both ·'tO Minutes" and "Wbo's Who," l1eo wm •
beccme aclinl aecutive producer for "Wbo'l Who." Thai •
means he win be apendlnc a lot of lime with the rww .00W, so •
another newa department vice president, Bob Cbandler' wm.
hancDe the VP chorlli for "Ill Mlnulu."
•
What that meanalli terms of corporate ladder cllmbq re- •
mains to be seen, batlt won't effect the future II. ''Who's Wbo." •
In the meantime, ''Who's Who" alllo was prHmpted tbll
week by Bill Moyers' CBS Reports on "Arizona, Here We ';
Come 1" The reason for that, CBS eJplaina,la that the network :
only allon the newa dlvlalon a limited amount of time. U It •
wants to JrHIIIIIIIora apeclal, It mUll JrHIDPtOne of Ill own •
shows. And "Arizona" bumped "Who•s Who."
~
There wouldn't be lillY queatlm about ''Wbo'a Who" If It ·..
IICOI'ed as high In the Nlelaen ra~ u ''80 Mlllltes," wltlch
consistently ranb In the lop ?Jl and often bits the top 10.
.
'!be week ending Feb. •· "Who's Who" ranked 15th on a lilt "
of 89.
.
•
Brown, Adams, Highland,
CBS saya)l wm go along witb ''Wh~'s Who"- afler all ''tO ,.
Ross, Pike, Scioto, Vinton, Minutes" took several years to take Qff and It didn't have to •
Gallla,
Jackson
and compete with "Happy ll8ya" and ·~Laverne lit: Shirley." · - .
Lawrence Counties.
The Fonz and friends were·in tile lop ~o apGia In the Nielsen
Area Nine Agency on ratings, and ABC dominated tbe top ten, with only CBS' ''MA·
Aging, wblch received ap- · .8-H" and ''One Day At A Time" keeping ABC from a clean •,
provaf to spend $306·,820, sweep.
·
covers Belmont, Carroll,
For thoae who think ABC can do no wrang, the last show oo '
Cosh oct on, Guernsey, the lilt also was an ABC entry- "Most Wanted," llllh on a lilt
Harrlaon, Hobnes, Jefferson, • of 89.
.
MusklngUm and Tuscarawas
The 10 top network televlaloo programs for lbe week ending
CounUes.
Feb. ?Jl, according to the A.C. Nlelaeq Ql., were:
The federal funds, which
1: "Happy Days;" 2: "Laverne &amp; Sblrley;" 3: "How The :
came to the Commission . West Was Woo" (ABC Monday Movie); 4: "M-A-8-11;" 6: ..
111der Title In of tbe Older "Otlrlie's Ancell;" 6: "Secreta" (ABC &amp;mday movie); 7:
Americana Act, is to be used . (tie) "One Day At ATime" and ''Sb: Million DoUar Man;" 9:
for service to older people In "Dirty Mary, Crazy Larry" (ABC ~y movie); 10: .
such areas as information "Welcome Back, KOtter."
and referral, transportation,
home health senolces, legal
assistance, education,
recreation, health assess(Continued from page I)
ment, and protective services. ·
JrQvlsional stall!lllca predicted.
·
The new funds were
awarded for the year
YOUNGSTOWN, OHIO- NURSES AT THREE boapltala
beginning Aprll 1 for the two here ratified a new cmtract late Tueaday night, ending the
area agencies. Each also threat of a strike. 'lbe nro-,ear contract c:overinll about 610
received $12,2SO In state funds nuraea at Younptown Nortmlde HOIIIftal, Southside Hoapltal
Ill 8S8illl In program plan- and Todd Bableo and Otl1drenl Hospital, Includes a pay
ning.
lncreaae of 87 cents an bour the flnl year ol the cmlracl and II
cenll an hour the aecnd year. Nunea now make "·33 an hour.
'!be contract also ~Us for a coat ol Uvlng allowance plus
NOW YOU KNOW
several fringe bene!lll. Meanwhile, )he Youngalllwn HOIIIltal
Th~ Grand Canal in Chins,
Assodalion Immediately announced a bike In room rates to
which connects the Yellow pay for the new cmtract. Room rates went up t2JO per day In
111d the Yangtze Rivers, Is~ all three hoapltala,
·
.
times as lCIIg as the Panama
AI. a rtllllt of the lncreaaa, rates at Northside and SouthCanal, yet It was built without side are • .60 per day for semiprivate rooms and $100 per day
modern equipment 1,300 for private 1'0011111. New ralu for Babies and Cblldrena hoapllal
years ago.
were not avallable.

Rhodes,

. .- - - - - - - - . commercial

Our Interest Is
Gre1ter For You

••

totaling $565,050

COWMBUS - The Ohio
Commlssioo on Aging has
awarded $565,050 in federal
fundli to two Area Agencies
oo Aging to provide social
services Ill senior citizens.
Martin A Janis, director of
the Conunlssion, said ap)rOVal ri tbe plans submitted
by the two . Planning and
Service Areas (PSA) came at
the February 16 meeting of
the Commission held in
Columbus.
Buckeye Hills - Hocking
Pomeroy Bawling unes
Valley Regional DevelopEarly Sllnctoy Mlxod
ment District, PSA 7, was
Lngue
awarded
$258,430 for
Feb. 13, 19n
program planning and
Stondlngs
Teom
Pis. supportive social services.
Jack's Dairy Bilr
.u This area agency covers
Olne's Construction Co.
41

Holzer Mecllcal Center
·\Discharges, Feb. 2%)
·Janet P. Brown, Harold
Burcham, John W. Call,
Lawrence M. Fowler, Matthew Gatrell, Vickie S. Hall,
Jeffrey R. Hawley, Mrs.
Hersel Herdman and
daughter, Debra L. Honaker,
Melissa A. Howell, Susan F.
Hughes, Hazel Kilgore ,
Elizabeth E. Kuhn, Olga
Msnowes, Rhnda D. Midkiff,
Julius. Pasquale, Armlntie
Ramsey, Russell L. Rhodes,
ElSon B. Richards, Melillla J.
Robie, Glenda L. Ross, Mrs.
John RuSllell and daughter,
Forrest R. Russell, Jr.,
32
Stanley C. Saunders, Kitty L. Town Kiln
Tom's
Carry
Qlt
28
Sialfer, Barbara E. Sheets, l'llmeroy Flower Shop
23
Keith A. Spencer, Calvin K. Mlrk V
·
18
Spires, Karl V. Sprague,
High lndl vidual game Rebecca L. Stewart, Unda J. Darrell Dugan 220, Betty
\\Ill !latch 18-1; John , Tyree
Tennant, John M. Thompson, 195,
Betty Smith 174; A. L.
Esta Welch.
Phelps, Jr. 188, Betty
(Births, Feb. Z'l)
1\!lltlalch ln.
Mr. and Mrs. David Leach, •High series- .John Tyree
Betty Whitlatch 528;
daughter, Jackson; l!lr. and 535,
Lorry Dugan 517. BeHy Smith
Mrs. John L. Helni, son, of/1; Darrell Qlgan 512, Lena
Wellston; Mr. and .Mrs. Howard 482.
Daniel P. Davies, daugbter, • Team high game - Town
Kiln 700.
Gallipolis.·
. Team high series - Town

T.Y•••in Review

Beach is guilty .of tampering

Approve grant

Local Bowling

Visit Our Salad Bar
Ham
Sweet Potaloes
Vegetable
Hot Rolls
Coffee. Tea or Milk

Texas panhandle

•

Young, and a brother, James A. Young.
SurviVing are his wife, Peggy; his mother, Mrs. Ellen
Young of Pomeroy; two sisters, Mrs. Patly Iloerfer and Mrs .
Dottie Nelson, both of Pomeroy; a grandfather, Henry
Cunningham, Pomeroy; a grandmother, Mrs. Alma Young,
Pomeroy, and several nieces, nephews and cousins.
Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m. Saturday at the
Ewing Funeral Home with the Rev. Floyd Shoo~ officiating.
Burial will be in Rock Springs Cemetery. Friends may caD at
the funeral home at anyUme.

Bridge smashed
by sulphur boat

Jackie Onassis joins battle to save New York Ci!y's
historic and symbolic Grand Central Smtion

Early morning motorists
watched horrified as the
unladen tanker appeared to
have a steering failure and
headed for the fixed portion
of the three-quarter mile long
bridge. The 612-foot Marine
Floridian, which had tried to
stop by dropping anchor upstream, blasted its horn Ill
warn those on the bridge to

Bass to be
sentenced
Pierce held
for felony
Brysn Eugene Bass, by sheriff
Syracuse, has pleaded guilty
sl~ counts of robhery, a
second degree felony, which
carries a maximum penalty
ri 15 years, being a possible
llllsl of 90 in the penal institution according to an
entry in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court. The
matter was continued for presentence investlg•tion and
report and the defendant was
remanded to the custody of
Steriff James J. Proffitt.
Bass was arrested In
connection with the Jan. 13
armed robbery of the Five
Points Grill when two men
wearing ski masks confiscated the money of patrons
at gunpoint and emptied the
cash register.' He was
arrested three hours later in
Pomeroy at Crow's Steak
&amp;use on identification of
patrons at the grill. Others
arrested with Bass were Tim
Hayman, 21, Racine, and
Keith Pickens, 21 , Pomeroy.

Ill

..,.ce

"'Il

get away.
Wayne Bolton, 31, wlio was
waiting for the ship to pass
through the channel as he
was on his way to work, said
the vessel veered slowly
toward the fixed span.
In desperation, Bolton said,
Ute ship released its anchors
Ill try to stop.
"I saw the ship coming
down river, about 100 yards
away," Bolton said. "I said to
my friend Paul, 'God, that
ship is going Ill hit the
bridge .' I saw it dropping
anchor.''

FIELD 11lAIL SET
A coondog field trail will he

he)d Sunday, Feb. 27,
beginning at 10 a.m. at the
Jackson-Vinton Club House.
Fred Mayn•rd will serve as
fteld marlhall.t,'l'be pubUc Ia
Invited.

Meigs County Sheriff
James J. Profitt's department reported the arrest
today of Michael Pierce, 18,
Rl. I, Middleport, on charges
ri reckless operation, Oeeing
a police officer and having no
valid operator's license. He is
being confined lit the Meigs
County· jail. He will appear in ·
county court Friday.
Ai!lo arrested was a 16year-&lt;&gt;ld juvenile on charges
ri delinquency and cashing of
checks for $250 from the W. C.
Hill residence on Happy
Hollow Road. The checks
were cashed at the Rutland ·
Department Store, Rutland
Pool Hall and Carpenter's
Grocery at Rutland. The
)I)Utb has been released to
the custody of his parents
pending a hearing In Meigs
County Juvenile court.

Weather
Mostly cloudy and cooler
lllnighl with lows near 40.
Partly" cloudy Friday with
lighs In lbe mid to upper 50s.
The
probability
of
)J'ecipitatlon is 70 per eent
fnday and 2G·per cent !might
111d Friday.
· Winds will be BOuthWNterly~ • to llll!ili .this .
allel'fiiiCII and tonJcht.
. .

�.'

2-The Dally Seritmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Feb. 24,1977

~:

~'

Educational lobbyists, lawmakers enjoined in
WASHINGTON (UP!) In tlle House. An aide said
Every p-esldent since Dwight Harris shares NEA's view
Eisenhower has sought, that Carter's budget planners
\'llinly, to halt a goverrunent · may have overlooked the
JrO!lr&amp;m d aid to school slgnlftcance of an Impact aid
districts with unusually rollback.
heavy numbers of govern"We've got to get education
ment employes.
out of the White House
Now comes President basement and give It the
Carter witb .tbe same goal, !l'lority attention it deser·
encountering tbe same heavy · ves," said Harris, whose
· opposition from lawmakers Northern Virginia
and education lobbyists.
congreaalonal district stands
Some Carter supporters to lose close to $10 million.
who oppose his decision to kill
Carter wants to cut off $400
tlle program say tbe action mllllon In impact aid subresulted from a lack of time sidles for an estimated 2.1
for st uc!ylng the budget million children whose
inherited from Gerald Ford. parents work for the ,
"There is no indication It government but don't live on
was deliberate," said James federal properly. Some 4,400
Green,
manager · of school districts are involved.
legislation lor tbe National
The total also includes,
Ed ucation AssoclaHon, since last November, more
Wednesday. But he none-th..- than $70mU!im to aid lig city
less Is spearheading· the ·school systems with· children
NEA's fll'lll Important o~ !rom public housing projects.
J))Sition to Carter on an issue
Subsldl"' would continue
affecting schools.
for children of parents who
He scheduled a meeting live and work on military
roday of tbe 7klrganization bases or ulher federal
Committee for FuD Funding property, including Indian
of Education Programs, reservatims.
The program originated as
which he heads, "to draft our
~r-a tegy to recoup the
an emergency measure to
flinds."
·
assist school districts
Rep. Herbert Harris, f).Va . Inundated by the children of
Is organizing a similar effort servicemen and war workers

It newly established or ex-

workerS', Indian
reserpanded bases and in- \'lltions, and beginning last
stallations during World War November, big city school
n.
systems witll children from
It later was broadened to pul!)ic bowing projects.
include districts with large
Eisenhower attempted to
numbers of government halt the program in the mid-

1900's on grounds the communities had long since
a~justed to t,!Je "newcomers. " Every president
since him has also proposed
fllding the aid, only to find it
growing Instead.

New bill would

West can pressure Soviets

on human rights issues

change penal law,

WASHINGTON (UP! ) ~ As eliled Soviet dl.uident
Vladimir Bukovsky sees It, there are four steps tlle
United States and other Western nations can take to
encourage respect for human rlghta in the Soviet
Union.
Speaking Wednesday to the U.S. Coounisslon on
Security and Cooperation In Europe, Bukovsky
outlined these measures:
- Unk trade arid credits to Moscow to observance of
civil rights assurances contained in the 1975 Helslnki
accords and the 1948 U.N. human rights declaration.
- Demand the Soviet Union admit observers to
inspect Soviet prisons, priaon camps, psychiatric
hospitals.
.
- Seek Investigations of infringement of generally
recognized human freedmns In Russia.
- Obtain free contact between Western groups that
support the Helsinki accords and tlle Moscow,
Ukrainian and Uthuaniaii groups which have sprung

COLUMBUS (UP!) Bipartisan legislation
~rply changing sentencing
a nd rehabilitation
procedures for
those
convicted of major crimes
has been introduced in the
Ohio House of 1'\epresentatives.
The
measure
was
presented Wednesday by
Reps. Edward J. Orlett, 0Dayton, and Charles R.
Saxbe, R-Mechanlcsburg.
It would eliminate parole,
except for shock parole, for
felonies after July 1, 1978, and
would require offenders to
serve a specific lengtb of time

up .

Bukovsky left the Soviet Union last year in. an
exchange for the release of Chilean Communist leader
Louis Corvalan:

in prison, minus "good time"

credit.

CIA payoff has
some ,credibility
of not commenting directly
By HELEN THOMAS
on
any specific CIA activity,
UPI White u-e Reporter
but
I can tell you that I have
WASIUNGTON (UP!) begun
a complete analysis,
President Carter says he
which
will be completed
hasn 'I found anything illegal
witllin
the
next week, of all
or Improper in current CIA ·
activities
by
tlle CIA."
operations but acknowledges
"I
have
received
,... . "some degree of accuracy ' ·
substantial
reports
already
...
in widespread reports of
I
have
not
found
anything
payoffs to King Hussein and
Illegal or improper," he
other world leaders.'
added,
saying that if he
AI a news conference Weddiscovered
improprieties he
-nesday, Carter displayed
would
take
immediate
action
anger over news leaks he said
and
inform
tlle
American
could
be
" extremely
damaging" to the potential people.
Carter again was asked
security of the country.
about
his policy of going
He specifically expressed
·
public
on
the human rights
concern about tlle number of
·
question,
and
said "I will
· people in the executive
continue
to
do
so."
branch and Congress who
He reserved his harshest
have access to CIA
criticism
for Uganda where
information, and said he
he
said
.
"the
actions there
wants to reduce that number ..
'have
disgusted
the entire
Carter's schedule today incivilized
world."
cluded a meeting' with U.S.
On ot~r issues, Carter
Chamber of Commerce
said
:
officials and visiting the
He will unveil his
Transportation and State
comprehensive
energy
Departments
to
get
package
at
a
joint
,
s
ession
of
acquainted with the workers.
Congress
April
20,
and
wUl
At his televised and broadcast news conference, the send his proposal for creatiOI)
President said a $5 billion to of a new energy department
$7 billion slash in tbe defense to Congress early next week.
- He supports public
budget is a goal ''that will be
financing
.or Congressiqnal
reached,'' but he could not
elections, elimination of the
say when.
Carter indicated the con- electoral college and
. troversial Bl bomber may be simplifying registration
a bargaining chip on arms procedures so everyone can
control. " If we can have a vote.
of
Improvement
generallesaening of tension,
a demonstrated corrunltment relations wltll Cuba awaits
on their (Soviet Union ) part l(some tangible evidence"
toward disarmament, it tllat Cuba is wU!ing to restore
would certainly make It less rights to political !l'isoners
likely that we would go ahead and change its attitude
''toward overseas adventures
with the BI," he said.
Asked about allegations such as the one in Angola."
that Hussein and other · -He supports deregulation
foreig n leaders received of natural gas for a limited
millions of dollars in CIA four to five years; but would
payments over the past 20 leave existing contracts in
effect.
,_
years, Carter said :
"I have adopted a policy ...

,._

.

ID cards ·for elderly in
By LEE LEOONARD
UP! Statebouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (uP!) - The
Ohio General assembly is
haUway tllrough its second
attempt to provide for colorphoto identification cards for
all non-driving Ohioans over
18 who want them and are
willing to pay tlle $3 fee.
Last session the proposal
cleared tlle legislature but
was vetoed by Gov. James A. ·
Rhodes . Wednesday, a
revived version made it
through the House on .an 82-5
vote.
Rep. Sherrod Brown, f).
Mansfiel&lt;\, chief proponent of
the cards for non-drivers, ·
said they would be valuable
for check cashing and other
identification for persons
without drivers' licenses.
"As it is now, all the people
who want identification cards
can't get Ulem," said Brown.
Rhodes did sign a bill
providing lor limited I.D.
cards lor the elderly and
handicapped.
. Under Bi·own 's biU; the
state Bureau of Motor
Vehicles would issue the
cards, complete witll color
photographs, identifying
numbers and information
· about the bearer. The cards
would be renewable every
five years.
Deputy registrars
dispensing the cards would ,
get to keep 50 cents of the $3
fee . The rest would go into a
rotary fund for administering.
tlle program.
Brown pointed out there.
would be no additional 'COst to
the ooreau; that equipment
for IJ'Oducing the cards is
already in place for drivers'
licenses and the I.D. cards for
the handicapped and elderly.
Rep. Alan E. Norris. R-

Westerville, amended the bill
on tlle Door to provide tllat
any surplus be diverted to tbe
state's highway safety fund.
One of the five opponents
was Rep. Donna Pope, RParma, who said she was
"not sure the cards are

necessary."
"Once non-drivers have
identification cards .it could
be that everybody will be
mandated to have them to
cash checks," she said.
In other Door action, the

Senate unanimously adopted
a House-passed resolution
disapproving the state Public
Welfare Department 's
annual plan for federal social
service funds.
The
Senate
also
unanimously approved
House-passed legislation
extending until Dec. 31 the
term
of
the' Ohio
Rehabilitation Study
Commission . The commission was to have repol1ed
to tlle legislature by last Jan.
I.

Also given unanimous
approval by the Senate and
sent to tlle House was a bill
confirming agreements made
by the state for purchasing
land from property owners
around Buckeye Lake.
Meanwhile, Senate Democrats Introduced legislation
requiring that the governor
and lieutenant governor
candidates of each political
party run as a team in the
general election.
Ohio voters endorsed tbe
''tandem election" concept in
the primary last June, but
left it to the General
Assembly to decide the
details.
Sen. Tony P. Hall, 0Dayton, chief sponsor, said
candidates for governor and

What causes bad breath?
the available mouthwashes
and breath sweeteners are of
limited help. They just Jn«sk
the odor temporarily and do
not do anything to correct the
cause.
The cause can be from the

grow there tilat create an
odor.
ClJronically infected tonsils
may be a source of had
breath. Any significant infection can rele~se unpleasant
odors. However, if the tonsils
are not infected, taking them
out will not help a bad breath
problem.
Beyond the teeth, throat,
nose and sinuses t11ere are
possible problems with the
lungs. Any infection of the
lungs, such as chronic lung
disease, cun·cause bad odors
that iJilSS out of the !upg witl1
eacll breaU1.
The lw1gs are a major
source of odors. Remember
that the odor of alcohol on ~
person's breatll comes from
tile alcohol vapors being
released f1·orn the blood going
into the lungs and into the air
that tbe person exhales. This
i.s the basis lor the bre•th l&lt;·'t
for ~I coho! conswnption. ·

teeth. This may he from infected pockets around the
roots that a person cannot
clean out himseU. A low
grade infection is present
along with decay ing
material. This i.s pyorrhea
and it net&gt;ds to be treated by a
dentist. So, one thing a person
witll bad breaU1 should do i.s
see the dentist to corred any
existing dental problems.
Beyond that the problem .
may be a low grade infection
In Lhe sinuses. As.the air
Rows through the nose or
back of tile throot it may pick
up unpleasant odors from
such infections.
Mouth . bl'eathinR m• y
cause bad-breath. The normal secretions in t~ back of
Yuu cu n breathe out tht•
tile throat ~nay dry up ;,ml od '" fJ( any ctuankal fro1r1
this may lliow badtwia t&lt;• tl1i · h~X Iy. 1\ lll"rsr·fl w11.h

dic.betic acLUulSt~ wjitlkt-ve au

odor to the breath si1nilar to
alcohol because chemicals of
incomplete
metabolism
(ketones) are released from
the blood into the air. Sitnilar·
ly chemicals from liver·
disease may cause·the breath
to have a Pllrticular ,;fruity"
odor.
I am sending you The
Health Letter number 9-4,
Halitosis, to give you more
complete infonnation. others
who want this information or
w~nt it sent to someone who
neds it can send 50 cents lo1· it
with a long, stamped, addressed envelope for mailing
to whoever vou want to have

••• ; .... ~ ....... ~ 1 vw.

, ... l.j_Ut:,:,L

Lv ;

me in care of this newspaper,

r .o.

lieutenant governor should
run separately in the
primaries so that Ohio voters
would "continue to wield
maximum power In selecting
tlleir parties• candidates for
the general election."
The bill also would make
the lieutenant governor a
member of the goveroor's
cabinet and permit him to
·preside in tlle governor's
absence.
It also would create an Ohio
Advisory Commission on
Intergovernmental Re.lations, to be chaired by
tlle lieutenant governor. The
13-member commission
would study state and local
goVernment problems as well
as ~effects of federal and
state grants.
The Senate was to
reconvene at 11 a.m. today
and the House at I p.m.

..

DR. LAMB

·By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - My
daughter is 24 and has had
bad breatb for several years.
None of Ute ·produd.s on the
market seem to help for very
long.
When she had a check-up
with her doctor she asked him
aboul this but he couldn't ·
seem to find out what is call!ling this.
She has a bit of a weight
problem so sbe watches her
diet 1!ut she .says ,she has no
problem with her bowels,
which sometimes happens
when people don't eat the
righ~ food. I am wondering if
you !\ave any solution to this
problem?
.
,
DEAR READER - Bad
breath is a symptom, not ~
diagnosis. It is also very common. Unfortunately some
people have it and are
unaware they are offellJlive to
others.
·
Your daughter was correct
. in a¥1ng her docjpr about it
and ""m sorry s~ didJ1't get
more help. It i$ alao true thai

Critics of l~ct Bid call It
a "pork barrel" and a bonus
for affluent surburban
schools with. ~eavy concentrations of well-paid
government workees.
Supporters spice trad-

n~,x

3V:. S;w AnlunitJ 1

TX78292.
My advice to everyone who
has a breath problem 1s to
have a mcdic•I and denl.al
evaluation. The causes of tlus
~ht'IU I

prublcm Hll' IIJ&lt;JIIY cmd
sumc anf rr~tJJ·u unport.aut

than jusl ilavn1g a

social!~'

Clli flf!I'!'; JSS IIIg prr11Jfcr0.

CALL ANSWERED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad answered a call at
II :01 a.m. Wednesday to
Welshtowil. Hill for Aaron
Kelton who was ill. He was
taken · to Holzer Medi cal
Center.

The current system of indeterminate minimum-maxImum sentences for various
crimes would be replaced
witll filled sentences. Judicial
discretion would be limited to
cases where aggravating or
mitigating circumstances
were found.
For example, a felony of
the first degree is now
punishable . by a minimum
term of four-to-seven years
and a maximum term of 25
years, depenljing upon tbe
judge.
The Orlett-Saxbe bill would
make it a fixed eight-year
term with up to two years
added or subtracted for
aggravated or mitigating
circumstances.
·
The sentence for murder in
non-capital cases would be
life imprisonment subject
only to pardon, commutation
or reprieve after 25 years.
Repeat or dangerous
offenders would be required
to receive stricter sentences.
Such cases are now left to the
discretion of the court.
In the case of a first degree
felony, a repeater would get
15 years in prison with up to
three years added or
subtracted depending on the
. judge.
Fines for felonies would be
limited by the bill to amounts
the defendant could. pay
witllout undue hardship to his
dependents. They would be
reserved to appropriate
crimes, including
participation in the activities
of a syndicate.
Under the bill, consecutive
sentences would be required
for any offense of violence or
physical harm to others when
committed in connection with
another crime.
Written
reports
of
investigation would be
required to he submitted to
the court IJ'ior to sentencing.
The state Parole Board .
would be replaced by a threemember Corrections Review
Commission to initiate or
hear appeals from decisions
of tlle heads of state penal
institutions as to the
suspension or reduction of
"good time" for lnmat..,.
An Adult Corrections
Autllority wOIIId, be set up to
administer required post-release reba bilitation
programs.

Second quarter
gains expected
CLEVELAND, 0.
RObbins &amp; Myers, Inc.; sales
and mrnings from continuing
operations for the , second
quarter ending Feb. 28 will be
ligher than for the same
quarter last year, Fred G.
Wall,
presidept,
told
Cleveland analysts here
today. "A)tllough earnings
for tlle qUarter will be below
those for our first quarter,
they still will be substantially
ahead of . earntngs for the
second period last year," he
said. For the. second quarter
fllded Feb. 211, 1978, sales
were $19,038,000 and net
income was $780,000, or 69
cents a share, based on
continuing operations. For
the six months, sales were
$36,230,000 and net Income
1111!DALYIIENTINEL

-AIIEA
-.Ell.
DEVOTEDT0111E
IN'm\ESTor

- L TANNEIIIU.
~BDT:UCR

Publlabed

~ !'""Pl. Satunlo)

by The Olllo v IIIey l'lll&gt;IIINna Com..,. Ill Coorlllt., """""'· Olllo

:::!. .

PhcioelliNl
-21111.
·- Ollke
llooond clllo pootqe
If
Pmleroy' 01*1.
Notlonol ldvtnliiiW lop-•·
lltivt Ward· Grlftth CGmplny Inc., lloUineW IIIII
DIY.,
717 Third Ave ., New Dli, N.Y1

Go''?.'-

10017.

SubocrOJtion rollll: OoUnnd bJ,
carrier where IVltllb&amp;e 71 ctntl pet'
..... By Molorlloolo
llf'VIco nol ·ovllloblo, One 1ll1111111,:
11.21. By nil ill Olio ond II. Vo.,l

-.con1or,

One Year, fZI.OO; Sll IDIIIlltbl.
IIUO; ' Three moatlll, •uo:
Ellewttere hii.OO yur; Sit rnonttw1
hrte moqthl , ruo,'
•
prb lncludt.ltl Sundly i

...

was $1,411,000, or $1.2&amp; a
share.
A strong. level of electric
motor sales, coupled with a
sharp increase in Hunter
Dlvisim's energy-oriented
electric heating and cooling
!l'oduct sales, offset a slight
decline in Industrial products
business, resulting in higher
sales for the quarter, WaD
added. He cited the prolonged
slowdown in Industrial
capital expenditures as tbe
reason fQr the current soft·
ness In the company's pump
and overhead material
handling operations.
"We are confident that
incoming orders for Industrial products will lm·
!I'OVe when there is a general
increase lri capital spending," Wall continued. "We
also elpfel to maintain a
good level d ooslneu in botb
our motor and comfort
conditioning operations. We
are stiD optimistic that· tbe .
second quarter will be the
lowest . earnings period tbis
· year, provided the economy
strengthens during the
aecond half of our fiscal

year."
Robbins &amp; Myers serves
BPeCiftc segments of growtb
markets with Industrial and
conaumer products. The
company manufactures
Moyno progressing cavity
pumps; Hunter portable
electric fans, ventilating
equipment, and Installed
heating equipment; electric
motors; · and o~rhtiad
material handling systelllli.

.,-----------,
l Pro I
battle. ·s.... tand.mgs
I

itimal arguments of need
with a new roe this year: The
eneri!y crisis has hit schools
harder than other Institutions, and now the
President want1 to pull tbe
plug from an Important
backup source of revenue.

Mrs. EmiPa • Ledlie
received word that her
daughter Mrs. Dick Ritter of
Fort l(:wx, 'K~. has had.
surgery and is recovering
nictly . He r sister, Mrs.
Slirley Merrill of Columbus
Is spending a few days with
her.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Phillips
of Frankfort, Ohio spent a
day this week with Mrs. Dena
Hoffman and visited his
trother Howard Phillips who
is a medical patient at
Veterans lfospltal.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Barr
went to Parkersburg, W. Va.
to consult a doctor for Mr.
Barr,
Mr. and Mrs. Duane Barr
m.J son Shawn called on his
mother Mrs. Elvira Barr
Sunday. Clhers at tlle Barr
home were Mr. and Mrs.
• Larry Barr and children,
David and Michelle.
.
. Mr. and Mrs. Michael Bari
and Mrs. Elvira Barr spent a
day recently with her
daughter and family Mr. and
Mrs. Blair Cadwallader and
family, Winchester, Ohio.
Mrs. Dorothy Wright Is
home from the hospital and
recovering nicely.
ACCEPTED AT GBC
SYRACUSE - Dfllise Ami
Hendrix, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Norman Hendrix,
Syracuse, has been accepted
at Gallipolis Businesa College
for the Spring Quarter
beglmlng March 10. Miss
Hendrix, a 1!177 graduate of
Southern Local High School,
is enroUed In the two-year
Business Administration
murse.

I1

E11t

W L T Pto.
Quebec
35 22 1 71
Clnclnnoll 30 27 3 63
lndl an•pls 26 28 7 59
New Englnd 20&lt; 6 5&lt;
Blrmnohm 23 35 3 •9
x.Minn e50t 1918 5 43

HouSion
Winnipeg
San Diego
Edmonton
Ca lgar v

Phoenl:.:

3"f1i
33 24
33 25
25 33
23 30
2• 3•

GF GA
251 209
261 221
205 229
210 2.j(J
208 225
1J6U9

2
2
2
5

68
68
52
51

269 21•
205 202
161218
181 199

By MILTON RICHMAN .
UP! Sports Editor

2 50 209 27.4

x-Tet m dlsb1nded
Wednesday's Rtsutts
Calgar y 3 Houston 2

PhoeniM 6 Winnipeg 3 •
Thursday's Games
Quebec at Birmingham
Phoenix at San Diego
Frld•y's Gamf's
New England at Calgary
Indianapolis at Edmonton
Qvebec at Cincinnati
Hquston at Phoen ix

NHL Stondlngs

By United Press tnternltlon•l
Campbell Conftr•nct·

Patrick Divltlon

W L T PIS.
Ph ila
36 12 12 84
NY lslandrs 36 16 9 81
Atla nta
25 2S 11 61
NY Rangers 23 26 13 59
Smythe Division

GF GA·.
2~4 165
207 148
196 201
217 225

W L T Pis. GF GA
St . LOUIS
27 28 6 60 184 205
Chicago
22 3110 54 199 226
Colorado
19 32 10 48 183 220
Minnesota 15 31 15 .45 182 240
Vancouver 17 38 6 40 165 235
Wales Conference
Norris Division
W L T Pis. GF GA
.Montreal
45 7 10 100 297 144
Pittsburgh 26 24 11 63 193 194
Lo s.Angeles 22 27 11 55 192 187
Wash!ngtn 17 33 13 41 167 244
Detroit
15 37 a 38 15f220
Adams Division ..
W L T Pts. GF GA
Buffalo
36 18 6 78 219 165
Bo ston
34 '21 6 14 227 193
Toronto
29 24 9 67 243 215
Cleveland 18 32 10 46 116 215
Wednesday's Results
NY Rangers 5 Toronto 4
Montreal 4 Atlanta 2
Chicago s Qerrolt 2
Minnesota 2 Boston 1
Buffalo 5 Cleveland 3
Thursdey ' s Games
Philadelphia at Buffalo
Pittsburgh at De troit
Van couv er at Los Angeles
Friday's Games
NY Islanders at Cl eveland
M innesota at' Atlanta
Toronto at Washington
; Boston at .Colorado

Meigs
Property
Transfers

Eagles, 72~45
contest played 'at Mercerville.
Swain, a talented. junior '
center, led the WDdcat offense despite playing with a
troken finger on his left hand.
Swain suffered the Injury
· Sunday afternoon In a sandlot
gmne.

Other players hitting
double figures were Frank
Mooney with 14 po~, Rick
Whitt and Randy McGuire
The Guiding Hand School canned 11. '
Cubs upped their season
Dan Spencer led Coach
record Tuesday to a 5~ mark Duane Wolfe's winless
by defeating host HUIB and Eastern Eagles with 18
Dales School at HIUsboro, points. Little canned 10
lllio 48-28.
points.
The Cubs lad In an stanzas.
Hannan Trace jumped to a
c:l the game. The ICOrlng by :11-4 flrlll quarter lead at the
quarters follows: first end of the first qututer. The
~p~rter 111-6, baH 30-10, and
Wlldclitsled to-1&amp; lit the half
third quarter 36-16.
and 82-211 going Into the final
Don Suon and Jim Racer · fplrter.
provided tlle Cubs with tbe
Hannan Trace also won the
necessary rebounding and reserve lilt, 10-47. Roll Pack
scoring In the second half, had 20 pointa ' lor the
scoring 14 and 18 polnta Wlldkittens, while Brian
respeetlvely. Paul Winston Bl,..l toued In 23 lor the
led the Cubllln the first half, Ulle Eagl...
scoring 18 points and wu not
The wlri puahed HT'a
to return for aecond half play. season mark to M overlll
Gene Shaver also chipped In 8 and W in the SVAC.
points for the winners. Ken
Eastern'• record ~ent to 0.
!llaver, Dale Tacker, E1111ene 17, 1).)2in the league. Hannan
Roach and Jim Bartley saw Trace travela to Symmes
seoond hall action hut failed Valley tonight.
lo score.
Box score :
The H1114. and Diles Team
C4S)- Nelson, 1·0·
ns led by Danny Beatty witb 2; llltern
LUlie, 4-2-10; Spencer, 7 - ~ ·
12 points.
11 ; Gotbtl, 3·1-7; end Brown,
The Olbs wi1l boll the next 4-0-1. Totolo 1t-7-4S.
Hannan Tr•c• (72) O'AA Area "iieyen game Gibson
, 2-0-4; Sworn, Comp!Dying Plcmeer School ol bell, 4·1-9 ; Whitt, 6-0-12;
3·5· 11 ; Moonly, 7·0·
Chillicothe, Ohio Friday, McGuirt,
14 and Ntol , 1-0-2. Tololo H ·
~ 25 at I :30 p.m. The ' 10· 72.
ly Qulrters 1
~("!
ic II Invited to attend. Ellltrn
· 6 10 12 1 ~-.S
Mmisliim Is iree.
H. Tract 2&lt; 16 22 1~72

five in row

Sport Parade

~ PJ:·~ M

Wildcats drop

Cubs make it

By GENE CAI)DES
UP! Sports Writer
COLUMBUS (UP! )
Morrall Ridgedale coach Dan
Wendell is one who doesn't
think being rated No. I is like
the kiss of deatll.
"I think it's good," said
Wendell, whose once-beaten
(IS-I) Rockets were selected
today as the No. I Class A
team in the final United Press
International Ohio High
School Board of Coaches
basketball rati~gs . "II gets
exposure for your kids. To
them, its a confidence factor;
they like it. "
Ridgedale, which led the
Class A poll the final seven

WHA Stlndings
By United Prtsslnttrnltlonal

THREE HURT
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Three persons aboard a twinJohn Thurman fischer to
engine plane making an - Mary R. Porter, Parcels,
inaul!llral Right were injured Sutton.
·
when the plane apparently
William L. FO!lter, Arlyn
ran out of fuel and mad~ an FO!lter to Margaret Ida Van
emergency crashlanding In a Meter, Parcels, Chester.'
muddy field near Don Scott
Henry E. Cleland, Leona V.
field here.
Cleland, Henry E. Cleland,
Officials said gauges in the Jr., Kathleen M. Cleland to
plane, based at the Delaware Gardner L. Wehrung,
Airport, were not properly Patricia L. Wehrung, Lots,
working.
Pomeroy.
They said the gauges
William Maynard, Evelyn
showed the plane had fuel Maynard to William FO!lter,
when apparently it did not. Arlyn L. Foster, Letart.
A fourtll person aboard tbe
James Walker, Margaret
plane was not injured.
JbAnn Rose Walker to
Hospitalized were three William Grimm, 44 A.,
area men: James Ross, John Rutland.
Wick and Robert Taggart.

Hannan Tr·ace, behind
David Swain's 20 points,
blasted Eastern 72-45 W!'dnesday night in an SVAC

Morrall Ridgedale is top Class .A team in Ohio

I

West

Langsville

3-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., T1'ursday, Feb. 24, 1977

~..

NEW YORK (UP!) - Everyone's asking Willie Mays tbe
same lbing, what If? He has heard the question so many times
now, he only listens and lalll!hs.
WhatifheCO!Jldroll back tlle calendar a dazen years or so to
when he was hitting 50 home runs a season, driving in more
than 100 runs and averaging well over .300, and he could sell
himself as a free agent the way ballplayers can today, Willie
Mays keeps getting asked.
·
"If ... if ... if," he always answers. "I don't like that word 'if.'
I enjoyed my time and it's finished now. I got paid well and I
don't like to look back.! still think the players of today should
get alltlley can although some of the sslaries do sound a lltUe
ridiculous. Me envious? Of who? Of what•"
At his peak, Willie Mays made $185,000 a season, which isn't
peanuts even today. His yearly income now still is in six
figures representing three different organizations, tlle Col. gate-Palmolive Company, the Ogden Food Corporation and the
Mets, whom he's gelling ready to join in spring training next
week.
The curious tlling about the man who thrilled so many during
his 22years witll the Giants and Mets is that he made countless
friends in baseball but never became overly close with any of
them.
"Parposely ,"be explains. ''I saw what happened to players
Cll the same club who had formed a strong friendship and tllen
· one of them was traded away, and I didn't ever want that to
. happen to me.l'll give you an example of what I mean. When
, George Foster ,came to the Giants, everybody Immediately
liked him very much. I felt like a father to him.
• "When he was traded to Cincinnati, our whole club was
; shook up. We were 8 ~ games in front and didn't think he
should've been traded .... "
· "We kept In contact and if you remember the World Series
two years ago, he made a great throw from left field to gel
(Denny) Doyle at the plate in the ninth irming and kept tlle Re\1
Sox from winning the game. I sent him a telegram. Later, I
called him in Cincinnati and told him how proud I was of him
because be was beginning to do all those things I knew he
could. I told him he didn't need me anymore, he could stand up
for hlmseH now. He has really developed Into an outstanding
ballplayer."
·
It isn't generaDy known, but Joan Payson, the late owner of
the Mets, offered the Giants nearly a million doilsrs for Willie
Mays a couple of years before he actually came to the 1 Mets.
Whim they eventually did get him, Mays remembers Mrs.
Payson calling him over to the rail at Shea Stadium one day.
"She never called me Willie, she called me 'son,'" he says.
"She said to me, 'We know you can 'I play the way you used to,
oot playing is not tllat Important because we feel you are part
of the family and we want you to be a part of the Mels as long
as you live.' Later, on the night I retired, she was having some
trouble seeing when I came over to give her some Rowers but I
·knew she recognized my voice. Sbe asked me what they were
when I handed her the flowers. 'Roses,' I told her. 'These
flowers are for you-for what you did for me.' I can't tell you
what happened after tllat because I choked up.''
Next year wUl mark five years since Willie Mays finished as
an active player·and come the winter of 1978 he's a cinch to
•make it straight Into the Hall of Fame the first time out of the
·chute. Anybody who doesn't vote for Willie Mays wouldn't
have vole!~ for Babe Ruth, eitller.
·
Some people talked to him about the Hall of Fame
Wednesday at tlle Concocd Hotel in the Catskill Mountains
where he answered as lll!IIIY questions as he could at one of
those special sports forums. When he finished answering
questions, he signed autograph&amp; for almost an hour and one 16year-old who asked for hill signature told him his name was
Hank Aaron.
"You serious?" Willie said to the hoy. "Where's your JD•"
"lief! it up In my room, butl'll go getitfor you," said the teen. ager. "Here, look at the initials on my ring.'-'
"Okay, okay, I believe you," Mays laughed, signing his
'
name.
The kid was pleased. He was on the ,level, too. His name was
Hank Asron.

Nuggets looking
like champions
By FRED DOWN
Ul'l Sports writer
Take it from Kevin
• Loughery - the Denver
Nuggets of the now defunct
American Basketball
Association have an excellent
chance to win the 1976-77
National Basketball
Assoclatlon championship.
Loughery, coach of the twotime ABA champion ·New
York Nets, was savoring a 9188 victory over the Nuggets
Wednesday night when asked
about tlleir chances to win the
· NBA playoffs in their first
. attempt.
.
"They are a tremendous
basketball team - as good as
any team in basketball,''
LOughery ·said, then added
· witll a chuckle, "As an old
ABA man, I would like to see
• tlle Nuggets win. t think they
have a good shot In the
playoffs."
'"1111 nle against them is
'no liJIIIJI,"' he said. "Don't
- give '1111 those lay'ups and
" they'll never ecore. Of
course, saying that and doing
It are two different things."
Mike Bantom and van
· Breda KolH led tlle Nets with
16 polnll! each whDe Dan I.ssel
• had 26 and Calvin and Bobby
" Jones' 18 . each for the
~ Nuggela.
·
The Waahlngton Bullets defeated the Indiana Pacers,
11»-101, the Detroit Pistons
ahaded the Los Angeles
Latera, 102--101, the Seattle
&amp;JperSonlc:e beat the Kanaaa
City Klnp, M-811, and the
New Orleanl Jau IICOI'ed a
-IOWI victory over the MD·
. wa~kee Bucks, In other

:aa1ftee·r
•.

Buliets 109, Pacers 101:
Phil Chenier scored 26
points and Kevin Grevey
added 22 for tlle Bullets. who
have won 21 of tlleir last 28
games. John Williamson led
the Pacers with 24.
Pistons 102, Lakers 101:
Bob Lanier's 12-foot jump
shot with nine seconds left
capped a second-ltaU rally
during which Eric Money
scored 22 points and enabled
the Pistons to raise tlleir
homecourt record to~ - The
Lakers,leaders In the Pacific
Division, suffered the sixtll
loss in tlleir lilst eight games.
Sonlcs lN, Kings 93:
The Sanies came close w
squandering a ~int lead
before pulling out their
victory at Kansas City when
Bob Boone missed a
desperation shot with· tllree
seconds left. Nic~ Weatllerspoon had 21 points and

Eastern's 8th
••

grade-team is
ART LANHAM
(District 22 Coach-of-Year)

out of toomey

·weeks of the voting, is joined
by defending state champion
Barberton (111-ll) in AAA and
unbeaten West Lafayette
Ridgewood 117-0) in AA,
voted best in their class.
Ridgedale's only loss of the
season came three weeks ago
at the hands of MI. Blanchard
Riverdale, but the Rockets·
managed to retain their top
spot over runnerup Indian
Valley South.
"When we lost and didn't
lose our No. 1 rating," said
Wendell, "the kids said 'hey,
maybe they (the voting
coaches) do know how good
we are ."'

Barberton, which grabbed
the top AAA spot the first
week of the voting and was
nearly unanimous as the No.
I team the final few weeks,
received 24 of 27 first place
votes and was second on the
other three ballots the final
week.
The No, I rating for the
Jack Greynolds-eoached
Magics, who take a 441Jame
winning
streak
into
tournament action, was their
second in the past five years,
also being picked the best
among the big_schools in 1973.
_ But, for Ridgewood and
Ridgedale, tlle No. 1 ratings
were their first, although
Ridgedale has· been a
conwnder for the crown on

·EAST MEIGS - Coach
Arch Rose's Eight Grade
basketbal l . t~am from
Eastern playmg mtlle Belpre
Tournament last weekend
were ousted by top-seeded
Belpre 46-42, but not before
they gave a good account of
themselves to the highlytalenied hosts.
The much taller Belpre
'"Juad, an AA school, inched
out to a 10-9 first period lead,
COLUM BU S (UPJ ) - The
hut then were held in check as final
1977 Unit~d Pr ess tn .
each team scored 12 points in ternational Oh io H igh Sc hool
Board of Coa ches: bask etball
the second and third quar- rat
ings with f ir s t.place vo tes
ters. With three and on..-haU an d won . lost records in
minutes remaining in the parentheses :
contest, Eastern led by four , Team .Class, AAA Points
267
points, but three turnovers in J. Barber ton 24 (18 ·01
~ . C o l linden 1 ( 18·01
212
a row by the visitors enabled 3.
Ely r i a t JB.Ol
1i7
Belpre to pull ahead for good. 4. lebanon 1 (11 .Q)
49
d. S. (15· 11
137
Coach Rose said it was one 5.6. Springfl
Dayton Roth (15. 1)
108
of the best games his squad 7. Warren We st. Res . ( 17 .1) 96
had played all year, B. Cleve . St . Ignat ius ( 17·1) 51
Vi ti abe Bay ( 18-0l
47
evidenced by the fact they 9.10.Bay
Cin LaSa ll e ~J4 . Jl
d5
Second ten : 11 . Cincinnati
connected on 33 per cent of
35 ; 12 . Cle &lt;Jeland Easl
their field attempts, quite Elder
Tec h 28 ; lJ . Newa rk lB ; 14.
sharp for an eighth grade Grove City 11 ; 15. Col umbus
ion Frank li n 16 ; 16 .
!quad. But the Eagles lost it Mar
To ledo Scot t 13; 17 . (tiel
at the charity strip where To ledo Devi lbiss and Cin ·
cinna l i St. Xavier . 11 each ;
they missed 14 foul shots.
Co lumb us Westland 9; 20.
Brett Matthews and Greg 19
(lie ) Canf on M cKi nl ey and
Wigal each had thirteen Toledo St. Jo hn, 7 each .
points to lead Eastern, and ·
Class A A
big Joe Bowers had 14 Team
Points
R idgewood 10 ( 17·0) .
174
rebounds to ·lead in that 2.1. Buckeye
S. 7 (18 -0)
108
JIMMY NOE
GIL PRICE
department. Peters had 16 3 Bellefonta ine 2 ( 14·2) 178
(District 22's Outslandlng (Member of Al(-Distrtct 22 points to lead Belpre.
4. Cleve Cathedral Latin
111
Player)
Team)
Eastern's next scheduled 5 Akr11621
on South ( 14·41
109
game is March I with 6 Co lum . M iffl in {15·31
107
7. Col. St. Charles 1 ( 1'3-2) 93
Waterloo.
8. Wheelersburg 1 07 -1 J
78

several occasions.
Ridgewood, like many
other schools, has one game
remaining on its regular
schedule, the Generals
visiting lanesville Rosecrans.
Saturday for a contest
postponed earlier by the
weather.
Ridgewood, coached by Bill
Gorscak, had the closest
chailenge, with Tiltonsville
Buckeye South ( 111-0)
finishing runnerup to the
Generals ; just six points
behind.
Barberton really had no
challenger, with Columbus
Linden McKinley second but
55 points behind, while Indian
Va lley South was second in
the Class A voting, 40 points
behind Ridgedale.
·
Elyria wound up No. 3 in
Class AAA as the first seven
wams were in the same spot
this week as last. Lebanon
took fo urth , followed by
Springfield South , Dayton
Roth ,· Warren Western
Reserve, Cleveland St.
Ignatius, Bay Village Bay
and Cincinnati LaSalle, ihe
last two newcomers to the
list.
Following.ltidgewood and
Buckeye South in Class AA
comes Bellefontaine. Then its
Cleveland Cathedral Latin,
Akron South, Columbus
Mifflin , Columbus St .

Charl es, Wheelersburg ,
Coshocton and Elyria
Catholic, another newcomer.
In Class A, all of last week's
top ten returned, with
Archbold in third, followed by
Southeastern ( Ro ss),
Versailles, Ada, Stryker,
Cardington , New Riegel and
Oak Hill. Hiverdale missed
the tenth spot by one point.

149 South Third
Middleport, 0.
Phone 992-7155

Thrs is my State Fa1m off~e
where I can serve you with the
best value 1n car. home. hie
and lllallh insurance I invrle
you to I

High school cage ratings

Pairings

Jim Noe of Rio Grande has
been selected recipient of the
Larry Arrington Memorial
Award as the outstanding
basketball player for the 1976n seas~ in NAJA District 22.
The award which goes tb ·
Noe, a 6·5 senior, Is named
In memory of Arrington,
former Malone CoDege star
who died of cancer:
Joining Noe on the all-

District 22 team are Kenny
Smitll and Ben Fowler of
Central State, Gil Price of Rio
Grande, Dave Repp of
Bluffton, Dale Creager of
Findlay. Kevin Dilworth of
Defiance, Tom Volarich and
Ray Tatum of Malone and
Tim Wilson of Wilmington.
Art Lanham , who has
guided Rio Grande to a 22-3
record going into next week's
District 22 playo ffs, was
chosen the coach of the year.

announced
MARION, Ohio iUPI) Pairings were announced
Wednesday lor the NAJA
District · 22 basketball
tournament with Rio
Grande and Findlay
selected to host the two
se mifinal
games.
Rio Grande (22-3) wlll
meet Ceatral State 11~10)
and Findlay (17-8) plays
Malone (16-10), with bo)h
games scheduled for 8 p.m.
Monday.
Tbe finals of the tournament will be played on
Wednesday at tlle ·sight of
the surviving team with the
best reeord.

DENVER (U P!)
ST. LOUIS (UP!) Offensive tackle AI Oliver
Wednesday be came the Oakland Raiders managing
second free ~gent signed by general partner AI Davis has
the Denver Broncos for the · ~een voted the National
1977 season, Broncos General Football Leal!lle's Executive
Manager Fred Gehrke said . of the Year in a poll taken by
Oliver spent the 1975 season The Sporting News.
Davis received more votes
on the Rams' reserve list
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
because of a leg injury and than Jim Finks of the Chicago world champion Cincinnati
Bears in balloting by the Reds said Wednesday tlley
was cut last season.
general managers in the will open spring training
NFL.
Friday in Tampa, Fla.
Fred Brown 20 for the Sonics
while Brian Taylor had 21 for
Kansas City.
Jazz 105, Bucks 96:
Pete Maravich scored 38
points and Bud Stallworth
had 26 while rookie Paid
Griffin collected 25 rebounds
for the Jazz, who clinched the
win by outscoring the Bucks,
10.2, early in the fourtll
period . Junior Bridgeman
and Bob Dandridge had 19
points each for Milwaukee.

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Po ints

2. Ind . Valley s . 51 15-21
J . Archbold 5 ( 16·1J

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9. CoshOcton (15·31
42
10. El yria Cath . 1 (16.2)
30
Second ten : 11 . Bexley 20 ;
12, Tri .Va ll ey 18 ; 13. East
Sa nd y
Pa l es t ine 17 ; l d
Valley 16 ; 15. Washington
Cour t Hou se 14 ; 16. Ottawa
Gl ando r f 12 ; 17. ( tie) Marfins
Ferry , Ironton and John stow n Monroe (1 1, 11 eac h;
20 . Gi rard , 9.

Rio's Lanham, Price,
Noe win cage honors

4. Southe ast. Ross (17 · ll
89
5 . Versailles t 16. 1 l
81
6. Ada ( 14 ·21
80
7. Stry ker ( 17·21
73
8. Carding ton ( 14·21
63
q. New Riegel 2 (18 ·21
59
IO. OakHiii(17 .JJ
51
Second ten : 11. Riverda le
56 ; 12 . Maple ton (7) .41 ; 13 .
Mansfield St . Peter 's 37 ; lA .
Rip l ey Union Lewi s 33 ; 15
Patr ick
Henry 30;
16.
Sou ther n (M eigsl27: 17. An t .
werp 24: 18. Shadyside 18,· 19.
New
Br e men
16 ;
20 .
Covi ngton 14

11 9
179
111

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�4-The [)ailySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Feb, 24,lm

®
BASKETBALL

,

cone:gt ·Basketball R:esults
By United Press International
East
Adelphi 63 Bridgept 62
Albny St . 96 New Paltr 66
Albright 64 Kutztown 51

C. W. Pos t 82 South mptn 65
CC NY 75 Brooklyn Coli 51
Delaware 92 Bu cknell 74
Gannon 72 Sllppry Rock 67
Geo . Wash . 74 G'town DC 73

Geneve 79 A llia11&lt;;e 64
Hamilton 1]4 C lark ~m 92
Hunter 79 Baruch 70
lana 117 uu 90
Ithaca 73 Iii IT 7'1
Kings Point 86 Pace 82
Latavenc 69 Rider 65
L incoln Pa , 84 Rutgrs -Cmdn 82
N.H . Co lt 115 F . Pierce 79
PeMn SL 73 DuQuesne 70
Potsdam 91 Cortland St . 57
Pratt 74 Rutgers -Newark 62

St .John's 92 Boston Coli 69
St .Vince. 94 Ind . Pa . 67

Sl . Bonnie 13 Fairfld 68
St )os Pa . lll Canisius 62
St .Anslem 's 85 Lowell 74

Syracuse 106 Niagara

'
KENNY YOUNG, A!l(lvE
and Tim Scites usually went in as
or seventh man ·
the Meigs Marauder basketball lineup this season
ended Monday Jthis week with a 9·9 record. Young is S.O,
150 lb. junior guard. Scites is :;.to, a 155lb. senior guard.

Hohnes just gave
a panhandler·•2o

•

)

AMARilLO, Tex. (UP! ) Pittsburgh Steelers defensive
tackle Ernie Holmes has
gave a
testified he
panhandler $20 in a· motel
restroom and did not know
the silver cylinder he was
given in return contained
cocaine.
The six men and six women
on the jury must decide if
Holmes was aware on the
night of Jan. 31, 1976, that he
was
purchasing
250
milligrams .of cocaine when
he took the cylinder from an
unidentified ·man. The jury
was scheduled to hear closing
ari:wnents today' and then
begin deliberations.
U convicted, Holmes could
be sentenced to from 2 to 20
years in prison.
Holmes testifed Wednesday
he gave a man a $20 bill and
some change only because
the man who confronted hinn
.in a motel restroom begged
for money.
"A gentleman came out of
the stall and said 'Hi, brother,"' Holmes said. "He said
he was trying Ill.get home and
wanted me to loan him some
money. I was pretty loaded
with fluids .
"He kept askillg me to give
hinn money to get home. I told
hinn I didn't have any money
to loan. But he asked me to
buy a silver bullet. I really
didn't want to talk to him. I
was just trying to assist

him."
District Attorney Tom
Curtis, on cross~xamination ,
told Holmes :
" A silver bullet is
something you snort cocaine
out of."

·

·

"! didn 't know that, I
thought it was a silver
bullet,'; said Holmes.
The proSecution called four
witnesses, the key one plain·
clothes officer Jack Magee.

Magee testified he was the
first of three officers to walk
into the restroom as Holmes
was trying to determine what
was in the cylinder he had
been given. Magee said he.
and his fellowofficerswere in
the motel checking the bar
for prostitutes.
The other two policemen-·
F1oyd Burke and Rodney
Murphy-then testified that
although th ey originally filed
a report that said .they saw
something pass between the
unidentified man and
Holmes, they now were not
sure what they saw.
· Burke testified the other
man ran from the restroom
and that he gave chase, but
that the man fled into a room
fi lled with at least 100 persons
and he had no way to identify ·
the suspect.
·
During the day the defense,
led by Amarillo attorney
Charles Rittenberry, called
Pittsburgh Coach Chuck Noll,
Steelers Pres ident Dan
Rooney and linebacker Andy
Russell, all of whom testified
they felt Holmes had a good
reputation for truthfulness.

NEW YORK (UP! ) - New
York Knicks forward Spencer
. Haywood, who has missed the
last 20 games with a knee
injury , was reactivated
Wednesday by the NBA club.
Haywood, who will work
out on his own ~ould be ready
to play against Indiana
Saturday night.
To make room for Haywood
the Knicks placed guard
Dennis Layton, who ruptured
· a ligament in his right thumb
Sunday, on the injured
reserve list.

"Ifthere's a
way the new
tax law can
save you money, '
we'll fmd it."
A brand-new reason why H&amp;R
Block should do your taxes..
The new 1976 tax law is full of changes.
New credits ... new deductions ... new
rules that affect you and every taxpayer.
But Block people are ready to help save
\YOU mon~ !WalsiQ9 ~llowable _
CleEII:Ietl6'n and credit
'

•

OVERALL SCORING CAs of Feb. 19)
PLAYER- TEAM
FG FT Pis.
Dennis Ward- Warren
160 69 389
Ralph Saylor-Kyger Creek
123 80 326
Joe Butcher- Fed. Hocking
157 76 390
Mark Sullivan- Nels.· York
Dave Burgess- Miller
Mike McBroom-Legan
Fred Logan- North Gallla
Mike Patterson-VInton County
Chip Braver-Southern .

130
137
119
118
133

42 302
53 327
41 279
59 295
'64 330 {I B} 18.3

SOUTHERN VALLEY ATHLETIC .CONFERENCE SCORING
PLAYER-TEAM
{G) Avg.
FG FT Pis.
Ralph Saylor- Kyger Creek
90 6l 245 {11} 22.3
Chip Braver- Southern
82 ll 215 {12} 17.9
Fred Logan-North Gall Ia
75 28 178 {10} 17 .8
Ralph Ingels-Symmes Valley
.88 19 195 {11) 17.7
Ron Jackson-Southwestern
BO 16 176 {10} 17.6
David Swaln- Hannan Trace
60 36 156 {10} 15.6
Mark Wllson-Symmes Valley
64 19 147 {11} 13.4
Joe Brown- Southern
56 37 149 {12} 12.4
Eric Dunning- Southern
51 46 148 {12} 12.3
Dave Spencer- Eastern
50 15 115 {10} 11 .5
Teams Ranked Offensively

Team
Pis. IGl Avg.
Southern
1454 (18) 80.8
Logan
1367 {17) 80.4
Warren
1239 {16 ) '77.4
Wahama
961 {14) 68.6
Nels .. York
801 {12} 66.8
Alexander
855 {13) 65.8
Meigs .
1112 1171 65.4
Vinton County 1031 {16) 64.4
Southwestern 1086 rm 63.9
Point Pleasant 831 {13) 63.9
North Gallla 945 {15} 63.0
Kyger Creek 878 {14} 62.7
Belpre
1055 {17) 62.1
Fed. Ha&lt;:k lng 1111 .{18) 61.7
Hannan Trace 947 {16} 59.2
Symmes

Valley
Ironton
Jackson
Gal lipolis
Miller
Wellston
Athens
Eastern

1001
1057
1035
977

ml
{18}
{I B}
{1 7}
860 {15}
11019 {18}
842 {16}
706 {16}

58.9
58.7
57 .5
57 .5

57.3
56.6
52 .6

Hannan Trace lOS I I 16)
Meigs
1120 {17)
Eastern
1068 I16)
Southwestern 1141 (17)
Jackson
1220 {18)
North Gal lIa 1044 {15)
Belpre
1180 {17 )
Wahama
992 {14)
Miller
1125 {15}
Wellston
1440 {1 8}

"

n.

BOYS
High School

Basketball Results
United Press Int ernational
Class AAA
At Cle South
Cle John Adams 7'1 Cle So uth
37
At Cle Lincoln -W est
La kewood 62 Cle w est Td ch

66.8

67.1
67.8 .
69.6
69.4
70.9
75 .0

80.0

Hann&amp;n .Trace

Valley

at Symmes

FRIDAY
Wahama at Point Pleasant
SATUROAY

Hannan at Wahama

Poi nt
Pleasant
at
Parkersburg South
North Gall Ia at Pike Eastern

MONDAY IFtb. 28)
TRI·VALLEY
Teams Ranked Dtftnsivaly · VInton County at Nelsonville·
Team
Pis. CGl Avg. York
Ironton .
889 {I B) 49.4 ,
Others
Gallipolis
903 {17} 53.1 Milton at Point F'leasant
Southern
988 {18) 54.9
l.oQan
951 {17) 55.9
TUESDAY (March 1)
PoTnt F'leasant 7MJ {13} 56.9 Wahama at Bvlfalo
Nels .. York
724 {12) 60.3
Waverly
1031 {17) 60 .6
WEDNESDAY (Marchi)
Symmes
Pl. Pleasant at Milton
Valley
1039 {17) 61 .1
Fed. He&lt;: king .1117 {18) 62. 1 . THURSOAY (March3)
VInton County 998 {16) 62.4 · Wahama at Hannan
Athens
1024 {16) 64'.0
Alexander
835 {13) 64.2
FRIDAY tMarch4)
Trimble
1034 {16) 64.6 Dunbar at Pl. Pleasant .
Warren
1034 {16) 64.6 Wahama at Ravenswood
KygerCree_k 90'1 IW 64.9

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Clt1SSAIA
At Elyria
Lorain Cat hol ic 72 Ol msted
Falls 50
Brooklyn 81 A\lon 6-4
At Grand River
Perry 56 Ledgem ont 31
At Cuyahoga ·
Bre cksville
64
, North
Roya l t on 57
Class AA
A t -Stelibenville
Ca rroll t on 64 Steuben\lille
Cath 51
Bellllire 86 Barnesville 57

Nicklaus about ready
LAUDERHlLL, Fla. (UPI)
- As usual, this xear's
$250,000 Jackie GleasonInverrary Golf Classic comes
at just about the same time
Jack Nicklaus is starting to
get serious about his game.
Nicklaus, who admits he is
a little behind for this time of
year, shot a· 74 in the pro-am
event Thursday, playing in a
fi vesome with former

Southern 7th
grade winner

at Shade 5043
RACINE - . Monday
evening a young Tornado
basketball team of · Seventh
graders traveled to Shade to
take on the Shade Panthers.
The Tornados jumped out to
an early lead, but by the end
&lt;i the first quarter, Shade
came back to trail only 15-14.
In the second quarter
Southern had trouble moving
the ball, and two of their
three big boys got into ioul
trouble and Shade led at
halftime, 26·22.
Southern came out in the
third quarter playing tight
defense and managed to tie
the score at 38-38 at the end ol
the . third quarter. Southern
played ba11 control in the ,
fourth, but the score was still ·
tied with three minutes to go.
At that point Robert Broivn,
of Southern, got an easy lay
up, and then stole the ba)l to
score his only points of the
game as he put Southern out
front by four.
The ·final score was
Southern 50 and Shade .43.
Southern scorers were Kent
Wolfe, 17 and 7 rebounds, Jay
Rees 10, Tom · Roseberry, 6,
Richard Wojfe, 8 pnd ·9.
rebounds, C. T. Chapman 2
and 6 rebounds, . Robert
Brown 4, and Allen Pape 3.
Southern shot a cool 40 per
cent from the foul line and 37
· per cent from the field. High
scorers for Shade were
Cremeans with 20 and
Skinner with 10.

New uniforms
expected at

President Ford, Gleason, Bob
Hope and banker Fred
Millsaps.
"I'm not really worried,
although I'm a little behind
where I usuaUy am/' he said.
"I have all of my
international traveling out of
the way until next fall and
I'm going to play four out of
the next five tournaments."
Nicklaus wa.-able to shate
a litue of his considerable
golf knowledge with Ford on
Thursday although he was
careful not to offer too much
advice.
"I tried to help with the
method be is learning," Nick·
laus e&lt;plained. "He was
putting too much weight on
the right side. I told hlm to
line up more square."
Ford responded by making
par on the par-three 12th hole,
only his second of the day,
and then lacing a 250-yard
drive that led to his third par
on the 13th hole.
Ford also scrambled
beautifully to a par (our on
the 18th hole and wolmd up
with a 53-47-100 for the day.
The crowd was estimated
at 39,200- short of the 41,270
he drew when he shot another
100 here two years ago in his
first year as president. But it

•2~.00

992-3092
MIDDLEPORT,

OHIO

UatlfG l'reasmlel'llllttooal
While Mi~!lli, Central
Michigan and Northern
Illinois have been playing
musical chairs with the MidAmerican Conference lead
Bob Nicliols' Toledo team ~
quietly slipping Into position
for a late run at the title. ·
The Rockets ran off their
sixth straight conference win
Wednesday night, a 69~1
decision over Central, and,
with a 9-4 league record, are
right back in the race behind
Miami at 1{).,'! and Northern
and Central each at !h1.
Miami beat Western Michi·
gao 7~ Wednesday night
and Northern was surprised
by Eastern Michigan, 7:;.71 in
overtime .
"We still have a chance in
this conference race," said
Nichols, whose team once
stood at 3-4 and appeared to
be out of it. "We have a big
ooe ahead of us Saturday," he
said, referring to an Invasion
by Northern iUinois.
The Rockets, in getting
Nichols his !98th coaching
win at Toledo, had to
overcome some hot.!Janded
shooting by Central, who
burned the nets for 77 per
cent from the field the first
half on 17 of 22 and 62 per cent
for the game.
·
"When a team is shooting
77 per cent 'at.the hall, there
·isn't much you can do about
it," saiP Nichols. "Our team
could have hung it up, but
they didn 't and they deserve
credit for it. "I thought it was
11 super game,'' he added,
"one of the best I've ever
been around . '~
The key to Toledo's win,
triggered by Ted Williams' 30
points, was offensive reboun·
ding.
The Rockets controlled the
boards 36-23 with 20 of them
coming on the offensive en.d
of the court. Central had only
three offensive rebounds.
'.'The offensive boards were
a disaster for us iooight,"
said Central coach Dick
Parfitt. "Toledo hit them
hard and the ball bounced
their way because they ' were
aggressive. Toledo is opening
a door for itseU in this
league."
Archie Aldridge, Bernard
Newman and Randy Ayers
paced Miami to its win over
Western Michigan.
Aldridge led the way with
19 points, while Newman had
16andAyershadl5aswellas
putting the second half locks

Reds sign Lum

Mike Lum has agreed to a

twO:year contract with the
Cincinnati
Reds, club
EAST MEIGS - The
officials
announced
Eighth Grade basketball
Wednesday.
team coached by Archie Rose
Only five Reds are yet to
traveled to Belpre Saturday
agree
on contract terms for
to compete in an Eighth
the
upooming
seaaon - Pete
Grade Tournament.
Rose
,
Davey
Concepcion,
Eastern took on the Belpre
Rawly
Eastwick,
Gary Nolan
Eagles and after a hard
and
Pat
Darcy.
fought game came out on top
46-43. The team did a fine job · Lum, a&lt;;qulred last season
Ailanta, • was
rebounding and displayed from
Cincinnilti's
busiest pinch·
great teamwork.
.
hitier
in
1976,
getting 10 hits
The top point boys for
·in
37
at-bats,
plus
eight walks .
Eastern were Greg Wigal and ·
He
hit
.270
as
a
pinch-hitter
Brett Matthews, each 13,
and
.228
overall,
appearing
in
followed by Joe Bowers 8,
Gene Cole 7 and Ray Werry 2. 84 games.
Other players on the squad
are: Rick Long, Tony Ken·
nedy , Kenny Chapman,
Randy Staats and Bobby
Barringer (unable to see
action due tO ann injllfy).
Eastern has a record of 6 and
6.
· The team was to travel to
Federal Hocking Feb. 24.

LADIES
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Racine meeting n...

CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
Cincinnati Reds, world
champions in both 1975 and
1976, begin gathering Friday
in Tampa, Fla., to open
spring training for the 1977
season.
Pitchers and catchers are
to report on Friday, with the
first workout scheduled
SatUrday. The rest of the
squad
is to
report
Wednesday , March 2, and
begin work March 3.
The Reds' ~arne spring
training sche&lt;\ule' begins
March 12 against Pittsburgh
at Bradenton, Fla.
Cincinnati opens its regular
season at home April 6
against San Diego;

BOYS BOOTS &amp;
PAIR

MEN'S

SIMON'S
Pici&lt;-A-Pair
Pomeroy, 0.

Middleport Dept. Store
JUST ARRIVED!

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-

Warfield will retire
YOUNGSTOWN, OhiO
(UP!) ..:. Cleveland Browns'
wide receiver Paul Warfield
says the 1977 season will be
his last in the National
Football League.
Warfield, who signed last
year with the Browns as a
free agent after playing out
his option with the Miami
Dolphins and jumping to the
defunct World Football
League ,
made
that
announcement Wednesday in
an interview with Sports
Director Bob Anderson of
WYTV.
"I've given a lot of thought
as far as next year is
concerned," said Warfield,
"and I've decided I'm going
to .play one more year.

}i"

JACKSON, Miss. - A twotime Denver champion and a
daughter of last year's grand
champion bull shared top
billing at the 54th National
Polled Hereford Show in
Jackson, Miss., Feb. 15·18.
Stanns Mr. Beef 2F, a 2,225pound two-year-old entered
by Beartooth Ranch,
Columbus, Mont.; Glenkirk
Farms, Maysville, Mo .;
Klondike Farms, Ltd.,
Douglas, Mantoba ; and J. A.
Grey,
Kessler , · Earl
Saskatchewan, advanced
through senior championship ·

O'Koren added 14 each as
North Carolina improved its
record to 20-4.
Elsewhere, it was Notre
Dame Ill Loyola of Chicago
86, Clemson 67 Duke 63, ~uth
Carolina 86 South Florida 63,
Kansas State 68 Oklshoma s:i,
Oklahoma State 62 Nebraska
60, Iowa State 95 Missouri 86,
Temple· 78 Pittsburgh 48,
Virginia Tech 71 Virginia 61,
and St. John's 92 Boston
College 69.

Students in Voc·Ed at

'

are involved in improvement
projects includin g dairy , beef
and shee p records, fence
building and repai r and
J:eSture improvements.
· In their regular Future
Farmers of America Work,
the Racine students learn
supervised practi ce activities, coopera tive ac·
tivitles, earning and saving
acttvit,ies, scholarship a c·
tivities, public relation ac·
tivities and improved farm
shop practice~.

· ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.
(UP! ) - The St. Louis
Cardinals said Wednesday in·
fielders Garry Templeton
and Jerry DaVanon bave
signed 1977 contracts with the
National League club.
Templeton, a shortstop,
made his major-league debut
last August. DaVanon , with '·
Houston last season, was
·acquired in a trade.

Fiiday 25th &amp; Saturday 26th

•Wilson Basketballs

STILL PLENTY Of BARGAINS
ntROUGHOUT lltE 'STORE
STORE HOURS•
Monday, tuesday, Wednesday
· Thursday and Saturday 9:15 · 5:00
Open Friday 9: 15 tiiB:OO

.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

J

Car Fann, Monkton, Md.,
and Harvey M. Oury,
Felicity, Ohio. This heifer
took first place in Class 9,
Heifers Calved Jan. 6-March
3, 1975.
Miss Victoria 83 5116 nabbed
reserye calf champion prize
for TL Polled Herefords,
Osage City, Kan., and Alan
Honeyman, Regent, N. C., ~
after leading the line-up of .
heifers calved from Nov. 2 to '
Dec. 1~. 1975. The fitting and
showing skills of TL owner,.,
Paul Trueblood were com· '
mended by his con·'
temporaries when they voted
him Polled Hereford Her•ilS- I.t
· man of the Year.

to win the 288-head show with a 2.11 weight per day of and best siJ&lt; head classes and
following a showdown in class age and 0.25 iDch fat thick· highest point accumulations
for premier exhibitor and
judging with the bull that to ness measurement.
The Polled . Herefo rd prem ier br eeder trophies.
fill reserve position.
A May 17, 1974, son of Oak treed's national classic took Calf champion heifer was BT
Ridge Lmpltr 49X, " Mr. oo an international flavor as Advance Hazel 2H, who
Beef" strengthened his drive this was the first time a headed Class 3, Heifers
fo r the na tional title in foreign breeder served oo the Calved Jan. 1-Feb. 14, 1976,
January when he captured panel of three judges who and is co-owned by Myr·
grand champion ship of the worked under the composite tlewood Farm, Lexington,
National Western S(ock Show system. Dr. Hilton Jacques of Ky. BT Advancer 147G, who
for the second consecutive Uruguaiana, Brazil , ap- is also owned by Laguns Del
year. Making his National praised the entries, along Monte , Cordoba , Argentina ,
Show debut, he tallied a 2.21 with Charles Boyd, Mays came from Class 22; Bulls
weight per day of age with 0.4 Uck, Ky. , and Odell Gelvin of Calved March 1·26, 1975, to
Ogeechee Farms; Fairland, take the junior champion
inch backfat.
award , while reserve calf BT
Grand champion· female Okla.
The trio chose second place U Advancer 12H stood first in
was OKC Caesars Pride-, who
was shown jointly by Wooden winner s to foll ow their Class 17, Bulls Calved Jan. 1·
Shoe Farms, Friday Harbor, champio ns . through both · Feb. 7, 1976.
Reserve junior champion
and
grand
Wash., and OK Corral Polled divisional
REG. 1449
bull
was MSU Victor 306 574,
Herefords, Auburn, Wash. champion titles, choosing S
The selection of the May 18, Gilead 115 for bull honors shown by Michigan State
1975, young lady made breed after a hotly contested race in University, East Lansing ,
history as it was the first iime Class 25, Bulls Calved April Mich.; James E. Duncan,
the grand champion femal e ~-Aug. 18, 197!. With weight New Milford, Conn. ; and
had be.en sire d by the identical ·to the grand storm Haven Farm, New
preceding year's grand champion, the May 4, 1974, Milford, CoM. He topped
cbaii1pion bull (WSF PRL roll shown by Spring Creek Class 21, Bulls Calved April4Farms, Inc., Pierpont, Ohio; May 20, 19'15 .
Justa Banner ).
Myrtlewo od joined with
She was bred by Wooden Jll&gt;yal Oak Farm, Pomeroy,
OPEN:
'J'jardes
Farms, Gibson City,
Shoe manager Tom Me· Ohio; and Overlook Farm,
Clelland, Friday Harbor, uttle Falls, N. Y., posted a m.,. to produce the calf
12 to 5 PM
Wash ., and earlier this 2.1S.pound weight per day of champion bull. He was
Myrtlewood
23X
012,
blue
season had topped Standard age with 0.4 inch backfat. A
THURSDAY FRIDAY
ri Perfection Polled Hereford aon of Gold Trophy Sire Wdrw ribbon qualifier from Clal!S
Shows at the Grand National Mise Gilead 24A, he's a 16, Bulls Calved Feb. I~
Livesto ck Exposition , consistent campaigner who March 8, 1976.
In the female show, Penz
&amp; SATURDAY
National Western and the claims thr ee SOP show
Southwestern Exposition and cham pionships among hi s Polled Hereford Ranch,
Roc hest er·. Minn ., nabbed
Fat Stock Show. The·heaviest current season laurels.
heifer in Class 6, Heifers . Five Point. • Pa stures , senior championship on PHR
Calved May 13.July 15, 1975, . Greensburg, Pa. , led FPP Mis Trojan 4219, who head!id
she weighed I ,350 pounds · Advancers Joy to reserve heifers born between Sept. 5
junior and reserve grand and Nov. 16, 1974. Following
positions after a second-place in reserve was JC Anxiety
finish in Class 6. The runner· Miss fS/, owned jointly by Jen·
CHICAGO (UP! ) - The ~ is a daughter of another
Chicago Cubs Wedn esday previous National tit list, 52nd
added six signed players to National grand champi on
their roster, leaving six still bull Advan cer 228D . She
negotiating contracts.
weighed 1,280 pounds with a
' Infielder Steve Ontiveros, weight per day of age of 2.16
obtained from the San pounds and 0.35 inch backfat.
Francisco Giants in the Bill Another tanbark veteran, the
Madlock trade, has not July 4, 1975, heifer's winnings
signed a contract hut has include two SOP re~erve
agreed verbally to terms grand championships.
offered. Still unsigned are
New American Polled
Bobby Murcer. J er ry Hereford Association Board
Morales, Joe Wallis, Bruce Chairman Vernon Sanders
Sutter, Buddy Schultz and proved to be a tough com·
Scott Thompson.
Signed contracts .were re· petitor in the showring as his
ceived from pitchers Bill Beartooth Ranch backed up
Bonham, and Steve Renko ; its grand champion bull title
Bill Buckner, Gene Clines, with calf champion female
values to $16.50
and Ivan De Jesus, who was and junior and reserve calf
part · of the Rick Monday champion bull rosettes, bull
ribbons in get-of-sire, calf get
trade.

3 PC.
COFFEE TABlE
SET
NOW

A

v
E

... r.a.scription ,.-.........Service
with a
smile ...

FOR MISSES
&amp; CHILDREN
Values

Ia $11.99

.FOR BOYS
Values Ia
$15.99

NOW

NOW

$1 TO'

5 $8

5 TO

FOR MEN
Volun ta sY1.99

H.URRY - SALE ENDS SATURDAY

BAHR CLOTHIERS
.

.

5

ONLY 2 DAYS LEFT
NOW IN PROGRESS

•Athletic Supporters
•SWeat Pants

"I'm going to announce
here for the Youngstown·
Warren area fans that next
year will be my last year in
the National Football
League.
"There are a couple of
things that I would like to
acco mplish," Warfield
added , "and I think one more
year in the National Football
League will enable me to
accomplish those things."
Warfield, a former Warren
Harding High School and
Ohio State University star,
was here to speak before. a
Parent:reachers Association
meeting at
suburban
Austintown Fitch High
School.

Royal Oak owners, Mr. and· Mrs. Horace Karr ; Overlook manager Don
Kerr; Over look owners Dee and Stu"Billing; Mrs. Howard Thomsen ; Spring
Creek owner Howard Thomsen; National Polled Hereford Queen Cody
Shain, Torrington, Wyo.; Vernon sanders, newly-elected APHA board •
chairman, Columbus, Mont. ; Spring Creek !ann manager Stan Romberg;
Spring Creek general manager Blair Surber; and Lloyd Clarkson , retiring
APHA board chairman, Winfoeld, Kan.

Top billing ·shared at 54th
show
National Polled HePeford
.

Bouie getting sharper

ShOI1s

~

rest of the way.
Tommy Harris scored 16
points to pace Bowling Green,
followed by Ron llammye
with 14 and Rosie Barnes with
12.
..
Both Kent and Bowling Green are now S-15 overall 1".1.•
and 4-8 in the MAC.
%1
In other games Wednesday ·
night, it was John Carroll 74
Case Western Reserve l)j;
Shawnee State 80 Wilberforce
76; Wright State 93 Akron 79;
Xavier 67 Northern Kentuc)&lt;y
65 and Youngstown State 90
Cleveland State 65.
In tonight's action, Ohio
State goes for its second .(!1 •
straigh) Big Ten win as the
Buckeyes host Northwestern, t'
a team they heat by 12 points '' ·
at Evanston, Ill., ear-lier in
the season.
Cincinnati, boasting a 2{)..4
'
.
".:.: . ~-&gt;4!'~~'----~
record, is at Biscayne (Fla .)
KARRS SHOW RESERVE CHAMPjON - The Reserve grand champion
for the first of two games in
bull at the 54th National Polled Hereford Show held Feb. 1:;.18 m Jackson,
the Sunshine State, while
Miss., was S GUead 115, exhibited by Spring Creek Farms, Inc., Pierpont,
rounding out the rather sllm
Ohio; Royal Oak Far.ms, Pomeroy, Ohio, and Ove~look Farm, Little Falls,
schedule
tonight
is
N. Y. Pictured with the bull are (from left), Ornlle K. Sweet, Amencan
Steubenville at Ashland,
Polled Hereford Assn. president ; judges Dr. Hilton Ja&lt;;ques, Uruguaiana,
Defiance at Tri-State (Ky.)
Brazil; Charles Boyd, Mays Lick, Ky., and Odell Gelvin, Fairland, Okla .;
and W &amp; J (Pa.) at Hiram.

Southern farmers too

DRESS SHOES -

•Converse ~I Star

points for a 7().jj2 lead. BG
never got closer than slx the

'

,
1
h
e
p
NHL
• l ed
apprec1a

DRESS SHOES
SJOO

on Western 's Mike Reardon
half.
Reardon scored 18 of his
game high 22 points ·in the
first half, pacing the Broncos
to a 42·41 intermission
margin.
Miami took the lead for
good at 57..16 on a jumper by
Aldridge with 6:25 to play and
pulled away in the closing
minutes as Western went
cold .
"Randy Ayers sat on Rear·
doli in the second half," said
Miami coach Darrell Hedric.
"Ayers does the job over and
over again. He stopped Reardon and took control at the
end of the game in our four·
corner offense."
Hedric also praised the
work of Newman on
Western's 6-8 Tom Cutter,
who scored only·two points, 11
below his average.
At Kent, Burrell l\lcGhee
scored 26 points as Kent State ·
ended a nine-game losing
streak to Bowling Green with
a 76-88 MAC win over the
Falcons.
McGhee broke a 62-all tie
with a jumper and the Golden
Flashes ran off six more

By GREG AIELLO
The
Tar
Hee ls'
UP! Sports Writer
performance left North
Quietly, unnoticed by just Carolina State Coach Norm
about everybody; Syracuse Sloan dumbfounded.
has · built one of the best
''I don•t have an
records in the nation and explanation for anything,"
slowly risen in the national Sloan said. "It was about the
rankings and one of the worst defeat we've had since
biggest reaaons is a 6-foot·ll I've been at State . We were
S O'Wfr~an named Roosevelt Ciimpletely dominated and
. ·
Bowe.
embarrassed."
Niagara Coach Dan Raskin
Phil Ford scored 24 points
got his first look at Syracuse while Walter Davis and Mike
· and Bouie Wednesday night
as they beat Niagara, 106-82.
He was doubly impressed.
"He was the dominating
RICHFIELD, Ohio (UPI ) player of the game," the
- The Cleveland Barons, fir~tyear coach said. "Bouie
their team retrieved from may be the best player ever
financial ruin only hours to come out of Syracuse, even
before, gave it li good shot though he's only a freshffian
Wednesday night before now.''
dropping a 5·3 decision to the
Bouie scored 16 points,
RACINE
Students of
Buffalo Sabres.
grabbed seven rebounds and Southern Hi gh School
"When you hit the lee, those blocked four shots as the enrolled in vocational
problems should be at the o_rangemen. won their :!?nd agriculture pursu e
lBck of your mind," said VIctory against three dele~ts. · significant fa rmin g
defenseman Len Frig, "but
N1agara scored the f1rst ~ratioos in addition to their
we must of given them three two points, butSyrac~ got regular classroom work .
goals" through sloppy play. the next 17, mcluding rune by
The 52 students enrolled in
"But it's cleared up now toward Dale· Shackelford, to vocational agriculture have
and I think we are going to put the game out of (each selecled a total of 120 farm
oome aroJD1d, We can put our ea~ly.
projects for the coming year
full 100 per cent into hockey
w~ w~nted to get 0~ including 14 steers for the
now and not worry if should runmng game_ going.'
fair ; eight market hog
we sell our homes."
Syra"l;l~e Coach J1I11 Boehe1Il1 jX'ojects; five market Iamb
In a brief news conference s&amp;d. 'f"e feel the running jX'ojects; two sheep breeding
before the ga me, player game ~. the key to our Jl'Ojects; a breeding hog
representative Bob Stewart success. .
.
project ; two ·dairy herd
and NHL Vice President Don
Guard Jmuny Williams led management proj ~ts and
Ruck echoed Frig's hope Syracuse with 18 pomts and two work·experience projects
discussing an announcement S~ackelford added 14 . 00 a dairy farm.
from New York that the Nlllgara forward Vern Allen
The students will also raise
league, the NHL Players topiJe&lt;! all scorers with 23.
!4,000 tomatoes, nine acres of
Association and principal
In ~he only other game oots, 40 acres of field corn, 1.5
owner Mel Swig were con· lnvolvmg a ~p team, No. 8 acres of sweet corn, one to
tributlng $1.3 million in order North Carolina sank 62 .per two acres &lt;i potatoes and will
for the team to finish the cent of its shots from the field maintain pasture and
811d routed North Carolina meadows. Slx youths will
season.
State, 90-73.
raise a garden while six
others plan to get experience
by working in tomatoes in
li!tart. In addition, students

.Barons

1,......,:,..

, u•amps uq;u.a
RACINE - T)le Racine
Baseball Association will settling in
.meet at 7:30 p,m. Monday at

the Racine Elementary
School.
New uniforms have been
ordered and, hopefully, wlll
be on hand for the Monday
meeling so that they can be
insp !Cted by the public .
There remains.$600 needed to
pay for the new uniforms and
those who have pledged
donations or wish to donate
oo the uniforms should give
SATURDAY {Marchl)
Alumni at Wahama {does not their contributions to Ubby
count on regular season Fisher, president; Don
record)
Beeg le, vice president;
Lillian
Weese, secretary·
March7
Nelsonvllle·York at Logan treasurer, or Lucille Diehl,
business manager.
Games to be rescheduled
Money-making projects
· TRI.VALLEY
will
be discussed at Monday's
Alexander at Warren
Olhers
meeting . The association is
Kyger ~reek at Alexander looking forward to the
AleXllnder a! Trimble
cooperation ri all parents,
Miller at Nels .. York
coaches and other persons
Nels. -York at Miller
Kyger Creek at Buffalo
interested in the children's
baseball program this
Games canceled
summer.
All are urged to
Kyger Creek at Hannan
attend
Monday
night's
Trimble at Columbus St.
meeting,
Charles

Toledo is showing strength

was still one of the biggest
crowds in golf history.
Nicklaus' 7! was 11 strokes
higher than the record 63 be
shot
In
the
same
circumstances a year ago,
but he said his game was at a
stage where he feels it could
all fall into shape quickly.
Many of the winners in the
tour's first seven events are
on hand, although two-tlme
winner Bruce Lietzke Is
taking the week off along with
Phoenix Open winner Jerry
Pate.
But Tom Watson, who won
back~o-back at the Crosby
and San Diego, is here along
with Rik Massengale, the
winner of the Bob Hope
Desert · Classic, and Tom
Purtzer, who won the Glen
Campbell-Los Angeles ~n
last week. ·
Making his first start of the
year is J.,jle Trevino '.• who has
been ouf"wlth back surgery
since Nov. 22. Trevino, how·
. ever, says he still is trying to
play his way back into shape
and isn't expected to he a
threat here.

· Eastern grade
·for two years
team goes to
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Re·
serve
outfielder-pinch hitter
B~pre tourney.

44.1

- 16" Bar
- Automatic or

NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY

6!.7
65.9

THURSOAY
SVAC

PHONE

Open r a.m. . , p.m. Weekda.vs. t.s Sat.
Phone 992.J7tl

West
Ca i -St Bar b 70 Fre sno St . 61
Cairbll Mont . 81 E . M on.f .
Chico St ." 63 Rumboldt St . 62
Co lorado 58 Kansas 49
·Seattle Pac: 75 Cent wash . ~9

TRI.VALLEY CONFERENCE SCORING
PLAYER-TEAM
FG FT Pis IGl Avg. 54
Joe Butcher- Fed. Hocking
. 92 54 238 {10) 23.8 Cle St . l gn~ tius ·94 C le Lin Dennis Ward- Warren
73 43 189 {8) 23.6 co ln -West 64
At Easllake North
Mike Patterson-VInton County
72 47 191 {9 } 21 .2
i ffe 77 Brush 70
Mike Adams-Warren
69 26 1&lt;14 (B ) 20.5 Wickl
71 West Geau·ga 65
Mark Sullivan- Nels. -York ·
57 20 134 {·7) 19.1 Hudson
At Lorain Admiral King
DaveSchultz- Nels .. York ·
51 ·15 117 {7} 16.7 . Stn;mg svil!e 60 M idv iew 59
At Cle South
John Ayers- Belpre
54 20 128 (9) 14.2
evelan d Heights 52 Cle
Ronnie Russell-Fed. Hocking
56 17 129 (10) 12.9 Cl
John F . Kenned v .49
Mike Turrii i- Aiexander
38 14 90 (7) 12.9
At Lorain Admiral King
Dave Walla ce- VInton County
44 28 111 {9) 12 .3 Rocky River 77 Avon Lake 63

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

.

148 43 339
97 54 248

~-··

Aim a 90 Hope 65
Bened c tne 90 Washburn 71
· Ca l vi n 93 Grnd Va l St . Ql ·
,E . Mich . 75 N . Ill 10
Ill. Wslyn 76 Mlli Jo;:n 61 ·
Iowa St . 95 Missouri 86
Kalamazoo 78 Albion 65
Kansas St . 68 Okl ahoma 55
(Gl Avg. Kent St . 76 Bwln g Gr11 68
0 . 76 W. Mich . 66
{16) 24.3 Miami
Notre Dame Ill LoYola 111.86
{14} 23 .3 Oakland 71 Wayne St . 67
{1 8} 21.7 Toledo 69 Cent M ic higan 61
St . 93 Akron 79
{16} 21.2 Wright
Xavier 0 . 67 N. Kentucky 65 ·
{12 } 20.7
Yngstwn St . 90 Cleve St . 65
{Ill 20.1
Southwes t
Ark . St . 85 SE Mo. 77
{17} 19.2
t Ark . eo" Ouac h·ita 59
{15 } 18.6 Cen
H e n d ri:~~: 75 Ar k. Te ch 73'
{16} 18.4 Okl a . St . 62 Nebraska 60 .

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO ATHLETIC LEAGUE SCORING
PLAYER- TEAM
FG FT Pis {G) Avg.
Mike McBroo m- Logan
108 43 259 {14} 18.!
Ron Hudson- Wellston
100 41 241 {14) 17 .2
Robert Holsinger- Waverly
83 43 209 {13) 16.1
Brian Hawk- Logan
89 42 220 {14) 15.7
Chuc k Thompson- Waverly
81 36 191i {13) 15.2
Dean Royal- Ironton
89 29 197 {14} 14.1
Steve Randolph-Meigs
59 62 180 {13} 13.9
Alan Dodson- Meigs
74 26 174 {13) 13.4
Tom Dorsey- Jackson
63 39 165 {13) 12.7

II&amp;R BLOCit
618 EAST MAIN

I

Area cage scoring

Mike Adams- Warren

8~

TeJTiple 78 P ittsburgh 48
Ph·ila Tex 100 King's Pa . 66
Union-NY 67 Bnghmtn St . 54
W'mnstr Pa 44 Gr ove Ct y 40
West Ches ter 76 Lehigh 58
Will ia ms 93 Hartford 89
York NY 80 Me.dgar l;v~rs 5(1
SOuth
Appy 70 W. Carolina 63
Centre 81 Transy lvan ia 69
Clemson 67 Duke 63
E . Carolina 76 Mercer 70
Grdnr Webb 85 Lim es tone 61
Grnsboro Coli 85 NC Wslyn 73
J acksnvl 70 Florida St . 64
Methodist 83 Aver ett 44
.NC-Ashevi lle 10 Presby 59
NC-Wil rt) 75 Ga . Southern 63
No . Car . 90 N.C. St . 73
NC-Grn sbr o 75 Va . Wes lyn 77
No . Tel( as 107 Cen tenary 1011
So. Car , 86 s. Flor ida 63
Tenn -Ch att 101 Tenn . St . 90
va. Tech 71 Virgini.! 61
Va . C'wealth 85 S. Ala . 70

li-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Feb. 24, 1977

•

A

Need a prtscription filled? We will fill

v

any prescription quickly and accurately.

BROKEN SIZES

Dutton Drug Store
SHOPPE
· 175 N. Stcond $1.
Middleport, 0.

5

Middleport

122 N. 2nd Ave.

992·3106

THE SHOE BOX
MI'*'£PORT, 0.

-E
•

�7- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 24, 1977

Sorority installs officer

~:~~'*~::::::::~~=:=:::~::::::::~;:;:::;::~::::~:;:::::.;:::~:::::

II

Generation Rap
By Helen and

Sue

Janet Pickens was ins~
as vice president at the Tuesday night llleet.ing of the Xi
Gamma Mu Chapter of Bel!!
Sigma Phi Sorority held at
the home of Mrs. Ruth Riffle.
Mrs. Susan Baer presided
at the meeting with Mrs. Donna Nease, service chairman,
reminding member! to take
their redeemable bottle cap~
to the next meeting.
Mrs. C!lrol McCullough,
ways and means cllainnan,
discussed advertising for the
Meigs County Fair premium
She said the advertisements
would have to be in by the last
of March and asked for
volwtteers to assist the ways
and means committee secure
theads. ·
The cultural report was
given by Mrs. . Carolyn
Grueser on the topic, "Practical Arts." Mrs. Grueser
showed various kits and han·
dicraft materials which can
.be· bought to design. These,
she said, can not only niake
the home beautiful, 'but

i::::

Bout'! ·

Dear Rap :
1101 ~t flrat when I was 12, and now at 15, I have a
cblld ol two and am ~nt again.
·
I feel great love lor ~fathers of both chlldren and they
told me they love me too. (laee them both.)
MCIIII kicked me OUI when llhe heard about my second and I
hiVe been Uvin&amp; with my 18-year-old sister. But she can't
IIford tbree of us.
MCIIII WIU oaly lake me back If I get child support money
frCIIII the faille!'. '!bey doo't have any, and their parents don't
lmowwhatlagoing m. What can I do? -DESPERATE

Desperate:

It's tbne the boys' parents knew what ls going on! And
atopped lt.
We can't cifer much bope for .Upport money from the
femiiJee of two dllferent fathen (how could you prove
pmotace If they decided ID figbt the cases?), but you can
qualify fer Aid to Dependent Ollldren through your. local
welfare ~ce.
Or you ~ oonalder giving the baby (or babies) up for
adoption. At 15, are you ready for twl)otlme motherhood? -

HElEN

.

+++

A Word Frolli Sue:
And for heaVI!n's llllke, give ywrself, your mother, Your
slater and the boys a break and equip yourself ,.(th fool.proof
IU1h conll'ol (if you insist m remaining semally active) .

+++

•

Rap:
I'm really cmcemed about my two couslna, 9 and 6. Their
mother Ia m welfare. She smokei pot, dates punks and I think
she may be a prOIIItute. SomeUmes she doesn't get in untu 4
a.m. and my older cousin stays all alone with her sister. The&amp;year-old isn't well. ~ bas bad headaches and 1s very nervous.
'lbelr father Uvea in another state and took the girls to his
home for a while. They were getting alolig great, liked their
ne.wschool and their Dad, but my aunt went and brought them
back.
Mcm and I are terribly worried and so is my wtcle (the
girls' father) but we aU live in.djfferent states and don't know
what to do. - VERY WORRIED COUSIN

FLAG PRE;SENTATION- Pam Powen and Miss
Erma Smith, Americanism ~n for the Jwtlor and
Senior American Legion Auxillary of Drew Webster Post
39, presented a flag to Mrs. Patty Woodyard, leader of

Americanism month is observed ·

Americanism month was
obaerved at Tuesday night's
meeting of the American
Le'gion Auxiliary of Drew
Webster Post 39 with the
presentation of the Hag to a
girl scout troop and a guest
speaker.
Using ''Americanism, as
his topic, Joe Struble spoke to
the group on the beginning of
a new era foilowing · a
Coualn :
bicentennial year celebrated
If your wtcle can prove bla wife unfit, he'll be given with splendor and elaborate
CUJtody of the chUdren, but it may be a long, expensive, and · display. He reviewed the
bitter fight.
American Legion Auxiliary
· Polllllbly a famUy c&lt;nclave niight convince ber to let them preamble to the constitution
go without a court battle. - HELEN
'
and commented on the
+++
phrase "for God and cowt· l
Coualn:
lry." Struble also talked 1
Tbla especially If yOW' wtcle hires a local lawyer who may about the signers of the
throw a scare Iilio tile !lellnquent mother.
Declaration of Independence
Since the kids seem to -~ cramping her style, she ~~light and noted that many of those
. give tbem up with only token resistance. It's worth a 1ry. great men who gave so much
SUE
are among the forgotten today.
An outward devotion
· creates a better America,

Polly's Pointers
Cover coat hangers
with braided yam

)

DEAR POLLY - 'I have
been trying in vain to find
someone who could give me
directions for · covering
regular wire coat liangers
with yarn. The type I have in
mind looks like braiding, and
no crochet hook is used. I
would appreciate ~ring
from anyone who knows this
method, ·R.A.D.
DEAR' R.A.D. - The only
way I know is to do a single
crochet stitch arowtd the
wire hanger, but I am sure
some reader will ·be able to
tell us how to braid them. POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - I would
like to add my trick for hang·
ing tapestries. Buy an inexpensive cafe curtain rod and
attach to the wall with a
brace in the middle. The
brackets and the brace add to
the attractiveness. Attach
cafe ·curtain rings to the
tapeslry and slip on the rod.
You'll have a lovely finished
product that is easy to take
down for cleaning, etc. MRS.H.F.R
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is with the many products in the stores that do not
list the calories. The boxes
holding the instant soup pnr
d!!cl used to list the them, but
I can no longer find them
listed. Many people use this
· soup to lower their caloric in·take and would like to see
how many calories are in the
d!Herent kinds and compare
thein. -LOUISE.
DEAR POLLY - After I
empty my baby's diaper pall
to waah the dtspers, I fill it
witb water so it is about
three-fourths full. Then I
clean lbe pail with toilet bowl
.cryllals. This gets tile pail
really clean and deodorizes it
at the same time. •.
THERESA
DEAR POLLY- We have
several relatives who travel
qui!A! a bit so consequently we
receive many lovely
postcards from faraway
(llaces. on various. occasions
when we wish to give u gift to
these relatives, we have
made lovely book-ends using
poatcarda they have sent us.
We uaed wood blocb of the
proper siJe and lhape, glued
the canis on after they were
cut to fit and when dry
decoupaaed thein. They were
JWch appreciated as memenloel ol tbelr trip or trips. -

MRS.L.

are lost on the highway. You
may get lucky and get yourS
back, if you paint your name
and address or phone number
inside have done that and did
have one returned s8metime
ago.-C.C.
·
DEAR POLLY- I added
pockets to the spreads for the
top bunks on .my children's
bunk beds. They are very
handy for holding bedroom
slippers, Utile dolls, facial
tissues, etc. The children love
them. (Polly's note - Such
pockets could be as large as
desired and hang over the
side of the bunk.) - MRS.
H.H.M.
Polly will send you one of
her " peachy" thank-you
cards, ideal for framing or
placing in your family scrapbook, if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her colwnn. Write Polly's
Pointers in care of this
newspaper.

· Pomeroy Junior Girl Scout Troop 1180, and two of the
scouts, Carolyn Casto and Tammy Capehart, aU pictured
left to right, in ceremonies conducted Tuesday night at the
American Legion hlill in Pomeroy.

Struble said, in commenting
about his association with
foreign students and their
response to kindnesses. He
c'Oncluded his talk by calling.
for higher . goal for young
Americans, for a rekindled
devotion and lor a rededication to GOd and country.
Struble was presented with
a monetary gift by Miss Erma Smith, Americanism
chairman, on behalf of the
wtit. Miss Smith and Miss
Pam Powers, junior
Americanism chairman, had
charge of the program. Aflag
was presented to Jwtior Girl
Seoul Troop 1180 of Pomeroy.
Mrs. Catherine Welsh was
at the piano for group singing
of "America." Readings in·
eluded "Prayer of George
Washington," Paula Kloes;

Gladys Hayman. Mrs. Grace
Prall, president, was assisted
in this by Mrs. PhUiip
Meinhart, unit chaplain.
Duririg the business
meetiog reports were given
and conunwtications read
from the family ol Mrs. Mry·
tie Walker for the memorial
to the Child Welfare Fowtda·
lion and also for a contribution to the Marie Moore Fund
of the Department of Ohio.
Aletter was read from Unit
16 asking support lor Mrs.
John Kilgore as department
treasurer. Two commwtity
service reports were
acknowledged by the district
conunwtity service chairman.. Mrs. Pratt thanked
those ·who assisted in the
de&lt;.'OI'ations for the dinner
recently served by the post.
''Ainericani.sm,'' Anna Wiles,
Sympathy cards were signand ' "The Flag Speaks" ed for Jean Wright whose
fatherin-law recently died,
Denise MarshalL
Theeliarter was draped for andffor Lori Wood who has
a deceased member, Mr~. been ill.

Clowns lead restaurant tour
Clowns led the way for a
tour of Cowttry Cousins
restaurant in Pomeroy taken
Tuesday night by the Brownie
Girl Scout Troop 1120 of
Syracuse.
The girls were shown 'the
food preparation and storage
areas and lor their · supper
which followed prepared
their own drinks al the fountain in cartoon glasses.
Suckers and balloons were

,

·
t the
.
..
·
g1ven as favors o
scouts Kathy P1ckens Veronica
by the mana~eme~t who also Provo, Reg in~ Nance,
gave ~ speclal .pnce on the Juanita Ginther, Paula
sandwiches, drinks and 1ce ' Winebrenner' Jill . Nease·'
te
f th
cream
Sherry
Sisson ' Kim Adams • •
I thor · e· youngs rs.J
·
n e group w~re ane Tracy . Hubbard and Alisha
Jett, Jane Imboden; Darla Van Meter. Mothers acLambert An · D · ea 1
H dri ks
CavlS, H ~ companying the scouts were
en c ,
ogar, e1
Mrs. Kathy Baldwin, Mrs.
Cobb, Karen Cook, Lori Carol Adams, Mrs. Joyce
Ruush • Becky Roush • Wendy s·ISSOn, Mrs. J anet Pic.ens,
,.
F'¥, Shelly Wolfe,. Wen~y Mrs. Judy Roush and Mrs.
Tnplett Mary jlaldwtn: . Christi R h
•
•
ous ·

J:::

Annual PAC membership
.

Paint
the town

FRENCH
...
.......
·····
• • • to,.

r-.:::=::~----~:

MEAT.

Mrs. Epling said the
membership campaign will
continue. for one month,
closing on Thursday, March
24, followed on Sunday af·
ternoon, March Z1, by a tea
from 2 until 4 p.m.' honoring
all members at Riverby.
Featured at this evening's
ll'mual meetingolthe French
Art Colony at Oscar's will be
Kezla Vanmeter Sproat, Ph.
D. and Bronwynn Hopton,
presenting a program of
dramatic readings and
· d I s c us sI o n c a II e d ,
''Shakespeare on Women."
Dr. Sproat, Mrs. Hopton
ll'ld Mrs. Epling will be
guesta on Joanne Jaeger's
A.M. Show on Channel 3 li1
Huntington tomorrow
· morning at 9 o'clock.

BROTIIER D!F.'I

Mon., Tues., Weclo~ S.t.-t':JOIII 5:00 .
THURSDAY TIL 12111100N

FINAL CLEARANCE
New Spring Shoes Arriving

Dai~

MARGUERITE'S SHOES

_____

.,!

FRIDAY UrtTIL
8 PM ·
'

MASON FURNITURE
Muon,W. Ya.

Social
Calendar

You can
TRUST our ( PHARMACISTS J

~~~ol~f~~vale~~:~~~

note was also read from the
Arcadia Nursing Home. Mrs.
Do H
be shi
1
ch~irm':'"' r~e::;.t r 1
members t~ date. P
Thearch meemgw1
t·
·11 be
1
!at'
·
il
d
f
""
one
1on, c1v ee.~e
und community service Mrs
E 1 p ell d M ·M ·
rnes ow an rs arjorie Goett Will be hostesses
for the March meeting ·
M G ld Wild.
th
rs. as era
served
sergeant atermu
anns
. d the 1 be·
an
co or arers were
Mrs. Knapp and Mrs. Mar·
jorie Goett.
Preceding the meeting a
dinner was served by Mrs.
Paul Casci, Mrs. Edith Sauer,
and Mrs. Davi&lt;l Cumings. ·

seeuuoon.

!J

'J!

....

SWISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy
Ktnnolfl McCullough, R. Pll. Cllarles RIH'-, R. Pb.'
Ron11d Honnl,., R. Pll.
Mon. tnru Sol. I:OGi.m.to I p.m.

Sundayl0:30iot2:301nd51o9p m

PRESCRIPTIONS
· Friendly Sorvic1

Ua,E, MAIJ~ ._,lli!JA_toiU9.

•

PH: 992_2155

POI!r\EROY..Q.

~--tJI'&lt;;

·~·-

e/DIWAL.T
Mr. Friendlv

1o" DELuxE
POWER SHOP

No. 77J.4

Freeman and daughter ,
Peggy of ChapmanviUe, W.
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Bernard
Hunter and chlldren, Rita,
Linda and Kenneth,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Temple and son, Jerry,
Jr., Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Morrow and Dawana
of Columbus; Mrs. WUma
Gilkey and son, Joe, Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Hunter, Roger
Hunter, Brynn Sutphin, and
Carl White all of Cheshire.

THURSIJAV
THE LOY ALMEN and
Women's Class Middleport
IJlurch of Christ, Thursday
1:30 p.m. at church.
IUVERVIEW Garden Club
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Cla remont
Harris with Mrs. Herman
Grossni ckl e as co-hostess.
The program topic Is successful gardening and an
. auction will he held.
MEIGS Christian Women 's
~'ell&amp;wship to be held at the
Brad! ord Church of CIJrist
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. In·
stallation of officers.
SYRACUSE Cu b Scout
Pack 242, blue and gold
banquet, Thursday, 6:30p.m.
at the Syracuse Elementary
School.
''
FRIDAY
.CHURCH Women United of
Meigs Cou nty planning
session lor Wprld Day of
Prayer, Friday, 1:30 p.m. at
• !lacnd
Heart Church. All key
women urgc'd to attend.
UNITED MINE Workers
Supporters club meeting 10
a.m. Friday at Eagle' s·hall in
Pomeroy. Wi ves of all
workers ut MeiE s I, 2 and 3
wclcin nc to attend.
•
.
SATURDAY
~ SOUP AND Bake Sale
!laturday at the Syracuse
Presbyterian· Church annex
beginning at 11 a.m. Ifring
.own containers for carryout.
SPAGHETTI Dinner
Saturdav from 5:30 to 7:30
.p.m. at· Middleport Masonic
::""''emple sponsored by Meigs
•· Chapter, Order of DeMolay.
: , Tickets are $1.50 each and
: : may be purch a~d from any
: : DeMolay member or pur: : chased at th e door.
• • THE GOOD News Trio will
be at the New Haven United
. : Methodist Church Saturday
: : at 7:30 p.m. Public invited.

"

~e

with

another.~'

Bill Stroud, teacher at the
· Aries School In New York,
will be the workshop leader.
He received intensive
In
personal
training
development, using the Arlca
method, under the direction
of Arica's fowtder Oscar
SUSAN STONE

Family attends

RACINE - Bobby Ord,
superintendent of Southern
local School District, announced today Saturday
classes will he discontinued
in tbe district.
Any other.Saturday classes

will depend on the Ohio
Central Assembly Ord said.
He Indicated that there was a
strong sentiment In the Ohio
General Assembly to con·
sider giving more hazaradous
weather days.

Rodlol arm sow features big,
2 HP motor and hondy on-top,
up·front controls. Blade cuts a
full 3" deep. Quick-stopping

monual broke.

.

.""

CEMENT BLOCK

CO~

THE DEPARTMENT STORE OF
.
..
BUILDING SINCE 1.915

cabinet

'DON'T WAIT •••
INSURE
YOUR
HOME
AND ITS
CONTENTS NOW!
Insure your home and belongings
with our special policy for homeowners or apartment renters. You
will be Insured for fire, theft and other
damages to your house, your furniture and your personal property.
Don't walt until It's too late. Call today.
SEE US ABOUT A:

UGHTNING ROD POLICY
State Auto Mutua I • Western Reserve

Davis Insurance Service
114 Court St.

Phone 992-5120

Pomeroy, Ohio

.

\

p~ident of

Announcing the·new

O..ester F.D.
CHESTER - Marvin
Taylor has been elected
president of the Chester Fire
Department for 1977.
Other officers elected in the
recent meeting were Pearl
Edwards, vice president ;
Kirk Chevalier, Be!!retary;
Russ Well, · assista.nt
!lecretary; John Wickham,
treasurer ; Ross Cleland,
inief ; Harold Newell, first
m~slstant chief; Roy Christy,
second assistant chief; Larry
Cleland, ca ptain ; Pearl
Edward'! first Lt.; Marvin
Taylor, second Lt.; Hobart
Newell, third Lt., and Bob
Wood, fourth Lt.
Training officer Is Bruce
Myers. In 1!116 the depart·
ment made 19 runs, logged
losses tllat totaled $33,700 and ·
took out 12 men per call who
spent 200 man hours.

...

"
,,
""
"' I

-- --+''- -----

"' I

--1~----l

""

""" '

""

NBA standings
By United Press International

Eastern Conference
Atlai'ltlc Division

1977

---

"'" uel•OO

GB

'29

29 .500

7

NY Knicks

27 ·ll .466

9

Buffalo

23 35 .397 13

NY N~t S
19 40 .322 11112
. ··; central Division
washington

W. l . Pd. GB
34 2-4 .586 -

San AntoniO
Cleveland

J2
30
25
23

·

26 .552 2
26 .536 ,3
33 .431 9
36 .390 1PI'

SNI•,..

f 934

PI,.._........,. 1 -' -· · - - - - » 2 0.53 00!

~0 "' J~•• ! 11116 I'·', Lo&gt;!f" 1·0 • l1

' ACCOUNT t«l

POMEROY VILLAGE
VILLAGE CLERK
POMEROY, OHIO

''

591

451"

Midwest Division
W. L Pet.

GB

~: i~ :;~

·93'12

g:rr~ft

Kansas City

JO 30 .500

Indiana

27 33 .450 12

Chicago

25 34 .424 ll'h

LOS Angeles
Portland
Golden State

Add power sttering and
Cruise-0-Matic ••.' $150 off*

36 22 .621

37 24 .607
32 27 .542

"All Pfa reductions are bued on tUwnted
retail prices lor teptlrlle options com~ to
specia l DICkage orlcea, Truck shown with whitt
siPewalls(U0.70extra)andrearbumpertS&amp;4.00
extra). See your Ford O.attr now.

1h
4'h

31 30 .508 61/:o .
Phoenht:
26, 32 .AA8 10
Wednesday's Results

NY Nets 91 Oenver 88.
New Orleens 106 Milw.!ukee 96
Washington 109 tndl&amp;ne 101

......

Jut! about everybody w11nts theae work savers
In his pickup. Get them in a Ford Explorer and
yoUr discount grows to 1150.

Then, add air conditioning
and tinted glass for $200 off*

w. L- Pet. oe

'·"'

..-

•o yo"'

I

Milwaukee
20 A3 .317 201.1:1
Pacific Olwision

Seattle

• ••

The 1977 Exolorer comes

chOice of pickup models- and they all look great
Special metallic paint with bodyside and hood
stripea. Uniaoo color·keyed trim Items im;luding
carpeting and seat belts.Mag·atyle wheel covers.
special mirrors. motd i~a and front bumper pro-tection -at aS100diacount ~ It's onebeautllul buy!

31 25 .554 . 2

,,""

.· II"
.",
,,
,,.,"
.... ,
.,

One beautiful buy! The truck and
features you want-up to $200 off!

. ··. Western Conference

nau..- a... .... " - ~"""11

W. L. Pet .
35 21 .625

Philadelphia
Boston

New Orleans
Attantll

'

"li

POMEROY ·

.

Houston

"

""""".

to name new

Oasses ended on Saturday

.,..

-

Conservatives

others in connection with an
abortive Chrls-{;raft attempt
to acquire control of Piper
Aircraft.
- Ruled 8 to I that the
Kansas Delawares were not
uncol\i!titutionally excluded
from diStribution of .congl'ell:' 1
sionally authorized funds
pursuant to an Indian Claims I
Conunission award for a
federal breach of an J854
treaty with the Tribe.
·- Rejected a request by
F1orida and Texas to include
in a dispute with the federal ·
government over control of
foreign fishing the question of
whether the states may exer·
else control within the threemile limit.

Taylor named

Mr. and Mrs. John Fultz ·
were in Athens Tuesday
evening lor a performance by
tile Ohio University Sym·
rnony Orchestra of which
their son, Marc is a-member.
The orchestra, wtder the
dlrectloo of guest conductor.
Eduardo Rahn, conductor of
the Maracaibo Symphony
Orchestra of Venezuelli,
presented ·"Dances of
Galanta" by Kodaly ;
"Concerto in D Minor lor
Plano and Orchestra" by J. S.
Bach and "Symphony No. 21n
C Major" by Robert
Schumann.
Marc, a freshman, 1s also a
member of the symphonic
band and was a member of
the "pit ordlesb'a" for a
recent musical, "Showboat"
at Memorial Auditorium .
Marc's specialty is the ·
trumpet.

••
"
••

REGULAR 329.95

variances in individual cases

Justice Lewis Powell did
not participate.
According to the Natural
. Resources Defense Council,
which acted as a "friend of
th e court," Z1 states have had
their permit programs
approved.
Companies which sued
EPA are E.!. du Pont de
Nemours &amp; Co., Olin Corp.,
FMC Corp ., American
Cyanamid Co., Monsanto Co.,
Dow Chemical Co., Allie&lt;!
Chemical Corp. and Hercules
Inc.
In other actions the court:
-Overturned a $36 mUlion
damage judgment in favor of
Chris~aft !ndusties against
Bangor Punta Corp . and

at the 1977 stage. Elimination
of all discharges is scheduled
for 1985.
In an opinion by Justice
John Paul Stevens, the court
oa~d the language o£ U•e M2
amendments to the Water
Pollution Act clearly
authorize EPA to set by
regulation precise numerical
limits lor pollutants for
various classes of plants.
This is true ,for both the 1977
and the 1985 limits, he said.
He cited the legislative
history of the act, the attitude
of EPA and "scholarly
opinions written by ·some of
our fine st judges." ,
Stevens
said
the
~shadow
companies' view Of the law
would require EPA "to give
individual
consideration to
WASHINGTON (UP!) Ichazo . Stroud formerly
the
circumstances
of each o£
Caucus will
taught at Esalen Institute in The Conservative
the more than 42,000
11
name
a
shadow
cabinet"
California.
dischargers whohave applied
Ichazo founded the Arica Thursday- a body of 12 for permits."
members
to
chall
enge
scl)ool, naming It after a town
Stevens also found no va riin Chile where his method "objectionable politics" of ances are permitted for
the
Carter
administration.
was developed during an
Gov. Meldrim Thomson, R- standards set lor plants to be
intensive workshop involving
N.H.,
wiD present the cabinet built in the future.
some 50 people. Ichazo,
The companies also argued
at
a
news
conference called
describing the method used in.
that the standards could be
by
the
200,000
member
an Arlca workshop, ex·
challenged in U.S. district
plained, "CAlly by balancing Conservative group .
"The Citizens cabinet will courts. But Stevens said the
body and mind, so that their
a
watchdog 4th U.S. Circuit Court of
aims and aspirations are in perform
in a Appeals, with which he
function
,"
he
said
harmony rather than in
largely agreed, had authority
contradiction, can we have a statement. "It will challenge to hear the case.
the objectionable policies ·of
complete life."
the
Carter administration ...
Workshop planners say ,
and
will define the
that no special skills are
conservative
vi;;ion of Ameri·
necessary for the weekend
ca's
futW"e.
n
experience and that any
OAKLAND (UP! )
State Rep. U.uis Jenkins, a
student or adult is Invited to
Golden
State Warriors
Louisia na Democrat, has
participate.
forward
Dwight
Davis was
The workshop offers one been. named secretary of the placed on the injured reserve
hour of college credit at Rio cabinet. Jenkins said the · list Wednesday and the NBA
will
include
Grande College-&lt;:ommunity cabinet
club signed free agent Larry
nationally
known
economists,
College for a fee of $25. Meals
McNeill, who played three
aruL!odging are available on former high ranking state seasons with the Kansas City
campus lor a slight additional and federal officials and Kings and started this year
present and former members
charge.
· with the New York Nets.'
Registration may be sent to of Congress.
Davis underwent surgery
11
The
Shadow cabinet"
Betsey Simpson, Rio Grande
for
a torn tendon above the
Colleg..Colll11lunity College, tradition is being borrowed right knee Wednesday. A
Box 363, Rio Grande, Ohio from the British. There, the team spokesman said Davis ·
leader of the political party
456'14. More information is
out
of power leads the cabinet would be lost to the Warriors
available by phoning 448-9748
and he ·names those who for the remainder of the
or 245-9511.
would be his ministers for National Ba ske tb all
Association.season .
each major department.

OU concert

WEST COLUMBIA, W. Va.
- A party was held in honor
cl Susan Renee Stone, who
celebrated her fir st birthday
oo Saturday, Feb. 19.
Susan is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Randy Stone of
West Columbia·, and the party
was held at the home of her
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Carse! Stone, Sr.
Those attending the party
were Kenneth Payne, Carse!
and Louise Stone, Phillip and
Pauline, James and Phyllis
Hale, Stacy Stone, Tina
Chandler, Andy and Shelia
Stone, Warren, Candie and
Aaaron Stone, Wayne and
Ronnie Pearson. and her
p~rents, Rillldy and Carolyn
Stone.
·

co mpanies when they
obtained necessary permits.
The law does provide for

.

: : REVIVAL SERVICES wUI
•• begin Saturday night at
: , Carmel Church located on CR
: : 46 off of Jackson Pike near
: : Gallipolis. Rev. Russell Nltz
: : of Pomeroy and Rev. James
•• Queen of Middleport will
: : deliver the message. All
: : singers are welcome. Ser·
: : vices begin at 7:30 nightly.
: , Public invited .

••
.,
.,

"'

WASHINGTON (UPIJ - In
a major v•ctory lor
environmentalists , the
Supreme Court Wednesday
upheld 8 to 0 specific
government limits for
dischar ge
of
various
pollutants into the nation's
rivers.
Eigh t leading chemical
manufa cture rs argued
unsuccessfully that the
Environmental Protection
Agency had authority to issue
only general guidelines that
would apply to individual

presided at the meeting
which opened wiU• the Lord's
Prayer in wtison. She read
"In and Out of Order" from
"Our Daily Bread." Scrip.lure by Mrs. 'Cathryn Ervin
was taken from the !38th
Psalm.·
Reported olll and sent cards
were Mrs. Nan Moore, Mrs,
Mildred Belling, Mrs. Pearl
Reynolds, and Mrs. Clifford
Hayes.
a
Prayer by Mrs. Alice
. Rubeson and a Bible quiz condueled by her closed the
meeting. Mrs. Daugherty and
Mr s. Ervin ser ved
refre shments to the 18
members attending.

RIO GRANDE- An Arica
Workshop, twice postponed
because of winter weather
and the energy emergency,
has been scheduled for the
weekend of Feb. 25-Zl in
Moulton Hall at Rio Grande
College-&lt;:ommwtity College.
The workshop, which
begins at 8 p.m. Friday, is
designed to help Its par·
tlcipants learn methods for
relaxiltion and personal
development. Arica is
planned to teach people how
to live more fully in a com·
plex society.
The weekend experience
employs a variety of body
and mind relaxation exercises as w~ll as forms of
meditation. According to .
workshop planners, Arica
uses a sequence of exercises
called "psychocalisthenics"
to "put three fundamental
ilspects of a human being mind, emotions, bOdy - in

Susan
Stone
feted

r

Metal IIGSTAIID
stand for steody

MAlON FU ...ITURIE

Mrs. Brook Hunter
CHESHIRE - Mrs. Brook
Hwtter of Route 2, Cheshire,
celebrated her 68th birthday
recently with a surprise party
hosted by her children.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene Stowers and
daughters, Brenda, Delberta,
and Eugena June of Pecks
Mill, W. Va.; Mrs. Edna

Mrs. Patrick Lochary left
via plane from Columbus
Mrs. Roy Reuter, Mrs. Wednesday for Lakeland,
Meinhart, · Mrs. Gerald Fla. where she was called by
Wildermuth Miss Smith, Mrs. the death of her brother,
Olin Knapp, Mrs. Paul Casci, Ralph Henry, a fonner
Mrs. Harry Davis, Mrs, Athens Cowttyresident.
David Cumings were named
on a coliJJiiillee to plan lor the
annual birthday party for the
Legion. The party will be held
on Tuesday, March 15. Cleaning day at the liall was set for
March 10 at 9 a.m.
Miss Smith presented a list
of students who are prospective delegates to Buckeye
That's why more people
Girls' State. The wtit selected
one delegate and one alterare depending on us. 1
nate, the names to be annowtced once the Department of Ohio has acc'epled the
People kn!lw an effistudents. ·
The district 8 community
cient, reliable service
service party for the Athens
Mental Health Center was an·
when · th ey see one.
nounced for March 15 at I p.m.
with the jwtior party to be
That's why they keep
held on March 22.
coming back to us. We .
Mrs. Veda Davis, junior activity chairman, read a comoffer many services,,
munication froin the
Veterans Hospital in
even baby needs. Come

INCLUDES:

.

MRS. BROOK 'HUNTER

A report on the stairway
raliing for the church was
given by Marvin Kelly at the
Tuesday night meeting of the
Loyal Bereans Class of the
Middleport Church of Christ.
Kelly reported that he had
IIUide contacts and is iri the
process uf securing · mst
figures for the installation of
the railing. George Meinhart
thanked the clas5 for kind·
nesses during his Ulness and
at the death of his wife, Mary.
The birthdays of Clarence
McNeal, Mrs . Clyda
Allensworth, Mrs. Louise
McElhinny and Mrs. Lena
McKinley were observed.
Mrs. Ella Mae Daugherty

upheld by U. ·S. Supreme Court

given birthday party A rica workshop planned

\lith personal contacts and
telephone calls to prospective
members. However, anyone
wishing to join the French Art
Colony who is not contacted
should feel free to call or see
any member of the Com·
mittee,

STORE HOURS

DEAR POLLY - Nearly
every month hundreds of ~~=~~~:.:;,
autolilobile whee( hub cups

LUNCH

drive starts this evening

The official start of the , GaUipolis.
Chairing this year's
pa1gn for the French Art cainpalgn is Barhara Epling
Colony will be this evening at with the theme for the on;
the annu~l membership month effort, " Paint the
dinner,meetmg, being held at Town 'French." Members of
Oscar s Restaurant in Mrs. Epling's committee
almg with the Trustees and
ot.her Interdepartmental
Committee members of the
French Art Colony will be
wearing large buttons,
colorfully Indicating the
theme.
Those who will be assisting
Mrs. Epling in the campaign
for French Art ·Colony
members are Annette Ash&lt;raft, Sue Beverly, Edna
Borden, Ruby Briggs,
Gretchen Carty, Beth
&lt;llerrington, Jackie Coonen,
Uz Cornell, Karen Eachus,
Heni Evans, Bess Grace,
Bobbie Holzer, Al1n Jenkins,
Koby,
Nancy
Sandra
Levernler, David Lyons,
Penny Moore, Joy Pren•
••••
dergast, Dortha Suiter, Fran
Thomas and Bev Walker.
.....,. The membership drive
· PAINT THE TOWN French Is tile theme of~ year's
committee
wUI be. making
French Art Colony membership drive. Large buttona In
red, white and blue will be used to indicate the theme
during the drive .

'

CUT

.

an~ual membership cam-

Stairway railing
to be installed

satiafy one's hobby.
A pizza party was held
following the meeting with
Mrs. Riffle as ~tess,
, _ _ _ _ _ _ _..,

BUDGET

EPA power to limit pollutants

Detroit 102 LoS Angeles IOl

seattle 94 Kansas Cltv 93
Thursday's Games
NY Knltks at Atlanta Golden State at Cleveland
Milwaukee at ~n Antonio
Houston at Phoeni )(
Friday's G1mes
Golden Stat e at Buffalo

Detroit at NV Nets
NY Knlcks at New Orleans
AWmta at ChiCllgO
Denver at Kansas Cit'{
Philadelphia at Los Anqeles
HOU!IIi&gt;n ftl Portland

Boston 111 Seattle

t

It's

•

better

idea

.

Buy_ or lease now at yom
Ford Dealer Limited Edition Sale.

-

�•
B-The Dilly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thurdllyy, Feb. 24, 19'17

•

Buy, Sell or Trad:e Through The 3eiltin~ant Ads
PUB LI C NOTICE
Sealed b ids will be recei v ec
in the utflce of the Vi llagt
Clerk , Second S tr.~et . V l llag ~
of Pamerov , Oh 1o, until l t
.o 'c lock noon on Mar ch 7, 1977
t or the fOllow ing proposal

I

For the purchase of a 1977
rubber .
t 1red tndus t nal tr actor _loader
backhoe c omp~ete w 1th the
r. unu ta ct u rer s
standa rd
a ccessories . .All com ponen ts
an d acceuones sha ll be ne w ,

d.l ~sel. eng in.e dr iven

rc!'ru~pe ~ra~ro'"n
" ~cpe~n ~~~v:re~dx
,
'

;:
~

~~
;1 ~

s =
~
~3
0

~

;:-a

oe aler s r epr ese n tat iv~ shall
:&gt; ra vl d e i n st r,u c ti an m t ~ e
proper opera t 1on and ma 1n
tenance a t th e ti m e of
deliver y One set of par t~ ,
m aintena nce an!;! operator s
manuals sh a ll be prov ided ,
The dealer ~nd manufac
turer sha ,l t_prov1 de a one -vear
wa r r an ty mcludi '1.g parts and
labor for the t r act~r and attachments su p plted . T he
~a rrant v per iod shall not
li mit opf' r at tng hour s
I . Fu r ther spe c i f ic a ti on s
w i ll bt on f ile with the Vi llagf
Cl erk . Sec ond stree T. V11lagt
of Pomer oy . Oh io
2. For sal e b v the Village or
Pomeroy
lh 1969 Ford
Ba cl&lt; hOe Wi th a front end
loader and 19S9 Wayne Street
Sweeper .
Th e b idder ma y st11te either
wh.,t he w i ll 9 111 e tor t he t9M
Ford Ba ckh oe with front end
l oa d er
e~ n d
1959
Stre et
Sweeper or what amount h£
w i ll allow as a t ra de.1n for thE
19 77
I n d us tr ia l
t r a ct or
described abov e.
E&amp;ch b idder may b1d for
either ttte purc hase af the 1969
For d Backhoe with front end
loader and 1959 Wayne Stree'
Sweeper or for the sale to th t
V illage of Pom eroy of a 1977
lndu st r 1al Tra ctor described
ab ove or both . Each bid must
conta in the full name of ever \
per son or company in t eresteo
1n the sam e. and the bld must
be acc om pa n1 ed bv a chec k or
bond In the su m of SlOO 00 to
th e sa t1 sfa ct 10n of the VIllag e
Co uncil as a gua r antv that if
th e bid is. a ccept ed, contra ct
w il l be entered into ancl its
per f o rman ce
properly
sec ured
Th ese checks or boncts will
be r et urned at once to all
e:JC cept the successfu l b idder .
H lsch ecksor bond will be held
unt i l i he con t ra ct or b1d is
proper ly ex ecu ted by him
The righ t Is r eserved to
re1 ect any and all bidS

'

Jane Walton , Clerk

IS.

'

WANT ADS

INFOitMATION
DIADLINIS
P.M . DIY
lefore
5
Publication 1
Clncttlationl ,
correc tl onl lcctpttd f irst dav of
publlntian .
•EGULATIDNS
Th e Publisher reserves
the r ight to tcllt or relect
Af1 'v ads dumed ob .
l tctlonal. The publisher
will nat be rtsponl lblt for
mor.e than one Incorrect
insert ion . .
.ATES
For 1 nt Ad Service
s cents per word one
Inserti on
M lnlmuni Cheroe Sl .OO.
14 cents per word thret
const~ut l ve Insertions .
26 tents per word six
consecutive Insertions.
2S Per cent D iscount on
pa id ads lnd •ads pa id
within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$l 00 f
· So · word!
·
or
..!g~~~·~aan u e~ 1 word 3
cents

1 11

ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 18)
Someone may de li berately
withhold some Important facts

The

Almalii.C

United Preas International
you should make certain lntorToday iB Thursday, Feb. 24,
mation you are given Is true.
the
55th day ol1977 with 310 to
TAURUS (April 20·Moy 20) Be
doubly sure the cash Is In your

account before you write that
check. You can't be a dreamer

llnanclally today. '
QEMINI (May 21.June 20) Shy
awa y from dominating , dictatorial types today. You're In no

mood to be bullied, badgered or
demeaned.

CANCER (June 21.July 22) Your
Ideas are bold and Imaginative

loday, but It Is unlikely you'll soar
to the heights to match them .
,You dream grandiosely but act

timidly
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) It a
business contact offers you a
fa~or today, look for an ultenor
mot lve.Gratulties or discounts
cou ld have strings!

VIRGO (Aug . 23-lopt. 22)
Someone you've known to be
uncooperative may run true to
form and try to pull the rug out
from under you again .

follow.
The moon iB apJI"oaching
its first quarter.
The morning stars are
Mercury and Mars.
The evening stars are
Venus, Jupiter and Saturn.
Those born on thla day are
under the sign of Piaces.
John Phillip Holland,
inventor of the submarine,
was born Feb. 24, 11142.
On thla day in history:
In 19?JI, a group of Germall8
organized the National
Soclalllt party, fcrerunner of
the Nul party wblch was in
power when World War II
started.
In 1922, Henri Landru,
better
known
as

"Bluebeard,'' was executed
in France, for murdering 10
of his sweethearts.
LIBRA (lep1. 23-0ct. 23) A
In 1945, American troops
reluctant attitude makes your
Uberated
Manila from the
tas k doubly dlftlcult today. It also

could be a pain In tne neck tor
your co-workers.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Now. 22)
You'll be resentful ot an.,.one wno
lrles to nose Into your private atfairs today. You could be really

milled If they try to manage your
life.

Japanese._____ _ _ _ _
In
1966,
President
Nkrumah of Ghana was
OUBted from office.

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

NOTICES
ATTN .: II
ALL HOUIIWIVES
All Yard sates, Rummage ,.
Pon;h and Basement Porct'l
and Basemtnt Sales, etc .
must bt pa id In advance .
Get yours In early by
stopping by our office at
The Dally Sentinel, 111
Court St or writ ing Bow.
729. Pomeroy , Ohio .t5769
with your remittence .

IF YOU hove a serv1ce tv offer .
• want to bu~ or sell something ,
oe look1ng for work
. . or
whatever
. you 'll get resulfs
faster with a Sentinel Want Ad .

Coll992 2156.

RISING STAR Kennel Boarding ,
lndoor·Outdoor runs , groommg
oil breeds, clean son1tory
foc1hfles Chesh1re Phone (614)

3b7-0292 .
HOOF HOLLOW . Buy , sell , trade
or tram horses RUTH REEVES ,
tromet..Phone (61•
. ) 698-3290 .

.

The lamily of lhe late
Harry Wehr~ng would like
to thank all olll!eir friends
and neighbors in the
Monkey Run aru for tile
lovely floral arrangement
and ads af kindness shown

• II

.,

.

-

1971 OLOS Cutlass 2 dr

Carpet &amp; Upholstery
Phone Mike Young
At
992-2206 or 992-7630

- 630p.n:. ---·· ---- ..
1973 PLYMOUTH DUSTER 3•0.
power steering power brakes ,
automatiC . Phone m -6038
cite ~ 5 p.m:_ _

.

1974 CAMARO Z28, automatic
tran srrusslon , 43,000 miles, e:. cellent
con dit10n . Phone

....,I.;;L.;.Y_,

.__ _ _......

-- - - -

-

~

--

~-

GUN SHOOT Ot the Roctne Gun
Club every Sunday 1 pm
Assorted meats .
RACINE FIRE Dept will hove o
Gun Shoot every Saturday mght
6 p.m. at the1r bu1lding in
Boshon , Oh1o.
------·

-·

•• - - · -

PICTURES .ARE for ever Coli The
Photo Place (Bob Hoeflich)

YOJJ DO-- OR ~OU i?IIOULC&gt;! .. ~15T EN.
EMY: 5UPPO?~ l COULD Fill THIN65
:;o THE VOTE GOE5 YOUR. WAY!

BLOW ~

(614) 915-4155
Clltltti'' Ohio
10.!7.:.l.!N.lPd!J

24
NORTH

Raof11g &amp; Siding •
Raoni Additions
Garages
Homes Built
Quality Work At
Reasonable Rates

Al. TROMM CONST.

.a 7 4 3
• J 10 5 3

ANYPIWH
ANY SIZE

Soutlll£11111' 'OIIil
Tna Raftef tO

WILKESVILLE. {6_1&lt; ) 669·378S

FULLER Brus h 'Products for sole
Phone
992 -3410.
.
.
CAMPER , $600
Allo, hors e
trotler, $4.50 Phone (61A) 690·

3290.
STEREO, new am-fm lm stereo·
rod1o comb1nol1on $129 95 or
terms Coif 992 -3965
.

"

Coll992.5858
2 BEDROOM TRAILER . $30 week
Att

utilities

.,

9'12·3324

--

paid.

~--

Phone

Rutlond, Ohio 45775PII. UU} U2-240t
We Delivu
12 22·• mos .

--- --

SMALL APT . in Middleport. Call
99~·~2·~ ·-K~~_£~~~- __
3 BEDROOM opt furni5hed , un·
furn1shed . 128 Mill St. Mid·
dleport ...~pnt9 ct Ben Dov1dson
over Spe~a.:.
Morket or

$25 00 PER Hundred stuffmg
phone (~ 13)J_:ll:~l'l~ -- __
enve l opes
Send
self ·
'
5
RMS AND both fu rnished in
addressed stomped envelope .
langsville. PhOne 7.42 -2404
Edroy Mills, Bo:JC 188, Albony ,
.
- - -

Mo . b4402.

Phone 992-2156•

I BEAMS ond H Beams 8, 9, and
10 mch Call992.703.4 .

----'-·· - .
FIREWOOD. $25 pickup lood .

9'12 5292 ·- - - .. - - .
Delivered
ot rea sonab le
d1~ tonce . Phone 949·2590
SHOOTING MATCH , just off Rt 7
by·pass near Rock Sprmgs ENGINE
tran smiss ion and
Cemetery, every Sunday, 12
rod1ator for 1969 Dodge 31 8
noon .
also 1974 Buick Rego12 door , '11
30th ANNUAl HEREFORD Sole 14
vmyl roof , 32,000 m1les, e.: ·
cel lent condition . Bu1ll m tope
bu lls
and
16 • females
player , cru ise control. tllt
Southeastern Ohio Herford
wheel , opero wmdows 455
Associat1an. Al l dwart tree
engme, $2850. Phone 992 -2280
pedigrees both Horned and
.
Polled Saturday, March 19, FARMAll SUPER A Cult1votor's
1977 Sole 1.00 P.M .. Rock Sprmower pl ow . Coli after 7 p.m .
ings Fo1rgrounds at . Rt 33 ,
three miles north of Pomeroy ,
.949·2870.
...
Ohio for catalogs write to
lloyd Blackwood, Sale Mgr , Rt.
3_. ~o~e~oy .~~~~ 4576!:__ _
One good used Gibton side SHOOTING MATCH , Rutlond
by.side refrigerator ... $115
legion Hall , every Sunday, 12
New Co-Op water sof teners, model vc .svt
noon.
'

~

FOR SALE

Only 1179.91

One good chain Homellte
Chain Saw . . ..
sno.oo
Save $50 . 00 on a new
Hotpo1nt Refrigerator
1 Good used Hotpolnt
Range
~100

PIISIDI l.lldmllk.

:!,..Ck w. Carsey, Mgr .
''fl~
A il.
Phone 992 ·ll81
Bar &amp; 2 bor stools , has podding
around edge, 8 ft . lonjt~ _.doors
for storage out of new trailer .
$75 . Also. do\,!Die aKi e, wheels
and t1res from tra•ler . good for
mak ing trader to haul heavy
equipment .
S75
Phone

Q85-&lt;290.
CARP-ET.- ·BR EAKFim .Set . . club

Will do odd jobs . roofmg. po1n·
l1ng gutter work Phone 992'·

7409
SEWING · ALTERATI O NS
Upholsteri n g ,
drapes
reasonable 572 South Third
A._e . Middleport . Phone

9'12 .()306_
PORTABLE WHDER . large ond

-PIANO

------· -· ---.TUNING. Phone lone
Dan1els , 992·2082
- - -- - ---- ..... --- . WILl DO housecleaning. Call

'\
Il

, I

-..:y•279.95
Lor .' h
Fr•t

~

test your water

PIIIIIIIDI

•

Lindmark

Jack W. CarMy, Mgr.
PlroM 992-2111

located at 12~ and Bashan
Road. Contact Sam Votes,

9&lt;9 .'2302

9'12 -2524 .
WILL DO bobysithng 1n my home
See D1ono Ashley , 175 Beech
Middle~a~~- __ _

_s!··

~~-~
-~-~
- )~
T.:-~~~
1'177 . GOVfRNOR "

X

70, 3

b&amp;drms both and
unfurn1sh·
ed May rent lot Phone
1
/,

7&lt;2-2577 .

.

~--

-------·

BRAND NEW 1.4 • 56 3 bedroom
Elcono total alec., total Wrap
Fom -Cor . extra Insulation
package. the best furn iture,
carpet , mirrored wardrobe
doon, wired lor dryer, plumb·
ed for washer and separate
utility room . We have had this
one much too long, consequently, we ore oiNring the
follow1ng d~l . ThiS home is .
priced ot $8595 to include
delivtiry and set-up. ln. addition
Ia this excephonal deol, we
will do one of 2 th ings . Make
the first 6 payment• for In , not
to exce&amp;d SSOO or we will in·
YOUNG COW wlfh n1ce coli . Cow
1toll a washer and dryer frH af
1s Angus Guernsey cross .
charge . Can be seen at
Phone 985 3952.
Kingsbury Home Soles, 1100 E.
A CRAGAR wheels, two l60 tires,
~~inS.! · · pomer~ , 0~_._
must sell by Fridar. Phone 1970 WINDSOR Mobile home, 12 x
3502 for Greg Ca~L -63, uceffent condition. PhOne

.I '

3 BEDROOM house. carpeted e:JC ·
cept kitchen . utility room . total
elec .. aluminum siding , fenced
bock yard, fully 1nsuloted,
washer and dryer. Hpok·ups.
See at 169 Beech St., Middleport or tall 992·7120 or
949-2150 from 8 11115

small ]Obs. Con also thow
frozen water pipes . Phone M'1 ACRE form , 7 rooms , both .
949 -2046.
born , pond, and furniture prlc·
ed all for $18,500. One mile
HAVE YOUR la)(es done by on oc·
from Lon·svtlle,Ohio on C R 10
countont. Also. now accepting
Phone 742·2668 .
bookkeeping. Phone 992 -6206
orm·6173 .
OlDER HOUSE , 5 rms . ond bath ,
aboul2 ocre1. Phone 9.49-2563.
INCOME TAX Ser\IICe , Wallace
Russel l .
Bradbury .
Cali 1970WINDS0Rmobllehome, 12x
m -7228 .
65 furnished . 1 acre lot, ex cellent condition . Phone
All TYPES of upholstering We
9'12-7797 .
spel"iallze 1n antiques. Phone
992-3377 or 985-4274 onyt1me .
6 ROOMS and both , e:JC tra lot

cho1rs . Mognovox elec. organ,
2 end tables. Phone 992-7476.

..

Free Prizes.

• 9'12·2905.
REDUCf YOUR healing bills wilh
thiJ 10 K 55 used Mobile Home .
Has 3 bedrooms , kitchen, living
roc,m dnd both Fuel oil heat,

only $2000. Phone 9'12-5786
from. l_l _a .'!!:.tl!!! f .m. doily .

· ~~ :·
~ U CTION

FRIDI\V , 6·30 PM .

New corpet, new enamel weo •
U5ed furniture , lots of new ond
u .ed rnerchond1se ot the A~c ·
11an "Ptouse. Horton St., Moson
W.Va .

TEAFORD.
Virgil B. Sr., Rt1Mor
216 E. Second Stretl
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Pllont 992-3325
NEW LISTING- like new
3 bedroom home. Beautiful
kitchen will! Obi. sink,
stove, utility room, large
garage, workshop space,
near Tuppers Plains. 21·M
RT. 124 WEST - 01~
home, 4 bedrooms, bath,
level lot, gas heat, carport
and garden In Rutland.

RESTAURANT - Now
operating in an excellent
location . All equipment
needed for the operation.
Want only St3,500.
WOU~D

YOU - Buy five
acres with an old 2
bedroom h011se, ·will! full
bosement, cistern, electric,
In !he sticks for $5,000?
BUILDING
LOTS
Water, electric available at
Rock Springs, F lve Points
and Syracuse.
HOUSE
FULL
OF
FURNITURE. ALL OR
PART. NEW LISTINQS
WELCOMED. t
WATCH THIS AD TO SEE'
THE NEW CHANGE.

¥AKQJ 74

East· West vulnera ble
North East

It

Pass

Soutb
4¥

2t

West holdmg four . If West
held five spades he would
have opened a spade If East
held four spades he would
have responded one spade
Thus , Alan was gotng to
have lots of trouble if West
held the king . He had a spade
to dummy 's ace . returned the
Jack of clubs and let it n de to

West's ace Business was
looking up.
West led a thtrd diamond.
Alan ruffed and led a low
spade. East won and returned
trol. He led another spade,
ruffed in dummy, saw the king
fall as he had hoped , drew
trumps and claimed the con·
tract.

4 K8
Wtsl

FA IDAY , FEBRUARY 25, 1977

a trump, but Alan was in con·

•Q

~EGO?!

Pass

Pa ss Pass
Opemng lead - A t

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

Free Estimates
Installation, samples
brought to your home
with no charge.
·tarpef.llno.-Tile
Pllont Mfkt Yount at

m.:nour m-7630

lltAT'S ONE THING

DOn TRY 10

I [)()toi 1T UNOE'R.STAND
-· YO\J, WITH YOUR

2-23· 1 mo.

HT'

S&lt;ILL, BURI ED HERE

HOMESITES for sale. 1 ocre and
up. Middleport , near Rutland .

-•II

, Coll992-7481
NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 baths ,
all alec .. I ocre, Middleport ,
close to Rutland. Phone 9'92·
7481 .
SMAll farm for sale. 10•1. dawn ,
owner financed . Monroe Coun·
ty, W. Va. Phone (304) 772·
COUNTRY formlond with seclud·
ed woOds, water and good OC·
cess in Monroe County . W Vo .

IJNDE RST'ANO IT,
OLIVER ·- MAYBE

I JUST WANT 10
BE ALO~E FOR
A WrtiLE - ~ - TO
THINK --

BRADFORD. Aucti oneer . Com·
plete Service. Phone 949·2487
or 949·2000. RoCine, Ohio, Crltl

_:B:::ro::d:::lo::.r:::
d·: ____ "- __
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

~Phone 992·2&lt;09.

BORN LOSER

$1.000 down , call (30&lt;) 772- SEWING MAOflNE-R.~Ir;.·-;;:
vice , all makes. 992:ns. . The
3102 or (30&lt;)772-3227.

Commerc1ol property opprox 17
acres, level land , located at
Tuppers Plains on Ohio , Route

7, Phone(bi•J66Ho30• .
3 bedrooms, Ph baths, large flv.
ing room , dining rOom and kit·
chen , fully carpeted. Phone
992·3129 , or992·S•3A
NEW 3 bedroom house. btlilt-in
kitchen , bath and 1/1, Phone
7-42·2306 or corlfod MilO B. Hut·
jHson, Rutland , Ohio

Fab r ic Shop , P o mero ~
Authorized Singer Soles and

Serv1c,~•.:.
·W
c.•.:.•:.:.hcco ~~.!~!~~~_:_.

fVR

DE ~IV!'RI~'

'~M TnTl.li&gt;O ~-

/

I)Jf()Nb .
fO)SES'?

EXCAVATING, dozer, looder and
backhoe work ; dump trucks
and to -boys for hire: will haul
till dirt , to soil. limestone and
grovel. Coli Bob or Roger Jef·
fers, doy phone 992·7089,

night phone 992-3S25 or 9925232.

EXCAVATING , dozer, backhoe
and ditcher . Charles R. Hot·
f1eld
Bock Hoe Service.
ONE LOT In Syracuse. Phone
Rutland, Ohio . Phone 742·2008.
9'12-371&lt;.
TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio. New
three bedroom house. li11ing
room . large kitchen, ceramic
bath , carpeted , attached
goroge, large lot $22,900·

Phone(bt•)b67·630&lt;.

SEPTIC Systems Installed by
licensed Installer
Shepard
Contrgcton . Phone 742·2409.

Sorr4 1 l5hould
have told 40u!
It's full of

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned. Modern
Sonitotlon 992 · 3~•

-----·

Will do roof ing , construction,
plumbing and heating . No jo&amp;

books!

too Iorge or too small. Phone

r----::.:::-1!!iiiii~

paneling. Phone 992-f75!·_ _

9'12·5858.
ELECTRONIC T.V. CLINIC , Now

NEW LISTING - 1 floor
plan. 2 bedrooms, dining
room, ba!h, nice kitchen,
range &amp; oven, lot of
cabinets,
carpeting,
paneling, basement &amp;
garage, porches. Lovely at

T V. shop, Electronic T.V. Clinic;
Service call , SS.95 Coler, 8 &amp; W
antenna system&amp; stereos, etc.
572 South Third , Middleport.
Phone 992·b306. Carry In ond
save money.

HOWERY

AND

MARTII'I

e..

cayating, septic systemt,
dozer, backhoe, dump trvck ,
limestone, gravel , blacktop
paving, Rt. 1&lt;3. Phone I (bl&lt;)

698-7331.
just $16,500.00.
NEW LISTING - Old OIL, GAS Furnoces, oil burner a,
repair, and partt for trailers
R011te 33 - 5.~ acres of
and homes . 2_. kour service.
ground, utilities available.
Phone 8&lt;3 -2t 65.
Excellent for building
sites, see it today. $6,067.00. HOUSE PAINTING, interior and
exterior. Quality work ot
NEW LISTING - Old
rea1anoble rates . Phone
established business,
7&lt;2·2328.
owner retiring, Heme and
Auto
businen. · For EXCAVATING, Backhoes, Dozer,
trencher. low Boy , dump truck,
Information please ·drop
trucka, teptic systemt . Bill
Into lite offlctt.
.
Pullins. Phone m .2.479 day or MOBILE HOME - Wi!h '12
night.
acre of ground . 2
bedrooms, large living
kitchen, metal storage
furniture, ite boxes. bra11
bldg. 12&gt;&lt;40 and ready to OLD
beds, wall telephones and
move into 17,500.00.
·porta, or campi" houMholdt .
SPIRAL STAIRCASE Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Lovely 1112 story frame.
Pomoroy , Ohio. Coli 9'12-7760.
Excellent neighborhood, CASH paid for all moket and
t'l2 baths, 3 bedrooms
models of mobile honles.
family room, carpeted. NG
Phone or"" &lt;ode 614-423-9531 .
forced air furnactt. Corner ,
TIMBER. Pomeroy Forest Pro·
lot. Look lust $23,935.00.
ductt. Top price for ttandlng .
DOUBLE LOT - Ranch i tawtlmber. Call Kent Hanby 1
type, 3 ltr~t btdroom1,
1-&lt;&lt;6·8570. .
closet .,..ce galore. bell!,
, CURMNCY , loktno, old
lovely kitchen w-dlnlng bllr COINS
·packet ,watches and .chal!".s!
and air cond., sewing
silver and gold. We need 1'10:'1 '
room, lull bosement W·
ond older silver coin a. Buy, sell 1
shower and 2 car garage.
or trade' Call Roger Wamal.,.,
NG forced air heal.
1&lt;2·233!.
$19,500.00.
CASH! II tor junk cart. Frye's
HOW TO..J.UJ.. _'{.0.!/~
Truck and Auto. 24 HOUR
HOME PRDMPTLY••. AT
WRECKER SERVICE I Phone
7&lt;2-:tOIIt .
FULL MARKET VAI"UI
LIST WITH
POM£ROY AUTO RKYCLING.
REALTY.
NOW BUYING SCRAI'. Turn
HENRY E. CLELAND
1unk autos Into. cath. Also bu~ ~
lng metola, bulleries. etc .
IIK..,A.ER
Open Monday , Tuetday,
HANK CLELAND
Wodo., Friday, 1:00 ' . 4:30:
ASSOCIATE
Soturdoy 1:00 , I2:00. flhcn.
m.mt . m-IMI
992-6337. Old Rt. 331utt acrot
ltS.-4112
Gru-'sChiPP!.'.
'

I

.~

6· 50-Good MOrning, West V i r gi nia 13.

6:S5-Good Morning ,Trl State 13
7.0G-Today 3,4,15; Good Morni ng Amer ica 6,13, CB S
News 8; Chuck White Re ports 10.
7·GO-Today
7·05- Porky Pig 10.
7 311-Winter School 10.
8 GO-School W1fhou t Schools b, Capt Kangaroo 8;
Sesam e St. 33.
a JG--Winter Schoot Continu es 10.
9 oo-A M 3: Ph il Donahue 4,13, 1S; Andy G r~ ffith B.
9 Jo-C ross-Wits 3; Concentration 8; W inter School
Continues 10.

10 Oil-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15; School Withou t Schools 6.
Price is Right B: M i ke D ouglas 13.
l O· JO- Holtywood Squares 3,4,15 ; Wi nt er Sc hool
Continues 10
11 DO-Whee l of Fortune 3. 15; E lementar y Setence 4 ;

Double Dare 8, Morning Show 13,
11 .311-Shoot for Ihe Siars 3, 15, Happy Days 6, 13, Love
of Life 8,10; Sesame St . 20,33.
11 ·55-C BS News 8; Ms Flxit 10
12 00-i'lews 3.4,6, 10; Don Ho 13, Name That Tune 15;
D ivorce Court 8.

12 :3(}-Lovers &amp; Fr iends 3,6,15. Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Bob
Braun 4; Search for Tomorrow 8,10.

1·oo-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6, 13; News 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10 ; Not For Wome~ Only 15 .
1:31)-Days of Our Li ves 3,4,15; Famil y Feud 6, 13, As
The World Tur ns 8,10
2:0D-S20,000 Pyramid 6,13 .
2·31l-Doctors 3,4,15, One Li te to Live 6,13 , Guiding
Ltght 8,10
3:GO-Another World 3,4,15; All In The Famil y 8,10 :
Crockett' s Victo r y Garden 20.

3.15-General Hospital 6,13.
3·3(}-Mafch Game 8,1 0; Lilias Yoga

&amp;

You 20.

4 DO-Mister Cartoon 3, L1ttle Ra sc al s 4, Gong Show
15, M 1ckeyMouse Club 6; Lucy Show 8, Sesam e 5t .
20,33; Mov ie " Yog.M on ster from Space" 10;

4·3(}-My Three

Sons 3; Par tr~ dg~ Famil y 4;
Emergency One 6, Partridge Fa m il y 8; Fll ntstones

12 Declaimed
ACROSS
43 Shah's land
I Spar
DOWN
5 Hovers
11 - spumante I Twin.
crystal
12 Make the
Z Wan
scene
3 Ending for
13 Rooter
home or
(2 wds.)
bed
15 Grassland
Yesterday's Answer
4 Allegiance
16 Musical
5 Ghastlmess
note
30 Tasteless
21 Toulon
6 Mountain
17 Go wrong
31 Blanket
summer
nymph
18 Goal
32
Grand,
7 Irish rebet 22 Craze
19 Jet engine
light or
23 More exgroup
housmg
hilarating
com1c
8 Musician
20MyiLat. l
33 Late
21 Hearing aid 9 Hillary and 24 Part 'Of a
Argentine
ham's rig
Norkay's
22 Like some
president
25 Substitute
conquest
clocks
(hyph. wd .J 38 Follower of
23 Precipitate 10 Notched
an ism
26 Performing
14 Settle the
26 Illustrious
39 Here (Fr.)
28 Acquired
score
poet
~r:--r:-r.27 Grafted
(her.)
28 " . . Cabots
talk only

!:-:-+-++-

to - "
29 - time
• like this
( 2 wds.)
30 Capochin
monkey
31 "Blue
knight"
34 Scout uni1
35 Bolivian
export
36 Start
poetically
:r7 Donor and

7•2·23&lt;8.
CARPENTER. flooring , ceiling,
MOBILE, Home Repair , Elec.,
plumbmg and heohng Phone

MAIN
POMEROY, O.

10.
6·45-Mornlng Reporl 3.

4'15-Little Rascals .4.

~~by THOMAS JOSEPH

3825.
REMODELING, Plumbing. heating
and all types of general repair.
Work guaranteed 20 ye(lrs e:JC·

A Montana reader wants to
We will finish hands from know if we ever open a 14·
the ''Bridge Bum" ·Wtth one pomt notrump
that Alan Sontag played His
The answer to this questton
four-heart call was a decided is that never is a pretty strong
overbtd and when he looked at word , but tf you are playmg a
dummy he saw that he had standard notrump you will do
plenty of work
well to never shade it two
West opened the ace, not the points to 14 although an ocking of dtamonds . East played casional IS-pointer ts OK
the jack so West could con·
tmue wtth a low diamond and
(For a copy or JACOBY
keep the location of the ktng MODERN , send $1 to " Wrn
concealed from declarer .
a l Brrdge, ' c l o lh rs
Alan ruffed and Reviewed newspaper, P 0 Bo&lt; 489
the biddin~ It was pbvious Radro Crty Stalron New Yor•
that spades were 4-3 wtth N Y 10019)

6·oo-S unr ise Semeste r 10
6 . 15-Farm Repor t 13.
6.20--Not for Women Onl y 13.
6.3o-c olumbus T oday 4; News 6; Over seas Mission

Dinah 13.

Sweepers, toasters , irons, oil
small appliances . lawn mower,
neJ&lt;t to State Highway Goroge
on Route 7. Phone (614) 985·

room, very nice dine In

MIDDLEPORT - Nice 3
bedrooms with closets,
dining room, nice kitchen
with dishwasher, disposal
and breakfast nook.. Full
basement, screened 'porch
and ~arage. $29,500.

12 41)-McCioud 8.
1:00-Tomorr ow 3,4; News 13.

Ravia 3, PI&gt; moray, 0.

3102 or (30&lt;)772-3227

Sentinel Carrier
. Wanted In
Syracuse Area.

• J 109 6
4Q72

• Q 7 52

WHERE IS TIIAT
VARMINT, 8EEB07!
WHICH WA"'I'D

LITTLE VILLAG E!

""'- ----

A K 32

SOUTH

Located in Langsville
Box21-A

IN THIS QUIET

.

EAST

""K 10 9
' 10 8 6

4 A96 4

Young's Carpeting

Free Eslimatfl
Work Guarantted
• 742-2328

COAL , l1 mestone , and colc•um •
chlonde ond calcium bnne for
TWO COON Dogs 1n Rocme oreo
dust control and special m1)(1ng 3 AND 4 RM furnished and un·
lost Fr1doy mght
Phone
opts
Phone
cy;n.
furntshed
salt lor farmers. Main Street .
742-2217
.
5434
Pomeroy , Oh10 or phone 992·
.
- ~··
3891,
COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork . Rt
33, ten miles north of Pomeroy
COAL for sale Open 6 days per
large lots w1th concrete patios
week and evemng s For fu rther
~ 1dewolks . runners and off SOMEONE TO 1ron and do some
1nformot• on call (614 ) 367 -7338
sewing either In my hOme or in
street ~r-~n~:_P_!l_? ~e 992]'!?9
APPLES FITZPATRICK ORCHARD .
Pomeroy or Middleport area.
STATE ROUTE 689. PHONE 2 BEDROOM house in Rutland
Phone m ·bOOA

WEST IDI
4J843
¥5

t

ALLEYOOP

12 00-Mov le " Water melon M an" 10; Janak\ 33.

WIN AT BRIDGE
Sontag gets spade readout
4A6
" 9 32

"Tha Origineton
Nat The lmllatan"
2·23-1 mo.

~[R~~~f~~~~~ ~:1,f

THE WEHRUNG

Price Is Right 8; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20.33;
Wild Kingdom 10; Nashville on the Road 13; Dolly

CAPf AIN EASY
1 THOUEoHT
'OOK, 5HIVAU": WHEN
~OU WERE A
McK EE PI CKE D ME TO
FI~JIIrER~
~U N THE CO MPANY-- HEo
DEALT WASH'S ESO A
PRE H Y PAINFUL..

PHOTOGQI!HY

l

33: Woman 20 .
.
11 ·311-Johnny Carson 3,4, IS; Academy of Country
Music Awards 6,13 , Koj ak 8; Mary Hariman 10;
ABC News 33.

7 3(}-Hollywood Squares 3,4, Ohio Stale Lotiery 6;

liEN GROVER

Frtt EstimltH
No Sundty Calls PIMH
1-30-1 mo.

11.DO-News 3,.4,6,B, 10, 13, 15; M acNeff .Lehrer Report

Almanac 20: Americana 33

Wtddlnoa

or949-2860

Honeymooners' Tr ip to Europe 10.

10:3(}-News 20.

i'lews 10; To Tell the Trulh 13; Wild Kingdom 15;

Commtrdll
Schools

Phone 949-2801

13; College Basketball 6; · Waltons 8, 10; Classic
Theatre 20, Masterpiece The~tre 33.
8:31)-What's Happening 13.
9:0D-Best Sellers 3,4,1 5; Barney Miller 13; Hawaii
Flve-0 8; Classic Theatre 33; Ten Who Dared 10.
9:»-Tony Randa ll 13.
10·00--Streets ot San F r ancisc o 6,13; Barnaby Jones 8:

perience 4; Bowli ng for D ollars 6, Muppet Show B;

~al

Alocal contrador

h.t .,

bucket seats, console w1th hi!
and hers Hurst shifter .
automatic on floor , butll· m
tape player , o•r , 01r inducti on ,
fiberglass hoed. E:JC cellenl con dition . Gr een w ith black intenor. Coli George Grate,
Rutland , Oh1o 742·2HXJ after

PI1010GRN'HY

JSSEII SIDI~ CQ.

Younts Carpeting_

-- - -

to us during tile illness and
death of our loved one.

lei l'omeroy landmark
soften &amp; condHian your
water and a Co.ap w~tor ,
soHtntr, - 1 UC-XVI .

affect where you .live.

---

AKC COLLIE Puppies . sable and
wh ile , l mole and 2 femal es.
Have been wormed and sho ts
9'12 7797.
sta r t ed .
Cal l
949 -2571
1973
FORO Bronco , p s , V ·8
weekdays after 4, p.m or
outomot1c ,
wh1te
spoke
onyllme Satu rday and Sunday
wheel s. Phone 949-2135.

r"AlfR \()f!INIR '

slore lor you thitYear One could

'~
01::'

1969 CHEVROLET Btsquome, 1%6
BUICJ&lt; El&amp;ctra . 225. 2 Rokar
trio lbikes . Phone 949-2432.

.

PROFESSIONAL

Superior
Steam Extraction

Deily , 8:30 o.m. to 12 .00

'.

changes which you may make..,
the spyr of the m.... ..dnt art In

Blown in flborglass walls
and tHics. 20 Pet. S.vlngs·
an Vinyl ond st.,l Sidings.
Replacement and storm
windows. ll YNn ed .. l
expeirence.
Finencing Avtilable
C. A. New men, Prfl.
1·25-t mo., pd.

Vinyl &amp; • Aluminum
Siding.
Storm
Windows
&amp;
Insulation.
Call ProfiSsionals

Rav1e 3, Pl&gt;meroy, 0.

m

Feb. 25, 1177
Important and l nterestl g ~

eveni~~gs .

Noo" Saturday.
~hone today 992 -21S6 .

• .j,

from you today. Knowing this.

•

8:30 a.m . to 5:00 p.m .

... -

For FrkiiJ, Feb. 25, 1177

Sl441

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

OFFICE HOURS

Offers will be received i!lt ..
the offi ce Of Bernl!lrd v Fultz ,
Nationa l
Bank
Pom eroy
Bui lding, Pomeroy , Ohio , unt il
Sllturdav . Ml!lrch 5, 1977, at NOW accepting p1ano students ,
begmners . 1ntermed•otes, ad·
10 00 O'Clock A .M , for t he
sale of the Lillian Stletr rea !
"anced students. Coli
estate , si tuated at 570 s
22707-'.'--~- ·- -Second Avenue , Middleport ,
Ohio . The real estate consists NOTICE . Prott s Meat Mid
of ·! two story frame dwelling ,
(Pleasanton Meat Processmg.
wi t h Brooms and 2bathrooms .
Inc.) Custom slaughtering . and
The Guard ian r eserves the
processing. Retail. wholesale.
r ight to re iec t any or all bids .
No oppa1nment necess ary. Coli
(614) 593-8655, hour s. 9 00 1111
Robert J Lew is
6 00 7 Pomeroy Rood Athen s.
Guardian of
Oh. I
Lillian St1eff

• Bemice 9 - O•oi

1971 FORD·'I'• TON CREW CAB
Body good, runs good.

Additional 25c Charge
per Advertisement .

(2) 24 {3 ) J , 2t c

121 24 , 27 131 I, 3, 4, Stc

$1941
1915!'LCAMINOTRUCK
8 cylinder, automatic, power steering and brakes. rally
wheels, black and black vinyl lrlm.

ILIND ADS

m

AstroGrapM

NEW 1975 APPACHE TRAILER
$1941
Fo4d-down never used, 1raded for Custom Van . Ready
to roll .

ECONOLIME HOME
INSULATION, INC.
1111 Washington llvd.
Bolpre, 'Phone (614I42J.
7SU day, or 992-6039

B·oo- Fantastlc Journey 3,4, I S; Welcome Back, Kotter

THURSDAY , FEBRUARY 24, 1977
5'0D-Big_Valley 3; My Three Sons &lt;; Brady .Bunch 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Star Trek 15.
S·3G-Adam -12 , ,13; News 6; Family Affa ir 8; Elec.
Co 20,33.
6·0D-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6, l oom 20,33.
6 3(}-N BC i'lews 3,4, 15, ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6,
CBS News 8, tO; Once Upon a Classic 20,33.
7.00-Trulh or Cons. 3; Ame ~ ica : The Young Ex-

Business Services

(;;\ 2 SIGNS
~OF QUALITY

w

VILL AG E OF POMEROY

PUBLIC NOTICE

Television log for easy vi~w~ng

15.
5·0(}-Big Valley 3; My Three Sons 4; Bradv Bunch 8;
MISter Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33. Star Trek 15
5:31l-Adam.l 2 4,13; News 6; Fam ily Affair 8: Elec
Co. 20,33
6:0D-News 3,4,8,10.1 3,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33 .
6:3(}-NBC News 3,4. iS; ABC News 13; Andy Griffit h 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Vegetable Soup 20; Vi lla ~legre 33
7·Oil-Truth or Cons 3; ToT ell the Truth 4: Bowling for
Dollars 6, $128,000 Question 8, News 10; To Tell the
Trulh 13: My Three Sons 15; Ohio Journa l 20 ;
Marshall University Reporl 33.
7·»-Porter Wagnoner 3. "Gong Show 4; Cand'id
Camera 6;

Treasure

Hunt 8;

M acNeil -Leh rer

Report 20,33, Andy Wtlllams 10, Name Thaf Tune
13; Pop Goes lhe Country 15.
B:OD-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15; Donny &amp; Marie 6,13; Code
R 8,10. Washington Week in Review 20,33.
8·»-Chico &amp; lhe Man 3,4,15, Wall Street Week 20 ,33
9.00- Rocktord Fi les 3,4, 15; Mo vie " SST.Dea t h
Flight" 6, 13; Sonny 8. Cher 8, 10; Documentary
Showcase .ll3: Lowell Thomas Remember s 20

9:»-The Way It Was 20.

·

10.0o-Quincy 3,4, 15, Hunter 8,10;

News 20,

Paul

Nuchims 33.
10 ·311-Lock , Stock 8. Barrel 20.
11 ·0(}-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; Monty Python's . Flying
Circus 20, Black Perspective on the News 33.
11.3D-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; SWAT o,13; Movie
" Monty Python &amp; the Hol y Grail " 8: Mary Hart man 10; ABC News 33.
12 :011-Movie " JourneyfotheUnknown" 10; Janakl 33 .
12 :411-Mod Squad 6; Ironside 13.
I :oo-Midnighl Special 3,4, 15.
1:41)-News 13
2· 311-News 3
3.oo-Movie " Harriet Craig " 3.

4.3(}-Movie " The County Cha irman" 3.
6·0D-Salnt 3.

'\}ijti}N} jri)'\l ~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ®

byHenri ArnoldandBobLee

Unscramble these lour Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to form
four ord~nary words.

donee?
(2 wds.)

40 Seclude
poetically
41 Food fish

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

II

\

One lellcr simply stands for another. In this sample A II
used for the three f.'s, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. E!ach day Ihe rode letlers are different

--

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

A

CRYPTOQUOTES

rr's A BfT OFF THE

flEAIEN PATH . HOW
ARE OUR CUSTOMERS
••. AND EMPlD'IEES.,
GOING106ET

I WA&amp;THINKING OF IN FACT1 I MAY
AMINI - ~5TAN 1

FOil rHOBt: WITH OUT PI21VATE
TR'INBFORTA110N

E:VEN LEAR N
HONIDI7RIVE
MYSELF !

WI NNI~ YOU11ZE

INCRfOIBLEl

PX

CTPXT

IWGIWK

THEilE?

PH

WJEAPHV

ATW

GKWH 'ATWA·

KGAYDW

ATW

BGPK

J PU W H
EN

tDRAWTY

AE

R W PK J

NEES. - ID. TWDRWDA HTENPWSI
Yeatenlay'a Cryp1oquole: A MAN HAS TO LIVE WITH
HIMSEI.F, AND !IE SHOULD SEE TO IT THAT !IE ALWAYS
HAS GOOD COMPANY. - CHARLES EVANS HUGHES
Cl 11'7'7 K.Jnl Features SYNIIcaM. lrw:.

WHEW!! I BEEN CHOPPIN'
WOODSTOCK AND HIS
FRIEND ARE TALKING

ABOUT Ml: ...

I KNOW JUST
WHAT THE~'RE SAltiNG...

THELt' FO~GET THAT I
CAN READ BEAKS !

WOOD 1H' WHOLE BLESSET DAI/··
I NEED SOME DAOBURN
REST

II

NUM"ER
WATCH IT
NOWADAYS.

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surpnse answer. as suggesled by the above cart oon.

' Print surprise answer here:

r In I I )
(Answers tomorrow}

G

Bi\1\NEY

I

i.A~6E

Yesterday's

I

Jumbles: VERVE AWFUL NAUSEA ELEVEN
' at gett1ng
. even - LEVELS
Answer' 'A1ms

�111-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Feb. 24, 1977

No bomb

'

POINT PLEASANT w
Va. - Over 120 patients ai
Pleasant Valley Hospital
were moved to other areas of
the ho8pltal prtmlses late
Wednesday night when ·
holjlltal olflclala learned of a
bomb threat.
The threat was a terrifying
remlnder of just over a year
ago when a late evening
aplosioo ripped apart the
Mall&gt;n CoWity Jail.
No bomb was found in the
hospital and witnesses at the

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION
WATCH FOR
OPENING DATE

scene said the· ~vacuation
was orderly.
According to assistant
hospital director Gary Park,
a person 'who sounded like an
old man called the hospital at
approximately !0:30p.m. and
said a bomb woqld explode in
the bospltal at midnight.
H o s p i t a I off i cIa I s C
JOinS
lnunediately put into effect
what Park described as "a
P"e-planned drill in case of a
bomb threat."
The mali called again at 11
~AST MEIGS - Members
p.m. and said the bomb would
of
the Eastern - Meigs go off in an hour. In the
Soul
hern Chapters are
meantime, evacuation con·
joining
this week with over
tlnued and units from the
500,000
other
FFA members
West Virginia State Police,
in
the
·
United
States in
Point Pleasant Police Dept.,
celebrating
National
FFA
Mason Co1111ty Sheriff's Dept.
Week,
Feb.
19-25.
and Point Pleasant Volunteer
Fire Dept. arrived to search ' Throughout the week the
state's numerous chapters
for the bomb.
After
waiting are . planning activities to
the.
theme,
approximately 25 minutes support
past ihe time the bomb was to " Agriculture 's New
explode, executive director Generation" is in the making ..
James Farley, following They're , FFA members
today.
Organized in 19211, the FFA
promotes leadership,
cooperation and citizenship
among high school vocational
agriculture students. The
FFA Foundation awards
program proVides chapter,
state and national recognition
for supervised programs of
ag ricultural production,
marketing, processing and
service.

Eastern FFA

h

I

I

I

•

celebrations

YOU'RE ALWAYS
SAFE

apter

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OF SHOES
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'

ED. NOTE: Mayor Fred
Hoffman rl Middleport in this
fourth article of this series,
explains the·operatlon of the
swimming pool by the
Middleport Recreation
Commission as provided by
State Law.
The Middleport Swimming
Pool is under the supervision
of the Recreation Commission,. which .in 1976 was
compo~d of · Paul Gerard,
chairma n; Ruby Vaughn,
secretary , and Richard
Hovatter. All members took ·
office on Janna ry l. 1!116 for

Hospi'tal News

I

.

five year terms. Richard
Hovatter has since resigned
and was replaced by Mick
Childs,
Expendi lures for operation
and maintimance of tbe park
and pool for 1976 were $8,109.
of which $7,060. was taken
from the recreation fund and
$1,049 for maintenance came.
from federal revenue sharing
funds .
Bob Rickelman was the
park . manager for· the
majority ol the season. Ruby
Vaughan filled in the last
several weeks and did an
excellent job in keeping the

Retlill sales up;
not so car sales

t

BEULAH MILLS
/Ws. Beulah B. Mlll1, 63, a
resident of 326 Jackson Pike,
Gallipolis, died In Sf. Mary's
ti&lt;&gt;OpllaL Huntington, early
fills morning .
Funeral arrangements will
be announced by Willis
FUneral Home.
:
In lieu of flowers, the
,
family requests donations to . •
file Gall Ia County Cancer ~;
Society.
·

JOHN 8, ARNOLD
Word was received In
Gallipolis today of the death
of John Bernard Arnold al his
home In Springdale, Pann.
Be(nard, as he was best
known here. attended Gallla
Academy High School, but
went to Pennsylvania at an

pool on a sound financial
llisis.
Mrly age where he w.,s a tool
Salaries for life guards and and die maker at the Alcoa
park manager totaled $3.861, plant. He leaves ' his wife.
June, and daughter Lisa:
chemicals totaled $MO, in- lllso,
one brotfler, Alfred
'
surance was $494, electricity ·Arnold and four sisters, Marv
MISS KAY PROCTQR
Miss Kay Proctor, 67, died
$803, and miscellaneous Lippincott, Dr . Edna Gettles,
and Hortense Epling, all of
Thursday morning at St.
elipenses were $17L
ipolis and sister, Zelda
Joseph Hospital In ParkersA total of $1,221 was spent Gall
Healy who resides In Walnut
rurg, W. Va . Formerly of
for purchase of items to sell Creek, Calif .
Meigs Cou nty , she had
Bur-Ial was In Springdale
-ked at St. Joseph Hospital
at the concession stand .
file past 28 years.
These Items were sold for Thursday afternoon.
Shels sl.fvlved by a sister,
$1,750. foc a net profit of $529.
ALQETH MARKHAM
Nrs. Ralph (Neill Graves of
Pool maintenance totaled
Aldeth Marvelle Markham.
Pomeroy ; a niece, Mrs .
$1 ,049, part of this being for a !11, formerly of Rio Grande, Carolyn Graves Thomas of
new circulating pump which died Tuesday In a Denver, Pomeroy, two greet-nieces
lo. hospital.
and two great.nephews.
had to be purchased as soon CoShe
was the daughter of
Funeral services will be at
as the pool was ·opened.
Mrs . Jessie Talcott of Denver 3 p.m . Saturday at the Ewing
The pool paid for by an d the late Marton A. Funeral Home with the Rev . •
mlllage voted by the Lowks. Besides her mother, W. H . Perrin oftlclatlnq .
she is survived by one
Friends may call at the
residents and this .8 miD was daughter.
Mrs . Dean (Keith)
iuneral home anytime after 7
removed from the tax McClelland of Austin, Tex . fills evening.
duplicate for 1977 as enough and two brothers, Marion 0.
rroney had been accumulated Lowks and Maurice E.
· Lowks, both of Columbus.
to pay off the pool.
Funeral services will be In
It is anticipated that Denver In charge of the
HOME FROM TRIP
several improvements will be Howard Park Funeral Home.
Mrs. Dorothy RoUer, Midmade at the park this year,
dleport, and Mr. and Mrs.
the largest of which will be
Richard Roller, Lori and
BALLOONS FOR SALE
the addition of two standard
Brad of Belpre, have returnA balloon sale for the
Size tennis courts. This was Heart' Fund drive will be
ed from a visit in Upper
made possible by a grant of held Saturday between 10
Marlboro, Md. with Lt. Col.
$7,050 from the Bureau of a.m. and 3 p.m. at the
Ret. James M. Roller and
Outdoor Recreations, with , Silver Bridge Plaza and In family:
the balance to be supplied by downtown Galllp·olls.
the village.
Asslstl~g
co-chairman
Th.e .recreation commission
RECUPERATING
Patty Hays and Martha
will 'be meeting in the near
Dwight
Logan
is
Cornwell with the sale will
future to set up plans for the
be the Trl·ID Y of Gallla recuperating at home follow·
summer recreaiion program
Academy High School. lng a heart attack and several
and make plans for 'other
Their advisor Is Janet weeks at lhe Holzer Medical
park improvements.
Center ull'dergo!ng treat·
DeVault.
Receipts
into
the
ment.
Recreation Fund for 1976
totaled $9,291. Ticket sales
amounted to $5,076, swimming lessons receipts were
(Continued from page I) .
$t,340, receipts from contaken
place
within
48 bours of touchdown.
cessions totaled $1,750. Pool
rentals brought in $260, and .
TEL AVrY, ISRAEL- PRIME MINISTER Yltzhak Rabin
miscellaneous receipts were
narrowly
won the leadership of the troubled Labor party
$20.
Wednesday
night, defeating Defense Minister Shimon Peres
Receipts from village
by
only
41
votes
out of nearly 3,000. Rabin ~d he would nime
amusement machine licenses
Peres
to
a
top
post
in hia next admlnlslration In a move to unite
were $845. This money is used
the
party,
which
faces
a stiff challenge in the May general
only for park equipment.
1976 was a very good year elections.
Despite opposition charge~ that 29 years of Labor' rule Is to
for the swimming pool and it blame for high-level corruption, a series of strikes and
is hoped that 1977 can be as inflation of 35 per cent a year, Rabin said, "The prospects are ·
good if not better.
good."

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Feb: 23)
Ralph L. Amos, f&gt;!ildred S. in Meigs County
Betzing,
Norman
R.
Brumfield, Leana W. Burke,
Retail sales tax receipts in
F1oyd R. Buskirk, Phillip A.
Meigs
County were up over )6
Byrd, Margaret K. Carter,
per
cent
in January, 1977,
Karen A. Comer, Decker Rex
compared
to January one
OJ!lums, Raymond l!. Dillon,
year
ago
but
motor vehicle
CUma Elkins, MrS. John Fox
sales
tax
receipts
were down
and daughter, Lucille Frey,
almost
live
per
cent this
~maid H. Hall, James Hem.
January compared to
Martha E. Husted, Joyce G.
Johnston, George J. Jones, January, 1976.
According to the report of
Wanda F. Malone, Mamie
Mrs.
Gertrude W. Dooahey
McCoy, Charles M. McPeek,
retail sales tax receipts for
Richard L. Meadows, Sr., January, 1977, in Meigs
I!Dberta K. Mohler, &amp;bert D.
Napper, Opal Payne, Mary County totaled $58,572.54
compared to receipts of
Phillips, Tamara L. Plants,
150.227.44
in January, 1976, an
Viola Puckett, Otis E. Rice,
increase
of
$8,345.10, or 16.6!"
Courtney B. Roush, Virginia
per
cent.
Motor
vehicle sales
H. Roush, Alice M. Smith,
tax receif(s for January,
Bert Thompson, Alberta E.
Tribble, Minnie ' C. Van 1977, totaled $25,861.11
compa re d to recei pts of
Sickle.
$27,206.59 for January, 1976, a
(Birth, Feb. 23)
decrease of $1,345.48, or 4.94
By ROBERT SANGEORGE
Mr. and Mrs. John L. per cent.
FRANKFORT, Ky. (UPI) Slaven, son, Athens.
- A diluted spill of carbon
tetrachloride continued to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
move down the Ohio River
ASK TOWED
ADMlTTED - Paul Duff,
Wednesday as water quality Pomeroy ; Brenda TemA marriage license was
technicians kept a close pleton, Pomeroy; Paul Voll, issued to Thomas Edward
watch for small quantities of Syracuse ; Joni Sellers, Ball, 12, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, and
another poisonous chemical, Racine; Floyd Cummins, Anita Lynn Buckley, 19, Rt. 3,
acrylonelitrile.
Racine; Florence John~on , Pomeroy.
Both substances are highly Pomeroy; Dana Covert,
toxic, but neither posed a Pomeroy; Eber Gillilan,
serious threat to water Chester; Usa Tillis, Rutland.
supplies along the Ohio,
DISCHARGED - Donna
according to environmental Parons, Nara Hartman,
. officials.
Alma Riggs, Gertrude Kloes,
"The Indiana spUI is not
Pauline
Derenberger.
going to present a problem,"
said Kentucky Division of
Water Quality Director
PLEASANT VALLEY
William Forrester, referring
DISCHARGES
to the acrylonelitrile spill in
Tanner's Creek, near Geraldine Ennis, Rodney, 0. ;
Guilford, Ind. "And the Angela Cundiff , Point .
carbon tet has shown up at Pleasant ; Mrs. Dorothy
I!Dush, Letart; Mrs. James
Henderson at less than 10
parts per billion, not a Hartley, Point Pleasant ;
Wally Allan, Point Pleasant;
significant amount."
Indiana authorities Angie Tackett, Vinton, 0.;
indicated · they
weie larry Duncan, Mason, and
successful in preventing a Mrs. Rick Whorbrey, Adsuqstantial runoff of 35,000 dioon, 0.
gallons
of
deadly
acrylonelitrile, which leaked bulldozers damned the creek
from a ruptured railroad tank to keep the spill from
car Tuesday. Crews with entering the Ohio River.
"I don't know how much
spilled into the creek or how
much got into the Ohio River,
but the Indiana people say
they stopped just about aU of
it," Focrester said. Tbe site
of the spill was several miles
downstream from Cincinnati,
in a rural area of Southeast
Indiana.
Acrylonelitrile is used
mainly in the manufacturing
process for rubber, plastics
and textile fibers . Forrester
said the chemical is
extremely toxic. "Just seven
drope of it taken internally
can produce death." But he
also described the sub6tance
as "very volatile," meaning
it evaporates and dilutes
quickly.
The carbon tetrachloride
spill posed less and less of a
threat as it moved further
down the Ohio Riyer, the
water qu~lity official said. As
bone
· a precaution however,
Paducah city officials lreated
with activated
water
charcoal as it was dl:awn into
the purification system.
Forrester said there was a
small possibility some of the
carbon ~t had gotten into ice
floating on the river, but
believed "it would probably
evaporate ." The water
quality director also said be
was "surprised" that no
groups of dead fish had yet
been reported on the Ohio
from the spffi, but thought a
fishkill silll might show up
See the many styleS women's and
perp01r
when more ice melts on the ~~~i_s.~es No Fault Oenirn' Jeans, jackets.
Plus pre washed No Fault
waterway'.
nis
too. Women's sportswear on
The
monitoring for
lhe 2nd floor.
acrylooelltrlle will continue
Also men's and bov s' regular and
at least through the next
washed No Fault Denim jeans ,
substantial
rainfall,
iac~1 ets,, ve sts in the men ' s and boys'
Forrester explained. This I&lt;~&lt;•P••·I m•enl, 1st lloor .
Stop in, try on the $fyle that vou
was being ~one because some
while se lections are their best .
of the chemical seeped into
the grdund around Tanner's
Creek and traces of it would
run into the stream and
possibly the Ohio the next
time it rained.

More
chemical
•
•
zn rzver

;News • • •in Brief~Columbia

sw1mmmg i Area Deaths !
pool had a good year

£ound thej~~~~~~~~~J~:r:~
Middleport
lt
patients to thell' rooms.
State police and other law
enforcement· agencies are
~ o n t i n u i n g t he I r
mvestlgation.

•

•

'l::::~::::::~:::::::::::::~:::;:::;:;:::::::::::.:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:::~·=·:·:·:::·:::::::.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

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

News.~ ~ in

,

By United Pmallltenlllt!onal

W~GTON -The administration lB seeldng cuts in
foreign aid to at le~ three countries for alleged human rights

vlolaUona, Secretary of State Cyrus Vance said Thursday. But
he uraed South Korea be exempted from such cuts.
·
"We have security commitments to the Republic of Korea.
We stand behind thole commitments," Vance told the Senate
approprlatlms subcommittee. Te!jtifying in support of
President Carter's fiscal 1978 focelgn aid request for $6.2
billion in hew 1:\Udget authority, Vance said aid to Argentina,
Ethiopia and Uruguay had been cut because of human rights
· violations In those countries.
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT CARTER will ask
Coogress for pow~r to control oil and natural gas prices as part
of a plan to consolidate federal energy duties uriler one
agency, Budget Director Bart lance said today.
The plan would eliminate several agencies, including the
Federal Power Commission, the Federal Energy
AdminljllraUon, and the Energy Research and Development
AdminlJtraUon, and transfer energy-related duties from other
offices to the new unit, Lance said. Pre~ident Carter told a
news conference Wednesday he will send to Congress next
week his request to create a cabinet-level Energy Department.
_The reorganization would mark the first major resh\llfle of the
(Continued_on page 12)

;

By JOH)'i T. KADY
United Prell IDieraotlonal
Columbia Gas of Ohio has received
another 4.3 billion cubic feet of natural
gas from its supplier, and the utility
apparently, now has enough gas to
provide for human needs customers
through March 31. The new supply
could mean a reduction in industrial
and commercial curtallmepts.
"It certainly seems to be heading in
that direction," David Sweet of the
Public Utilities Commission of Ohio
said today. "I assume it will lead to a
reduction in the curtailments."
"They are bound to change," said
James L. Fullin, Columbia's chief
attorney.
The new supply of gas was released
by the Columbia Gas Transmission
Corp. of Charleston, W.Va., which also
.gave Cincinnati ·Gas &amp; Electric 1.1
billion cubic feet and the Dayton Power
&amp; Ught Co. 700 million cubicfeet of gas.
Columbia Gas Transmission Corp.
released 4 billion cubic feet of natural

VOL XXVII NO. 221

Federal
Republic
of
By HELEN THOMAS
.
Germany
which
is
UPI White Houae Reporter
representing
the
United
WASHINGTON (UPI) Presldelll Carter Is reviewing States diplomatic interests in
''with concern" the refusal by Ug~nda and they have
ldl Amin to let Americans assured us they wm take aU
leave Uganda, the White possible measures to protect
Houae said today. The State U.S. interests," the Whitil
Department demanded an House statement said.
Ugandan Charge d'affaires
brunedlate explanation from
Mahmud
Musa
was
lhe Ugandan Embassy.
summoned
to
the
State
carter, who earlier this
week sharply criticized Department and emerged the
Amln, Is reviewing tte building at 9:50 a.m. EST. He
. situation ''with concern and refused to .answer questions
monitoring It closely," and was driven away in a
according to the brief White black limousine.
Amin earlier today ordered
HO~ anouncement.
"We are in touch with the hia security forces to bar U.S.

ELBERFELDS 1·N POMEROY

has Wra~r 'No-Fault'. Denims.
At last, denims without any faultS.

Senate Energy chairman caught in the act
COLUMBUS (UP!) -The chairman of
the Senate Energy and Public Utilities
Conunlttee tried this week to get committee members to attend a hlghprlced dinner
sponsored by an oil industry
lobbyist, It was reported t~y by ScrippsHoward Newspapers.
Bit when the newspapers began raising
questions about the dinner party, Sen.
Neat Zimmers, D-Dayton, decided to
cancel the party scheduled for March 8 at
one of Columbus' finer seafood
restaurants, Engine House No. 5 In
fashionable German VU!age.
The newspapersreported the price of the
dinner and drinks would have easUy
surpassed .$30(1, according to the man who
wu going to pay for It- David Hyer,
executive director of the Ohio Petroleum
Council, which represents the state oU
refineries, like Standard 011 and
Marathon.
"I just wanted to meet the members of
the conunlttee," Hyer said. ·
Alked what leglalation hia group was
watching In Zimmer's committee, Hyer
responded, ''Not a thing."
The committee has begun an
Investigation of why Ohio experienced a

•'

...

Shrinking

'

Forget about buy1ng denims a oout]el
of sizes too b1g. W1th Wrangler
'NcrFault' demms the size you buy
the s1ze they stay- no matter how
olten you wash them.

.'' '
'

•

Fade gnat.
Feel great.
No more stilt jeans and
•
jackets. 'Ncr FAull" denims get
soltlaster and fade the
way 100% cotton denims should -

beautifully.

Wtqlertook
the tiults out

s

Freedom from wri1nkt.•

Freecomlrompuckers.
Freecom lrom shrinking.

Denim jeans and jackets
~
get soft !aster anc lade
e&gt;actly the way c6tton denim should.
In shan. denims wort~ii o1 being call1~l
Wrangler 'No-Fault:

. IOJRS:
OPEII FRIDAY 9:30 AJI,

TO I P.M.

ELBERFELDS N POMEROY·

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

COLUMBUS State
Senator Oakley C. Collins (R·
Ironton) Thursday Introduced a bill in the Ohio
Senate that would ease the
OOrden on many Ohio school
districts forced to close
becauae of severe weather
oondltiiN In Jan1111ry and
Fehhlary.

Mounted posse is organized .
Sherif! James L. Proffitt
aid today llle flnl meeting of
the Melc• County Mounted
"'--of appr01lmately eight
pll'llllll

wu held Tunday.

conilat of searchlna for

IIUIIJW cldldren and odulta

loll In terl'lln salted for

hol'lll, help the sherlfra

department In a11istlng
'lfdlml of natural dlsulen
~ u floodl, fires, etc.,

•

full explanation for this
order," the spokesman said.
The department also said
the
West
German
government had been asked
to obtain an accounting of the
situation.
The West Germans have
been handling U.S. affairs in

He referred to the deaths of
the African country since the
American Embassy in an Anglican church official
two
Ugandan
Kampala was closed in 1973. and
About 2,000 U.S. citizens were government ministers who,
living in Uganda at the time Amin said, died in an
and aU were advised to leave. automobile crash.
But charges were made
During his news conference
Wednesday, Carter said, "In that Amin killed the three . He
Uganda, the actions there said they were plotting to
have disgusted the entire overthrow him, but denied
killing them.
civilized world."

Surface
·mmmg
attacked
I

I

WASIDNGTON (UPI) -A
group of Appalachia citize!)S.
has told Congress strip
mining is "ifr\moral" and
should be phased out. But a

governor and utility officials
argued proposed reclamation
requirements are too strong.
They appeared Thursday
before a House Interior subcommittee considering a bill
which would require land
disturbed. by surface mining
decision.''
of coal to be returned to its
Then in the same conversation, the
approximate ociginal contour
Dayton Democrat said be decided to
and set requirements for
cancel the dinner. He said he made the
reclaiming the land.
decision because of "circumstanCI!S" and
Chairman Morris Udall, [).
couldn't comment on whether the dinner
Ariz., chief architect of tbe
would be rescheduled at a later date.
legislation, said "one of my
The young attorney angrily defended his
dreams is that before the
committee. "There's absolutely no
summer we'll have a strip
collusion with anyone, and you would be
mining bffi at long last."
absolutely wrong if you said th~re was,"
The presentations ranged
be said heatedly.
from those wbo would have
Soon··after the conversation, Zlnuners
no federal law at aU, to those
sent out letters saying the dinner party
wbo prefer a han on strip
was not going to be held.
mining.
Hyer, the man who was to host the party,
A group from Kentucky,
knew nothing of the cimceUation and
West Virginia, Virginia,
indicated he thought the dinner was still · Tennessee and Alabama,
scheduled.
suggested strip mining be
phased out and the emphasis
turned to deep mine
production.
The Rev. Baldwin lloyd of
the Appalachln Peoples'
Service Organization said
destruction cauaed by strip
mining "is wrong and "evil."
"Strip mining is .lnunoral
because of what It does to
people and to land and water
and
forests," Lloyd said.
Earlier m the ciureu~ ll!hool closmgs.
·
(Continued on page 2)
This move was opposed by
sessloo, a liD was pas~ and
lligned by the Governor that the Democratic leadership in
provided relief to school the General Assembly and
d!atricts which suspended weather-related closings ,
~raUms due to a shortage were not covered.in the final
of energy. At that time 'II!I'Sion of the bill.
Senator Collins noted,
several attemptll were made
By STEVE GERSTEL
to Include in the bill a section "Mjllly soUthern Ohio school
WASHINGTON (UPI)
deaUng wilh we$ther-related districts, as well as many in VIolence lind vandalism in
lther parts of the state, were
forced to close' their doors scmary object lB "no longer
during
January
and ediiCation but Jreservatlon,"
February due to 'hazardous schools lB now so serious that
weather' conditlops. These lor a growing number of
participate in events such as districts got little &lt;ir no relief students and teachers the
parades, and patrol the from the recently-passed primary object lB ''110 longer
fairgrounds parldng lot to legislation. The bill I In· education but preservation,"
JrOtect the vehicles .of traduced' ·today allows a a Senate subcommittee
dtlzena enjoying the Meigs school district up to 10 ad· report said today.
The chalnnan of the Senate
~unty Fair from theft and ditlonal 'hazardous weather'
juvenlle
delinquency
vandalilln.
calamity dosing days. These
Sen. Birch
subcommittee,
For further Information, ten additional calamity days
Bayh,
D-Ind.,
cited the
Interested persons may can only be uaed to rover
"shocking"
atatlstlcs
ol
contact Deputy Randall situations wilere the weather,
"70,000
serious
physical
Carpenter at the Meigs not the lack of energy, was
~unty Sheriff Department.
the reason for a school Uifulll on teachers and
·me rally
hundreds
of
dming."
II
.~

Schools would get 10 more
calamity days from Collins

Dillie• of 1'- otllcen will

,TO 5 P.M.

severe shortage of natiD'al gas this winter.
It also intends to take up legislation that
would 11ft the ban on drilling for oil and gas
beneath lake Erie.
Zlmm~rs
told
Scripps-Howard
Newspapers, "I have no problem with any
member of a legislative committee
meeting with an interest group." Asked If
be pi!lnned to attend the council's dinner
party, be responded, "I haven't made that

New Crestline
•
•
service commg

enttne
'

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1977

citizens from leaving Uganda
and ordered the estimated 240
Americans to meet with him
Monday.
The State Department said
there are believed to be about
175 Americans living in the .
southeastern African nation,
most of them missionaries.
A State Department
spokesman Said earlier today
Musa would be asked for an
explanation of the Amin
order, which apparently was
in retaliation of criticism by
Carter at a news conference
thls week.
"We are asking him to
obtain from hia goverllli1ent a

KATHY KlTCHEN HAS BEEN NAMED coordinator of a
new helpful evidence service to be known as "Crestline" for
the Jackson-Meigs.{;allia Community Mental Health Center.

•

at y

POMEROY-MIODLEPORT, OHIO

Dayton Power &amp; Light Co., Thursday,
told Montgomery County officials to
find an alternate fuel source oc the
utility would shut off gas to county
offices in five days.
The utility told the Montgomery
County Commissioners it would
"meehanically terminate" gas service
unless the county acquired an alternate
source of fuel.
In another energy related
development, the Ohio House passed a
bill Thursday allowing the Ohio
Director of Agriculture to reallocate
farm petroleum supplies to guarantee
adequate energy or spring planting.
Rep. Eugene Branstool, D-utica said
the emergency bill would be effective
only until Dec. 31, 1977.
"There has been a drastic shift in the
normal fuel oil consumption," ssid
Branstool. He added that propane,
another prime source of lractor and
farm implement fuel, would also
become scarce later this year.

Ugandi's ldi Amin watched
''with concern' by Carter

Briefs

fl eedom flam

gas to Columbia Gas of Ohio last week.
Meanwhile, the Cincinnati Gas &amp;
Electric Co. announced Thursday it
woUld lift its natural gas curtailments
effective next Tuesday.
The utility had imposed an 80 per cent
curtailment on 406 large industrial and
commercial users, and had cot hack
some 16,000 smaller users by 30 per
cent.
"Ending IJ!e curtaiiment.s is possible
because an additional 1.1 billion cubic
feet of gas is being made available in
March to CGE by its supplier,
Columbia Gas Transmission Corp.,
along with forecasts of warmer
weather which will reduce the demand
for gas for heating purposes," said
CGE president William H. Dickhoner.
"Even moce important has been the
splendid cooperation of all customers in
conserving gas and making it possible
for our conununity to get through the
coldest winter on record, without more
serious hardships," said Dickboner.

•

e

•

gets more gas

A new telephone service to "'l111teers working together
provide help to troubled for the best possible service
residents of Meigs County is to calle.rs. ·
planned by the Jackson Volunteers ate being
Meigs· Gallia Mental Health oought for the program and
Service.
those selected will be given
Kathy Kitchen, a resident an extensive training course
· of Athens for the past few Cl1 crlsi s theory, helping skills
years, has been named and !he study of different
.:oordinator of the new topics which people often call"
P"ogram which is expected to about. There will be a toll free
be in complete operation by number to call but it has not
the end of April.
been assigned yet. Anyone
The new service to be who has an interest in
called ~~cres tline" will becoming a volunteer in the
!l'Ovide. a 24-lmur service to P"Ogram is asked to call the
anyone who wishes in- Meigs Mental Health Center,
fonnation, referral service, ·992-2)92 , and leave their
or who just wants to talk name and address.
about a problem . The calls
'Crestline" will replace
will be anonymous and In- "Careline" which has been
formation given will be kept serving Meigs CoWJtians out
confidential.'
of Athens. However, those
The spirit of the program is needing help or who wish to
" caring abo ut neighbors" talk over a problem are urged
and it will be a combined to
continue
calling
effort by professional staff "Careline" until the switch·
members of the center and over is made.
1
•

.

More poison spilled in river
SOUTH CHARLESTON,
W.Va. (UPI)- Less than one
week after. communities
along the Ohio River received
a scare from a major carbon
tetrachloride spffi, a new
6,()()().plund spill of the same
chemical leaked into one of
the Ohio's tributaries
Thursday.
West Virginia Health
Director Dr. Newman H.
Dyer advised t.esldents of
HWJtington, W.Va., the only
state community getting its
water below the point of the
spill, to boll · their drinking
Water.
"We don't expect any
.serious problem, but I think a
precaution Is Indicated," be
said. "We don't want to take
any chances regarding the
health of the people."
The size of the spffi was
relatively small compared
with the estimated 70 tons
which drifted down the
Kanawha and Ohio rivers last
week. Most of the 6,000
pounds of carbon tel, which is
used in cleaning fluidS, could
be expected to d!aslpate In
rainswollen river waters,
Dyer said.
The chemical seeped from

a ruptured storage tank at the expected to be only a
FMC Corp. chemical plant at fraction of the levels
South Charleston , located measured last weekend.",
along the Kanawha River.
Currey maintained It w.S·
FMC has been mentioned as a doubtful that FMC could have
possible source for the 7~on been the source of the earlier
spill· but the company denies spill.
it
and
no
official
"We've foWld no losses of
determination has been carbon tel which would
made.
confirm the EPA report of
_ After reporting the earlier any spill having occurred at
spill, the Environmental Pro- this location," Currey said.
tection agency advised com·
The FMC plant , which
munities along the Ohio to
boil their drinking water. The
70-t9n spill moved down the
Kanawha and Ohio Rivers,
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
gradually dissipating and
Sunday tbrougb
evaporating, apparently
Tuesday, somewhat cooler
causing no ill effects .
through the period with a
FMC spokesman WIU!am
chance of rain or snow
R. Currey said samplings
Monday. Highs will be In
after the leak occurred
the 40s or low 50s Sunday
showed
no
large
and In the 30s or low 40s
concentrations of the
Monday and Tuesday.
chemical in the water.
, Lows will be In the 20s
The EPA said, however, It Sunday, falling to.,the teens
was possible that some of the
by Tuesday.
\..
carbon tel could reach the
Ohio River sometime today.
With rain in the weather
forecast, the EPA said runoff ·
into the Kanawha and Its
AWOL CAUGHT
tributaries ''w!U accelerate
Meigs County Sheriff
the dilution of the cbemlcal
and the concentration Is .Tames J. Proffitt reported
tllllt his department Thursday apprehenqed Wesley D.
Clark, Rl. I, Racine as AWOL
from the Army.

employes 1,200 persons, has
been experiencing difficulty
since a power shutdown In
mid.January caused pipes to
freeze and several other
problems.
The severe weather · has
also delayed completion of a
pollution containment faclllty
that will prevent chemical
spills from reaching the
nearby river, .currey said.

Salesman wins
I

trip to Hawaii
COLUMBUS - Jim Earl,
28, a salesman for Bob Evans
Farms Sausage, has won an
lklay trip for two to Hawaii
from Bob Evans Farms, Inc.
for sales performance during
October, · November and
December.
Earl, whose route covers
retail stores in southern Ohio
and West Virginia, had the
largest increase In sales
"'lume in the company's
southern Ohio sales area. A ·
graduate of Huntington East
High School, Earl is a
resident of Henderson, W.Va.
Be and hia wife, Barbara.
have one child, Mary.

School sub,idy payments made
Meigs County's three local
8chool dlstricis received
$194,5114.45 after deductions
for employes retirement as
their part of a $55,646,069.22
February State School
Foundation Subsidy
payment, State Auditor
Thomas E. Ferguson reporta.

Of the total, Eastern Local
received $45,061.21; Meigs
Local, $110,338.96 and
Southern !.neal, $39,194.28. In
addi!ion, the Meigs County
Board of Education received
a direct · allotment of
$13,700.61.

Weather
ASK TOWED
A marriage license was
issued to Forrest Raymond
Teaford, 21, Rt, I , Long
Bottom and Launa June
Greer, 16, Rt. I, Long Bottom.

Cloudy tonight, near 35.
Rain likely Saturday, highs in
mid 50s. Probability of
precipitation 20 per cent
today and tonight, 60 per cent
Saturday.

Staying alive object of teachers, students
thousands of assaults on stu- scale, " we are currently
dents" each ~ear.
spending almost ~ million
His subcommittee's repQrt each year as a result of
said a lengthy study "has vandalism in our schools."
establlsned · tl;lat acbool
"This staggering waste of
violence and vandalism has · scarce educational resources
become a serious and at Is more money than we spent
ttmea critical Jrohlem in for testbookS In 1972 and lB
American education."
enough to hire 50,000
"While certainly not every additional teachers without
school in the country Ia faced Increasing taxes by one
with serious crtme P"Ohlems · cent," Bayh said.
it lB clear lor a growing
He said a study by the
. number of students and National Education
teachers the primary taak Is Asaoclatlon submitted to the
no lonaer education but subcommittee showed that
..-eservaUon," It said.
between 1970 and 1974,
Bayh said in an accompan- 1888ults In schoola Increased
ylng statement It has been ii&amp;per cent; sex offenses by 62
esltmated that on a national
~~

· per cent; deregulated crimes
by 81 per cent; and (Obberies
by 117 per cent.
The report , said the
subcommittee was "totally
oppoaed to the view that our
schools must be turned Into
armed fortresses In order to
Jrovlde a secure place In
which to teach and learn:"
It
urged
" sober
assessment, not hysterical
reaction, and instituting
ihoughtful measures rather
thjlll making glib promises."
The subcoounlttee noted
that "problema involving
home environment, severe
unemployment among young

people, and a lack of
adequate recreational
facilities have a tremendous
Influence on youth, yet
remain largely oulllde of the
school's ability to directly
·cootrol."
,
The subcommittee recommended that school boards
and state education agencies
develop balanced and
effective programs to cut
violence and vandallsn; that
schools, parents, students
and others join in efforla to
reduce the delinquency
pattern, and that Concreu
pass leglslati~ lo help with
advice and graniB.

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