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                  <text>14-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday. March 9, 1977
~---------------------------I

:

Area Deaths

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,

ORLAND GILLIAND

REEDSVILLE - Orland
W. Gi lliand . 67 . Rl. 1.
Reedsville, died a1 his home
Tuesday evening as a result
of self~ infl l cted gunshot

wounds .
The Meigs Count y sheriff's
was informed of

~epartment

.

I·
I

Marion .
Surviving Mrs. Bentz who
was formerly of · Meigs
County , are her husband.
Floyd, and three sisters , Mrs.
Della Frost, Marion. and·
Mr5 . Edward Boen and Mrs.
William Lowen , both of

Pomeroy . Officiating at

the incidenl Tuesday al 6: 10 services will be the Rev .
p. m .
Sheriff James J . }&lt;enneth Roshon. Burial will
Proff i tt was assisted by be in Beech Grove Cemetery .
acting cornor Dr . John Fr iends may call at the

Ridgway and deputy Randall

Carpe nte r
in
the
in vestiga tion which .fhe ·sneriff
said today is being continued.
Mr . Gilli and was born In

' Bedford Twp. to the · late
pavid

E. and Mary

Jeffers Gilliand.

Inez

A member of the Success

Church of Christ, he was a

retired employee of the FMC

plant at Park.ersburg where
he worked more than 30

years.

·

Survi ving are his w ife ,
Eunice Spencer Gill iand ; two
sons , Edward L. , Mansf ield

and AFC Jeffre y G.. serving

with the U.S. A ir Force in
GriSsom ,
Ind . ;
tw o
daughters, Eva Mae Gillfand ,
Columbus and Mrs . Ann
Fausnaugh, Grove· Ci ty; a
· brother, Ferdinand, Ches ter ;
three sis ter s, Mrs . Dora
GOldsberry, Athens ; Mrs .
Oma
Carsey
Mart in ,
Parkersburg , W. Va. and
Mrs .
Leo ta
Warne r ,
Guysville ; eigh t grand·

children.
He was preceded in death
by thr ee brothers and three
sisters.
Fu ner al ser vices will be
i: 30 p .m. Fr'lday at the White
Funera l Ho me, Coolv i ll e,
with Mr . Joseph Hoski.ns of
Grove City officiatin g. Burial

wi ll be in Cherry Ridge

cemetery . Friends may call
at the funer al home any time
after noon Thursday .

AlTA M. BENTZ
Funeral services for Mrs .
Alta Mabel Bentz, 71 , Mar ion,
who died Monday at Com m un i ty Medica l Center ,
Marion , will be held at 11
a.m . Friday at the Ewing
Funera l Home.
Mrs. Bentz was born Dec .
18, 1905 a daughter of the late
Dav id an ~ . LouiSe Bookm an
Fox. She was a member of
Grace Bapt is t Church in

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION
WATCH FOR
OPENING DATE

funeral home Thursday from

1to9p.m.

Market Report
, GaiUpoU., Ohio,
March 5,1971,
.
Sales Report o!
Oblo Valley uv .. tock Co.
STOCKER CATTLE SI'EERS - 250 to 300 lbs. 26
to 36.50 ; 300 to 400 lbs. 25 to
3HO; 400 to 500 lbs. 27.50 to
38.75; 500 to 600 lbs. 25 to
:.l.SO; 600 to 700 lbs. 24 to 35;
roo 11:8. and over 24.50 to ·
. :li.50;
HEIFER CALVFS-250 to
:110 lbs. 22 to~ : 300 to 400 lbs.
Zl to 3!.25; 400 to ~ Jbs. 23 to
31.50; 500 to 600 Jbs. 25 to
32.75; 600 to 700 lbs. 25 to
32.75; 600 to 700 lbs. 22.50 to
31; 700 lbs. and over 24 to 33.
STOCK COWS &amp; BULLS
(By The Head) - Stock Cows
145 to 25() ; Slock Cows and
Calves ZlO to 315 ; Stock Bulls
:110 to 275; Baby Calves 5 to
52; (By The Pound) Canners &amp; Cutters Cows 19.a0
to 26.25; !lolstein Cows 26 to
30.a0; Coliimercial Bulls
(1,000 lbs. and over) 27 to
ll.25.
VEAL CALVES- Tops 220
lbs. to 250 68 to 76.50 ; Medium
:110 lbs. to 300 47 to 01.50; Culls
fi down .
SOWS - 3!iO lbs. up 32.50 to
li.
PIGS - 8 to 29.

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - .State
Rep. Irene Smart, D-Canton,
and 10 other Democratic
House mlllllbers Tuesday
introduced legislation
requiring gas utilities to
make arrangements to meet
residential service · needs
each winter.
Under Mrs. &amp;Dart's bill,
the estimate of needs would
have to be calculated May I
of each year for the following
winter, based on the. coldest
daily temperatures ever
recorded in the service area.
If the Public Utilities Com- .
mission determines that a

INTEREST

Of Deposit

sl,OOO ~inimum
1 Yr. Term
Ninety day interest penalty
if
wi1hdrawn
matur ity date .

before

Meigs Co. Branch

f!J

Th e Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan Co .
29~ Second St .
Pomeroy , Oh io

!!!!/

Editorial comment,
opinion, features

need licenses
COLUMBUS (UPI J Twenty-four Ohio House
members, led by Rep .
Michael Stinziano, D·
Columbus, introduced
legislation requiring the state
Department of Agriculture to
license animal shelters and
pounds.
' Stlnziano's measure sets
forth standards for the care
of animals at such
establishments and
empowers the director of
agriculture
to
make
Inspections and suspend
licenses for violations.
He said the bill resulted
from an inspectioo which
un cove red Inhumane
treatment of animals
impounded at a shelter in
Gro'!eport outside Columbus.

~House

Republicans acting
in cohesive opposition

\

01110 POLITICS
lly IA"e Leonard

ELBERFELD$

gas company has failed to
make such arrangements by
Nov. I of each year, thel!ltility
would have to pay the state 5
per cent of its daily earnings
for each delinquent day.

..!.v

'

i

I

'i '·
'I. :

I

, : i

(,.

Il
I .'

I

;

GOP leader

J
/

'

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. . . .;.:. I., ~: -~r. .-'~=-=:.~=:,~
-.-/...
1'-/.
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needs time
COLUMBUS (Ul? l ) Senate Door debate of a
measure to repeal the
$750,000 limit on state debt
was set for Wednesday, but
Senate Minority Leader ·
Michael
Maloney
of
Cincinnati 19ld his colleagues
on the Senate Rules
Committee Tuesday he
needed more time to . study
the legislation.
Floor deba te is now
tentatively set for Thursday.
The resolution, sponsored
by freshman Sen. Marcus
Roberto, Ii-Ravenna, would
place on the November ballot
a proposed amendment to the
Ohio Constitution to let the
legislature authorized
general obligation bonds in
an amount tied to the state 's
ability to pay them off.
A similar resolution failed
in the legislature last year .

I

I

By Katie ~:row
An awards dinner Wed·
nesday night at the Meigs Inn
was a gala affair when approximately 100 persons
turned out to honor Robert
Wingett, Charles Legar and
Pete ShieldS.
The event was sponsored
by the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce.
Others recognize~ were
Leroy Bartrwn, who por·
trayed Santa Claus for the
chamber; Jim Frecker and
Charles MuUen fot helping
with the Christmas lights,
Dwight Goins and Neacll
Carsey for their fine effort in
selling tickets, and Ed
Kennedy,.who was unable to
attend, for his electrical
work. . .
.
Richard Jones was rnaoter
of ceremonies and the in·
vocation was given by VIrgil
King.
...
Jones said Wingett, Shields
and Legar are an outstanding
group of men.
He Introduced the president
of the chamber, Fred Crow,
wha said a great deal of effort
went into the selections.
Those chosen were selected
by a committee of five,
Richard Jones, Katie Crow,
Beulab Jones, Thereon
Joha.son and Fred Crow.
The first honored was
Charles Legar who was
presented his plaque by
·Kermit Walton. He was cited
for being In viUage government for a nwnber of years

You'll want to see these fine quality sheers
and priscilla curtains plus the new drapes,

.t

ready for your selection.

Also big selections, now, of area rugs in
all sizes, new colors, new patterns, table
covers i'n cloths, vinyls, rounds, squares,
ovals and oblong. Complete line Kirsch
Drapery Hardware, window shades, bath
towels, sheets, furniture covers, bath
mats and sets.

I t,
1 -~

1

/

I

;

HOME FURNISHINGS -1st R.OOR -

OPEN FRIDAY 9:30 TO 8 P.M.
OTHER WEEKDAYS 9:30 TO 5 P.M.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Meigs easy

for the slaytngs of seven Hanafl Muslins in 1973 be turned over
to them for retrlbutioo.
Grip quoted· the raiders at City llall as saying "they are
prepared tD die because they killed our family.
"This is for aU Islam. It is oot a personal grudge. It's just
that justiee should be done.'' he said.
Dozens of flak•jack eted pollee surrounded the three
buildings in the tense standoff as the mayor announced at midmorning that negotiatjons were "going through .~'
The terrodsts released a woman hostage suffering from
chest pains and an ambulance took her to a hospital.
Seven persons were believed being held in city hall, three
blocks from the White House.
· About 15 were held at the Nationallslamlc Center, a mosque.
And the message from Grip said "over 100" were at the
national headquarters of B'nai B'rith, where the .woman was
released at mid-morning.
All were seized within four hours Wednesday when six to
eight gunmen Jed by llamafi leader Hamaas Abudul Khaalis
took over the bulldings.
"I have men waiting to do something very, very bad,"

as clerk and mayor of
Pom81'9Y. He also served on
the boJrd of public affairs as
president. "'His service as
mayor for 14 years was the
second longest period since
Deacon Long who served 18
vears.
Legar is a member ot the
Pomeroy ER Squad and !Ire
department of which he Is
chief. I.,egar responded that
the fire department members
should be commended for the
excellent job they have done.
I.,egar also Is a successful

businessman.
Legar's family, his wife,
Polly; his son and wife, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Legar; his
daughter and husband, Mr.
and Mrs. Cecil Midkiff ;
daughter, .Maria and his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. John
Terrell, were introduced.
Jones in Introducing the
next honored guest, Pete
Shields said Pete was a
in
classified
expert
agricultural, an influential
man, a quiet man who has
served his county well

Meigs County authorities
are seeking Identification of a
male body which was found
along the Ohio River In Letart
Township Wednesday
morning.
Meigs Sheriff James
Proffitt and Deputy Coroner
John Ridgway answered a
caU to the scene at 9:05 a.m.
in response to a telephone call
from Robert Lewis, owner of
the farm where the body was
found. The two officials were
met by Lewis who took them
to the body which had apparently been washed onto
the river bank. It was
estimated that the body had
been in the river from two to
eight weeks.
The remains, taken to the

Ewing Funeral Home were to . relatives through the
be taken \O Col~bus today, clothing. According to Dr.
for an autopsy at Ohio State Pickens the man was
University to determine the believed to be between 45 and
cause of death, Meigs 55 years of age, partially
Coroner Dr. R. R. Pickens bald; was wearing a white I·
said.
shirt, a white shirt with a blue
The Bureau of Criminal floral design on the front , a
Investigation also has been brown jacket which zipped up
notified.
the front, double knit trousers
Last night, a resident of in a brown and grey check
Athens visited the funeral design and a black belt, one
home to determine if the and one-half Inches wide with
deceased was his brother who a half roun&lt;\ buckle.
had drowned in the Hocking
Anyone feeling that they
River. However, the man might be able to identify the
could not Identify the body as .body Is asked to contact Dr.
his brother.
Pickens office or the
Dr. Pickens Issued a department of Sheriff Proffitt
description of the clothing of at once. Officials would
the rnan In hopes that lden- appreciate any leads which
tificaUon can be made by the public might offer.

days depend
on lawmakers' action

'

NYLON

TWEED &amp; PATTERN

FOR

KITCHEN OR

LIVING ROOM

GOLD, GREEN AJtD RED

Th~~~~
are bound to go in a hurry

.•. so step on it

PORCH GREEN .
CARPET

THE MEIGS INN

. $4~9 Yard

'5HAG

With Rubber Back

'4"

Sq·
Yard

$695

economize! _ _ _ _ _ _ _,;;.;.;;;.;.P,~~..,.-------.;.--~

HI-Low SHAG
Was $10,95

RED ioo%ENYLON CARPET

NOW $695Sq. Yard

*4"

Only

INGELS .FURNITURE
106 N. 2ND

ONLY

sq.

Yard

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO '

992·2635

.

In the Clan AA Girls'
Sectional basketball tournament a f Coal Grove last
EAST MEIGS - Make-up makeup classes, if needCO,
night, Meigs rolled over days;
If necessary, were set · the ~hool year will end on
Jackson 75-35 and earned the
by the Eastern Local Board schedule with graduation set
right to go against GaWpoU.
of Education Tueaday night. for May 22.
Friday night in the chamThe board conferred with
Supt. John Riebel said the
pionship game. That game, make-up days will depend Elllie Folmer, president of
also at Coal Grove, will start upon the final action of the the Chester PTA, and agreed
at 7:30.
Ohio Legislature. H I~ days to ~nntt a room or part of a
Meigs took an early lead are allowed for bad weather, room at the Chester School to
and was never really then no clauea will have to be be used . as a library.
threatened as the Marauder rnade up. However, If only 10 However, If tt sliouid be
lasses put ten girls Into the dayi are aUowed, then four needed as a clasaroom then
scoring colwiln. Pivot lady W!ys wiU have to be made up. changes wiU have to be made.
Cathy Meadows Jed all
The board. accepted the
Should the four daya have
scorers as abe tossed in 18 to be made up, the board resignation of Mrs. ·Helen
points on eight field goals. deCided on classes for Heaton,
high
school
Pam · Vaughan was right Saturday, April 2: April 7 and secretary, and two apbebtnd her in scoring with 14 B which would have been plications for the post were
whUe Glenda Brown added spring vacatloo, and Aprll16, received. Added to the
nine.
another Saturday. With the subetltute teachers list were
Beth Vaughan gleaned the
boards for 17 rebounds and
the Meigs crew of Coach Joy
·
Bentley bit I fine 49 per cent
from the floor, and 42 per cent
at the foul Une.
MASON -: The first pubUc Perry, sewage superlnKim ~nley Jed the lolleMJ
revenue
sharing lund tendent, were asked to check
with ten markers 11 the Iron
·
meeting
was
held by the on new equipment and
WOQlert lhot lUll 17 per cent
Muon
.Town
Council on motors for the sewage plant. ·
from the floor, 3S per cent
Wednesday
evening
al the . It wasaMOunced that June
from the charity llrlpe.
dty
building
where
council
7 will be the towp election
Other _ . . for Meigs
dileuued
ways
a1
spending
day. Eleclloo forma must be
W«t : Btt11Vauafllll7, Tracy
lbe
IIICIIiey,
and
a
leCOIId,
l.r.t
tn to the town clerk on
llurdetle I, lbr)' Boa- I,
llldllle
meeting
wu
set
for
orlihre
May II at ·noon. '
Pat Vaa&amp;blll 7, lklnla Alb 4,
\f"'nnlday,
March
II.
The
l'ritllnl
nre NaYar Pnd
Tllllil Alb •• 'Oat)' OlafiiiiiJI
budget
will
a11o
be
dlJcuued
Taylor,
C4luncll
m1111btrs
2. T.all • 32, II, 7.
It this time.
a..rtaite Jlllb, Ed Perry,
Other - · for Jacbon . Coancll ordered '!he town Lawrence
Rouab
and
wen: Amott 4, M-r 2,
park
and
tennis
courts,
Catherine
Slnlth,
and
Calvin
Jewell I, Eullne 2, MeDonald 8, Ro1111 S. Totals· 1&amp;, opened and LIW11nc4! Roush Smith, public re]atlonl man
water superintendent, and Ed for the water tank project.

How to spend discussed

,, •.

~

v
'

to

ostages

Khaalis said in one ofthe first in a series of rambling telephone
messages broadcast by local stations.
He demanded that six men serving life sentences for the
exeeutions of two women and five children in 1973-members
of the Hanafi sect. Four of the children were Khaalis.
In demanding delivery of the convicts, Khaalis said : "I want
to see them show how tnugh they are."
Hcalso asked that the murderers of Malcoim X a founder of
the Blac~ )'duslim movement, be brought bef~re him. He
demanded the return of a $750 fine he paid for disrupting the
murder trial of those con~icted in the 1973 slaytngs.
Mayor Washington announced the money was sent Khaalis
during the night.
New York City area theaters Wednesday halted showings of
the fiim "Mohammad Messenger of God " sometimes In midscene, in compliance with another demi.nd
Police ~eported they were studying payroll iists to determine
th~ 1dent1ties of those held hostage in the B'nai B'rith. The
buil&lt;lin.g also houses the Communications Workers Union • and

the union reported most of'its employes there were among
those held prisoner.
The mayor was one of many officials who escaped from city
hall when the gurunen invaded. He barricaded himself in his
office, and hours later was led to safety by police.
·
In his statement tod_
ay, he said negotiations "are going
forward" and the city government was following a strategy of
avoiding "over-reaction.'1
1

' Discu~i ons -negotiations

if you will-are going forward "

Washington said, but gave no details of whether officials we;e
· near any kind of settlement.
Washington said he ;vas told that "the hostages are not
suffering other than being confined."
Asked if any new demands had been received or whether any
of the original demands had been relaxed , he replied no to'both
questions. He also said no deadlines had been set by the
gunmen holding the hostages.
The mayor said members of the diplomatic corps were
involved but he declined to identify what diplomats had tried to
·help.
.

through the ASCS, and a hard
worker in the community of
Letart Falis.
Thereon Johnson presented
Shields his plaque.
Johnson stated that Pete
actually began his career in
193p after graduating from
;Racine High School. Pete has
served his . county well in
many capacities, on the
CommUnity Action Board,
the board at Veterans
Memorial Hospital, Meigs ·
County Regional Planning
(Continued on page 12)

Identity of dead man
sought by-officials

winner over Make-up
lronettes

Carpet With Rubber
Backing You Can
Install YourseH
and Sav.- Money

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28, No. 230

·3 .Meigs men honored

sheer curtains made of 100 per cent
Dacron that wash so well. White and a big
selection of solid colors . Choose ao to 120
inch width in lengths from J6 Inches
through 90. New this season is a Priscilla
curtain in white ninon .

Thursday Night Special

Plus Tax

WASHINGToN (UPI)
HBnafi Musllms broadcast a
warning to pollee today that any attempt to free more thajllOO
hostages held in three hillldings would jeopardize the lives of
their jlrlsoners.
"We are llanaft MuSlims to the death," they said In a
message relayed by telephooe and ra!llo by Alan Grip, one of
their prisoners. He Is press aide to City Council Chainnan
Sterling Tucker .
"And If the pollee have any icleas about storjning this room,
It will put all of our lives in lnunediate Winger as weU as the
over 100 hostages at B'nai B'rith ..." Grip relayed from the
Dl.strle\ of Colwnbta city hall.
The hostages were taken Wednesday in attacks on city haU,
the National Islamic Center mosque and the national
headquarters of B'Nal B'rith, a Jewish service organization.
One person was shot ID· death and eight wounded by the
terrorists.
Mayor Walter Waahing!Dn said negotiations with the
terrorists had blgun. But he declined to say whether the
gunmen showed any signs of yleldq,
The terrorists Wednesday demanded that those imprisoned

A brand new se lection of these popular

,I

reatene

eat

NINON
SHEERS
AND
PRISCILLA
CURTAINS

..

en tine
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..

IN POMEROY

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, March 10, 1977

Just hope Otina's
about done testing

THE INN PLACE

Visit Our Salad Bar
Fish or Deep Fried
Oysters
French Fries
.
Hot Rolls
Coffee, Tea or Mi lk

Good luck, Tornadoes,
against
Southeastern!
.

governor to selve the problem Demi&gt;crats In one area. He
wasn't working properly, the suggested that . negotiating
Ul'l Statehouse Rtporter
GOP presented a bill to sessions should be open to the
COLUMBUS (UP! )- After amend the procedure and public - Wlheard of thualar
four years In the. minority, provide ..some enforcement. in collective bargaining.
Republicans in the Ohio
Their proposal was introKurfessalsocameinwitha
House are showing signs of duced at a special session on timely bill helping residential
developing a constructive, the energy crisis, and it came property owners hit by blgh ~
cohesive opposition to so swiftly that it Irked House gas bills during the severe :
majority Democrats.
Speaker Vernal Riffe Jr., D- winter.
:,
For two years after surren- New Boston.
He proposed that the ;
dering control of the House in
Not long afterward, . deadline for tax payments be •
1973, the GOP generally Minority Leader Charles extended without penalty ~
By Don Oakley
pouted, refused to believe it Kurfess, R-Bowling Green, because of the unusual ::;
Even allowing for the wtwrillen law which
(excluding the wartime bombs), and in 1949 was a minority and pointed to a loophole In a clrcwnstances.
~
says one must never speak ill of a Com·
for the Russians - and lasting unti1 1963 complained about unfair Democratic bill providing
Avariety of GOP represen- 1
munist or socialist regime, the absenee of
both countries exploded bomb after bigger treabnent.
makeup-free school closing tatives, with Democratic sup- •
any outcry by so-called world opinion in the
and beller bomb in the atmosphere.
The tempo of the next two days foc energy reasons.
port, offered legislation ,
wake of China's latest atmospheric nuclear
Demands for a nudea t· test ban treaty years was dictated by the
He observed that teachers establisiJing an Office of ~
explosion is remarkable.
mounted with each explosion until one was "Six.{)ay War" in which would have to be paid extra Olild &amp;lpport and Fraud In •
Remember all the agitation when the
finally agreed to in 1963. Thirty-three other Democrats demonstrated for, any voluntary makeup the state Department of j
United States was conducting above-ground
nations announced they would abide by the their absolute controi of both days, a fact which was not Public Welfare to attempt tD
nuclear tests at regular intervals during the
tenns of the treaty, allhough they did not legis lative chambers . advertised when the blll was cut down on ,unnecessary :
1950s and early '60s? Remember SANE and
sign it.
Republicans saw red, but offered.
welfare payments.
·
.~
other protest groups which sprang into exAmong loose neither abiding nor signing could do little except defend
Republicans from rural
There is no doubt that the •
istenee'
were Franee and China, who of course had Gov. James Rhodes.
areas were the first to Democrats still run the show ~
China exploded a9other nuclear device on
their own plans for developing nuclear
Now they are striking out demand equal treatment for In the House. They can do ,
Nov. 17, the l~h and la rgest in its history,
weapons.
on their own. They have schools closed because of anything they want, within !
sending anothet· radioaetive cloud around
A decent respect for the opinion of abandoned their loud wailS of snow or flooding, and that rea5!!D,. and the Republican . ;
the globe to rain down on the just and unjust
mankind by the UnitedStates and Russia , or anguish in favor of legislation may yet be proposals will never grab •
alike. For all the reaelion it aroused, in the
eoncem for the well-being of future genera- constructive criticism.
passed.
headlines or dominate the ~
world conununity, it might as well have,
lions, had nothing to do with the lest ban
'fhey are pushing forth a
Kurfess has assembled a legislative scene.
;
been eomposed of apple blossoms.
treaty. It was simply that both c-ountries had nwnber of alternatives to cadre of bright young
But the change in tactics ...
Not so remarkable, however, is the of·
learned about as much as they could from Democratic bills, many of lawmakers proposing seems certain tD score some ;
ficial silence of world governments,
above-ground testing and now believed they them with worthwhile alternatives to Democratic' points and keep the ~
· 11y I he united States and the Soviet
could safely accede to "world opinion" by proVJSIOns
··
Democrats on their toes. ·
especta
which may be b'll
1 s on public employe
•
Union. We cannot pretend to divine what
confining f4 ture tests to below ground.
incorporated intD the final bargaining, motor vehicle
It will also develop a solid •;
goes on in the minds of the people in the
With such examples to guide it, it is not products.
·
registration procedures, program
which
GOP '
Kremlin - or even in our own State Departsurprising that China should feel that it has
At the same time, they are "sunset" legislation to eUmi- candidates can take to the ·
ment, fur that matter - but it seems obas much right as any other soverign nation cooperating in bipartisan ef. nate unnecessary agencies public in future elections, not ,
vious that both governments are ·reluctant
to pollute the world with radioactivity, forts in a number of areas. and a sch(I!JI district income to mention the constructive · ·
to say or do anything that could jeopardize
though fortunately its bombs have not been
And from time to time, they tax tD replace property tues. legislation that is bound to '
1
their delicate relations with Ute touchy
the "dirty" type exploded by the first two are engaging in a little "on~- ·
Each has some featw-es result.
-~
Chinese.
,
nuclear powers in the early days.
upmanship" to keep the whic~ wiU not be acceptable
Ironically' this new
.They may also rea lize that they haven't
We can perhaps be thankful for that. In ·Democrats off balance.
to the Democrats, but there effectiveness is beginning .
got a moral leg to stand on to support a for·
the meantime, ailuut all we can hope for is
The first sign of budding are also some provisions when the GOP is at low ebb '
mal protest. The day each country exploded
that China will be the last great power to Republican effectiveness which may be adopted.
with 37 of 99 members In a
its first atomic bomb it abandoned all future
feel it must develop a panoply of nuclear ar· came at the outset of the
In the bargaining bill for "veto11roof" House. Perhaps
right to tell other countries how they should
maments and that it will do so in less than energy crisis. When it public employes, Kurfess there is solidarity In smaU
behave.
the 17 and 14 years it took the United States hecame evident that the state went a step further than the nwnbers.
"
Beginning in 1940 fur the Unfit;:;ed::.,;;S:;:ta;,;le:o;s.__•.nd• t•h•
e•U•.S•.S•.R•._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.;,Ia;w;;....;,em;;;:;p;;.
ow;;.e;;,;r~in;;:g:,_.,:th:;:e_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ "

Gas needs met in newest hill .

PoWids may

on Certificates

_______,..,..._._____________.....,-.....,

THREE HONORED- Man of the year awards were
presented to Robert Wingett, Pete Shields and Charles
Legar, left to right front, Wednesday night at the Meigs

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Saturday through
·. Monday, chance of showel'll
Saturday and Sunday and
fair Monday. Highs will be
In the 70s Saturday, the 60s
Sunday and the 5011 Mooday. Lows will be In the 5011
Saturday and ·Sunday and
the 40s Monday.
.::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:::-:·:::::·::::::::::::::::::::::::.

Fema}e CaSt
of up to
50 needed
Any one for an old·
fashioned minstrel show?
Plans are being made for a
clown theme minstrel
presentation as a part of the
annual spring show of the Big
Bend Minstrel Assn. to be
staged in late April. The cast
for the minstrel, to be made
up entirely of women, wiU
require 40 to50 women for the
vocal chorus and soloist
group.
In order to determine If
adequate interest Is present
to proceed with that type
presentat ion , women,
preferable 18 or over, who
would like to take part are
asked to telephone Charlene
Hoeflich, 992·5292, Mrs.
James Soulsby, 992-2.'177, or
Mrs. Robert Buck, 992-;3833.
The spring show will be
sponsored by the Meigs Local
Athletic Boosters. Rehear·
sals will start next week
according to present plans.

Inn; back are Fred Crow, president of the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce whn sponsored the event, and
Richard Jones, master of ceremonies ,

numbers
project is advancing
Jim Page, project engineer
for the Meigs County countywide house numbering
project, said today the first
house numllers will be
released soon. .
The engineer sa id field
personnel are working full
time on the roads obtaining
persons names, using newly
flown aeria l photography
which shows residents'
houses. House numbers are
assigned on an additional set
of photography for a permanent county record.

Page said each rosa's new
house numbers are compiled
and sent to the post office for
verification, prior to each
resident receiving a personal
letter informing them of their
new address. Page 'explains
that post office involvement
is very important and that
Meigs County postmasters
are being very cooperative
and helpful.
According to the engineer,
road naming is progressing
and na mes for roads
proposed by the township

trustees will be published
prior to formal adoption by
the County Engineer and
County Commissioners. This
procedure will give residents
ample opportunity to review
the names prior to use.
Several townships have
already submitted names,
which are being reviewed. '·
Page indicated the timeconsuming portion of house .
numhering is the field work,
so emphasis to date has been
to get that portion of the
program underway.

Pickens gets 4-15 years

the names of Rebecca CotKeith Pickens, Pomeroy, served upon the imposition of
.terlll, Julia Hutchinson and
who
pleaded guilty before the four to 15 year sentence
Becky MiUer. Mrs. Grace
Judge John C. Bacon recently on conviction of the six counts
Stout was named to the
on six counts of robbery, was of robbery.
substitute cook list.
Wesley David Clark
sentenced to be confined in a
The board agreed to apply
pleaded
guilty to charges of
penal Institution for not less
for permission to purchase
forgery
and
was released on
than four years nor more
two new school buses and the
his
own
recognizance.
His
than 15 years on each count,
clerk, Eloise Boston, was
case
was
continued
pending
sentence to run concurrently,
authorized to request an
pre-sentence investigation.
the court has. disclosed.
advance draw from the
Also on probation for a Willie Maude Coates,
county auditor in order to
breaking and entering Middleport, · ftled a suit to
meet the March 20 payroll. It
charge, the defendant was quiet title against Clifford
was agreed to aUow the
ordered to serve the Icenhower · and Helen
Chester and . Riverview
remainder .of the sentence of Icenhower, Pomeroy, and
hnUdings be used for Bible
six months to five years in a Richard C. Ebliil and Reta
schools In June. Duane Wolfe
state penal institution, before Ellen Eblin, Pomeroy.
and LaiTY Heines, faculty
he is to receive credit for time Three divorce cases filed
members, were given permission to attend a coaches
meeting, missing one-hall
day of school on April 15.
Clerk'· ' receipts
FIREMEN BUSY
Tbe board employed Mrs.
The
Pomeroy
Fire
Jennifer Berkheimer for an
Department
and
Emergency
additional one-baH hour each
IT'S SOUTHEASTERN
of $1,644 noted
Unit were busy Wednesday.
day at Riverview School to . Southern High School
At 1:20 p.m., the departhelp with the breakfast wm take on once defeated
program. About half the Ro11 of' Southeastern al ··\ The otttce of Larry E. ment went to a brush !Ire at
Spencer, clerk of courts, the. roadside park on RQute
studenU of the school are . Rlcbmondale Friday
collected $1,6« in Febniary. 33, at 1:25 p.m. to Cbe~er
talting part In the breakfast evelllag In tile Dlatrlct
'!'he
county's share was Road for a brush fire neat the
PI'OIII'IIIIt Riebel reports.
Cla11 A bl!aletball to~r­
$1,309.75, the state's f334.25. Ada Harper residence, at 4
Tbe next meeting was eet a aament tn Chllllcotbe.
The office llaue&lt;) 6$6 titles, p.m. to a brush fire on
,..t urJier than usual, at 7 Gamettmela 7:30p.m.
'IZI
notations of liens, 131 Peacock Ave., at 5:04 to a
p.m., on AprU ~- Baud
Ro11 of Sontheastera
memos, 10 salvage titles, 585 vehicle fire near Elberfelds:
'mlllbera attending were defeated a atrong West
applicationa, affidavits and at 7:15 p.m. Mrs. Norma
'Oril Slnlth, David Smith, UDIOD club 8$ to 17 Wedassignments, 35 penalties, Goodwin was taken from the
Dorothy Calaway, Doug aeaday night to get tote tile
and nine certified copies. home of her son, David, to
Billell and Dorset Larklna; «rm Friday against
There were .92 auto In· Veterans Memorial Hospital
admlnlltratora Riebel · and Southern.
spectlons for total fees of and at II :37 p.m., the squad
Olelter Gooding, high school
S2'16, the county's share, $23; took Gilbert Mees, W. Malo
principal, and Mrt. Boston,
state's share, $253.
St. to VMII.
the clerk-lreasurer.

were Joan Leslie Pickens
Portland, against Franci~
Levi Pickens, Portland· Ruth
Priddy, Rt. 4, Pomeroy: from
Raymond Priddy , Mid·
~rt ; Linda Hewitt, Rt. 1,
Long Bottom, against Harry
Hewitt, same address.
Kathryn Diane MtUer was
granted a divorce from
James Michael Miller and
plaintiff was restored to her
malden name of Kathryn
Diane King. The marriage of
Roger G. Theiss, Rt. 2,
Racine , and Myrtle E.
Theiss, same address, was
dlssolved.

Weather
Cloudy tonignt, lows in the
low 508. Cloudy, chance Ot
showers Friday, highs in .l,he
mid 60s. Probability ~ f
precipitation near zero today,
20 per cent tonight, 50 per
cent Friday.

NOW YOU KNOW
It I• J10118lble to survive
without food for 40 daya;

without water for four dan
and without air for four
minutes.
'

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, March 10, 1977

FMC will close down plant
SOUTII CHARLESTON,
W.Va. (UPl) - Besieged
with complaints and bit by a
federal judge's edict over
carbon tetrachloride spills,
the FMC Corp. said it will
shutdown its entire chemical
complex and warned that
Wesi Virginia's economy will
suffer. ·
The closing, which will cost
1,200 workers their jobs, was

announced Wednesday within
an hour after U.S. District
Judge Charles H. Haden II
·imposed a llkiay restraining
&lt;rder oo the plant's manufacture and disposal of the
chemical. FMC has been
&lt;rdered to devise a means to
prevent future spills.
'Owing to Its size and
complicated maintenance

"Virtually ~of the plant's
operations ,are dependent
upon each other, thus this
decision has a tremendous
negative impact on a large
segment of employes and on

possible.
Controversy began last
month when the EPA said
that a 7o.ton mass of carbon
tel found its way into the Ohio
River. At that time, the
the area's economy," Currey agency said the source was
an industrial complex in
said.
"FMC is convinced through South Charleston.
FMC, one of four possible
extensive investigation that
this extreme action was sources, produces a number
W\necessary. Unfortunately, • of salt brine derivatives,
the sensationalism . among them chlorine and
surroW\ding recent events hydrogen pei'Olide besides
has so far eliminated the carbon tel. The firm
opportunity for the facts on conceded a three~on spill last
both sides of the issue to be mooth, as weD as a 250 to 756discussed in a cairn and open pound leak Tuesday.
But the firm stood by his
fashion."
Currey said the plant will contentions that it wasn't to
entire complex," said · a work with state and federal blame for the alleged 'TO-ton
public relations spokesman, officials to get the plant spill.
.. .
operational as soon as
Haden advised the firm
William Currey.
·
that the EPA's request for a
permanent injunction against
the production and disposal,of
the chemical until prevention
of spills is assured would be
considered at a March 18
hearing.
The EPA said the chemical
is a health hazard and told
Haden that nearly 1.3 million·

needs, FMC said it needs
several days to complete the
shutdoWil.
Haden's order came after
the Environmental
Protection Agency, using the
Safe Drinking Water Act and
Federal Water Pollutio n
Control Act for the first time
in court, asked for a
restraint.
The EPA charged that the.
South Charleston operation of
FMC had permitted 20 spills ·
within the last two years into
the Kanawha River, which
feeds into the Ohio River.
By closing the carbon
tetrachloride seotion, FMC
must close "essentially the

$1.5 billion proposed
for hiring of young
l)y DONAlD H. MAY

WASHINGTON (UP! )
President Carter proposes
spending $1.5 billion during
the next 18 months on three
new efforts to reduce
unemployment among young
people. Congress probably
will want to spend even more.
The President outlined his
proposals in a news
conference . and special
message to
Congress
Wednesday, noting that 3.4
million youngsters aged 16
through 24 are out of work.
They constitute half the
nation's unemployed. The
jobless rate arnoog those 16
through 19 years old is 18.5
per eent and exceeds 40 per

Man hurt

cent among minority
youngsters in some urban
areas, Carter said.
He urged creation of a
National Youth Conservation
Corps, similar to the Civilian
Conservation Corps of the
1931&lt;l, in which youngsters
aged 16-24 would work
outdoors in the nation 's
parks,
forests
and
recreations areas. Cost: $350
million for 35,000 jobs.
· Carter also proposed a
Youth Community
Conservat ion and
Improvement program in
which youngsters 1&amp;-19 would
be hired for community and
neighborhood improvement
projects and projects to
restore natural resources on
public land. Cost: $250 million
for 30,000 jobs.

Carter's third and liu-gest
proposal was a "full range"
of job and training programs,
with emphasis on training,
operated through existing
Labor Department
machinery.
The money would be aimed
at disadvantaged youth 1&amp;-21
who are out of school and out
of work. Half the funds would
be used to encourage
innovative · youth
employmentprogranns.Cost:
$900 million for 138,000
positions.
The package also would
include doubling the size of
the Job Corps in which 40,000
disadvantaged youngsters
now receive job training at
special centers around the
country.

in auto
accident

FUNNY BUSINESS

Joseph D. · Wiils, 27 ,
Cheshire, suffered visible
irijuries in a traffic arcident
at 5,33 p.m. Wednesday on
Little Kyger Rd ., seven
tenths of a mile wesi of SR 7.
The Gallia-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said
Wills lost control of his car
which ran off the left side of
the roadway striking a
telephone pole. There was
moderate damage.
Wilfuim E. Mitchell, Jr., 30,
Gallipolis, was cited to
Municipal Court for failure to
yield the right of way
following an accident at 6: 44
p.m. on the Bidwell-Rodney
Rd., three tenths of a mile
south of SR 554. State
troopers said the Mitchell car
)lacked into the path of an
'3Uto operated by Michael G.
:McBride, 31, Bidwell.
: A deer was killed in an
·accident Wednesday morning
:On Rt. 7 at Airport Rd. The
:animal ran into the path of a
·car operated by Paul D.
:Green, 33, BidwelL There was
;minor daiJlage .

By Roger Bollen

AS '100 CAll! S.E E ... HE'S kSO
VE~Y $COD t()ITH CHIL.DeEN. /

LLhl,

If'S

WASHINGTON (UP I~ President Carter said
W ed nes day
t h .e
administration is studying
new ways "to encourage or
periJaps even force" power
plants to switch from oil or
natural gas to more plentiful
coal.
· Asked at his news
conference whether
mandatory use of coal will be
included in the energy
program he will announce
April 20, the President said:
" I can't yet say which
proposalS will be mandatory
and which will be voluntary."
"How to encourage or perhaps even to force the end to
,wasting natural gas just for
the generation of tieat at
central power plant stations
is ·something we 'II have to
address," he said.
"It may be done bY legislation. It may be done by
economic pena4ties. It may
be done by an appejll to the
stationary heat producers to
shift .on a patriotic basis."
The Federal Energy
Administration has authority
under a 1974 law to require
conversion to coal, and more
than 100 such orders to power
plants were issued during the
Ford administration .
Carter's energy · package
could incorporate that
provision, or he could devise
his own formula in that
regard.
In .the interim, an FEA
spok es man no.ted ,
"mandatory conversions are
already on the books and he
can Order them if he wants

to.
Past orders requiring new
and existing power plants to
use coal - the nation's most
plentiful fuel , were
designed to reduce oil
imports and make inore
natural gas available for
homes and factories.
!I

Care needed in weight gain
crease your maleness.
It will only increase your
chances of having a major
problem with obesity later in
life and the chances of having
arterial disease that causes
heart attacks, strokes and
even decreases a male's sexual capacity earlier in life
than would otherwise occur.
Many think that extra blubber is actually unsightly.
AI your height 140 pounds is
just fine. If you want to improve your body contours so
that you appear more
muscular you need a muscle
strength training program. I
am not implying you need to
develop large bulging
muscles, but rather to firm
up your body and If you have
'" me.
body fat convert it to muscle.
: DEAR READER - This
When a young man· says I
;question · is asked far more want to gain weight it is
•often than you realize. It is necessary to know if he wants
: aaked m011t Often by young to gain muscle size, strength,
: men and may be related to or wants some blubber on his
•our stereotyped -~:oncept of torso. It makes a different'l!.
:masculinity. Addinl pounds If you want to emulate the.
~ Of fat to your torso will not iii- fat, stock show animal all you

•

need to do is be inactive, use
as few calories as possible
and stuff yourself with rich
foods, to take . in as many
calories as possible. Such a
program will help you get fat
·and sloppy if that is your
goal.
Otherwise I recommend a
strength-training prugram.
You can buiLd'- muscle
strength and re-asonable size
without lld"ding a lot of fat to
the body. In most instances
the key to success is the exer·
cise program. As you load a
muscle when it contracts, it
grows stronger and bigger to
be able to )if( that 8mOWll of
weight easlly.
There are right and wrong
ways of doing this. I am sending you The Health Letter
number :i-1, Weight Training
for Energy and Weight Control. As you develop and
maintain muscles your muscle mass will help keep you
from getting tilt. So, developing muscles is good for tho.e
who want to avoid obesity, in-

eluding women, and for those
who want to develop a
stronger, healthier, muscular
body. Others who want this
information can send 50 cents
for it with a long, stamped,
self-addressed envelope for
mailing. Send your request to
me in care of this newspaper.
P.O. Box 1551, Radio City Station, New York NY 10019.
When you develop adequate
strength of the muscles you
need for sports it makes it
easier to be successful. Aperson who wanls to play tennis
is wis,e to develop the arm
and shoulder muscles by a
good training program.
Vitamins wiD not help you
gain weight unless you have a
vitamin deficiency_ They do
not provide calories for
energy nor do they provide
protein for · building · body
tissues. They merely provide
the chemical catalyst thai
your body's enzyme system
wu's to prot'ess your caliH'iet'Onlaining foods; fa!$, pr(.&gt;o
Ieins a1id carbohydrates.

inhaled llffioke from a single
cigarette.
Addressing itself to that
aspect, FMC maintained
Wednesday it "remains convinced that the health of the
residents of the Kanawha and
Ohio Valleys has not been
jeopardized. "

LANCASTER, Ohio (UPI~ - il. J. Gibbo ...
stoppe&lt;lsplldDC hll cblct..,•water. To eompe. .te lor
an 1111111Iy 111M wiDter, the Fallfield Coantr Iarmer
had been adding a vltamla addlllw to water for hll :It
whlte legbonll,
Tbe retlllt• were obvloul Sunday wbeD one ol blo
beDH laid a cilloual 51'.1 ounce e&amp;e· That'• aboattbree
limes bigger than the g~ry'• "large" egg1.
Complalalng that people j•l doo't b,y egp that
big, Gibbs said Wedne1day he WM withdrawillg tbe
super additive.
Happiest about that declaloo may IMi Glbbl' beo,
wblcb wu unable to stand for aeveral days alter laying
ber big egg.

Tiant- threatens to go .to Mexico--for good
By KEN ROSENBERG
UP! Sports Writer
Some people attribute the
Boston Red 'Sox' collapse last
year to the disharmony
caused by the holdouts of
Fred Lynn, Carlton Fisk and
Rlck Burleson. Otllers point
to the ineffectiveness of the
bullpen corps.

Prices driven up by shortages
WASHINGTON (UP!) - perienced a monthly dose of
Wint er food and fu el double-digit inflation in the
shortages !~rove wholesale wholesale market since Ocprices up 0.9 per cent in tober, 1975, when prices
February, the biggest leaped 1.2 per cent.
The
February
rise
increase in 16 months, the
consumers
with
a
threatened
Labor Department reported
heavier
burden
in
the
mooths
today.
The increase, which trans- ahead. Wholesale pric~
lates into a 10.8 per cent increases eventually work
annual rate , was caused their way into the retail
almost entirely by price hikes market.
The Wholesale Price Index
for fuel, food and farm
rose
in February to 190.0, an
products. These commodites
·have been in short supply due
to the frigid weather.
The wholesale price of
gasoline rose an average of 13
per cent between January
and February.
The nation has not ex-

Switch
to coal HUD has free
will come nwnher to call

DR. LAMB

: By Lawrence E. ~mL, M.D.
: DEAR DR. LAMB - My
: problem is that I am 5 feet10
:and only 14{) pounds. There is
;so much information on ios·ing weight and so little on how
:to gain it. Please help me and
' the many others who wanl to
.:gain weight.
·: Is it best to start on a
·:weight-training course or
'·should I try to put on weight
·:first and then go on a weight.-training course?
; can I gain more weight by
i eating more, while limiting
·my activities, or can I gain
: weight faster using a weight; training course? What
•vital'nins will help me gain
: weigh!? l would apprecilite
•:any information you can give

people get their drinking
water from the two rivers.
There have ~n doubts,
however, about the ·validity of
the EPA's charge that the
carbon tel is hazardous. One
chemist has said the entire
volume of spills reported was
less dangerous than the

. ~Thti Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, March 10, 1977

No more spiked chicken water

WASHINGTON
Representative Clarence
Miller has been informed by
the U.S~ Department of
Housing
and
Urban
Development (HUD) of the
establishment of toll-free.
telephone service to assist
private property owners with
questions relating to the flood
insurance program.
The number is 800-424..'11172.
Miller pointed out that
HUD officials coordinating
the flood insurance program
eould be written to at'Fiood
Insurance Administration,
U.S. Department of Housing
and Urban Development, 451
Seventh Street , W.W.,
Washington, D.C. 20410.

Meigs
Property
-Transfers ·
Charles William King,
Sandra Lynn King to Charles
William King, Sandra Lynn
King, Parcels, Bedford.
Hallie Cross to Virgil Cross,
Velma Parsons, Merdayne
Patterson, Arletta Vanover,
Minerals.
HaiHe Cro'Bs to Velma
Parsons , Merdayne Pat·
terson , Ariella Vanov er ,
Virgil Cross, Lots, Syracuse.
Kenneth B. Lawson.
Dorothy L. Lawson to John
Bentz, Linda Bentz, 30 acres,
Chester.
Bertha Brooks Rife to
William B. Rife, Ruby P.
Rife, Minerals, Salisbury.
Clilir F. Shenefield, Lela B.
Shenefield to Thomas P.
Gannaway, Judith C. Gannaway, 4.516 A., Salem.
Flossie F. Badgley, affidavit, Letart.
Harry Osborn, Sr. dec. to
Wilma Osborn, cert. for
trans ., Pomeroy.
Opal DUnham, dec. to Carl
Dunham, cert for trans.
Columbia.
Carl Dunham to John B.
Dunham, r/ .36 A., Columbus.
Lowell Smallwood, Janice
Smallwood,
to
Buell
Smallwood,
Mary
Smallwood, 2.72 acres,
Rutland.
Alfred A. Duff, Eunlce L.
Duff to Tllomas C. Autherson,
Marie Autherson, Parcel,
Rutland•
Charles A. Elliott, Allee
Elliott to Roscoe C. Prater,
Betty R. Prater, 56.69 acre,
Bedford.
Clarence Might, affidavit,
Rutland.
Clarence Might to Ellen
Ebersbach, Lot, Rutland.
Charles William King,
affidavit, Bedford.
Leonard F. Erwin, Georgia
Ruth Erwin to Boyad A.
Ruth, Judith M. Ruth, Lot,
Chester.
Edward Eugene Durham,
Pansy Beatrice Durham to
Eugene Durham, 3.3 acres,
Rutland.
Herbert E. Boney, Berneda
C. Boney to Henry E. Clelilnd,
Jr. , Kathleen M. Cleland, Lot;
Pomeroy.

increase of 6 per cent over the
past year- That meana goods
costing $100 in' 1967 now cost
$190.
Farm prices rose 2.2 per
cent in Febuary, and the cost
of processed foods was up 1.8
per cent- both ipcreases
similar to those recorded last
December.
lndustrl'al pr ices,
meanwhile, rose 0.6 per cent.
But most of that waa caused
bY a 3.3 per cent jump in the

Today's

prices for fuels and po'wer.
The 13 per cent guoline ..
increase led the February
WPI increase. Gaa prices ··
have risen more than 47 per
cent over the past year.
Electric power was up
more than 10 per cent and ,
crude petroleum more· than
13 per cent in JaiU&amp;J'Y. MOlt
experts anticipate thla trend
will continue in the wake of
one of the nation's coldest
winters.

Washington may
ban saccharin
Acting FDA Commissioner consumer demand, " and
Sherwin Gardner said at a noted that it met a similar
news conference Wednesday crisis once before when
that because of exhaustive cyclamates were outlawed.
- FDA said it haa called a
Canadian tests and studies
indicating high doses of the prehearing conference AprU
substance may cause bladder 20 as part of the continuing
cancer in rats, the United effort by producers to restore
states and Canada are taking the use of cyclamates.
Another sweetener, asparimmediate steps to ban
tame,
was approved by FDA
the
saccharin
from
in 1974 but has never been
marketplace.
·
He said the proposed ban marketed. The FDA stayed
will be published in the its approval in December,
Federal Register as soon as 1975, but is now reviewing the
necessary papers , can be available data to see if sales
prepared, perhaps within 30 should be permitted.
Marvin Eisenstadt ,
days .
However,
he
.
executive
vice preisident of
acknowledged the length of
the
Cumberland
Packing
the legal process means it
.
Corp.
which
manufactures
could take up to four months
or more before the sweetener the sweetener "Sweet 'N
Low," called the saccharin
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!)- actually disappears from Jl'ohibition "outrageous and
Parents from five states retail shelves. ·
There were two rays of harmful," and charged that •
ivant to legally deprogram
is is based on "tenuous
their offspring, who have hope for weight wal£hers scientific evidence."
become ~~moonies," even with a sweet tooth :
Gardner told a news
-The National Soft Drink
though their sons and
conference
the Canadian · ·
daughters range from 21 to 26 Association said ll expects researchers found that in :1110
manufacturers will "attempt
years of age.
to
develop a productto satisfy rats fed high amounts of
The parents went to
saccharin, malignant bladder
Superior Court Wednesday to
tumor~ deveiQped in 17. In a
ask mandatory 30-day
control group of another :1110
custody of the young adults
rats fed no saccharin, only 2
who have become converts to
developed the cancers.
ideas espoused by Rev. Sun
THE DALY SENTINEL
But he said the test rats had
Myung Moon's Unification
DEVOTED TO TilE
doses
"In eKcess of the
INTEREST OF
Church.
amount
that a consumer
MEIGS-MASON AREA .
Heated
charges .of
LliESTEil L. TANNEHill
would receive from .drinking ·
Euc.Ed.
" brainwashing" tactics we~e
IMIO l~z. diet sodas daily .
ROBERT HOEFLICH
made by both sides in the
Cltf.Ed61or
over a lifethne."
Publillhed daily excepl Satunhly
dispute.
This was the information
by~ Ohio Valley Publlshinli Com.
An attorney for the parents, any.
ll1 Coun SL, Pomeroy, moo
Eisenstadt attacked as
said the young converts 45769. BlL'Iiness Office PhOne 992·
ridiculous. He claimed the
2156. Edilor4tl Phune992-2157,
members of New Education
rats were fed so much
St!&lt;.."Ontl chtSs postag~: paid HI
Development Systems Pumcroy, Ohio.
saccharin that "the averageNatioM I advertising repre.:enwere being " financially
sized man would have to eat
taUve Wml· Grlffi lh Company Infaped 11 by a "cult."
c., Bil tti.JJelli and Gallagher Otv.,
140 poWids of it a year to
An attorney for the off- 7~7 Third Ave ., New York, N.Y. consume an equivalent
10017.
spring replied they were
Sull!icriplion rates: Delivered by
amount."
being "spiritually raped" by carrier wher~ available 75 cents per
The FDA argued that the
week. By Motor Rout.e where carrier
attempts to deny them the service
law
says no ingredient that
not IIVIIilaWe, One munlh,
choice of their own religion.
$3.2$. By n~il in Ohio and W.Va.,
causes cancer In man or
One .Yeur, $!2,00 ; SUr: months,
The parents - from New $11.50;
animals may be added to
Three months, $7 .00 ;
York, New Jersey , Califor- Elsewhere $26.00 yeBr ; Six lrKlllthti
American food , and G:u-dner
nia, Ohio and Oregon - faced t13.50; Three munth5 , 17 .5n. said "science and law dictate
price includes Sun~y
their children in what legal Sub&amp;.Ti))tlon
Ttmt's-SenUnel.
that saccharin be removed
authorities regarded as an
from our food supply."
unprecedented open court
battle over the issue.
Before a packed covrt·
Letten of opbdoo are welcomed. Tbey sboold be 1
room, Assistant Oregon
less tbao 300 wordlloa1 (or be nbject to reduction by 1
Attorney General Raymond
the edlter~ aDd mUll be 1igned with tbe slpee'a ad· ' I
P. Underwood took the stand
dress.
Names may be withheld upon pubUcallon. I
as the first witness and said
However, on reojaeat; naines wUI be dilclolled. Letter~ I
his daughter, Barbara, 2:i,
should be in good Iaaie, addreuing ilsues, nol pel'·
had
been hypnotized,
-.lilies.
1
mesmerized and brainI
washed.

Parents ask
moonies to

come back

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

l
I

I
I

)·

I

I

QuestiOn&amp; bond amounts
Dear

Sir-

.

EarlyTharsdaymorning~ere'was allhootlngin tbe Melp

County 81'ea. The man who aliegedly attempted the llhoollng
abnost - but faDed by the mercy of God- did the job up right.
Today thla 111111111 waiting m our 11treet1 where he may II
any lime try to finlm the job. This man's bail wu lilt at tw81ty
tbousand dollars.
· ' .
Bad&lt; in January three YOUI!I boys of the Melp QJunty
area were picked up am they had robbed a locll tavei;Dind
were armed. TbeH lbree beve never been out of jail IInce the
thne they were picked up beeauae their baii wu let at one
iluuhd lho111111d dol1ara. Wheh llie In wu llkeci '11117 thla
baD wu Ht .10 low for attempted lilurdtr llld IGr II'IJled
. robbery 10 high, there wu only one co1111111111 made, the law
can mly arrt!lll,lt'a up to the Judie to Ill the 11111.
I'm not 1mocldng our law olrlcln becaule I bellm we
have a wonderful llberllf and the real of hla dlpartmeat .
Together they are doln&amp; a line job, but they cu onlf do 10

much.

I alwayslhoUBht H dldn~ matter wbo you Were but w1u1t
tbe charges were. Am I wront? -RoWe Stewart, S)'raeult,
Ohio

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
NEW YORK (UP!~ - Latest one kicking around the baseball
camps is that Charlie Finley is about to defy Bowie Kuhn again
and sell the Texas Rangers another one of his left-banders,
Vida Blue, for $2.5 million .... The price is right but the team is
wrong. That $400,000 they paid Finley for reUever Paul
Lindblad is going to hold the Rangers awhile. They have no
intention of giving Finley what he's asking for Blue - but
Montreal will. The Expos will even throw in a second-line
player or two, and what will the Coinmissioner caD that, a
trade or a sale? ...
----~ -

By ELIZABETII WHARTON
WASHINGTON (UPil Diet-conscious
America
could lose - its last legal
sweetener for low-calorie soft
drinks, candies and desserts
if a Food and Drug Adminisi !ration decision to ban saccharin goes into effect.

TEAM NOMINATION ·
COLUMBUS (0PI~ Twenty -f our House
Democrats introduced
legislation Wednesday
requiring tandilin nCIJliililtlon
and election of the governor
and lieutenant governor, a
ll'ocedure favored by Houae
~ker Vernal G. Riffe Jr.,
D-New Boston.
Another bill, backed by the
Ohio Democrallc Party and
being con~idered In the
Senate, would provide for an·
open primary WI tandem
electloo of tbe two ofllces,
Rep. Kenneth Rocco, DPanna, dllel llpCIIIIOr of the
latest version, aald joint
nomlnatlon would ''fortify the
team cmcept" and inJure .
thai the tWo candldalel wUI .
work together if elected.
'"lbe alternative II a llhotgun
11181Tlage," be said. ·

This year, should the Red
Sox fail to challenge the
Yankees for supremacy in
the American League East,
the reason might weD be
found in Mexico . That's
where. Luis Tiant, a 2l.garne
winner last year, has vowed
to move with his family if the
Red Sox continue to refuse to

Rather remarkable how Bucky Dent's agent, Nick
Buonicontl, former middle linebacker for the Miami DQlphins,
made the transition fronJ football to baseball so quickly.
Negotiating for Dent, who got $60,000 last year and wants
$450,000 over the next three, Buoniconti said his 'client should
be paid with the best shortstops in tlle majiH's, adding, "It
looks as though the White Sox can't afford Bucky ." Buoniconti
may be much closer to the truth than he suspects. White Sox
and Indians both are having serious financial problems.
Braves and Twins aren 't that far behind, and Finley is in the
same boat. That's the reason he's trying to sell his players.
Ultimately, he 'll probably sell the A's, but he sliD wants to go
to the mat a few more times with Kuhn . Finley enjoys that
al!nost.P~ much as he does winning ball games ....

.

- dne of the first things Willis Reed did after being named the
Knicks' new coach was give former teanunate Walt Frazier a
vote of confidence and it sounded to me like the same kind Of
vote a guy is given before they trade him. Commenting on
whether Frazier has siowed up or not, !leed conceded he may
have lost a step or so, then defended Frazier by saying he was
· "sUD better than 80 or maybe 90 per cent of the guards in the
league." Tome, that sounds as if Walt Frazier may be moving
on ....
Wayne Pinkerton, a 23-year-old non-roster shortstop from
HoUendale, Miss., was flagging down ground balls in the Texas .
Rangers ' •camp at Pompano Beach, Fla., Wednesday when
Manager Frank Lucchesi came over to ~ tQ him about the
team's opening exhibition game. "You're startiilg against the
Yankees Friday.'' uFor real?" the rookie asked, his eyes

aglow. "Gee, J.gotta caD my high school coach tonight and tell
him." ...

Thir·
'!l''ntof "The Way it Was," a nostalgic TV series of
memo
happenings in sports, is due to · be shown this
Sunday , ning with Joe DiMaggio offering his version of
Ernie Lombardi's famous "snooze" at home plate in the 1939
World Series between the Yankees and Reds ..DiMaggio was
one of two Y•nkee players who scored as the Cincinnati
catcher supposedly lay napping only a foot or so from horne
plate , but in reality, poor Lorn wasn't sleeping, he was hurting ,
although he never used that as an alibi after the ~arne ....
Iiernie Bierman, the late University of Minnesota football
coach who died Tuesday, was one of those rare old-timers who
saw some aspects ;&gt;I the game as being better today than they
were In his day. But he said he never saw a team anywhere any
better than his 1934 team, and I agree .... .
Torn Seaver's capsule comment on major league salaries:
"No matter how much he's making, every individual wants to
be paid what he feels he's worth ." Does Seaver think fans
generally understand that? "Some do, some don't," he says. .. .
Willie Mays takes issue with Frank Lane on the subject of
Rick Monday'sstrikeouts. Citing Monday 's $125,000 salary and
125 strikeouts with the Cubs last season, Lane points out that
came to ,1,000 a strikeout. Now that he's with the Dodgers,
Mooday Jl'Obably will get $250,000, and that means he was
raised to $2,000 a strikeout, Lane says. "What does it matter
how many ~es Monday strike~ out?" asks Mays .... How
many home runs did Monday hit last year? How many runs did
he drive in? That's what's important." Monday had 32homers
and drove in 77 runs ... Over to you, Frank Lane ....

All MAC named
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI~- II the b.ggest player on the
For the Becond straight year, team . He averaged 16 .5
Matt Hick~ ,of d Nof.lhern .points and )I rebo~ per
Dlinols,. ,tl)e, ,llfi ,~can f!IDle for the Chippewas, who
Conference'• scoring and will represent the conference
rebounding champioo, · has in the NCAA Tournament this
been unanimously selected to weekend.
the aU-cU!ference basketball
Poquette, who halls from
East Lansing, Mich ., was the
team. •• ~
Joining: the 6-4 senior. second' leading rebounder
forward on llle all-MAC first and ninth best scorer the paat.
team,• selected by the season .
leagqe•s; coaches, were
McGhee, of Warren, was
seniors Ben Poquette of CO· the only newcomer to make
champion Central Michigan the all-conference team. A
and · Tommy Harris of ·tranSfer from the University
Bowling Green, junior Archie of Michigan, the 6-7 McGhee
Aldridge of co-champion averaged 19.8 points per
Miami and sophomor~ . game, third best in the
Burrell McGhee of Kent · league, and became Kent's
State. ·
· all-time Bingle season scorer
Hicl!i, of Aurora , m., led with ~ points.
the catference in ICOI'ing and
Named to the second team
rebowidlng fer th'e secOnd were seniors Chuck Goodyear
atralgllt y.,ar with averaaes of Miami, Leonard Drake of
of 2li.3 and "12.9. He was a1ao Central Michigan and Tom
llle elcJ1th leading fl~d goal Cl!tter of Western Michigan,
shooter, httilng .1104 per cent. junior Ted Williams of Toledo
Hartll,
6-4, of lorain, . and JIOPhomcre Steve Skaggs
was ~d in the catference of Ohio tlnlversity _
in scGitnl wltii an average of
Receiving
honorable
23.1. Hln'll ·,..a a secOnd , millUon were Bill Weaver of
teem d¥Jice lut year.
Eutern Mtcldpn; James
Alcb;ld8!l 1, &amp;4,, a nadve of .Collina of Kent Stale; Randy
Mlddlitowa, wu the flftll 'Ayers and Jolm llloemak.- of
leading scorer · III the ·Miami; Plui Dawilns of
conre~. with a 19.1 mark Northern Illinois· Thn Joyce
and 'Ill ' . seventh belt and Bucky walcien of Ohio
rebounder at U per pme. University; and Dave
He, too, wu a IIICOIId teem _ Speicher, Dick Miller and
pi~ lut ·
Stan Joplin of Toledo. 1
The w, 2»found Poqueue
'

aw

meet his contract demands.
At issue is the length of
Tiant's contract. He is
currently working on a
multiyear pact , which
expires at the end of this
season. Tiant, whose age is
listed as 36 but is suspected to
be closer to 40, wants a niH!ut
ex.teqsimi through 1978. For
obvious. reasons , the Red Sox

are balking.
"! wanted a three-year
contract ; then I carne down
to two and now they are still
monkeying around like (I
was\ a kid, " said Tia nt, a
Cuban native . "I'm disgust ed
and coming home.
"I just talked this morning

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

Titans edged out of NIT

:I Pro lI
IC
d"
I
1.:"tan mgs 1

By KEN ROSENBERG
UPI Sports Writer
Oral Roberts University
could
have used a few more
N BA Standings
By United Pren International
things
than the record 65
Eastern Conference
points
it
got from Anthony
Atlantic Div ision
W. L Pet. G B Roberts in an opening-round
Philadelphia 38 26 .594
Invitation
Boston
33 32 .508 511• National
NY Knicks
29 36 .446 9V• Tournament game WednesBuffalo
25 41 .379 14
day night : like another
NY Nets
20 45 .308 181Ji
technical foul on Oregon
"
Central Di vision
w. L.. Pet . GB Coach Dick Harter , or
washington
39 26 .600
1h perhaps even another prayer
Houston
38 26 .594
- San Antonio
37 28 .569 2
or two from its evangelist
1
33 29 ' .532 4 h
27 39 .409 121/z

Cleveland
Atlanta

New Orleans

26 39 .400 13
Conlerence
Midwest Di visio n
W. L. Pet. GB
Denver
42 23 .646
Detroit'
39 28 .58'2 .4
Kansas City
33 31 .516 8 117
Chicago
31 34 .477 11
Indiana
30 35 .462 12
Milwaukee
22 47 .319 '22
Pacific Division
W. L. Pel. GB
Lo~ A{lgeles
40 24 .625
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Por tland
39 27 .591 2 ·
~
Morning Glories
Golden State 38 29 .567 31h
March 1. 1977
Seattle
J J 34 .493 81!2
Standings
PhOen ix
26 39 .400 14111
Team
Pt s.
·. · :.- Wednesday ' s Results
NeWel l Sunoco
114
Seat tle 11 4 Boston 86
G. &amp; J. Au to Paris
90
Phila 129 Den\ler 125. 2 ots
Hous ton 105 PhOen i)( 100
Karr &amp; VanZandt
78
Milwaukee 109 Washington 107
Sears
77
Thursday ' s Games
Roach's
Gun
Shop
60
Portland at NY Kni cks
No. 1
39
Cleveland at San An tonio
High ind. game - Doris
Friday's Games
Grueser 185; Betty Whitlatch
PhOe niK at NY Nets
181.
Ch icago at Buffalo
High Ind. 3-games ~ Betty
Seattle at Philadelphia
Denver at Atlanta
Whitlatch 494 ; Orema Roach
Houston at Indiana
459.
Portland vs . Kansas Ci t y
f;iigh team game - Sears
at Omaha
83.
,. Wash ington at Los Angeles
We~tern

BOWLING

to my wife and. she feels the
same way I do. She to ld me to
come back home !Milton ,
Mass. ) and we will go back to
Mexico. That's lhe best thing
to do. I just got tired of the
whole thing."
If Tia nt doesn't come to
terms. the Red Sox will sorely

fo under.
Whateve r the Titans
needed, they didn 't get
enough of it, however , as
Greg Ballard scored 43 points
in leading Oregon to a 90-a9
victory and into next Tuesday
night's quarter-finals of ·the
NIT at Madison 'Square
Garden in New York.
Des pite constan t dou ble
and sometimes tripl eteaming, Roberts connected
on 2'i of 37 field goals and 15 of
16 free throws in breaking
George Mika n's 22-yea r
tourna ment record of 53
points . What ma de the
performance eren more
remarkable was the fact tllat
Roberts became iii at
halftime.
"I was so, intense about
winning that I got sick to my
stomach at the half," said
Roberts, the nation's second
leading scorer.
Harter, on the other hand ,
may not have been physically
sick, but something about the
officiating in the game at
Tulsa upset him enough to
allow Oral Roberts to shoot
four technical foul shots in an
11'h-minute stretch . The
technicals were followed by
two Rober,ts' fr ee throws and

be hurting fo r starti ng
pitchers. On ly Ric k Wise,
who had a solid first-half last
season then fa ded and won 14
games, ca n he counted on
every four days. Bill Lee , the
flaky south paw, is coming
hack from a shoulder injury
and Reggie Cleveland is

inconsistent.
Mea nw hil e, Ge nera l
Manager Dick O'Connell has
taken care of the Red Sox'
other problems . Lynn, Fisk
and Burleson are aU signed to
multiyear contracts ; Bill
CAmpbell, who won 17 games
and recorded 20 saves as a

reliever for lowly Minnesota
last year, was signed as a
free agent ; and power-hitting
George Scott was reacquired
from Milwaukee for Cecil
Cooper and Rick Miller.
The Red Sox stiU managed
to lose to the Deiroit Tigers,
5-4 , Wednesday, with Mickey
Stanley belting the gamewinn ing solo hom er off
Campbell.
Elsewhere around the
camps as the teams prepared
for today's fir st full
complemen t of exhibition
games :
Steve Yeager hit his third
home run in as many intrasquad games for the Los
Angeles Dodgers ... Cal£her
Jerry Grote unretired with
the New York Mets, signing a
contract for one more season
and two years as a spring
training and minor league.
instructor .. . and Cincinnati
Reds Manager Sparky
Anderson announced that
Dan Driessen, who replaces
Tony Perez at first base, will
bat sixth against right-

loss of ba il possess ion , champ, beat Georgetown .
providing Or al Robert s Virginia Tech will play the
ample opportunity to come winner of tonight's Alabamahack from a ninei&gt;oint deficit Memphis State game . .
Villanova also advanced to
and nearly win the game.
the
quarter-finals with a 71~
Oregon , 19-9, next will play
the winner of tonight's St . overtime victory over Old
Bona venture-Rutgers game. Dominion as Keith Herron
AU -America guard Oti s scored 22 points and his
Birdsong scored 30 points in brother, Larry, added 20,
helping Houston survive a including a crucial jump shot
furious Indiana State rally which broke the game's last
and 44 points by Larry Bird to tie in the closing moments.
Villanova will now play the
win a tense 83-&lt;12 victory.
Houston appeared to he winqer of tonight's Seton
coasting to an easy victory Hall -Massachusetts game handers and seventh against
with five minutes left, but its next Tuesday night.
lefties.
slowdown tactics backfired
as Bird scored eight points in
th e final minute to create a
52-,52 tie with 58 seconds left.
After
Mike
Schultz
BILl FLETCHER
converted the first half of a
one -and-one free throw
149
situation 21 seconds later,
South
Third
Street
Bird attempted a winning
Middleport
shot which bounced around
PH. 992·7155
the rim and failed to fa ll.
Houston will play Illinois
State, an earlier winner over
.'-''"'" Farm has LIFE insurance too!
Creighton , next Monday
Call me for details.':
night.
At Blacksburg, Va ., guard
Stat e Farm
Marshall Ashford scored 24
Lit e I nsuran ce Com .
points, including six in · the
pan y
Like a good neighbor,
Hom e Off ice :
final3 :20, and Ron Bell added
State Farm is there .
Bl oom ington , Ill ino is
18 as Virginia Tech , the 1973
p 7554

Hi gh team 3-ga mes

Sears

Pomeroy Bowiing Lanes
Tuesday Triplicate

NHL Staildings

March 1,1977
Team
Shamrock 1\o\otel
Royal OJ k Park

By United Press International

Campbell Conterence
Patrick Division
W L T Pfs . GF GA
Phila
41 1.!1 12 94 269 180
NV lsl andrs d l 19 9 91 238 165
.Atlanta
27 30 11 65 214 226
NY Rangers 25 30 13 63 232 253
Smythe Di'o'islon
W L T Pts . GF GA
St. Lou is
28 32 1 63 194 223
Chicago
·23 36 10 56 214 257
Mlnr1esota 19 34 15 53 205 263
Colo rado
19 37 11 49 193 245
Vancouver 20 40 a d8 la4 255

Royal Crown Cola

indlvlpual

40

~am high series - Sha mrock

Mltel 1313.
Saturday Beginners

Team
No. 2
No.5
No. 1

W L
44 4
28 20
26 22

No. d

24 24

No.6
No.3

16 32
6 40

High team series :game -

No.2 2454, 861·843 : No. 4 2418
844; No . 1 2384.

Mon treat 2 Toronto 2
Pittsburgh 3 Colorado Q
Buffalo 6 Detroit 3
Vancou\ler 5 WaShingto n 2
Thursday's Games
NY Ran ger s at Bosto n
Clell el&amp;nd at Philadelphi~
Colorado at Montreal
St. Louis at Detroit
Wa sh ington at Lo s Ange les
Chicago at vancouver
Friday's Games
(No games scheduled )

Individual series -

Saturday Beginners

Teom
No. 2
No. 1
No.4
No.5
No. 6
No.3

WHA s·tandinl!u
GF

289
293
219
230

game

- Bobby Will lans. 374 : Clift
Murry 363 137: Din o
Papadopou los 351 144; Will ie
Richards 138. - Paulette
Butcher {Coach1

By Unite_d Press International

W L
44 12
34 22
30 26
30 26
22 34
8 46

team series-game GA No.Hi1gh2531·862;
No. 2 2482·842;
243
2.:11 No. 4 1439.856.
Individuals series-gam es -

245
252
233 248
136 129

Bill Jeffers 394-142 ; Dina
Papadopoul os 148;, Sara Gaus

138 : Bobby Williams 377;
Kenny Leedy 366.- Paulette
WL T Pts. GF GA Butcher
{Coach).
40 20 6 86 262 194

Houston
Winnipeg
36 28 2 74 294 241
San Diego . 33 32 3 69 221 238

28 31 5 61 203 211
27 38 2 56 190 246

Phoen ix
25 39 3 53 230 312
x-Team disbanded
Wednesday 1s Results
Cincinnati 5 Edmonton 3
Bir i'T'Hngh8m 4 New Eng 3, ot
Calgary 4 San Diego 3
Thursday's Game
Edmonton at Indianapolis
Friday's Games
New England at Birmin gham
Calgary at Winnipeg
,. Cincinnati at Houston

SALE-.-·~

Bett y Smith ,

411 ; team high game Ruth's Beauty shop. 468:

GF GA

Wednesday's Results

Edmonton

PANELj

game - · Sonja

hi gh ser ies -

NY Rangers 6 MinneSota 4
NY Islanders 6 Atlanta 2

Calgarv

rTRUCKLOAD.M~rt

Wayland , 1110: high series Sonja Wayland. &lt;189: secon d

330 161
208 214
223 206
washin9tn 19 37 13 51 185 264
Detroit
16 42 a dO 166 2.:18
Adams Division
W L T Pts . GF GA
Buffalo
.42 20 6 90 252 1!17
Boston
40 21 7 87 258 206
Toronto
302 711 71 261237
Cle11 e1and
21 35 10 52 194 230

East
W L. T Pts.
Quebec
39 26 1 79
Cinc innat i 33 29 3 69
tndianl!lpls 29 30 7 65
New Englnd 29 35 6 64
Blrmnghm 26 38 3 55
x -M inn
19 18 5 43
west

Sid.
71
61

Shirts, Ltd.
33
Ruth's Beauty Shop
30
New York Clothing
20
High irdivldua l game Betty Smith, 182 ; second high

Wales Conference
Norris Div'lslon
W l T Pts.
Montreal
50 a 11 111
Pittst)urgh 29 2713 7'1
Lo s Angeles 27 28 13 67

1393.

R

College Basketball Res ults
By Un ited Press International
Nillional lnvitilt lon Tournam ent
(First Round)
Houston 83 Ind iana St . 82
Oregon 90 Ora l Roberts 89
Vi llanova 71 Old Dom. 68 . ot
Va . Tech BJ Georgetown 79
Sunbett conterenC:e
(Championship)
UNC -Chrltte 71 New Orleans 70
(Consolation)
Jacksonvt 102 Geor g Ia St . 72

with us!.
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GASLIGHT BRICK DESIGN••••••••••••••••••

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ALL ITEMS CASH &amp;CARRY
'

�&gt;-The Daily Sentinel, Middleoort·Pumeruy, 0 ., Thursday, March 10. 1977

4-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thunday, March 10, 1977
':~:~:::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :::::;:;:;:;;;:;:;::;;:;:::::::;:;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;: ;:;:::::;:;:,

I

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WITH THE .TORNADOES
A WINNER DOESN'T KNOW
HOW.TOLOSE

I

"
I

tourn~y
Boys
Ohio High School
Basketball

scores ,
I

COMPARES TO TV ANTENNAS COSTING 35% MORE!

Glenn 57
c..hocton 63 Maysville 61

United Press International
Wednesday's
Tournament Results
ClassAAA
At Bowling·Green

3ANTENNAS 111

Class A
At Ll ma Senior
Ridgemont 62 Marlon Local

·VHF·FM

48

At Chillicothe
Ross Southeastern 85 West
Union 67
AI Columbus
At Findlay
Col L inden 75 Col Westland 62
Riverdale 91 Arcadia 35
A!Troy
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Spr ingf ield N 63 Trotwood
Clinton Massie 91 Houston 79
Madison 56
· Fort loramie 72 Waynesville
At Delaware
63
Col Mar ion -Franklin 48
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81
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Girls
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Wednesday's
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43
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Lemon Monroe 61 .1ndian Hill
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51
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South 19
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AI Toledo Whitmer ·
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Genoa 76 E'astwood 70
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AI Mentor
Lexington 38 Norwalk 37
Euclid
52
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Edgewood 48
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Willoughby South SB Nor·
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doo ia 39
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53
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lakewood 49 Midview 32
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Brookfield
60
Cortland
West Branch 45 Youngs
Lakeview 43
Wilson 21
AI Chagrin Fa lis
Youngs MQoney 57 Howland
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36
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At Findlay
Brookside 66 Elyria Catholic
Bowl ing Green 70 Elida 48
58
Celina 49 lima Sr 27

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Columbia n S3

79

Tiffin

At. lorain Admiral King
Bay Village 65 Loar.in 64

At Cincinnati
East Cl inton 67 Madlera 63
Ci n
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Badin 68
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Buckeye 5 68 New Concord

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Dayton M ea dowdale 49
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Fairmont E 56 Dayton Wright
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�7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, March
6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, March 10, 1977

SANTA ANA, Calif. (UP()
Forner
Minnesota
University football Coach
Bernie
Bierman
was
cremated Wednesday fol lowing brief, private funeral
rites attended by his widow,
Clara, amj . one of his two
9C)IIS , James.
Bierman died Monday of a
heart attack. He would have
been 83 Friday.
Bierman's body was
cremated and the ashes were
to be returned to Minneapolis .
for burial at the. Sunset
Memorial Park .
One of (he nation's bestknown coaches, Bierman
built Minnesota into the
country's top football
powerhouse in the 1931i; and
early 194Q;.
OAKLAND (UP!) - Tbe
Oakland Raiders completed
their six-game exhibition
schedule Wednesday with the
announcement they will be
host to ,cross-bay rival, the
San Francisco 49ers, Sept. 3.
lrt addition to the 49ers, the
Super Bowl champion
Raiders will meet the
Houston Oilers on Aug. 8, the
Olicago Bears Aug. 13 ami
San Diego O!argers Aug. 'l:l
at the Oakland Coliseum.
Away games iilclude Aug.
18at Seattle and Sept. 9at Los
Angeles.

SARASOTA, F1a. (UP!) The Clli~ago White Sox
reportedly are close to
reaching
contract
agreements with Ralph Garr,
Jim Spencer and Brian

Downing.
'
' Renewal cootracis were
sent VVednesday to three
others. ·Ken Brett, whose
agent Jerry Kapstein was
&lt;lelayed ccming to Florida
d\le to illness, was renewed at
last year's salary, while
Wayne l'jordhagen and Jim
E~an received 20 per cent
cuts.

•••••••lllffll

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SET OF

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WATER GLASSES
BEDSPREADS
ASH TRAYS

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40% &amp; 50%
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OPEN: 12 to 5 p.m ..
Thursday· Friday
&amp; Saturday

Driess·en

~~

Jaworski,Young on new
teams in pro football

,(t

can hit,

run, too
TAMPA, Fla. (UP!) Danny Driessen ambles up to
the plate with all the speed of
a sleepwalker,
"But don't kid yourself.
The guy's got great speed,"
said Reds inanager Sparky
Anderson. "I'll bet that if I
matched him in a 60-yard
race with Ken Griffey, be
wouldn't lose by more than a
stride. That's why I'm
expecting him to steal 30
bases this season."
Driessen will be replacing
Tony Perez at first base and
Anderoon plans to bat him
sixth in the Reds'lineup when
the ciub's facing a
righthander.
"H we go against a lefty,"
said Anderson, "I'll drop
Danny to seventh and move
Davey Concepcion up to the
sixth spot."
Joe Morgan is predicting
that before the season is more
than a few weeks old,
Driessen will be batting sixth.
.In ·fact, Morgan thinks that
before the season ends,
Danny will be hitting even
higher than sixth.
"People have a teodency to
think that Driessen is some
rookie coming up to the ·Reds
from lhe minors with... an
impressive
set
of
credentials," said Morgan.
"But here's a guy who has
already proved he can hit .300
in the majors playing
regularly."
Morgan was referring to
the 1973 season when
Driessen, called up from tbe
Indianapolis farm club to
play third ba!!O, batted .301 in
366 at-bats.
"In a ccuple of years,
Danny inay he one of the best
hitters in the league," said
Morgan. "And, if he had had
a chance to play regularly the
past two years, I think I
would be saying he's one of
the best right ' now."
With Perez gone, the Reds
anticipate seeing a lot of
lefthanded pitching this year.
But, Anderson isn't worried,
pointing out there aren't too
many real good ones in the
league.
1
'And," said Anderson,
"most of the good ones are in
the other division."

TilE CHAMPS - Southern District, the host team, won its own Seventh Grade
invitational basketball tournament Wednesday night at Racine. Front, 1-r, are Kent WoHe,
Brian Ash Allan Pape Tom Roseberry and Joe Bob Hensley ; back row, Coach Jim
Lawrence.'Richard Wolfe, Robert Brown, C. T. Chapman, Jay Rees. Not present, Eric Hill.
Gary Sisk picture.

LOS ANGELES (UP!)
Quarterback Ron · Jaworski
and tight end Charles Young
are on new teams today
without even signing a
contract.
It all happened Wednesday
when the Los Angeles Rams
and the Philadelphia Eagles
traded first refusal rights to
the players. The Rams got
Young while the Eagles
acquired Jaworski.
What it means is the two
teams now have the trading
rights of their respective.new
players. Both Jaworslli
(Rallll! ) and Young (Eagles)
played out their options last
.season but still "belonged" to
'their teams. Now, if they are
offered contracts by other .
teams, the Rams (Young)
and Eagles (Jaworski) have
first priority to match the
offer or be compensated.
"Charles Young would give
us an added dimension as
both a wide receiver and tight
end/ ' said. Rams coach
Chuck Knox. "I coached him
in the Pro Bowl and I'm
delighted we've acquired the
rights to a player of this
quality."
Dick Vermeil was equally
happy with Jaworski, a
former Youngstown State
standout.

boasted he could betome a
star if given a chance, was
expected to sign with the
Eagles because they have put
last year's starter, Mike
Boryla, on the trading block.
If Jaworski signs and
lloryla leaves , all three
Philadelphia quarterbacks
this season will be ex-Rams,
including Roman Gabriel and
Jolm Walton.

"Having been around Ron
one full season when Vermeil
was a Ram assistant, I'm
ccnfident he has the potential
to mature into a fine NFL
quarterback."
Young, a University of
Southern California product,
was NFL rookie of the year in
·1973 when he led ail tight enda
with S5 receptions aod six
touchdowns. In 1974, he
caught 63 passes for 696 yards
and three touchdowns.
"I want to play for a wann
weather franchise," Young
said. "I'd like to play on
natural turf and I'd like to be
with a ccntlmder."
The Ramsstarted Jaworski
last season, but he was
relegated lei the No. 3 spot
behind Pat Haden and James
Harris after he got hurt. He
protested loudly and made no
secret he wanted to be
traded, playing out his option.
Jaworski was a secondround Ram draft choice in
1973 but spent that year in
ready reserve. His best year
was 1975 when he had 24
completions on 48 passes for
302 yards. He Jed the Rams to
three victories over "Green
Bay, Pittsburgh and St. Louis
after Han'ls was sidelined
with a shoulder injury.
Jaworksi, who has often

5caulJ
Marks

~o~~
SHOU

FO~

WOIIIIN

MARGUERITE

Suds signing players

CINCINNATI (UP!) - It
· wasn 't the Cincinnatl Reds,
but' a ballteam called the
Cincinnati Suds announcing
manager, coach and player
signings Wednesday.
The Cincinnati Suds?
Yes, the Cincinnati Suds, a
franchise of a new 12-team
professional slow-pitch
softball league which starts
play this year.
Suds' officials announced
· that Clyde Stafford of
suburban Ft. Thomas, Ky.,
has been hired as manager.
Stafford also will pitch for
the team, which operis its :;&amp;.
game schedule May 29 at
FINISHED SECOND - Shade School's &amp;:venth Grade finished s~ond in the Southern
Minnesota. The Suds will play
Local Seventh Grade invitational Basketball Tournament Wednesday, losing to Southern in
14 home dstes, all weekend
the finals. Front, 1-r, are Mark
fl&lt;lna ld Lee , steve Bolin, Jay Moore , Sam
doubleheaders, at Cincinnati
; back row, Coach -Jeff
Jeff :s~inner , Larry Whaley, VVayne Cremeans,
Teclmical CoJiege 's Trechter
Stadium, the former home of
. and Frank WhaleJr. - ~.;,~;.e~,~~rr ~J.!~~
the defunct Cincinnati
Comets' pro !;OCcer team.
The Suds' also announced
that Carel Cosby, a
basketball referee !or the Big
Ten , Mid-American , and
Metro 7 Conferences, will be
a coach and pitcher for the
team.
SEATILE . (UP!) - Bill
The first two players on the
O'Connor · was rehired as
20-man roster also were reSeattle University basketball
vealed - leftfielder Michael
coach WedneSday and
O'Brien, 23, of Cincinnati,
immediately made plans to
and shortstop Wilson
go recruiting in Oregon and
"Butch " Hays, 30, of
California for "some forFalmouth, Ky.
wards."
Suds' . officials announced
O'Connor completed a
ticket prices as $3 for each
three-year ccntract with a
doubleheader or $35 for a
pair of wins over the weekend
season ticket.
to give his team a 13-14 record ,
Team officials said the
for the season, 7-7 in the VVest
local 'franchise was named
Coast Athletic Conference.
the "Suds " because of
Cincinnati's reputation as a
beer and soap town. Three
breweries are located here ,
TIITRD PLACE FINISH - Eastern's Seventh Grade took third place, wiMing the
as well as soap manufacturer
conoolation game Wednesday in finals of the Southern District Seventh Grade Invitational
Procter &amp; Gamble.
Basketball Tournament at Racine. Front, 1-r, are Roger Gaul, Robby Smith, Rick Leonard,
Rodney Spurlock, Greg Cole, Todd Norton, and C. J . Morlan ; back row, Coach "Joe Mitchem, '
Ed Riffe, Charles Massar, Larry Patterson, Johnny Riebel, Mike Bissell and Brian
Connolly. - Picture by Gary Sisk.

SHOES

The Suds will be playing in
the "American Professional
Slo-Pitch League," which is
headquartered in Columbus,
Ohio.

Betty Ohlinger
Pomerpy, 0 .

WE HAVE SOMETHING FOR YOU
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COMPACT MODELS

BATAVIA, N.Y. (UP!) The BataVia City Council
asked the state Racing and
Wagering Board to allow
Ba\3via Downs to open this
year for harness racing
because of the financial
impact on the area if a license
were to be denied the track.
Batavia Downs was
scheduled to open ' for ' its
summer-fall meet June 'll,
but the Racing and Wagering
hoard indicated .earlier !his
year it may withhold the
license until two of its
stockholders divest them- ,.
selves of their interests in the ·
track. l'he two · were
convicted last year of income
tax evasion.

DON'T WAIT •••
INSURE
YOUR

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HOME
AND ITS
CONTENTS NOW!
Insure your home and belong)f19s .
with our special policy for homeowners or apartment renters. You
will be Insured for fire, theft and other
, damages to your house, your furniture and your personal property.
Don't wait until It's too late. Call t~ay.
SEE U~ ABOUT A:

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"Everything in Hardware"
110 W. Main
Pomeroy
Open Fri. TiiB- Sat. Til5

UGHTNING ROD

PO~CY

State Auto Mutua I - Western Reserve

Davis Insurance· Service
Phone 992-5120
114 Court St .
Pomeroy, Ohio

.

I

·

..

FEELING BETTER ·
COLUMBUS (UP() -Mrs.
James
Rhodes
said
Wednesday she was feeling
much better ·arter a two-week
stay in a Florida hospital.
Mrs. Rimdes slipped a disc
Jan. 10 while housecleaning
the
Rhodes'
Florida
condominium.
She said she was in no pain,
but returned to Ohio to aee
her personal physician.
Mrs. Rhodes bought three
paintings for $650 Wednesday
at the 2nd Annual Senior
Citizens Art Show and
Auction hosted by her
husband ,;

HARRISONVILLE
Initiation was exemplified for
Beverly Sue Bishop, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Doug Bishop,
worthy matron and worthy
patron, at the Tuesday night
meeting of Harrisonville
Chapter, Order of the
Eastern star.
Meeting at the Masonic
Temple, the chapter balloted
on two petitions. Following
the initiation gifts were pre·
sented to Miss Bishop and
Mrs. Kathryn Mitchell, guest
from Evangeline Chapter, by
Mrs. Frances Young.
Chapter
opened
in
ritualistic form with the
opening ode, "The Chimes ol
Time," the pledge to the flag,
and group singing of "God
Bless America."
· Guests presented were
Howard I. Shull of Athens,
junior past grand patron, He
was w~lcomed by the worthy
matron and then escorted to
the East and given the grand
honors. Also welcomed was
Mrs. Mary Shull, grand
representative to Oklahoma,
Jean Wallace and James
Wallace, worthy matron and

Party
enjoyed

-~lii'W:!&gt;l'li~\' • Underwear

Pomeroy, 0 .

Rev. and Mrs. Walter Patterson

~ pastor with dinner

patron of Athens Chapter,
and 12 past matrons and five
past patrons of Harrisonville.
Also presented were Gracie
Wilson, grand page of
Harrisonville Chapter;
Carrie Atkinson, past matron
of Athens Chapter, and Mrs.
Adrian Wilcox and Mrs.
Mitchell of Evangeline
Chapter,
Miss Ruby Diehl and Mrs.
Helen Johnson were the
sunshine pages . Roberta
Circle was announced for
April 21 at Beverly with a
potluck dinner at 6:30. Invitations to inspections were
read from New Marshfield
and Webb Chapter.
The birthdays of Norma
Will , Lois Wyant, Doug
Bishop, Pauline Atkins and
Stella Atkins were observed.
The past grand patron spoke
briefly congratulating the
new member and the chapter
officers.
To cloSf the meeting, the
group joined in singing
~~sweet Hour of Prayer."
Refreshments were served
by Larry and Judy Well,
Audria Well, Louise Well and
Donna Morris.

McClure attended the Church
Public Relations Clinic of the
Scioto Valley Baptist Assn .
held at the Emmanuel
Baptist Church, Jackson,
March I.
Theo Sommerkamp, editor
of the Ohlo Messenger, was
leader of the clinic and put
special emphasis on using a
variety of publicity in order
to get news of the local
church life out to the community.
An
informal
workshop was held with
several associational church
newsletters being analyzed.
Mrs. Clifford Coleman,
associational secretary
served coffee and donuts to
those attending.

A St. Patrick's Day party
was held Tuesday night by
the Homebuilders Class of the
Middleport Church of Christ
(or 40 patients at the Athens
Mental Health Center.
Games were played with
prizes going to the winners.
There was group singing of
hymns, and refreshments of
cupcakes, potato chips,
candy, bananas and KoolASK TOWED
Aid.
A marriage license was
Going over the party were
Mr. and Mrs. Mack Stewart, issued to James Herbert
Mrs. Flo Grueser, Mrs. Garey, 24, Pomeroy, and
Dorothy Roach, Ed Evans Sandra Kay Might, 17, Rt. I,
Middleport.
and Mrs. Nora Rice.

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and WOMEN

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Millions of Grateful Users
A strong, form -fitting. washa ble support for reducible inguinal hern ;a. Design ed to give you relief and comfort. No
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sure around lowest part of abdomen and state right side,
left side or double.

Man.thru S.t.I:OOo.m. Ia fp.m.
Sundoy 10:30ia 11:30ond Ita fp.m.
PRESCRIPTIONS
· PH.ff2-tfSiltJt
•' Frl.,.dly Service
0.,

"InN' Iii'

MEETING SET
A regular meeting of the
International Order of
Job's Daughters, Bethel 62,
will he held at 7:30 p.m.
Monday at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple.

R-efreshments were llei'Ved
An invitation from Wilkes- Searls to be hostesses. Mrs.
by
Mrs. Hackett and the coVeda
Davis
will
have
the
ville Salon 752 to lhe fourth
hostess,
Mrs. Welsh.
memori~l
service.
annual dimer on April 22 was
read . A report on the recent
!XJUvior held in Columbus was
given by Mrs. Catherine
Welsh and Mrs. Mary Martin.
They announced that the next
Pouvior has been scheduled
for April16 and 17 at the Neil
House.
During !he meeting several
fund raising projects were
carried out. Membe rs contributed to the nurses
.:holashlp fund and conventioo expenses fund. Mrs.
Ruby Mar shall , chapeau,
appointed Mrs . Lul a Hampton, Mrs. Pearl Knapp and
Mrs. Julia Hysell to the
SUITS - DRESSES - PANTS - SUITS &amp;
nominatin g com mitt ee .
Report on the purchases of
BLOUSES by
tuberculosis seals was given
and thank-you notes fr om the
• Jantzen • Coddington
Roush family and from Joni
Sellers were read.
The Salon voted to prepare
Easter baskets for Sherri
Marshall , cystic fibrosis
child, and for two asthmatic
children in the county. It
'• was also decided that an
Easter dress will be given
Sherri.
N. 2nd Ave.
The national chapeau's
Middleport, Ohio
dinner to be held April 16 at
the Mountain View Inn in
Greensburg, Pa. will be attende d · by Mrs. Eunie
Brinker, Mrs. Welsh, Mrs.
Martin and Mrs. Knapp .
The next meeting will be
held at the home of Mrs . Julia
Hysell with Mrs. Lula
Hampton and Mrs. Eileen

Spring

~~~~
BAHR CLOTHIERS

POLLY·s POINTERS

COMFORT TOP

Polly Cramer

MEN'S

YFO names
Vinegar removes old carpet odors new officers
By Pully Cramer
smelling rugs worked like a
DEAR POLLY -- We
recently mov.ed into a 2().
year-old home and have
dJscovered there is an odor
coming from one small area
of the carpet that smells like
urine ..Shampooing and room
deodorizers work only temporarily, This 'is most offe~­
sive and embarrassing when
company comes. If there is
anyihing to eliminate this
problem please let me know.
-MRS.D.G.
DEAR MRS. D.G. - You
might try three parts of
lukewarm water and one part
of white vinegar. Brush
across area with a clean
unstarched cloth, leave on
about 15 minutes and remove
with a clean damp doth.
Rinse with plain water the
same way . Of course,
anything must first be tested
to sec effect on your particular carpet. Professional
rug cleaners suggest shghtly
dampening the rug, sprinkling thickly with salt and leave
on even overnight and then
remove with the vacuum. Be
sure to clean all salt from
vacuum parts.- POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - The
Pointer about stuffing
newspapers in my musty

REG. 1279

SALE

SHORT SLEEVE

WORK SHIRTS

Officers were elected at a
charm.- PAT.
·
DEAR POLLY -- .My rreeting Tuesday night of the
Pointer is for those who make Y.F .0. at the South Bethel
their own bread and there are United Methodist Church.
Elected were Norma
many of 11&amp; doihg so. Set the
dough pan on a blanket and Hawthorne, president; Lila
CURITY
then slip an electric heating Van Meter, vice president ;
PRE-FOLD STRETCH
pad under the pan and Kathy Pullins, secreljlry; Iva
blanket. Tum on low heat'and Upton, treasurer; Ada Van
the dough is kept at an even Meter, · news reJXlr:ter: and
Martha Bailey, historian.
temperature.- MARY K.
Mrs. Pullins had the
Reg. $6.99 Dozen
DEAR POLLY - I have
dJscovered that when clean- devotions to open the meeting
ing windows , especially in and officers reports were
. SALE S399 Dozen
cold weather, windshield sol- given. A . contribution was
vent inade for cleaning car made to the Albert Roush
windows does a very good job family .
WINTUK
easily and quickly. Dampen a
cloth with the solvent. Try it!
·MARIE.
DAUGHTER BORN
DEAR POLLY - For best
RACINE
- Mr. and Mrs.
protection when frying any
Jim
Walker
of Athens, Ala.,
foods I wear cobbler's aprons
are
announcing
the birth of a
that I make myself. For easy
daughl,er,
Ramona
Lynn,
closing at the neck I sew on
weighing
7
lbs
.
3
oz.
at
Athens
small squares of Velcro instead of the customary ti.es. - Hospital on March 2.
Grandparents arc Mr . .and
HANNELORE.
DEAR POLLY - During a . Mrs. Grady Craig Jr. of
weekend when the stores Athens aod Mr. and Mrs .
were closed I needed just a Walker, Huntsville, Ala.:
little bit of white paint, not great-grandparents are Mr.
really enough to warrant buy- and Mrs. Grady Craig Sr.,
ing even a little can.l made a Athens, and Mrs . Pearl
mixture of patching plaster Norris, of Rt. 2, Racine. Mrs.
and "planted" an acceptable Walker is the former Sherry
white surface. As a touch-up · Craig, daughter of Mr. and
surface patching plaster is Mrs. Grady Craig Jr. All are
whiter than white and more former re si dents of the
lasting than paint'. That was Racine-Syracuse area .
the way I '' got plastered"
during the holidays. - r~--~-----~~~-~--HAZEL.
DEAR READERS - A
painter tells me this will really work but one would have to
be sure the spot being touched up was the same white. A
certain amount of discretion
should be used as to where
this would be workable. POLLY.
DEAR POLLY . - When
making stuffing I butter each
slice of bread (slightly) and
then break the bread into the
desired size pieces. That way
the butter is all through the
bread and the other seasonings can be added as before.

PER SET

20% . .re

~

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HOSE
. MIST DACRON

QUILT BATS

DIAPERS

8x96 ....................... 13.33
90Xl08 ...................... 13.99
FIBERGLASS ..................'1.33
MEN'S
SHORT SLEEVE

RED HEART

SPORT

YARN

SHIRTS
Reg. SS.SO

SALE

$299
OPEN FRIDAY &amp;
SATURDAY TIL

8

T~EY WANT TO S~iNE ON EASTER
iN 'PoJJ-'Parrot sl-tOES

-RACHEL.
Polly will send you one of
her "peachy" thank-you
cards, ideal for framing or
placing in your family scrapbook, if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem'in
her column. Write Polly's .
Pointers in care of this
newspaper.'

$219

KNEE HIGH

'2''

l

ARM MATTRESS AND
1-FOUNOAnON

- ~

~~~~~~Hoju~I~=.~R~.~~t,R.~-~·

'
·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:

Date selected
for banquet

Right or left Side

' •

Donations for projects
relating to children with
respi ratory diseases were
made at the Monday night
meeting of the Meigs County
Salon 710, Eight and Forty, at
the home rl Mrs. Rhoda
Hackett.
The Salon voted to send
donations to the summer
camps at hoth Toledo and
Cleveland , to the local
tuberculosis nurse, Mrs. Jan e
Brown, for her work , and to
ihe Xenia H!llle for Orphans'
~wimming pool fund. It was
reported that $HIO had been
sent to the National Jewish
Hospital in Denver, Colo. for
a plaque in memory of llrian
Marshall, a cystic fibro sis
child.
On cystic fibrosis, it was
ooted that Gab Cotter is the
mtional honorary chairman
and !hat a bike-a-thon is
being planned for Mei gs
County m May.

IIY RENE BROYLES · desserts were also served as
Rev . and Mrs. Walter was milk and coffee.
Patterson of Mason, W. Va ,
Mrs.
Patterson was
were pleasantiy surprised presented a white orchid
Sunday
when
the corsage and Rev . Patterson ,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,,,,:,:,:,:,:-:,:,:,::-::,:,:,:-:-:,:,:-:-:-:-:-:
ccngregation of the Addison received a white carnation.
Free Will Baptist Church Rev. Patterson expressed his
served them a delicious appreciation and love for the
dinner.
ccngregation for their kindMrs. Jewell Russell 'bsked ness and their dedication to
CHESTER - June 4 was
the pineapple and cherry the church . Mrs. Mickey
garnished ham with Mrs. Smith made the presentation set as the date for lhe Chester
Alumm Association. banquet
Effie Martin presenting them of the corsages.
Rev. Patterson extends an · and ~ce at. a meetmg of the
with a beautifully decorated
cake with the inscription "In invitation to the public to Alumm officers Thursday
appreciation of our beloved attend any or all services at rught at the Chester
Elementary SchOO!!. .
pastor and his good wife." the church .
Mus1c for dancmg will be
Assorted vegetables and
, provided by the Country
Bunch of Marietta. Classes to
be recognized will be 1922,
1927, 1932, 1937, 1942, 1947,
1952 and 1957.
A special table will be
provided for graduates of
over 50 years ago.

you're Crampeci,Crowcleclancl Crushed •••
You're sure to Toss, Turn ••cl Twist all night

• 'j:

uu. MAjjl

•

·
rc;;;:::::,~;;~-""1 Congregation honors

The Rev . Paul White,
pastor of the First Southern
Baptist Church, "Pomeroy,
and Mr. and Mrs. Hershel

12 mo. to size 14

Start your
garden this way •••

and

will be open only to those 21
and over. Charge wUI be $3 a
couple. Several businesses
have donated prizes for the
dance. Advance tickets can
be secured from any sorority
rrember.
For the cultural program,
Mrs. Shi'ila Reeves presented
ber father, Bill Childs who ·
talked on transcendental
meditation . He gave his
!iJIIosophy of life as "living
each day as if it were your
last."
A pizza party followed the
meeting.

Church clinic attended

New bOrn siles to 14

lnd St.

Assistance with the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
aub's tl!lethon for Easter
seals was discussed during i
;meeting of the Ohlo Eta Phi
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi .
·Sorority Iield Tuesday night
It the Meigs Inn.
The telethon wUI take place
March :II and 27 .and the role
rl.t,he sorority members will
he to answer the telephones
and take down the pledges.
The 50's party to be held on
March 26 was discussed. The
dlapter Is joining the Jaycees
lor the public dance which

J conducts initiation
That' s ~hal the little crOsses
and lines repre sen t on Bare toot Freedom shoes of all
natural le ather. No attempt
has bee n made 1o aller or
obl i tera t e thes e mark ing s
which add to th e beauty of a
t \ruly fin e p ai r ol com f or t
shoes

Salon 71 0 makes donations

Sorority to help ;.
with Easter Seals

REVIVAL PLANNED
A revival will be held at
7:30 each evening, Friday
through Sunday, at the
Middleport United Pentecostal Church with the Rev.
James Jacks, Reynoldsburg,
aa speaker. The pastor, Rev.
WilHam Knittel, Invites the·
public. Sunday morning a
special evangelistic service.
will be held at 10 a.m.

,.

Bright, shining fashion looks
your child will flip over! Shaped
to give lots of freedom, beautifully finished, expertly crafted.
Also designed for long wear,
shape-keeping .
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.

MIDDI.EPOIT, 0.

�I-The O.Uy Sentinel, Middleport·PomProy, 0., Thursday, March 10, 1977

Women plan observance
Plans for the observance of
Youth Temperance
Education Week, April 24-30,
were dlacusaed at the Mon·
day meeting of the Pomeroy
Women's Christian Tern·
perance Union held at the
home of Mrs. Elsie Roush.
Mrs. Robert Warner
reported that a film had been
provided for the schools and
that l~ets on temperance,
along with the goyerD(Ir's
proclamation and posters will
be placed In schools, chur·
ches and business places. A
discussloo was held on the
movement "Citizens for
Decency tbrough Law."
Mrs.· Allen Hampton
presided at the meeting

opening it with group singing
of "Draw Me Nearer" and
"In the Garden" and prayer
by Mrs. Joseph Cook.
A memorial service was
held for Ml,!.! Nelle Bing with
Mrs. Warner reading a story
of a nurse named Lydia
Holman. There was silent
prayer in Miss Bing's
memory. A book has been
placed in the llbrary in her
honor.
For devotions Mrs. Warner
read the 46th Psalm and then
presented a program on the
life . of Frances Willard,
organizer of the World
Christian Temperance Union,
first woman president of a
college and the only woman

More "Revirgtuated" CoQUDents

Dear Sue and Helen:

whose statue is in the
Statutory Hall in Washington,
D. C.
Cookies and tea were
served from a table centered
with white tapers and lilies of
the valley . •

AU your Ford dtlllf why his Pintos haYe· only about hall as
much trunk space as 1/W's Rabb1t.
Ask JOUI' Honda Haler why h1s liny C1v1cs have less head,
shou lder and h1p room than VW Rabbit

Atk pour Cht"

cital., why his Chevettes do not have engi.

Social
Calendar
SENIOR GYMN~S ~ Mary Blaettnar,left, and Becky Thomas are the two senior
athletes oo the Meigs High women's gymnastics team that will compete at the district level
·
Saturday in Athens. There are 12 girls on the Meigs team.

THURSDAY
MEIGS County Humane '
Society,
Thrift
Shop,
Pomeroy, 7:30 p.m. Thursdsy. Public welcome.
ROCK Springs Grange,
7:30 Thursday night at the
hall.
· PRECEPTOR Beta Beta
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, 7:30p.m. Thursday,
at the home ti Mrs. Harvey
Van Vranken.
OHIO Valley Junior .
Grange regular , meeting
Thursday at Lttart Falls
Grade School rather than
Lttart Community Building
· due to heat problems In latter
Wilding. Anyone wtth transportatioo problem call Mrs.
Florence Smith.
FRIDAY
SOUTHEASTERN Ohio
· Blark Long Assn. meeting, 2·
4 p.m. Friday at Senior
Citizens Center, Pomeroy.
~ HAPPY Harvesters Class
Trinity Church, 5:30 p.m:
Fridsy with a dinner to be
served by the hostesses
preceding the meeting. Mrs.
Archie Swartz . will give
devotions.
RETURN Jonathan Meigs
&lt;llapter, Daughters of the
American IU!voiutlon, 12 :30
p.m. Charter Day luncheon
Friday at Trinity Church.
Good Citizenship winners to
be honored.
MARY Shrine 37, Order of
the White Shrine of
Jerusalom, 8 p.m. Fridsy at
the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple. Election of ~fleers
wiD be held and all reports
are due at that Ume.

EVERYBODY
Shops the
WANT AD WAY
As a member of the House
Committee
on Appropriations
VILLAGE OF POMEROY
ORDINANCE NUMBER 477
which is now working on the
WHEREAS. the Village
Solicitor, Fred W. Crow, Fiscal Year 1978 .budget, I
having presented to the was disappointed with the
Council the request of President's revised budget
Pomeroy Cliffs, Lid., the
ourchaser of the 3.556 acres calling for additional inof ground a·t the soufhwest
creases
in
spending.
corner of Osborn Street and
President
Carter
wants to
Union Avenue. for the Village
to limit Its blanket easement spend $459.4 billion in FY
tor a storm and sanitary
sewer affecting said 3.556 1978, $19. 4 billion more than·
requested
by
former
acres; and
WHEREAS Richard C. President Ford. The Carte1·
Gl asgow , Ohio Regi ster ed
Surver.or . ha• located the budget riow contemplates a
centerline of the storm and
sa nitarv. sewer anq has $57.7 billion deficit tha t wm
prepared a lega description push the federal debt to $802
ot an approxi mately 20 fool billin in BY 1978.
wide easement strip which in ·
This higher 'Spending level
his opinion is suff ic iently
wide enough for the Village's reflects the President 's
purposes for any fufur e restoration of
certain
ma·1ntenan ce , repairs or

It's the largest supermarket in the world-the
WANT ADS! P~cked with listings in virtually
every imaginable category, chances are you'll
find exactly what you're looking for in our
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING page! Looking
. for a job? Need help around the home? In the
office? Want to buy? To sell? To Trade? To
lease? TO rent? Whatever you want. - turn to
the WANT ADS- Or run your own low-cost ad
simply by calling us at992-2156 or by filling out
the want ad order f!Jrm below and mailing it to
us today.

Ask your Toyota deeltr why his Corol las have only 8B cubic
feet of passen!Jer and trunk space compared with iNJ Rabbit's 96

Aak your YW dialer for e test drive in his spacious, yet eco·
nomical Rabbit" that runs on the
cheapest gas you can buy.

WANT AD ORDER
CLIP and MAIL This Handy Order To

\

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The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy, Ohio

Phone 992-2156

Write your complete ad
in the space below. One
word to be written in
each space leach Initial
in considered
one
word .) BE SURE TO
INCLUDE AS MUCH
OF YOUR NAME,
.ADDRESS OR PHONE
NUMBER AS IS TO
· APPEAR IN THE A.D.

The car with &amp;tithe r1ght answers.

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19 Wor•·· ' Ojlys $3.70
19 Words, I Dlys $1.99
20 Words, 6 Dlys $3.90
20 Words, 3 O.ys $2.10

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y ou are both per siste nt an d
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March 11 , 1971
Advan c ement is a s t rong
probability this comi ng y'ear .
Th ere is a top spot wallin g lor
• 'f'OU iLyo u'r e a go-getter.

(Are you a Pisces? Bernice
Osol has writte n a special AstraGraph Letrer for you. For your
copy send 50 cents and a sell·
addressed, stamped envelope to
Astra-Graph, P.O. Box 48g,
Radio City Station, New York,
N. Y. 10019. Be sure to ask for
Pisces Volume 5.) ~

WANT
ADS REACH MORE PEOPLE IN .MORE CATEGORIES.
.
WITH MORE INFORMATION THAN ANY OTHER fORM OF•
ADVERTI$1NG. WHEN YOU WANT REsULTS •••

in 18, James Earl Ray
pleaded guilty to the murder
of Dr. M.tin Lolhl!r King
and wu aentenced to 99 years
in prilon .

.'

TRY THE WANT ADSI
•

MASON FURNITURE
Herman Grate

•

..

Milson, w. Va .

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FREE

Candy's Oassic Collections

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Announcing the new

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•

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The 1977 Explorer comes 'n you&lt;
choke of pkl\ upmod els-a nd t h e ~ all look great.
Special metal lic pai nt w1lh bodyside and hood
stripes. Uniaue color-keyed tnm items including
ca rpet1ngand seat bait s. Mag·style wheel covers,
special mirrors. mold1fi QS and fro nt bumper pro"
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A brand-new reason why H&amp;R
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The new 1976 tax law is full of changes.
New credits ... new deductions ... new
rules that affect you and every taxpayer.
But Block people are ready to help save
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deduction and credit.

!

GRAND
OPENING

FFA chapter
attends contest

UTIIJTY RATES
COLUMBUS
(UP! ) - Rep .
21) Be a boo ster of your o ld
friend s today. Nothing will be Kenneth Rocco, !)..Parma,
gain ed by rattl ing skeleto ns.
proposed . legislation
forbidding
CAPRICORN {Doc. 22-Jan. 19) Wednesday
Substantial acc om plis h me nt s volume discountS for the
ar e pos sible to day provided yo u purchase
of gas and
are able lo work al one us ing electricity.
your meth.o ds.
Rocco said large users
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Fab. 19) should pay the same Oat rate
You're quite capab le today for utility service as
wi th the ~ xce ptlon of eslirnat ing
customer s ,
costs. So me of your proje cts re sidential
although he conceded it is
c aul~ run over bud get.
PISCES (Fob. 20-March 20) easier to deliver in large
Success is li kely to da y be caus e volumes than small .

•

"AMI&gt;&lt;! ptt l7 '"PU 011 Ntto ~~..,. 2 4 ill lllct e•"" (ln• r. Fi&gt;" 1 n~ll'lllto too "'1ilu11
trllll"'ot..atl AcMII """""' mey ~trY jjBpel'l(l.no 00'1 d rMitQ IIIOo'-, Ur I CO!OG•I•I)n 1nd

RIVERSIDE VOLKSWAGEN

BOYS' • MEN'S
&amp;
LADIES'

r

;
•

tournaments is carried on a ,harness racing documentary voluntary agency providing
•
on the Hambletonian Trotter, direct rehabilitation services
statewide radio network.
"
to
handicapped
persons.of
all
A native of Mansfield, he "B. F. Coaitown."
The Easter Seal Society is ages. Last year, the Easter
began his broadcasting
career lor WMAN Radio at the oldest and largest Seal Society provided serthe age of 14 . A(ter a tour in
the Marine Corps with Armed
Forces Radio, he attended
Ohio University majoring in
radio. He wa.s sports director
for the university station.
WOUl , and sports announcer
FRIDAY &amp;
for WRFD radio In Worth·
ington before joining WLWC·
SATURDAY
TV in 1953.
Crum's interest in the
MARCH
handicapped dates back
many years ago; when he was
11th &amp;
inspired by the courage of a
young polio victim at
Children's Hospital.
In 1965, he personall y
in itiated the nonprofit
"Recreation Unlimited" fund
at l'V-4 , which has raised
more than $235,000 in )2 years
to send handicapped children
to summer camp.
Crum Is former cha innan ~
Franklin County Society for
Crippled Children, and past
stale chairman, Ohio Society
... Getting up
for the Prevention of Blinde&lt;tra early to take
ness. He is a member of the
her to our
exclusive Headhunters Club,
Ohio University Alumni Club,
Grand Openmg
To Be
hoard of trustees of United
of
1ugeis
Furnltures
Cerebral Palsy Foundation of
Given
Columbus and Franklin
NEW ADDITION
County: and board of
directors, Ohio Athletic Assn.
Awal
Candy's
for the Mentally Retarded.
Crum is a board member of
Classic
lOK Black Onyx
both the Franklin Coun ly and
Ohio Easter Sefl1 Sode1 y. J! r,
Ring
helped
organ ize
' he
Come In and Register
Colum bus-Dayton locul nf
No
Purchase Necessary
American Federation of TV
and Radio Artists and is a
•'
The Eastern Chapter of the member and past presid enl
Future Farmers of America . of the Ohio Sportscasters
OUHS AS A &lt;;JFT
attended a parliamentary Assn. Last year, he was
procedure contest recently at arpoi nted by G1
the Buckeye Hills Career James A. Rhodes to the '" ''
Center. In the contest the State Occupational Therapy
team won a bronze award. Board.
"
Taking part were Ed
Recognized as
leading
Holter, Blair Windon, Debb~e Ohio sports authority, Crum
&lt;': RYS'I'ALITE
Durst, Roger Riebel, Bill was voted as "Most OutKautz , Clifford Longenette , standing' Sportscaster in
•
Te rry Lungsford , Keith Ohio" in 1970 by members of
Wolfe; Brian Windon, Ter~sa the National Sportscasters
With Tray
Benedum and Jim Jackson. and Sportswriters Assn. His
Meet ing recently with awards and tributes ar e
chapter members at Eastern many, including a ."Billboard
High School was Andy Lyles Award" for ·a . filmed
who talked about game documentary of a "big bear
management and fishing and hunt" at Kodiak lslahd in
I Oii N. Second Av e.
Middleport, 0 .
hunting law s and regulations. Alaska, and the Johr Hervey
/'&gt;
Award for Excellence in
THE NEW ADDITION TO INGELS FURNITURE
r
Reporting
for
a
3()-minute
---~w•-ESTATICIANS
COLUMBUS (UP! I - Few
people know what estatlcians
•
are , but . they will soon be ,
licensed by the state of Ohio if
legislation introduced in the
House Wednesday is passed .
Rep. Donna Pope, RParma, offered the bill
requiring separate licensing
of estaOcians - persons who
administer cosmetics, lotions
and creams for facial
beautification.
Mrs . Pope said under
current law a person who
wants to give facials without
opening a liill~ledged beauty
shop riJUst be licensed as a
cosmetologist and take 1,500
hours
of
instruction.
Estaticians will only have to
take 150 hours of training.

Television sports director
Jimmy Crum bas been
selected as Ohio Easter Seal
·c hairman for an unprecedented third year. The
selection actually was made
at the Feb. 25 board meeting
ol the Ohio (Easter Seal)
Society for Crippled Children
and Adults in Columbus.
"This is the fir.s t time a
slate chairman has 'been
asked to serve for three
years," commented Richard
E. Plum~ board president.
"We are 'delighted to have
Jimmy on our team again-he
is doing an outStanding job
for Easter Seals, and we're
looking forward to an even
better year in 1977."
The Easter Seal campaign
began In March and extends
through Easter Sunday, April
10.
Crum, sports director for
WCMH·TV in Columbus for 24
years, has appeared in
dozens gl eounties supporiing
local Easter Seal activities.
"H·e is a talented and entertaining dinner speaker and
has been a frequent guest on
local television and radio 'talk
shows during our campaign,"
Plum said.
·
A poplular emcee for
community and sporting
events, Crum is part of the
play-by-play team for the
Cincinnati Bengals Radio
Network. His coverage of
Ohi o High school ;,"skclb&lt;t ii

SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-Doc.

~~!\

Post Offke
SWEEniEART TIME
The annual sweetheart·
competition of the Meigs
Chapter, Order of DeM~Iay,
will be held at 7:30 p.m.
Saturday at the Middleport
Masonic Temple.

lo ng as you m o ve prude ntly tod ay, yau·fl have no fin anc ia l
p rob le m . Depar ting fro m t he·
norm cou ld br ing quite differe nt
results.

Passed : 3·7·77
(3) 10, ltc

TUESDAY
SALISBURY
PTO,
Tuesdsy, 7:30 p.m. at the
Salisbury
Elementary
School. Father's night will be
observed.

MEETING HELD
A covered dish lunc:1eon
111d fellowship hour was held
Tuesday at the ~nited
l'entecostsl Church by the
Ladies Auxiliary. There was
a brief business meeting
during whidl Ume the sale of
dshcloths was discussed. A
houwrares )lllrty with 21
attending followed the
meeting.

program cuts by the previous
Administration and his
suggested economic stimulus
package presently making its
way through the Congress.
What I find pariicularly
troublesome about the Ad·
ministration's fiscal policy is
that by not electing to check
spending now, it has com·
mitted th e nation to
escalating prog• ··:1. costs in
the years ahead. In Uo:ng so,
the President may have
seriously compromised his
public pledge to achieve a
balanced budget by the end of
this term.
The President is bankihg
that his budget revisions Will
replacement ; and
st
imu late
the
robust
WHEREA S, the Vil lag e'
economic surp,r needed to
Solicitor ha s ~ r eviewed tfll"
proposed Modi f ication and
generate new revenues that
Lim itation of Right of Way
can cover all future program
Easement prepared b~ the
attorney for Pomeroy Cliffs ,
costs. ln other words; what
Bernice
Bede
Osol
Lid ., and is satisfied with the
the Administration is saying
form of the sa me ; and
WH EREAS , the b~lance of ARIES (March 21-Aprtt 191 Con- is that the government must
the 3.556 acres Is to be used dition s are gen erally favo rab le borrow and spend nOw so it
for the constr uc1ion of thi rtv.
for you today , but yo u m a y
apartmen t units f ina n ced
o vertook some smal! b ut Impor- will not need to borrow at all
pursuant to a HUD approved tant fa ctor . Con sider ,H1e wh o le three years ·hence. Neither
SeCtion B Loa n and the at. pi cture.
logic nor experience can
torneys for HUD and the
l~nder ha ve requested that
sustain this fiscal argument.
TAURUS
{April
20-May
20)
ll's
the blanket storm and
The Administration makes
sanitary sewer easement be ~ to you r advant age to day to be
limiled lo a spec ifi call y c l o se- m outhed . If you h ave a fatal mistake in minimizing
someth in g g ood g oing for you.
descjibed area~
NOW, THEt&lt;EFORE, on don't annuunce it to the world. the seriou s inflati'onary
consequences that a com[\oll on- made by touis
OSborne and duly sec onded ~ GEM IN I {May 21-June 20) bined $126 billion deficit in
bv Ralph Werry BE IT Thtngs will go well today 11 you
ORDAINED that the Village don't ptacP your int erests above FY1977 and FY 1973 will have
limit its Right of Way those of the peo p le wh o helpe d ·on rea I economic growth.
E~sementdafeij Julx 10, 1969,
This $126 billion or more that
granted to the Village by yo u get to the to p .
Pomeroy Motor ComRany. of
the government will borrow
record in Deed Book Volume CANCER (June 21 -July 22) is not off irt some vacuum,
Grand phr ase s are of little va lue
240, Page 446 of the r ecords of
the Meigs County Recorder.. to you tod ay. What counts Is Deficits create inflation and
to the area described In what th ey p ay, not wh at they say. inflation raises the cost of
Exhibit A to lhe Modif ication
and Limitation of Right of I.EO (July 13-Aug. 22) Don'! government while reducing
Way Easement and that the count pen n1es with pals toda y. the revenue it would other·
"""yor and Clerk are hereby Even though they don't ante up
wise have available.
authorized and directed to
what you ex p ec t e d . b e u nexecute, for an on behalf of
the Village of Pomeroy said de rsta nd ing o r at least cern- The guH , therefore, be·
tween the government's
Modlficalion and Umilatlon pa ss ionat e.
of Right of Way Easement
revenues and expenditures
and to deliver the same to the
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sepl. 22) In
Meigs County Recorder for f ina nci al matters tod ay , yo ur becomes ever widening. And
recording .
if the President is indeed
This Ordinance shall take jud gment is likely to excel th at of
effect fr om and after the your mate . Try to ma ke her un- serious about a balanced
earliest period allowed by d e rsta nd you 're c ons1der ing budget, his action this year
law .
everyo ne's good.
·merely postpones and makes
Clarence Andr ews
Mayor LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0ct. 23) l!'s vir- even more difficult the
tu ally 1mpossible for o ne to gain
Ra lph H. Werrx the approbation of all. What you inevitable day of reckoning
President of Counctl
nee d to k now tod ay is that you when he will be forced to
Attest:
advoca te massive spending
C AN w inl
Jane Walton
Clerk
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-~ov . 22) As cut.&lt; in order to achieve it.

ASTRO•GRAPH
.

neering features like f ront whe el dnve, fuel inteCtiOO and four
wheel independent suspension. while VW Rabbit has all these
and more

Crum chairs Easter Seal campaign

The Largest Supermarket in the World ...

About two lliooths ago, I took a detailed survey of our high
. school on !lie topic of sex. The letter from your "Revirginated"
reader prompted me to send you the results. I don't gL!&amp;fantee
the survey's validity, but I believe it is fairly accurate, and,
even If not, makes Interesting reading.
eM' school is oomposed of 53 per cent virgins, with 36 per
.cent of males and 62 per cent of females being virgins. (Two
per cent didn't say.)
Of the noovirgin females, 18 per cent lost their virginity at
age 13or younger; 37percentat age 14or 15; 37per cent at age
16; and six per cent at age 17 plus (It must be taken Into
coos!deration that few high school students are over age 17).
Of the nonvlrgin males, seven per cent lost their virginity
under age 13; 21percentat age 11; 14per cent at age 14; 21 per
cent at age 15; 26 percent at age 16; and seven per cent at age
17'plus.
The ages of the noovirgin girls' first partners varied as
follows: 12 per cent umer 15; 25 per cent, 15 to 16; 25 per cent
were 17; .25 per cent were 18; sa per cent were 19; and six per
cent, :. plus.
A very small percentage of the noovlrgin populatioo
regretted their first sexual act. Of the few regrets, most were
that they were too young or they didn't really like the partner.
Twenty per cent of the nonvirglns reported they were coaxed
Into sex by lbeir partners, and 73 per cent are still friends with
their first partners.
Of the noovlrgin males, 36 per cent have had one partner ;
SOper cent, two to 10 dlfterent partners; and 14 per cent have
~lad over 10 partners.
Of the girls, 38 percent have had ooe partner; 19 per cent
two partners; 31percentthreepartners; six per cent have had
between folD' and siJ: partners; and siJ: per cent have had over
siJ: different mates.
Thirteen ·per cent of nonvirgins, both males and female,
believed they l!'Ould marry their first partner; 13 per cent had
sex because they felt their partners would like tl)em better,
and 43 per cent used some form of birth control ( 93 per cent of
SA'I\JRDAY
these co~les used coodoms) .
RIO GRANDE Baptist
Half of the studenta Interviewed can discuss seJ: openly Assn. meeting, 10 a.m. to 4
with their parents, and 96 per cent can discuss sex openly with p.m. SatUrday at Racine
friends. Oral sex ~bs 18 per ttnt of the Interviewees; and First Baptist Church with
63 per cent would coosider abortion for themselves or their Rev. Conrad Lowe, senior
partners If pregriancy should occur.
minister of Norih Parkers·
· Some 59 per cent of survey participants said when they see burg Baptist Church,
a stranger, they notice the face first; 20 per cent noticed Parkersburg , W. Va.,
general appearance, and three per cent noticed neatness first. ,.,.aking on "The Growing
Thirteen per cent admitted they were inhibited, talking to me. Church"; covered dish
- MALE RESEARCHER IN CALIFORNIA
llllcheon at noon .
HEART Fund volunteers
Dear Researcher:
will
be canvassing Pomeroy
Thank you for an interesting report. Back in early 1974 we
Slturday.
did an extenaive teen survey which revealed that (three years
ROBERT Thorn, evangelist
ago) teen virginity in CaUfornla stood at 56 per cent while
will
be at Chester Church of
natloowide, figures roee to 65per cent. But less than :.I per cent
of boys and girls considered premarital ¥X "always wrong." God Saturday at 7 p.m. and
Qmparlng your results to ours, we note CaUfornla young Sundsy at 11 a.m. and 7:30
people haven't ch8nged very much between 1974 and 1977 (only p.m. The Rev. Mike Sothard,
three per cent), But we suspect the rest of the country has pastor, invites the public to
attend. •
· caught up with them. - HELEN
+++
RACINE BASEBALL Assn.
A WORD FROM SUE: I'm sorry yoiD' good survey didn't signup dsy , Saturday, 9 a.m.
add one further question: To the 53 per cent of sel1181ly active to 12 noon at the kindergarten
high school students who do not use some form of birth conirol, building for pony, little, pee
we'dutinfoot-blgbletters: WHY???
wee leagues and T·bail.
The answer iBn 'I ignorance - not In th1s enlil!htened time. Junior· and senior girls, if
But various Inadequate excuses add up to the sad fact that over enough register. Signup fee,
two-thirds of a million unmarried U. S. teenagers become $5.
p-egnant each year. And more than 30,000 of them are under
SUNDAY
15!
REV. AND MRS. Steve
Hight; missionaries in
Guatemala will be in charge
of services at the Pomeroy
Wesleyan Holiness Church,
located on SR 143, Sunday at
7:30 p.m. The Rev. Dewey
King, pastor, invites the
public.

vices to a total of 27,486
handicapped children and
adults In Ohio. The nonprofit
organization was founded in
Elyria, Ohio In 1919. It has 77
affiliates in Ohio, and is part
of a nationwide federation of
52 state and territorial
societies.

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
.
.

618 EAST MAIN
,Open 9 a.m. · 6 p.m. Weekdays, 9.5 S•t.
Phone 992·3195
NO APPOINTMENT N E.CESSARY

:.•
'

. work savers
Just abou t eve rybody wants these
in his picku p. Get them in a Ford Explorer and
your di scount grow s to

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

Add power steering a nd
Cruise.O·Matic .. . $150 off*

•

better
ldel

·All price reduc tions are based on suggested
retail prices for se p1.rate options compared to
special package prices . Truclt shown with wh ile
Sldewanst540. 70 extra)andrear bumper1S64.00
extral . See your Ford Dealer now.

.
.

1
'
,
'
I

~

Buy_ or lease now at yow
Ford Dealer Limited Edition Sale. ,:

-·

�' I

/

1G-The DaUy Sentinel, Mulrllonort-Pomerov, 0 ., Thursday, March 10, !WI

"'

Buy, Sell or.Trade Through The Sentinel Want Ads
Notices

WANT ADS

INFORMATION

DEADLINES

s PM
Da y
Publi cat ion .

Bef ore

corrK

Cancella tions.

l ions accepted f irst da v of
pub ll celion

REGULATIONS

T he Publ rsher reserve s
tht nght to ed it or r ejeet
an y ads dee m ed ob
jectl orHtl T he pub lis her
will not be r espon sib le tor
more th an one incorrect
Insert ion
RATES

For Want Ad Service

S cents per word

on e

insertion

Nhn rmum Charo e $1.00

1.4 cents per word three
consec utive inse rt rons
1 ~ cen ts per word SrK
consec ut ive lns ert rons
25 Per Cen t D l scou nt on
all ads paid In advance

CARD OF THANKS
&amp;OBITUARY
for

S2 00

SO

w o rd

mrn r m um ~

Each addit ion al word J
cen ts
BLIND ADS
Addit ional 25c Charge
per Adver ti sem ent
OFFICE HOURS
8 30 a .m to 5 00 p ~..:

D&amp;ily, 8· 30 am
noon Saturday

to 12 00

Phone today 992 -21 56

NOTICES

All Yard Sates, Rummage,
P.DLtb aJ!d Basement , etc
must -tie paid '" advance.
Get yours 1n early by
stopping by our office at
The Da l ly Sentmel , 111
Court St or w nt 1ng BoK
729 , Pomeroy , Oh 10 45769
Wi th y ou r r emittance
.

COUNTY

Auto

MEIGS

PUBLIC NOTICE

Th e tollow1nQ documents
w ere r ec ei ved or pr epared b y
The Oh io En\l l ronme n t a l
Protect 1on Agen c y dur1ng the
pr ev iou s week
Anyo n e
BQQrleved or adversely af
fec ted by 1ssua nc e, denia l,
modif1cat1on , revoca l 10n or
renewal of an y perm iH sJ.
l 1cense(s ), or vu1an ce ( s J
may r equest an adivdicat1on
hear1n g by wntten req u es t
pu rsuant to Ohio Rev1sed
Code Se ct ion 3745 07 w ith m
t h i r t y (30 ) days of tne
directors pr oposed a ct1on to
ISSu e
or
de n y
suc h
documents TM t statute does
n o t prov1 de for hearmg
requests to Th e OEPA on
a ppt 1ca t1ons c om pta 1nts,
\l er if1ed complaints, orders,
or f 1nal actmns
30
days
of
W 1th l n
pub l 1ca hon m a newspaper 1n
th e affe cted c ou nty an y
person may also ( l) submit
written com m ent relating to
a ct10n s, prop osed a cti o ns ,
com plamts , or
v er 1f 1ed
compla ints . O l r eQuest a
p u b! 1c meet 1ng regard i ng
propo sed act 1ons , and or 131
req uest notice of further
a ct 1ons on proceed1ngs
F1nal actions to Iss ue, den y ,
mod1fy, revoke or renew
perm 1ts,
11cen ses,
or
v aria nc es t h at art not
preceded by proposed act 10ns
may be appeal ed to T he
Environmental Board of
Revtew , Su ite 305 , 395 East
Broad Street , Col u mbus ,
Ohio, -432 16 All su ch fina l
act1on s are so 1denttf 1ed In
t h1s not 1ce All other req uests
for adjud1cat 10n hea n ngs ,
and other comm u n,catlons
concerning publi c hear1ngs ,
public meet1ngs , edlvd 1cat!on
heanngs , compla ints of any
k md , and regula t ions , shou ld
be addressed to The Lega l
Recor ds Sect ion , Oh10 EPA ,
P 0 Bo)( 1049 , Columbus ,
OhiO, 43216, (614 ) .466 6037
Un l ess otherw1se stated 1n
part tcular noti ces , all other
commun 1c ahons
1nc lud1ng
comments on pr oposed ac
t1ons and r equests for publi c
mee t JOgs , sho u ld be ad
dressed either to The New
Source , A i r , or NPDES
P erm 1f Re cor d s Sect10n ,
Wh iChever ts appr opr iate , a t
The Oh io EPA , P 0 80)(
1049, Col umbus, Oh io, .432 16
Issuance of cert1f 1cat10n
Oh i o Oep t of
Trans
porta tion
Chester Twp , o rllo
Wa ive r of 401 cer ti f 1C Bf1on ,
th1s act ton not pre ceded by
pr opos ed act 1on a nd 1S ap
pe alable to EBR under ORC
Sec 374 5 07
(3) 10 tt c

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
PURCHASE OF THREE

PEARL CLIFFORD JACOBS, only
child of the lote Gilbert and
Nellie Howell Jocobs, was born
De&lt;: ember 3 1890 ond passed
away February 22, 1977 01 the
St
J o se p h
H os p i tal ,
Parkersburg, West V ~rg m1 a al
the age of 86 years~ 2 mon ths
and U doy s He and T1no K
Buck were united 1n momoge
January 20, 1913 They became
the parents of two sons, Chf
ford of Pomeroy Oh1o, Paul of
South Shore, Kentucky , an d
four daughters Mrs W1lliom
(Thea) Dav is, Mrt W1lham (Bet
ty) Jacobs both of Columbus
Oh1o , Mrs James (Donna)
Gilmore , and Mrs Steve {Won·
do) Ebl1n , both of Pomeroy
Oh1o He Is surv1ved by 1b
grandchildren, 20 great grand
child ren and three great
great grandchildren H1s w1fe
Tma, and oil the ch1ldren sur
v1t He accept8$1 Chn$f as htS
So11lou r the lost week of a sue
weeks revival
under the
mini stry of the Rev. Z1chefoose
at the lau rel Chff Free
Method1sf Church He become
a member there ond for 53
years has been fa1thful 1n at
tendonce and support H1s
children, too accepted the
Chn&amp;flon fo 1th Mr Jacobs
always loved God s word ond
OS i'IIS phySICO! body became
weaker, 11 proved to be a
greater source of strength and
comfort to h1m You seldom
found him w1thout h1s 81bie 1n
h1s hands If he hod any sp,clol
'ler ses, they would probably be
Paul s words from 2nd T1moth~
4 7, 8 ~ "I ho\le fought a good
f1ght I hove hn1shed m~
course , I hove kept the fo1tM
Henceforth there 1s lo1d up for
me o crown of nghteousness
wh1ch the Lord the ngMteous
judge shall g1ve me at that
day and not lobe only, but un
to all them also that love H1s
appeonng Mr Jacobs w1l1 not
only be m1ssed by h1s own
churcM as he attended other
revtvols as well, and was
always a ready w1tness to the
goodness of God n h1s behall
He spent M1s entire l1fe 1n Me1gs
County served as Trustee of
Sol1sbury Townsh1p for a
number of years worked 1n
cool mmes his entire l1fe , and
owned and ope rated the
Jacobs' Cool Company for 18
yeors H1s lost 11me to dnve h1s
cor wa s Chnstmos he when In
keepmg with the fa mil y
custom, the fom1ly gathered at
the church lo toke Commumon
together It was M1s lost v1s1t to
the church he loved so much
H1s heoltM had begun to fo1l so
he sought help at the venous
hospitals w1tM no permanent
results . He bore h1s suftenng
pot1en tly, and only the lord w1ll
know or undersond why hs1 suf·
ferl ng was not more mtense
Mr Jocobs was o loving and
devoted husband
ta tMer ,
great ,
and
g reot -greatgrondfother , too He w1 !1 be
m1ssed by one and all who
knew h1m 1ndud~ng h1s
ne1ghbors ond fnends
11 was eorly Tuesday mormng
Though unseen from our s1ght ,
Jesus
sent
o
heo venly
m~~tssenge r,

W1tM a summons from the sk1es
Now your earthly task IS fmtshed
Vou hove been o sold1er brave
Your walk mg staff no more 1s
needed
You hove tited ond proven true
Jesus trod th1s vole of sorrow
And He conquered every foe
And ascended back to Heaven
To prepare a place for tried ond
true
In JoMn s Gospel. we are told
Here on eorth the Moster Bu1lder
Hod to work w1th wood and
stone
Unt1l th1rty yeors we ore told
The rest He spent in gothermg
1ewels
That compose the waihng bnde
Pearls lost words he spoke on
Sunday
To the one on earth he loved so
dear,
We will meet again m Heoven
If no more we meet down here "
It IS hard to part w1th loved ones,
Though the l1fe be short or long
We w1ll me&amp;t ogotn up yonder,
And we'll 101n the blood washed
Throng
Wr11ten by a fnend , Mrs Lucy
Gaul.

SCHOOL BUSES
FOR
MEIGS LOCAL BOARD

Sal!!!

Of
Motor
QUALITY

Oh
GUN SHOOT at the Roc;me Gun
Club every Sunday I pm
Assorted meats

$419l

Estate Wag on , Jocal l owner car, wh1 te r a d ial tir es, air
, ondJt tonl ng, .V ·~· automatic, po wer st eer ing and
bra kes, •radio, dark r ed fm i sh, bla ck v m y l inter ior .

1174 GMC t;, TON

tt~= ~~q::~;,_":-~

U49l

Gr een and whit e, 8 cyl inder, au tomat ic, power steering

and brakes, radio, high roof topped

LOST BROWN and wh1te female
Po.nter dog on Rt , 143 on Hor
nsonv1lle Rood Owned by R E
R1ff le 992 5072

1972MERCURY MONTEG040R.

BABYSITTER 1n Portland area for
age! 4 and 5 one rn school '/1
day, 7 o m fill 6 p m 1n your
home Ph one 843 2292 aft er

Route a,

Aerial
Commercial
Schools
Weddings

0.

Pomeroy,

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

WANTED MAN lor roafmg ond
spoutm g, some duct work
Must be able to go ahead w1th
tob It Interested wrl!e Bok
150 Pt. Pleasant W Vo 25550
G 1ve experience and expected
woge
HOME DECOR, on old estobl1 shed
party plan compan y now ex
pond1ng 10 th1 s area. Port t1me
work for full ttme pay . Call

992-593S.

OLD furmture ICe bokes bras s
beds wall telephon es and
parts or complee households
Wnte M 0 Mdler, Rt A,
-~o!"eroy , 01-uo Coli
77&amp;J

m

CASH po1d for all makes and
models of mobile homes
Phone area code 614 423 9531
TIMBER , Pomeroy Fores t Pro
ducts Top pnc e for ston d1ng
sawtimber Colt Kent Hanby

I ••6 8S70
COINS CURRENCY tokens old
pocket watches ond chou1s
s1lver and gold We need 1964
and older s1lver co1ns Buy sell ,
or trade Coli Roger Wam sley

7•7 7331
WANTED OLD p1anos . any cond1
l1on Poymg $10 and $25 each
F1rst floor onl y Exper t movmg
Fully 1nsured Co mpany W r~ te
g 1~1 ng
d~rect1on s
W1tten
P1onos Bo x 188, Sard1s, Oh1o

43946 Phone (614) 483·160S
WANTED
CHIPWOOD
Poles ,
mox1mum d lometer · 10 1nches
on lorg8st end , S8 per ton
bundles 1lobs $6 per ton
Oel1vered to Ohto Pollet Com
pony . Rt 2 Pomeroy Oh1o.
Phone 992·2689

HOUSE

OP~N

i 969 CHEVROLET 81 squame 19bb
BUICK El ectro 225 2 Rokan
1r~olb 1 k es Phone 949 2432
--~-

197 1 VW

---~-

Super Bee tle

Phone

CAMP CONLEY

STARCRAFT Soles , Rt 62 N of
Pt Pleasant MorcM 1ttM 12th
13th Open 10 6 Spec1al d1s
counts on all m1m's, tra ders
and fold-downs See the all
new economy travel STAR
LINE up to 25 per cent on Iorge
acces sones Reese h11ches on d
Omn1 auto own1ngs Reg1 h er
for free gtfts We sell ser vice
and qual1ty

3 AND 4 RM fur n1 shed and un·
furn 1shed opts Phone 992

S.34

-

1974 OLDSMOBILE Tornado fully
equ1pped Ph one992 -35 11 after
5 30 p m

1974

-

------ -VEGA HAT CHBA CK

automollc 4 ne w f1res , good
condlhon Phone 74 2 274B
~

-

- _,._,._..__

--

1973 VEGA STATION new fires,
o1r cond1t1onmg Good runnmg
ccnd1110 n
exce l l e nt ga s
mileage $1400 or best offer
Phone 742 2565

-·------ --

..

-

t

T1mbe r1ock 240 Skldder , Pet·
11bcne Super 8 Cory L1f t. tJJ
Bu sh Meto!lurg1col Ch1pper
Contact Denn1s Smurr Phone

.

-

-----

STEREO NEW AM FM stereo
rod1o comb1no t10n $129 95 or
easy term s Coll992 3965
---~

-- --

ol um1num h1 me , Hollev 4 197S HONDA CRI75
1977
speed hurst 4 11 r ear end o1r
KAWA SAK I
I 75
Pho n e
shocks mags all fa ctory $500
992·3367
See Ronn1e Hoffman at green
trader 1n Tuppers Pla1ns or co li 2 PIECE L1vmg room su1t e !;JDOd
con d1flon $75 Phone (b14)
(614)667-3901 ~-~-b67 3319 Tuppers Plam s Oh1o
1971 CHEVY three fourth ton
3 PIECE coffee table set Phone
p1ckup 350 V 8, p s p b 01r
992-2571 or C/92 7828
automa ti c
$107 5
Ph one
949 2801 or 949-2860
t937 Formal! F-20 rubber wheels
good cond1t 1on See a1 Albany
Oh1o Rt 2 157A I Gary
·.c:______________
Welch

INS1Hut710N
Ori~ ~-p~uy.r~

•r ..,...

•rwti•r

....,$18:,300 .,;·

Ph. C614) 742-2409
We Deliver

whote11er
you'll get resu lt•
fo ster w1th o Sentinel Wont Ad

Morc;h 12th of Carl Authenom
res1dence on the Portland
BosMan Rood If 11 ro1ns wdl be
1ns1de

Free Estimates ·

lnst;~llation. samples
brought to your home
with no charge.

ca rpof.Lino.-Tilt
Phont Mike Young at
992·2106 or 992-7630
2-2J.1 mo.

NlED A
wmR SOFTENER 7
Lef Pomeroy Landmark

Virgol B. Sr , Realtor
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohto 4Sf69
Phoqe 992-3325

Pomeroy Landmark

\'.~Jack W. C.rsey, Mgr.

Ail,

Phon0992·7181

Solid 9
stucco home , 3

room
bedrooms wtth closets, nice

equtpped k llc hen and
dining Full basemen! ,
good coal furnace, 2 car
garage with storage, nice
c:nrner lot on Rt 124 at

$35,0011
NEW LISTING- II room
b-tck tn Mtddleport out of

llood Has 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, nat gas furnace,
basement, front and back
plrches Over I acre &amp;f

(!l!ld· S13,0110.
. P,AGEVILLE - 7 room
to''ame home wtth 3
bedrooms , 2 balhs, front
porch , n 1ce sid1 ng

and

garden tn back S7,SOO
MIDDLEPORT 4
t.Jdrooms , 2 balhs. fr.me
house on 40x 120 corner lot.

All ultl tlles and nice view of
lhe Ohto River 512,000
1'12 ACRES - Large 4
bedroom home with

v,

bath on Rf 7 In Tuppers
Plains Good location for a
business. Onll 511,000.
LOOK HER - New 3
bedroom

br!c:k

veneer ,

dining wtlh glass doors, 2
Cllr gar age and almost one
acre of nice laying land

With the

house, 115 acres with 90
lenced. Good hunltng and
fishtng Would ltke $30,11011 '
ALL HIRED HANDS WILL
TRY TO SELL THE
PROPERTY THAT YOU
.LIST WITH US.

SEARS ROEBU CK 100 ,000 btu gos
fu rnace never used $150 Not
adoptable tor mob1le homes
Phon e 949 2348

B87·2S79
1976 M F G Gyps~ Boat, i6 ft.
w1th walk thru wmdow 1976
Chrysler 75 h.p motor 1973
Wmnebago Braze Camper, OC•
l uol m1le s, 6600
Phone

992-5176

0.

NEWLISTfNG-1'12 story
frame. 2 bedrooms. bath,
.dining R., large lot . Needs
some repair $4,100.011.
NEW LISTING - Building

~0 lo~~ng hens Phone 992-2183

and 3 lots located on corner

USED HOOVER Sweeper $27 cash

of Routes 33-7·121. Ideal for
Commerc ial Loads of
trafllc past this ground
dally.
POMEROY - 2 story

or terms Col1992-5146.
8N FORD tractor, $850 Good
shape Also 1964 Ford P1ckup

F-1011 Phone (6U)378-61S7
GR AVELY TRACTOR Model L.1
with mower cultivator, plow
ond sulky , $700. Phone

985 35'-11~------'--HOTPOINT EL EC range for further 1nforma11on caii9B5 4227

19511 MODEL FORD . llaohead
engme new va lve job 3 speed
tron5min lon $60 for both 1W6
ndmg lawn mower , used 2
month ~ elec start, 30 ' cutting
edge, cost $650 w1tl sell for
54 ~ Phone 965 ·4790
:::..~--

HAY FOR sale. Phone (611)
667 36S2

FOR SALE

'

New Co -Op water sot

tener,, model VC -SVI.

Only S27MI

One good chain Homelite
Chai11S1w . .
S1lt.OO
Sin sso oo on 1 new
Hotpomf R ,friQtrlfDr
1 Goad Und Hptpoinf1

Range

stoo:,

,.11111 I.Mmlrk

9.-!.•clc
W Ctrstv. Mtr
Ail. Pttone
t92 2111

;

frame

has

3

Excellent
condition .
S16,SOO.OO.
WE HAVE BUYEAS FOR
ACREAGE AND NEWER
HOMES. LIT US SELL

y~E~5R~0:'cLELAND
BROKER
Htnry E. Cllelaod, Jr.
Assaclatt

m-22" . m.z,..
915-4111

was lookong at 13 hogh·ca rd
poonts woth at leasLon e honor
tn each sutt
West got off to the normal
lead of hos fourlh·best club
and expert South saw that he
had exactly eoghl lop lrt cks
and no play for none unless he
could steal a dtamond so South
hopped up woth dummy's ace
of clubs and led the four of
doamonds
East who had been payong
little a(tentoon to anylhong
played low South " on the doamond trock and cashed out the
other eoght

PAilTS ·lABOR
GUARANTIED

¥AQI092
.. 9 5
AH! HERE "T&gt;IEY

I

•''

•

Both vulnerable

COMe NOW!

I

RATES
Reedsville, 0 . Ph. 378-62SO
2·2S·1 mo

cr---~-.;.:.;.,;;...::

SIDII!i-mm

AH~IE t W~I(E

_cumiUI!IIIGS

UP.,.. T'H'ERE 'S
SOMETHING

LAHH~~~~DER

COUNTRY farmland wttM seclud
ed woods, water and good ac·
cess 111 Monroe County W Va
$1 ,000 down coli (30.4) 772

3102 or (30•)772 3277
Commercial propert'( approx 11
acres , le11el land , located at
Tuppers Plc11ns on Oh1o , Route

7 Phone (61 ~ ) 667·63114
NEW 3 bedroom house bu1 h·1n
k1tchen both and 'h Phone
742 2306 or contact MilO B. Hut
ch1son, Rutland Oh1o
TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohto New
three bedroom house llv1ng
room Iorge kitchen cerom1c
both , carpeted
atlached
garage , Iorge lot $22 900

Phone (614) 667 6!104 .

I HEARD IT "fiAS YOUR.

EJIRTHDA.'f CO MING UP,
90 . . •

BRADFORD. Au•~•!on•oer.c · -'~o.~s;;;

t1c tank, 17 ocres See owner,
fourth mobllv home on left thru
Oonv1ile Ohto $18,500

AUCTION . FRIDAY.

p m Apl..

51ze 901 rar,ge , auto washe r,
fuel drum and pump plu• lots
of new and used merchundi1e
at the Aucl1on Houte, Horton
St , M01on , W Vo. Phone (30ol}

773-S.71

80fl JU ST WAAT
I NEEDED · · AND
WHAT ~ Bf/IUT'( 1

d tamonds

SEWING MACHINE Repairs ser
v1ce, o!l mokes 992 2284 The 1
Fobrtt Shop , Pomeroy
Aufhonzed Smger Soles ond
Serv1ce We sharpen Sc 1ssors
1
1
EXCAVATING dozer loader and
backhoe work. dump trucks I
and lo boys for h1re , w1ll haul :
hll d1r t to sod hmestone and 1
gravel Call Bob or Roger Jef· :
fers , doy phone m -7089 j
night phone 992-3525 or 992 1
1
5232
EXCAVATING. dozer , backhoe
and d1tcher. Charles R Hot·
he ld
Bock Hov Servtce-, . ....
Rutland Oh10 Phone 742·2008 ... 1

'r~~~
f.4

'"

ELECTRONIC T V CLINIC . New

TV shop, Electronic T.V Cllntc
Service coli , $5 95, Color , 8
antenna systems slereos, etc.•
572 South Th1rd , Mtddleport. :
Phone 992-6306 Corry 1n and •

&amp;JIJ.

6 55-Good Morning, Tr l Slafe 13
7 DO-Today 3,4,15, Good Mor ning America 6,13 , CBS
News 8: Chu ck White Reports 10.
7 O~ Porky Pig 10
7.30-Schoolles 10
a Oil-Howdy Doody 6, Cap!. Kangaroo B, 10. Sesame
Sl 33
8 30-Big Valley 6
9 011-A M 3, Phil Donahue 4, Phil Donahue 15, 13,
Andy Griffith 8, Mike Douglas 10
9 30-( ross Wits 3, Edge of Night 6, Concentration 8
10 Oil-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, IS, Dina h 6, Double Dar e
8,10, Mike Dougla s 13
10 ·30-Hollywood Squares 3,4 ,15. Pr ice Is Right 8,10.
11011-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,1S; Morning Show 13
11 30-Shool for lhe Stars 3,4, 15, Happy Days 6,13,
Love of Ltfe 8,1 0. Sesame Sl. 20,33
11 ·5&gt;--CB S News 8; Ms Flxlt 10.
12 Oil-News 3,4,6,10, Second Chance 13, Name Thaf
Tune 15. Divorce Court 8

12 30-Lovers &amp; Friends 3,15, Ryan 's Hope 6,13 , Bob
Braun 4, Sear ch for Tomorr ow 8,10

1 Oil-Gong Show 3, All My Children 6,13; News 8,
'Young &amp; lhe Reslless 10, Nol for Women Only 15
I 30-Days of Our Li ves 3,4, IS; Family Feud 6,1 3, As
The World Turns 8,10
2 D0-220,01111 Pyram td 6,13
2 30-Doctors 3,4,15, One Ltle lo Live 6,13, Guiding
Llghl 8, 10.
3 Oil-Another World 3.4.1 S. All In The Fam il y 8,10,
Crockett's VIctory Garden 20
3 ! ~General Hospital 6, 13
3 30-Match Game 8,1 0, Lili as Yoga &amp; You 20
4 011-Misfer Cartoon 3, Ltttle Rascals 4, Gong Show
IS, New Mic key Mouse Club 6, Lucy Show 8.
Sesame Sf 20,33, Movie " Kid Mill ions" 10, Dinah
13 4 l ~ LIIfle Rascals 4
4 30-My Three Sons 3, Parlridge Family 4,
Emergency0ne6. ParlrldgeFamllyB , Fll ntstones
15
5 oo-Big Valley 3, My Three Sons 4, Brady Bunch 8,
Mlsler Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Star Trek 15.
S 30-Adam 12 4, Family Affair 8, News 6, Elec Co
20,33, Adam 12 13
6 oo-News 3,4,6,8,10,13 ,15, ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33
6 30-NBC News 3,4, 15, ABC News 13 , Andy Gr ilfllh 6,
CBS New s 8,10; Vegetable Soup 20 , VIlla Alegre 33

know of hearts ever were .the
hoghesl·rankong sut t
Not at contract. but on the
ea rly da ys of audoo n the
order of rank of sut ts was
hearts, dta mond s, clubs and
spades The spade suot was
moved to the lop around 1910
and has stayed there
(For a copy of JA C O~
MODERN. sen d $1 to
a r B rt dge . · c l o
newspaper. P 0 Box
Radto Coty Statton fl ew
N Y 1001 9)

"Wtn
thiS

489.
Yorl&lt;

DOWN
I Third
Reich

chromcler
7 011-Truoh or Coons J , oo Tell fhe Truth 4, Bowl ling
for Dollars 6; S128,000 Quesllon 8. News 10, To Tell
lhe Trulh 13, My Thret Sons 1S; Ohio Journal 20:
Marshall Unlverslly Reporl 33
7 30-Porter Wagoner 3; Gong Show 4, Candid Camera

2 German coty
3 Bouncer's
bouncees
(2 wds.)
4 Pagoda

ornament
5 Money ( sll
6 Collector 's
orem
7 Italoan rover
8 Vosoon
(3 wds )
II Take
wong
12 Appetite
wheller ·

6,

Yesterday's Answer
16 Illiterate's
29 " The
sognature
Balcony"
18 S.shaped
playwnght
moldong
30 Bot of
21 Turf
work
22 Anagram
31 Olate
of meal
33 Maleficent
23 Curved
34 Renovate
24 Type of
37 Call, in
leave
poker

26 Prices
27 Balkan
country
(abbr )
28 - -Magoon
29 Neighbor of
Tl Across
32 Hit one out
of tbe pa rk
35 Villa on 's
cry
36 Cricket
ream
:rl Puccini' s

Treasure

Hunt

B; MacNeil Lehrer

Report

:Z0,33, Andy Williams 10, Name That Tune 13 ; Pop
Goes fhe Counfry 1S,
8 oo-BIIIy Graham Crusade 3,1S, Donny &amp; Marie 13,
San lord &amp; Son 4, Billy Graham Crusade 6, CodeR
8, 10; Washington Week In Review 20,33
8 30-Wall St. Week20,33; Chico&amp; theMan4 .
9 oo-Rockford Flies 3,4,15, Movie " Lei's Scare
Jessica to Dealh " 6,13, , Sonny &amp; Cher 8,10;
P~ople ' s

Go vernment
Remembers 20

33 ,

L o well

Thomas

9.30-The Way If Was 10
10 Oil-Quincy 3,4,1S, Hunter B,10, News 20, Firing
Line 33
10 3G-Lock Slock &amp; Barrel 20
11 .oo-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15, Monfy Python's Flying .
Circ us 20, Black Perspective on the News 33.
11 3G-Johnnv Carson 3,4,15, SWAT 6,1 3,
Movie
" Ben" 8, Mary Hariman 10; ABC News 33
12,01)-Movle " A Covenant with Death" 10: Janak! 33.
12 4G-Mod Squad 6, Irons ide 13
1 011-C hocago Soul 3,4,15
1 4G-News 13
1 30-News 3
3 oo-Movte " Ye llow Sky" 3
4:3G-Movle " Rascals" 3
6 oo-Salnt 3

1}1JIJM )~'\1 ) ~THAT S~H~018LEDWORO GAME
..-+-+--l~ ~ ~~~ ®
by Henr1Arnold and Bob lee
-

-f--+--1 Un$crambl e these lour Jumbles,

lo

&lt;'

one letter 10 each square, to lorm
four ordm ary words

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE -

EXCAVATING, 8ockhoas Doze~ .!
trencher low Boy dump truck ,•
truck1, sepfl c systems, 811 (
PullinS. Ptfone 99:2·2478 day on
mght
•

Here's how to work
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

---·

It:
1

tI

One teller simply stands for another In this sample A II
used for the three L's, X for the Lwo O's, etc. Single letters,.--------.
ap0$lrophes , the length and formation of the words are

SUPPLIES !'

alii. HEETES

hmts. Each day the code letters are daR'erent.

R&amp;edsv1lle , Ohlo Bee suppliell
and equipment. Phone (6141

-

ACROSS
I Occlude
5 Holy terror
9 Attendant
10 Cardinal's
symbol
(2 wds.)
13 She (Fr I
II Salad green
15 Brodge expert
Culherlson
16 SICilian City
17 One kond
of player
19 Neon or
niton
20 Actor,
- Tognazzo
Z1 Strucl(
23 Church
features
25 Thon
cracker

"-

limestone, grovel, blacktopj
povmg, Rt IA3 Phone 1 (614)'
6q&amp;·7331 '
~: :

CRYPTOQUOTES

(~SP/)A

CIIECKFOR
¢~000/

LYZEZ'X
ZBZEI

[

XSFZVSQI

QMJ J
ORR

zE
LYZ

cDE LI

J

I

DL,..-------.

K

TZRZEI

ys

j

IPANMEC I [j
.

I .

[ ]

~A It/
THE DIVt:f('.

WHAI1HE.Y
A~OUT

Now arrange the etrcled leHers lo
form the surpri se answer, as sug·
gested by the above canoon.

"

ZDLX

•

Anawerhere:"(I]'OA[
YAVVDEQ
PMJ
Yesterday' • Cryploquote: IF IT HADN'T BEEN FOR
(fulswers lomorrow)
EDISON, WE'D BE WATCHING TElEVISION BY CANJumbles BROIL TACKY COLUMN FERVID
Yesterday s
DLEUGHT. - SOURCE UNKNOWN
An swer. Less than a doMar, but olton pleases
C tt71 Kina Featuru Syndleat.e, Inc.
aguy- '"AOOLL"

r

•
"
' ,'
'

•

"'*""· ,

Please save this 'all for fulure refl"""ce. I
am always buylllfl • •Cash money plfd. C. II
me. write me Alltn P. Giller, 209 Ellsworth
Drive, Mlrietfl, Ohio 45750. Pl!one 1·373- '

...._.....;;__.,.
~

6 •~Mor n i ng Report 3
6 so-Good Morning, Wesl Virgin ia 13.

A Vtrgt ma reader wants to

rather than one

10

6 20-Not for Women Only 13
6 Jo-Columbus Today 4, News 6; Sun r ise Sem ester 8;
Oer seas M tsslon 10

~Q~~

Angelica " •
38 Mock
39 To he
(Fr.)
40 Aperture
4) Scrutmized

;::;•:;:a::'eO;;m
~on::eO!y::C:-::-:-:::::-:--:-::

_____

FRIDAY, MARCH 11, 1977

by THOMAS JOSEPH

'

378-63S7.

T

Pa ss

News 13

6 . ~Sunrlse Sem ester
6 ! ~F a rm Report 13

6&amp;tUt1·~-

3875

BEES

I"
IN

ott. ADOLLY! notrump You do n't b1d
A REAL
DOLLY' WITH notrump when you have a
A 1RU~k 0' " orthless doubleton on an un
CLOTHES Ali' btd smt 1f you can find any
EVER ' TH1t4G -·
other bod South had a perfect·
~-_./ ly good two-doamond call
Stoll he had a reason for bod·
- - dong notrump He was an ex·
cell ent dummy player and

REMODELING. Plumbing heotmg
ond oil types of general repo~r 1
Work guaranteed 20 years e:w: · ''
penance Phone 992-2409

I will buy Items made befc... 19&lt;10· Old Iron or tin
banks, Old fin or Iron loys, old large swirl and sulphide
and comic strip marbles. old tin peanut buller and
candy polls with pictures, old lin falcum powder cans
wllh pictures. old tin iobllcco store confalntrs and
smell tobacco I ins (no Prl~c:e Albert, Velvet,
EdGeworth, or Ralelahl. old tin coffee e11n1 wllh
plcluros, old tin edvtrilalng signs, llhl tin adyorllslng
frays, old lin edvilrtlslng match holdlrt, old cardboard
a&lt; peper advtrliaing signs, &lt;tid c:altnllars llkt Coca •
Cola, Pepsi, Hires and All Ammunition. old' wood and
tin dye cablnefs, old tin attvtrtlsing ovorhaad string
holders, old wood end lin advtrtlslng medicine
cabinets, old glass P1111t.rs Poonut Iars (no creeks).
old wooden cigar store Indians end caroustl haful, old
slot mechi- small end large, old br&lt;llf Clllh
roglsltrs, old Civil War Items, old 1111"'111 Jilin
windoWS, old attlntd gtaslemps, old G41rmanll!'
Dutch primitives ond folk art Items, oill wood
coverlals, old br1111 bids, groy sfonowitr.o Pllchtrs .
blut decoration.

..,373.

A MUFFLER 1 OH

REPAIR

WANTED FOR CASH

..._...

FOR r.JE? WHY,

AHIIIE ~ THANK
YOU ·· THIS IS

Sweepers toaste rs ~ram; , o"tl
.,. , '"'"
small oppl1on ces Lawn mower , -~
ne xl to State H1ghwoy Goro~--~
on Route 7 Phone (6t4) 985-

JACK'S

Pass
3NT Pass
t•

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Tcxlay's hand shows two ex·
cusable errors in th e biddong
and one almost onexcusable
error on the play that made up
for them
South 's one-heart openong
and N orth ' s one·spad e
response were both correct,
but South should rebod two

plet e Serv1ce Phone
or 949-2000 Rocme Oh1o
Bradford

I; :

ocrelond Phone 742 -2769

CHRISTMAS

A 5URP~1'5E -

OOW~STAIRS
FO~ YOU-

39 ACRE Form, 20 acres , hllable , SEPTIC Systems msto!led by~ t•
s1x room house , botM furnace
l1censed mstoller
Shepo~d /
born shed, corncrtb, cellar
Contractors . Phone 742-2409.
house basement loyed up for
another house Also 12 • 60 SEPTIC TANKS cleaned. Modern
n1ce mobile home Included It
Santtahon 992·3954 ,
not sold previously Pnced and WILL do roofing, construction,
shown by appo1ntment Call
plumbing ond heotmg No ~~
(614)667·3666.
tod Iorge or too small Phone
72 ACRES, portly fenced , 8 room
7•2-23.48
remodeled Mouse, full bose
CARPENTER. llooring cetlin~'
ment , fuel o1l, forced olr heat
panelmg Phone m -2759
ut1ltty room . carport and
storage room Phone 742·2819 MOBILE Home Repair, Elec. , ....,
plumbing anti heat ing Phone '
$35 .000.
-.992·5858
II'

REMODELED S ROOMS ond balh. I

Pass
Pass

Opemng lead - 6 ..

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-MERRY

{1107 or (304)772 3727

North East

Pass

ALUMIIIUII

SMALL farm for sole , 10% down ,
owner fmonced Monroe Coun·
ty W Vo Phone (JOA) 772-

South

West

I

utrrLE ORPHAN ANNIE

7481

K4

+K Q 10 6

large

furnace ,
garage.

rebtd one notrump and North

t A9 2
•Q!Ol

t1&gt;

IEI'IACEMEIIT
WI-

room, fireplace, basement,

oven
NeW
bastment ,

"6 53

+ 75 3

10

SOUTH iDI

~

l oo-To mor row 3,4,

EAST
.Q 872

• KJ66 43

REASONABLE

10 30-The Maze . The Sfory of Will iam Kurelek 33:
Woman 20.
II 011-News 3,1,6,8,10113,1l , Mac Neil Lehrer Reporl
33
11 3D-Johnny Carson 3,4,15, Geraldo Rivera 6,13,
Ko jak 8, Mar y Harima n 10, ABC News 33.
12·DO-Movle " Com e Blow Your Horn" 10, Janaki 33
17 10-Movle " The Looki ng Gl ass War" a

WEST
6 J5
. 84

I

ELWOOD

Lawrence &amp; Eydie Germe 6.13,
Honeym ooner s' Trip to Eur ope 10; N ew s 20

wan ted to be the declarer tf
anyone played notrump
North should have goven a
JUmp bod of three hearts on
spo te of Sou th 's not rump
re bod But North knew that h1 s
partner loked to play notr ump,
had opened the btddong and

NORTH
6 A I0 963
• KJ 7
tJ84
. A2

AuTOmatic
Tr·anlsmisslomn Service

SlOIIM

NEW 3 bedroom house 2 baths,
all el ec I acre Mtddlepor1 ,
dose to Rutland Phone 992

1n oo-S teve

Bad bids balance bad play

SWAIN'S

bedrooms, bath, dining
NG Ileal. Porches overlook
the river (beautiful view) .
$12,SOO.OII
RUTLAND -. ~.acres with
older home. 3 ·tiolilrooms,
bath, NG heal. alum .
siding, porc~es, trailer
hookup. SIS,SOO.OO
MIDDLEPORT - Brick &amp;
Frame 2 bedrooms, bath,
din lng room. enclosed
porch, block garage, vary
nice level lot. House needa
some repair. 11.900.00.
MINERSVILLE - '1 floor
plan, 2 bedrooms. bath,
lovely k ltcllen, range &amp;

OF YOUR AD V E~ T­

URE5·· ER. FOI'!:
TH E: TWINS' SAKE""
e.E:FORE YOU :OPLIT

Classic Theatr e 20,

Masterpiece Theatre 33.
8 30-What's Happening!! 13
9 01)-Besl Sellers 3,, ,1S, Barney Miller 6, 13, Movie" A
Ci rcle of Children " 8, Ten Who Oared 10, Classic
Theatre 33
9 30-Tony Randall 6,13.

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

UP FOil. KEEP$l

Phone (614) 696·5607 o&lt; (30&lt;) HOWERY AND MARTIN l::x :
773-5759
cavatlng
sept1c systems ,t
dozer, backhoe, dump truck ,'
6 ROOMS. BATH . deep well . oep·
POMEROY,

1' HI G~

,.,_,_

HOUSE wtth 5 lot5, bath and 1.4
with 4 bedrooms, double
goroge outbu1ld1ng and cellor

MAIN

ARRAN SliD

5 AWE D OFF -

Fioott&lt;lollllillbtl

81 -IEVEL HOME near Me1gs H1gh
School Phonem-74 14.

TRUCK TOPPER, 8 ft on e wh1te
canape bedroom su1te 197 1
Ford lonna
one small
refr1ge rator
Phone (304 )

SU CH AN ORNER~

Blowo iollllols Utt&lt;S

·-;-'-'- c~---~,-

;.,ye\1, all minerals , barn , old

water

TALK TO ME
1\eCUT, WASH

lnsulllian Senices

Ca11992-74BI

FINE HOME -

WAITl PLE~ S E~ ... •· :00 L COULD &lt;SJ;T
THE FULL 5T012.Y
ACT UALL 'Y I

WHO'D

WANT TO SEF:

BlOWn

HOMESITES lor sale, l acre and
up M 1ddleport , near Rut land

softener, Model UC-XVI.
Now Only •279.95
vour

GNATS~.

T£AFORD

REDUCED
FREE GAS -

test

oR' WHAT'D
~OU WANT TO

,h.M!-lttl

soften &amp; condition your
water and a Co-op water

Let us
Free.

•

~

==-

~---

FABRIC SALE One week only
---~
1973 P~YMOU T H DUSTER . 3.40.
Monday, March 7th thru Sotur
cutomatJC ps p b toke over
day March 12th Ali our usual
poyments Phone 992 6038
good quol 11y motenol $2 98 per
yord ond under
Noth1ng
1975 PONTIAC ASTRE 2 dr hoth1gher Hours 9 00 A M ro
t hbock new fires l1ke new
7 00 P M Monday thru Fnday
Conl act 98~~2-c90
.;c._-'c--'Closed Saturdays excep t for
197 3 NOVA SS. 350 outomot1 c
sole weeks Co roll no Fobncs on
lew m1 les, good shape Phone
Route 7 one -holt mile nor th of
843 273.4 ~el.2_ p m
Chester Ohto Henry ond Mary
Hunter owners.
1969 FORO FA IR LANE. 351

AKC REGISTERED Pek1nge se Pup
p1es ready to go Phone 1 (304 )

Ohio 45775-

Route 3, Pamoray, 0 .
.

Cr usad e 6, Walto ns 8,10i

BRIDGE

CAPTAIN EASY

(6141 91S-41S!

(614/ 836 534S

FRIGIDAIRE 40 mch Elec stove
used 3 year s L1ke new , $150
Gordon Caldwell , Tupper s
__PI~~s Pho~~ (61 ~ b67 3935 _

~

Local Bowling

USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT (I)

1974 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS S
36 000 m1les good condlflon
Tun e up ed
$32 00
Call
992 5852 onyllme

2 BEDROOM TRAILER , Browns
Tro1ler Pork Phone 992-3324

m

BTU Like new . Phone 992 2805

SEAR s 8 H P garden tractor w1th
mower $450 16 gouge 87 0
shotgun $ 100 Pho ne 992-2369

----

Rutl~tnd,

6 30-NilC News 3,4, 15, ABC News 13, Andy Grlflllh 6,
CBS News a,10, Once Upon a Classic 20,33
7 011-Trulh or Cons 3. To Tell I he Tr uth I ; Bow li ng for
Dollars 6, Muppet Show a, News 10; To Tell the
Trul h 13; My Thret Sons 15, Al manac :zo,

Chesler, Ohio
10.17·1 mo(Pd)

Call 997 7156
HIGHEST BIDDER
- . ---- ···_'----~- 4 FAMILY YARD Sale Solurday
WARM MORNING Gas 65 000

1974 MALIBU CLASSIC, Landau
roof tnp le bloc;k 2 door , V 8
3,50, oulomot1c P s , P B , Am
~ nd to~e ~~992 5b37

~ 7M=3'-----------­

2288 or 992-2348 al tvr 5

LATER THAN 7 PM APIHL 5
1977 TERM S·· CASH FROM THE

1969 Ford LTO mo lar $200 00,
1%3 Chevrolet Moior $75 00
949 ~ 16 2

1965 F6Ro MU StANG ' 289 enliJme
aulomall c; , good 1ntenor body
rough good work cor $200
Phone 99 2 6281 or 992 56b3

Located in Langsville
Box 28-A

12 224mo s
SLAPE AND A 1965 DODGE 4
OR FORMER POLICE CRUISER
BOTH ITEMS CAN 8E SEEN AT
~UT LAND
OHIO CONTACT
BRUCE DAVI S OR CALL
747 1143 VERNON WEBER
CLERK TREASURER RUTLAND IF YOU have a serv1ce to offer
wo nt to buy or sell something,
VILLAGE BIDS MUSTBE SEALED
ae lookmg tor work , , Of
AND IN THE CLERKS HANDS NO

ty Coli 992 -S709_.,. -

COUNTRY Mobile Home Park Rt POODLE GROOMING reasonable
33 ten miles north of Pomeroy " ~r~te~ Col! for dppt 742 ·3162
Lorge loh w1th concrete pa11os.
s1dewolks rvnners ond off
___!tr~!!_porkmg Phone 997.·7479

m

APR IL 5 1977 of 7 PM FOR A
USED JOHN DEERE DOZER WI TH

843 7613

WANTED TO rent wrth poss1ble
option to buy 50 to 200 acres
seduded land, some t1tlable
w1th 1nhob1table house Colum· RISING STAR Kennel Boordmg
Indoor-Outdoor runs groom mg
bto , Sc1pto Bedford or Rutland
ell bre eds, clean scmlary
Townships
Wr 1te
Tony
fccrl1tles Cheshire Phone (bl4)
Rus sega 1331 Meadow Rood
Columbus . Oh1o 43212
~7 0~29~7~~~-~--~
HOOF HOLLOW Buy sell, lrode
or tram hors"is. RUTH REEVES
I rome ~ Phone (61.4) 698·3'290

-

FOR SALE TO THE HIGHEST SID
DER SEALED BIDS WILL BE
RECEIVED ANYTIME UNITIL

1976 ( AMARO 305 2 borrell
automatic sliver w1th red
p1nstnpmg Still under w arron

MiHbitbiiiut

Southeastern Ohio
Tns Rafter Co.

~j~V.#;~--~~_..:..:;_ '-"!- F~&lt;g

ABOUT

PHOTOGIIAPHY·

"The Originators
Imitators"
2·23·1 mo.

-HOUSEiBAI»i"'
TRUSSES
ANY PIXH
ANY SIZE

Co. 20,33 .

6 011-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15, ABC News 6,Zoom 20,33

Price is Righl a, Mac Neil Lehrer Reporl 20,33,
Wild Kingdom 10; Nashvi lle on lhe Road 13; Dolly
IS

........

KEN GROVER

8.01)-BII Iy Graham 3, IS, Welcome Back, Koller 13,
Perspective. The Agi ng Ma jority 4, Billy Graham

A mericana 33
7 3D-Hollywood Squares 3,1 ; Ohio Sfafe L,ollery 6:

Service

1~ Young's Carpeting

S 30p m

m

167.

and

PHOTOGRAPHY

Young's Carpeting

THURSDAY . MARCH 10, 1977
5 30-Adam-124,13: News 6; Family Affair 8: Elec.

EXHRIINCID
Radiator,.......-.,

PROFESSfONAL

Not 1be

OF EDUCATION
RACINE FIRE Dept w1ll hove a J~
r _,../II#J JM4 111111:... ~ fWIIIIIIfl
Seated proposals wil l be
Gun Shoot every Saturday night 2 BEDROOM Fur opt Phon e
r ece ived by the Board of
6 p m at their bu dding m
22B8 or 992 2348 after 5
Educat 1on of the Me igs L oc a l
Boshon , Oh1o
pm
School D1Sfr 1ct of Middlepor t
Oh 10 at the ClerK's off 1ce unt i l SKATE A WAY
ANNOUNCES FURNISHED APT lor rent for
Ill fiiiiiHri by Ill~ US /Np4 o4 lQb.w
7 30 o' clock PM on M ar ch 2l ,
Schedule Open Weds , Fnday
elderly couple Phon• 992 -2571
6111'n11 rJ/L.bun/IIIIJ/tu 6111"1111 6 /l }j
1977 an d at that lime opened
ond Saturday mghts 7 30 p m
or 992-3975
by th e Clerk of sa1d board a s
fill 10 p m Avo1lable for
~
provided by taw for thr ee (3 )
NO FUTURE/IN A$$ RUT?
pr1vote parties, Monday, Tues , 3 room and both furn1shed aport
66 passe nger sc hool buse s,
and Thursdoy n1ghts, ond1Sotur • 1 men! ufll111es po1d 356 North
accord tng to spe c1 f1 caflons , of
day and Sunday afternoons
4th St , M1ddleport . Ohto
sai d Board of Edu cat 1on .
Se paret e and mdependent
Phone 9B5-3929 or 985·9996
2 TRAILER LOTS . If 1nterested, col!
,b1ds will be received wnh
m .s.JJ
, res pect to th e ch aSS IS ~ nd NEW CARTOON Glau Ser1e1 49c
, bod y ty pe and w ill sta te that
w1th 16 ot Peps1 DAIRY ISLE , ONE BEDROOM furmshed opt
' the bus when ass em bl ed and
Middleport
Colt 992 .3129 or 992 5.-434
pnor to delivery comply w 1th
sc hoo l
d 1s tr1 c t SHOOTING MATCH
a ll
Rutland
sp ec tf 1ca t1 on s. all saf et y
Legion Hall every Sunday, 12
r egula tions lind curr ent Oh1o
Consider a Prof....,...l Career
noon
M tn 1m u m
Standar ds
for
llrMng
o "BIG RIG". We "'• a
Sc hool Bus Constr u ction of th e
2 BEDROOM 8 :oo: 4B portly fu rn1s h·
Pnvate
'rrawung
School oHerD epartment of E d u ca t 1on
ed Phone (304 )862·3346
"'9 a PART Tme a&lt; fULL Time
adopted by and wit h the
: consent of the D 1rector of
GOOD 2 b-;d,,; -ho~;; ~r~1ler,
Trawung Program If you are
H 1gh way Saf ety pu r suant to
10x40 $2200 Phone 742 3108.
warting, Don't Oun: lour Job
Pomeroy
Bowling
Lants
sec t1on 4511 76 of th e Rev 1sed
Mondly Nltt Mixed
attend our Weekend T ratnlnfi
1 Code and al l oth er pert 1nen t
1 prO\I ISton of law
Mlrch 7, 1977
P'QIII"IIW Of lttond pur 3 Weet
Spec 1fica t1 on s
~n d
1n
Stondlngs
FUlL Time -~ Training.
st r uctlons to b1dder s may be Team
W. L.
Nt'tt .. 11\1tltot'f1tliltr l"'IIWft l•u
Will do odd 10bs, rooflf'!g, pain·
obta1ned at t he off1 ce of t he Marcum's
50 14
Clerk , M idd lepor t , Oh1 0
ling,
gutter
work
.
Phone
992·
Team No.2
~2 22
PARKERSBURG
A cert ified check payab le to
1&lt;0'1
34
- the cler k tr eas urer of t h e Roach's Gun Shop
422 - lt080
28 36 SEWING ALTERAT IONS
abo ve board of educ alton or a Merry Go Round
21 AO
saflsfactory b1d bond ex ecu ted Team No.4
Upho ls te ri ng ,
drapes
10 50
by the bidder and th e su r et y Team No. 1
rvosonobl e 572 South Th1rd
compa n y , l n an amount e q u e~l
Team high series A'le., M1ddleporl . Phone
to fl~e per cent of th e b1d s Mll Marcum's 2336 Roach's Gun
6!106,
be submlffed wtt h ea ch bid . Shop 2091 ; !Aerry COo Round
Sa id board of educa t1 on
PORTASLE WELDER , Iorge and COAL, limestone and calcium
reser ves the n ght to wa1 ve 2189.
small 10b1 Con also thaw
ch lor~de and colchtm brme for
Teem high game - Merry
mtormatilles , to acce p t or
frozen water p1pes Phone
dust control and spedol m•xmg
reiKt any and all , or parts of Go Round 796; Roach's Gun
949 2046
sail for farrT]ers Mom Street
Shop 777, Marcum' s 767.
any and all b1ds
Pomeroy Ohio or phone 992.
No bids may be Wit hdrawn
Men's high series - Bill HAVE YOUR toJCes done by on oc·
' for at least thirty (30) da ys Marcum 5S~;
3891 '
Raymond
countont Also, now occephng
- - - - .......
...:a!.,..
after the schedu led closing Roach S21; Mose Norman 509.
bookkeepu1g. Phone 992-6206 APPLES. FITZPATRICK OR&lt;;HARO
time for rece ipt ot bids
Men's high game - Bill
or992-6173
STATE ROUTE 689 PHONE
Marcum 191; Most Norman INCOME TAX S.rvtce Wolloce
WILKESVILL~c (61iL669·~~85
Board of Education
197 ; Dave Dobbins 192.
ot Meigs Local School
Russell ,
Bradbury .
Coil FULLER Bruah Products for sole
Women's high series D1strlcts
mn1a
Phono 992-3410.
Naomi Floyd iS3; Debbie
Jane Wagner
Clerk Treuurer or
Dobbins 452 ; Bess Hendricks WILL DO Housecleonmg Call CA~PER, ~~ ·,..AIIo: -h;,,~•
Meigs Locel School
m252•
• l&lt;&lt;tio.tc !IUO..fhone- (.U ) 6911~orstrlcf
Women's high game 3190 ' "' """
•
PIANO TUNING Lone Don1e ls 12
South fhlrd Avenue
Bess
Hendricks
187;
Debbie
Mld~l•porl , Ohio IS760
years of ser ~1 c e
Phont:t l BEAMS and til Beams 8 9, and
Dobbins 1'1; Naomi Floyd
m -10111.
10 mch Call m -7034

171 7• 131 3. 10. 17, " c

$1795

A1r cond 1t1on!ng , automatic, · power steer tng
brak es. radto, wh ite finish , bla ck trim

3 ROOM FURNISHED apt . Call

:zo

Superior
Steam Extraction

Television log for easy viewing

SHOW, WHAT
PERFUME
AND FII.M
DIRECTOR
Da MILL?

Business Services

Co.

117S CHEVELL E

--

~

Auto Sales

-- - ----.
- ·-2--SIGNS Pomeroy

NOTtCE Pra tt s Meat Mkt
(Pl easanton Mee t Processmg.
Inc ) Custom slaughte rmg ond
pro&lt;essmg Reto1l, wholesale
No oppomment necessary Colt
(bU} 593 -8655 hours 9 00 til l
6 00 1 Pomeroy Rood . At hens

TilE BEST CiET- WEL.L.
IN MY LIFE SITS
ON THAT TABLE.

I

BARNEY

WHAT'S
ALL THAT
DADBURN
RACKET?

WE JEST HAD US
A DADBURN
ROCKSLIDE, PAW

Xl X )[I U!"

�1%- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, March 10, 1!171

r-------------------------- 1 A

!

Area Deaths

d1•t

Several
! · u · ?r attend
explaJDS .services
t ax I aws

EDGAR GREENE
Mei gs County , who died I
EdQar Greene. 56. Patriot Monday
at the Ccm~un i ty
Star Route, died at hlo home Med ical Center, Marion, is

at approximately 6 a .m . sun1l ~ed by her husband,
Thursday morning . He had Floyd ; one sister, Mrs. Della
been Ill !he paot year.
Frost of Marlon ; Mrs. 'Ed-

Born Feb. 15, 1921 at wa rd Bowen and Mrs .
Maleotlc, Ky. to the late Ott William
Lowen of Pomeroy,
and Velma Cooke Greene. he who are sisters-in-law. and
is survived by his wife, several nieces and nephews.
Kafhryn lou ise Barcus Besides her porenfs. David
Greene and children, James
louise Bookman FoK,
Ec!Qar and William Ec!Qar, and
Mrs
.
was preceded in
botn of Patriot Star Route; deathBentz
by • sister . Mrs .
Mn. linda lou Stephens, Rt. Augusta Will, local.
I, Patriot; Mro. Brenda Sue
Ireland, Gallipol is; 14
grandchlldren i one sister ,
JAMES E. SELLERS
Mrs. Jack (Beatr ice) Hanley ,
PORTLAND - James
Columbus.
Elmer Sellers. 91 , died
He was a member of Wednesday ot his Portland
Northup Missionary Baptist Route I , residence.
Church.
Mr . Sellers, a member of
Funeral services will be 1 the Morse United Methodist
p.m. Saturday at the Willis Church, was born Feb. 1.
Funeral Home with the Rev. 1886, a son of the late Henry
Bruce U nroe off I elati ng . and Eliza Bourgeois Sellers.
Burial will follow in O~ l o He was also r,rec~ed in
Va lley Memory Gardens. dea!tl
by his wl e. Mabel ; a
Friends may call at the daughter , Ka1hryn Sellers.
funeral home Friday from 2 and three brothers, John ,
to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
lemuel and Fred.
Surviving are three sons,

ALTA BENTZ
Mrs. Alta Mabel Bentz, 71,

~rion, _former resident of

RC
COLA
8-16 OZ. BOffiES

Edwin of Middleport, and
Harold and Darrell', both of
Portland ; two daughters ,

Mrs . Helen Arnott of Racine,

and Mrs. Mabel Sprouse,
Pomeroy, 11 grandchildren
and 25 great-grandchildren .
Funeral services will be

held. a1 1 p.m. Sunda~ al the
residence with

the

Rev .

Freeland ·Norris officiating .
Burial will be In Mlddleswart

Cemetery. Friends may call

a1 · the residence anytime
12 noon on Friday. The
Ewing Funeral Home is in
charge of arrangements.

after

$}09
BORDEN'S ELSIE

ICE
CREAM
.

lh GALLON

gge

OIL SPIWI
OOLUMBUS (UP I) - Ohio
waters would be protected
from discharge of oil and
other hazardous substances
under a bill introduced
Wednesday by two legislators
whose diBtricts border oo
Lake Erie.
The legislation, sponsored
by Reps. Robert J. Boggs,!)..
Jefferson, · and Edward
Hughes, D-Mentor, would
require anyone making an
accidental discharge to
report it immediately to the
Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency under
penalty of $25,000.
The Individual or c&lt;111pany
responsible also would have
to help remove the spilled
material or pay the cost, and
make reimbursement lor any
properlY damage.

r----------~==~===~

COT¥ OR REVLON TO THE FIRST 200
LADIES BRINGING THIS COUPON TO
OUR STORE.

Ladies, just present this coupon for your
FREE trial size of Coty's Spring
Fragrance or Revlon Intimate
Fragrance. HURRY IN NOW WHILE
THEY LAST.

COUPON GOOD ONLY AT DUTI'ON DRUG STORE
MIDDl.EPORT,O.

Three men
honored

RACINE - l!elatlves and
friends from a distance
Ohio has a new property calling at the Ewing Funeral
H
·
pect to Vir U
tax law which became ef·
ome 1D res
g
lective October II, 1976. This Roush ·have been Mr. and
new tax law Is designed in Mrs. Virgil Woodson and
House Bill g:a), The major family Haydenv_llle; Mr. and
M
J h V k
M
provisions include according
rs. o_n IC roy ,
cto Howard E. Frank, Meigs Connellsville; Mr. and Mrs.
County Auditor:
.
· Sheldon Cattlett a.nd family,
" Tangible personal Mrs. Hilda l!oush Andris, Mr.
property tax assessment and Mrs. Cecil Hill, Carl
levels reduced two per- Cattlett, and Steve Uhrig, all
centage points a year until of Columbua; Mr. and 1\frs.
down to ~ per cent (live Walter McDade, Troy, Mr.
years lor inventory, eight and Mrs. Charles Lampen,
years for machinery and Portsmouth; Mrs. Evelyn
equipment), but only when Young, G~lllpohs ; Mr. and
growth in state wide tax yield Mrs. Wilham Stewart, .
is at least US per cent from Athens; Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
third preceding year to Rood, New Haven; Mr. and
second preceding year.
· Mrs. John Ord, Letart, W.
"Growth of 14 per cent Va.; Mrs. Paul Randolph,
from 1974 to 1975 assures that Mrs. Robert Roach, New
assessment levels for 1977 Qaven and Mr. and Mrs. R.
will be 43 per cent' for E. Sarge~t, Columbus.
.
machinery and 43 per cent lor
Attendmg funeral .services
inventory.
from a dlBtance Sunday at
"Real estate valuation Ewing Funeral !lome were
increase credit beginning Mr. and Mrs. Terry Roush, of
with 1976 tax year enacted to Aurora, ni. ; .Darrell Roush,
offset Impact of higher tax · Mr. and Mrs. Don Roush and
valuations due to reappraisal family, Mr. and Mrs. Dick
or equalization. Credit would Bnggs, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
apply to voted millage only. l!oush and family, all of
"Meigs county did not have Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Carl
reappraisal or equalization Roberts, Mr. and Mrs. J.E.
this year. However, in McTurner, Athens; Mrs.
following House Bill 920, SadteShaln, Logan, Ohio, and
Meigs County will have a Mrs. Jerry Walker and Greg
property valuation ad· of New Lexington; Waylllnd
justment lor the tax year Marr, Lancaster, Ohio, Mr.
1977.
and Mrs . Archie Lee,
"The Bill also determines Gallipolis, Mr. and Mrs.
the
valuation
and Robert Jones and Jim Jones,
equalization criteria revised Shade; Mr. and Mrs. Jim
by requiring three-year Circle, Mr. and Mrs. George
average of sales ratios in Circle, all of New Haven; Mr.
measuring assessment levels and Mrs. Bill Perry, Toledo;
and specifying use of sales and Rodney, Randy_ and Tony
price of property sold as basis Reeves and Jeff Dllcher, all
for valuation."
of Albany, Ohio.

HOSPITAL NEWS .
Veteralil Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Linda
Carroll, Neva Grimm,
Pomeroy; Herman Lawson·,
Minersville; Mona Neal,
Middleport; Herman Jones,
Cheshire; Norma Goodwin,
Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED - Fred
Stewart, Florence Johnson,
Tamara Mossman, Sharon
Buffington, Ernes Halley,
Jane Hawk, Bessie Oliver,
Maggie Gilmore, Clara
Gilkey, Edward Willet,
Martin Mollahan, Joseph
Rudolph.

Jacqueline Sayre, Point
Pleasant; Marinito Montero,
Lakin; Pearl Riffle, Point
Pleasant; Benjamin Saser,
Arbuckle; Mrs. Ode Beaver,
Crown City; Mrs. Wllllam
Mattox, West Columbia;
Franklin Wolle, Point
Pleasant; and Mrs. Earl
Rollins, Pliny.
BIRTH - A son to Mr. and
Mrs. Peter McKinney, West
Columbia.

Holzer Medical Center
(DIIebarges)
March 9 - William R.
Anderson, Jr., Marion Kay
Pleasant Valley
Arnold, Clara E. Brown,.
DISCHARGES -Mrs. Rex Garland R. .Caldwell, Mrs.
Patterson, son, Point Michael Conkle and infant
Pleasant;
Mrs.
Paul daughter; Hugh Gillum, Jr.,
McKinney, daughter, West Clyde W. Hammons, Delmar
Columbia; Mrs. Wayne Love, F. Harris, Jr., Richard A.
Point Pleasant; Kenneth Harris, John N. Hill, Hazel A.
Ashworth, Ashton ; Mrs. Johnson; Mary J. Johnson,
Henry
Elliott,
Point Sherry D. Johnson, Vernon
Pleasant; Carrie Higgin· Keels, Charles Knotts,
botham, Red House; Johnny Samilel L. Lutton, Donna J.
Rouah, New Haven; Mrs. MCGhee, Katie K. Miller,
Ronald Johnson , Letart; Helen Pelllberlon, Hazel M.
.Marjorie Ripple, Point Persinger, Joyce Ann
Pleasant; Ferris Hill, Sr., Philllps,[)orls F. Rapp, John
West Columbia; Howard M. Richie, C!larles R. Roush,
Carder, Point Pleasant; Ruby L. Sexton, Alline
Sandra 'Bland, Letart; Shelton, Chad E. Smith,
.Johnny McCloud, Mason: Crystal D. Smith, Betsy L.
Spencer, June A. Stanley,
Darlene H. Swain, Paul F.
Thomas, George 0. Turner,
Mrs. Terry Varney and infant
daughter and Suedell Young.

MEIGS THEATRE
Q.OSED FOR

Birlbl

VACATION

DEPARTMENT

WATCH FOR
OPENING DATE

LOOK YOUR
LOVELIEST WITH
COVER GIRL
MOISTURE WEAR.

March 9 - Mrs. John
Davis, son, Middleport; Mrs.
Roger Coleman, son, Oak
Hill; Mrs. Carl Perry, son,
Vinton; Mrs. Gary Lunsford,
son, Gallipolis; Mrs. John
Metzger, son, Patriot; Mrs.
Frank L. Queen, son,
Gallipolis and Mrs. Charles
Eakina, son, Racine.

•

us im terror en sIn peace

(Continued from page 1)
Commission, and as chairman of the trustees of the
Let~rt Falls
Methodist
Church.
A letter was read from Mr.
and Mrs. C. E. Blakesles who
were unable ' to attend
commending Shields. "We
salute you for what you have
done for Meigs County,"
wrote Daisy and Chuck
Blakeslee.
. Introduced were . Pete's
wife, Mabel ; daughter,
Marlene, and his grand·
children, Larry and Amy
Fisher.
Shields responded: "I am
glad _for myself and
agriculture. More recognition
should be given to the farmers of Meigs County."
The last to be honored was
l!obert Wingett.
Jones in his comments
allowed that he could talk all
night about the things
Wingett has . done. "I
remember him when he was
peddling papers as a kid, He
IS a man that you never know
what he will do next," Jones
said.
Jones went on to say go to
Syracuse to look at the new
lighted baD field, the new
building, the new swimming
·pool, the expanded water
SYstem. "This is leadership,"
Jones said.
;,
Wfugett was presented his
plaque by Katie Crow, long
time friend and Co·WOrker.
Crow ill her remarks said
Wingett began working lor.
the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company when he was 17•
years-old doing what ever
was
necessary
from
sweeping floors to delivering
papers.
Wingett has been with Ohio
Valley Publishing Co., for 17
years, for the past seven
years has been vice president
of the company, and has been
on the bOard of directors the
past two years.
He is editor and publisher
of the Point Pleasant
Register, editor of the Mason
County News and publisher of
the Belpre Observer.
Wingett is the ·youngest

-...•

....'
•••

•••

..

'
THE GRAND
OPENING of a new business addition, a jewelry shop, to the Ingels
Furniture Store in Middleport will be held from 9 a.m. to S p.m. Friday and Saturday. The
new.addition set up inside the furniture store will be known as "Candy's classics Collection"
and will be operated by Candy Ingels, c!aughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Ingels. Miss Ingels
is pictured in the new addition. The store will not carry costume jewelry but will feature a
~mplete line of men's jewelry, wedding sets, jade, opal, onyx and other setted rings,
watches and pendants and necklaces. All of the jewelry will be 10 and 14 karat gold. A 10
karat onyx ring will be given away as an attendance prize for the grand opening. There will
be refreshments served and aU guesta will receive a salt and pepper shaker set.
person ever to serve on
Syracuse village council, of
which he is president. He
started his first term at the
age of 22 and is presently
serving in his 12th year.
Wingett responded that
there are others who have
done more such as attorney
Frank W. Porter, Syracuse
Mayor Herman London, who
has been associated mthe
government of Syracuse for
the past 25 years, but as
Wingett stated, "likes to stay
in the background." These
men are deserving of
recognition Wingett commented.
lntroduced were Wingett's
mother, Eleanor Wingett,
and his aunt, Emmogene
Holstein.

TWO DAY SALE
BLUE JEANS AND FASHION JEANS
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

MENS &amp;BOYS JEANS

SAVE '1

00

MENS-

This specia I sale includes au of our men•s blue leans~

famouo make• Wrangler, lee and Mr. Lens. Pre-woohed
and regular denims, flare legs and straight ley o1yles.
There's an excellent new seledlon. Sites r11n rom 29
waist to 44 lengths from lO to 361nches.
Also included in this sale are the men's fashion jeans in
corduroy, cotton polyester blends, solid colors, patterns
and white paln1ers jeans, sizes 2f to 42 waist.

BOYSwai~t.

The sale Includes all of our boy's blue jeans -and fashion
leano. There'• a terrific •election of styles colon.
Wrangler and Mr. leggs brands.

FLOOR

OVER 25

WOMEN'S-

son of a gun®

Women's and misses jeans ore located on !he second floor
and our entire stock" included In IIIII sale. Pre-washed
and regular denims. The new spr.lng styles.

by Clalrol

' • 1200 watts of power

I

• hghtwetght, easy to handle
• Extra w1de nciule provides greater airflow
• Comes with foldable table stand end concentrator noule

Model T0-1

•

Women's .sizes 10 to 20, lunior sites 3-4 to 17-18, plus extra
sius 3l1o 40 waist meuure. You'll like this new Mlecllon.
Save 51.00 a !Niir.

PRINCESS

Jlush

GIRLS

1\.pp~~·

A superbly comfortable suburban sandal with style betit1ing its name . . Princess. The sling ankle slrap is
elasticized up front ·for slipon , slipoff ease . The insole
is cushioned for added cOmfort. And Hush Puppies ~

The girls 101ns ore located in lilt children's deportment
on the second floor. Slaes 7 to. 14, blue denims, polyester
and cotton blends -in solid colors and patterns, olso whllo
~»inters ie~ns .

Casuals are born comfortable ... ;ust for you.

AVAILABLE

IN

SHINY

BLACK AND

BROWN

HUSH PUPPIES

Dutton Drug Store
0

'
Middleport

122 N. 2ad. Ave.
t92·3106

FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY

THE SHOE BOX

.The Middleport Board of
Public Affairs after extensive
investigation, has determined to free its water
system of some of the natural
elements which causes
mrrosion of pipes, hot water
tanks, and spigots·.
The board has also decided
to impose a 25 cent charge
per mon1JJ per customer to
pay lor the improved water.
· After contact with com·
pany representatives and
with other water systems, it
was decided by the Board to
condition the water with
Aquadene. This seemed to be
the most economical ap(l'oach to the problem of hard
water. The Leading Creek
Clmservancy Di!trict uses
this method and they are well
pleased with the results.
Aquadene is a non-toxic,
inorganic, crystaline comJDUnd soluble in water. It
suspends and inactivates
mineral elements that prove
harmful and damaging to
industrial, commercial ·and

i

. .'

corrosion

are

reduced.
Aquadene is non-toxic ,
containing only items
generally recognized as safe
under the proVisions of Title
21 of the Code of Federal
Regulations, Section 121.
Although Aquadene costs
roore per pound, treatment
per gallon costs less because
of the small amount of
Aquadene required to do the
job.

Until the development and
.use of Aquadene several
years ago, it was necessary to

Look around ol new ..Wing onci summer merclllndiH
arriving doily. Visit every dtiNlrtment, shop every floor
ond the warehouse on Mtcllonk: Slrtet. And remember It
soYe oil of your cosh roglsle~ recelptsond wtllto JIIIYmtnf
on ocmUill slips from Elborhlds. Tiley ore voiiNitlt to

you.

WASIDNGTON - THE NUMBER OF BANKS with
problema swelled to 384 this week despite Improving economic
conditions the chairman of the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporati~n said today. FDIC Chairman Robert Barnett said
115 of them are in the two most serious categories.
Although Barnett, in testimony prepared lor the Senate
Banking Committee, gave no breakdown, the FDIC annual
report listed 2t banks in extremely dangerous condition and 91
in the next worst category. Based on experience since 1973
outlined in the annual report, eight of the banks will fall and
three others wtll be forced into mergers wtth stronger
Institutions.
NEW YORK- PRICES OPENED IUGHER TODAY in
moderate trading of New York Stock Exchange Issues. The
Dow Jones industrial average, which r~llled to gain 3.83 points
Thursday, was ahead 0.58 to 947.31 shortly after the opening.
Advances led declines, 37 to 68, among the 339 isaues across the
tape.
.
Turnover in the first few minu!A!l! amounted to about
500,000 shares. Investors were encouraged by the Federal
Reserve Board's report late Thursday that the nation's basic
mooey supply declined $000 million in the latest week,
foUowtng a $!-billion slide the week before, which eailed
pressure on interest rates.

Cheesebrew, state chaplain,

will speak at Legion party
Frank Cheesebrew, former
Meigs County resident low
llvlng in Shawnee, will be the
me•ker At the 58th annual
lirthday party ot urew
Weblter Post 39; American
IAtllon. to be held Tuesday
Mr. CheeJebrewla chaplain
of the Ohio Department of the
American Legion. other
guests to be present will be
•

,.

metallic

u;e a combination of comJDUnds to treat water.
Aquadene insures the same
(I'Otection with one chemical
over a wide range of fluctuations.
This tested and · proven
approach to the control of
~ale formation, corrosion,
and rust prevention in high as
well as low temperature
applications assures ef·
ficient, high performance
water-usiug eql!lpmmt.
Installati(J) cost would be
approximately $1,400 with the
;illage using some equipment
which it already has.
Monthly cost of conditioning
the water will be
·

By United Press InternaUiinal
BURLINGAME, CAUF. - A 10-YEAR BITIER and
sometimes violent struggle over the bargaining righ1s of the
field hands in the West has ended with a 5-year agreement betWeen the Teamsters Union and Cesar Chavez' United Farm
Workers. The pact, in effect, allows the AFL-CIO UFW to
become the union representative for just about all field hands
while the Teamsters Union will retain jurisdiction over
commercial packing sheds and off-farm transportation of ·
crops.
Chavez and M. -E. Anderson, director of the Western
Conference of Teamsters, signed the agreement Thursday
wtth Teamsters President Frank E. Fitzsimmons looking on.
Fitzsimmons called the signing a "momentous occasion."
Chavez said, "It's 10 years later, and hoth of us are fed up with
fighting each other.'' He added that the UFW would not be able
to throw its full weight Into organizing field hands without
expending needed money and energy into fighting the
Teamsters.

evening.

MIDDLEPORT, O.

wmestic piping and equip·
ment.
Aquadene, over a period of
time, will remove existing
scale depositions already
formed in piping, valves and
equipment.
Aquadene ha s cathodic
inhibiting ability whereby a
microscopic film is developed
on all interior surfaces. Since
this film is impervious w
Clltygen and other gases the
(l'oblems of oxidation and

The boy's blue denim and fashion jeans are in sizes 8 to 18

slims, regulan and huskies and otuclenl slaes 26 to 30

at y

when tne prisoners realized they were free.
"We all untied each other," he said. "We congratulated each
other. As Jews, we said a prayer. We said the traditional
prayer- 'Thank God, You have kept us and preserved us w
this day."'

Hostage Mimi Feldman, who worked as a secretary in the
lund-.-aising office at B'nai B' rith, said the terrorist singeld out
Jews for separate treatment. She said she was afraid to reveal
that she was Jewish.
.
"Their anti-Semitism didn 't make any sense," she said,
adding that the raiders made a number of statements about
Arabs and Palestine and "little bits of disconnected thoughts."
Egypt's Ambassador Ghorbal described Khaa lls as rationaL
"He would have to have reasons for doing what he did ," he
said. "He was emotional, but a.• von talked to him you could
(Continued on page 12)

en tine

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28, No. 2~ 1

Corrosion treatment begun
in Middleport water system

FRIDAY, MARCH 11th AND SATURDAY, MARCH 12th

SAVE '1 00

ou~l'1u,0L

WHITE CAUGIIT
MYRTLE BEACH, S.C.
(UP!)- Larry W. White, 26,
of Lancaster, Ohio, wanted in
his hometown on a~ forgery
indictment, has been
arrested in Myrtle Beach,
s:c., on ' charges of
burglarizing a restaurant.
White is also wanted,
authorities said, in Orlando,
F1a., in connection with the
murder of May Bailey, 79,
found suffocated February
24.
,.
Police said a car owned by
Ms. Bailey was found in
Houston, Tex., at the home of
Elizabeth St. John, 59, who
had been raped and stabbbed
to death with a screw driver
March 3. Police found Ms. St.
Joho's car here.

berfelds In Pomeroy

WITH SKIN

The p.,,."""'•'llgh-iQht 0 ..,.,

CARRY.OUT SALES
COLUMBUS (UP!) -The
Ohio House has passed and
sent to the Senate legislation
permitting local option csrryout sales of beer and wine on
Sunday.
Sunday sales of liquor-bytheglass were authorized on a
local option basis by the
legislature in 1970, but csrryout sales were not Included.
Under the bill, sponsored
by Rep. Patrick A. Sweeney,
D-Cleveland, and passed
through
the
House
Wednesday, petitioners could
place on the ballot in a
precinct, township or municipality the question of
·whether beer and wine could
be sold for off-premises
consumption between 1 p.m.
and midnight on Sundays.

Maurice Williams was shot to death when city hall, only three
blocks from the White House, was invadedj,ust before noon
Wednesda y.
U.S. Attorney Earl Silbert Jr. would not say if they would be
charged with other crimes and if they, too, would be freed to
,.await Indictment.
The temporary release of Khaalis was agreed to in advance
by Chi ef Superior C.ourt Judge Harold Greene. The deal was
carried to the bargaining table at B'nai Brith.
There, Khaalisdiscussed poetry and the lessons of the Koran
for three hours in the meeting with ambassadors Zahedi,
Egypt's Ashraf Ghorbal and Pakistan's Shaabzad YaqubKhan, two police officers and President Carter's emissary,
Pittsburgh Mayor Peter Flaherty, who lias been nominated w
be deputy attorney general.
Hostage Sidney Colster told what happened at B'nai B'rith

•

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohi!l
Friday, March 11. 1911

WOMENS AND GIRLS JEANS

FOR WOMEN

negotia tors, said Khaails turned out to be a sensitive man who
was concerned about the well-being of his prisoners.
But Khaalis had threatened to decapitate hostages if those
responsible for the 1973killings of seven Hanfis, including one
of his wives and lour of his children, were not brought before
him to receive revenge.
·
"I think that he himself felt that they are all believers in God
and Allah. He thought that if these people, the hostgages, were
suffering, it would not be good," Zahedi said.
Khaalis was released without bOnd after arraignment on a
charge of armed kidnaping. A police cruiser carried him to his
home at the Hanuli headquarters in northwestern Washington
and he went Inside without talking to reporters .
Khaalis' 11 cohorts were to be arraigned this afternoon on
the .same charge.
Murder charges were also possible because radio reporter

WASIDNGTON (UPI ) - The ambassadors of three Moslem
nations persuaded Hanafi Muslim terrorists early today to
surrender, free 134 hostages and end in peace a 39-bour ordeal
that began in bloodshed.
As part of the bargain, Hanafi strongman Hamaas Abdul
Khaalls was permitted to go free for. the time being. He led the
12 gunmen who seized three buildings Wednesday, killed a
young black reporter and wounded eight persons.
As freed hostages streamed from city hall, the Islam Center
and the B'nai B'rith building, the bells of the Foundry .
Methodist Church - largest Swiss bells in America---pe~~Ied
out the news in the darkened city .
Waiting relatives wept, danced, embraced and prayed.
Doctors said most of the hostages were in good shape but a
few might be ill or seriously hurt.
Iranian Ambassador Ardeshir Zahedi, one of the

the district commander of the
legion and the district
president of the auxiliary.
A dinner at 7 p.m. will open
the annual party and this will
be followed by a meeting and
entertainment under the
direction of Mrs . Carrie
Neutzling. The party is open
to members of the post, the
auxiliarY and their families.

Burning
limit is
invoked

approximately '300. This
wuuld amount to ahout 25
cents per month for each
customer on the water
system. The water depart·
ment has not had a raise in
rates since 1967, and other
utiliti es and costs have
!l&lt;yrocketed. The board is
!J'OUd that the village water
system has been operated in
such an economical manner
that rates have remained the
same for the past 10 years.
The board wishes to
p;ovide village residents with
the best service possible at
the lowest price and feels that
each customer would be
willing to pay 25 cents per
month lor this water conditioning service. The board
It its January _meeting voted.
lllanimousiy w place this 25
cents per month charge on
each customer's water hili
reg inning with the April bill.
· The villa ge will bear the cost
of installatioo of equipment.
This water conditioning is
not something which will

RACINE - An ordinance
forbidding burning on Sun- ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:·:=::;:;.
days and until 4 p.m. on
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
weekdays will be enforced
Racine Village Council · Sunday through Tuesday,
chance of showers each
decided Tuesday night.
Tom Wolfe of the Racine day. Mild. Highs In the 50s
Home National Bank showed and low liOs. Lows In the
council plans for a new drive- 40s.
in bank and was given per- ::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:
mission to have entrances
from Third, Fourth and Pearl
Sts.
Mayor Cba rles Pyles
agreed to contact the county
commlssiorrers on the
possibility of. securing an
officer to help Alfred Lyons
through the CETA program.
The Middleport Fire
Lyons gave report showing Department was called to the
89 miles of travel , in- Eob Moodispaugh residence,
vestigation of three ac- 3i Railroad St., at 8:09 p.m.
cidents, nine arrests, 18 calls Thursda~ where a fire was
and lines of $257.80 collected threatening to get out ·of
last month.
control in the kitchen.
Boyd Ruth offered the help
Water from a broken line
of the Meigs Soil and Water was running over electrical
Conservation Service in soil lines. There were no
testing for better production damages, · the fire depart·
service and foundations. ment reported.
Council
adopted
a
At 5:45p.m. Thursday, the
of
un- Middleport squad took
memorand urn
derstanding between the Arletta Flint, 169'fl North
village and the district. Second Ave., to VMH with a
Council decided to meet twice loot injury.
a month, the first and third
Firemen extinguished a
' Mondays of each month, so as !rush fire at 4:30 ·p.m. near
to accomplish more and have Clleshire behind the Guiding
shorter sessions.
Hand school, and at 6:42a.m.
Attending were Mayor Thursday Doyle Shuler. of
Pyles, Clerk-Treasurer Mae Cheshire was taken to
Cleland, and council mem· Veterans Memorial Hospital.
bers, Maxine Wingett, Grace .. fuemen fought a barn blaze
Roush, Albert Hill, Clarence on · Zuspalr Hollow Road at
Bradford and Pete Simpson. 3:45 p.. Wednesday.

Firemen called

on 3 alarms
in Middleport

a

make a great- difference in
the water overnight. It is
rntimatedthat it will take six
to eight months after
treatment has begun before
the system will be completely

-?:;:;~

~ -WI'.

·~··
HfU'.n,./
&gt; ·'

f1{1j

clmned of corrosion.

The Public Water Supply
Section Chief, Southeast
District Office, ha s been
contacted by the villa~e and
Aquadene was verified as
having no harmful effects
and is used by some water
systems in Ohio.
The board is pleased to be
able to offer this improved
water service to village
residents.

Early bird
•
•
regtStratwn

is announced
Owners of non-passenger
vehicles - trucks 1 trailers,
motorcycles, house vehicles
- can take care of the 1977
registration of their vehicles
at the office of the Meigs
County Registrar, William
Gibbs, 166 Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy, March I through
March 31.
This is an early bird
registration
period
specifically designed for 0on·
passenger vehicles and
owners are urged to take care
of the rna tter now in order to
avoid a lengthy wait later on.
L 'cense tags are not being
issued this year. Instead
vehicle owners are given a
validation sticker for each
vehicle
registered .
Passenger cars cannot be
registered until April and
May.

.y, iJ~'f;
/ ,..(~[''' ~ ....j''*-'1
'·~~··€''"~

f.... *~'
.~::-~~;:·:~

·-·

~· .....

JON PERRIN , AFIFTI! grader at Pomeroy Elementary School keeps a thermometer
replica updated as teacher and students of the school collect funds for Christine Smith, a
member of Mrs. Mary Hysell 's fifth gr~de. Christine was severely burned at the home of her
grandparents, 1\fr. and Mrs. Albert Roush near Pomeroy on Feb. 6. So far , students and
W.chers at Christine's school have raised over $140 towards Christine's hospital bill.
Christine is confined to the New Burn Center of Children's Hospital in Columbus. Jon, son of
Rev. and Mrs. W. H. Perrin, Pomeroy, is one of Christine's classmates.

Y-ielding-te sirens, lights-

required reminds sheriff

County law enforcement
officers will be on the alert
for motori.ts who fail to yield
to public safety vehicles
responding on calls using
tights and sirens.
Sheriff James J . Proffitt,
who noted his office has been
receiving complaints of some
motorists failing to yield
right of Wily, said such public
safety vehicles include
ambulances , fire trucks,
emergency squads and police
and sheriff cruisers.
Said Sheriff Proffitt : "I
have instructed my deputies
to start .topping motorists
that they see falling to yield
to any public safety vehicle."
Ohio Revised Code section
4511-45 states : " ... Upon the
approach of a public safety
ARREST MADE
vehicle, equjpped -vith
Tuesday night, Meigs ftashlng light ... and driver
County Sheriff's deputies
arrested Arlene Roach, 20, of
628 E. Main St., for
attempting to cause physical
harm. She posted bond and
FIRES DOUSED
was released Wednesday to
Pomeroy firemen exappear later in Meigs County tinguished two brush fires
Court.
Thursday, At 10 :10 a.m ., the
first was extinguished near
the Meigs Memory Gardens
NOW YOU KNOW
111d
at 4:03p.m. , the second
In his last sennoo in 632
;ms
put out on Darwin Hill.
A.P., Muhammad urged his
AI
7:15
p.m. the Pomeroy
followers not to split after his
Emergency
Squad took
death, said God was one and
Penny
Smith
to Holzer
reaffirmed the brotherhood
Medical
Center.
of the faithful.

giving aildible signal by siren
, ... the driver of every other
vehicle shall yield the right of
way, immediately drive to a
position parallel to, and as
dose as possible to , the right
ooge or curb of the highway
dear of any intersection, and
!top and remain in such
position u.ntil the public
safety vehicle has passed ... "
Penalty as provided in the
Ohio Revised Code for failin g
to yield to public safety
vehicle is a fine up to $100.
Sheriff Proffitt po int ed
out, " Alter a public
safety. vehicle goes by,
be sure to look before
pulling out into line of traffic
... there might be another
vehicle coming."
"With the cooperation of
the motori&amp;s, I am sure that
oor lire units, emergency
squads, and police cruisers
will be able to safely respond
without being held up ir

traffic . The dela y in getting
through traffi c could be the
difference between life and
death," the sheriff said.
Motor ist s should re·
memb er that a unit is
perhaps responding for a
family member. Cooperation
will be appreciated by all
oopartments.
BETTY BETIER
UJS ANGELES (UP! )
Betty Ford says living in
Southern California has Improved her health.
The former first lady was
honored by the !.AJs Angeles
Ballet Guild at its annual
Beaux Arts. Ball Thursday
night for " inspirational
leadership to 1lle performing
arts of dance ."
She tol.d reporters she liked
living in Southern california.
"The
climate
is
marvelous," she said. " My
health has been so much
better since I've been in
California."

Weather
Showers tonight and
Saturday. Lows tonight in the
lower 50s. Windy and wann
with highs Saturday in the
mid 60s . Probability · of
precipitation 20 per cent
today, 00 per cent tonight, 90
per cent Saturday.

CLINIC CLOSING
The
Meigs
County
Thberculosis Clinic will be
dosed Monday and Wednesday, 8:30a.m. to 12 noon
due to skin testin~ in the
schools. The office will be
open from 12 noon to 4 p.m. on
those days, however.

I~dictments crack Parkersburg car t~eft _ ring
ELKINS, W. Va. (UP!) Interstate vehicle theft rings
in the Northern Panhandle
and in Parkersburg bave
been exposed in indictments
returned by a U.S. District
Court grand jury.
A 10-count Indictment
Thursday charged that
Chester Myers, Bernard
Shepherd, Jennings Roberts
of WeilBburg and Michael L.
McGuire of Neffs, Ohio, were
aided and abetted by Harry
WUllam Heas of Wellsburg in
stealing vehicles, mostly
pickup
truckl,
and
transporting them from Ohio,
PeMSylvanla, Virginia and
Kentucky to Weirton between

•

March and September 1976.
A lwo-count indictment
againat Russell Henderson
and Carl Lee Myers of
Bellaire1 Ohio, charged that
they, 111ded and abetted by
Hess, stole two vans and
transported them from East
Uverpool, Ohio, and North
Plainfield, N.J., to Weirton,
according to U. S. District
Attorney Stephen Jory.
A four-count indictment
charged David Elwood Jones
with receiving stolen motor
vehicles between July and
September 1976 in Weirton.
James Silver of Wellsburg
was indicted for receiving
and selling a riding mower

•

stolen and transported
interstate in August, 1976.
Emmett L. Ball, Jr., 32,
Kimberly Rose Nadelhof!er,
211, and Johnny Ray BaU, 28,
were charged in a six-count
indictment with Interstate
transportation of motor
vehicles from Florida,
Georgia, North Carolina and
Alabama to Parkersburg
from August through
November 1976.
Emmett Bail and the
Nadelhoffer · woman were
charged with transporting a
$7,550
check
forged
Parkersburg to Meridian,
Misa., last Oct. 2.
Bryan Lee Michaels, 25, of
Pittsburgh was charged In a

lour-count indictment with
theft of a tractor-trailer
containing furniture and
taking it from Valley Grove,
near
Wheeling,
to
Cambridge, Ohio.
Nelson W. "Ace" Clark,
proprietor of the Top Brass
Club at Bunker Hill, Berkeley
County, Will' charged in a
five-count Indictment with
conspiracy to receive and sell
stolen motor vehicles and
other merchandise.
Other indictments
included:
-Michael R. Wllaon, 23,
Marietta, Ohio, an employe of
the u. s. Bureau of Public
Debt at Parkersburg, 10
counts of forging and passing

counterfeit $Uio u. s. Savings
Bonds, last May.
~Nancy P. Kelley, 29,
Parkersburg, charged on ·
seven counts of possession
and forg~ry of stolen U.S.
Treasury checks, including
income tax refunds.
-Wayne A. Hall, 20, Wellsburg, three counts of
interstate transportation of
forged· securities from
Wellsburg and Wheeling to
St. Clairsville, Ohio.
-Francis s. Bowte, Frede·
rick, Md., three counts of
possession, forgery and
uttering a stolen U.S .
Treasury 'Check for $14o.60 at
a Charles To'I!TI race track
June 9, 1975.

- Richard Ivan Nichols, 44,
Fairmont, a U.S. mail carrier, six Counts of
embezzling ca:ah from letters
addressed to charitable
organizations Feb. 8 and Feb.
11 of this year.
-John Richard Spadafore,
Anthony Donald Spadafore,
Ralph Spadafore and Alan B.
Bond, aU of Fairmoot, 26 ·
counts of ~yright Infringe.
ment by the reproduction,
manufacture and distributloo
of eight-track tapes on which
the copyright owner had not
been paid the royalty. The
Spadafores run a discount
store
at
Bridgeport,
according to the federal
attorney,

'I

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