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                  <text>10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, March 7,1977

HOSPITAL NEWS
VeteraDB Memorial Hospital
Saturday Admissions Floyd Rhodes, Middleport;
Nellie Vale, Rutland; Ed·
ward Willett , J r. , New
Haven; Albert Hemsley,
Syracuse.
Saturday Discharges Salem Yates, James Wlll,
Rose
Hooper,
Mabel
Kesterson, Ralph Sisso n,
Edna Reeves, Rose Mar·
cili&lt;o, Paul Andrews, Deana
Good, Mary Hamm, Carmel
Jewett, Larry Klein.
Sunday Admissions Mary Layn e, Clleshire; Mark
Hood, Pomeroy ; Thomas ·
Hart, Pomeroy; Rollin
Bea rhs, Pome roy ; Joseph
Rudolph, Sr ., Athens ;'
Frances Davidson, Rutland ;
Floyd Bush, Letart, W. Va.
Sun da y Discharges Brian Diehl, Susan Bennett,
Paul Voll.
PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Kenny
&amp;ders, Point Pleasant; Lisha
Kerwood, Cottagevllle; Mrs.
Richard Tolliver, Gallipolis
Ferry; Mrs. Lari'y Oldham,
Letart ; Mrs. William
Thomas, .Glenwood ; Mrs.
Ronald Roush, Mason ; Mrs.
John Lewis, Mason ; Mrs. Joe
Ma rcum , Point Pleasant ;,
Olivi a Sturgeon, Point
Pleasant; Robert Fowler,
Buffalo; Emmons Selby,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Elva
Black, Ashton ; Nellie Kent,
Point Pleasant; I\elle Ralke ,
Point Pleasant ; Mrs. Orville
Ellis, Point Pleasant ; Ehner
Wood, New Haven; Mrs.
Robert Ruckel, Portsmouih,
0. ; Tina Neal, Apple Grove ; .
Mrs. Charles Divers, New
Haven; and Mrs . Michael
Burgess, son, Point Pleasant. ·
Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, March 4)
John H. Adrian , John T.
Coleman, Guy D. DooUttle,
Mrs. Ben Ewing and son,
Mrs. Robert Flesher and son,
Danielle S. Frogale, Mrs ,
James Gro ves and son ,
Gertha J. Hensley, George A.
Holbrook, Jr., Eloise N.
.,IJowell, Bruce H. Jamison,
Jr., Coa Jeffers, Rose M.
Johnson , Marian J. Keller,
Aaron K. Kelton, Kathleen N.
,Lawless, Philip E. Long,
El izabeth Lycan, Elizabeth
Ma cKn ight, Branol- J .
Mallory, James H. McQuaid,
Belinda Mitchell, Amy D.
Mooney, Alma L . Moore,
Wllliam D. Morris, Veld!~ W.
Oh li n ~er r Ruth Patterson.
Mildred A. Paxton, Glenn
Powell, Mrs. DaVid Price and
,.,n, Elaine R. Ramsburg,
Marilyn R. Riegel, J ustin S.
Roush, Audra M. Sayre, Mrs.
!Uchard Scott and daughter,
AI va G. Shoemaker, Steven
Ray
Snider ,
Estelle
Spa ulding, Mrs. Paul Swain
and daughter, Gllldys Vitltoe,
Elizabeth Wasch, Trudi D.
Wright.
,
(Birlbs, March4)
Mr. and Mrs. Carl McCoy,
daughter, Wellston ; Mr. and
Mrs . J ames Littlejohn,
daughter, Wellston.
(Discharges, March 5)
Connie L. Bailey, Mrs.
Daniel Bias and daughter,
Newton J. Boyer, Keith E.
Burdette, Gemma M. Casci,
Myrtle M. Coon, Hallie Cross,
she! H. Dabney, Nellie E.
Eblin, Ann Fleming, Charles
W. Fulks, Steven M. Hill,
Goldie Hood, Peggy A.
In galls, Mrs. Charles Jarrell
and son, Ray10ond M. Jones,
Darin P. Logan, Kathryn
Mayes, Wesley C. Meeks,
Kathryn J . Pauley, Forrest
R. Russell, Jr ., Inez C.
Sheward, Correna M.
Stevens, Carl C. R. Stewart,

CELEBRITY AIR·RIDE
CANISTER VAC
• 1.7 puk h,p,
• . (.79 VCMA Roting)

• 10 quart bag c:apacity
Rides on 1 cushion of
• air for tffortltSI mobility
• Fuii,Time edg•cleaning

eAllotoond
furniture
...rd

All GAMES
TEAM
W l P OP
Southern
21 0 1749 1132 ·
lym. Va lley 12 9 1174 1210
1-l&lt;&gt; nnan Trace 9 10 1089 11 86
Ky~er Creek
8 to 11 56 119 1
Nor lh Ga lll a 8 10 1216 1345
.Southwestern 6 12 114S 1231
Eastern
0 19 811 1328
FINALSVACONLY
TEAM
W l P OP
Sou ther n
12 0 1033 702
Sym. Valley 9 3 766 7 14
North Galli a 7 5 787 794

Vernie Van Duke, Katie M.
Walburn, Phyllis F . Warner.
(Births, March S)
Mr. and Mrs . David
Thompson, daughter Jack·
S&gt;n; Mr. and Mrs. James
Stewart, son, Circle ~iU e ; Mr.
and Mrs. David Triplett, son,
Portland.
(Diocharges, March f) • Hannan T r ace 6 6 726 833
Vaughn Glassburn, Christi Kyger Creek 4 8 659 105
A. Halley, Kevin Hunt, Lulu Southwestern 4 8 772 764
0 12 469 72S
C. Lodwick , Celia R. McCoy, Eastern
FINAL SVAC RESERVES
J. Steve Oney, Sandra Kay TEAM
Patterson, Shannon M. Sruns, TEAM
W l P OP
Southern
11 1 629 436
Shannon M. Wheeler.
North Gall ia 10 2 603 470
!Births. March 6)
Sym.
Valley 8 4 536 547
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Eastern
s 7 482 46 7
Conkle, daugh.ter, Cheshire ; Hannan T r ace 3 9 492 543
Mr. and Mrs . Richard Sou thwestern 3 9 401 ·534
Plymale, son, GallipoUs; Mr. Kyger Creek ·2 10 378 SIS
and Mrs. Terry Varn ey,
LODGE TO MEET
daughter, Racine; Mr. and
RACINE
- Racine Chapter
Mrs. Roger Vanco, daughter,
134,
DES,
will
meet in regular
Gallipolis.
sessloo at 8 this evening at
the Masonic temple. The
worthy 10atron reminds
members whose dues are not
(llid
that the deadline for
(Continued from page I)
dues to be paid Is the first
p.m. Winners
collide Monday in April and after
Saturday at 7: 30. The 1977 that tinie there will be. a
district winner will advance penalty. Refreshments will
to the regionals, which will be served by Jan Norris and
also be held at Athens March CresUyn Hill at tonight's
18·19.
meeting . Dues should be
Both Washington CH and mailed to Cora Webb,
Nelsonvine :York ha ve
secretary protem.
regular season makeup
games remaining. The Blue
lions will play Wilmington
Tuesday and Nelsonville·
LADIES TO MEET
York is at Logan tonight.
RACINE
- The Racine
Thiets may be purchased
Fire
Department
Auxiliary
at lbe gates In Athens for $2,
will
meet
at
B
p.m.
Tuesday
... at Gollla Academy High
at
the
ho10e
of
Grace
Roush.
School.
In the Class AAA District at
Marhtta College, Marietta,
14·5, will tackle New
Philadel~ia , 10-9, at 7 p.m.
DAVTOMEET
Friday. Cambridge, 14-6, will
Meigs County Chapter 53,
lllke oo Miami Trace, 1().9, at Disabled American Veterans,
8:4:i p.m. Friday. Cham· will meet at 7:30 p.m.
r&amp;ooship game is 8 p.m. Thesday at the chapter home
Saturday. The winner ad· oo Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
vanced to the Marion Election of officers will be
Regional.
held.

District

,-------------------------- 1

Area Deaths

!

ETHEL RALPH

Graves ide services will be

reid tor Mrs . Ethel Ra lph, 90,
a resident of Pompano
Beach. Fl a. a nd f ormer
· re sident of the Eno com.

one

da ugh ter, Mrs . L. J udd

after mishap
Ada C. Ward, 69, Cheshire,
was cited to Gallipolis
Municipal Court for failure to
:top witbln the assured clear
distance following an ac·
ci..,nt at 4:32 p.m. Saturday
oo SR 7, one mile south of CR
2.
The Gallia-Meigs Post
&amp;ate Highway Patrol said
the Ward 'car struck the rear
end of a vehicle operated by
Walter Scotty Lucas, 44,
ClleShlre. There was minor
damage.
A second accident occurred
It 7:05 p.m. on SR 7, two
miles north of U. S. 35 where
a deer ran into the path of a
vehicle operated by Melvin
Tabor, 30, GalllpoUs. There
was slight damag•.

•
BING ''ON 111E ROAD"
. PASADENA,, Calif. (UPI )
- Singer Bing Crosby, still
"too sore to travel" after a 20- ·
foot fall into an orchestra pit,
Is on the road to recovery at
Huntington Memorial
Hospital.
"He
is
still
too
uncomfortable to travel,"
hospital spokesman John
McCartby said Sunday.
Crosby, 72, fell during a .
television taping last.
Thursday commemorating
his 50 years in show bu.slness.
He was not seriously injured.

t

Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Hennessy

was

the

deatH by her

husband,

Thomas ; one son, Tommy ;

four br others, John, B ruce,

Cha se, Pom pa no Beach ,
Flit .; on e gr andda ug hter ;
nine great-grandchil dren,
and sev eral nieces and

Ted and Clint Roberts, and a
sister, Bea Parrish.

wi ll be Rev. C. J. Lemley .

Offfciafing at the service

Cathol ic Church, ladi es
Gvi ld of the Sacred Heart

lJ"lder the direction of the

Au xil iary a nd Wh isperi ng
Pines Garden Club.

nephews.

Funeral arrangements are

McC oy-Moore

Funeral

M r s. Henne ssy was a
member of th e Sacr ed Head
Par is h, Amer ica n Legion
She is survived by a son,

Horne, Vinton .

Pa t Hennessy, Bel Aire, Md.;
1wo daughters , Mary El len
Eubanks. New Wilm ington ,

PRESENTS
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
Actress Clcely Tyson has
been added to the list of
presenters at the 49th Annual
A Cad em r AWards
presentation ceremonies
March 28.
""- F 'dlcln odu
· Wil W..u rel
,pr cer
of the award ceremonies,
said
Miss
Tyson's
appearance would be her
second on the award show.
TYSON

Pa., and Ka th ryn Craven,

Calif.; 1wo brothe rs, Robert
Roberts. Pomeroy, and Grant
Roberts , Point Pleasant; 12
grandchildren, several greatgrandchildren, and several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be
reid Tuesday at 10 a.m. at the
Sacred Hearl Church with the
Rev. Father Paul Wellon
officiailng. Burial will be in
tre sacred Hearl Cemetery.
Rosary servi ces will be held
· this even ing at 7: 30 at the
Ewi ng Fu neral Hom e.
Friends may call at the

flll eral home at any t[me.

Attend recent health
session in Atlanta

almounced by agent

Driver cited

nig ht at

i!Wld Cora Hannum Roberts.
She was a.lso pr eceded in

Eno.
Sundvors · incl ude

George B. Greaves, Ph. D.,
center director, and Malcom
B. Orebaugh, administrator,
rl theGallla. Jacksoo - Meigs
Community Mental Health
Center in Gallipolis were
among 1,000 people attending
a. recent mental health
meeting in AUanta.
Sponsored by the National
Council of Community
Mental Health Centers
(NCCMHC), the meeting
focused on planning for the
future of mental health
service delivery systems.
· Dr. Greaves and Mr .
OrebaUgh were part of the
patients' rights issue group.
Kenneth Donaldson,
(lltients' rights activist and
althor of "Insanity Inside
CAll," participated In two
sessioos. He was a Florida
The Pioneers led 1!1-18 at :tate · hospital patient for
lbe half mark and outl!Cored many years and his lawsuit
the Cubs 16-7 in the final against the hoopital resulted
in a landmark decision on the
!tanza for the victory.
right
to treatment.
The Cubs falling to
Twenty-two
workshops, led
. generate any offense or
by
nationally
known mental
..,fense were led by Paul
healtb
specialists,
focused on
Winston who scored 20 points
management,
services,
before fouling out with six
prevention,
community,
minutes remaining in the
research and evaluation.
mntest.
"Mental health service
The defeat left 'tbe Cubs
delivery
systems are at a
with a 6·1 mark.
crossroads
today," said Dr.
The Pioneer School will
Join
C.
Wolfe,
NCCMHC
meet the Happy Hearts team
"l'ecutiv~ director. "Centers
rl Portsmouth, March 9 for
the OAA Area Seven League must constantly assess and
bnprove their service
championship.
..,livery system and, at the
same time, develop broad
tllses of community support
md funding."
"This meeting proVided an
exciting forum for center

]l'Oduction and what it takes
to get swine enterprise
financing . Th ere will be
plenty of time for questions.
On March 17, Dr. Andy
Swiger, Department of
Animal Science, The Ohio
State University, will discuss
the selection of boars and
gilts, where to procure them,
and how to handle newly
acquired breeding stock for
the swine herd. Dr. Swiger
pans to answer questions
such as "What traits should
be considered in breeding
"ock selection?"
According to Clay, the
March 24 meeting is tbe
annual meeting of the
Southern Ohio Feeder Pig
Improvement Association .
This begins
with a
potluck supper. at 7 p.m. fol·
lowed by the annual
meeting and guest speak·
er Dick Isler of the Ohio
Pork Producers' Council. A
speci81 women's prograrri
that evening will deal with
"Home
Fire
Warning
Systems.' ' Reservations are
needed for the March 24
meeting.
Clay states that all area
swine producers are welcome
to attend tbe three sessions.

died Sa tur day

a.m . a t Robiso n cemetery,

Area swine meetings
Three area swine meetings
are to he held at the Jackson
Area Extension Center on
March 10, 17 and 24, says
James C. Clay, Area Ex·
tension Agent, Aruma! In·
dustry.
On March 10, at 7:30p.m.
Hank McClurg of Jackson
PCA, and Mr. William P.
Smith, Area Extension
Agent, Farm · Management,
will discuss swine _..Price
outlook, today 's .costs of

Mrs. Ruth Hen ne5Sy, 79,

Mulber rv Ave ., Pomeroy

daughter of the la te Willi am

from cage tournament
The Pioneer School of
Chillicothe ousted the
Guiding Hand School Cubs in
First Round Action of the
OAA Area Seven League
Tournament at Wakefield,
Cl\lo 5(1.31.
The Cubs who had beaten
the Pioeer school only last
week by 16 points in Cheshire,
were no match for the
fighting Pioneer l!Chool.
Mark Chamberlin and D.
Wayne led the victory attack
with 16 points each, handing
&lt;if assists and playing a fine
floor game for the Pioneer
school.

RUTH HENNESSY ·

.

!Flynt would pay for new
study of pornography

mm lty, Wednesda y at 11

Cubs are eliminated

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION
WATCH FOR .
OPENING DATE
(

S VA(,' standings

diS&gt;rders, staff and b(lar.d
members to address the.
critical areas of planning,"
he said.
The NCCMHC is a
Washington
based
organi.ation of more than 500
community mental health
centers in the United States,
Guam and Puerto Rico.
Its purpose is to raise the
level of effective mental
health services through
ooordinatio~ and cooperation
of community mental heaith
centers and other mental
health and health agencies.
It is a unique organization
in that the board of directors
is composed of both. mental
health center representatives
and representatives of the
citizen boards which govern
mental healtb centers.
Dr. Allan Beigel, Tucson, is
outgoing chairman, and
W~liam E. Summers, In,
Louisville, is chairman-elect.

CINCINNATI (UPI ) Hustler magazine publisher
Larry Flynt, in full page
advertisments in !Dday's two
Cincinnati dally newspapers,
asked President Carter oo
appoint a new " President's
Com10ission on Obscenity
and Pol'llograpliy."
Flynt offered to pay the
en tire
cos I
of
the
poroography study, which he
said could run into "millions
of dollars. " Flynt also sa'id
that' if such a commission
finds pornography harmful,
he will stop publishing
Chic
Hustler
and
magazines.
In , the ads, Flynt also
figured that Carter hlmself
"could have been indicted
and possibly. convicted for
conspiring · to promote
poroography" by virtue of
the controversial ·interview
he gave Playboy magazine
during
last
year's
presidential campaign,
Flynt was convicted here
last month of pandering
obscenity and engaging in
organized
crime
for
.distributing Hustler in the
Cincinnati area. Sentenced 00
7-to·:l!i years in jail, Flynt is
free on bond pending appeal
of bls coovictions.
·. Flfnt's ads in the
Cincinnati
Post
and
Cindnnatl Enquirer were
headlined "Dear President
Cafler :" and subtitled, "An
Open Letter from Larry

goven:unent in matters that
affect the citizens of our
nation. I am offering my
cooperation, even though the
study could coilt milllona of
dollars.
~' I want no part In
.~ppolntlng the · co~on.
no~ do I expect my financial
S!lpport to have any influence
on their methods of
procedure or ulthnate ci&gt;n·
ch11ion ...
· " Personally I do .not
believe pornography is
harmful, and I am prepared
to stake my livelihood on this
belief. U the findings of the
new commission show
evidence ID the contrary, I
will stop publishing both
Hustler and Chic magazines,
which have a combined

readenhip of tnore than 15 '
mfl1ioo people monthly .
"If I am respolllible for
seriously impairing the
minds of 15 million
Americans, I am willing to
put a stop to it. But If
pornography Is found to be
hannlesa, the represalve obscenity laws oow in force
should be removed from the
books.
"Aa my President, I am
confident that you will
appoint a conunlssloo whOle
membership will not be
biased but repreaentatlw of
the views of aU Americana.
"The absurd law that was
used to convict me In CinciD·
nali could even be uaed
against you,." Flynt told
Carter in the ads.

Scars of Eastern Ohio strip mines insPected
ffiLUMBUS (UP! ) - Four $late legislators were given a
flying tour of strip mines in most of eastern Ohio Monday to
belp coovince them that passage of a bill pending in the Ohio
General Assembly was essential to removing the scar left ·by
strip mining.
The bill, sponsored by Rep . Arthur Bowers, D.Steubenville.
would allow the state to pay fo r up to 75 per cent of the cost of
reclaiming land strip mined prior to 1972.
After AprU, 1972, the strip mine reclamation act required
· strip miners to close the canyons aod level the clifts they made
to remove the coal.
However , left untoucped was an estimated 200,000 acres of
''orphaned" strip mine land which produced widespread
pollution when water mixed with the exposed roRI seams .

forms sulphw·ic ad d e~nct runs into creeks and rivers.
HI needed to see U11s." said Ohio llcpartrnent of Natural
Resources Director Robert Tea ter after leading the 13-person
de legation on two carand-va n trips in Columbiana , Vinton and
Jackson counties.
." I think it's" shame;· said Teater, adding that reclaiming
the orphaned land was an "obligatioo all of society can profit
from.''

Last year , the legislature passed a bi ll earmarking most of
Ohio's 4-cent a ton seve rance ta x on coal to reclaiming
abandoned lands. The pending bill provides a mec hanism for
use of the estimated $5 million annually.
The only controversial area of Rowers' i mplern entin~ legis·

&amp;I

•

e
VOL. XXVII NO. 228

POMEROY MAYOR CLARENCE ANDREWS, left,
and Fred W. Crow, president of·the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce, work the handle of the groundbreaking
· ceremonies shovel for the new headquarters of the Athens
County Savings and Loan Co. Meigs Branch in Pomeroy.

Flynt."

The ads stated, ''Nearly
seven years ago, the Pres!·
dent 's Commission on
Obscenity and Pornography,
after a lengthy and trying ·
investigation, recommended
that laws 'prohibiting the
sale,
exhibition
or
distribution of sexual materi·
a1s ID consenting adults' be
abolished.

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Charles Legar, Pomeroy,
will be one of three men to be
honored at the awards dinner
Wednesday, March 9, at 6:30
p.m. at the Meigs Inn.
I.ega r will receive 11 Mari or.
th e Year Award" as
Pomero y's out sta ndin g
leader. Lcgar is Pomeroy
Fire Chief and former long·
time mayor of Pomeroy.

Others to receive awards
are Pete Sh ields, Letart
Falls, as outstandin g
agriculture lea der, and
Robert Wingett. Certificates
wiU be presented to six other
outstanding citizens.
Tickets are IS each· and
may ·be purchased fr om
Barba ra Chapman, secretary
ot the chamber, Ra lph

"The commisSion also

can be sitting pretty
.. . Financially, that Is! How? Just
park your money where It can do the
most for you ... in' one of our high
tnterest earning savings accounts!
It's to your advantage. Find oOI.

~ Farmers Bank
e• n'

POMEROY. OHIO

$40,000.00 Maximum Insurance for Each

Depositor. Membef Federal Deposit
Corporation.

~~surance

'

•

enttne

TUESDAY.• MARCH 8, 1977

PRICE Fl FTEEN CENTS

Columbus schools
found guilty of
CHARLES LEGAR

Werry , Fred Crow a nd
Kermit Walton.
:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::::::::";:;::::::::::::::.:-:-

EXTENDED OUTl-OOK
Thursday through
Saturday, unseasonably
warm, chance of showers
Thursday, Friday and
Saturday. Highs will be in
the 60s Thursday and In the
upper 40 north and the
upper 50s south by
Saturday. Lows will lie In
the 40s.

intended bias
By J.R. KIMMINS
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - U.S.
District Court Judge Robert
M. Duncan today found the
Columbus public schools
guilty of intentional racial
segregation and said that the
Columbus
Board
of
Education "has never taken
action which effectively
corrected" racial imbalance
in the. public school system.
Further, held Duncan in an
86-page
opin ion,
the
Columbus
Board
of
Education "has never taken
action which eff ective ly

corrected the co ntinuing
bnpact of this dual (school )
system."
Duncan sa id that lhe
Columbus
Boa rd
of
Education has "mainta ined
and even enhanced racial
Unbalance in the schools by
the use of optional attendance
zones,
di s contiguous
attendance areas and
boundary changes."
''The court does recognize
ille value of recent efforts to
provide more opportunity for
integrated educational experiences," said Duncan.

"However," he added, "the
sum of these efforts does not
have the probab ilily of
substantially curing the
system's unlawful racia l
segregation."
Duncan ordered that a plan
to remedy the racial
imbalance he found in
Columbus public schools be
submitted to the court within
90 days.
A special meeting of the
Columbus
Board
of
Education was set for 4 p.m.
today w discuss the ruling.

Andrews bitter about HUD
.failure to help out Po~eroy

.

Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews, "very disturbed"
because for the second time
in as many years the town
has been turned down on a
HUD grant, told town council
Monday night he wants an
explanation from U. S. Rep.
Clarence Miller, State Rep.
Ron James and State Sen.
. EMPLOYES OF 'OlE MEIGS BRANCH of the Athens
(Dick ) Whitmer, president ; DaVid Hughes, Dr. James
Oakley Coliins.
County Savings and Loan Co. and the company's board of
Bratton, local employes Connie Warner and Geri Walton,
He'd like to know why
directors at Monday's groundbreaking ceremonies. Left
Michael Hartman, and 0 . J . Houck.
southeastern Ohio, especially
to right are Richard Jones, Meigs Branch manager; B. R.
Pomeroy, is turned down on
all requests.
If'';,,,,,,,,:;:=:=:=:=:= = =: =:==·:·:==·=· "~.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.~,:-:·::= ·=:=·= ·=·=·= ·.;:·:::·::=·=::,:,:::=·= = = :=========:=:=:;; Gro
b r o k e n The grant was to be used
for street repair·. Mayor .
Andrews said, "I would like
to invite our representatives
to tour the Village to s~ the
conditions of the streets."
·:··
ByUnltedPresslnternatlonal
:.:
At the last meeting of
ATHENS, OHIO - ROBERTSHAW, 21, MILLFIELD, was
council there was a tie vote on
sentenced Mondsy to a 3-to-10 years in the Mansfield Reformaaccepting the bid of
Groundbreaking
president. Directors in·
tory in the death of Ted Holcomb, Trimble Village marshal,
Southeastern
Equipment Co.,
ceremonies for PQmeroy's troduced were David Hughes, .
last Oct. rl.
of
Gallipolis
for a tractor,
Shaw was charged with fleeing a fight in a tavern and newest business building Michael Hartman, Orlan loader and backhoe. The tie
crashing into a roadblock set up by Holcomb, killing the were held Monday afternoon. Houck, James Bratton and was broken by Mayor An·
The ceremonies marked Whitmer. Others with roles in
marshal. He was originally charged with murder but pleaded
the
beginning of construction the project, including Horace drews' yea vote. It was
guilty in Athens County Common Pleas Court to lesser charges
disclosed Monday night
of involuntary manslaughter, driving while intoxicated and on the colonial ty~ new Karr and son, R~y, of the however that Mayor Andrews
headquarters of the Meigs Karr Construction Co., which
resisting arrest.
Branch of the Athens County will be the building firm ,
TOWER CITY, PA. - RESCUERS TODAY dropped a Savings and Loan Co, On were introduced along with
television camera, microphone and loud speaker through a hand were officials of the community a~d business
c ompany , employe s, leaders.·
hoi~ straight down from atop a 4~foot hill into a flooded-out
representatives
of Pomeroy's
Following the ceremonies a
coal mine to find out if five five missing miners might still he
offici a I family and the reception was held at the
alive.
The hole was made by a giant drill which broke through chamber of commerce and Meigs Inn.
business leaders.
The new building will be
Into Jibe Kocher Cool Co. mine at 11:15 p.m. Monday after
Richard
Jones,
local
located
at the site of the home
hollts of drilling. The work was slow because steel casings had
of
the
company,
manager
of
the
late
Theodore EhersA special public meeting
to be dropped into tbe hole and cemented in to prevent
welcomed
guests
did
B.
R. hach on Pomeroy's West
will be held at 7:30 p.m.
cOllapse.
!Dick ) . Wh(tm·er, county Main St.
Wednesday at the Meigs High
School to discuss a new bill
NAIROBI, KENYA - 111E SOVIET UNION iS deeply
proposed In the Ohio
involved in tbe mass ldillng of Ugandans by President' ldi
Lesislature known as the
Amln's security forces , a Nairobi newspaper ha reported. The
"Sunset Law."
Nation newspaper urged Ugandans to establish their own
According to Mary Powell
governrnent4n-exile, demanded the United Nations "disarm"
and
Linda
Yonker,
Uganda and blasted Arab and African nations for their silence
cosmetology instructors at
over recent events in the East African country.
the high school, if passed, the
The Nation's editorial was possibly the severest attack by
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Attorney General Griffin
bill would elbninate certain
.any African pewspaper or govermnent on Amin and events in
Bell says prosecution - not leglsllltion - will curb
professional agencies and
Uganda where hundreds and possibly thousands of persons
multimillion dollar fraud by doctors, nursing horne
boards within the state and
have been killed in a countrywide crackdown. The newspaper
operators
and druggists serving millions of poor and
combine them with agencies
said Amin's State Research Bureau - his "death squad"
elderly covered.by government health programs .
and boards totally unrelated.
blamed for most of the killlngs - "Is being trained and
Bell, appearing Monday before joint House health
An example of this Is that the
directed by Russia's Committee lor State Security - the
subcommittees, - d considerably less enthusiastic
Cosmetology Board which
EGB."
about new ·anti .fraud legislation than did Health, ·
would be combined with real
Education and Welfare Secrelllry Joseph Califano Jr.
estate, archllects, ac·
WASHINGTON - THE PRESS MAY PRIN'j' or broadcast
last week. ·
·
countants, hearing aid and
anything seen or heard in otien coort or obtained from court
" ... What is needed ID deal with this problem Is not
barber groups.
records. This Jrlnciple, which the Supreme Court has porsued
rnajll'
new legislation but a commitment to maintain
The ·Ohio Vocational
for 30 years, was underlined again Monday in the case of an
and protect the integrity of these programs," Bell said.
Cosmetology Teachers ASSII.,
Oklahoma City juvenile held in coonectlon with the fatal
"I am making that commitment to you on hehaH of the
the Ohio Coemetology ASSII.
shooting of a railroad worker.
Justice
Department."
and
various
other
Although Oklahoma law says juvenile hearings can he
Califaoo last Thursday told the same committees
cosmetology groups are
closed, reporters attended Larry Donne! Brewer's first
the Carter administration Intended to root out "craven
workin~ together to lobby
hearing and uaed the story with his picture. Judge Charles E.
profiteers"
and il backed many of the provisiOns of the
a~ainst the new bill. '['hey
Halley Cl'dered no further identification of the boy aoo was
anti-fraud legislation which boosts penalties for brlhes.
!lave had petitions drawn up
upheld by the Oklahoma Supreme Court on the ground his
by an attorney and would like
(Continued orl page 2)

:~News.

Save

" .zn BrzefS\\\

und

for structure

cannot break a tie vote when
it deals with an expenditure.
Council therefore ad·
vertised again, and received
two bids . One from the
Reasor Equipment Co.,
Hamden was for $18,895, less
trade-in of $7,695, a total of
$11,200.
The other wa s from
Southeastern Equipment of
Gallipolis in the amount of
$19,867, $15,500 without trade
and $11,800 ·with trade. The
Gallipolis firm which loaned
the Village a tractor, loader,
and backhoe for the past two
months, was informed that if
its bid was accepted the
$1,000 a month rental would
not have to he paid.
Council voted to accept the
bid from Southeastern
Equipment. Delivery will he
within seven days .
An ordinance to regulate.
the use of amusement devices
and providing for a tax on
such devices was given its
first reading. It requires that
no person, lirm, organization

or corporation shall have in
the village of Pomeroy in his
or her possession in a place of
business, rent, offer for rent
or allow to be operated in a
place of business any pinball
machine without first having
obtained from the village an
annual license the fee of
which shall be $50 ~ach for
the first tbree machines or
devices, and $25 for each
additional machine or device.
· The ordinance alSo includes
juke boxes or musical boxes
that require the deposit of
coins and such licenses ·shall
be $50 a year. Pool tables
which require deposit of coins
will cost $50 a year. Violators
will he fined not less tban $100
or more than $200.
The third reading was

given to an ordinance giving·
Pomeroy Cliffs · Ltd.,
easement for a stonn and
sanilary sewer along Osborne
Street. The third reading
passed on a 4 to 2 vote witb
Harold Brown· and Phil
Globokar voting no.
Meeting with council was
Don Hunnell, who is
associated with the Pomeroy
Youth League. Hunnell asked
council
for
financial
assistance with the baseball
(Continued on page 2)

Third WOrkshop

Mystery
pickets
.
.
on
loose
Public urged to oppose
·

to

proposed Sunset Bill

as

Now you cah save money and
get the super smoo1h 1001&lt; you've
a"'-ays .wanlad. So smooth and stretchy
LOOk Panties tit pretty much like you;
ski1n his. No wrinkles ... no crinkles ...no seams
!hal show. Your clothes look smooth, you look supar
, ,,...r.
... even under your ckngiesl styles.

THE MORE YOU BUY•..
THE MORE YOU SAVE ...
w~h

a cash refund
. • from Playlex®
oVHII ~ f

JUH\IY

15.00

3 pairs or

12.50

2 pairs or
1 pair ·

$1.00

Bell promises convictio"i
in healtb programs' fraud

"-'•
... -----------II

~I

how to get your calh ....,nd:

amQ~Jnt

~nstruclont

'"I

1, Buv I he tequ,ed
or 'IIIUI'IIng
1o1 1
Plt WII\ ' , SUPII Look Paf1hn .,.not UCIPIIIMI.
.,.
(I fly st,le Of COIOI] arld gel 1
&amp;all!tlecetpl dated beh,ll'l Maret\ l . S1 nd lh1 llbtl port ron(t)
11, 11177
d l lld ulet reurpt lnd I~• •'
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, ~ Witrl ytltlr n11111 111C' ld·
t move 111 1 porhon of lht
dllrl}' Pflfllt&lt;l 1o ,._.....
l• be f(l) lr o~ the glf mt nlt Dtpl. #21320, P.O. loa 1rii0•
pUICfll sed whiCh show lhl l!y\1 ~. DeinNre1~ .
'
numotf t nd sru , Do not lll'nO\Ie

I
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I
I 'cntc~
the
IDJ)IOI)I'IIIt
I bo•·

di"•

$5.00 ~tlunc!
S2 ~ Retune!
SI .OOAtk,md

••
•

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1

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CJ I bouQht l Super LOOk P~ntru
0 I bo\lgtll2 Suptf lO Pentlfl
Cl l bou~tl Sul)trlookPal'lly

11\( ~"- ' .......

.

•"•

•••

Offer good on
purchases made

before March

aty

I

recommended the
development of more factual
information and a ·continued
open discussion of the
subjecls it studied. To date,
however, the federal government has utterly ignored the
findings
and
recommendations of this
remarkable study.
SQUAD CALLED
"It is time for you, Mr.
The Mid die port
Emergency squad was called President, to establish a new
li 8:10p.m. Saturday for Eva bipartisan · commlSSlon
Moddlspaugh, Park St. The consisting of qualified social
squad administered ald. At experts to review and Update
8:26 p.m. Sunday, tbe squad' the findings of ·the previous
went to a Middleport church one and to investigate new
where Penny Smith, Route I, infOIJ!l81ion concerning this
Middleport, was ill. She was impllrtant social topic.
"!realize you are currently
laken to Veterans Memoriaf
making efforts to cot back on
&amp;spital.
government eXpenditures,
NCAA Division Ill therefore I offer to finance
Great lakes Regional
the entire eXpense of the
(AI Springfield)
(Championship)
study. It has been an
Wittenberg 69 Ashland 67
American tradition for
!Consolation I
private enterprise. .ID work
Muskingum 74· Carneg ie•
with and assist the
llelion 71

,f I

•

Legar will
be honored

NOW at ELBERFELD$
IN POMEROY

'&lt; )I J

lation is use of the fw1ds on private acreage.
late 1950's and have since contributed to severe pollution to
Teater said ille concept is nol radically different from Raccoon Creek .
mrrent pral'tice.
"You may never solve the esthetic problem," explained
''So much of what we do benefits private landowners, '' said John Schalip, supervisor of reclamation for the state in a 10.
Teater , noting thut real estate values increase whenever a new county area of southeastern Ohio, as he pointed out the acid
highway is constructed adjacent to the property and that water drainage off one of the abandoned mines.
location of a new state park invariably boosts nearby laod.
"Initially, we'll probably spend all the money on public
The first stop was near .Calcutta in Columbia na County, lands," said Bowers.
where ille group was taken ID an abandoned strip mine above
The bill also allows th e state to provide incentives to strip
Beaver Creek . The Tassi Coal Co. forfeited its bond on the miners to return and r!Hlline abandoned lands, and aftermine in 1965 and went out of business. The land is now ownect wards recla im the entire acreage.
by Jack and Robert Vodrey , two East Liverpool at!Drneys .
At least three more subcommittee hearings, chaired by Rep.
After flyin g to Jackson County, the group was laken to two John Wargo, D·l..isbon, are scheduled.
abadoned strip mines near Wellston Roth were mined in the

12,

•
••

1977.

•'
,.

I

I

1

all interested persons to
attend tomorrow night 's
meeting in Room 101 of the
high school.
Those unable to attend the
meetings are ask~d to write
letters to Gov. James Rhodes
and their state legislators
giving reasons for being
opposed to passage of such a
bill.
Many people will he af.
fected by the passing of such
a bill and tbe cos!Detology
groups are encouraging
everyone to do all they can to
help prevent this from
happening, the instructors
said. Anyone wishing more
infor!Datlon who cannot
attend the meeting 10ay call
992·7758 or 992-2622. The ih·
structors urge that action be
taken now before it Is too late.
· Mrs. Powell and Mrs.
Yonker attended a meeting
last weekend of all vocational
instructors held at the
Delaware Joint Vocational
School at Delaware.

CHARLESTON, W.Va .
( UPI ) - Mysterious pickets
wandered through coal-rich
Kanawha County shutting
down Carbon File! Co .' s
operations, and officials ·
remained puzzled today
about the latest outbreak of
trouble in southern West
Virginia's coaHields. ·
"There are no ulU'esolved
local issues of any kind that
we're aware of," said Gary
Sams, labor relaiions spokesman for Carbon.
Up to 2,400 refused 1D work
when pickets greeted them at
eight Carbon mines Monday
afternoon and other facUlties
owned by Cedar Coal Co.,
Bethlehem Mines Corp., Can·
neUron Industries, Inc., and
Irnperllll Colliery Co.
' A dispute had flared at
Carbon .over the ctmpany's
five-day suspension and
notice of intent to dismiss on
an employe who refused to
work with a "red hat,'' or
trainee, but the Issue was
settled in a hurry.
" When an entire work shift
prepared to enter a mine,
however , a looe picket stood
ll:ontlnuad on page 2)

on health here
is announced
The third in a series of
health workshops here for
Senior Citizens and community agencies staffs will be
held Friday, March 11, at the
Senior Citizens Center in
Pomeroy.
The morning session on the
subject " Understanding
Grief and·Loss" will be from
10 to 11 :30 a.m. Speaker will
he Mrs. Priscilla Leavitt.
This session is especially for
senior citizens.
' .
The afternoon session on '
"Mental Outlook on Aging"
will be conducted by Willia!Jl
Brezinski,
a · clinical
psychologist at Spencer State
Hospital in charge of the
geriatrics center and a part·
time faculty member at
Parkersburg Community
College. This session, from I
to 4 p.m., is especially for
agency staff members
although the public is invited
to attend both sessions If
interested .
Continuing Education Units
will be credited to those at·
tending the session by the
Parkersburg Co!Dinunlty
College. For persons who
wish to sign for the C.E.U. the
cost will be $5 •. There Is no
charge for persons who do not
sign for C.E.U.'s .
The workshop is conducted
by staff personnel from
Parkersburg Community
College through a grant to the
Corporation for Health
Education in Appf_lachlan
Ohio -from the Appalachian
.Regional Commission.
II.

�'
2- The Daily Sentinel, M1ddleport-Pomero). 0 ., l'u&lt;"'rlay. March 8, 1977

in
Terrorist demands!
Two die
talk with Carter
school bus

I

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

Area Deaths

ROBERT KNAPP
MASON , W Va -- Rober t

Vernon Knapp, Jr , 11 months

LYNCHBURG, Va. (UPI)
-At least two children were
killed and 31 others were
injured today when a tractor
trailer truck rammed into the
rear end of a school bus about
15 miles south of here,
authorities said,
Aspokesman at Lynchburg
General Hospital said 31
children were admitted but
their Identities and the extent
of their injunes were
llrithheld.
The body of one child was
found 11181de the school bus by

rescuers and the IIUingled
body of another was
diScovered
under the
overturned bus when workers
tned to move it from the
medJall str1p
Authol'lttes satd the losded
school bus had stopped to
piCk up a child on Rouhl 29
about 8:10 a .m. when the
truck rammed it from behind
at full speed.
The driver of the truck was
also taken to the hospital
Witnesses said the bus
overtuned ooto the median
stnp of the four-lane
highway

Andrews
!Continued from page t)
program. He satd 150
youngsters were involved in
the program last year.
Council agreed to donate
$250.

Council dtscussed road
conditions and conditions at
the cemetery. It was
suggested that an mvitat1on
be extended to the cemetery
trustees to meet With council
at the next meetmg on March
21
It was agreed that it will be
the responsibility of the street
department to repatr streets
damaged by work by the
water department
Harry Davis, councihnan,
suggested that the water
department fill holes w1th
sand and gravel and the
street department will put in
blacktop. The sand and
gravel wiU help hold the
blacktop, Dav1s said.
Davis stated that he w1ll
begin at once ordermg hot
mix from a company that is
opening today at Kanauga, so
patching can begin at once
Councibnan Lou Osborne
recommended that Robert
Hawley be sworn In as a
patrolman but continue his
duties as meter patrolman.
Steve Hartenbach, who has
already been sworn in as a
spec1al police officer, was
hired by the village under a
Federal program.
There will be a public
beartng on Revenue Sharing
funds at the next regular
meeting of council on March
21.
It was also reported that
the fire department will hose
down the streets when debns
from the streets IS removed.
Police Chief Jed Webster
su bm1tted his report f_or
February: 21 arrests, mvestigated 14 acctdents,
issued 724 parking tickets,
collected $326 from tickets,
drove 3,865 miles, had the
cruiser serviced two times
and collected $5,569 from the
parking meters
• The mayor's report, which
. :was accepted, showed
:-receipts in the amount of
-,$4,102.60 in January and
~ :February.
'·. The meetmg was opened by
{' prayer by the Rev. William
~ : M1ddleswarth. Attending
~; were Mayor Andrews, Ralph
' Werry, Lou Osborne, Harry
:: ;::~~::; Phil Globokar, Larry
;·
and Dr. Harold Brown
,: : counciln•en, Chief Webster
Capt HenrJWerry.

1

Mystery
•
(Continued from page I)
m the men's path at a Carbon
mine and all of them
retreated.
"We have no idea what 11 1s
or what their problem IS,"
Sams said. "Any problem
that has been brought up has
been solved in one fashion or
another to the satisfaction of
the local.''
Carboo has more than 1,000
employes in its strtke-bound
divlSlOOS.

By ROBERT PENICK
WARRENSVILLE
HEIGHTS, Oh10 ( UPI) - A
black exMarme who has "a
hangup about white people"
and who has held a diabetic
police captam hostage smce
Monday afternoon today
demanded President Carter
listen to his grievances
Corey Moore, 26, Warrens·
ville Heights, took Capt. Leo
Keglovic, 48, and SheUy Kiggans, 18, a h1gh school
student and part time clerk,
bostage m the traffic section
of the station about 2 p m
Mooday.
Moore, armed wllh .38
caliber and .45 caliber pistols,
released the girl early today
m exchange for a telev!$1on
set. He had deman'ded media
coverage of the se1ge and has
cOmmunicated with the
med1a through an mtercom
hookup
"We are trying to get a call
through til the White House,"
srud Police Ch1ef Craig Merchant "We've talked With the
Secret Service and realize 1t's
a gtganllc problem from their
point Of VIeW,
"If this is approved there's
no telllng how many other
people are gomg to try the
same thing," said Merchant.
"We're trymg to make Mr.
Moore understand how
involved th1s request ts."
Moore demanded late
Monday that "all white
people gel off the planet m
seven days" but changed that
demand today when he said
"if the white people don't
leave the planet .they should
show good fatth by burrung
all their money.''
Merchant also sa1d Moore
was "concerned that you (the
med1a) are not telling the
people that he has put a curse
on white people and also that

he chose to let the young lady

leave It was no bitl gam

deal''
· The)
(Moore
and
Keglov1c) are JOkmg and
gett1ng along together,'' said
Mcn.·hant

has

n Moore

refused all offers of food."
Merchant sa1d he does no
know how long KegloVIc's
health w1ll holdout w1thout
msuhn. _
Moore late Monday mght
had agreed til let food and
1118ulm be passed m for
Keglov1c but when the
captain made a move to get
the"sopplies Moore fired one
shot and Kegloviccame back.
Randall Fitch, 25, a friend
of Moore's, sa1d Moore had

told hun last week "to watch
teleVISIOn oo Monday because
there's going to be a demoostration
"He has a hangup about
white people,'' said Fitch.
"He is very firm in his beliefs
that white people should be
liqUidated."
Miss Kiggans said "he
treahld us both mce" and
added "he d1dn't seem to be
prejudlced. He just wanted to
get his message across "
Moore, when he first took
MIM KiggaM and Ke~OVIC
bostage, caUed for "an end to
white oppression of black
Amerlcans, an end to crune
and dope m the streets and
ellmmation of ballistic miS·
Slles ''
M•ss KiggaM sa1d Moore
walked mto the traffic sec11on
about 2 p.m . Monday with
"an overcoat over his ann
He took away the coat and he
had a gun. "
She sa1d he mot1oned her to
go to a room at the front of the
two-story bnck building and
Kegl~ic was taken hostage
when he heard a ruckus and
went to investigate.

The newest trouble came
just as two other wildcats
were ending, including one
that had 1dled 5,000 men m
northern West Virgmia. A
federal judge had Imposed an
$8,000 fine on a Uruted M1ne
Workers union local for
engagmg in the unauthorized
strike.
A third walkout had idled
about 2,000 mmers, IIUiny of
them employed at Carbon
mines, but workers meeting
Sunday in rural Kanawha
County had agreed to report
(Continued from page 1)
back to their JObs
rehabilitation overcame constitutiOnal demands of the free
Early m February, more preM guarantee.
than 14,000 miners boycotted
The state court said Halley did not def1rulely specify the
the southern p1ts m a diSpute hearing was open
over one coal operator's sick
leave policy.
STOCKHOLM, SWEDEN
THE SWEDISH
GOVERNMENT, in keepmg w1th women's llberal10n,
proposed Monday to 1£1 the first-born daughter of SwediSh
mooarchs
succeed them to the throne. AI present, only first•
born sons can inhent the SwediSh crown.
"The full equality of men and women IS a bas1c prmc1ple of
our tune and our country," said Gov. Ingvar Lindell, who was
asked by the government to draft the law.,
"Therefore the Swedish law Will differ from !bose of
COLUMBUS (UPI )
Denmark and Great Britain where a IIUIIe dependent precedes
Payments to nursing homes an older sister,'' he said
for trealment of md1gent
· persons were reduced
CXlLUMBUS - THE 51' ATE 'S 12NATURALGAS, electric
illegaUy m 1975 by the Ohio and telephone utilities' 22 salaried lobbyist:; spent $84,000
Department of Public durmg 1976 while working to Influence legislation in the Ohio
Welfare, according to the General Assembly, accordmg to Ohioans for Utility Reform.
Franklin County Court of "ThiS amount is only the tip of tbe iceberg,'' said Don Kral,
Appeals.
spokesman for the consumer group "The $84,000 is for
The dec1s10n came m a suit
restaurant tabs, bar bills, lodging and transportation mvolved
filed by eight nursmg bomes
in lobbymg. That averages outto over $480 per legiSlator.
against the welfare depart"The expense statements do not report the hundreds ol
ment and former Welfare thousands of dollars paid out in lobbyists' salaries nor the
Dtrector Raymond F. value of their company-owned cars," Krai said. "When you
McKenna, who ordered the note the more than $2 million spent by the utilities to oppose
cuts Into effect on July I, 1975
state Issues 4, 5, 6and 7 you begin to realize why the monopoly
Appeals•Court Judge Dean utility industry .., considered the most powerful lobbying
Strausbaugh ruled Mooday mterest m Colwn~us. "
that McKenna had the nght

News •. in Briefs

Appeal by
nursmg
homes won

to reduce pay to Medicaid
providers
when
approprlations were less than
the full costs of the
program.
·
But the JUdge said the feet
McKe{llla reduced P!lyments
only to nursing homes "is a
discriminatory and arbitrary
action "

"

.

Hosp1tal on Monday

Born Mar c h 2J, 1976, '"
Gallipolis, he was the son of
Robert Vernon and Marsha
Lynn Murray Knapp.
Surv ivors other than h•s
parents are a s1ster, Angeli ca
Rae Knapp , hiS ma teria l
grandparents, Cllfiord and
Lucille Mur.ray, Pomeroy ,
and paternal grandparents,
Don and Coley Knapp West
Columb•a

Funeral serv1ces wdl be

M rs Edward Bowen and
Mrs W ill iam Lowen of
Pomeroy have rece1ved word
of the death of the1r sister,

Mrs

Floyd

M

I

Bentz. the

former Alta Fo;.: of Mar ion

services wil l be
announced
Funera l

WILBUR WOOTEN
Wolbur Clyde Wooten, 69 ,
d•ed Sunday morning at h is
home at Browns Mills. N J
Born m Clay Twp , Gall1a
County, he was the son of the
late John and Savanah
Wooten He attended Gall 1a
County schools and served
four years in the U S Navy
before toming the Merchant

Middleport Cub Scout Pack
245 and Pomeroy Cub Scout
Pack 249 jomed for a skating
party Saturday at the Skatea-way Rink on Route 7
Winners of games played
dunng the event were Vm·
cent Kntght, pole game;
Ricky Patterson and Curtis
Fraley, the corner game with
Joey Barton second place

Hood, Parker Long, Jason
Bush, Mike Jones , Jenntf~r
McKinley , Tara Bacon, Susie
Barker, Wendy Barker,
Kathy Barker, Jody Miller,
Todd Grover, Cubmaster and
Mrs. John C. Bacon II, Donna
Gheen, Marilyn Poulin, LouiSe Johnson, Mr and Mrs
Larry Baker, Mr and Mrs.
Harold Wolfe and Charles

wumer.

Davis.

Members and guests atheld al the res1dence of Don
tending
from the Middleport
Knapp on Wednesday at 1 30
Pack
were
M1ke Stone, Enc
p m w1th Rev
Geor~e
Marines
Hoschar offic1at1ng Bur1al
Survivors include hiS w1fe, Johnson, Dannte Thomas,
wrll follow af fhe Cl ifton Hill Tresa , son, Dav1d, Florida ,
Scott Gheen, P. J. Hams,
Cemetery
daughter , Shirley Rock ,
John Arnold, Darin Wolfe,
Friends may call at the Don
Vermillion , brother, Russell,
Shawn Baker, Jeff Smtih,
Knapp res1dence after J p m
Gallipolis and sister, Sibyl
today Funeral arrangements Toops. Mt . Sterling
Jeff McMahon, John Epple,
are under the d1rechon of the
The body was cremated
Melv1n VanMeter, Ronnie
Foglesong FunerC~ I Home
iollowlng serv1ces held in
Denny, T1m Wamsley,
New Jersey
Richard Poulin, Steve Crow,
Scott McKmley, Tun Smith,
Nick Bush, Dav1d Hoover,
Charles Davis, Tony Welch,
John Bacon III. Kevin
Johnson, Kathy Thomas,
Arnie and Danya Gheen,
Chris Connors , Melanie
Arnold, Beth Wolfe, Polly
Chadwell,
Mathew Baker,
Four persons were mjured McGeary, 21, Oltway, ran off
Lynn
Epple,
Chris Burdette,
in four traffic accidents In- the roadway into a ditch
Jeff
Nelson,
Jeff and Todd
vestigated Monday by the McGeary and a passenger,
Gallla-Meigs Post State Donna Brewer, 58, Columbus,
H1ghway Patrol.
were taken for med1cal
The f1rst accident occurred treatlnent No citation was
at NO a.m. on the Kerr- issued.
Ramsburg Rd. west of SR
Kenneth H. Dickey, 27,
160 where an auto driven by Caldwell, was c1ted to Meigs Veterans Memorial Hospital
Tanya Robinson , 17, Bidwell, County Court for failure to
Admitted - Jack Cornell,
pulled mto the path of a yield the right of way Portland; Verlln Howery,
vehiCle operated by Robert L following an accident on SR 7 Albany; James Voshel,
Hums, 26, H1dwell.
at the ext! ramp to SR 33.
Manetta; Denzel Boggess,
Both dnvers complained of
Officers said the Dickey Racine ; Shirley Custer,
minor injuries but were not vehicle pulled into the path of Pomeroy; Marcella Alling,
Immediately treated.
a car operated by Jerry L. Pomeroy; Gary Scholderer,
Robmson was charged wtth D1tcher, 18, Albany. There Pomeroy; Nancy Taylor,
failure to yield. There was was moderate property New Haven:
Johnson
moderate property damage. damage.
Scarberry, New Haven ;
Two persons were taken to
A deer was killed in an Deborah King, Middleport.
the Holzer Med1cal Center for acc 1dent at 8:45 am. on SR
Discharged - Viola Edtreatment of mJurtes suffered 160, four ITIIles north of U.S. wards, Thomas Hart, Albert
man accident at 11 :18 p.m.•---as. The anunal ran mto the Hemsley, Ernest Stewart ,
Monday on SR 554, east of SR path of a car driven by Lowell Eugene Roush , DoriS Miller,
325.
F Halley, 44, Gallipolis
Donald Kelly.
A vehi cle driven by Vernon

Four injured in
as many mishaps

Members of Pomeroy Pack
249 and their guests attending
were Joe Fields, Greg Fields,
Robbie Fields, Vincent
Knight , Brett Korn, Brian
Korn, David Leach, Lee
Powell, Scott Powell, TOdd
Powell, Gene Powell, James
Leach, Ricky Patterson,
Curt•s Fraley, Joey Barton,
Brian Betzing , Vaughn
Spencer, Rodney Roush ,
Terry Derenberger, Cubmaster and Mrs. George
Wright, Sherrie Southwarth,
Paula Derenberger, Kelly
Wise cup, Rodney Roush ,
Cheryl Roush, Rita Fields,
Paulette Farley, Tammie
Johnson and Nancy Whittekind.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Mareb 7l
Ira Adkms, Timothy Lee
Barry, Susie E. Foster,
Goldie M. Freeman, Linda
Mae Gantz, Kunberly D.
GiUiland , Bradley A. Gray,
Helen M Grumbling, Barbara Ann Jones, Mrs. Carl
McCoy and daughter,
Frankie Neigler, John C. Ray
III, Dawn A. Shafer, Leo M
Smith, Nellie K. Travis,
Shirley J. Watson.

Ohio Valley warned of danger
pollution.
Added Dr Max Menefee,
commtttee chairman, "It
a lways amazes me how
industries asswne it is their
God-given ri~ht to do
whatever they want."
Menefee, a professor at the
Umversity of Cincinnati,
complained that utility
companies have unfairly
used the severe winter and
accompanymg natural gas
to
promote
shortage
expanding their electrical
plants.
"Our wmter has been had
enough," he said. "We can no
longer allow it to be used as a
subterfuge
to
excuse
everylhmg mcludmg the
burnmg of h1gh sulfur coal,
improper operation of
ex1stmg power plants,
nuclear power plants,
unneeded new conventional
plants and even higher utility
rates.
"We have had a natural gas
shortage, but there has been
no shortage of electric power
and generating capacity."

Menefee said his group
"finds it impossible to
condone the contmued
degradation of the Ohio River
VaUey that will come from its
exploitation for power plant
construction ''
''The proltferation of plants
within the relatively narrow
confines of the river valley
can only lead to more severe
problems lllan already enst
and increased mc1dence of
respiratory diseases," he
added.
Menefee cited an Ohio Lung
Association report that there
will be "100 to 200 excessive
deaths annually". because of
"inadequate Ohio standards
and
regulations"
in
controlling pollutiOn from
burnmg high sulfur coal. ·
"ThiS is a price that just
shouldn't be pa1d," he said
"High representatives in the
Ohio government are pushing
for unregulated use of high
sulfur coal. This is
completely immoral. The
result Is massive mcreases in
lung diseases."

Menefee noted that an "increased number of cases of
breathing-related illnesses"
occurred recently in the
VIcinity of an Adams County,
OhiO power plant "due to the
improper operation of that
plant."
"We recognize the need to
continue to urge energy
conservation and to continue
to meet the power needs of
bomes, schools, businesses
and industry," he added.
~ 1However, other means of
meeting those needs and
energy conservation, such as
off.peak pricing, need to be
explored before the massive
expense of 11 new power
plants can be justified.''
Menefee referred to the
proposed construction of II
power plants along the Ohio
R1ver between Portsmouth,
01110, and Louisville, Ky.
"Theclustering of so many
plants withm an ar~ is likely
to have the same kind of a
cumulative effect as the lm·
proper operation of one
plant,'' he said.

Recyclable co~tainers may
have eased energy· shortage
8y WIWAM E. CLAYI'ON

Blood pressure up and down
had plam higb blood pressure
there would be medicmes for
11 but there seems to be so litUe to do \l'ith this up and down
problem 1 dread evenmgs
because of this problem. Can
you help me?
DEAR READER - I have
wntten about this problem
before but 11 IS common
enough to Justify repeating.
Your doctor is absolutely
nght in not glvmg you htgh
blood pressure medicme in
view d your fa~rly regular
nonnal readings. IndiVIduals
-,rith your problem are called
vascular hyperreactors. I
have seen hundreds d them.
Even young healthy people
may have such reactlons m
the doctor's offtce, only to
have perlectly normal
readings an hour later
Your' blood pre;u~ure can
rise and fall as a reflex
response, as the small
arteries m yuur body t'OO-stnct or dilate in relljJ(llllle to
re0et'1. at.'lion. Such response~~
can foUow stress uf any kind.
That ;., why medidnc.ll like

arr ival at the Pleasan t Va-l lev

By RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI (UPI)- The
Ohio R1ver Valley could
become Arner1ca's version of
Germany's mlamous Ruhr
Rwer Valley as more and
more power plants pop up
along the shoreline, warns a
groUjJ of environmenlabsls.
Officials of Ule Tr1.State
( Oh1o, Kentucky
and
Indiana) Air Committee,
Inc , pointed out at a news
conference Monday that
some 50 power plants are
either operatmg, under
construction or proposed
along Ule Oh1o River between
Ashland, Ky. and Cairo, JU.
"We face increased
thermal pollullim of our
waterways and mcreased a1r
polluhon," said Stan Hedeen,
a
Xavier
Umversity
professor and a corrurnttee
board member. "In short, the
Ohio River Valley could
become the U.S.'s Ruhr
CXlLUMBUS- RECORD 1976 OPERATING earnmgs ol Valley."
Germany's Ruhr R1ver
$21 ,952,boo, or $2 15 a share, have been posted by Nationwide
VaUey
is noted both for its
Corp , lor a 41 per cent mcrease over 1975.
lllaBsive
manufacturing and
General Chairman Dean W. Jeffers said Monday it was
"an excellent recovery,'' resulting IIUiinly from "exceUent
sales and higher investment mcome, unproved mortality
expenence oo life msurance pohctes and the significant
unprovemenl in the health insurance lines.'' After realized
mvestment losses of $174,000, net income last year was
$2t,m,ooo, or $2 13 per share, including $4,458,000 operating
earnings m the fourth quarter . ·

Dr. Lamb

By Lawrenre E. Lamb,
M.D.
D~AR DR. 1.AMB - I'm
hopmg ron will help me llrith
a quest•on my doctor doesn't
seem to answer. And I have
found no literature 011 the subJecl. Low has been written
about plam high blood
pressure but so little about
the patient whose blood
pressure Is up and down
Much of the tune through
the day it IS nonnal or lower,
120 over 78, 140 over ~- Then
anytime, and espec1ally evenings, it IIViU go up to l:;Q over
90 or even as h1gh as 200 over
115.
My doctor does not g1ve me
blood pressure med1cme
because he says 11 Is noc
regular high blood pressure.
But I am very uncomfortable
when it goes up and feel very
weak and nervous. I take a
light Librium and a
nil.rofllycerine under the
lollgUe. 1be mtru usually brlngl it dnwn but II Will often
soon go bat-k up.
r am not overweight, do not
smoke, or drink coffee If I

ol d ot Mason was dead on

MRS. FLOYD BENTZ

! Cuh packs joined
at skating party

Libnum that calm you are
helpful. It IS also why In·
divtduals wtlh this problem
should not drink coffee or
stimulating drinks.
There are a few patients
w1th this problem who do
have a tumor of the adrenal
gland ( usuaUy not malignant ) called a pheochromocytoma. The tumor
secretes adrenaline and
causes the sudden I'ISe m
blood pressure. Your doctor
can check you for this 1f he
has not done so already. This
u; a cureable problem as once
!he tumor Is removed the swmgs in blood pressure stop.
But I hasten to add that most
cases of mtenruttent sharp
nses m blood pressure arc
not on this basiS but are a
reflex response
You rrught try eating
something at !he tune one of
l.helle episodes occur w see 1f
that helps Also, ir you can lJe
WSial al tht&lt; tune of a nse m
pressure 1t 11nght help. I
wuuld thmk a blOO&lt;J sugar
1~lucrl!iC J test dUimg the

v

epiSode rrught lJe usetuJ w ""
sure you are not havmg some
form of hypoglyce(llic attack
These are usually assoctated
wtth low blood pressure but
that may not always be the

case.

~

,

Other than these suggestions the only thing you can
do IS to try to identify the
causes of stress in your life
and avmd ~ - You mtght
get some beneiit out of a
regular exercise program,
not just to Improve your
physical condition but also to
help you relax. ExerciSe IS
much better than alcohol m
providing true relaxation.
I am sending you The
Health Letter number 1-.'1,
Blood Pressure to g1ve you
more mformatwn on what
cvntrols blood pressure .
Othe1-s who want th1s infonnatwn can send 50 cent.s
for 1t wtth a long, ~tamped,
self-addressed envelope.
ScnrJ y;.ur request to me in
ca1·c nf llus newspaj)er, P 0
Bux 15:!1, RarJ10 C•ty SU.t1nn,
Nr·~ Vurk , NY 10019

WASIUNGTON (UP!) Rap James Jeffords IS a
strong behever in the
returnable bottle and
recyclable can. So strong, in
fact that he thinks putting an
end to the throwaways could
have eased this winter's
energy woes.
Jeffords, a Vennoot Democrat, introduced a b1ll early in
this Congress to require
returnable containers for
beer and soft drinks.
He and Environmental

IN HOLZER

Mrs Edgar Thomas, Nye
Ave., Pomeroy, !sa patient at
Holzer Medical r;enter where
she was scheduled to undergo
surgery today. Her room
number is 208.
GRANGE TO MEET
The Ohio Valley Junior
Grange w1U meet in regular
session Thursday at the
Let.ri Falls Grade School, a
change in location. The
change has been made
because of difficulty in
heatln~
the community
building. Anyone who has a
trllnsportation problem Is
askrd to call Mrs Florence
Smith.

Action Inc ., an interest _
woup, released figures this
week contending that 30 to 50
billion cubic feet of natura£
gas could have been saved
last year with such a
requirement.
Natural gas Is used in
IIUiking of glass and In some
metal processing.
"A returnable beverage

UNIT CALLED
SYRACUSE - The local
emergency squad was called
Sunday at 7:15 p.m. to the
Syracuse Municipal Building
for Ruby Watts, 77, Rt. 1,
Buchanan, Va . Mrs. Watts
was here visiting her,
daughter and became iU. Her
daughter was enroute llrith
her mother to see a doctor
when Mrs Watts' condition
worsened and they stopped at
the municipal buUdlng. She
was transpo'rled to Veterans
Memorisl Hospital where she
was dead on arrival.

container system would have
... aUevtated the effects of
th1s winter's natural gas
crisis," Jeffords said in an
interview. His bill has
appronmately 50 cosponsors
now.

: .·:: •' '• .· ·...·.:;.;: :, ,::,.;.: .·: •, .: :,.;: .;.·:.::::

BAD HANDLING
COLUMBUS (UPI) More thao $5 mlllloa in
treasury Investments were
lmpreperly baodled by the
City of Loveland, a CJa.
cbuulll suburb, according
to state e11miaers.
"Treasury iavestmenll
' were oot properly bandied
In that no Investment board
was used," said aa audit
report released Ieday by
State Auditor Thomas E.
Fergason.
·::··:: ··==····:·:·:·:·:·:·:·.·::·.·:::,:;;·,:;;:,; ':':' ': :

Weather

Clear, not as cold tonight,
lows to 40. Sunny and wanner
Wednesday, ~ighs between 6S
and 70. Probablllty of
precipitation near zero per
cent
today and tonight, 10 per
E-RCALLED
cent
Wednesday.
. The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to the home
NOW YOU KNOW
of Mrs. Genevieve Well,
A giant tortoiSe can crawl
Laurel St., at 8-21 a.m. about five yards a minute,
Tueaday for Mn. IDa Welker, but a rabbit can cover the
who was taken to Veterans same distance in lesa than
Membrlal Hospital.
half a second.
I

It would bring about the
change over a three-year
penod, to give industry time ,
to set up a way for stores to
keep the returned cootainers
and redeem the deposita, and
for Industry to clean and
reprocess the bottles or
ri!OIIIIIIfacture the cana.
Jeffords says there is
opposition from some
segments of industry and
from some labor people who
fear skilled jobs will be lost to
"botlle-washlng Jobs ...
"If a national beVerage
container deposit law had
been in effect thla year, we
would have saved more
natural gas than Is Ulell by
the city of Washington, D.C.,
plus the stales of Maine, New
Hampshire and Vermont,"
said Pamela Deuel, an
Environmental Action
lobbyist.
Amerlcarw uae eomethlng
like 95 bUllon beer and 110ft
drink containers a year, a
Jeffords aide said. That
doeln ~ Include food cana, but
lbo8e are not involved In hil
legillaUon.
Approlimately 40 per cent
of the beer II in botllea and 80
per cent In cans, with the
percentaaea easentially
revertled for soft drinb - IH
per cent In bottlea ani! 36 per
cent in cana, he said.

'•

3- The Dally Sentmel, Mlddlepvrt-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, March
197S-77 AJ.LSVAt: UKEAM TEAM

Southern dominates
SV AC dream team

I'LA n:K ~~OIOUI.

~l~nr Dunrun~ . :\ou Uu~rn

Kalph Ingles, Sy m Va llev
Ft ed l .ogun,

NortlJ Ga llta

Ch1p llrauer, Sou thern
SECOND TEAM
Oav1d Swain, Hannan Trace
Joe Brown, Southern
Mark W1lson, Sym. Valley
M1tch Salem, Kyger Creek
Monhl Blantnn ,Southwestern
THIRD TEAM
Dan Spencer, Eastern
Gene Layton, Southwestern
Doug Sands, Kyger Creek
Steve Mundell, North Gallia
GregEstep, Sym Valley
MVP - Ralph Baylor, Ky ger Creek

Baylor named
•
MVP rn SVAC
3M1Sis. He had a 40 1 pet.
CHESHIR E
Ralph f1eld goal ave. and a 53.1 ave.
Baylor, 6-{) semor for the at the fou l hne.
Kyger Creek Bobcats was
Baylor was nommated by
nam ed the SVAC 's Most h1s coach Ketth Carter and
Valuable Player for the 1976- Gary Salyer, head coach at
i? cage season here Monday Synunes Valley
night
Logan an d Brauer are
Ba)lor, one of the area's repeaters on the f1rst team
leadmg pomt-makers, scored All.SVAC
419 pomts1 n 18 games for a
Other members chosen
23.2 average
were Baylor, Enc Dunmng,
, Inside SV AC play, Baylor 5-.'1 senior guard for the
led the league m sco ring with champiOn Southern Tornados
280 points, a 23 3 ave He and Ralph Ingles, 6-5 jumor
averag~d 14.8 rebounds per
center for Symmes Valley.
game. H1s shootmg stallst1cs
All league selections "ere
show a 56 5 pet field goal ave. made by the head coaches at
and a 71 pet ave at the foul each league school
line. He also had 5.7 ass1sls
Dunng a bnef busmess
per game.
session condu cted by vice
During the recent Class A president , Gary Minton, the
SectiOnal Tournam en t at All.SV AC league banquet was
Me1gs High School, Baylor tentatively set for 4 p m.
collected 93 pomts m three Apnl3 at R10 Grande College.
games, 55 rebounds and 14 Further details w11l be anasSists. He wa s a member of nounced
the SV AC' s second learn last
year as a j umor
Baylor
outpolled
FOXBORO, Mass (UP! ) Southern's 6-4 semor center The New England Patriots
Chip Brauer and North will warm up for the 1977
Gal11a's 6-3 semor Fred Nattonal Football League
Logan m the ballotmg for season With home exh1b11lon
MVP.
games agamst Pittsburgh,
Brauer was nommated by Washmgton and Atlanta, the
hrs coach Carl Wolfe Brauer club has announced.
averaged 54 pet. from the
The Patriots, in keeping
field and 74 pet. at the free With President Carter' s
throw line He averaged 18 energy
conservation
rebounds per ga me
program, will switch to 2 p.m.
Logan, nom mated by hts sl&lt;lrtmg times from their past
coach,
Ron
Twyman , practice of playmg mght
averaged 17 5 poin ts per exh1b1bon games at Schaefer
utmg, 14 8 rebounds and 41 Stadium.

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor
NEW YORK (UPI )- Every tune you see O.J Simpson in
that TV commercial, he's runmng through some a1rport w1th
his suitcase m one hand, his trencl\ coat m the other and a b1g
Super Bowl sm1le on h1s face because he knows he st1U has
enougb tune and he's not gomg to blow his plane at all.
That's only in the commercial, though.
Realistically, time 1s runrung out for O.J Sunpson, and one
of the reasons for that IS because he has unposed a deadlme of
only two more years upon himself, after which he says he w1U
not play professiOnal football anymore
This season and next, and that 's 11
That's absolutely deflmte, says O.J Sunpson, the Natwnal
Football League's lead mg act1ve rusher and qu1re possibly the
fmest runnmg back in the entire history of professiOnal
football.
0 J. Sunpson is only 29. Why IS he qu1ttmg so soon? What are
the reasons Sunpson is so determmed to qwt playmg after next
year? There are three reasons
The first IS the one superstars always talk of but don't
always do anythmg about, pnde. The second reason IS
mtermingled with the first and has to do w1th physiCal
limitations, and the th1rd reason concerns a new career With
which he's anx1ous to become more mvolved, acting.
0 J . Sunpson talked about all three reasoM here Monday
after signing a new three-year contract with the Hertz Corp , to
keep making commercmls for them.
"Some people ask me whether I've lost a step, " he sa1d.
"Could be. I dunno. I got caught a coupla' tunes last year and
the guys wouldn't let me forget it. I know this : If1nd it harder
and harder to concentrahl. I used to dream about makmg a
long run; now I dream about playmg a part."
He smiled - maybe he was remembermg another dream he
once had when he first started in pro ball after coming out of
the Umvers1ty of Southern California eight seasons ago, a
dream m which he and the Bills were going to wmd up playmg
m the Super Bowl. But he knows that w1th the two-year
deadline he has gtven hunself, there IS little likelihood of h1s
dream ever bemg fulfilled.
''The Super Bowl logically IS everybody's goal,'' he said,
"but to get there, you gotta have some players, you gotta go
out and gel'em We haven't so far ,and 1fwe don 't, our chances
are slim "
Is that ooe of the reasons he has made up his mmd to qUI I in
two more years?
Simpson shook h1s head no
.
"I'm a runnmg back and I'U be 30 this season," he sa1d. "I
look around me to see some of the other r~mning backs who
came mto the league with me and I don'tsee 'em. Not too many
keep playing after 30. I saw Leroy Kelly play well at 32, but I
never wannabe out there on the field and fmd out I can't do
something I wanna do."
Somebody asked Simpson about Joe NaiiUith
"I think the Rams would like to have him but I don't think he
wanlll to take a 'cut m his contract," sa1d Sunpson. "I
understand the way Joe feels, but 1f he can swallow some of his
pride and sign With the Rams, I think 'he can U!ke 'em to the
Super Bowl. I think that with h1sarm, he can't take an average
team and getlt to the Super Bowl, but he can take a good team
there and the Rams are a great team."
So far Simpson has made six movies. He likes doing them
and hop;,s to make acting his full-time occupation after he
quits football.
"PhySicaUy, making pictures are much easier than playing
football, but emot10naUy II can be tougher," he sa1d. "I've got
13 scripts now and I've been offered some leadmg roles, but I'd
rather have smaller roles 1f they're the nght ones."
Slmpson'sfirst major picture was "The Klan~man" starring
Richard Burton - when he was still married to Elizabeth
Taylor - and Lee Marvin. Simpson said he learned from both
aclors.
"Lee Marvin told me , 'Juice, the hell wtth the scnpt. You
just make sure you get the thought across, the theme, then ~1ve
your fellow actor his cue and you'll be aU right m this
business.' Richard Burton complained about all the trash he
had to do. I asked hun why he d1d 11, and he laughed and told
me, 'WeU, lJz 1s a little extravagant." '

IHl 4
5-114
6-53
&amp;-3 4

6-44
&amp;-1 3

6-l 4
&amp;-2 4
&gt;-7 4
&amp;-2 3

5-10 2

( .m1phll

5-li 4

l ,ntoln MPm IS

r

';WOk St 99 f}o Utnh St 89
W1 &lt;. Pil r~ o,,d(' \\1 Pilrnf' 6~
Other Gt~m cs
l&gt;l(ll)t'tn•il 1!1 ~ lorrtl.;t !0
Rlf)lil tl1 P01rtl l 01'11il ~7

f1111 M1rh

n

Oh•O u

6~

K l"n!ur ky !'J Gf'OrQ~c:l 54
M1t~rn l

0 67

t ao,~•e r

0

57

M1'i'. ~ ~ P.Y .Auburn 7S
N Ill ! 10 Kent St 101
NotrE' Damt&gt; f6 DePaul 68
f~nn 6'i Vanderbil t ,55

&amp;-1 2

5-10 4
5-11 4

If,

Oowl1nq 7S Whdl ror 66
(irc~nrJ Viti Icy 911 Mo
C 68
HfiWil n Ht!O 81 Spr nq Grdn 66
NPWhPrry B4 Hi! ':.hnq &lt;, 81

WITH TAPE
BURBANK,Calif. (UP1 )Johnny
Carson
says
productwn problems and the
availab1hty of guests have
forced "The Tomght Show"
tn contmue IW tape-&lt;ielay
format
The late-flight talk show
was til be broadcast tn the
East Coast hve, begmmng
March 15, but Carson sa1d
Monday Insurm ountable
problems requ1re staymg
with the tapmg system.
~'TAYS

MO NDAY ' S SCORES
M 1C h gen 76 Oh10 U

Ce n ! r ~ l

THIS WEEK ' S SPErt AL

"

Nor lhe rn lllrnols 110 Kenf 51
10 I

M1o3mt 67 Xav 1er 57

Western M'chtqan 89 Bow lmq
Gr ee n 68

USED CAR_S
Chip Brauer
First Team

Eric Dunning
First Team

Teammates are upset

71 FORD

RYAN YALE'S AD
NE WHAVEN, Conn. (UP))
- Frank Ryan, form er
qu arterba ck for the
V 8, automatrc w tlh
Clevela
nd
Browns,
Monday
topper
w1th the effectiveness he
displayed m 1974 when he won was named Yale Umvers1ty
tlle Cy YoWig Award while athletic dJrector, replacing
pitchmg m a record 106 Carm Cozza who res1gn ed m
November to devote full lim e
games fo r the Dodgers
to
footba 11 coaching.
However, Brll Luca s, the
Yale
President Kmgman
Braves' d1rector of player
Brewster
sa1d Ryan wrll take
personnel, IS not worned
over
as
athletrc
d~te ctor June
You'll L1ke Our Quahty
about Marshall 's bemg m
I
Way Of Dotng Busmess
shape.
GMAC FINANCING
Rya n never had a lo smg
"1 know the man," Lucas
992-53112
Pomeroy
season
wh1le
qua1terback
for
smd &lt;~He ' ll be m shape when
Openmg
Evemngs 'ttl 6 00
he gets here. He had a back the Browns for seven seasons
Trl5 p m Sat.
operation Ulis wmter and he endmg 1n 1970
was playing basketball e1ght
days later l'rr gomg to worry
about hun bemg ready'"
If your msurfnce agent can'l give you
Another man the Braves
"worry free" service, fire him and hire
are relym g hea\'Ily on ,
"Mick .
sluggmg outfielder Jeff
Burroughs, mtssed workouts
for the second day m a row 1
because of flu
On other fronts .
George Hendrick, "ho hit
25 homers fur Cleveland last
year and 1s expechld to
t-ombme w1th Gene Tenace to
prov1de San D•ego w1th
much-fleeded power, s1gned
w1th the Padres . J oe
Morgan, two-time NL MVP,
made his f1rst appearance m
the Cmcmnat1 Reds ' sprmg
camp ... Doc Medtch was the
only pitcher to look sharp m a
Pittsburgh P1rates' Intrasquad game . Cecil Cooper,
acquired from the Red S~x
for George Scott, h1t two

lh TON PICKUP

with Mike Marshall
By KEN ROSENBERG
UPI Sports Writer
A screwball 1s not only
M1ke Marshall's best p1tch, 11
also IS the term used by some
people to describe h1 s
• behav1or.
On Monday, Marshall, accused oo more than one
occas1on by tearrunates of
bemg se lf -centered rather
than teamortented, tllld the
Atlanta Braves he won't
report to sprmg trammg unlll
March 25.
The reason for Marshall's
tardiness stems from hiS
mvolvement m a la\\Slllt
agamst M1ch1gan State
Umversity. The school
allegedly eviCted hun from
1ts gymnas1um durmg the
Wmter of '75 when the rightha nded' reliever tned to
conduct one-man baseball
workouts while tenms wa s 1n
session . That IIUitter will soon
be resolved m the courts
II the Braves are to make
any kmd of a run at the twolime World Champion Cmcmnall Reds and muchunproved San D1ego Padres,
MarshaU w1ll have to pitch

\
\
Joe Brown

Dan Spencer
Third Team

Second Team

Southern girls
oust KC, play in
finals tonight

Today's

HT YK

1\&lt;ilplo Baylor, Kyger Creek

Coll t' Q(' f\.t '&gt; lt ethatl Rcs ull '&gt;
Bv Unt l f'd Pren !nt t&gt; rn;~t, onal
NA!A T ournilm enl
/l&lt;,l Pou nd )
/d 11 IIIJnl .,vl n I"V 51 61

BY GREG BAILEY
RACINE - The Southern
Tornado G~rls basketball
team advanced to the finals
m 1ts Sectional Tournament
Monday mght , overcommg a
slugg1sh first half and going
on to beat Ky ger Creek g1rls
52-37. The final s will begm at
7.30 p.m. tomght here between Southern and Federal
Hocking
Southern trailed m.uch of
the frrst quarter, but mched
out m front 13-9 by the frr st
tmzer But then the Galha
gtrls came on strong and
outscored the hosw 11-9m the
second period to go mto the
lreker room at mtermisswn
Ira 1hng only 22-20
In the th1rd penod,
Southern showed why they
were No I seed as they
corr~cted their miStakes and

NEW YORK (UP)) - Btll
Bradley of the New York
Kmcks Monday was named
chalriiUin of a new fundraising project for United
Cerebral Palsy.
The proJect, called the
BookA-Thon 1s an actiVIty m
which students ratse money
for the cerebral palsied by
reading. Sponsors agree til
pledge each student an
amount of money for each
book read, and students send
m the mooey as contributions
til Umted Cerebral Palsy
If they collect $20 or more,
they receive a Bill Bradley
"Book-Knick" T-shirl; if they
collect $50 or more, they
receive a "Book-Knick" tote
hag
Students or teachers can
request Book-A-Thon
materials by whting to : Bill
Bradley, United Cerebral
Palsy, 122 East 23rd Street,
New York, New York 10010

1111-~

Girls and boys

tightened their defense to
hiTIII Kyger to JU st four
po1nts, scormg 14 of their
o\\n in that third period,
!ilal'pshooter Jean R1t chhart
started connect mg from
outside, and semor Brenda
Lawrence bega n hiltmg the
boards for some key
Gtrls
rebounds.
Ohto Ht!lh School
That seemed to make the
Basketball
Untted Press lnternatronal
difference as Ritchhart, the
Tournam en t Result s
talented jumor guard, ended "
Cl ass AAA
(A t Hubbard)
the mght wtth 18 po1nls while
55 Salem 2:2
Lawrence ended up w1th a Hubbard
Youn gs town Ursuline 40 N rles
"~oppmg 21 rebounds. J un10r
38
Class AA
Oleryl Roseberry also played
(A I La ke)
a fme floor game and also hit Tu slaw 47 Manches ter 16
double f1gures With 12 pomts LOU tSVtl le Aqumas 57 Lak e 54
Bucyrus)
Lawrence had ten, Lisa Allen Wvn for dI At
.:18 Clear fork 45 (of )
canned four , and Jay e Ord
Class AJ
(At Ontr10)
got e1ght to round out the Lu ca s 32 Buckey e CE'ntral 25
Southern scormg
(At Untfel:t)
63 L rsbo n 27
VIckie Stroud led the Kyger Unrted
Colu mbtana 49 Seb r mg 38
!IJUad wtth 15 markers whrle
(At Ractne J
M Roilms added II G. Amos Southern 52 Kyger Creek 37
got seven and J. Darst four to Feder al Hockrng 49 MJII er 39
Regular Season Results
round out that scorm g. That
Porn! 91 Oak H il l 49
win kept South ern's w1n South
P e rry Lak e 76 Py m atunm g
~ring allve over a four year
Valley 30
period, the1r on ly l&lt;&gt;;s coming
Boys
to Alexander m last year's
Oh10 H1gh School
Basketball
sectional. The Southern
Untteel Press tnternat1ona1
!IJUad is coached by Connee
Tournament Resul1 s
Class AAA
Williams
Canton)
s
1391416 Stark P er{At
ry 70 Akron S ~rtn g
K
911413 f1eld 53
Class AA
Federal Hocking earned
(A tOelwaar e)
the nghl to play Southern Be)(l ey 67 Marysvrll e 63
when they trounced M1Uer 49- Johnstown 53 Bucke ye Valley

cage scores

Federal zipped the nets for
a 60 per cent shootmg
average, and the Boggs
asters combmed for 32 points
to overcome an 8-7 first
penod deficit. Karen Boggs
led all scorers w1th 20
markers.
Miller hit oo just 11 per cent
rJ. their shots, led by Lincoln's
nine pmnts.
7243649
F
8111529
M

Pi1mttuy,Ohrv
Nalrtlll!ll advcrt~~lllf.( tCpiCI&gt;CII·
Wlrv ~ \\11ttJ C:tlff1 th Cutni»Hl} !tr·
1 ,

lluttirtu llt ami

( ,;tiiOlgh~t

Ot ~,

7S7 llunl 1\vc. New Ymk. NY
IIJ01 7
.Sull"l ll'lnm t utu s Hcll vc1ed l11
c,tr tiL'r 11h~.;1 c uvwla!Jic 7~ 1.:111l~ 111. t
Wt•k H) M.. tnr H"ulc wlto lt'\&lt;1 111&lt; 1
11 1•1 dl' !ldq iJil!, Ortt lllllll!ll
$:1 1;J flv tii i!IHJ Olun und W v,,
l ltll Yt 11. U ltMI S" munth'
$l l ..,tt l hllt 111 nth .-; $7tlll
MI VIII

) IM II httt $1h()l l \&lt;,11

ill~~~

I itt• •
Str b~· ' rplt••r r 1 t.
'I UIL ~ ~ ::.. ' li t\ ,

MX /lltollll h

"Let Mick Do It!"

homers m a Milwaukee mtra-

squad game .. Bump W11ls,
son of former maJOr lea gue
basestealing champ Maury
W11ls, s1gned w1th the Texas
Rangers and Mark F1drych,
the AL Rook•e of\ the Year
last year, was named b)
Manager Ra lph Houk to start
the T~gers' exhibitiOn opener
agamst Boston Wednesday

You may never have to worry about
insurance again.

OOWN\NG CHllDS ~
INSURANCE AG~NCY INC.
~

Middleport. 0 .

992 -2342

Class A
(At St eubemrlle)
Woodst.eld 58 Lakeland 44
Sh adystde 74 Skyvue 63
(At Canton)
Fatrpor t 66 Gates Mil ls
Hawken 54
Sebnng 87 R ich mond He1ghts

48
Regular Season Result
Logan 85 Ne l sonville Yor k 76

Grrls Class AAA
(At Tallmadge)
Stow SO Akrop East 29
Akro n North 47 Akron
F1restone JB
Akron Garfield 50 Hudson dl

'

with us!

DAI.YSENTINEL

any Ill (.;uU!1 St , f&gt;uute!!l)', Ohw
~5 71[1 Bu~ l llt!lJ.!i Oi"ft ct Ph.,m; !l!l'.l
2156 ~: dtlu r la l Phone992-2157
S\;t u n~ c w~~ pu~ lllge !»ltd Ill

Karr &amp; VanZandt

45

29.

Lli!:VOTEO TO THE
fNTEHI&lt;}}"T OF'

MEIGS.MASON AREA
CHF.STER 1. TANNEHIU.
1-:xer E:d
ROB.~ RT HOEFLICH
Clly£dilur
Pubh~l~ tl dtu ly except S&lt;a~ut'tlay
by Tilt Ulnu VNlll'Y Publishmg Com·

'1695

PlANNING APIZZA PARTY
PHONE
THE ALL NEW

MEIGS INN PIZZA SHACK
-Enjoy three sizes of you.r favorite
pizzas.
- Try our delicious subs. while you
sip your favonte suds.
Eat In Or Carry Out
Phone
992-6304

J'lnlilhs $7 ~ tl
rt• lull ••· "''' ,j •

••

down
When you need money for home tmprovements, or any good '
reason; talk to us. We handle HomeOwner Loans quickly, easily
and with consideration Amounts up to $15,000 avmlable.
We find ways to help.

CITY LOAN

COMPANY
t:Jt::\

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\::I~ Ul'&gt;l lf\lll DAIA UIK;'OM.A!! ()N

125 E. Main Street 992-2171
.,

�t - The Daily Sentine l, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, March 8, 1977

den talk

5- The DaU YSe nt'me I. M'ddl
t eport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday. March 8, t977

. .....,..
~·

NAIA play rmdenvay

These are critical
times for wildlife
BY GREGBAILEY
The recent harsh winter has affected us sportsmen in
many ways. Naturally it has taken its toll oo wildlife, and right
now-the time between winter and spring - is a critical time.
The animal's fat and otber stores are depleted, and no new
food is growing. So just because there 's no snow, don't forget
tile animals.
~ to the late ice thaw and tile heavy ice on area waters, the
trout stocking program will be delayed. However, late March
and early April should see the hatchery truck coming around.
Forked Run and Dow Lake are two of the local tt:outspots.
OUr local game proteclor Andy Lyles is sending out a p)ea
for help. Anyone who owns a pond, (or even notices a body of
water.) which has experienced a fish kill due 1(1 the hea vy ice,
report it to Andy at once. His number is 98S-3947. There's a
possibility of Federal assistance for a restocking program, but
Andy must check out ali reports so that there can be an
accurate report. Do it now !
. On March 15-17-22 and 24 there is going to be a Hunter Safety
Program conducted in Pike County at the County Fish and
Game Club House. It's open to youngsters ten and over, but
adults are also invited. Thatlocstion is just off State Route 220,
west of Waverly. Some states are now reqiliring hunter safety
certification, so you might want to take advantage of this.
There's also a course to be offered in Meigs County some time
Ibis month, so keep your ears open.
Andy reminds all you folks that have a permit to keep a
wild animal that your permit expires on March 15. You'll need
a new ooe, so just contact him.
There are only two legal ways to harbor a wild animal.
Number one, you may capture it during tile open season, but
tllen you've got to still obtain a permit. Number two, you may
buy an animal from a licensed, commercial wild animal
dealer, but even then you've got to obtain a state permit. So
consider yourself forewarned.
The Ohio Big Bucks Banquet will .be held March 19 at the
Marietta College Field House beginning at I :00. The trophy
heads will be on display, and tickets for the event and banquet
are $7.50. Reservations and money should be sent to : Jack E.
Henderson , Sec., 628 N. Broadway, Barnesville, Ohio 43713.
Phone 614-425-1409.
One final note. Dognapping is getting to be big business
locally. Many beagles and other hunting dogs are stolen each
year, then sold at a profit. I'd sure like to see some of these
people prosecuted. Don't buy a hunting dog unless you know
for sure it's not stolen. That's one way of cutting down the
market.
Last week one of my beagles was loose for some exercise,
and just happened to be ruMing a rabbit near the road. Not
one, but two vehicles stopped,and tried to coax him into the
car. And would you believe it -the last car's occupants were
lwei ladies! That took place on tile Flatwoods road, and if I'm
ever arpund and it happens .again, there might be some
buckshot {lying. There might not be occasion lor that though ,
as my dog is vicious and wouldn't let anyone pick him up. I
wish, whoever you are, that you'd try again. His teeth are
sharp, and your. vehicle is known. I'm waiting.
No news yet on the status of lhe anti-trapping ballot.
Again, stay in touch with tile Wildlife Legislative Fund
because something should be breaking soon.

Ry RICK GOSSELIN
UPI Sports Writer
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)
- Kentucky State proh,hl•
will refuse lo bt• seeded if the
Thorobreds manage to
qualify for the NA JA
pos tseaso n basketball
tournament again ~ex t year.
High seedings and poor
showings have gone hand-inhand fo r Kentucky Sta te
lately, as evidenced by the
Thorobreds' 7U3 setback to
unherald ed Al aba maHuntsville Monday in the
opening round of the NAJA
tourney.
Kentucky State had the
second best record in the
tournament at Zl-2 and was
rewarded for its regular
season efforts with a third
seeding.
But tile Thorobreds hardly
played like one of the
favorites against Huntsville,
hitting just 28 per of their
shots as the Alaballl!l school
ran off leads of up In 17 points
in the second half. AllAmerican Gerald Cunningham was an atrocious six
for 25 fr&lt;&gt;m the field for

· Cubs, Urbana
clash in meet
Coach Dave Ratliff's
Guiding Hand School Cubs
and Monty Kerr's Urbana
team of Champaign County,
Urbana, will clash at 1:30
p.m.
Wednesday
in
Chillicothe for the 1977 Adult
Division South Regional
Tournament Bashtball
championship.
Tite Cubs, advancing to the
south Regional Tournament
by defeating the Hills and
Dales team of Hillsboro Feb.
12 at the Lyne Center at Rio
Grande College, will be led by
Paul Winston . averagillg 26
points a game,
The Urbana
Team,
representing Area One, is a
well balanced, fast breaking
type ball club and has past
experience in post season
play. The Cubs fast break run
the set offense, and boast a 61 mark.
The winner will advance to
the State Basketball Tournament, Mar ch 18-19 at
Youngstown University,
Youngstown.

said

9 AM

Coach A.L. Willis. "Maybe
one of these days we'll let
people know tllat Alabama
plays
pretty
good
basketball."
Kentucky State was joined
by sixth-seeded Lincoln
Memorial (Tenn.) and lothseeded WhiWer (Calif.) as
early departures from the
40th annual tournament.
Lincoln Memorial wa s
elimin ated by Ca mpbell
CoUege (N.C.), 76-75, while ·
Whittier was sent home by
Dowling (N.Y. ), 71Hi6.
Top-seeded Newberry
CoUege (S.C.) and eighthseeded Grand Valley State
College (Mich.) also were
jostled by supposedly inferior
· foes before staging rallies to
advance into the second
round.
Newberry trailed Hastings
College (Neb.) by 13 points at
one point in the first half but
rallied to draw even with 7:37
left in the game. Newberry
took its fir st lead of the
contest moments later and
then held on to claim an ~~
victory, the 36tll without a
loss for the Indians.
Grand Valley needed a 15point spree spallf)ing four
minutes late in tile second
half against Missouri-Kansas
City to overcome a 10-point
deficit a nd post a 94-88
triumph , the 28tll in 30 games
for tile Lakers.
Paul Peterman scored 36
poillts for Grand Valley, the
high for any player in first
day action .
In other games, 12thseeded Wisconsin-Parkside
coasted to a IIUS victory
over Paine College (Ga.)
behind Leartlla Scott's 23
points ; Southwestern ·
Oklahoma State had no
trouble disposing of Southern
Ulah !J9.il9 as tllree players
topped the 20-point level ; and
Hawaii-Hilo made its debut in
NAlA postseason play with
an 81-66 whipping of Spring
Garden (Pa.).

NBA Stitlndi ngs
Ea stern Conference
Atlantic Divis ion

W. L . P'ct.

Phi ladelphia
Boston
N Y Kn icks

G8

~7

25 .597
33 31 .516 5
29 35 .453 9
Buffa lo
24 41 .369 l.d 'h
NY Net s
20 45 ·.308 18 '11
central 0 1\.'i sion

W.

~-

Pet.

Ga

was h ington
39 25 .609,
Houston
37 26 .587 l'h
36 28 .563 3
Sal] Ant onio
Clt've land
33 28 .541 .4 'h
New Or lean s 26 38 ,406 13
Atlan t a
26 39 400 ll'h
Western Conference
M idwest Division
w. L Pet. GB
Denver
41 22 . 651

De tro it

38 28 .576

41h
8 1h

K ansasCity
33 31 .516
Chicago
31 34 .477 11
lndlena
30 35 .462 12
M i lwa ukee
21 .46 .31J 22
Pac ific Division

QUANTITY RIGHTS
PRESERVED

WE ACCEPT FED.ERAL FOOD STAMPS
NO DEALERS PLEASE!
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU MARCH 12, 1977
USDA CHOICE

RIB STEAK ••
FRENCH CITY BEEF OR REG.

WIENERS

12 OZ. PKG.

- _.
.....

EXCE;LLE;NT PROGRESS IS BEING made in the preliminary processes ol rebuilding
the Stiffier Department Store, W. Main St., Pomeroy. Wprkers have completed the concrete
foundation for the Main St. level of the store which was destroyed by fire in January, 1976.

Morgan in rmifonn first time

ROASTING
CHICKENS

w. ·L. 'Pet.

Los A ngeles,
40 24 .625
Port land
39 26 .600
Golden State ·37 29 .561
se att le
31 3.4 .477
Phoen ilc
26 37 .413
.
,
Monday ' s Result
HO'U$fOn 128 Buff alo 107
Tuesday's Gam es
Por tland at Buffalo
Denver at NY Kn lcks
PM iladelphia a t At lanta
Sea ttle ·at NeW Orl ea !"ls
Phoen ix ar San An ton io
M ilwaukee a t D etro ll
Cleveland a t Golden State
Wednesday ' s Games
Sea ttle a t Boston
Denver at Phil adelph ia
Phoen ix a t Hous tOn
wash ington a t Milwaukee

GB
11h
A

91h
13 1/ ,

NHL ,Standings

Hockey Ltague
United Press International

32 23 12 76 288 251

26 35 6 58 232 266
South

w I t ph. gf ga
Cayton
Colu m bu s

Ft . Wayne

7 69 267 284

4 64 264 263

25 30 5 63 256 278
.

1

25 31 9 59 240 270
Monday's Result
N o o am es sc hedul ed
today •s Games
Dayton a t Fort Way ne
M us kegon at Ka lllmazoo
Wedneidly's Games
F or t Wayne at Deyton
M uS kegon a t Saginaw
F li n t at Toledo

Potrick Division
T Pis.
GF GA
Ph ilo
·.,W14~ 12
94 269 1BO
NY lslandrs &lt;O 18 9 89 231 160
A tlanta
27 28 11 65 2 10 217
NYRangers 2&lt; 30 13 61 226·2&lt;9
smythe Division
'
W ~ T Pts. GF GA
St, LouiS
28 3i 7 63 i9 J 221
Chicago
23 35 10 56 ,213 2s0
Minnesota 18 33 15 51 198 256
Colorado 19 36 11 &lt;9 193 W
vancouver 19 &lt;O s '6 179 253
Wolfs contertnce
Norris Division
W ~ T Pis. GF GA '
-trul so 1 tO 110 321 159
Pi,...,;n 27 27 13 67 203ll3
~ .. Angeles 26 2113 65 2i6 205
wosningtn 19 36 13 51 113 159
De1roj.t
16 &lt;1 s, •o 163 w

PONTIAC, Mich. (UPI) RoIll e Dotsch, Iormer
Michigan Slaw player and
North
M' h'
h
ern
IC tgan coac ,
has been brought home by the
Detroit Uons to coach the
1 b' lin b ke
Cu s e ac rs.
D&lt;Mch, 44, who coached
lineback rs fo th N "'•n
e . r e ew ~.,land Patrtots tile past two
seasons became the fourtll
'
addition to Coach. Tpmmy
Hudspeth's staff. The new
Detroit coach has one
vacancy yet t o fill.

shots.''

'1"

I

89~

I

STORE HOURS

.I

Mon ., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat.-9:00til5:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

I

FRIDAY UNTIL 5 PM

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MASON FURNITURE
773-5592

·Herman Grate

Mason, W. Va.

oz.

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GLAD TRASH BAGS
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39~

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Coupon Expires March 12, 1977
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Expires March 12, 1977
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BOWLING

Pomeroy Dowling Lan es
Saturday Afternoon
League
F eb. 1,, 1.977
Standing s
Team
Ph .
Sup er St ar s
48
Ni te Owls
&gt;1 &lt;1
Bow I ing Ston es
44
Road Runners
32
Red Barons
16
Gutfer · Busters
8
High individua l game Lanny Longst r eth 173 ; Dave
Smith 165 ; Steve Peckham
158 .
H igh series Bob by

I
I

I
I
I
J

Houston Coach Tom
Nissalke agreed, but not
before adding that Kullf)ert is
improving daily.
"Running is the key to our
offense and getting Kunnert
and (Moses) Malone open."
he said. "Kevin is just getting
smarter. We're running more
tllings lor him and he 's
learning to use the offense
better.''
Kunnert, a former Buffalo
center, pulled down 13
rebounds and shot 14-of-22
!rom tile Iieid as Houston
handed the Braves their
Iourtll consecutive home Ioss.
"Kunnert is a fine shooter.
I didn'texpecthim to shoot so
well " said Buffalo coach Joe
Mullaney. "OUr defense is
·IJOwhere near where it should
he. Moses and Kevin kept the
ball alive."
· .•
Malone, another former
Brave, hit 13 points and
grabbed 13 rebounds to tie
Kunnert In the board department and pull the Roc~ets to
,fithin l't\ games of the
central Division-leading
Washillgton Bullets.
Rudy Tomjanovich and
rookie Lucaa tallied 20 points
apiece, Calvin Murphy 18 and
Mike Newlin had 10 points.
Rookie of the year
candidate Adrian Dantley .
who missed one . ll&amp;flle
because of the nu, returned
with 1 game.ltigh 33 points for
Bui!IIO. Randy Smith scored,
18 points, as did Ernie
· DIGregorio , who led · the
. Braves with 8 rebounds. John
l!hurnate scored 15 point, ,

j

Saturday Afternoon
le-ague
F eb. 26 , 1977
Stand ing s
Team
Pis.

CLEVELAND ( UPI ) - Super stars
56
N'te Oing
w lS
51
Ohio Co nf erence basketb aII · Bowl
Stones
44
coaches have voted Tim Road Ru nners
32
Appleton of Kenyon , Rick ~~~t :ra~ouns~ers
~&amp;
Wh ite of Wlttenberg and
H igh indivi dual game 168 .
Musk.ingum coach Jim 167 . Bob H aggy 152.
Hi gh ser ies - R on Cullums
Burson top honors during the 468 : · Bi l l Je ff er s 418 ; Fr ank
season .

•
iMICFuNj
1 ~~~~· ~ 1

ggc

M~~~.~~.:LUs

MITCHUM

HALO
SHAMPOO

ROLL-ON
Anti-Perspirant

11 oz. Family Size
'1.79 Value

H /2oz.
'3.50 Value

F.I.P. Price

I

F.I. P. Price

JOHNSON &amp; JOHNSON

CASHMERE

BABY LOTION
Size $}19

BOUQUET
BODY
POWDER

.... •

--

-,
'

.

.,

~ .

'

'"

1.,..

I

9oz .

$1. 92 Va lue

F. I.P. Price

10 oz .

CRICKEnE
LIGHTER
With Free

Reg. $1.58

CONGESPIRIN
TABLETS

Good Ne ws
Razor

of sulfur oxide emissions

1

BUFFALO, N.Y. (UPI ) - ·
Houston 's seven-foot center
Kevin Kunnert sitre can "dish
it' up" against the Buffalo
Braves.
"I'm just happy we won the
game," said Kunnert, after
scoring a career-high 31
points •In Houstoo's 128-107
victory over Buffalo Monday
night. "Mike (Newlin ) and
John (Lucas ) were driving to
the basket real well and they
just kept dishing tile ball up to
me and I had really easy

r-

Lung group supports control

Dave Concepcion remained
un signed.
" If the five stili are
unsigned by Thursday, we'll
COLUMBUS iUPI ) -The
auiomatically renew their
Boardo
f Directnrs of tile Ohio
contracts with 20 per cent
Lung
Association
has adopted
cuts in tlleir salaries of last
.
a
resolution
to
support
the
year," · said Reds President
control
ol
sulfur
oxide
Bob''Howsam.
emissions in Ohio, it was
announced Monday.
" We advocate tllat Ohio
coal can be burned with
adequate control of sulfur
oxides and without the loss of
Ohio jobs," said association
executive director Dale C.
Hollern. "Effective methods

414 ; Lanny Longs tre t h 405 .
Team high g am e - Super
Star s 794.
Team high series - Super

COLD POWER DETERGENT

By United Press International

campbell confl!rence

.

YELLOW
ONIONS

oz.

Sag i naw 31 25 10 72 278 253
F li n t
32 27 7 71 299 260
M us kegon
28 28 10 66 256 263
Port Huron

31 29
30 32

GATEWAY

MAINE
POTATOES

LaCoss is a 20-year-old who
compiled a 12-10 record with
the Three Rivers club of the
Eastern League last year. He
will open against the
Pitts burgh Pirates at
Bradenton Saturday .
Moskau, 23, will be the
starter when the Reds and
Pirares play a return engagement here Sunday.
Moskau also pitched at
Three Rivers last year , and
won 13 games and lost six
while compiling a 1.55 ERA,
best in tile Eastern League.
Cincinnati attorney Reuven
Katz, who is Pete Rose 's
agent, arrived Monday and
conferred with Reds Genera l
Manager Dick Wagner.
Rose and pitchers Rawly
Eastwick, Pat Darcy and
Gary Nolan, and shorstop

'Appleton, .
has 31 in Wh l•te' sh are Wi ll iams 439; Cli ff Ken nedy
NBA win OC honors s a" m, .

BREAD

AXtON PRE-SOAK

ga

K o!tla ma zoo

To ledo

BAKED BY BETSY ROSS

0

lnttrnattonal
North

TAMPA, Fla. (UP! ) - J oe
Morgan, in uniform for the
first time, got in a few swings
,with his bat Monday before
rain cut short tile Cincinnati
Reds workout.
Morgan , who lasr- year
became only the seco nd
National League player in
history to win tile most
valuable player award two
years in a row, had been
given permission to report
late so that he could COII\plete
his ell8ms at California State
College in Hayward.
Reds manager Sparky
Anderson announced Monday
two of the club 's prized rookie
rightllanders, Mike LaCoss
and Paul Moskau, will start
the first two games in
Grapefruit League play.

WHOLE

has done. They have all it Carolina-&lt;:harlotte Sunday at
takes to be very good ... Bloomington, Ind ., in Ute
quickness, size, strength, opening round of the NCAA
excellent shooting. And they tourney.
play well as a team."
In another MAC season
Ohio U. rallied from a 35-33 cl oser , Northern lllinois
deficit at halftime to tie it at senior Matt Hicks tied an
35-all, but then the Chippewas opponent's single game
jumped out In as much as a record of 42 points and Kent
14-point lead before the State's Burrell McGhee
visitors annexed their 18th established a school scoring
win in 27 games and 13th in 16 record . The hot shooting ·
MAC starts.
came as the Huskies downed
Central Michigan coach Kent State 110-101 at Kent.
Dick Parfitt said the Bobcats
Northern overcame two
played a great game."
eightpoint KSU leads to take
"They are as well coached a 41146 halftime advantage,
a team as there is in the w·hich the Huskies widened to
MAC," he added. "We'd seen . 17 late in the second period.
them early In the year and
Hicks' 42 points tied the
again while scouting another mark Bob Lanier set against
US NO. 1
US NO. 1
team. They run their stuff the Flashes Jan. 10, 1970,
well and they don't have when he played for St.
experienced big men and Bonaventure. McGhee tOssed
they do what they have to do. in 32 points to give him 534 for
"I felt our tough defense the season, besting the
was what won it for us ... the previous high of 526 set by
major factnr anyway. We Ruben Vance during the 1970made them work very hard 71 season:
2LB. BAG
20 LB. BAG
on offense, but they ran what
The Huskies closed out the
we knew they would."
season 13-14 overall and IIHi
NO. 125
84 OZ. BOX
Central Michigan ' s in the MAC, good for fourth
Coupon Expires March 12, 1977
balanced scoring attack also place. KSU finished 8-19
_ _ _ _ _ _ ,.. _ _ _ &lt;!Jiiij"
was another big factor , even overall and 4-12 In the MAC,
TWIN CITY GAT._E:;W::;A,;.Y
if game-high honors went to and extended coach Rex
I
the Bobcats' Steve Skaggs Hughes' contract for another
I
with 25 points and Tbn Joyce year.
with 22. Ohio U. finished its
In anoiher season finale at
season 9-17 overall and 4-12 in Cincinnati, Miami rallied
the MAC.
from a 31-29 intermission I
NO. 155 79~ 25
BOX
NO. 245
BARS 79~ 5
Sophomore Dave Grauzer deficit with four quick points
Coupon Expires March 12, 1977
1 •
Coupon Expires March 12, 1977
led tile Chippewas with 18 and rolled on to beat Xavier 11
1
TWIN
CITY
GATEWAY
points, and senior Ben 67-57 with Archie Aldridge
Poquette and sophomore Jeff leading the attack with 21 ~-- - -Tropf each added 15.
poillts.
I
I
Central olficially · tied
The Redskins finished the
Miami for the MAC crown but seaSOf\. with a ~ overall
got the tourney nod because it mark. Xavier, headed by
had beaten the Redskins Dale Haarman and Nick
10 CT. PKG.
NO. 235
48 CT. PKG.
twice this season . The . D~iels with 12 points each,
Coupon Expires March 12, 1977
Coupon Expires March 12, 1977
Chipp&lt;&gt;was will fat:e North ended at 10-17.
I
TWIN CITY GATEWAY
1
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

coosidered Ule proposul since
t923.
"That 's just Congress, "
said Rev. Terry Campbell.
"Congress represents the
peotsle of the United States,"
Actress Maureen Reagan, Miss Reagan said. ''I know
daughter of tile former Cali- tllat comes as a shock to some
fornia governor, tr ied to to people."
Mlss Reagan sa id many
in flu e nce Repub li ca n
legislators Monday to vote for women oppose ERA because
the
Equal
Rights IIley wrongly have been told
they might lose privileges
Amendment.
Rep. Joan Hastings of IIley now have.
"They don't have any," she
Tulsa told Miss Reaga n,
"We're not used to people said.
"May be it's different in
talking down to us.''
"I'm not talking down to California," said Rep. Bill
anyone," Mi ss Reaga n Holaday of Ok lahoma City.
replied. "I don't understand "We treat our women better
here."
why you are so nasty."
"Tha t 's
rather
a
At the end of the session,
Mrs. Hastings told Miss cantankerous thing to say,"
Reagan her "crisp diction" Miss Reagan said. "What the
may have caused Oklahoma hell do you know ~"
uWhat the hell &lt;Jre you
Republi c an s t o
1
doing
here?" Holaday said.
' misunderstand
your voice r
"I
was
invited,'' she said.
iintktions."
"Who
the
hell invited you? "
"!'m sorry il we were
Holaday
asked.
"Are you
rude," Mrs. Hastings said.
going
w
come
in
here
and tell
Miss Reagan, on the
us
how
to
run
Oklahoma
'1"
opposite side of ERA from
Several
other
legislators
her father , said Reagan had
supported ERA wh ile attempted to calm Holaday,
but apparently Miss Reagan
governor of California.
had
had enough.
"I don't know what caused
"It's
really time for me to
him to chsnge his mind," she
go,
"
she
said. "I'm sorry I
said.
wasted
your time. It's
Miss Reagan said she supobvious
I
ha ve."
ported ERA because women
"I'm
very
sorry I found a
routinely have been denied
Republican
caucus
so full of
credit and jobs and are paid
bigotry,"
she
told
reporters.
less than men for the same
work . She said r,()ngr"'" had

UKI.AHOMA CITY (UPI)
- Oklahoma Republica ns
cheered Ronald Reagan 'last
year, but they gave his
daughrer quite a diffe rent
reception.

somEs

Adams Ohrision
W ~ T Pts. GF GA
Buf f alo
41 20 6 88 246 184
eos ton
39 21 7 85 255 204
TorontO
30 27 10 70 259 235
Clevel an d
21 35 10 52 194 230
Mo·nday ' s Result
Toronto 4 Ph iladelph ia 2
Tuesday's Games
Minn esota at N Y Isl and er s
Atl ant a at Boston
P itt sburgh a t St . LoUi s
Chic ago at Los Angeles
Wednesday ' s Games
M tn nesota a t N Y Rangers
NY Islander s at At lan ta
Mon tr eal at Toronto
washi ngton at vancouver
Colo r ado at PittsbUrgh
Detr oit a t Buffalo

w I t pts . gf

to 9 PM

SUNDAY 9 AM TO 6 PM

8-16 oz.

STANDINGS
By Un ited Preu lnterniltional

love for other Reagan

'

OPEN

Huntsville

R.C. ·COLA

make a very fine representative of our conferent:e in the
NCAA."
''Going in we knew we were
outmanned, so we tried In
slow the tempo down and
control tllings in tlie Iirst
half, " Bandy said . " And
except for one spurt by them,
we did.
" The second half they
played defense very well, as
well as anyooe iri the lea~ue

Okie GOP has little ·

MON. THRU SAT.

Central Michigan to represent
MAC in NCAA post-season·, event
By
Uoite1
Press
loteroaliooal
•
Central Michigan 's allaround superiority, including
a stout defense, overwheimed
Ohio University in tile final
half Monday night to give
Chippewas a 71Hi4 victory and
tlleir second NCAA playoff
bertll in three years.
And Dale Bandy, coach of
the outmallf)ed Bobcats, later
admitted the Chippewas "will

.

OPEN

Kentucky State.
Two years ago, Kentucky
State was the top seed and
again was knocked out in the
opening game, losing tllat
time to Malone College of
Ohio.
·
"We expected a tougher
ga me/ '

'

Hag gy 470 .

Appleton and White, both S t ~resa~OB~igh gam e - Super
senlors, were named co·
Team hig h series - Supe r
recipients of the Mike sta rs 1319
Gregory OC player of the
Early Sunday Mi " d
year award. Burson , who
League
Standings
guided his team to a 2~ Team
Pts .
record and the conference Jack's Dairy Bar
54
Clin e's Cons! . Co .
47
till
t
tournamen
e, was . Tom ·s c arr y ou t
44
unanimous choice as the Tow n Kiln
40
league 's top coach.
Pom ero y F lower Shop
29
,
· MarkV
18
The 6-8 Appleton, of Pitts·
H igh ind i vid ua l game - c.
burgh Pa. averaged 24.1 .c. How ar d 230 . Mary Voss
. '
'
h
207 ; Darr el l Dug an 12d, Be tt y
pomts per game t e past Smi th m ; A . L . Phelps, Jr .
·season to lead the conference 22~, Belt y Smi lh . Marl ene
in scoring, and finished his w~~ ~~ ~~~ ies _ A . L . Phelp s.
career With 2,062 points, tied Jr . 598, M ~Jr y Voss 504 ; Jer r y
for sixth on the all-time Cli ne 572 , Marlen e Wilson
.
.
50 1; L;m y D ug an 552, Betl y
league scormg list. He also sm ith m .
won the Gregory Award his
T eam n ~gh ga m e - Cli n e's
,
Cons tr uc tion Co . 755 .
sophomore year.
T eam high serie s - Tom's
White, a 6--4 forward from Ca rr y out 2099 .
Athens, averaged 16.5 points
Tri- County Leaoue
per game this season in
Milrch 1, 1977
leading the Tigers to the Team
Sflndinos
Pt5 .
regular season Southern Pomeroy Cem ent Alock Co .
Division title and the NCAA
56
H . &amp; R . Fires tone
48
Division Ill Great Lakes Ea gt" ctub .
12
Regional championship.
Cli ne'• Con•t . Co .
38
'
t
des
Appleton
and
Com
put
er
Services
30
Bes
Stri k ers
26
White, 11 other players were
H i gh indl vldu o!ll .e.ame named to the all-Ohio Ra y Ro•on 135; Ed'Voss 230,
224.
Conference team b Y t he
H i gr&lt; se r ies - Ed voss 631 ;
coacheS.
Ra y Roec h 6~ 4 ;
H enry
Cl at w or l h y 54 3, . ·
Forward Marvin Smalley
T eam Mlg h gam e - Cline's
and guard Pete Ilptrap of Constr ucti on co . 888,
Muskingum were selected, as Cl ~ ~ a'2~B~ i ghtseries - E agles
was center Greg Seay of
1
Early Wednndi1 Y Mind
Wittenberg .
Le agut
Capital and ,Ohio Nortllern
March 2, 1977
also had two players each · r.. m Standinq ~
Pt ~.
selected - sophomores Sm i t h Ne lson Mo tor s
58
12
Napoleon Allen and Ricky Zide's Spo rt Shop
46
Oilers Four
Lee representing t he Tenth Framers
36
78
Crusaders
and
Mark Nel.on Drug to
and
Bra"'
H i qh individua l game
Hensche n
~ J im Haw l ey 163, Pal Smi t h
Loogberry tbe Northern re- 73 1; Lerry Dugan 133, M ary
1/o!)S 204 , J;~ kh ar d R usu ll
Presentatives.
110. Dehh ie Hawl ey 703.
J
Rounding out the selections
H iCjh &lt;,erie&lt;,
J irr1 _ Hawley
werecenterWarneAUisonof m . Pat Srrollh 111 . Fu vos;
S51, Ma r y liM~ 55 7, Aoh
Wooster, Dave Long oI Bald· couch 547, ~ &lt;len Ph o to &lt; m
win-Wallace, Jimmy Jones of
T J:.lm hiqh qa m~o:
t,m It h.
.
d Ed Will '
1 Nelc,cn Moton 794
OberIm
an
tams o
t eam h h l l'&gt; ~r&gt;r l e&lt;,
t)ilr·n.
Otterbein.
!=our 1 WI

are now available to utility
companies and other users of
coal to regulate sulfur oxide
emissions at a reasonable
cost. ·
"We have been fighting this .
battle too long," said Hollern.
" It is time for the utilities and
other Ohio coal users to
accept their responsibility to
safeguard the healt)t of Ohio

36's
Reg. 89c

Reg .
$1.49

AIM TOOTHPASTE

GILLETTE
SUPER STAIN·
LESS BLADES

FLUOAIOE

citicens."

The associate estimated
that
inadequate Oh io
standards ·and reg ulatio ns
will result in IOOto 200 deatlls
a year and laO,OOO to 300,000
By
Unile1
Press severe respiratory ailments
International
in Ohio children annually,
WASHINGTON (UPI ) Baseball Commission er
Bowie Kuhn received official
word from the. State
NEW YORK I UPI) - Cap
Department Monday tha t it
wouldn't object to a major Raeder, tile New England
league team from the United Whalers' goalie, ,Monday was
States pla)1ng an exhibition named tile World Hockey
Association Player of the
game in Cuba this spring.
Kuhn
reportedly
is Week.
In tllree games last week,
interested in ,sending an allstar team to Cuba and the Raeder, a hero in the playoffs
department said it would last year, shut out San Diego,
have no objection . Cuban beat division-leading squads
Premier Fidel Castro, an from Houston and Quebec.
avid baseball fan, recently
suggested that the defending
American League champion
You've seen if on TV
New York Yankees visit the
island. The Yankee management quickly endorsed the
suggestion.

SUNSHINER

SUMMIT ARCHITECT
WASHINGTON (UPI )
ijenry Owen , director of
foreign policy studies at the
Brookings Institution, will
represent tile United States in
preparations for a summit
meeting later Ibis year.
The . White
House
announced lila t Owen will
have the rank of ambassador
in arranging for the meeting,
to be held in Europe,
Owen joined Brookings in ·
1969 after 2:i years with the
State Department.

BOUQUET

4.6 oz.
' 1.08 Value

' 2.09 Value

F.I.P. Price

CUfad ~

Medium Point Black
or Blue
25' Value Each

314" Size

'"

't'"''"' ,,, ..

~·, 49C ~L.......--F.IPPnce 2/25 c
DURAY
COSMETIC BAG

DIAL VERY DRY
ANTI-PERSPIRANT
12 oz .

$119Reg .

FESCO TRASH BAGS
}J)2o::~ . . ,; )~[
Leakproof Plastic
26 gallon size 20's
1J.29 Value F.I.P. Price

and

carry
$12 .50 delivered

"

89

:@'~

/t.
'f

5Grain
lOO's
F.I.P. Price

41' Value

Reg . $1.13

Reg .
$ 1.00

STORAGE CHESTS

49~

Reg .
$1.49

l=iiP. F'nltf,.rc;

4';

" .4
{'

"

--

Third Cut Manila
Letter Size
12 Folder Pack

·~­
-~

.. ~ ... . ~ ...

- ·-

98' Value

F.I.P. Price

49c

LEGAL P'ADS
by Top Scholar
Visit Our Salad Bar
Cabbage - Ham - Potatoes
Hot Ro lls
Coffee, Tea or Milk

B
Plus Tax

THE MEIGS INN
f'llmeroy. 0.
Phone 992 ·6304
PIZZA SHACK Phone 992-6304

d

-

50 Sheet'
8-1/2" X 11·3/4"

~.~~- ~~~,~e

39C

89~

BEAN BAG
ASHTRAY

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File Folders

"

7 oz.
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WOLFMARY
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MR. BUBBLE
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Re2:.~~·. 77 $119
r

25"

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3/$}00

~~~·

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DA"AL
Each

ASPIRIN
TABLETS
by Pameco

""\lir lll

PLAYING CARDS

Wednesday Night Special

49c

Reg .
$1.00

$2 .44

cash ·

S119

BIC PEN

CURITY CURAD Transparent
..~.,.,.
Bandages

. tor those
happy occasions

THE INN PLACE

F.I.P. Price

4" Diameter
49' Value Each

F.t.P. Price

St
00
31
· FLICKER
Ladies Safety Shaver!
w/5 Blades

�1-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, March 8, 1977

lllllMWIIIIICIWIII!II~
. ~-

Social.
Calendar

TUESDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Chapter
53, Disabled American
Veterans, meeting, 7:30p.m.
Tueaday at DA V Home,
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy;
election of officers.
RACINE Firemen 's
.,IWilary regular meeting, 8
I
p.m. Tuesday at home of
Grace Roush.
HARRISONVILLE Chip,ler, OES, 8 p.m. Tues·
day at the Mauonic
·
Temple. Betty and Doug
Bll!hop, worthy matron and
worthy patron, announce
The annual World Day of
tmllltton and bake sale to be Prayer Service of the Hysell
held following meeting.
Run and Laurel Cliff Free
LEWIS Manley American Methodist Churches was held
Legion Auxiliary, 2 p.m, recenUy at the Laurel Cliff
lbesday It the home of Mrs. Church.
·
Ruth Brown. Gallipolis.
Mrs. Doris Shook opened
lfEDNESDAY
the service with prayer and
THE LEjlANON Golden
the song, "Tell Me lhe Story
Age Club will meet at tbe
of Jesus." Scripture was
rome d Mr. and Mrs. Charles verses on prayer from Matlillon with a noon potluck thew 6:9 and 21 by Mrs. Jean
clnner followed by en• Wright. There was a solo, "0
tertalnment In the afternoon. lllrd You've Been So Good to
FREE CERVICAL cancer .
Me" by Mrs. Pauline Tillis; a
clllic lor all Meigs area
duet,
"Are You Watching His
women, Wednesday, I to 3:30
Star,"
by Mrs. Joanne Clark
p.m. at Veterans Memmorial
and
the
Rev. Floyd Shook,
Halpit&amp;l. CaD 992-,'!383 lor
wilh
Mrs.
Darla Hawley at
1ppointment and 992·7531
the
piano.
'
from I to 4 p.m. Tuesdl!y for
Offerings
and
pi~dges were
1ppointment.
POMEROY - Middleport taken by Mrs. Wnght, Mrs.
Ums Qub, Wednesday noon, Donna Gilmore, Mrs. Ann
Mash and Ida Martin with
Mei(91lnn.
POMEROY Chapter 80, Mrs. Shook giving lhe ofRoyal Arch Masons, stated leralory prayer.
Slides on Haiti were'shown
convocatioJl, 7:30 p.m.
,by
lhe pastor of the Hysell
Wednesday, Pom.e roy
Run
Church and to conclude
Ma11011ic Temple.
the
program,
Mrs. Tillis sang
BOSWORTH Council 46,
"God
Took
Away
My YesterROyal and Select Masters,
days"
and
the
Rev. Mr.
~ted 8Silembly, 8:30 p.m.
Shook
had
prayer.
Wednesday , Pomeroy
Masonic Temple.
WHITE Rose Lodge, I :30
p.m. Wednesday, Middleport
American Legion hall.
REVIVAL In progress at
Chester Nazarene Church
through March 13. Services
7:30 nil#ltly. John Lanier of
Junction City, evangelist.
Herbert Grate, pastor. Public
Invited.
' PAST Councilors Club,
Acontribution of $25 to the
Chester
Council
323,
' Daughters of America, Christina Smith Fund was
. Wednesday, 7:30p.m. at tbe made by the Sew-Rite·
• hall witb Mary Hayes and Sewing Club at a meeting
: Mary Showalter,_ hostesses. Wednesday night at the home
· MIDDlEPORT Amateur of Mrs. Shirley Baity with
: Gardeners, 8 p.m. Wed- Mrs. Ann Browning, ho:.tess.
Mrs. Pandora Collins had
.: nesday at the home of !\Irs.
charge
of the meeting wilh
Edgar Reynolds.
Mrs.
Evelyn
Gilmore giving
: MIDDlEPORT Literary
lhe
secretary's
report. The
; Olb, 2 p.m. Wednesday at
~ays and means t'Onunitlee
• the home of Mrs. Emerson
; Jones. Mrs. Nan Moore to announced projects for the
.coming year with a white
·. review , "Edge of tbe World." elephant sale to be held next
· Roll caU wm be an interesting
rimnlh. It was decided to
: fact from the book.
have a traveling prize at the
THURSDAY
meetings . Games were
MEIGS County Humane played with prizes being
, Society, Thrift
Shop, awarded \u the winners. Mrs.
Pomeroy, 7:30 p.m. Thurs- Baity will host the next
: day. Public welcome.
meeting.
ROCK Springs Grange ,
Adessert course was serv• 7:30 Thursday night at the ed to lhose named and Mrs.
: haD.
Lucy While, Mrs. !£nora
FRIDAY
McKnight, Mrs. Joni Hoff·
HAPPY Harvesters Class, . man, Mrs. Nettie Boyer, Mrs.
: Trinity Church, 5:30 p.m. Martha Hoffman, Mrs. Bar• Friday with a dimer to be bara Mullen, Mrs. Mildred
• aerved by the hostesses Wells, Mrs. Flo' Strickland
; preceding the meeting. Mrs. and Mrs. Betty Wehrung.
; Archie Swartz will give Julie Baity was al!uest.
, devotiona.
,. "

Annual
servzce
Conducte

Club donates
to fund for

Christina Smith

MY

' ·Meat

Ground Fresh DallY

-~.

A

l

I

ADOLPH'S
MIRY VAlLEY
Pomeroy, Ohio

J/"---- ·;{~
rt:( D&amp;llf )

MEIGS COUNTY GIRL SCOUTS are joining
lhousands across the na lion in the celebration of Girl
&amp;out Week. The 65th birthday of scouting will be observed Saturday, March 12. Badge work is the big thing '!'ith

( FDDDI J
/

\

~

HilS.: It:• A.M. 1il11 :00 P.M. SUII . • Thurs. 10 :110 A.M.
til 12:01 P.M. Fridoy tnd ~lurdty.

Set Us At the Pomeroy Bend Brid

e

scouts, and here from Chesler Troop iU49 are Pemy
Kesterson .and Mary Hibbs displaying sewing projects,
and Pam Riebel, her camera work. They are pictured
with Becky Mankin, leader.

::::::::::;:::::;:; :;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::•:•:•:•:·:~:r.::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;::•:::::::::::;:.:·:·:·: :~::;:~

Generation Rap
The Ins and outs
Dear Helen and Sue :
I'm 12.and have no friends. I'm not awfuliy ugly, but the
popular kids just ignore me. I won't hang around with the
unpopular ouiies (tbey don 't like me either) so I'm alone and
&amp;lmost feel like killing myself sometimes, even though my
folks buy me anything I want.
My sister and brother call me "pig," "dog," etc. I have to
wear biacl&lt; Mary Janes, sometimes I stutter when I can't think
of the right thing to say, and this year I'm getting glasses!
Even ill got asked by the popular kids, I couldn't go tAl boygirl parties because my parents say I'm wo young.
Please help! -NO ONE TO TALK TO

Round ·the-clock relief begun.

~

t:

By Charlene Hoeflich

/ POMEROY JUNIOR TROOP 1180
'~
Meeting Wednesday at tbe Senior Citizens . Center ...
building the Pomeroy junlors opened their meeting wtth '"
the pledge to the flag and lhe girl scout promise. ·
.:
Plans for Thinking Day to be held March 'll were~
discussed and a pizza party was scheduled. Two of lhe·•
girL~ completed badge requirements. A demonstration ••
was given on how to fold the American Flag.
BROWNIE TROOP 1120
"
Girl Seoul Sunday lhe Syracuse brownies attended Sun,ii
day school at the Syracuse Asbury United Methoclist:;
Church.
· .
..
At Thursday nlght's meeting the troop made pians·for a ~
bowling party at the Pomeroy Lanes from 3 to 6 p._m. "
Saturday and for a skating party at the Skate-a-Way Rink
from 7 to 9:30 p.m. Monday night. Work on Thinking Day
to be held on March 27 was carried out in two groups.
Karen 'Cook led in lhe pledge to tbe flag, Kim Adams
had the Lord's Prayer, Mary Baldwin led in the girl scout
promise, and Heidi Cobb gave the Brownie "b's". The
brownie smile song was led by Kim Cogar. Refreslunents
were served by Kim Cogar and Karen Cook.
RUTLAND BROWNffi TROOP
Meeting last week at the home of Mrs. Shidey Wilson,
leader, Thinking Day plans were discussed and Germany
was. selecteQ as the country to be represented. Ar-:
rangements were made for slides on Germany w be"
shown at this week's meeting.
~
Badge work was discussed along with bird Ieeder pm' ·
jectS. For Girl Scout Sunday, the troop attended the"
Nazarene Church of Rutland and participated in a prQJ.:
gram. Charlotte Patterson was welcomed to the meetingattended by 17 scouts.
Chris Black led in lhe pledge and Sabrina Wilson the'
Brownie promise to open the meeting. The flag used by"
the troop was provided by the Rutland Amerioan Legion:
Post.
·•
RACINE BROWNm TROOP 1247
At the Thursday night meeting of the Racine Brownies;:
participation in Thinking Day was discussed along with•
plans for attending the Racine Methodist Church in · a:
group.
·
Joyce Stobart held the American flag as the BrownieS'
recited the pledge and Lina Curtis led in the girl scout pro"
mise. Work was continued on projects. Lina Curtis led in•
prayer before refreslunents were served. Mrs. Charlotte!
Wamsley is leader, and Mrs. Kay Hill is her assistant.

J

bear NOTTT :
· Would you believe: a big majority of 12- and 13-year-()lds
often feel as miserable as you do ? Early Junior Hi is down city
for an but the so-called popular few , and even they sometimes
worry over acceptance, personality, looks, family hassles fears you think belong only w you.
MRS. BARBARA BAER, longtime resident of the
Now, let's look at your problems one by one:
Chester community, will celebrate her 94th birthday FriFirst: "no friends. " Be honest, and you'll admit much of day. For the past two years she has iivedatthe Riverview
this comes from snobbishness. You're viewing people as Manor Nursing Home at Lucasville and cards may be sent
"outies" and innies" (who doesn't), and it b.Irns you blind. to her there at Box 785.
Stop labeling and help some other kid over the rough spots.
You may discover he or she is much more re&amp;l than those ~ig
shots you envy.
When you forget yourself, knock off "soci~l climbing"
(which makes you stuttery), really see the students you've
been putting down, you'll start making best !rie_nds who may
last through high school and beyond. (And they \VOn't mind
your glasses, Mary Janes or parental restrictions because
tbey're probably. in .tbe same boat: You can relax, well,
anyway, commiserate ... and mature together.
Next : Your brother and sister. We've an idea you give as
good as you gel here. If you'd give more consideration and leS! By Polly Cramer
criticism, you might get better ireatment from them. Try a
found a way to fiX those new
week of compliments and let us know the results - a whole
DEAR POLLY - We have neckline zippers that curl al
week, not just a day!
new wail-to-wall carpeting
Finally: boy-girl parties, Start by getting permission to that is mainly nylon and, the bottom and scratch one's
attend school dances with yo ur new girl friends. (Junlor Hi since the weather is colder back aU day. Take a small
hops are usually nondate affairs.) Parties should he allowed by and the heal on, thw&gt;oili a ter· piece of iron-&lt;&gt;n tape and
the time you throw away your Mary Janes, and we predict the rible.problem .vn~ static. Is p(ess the zipper flat with the
tape across it and have no
Ume is almost now. Good luck! - HELEN.AND SUE
there anything that can be more scratches. Remember
+++
done to relieye this problem? lo use a press(ng cloth as the ·
Rap:
·- KATHY.
shirts are likely to scorch or
I'm tbe youngest of four and the only girl. My parents both
DEAR KATHY - Some
work and have no time for me. They spend it ali on the c"rpet authorities suggest the burn if the iron is on high selling. I use tape from a sheet
youngest boy, their pet.
addition of moisture to the air
I once even threatened to run away, but Dad just handed which might be done by keep- repair kit as it is lightweight.
.
me $20 and said, "call us." So I didn't. Bur ruMing away ing radiator water paru; fill ed - KATHLEEN.
POLLY
The
.DEAR
worked for my second to oldest brother. Should I try it• - or placing water-filled con·
following
has
saved
a
lot
of
UNWANTED AND UNNOTICED
tainers around the room - cookies for me. When cookies
ncar the healing outlet if have hardened I fold a paper
Dear U and U:
possible. If this faits there is
Don't run away. Instead, run toward your parents. Let an anti-static agent that may towel in fourths, wet ·it,
them know how you feel, how lonely you area . And if you can't be procured at a carpet squeeze out excess, and put
this on lop of lhe cookies in
say it, write it.
dealer. But do be sure to gel the cookie jar. Put tbe cover .
We've an idea you're more. quiet than your brothers, one that does not promote
on tight and then repeal the
tberefore easily ignored. Don't let it happen: concentrate on soiling.- POLLY.
.next day if cookies are not
being the engine that backs up the train, not the caboose. DEAR POLLY - My Pet soft enough.- MRS. J.H.
HELEN AND SUE
Peeve is with the manufac·
DEAR MRS. J.H. - Your
turers of sofas who put the meU1od is somewhat like the
zi ppers on the backs of rever- one I have used for many
si ble cushions. If lhe zippers years and was sent in by a
were on lhe sides of the reader. I fill an aluminum tea
cushions, the furniture would ball with wet cotton and drop
ounces. Maternal grand· look good longer. - MRS.
SON BORN
in\u the cookie jar. When cotAnnouncement is being parents are Mr. and Mrs. J.B.H.
ton dries I wet it again. - .
DEAR POLLY - I have POLLY.
made of the birth of a sun to William Demoskey, Mid·
Mr. a nd Mrs. Jay Rowe 320 1~ dleport; and the paternal
South Third St., Middleport. grand parents are Mrs.
Mrs. Rowe is the former Cin- Virginia Rowe of Pomeroy,
dy Demoskey. Born Feb. 24 and · John Rowe, Cincinnati.
at the Pleasant Valley Greal-grandpareuts are Mr.
Hospital, the baby has been and Mrs. Edward Demoskey,
named Ryan Keith. He Mictdleport, ·and Mrs. Ferne
weighed six pounds, II Harris, Lancaster.
11

Polly's Pointers
Moisture helps
carpet static

,,
A layette shower honuring
Debbie Friend was held Friday night allhe home of Mrs.
Shirley Friend, Pomeroy,
with Bonnie Friend and Pen·
ny Stewart as hostesses.
Refreslunents were cake
det'Oraled in hink with bootie
replicas on the individual
pieces, ice cream, ,mints,

nuts and punch. The gift table
was . decorated with _pink
streamers and featured a
stork centerpiece. Gaines
were played with prizes going to Linda Friend, Peggy
Johnson, Emma Moodispaugh and Sue Robinson.
Shirley Friend won the door
prize.
Others attending were Pat·
ly Johnson, Keith Friend,
Darrell Stewart, Edna Faulk,
Connie Shoulder, Belinda
Friend, Tina Stewart, Teresa
Hoffman, Mindy Sevmore,

Doris Shook an d Mark "
Friend.
:
Sending gifts were Palsy
Oiler, Mary Mills, Debbie,
Honaker, Betty Smith, Mar·
jorie Ball, Mabel Tracy, Donna Gilm ore, Narsa.
Moodispaugh, Amber Lohn,
Marjorie Powell, Jean
Wright and Mabel Johnson.
\

•

YES

KROGER

HAS
FRESH FISH

I.

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137.50 :

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LARGE SHIPMENT OF

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DI.I. ,\ IIINU RIHfl

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!lor " ' I I k &lt; tlllll"' nr
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"QUALITY and
SERVICE"

4,

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Come In and Look It Over.
Many, Many Items .for the
Crafty Person
w. Main St.

Pomeroy.O.
Ju st be low the.Jones Boys in Pom'e roy in the
Nahonwide Ins. Building .
OPEN
'
Monday thru Wed . &amp; Friday
&amp; Saturday 10 a.m. to S p.m .
Closed Thursday

804

SUCHAREST, Romania
(UPI) - The Unlted States
has begun 24-hou r relief
operations to airlift medical
IUpplies to quak~avaged
Rcrnania, flying in tons of
lntiobiotics and medical
IUpplles.
A U.S. Air Force C130
Hercules transpori from
Plsa, Italy, lumbered intll
Bucharest Monday with
.,,000 worth of bandages,
antiseptic sprays, antiblotics
and other supplies from
American bases in Italy and

Tti"U II IA\I!I NU

~I NI &lt;
Th O&lt; • IJi o "U ~1 otni&gt;OUIO

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GREAT
'200.00:
GIFTS FOR EASTER

GOESSLER'S·
JEWELRY STORE
113 E. Court, flomtroY

West Germany.
State Department olfidals
in Washington said its
Disaster Relief Office will
conduct .. 24·ll0ur operations ·
until Romania finishes
rep&lt;rtingitsneedsloroutside
assistance.
Yugoslav, Bulgarian and
Italian planes carrying
similar mercy supplies
landed shortly afterwards.
Britain, West Germany,
Greece, Austria, Israel and
Scandanavian countries also
pledged aid.
·

Noolferof aid was made by
the Soviet Union, a Romanian
official said.
Switzerland sent in special
dog teams Monday w ferret
out bodies buried under the
dozens of apartments that
collapsed during Friday's
quake. One dog inunediately
found a survivor.
The official casualty toll
now stands a\1,034 dead and
6,1115 injured, although the
final death toll was expected
to be in the thousands.
Among the latest bodies

Amin claims he's on
CIA's list to die
By DOYLE McMANUS
' CAIRO (UP!) - Ugandan
President Idi Amin said
today he Is oo a CIA deatb list
as me of Mrica 's 11Strong
leaders" but added he has
many American friends who
JlllSS him information from
tbe spy agency.
ArnJn also said "there is no
cause for alarm in Uganda"
and suggested that an
International committee of
inquiry should investigate the
United States Instead.
An embarrassed silence
has greeted the Uganda
leader since he wok center
stage at the Afro-Arab
summit conference here
Monday carrying a bright
marshal's baton and huge
med&amp;ls bristling on a goldbraided uniform.

LAWHENCE, Kan. (UP! l
- A University of ~W~Sas
professor and a student
newspaper reporter say tbey
received telephoned death
threats for publicizing
allegations about the shah of
Iran's secret police.
Police and University of
Kansas
officials
are

At a news conference
today, he told reporters tbat
. neighboring Kenya and other
African countries were
s preadin g "no nsense
reports" about him out of
envy.
"Kenya is jealous of
Uganda because Uganda has
lhe best national park in the
world," he said.
"I have many friends who
are Americans," Amin said,
emphasizing his points witb
two clenched fists. "Bul the
Americans are martyring
strong leaders like me, who is
on a list to be martyred by the
CIA.n

But the unpredictable
Ugandan also said "there are
very many Americans who
are my friends who pass me
information from the CIA."
uThere is no cause for

alarm in Uganda," he said,
responding to ch!lfges his
military
regime
is
systematically killi ng
Christians.
"Thousands of people are
dying in New York, in
Washington, In an parts of the
United States every day. We
should send · an independent
committee of inquiry to
America to investigate your
martyring of your own
president, President John F.
Kennedy.;'
He flatly denled reports
that Cuba has supplied him
with military advisers.
On Monday, Amin told
summit delegates ''there are
no prisons in Uganda" and
said his countrymen and
foreigners lived together in
peace and security.

uncovered were those of
more lhan 10 artists, writers
and actllrs who were holding
a smaU party in a restaurant
in the old city center - the
hardest hit area.
The
quake,
which
registered 7.2 on the openended Richter Scale, hit
Romania !"'d Bulgal'ia the
hardest, but was felt from
Moscow to Rome.
At least 100 were killed in
Bulgaria.
The economic loss tAl Romania also was staggering.
But Western diplomats said
no assessment could be made
since Romanian authorities
have released no overall
industrial damage figures .
President Nicolae
Ceausescu toured stricken
areas in Bucharest and
outlying towns Mon day,
Including the oil fields and
plants in P)oiesti where he
waded through ankle-deep
mud w inspect the damage.
A fertilize r plant at
Ploiestl, which -was bombed
heavily during the World War
n, was working at only 40 per
cent of capacity because of
quake damage.
In
Bucharest ,
the
government radio announced
that residents no longer had
·'w boil water before drinking
it, &amp;!though tens of lhousands
of bottles of mineral water
continued to be trucked in
from outlying towns.
Work crews started
demolishing buildings
structurally damaged during
the quak e and later
condemned by city building
inspectllrs . More than 40
buildings have bee n knocked
down.

912·1f20

. (,

investigating the threats and
a related charge by the
Iranian Students Association
at KU that an agent of ttM!
Iranian secret pollee, known
as SAVAK, operates on
campus and ileal one of their
members recently.
The alle ged agent is
Kambiz Zibaii, enrolled as a

special student from Tehran,
Iran. He refused to talk with
· reporters.
Norman Forer; associate
professor of social welfare,
said his wile received an
anonymous telephone threat
last l'hursday night.
"He had a foreign accent,
said he was an Iranian
student and a representative
· of the Iranian government
and to tell professor Norman
that if he continued in his
activities he would get shot,"
Forer said. "My wife said,
'What you're saying is illegal
and I'm _going to caD the
police,' and then he repeated
wjth it.' '

Cable firms told
~of trouble ahead
, COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
\:able owners have been
warned that the telephone
'company could take over
lheir systems under sought
leglslsatlon.
' Th(Jilas Wheeler, of the
~aUoo&amp;l Cable Television Association's Washingtlln staff,
M&lt;llday told tbe 1977 meeting
bf tbe Ohio Cable Television
jl.ssociatlon, that
tbe
Consumer Communications
Act of 1976 or the so-called
•''BeD bill" could result in a
'telephone company takeover
•ollhelr Industry.
• In an evening speech,
;Charles
Carney,
D,
:Youngstown, promised that
·flwhlle .r am no lover of your
•lnduatry,'''he would give the
•cable induslry a fair hearing
Congress. Carney, a co;jponaor of the "Bell bin"
' 'lllhich tbe cable operators
ioppuse, said his sponsorship
•"doesn't mean I'm not gomg
..to lllten to reason. "
: Carney urged the cab~e
•operators to work with !bell'
: congresan~en and loc&amp;l re, preaentatlves to reward re: presentative• who helped
them, and !Allieek to replace
• those who did not.
' Wheeler said AT&amp;T has
: spent $2 million in the last
• year lobbying for the
: leglslatloo which he said
• would give tbe telephone
: company· exclusive control
! over secondary transmission

:m

JUST RECEIVW

"The Insurance Store"
Complete
Insurance Service ·

By RICHARD C. GROSS

.

SUPER
MARKET

having
to
do
communications."
Wheeler said that AT&amp;T is
also telling tbe Federal Com·
munications Commission
that the cable industry has
failed in its promise to wire
the country lor ca ble
televison and tbat AT&amp;T is
more able to do the job.
"It's a question of whether
cable- would CQ!ltinue as an
independent medium or
disappear,'' said Wheeler.
Wheeler
said
that
broadcasters, who have
traditionally viewed cable
systems as their enemies,
"may be the problem lor
today rut are not the problem
for tomorrow."
Wheeler said that the
majoriy of Ohio congressmen
have signed as co.sponsors of
tbe "Bell bill" and urged
cable owners tAl put ppressure
on
their
elected
repesentatives w defeat the
measure.

Social
Calend-ar

FRIDAY
RETURN Jonathan Meigs
Olapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution, 12:30
p.m. Charter Day luncheon
' systems.
Friday at Trinity Church.
! Many cable owners use Good Citizenship winners to
mtci'O-wave transmissions be honored.
•
· : and other
non-AT&amp;T
: transmission systems to
; distribute cable signals.
HERE FOR VISIT
: "The telephone c om~y
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Henry
' wants us out of their . of Amesville were .Monday
: busl,tesa," said Wheeler. visitors of Mr, and Mrs.
! "And that means anything Patrick Lochary.

•••
•
•
~

! JUSTICE MENDING

'! WASHINGTON (UP!)
; Supreme Court Justice
• Wllllim Rehnquist Is bllck at
·: home after a week In traction
: at George Washington
: Unlveraity Hospital for a
! s&amp;•lned back.
: RIM!uilt, 52, went to tbe
• hospital after bed rest at
! home did not bring
·: Improvement. The atr«ll)
: occurred Feb. 19 when he ran
l amlleandtbenplayed paddle
t tennl&amp;r
..

HOSPITAUZED
Miss Frieda Faehnle is a
patient at lhe Holzer Medical
Center. Her room number is
511:
DAUGHTER HONORED
Mr. and Mrs. Wllliam King
entertained Sunday with a
party honoring their
daughter, Kllthy, oo her
birthday. Guests were Mr.
and Mrs. Steve Finlaw,
Heather and Matthew, and
Sherry and Kevin King. Mrs.
Finlaw baked the birthday
cake.

VISIT MADE
Mrs. Grace Glaze and
Virgil Glaze of Middlepo1t,
accompanied Mr, and Mrs.
William Radford, Pomeroy
to Columbus where lhey were
joined by Mrs. Donald
Pullins and Mrs. Bessie
Byers for a trip to Parma (o
see Donald Glaze, who
recently suffered a coronary,
and his wife.
BACK HOME
Word has · been received
that Mrs. Peter Krajcovic,
mother of the Rev. Father
Bernard Krajcovic, pastor of
Sacred Heart Church here for
several years, has been
returned to her home at 1328
N. River Ave., Toronto, Ohio,
alter being hospitalized. Mrs.
Krajcovlc has sent thanks to
Meigs
residents
lor
remembrances during her illness.

Forer visited Iran last
month to gatber information
about dissidents who oppose
the shah and said said he
found "fantastic corruption"
at the highest levels of
goverrunent, pius evidence of
torture deaths of two
religious leaders.
Forer said he thought the
anonymous
ca ll
was
prompted by a newspaper
report of his recent visit to
Iran. "The agents have the
arrogant assumption that
they can get away with these
things in Amerira," Forer
said. "It's a preposterous
notion ."

John Mueller, a reporter
for the University Daily
Kansan, said he recelved ~
telephone call at his
reSidence hall Saturday night
from a man with a foreign
accent a few hours after
visiting Zibaii's house.
"He said, 'II you do another
story, you wiD be shot,' tben
he hung up," Mueller said.
.Mueller said Zibllii refused
tAl talk to him and another
Kansan reporter. He said he
asked Zlbaii if he were an
agent of SAV AK, and Zibaii
replied, "I won't talk about
that. I don 't have to say
anytbing."
KU Executive
Vice
Chancellor Delbert Shankel
said university officials are
interviewing students to find
whether the accilsation that
Zibaii attacked another,
smaller Iranian student on
Feb. 25 can be substantiated.
"We are taking this
seriously," Shankel said alter
an 80-minute meeting
Monday with representatives
of the Iranian student group.

"If we make
an error on
H••rv w. a•o•• your taxes,
we pay the penalty.
And the interest!'
Reason No. 14 why H&amp;R Block
should do your taxes.
H&amp;R Block doesn't make many mistakes.
Our people are trained not to. But if we
should make an error that costs you
additional tax, you pay ohly the additional
tax. Block pays any penalty and interest
We stand behind our work.

H&amp;RBLOCit

OPEN DAILY
9 TO 10
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Professor, reporter are threatened

Layette shower fetes
Mrs. Debbie Friend

CRAFTY LADIES

.

(l)

.._

I

II

~ES1y

CAIIIII&amp;

'c
'•

TRY OUR DELICIOUS
HAMBURGERS

~

j

Jordan has announced a " 7
Day Membership Drive."
Ideas for recruiting new
members will he discus~
with State Grange leaders at
• meeting at Victory Grange
on March 18.
The National Director of
Women's Activities Jenny
Grobusky and the Ohio State
Director Jeannette Lewis will
elplain the activiiies to be
held this year at a meeting
March 29 from I to 3 p.m. at
the McArthur Community
Building. ·
The lecturer's program at a
r«ent nleeting when the
banquet was planned,
presented by Elizabeth
Jordan, was a reading, "Food
lor thought for the year," a
contest by the youth, roll can,
and a discussion on "What I
Would Say About the Grange
to a Prospective Member."
After the meeting Hemlock
Grange served refreshments
to 35 grangers.

"(

7- The'rlaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, March 8, 1977

I Girl Scout.Diary 1t

Grange sets date
for annual banquet
The Meigs County Pomona
Grange has set April 15 lor
the aMual grange bllnquet
which will be held at
Salisbury Elementary School
befinning'at 7 p.m. with Past
State lecturer Bernice Arter
the 1111est speaker.
Pomona Grange secretary
Avenel Hollldlly said musical
llllertalnmer!l will be by
State Contest winners Keith
A.hley and Randy Woife.
Members of the communlty
wanting tickets should
contact any Grange tnember.
Deputy Master Mendal

.::~'':.:·:·~:::·::::::::::&lt;:::;:::::::::::::::::&lt;::::::::::&lt;:~:::::&lt;::::::::::::&lt;&lt;W:::~::IIi£{1{'::c:~:~l ~

$}19

Shortening ..... ~~.~ .••

PEPSI
1
COLA .....&amp; :~l99~

0

BANANAS
5 '1
LB.

I

FROZEN

DAIRY

$149
'

MORTON
COUNTRY TABLE

01 NNERS....e~~~
ICE

~

plastic

BROUGHTON'S

2%· MILK.. }.3!~~....

7
HOMO MILK.~.!~'~·"·

g·~

BROUGHTON'S

SCOT LAD

~ VALLEY BEll

MILK...........~.~~~~-

¢

lfz

BUTTERMILK.~~.~&amp;9 ·

SOFT DRINK SPECIALS
'

THURSDAY ONLY

DIET Rl;r£ .
COLA

R.C. COLA
8'7"16 0~ BOffiES

8- 16

DR. PEPPER

COCA-COLA .

8-16 OZ. BOTTLES

QUART' 8011LES. ,,

0~

BOffiES •

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

618 EAST MAfN
FOR

Open 9 A.M.-6 P.M. Weekdays, 9·5 ~1.

Phone 992-3795
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY

l

'

:

�8- The Daily Sentind, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday. March 8, 1977 •

.

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash
ASIRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol
AAIES {Mirch 21-Aprll 11)
There's no doubt you can make
gains today . but you may not
enjoy what you accumulate.
There are too many problems.

TAUAUS {April 20-Miy 201 You
may race a potentially serious
disagreement between you and
your mate today. It can be
pre\lented with unselllsh com.
promise. .
'

GEMINI {Miy 2t-Juna 20) The
route to your goals Is fraught
with many obstacles today If you
are singular of purpose you will
not be easily dtssuaded .

CANCER {Junt 2t -July 22)
Don't put your usual fatth In
those you trust if buying or investing Joday. Though their intenttons are good , they could
lead you astray.
LEO {July 23-Aug. 22) Ordinarily
you'd not do things for others
jus! to feather your nest. Today.
however, such motives could
gu ide your acuons.

VIAGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) You
have a tendency to trear people
too sternly at first today. Once
you become more com·
passionate. you'll fare better.

LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0ct. 23) Money
matters are a mixed bag for vou
today. The elation of a windfall
could be offset when an old debt
rears its head .

SCORPIO {Oct. 2•-Nov. 22)
Don't try 10 use others to further
your ambitions today. It's far
better to enjoy them as friends or
indiViduals.

SAGITTARIUS {Nov. · 23·Dec.
21) It's folly to cling to archaic

Finn1nci1l Report
Of Townships
For Fiscal Y~ar End ing
Oectmbtr l\ , 1976
Sci pio Township
At . 1 AIUn'f' , OlHo
Feb. '1 , 1977
1 certify lht&gt; follow ing report
to be correct.
G lenn 0 . Jew ell
TowMh i p Clerk
Tel No . 698 -5715
(457 10 1
Summary of Cash
••lances . Receipts
And E xpendltures
· B11lance Jan . 1, 1976
GeneraiFund
S6,945. 12
Motor Vehicle L i cense
Tl!• Fund
526 .05
Gasolin~Tax Fund
1.870.19
Fire Protect ion F d .
:1"23 ..&amp;9
Federal Revenu e
166.0.4
Sharing Fund
9,830.89
Totals
Tot I Receipts •
General Fund
8,491.54
Motor Vehicle License
Tax Fund
8,5&lt;16.81
Gasoline Tu Fun d
15 ,.t&lt;ll .8l
Fire Protect ion Fd .
1,501 .43
Federa l Revenue
Sharing Fund
2, 197.00
Totals
36, 178.59
Total Receiph &amp; Balances
General Fund
15 ,436.66
Motor Vehicle License
Tax Fund
9,077.86

17 ,312.00
1,874 92

Gasoline Tax Fund
Fire Prote ction Fd
Federal Revenue
2,363 04
Sharing FuncJ
46,009 .48
Totals
Expenditures
General F und
5, 176.81
Motor Vehicle License
•
Tax Fund
5,3.!8 16
Gasoline Tax Fund
1l ,694.73
Fire Protecti0i1 Fd .
1,237 .25
Federal Revenue
Sharing Fund
1.956.81
To talr.
28,4 1J 76
hlilnce Dec . 31,1976
General Fund
10,259.85
Motor Vehicle License
Tl!)( Fund
72.1 .70
5,617 .27
Gasoline Tax Fund
Fire Protection Fd .
S87 .67
Federal Revenue
Sharing Fund
Total

ideas that you know won't work.
Use your nimble mind to select
timely atternattves .

CAPAICOAN {Dec. 22-Jtn. 1t)
It's probable persons you can
usually depend upon won't be
there when you need them to·
day. FiQure how to get along
without them.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Fob. 1t)
Safeguard your own interests to-

NOW mrep tmg p1ono !t ludent -,
bef"p!ll 1~1 '&gt;

.. anced

Ul ft' l IH('tlmt~-,

~ t u cier ll ~

Coli

Pomeroy
~OF QUALITY Motor Co.

vu:,o

mo
NOliCE
Pr ott"s Meo t Mkt .
(l'lposonton Metu Pt ocessing
Inc ) Cu~ tom slaughter;.,:.. , ond
proceuing. Re ta il . whole!&gt;ole
No oppo•nrnent neces~ory . Call
(bl-4 ) 593·8655 . hour s, 9:00 trll
6:00 7 Pomeroy Rood Athen s.

1m VEGA ESTATE

GUN SHOOT at the Racine Gun
Club every Sund ay , 1 pm
Assortec1 meats

and brakes, radio, good rubber, light green .

1976 TORIN04 DR . SEDAN
,Air , automatic, power steering, 8
rUbber , ligh1 green.

SKATE -A -WAY
ANNOUNCES
Schedule. Open Weds . . Fndoy
and Saturday nights , 7:30p .m .
till 10 p m. Available lor
p r i~o~ote port1es , Monday , lues .,
and Thu rsday n1gh ts, ond Sotur·
day ond Sunday afternoons.
Phone 985 -3929 or 985 -999b.

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

rived In Holy !Ddl, Scotland,

from Charleston, S.C.,

LOST. BROWN and white lemole
Poin te r dog on Rt. 14 3 on Hor ·
nsonvi lle Rood. Owned by R. E

7 BEDROOM 8 ~ .CB, por11y furnish - l9b9 CHEVROLET 8i squ01ne: 1966
BUICK ,Electro, 175 2 Rokon
e~ Phone (304 ) 882 -3348 .
• triolbikes. Phone 949 2432.

Rolfle , 992·5072.

OLO furniture , ice bo~es , brass
beds , wall tel ephones ond
ports . or complee households.
Write M . D... Miller , Rt. .:I ,
Pomeroy . Ohio. Coll992-77b0
CASH paid for 011 makes and
models of mobil e homes .
Phone area code bl4 -413-9531

AUTO

RECYCliNG .

Gasol ine Ttix
15,400.00 Pcts for Sale
Other
41.81
Total Recei p ts
15,441 .81 RISING STAR Kenne l Boarding ,
Total Beglnnmg Balance
Indoor -Outdoor runs . grooming
P lus IHceipts
17 ,3 12.00
all breeds , clean sanitary
Expend Ilures
facilities . Cheshire Ph one {b14 )
Total E)Cpendltures
367·0292
- Miscellaneous
5,011 26
- Maintenance
' 6,683 47
HOOF HOLLOW. 8uy , sell , trade
Grand Total Exp , or train horses . RUTH REEVES,
Gaso11ne Ta x Fund 11,694.73
Ba l., Dec . 31.1976
5,617 .27 · tromer . Phone (61.4 ) b9B·3290 .
Total E x p . Plus Bal.
Dec . Jl, 1976
17 ,3 12.00
Fire Protection Fund
Ba l., Ja n . 1, 1976
323.49 F'or'Rmt
R ece lp ts
3 AND .C RM. furni shed and unGeneral Propert y Tax furnished opts . Phone 992Real Estate and
Trailer (Gross)
1.&lt;180.57
5434 .
Tangible Persona l Property
TaK (Gross )
20 .86 COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork . Rl.
33, ten miles norlh of Pomeroy .
Tot .!II Receipts
1,501 .43
Totel Beginning Ba la nce
Lor ge lots with concrete patios,
1,82.4 92
Plus Receipts
Sidewalk s, runners ond off
'
E111pendltures
street parking . Phone 992 ·7479 .
Contracts
1.200.00
Auditor &amp; Treas
2 BEDROOM TRA ilER . Brown's
17.21
Fees
Trailer Park . Phone 992·3324 .
1,217 .21
Total Exp
Bal., Oe c 31, 1976
587 .61 3 ROOM FURNISHED opt. Coli
Total Exp . Plus Bal.
992 -2288 or 992-2348 alter 5
Oec . 31.1976
1,82492
p.m .
Federal Re\'enue
ONE BEDROOM all elec . apart Sharing Fund
106.04
· Bat., Jan . 1, 1976
ment. Phone 992 -5742 orinquire
Receipts
at Pomeroy Home and Auto .
Gra nts - Federal
2, 197.00
T ot.!! I Receipts
2, 197 .00 2 BEDROOM Fur . opt. Phone
Total Beg inning Balance
992 22B8 or 992 -2348 alter 5
Plus Receipts
2.363 .04
p.m .
Expenditures
FURNISHED APT. for rent tor
Maint. 1nd Operation
Salilrles - Emplovees 1.956.81
elderly couple. Phone 992 -1571
Total EKp .
1;956.81
0 ' 992·3'175.

A thought for the day :
Supreme Court Justice OUver
Wendell Holmes said, "Tnes •
are what we pay for dvWzed
society."

•06.23

3 room and both furnished apart Total E~ep . Plus Bal. ,
2.363 .04
ment , utilit1es paid , 35b North
Dec . J1 , 1976
(31 e. ltc
4th St. . M iddleport , Ohio.

COAl , l1mes tone , and calcium 1972 CHEVY VAN . Phone
chloride and colc1um brine lor
992 ~ 7689.
dus t control and special mixing
1976
(AMARO 305 . 2 borrell
salt for formers . MOi'l Street .
outomollc, silver with red
Pomerof. Ohio or phone 992 pinstrtping. Still under warron·
3891

APPLES. FITZPATRICK ORCHARD .
STATE ROUTE 6B9 , PHON E
WILKESVILLE. (6 1A )669·3785.

·BABYSITTER in Portland a reo l or
ages .c ond 5: one in school
day, 7 a .m. till 6 p.m . m your
home . Phone 843 -2191 after
5·30 p.m .
1

'

.

G•in recognition and prntltt lhrouth 1 ureer in
contumtr fintnte. Consumer lint nee it an lnlttrol ond
lmpor11nt Ioree In our counlry'• economic growth. ond

proQress.
.
.
.
A position here wtll gt\le you economic securrty.
The consumer finance business is study - even

during receulons.
You ctn win promotion rapidly . You will be paid 1
good slarting JaltrY and receive exceptional employee
benefi1s.
There art Brondl Representative po•iHon• open
now lor high school grtduates. Must have Auto.
Phone Mr. Mills today lor • confidtnlial, persontl
interview. C•ll m -2111 .

Capital Finance Services
300 West Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

... '

'

r-------r------------,
A' CAREER JOB
IN CONSUMER FINANCE
1

'Y · Coll992·5709.

1974 OLDSMOBilE Tornado. fully
equipped. Phone 9~2 - 3511 aft er
5:30p .m .

USED JOHN DEERE DOZER WITH
BLADE AND A 1%5 DODGE 4

742 · 21A~

At&gt;l EQUAL OP''ORTUN•TY "MPI OYeR

VERNON

WEBER ,

CLERK TREASURER . RUTLAND
VILLAGE . BIDS MUST BE SEALED
AND IN THE ClERKS HANDS NO

lATER THAN 7 PM APRIL 5
1977 . TERMS : CASH fROM THE
HIGHEST BIDDER.
WARM MORNING Gos 65,000
BTU . like new . Phone 992 -2805 .

USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT . (I)
l tmberjock 240 Sk idder: Pef·
ttbone Super 8 Cary lift : 60"
Bush Metal lurgical Chipper .
Con tod Denn1s Smurr. Phone
(bl4 ) 838-5345.
SEAR's 8 H.P. garden tractor with
mower, $450. 16 gouge 870
shotgun. SlOO . .Phone 992-23b9
FRIGIDAIRE .cO inch Elec . slove.
used 3 years . like new , $150 .
Gordon Coldwell, Tuppers
Plain~ . Phone (b14) 667 -3935 .
STEREO. NEW AM -FM " stereo
r adio combination . 5129 95 or
easy ter ms. Co11992 -3965 .

FOR SALE
New co-Op water so(
tenen , model VC -SVI.
. Only 1279.95
One CJOOd cha i n Homelite
Chain Saw ....
!illD.OO
Save SSD.OO on a neW
Hotpoint Refrig erator
1 Good Used Hotpoint
Range
SlDO

P0111eroy I.Jndmark

9•

!_ack W. C'arseV-;-Mqr.
. . . . Phone n2 .2181

Carpet &amp; Upholstery
Phone Mike Young
AI
992-2206 or 992-7630
"The origi('lators
Not The Imitators~~

Will do odd tabs , roofing , pam ling , guller work . Phone 992·

7409
SEW ING - ALTERATIONS ·
Up hol s tering .
drapes
reasonable . 572 South Third
Ave ., Middleport. Phon e

992·0306.
PORTABLE WELDER . Iorge and
small jobs . Con olso thaw
frqzen water pipes . Phone
q49-2b.C6.
HAVE YOUR 1ol(es done by on oc counlont. Also , now ocu1pting
bookkeeping . Phone 992·6106
or992-b173.
INCOME TA)( Serv1ce. Wallace
Ru ssell,
Bradbury .
Coli

991·7228 .

KAWASAKI

CRI25:
175 .

1972
Phone

992·3367 .
OAK FIREWOOD. Phone 9S5 -3920 .
TWO HOLSTEIN ' Heifers coming
two years old . Coli alter 5 p.m .
985 -JBb3 , Tom Nice .
2 PIECE living room suite, good
condition . $75. Phone (b l&lt;l)
6b7 -J319, Tuppers Plain s, Ohio .
SliGHTl V USED Hoovei's, $-45
cosh or 1erms. Coll992-51-46.

882 ·2683.

DO

REDUCE SAFE and lo5f with
GoBese Tobleh and E-Vop
'"woter pills" Nelson Drug.
3 PIECE coffee tQble set . Phone
992 -2571 or m-782B
1937 Formal I F-20, rubber wheels ,
good condition . See at Albany ,
Ohio, Rt. 2. l57A ·l. Gory
Welch .

NIH! A
1'1 nif R \ fll lE NI R1
Ltt

Pomeroy Ltndmtrk

soften &amp; condition YDUr
w1ter and a Co -op water

softener, Model uc.xvl.
Now Only'279,95
Let

us

test

your

wal4tr

Aerial
Commercial
Schools
Weddings

KEN GROVER
{614)985-4151
ChHter, Ohio
10-17-1 mo!Pdl

PHO~E

Carpet-Lino.-Tile
Phone Mike Yoto~g al
992-2206 or 992-7630
2-23·1 mo.

R~d£stit~%r
.- - !hl'i~c ~ -

Housecleon mg.

Ca ll

COUNTR't' farmland with seclud ed woods . water and good ac cess in Monroe County , W. Vo .
Sl ,000 down , call (304) 772 -

3102 0' (304) 772·3227 .

I'll M2·2174

Virgil B. Sr., Realtor
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45169
Phone 992-3325

:YEP! SOMETHIN 'S CDMIN' ALL
... MESSE I CAN 'Tl:LL
RIG'IT, AN' rT DOESN'T SOUND
IF I LISTEN
VERY BIG I H"""'- ! I \\ONDER IF
ReAL CLOSE !
ITS "TWO·LEGGED,CR FOuR-LEGGED?

FINE HOME -

Solid 9

room stucco home, 3
bedrooms with closets, nice
equ i pped · kitchen and

dining. Full

basement ,

good coal furnace, 2 car
garage with storage, nice ..
rorner lot on Rt. 124 at

!35,000.
NEW LISTING - II room
l:rick In Middleport out of
fl,ood. Has 4 bedrooms, 2
nat . gas

furnace,

basement, front and back
porches. Over I acre tlf
land. Sl3,000.
PAGEVtLLE - 7 room
frame home with 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, front

' :
' :

JACK 'S

BEE ' S

378·6357 .

U'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

All HI RID HANDS WILL
TRY TO SE~L THE
PROPERTY THAT YOU
LIST WITH US.

---

bMihti• 1Jll75.

NO FUTURE? IN A$$ RUT?

Consider a Professional career
Driving a "BIG RIG" . We we a
Private Training School offertngaPARTTimeorFULL Time
Training Program. If vou are
working, Oon't Quit Your Job,
anend our Weekend Training
program or anend our 3 Week

FUU Time Resident Training.

PARKERSBURG

JOHN DEERE Dozer No . 40 , $2000;
1971 Dodge Von , 6 cyl.
automatic, side doors and win dows , $1000. Will sail or trade
for tra ctor IJnd equipment
Phone (614 } 667 -3319, Tuppers
Plains , Ohio.

garage.

Free.

11H U.S. Dtl'f. uf hlkw.

room, fireplace, basement,

basement,

house, 115 acre• with 90
fenced . Good hunting and
fishing . Would like Slti,OOO.

a,

422-4080

dining with gla•• doors, 2

well, all minerals , barn , old

""'""'

of Routes 33-7·124. Ideal for
Commercial. Loads of
traffic past this ground
dally.
POMEROY - 2 story
frame has 3 large
bedroom•. bath, dining

furnace.,

car garage and ~lmost one

ou t•lllnl

Excellent
condition.
$16,500 .00 .
WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
ACREAGE AND NEWER
HOMES. LET US SELL
YOURS NOW. .
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
Anocloto
m -2259 . "2·2161
985·4111

-

LITTLE ORPHAN ANMiE-'SEAL OF APPROVAL

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

"

,you -wON'T
E~ER. LET ON
1
YOU KNOW

ileouT ANNIE'S

HE --- HE

~ISSED

YOU COMPOUND

YOUR VILLA'" Y
5ECRET, TOO-

ME··

YOUR C~IME WlTH

WH"f, HE HA 5 N11

YOU'RE A DOU6Lt:·
DtALIHG WENCH ·- ·

SINCE HE WAS

AL'BIS- NEtUEL

IN GIVING

AWAY HER

KISSED ME

A I..ITTLE

"~'' --

, ...

_

LARRl,!~Y,,~DER

H/&gt;-V~ ~DO GW[}OD ~~

~ l 0.1

. Ph. 992·3!!!

WHAT tiOV UJAAT TO~
WHC'~ ~OU

troJJ IR?

',.
,'
.
•'
~

BRADFORD. Auction eer. Com~
plete Ser\'ice . Phone 949-2481'
or 949 -2000. Raci ne , Ohio, Crltt
Bradford .
·

---ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR

·-·~-

~

••'

Sweepers . toaster s, irom ,. ol ~
small oppliances"' lown mower .•
next to Sta te Highway Garage:
on Rout e 7. Phone (614) 985;

•

3825. ~--- --J..~
REMODEl iNG , Plumbing, heotirlrg
and oil types of genera) repair .
Work guaranteed 20 years eJI ~
perience . Phone 992·2409 .

GASOIJNE AUEY

some·

thinq

out of

EX(AVATING. doze~ :l~;ier ooJ
back hoe work : dump truck•
and to-boys lor hire; will haUl
fill dirt , to soil, limestone ond
grove l. Call Bob or Roger Jef.
fers , day phone 992-7089.
night phone 992-3525 or 992·

_ 5232. --:---:----:--

Your baq is outside ...
filed under"Ci'"r

And
I need

~

SE,WING MACHINE Repo1rs, ser. ,
vice , all makes, 992-228.4 . Tl'ml
Fabric
Shop , Pomero). .:
Authorized Singer So;:,les ondt
Service. We sharpen Scissors ., 1 ;
1

my

-L.c..
..__

.....

baq!

'·

---,

EXCAVATING , dater. backhoe
and dltcher. Charles R. Hot•
field . Back Hoe Servic8,
R.utlond, Ohio. ~one 742·2008..:.

ULABNER

WIU:-~~fin9~ -~;;sfruct'i;;~. :
plumbing ond heating. No jobt
too large or too small. Phone:
'7.C2-2J.48.
I

A®~m);~-.
lnd~ana reader held ·
A 97:J ¥K xxx . Qxx A XXX .

An

She responded two notrump
to her partner's two-spade
opening and p ~ssed when her
partner b1d three spades She
asks if she was right to do
this .
The answer is that her

negative two notr ump
response was correct. but she

12 :30---Janaki 33.
l ·OQ--Tomorrow 3.4.
I: Ill---News 13.
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 9, 1977
6:QO-Sunri se Semester 10.

6:15-Farm Repor113.
6: 20---Nol for Women Only 13.
6:31l---AG·USA 4; News 6; Sunrise Stp1ester 8;
Chrls1opher Closeup 10.
""" '
6:45-Mornlng Report 3.
~
6:51l---Good Morning, West VIrginia 13.
6·55-Good Morning, Trl State 13.
?·DO-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Chuck White Rports 10.
7.05-Porky Pig 10.
7:31l---Schoolies 10.
8:00-Howdy Doody 6; Capt. Kangaroo B,IO; Sesame
Sf 33,
8:31l---Big Valley 6.
9:DO-A .M. 3; Phil Donahue 4;, 13, 15; Andy Griffith 8;
Mike Douglas 10; .
9 : 31l---Cross ~ W i fs 3; Edge of Night 6; Concentration 8.
IO :oo-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15; Dinah 6; Double Dare
8,10; Mike Douglas 13.
IO :Jil---Hollywood Squares
10:3Q---Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; Price Is Right 8,10.
II :Oil---Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15; .Morning Show 13;
E lee. Co. 20.
ll:Jil---Shoot for fhe Stars 3,4.15; Happy Days 6,13;
Love of Life 8,10; Sesame St. 20,33.
II :55-CBS News 8; Ms . Fixlt 10.
12 ·0Q---News 3,4,6,10; Second Chance 13; Name Thaf
Tune 15; Divorce Cour1 8.

definitely should continue to

12 ·31l---Lovers &amp; Friends 3,15; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Bob
Braun A; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10.
four spades over her partner's
I :00-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6, 13; News 8;
three . A king and a queen
Young &amp; the Restless 10; No1 For Women Only 15.
represent considera ble value.
1:31l---Days
of Our Lives 3.4,15; Family Feud 6,13; As
(Do you have a questlor1
The World Turns B. 10.
tor the experts' Writs "Ask
2:00-120,000 Pyramid 6, 13.
the Jacobys " · cars of this
2:31l---Doctors 3,4,15; One Life to Live 6,13; Guiding
newspaper. The Jacobys will
Llghf 8, 10.
answer l(ldividue/ quest1ons
3:00-Another World 3,4, 15; All In The Family 8, 10; On
trick because it was obvious it stamQBd, sell-addressed
Aging 20.
to East that his partner had envelopes are 9nclosed. The
3:15-General Hospital 6,13 .
led a singleton and that South mosr interesting questions
3:31l---Match Game 8,10; Liflas, Yoga &amp; You 20 .
would have no way to get rid w1fl be used m th1s column
4:00-Mister Cartoon 3; l ftle Rascals 4; Gong Show
uf the six of clubs later on in and will rece1ve copies of
15; New Mickey Mouse · lub 6; Lucy Show 8; Movie
the play .
JACOBY MODERN.)
"Branded" 10; Call If Macaroni 13.
4 : 15-LIItle Rascals 4.
4· 31l---My Thee Sons 3; Afterschool Special 6, 13;
Partr idge Family 4,8; Flintstones 15.
by THOMAS JOSEPH
5:00-B ig Valley 3; My Three Sons 4; Brady Bunch B;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33 ; Stor Trek 15 .
ACROSS
40 Beauty
5:31l---Adam-12 4, 13; News 6; Fam ily Affair 8; Elec .
l Big first
parlor
Co. 20,33 .
for baby
specialist
6;00-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
5 Subdue
DOWN
6:31l---NBC News3.4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
ll Ancient
I Becky CBS News B, 10; Vegetable Soup 20; Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 33.
12 Musical
2 One tippling
?:DO-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling•
3 Pleasant;
interval
for Dollars 6; Pop Goes the Country B; News 10; To
13 Church part
attractive
Tell
lhe Truth 13; My Three Sons 15; Consumer
(4 wds.)
14 Blabbed
Survival Kit 20; Big Green Mgagazlne 33.
15 King ( Sp.)
4 Before tend
Yesterday's Answer
7:31l---Dolly 3; $100,000 Name That Tune 4; Match
16 Follower
or tense
Game PM 6; 125,000 Pyramid B; MacNeil-Lehrer
of Feb.
5 Tooth
16 - out
28 Misogynist's
· Report 20,33; The Judge 10; Break the Bank 13;
17 Before
6 Maple
( apporfear
Wild Kingdom 15.
18 R1ght
genus
tioned)
7:
29 Finnish
B:Oil--20 French
19 Blanched
7 Subway
lake
7:35-High School Basketball 9.
slop (abbr.) 20 Cringe
statesman
J() Decrease
8:00-B illy Gaham Special 3, 15; Bl9nlc Woman 13;
21 Part of NHL 8 Attract
22 Senior
32
Ponder
Grizzly dams 4; Billy Graham Crusea Special 6;
(3 wds. )
member
1abbr.)
Gunsmoke 8; Nova 20.33; Good Time&amp; 10.
35
Ethiopian
22 Bequest
23 Man-made
9 Turned
8:31l---Jacksons
10..
princely
mside out
fabric
getter
9:01l---CPO Sharkev 3,4.15 ; Baretta 6.13; ; Movie " Mr .
title
10 Cheap booze 25 Moorish
23 Salt tree
Maiestyk" a,10; Childhood 33; ,Soundstage 20.
24 Was in debt
drum
36 - woks!
( hyph. wd .)
9:31l---We Think ·You Should Know 3; Mclean
Stevenson 4,15.
25 Yearned
IO :OQ--26 Reply to
IO :DO-Tales of the Unexpected 3,4, 15; Charlie's
Virginia
Angels 6, 13; News 20; Scenes from a Marriage 33.
O'Hanlon
10:31l--ln Search of lhe Real America 20.
27 - off on
11 :Oil---News 3,4,6,8,10, 13,15; MacNeil-Lehrer Report
(rebuked)
33; Monty Python's Flying Circus 20 .
28 "The Song '
11 :31l---Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Rookies 6, 13; Movie
of Berna"Day of the Evil Gun" 8; Mary Hartman 10; ABC
dette"
News 33.
12 :DO-Movle "Life at the Top" 10; Janak! 33.12:41l--author
Mysfery of the Week 6, 13.
31 Devoured
1:oo-Tomorrow 3,~.
32 Day of
2:11l---News 13.
the wk.
33 Pitch ~1t ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
hitter
~ ~ ~~ ®
byHenrl~nokhndBoblee
(2 wds.)
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
34 Tonsorial
one tener to each square, 10 form
foUr ordinary words
1":'51,'
product
(2

•

!

MOBilE Home Repair. Elec.. :
plumbing and heoting. Phonet

,:

--- ......
ELECTRONIC T.V. CLINIC . N~w,
T.V. shop. Electronic T.V. Cllnl"
Service c;ol~. $5 .95. Color, 8 &amp;
antenna systems stereos, etcA
572 South Third . Middleport :
Phone 992 -6306. Corry In onctsolle money.
......u...
~---

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how &lt;o work it: -..;--:=y::.:..::;-...;,-.:r~
AX\'DLBAAXR
is LONGFELLOW

W.

MARTIN

b·

wcls )

36 Nibble at
37 Contented
(2 ~ds.)
36 Israeli port
,...-' ..-.-&lt;1 39 Diminish L-..1..--L-.1-..1..--1-

CARPENTER, flooring , c;eillng,•
paneling. Phone 992·2759.
,

AND

2 ¥"
3•
4W

News 20; Oec1!1des of Dec ision 33.

ltlliirut

---~!

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned. Modern•
Sanitation , 992 -395.4 .
.;

-- 992-5858.
---

Pass
Pass
Pass

Pa ss
Pa ss
P;t ss
Pa ss

·

~

GIJT]:!_Is.IIIIUR~S

HOWERV

TOBACCO BASE.-Phone 7~2·2014.

HO!SO~OW

IT WOULD
UNMASK

SIDIJIC.SOIJITT

--~~---

New

acre of nice laylf11J land .
REDUCED.
FREE GAS - Wilh the

IIW'N~

Sout h

Pass
2N T
3 N 'f
Pass

murmured East after South

SEPTIC Systems installed hy
licensed installer. Shepqr~
Contractors. Phone 742-240'1.

oven .

house on 4Qi120 corner lot.

111111Hf

81 -IEVEL HOME near Meigs High
School. Phone 991·7.114 .

bedroom brick veneer ,

siding and

ht/

Bt,"NN ufh"- Jl•lutin.

All Ulllitles and nice view of
the Ohio River. $12,0011.
IV• ACRES - Large 4
bedroom home with •;,
bllh on ~t. 7 In Tuppers
Plains . Good locollon for a
buslnHs. Only $12,0011.
LOOK HERE - New 3

porch, nice

garden in back. $7,500.
MIDDLEPORT 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, frame

cOMptllrW&gt;

North Jo:ast

had found a way to get himse lf
set at hiS four-heart contract.
Now see if you can figure
out the method adopted by
South to wmd up with only
mne tncks We 'll give you a
hmt. East made a frightful
play at trick one.
Specifically. after the 10 of
clubs was played from dum·
my East played the deuce.
This play gave up a club

3·B

SUPPLIE S.

Reedsvill e , Ohio Bee suppl1es
and equtpment. Phone {61-1)

We§t

Os,.ald &amp; James Jacoby
.. Greed is a ternble thing , ..

11110011$

Reedsville, 0 . Ph. !78,.250 .
2·25·1 mo.

. t\ ij
East· WI'S! \'Uineral&gt;l c

B)

~MIRUM

.

$3S.OOO.

NG heat. Porches overlook
the river {beautiful view).
m,soo .oo.
RUTLAND - 4 acres wllh
older home . 3 bedrooms,
bath, NG .heat, alum .
siding, porches, frailer
hookup. 515,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Brick &amp;
Frame. 2 bedroom•. bath,
dining room , enclosed
porch, block garage, very
nice level lot . House needs
some repair . $8,'100.00.
MINERSVILLE - I floor
plan, 2 bedrooms, bath,
lovely kitchen, range &amp;

IF I DIDN'T KNOIV BETTER , I'D
IT WAS SOMe KINDA $t)(LEGGEtl CRITTER!

SAY

. fiolocinJ RNillb~
Blown inWWIIII. RHKI
S1URM
W111110WS&amp;OOIIIS
REPLACE,EIII

RATES

...~, $18,300 ,.,;·.

and 3 lots located on corner

• AKQJ 74
t AQ I0 9 2

ln111lalion Senices

REASONABLE

fenced. 8 room
remodeled house, fu ll basement , fuel o1l , forc ed air heat ,
utility room , carport and
sto rage r oom. Phone 742 -2819 .

NEW LISTING - l'/2 s1ory
frame. 2 bedrooms, bath,
dini ng R., large lot. Needs
some repair . $4,800.00.
NEW LISTING - Building

··-

Opening lead - 5 "'

GIFT, WILL

PARTS • lABOR
GUARANTEED

EAST
• KJ8
• 10 3 2

tK R76 :l
olo 5
SIIUl'll

,_

·~

to rea lize that West would

· WEST
• A9652
.. 9 6

Rutland , Ohio 45715
Ph . (6141742 -2409
We Deliver
12 -22 -4 mos .

Complete Sales and service
and supplies.

t4
o!oKQ973

never have led away from
king-queen after the strong
two·sult biddmg by South and
thai a trap was being set.
At trick two South led dummy 's jack of diamonds and
finessed whereupon the hand
collapsed.
West took his king and gave
h1s partner a diamond ruff
Rack came a club to be ruffed
by West. A th1rd diamond was
led and F.asl overrulfed with
the selling Irick .

"' .J 10 8 4

Located in Langsville
Box 28-A

MlddleP.,rt, 0 .
'992-5724

At thi s point greed gal . the
better of South . He didn 't stop

• 85
• .J 5

8:30-Laverne &amp; Shirley 13.

9:00-Pollce Woman 3,4,15; Rich Man, Poor Mon 6, 13;
M·A·S· H 8.10; In Search of the Real ollm•rlco 33 ·
Oasis in Space 20.
·
'
9 3(}-()ne Day Af A Time B. 10; Anyone for Tennyson?
20; Oasis in Space 33.
10:00---Police Story 3,4,15; Family 6, 13; Kolek B, IO ;

12 :00---Movie " Savege Pampas" 10.

8

.(/10 743

Southeastern Ohio
Truss Rafter Co. ·

R1.1

""fh,..-r-l ' '""'~ "' liri"J'I!' ,,..f'Ai111

MAIN
POMEROY, 0.

Greed builds its own trap

EASY~!

NOII'I'Il II) I

TRUSSES
ANY PlliCH
ANY SIZE

D. BumgaJdner
Pool Sales
Nobil Summit Road

B~ti~;~~w

REMODElED 5 ROOM Sand both, 1
acre land . Phone 742 -2769.

Rl-

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

1~~
. -HQVSE&amp; BARl\1

Automatic
Transmission Service

Installation. samples
brought to your home
with no charge.

DID ~' T

HEAR THE

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC. ·

PHOTOGRAPHY

SWAIN'S

(014) 667·3866.
ly , W. ·vo. Phone (304) 772 ·
31 02 or (304)772·3227 .
72 ACRES . portly

baths,

LOOK TRIM ! Take Alginess diet
pion ond Aquovop " water
p1 lls··. V1lloge Pha rmocy, 271 N.
2nd Av .. Middleport.

PHOTOGRAPHY

Route 3, Pomeroy, D.

TEAFORD

HONDA

CAcclNe; , DEAR:

~~~-=---:-::---

WAIT A
SECOND:
DID YOU 'SAY

EXPERiENCED
Radiator ..--...:
Service

PROFESSIONAL

Young's Carpeting
Free Estimates

FUN,\JY--l

Estimates
Work Guaranteed
142-2328

NEW 3 bedroom . hou se, built-in
kitchen , both and ' /1, Phone
' 992·2524.
742·230b or con tact MilO B. HutWILL DO housework . Phone
chison, Rutland , Ohio .
RESPONSIBlE PERSON Wonted to
992 7135.
own ond operate candy and
TUPPERS PLAINS , Oh1o. New
confection vendmg route .
three bedroom house, l1v ing
Pomeroy and surrou nding
room , Iorge kitchen , ceramic
oreo. Pleasant business . High
Real t:otate for Sak
bot h , carpe t ed . attached
gorage. large lot . $22 ,900- • profit items . Co" star t port HOMESITES for sole, l acre and
time. Age or e11perlence not
Phone {614 ) 6b7 -b304 .
up. Middleport , near Rutland .
important . Requires car and
39 ACRE Form . 20 acres.. tillable.
Co11992-7481.
S%0 cosh investment. For
six room hous.e, both , furnace ,
details write and include your
NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 baths ,
barn , shed , co rncrib , cellar
phone. SAl, 1072 San Jose
all elec , 1 acre, Middleport ,
house, basement layed up for
Avenue , Burbank , California
close to Rutland. Phone 992another house. Al so. 12 x 60
91501.
7481.
ni ce mobile home included . if
not sold previously. Priced ond
SMAll form for sole, 10% down,
INSTJWCTWN
shown by oppom tment. Coli
owner finan ced. Monroe Coun ·
WILL

Commercial property opprox . 17
acres . level lond . located at
FABRIC SAlE: One week onty.
Tuppers Plains on Oh10, Route
Monday , March 7th thru Satur7. Phone (614) 667-6304.
day , March 12th. All, our usual
good quality moteriol $2 .9S 'per 3 bedrooms. 1•1, baths. Iorge livyard and under. Nothing
ing room , dming room and kit higher. Hours : 9:00 A .M . to
chen. tully carpeted. Phone
7:00 P.M . MondQy thru Friday.
992-3129, or992-5434.
Closed Saturdays elCcepl for
sole weeks . Coroltna Fabrics on
Route 7 one·half mde north of
Che!&gt;ter , Ohio . Henry and Mory
Hunter owners .

197S

ER- THAT WAS EASY

Ma1ch Game PM 8; MacNeil -Lehrer Report :io,33; ·
In The Know 10; Wild Kingdom 13; TV Honor
Socle1y 15.
8:00-BIIIy Graham Crusade 3, 15; Happy Days 13; Boa
Baa Black Sheep 4; Billy Graham Crusade!; Who's
Who 8. 10; National Geographic 20,33 .

10:30---B iack Journal 20.
II :Oil---News 3,4,6,8, 10. 13, IS; MacNeii ·Lehrer Report
33.
11 :30---Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Movie " Dead on Target"
6.13; Movie "Trapped" 8; Mary Hartman 10;
Pracflcal Dermatology 33.

BRIDGE

CAPTAIN EASY

Free

Free Estimates

No Sunday Catls Please
1·30·1 mo.

Cooking with a Continental Flavor 20, American
Issues Forum 33 .
7:31l---Hollywood Squares 3,4; Let's Deal W1th It 6;

AI. TROMM CONST.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding,
Storm
Windows
&amp;
Insulation.
Call Professionals
A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860

..'

Quality Work At
Reasonable Rates

2·23-1 mo.

BISSELl SIDING CO.

8:

YOU?

DR. FORMER POLICE CRUISER

BOTH ITEMS CAN BE SEEN AT
RUTLAND . OHIO CONTACT
BRUCE DAVIS OR CAU

AKC ~EGISTEREO Pekingese Pupp1es, reody to go. Phone 1 (30&lt;1)

Help --~lfid

LAFF • A • DA'f

843·2613 .

FULLER Brush Produ cts fo r sole.
1974
VEGA
HA TC HBACK
Phone 991-3410.
TIMBER. Pomeroy Forest Pro automat ic, 4 new tires . good
ducts Top price lor standing CAMPER, S600
Also. horse
co ndifiOn . Ph one 742·2748.
sawtimber . Coli Kent Hanby .
trailer $450 Phone {b14 ) b98 1973 VEGA STATION , new tires ,
1-446-8570 .
3290.
01r conditioning. Good run ning
COINS , CURRENCY. tokens , old I BEAMS and H Beams. 8, 9, and
co ndition . excellent
gos
pocket watches and chams .
10 inch Coii 992·703.C .
mileage. $1400 or best offer.
silver and gold. We need 1964
Phone 742 ·2565
and older silver coi ns. Buy , sell . FOR SALE TO THE HIGHEST BID·
DER . SEALED 81DS WILL BE 1969 Ford LTD motor' $200.00.
or trade " Coli Roger Wamsley ,
RECEIVED ANYTIME UNITil
1963 Chevrolet Motor $75 00.
742 -2331 .
APRil 5 1977 at 7 P.M. FOR A
949-2 1b2.
NOW BUYING SCRAP . Turn
1unk autos into cosh Also buy Ing metals , bollefles, etc
Open
Monday , Tuesday ,
Weds ., Fndoy , 8:00 · 4.30 ,
Saturday 8:00
11 ·00 Phone
992 -6337. Old Rt . 33 ju st across
Gruese(s Chipper .

Bal., Dec . 31, 1976

1971 VW . Super Beetle. Phone

For Sale

Wantro to Buy

POMEROY

the
first American sub to use the
Scottish naval base.
In 1962, the U.S. House of
Representatives defeated a
bill which' would have
increased its membership
from l35 to 438.
'

Young's Carpeting
Route 3, Pomeroy, 0.

Receipts

start of the Russian
Bolshevik revolution.
In 1961, the U.S. nuclear
submarine Patrick Henry ar-

·

'~
Oi:'

Superior
Steam Extraction

Mobile Holll&lt;!o for Sale Auto Sale•

WANTED OlD pianos , onv co ndi ·
- Cemeteries
l10n Poy1ng $10 and, $25 each
- Lighting
First floor only. El(pert moving.
Grand Total Exp .
Fully insured Company . Write
General F und
5,176.81
g1v 1ng d1rectio ns. W1tten
Bal. , Dec 31 , 1976
10, 259 .85
P1onos , Box 188 , Sardis. Ohto
. Total Exp Plus Bal. ,
March 8, 1177
15 ,436.66
Dec . 31 , 1976
43946. Phone (61&lt;) 4B3·1605.
Motor Vehicle License
'
It would be a big mistake lhls
Tax
Fund WANTED , CHIPWOOD. Poles.
year to pass up any chance you Bal. , Jan . l , 1976
maximum diameter · 10 inches
526.05
have to add tO knowledge In your
Receipts ·
on largest end, $8. per ton :
ch'osen field . What you'll fearn Motor Vf!hicle
bundles slob s $6 per ton .
License Te i
8,546.81
governs what you'll get.
Delivered to Oh1o Pollet Com 8,546.81
(Are you a P1~ces? Bernice Total Receipts
pany . Rt. 2 Pomeroy, Ohio.
Total Beginning Balance
Osol has wntten a special AstraPhone 992 -268q.
Plus Receipts
9,072.86
Graph Letter for you. For your
E11penditures
copy send 50 cents and a self- Total Expendilures
addressed, stamped envelope to
- Miscellaneous
2.232.63
- Maintenance
, 6,115.53
Astro-Graph, P.O . Box 489,
IF YOU hove a service to offer ,
Radio C1ty Station, New York. Grand ;Total Exp . Motor Vehicle L icense
wont fO buy or sell something ,
NY. 10019. Be sure to ask for
Tl!X Fund
, 8.348 .1 6
ce loolo;ing lor work . . or
Pisces Volume 5.)
~el., Dec . 31 , 1976
72d 70
whatever .. you 'll get results
Tota l Exp , P lus Ba t
foster with a Sent mel Wonf Ad .
9.072 .86
Dec. 31. 1976
Col1992 ·2156.
Guoline Tax Fund
Bal ., Jan . 1, 1976
1,870 19

licensed.
In 1917, strikes and riotsln
St. Petersburg marked the

9'!0"

Lu.t and found

Don't try to delegate authority tO·
day. II you want something done
right, do It yourself.

U.S. Suprfllle Co\11 Jllltice
Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr .,
was born Mardi 8, 1841.
On this day in history:
In 1894, New York became
the first state to pass a law
requiring· ~ogs to be

cylinder.

Com pany 20.33
6:00-News 3,4,8,10, 13,15 ; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33 .
6:31l---NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Grlff ilh 6 ;
• CBS News 8, 10; Vegetable Soup 20; S1ud io See 33.
7·00-Truth or Consequences 3: To Tell The Truth 4·
Bowling for Dollars 6 ; let's Go To The Races
News 10; To Tell The Truth 13; My Three.Sons 15;

-~

Homes Built

1·2S·I mo., pd.

NEW CARTOON Glo ss ~erj,es : .C9c
w1th 10 oz . Pepsi. OAI~Y ISLE.
Middleport .

PISCES {Feb. 20-March 20)

Pisces.

$2848

5:00-Big Va lley 3; My Three Sons 4; Brady Bunch 8;
Mis ter R09ers· Neighborhood 20,3J; Star Trek 15 .
5:30-AdOJm 12 4.1 3; News 6; Family Affair 8, Electri c

•

Room Additions
Garages

e\lenings.
Blown in fiberglass walls.
and attics. 20 Pet. Savings
on Vinyl and Steel Sidings.
Replacement and storm
windows. 33 years actual
expeirence.
Financing A\lailable
C. A. Newman. Pres.

1'76 MALIBU CPE.
S3848
Automatic, air conditioning, 8 cy linder. power steering

RACINE FIR~ Dept. will have o
.Gun Shoot every Saturday night
6 p.m . at thetr builcttng in
Soshon , Ohio .

day. The only person you can
really count upon is you .

Tbe AlmiiiiBc ·
Prell
By .
Uolted
lnteroallooal
Today is Tuesday, March a,
the 67th day of 1977 with 2118 to
follow.
The moon is apll'oachlng
the last quarter.
The morning stars are
Mercury and Mars.
The evening stars are
Venus, Jupiter and Saturn.
Those .born on on this date
are under the sign of

53595 ·

TUESDAY , March 8, 1977

..•

Roofing &amp; Siding

ECONOLINE HOME
INSULATION, INC.
1811 Wa•hington Blvd.
Belpre, Phone C6141423·
7164 day , or 992 .6039

Like new white finish , automatic, air condition ing,
power steering. radio and tape, luggage rack. rad ial
tires , less than 10,000 miles.

·oh.

••'

Business Services

13\ 2 SIGNS

l Hj '

••

-·
r-----~--------------------------------------------------------, 1

Auto Sales

AutoSalcs

g~~:~~ Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, March 8, 1977

One letter simply st.:lnds for another. Jn l his sample A is

used for the three L's, X for Jhe two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, t he len gth 3nd for111ation of the words are all

.\VINNIE

~

hints. Each day the code lett ers are different.

covating, septic systems1
dozer , backhoe , dump truck \
limestone. gravel , blacktop
paving, Rt . 143. Phone 1 (614, .

I WONDER.
WHERE HE
WORKS???

696·7331 .

·-...- -..!.t:..!
EXCAVATING, 8ockhoe1. Doz'er:
trencher , Low Boy , dump truck\
trucks , septic syttems. "BJI
Pullins . Phone 992·2-478 day or
night.
.:: .:

-:H~I~N-:-::S~A~Cb::--,

-..:...:,;.:.;cr:::.:...:;:;;...,±&gt;o"&lt;:'t"--,
V~

L1

t:RVPTOQUOTES
OPAWJGCK
JP

HWOWJ

u

TREFER

wo

u

Xi&gt; PC

NAULK

TGJ

u

NPPY

NAULKKJ

'

Now arrange the circled letters to
1orm !he surprite answer, as sug -

I I
"::::•"V -LL:&gt;....LA~:..LIA::....a.J
X 'f' 'f"Hf, X1 XI X ,A'I"

v

gested by the ajbve cartoon.

.Jp
0 J D '- I p 0
TwA A w B X 0
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: ONE MAN'S WAY MAY BE AS
. 1.&gt;-t&gt;,
GOOD AS ANOTHER'S, BUT WE ALL UKE OUR OWN BEST.
(Answers lpmorrowJ
_ JANE AUSTEN
'
y 1 rd • Jumbles: ALBUM BRINY RARELY MAINLY
Cl 1977 Klnl Fe•turts SJndlca11t,lnc.
ese ays Answer: Asl''rnelea,...."ha~
BARNEY
.Si'leepllh -AIWI

.. '

I

BUY, SELL OR TRADE?

I

LISTEN TO THE

I . HERR TELL
TATER'S 11\lJUN PONV
15 AlLIN;
SNUFFY

'

SWAP SHOP

I'

' I

'I
'

7 PM - WMPO • 92.l FM ~!
92 in .the
I

•

VEP-HE SHORE
IS, LUKEV--

HE'S GOT A TETCH
OF

TF~~Ml"TF~

�10 - The Daily Sentinel, Midclleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday, March 8, 1977

Cub packs will select themes

Christina Smith fund
standing·at ·$2,111.65
A public lund drive for
Christina Smith, 11, seriously
burned when her nightgoWl'
caught fire on Feb. 6, Ms
reached S2,!ll.65 .
The drtve is being sponsored by the Women 's
Auxiliary of the Middleport
Fire Department with Mrs.
Marilyn Epple as chairman
and Mrs. Phyllis Baker as cochairman.
According to the family.
Christina is confined to the
new Burn Center of
Children's Hospital in
Columbus. Friday, she underwent surgery on her hands
and skin grafting is expected
to start in the near future,
possibly this week . Fift y
percent of Miss Sl)lith's body
received third degree bums
and she suffered second
degree burns over fiv e
percent of her body.
Funds being collected by

public contributions are lJJ_ be
applied to Christine's hospital
bill which is expected to run
into thousands of dollars. The
Shriners are atlempti n ~ to
provide help and Miss Smith
does have · some hospita l
coverage throu gh the insurance policy of her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Roush , of near Pomeroy.
Contributions may be sent
to Mrs. Marilyn Epple. 48 N.
Fourth Ave., Middleport.
Latest contributors to the
fund by community include :
Middleport - Mr. and Mrs.
Lewis F. Long, Mr. anjl Mrs.
Wilbur
Koenig , Reed
Koenig, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
McElhinny. Mr. and Mrs.
Chet Erwin, CharleS and
. Gwinnie White, Mr. and Mrs.
Perry Mitch, Carrie Kennedy, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Byer,
Middleport Fire Department
Auxiliary, Mr. and Mrs. Don
Lowery, Mr. and Mrs.

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0

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Just call for information about the var iety of easy
payment plans we have av ailable. Ther e's one to suit
every budget. So don 't delay buyi ng that car . ..
thumbing it can get awfu l toug h!

"THE

Thomas Da rst. Debbie
Ohlinger's lirst grade at
Middl e port Eleme ntary
School, Mr. and Mrs. Everett
Michael. Mrs. Mary Lyon,
Mr. and Mrs. · Dwight
Wallace, Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Barnhart, Mr. and Mrs. John
Metzger. Ulllan Zerkle. Mr.
and Mrs. Willie Davis, Mr.
and Mrs. Judson White, Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Mack, Mr.
and · Mrs. Millard Wildermuth, Gertrude McElhinny.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sauer,
Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Price, Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Owen,
Bradbury El ementary
School , Middleport Fire
Department, Feeney Bennett
Post 128, American Legion,
Lena McKinl ey, Bernice
Winn, Mrs. Lula Murray.
Minersville - Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Arnold, Kathryn and
Myron Miller.
Cheshire - Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Sisson, Richard and
Marie Pickens.
Syracuse - Mr. and Mrs.
Mark Smith, Evelyn Smith,
Mr. and Mrs. George Conde.
Pomeroy - Mr. arid Mrs.
Gerald Rough, I.B .E.W.
Local 1561, Ladies Auxiliary
of Big Bend C. B. Radio Club,
Lorain Sterrett, Mrs. W. A.
·Morgan, Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Kennedy , Mr. and Mrs. Eldon
Morris, Mr. and Mrs. L. F.
Schoenleb, Mr. and Mrs.
Louis Thompson, Sharon and
Chuckle Smith, Xi Gamma
Mu Sorority, Big Bend
Citizens Band Radio Club,
Homer and Belva Willard,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Strauss, Mr. and Mrs. Wyatt
Chadwell , Mrs. Homer
Hawkins, Lawrence and
Mary Stewart, M. V. Bengel,
Mr. and Mrs. Adrian Roberts,
Miss Dorothy Long, Mr. and
Mrs. l:larley Haning, Mr. and
Mrs. Lester Russell, Gerald
and Elizabeth Hilferty, Adult
Class of Rock Springs Sunday
School.
Racine area - Mr. and
Mrs. Marvin Hill, three
anonymous donors, · Mr. and
Mrs. Benny Wilson, Joe
Swain, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Beegle, Kenneth and Pearl
Reynolds , Mr. and Mrs. A. C.
Bradford, Antiquity Baptist
Church.
Mason, W. Va. - Erma
.Wright, Jean Higginbotham,
Roger Reynolds.
Also, Mr. and Mrs. Victor
Babbitt, Dublin; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Shafer, Jr.,
Marion ; Agnes Randolph,
Worthington; Marie
Houdashelt, Jim Riley ,
Athens; Florence Michael,
Albany; Mr. and Mrs. John
Kreager, Newark ; Nelle
Shaw, Gallipolis ; John
Moore, Doug Rector, Belpre;
Malinda Smith, Reedsville;
Tweedy Family, Sunbury;
David Hunter, Columbus.

FRIENDLY BANK"
PITTSIUIIGh

illbens ,ational
-lrPK;._ATI

hk·

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Deposit Insurance ~ratior
· DEPOSITS INSURED TO '40,000

DYLAN WINS
SANTA MONICA, Calif.
(UP! ) - Singer Bob Dylan
has won a court ruling to have
certain legal documents in
his divorce case closed to Ire
public.
Superior Court Judge
Edward R.afeedie approved
the action sealing the records
Monday to protect Dylan, his
estranged wile nnd tlleir five
children from harassment
and annoyance.
Dylan's wife filed for
divorce from the 36-year-old
singer last Tuesday.

~!'J~~t~~~~
•
n
m m~
• Choice of two flnlahea:

Genuine 10

YOUR ASSURANCE OF
FINE QUALITY,
YEARS OF WEAR AND

nutmeg meple or.antique pine

• Flneat A~n crllftlmanahlp

..

HUNTINGTON - Cub
Scout packs in the fr i,~tates
Area CoWteil will he doing
tllelr annual planning soon.
~ i ng an excfting list of
!llggested program themes.
!.eo M. MacCourtney, vice
~resident of the coWtcil, said
nK&gt;re thm75 Cub Scoot packs
will he selecting monthly
themes for the next 12
months. Each theme is
designed to provide fun ,
variety, action and purpose.
Each pack brings together
its pack leaders and the
Scouts who serve as den
chiefs to determine the theme
lor each month, pack aclivtties, and den, home,

ROBERT THOM

r

~rojects.

Th e suggested monthly
themes, carefully researched, planned, and written to
give a varied program for the
rext year, are:
March, Kites - Spring.
. April, Our Latest States.
May, Genius Night.
JWte, Muscle Builders.
Jujy, Trails, Treks, Trips.
August, Water Fun.
September, . Doorways to
Adventure.
Oc tob e r , Di s cover
America.
November, The American
Indian.
December, Do Your Best.

·
Journey
Going Places.
• Blue and Gold •·
February,
Tradi lions
March Let's Go to a Cir-

cus

'

A'mong the special events
that may I&gt;! included 'm each
pack's program during the
coming year are safe bicycle

Carter ·lifts restrictions
on travel to four nations

-'-Ivmg
· , '"'ub Scout physical
..
f"l
ss • learn -to-s
I ne
. d wim
b
~rogram, a Cubmob1le er Y,
the pinewood or space derby,
service projects, and par~
tidpatl(ll in School Night lor
Cub Scouting, when ne_w Cub
.. a pa ckmthe
Sco_uts JOin
spnng or fall.

Playing o( tape being announced
The Personal Advocacy
Program will present a
playing of the cassette,
"More Alike than Differe~~t ,"
a bJ pe about sex and the
menblll retarded, on March
10 at 1 p.m. nt the Meigs

Community Mental Health
Center, 236 W. 2nd St.,
Pomeroy.
All advocates, friends ,
parents and other interested
persons are invited.

:.;.;;.;;:,;::...;,;:;~~~'11'11T11'1rrnn'TI!TirTTTT1rnTirnT'I'Tn'l'1rTITlmrTBTnTITTTIIT't'"l'l~ ·'

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Evangelist is

SENIOR GYMNASTS - Mary Blae\jnar, right, and
Becky Thomas, are the two senior athletes on the Meigs
High girls gymnastics team that will compete at the
district level Saturday in Athens. There are 12 girls on the
Meigs team.

coming for
•
two sessmns
·Evangelist Robert Thorn of
Louisville, Ky ., will be the
guesi speaker at the Chester
Church of God March 12 and
Services on Saturday will"
beat 1:30 p.m. and on Sunday
at 11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.
Pastor Rev. Mike Southard
invites the public.
Thorn was born Feb. 26,
1915 in Oudlsh\)(lrn, SA. He
went to work to help support a
widowed mother at the age of
14.1\1 a young age he became
addicted to alcohol but
through the obedience of Mrs.
Gladys Webster he was led to
the Lord.
Since receiving the call to
preach in 1951 he has traveled
all over the world. He is•
known for his prophetic
ministry. Many are saved,
healed, and filled with the ·
Holy Spirit at bis meetings.
He is the author of a best
seller, "The New Wine is
Better," with a new book now
on the market , "Making
Known His Deeds." He has
·appeared on the 700 Club on
numerous occasions.

Laurel Oi££
News Notes

VOL. XXVII NO ..229

the restrictions.
The United States has ho
diplomatic relations with the
four C(lmmunist countri es
and said such relations are ''a
doubtful prospect" at this
time , the President said. He
stressed the need for
''necessary precautions" by
U.S. travelers because they
have no protection from an
American Embassy.
Carter said the travel decision was in line with the
Helsinki accords, which call
for the right of free travel for
everyone. The President said

•

di ff e r e nc e

be tween

employment among yo Wtg
Americans by providing
rights ."
"soverign lega l" borders in about one million permanent
Carter also said a Midclle an
eventual
peace new jobs and another one
East peace settlement might settlement .
million summer jobs.
includ e " s ub s t a nti al
".Israeli defense lines may
Carter said he was very
withdraw! of Israeli control" exte nd
beyo nd
those co nc·er.ned abo ut "the
over Arab territories recOgnized borders/' Carter ext r aor din a r ily hi gh
captw-ed in the 1967 war. He said, mentioning such unemployment rate among
said a settlement might begin possibilities as mon itoring young peo ple," especially
"with minor adjustments of si tes and international zones those in minority groups,
the 1967 borders."
between the coWttries.
where he said the rate ran as
Carter said he will meet
Carter opened the news high as 40 per cent in some
with leaders of both sides conference by announc ing areas.
before May and that both the that he was sending Congress
He said he was proposing
Israelis and the Arabs must a $1.5 billion program ''a youth conservation corps' '
realize that th ere is a designed
to cut
un- to be administered by the
Departments of Agriculture
and Interior and " a
communi ty conservation
corps in our urban areas,"
with an emphasis on training.
Together with existing programs, he said his plan would
produce "about a million jobs
on a permanent basis plus
another million jobs during
''defens ible bor ders " and

•

at y

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

he wanted "to I&gt;! sure we
don't violate these travel

enttne

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 9, 1977

the summer."

The President said in response to another question
tllat he will stand by his
campaign pledge to withdraw
American ground troops
from
South
Korea ,
expr essing belief tha t a
period of fo ur to fiv e years "is
appropriate" for that· move.
Carter said the details of

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

.'Additional HUD grant lost
A letter from the Department of Housing and Urban
Development (!:IUD ) was
read to the Meigs CoUnty
Commissioners Tuesday
night infonning them that an

4
PuH Sleeve Top
$3.25
Gingham Jumper
$5.50

TANK TOP 13.50
BOXER SHORTS 12.59

Attendance at the Free
Methodist "Church March 6
was 99.
Mr. and Mrs . Joseph
Higgenbolhem, Columbus,
Mr. and f&gt;!rs. Jerry Whiblker,
Newark, visited recently with
Rev. and Mrs. Floyd S~ook .
Mrs. Pearl Jacobs is a
patient in Holzer Medical .
Center. Her room number is
335.
Mrs. Edna SChaefer and
Mrs. Fern Dora Story visited
recently with Mrs. Schaefer's
brother, Mr. Fritz Sblhl, New
Marshfield.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Wells,
Middleport, spent an evening
recently with Mr. and Mrs.
N. E. Schaefer.
Rev. Cecil Wise, Chester,
attended Sunday morning
service at the local church.
Mr. and Mrs. Lennie Lyons,
Rock Spriil'gs gave a surprise
birthday dinner Sunday for
Mr. Lyons' grandmother,
Mrs. Erma Fox. Those
present were Mr. and Mrs.
John Douglas, Mrs. Nancy
Howard, Tracy and Jason,
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Howell and
Jeff Howell, Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Walker; son Brian, Mr.
and Mrs. Mike Douglas.
Mr. Joe Guess, who is 86
years old, has ridden his bike
700 miles the last two years.
. Mrs. Erma Fox spent
Thursday with her daughter,
Mrs. Ruth Douglas, Guysville.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Bauer,
Marion, Mr. and Mrs. Ted
Mathew, Huron, spent
several days with Mr. and
Mrs. Dick Karr.
Mr; Joe Guess, .Thomas
Fork, visited recently with
Thomas Parker.

Cap Sleeve Top
$3.25
Calico Patches Print Plnb
$4.50

additional block grant
request for 1977 has been
denied.
The request was for water
and sewer line construction
where the multi -purpose

development of an access
road , Page Street reconstruction, and a plat map
update.
Commissioner Richard
Jones pointed ou~ that this
MlS an additional request lor
funds in the amount of
$500,000. The county received
funds in 1916 for the senior
citizens cen.ter (multi....
By Uolted Press lnteruaUonal
·· purpose building).
The commissioners showed
CAREY, OIDO - AN EXPLOSION OF 40,000 to 50,000
di
sappointment
with the
poWtds of dynamite rocked this northwestern Ohio community
decisioo
by
HUD
·and will
of 3,500 early today, shattering hundreds of windows and
confer
with
Congressman
leaving numerous families bomeless, Wyandot County sheriff
Clarence Miller on the
mark Kauble said .
·
matter.
"It's ll!ll8Zing, but there were no injuries, at least not as we
A resolution was inknow right now," said Kauble. Kauble said the explosion at the
National Lime and Stone Co. quarry near here was heard as troduced commending the
far as 611 miles away. The firm has been struck since Feb. 19
but authorities said they did not know whether the explosion
was connected with the labor dispute.

fNe';'~~":,,:,i~~B;~:t:~

·&lt;

WASHI~GTON -

REPUBUCANS WER,E dead set
$g~inst it and Democrats didn 't rehlly liKe It 'either, but
•
,President Carter's $iiO tax rebate passed the House by a
margin of more than two to one.
Carter's pl81) to give a government check to almost every
American in families making less than $30,000 was passed, 262 . By PETER P. SPUDICH
to 131, Tuesday, as part of a $12.7 billion package and sent to
WARRENSVILLE
,lbe Senate where it faces a ho-llurn·receptlon. But it's expected HEIGHTS, Ohio (UP! ) .- A
to pass there too possibly with some changes .
black gwunan, who had held
a police captain hostage for
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT CARTER HITS the road about 44 hours, surrendered
next week, visiting Massachusetts, West Virginia and New
as promised today after
.York Wednesday and Thursday to further gauge - and President Carter agreed to
\&gt;erbaps influence - public opinion .
speak to him. Carter
Carter will attend a town meeting at Qinton, Mass., March acknowledged he was setting
16 and stay the night at the home of a friend. He flies to a "dangerous precedent"
Cllarleston, W. Va., the next day for a two-hour White House- with the agreement.
sponsored panel on energy and goes from tllere to New York
President Carter said in his
City to address the United Nations and attend a reception in his
televised
news conference
..honor .
that he would talk to the
gunman, Corey Moore, 26,
CINCINNATI - PATRICIA J . SHONTZ is the first woman Warrensville Heights , if
ever nominated to sit on the Kroger Co.'s board of directors, Moore released Capt. Leo
offidals of the nation's third largest supermarket chain said Keglovic, 48, a diabetic.
Tuesday.
.
''The capblin came out witll
Mrs. Shontz, a professor of business administration at the the guns," said a police
University of Michigan, is on the boards of Detroit Edison, department spokesman. "He
Jacohsen Stores, Inc., Manufacturers National Corp., is in good health. Moore will
Manufacturers National Bank of Detroit and Warner Lambert be held in the city jail here.
Co. Kroger shareholders will vote on Mrs. Shontz' nomination There were no problems."
to tlle 15-memoor board at their April'!4 annual meeting.
Moore took Keglovic and a
high school coed hostage in
EUGENE, ORE. - STRETCH &amp; SEW, EUGENE-based · the police station here at 2
finn which sells knit fabrics, instruction books and patterns, p.m. Monday but released the
will beglh construction of a $1.75 million distribution center girl ll hours later in exnear Cincinnati, Ohio, next September, accorcllng to a change for a television set so
company officials.
.
he could watch media
F1oyd Skor, Stretch &amp; Sew vice president, said the coverage of is demands.
company will reblin Eugene as its headquarters and West
"The request was made to
Coast distribution center but decided to build the Cincinnati me to talk to Mr. Moore,"
center because most of the finn 's suppliers and customers are Carter said. "I replied that I
located in the East and Midwest.
would be glad to bllk to Mr.
Moore after the officer is
WASHINGTON -DISEASE AND ASTHMA will tonnent released.
tens of millions of Americans living in big cities unless
"I understand he would
industry is held to air quality standards, a physician with the release the officer after this
American Lung Association said Tuesday.
news conference and I hope
!.
br. Carl Shy, who works with the organization's office in be is released," said Carter.
, Washington, testified at a hearing by a House health
subcommittee looking Into possible a111endments to the aean
Air Act of 1970. He said exposure to air polluted beyond
lllandards puts a "considerable health burden" on people Bonds forfeited
:breathing with air.
.
.
Forfeiting bonds in the
Particularly among children m polluted areas, there is
court
of Pomeroy Mayor
'"significantly greater frequency of acute respiratory illness,"
Clarence
Andrews Tuesday
'Shy said. 1
night were James· Snyder,
, WASHINGTON- FORMER OIDO GOV. JOHN Gilligan Rutland, $350, posted for
was formally nominated by President Carter Tuesday as driving while intoxicated ;
administrator of the Agency for International Development. Mark Zielinski, Reedsville,
"Carter and Gilligan have known each other since days when $31, speeding, and Melvin
both were governors. Gilligan lost a bi&lt;j for reelection In 1974. Durst, Middleport, $50, InGllllgap, 55, Is a fonner Englls professor, Cincinnati city toxication. Don Bolin,
:coundlman and coogressman. Since he was governor. he has Pomeroy, was fined $50 and
.done government work in Nigeria, Belgium, West Gennany costs, on a charge of per-and France. He was a Woodrow Wilson Fellow at the mitting an unlicensed driver
to drive.
· Smithsonian ln!llitutlon in Washington.

••

Striped

Floral

Pui~IMr

Gypsy

$3.00

Blouse
$4.75

We've.corralled all the
newest styles in this special
fashion collectiO!I for kids!
Shorts, tops, sleeks and jeans
that coordinate to make this
the best Sprinc collection ever.

Zip Front

Pants
$5.75

Band Front

. Pants
$5.00

Jacquird Knit Crew

MEIGS THEATRE
aDSED FOR

li

Utile Shflpr
Knit Jumpsuit
$5.11

$175
· RompirS~

$2.00

' CoLUMBUS (UP!) - Two
resolutions honoring the Irish
man and woman of the year
"' ch01en by a local chamber
-Gf commerce were adopted
.-by the Ohio Senate Tuesday.
7' Both were sponaored by
1len- Harry Meshel of
~'Voungstown, who routinely
jokes about his Greek

MAIN STORE AND MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE
OPEN FRIDAY 9:30A.M. TO 8 P. OTHER WEEKDAYS 9:30 TO 5 P.M.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
t

~urk needed between the
Chester Fire Station and the
old county court house. The
commissioners agreed to
check the situation and make
repairs, weather permitting.
Commissioner Jim Roush
asked that Mrs. Naomi
Brinker, director of the
CETA program, attend the
next meeting of the commissioners so the program
can be discussed in detail.
, The commissioners in·spected the lire escape
recently constructed at the
jail and ga ve their approval
of the work. Attending were
Henry Wells, Jon es and
Roush.

..(

'"

heritage.
Sen. Robert O'Shaughnessy
of Colwnbus, who begins his
preparations to celebrate St.
Patrick's Day early in the
year, said after the voice vote
on Meshel's resolutions that
he wished he had included his
name as a co~ponsor .
I~

Gallian is

SPECIAL NOTICE
There will be a special
meeting f..- all coaehes and
representa tins of tea11111
intereot.ed In parUclpating
in the Ohio Valley Ind ~Jl•nd~nt Bueball
Lri'Ju~ tonight at Syracuse
City Hall. The meeHng will
begin at 7.

arrested in

more tickets
Additional tickets for ihe
district basketball tournament at Chillicothe on
Friday eveuing have heen
seciD'ed by Southern High
School.
Prlneipll James Adams
said lhat 200 additional
tickets wiD be obtained
tonight to go on sale, first

W. Virginia

POINT PLEASANT - A
Gallipolis man was arrested
here early today on two
charges, one being possession
of a controlled substance.
Police Chief Jim Gaskins
said arrested on Main Sl. at
come,
first
served,
approximately 3:37a.m., was
Thursday morning.
Glenn David Smith, 25, Rt. 2,
Persons planning on Gallipolis. He is scheduled to
attending Friday night be arraigned before a local
should make every effort to magistrate today on charges
secure advance tickets of possession of a controlled
since only between 200 and . substance and public in300 tickets will be sold at toxication .
the door Friday night,
Officers John Sallaz and
Adams said.
Ray Cox observed Smith in
what they charge was an
::: : ::;:~:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:; :;:;:;:;:; :;:;:; :;: ;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:; : ;. ;: ;. ; . ;
1
' intoxicated
condition .''
After arresting him for public
intoxication, they f~und a
quantity of marijuana on his
person.

Pennission
sotlght for

new facility
The Ohio Department of
Health advises that the
Arneritel Corporation, 1810
MacKenzie Drive, Columbus,
has filed an application for
the construction of a new 100l&gt;!d convalescent center in
Pllmeroy.
Colt of the project would
mnomt to $1,820,000 and the
areawide comprehensive
health planning agency inwived is the Ohio Valley
Health Services Foundation,
1 Blue Line Drive, P. 0. Box
146, Atllens, Ohio. The application must oo approved
by the Ohio Director of
Health.
Persons interested in the
JrOposed project are invited
to call or write the Ohio
Department of Health, 450
East Town St., Columbus, or
the comprehensive health
plmning agency.

LIFELINE
COLUMBUS (UPi) - The
House Utilities Conunittee
Tuesday
accepted
a
substitute bill establishing
"lifeline" utility rates for
elderly and disabled Ohioans
and assigned it to •
subcommittee chaired by
Rep . Irene Smart, DCanton .
·

'

Right to gripe
tsn 't gtven up ·

.

PETE SffiELDS

be given
. I

The Middleport Fire
Department answered five
calls Tuesday.
At 11 :30 a.m. , its E-R unit
went to the Route 1 bypass
near CR 5 where a car and a
bicycle had collided. No one
was hurt.
·
At 2:4li p.m. firemen went
to Storys Run to extinguish a
brush fire. At 5&gt;15 ,p.m., the
E-~ unit took Sarah McCarty,
Bryan Place, to Veterans
Memorial Hospibll and at
8;07 p.m., went to the LaSalle
Hotel where Deana James,
Racine , had fainted .
Emergency treatment was
provided on the scene.
At 10:09 p.m. the squad
went to 50 Riverview Place
for Nellie Eblin who was
taken to Hol~er Medical
Center.

·.

recogn1't'IOD
Pete Shields, Letart Falls,
will be one of three men to oo
honored at the awards dinner
Wednesday, March 9, at 6:30
p.m. at tlle Meigs Inn. Shields
will receive "Man of the Year
Award" for outstanding
agricultural leader .
Certliicates of appreciation
will be given to six persons.
Also to be honored with be
Charles Legar and Robert
Wingett.
Shields was
associated
with
the
Agricultural Stabilization
and Conservation office
many years.

Elderly man
hit in road

An elderly Logan. W. Va.
man
was injured in a traffic
·:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:·:·:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::·:·:·:·
accident at ll:30 a. m.
EXTENDED OIITLOOK
Tuesday on SR 7 at CR :i in
. Friday through Sunday, Meigs County.
a chance of showers on
According to the Gallia Friday and .Saturday, with Meigs Post State Highway
unseasonably
wann Patrol, 83-year old James A.
temperatures
Friday. Taylor, pushing a bicycle,
Turning cooler Saturday went into the path of a !"Jr
and Sunday, Highs will be driven by Merrill R. Alkin-In the 60s Friday and in the ,. oon, 11l, Logan. Atkinson's cae
upper 40s or the middle 50s
struck Taylor, then ran off
Saturday and Sunday. the road and overturned onto
Overnight lows wlll be in
its top.
the 40s arly Friday and in
Taylor was not injured.
the 30s early Saturday.
Atkinson was treated at the
:::::.:c:::::::;:::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::. scene by the Middleport
Volunteer Emergency Squad
for
minor injuries. No
t
OU dlarges were filed.

F':aremen go
fi call S
OD Ve

the troop removal would have
to be "work~ out carefully "
with the So uth Korea n
government, with Japan kept
fully
inform ed
of
developments.
He said the South Koreans
would nee d \0 build up
sufficie nt groWtd forces for
its own protection during the
period of th ~ witlldrawal, and
that he envisioned the United
States continuing to provide
air cover for the coun try .
"My commitment to with draw American gro und
troops from Korea has not
changed," the President said.
Carter was asked about a
task force on terrorism and
violence report to tlle Justice
Department las t week
indica ting there may be
resumptions
of
civil
distrubances in the United
States.
He said he is "oppposed to
mass arrests and I would be
opposed \O preventive
detention as a general policy
and even as a specific policy"
unless it is an extreme case .
Carter said he believed
"abuses of tlle past (by police
and government) in many
cases hav e exace rbat ed !!
civil tensions in the United
States.
'

Shields to

. . , . Adams getting

giVeS up

'Toddlers' Pant Sets
$7.25 ta,$1.21

late Virgil Roush for his
service to the coWtty and his
rommunily.
A letter was read from
Pomeroy attorney Frank W.
Porter, representing the
Meigs
County
Bar
Associati on, requesting a new
court room be established in
the court house to handle
cases from county court,
probate and the juv enile
section. Th e commiss ion
agreed to study the proposal
and discuss itfurther with the
Bar Association.
Meeting with th e commissi oners were Ross
Oeland and John Wickham of
Cllester in regard to repair

GlUlman , , , , , , , ,,,., , ,.,, ,.,, ,.,.,.,,.,., .,., ,,;:, , ,,,,.,

MEDAL FOR TISHLER
MIDDLETOWN, Conn.
(UP!) - Dr. Max Tishler of
Wesleyan University has
been named the 1977 recipient
ol the American Institute of
Chemists Gold Medal, one of
tlle highest honors of
chemical science.
Dr. Tishler has made
significant CGntrlbutions in
tlle fields of vitamins,
steroids, antibiotics and sulfa
druge.

-----

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter·
WASHINGTON (UPI) Presiden t Carter toda y
ordered all restrictions lifted
on travel by U.S. citizens to
Cuba, Vietnam, North Korea
and Cambodia as of March
16.
Carter told a televised news
conference that he has reen
"concerned about the
problem of American citizens
tr avelin g
to
forei gn
countries" and disclosed he
had ordered Secreblry of
State Cyrus Vance to remove

e

13.

VACAnON
WATaf FOR
OPENING DATE

f

Wehetos, and special park

Weather
Clear tonight, lows in the
mid 40s. Swmy, continued
warm Thursday, highs near
70.
Probability
of
. Jrecipilation near zero today
!l"ld tonight, 20 per cent
tomorrow.
TAKENTOVMH
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to Mulberry
Ave. at 4:33p.m. Tuesday for
Lydia Ebersbach who was
blkeh to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where she was
admitted.
NOWYOUKNOW
The H's in the 4-H Club
ltand for head, heart, health
and hands.

.

GliTHR.IE, Okla. (UPI) - pay raise.
Rep. Torn Steed, D.Okla .,
"It 's been a long time since
unhappy because the folks he's been back to the grassback home complained about roots level. I don't think he
the latest congressional pay really knows what 's going on
raise, recently cak:ulated his here," he said .
$13,000 raise cost the average · Mary Hopkins, 76, said, "l
blxpayer a nickel.
think it's a good thing for
"!carry a bunch of nickels people to get up and do these
in my pocket so I can pay off things."
anybody who bellyaches
"Maybe li they "do tllese
about how much they 're little things nose-to-nose we
paying me," said Steed.
will get to know our
Shoe salesl!lan John politicians better," she said.
McKean took Steed up on the uThey'll find out we are
offer and quickly gathered listening."
5to names on a petition
She said she resents candirequesting the nickel back. dstes thinking she is a "ni ce
Steed, who plaiiS to retire in old lady."
1979 after 30 years in
"Well, I'm not a nice old
Congress, sent a check for $26 lady. I don 't like to be patted
even though Guthrie is not on the hair or kissed on the
even in his district. But Steed head. Baloney to that. If
said protesters who accepted they 'd say, 'Listen, old gal, I
the money forfeited "their need your vote. Then I'd say
right to gripe. "
all right ,'" she said.
During the next week, those
who signed the petition can
.pick up their nickels at two
drugstores. However, they
also may sign a waiver , .
saying they are not giving up
their right to free speech for a
nickel and their nickels will
Fined in the court of
be retlll'ned to Steed, McKean Middleport Mayor Fred
said .
Hoffman were Nancy A. Roy,
McKean said he did not like 18, Racine , $15 and costs,
the tone of Steed's letter.
speeding : Celesta C. Bush,
"It was kind of like he was 29, Midclleport $15 and costs,
snubbing his nose at us,' ' speeding ; Wesley A. Barnett ,
McKean said. "I'm not going 19, Pomeroy, $15 and costs,
to lose my freedom of speech following too closely ; Curtis
for a nickel. ''
Riffie , 40, no address listed,
Some other residents $75 and costs, assault.
agreed.
Forfeiting bonds in the
"I don 't believe they're court were Rnbert Dugan , 40,
entitled to that raise. They're Rutland, $50, disorderl y
getting a cost-of-living raise manner ; Edgard G. Van
later this year anyway," Mater, 21, West Columbia,
Mark Ekiss; a pharmacist, $300,
driving
while
said. "I think it's a little bit intoxicated ; Thomas R.
ridiculous. My right to gripe Walters, 18, Midclleport, $50,
for a nickel -it's worth a lot reckless operation, and Don
more to me than a nickel. If Lovett, 53, Midclleport, $50,
he tllinks he can shut people disorderly manner.
up by giving people a nickel
he's crazy."
He said he believes at least
80 per cent of the public, at
least in Guthrie, opposed the

Several fined

m town court

He'd Jike to

rotate games

Sales off 33%
during January
COLUMBUS (UPI) Retail sales in Ohio for
January dropped 3:: per cent
from record setting sales the
previous month, or a 1 per
cent decrease after seasonal
adjustment, the Ohio Slate
University Center for
business Research said
Tuesday.
·
The center said the
decrease in sales was the first
adjusted seasonal decline
from December to January
since 1912 and the first
January decrease since 1910.
The severe winter weather
and the energy crisis caused
increases in such sectors as
food, automotive, heatingplumbing and electrical
supplies and durables such as
snow handling tools.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - State
Rep. James W. Rankin, DCincinnati, irked tllat the
state high school basketball
championship tournament is
always played in Columbus,
introduced ·legislation
requiring tllat all high school
tournaments . be rotated
among major cities.
"There's no useful purpose
In the basketball tournament
always being played in
Columbus," said Rankin,
pointing out that Cleveland,
Cincinnati, Dayton and
Toledo have arenas with
seating capacities exceeding
or equaling that of St. John
Arena at Ohio State
University.
Rankin's bill would require
that the tournaments be
played in a city no more often
tllan every 'five years. A
violation would require every
high school to secede from
the Ohio High School Athletic
Association.

..

''

'

l

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