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                  <text>0-1-The Sunday TiJnes.Sentinel, Sunday, March 13, 1977
~ ·

IJ4~t.

I

I

Of the Bend
By Bob Hoeflich
POMEROY- Fire departments and individuals who wish
to donate to the New Straitsville Fire Department in .perry
County, which lost an of its equipment and fire station In a
blaze recently, may do so Tuesday night when the Area
Volunteer Fire and Emergency Association meets at the
Middleport Fire Station.·
Bob Byer, Middleport, who heads the area firemen's
organization, said plans call for presenting these donatiqns to
New Straitsville in the name of the aasoclatlon. ,
11IE DEADLINE FOR Fn.ING petitions of candidacy for
offices in Pomeroy and Middleport Villages with the board of
elections is 4 p.m. on March 24. This year In Middleport the
terms of f9ur councilmen and ooe member of the board of
public allairs expires and in Pomeroy the terms of four council
members, the treasurer and two members of the board of
·public affairs.

JIM CLELAND WilL BE MAKING another television
.,Ppearance on March 23, 9 p.m., Channel 13. The hour long
program will be oo teen-age drinking and there wiD be a panel
with Jim on the discussion. Clelan~ is president of the Ohio
VaUey FeUowship.
NITA WISNISKI, WHO IS HEADING a nM program on
hYpertension (high blood pressure) for the Meigs County
Department of Health, announces that a blood pressure clinic
will be held on April!, from Slc! 7 p.m., and Aprll2, 9 a.m. until
12 noon in the lobby of the Pomeroy National Bank. Of course,
the service of having your blood pressure taken will be free on
both dates, Two registered nurses will be on hand for the clinic,
Speaking of the Pomeroy Natienal Bank, congratulations
to Mrs. Maxine Griffith who completed her 35th year at the
institu~on this past week.
MRS. ASA (LAUii.A) BRADBURY, who ob8erved her
!DOth birthday at Veterans Memorial Hospital recently,
received not oilly a card but a letter of congr~tulations on the
occasion from President and Mrs. Carter.
MRS. VILMA PIIQ!:OJA, SUPERVISOR of the Meigs
Bookmobile, reports that two literary magazines - hard to
come by - are being distributed each week on the bookmobile.
The magazines can be taken out but must be returned to the
unit when the patron is finished with them.
·
Incidentally, Sharon Buffington, bookmobile veteran,
underwent major surgery recently at Veterans Memorial
Hospital and has been returned to her home on New st.,
Pomeroy, to recuperate .
POMEROY'S EDGAR VAN INWAGEN, A SURVIVOR of
World War ll's Bataan Death March, lost a friend recenUy in
the death of Roy VanGunday; Opalocka, Fla.
VanGunday also was a survivor of the death march who
before that tragic event underwent the horror of seeing his
wife and two sons bayooeted by the Japanese . In the
Philippines. In 1942, Mr. VanGunday was tied to a tree,
tortured and forced to watch as his wife and children were
murdered. After his family was killed, be was sent to a prison
camp and later on the death march. During 18 months in the
prison camp, his weight dropped from over 200 to 87 pounds.
According to the newspaper account of his death, VanGunday
lived with frequent nightmares over the years.
11IE FRENCH CLUB OF Meigs High School will be
cmducting a fund raising drive through the collection of
returnable soft drink bottles and Roysl Crown Bottling Co.
product bottle !;&amp;~. Any resident having bottles or caps to
contribute to the drive which will be Saturday, March 19, is
&amp;Sked to call 99m7 or 99:1-2429.

County agent's
corner
By Jolm C. Rice
Ext. Agent, Agriculture

..

POMEROY - There are several upcoming even is that I
want to mention so that everyone "interested can be sure to
attend.
·
First of aiL, ne&gt;:t Thursday, March 17, Meigs and Athens
Counties will both be conducting a dairy school. The school In
Meigs County will be at the Meigs inn from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Dr. Lawrence Heider, Extension Veterinarian, will be with us
to talk about Msstitis and its control. Dr. Harry Barr
Extension Dairy Specialist will discuss reproductlv~
efficiency.
Also, on the same day, March 17, at 7:30 p.m. at the
Extell!ion Office, there will be a meeting on artificial
insemination of beef cattle. Harold Bennett of the Central Ohio
Breeding Association will be here to discuss artificia l
insemination, heat detection, and management techniques to
get cows bred.
On Tuesday, March 22, Meigs and Gallla Counties. wiD be
joining forces to conduct a pesticide training workshop at the
Grace United Methodist Church In Gallipolis.
This training session will be for agricultural producers
who will be applying restricted pesticides on grain and forage
crops. Through the stDIUDer of 19Tipermits will still be issued
lor restricted chemicab for those who have not already passed
an ellllllination but after October 21, 1977, all persons who wish
to apply restricted chemicals must be licensed.
The meeting will start at 10 a.m. and the Ohio Department
of Agriculture will be there to give examinations around 2:30
or 3 p.m. ·
A beef tour of the Eastern Ohio Research and Develop11\eDt Center near Caldwell, is scheduled for Saturday, March
25. We will be leaving from the Extension Office at 8:30a.m.
and should be back by Sp,m. We will see the beef bulls of many
breeds that are on test Including several bulls from this area .
We will see cows on a winter grazing program that should have
calves by their side at this time, and we wiD also see the beef
operation on the strip mined land.
WE WILL BE pooling our transportation and going In vans
to the Research Station. Please call in your reservation by
Tueaday, March 22, so that we will know how many vans to
schedule. The phone number ill ~. The C08t of transportation will be' $4.
Also, please bring a sack lunch and we will eat our lunch In
the farm shop at tlje Research Center.

Leaders like Carter's style
CINCINNATI (UP! ) European leaders view the
new adminlatratlon of
Preltdent Jimmy Carter with
. a "great deal of hope," says
lntenultlonal political expert
Martin J . Hillenbrand.
" WhUe It's too early lor a
deflnltlve statement about
how Europeans conceive
c.rter'a foreign policy thly realile every new adrulnlllrltitlll bu to have a
lbakldown p¢od - on the

'

whole I ihlnk Europeans
show a great deal of hope In
the Carter administration,''
Hillenbrand said Friday.
"It appears to be an out·
ward looking administration
with understanding of and
sympathy
for
their
requirements. They have an
open mind, but feel the kind
of dynamism the Carter
administration displays can
only be a good thing."

Otamher surprised by Lance
in brevity of his speech
PITTSBURGH (UPI ) can be and sit down."
President Carter 's budget
He waited about 10 secoods
director, Thomas " Bert" fora question and, when none
Lance, stunned the Greater came, sat down. It probably
Pittsburgh Ownber of Com- was the shortest speech In the
merce Thursday night, nol 102-year-old history of
with the contents of his Chamber of Commerce ·
spei!ch but 'with Its brevity. annual dinners.
Lance, director of the
The ii40 chamber members
Office of Management and and guests appeared stunnl'(!
Budget, told the chBmber it and did not applaud. Lance
will find the Carter · apparently was annoyed beadministration sympathetic cause the program had gone
to business alms.
on for two hours and 10
"We believe In the free mlnu\es before he was called.
enterprise system, ·in letting
it do Its thing without too
much regulation," the fonner
Georgia banker said. "You
I
'0
will find that the Carter
SPECIAL RECOGNITION ~ Five persons given
administration b with you.
special recognition for service to their communities
''Govenunent b too much,
Wednesday evening by the Pomeroy Chamber of
with us, the time spent In
fllllng out endless forms and
reports detracts from
productivity," he said.
Force
Is looking
COLUMBUS
- for
"Theyoung
Air ,
Lance next opened the floor men
am! women in selected
.
·
·
to questions , adding, "Then I training areas,.. said Major
am going to show you how William D. Sheppard, Air
BY FRANK HilL
efficient good government Force Recruiting com·
GALUPOUS - There were at least three more buildings
mander, here.
than I recalled recently located on the river front of First Ave.
·
A nationwide drive is un· in the 100 and 200 blocks.
derway to fill immediate
Peter and EdwardS. Menager had·a flour mill on the river
openings in several technics) bank just south of their lather's American House Hotel. Huge
and specialized areas. Some· piles of bran laid below the mill; this bran eventually washed
into the river .
POMERO~ - Tuesday of the jobs. which the applicant
might
'
choose
are
The mlll closed In 1857 and was torn down. The lumber was
night , March 15, teams from
used
to build a large barn In the Uikewood Addition of East
voice
processing
specialist,
Pl. Pleasant High School and
printer
systems
operator,
Gallipolis.
This barn stood until well Into the 20th century;
Meigs High School will meet
and
morse
system
operator.
When
Clodius
Roman Menager first built the American
on the "TV Honor Society" on
These
jobs
involve
operating
House
he
used
it
for
a residence. He later converted it into a
WTAP·TV, Channel 15
voice
equipment,
radio
hotel.
When
Henry
R.
Bell, the saddle maker, arrived here. in
(WTAP is channel 1 on the
receivers
,
and
equipmerit
.
1846
he
stayed
at
the
hotel.
Rates were .2.50 per week for room
cable) at 7:30 p.m.
and
board.
.
·
related
to
the
reception
of
By special arrangemeni
radio
signals.
In
the
GaUin
.
Gazette
dated
Dec. 10, 1819, Menager
with WTAP, and lor the
Technical
training
is
advertised
lor
a
good
quantity
of
corn.fed
pork for his hotel.
convenience of parents and
Kees
ler
Air
available
at
A
Uttle
farther
down
the
street
Robert
Worth had a sawfriends of the students who
Miss.
;
PenForce
Base,
mill
and
a
grist
mill.
Worth
was
the
biggest
river
shipper of aU
are participating In the
sacola,
Fla.;
Goodfellow
Air
the
mllls
in
town.
In
1839
his
mlU
failed
because
an
agent of his
program, "TV Honor
Force
Base,
Texas,
arid
at
the
on
a
flat-boat
trip
south
swindled
him
out
of
the
money
for the
Society" will be repeaied
goods,
.
Presidio
of
Monterey,
Calif.
Wednesday night, March 16,
Reuben Aleshire hauled produce to New Orleans by flat boat
at 8 p.m. and Thursday night For more information,
for
the Menagers for 11 years before their mill failed in 1857.
contact
the
nearest
Air
Force
at 9:30p.m. on cable channel
Recruiter
or
call
Columbus,
Aleshire went into business by himseU in 1859. The Civil
five.
War forced him out of business and he lost $1,500 on his last
area code 614-236-2767.
trip.

5 injured
in smashup

Air Force has

opemngs m
special jobs

Commerce were, left to right, front, Jim Freeker, Neacil
Carsey and CharleB Mullen, and In back, Leroy Bartrum
and Dwight Goins.

THIS IS THE WAY IT WAS

TV honor show
to be repeated

,.
'

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bade Osol
ARIES (Morch 21 -Aprll 18)
Some or your compa nions will

good deed for anot her.

SAGITTARIUS

(No•.

23-Doc.

·21) Even th ough you're rather
shrewd In business today, yo u

could encounter someone who is
more than a match for you. Be
careful.

HUNTI NGTON - " We
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jen. 181 haven 't changed our name Enjoy yo ur pals lor what they are
and ~ee p everything on the light we're still the Boy Scouts of
TAURUS (Aprii20·Miy 20) You side today. Don 't attemp1 to i n ~ America ,'' the Tri-State Area
lack faith In yOur Ideas today, valve th em In your ambitious Council said Saturday in
You can be eaSily dissuaded by· plans_
response to inquiries based
anyo ne wh o ll nd s eve n the AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Ftb. 181 on misleading national news
s m al l est f la w s in y ou r
S o met h in g adva nt a geous reports.
brain storms.
careerwise co uld pop up uneK- Council Vice Pr esident
GEMINI (Moy 21.June 20) Out- p~cte dl y today . yo u'll have to William M. Steen said the
moded methOds will not do the move qu1ck ly to ma.ke the most
legal corporate name of the
j ob fo r you toda y. Be i.m · of 11.
aginative. Try new tw ists for ol d
PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 201 To Boy Scouis of America had
problems.
best you sleep on import ant
bu siness decisions. To be im·
pul slve won't be doing yo ur bank
accou9t a favor.

be on the sale si de today. avoid
doing business wit h persons you
know lillie about. Someone unethical could tr y to take advantage of you.

Grass fire sets
off fatal blast

LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Althoug h

NEW MIDDLETON, Ohio
(UPJ) - Richmond Smith,
81, died today from burns
received Friday as the result
March 13, 1877
of a. grass fire that Ignited
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 221 Oon 'l ·some exciti ng surpri ses may be, 'propane gas in a tank next to
pick so meone apart today who in stor e fo r yo u th is year . his home, police said.
isn't there to defend himself. Say
Through an unusual chain at
Police said Smith was
nothing unless It's complimen·
events things could happen to 1111
·
tary.
yo ur o utlook to new levels.
trying to ~nh.ook a prop~ne
(A re you a Pisces? Bernice gas tank on h1s house trader
LIBRA (SEpl. 23-0ct. 23) Look
after th e welfare of your fa mily Osol ha's wrirten a special As trb- . when the flames from the
before trying to satisfy the needs Grap ~ Leifer fo r you. For your· nearby grass fire Ignited the
of outsi ders today. Family has copy send 50 cents end • self· gas enguUing him in flames
addressed, stampe d envelope to
'
•
•
priori ty.
Asfro -Graph. P.O. Box 48 9. He recetved third degree
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 221 Do Radio City Sta tion. New Yor k. burns over 80 per cent of his
things .today with out expecting
N. Y. 100 19. Be sure toesk for bOdy an&lt;idle!lat Youngstown
favors tn retu rn. You'll be d isapPisces Vol m e~ 5)
Hospital.
you will be willing to help an other
toda y. yo u ma.y do so . in a
manner that will cause this person to !eel indebted and resentful .

pomted if you try to trade one

11IE ANSWER ro LAST week's question :
Mathew Backus was the first Prosecuting Attorney of
GaUin County, 1~ .

Something to think about: .
What famoUB French General, who was a graduate of St .
Cyr (the French West Point) was born in Gallipolis?

PLAYT~

CROSS YOUR HEARTRight now, cross over to abetter figure this Easter and save!
Every Undercup Support
·Panel Bra
·
Every Seamless Bra
and styles
# t8t lace
#56 fully padded
#73 slighliy padded

Save$1.00 .
when you buy any 2'
Cross Your Heart•
Cotlon Bras

Save $1.50
when you buy any 2'
Soft Sider Tricot Bras
and style
#173 cotton lace bras
'TINOd the same stYe

SALE ENDS APA! L 9, 1977

LINGERIE DEPARTMENT

States of America because
the organization does not
serve youth in South
America, Mexico, Cent r al
America, and Canada.
The legal corporate name ,
Boy Scouts of America, which
was established by a Charter
from Congress In 1916 (6
years after Scouting's funding In this country), will stm
be u8ed along with the new
Scouting-USA symbol.

not changed and that the modernized form, but badges
misunderstanding arose over and insignia denoting adthe BSA 's adoption of a new vancement and office will not
communicative symbol using be
changed. Also not
the words Scouting-USA, changing wiU he the three
which wsa mistakenly symbols lor the Cub Scout,
reported as the new name of Scout, and Explorer phases of
the 67-year old Boy Scouts of the total BSA program.
America.
The "new look" lor
The officail name of the Scouting-USA will help clear
local council will continue to up confusion related to the
be Tri-State Area Council, youth and adult leaders
Boy Scouis of America. The Scouting Is committed to
council will graduually in- serve, according to the fincorporate the new symbol on dings of a five-year study.
lis printed material, signs,
Steen explained that
and other places where a Scouting serves young men
strong, recognizable !.den· and women as well as boys,
tlflcation is required.
and that the word "hoy" was
s••
The BSA's new bright red dropped from the Scout phase
hillt
and white symbol includes a of the program several years
contemporary version of the ago. This was not because of .
traditional BSA neur-&lt;le·lis, any pressure from minorities
your
plus the new communicative or women's groups. Surveys
flmi!Y
name , Scout'lng -USA . showed that the boys
iniUflnCI
Together , these elements themselves did not like to be
nHdl.
more appropriately reflect caUed boys.
Caroll K. Snowden
the current ·broadened scope
SC\)uting-USA was selected
24 State Str"1
of the Boy Scouts of America. as the BSA 's communicative
Phone 446-4290
Use of the Scouting-USA name because women are
symbol began last summer, now serving as volunteers
Utu
''""
gud ,.~.or,
but full implementation is and professionals and hav~
$(1. ,,..
expected to take several fuU membership in the Exyears.
ploring program. Alao, there
;,
The traditional fleur-de-lis 11as been a need to identify
St•t• F1rm Insurance Coml)fnies
of Scouting will continue In a Scouting with the United Home Offices: Bloomington, Illinois

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Save $1.00 on

,,

FOR '!'HOSE WHO may be interested:
Samuel H. Gates Sr. was a pioneer mall carrier for
Gallipolis. He came to Addison Twp. In 1834 from Washington
County. Mr. Gates carried the mall from Marietta to
Gallipolis, going by way of Jackson, Ohio. He was a county
commissioner nhen he Qled In 1847 at the age of ~- (He
carried the mall by horseback.)
In 1833 there occurred In our area one of the greatest
display of meteors ever seen.
Samuel R. Holcrimb served 3 time8 as Sheriff of our
county: 181&amp;-19, 1823-2S, and 11L'I(h'll.
In 1802 James Burford, teUer.of the tales, was chairman Of
the Board of Fence Viewers for GalllpoUs Twp. The Fence
Viewers elected to office that year were Joshua Chitwood,
Abraham Lessley and Micheal Hanunond.
.
The parents,of the famous Cliff brothers of Gallipolis were
a sight to behold when traveling the stnets about town. He was
nearly 7feet tall, she was about Heel 10 Inches.
The first mayor of Gallipolis was .J. P. R. Bureau In 1804.
The first city manager was Ed Myers in 1918.

Tri-State Council is same
old Boy Scouts of America

not share Interes ts akin to yours
today. Don't push them In the
wrong direction.

CANCER (June 21.July 22) ll's

·

- 2nd FLOOR

STORE HOURS: MON., lUES, WED., THURS., SAT. 9:30 A.M. TO 5 P.M.
FRIDAY 9:311 A.M. TO 8 P.M.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

A
NEIGHBOR

OF·YOURS

,,""

....

"'"'·

Five persons were ad- County Court lor fail ure to
mitted to Veterans Memorial stop within the assured clear
Hospital lor treatment of dista nce. There was heavy
injuries suffered in a rear- damage to both vehicles.
end collision at 3: ~ p.m.
A single car accident ocSunday on SR 7, six tenths of . curredatl :20 a.m. Sunda y on
a mile so uth of SR 248 in SR 554, five and eight tenths
Meigs County.
mites east of SR 160. The
The Ga ll ia-Melgs Post pa trol said John R.. Denney,
State Highway Patrol said a 24, Gallipolis, lost control of
vehicle driven by Grace R. his car on a curve. The
Ritton, 52, Parkers burg, vehicle ran off the left side of .
struck the rear of a car the highway into a creek.
driven by Jennie L. Ailing, 70,
A defective steering unit
Strausburg .
was blamed lor an accident
Both drivers were Injured Saturday on SR 160, one and
. as were Shelia L. Ailing, 20, six tents miles north of SR
Zanesville, a pa ~senger in 554. .
the Alling car, and Effie
The patrol said the.steering
Blanche Hall, 63, and Dewey failed on a car driven by
Hall, 6t, both of Parkersburg, Robert L. Reeves, 26, Rt. 3,
passen gers in th e Ritt on Pomeroy , causing him to lose
vehicle. They were rushed to · control of his car. The vehicle
the hospital by ambula nCes ran off the roadway, over an
from the Middleport and embankment , striking a wire
Pom er oy Em er ge n cy fence owned by George M.
Squads.
Pope, Bidwell.
Ritton was cited to Meigs

~

,-;-·....,.,.
:•,

.

'!
I
-:,;&lt;;

&lt;te··

"

WElL OVER HALF of Ohio Power Company's $194-million 1977 construction budget is

ea ~ked fo.r upgradmg of environmental eqwpment, such as this huge electrostatic

pre~1p1tator, one of t:wo under construction at Mitchell Plant, near Moundsville, w. va.
Snrular constructon IS underway at four other power plants of Ohio Power The new
precipitators remove nearly ~ ll ash from the plBnts ' stacks .
·

NO. 232

TOLEDO - ABOUT 4,6110 STRIKING United Auto
Workers are expected to return to work at the American
Motors Jeep plant today lor the first time since going out on
·
strike In a contract dipute Tuesday .
Members of UAW Local 12voted 2,177 to 1,134 Saturday to
accept a new three,year contract thatprovides an annual wage
hike of 3 per cent, plus an additional 11 cents an hour the first
year. The contract also calls for irnprovemenis In
supplemental unemployment benefits and pensions.
SACRAMENTO, CALIF. - LffiERAUZED MARIJUANA
laws have cut by half the number of pot smokers in
California's jails and saved the state about $13 million without
significantly increasing the ranks of those using the weed , a
state study shows.
However, the report from the state Office of Narcotics and
Drug Abuse - using ligures from the state Justice and Health
Departments and other agencies - noted that arrests lor
heroin, cocaine and other felony drugs had jumped by 18 per
cent since tbe more lenient marijuana law went into effect Jan.
I, 1976.
PI'ITSBURGH _: UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURTH
anthropologists report uncovering the fossil of an Ice-age
animal which is said to be the first evidence of a direct
association between early man and an extinct animal in
eastern North America.
James Adovasio, director of a university excavation, said ·
the fossil of a plgllke manunal, extinci for 10,000 years , was
found at the Meadowcroft Rockshelter, a Pitt archeological
site near Avella, Pa., close to the West Virglnla- Pennsylvania
border. The peccary, a mammal reminiscent of the European
wild boar, may have been hunted by inhabitants and brought to
the rockshelter for eating and otber uses. Adovasiosald.

Probe uncovers
utilities facts

~dacks ."

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .

Muskingum River Plant near
Beverly , Ohio; Cardinal
Plant at Brilliant, Ohio ;
Kammer and Mitchell Plants
near Moundsville, W. Va.,
and Philip Sporn pla nt near
New Haven, w. Va.
"Ou r newes t generating
station, the Gavin Plant at
Cheshire, alrootly complies
with regu lnttons. Its facilities
were designed to eliminate
99.7 per cent of the ash."
The remaining $82 million
included in the 1977 con·
struction budget will go
to ward power plant 1mprovements,
transmission
and distribution lines and
statio ns, and other con-

Work on these precipitators struction.
will be performed at Heller noted that by the end

of this year , over $340 mlllion
will have been spent by Ohio
Power on environmental
improvements.

UNIT CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to Veterans
Memorial Hospital at 9:41
a.m. Sunday to transfer
Nancy Taylor to Holzer
Medical Center. At 3:10p.m.,
the squad went to Chester
Road and was assisted by the
Middleport unit at the scene
of an accident. At 7:28 a.m.
Monday, Mildred Hudson was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital froin her home in
Pomeroy.

•

at y

e
VOL. XXVII

Upgrading of environmental equipment at most of
lis power plants will cost Ohio
Power Company $112 million
this year.
C. A. Heller, executive vice
president, said the environmental
expe nditures
represent well over half of the
co mpany's $194 -mill ion ·
construction budget for 1977.
Most of the sum will go
toward backfilling electrostatic preci pitators at the
power planls to improve
environmental qua lity.
Heller
said,
" These
precipitators remove nearly .
all ash from the pla nts'

•

«

By United PresslnternaUoual
WASHINGTON - THREATENED WITH severe legal
penalties, Teamsters President Frank Fitzsimmons and three
other men promised the government they wiD resign by April
30 as trusteea of tht) union's largest pension fund. The Labor
Department and the Internal Revenue Service announced
Sunday that the lour trustees agreed to resign under a
reorganization plan deitigned to correct apparent legal
violations by the $1 .4billion Teamsters Central States pension
fund .
The agreement, reached in top-level negotiations between
Teamster and government officials, also provides the trustees
will place the assets of the fund into the hands of independent,
professional investment managers. In exchange, the IRS
promlsed to restore permanently the tax..,xempt status of the
fund . The Labor Department , likewise agreed to drop a
threatened law suit, and discontinue its Investigation into the
current management of,fund assets.
But a Labor Deparf:!nent attorney ~id the agreement does
not end the government 's investigation, nor does it preclude
legal aCtion against any individuals suspected of past wrongdoing. The 1974 ~nsion law holds fund officers personally
liable for money lost on bad Investments.

COLUMBUS (UPI·)
Information "severely
damaging" to the state 's
utility companies has been
gathered in Washington by
two investigators, S.,n. Neal
F. Zimmers Jr., D-Dayton,
chairman of the Senate
Energy and Public Utilities
Committee, said during the
weekend.
Zimmers said the two
Investigators
for
his
conunlttee have spent a week
In the nation's capital. He
said the team, consisting of
an economist and a lawyer,
were sent to Washington
under a personal service
contract they have agreed to ,
· but have not Yet signed.
Zimmers Identified the
Investigators as Elizabeth
Blake, a Yellow Springs
attorney , and Robert
Ramsdell , an economics
professor at AnUoch College.
They will be paid $25 per
hour, to a maximum of $7,500,
plus S2,500 for expenses
through April 30th.
Zimmers, who was accused
during the past week of badly
handllng an lnvestlt!a\lon into
the state's energy Jroblems,
118id he had nol announced the
lnvutlgatlon because
utilltiea would do "all they
fjlln to block this."

I

!

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

~~News. . •in Briefsl\

:t

Precipitators costing
$112 million in 1977

enttne

MONDAY, MARCH 14, 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

,.

Broad reforms
will be asked
WASHINGWN (UPI ) The Carter administration
plans to ask Congress next
week lor a broad election
reform pa cka ge including
Wliversal voter registration

and public fin ancing lor
congressional election s,
according to presidential
assistant Stuart Eizenstat.
He said the White House
also plans to move
aggressively on an am~itious
agenda Including a consumer
advoca cy agency , food
stamps, and hospital costs.
Ca rt er's ~4- y ear -o ld
assistant for domestic policy
and legislation laid out the
agenda during an Interview.
He said the election reform
package is expected this
week. In addition to.making it
easier to register and
authorizing federal financing
of Congressional races, the
package will include :
Allowin g private
fundraising in addition to the
$21.8 million limit on fed eral
finan cing for presidential
elections "because of the
absence of gra ss-roots
involvements in lundraising
in 1976."
- A l~ning of the Hatch
Act to permlt more political
participation by .federal employes.
Carter wiD not propose how
much financing should be
provided for congressional
elections, nor will he offer
any recommendations on the
president ial elect oral
process, Eizenstat said.
Besides the election
package, here is Eizenstat 's
rundown of initiatives

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Wedne sda y thr ough
Friday, mostly fair
Wednesday and Thursda y
and a chance of showers

Friday. Highs In the 50s.
Lows in the 40s Wednesda y
and In the 30s Thursday
and Friday,

expected from the new
administr ation durin g the
next few months :
- A food stamps reform
will be submitted within two
weeks on the basis of a study
und er
way
in
the
Departments of Agriculture ,
and Health , EducatiOn and
Welfare.
- A message asking estabMADRID, Spain (UP!) lislunent of an independent An Italian
passe nger
consumer agency will he commandeered a Spani sh
ready within two weeks. It ai rliner today and ordered
will be, with a lew the pilot to fly to Algiers, the
amendments, substantially · national airline Iberia said.
the bill vetoed by President
The airline said the plane ,
Gerald Ford.
Iberia 's flight 027 from Bar'- Aproposal in about three celona to the Mediterrrlinean
weeks toput a cap on hospital island of Majorca, landed in
expe ndit~re s by uniform •Algiers at ~ p.m. (8 a.m.
bud get
control
and EST ).
accounting procedures The national news agency
"the foundation of national Citra said the plBne was
ljealth insurance,'' Eizenstat carrying 30 persons. The
·
said .
hijacker's name wa~ given by
Citra as 11 Zossi. "
There was no immediate
indication as to motive.
Spanish police in recent
Clear toni ght, lows in the
weeks
arrested 10 Italian
mid 40s. Tu esday sunn y,
ri
ghtw
i ng e xtremists
hi ghs in the upp er 70s.
allegedly
involved in terrorist
Probability of precipitation
activity
either
in Spain or
10 per cent today, near zero
Italy.
But
there
was no
per cent tonight and 20 per
immedia
te
indication
the
cent Tuesday .
hijacking was connected with
the arrests.

Airliner
hijacked

Weather

COF CTO MEET
The Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce will meet at noon
Tuesday at the Meigs Inn for
lunch and a business meeting
to follow. All members and
others
interest ed
in
progress ive programs in
Pomeroy are welcome.

OPINIONS WANTED
SALEM CENTER
Trustees of Salem Township
will meet at 7:30 p.m.
Monday, March 21, at 7: 30
p.m. to discuss formation of a
volunteer lire department in
the township. The public is
invited to voice opinions pro
and con. The meeting will- be
at the Salem Center School.

.Reserve of food is asked

WASHJNGWN (UP!) - A
group of 35 religious leaders
including evangelist Billy
Graham today appealed to
Sen. Thomas Van Meter, R- Congress and President
AshlBnd, had criticized Zim- Carter to create a national
mers' conduct of th e food reserve program to
investigation in a letter to protect consumers and
Senate Majority Leader farmers .
"In food-short years it
Oliver Ocasek, [).Akron. Van
could
assure a supply for
Meter asked that minority
emergency
needs. and
Republicans on the conunitee
prevent
extreme
pri ce
be allowed to hire their own
Increases
that
relegate
many
special staff.
Van Meter citied "lack of poor people to hunger and
direction
and
staff starvation," the group said in
capabilities" and accused a petition.
"In food surplus years it
Zimmers of falling to inform
could
prevent depressed
the Republican members of
the conunlttee of his plans.
Zimmers, however, said he
makes an announcement
prior to each committee
meeting of what work wiD be
conducted . during
th e
The average residential
following week.
customer of Columbia Gas of
Van Meter also questioned Ohio will pay about $85 more
Mrs. Blake's and Ramsdell's for natural gas this winter
qualifications.
than last according to a study
Zimmers said Mrs. BlBke released today by the gas
has handled case• before tbe company.
Public Utilities Cornmlssioo
J. M. Koebel, manager for
of Ohio and the Federal Columbia Gas of Ohio In the
Power Commission. He said Gallla-Melgs area, said
Ramsdell was a private Columbia IB not dlsc~unting
accountant for two years, the impact the cold weather
before moving to Anitoch and higher rates are having
College at Yellow Springs. on gas bills and the hardship
Zimmers said be expects _ this is causing som e
his commlttee to com,plete its customers.
ll!udy and issue a report, with
"To help out Columbia Is
recommendations, about offering custortim a 'special
April 30.
payment plan that wl)l

prices that hurt fanners in
developed and developing
countries alike,'' it added.
The petition said American
leadership wiU largely determine whether the world establishes food reseryes,
The petition, signed by
Grsham and 34 other Protestant, Catholic and Jewish
leaders, was to be presented
by three of the signers to a
Senate
Agriculture
Conunittee hearing on farm
legislation .
Among the signers were the
Most Rev. James F: Rausch,
General Secretary of the
United States Catholic

Conference; William P.
Thompson, president of the
National
Council
of
Churches ; and Rabbi Marc
of
the
Tannenbaum
Ameri c an
Jew i sh
Committee.
Spokesman said the appeal
also would be discussed with
White House officials.
The religious leaders urged
Carter to support reserve
legislation, and , once an
American reserve is set, "to
use it as the basis for
negotiating ... establishment
of an
internationally
coordinated system of

reserves.''

Lawmen are busy
Weekend law enforcement potato chips were tltken as
act ivities by Sheriff James J. was approximately $75 in Sunday afternoon was James
Proffi tt 's De pt. included change. Entry wsa gained by Andy Laudermilt, E. Main
Pomeroy, for operating a
beginning investigations into a person or persons ~ic king in St.,
motorcycle without
a
fou r theft incidents, several a rear door.
motorcycle
endorsement.
He
traffic code violators, and one
Dottie Pierce, Rt. I , will appear Friday in County
case
of
mari juana Middleport, was ci ted Court.
possession.
Saturday afternoon to county
Rick Mu rphy, Rt . 3,
Sheriff Proffitt reported a court for allegedly perm itting Pomeroy, reported Sunday
breakmg and entering at th e an unlice nsed _. drive r to
ft ernoon
his
locked
No. 2 Vista Station at operate a motor vehicle. She aautomobile
had been entered
Tuppers. Plains. The entry is to appear Friday morn-ing.
and a CB radio stolen. He
occurred Friday evening or ning.
advised
that it was a Pace
early Saturday morning
Also cited Saturday af· 23110 va lued at $300. This
Cigarett es, ciga rs. and ternoon was Terry L. Wilson,
incident . is under in·
20 , Rt. 2, Reedsville, lor vestiga tion.
operating
motorcycle
Hilton Wolfe Sr., Racine,
· without a motorcycle en· reported that the old Ben
dorsement. He was cycling in Salser residence had been
th e Arbau gh Addi tion at entered. Noise was heard
Tuppers Plains when cited by around 4 a.m. Sunday. Entry
deputies. He will appea r was gained by kicking in a
Frids y morning.
front' door .
Arrested and ja iled
No information
was
Saturday evening was Don E. available on items taken.
Stobart , Rt . 3, Pomeroy, Deputies are investigating. A
COLUMBUS (UP!) - State charged with operating a pickup truck was seen in the
School &amp;!pt. Martin Essex motor vehicle while under the • vicinity.
Cited Saturday afternoon to
said today he would influence of alcohol. He was
recommend to the Ohio released earl y Sunda y Me igs County Dourt for
General Ass embly that morning alter posting bond possessing less than 100 gram
legislation be enacted to pro- for appea rance in county of marijuana were Rodney
vide schools with 10 court. Also arrested Saturday Baker, Tuppers Plains, and
hazardo.us weather days in night was William Reeves, Steven R. Dill, Rt. 1, Long
addition to the live days Pomeroy, cha rged with Bottom. They will appear
Fr iday in Meigs Co unty
whic h are now already disorderly conduct.
Saturday
evening
between
Court . The incident occurred
covered by law.
Essex said his recomenda- 9 p.m. and 10 p.m . Larry the evening of March 7 at
tions are based on a series of Milhone, Tuppers Plains, Tuppers Plains.
seven meetings with more reported his Peterbelt
than 550 sc hool sup'er- Tractor was brok en into
intend ents during a two- while it was parked in a lot
TRAINING SET
day flying tour of the state across from the Tlljlpers
Plains
School.
It
was
The
Meigs County Cancer
and a more recent
reported
that
a
television
and
Society
will hold a training
comprehensive survey of the
hair
dryer
were
stolen
from
session
Thursday,
March 17,
weather and natural gas
the
cab.
Milhone
told
deputies
7:
30
p.m.
at
\he
office in
at
disruption in an 616 school
the
doors
were
open
when
he
the
fonner
children's
home.
districts and 43 operating
discovered
the
theft
.
The
All
Cr:isade
captains
are
joint vocational schools.
He said the survey incident is stiU under in- asked to attend and other
interested persons are
confirmed that 227 school vestigation.
welcome.
to
County
Court
Cited
districts were closed for more
than the five allowable
weather days and some were
closed for as long as 20 days.
Essex noted that the
legislature had already
enacted a bill which would
cover schools that had to
close because of the natural
gas shortage.
Districts which utlUze other
forms of fuel, however, were
CHICAGO (UPI ) - Organized baseball wants to buy the
closed because of weather OaklandA's and move the team to Washington, owner Charles
conditions and would not 0 . Finley said Monday.
apply lor exemptions
"I have no Intentions of moving my ball club,'' said Finley,
included in the energy "!have no intentions of seUlng my baD club.
legislation.
''The commissioner (Bowie Kuhn) has had problems In
Essex said his proposed Washington and I have no intention whatsoever of pulling his
legislation
would
be chestnuts out of the fire ."
applicable primarily to these
Finley said the plan was devised a.t tbe joint major league
school districts to permit meeting last December, a session which be did not attend.
them to complete the school
Finley said he became aware of the plBn when he received
year In June without serious the agenda of the next,owners' meeting, March 24, from Kuhn.
complications, particularly
It lists, first, franchise relocation matters, ''which means
the disruption of graduation some club is going to move," and "there will be a realignment
time lor seniors.
Into two 13-dub major leagues. It says these were proposed by
the conunissioner and the league presidents," Finley said.
Under the plan, the major leagues would buy the A's from
Finley and operate the club In Oakland this year. For the 1978
season, the team would be sold to Washington Interests and
move to the national capital.
this winter than during the
The major league club! would share expenses In canceling
same period last winter , the A's lease for the Oakland ball park although the San
based on actual consumption Francisco Giants, which would remain the oruy team In the
and average rates in effect. Bay Area, mlght play part of their home season in Oakland to
· Higher gas bills thus far diminish damages.
this winter can be attributed
Finley said that American League President Lee MacPhail
to a 23.$ per cent increase In called him last week and discussed the possibility of a sale c1
gas consumption because or the A's to the leagues,
cbld weather and an 18 per
Finley said he was now "beginning to see the real light In~
cent Increase in the average Kuhn canceling the sale of my players last summer as a great
cost per thousand cubic feet way to keep as good a team as he could get to go to
of gas.
Washington."
Koebel said gas bills would
Finley sued Kuhn for $3.S million · because 'be willed the ·
have been even higher If It sales of Joe Rudi, Vida Blue and Rollle Fingers last June.
had not · been for the out''Ali he's trying to do b run me out of basehaU " Finley
standing conservation effort ~dt;d . "When I got Into baseball 18 years ago, they told me
on the part of Ohio's don t roc;k the boat,' and they've been playng the same tune
residential users.
·ever since. And I've been rocking It ever alnce I got Into
baseball."
.

Essex will

ask for 10

mor~

days

Finley fights
sell-out plan

.Keeping warm cost $85 more

~·

permit customers to spread
the cost of additional gas they
have used because of the
extremely cold temperatures
over several months at ho
extra cost,'' the manager
explained.
" Any customer who anticipates having trouble
paying a gas bill should
contact the local cas company office as soon as
possible and ask lor details,"
be said.
The study released by the
company today shows that
this winter the company's
average residential user ca n
expect to pay $298.94 for gas
o,j

service. This projection - is
based on current statewide
average rates, actual consumption lor the first· four
months of the winter and
projected consumption based
on mormal weather for
March and April.
The
same
average
customer paid $214.50 for
natural gas service last
winter, based on actual
consumption figures and
average rates In effect.
·
The study shows the
average customer ~as paid
$67.27 more for natural gas
during November, Decembet·, January and February of
'

'

~

"

I

�~

3-The Datly Sentinel MtddleoortrPomeroy 0

NCAA's first round
had plenty surprises

Arizona falling far short as western 'land of promise'
Edllon Note The foUowlng Is lbe lint In a series of articles
prepored by Iavestlgallve Reporlen and El!llors Inc and
-rlbuled by Unlled Press International The series was
aadertaken otter the bombillg murder of Arizona Republic
reporter Don Ikllleslasl June The articles were prepared by a
team of 38 reporters representing 23 news.-pen radio and
t.lavi•inn

Copyright1977
Invesligallve Reporters aod Editors Inc
Distributed by
Unlled Press lnternallonsl
Wtth its pastel sunsets glearrung ctttes and salubrtous
climate Artzona IS a land of pronuse
But some of that promtse ts being siphoned away by organ
ized crune corrupt pohtical structures and a JUStice system
often cnppled by evils rangmg from cronytsm to flat-&lt;&gt;ut
dishonesty
This IS the basic finding of a team of 36 reporters represent
ing 23 Arnencan newspapers televiSion and radio who came
to Arizona m response to the murder -by-bomb last June of Don
Bolles an investtgalive reporter lor the AriZona Republic
Bolles had spent most of his professtonal career tracking the
mvasion of AriZOna by maJOr hoodlums and swindlers such as
national land fraud czar Ned Warren He also had concen
!rated on the state s politic1811s and public offtclals an active
nunortty of whom have made easy and proftlable accommo
dation With the underworld
It was the premise of the IRE team not to investigate the
Bollesmurder-nowweU on tis way to solution- but to carry
on Bolles work as a final trtbute to hun and Ute people he
sought to tnform and protect
in the course of this mvesttgalton team members w•r•
llarassed by a shotgun-totmg guard when they talked wtth
illegal Mencan alien workers on a cttrus ranch partly owned
by the brother of U.S Sen Barry Goldwat..r they served as a
condwt to Ia w enforcement for Bolles killer John Adalll8011
who offered to confess and unphcate others they crossed and
recrossed the AriZona border wlth the bosses of a Mextcan
dope smuggling rmg they tnlervtewed some of the top
mobs\ers m the state and then secretly met wtth prostitutes
who some of these hoodlums are feeding mto the flourishing
massage parlor ctrewt they talked wtth both honest and
corrupt public offtctals wtth arrogant and concerned
politictans wtth honest cops dope dealers and worrted CIVIC
leaders
The concluston AriZona IS m deep trouble
The AriZona m which Bolles lived and worked lS a sparsely
settled (pop 2 29S 000) boommg (10 000 new housmg uruts
annually m Pboerux alone) state of ptcture post~ard beauty
and enormous potential Unemployment at 5 per cent ts way
below national average the major cities are weD-planned and
streets are safe to walk at mght Prices are reasonable and
Industry throughout the nallon IS fmding Aruona s lure almost
UTesistible
But there IS also another Arizona
As the last contiguous state admitted to the Umon (48th 1912) AriZOna IS the last vesllge of the Old West rough-hewn
unsophisllcated Cultural cenrers rtse m the ctties but only 15
per cent of the state land ts m prtvate hands the rest ts open

HEALTH
Lawrence E Lamb, M D
DEAR DR LAMB - Would
you Lam !&gt;-baste doc tot s
secret.alleb who lord 1t OH!t
pattents as [ patLents \\ et e
1 ecessary evtl.s? Several t e
ceht expenences have dtset
cha nted me and I suspect I
have mtlltons of fello•
sufferet s
As an example I was to call
my famt ly doctot fm the
results of certat 1tests and X
ravs I phot ed and the
secte\ary satd Just one mome nt please
For 22
mmutes I wal\ed then hung
up and called back late
Madam se&lt;retat v adtn tted
she had forgotte me
Then I phoned a spectaltst s
offtce for an appomtment
The secretary satd Come n
tomorrow at 10 15 When 1
arnved I found the off ce
dosed and a note on the door
statmg that the offtce was
dosed on Wednesda) s B

space dt vtded he tween the federal government and 60 per cent
of the nation s Indians Laws even when enforced are
madequate
The staffmg of pollee and regulatory agenctes ts mtserly
The tax base IS narrow Government creaks and there IS
Widespread public restgnation to corruption as the mevttable
consequence of that government
It ts on this stage that crune and corruption play thetr parts
The actiVIties of orgamzed crun.e go largely unwatched white
collar swtndlers such as Warren bribe and lawyer thetr ways
through a prosecutonal system marked - unttl recently - by
IIICompetence fuzzy or nonexistent law and br~en brtbe
laking
Public figures on the rare occaston that they are caught
wtth lhetr hands m the cookie jar are allowed to restgn in lieu
of prosecutioo AnCI the leaders of the most powerful polltical
machine m the state have set the general standard through a
history of profttable and open assoctation wtth organiZed
crune f1gures
Here are a few of the specific fmdmgs of the IRE team
The hoodlum history of ArtZOna-&lt;Jnce epttomued by
shootouts at the 0 K Corral the Clanton gang Johnny Ringo
the Apache Kid and Saturday mghts tn Tombstone - IS now
dommated by such Jet-age mobsters as Moe Dalltz Joe
Bonanno Peter Licavoli and thetr lethal army of mob
grouptes
Desptte efforts by the Phoerux pollee department the State
Department of Public Safety (DPS) and the Four County
Narcottcs Strike Force orgamzed crune ts stagmg a blitzlmeg
mvaston of Phoerux Tucson arid other AriZona ctties Some of
these cnme beachheads were established as long as 40 years
ago m shrewd antictpation of the boom times to come
The state has become a haven for white-eolar swmdlers such
as Warren who stl m plush mountainstde homes and sky
scraper offtces and dtrect mtrtcate frauds that span the nalton
and have fleeced small mvestors and buyers out of more than
one billton dollars They have often been encouraged by
offtctals of both pollltcal parltes who have JOtned them m
~!tractive busmess deals and tlchyiJ8lmed public offtctals
eager to look the other way for a prtce
There IS a htstortc and continwng relattonship between these
underworld chieftams and leadmg power-brokers of both the
Republican and Democrattc parltes Some of these relatton
ships have heen acctdental or cursory But many are for
mutual advantage mvolvmg hood worshtp power and money
The frutts of these relationships according to some crt tics
have been reflected m parsun.oruous law enforcement budgets
which force pollee to concentrate on high-proftle street crun.e
VIrtually tgnormg such so-ealled VICtimless crunes as
gamblmg and prostttution - maJor sources of mcome for the
underworld
Thts combmatton of events - emting crunmal
organtzaltons understaffed law enforcement agenctes
courtroom bottlenecks tolerance on the part of some offtclals
- plus close proximity to the heart of MeXIco s drug-growmg
regtons has made AriZona perhaps the smgle most
concentrated comdor of tUegal narcotics entry mto the U S
This ts particularly true of manjuana and herom stnce Mextco
has replaced Turkey as the Jeadmg supplier of herom to thiS

'Lamb-hasting'
is requested
help lu lul lm e

II ~

a heady fr u.str ated as vou a e about
lm tu t!d 1 at1 ~ nts I I ave tl e sut e uf ll e abuses ll at occ ut
fot II) nl'U VCI ICrll'C N
u1 u 1 f tab e cu v ~ t o
wa) Su nehuw 1t wms
\
off tees Thet e at c mat y
tl &lt;::~t U e e1 ll e n ed1cal p u fme dedtcated people 1 doc
fault I dtdn t go back
I ti 1ed anult1eJ spec alist fe.s.s1 1 - mdud ng uffu..: e Lut s offtees who dt a gt eat
ami he h 1 l11 e lu l&lt;i ke fu thet staffs - bel eve II at only JOb a d belte&gt;e me then due
X ta} s a1d told ne o call THEIR 111 e s tnpOt tanl tor bosses 1eall v app1 ec 1).1 l
back fo ll e esults I pi o ed Pe!l aps a \\ Ul li I ) UUI t:ul then
wnn ugl l case tl c s1tuatwn
I he pt ui; en s a stg 1 uf the
at d ""' told
aut
tn es Dot 1 blame tl o ll e
The dudm Hi w1tl a pa
DEAR READER - Yuu loetm s Yuu 1 ced to ask "hy
l e l He ca t talk to you ate absulutelv 1 glt a d \ ou tl1s o~.:c u s u ar y office 01
now
I ave desCJ bed ll e sttuallol busmcss Pcii ap we all et!d
Whet shall 1 call back '
the way a lot o I t:tot :s sec t to ask I OY. Uns as come
T he Oodm tsn t 11 tumm
also
about a 1d "hat I a.s b~cumc
1 o• call back F11da} mot n
What you failed to nc I on ur cor cc 111 1 Just pia n
1g befo e II a m
s tl at tile pt oblem tsn LJUst cu lll'tesy It would I elp 111 all
Wl et I ca lled Tl e do lot
1 II e doclot s ufftcc It IS off ces 1 dudu g tloctutS of
ISJJ t
) el Call back aftet evet ywl e c Sales de t ko f ces husp tats otl et pt ofes
100
dun l ca t c tf they Lake cat c of swns i::l ad busmesses
So l ca ll ed at 1 OJ and was a custome1 Sec t.!tcu 1es Ill
Yuu a e u doubtedly a
told Tl e duc\01 ts w II a pa
otl et offtces do tl e same pet feet o usl and sou e wuuld
ltenl He can t talk to you ll gs you speak ol Just lt y dass yuu as a T} pe A pet
I OW
to talk tu sun c uf the bust ess su 1al ty I am se td g you
Can you blame me lot blow cxec ut vc.s You r i:i} ut e\ c 1 The Healtl Letlc t 4 1
1 g my top
be able to fn d out f II ey a e Behav o
Pal let
I don I u "land wl y doc
nl
Psyc l ulug tca l Faclot s
lo ' " ll 1 mtl then offtce
Doctuts arc JUS( as St ess at d Heatl DISease
Do1 tiel yuut n11ta ttun affect
)o 1 health nu rmltet I u~&lt;
JUsltf cd l 11ay be Ot hetS
wl u wa t ll s rm matwn
CO Set d 50 CCI (S [Ot t( Wltl a
u g stau ped self
i::ld h essed cnve ope Just
&lt;lid tl e sectetaty apolog1ze

Let's talk about our teens

National teenage crime problem
Lookmg at nattonal crune
stattsltcs tt would seem
people don t have as much to
lear from the hardened
crunmal as from the JUVemle
and young adult
16-year-olds head the list
for those arrested for seven of
the F B I s mdex crunes
Followmg are 17 year-&lt;&gt;lds
18-year-olds and 15 year-olds
respecttvely Approxunately
half of all arrests mcludmg
burglary larceny and auto
theft are people under the
age of 18 The cost of crune
coiiUllltted by JUvemles each
year ts m the btllions of
dollars'
In this area these nat10nal
figures do not always hold
true but the posstbtltty of
achieving the nattonal
averages is apparent tf we do
nothing to reduce the growth
in juvenile offenses Parents
and other adults as well must
put forth more effort toward
Improving teen behavtor and
attitudes Here are some
suggestions
- Make it a pomt to know
your children s friends
better
- Know where your teen ls
at night every night Check
to He that the youngster goes
where he says he s gomg
_.,.onaDy Don't be bin
dertd 117 the thinking tl s not
right to spy It I~ your nght

to check on your teen you
are or should be concerned
for hts welfare
and
responSible for hts mtsdeeds
- Adhere to the rules you
have set If vtolated and
unpurushed all rules then
become a Joke
Whtle most teens are
good there is a large
number who are belllgerent
sarcasttc arrogant wtth no
respect for authority of any
ktnd These are the most
likely to wind up tn trouble
wtth authorities Some ad
verse attttudes seemingly
accompany the growtng up
years and tf parents allow
these negaltves to contmue
and prevat l when the
youngster reaches late teen
years there ts litt le
proba blltty of change
Today little ts heard about
what used to be termed the
generation gap Yet by
whatever term you gtve tl
the problem ts still there and
parents use it as the reason
for loss of contact and con
trol But more than thls the
basts for problems wlth teens
now sttll seems to be m the
fallactes of permtsstveness
allowtng overtndulgence
domg their own thing all
havmg their beginmng a la
mode Dr Spock
How can a parent nulltly
practices prevtously thought

to he effectiVe chtld raiStng
when all that has gone before
IS proved wtthout doubt to he
wrong• One way assume
acttve control of household
government mcludtng strong
assertiVe dlreclton and
gmdance m the matter of teen
acttvthes 1
If your teen ts ptcked up by
a law enforcement offtcer
don t get your back up Go
oown wnen requested ana
hear the charges before
formmg an opmion Too
many parents assume Ule
attttude that law enforcement
ts the culprtt This ac
compliShes nothtng and adds
to an already unpleasant
sttuahon Never let your
youngster belteve YOU feel
he s bemg ptcked on As an
adult you know this ls not
possible Your dtplay of such
an attttude subliminally gives
the youngster the green light
to contmue to dtsregard rules
of the home and laws of the
commumty
Remember one of the most
unportant functions of local
law enforcement agenctes Is
to help teens stay out of
sertous trouble To achteve
lhts takes the whole-hearted
support of every parent
Thts column ts spoosored
by the Ellis and Sons Sohlo
Station Mtddleport (Next
week The Roots of Teen
Problems )

Wille lo I e Ill t:a! C Uf tillS

P 0 Box 1551
Rat! u C ly Stat on Ne•
Ym k NY 10019
ewspape

country
The ability of mobsters to move unscathed and of corrupt
public offtctals to go unpunished has partially resulted from
the berugn attttude of some judges and prosecutors and bar
assomaUons that functton more as social clubs than guardians
of the legal ethtc The result IS an atlltude of arrogance and
untouchability logtcal precursors to the thought that the
murder of a newspaper reporter IS a reasonable way to halt his
work
There IS no questton that organized crune IS a major threat
to Artzona Wtth the assistance of federal and local law
enforcement agenctes the IRE ream was able to tdentify more
than 200 persons m AriZOna wtth ties to nationailly recogfllZed
crune fanulies Many more are believed to he working ln the
state The I~ list shows at least 171 of these persons to hem
Phoerux and Tucson alone The bulk of these crmunals have
arrtved tn Artwna durmg the past 10years comc!dent wlth the
populaUon boom and the emergence of the state as a major
narcotics corridor
Nor ls this mvaston luruted to big ctties IRE reporters
discovered a virtual transplant of the Rochester N Y branch
of the Joe Bonanno crune family m Lake Havasu Ctty AriZ
near the Nevada border Similar Cosa Nostra types were found
m such smaller ctltes as Prescott Kingman and even 1n the
mountmntop semt-gho~ town of Jerome tn central AriZona
The crune familieS represented come from such varted mties
as New York Boston Detrotl St Louts Chicago and
Cleveland But all have found a home m ArlZOilB
'Orgaruzed crune ts one of AriZona s major problems satd
Bruce Babbttl the states forceful new attorney general
It has AriZOna by the throat satd outgomg U S Attorney
Wtlliam Smttherman
Its a monumental problem
agreed Vernon Hoy
aggresstve reformer of the DPS
The odds are overwhelming SBid hard-nosed Phoenix
pohce chtef Larry Wetzel
We are agamst t.Qe wall said Terry Grimble dynamic
director of the Four County strike Force
Not all AriZOnans agree however wtth this assessment
Sen Barry Goldwater RAriz after a month of ducking IRE
requests for an mterVIew appeared on PhoeniJ[ s Kf AR TV
tast ~ eb 16 and criticized the mE project f
I thought they (IRE reporters) came down here to solve the
Bolles case complained Goldwater Instead they ve
lntemewed my family Rosenzwetg s (former state GOP
leader Harry Rosenzweig) family God knows how many other
families in thiS state about thmgs that have nothing to do with
the Bolles case
Asked whether the mE ream wasn I looking mto white
collar and org8fl1Zed crune m AriZona Goldwater replied
Well I wtsh them aU the luck m the world I haven t seen tl
and I ve lived here for 68 years

Sport Parade

Desptte the real problerrts ol law enforcement IRE
reporters found the local offices of the FBI Phoenix police
DPS and Four County Task Force to be honest professional
and hardworking
But the quality of the sheriff s offices ln the 14 Arizona
counties is uneven rangmg from good to corrupt How long
law enforcement can stay healthy without massive extra
sopport ls a question mark
Although the AriZona picture Is depressing there are the
1111ttal stirrings of reform Babbitt despite accusations .that be
Is an ambitious loner has shrugged off politics and created an
aggresstve professtonal office Maricopa County Dl.strlct
Attorney Hyder has started on the same path Freshman U S
Sen Dennis DeConcmt founder of the Four County Task
Force rates or gam zed crime as the state s prbne priority The
AriZOna Assoctation of Industrtes gave strong financial
support to the IRE Project
The Phoemx Forty representing that ctty s business power
structure has effectively lobbied for a statewide grand jury
and Hoy s appomtment to reform DPS Now shrugging off
occastonal charges of elitism the Forty Is pushing for a
masstve modermzation of state regulatory agencies and
substantial strengthening of the penal law
The state House 9f Representatives prodded by such hatr
shtrts as Reps John Hays and Tony West ts beghmlng to react
The Senate however remains monbund And reform Is not
easy to sell
From the beginning of the project !Q tis end Arizonans both
m public and prtvate life were cordial and helpM to members
of the mE ream There were never any threats and only one
attempt at a payoff Most submitted courteously and patiently
to mrerviews
Many of those mterviews wtll not appear m the stories to
come because through them IRE reporters were able to
reassess source Information and dectde against further
Investigation or stortes
Exceptions were Sen Goldwater the gUIIIt Del Webb Corp,
the Valley National Bank and two Phoerux businessmen
Officers of the Webb Corp once headed by Del Webb fonner
cO-&lt;&gt;wner of the New York Yankees refused to be Ulterviewed
after a r&lt;:porter told an official of the publicly held buDding
company thai IRE was mterested in delvmg mto specific mob
stockholdmgs m the firm
The Valley National Bank failed to respond to numerous
mtemew r!lquests directed through one of Its lawyers The
mE had sought to question Valley Arizona s largest bank
about loans to mob figures durmg the early stages of the
building of Las Vegas and about certam activities of Robert
Goldwater brother of the Senator who lS a member of the
hank s board These matters will be discussed m stories to
come
So will AriZOna the land of periled promise

By MILT.ON RICHMAN
UPI Sporll Elillor

to take men m wtth
snowplows
Offtctals estunated 11 could
take 10 to 15 days to fully
restore power m Sherman
County Utility service was
sporadtc m a number of
conununlties in the four-elate
storm area
Dozens of the more than 150
motorists holed up smce
Frtday at an Interstate 90
truck slop in Kadoka S D
shoveled out thetr abandoned
cars and began to leave the
town
An Amtrak passenger
tram snowbound for three
days wtth 100 passengers
aboard m McCook Neb
headed west to Denver
wtthout mctdent Sunday
Another tram whtch left
Chicago with 124 passengers
Frtday was stalled m Lmcoln
Neb AU but 10 of the
passengers accepted an

Amtrak offer and flew ba ck
to thetr departure points
There was one redeeming
value to the snow - lt may
have Signaled an end to the
long wmter drought Glenn
Kreuscher
Nebraska
Agrtcultural Director said
the moiSture would help the
drough\Strtcken winter wheat
crops if the plants haven t
blown out of the sot!
Nebraska Gov J James
Exon took an aertal tour of
the state s bardest hit areas
and esltmated storm
damages at at least $3 5
mtllion The 36-hour blizzard
burted roads and towns under
20-foot snowdrifts

'
'

Pitching
is tough
for Mets

THEDALYSENTINEL
DEVOTED TO THE

Us.

INTERF.STOF

MEir.S·MASON AREA
l11ESTER L TANNEHill.
E1et Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Ed.Hor
Pub! ~hed da y ut:·ept Sa urday
Uy Tl ~ OJ o V11.1Jey Publishmg Con

a Y 11 Cuurt Sl Po ne uy Ohio
45769 8\L'llness Off :e P wne 99'.l

2 56 Ell Ioria PI one 992-2157
~o d his~ postage p!:l d a
Pone uy 0 lo
Nuuo wl lHlvertls ~ l'l'pre.sen
ta t ve Wa d G iff tl Co nJ)&lt;lny I
Bo ~I a d f,11.laghH OV
757 T rd Ave Nev. York NY
0011

Sub$ r pt on rll.k.s Delivered by
ca r e whn ava 1:1ble 7&amp; ents per
Wt!ek By Mulo Routt= wl ttre urr e

servi e nut HVH able One no th
$32S By na lu Oh o amiW Vu
01 e Yeur

$22 00

SLX

nu tll!l

$11 SO three
unll ~ $ 00
Eltit!w ere 126 00 ye~:~r S x nonth.s
$1350 T et!
u till 1750
Su!Js&lt;;r plio1 pr1ce u ludes Sunday
Times&amp; !.tel

LODGE TO MEET
RACINE - Ractne lodge
461 F&amp;AM will hold a
spectal meeting at 7 30 p m
Tuesday for Its annual ln
spectton Work will be in the
fellowcraft degree All
master masons are invited

'
~
~

'

••

By Helen Bottel

~
~

Her Best Friend ls No Rival
Dear Helen
My best frtend ts a terrific person who couldn t possibly
UISptre jealousy tn my husband - but be does You see Allan Is
gay There s absolurely no sexual attraction between us
We can discuss anything, enjoy the same bobbies such as
antiques hunting which Jon (my husband ) has no time for
Allan IS like a good woman frtend oqly more understanding
Why would Jon resent him? - AIJCE
Dear Altce
Jealousy tsn t always sexual Perhaps Jon resents your
gay frtend because you communtcate better wlth Allan than
you do wtth hun. and share more mterests
Or he may worry that some day you U ftnd a straight'
Allan to replace him
Then too he could have the mgralned macho male
averSion to homosexuals ( Whtch tsn t right but lt happens )
A three-way diSCUSSion mtght show him he has noUting to
fear - H

+++

Salary increases favored
WASHINGTON (UPI) Prestdent
Carter
ts
constdered certam to approve
salary mcreases ranging up
to nearly 29 per cent for about
50 White House aides with
the largest amounts gomg to
his top advtsers Whit.. House
sources say
The sources SBid Sunday
Carter lS certain to approve
proposals made in a salary
revtew prepared by White
House staffers
Carter who lhts week
makes his first major trlp
since
assuming
the
prestdency ts expected to
pass JUdgment on the pay
ratse plan wtthm the next few
weeks perhaps sooner
The Prestdent s schedule
todaycallsforhim to attend a
Cabinet meeting lunch wtth
Vice Prestdent Walter
Mondale and participate m
the swearmg m ceremony for
Paul Warnke as director of
the Arms Control and
Dlsarmament Agency
Rex Granum deputy Whtle
House pre81 secretary, ac
knowledged the salary
revtew is near completion He

SBid he did not believe the
recommendations have been
submitted to Carter but that
they wlll be soon
The money for the
execuUve salary boosta was
authorized m the leglslation
which allowed memben of
Congress to gtve themselves
mcreases of nearly $13 000 a
year
That actton IIICluded hikes
for a stzable layer of
govenunent - mvolvlng pay
levels two through flve
However the ratses that
would apply to the White
House are independent of the
others and nwst he approved
by the President before going
into effect
The recommendations tn
the White House review
mvolve shuffling individuals
from ooe pay level to another
the sources sald In the end
however all would end up
wlth larger paychecks
The highest mcreases
involving a 28 9 per cent rise
for those at level two would
go to senior presidential
asslslanta such as Robert
Upshutz ~ Hamtlton Jordan

and James Schlesmger
Also at that level would be
national security adviser
Zbtgniew Brzezmski policy
and domestic affairs adVISer
Stuart Elzenstat
congresstonal Iiason Frank
Moore and Press Secretary
Jody Powell
The
revtew
also
recommended that 10111e of
the people at level three be
shifted to level four pay
scales which will stlll
amount to a salary Increase
once the new rates go into
effect
Carter attended Sunday
school and church services at
the First Baptist Church of
Washington and heard Pastor
Charles A Trentham give
thanks for the releue of the
more than 130 hostages seized
last week by terror1Bta at
three
buildings
in
Washington
On We&amp;tesday, Carter goes
to Clinton Masa for a town
meeting The neil day he
travels to West Vlrglnla and
later to New York City for an
evening address at the United
Nationa

Dear Helen
IBBked your adVIce 16 years ago and unfortunately didn t
follow tl You as well as .-rents and frtends, told me marriage
wouldn t change a spoiled lazy egotistical (but terribly
charming) man I spent nine miserable years admitting you
were right
After the divorce I went out wtth many men and learned a
lot about what I don t want 1ben I met the man I knowls right
Problem he feelo marriage means too mucb
responsiblllty Says he d ezpect me to CJI)t work and stay
home and he d want to adopt my three teenage dtlldren
Sometimes he c&lt;Iiles close to making this decision Then he
backs of!
We ve had a perfect relallooshlp for three years 1be kids
love hun Our family vacations are great No fr!ctloo But
still most mghts he gets up and goes home to bachelochood
Should 1drift on Ilk! this or cut loose • Friends say as lone
as he has a 'wife without the license he wont risk marriage,
and I should Sllllre him to lt by dating other men 1bal111111111
sneaky
This time Ill take your advtce, so I m - ASKING AGAIN

Dear Aaklng
Because I was tight 16 years ago on a IOIIfl-dlatance
I!PPralsal (let s call it suggestion not advice), it doean t lollow
I ll hit the jackpot again Remtlllber, I ooly try to make you
think you must he your own advisor
Yes lt smeaky making a man jealouaso that he 11 choose
for marriage Alao rlaky- but sometimes lt worka
Moce to the point why not concentrata on his mladlrectad
approach to marriage' Let him know be wont be tatq on
CCIIIlplete reoponalblllty for a family ol four that you want 1
cooperative venture wblcb won t overburden blm, and you 11
draw up a contract if be wishes
A slx.mooths trisl marriage might pel'lluade him
At any rate, If you re happy wlUt thla 111111, why cut l001e'
Drifting wrrn someooe Is much better than driflln8 llo1111 H

TAMPA F1a (UP!) - Some penple htde thetr feelings weU
Not Pete Rose He does a dreadful job
He s trying hard to keep everythmg instde hun now and he
can I His feelings spill out on hun all the time He can t help lt
What s tn Pete Rose s heart one second ts on hts tongue the
next
Of all the salary disagreements he has had with his
employers the world champion Cincmnati Reds this one has
taken the most out of him By far
It s killing him eating him up lllSide
The reason for this ts because Pete Rose has got tt in his
mind that the Reds are unappreciative of all he has done for
them over the past 14 years
Here are the facts
Nobody m the history of the Reds can match Pete Rose s
overall statistics They re so unpresstve he could waltz mto
Baseball sHall of Fame on the ftrst ballot five years from now
if he never even ptcked up a bat agam
For the eighth time m hls career htst year Rose had at least
200hits Only player ever to better that wasTy Cobb who did it
nme years Rose now has 2 762 hits and to gtve you some tdea
what that means Iklhe Ruth had 2 518 and Joe DiMaggto 2 214
Last year Rose who will be 36m four weeks played m aU
the Reds games for the third strrught year extending hts
coosecuttve games streak to 490 moot among aU acltve major
league players His 323 batting average boosted hiS lifetime
figure to 311 which makes hlm No I m the National League
Rose s salary wtlh the Reds last season was $188 000 They
offered him $25.0 000 thts season but he turned tl down asking
for $400 000 mstead When tl came tune for the automatic
renewal of hls contract last week the Reds could ve cut him 20
per cent but they dldn t They renewed hun at the same figure I
as last year-$188 000 Meanwhile they stgned Joe Morgan
MVP f&lt;r the second time htsl year to a three year contract for
$1 2 mlllion which comes to $400 000 a yesr Rose says what
NBA Stand ngs
he s asking for now has nothmg to do wlth what Morgan was
8y Un ted Press nternat onal
gtven
Easte~n Conference
Atlant c D ,. s on
I asked for the ftgure I wanted a month and a half ago and
W L Pet
GB
that was long before Joe Morgan stgned says Rose
Ph lade lph a
39 27 59
Boston
34 32 5 5 5
answermg the obvious suggestion he wants to be patd at least NY
K n CkS
30 37 448 9
as much as the highest salarted man on the club
Buff a o
27 41 397 13
NY Nels
21 46 J IJ 8 2
But that ISI11 uppermost m his mind he mststs
Central 0 \ISIOn
Pete Rose was saymg all thiS off to the stde of third base on
W l Pet
GB
&lt;10 26 606
one of the Reds practice diamonds at thetr trammg complex t-tous on
ng on
39 28 582
here Picking his head up he noltced Sparky Anderson the Wash
sa n An ton o
38 29 567 2 2
Reds manager out near second base
C e\ie and
34 JO 53
5
Atlanta
28 40 4 2 13
I d do anything foc that man satd Rose Anything m the New
Or ea n s
26 40 39.4 14
By FRED DOWN
world Ilove Clncmnati and I love the fans there Its my home
Western Conference
M dwest D v s on
UP! Sporls Writer
town but all they (the Reds) dots beat me down Why do I
W L Pc1
GB
Other values may change
have to go through this • Why are they puttmg me through this ? Denver
.42 25 6?.7
Detro t
.40 28 588 2 durmg baseball s revolutton
Kansas C y
35 Jl 530 6
of the 1971il but one rematns
Look, I m not bemg concetted but just look at my record I Ch
cago
32 35 47 8 10
as
dependable and deep as
have to think that record wise and for consiStency and nd ana
30 JB 441 12 '
23 47 329 20
Rockefeller ml
popularity I rate 111 the top three of my professiOn' Am I M waukee
Pac f c D v son
That would he New York
wrmg or am I nght • You tell me
W L Pet
GB
Mets pttchmg ol course
in that regard I have to say Pete Rose ls rtght but I m not Los Ange les 42 2.4 636
Port end
39 29 574 4
The Mets are havmg
the one who lS paymg him Bob Howsam and Dick Wagner take Go
denS ate
39 29 51 4 4
34 35 493 9 2 trouble Slgnmg slugger Dave
care of that department and they feel the club s offer to Rose IS Sea t le
Phoen 11.
26 4
388 16
Kingman and are expected to
fatr
Saturdays Results
go mto the new season as long
We have offered him a superb contract even by today s Sea ttl e 91 NY Knlcks 88
Hous on 120 New Orleans 04
shots to wm the Nationa!
staooards says Wagner the Reds VICe prestdent and M
waukee 108 nd an a 06
League s Eastern DtVISton
general manager I really feel Pete has been gtven too much
Sundays Results
title It s a team wtlh
advtce He has Uatened to so many people that be doesn t have
Boson 124 Phoen )( 107
numerous mfteld proble~
a sound @W'e ln mind
Buffa o 102 Denver 95
posstbly a problem at catcher
LOS Ang e es 84 NY Nets 81
Pete
, believes he has at least three more strong years
cago 106 Ph ade phla 02
and popgun power
left ar
way he figures lf he plays for $250 000 a year lor Ch
C eve and 115 Atlanta 113
But when tl comes to
three
years that comes to only $750 000 He feels if he Detro I 02 San An1 on o 97
Sf 122 wash ng ton 9
ptlchmg the Mets believe
plays out OIS option thiS year wlth the Reds some club mtght Golden
Kansas C tv 103 nd ana 98
they rank No 1
pay hun twice that amount next year
Monday s Game
1
Met ptlchers turned m thetr
I have to coostder that he says 1don t want to leave the Los Ange es at M waukee
Tuesdays Games
second stratght shutout
Reds But I Jru&lt;Y have to The thing that bothers me so much IS Philade ph la at Cleveland
Sunday when Jon Matlack
they don t say 'you re too old you can t hit you can t run or NY Nets at San Anton o
Boston at Ch cage
Nmo Espmosa Ray Sadeckt
you can t play thtrd All they keep telling me IS 'we can t
W&amp;sh ng ton at Kansas C t y
and Sktp Lockwood combmed
Los Ange es at Denver
and 11 s too rich for our blood
New Or eans at Po ttand
on a fourhitter and a 3-ll
trmmph over the St LOUIS
WHA Stilnd ngs
Cardinals
The Mets have
By Un ted Press Internal ona
East
allowed a total of three runs
W L T Pts GF GA
40 26 2 82 297 249 m three games this sprmg
Quebec
C nc nnat
35 30 3 73 309 252 while holdmg rtvals scoreless
ndlanapl s 30 32 1 67 229 256 ln 24 of 26 mmngs played
New Eng nd 29 37 6 64 236 263
Walks and St Laws errors
B rmngh m 27 40 3 57 245 265
x M nn
9 18 5 43 136 129 contributed to the Mets runs
West
Boys
Cov ngton 66 Clinton Massey
W l T Pts GF GA two of which were unearned
Oltlo High School
60
Houston
42 20 6 90 272 194 But when your opponents
W nn peg
38 28 2 78 307 245
Basketball Results
(AI Canton)
United Press lntern1t1onal
Sebrmg 65 Fairport Hardrng San 0 ego 33 33 3 69 227 245 don t score
Ca lgary
28 33 5 61 206 224
Elsewhere around th e
Class AAA
59
mon on 28 39 3 59 200 26 camps
(AI Bowling Green)
Mogadore 57 Columb ana 52 Ed
x
26 39 3 55 237 318
Defiance 49 Lima Senior 45 Cuyahoga Hgls 67 Oa llon 53 PhOen
Don Sutton a 20 game
x Team d sbanded
(AI Cleveland South)
(AI Ashland}
Saturdays Results
wmner
last season allowed
Cle John Adams 80 Cle Mansi eld Sl Peter 91 Tllfrn lndlanapo s 7 B rm ngham 2
three
runs
m ltve mnmgs m a
c nc nnat 9 ca gary 2
Glenville 57
Calverl 6
Edmonton 3 Qu ebec 3 ot
(AI Cleveland Lincoln Wesll
losmg cause as the Atlanta
PhOen x 7 san 0 ego 6 ot
Girls
Cle St Ignatius 76 Parma
Braves beat the Las Angeles
Sundays Results
Class AAA
Padua 65
C ncinna 7 Birm ngh am 4
Dodgers 5-3 Wayne Gross
(AI Dayton}
(AI Eastlake North)
W nn peg 9 Edmon on 3
homered for Oakland and BtU
Mentor 43 Nordon Ia 38
S dney 53 Northmonl 37
Houston 5 nd anapol s 0
Melton
and Andre Thornton
(AI Lorain Admiral Kmgl
Xen a 42 Troy 22
Quebec 5 Ne'W Eng and 3
Mondays Games
El)'f"la )O Bay 51
Oaylon Wayne 60 Trolwood
connected for Cleveland m
No games scheduled)
!AI Oxford)
Madison 36
the A s l}{i VICtory over the
Tuesday s Games
(AI Parma Valley Forge)
Princeton 56 Lemon Monroe
Calgary
at
lnd
anapo
s
Indians
Jlm Slaton Larry
Parma Normandy SS Berea Quebec at Houston
51
(At Dayton)
Sorensen
and Sam Hmds
38
C nc nna t at 8 rm ngha m
Kettering Aller 55 Falrmonl Medina 52 Brecksville 23
combmed on a three-littler m
PhOenix at San 0 ego
Cle Lincoln W 46 Cle Rhodes
West45
Edmonton at W nn peg
the Mtlwaukee Brewers ~
(AI Canton)
36
wm over the Cahfornta
Canton McKinley 45 Massln Cle John Me shall 52 Wads
NHL Stand ngs
An gel s as Nolan Ryan
Perry 43
worth 45
By United Press lnternat onal
(AI Toledo)
!AI Mentor)
campbell Conference
suffered his second loss of the
Patr ck Divis on
To! Scotl 77 To! Devilbiss 74 Euclid 50 Willoughby S 42
W l T Pts GF GA sprmg
(AI Troy)
Eastalke N 55 Geneva 25
Phlla
43
IS 12 98 281 185
John Mayberry drove m
(AI North Rldgevolle)
Vandalia Butler 58 Sprgfld
NY lslandrs 42 19 10 94 251 173 ftve runs wtth a smgle and a
Lakewood
51
N
Olmsted
28
Norll1 54
At ant a
29 30 1 I 69 225 232
(AI Copley)
Bay 56 N Rldgev lie 23
NY Rengers 25 33 3 63 241 27d homer to lead the Kansas
(AI Canton}
Barberton 71 Akron Firestone
Smythe Divis on
City Royals to an 8-7 vtctory
Greene 49 Canton South 32
W l T Pts GF GA
60
St louis
29 32 8 66 201 228 over the Texas Rangers
Woosler 38 Tlmken 26
(AI Marietta!
Ch
cago
23
38 o 56 2 5 267 Reggie Cleveland 30 pounds
(AI
Hubbard)
Marlella 78 Cambridge 63
19 34 17 55 213 271
You Mooney 43 Wesl Branch Mlnnesot.!
Cllss AA
va,...couver 22 ~o 9 53 197 259 hghter than last spring
(AI Ashland)
40
Coloredo
19 3912 50 198 260 pttched shutout baU for four
Struthers 52 Boardman 34
Lexington 68 Willard 55
Wales conference
mnmgs as ~e Boston Red Sox
ttlass AAI
1At Athens l
Norris Division
(AI
Canfoeld)
W L T Pts GF GA topped the Chicago Whtte
Ironton 61 Nelsonville York
Campbell 61 You Rayen 22 Montre&amp;l 52 8 11 115 342 163 Sox 5-2
39
Pittsburgh :w 28 13 73 211 220
Walerloo 43 Girard 41
(AI Ado!
Shortstop Sergto Ferrer s
Los Angeles 28 28 1~ 70 231 208
(AI Ptckennatonl
Ottawa Glandorf 79 Lima Cen
Wash
ng
tn
l?
38
14
52
188
273
three-run
homer tn the mnth
Ham Two 44 Wesllall ~
Calh 66
Detroit
16~4 9 41 171261
(AI
Boxley)
mnmg
lifted
the Philadelphta
(AI Toledo)
Adams Oi\ islon
Col Wehrle 54 Col Ready 49
Rosstord 66 Genoa 61
W L T Ph GF GA Phlllies to a 6-4 vtctory over
Col Hartley 56 Grandview 32 Buffalo
43 21 6 92 260 191 the Detroit Tigers who got
!AI Worrenl
(AI Bloom Carroll)
Boston
42 21 8 92 273 212
Warren Reserve 66 Warren
To onto
31 28 11 73 268 243 flve strong mnmgs from
Heath 43 Granville 28
Harding 65
21 37 10 52 199 245 pttcher Ray Bare
Utica SS Watkins Memorial 48 Cleveland
Rookie
(AI Cincinnati)
Saturdays Results
(AI Elgtnl
Cln LeSalle 55 Cln Elder 53
outftelder
Steve
Henderson
s
At llnta 6 NY Rang ers 3
NCollege Hill 74 E Cllnlon 67 River Valley 28 Marlon NY Slanders 8 Clevel&amp;nd 3
two-run
homer
was
the
btg
Ple..ant 26
!AI Dayton)
Boaton 3 Ph lade phla 1
blow as the Cmclnnatl Reds
Montreal 5 Ch cago 1
Day Jefltrson 66 Mason 65 Highland 55 B g Walnul 39
Pittsburgh
3
Buffe
o
2
scored
a 3-1 win over the
Class A
(AI Stoubenvlllol
Toronto 6 Detroit 0
(AI Warren)
Coshocton 74 Bellaire 58
Pittsburgh
Ptrates
Glenn
or ado 2 Vancouver 2
Buckeye South 66 Ridgewood MacDonald 38 Bloomfield 34 Co
Adams
homer
started
a
3 St Lou s 3
Maplewood 49 Southington 15 Minnesota
51
SuiMiay 1 Resulh
three-run
fourth
mning
that
Bristol 47 Lordstown 40 (ot ) Wash no ton 3 Detro t 3
Cllss A
.-ced the Mtnnesota Twins
fAt Flndlly)
NY Rangers 5 Atlan ta 3
Riverdale 71 Corey Rowson Teays Valley 59 West Jeff 33 Phlladelph 1 4 P ttsburgh o
over the Houston Astros 3Regular Season
Los AncJeles 2 Boston 2
69
2
Buffalo 6 Toronto 1
Montpelier 64 Dotta 49
(AI Llmli
NY slanders s Minnesota s
Randy Elliott a non-roster
New 8remon60 Rldgemonl50
Colorado
2
vancouver
6
player
who mtssed all last
(AI Elldol
Monday 1 Game
.\ thought for the day
Continental 48 Ollovllle 39
season
wtth a diSlocated
Los Angeles at Montreal
(AI Nopolo.,)
President Harry Truman
Tuesday s Games
shoulder had two singles and
Archbold 6ol Ayersvllle 50
&lt;~I At ant ll
said 1be reiiJOnslbillty of CPittsbu~q,
a trtple as the San Franctsco
evcland a Wash nQton
fAI Doyton I
the
great
state
Is
to
serve
and
To
on
o
at
s
Lou
s
Gtants downed the Chtcago
Middletown Fenwick 81
Oelro t at Vancouver
not to dominate the world
Franklin Monroe 70
Cubs 6-2

: Pro \
...•stan d"mgs,'

The good part of Jhe storm
was tl gave us obviously
much needed moisture to
help the wheal crop Exon
SBid The bad part of It ls slx
people are dead •

Helen Help

121 95 Saturday
Another surpnse ol the
weekend was Syracuse s 9388 overtime vtctory over
Tennessee
The 32 team fteld was
pared to 16 m the weekend s
action The other survtvors
are North Carolma UCLA
VMI
North Carol ma
Charlotte Kentucky Notre
Dame Marquette Southern
fihnms Wake Forest Kansas
State Idaho State Detrmt
and Utah
I think we took them a
httle ltghtly at ftrst Green
satd after the Wolverme s
tough game wtth Holy Cross
The second hall was one of
the best we ve played thts
season
Mtchtgan ts deftrutely the
qmckest team tn the country
that s why they reNo 1 They
deserve hemg No I Holy
Cross George Blaney satd
Reggte Theus scored ?:/
pomts and Edd te Owens 22 tn
leading La s Vegas rout of
San FranciSco the second
stratght loss for the Dons
I after wmmng thetr ftrsl 29
games Las Vegas whtch
equa led
the
NCAA

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

West, plains hit by killer blizzard
United Press International
J;toads lay burted under
house htgh snowdnfts
electrtctly was an on-again
off -agam semce and work
crews searched today for
more vtctuns of a killer
bluzard that battered the
west and the PlatnS
Light snows wafted over
the Rocktes and parts of the
storm weary Plams early
today m the wake of the
weekend
storm
and
stockmen s and travelers
advtsOrtes remmned m effect
m Montana
But warm weather settled
over most of the stOrm areas
Sunday and today and the last
storm warnmgs were
canceled Sunday speUlng an
end to a late wmter rampage
that left at least 15 persons
dead
Seven fataltttes were
reported m Colorado SIJ[ m
Nebraska and one each m
South Dakota and Kansas
Most of the dead were
motorists trapped m thetr
cars by the howling storm
Rescue workers searched
the Rocktes and the Plams
states Sunday for more
bodies
Thousands of northwest
Kansas homes remamed
wtthout electrtctty today and
house htgh
snowdrtfts
hampered repair crews as
high as etghl feet on Sherman
County Kan highways
A Great Plains Electrtc Co
op spokesman satd the storm
downed some 1 500 utility
poles m Sherman County
Kan
The matn trouble ts
getting crews around the
spokesman srud We ve got

By CHRIS SCHERF
UP! Sports Wrtrer
The top-ranked Wolvermes
were heavy favontes over
unranked Holy Cross
especta lly
wtth
the
Crusaders htghscormg Ron
Perry mJured and out of
Sunday sgame butMichtgan
was unable to take command
unttl the ftnal ltve mmutes
Dave Baxter led the Wol
vertnes late surae wtth a
half-dozen key baskets and
All Amertca guard Rtckey
Green finished w!Jt 35 pomts
Mtchtgan Coach Johnny
Orr was not espectally
Impressed wtth his team s
performance but satd
Anytime you wm tt sa good
victory
San Franctsco Coach Bob
Gatllard certamly would
second the sentunent after
stxlh ranked Nevada Los
Vegas elimmaood the DOns
from the NCAA tournament

Ohio High School

tournament scores

•

..

tournament record ror most
pomts m a game now 1s ~
2

Carolina 500
won by Perry

LaGarde and Walter Davts
8o Eilts scored 17 pomts m
Marquette s 56 51 vtctory
ove r Ctnctnnalt as the
Warrtors took thetr ftrst step
toward the naltonal lttle tn
coach Al McGu re s last shot
Duek Wtlhams scored 25
po nls mcluding eoght tn the
last two mmutes to lead

Syracuse s \ 1ctory over
Tennessee was htghl ghted b)
Larry Kelley s 22 pomt
performance Erne Crunfeld
had 26 pomts and Bernard
Kings 23 for the Vols the
Southeastern Conference
champs
Notre Dame to a 90-83 wm
Guards Brad Holland and over Hofstra and Rtck Robey
Jun Sptllane each had 16 had 20 pomts to htghhght
pomts m sparkmg UCLA to Kentucky s 72'58 vtctory over
an 87 79 vtctory over Prmceton
Lomsvtlle Marques Johnson
Freshman Curtts Redding
had 17 pomts for the Brums scored 32 pomts and Mtke
who won for the 49th time tn E\ans 20 m leadmg Kansas
thetr last 51 NCAA State to an 87-80 \Hn over
tourmunent games
Provtdence Rod Griffm had
Phtl Ford s 27-pomt perfor 26 pomts and Sktp Brown 23 m
mancc led North Carolu" to Wake Forests 86-80 v1clory
a 69-66 v ctory over Purdue over Arkansas
desptte the absence of lar
Gary Wolson s baselme
Heel Olymptans Tom JUmper w lh four seconds left
gave Southern lllmms an 81
77 decisiOn over Anzona as
Mke Glenn led the SalukiS
w1th 35 po nts
Steve Hayes 29 pomt
performance htghhghted
Idaho State s 83-72 wtn over
Long Beach State and Terry
Tyl
er s 29 pomts were
Pomeroy Bowl ng Lanes
Mormng Glor es
responstble lor Detrmt s 93 76
March 1 1977
romp over Mtddle Tennessee
Newe Sunoco
20
Cedrtc
Cornbread
G&amp;J Auto Par s
96
Maxwell had 34 pomts m
Sea r s
83
Karr &amp; VanZandt
80 lead ng North Carohna
Roa ch s Gun Shop
62
Charlotte to a 92-81 overttme
No 2
41
\lctory
over
Central
H gh nd v dua game
Mtch tgan Ron Carter and
Betty Wh 1 atch 187 second
- A l ma Pooler 171
Wtll Bynum had 18 pomts
H gh nd v dual 3 games
each m VMI s 73.66 wm over
V cky G I lan 476 second
Duquesne
Barbar a Wh t1 ng ton 458
Greg Deane s 25 pomts
H gh team gam e
Newe
Su noco 802 h gh l eam 3
h ghl ghted Utah s 72-68
games Newe
Sunoco
VICtory over St John s

BOWLING

2254

HS regional pairings
lnternat on a I
Pa1nngs for the

Un ted Press

Bo ys Oh1o Reg1on a I
Ba ske tba I Tournam ent

Class AAA
IAI Kent)

Mentor (18 4) vs Toledo
(19 3 ( Fr day)
E lyr a 22 0) vs C eveland

Scoll

John Adams

(Frday

(56

F na s Sa turday W nner to

Columbus
(AI Canton)

C~ um bus

(At Mar10n)
Mare ta
( 16 5)
vs
Co umbus Mar on F rankl n

(F rday}

L nde n
M cK n ey (23 0) vs Det ance
Columb u s

(176) (Frday)

to

F mals Saturday W nner
Columbu s

(AI Daylon)

Dayton A lte r

P nceton (17 5)
{ Wednesday)
C nc nnat LaSa l e (18 3) vs
Vanda l a But e
( 8 4)
{Wednesday)
F nals Sa turday W nner to
Columbus
Class AA
{ At Canton)
Akron Sou th ( 18 4) vs
Youngs t own Rayen ( 17 4)

IF day

Canton McK n ey ( 7 5) vs
Barberton (22 0) Wednesday
Warren Western Reserve
(21 ll vs C eve and S
Ig nat us ' 1 ( Thursday)
F nal s Satur day W nner to

(203)

C nc nna t

(19 3)

vs

Spring sports
banquet date
set April2
EAST MEIGS - Plans for
a sprmg sports banquet on
April 2 were made by the
Eastern Athletic Boosters at
the hlgh school wtth Bob
Mtlls prestdent m charge
Speaker for the banquet
wtll he Charles Huggms of the
indtan Valley South Htgh
School Parents are to brmg a
covered dish and there wtll be
a $1 charge to adults at the
door
The boosters also planned
to sponsor an mdependent
basketball tournament
March 17 20 wtlh Larry
Hemes and Duana Wolfe
directors Boosters will seD
refreshments at the games
Everyone who can help ts
asked to call ~110 or 9922418 The next meeting will be
held on April 2 wtth the
covered dish meal before the
meettng

C eve and Cathedral Lat n
120 21 vs Brook I eld ( B4)
Fr day
F nals Saturday W nner to
Co umbus
(At Bowl ng Gree n)
(16 5
vs
B oak s de
Lexngton ( 183 ) Frday
Olfawa G andorf (20 2) vs
Ross ord ( 4 8) Fr day
F na ls Saturday W nne to
Co umbus

tAl Alhensl
Buckeye South ( 22 OJ vs
lronlon (19 4) IFr day I
Coshoc t on

Columbus
(Fr day}

( 9 3)

M ff

vs

n (

9 3)

F na s Saturday W nner to
Co umbus

(At Dayton)

Dayton Jefferson (
Spr ngf eld Shawnee
(Thursday)
C nc nnat Nor th
H II (13 9 vs Bexley
(Thursday l
F na s Safu day W
Co umbus
Class A

Davtd Pearson Winner of
the ltrst race of the season
had a flat ttre and slammed
mto the lhtrd turn wall on lap
134
Bobby Allison wmle ss
smce 1975 had another rough
day as he spun out m the
fourth lap of the race and left
on lap 172
Cale Yarborough making a
btd for hts thtrd consecultve
wm had to slam on hts
brakes to avo d a crash and
sent hts Chevrolet mto the
wall ftve laps aft..r Allison
reltrcd He lost three laps
while repa1rs " ere made but
hung on lor st&gt;th place

TWO ADVANCE
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Ash
land and Dayton advanced to
the small college national
basketball tournament for
women which wtll be played
tn Califorma later thts month
Ashland paced by Darla
Plice wtth 22 pomls and Sue
Welch wtlh 14 won the
Mtdwest Assoctatwn of
IntercoUegtate Athletics for
Women defeatm~ Dayton 6662 Saturday
Arm Meyers was top scorer
for Dayton wtth 17 potnts
In a consolalton round
Saturday Sagmaw Valley
( Mtch ) downed Carroll
College ( Wts ) Bl-&amp;1 while m a
battle for filth place Capttal
Umverstty topped Taylor
(ind ) 5347

me

BILL FLETCHER
South Thtrd Street
Middleport Ohro
992 7155

149

ITATI FUM

A

INIUUNCI

STATE FARM
Insurance Compantes
Home Off cos B oom ngton Ill no s

A Pub tr Se ICe o h s new spape &amp; T~ Adve t s g Counc

!I

57) vs
{7 12)
Co ege
18 3) I
nner to

(AI Canlon)

Sebr ng ( 19 3} vs Mogadore

(BJ)(Fr day)
Mansf e d St Peters (19 4l
vs Cuyahoga Heghts (183 1
IF dayl
F na s Saturday W nner to
Co umbus

(At Bowl ng Gree n)

R ver dale ( 18 4) vs New
Bremen (20 22 (Wednesday)
Archbo d
(20 2)
vs
Cont n en ta l 18 6) {Thu r s

day I

F nals Saturday W nner t o
Co umbus

(AI Alhens)
(20 2)
vs
Shadys de
Strasburg ( 166 ) (Thursday}
Lu caS\1 lie Va ley (18 4) vs
Ross Sou t heastern (21 1 l

(Thursday)

F na ls Sa turday W nner

to

Colum bus

tAt Dayton)

vs Fort
Laram e ( 6 B) I Fr day }
Sparta H gh and ( 17 5) vs
Cov ngton (20 2)

M1dd etown Fenw ck

ROCKINGHAM
NC
( UPI ) - Roc hard Petty satd
his Dodge d dn t run any
stronger a s Sunday s
Carohna 500 stock car race
dragged on But he tad a
hard tune ftndlng a believer
among his fellow drtvers
Petty took command after
200 mtles and had no sertous
challenges as he went on to
pt ck up hts ftrst vtctory of the
season and $18 855
Everybcxly wa s rurm ng m
the lower part of the race
track but I was able to run a
little lower than anybody
else sa d Petty of the newly
resurfaced North Carolma
Motor Speedway The car
ran real good but 11 dtdn t
really get any stronger I JUSt
had a little btl hettel"' groove
m the race
It was Petty , runth wm m
23 races at the one-mtle track
and hto ftrst vtctory smce he
took the checkered flag m the
Amencan 500 last fall
Sunday s race was the
slowest on record m the
track s 12-year hiStory as 11
cautt on flags slowed trafftc
for 116 of the 492 laps The
race lasted ftve hours and stx
mmutes and Petty averaged
only 97 860 mtles per hour
A cautton flag now and
then ts real good because tl
lets you rest Pelt) sa td
But there were so many
cautton flags that everybody
- fans the crews and
everybody - got bored
Darrell Waltnp ftmshcd
second tn a Chevrolet e ghl
seconds behmd Petty and was
the only dr ver m the same
lap w1th the wmner at ihe
fm sh Donrue Alltson who
started on the pole postlton
pot h s Chevrolet tn thtrd
place Buddy Baker was
fourth m a Ford and Net!
Bonnett took ftfth place tn a
Dodge
The speedway was slippery
at the start but Petty satd the
traction unproved as the race
progressed Waltrtp satd he
was JUSt happy to be around
at the end of the race
It was ruce not hemg
messed up Waltrtp satd
Durmg the ftrst part of the
race I figured I could run wtth
any of them but the) were
actmg crazy up there I front )
and runnm g all over
everybody
I ftgured the best thmg lor
me to do was hack off and let
them go on he SBid About
mtdway of the race the track
really got rtght for me but l
got rtghl for Petty too

(13 7l

( Fr day)

F nals Sa turday W nner to
Columbus

with us!

"Red Cross is an
organization of
physical action, of
•
Instantaneous
•
•
act1on; 1t cannot
await the ordinary
deliberation of
organized bodies
if it would be of
use to suffering
. .."
human1ty.
Clara Barton,
Red Cross
founder

PLANNING APIZZA PARTY
PHONE
THE ALL NEW

MEIGS INN PIZZA SHACK
-EntOY three stzes of your favort1e

ptnas
-Try our delicto us subs whtle you
stp your lavonte suds
Eat In Or Carry Oul
Phone
992 6304

Red Cross. The Good Neighbor

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O..'Mumlay, March 14, 1977

5-The Daili&amp;:ntinel, Mlddlepm1-Pumeruy, 0., Monday, March

College scores

Andy Bean unflappable at_

5ilturdo.v
rournam•n ts

,,.CAA Un i ' '· Ot ~
~ IS1 Ro'!nd
Eut Jh.•gtonal

winning first tournament

VMI 73 OUCIU.esne 66

North Ca r ol tna 69 Purdue 66
Kf'ntuc k,- 7'1 Princeton 58
Not r e Dame 90 Hofstra 83
Mldwe~t

MIAMI (UP! ) - · Andy Monday mornings and will be
Bean had just turned 24 and able to play in the Masters
was winning his first pro golf next month.
tournament , but he looked as
After Graham sank the putt
though he'd heen doing it all for a tie, he gave the lead
his life.
back by bogeying the next
Unflappable, even in the hole. Bean; playing behind
lace of a very real threat by Graham, took a twu-&lt;lhot lead
veteran David Graham, Bean by sinkmg a 15-foot putt for a
appeared to be heading for birdie on No. 15, but bogeyed
the nearest fishing hole the next hole when his drive
rather than on his way to the hit a tree.
biggest win of his life . As he
Graham gave him the
ambled up wthe sixth tee , he · stroke back on the 18th by
even took time to smile and missing the green and twotalk to a tiny toddler, who was putting from 10 feet, so Bean
clutching her mother's leg. came up to the 18th tee with a
Bean, a tall, handsome twO-&lt;lhot cushion .
blond, shot a par 72 over the
"I just wanted to get it on
famed Doral Blue Monster land twice and on the green,"
course Sunday to win the he said. He played it sale,
$40,000 first prize in·the Dora I hitting an iron off the tee and
Open
golf lagging up for a bogey five
Eastern
tournament with an il-under- ana his first tournament win.
par 277, one stroke ahead ill
Graham shot a 69 Sunday w
Graham. ·
fmish at 278. Another shot
The birthday present back was Tom Weiskopf, who
'~th e best of my life,
carded a final 68. Tied at
means the second year pro no seven-under 281 were LaMy
longer will have to qualify Wadkins and rookie Mtke
with the "rabbits " on Sullivan, each of whom shot

COLUMBUS (UPI )
Macedoma Nordonia won its
first Class AAA state
wrestling championship and
Columbus De Sales won its ·
third Class AA title in the last
seven years at the 40th
annual State High School
Wrestling Tournament this
weekend.
A record crowd of 10,864
watched the meet in St.
John's Arena at Ohio State
University.
At Otterbein College in
nearby Westerville, Licking
Heights with 87 points and
Richmond Heights with 64
points finished one-two in the
Clas~
A tournament ,

repeating their finishes of
last year .
Nordoma, coached by Gary
Watters, won its title with
58'h points w56 for runner-up
Maple He ig hts. DeSales,
coached by Mike Stanley,
won its crown with 99 'h points
while Columbus Bishop
Ready was second with 90 \2.
Seven of the 12 returning
champions successfully
pulled off second straight
individual titles.
Wickliffe's Greg Drenik
and North Olmsted's Billy
Walsh each repeated as Class
AAA champions. Drenik, who
winds up the season with an
overall record of 25-0-1,

ASTRO•GRAPH

POLLY.$ POINTERS
Polly Cramer

Gentle handling gives
old wicker new life

captured the 138-pound title
with a 3-2 victory over West
Chester Lakota 's Tom
Cooffing.
Walsh defeated Galloway
Westland's Jin\ Edwards, 11-li,
to win the t32-pound crown,
Walsh was the U9-pound
champ a year ago and
Edwards was the 126-pound
champ a year ago.
In Class AA , DeSales' Mark
Zimmer raised his season
record to a perfect ~ when
be won his second state title.
After taking the 98-pound
crown last year, he won the
l12:pound title Friday night
with a 13-4 victory over John
Churchill of Vermilion. The
other wrestler In win his
second straight AA crown
was Columbus Watterson's
Phil Anglim.
Anglim, who won the crown
with an easy IS-I victory over
Kenston 's Dave Brinton ,
completed hiS second straight
undefeated season, running
his two-year total to 7Ul.
In Class A, Ashland Crest·
view's Reggie Johnson (lOS),
Licking Heights' Mark Lowe
(155) and Hillsdale's Mike
Glass ( 167 ) successfully
defended their titles.
Nordon1a won its title
without the benelit of an
individual champ . The
Knights , under Watters'
guidance for the fourth year,
had Randy Jenkins finishing
third at 105, Tony Codner
third at 132, Ken Chorba
fourth at heavyweight, Larry
Anzivme fifth at 126 and Jell
Cole sixth at 167.
DeSales, which won state
titles in 1971 and 1974, had
seven place winners.
In addition to Zimmer's
title, Tim Palermini was fD'st
at 132, Pat Zimrner was
second at 126, Mike Murtha
was third at 138, Ron Reeb
fourth at ll9 and Brian
Dowds fifth at 185.

pages of a thick magazine.
When I am ready to wear it
again it is nicely pressed. NAOMI.
DEAR POLLY - I make
" quickie" ice packs by
soakmg folded wash cloths or
small hand towels and
placing each one on a loam
tray such as meat comes on.
These are put in the freezer
for about IS minutes, taken
out and slipped Into a plastic
sandwirh hag. I always make
rwll ..... a hme. When one
thaws the other is ready to
replace it.
When having new carpet
Ia1d always save several
pieces to use for repa~rs.
Careless smokers olten drop
ashes that leave burn spots.
When this happened to me I
called the carpet installer
and he told me to cut off some
nap from a scrap, drop that
TAMPA, Fla. (UPII milky white glue we use so Rookie- outfielder Steve
much on the burned spot (of Henderson hit a home run
course, after scraping off the with a man on base Sunday to
loose burned part ) and then climax a three-run fifth
press the nap into the glue.
innin~ which
Redscarried
w a the
3-1
More can be added to buDd it Cincinnati
up. Mine lasted for 10 years victory over the Pittsburgh
but I still hold on to those Pirates.
Lefthander Grant Jackson,
carpet scraps just in case
there should be another the third of four Pirate
pitchers, was the victim of
accident. - MRS. L.H.
Polly will send you one of the Reds' scoring splurge
her " peachy" thank-you which was touched off hy a
cards, ideal for framing or single by catcher Bill
placing in your family Plummer. One out later,
scrapbook, if she uses your rookie shortatop Roo Oester
favorite Pointer, Peeve or followed witli a triple to right.
Then came Henderson's
DEAR POLLY - When Problem In her column. Write homer.
Polly's
Pointers
in
care
of
mailing gifts and other
The Pirates' only run came
packages we take them to a this newspaper.
Parcel Service where the
delivery date is sooner and
the cost less than that of
regular parcel post. Since
OR. RONALD F. RIVIERE
many ill our packages are
OR. A. J. STAEHLI - DR, K. H. CHUNG - .
addressed to a P.O. Box
DR . VICTORY. LIANG - DR. G. J. STOMBAUG H
number instead of the usual
street address we always
One or two day
include the telephone number
full denture service,
and area code along with tne
partial dentures
address. This enables the
Parcel Service to contact the
FOR PRICES CALL
recipients immediately on
OHIO
TOLL FREE
arrivaL This is a marvelous
0~ . FIIVIEFIE
lime saver and we · can
1·800·282·6411
depend on packages arriving
at a desired time. - C.E.F.
DEAR POLLY - The
small scarves we wear so
much now get so . wrinkled
and look as if they need
RIVIERE CENTER 949 E. Livingston Ave., Columbus
pressing alter each time thPv
Weekdays 8·30 A.M. to6 :30 P.M.
are wolln. When I take o~ off
'You'fl .'irml•· TomotrfJ•• I l' •11 'f'frlt t• Curt• Of .l'our l•••'ll11 ,,/t);·
I smooth and fold it n••tlv
and place It betweer.
Polly's Problem
By Polly Cramer
DEAR POLLY - I have an
old white wicker fernery that
haft evidently heen used on a
porch and it is so very dirty. I
want to spray paint it with
white enamel but do not know
how to clean it or prepare it
for paintmg. I am afraid to
wash it for fear the wicker
will get soaked. Using a
whisk broom has not helped. I
do hope someone can help
me. - JUNE A.
DEAR JUNE A. - I think a
whisk broom is far too stiff
lor brushing the dirt out of
wicker. A large clean paint
brush would do a better job or
the attachment brush on your
vacuum should remove the
loose dirt. You mentioned
that the fernery is now white.
I wonder what condition the
old paint is in. Often such
pieces have been painted so
many times that tl)e old paint
is flaking off and the new job
would be far from satisfactory. That was happening to
my white wicker porch chairs
and last year I had them
stripped of all paint by a
furniture stripper and then
they were spray-painted. If
the present paint is in good
condition a hosing off should
not hurt it. I am pres\lllling
this is real wicker not the so
called wicker that resembles
papier·mache. - POLLY.

something belonging to another.
Your judgm ent isn t too nitty In
e1ther case.

LEO (July 23·Aug. 221 Be your
own person today. You could
h o p on someone else ' s
bandwagon w1th costly results

VIRGO (Aug. 23· 9opl. 221
Although you're not a good team
player today. It'S not all your
t au tt Qlhers co uld l h row
mon key wr enc he s Into the
ma ch1 nery.

LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0ct. 231 Spendmg dollars won't chase you r
d old ru m s to d ay . Seek
somethi ng inspirational. You
can't buy your way out ol the
blues

SCORPIO COcl. 24·Nov. 221
Even tho ugh you th!nk what
you, re do1ng today wit! benefit
all don't make decisions without
the consenl of the famlt~

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc.
21) Stick to the facts In all cases
today even it they're painful and
you lear their 1m pact.

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon. 181
Fr1ends cou ld come to you to
ba1 l the m out of foolis h financial
scrapes. Keep ·your eyes wide
op9n to avoid ·embarrassment

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20·flb. 111

Reserve a little time for yourself
to handle Important personal
business today Associates w111
be demand1ng , and you'll lose
out otherwise

PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20) Be
rea.11st1c regarding what you can
expect from other s today II
you're overly opt1m1stlc. you 'll be
d1sappo1nted.

Mlfch 15, 1177
The correct choice of partners Is
VItally. important to you this year
m business. Pick those who
al ready have proven trac k
records.

(Are you a Pisces? Bernice
Osol has written a special AstraGraph Letter for you. For your
copy send 50 cents and s self~
addressed, stamped env&amp;Jope to
Astro-G raph, P.O. Box 489,
Rad1o Ctty Station, New York,
NY 10019 Be sure to ask for
P1sces Volume 5 }
I NEWSPA PER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

:J::riple wins it for the Reds

.

'I
•

off rookie righthander Mario
Sow in the eighth inning when
pitcher Fred Scherman
tripled and scored on
Fernando Gonzalez's

e

York Nels , 84-81, Golden
State shaded Washington,
121-119, Cleveland nipped
Atlanta, 115-ll3, and Kansas
City whipped the Indiana
Pacers, 103-98.
Pistons 10?, S]iurs 97:
Detroit snapped . San
Antonio's six-game winning
streak with the help of a key
three-point play by Marvin
Barnes with less' than four
minutes' to play. The Spurs
led hy six points early in the
fourth period but the Pistons,
With Harold Porter scoring
eight of their next IS points,
surged into the lead. Auston
Carr led Detroit with 19
points while George Gervin
had '!/lor the Spurs.
Brave~~ 102, Nuggets 95:
Adrian DanUey scored 33
points as Buffalo beat
Denver, despite '!/ points hy
Dan Issei. The Braves staged
a 16-3 burst in the fourth
period to build a 14-polnt lead.
It
was the third straight loss
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!)
for
the Nuggets and their fifth
Ohio University graduate Bill
in
seven
road games during
Havlland, 26, a fonner OU
the
last
13
days .
track star, won the tenth
Lakers
84,
Nets 81:
an~ual Athens Marathon
Kareem
Abdul-Jabbar,
Sunday by more than a
under
tight
security by
minute and was crowned with
federal
agents
because
of his
a laurel wreath, the gift of
suspected
ihvolvement
with
up."
Minas Stavrakis of Greece.
Dave Cowens led Boston's
lite
Hanashi
Muslims,
scored
He covered the some 26scoring with 21 points while mile distance in 2:23.22 to get 23 points to lead Los Angeles
John Havlicek and Sidney the crown. Stavrakis picked
Wicks added 19 each. Alvan the laurel leaves from the
Adams had 29 points for the fields near Marathon, a town
Suns.
near Athens, Greece, and
The victory moved the wove the wreath especially
..Celtics to within five games lor the race.
of the first-place Philadelphia
Kerry Ragg of Athens, a
former
marathon winner who
NEWLAND REPEATS
is
a
faculty
member at OU
MINNEAPOLIS (UI'I) and
the
College of
Rod Newland of Ohio State
Osteopathic
Medicine ,
provided the only bright spot
finished
second
in
2:24.47.
lor the Buckeye gymnastics
Although
103
runners
team this weekend in the Big
Peden
Stadium
oo
started
at
Ten competition as he
the
OU
campus,
ooly
76
repeated as champion in the
runners
completed
the
race,
vaulting exercise.
The Buckeyes finished last out 13 miles and back. •
The Ohio State University
among the eight schools par·
Alumni
Club won the team
ticipating. The University of
title,
with
the Mid-Ohio
Minnesota repeated as
Striders
second
and the
confere11ce champion in the
Toledo
Roadrunners
third.
two-day event.
76ers, who bowed to the
Chicago Bulls, IO&amp;-t02, at
Philadelphia.
. .
Artis Giirnore scored 21
points, including seven in the
last five minutes and a field
goal that gave the Bulls the
lead for good with 3:51
remaining . Julius Erving
scored eight of his game-high
29 points in the final 2:23 in a
vain attempt ID rally the
76ers.
Elsewh ere,
Detroit
defeated San Antonio, 102-97,
Buffalo beat Denver, 102-95,
Los Angeles topped the New

Marathon
•

wmner

crowned

Your assurance of quality. From
inside, out - only 1he finest
materials are used.

over New York at the
Uniondale, N.Y.• Coliseum.
Mike Bantom led the Nets
with 17 points. There were no
incidents.
Warriors 121, Bullets 111:
Golden State had eight
players in double figures to
offset a 47-point performance
by Washington's Elvin
Hayes. Reserve guards
Charles Dodley and Charles
Johnson each scored a field
goal in the final 44 seconds to
pull the Warriors away from
a l!5-115 tie. Hayes also had
20 rebounds in a brilliant allaround performance.
Cavs llli, Hal!'ka 113:
Elmore Smith's 30 points
led Cleveland In its victnry
over Atlanta, enabling the
Cavs to snap a three-game
losing streak. Smith also had
13 rebounds and six blocked
shots. Len Robinson scored 31
l&gt;oints and John Drew had '!I
for the Hawks.
Klllgs 103, Pacen 98:
Scott Wedman had 23 points
and four teammates were -in
double figures lor Kansas
City in its triumph at
Indianapolis. The Kings led
most of the way by small
margins. John Williamson
led the Pacers with 32 points,
including 18 in the second
half.

'

Slrong and yields big. DEKALB XL·72b Is bred to
do the job for you . Order yours today.

The longer you own H,
the more you like it.

DEPEND
ON
DEKAlB
"' . ,..... ,,. ... ··
-·-·._
. ' ...............

BAKER FUR NITURE

GERALD ROOD &amp; SON

M

Rt. 2 Letart, W.Va.

304 . 882 _3144

•sa~cr~if~ice~l~ly~.-----~~~:~~~~::::~~~~~~~~~~~L~===============~===

1-

to keep your wages?
Let ~r fingers check these pages.
a

..
.'

.'

pages
•

With rushing winds and gloomy skies
The dark and stubborn winter dtes
F~r'!fl, unseen, Spring faintly cri~,
Biddmg her earliest child arise
MARCH!
'
- Bayard Taylor

•
'·
~

COLD FRAME AND HOTBEDS
Cold frames and hotbeds are mighty useful whether you
have a greenhouse or not. In the North this is the month when
hotbeds are started to raise young vegetable and flower
gar~en plants for setting out later .
Locate your hotbed ill a sheltered place where it will not be
SUbjected to cold winds and where as cool as practicable now,
in preparation for their transfer to the open garden. Keep the
glass sash off the frames on all favorable occasions and give a
little ventilation at nights except when it is expected that the
' temperature will drop below 30 degrees.
Plants moved from the greenhouse to cold frames, as
some will be towards the end of the month, should be kept a
UWe wanner and the air inside the frame a little "closer" than
is customary for plants that have been wintered in the frames.
This is done by ventilating less freely and by spraYing the
~:~~~;s~:;:~~~~~~~so~~~p:;:.~ ~~o~~ :;~

~noc~~::~~e:a~dt~~~~rr:t~~~tmilartothat
of tender plants newly moved from the greenhouse to cold
frames. The idea is In simulate about the plants the conditions
that occur outside on a warm day ... on what the gardener
considers good growing day . Although hotbeds and cold
frames that contain tender plants must not be over ventilated,
It is Important that a little ventilation be provided early on
:runny days, otherwise the inside temperature may soon rise w
! 80or90degreesorevenmore,whichisharmful.
In the greenhouse, March is a month of great activity. Now
; a great variety of seed are sown, cuttings of many kinds must
: Ill! inserted, and young plants coming along from earlier
! propagations need attention in the matter of transplanting and
• repotting. Growth is phenomenal. Good planning and an
! &lt;rdiily ·llttaek·"CIIl the jobs ·to he done a~e-·necessary to keep
~ ahead of the work.
t Seeds of aMuals that grow fairly quickly, intended to
~ provide plants to set in the garden in six to eight weeks time,
t will in parts of the country be sown in March. It is a mistake to
• sow too early. Better by far whave at planting time s}J\\ctmens
l that could have stayed another week or two in the flats or pots
~ withouthann, than ID set outplantsthathave been growing too
• long in cramped quarters and have suffered because of this.
:
Annuals wsow include petunias, Verbenas, Calendulas,
; BMual Phox, strawflowers, Globe Amaranths, marigolds,
! asters, stocks, zinnias, and many others.
i TUBERS - Start into growth tubers of Cannas,
l Caladiwns, and tuberous begonias in order to have good strong
! plants to set out when the weather becomes really warm and
; seWed.
1
Watering will need more attention now. Plants that are
! well rooted are likely to dry out quickly on sunny, wmdy days.
! They must be prevented from wilting by watering before the
i earth becomes excessively dry, and by damping down
• (wetting) floors, paths and the benches on which planta in flats
: and pots stand.
:
Syringing (spraying lightly with clear water ) is of benefit
1 to many plants and will be needed more frequently from· now
; oo. Never syringe in dull weather or so late in the day that the
•~· off before nightfall.
ll foliage will not "''
Apply fertilizer regularly. Plants in the greenhoose that
: are in active growth and are well rooted should be fertilized
' regularly as long as active growth continues. At least once a
! week, and usually oftener, they should be givep dilute liquid
: ferWizer. Calla lilies, primroses, cinerarias, hydrangeas,
• roses, sweet peas and all other annuals that are to flower
indoors, will benefit from this attention.
House plants should now he making good growth. If you
1 air~ayerll!l any a month or so ago, the roots may now be
' ·showing oo the outsides of the ,moss balls. When this happens,
·the rooted tops may be severed from the lower stems and he
potted separately. There is still plenty ill time to make new air
Ia~.
'
CUttings - March is a good month in the house to make
cuWngs of a great many plants. With the exception of cacti and
other succulents, all root much more readily in a terrarium, a
glass covered or a polyethelene-eovered propagating box or
IUider a bell jar.
Leal cuWngs ill African violets, peperomias, rex begonias,
pickaback plants and others that can be propagated in this
way, if Inserted now, will give young plants that can be grown
Into nice sizeable specimens by fall. Stronger sunshine now
makes it desirable to mov~ African vloleis, ferns, pickaback
plants, and others that are known to prefer subdued lighting, to
positions where they do not receive lull, middle-of-the-day sun;
ir, alternatively, to shade them lightly during that period.
:
Repottlng is an tmpoctant task during the pr.esent month.
"Eumlne all the plants to determine their need for their
-treatment. Some Jdnda need repotting every spring, others
·mere than mce a year, and some at Intervals of several years
mly.
Old specimens in large containers are likely to belong in
·.;the latter clasa. Many bulbs and semi-bulbous plants such as
,.CUvlas, ApP'JithUS, Urgineasand Hippeastrums (amaryllis)
aiJo belon!! there.
• Planta that are not to be repotted wiD benefit ll'orn top.
"tlrelling with lrelh, rich soil after as much as possible of the
,old IUI'face soU has been removed as can be without doing too
much damage to the roota.
Mike sure the drainage In all pota Is in good condition and
Ia not stopped up. Wuh the pota, if they are dirty, in plain
water without 108p or detergent.
The trick with aU plalt\l forced early indoors that are later
to be pllllted outdoors Ia to keep them growing without drying
them ltf,llnd Ia gradually harden them to outdoor conditions.
'lbey llhoultl not be pllnted out until the weather is wann and
leltletl. Until then keep them watered and growing in a cool
roam in a IWIIIY 1Jindow. A sunroom usually afforda suitable

a

coodttlou.

.

.

I bope that bt a IIDallWay I have helped ~I
ion to lll'O" !Iowen as I do .
/

at the tunc or hcr'tl~~th, whcll

•••
••

.. This is an active month in the outdoor garden in all but the
yery coldest section of North America. Everywhere in the
~house gardener is busy.
·
To keep abreast of spring work it is necessary to plan
carefully and, above all, take advantage of every favorable
opportunity the weather affords.
·
, In March are laid some of the foundations for summer
gardens. Weeks, days and even hours frittered away at this
time can never be regained; indeed, the results of such
procrastinatioo will be mcreasingly evident as the season
progresses .
'

~

t\ jli'IJ

Spr·•l,gs'&lt;\:if'ad~lip•fc~urer

i

· For all around performance, it's XL·72b . This corn
hybr id has the qualities you like to see. It stands

. . .t.RiOlSTERED
. ~XSTEE:L
F1.JINTlR:

I 1:~· dw rll'r' Y~a s til :.rpL'1i rur

M~&gt; . . llel•·n Hadfunl, "
~)!JI,I:t,l;r, ·t~,&lt;:JJli~·! : ~f.)j le J&lt;" •k

tilL'

gn-wgc mcmOcrs

Ult't

Thursday mghl at the hall.
It was nutci.l dunn~ lhc
mcctmg that the buwlmg

WHATTODOINMARCH ·
THE STRATEGIC TIME FOR LAYING THE
FOUNDATIONSFORYOURSUMMERGARDEN

~

.
.:
,
:
::

•

County Gorden Club members.

••
"

,:
::

Team takes part in tournament

BY MRS. ELIZABETH BURKETr
MIDDLEPORT AMATEUR GARDENERS

Celtics again have it all togeth~r ·
United Press International
The Boston Celtics may yet •
win the National Basketball
Association's Atlantic
Division because they have
the tools to cope with any
: situation.
The
Celtics
found
themselves trailing Phoenix,
36-28, after the first period
Sunday but Coarh Tonuny
Heinsohn went to his bench
lor reserve guards Kevin
Stacom and Bobby Wilson.
The Stacom-Wilson nlission
was to establish a permanent
press designed to disrupt the
Suns' running and passing
patterns.
And that's exactly what
happened as the sub guards
led a 41-point second-period
surge, which p(oduced a 69-,;2
halftime margin,. and paved
the way lor the Celtics' 124107 romp over the Suns for
their 12th straight loss and
seventh in a row on the road.
"We just did what we've
been worklllS iln since I got
here (in January)," said
Wilson. " Coach Heinsohn
wants the pressing unit to
press full-court, upset the
other team's concentration
and keep them from setting

~

••
•••e ANotes
weekly feature of Meigs

Ironton will battle
Ironton trailed 12-10 alter points. Mark Sullivan lidded . In Class · A action, Doo ,
Buckeye .\falley South and · ooe period. The Southeastern 10.
(Moose) Mauer's Strasblrg
Coshocton will take on Ohio League champion
Buckeye Valley South is 22- team ( I~) will battle ShadyColumbus Mifflln in Class AA . Tigers
outscored
the 0 oo the year. Ironton is 19-4. side at Athens on ThUI'Iday in
Regional Tournament play at Buckeyes 23-ll in the second That game starts at 7 Friday a regional lilt. Mauer Is a
Athens Friday night. South stanza for a 33-20 haHtime -'1ri the Convocation Center. fonner GallipoU. teacher and
was ranked No: 2 in Ohio by advantage. The Tigers led 45Coshocton is 19-2 and assistant coach.
United Press International in 32 going into the last period. Columbus Mifflin is also 19-3.
In the second regional till
the final weekly poll Feb. 24.
Four Tigers finished in That game starts at 9 Friday. atOU Thursday night, lAicasIronton captured its first doubJe· figures lor the Finals wlll be 7: 30 p.m. ville Valley, 19-4, will take on
district basketball title in 18 wmners. Mike Brown, Rick Saturday with the . winner Ross of Southeastern (21-1).
years Saturday night by Howard and Dave Sesber all advancing to the state Finals are Saturday, with the
eliminating Nelsonville·, had H points while Dean tournament, to be held the winner advancing to the state
York, 61-39, in the Class AA Royal added 10. Rudy Schultz following weekend In tournament the following
District fina ls at Ohio led the Buckeyes with 15 Columblf,s.
weekend in Columbus.
Uniyersity.

DENTURES· DENTISTRY

l

••······ ~·~ ······
•••
•• Thumb

Re9ional

6:6 Cincinna ti Sl
par 72Sunday. Jack Nicklaus Marquette
5o fll1 n01S 81 An zona 71
and th1 s year's two-time Wi'lke Forest 86 Arkansas 80
87 Prov idence 80
winner , Bruce Lietzke, !(&lt;msas St.
West Regional
finished at 283.
.
UCLA Ill lOU ISV ille 79
· Bean, a University of Idaho St 83 Lon9 Bch St . 72
Ul"'h 72 St Johns 68
Florida graduate, •·who · Nev
. LV 121 San Fran 95
Sunday
majored in golf and •
NCAA Un llo'. 0 1\t,
marketing, m that order," is
Mideast Regional
certainly one of the most
(1st Round I
colorful of the newcomers to M1ch1gan 92 Holy Cross 81
N.C Ch rltte 91 C Mlch 86, ot
the PGA tour and he D~troit 93 Midd . Tenn . 76 .
Syra cuse 93 Tenn . 88, ot
delighted in regaling the
press about his penchant for
teasing alligawrs.
Raised in Jekyll Island,
Ga., but now a Lakeland, Bemice Bede Osol
Fla ., resident, Bean has a
large dose ill "country" in ARIES (March 21·Aprtl 111 Sllfle
him and spent his evenings at a tendency to be generous to the
the Dora! fishing loc hass in wro ng people today. Recall the
story about casting your
the pond that guards the ~Jue Biblical
pearls be!ore swine.
Monster's 18th hole. ,
Bean, son of teaching goH TAU AU S (Aprtl 20·Mor 201
Don't bank on your luck to carry
pro Tonuny Bean, credits his you
over the rough spots today.
success this year to his ability Hard work Is what's called tor.
to control his temper. In 1976 GEMINI (Mor 21-June 201 You
he won only $10,671, but his pnze your op1n1onS too highly to ~
winnings in the Dora! and day Don 't defend the lndefens1 ~
seven other outings thiS year ble
have boosted his earnings to CANCER (Juno 21-.lulr 221 Be
$65,408, third among the pratecti\le of .your resources to ~
IDur's golfers.
day and also don 't jeopardize

Top wrestlers crowned

Ironton faces state's second
ranked team 1n regional play

J;; at

\Ill'

:'\,dJ.'IIIll! ~

Sth 1UJ!, 7:l:i Jl 1!1. l'H"kl'L.~ cllt:
iJV&lt;ulahlc frn111 Lilt .-.ubut·
dltli.lh: JIJ&lt;:t.Slt:r. llu• bauqul'l
is nJwn tH grang~: mcrni.K!r."i

cmd t!JcJJ fi.lJJul y ~md fr·1 emls
Spcakt·r wlll I~ Her 111cc
Arter, pttsl st&lt;:~ll' lt·cturer.
A rnct!liJig uf subtnlmall'

team hau placed 11111th 111 the
s1atc at the tuumament held
Ill Culum bW:i 111 team were
Wilham Radfonl, Harold
Blacks1on, Robert Bowen,
Ruy Holter and Roy Grueser.

gnmgcs wa~ set fo1 Mcut:h 25
at wlurh t11nc tlu.:rc wtll be a
mortgCtgc burmng to rrwrk

The annu(jl county grange
lllirrqucl was mmounred fu r

be i:J eerernony tn Washmgtw1
ilttd all gr&lt;mgcs art bcmg

fm~l pa yments uu the Natwn&lt;Jl Gnmgc BU1Idu1g 111

Washmgtun, D. C. There wtll

~t S kt•d lu do !Jki'WISC.
Mr~ 1\nu,s l.eiJil.altl,

LWA

dJawrnw1, etllfltJUII t:td the nattuuc.d g rCtn ~-;c dress con test

wil •cll will end on Aplll :10.

The slate cor Jtest IS 8 wrapctruwtd skirt am.l any kmd11f
rleedlcwork Tltt t'c will be a

CWA meeting at 'McArthur
on Man.: h 29 wtih tht lleitJuna l
CWA cht.dJ rmm to be the
speeikcr .
Pluns were IIH.H.it; to se rve

Begmmng

111

Apr1l

t he

Surprise party

honors Yeaugers

fu r&lt;!, MISs J udy Ra&lt;lfu1·d '
Mrs. i.ottw Leonard, Mrs.
Susan Pullins, Mrs. Ka1 en
Sloan, :vlrs. Wilm etla
L ei fh eit,

Mr !:i

Hcun&lt;J

Grueser, Mrs. Ethel G• uese1,
Mrs. Martha Mayer, M1·s
Hazel Ball, Mrs. J udy Humphreys, Tara Humphreys,
Mrs Opal Gn•cse1 , Mrs
Peggy Harris, Mrs. Henrietta Ba1ley, Dal'lene Buckley
Also presenting g1fts were

Mrs. LoUise Radfu1d, Mrs
Becky Romme, Mrs. Nancy
Ra&lt;lf u1d , Mr s
Rclty
Mr s
Weye •· s ml l lc r ,
Genevieve Burdette, Mrs

Women prisoners :._.·•:._
Mrs. Reynolds
if
:
;
:
toptc 0
: ·;

Jane Abbott , MIS. Shil'ley
S1ssun, Mrs Belly Conkle,
M1s. Velma Douglas, Mr.
and Mrs. James F'ry, Mr. and
Mrs. Al'lee Abbott, Mr. and
MIS. Scutt Folmer, Mr. and
Mrs. Wilbur Bwley, Homer
Radfm·d, Agnes D•xun, Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Goeg lem,
Mrs. Ann Evans, Chnsty Ctntl
Pam Evans, Sho1on Darst,
M1 s. Helen Partlow, Mr am!

I

hosts 6'aarden

· ·:

" Women Locked m
Pnsun" was the program
tuple at the Thursday mg ht
meetmg of the Misswnary
Society of the Pomeroy F1rst
BaptiSt Church.

soc•Ia

~. :O:"".~W.~:;:,:-~::::

1

caIen dar
MONDAY
JAYCEE meeting Monday,
8 p.m at Pomeroy C1ty Hall.
UNITED MethodiSt Women
of Heath United Methodist
Church Monday at 7:30 p.m.
Program chairman , Mrs .
Jack Bachtel ; devotions,
Mrs.
Dewey
Horton;
hostesses, Mrs. Earl Knight ,
Mrs. John Krawsczyn, Mrs.
James Criswell and Mrs.
Fred Hibbs.
INTERNATIONAL Order
of Job's Daughters, Bethel&amp;2,
Monday, 1:30 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
LETART Falls PTO
Monday 7:30p.m.
TWIN City Shrine Club
Monday, 7:30 p.m. at the
club: Refreshments.
TUESDAY
SALISBURY
PTO,
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at the
Salisbury
Elementary
School. Father's night will be
observed .

MEIGS Muzzleloaders
Tuesday 7:30p.m. at Tewksbary's
Barber
Shop.
Everyone welcome.
WINDING Trail Garden
Club, 8 p.m. Tuesdliy night at
the home of Mrs. Margaret
Parker. Members to take a
sempervivum plant .
Program by Addalou Lewis
entitled "Grow Your Own
Drugstore." Easter parade is
the theme of the arrangemenC
of the month.
FRIENDLY Circle, Trinity
Church, 7: 30 Tuesday at the
church. Mrs. Donald Hauck
and Mta. Roy Mayer to"
present. the. program.
XI GAMMA Mu Chapter,
Beta'Slgma Phi Sorority, 7:30
Tuesday at the Columbus and
Sl)llthern Ohio ·electric Co.
Officers jl'il~ b~ elected and
there wiD· bt·11 do-your-&lt;Jwn·
thing auctiQp.
GROUP II of the Middleport United Presbyterian
Church, 7:30 Tuesday at the
home of Mrs. William Morris.
'Mrs. Donald Lowery will be
co-hostess. Mrs . Richard
Karr will give devotions, the
thank olferin~ will he taken
of those who and the Bible study ·will be
fl·om Cha pl&lt; r· 1 of Rnok 3.

Mrs. Ellen Couch was
cllamnan fu r the program_,
wh1ch dealt with ways wll•cll
m1sswna ry mmded women
can help cunfmed women.
Mrs. Georgia Watoon read an
~·t•de on the relativeneso uf
the program for Chnsllan
women w1th Mrs. Mana
Fosler readmg "What ll
Means to Be Locked In," and
Mrs.
J use ph Cook,
"P1·ublems Unique to Women
111 Pnson " Ways of entering
into an offender's hfe were
diScussed by Mrs. Harne!
Sterrett.
Mrs. Phyllis Skinner
presided at ti1e meetmg
which opened with the theme
suug, .. Lord Speak to Me
That I May Speak " and the
Lord 's Prayer. Program
books' for the 1977-79 yea•·
we1·e ordered. Theme is
"Wumen ufGud1 Yes !".
The love g1ft was dedicated
by M•·s. Couch and Mrs. Betty Wiles and Mrs. Nettje Bar·
nhart served relreslunents
ca n-ying out the St. Pa1rick's
Da)' motif. Mrs. Mar"aret
~
Bailey attended m addition to
those named.

Meigs
Property

Transfers
William B. Rife, Ruby P.
Rife to William B. Rife, Ruby
P. Rife, Parcels, Salisbury.
Betty J . Graham to Darold
G. Graham, Divorce Decree,
Harrisonville.
Anna M. Ryther, Comm.,
Gerald D. Nease, Dec. to
Anna F. Nease, Lot 6, Racine.
Wayne James Grim'm,
Dalene Ruth Grimm to
William Grimm, 44 A.,
Rutland.
Rhoda Evelyn Collins
Grimm to William Grinun, 44
A., Rutland.
Herschel L. Rose, De&lt;:., to
Margaret A. Rose, Michael
Rose , Diana Rose, Cert .
Trans., Sutton.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Chapter 80,
,,Royal Arch Masons, special
convocation, 7:30 Wedneaday
at, the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple for the express
purj&gt;ose of conferrin&amp; the
royal arch degree.

club meeting
Aprogrcun on forcmg branches for spring bloom was
presented at the Wednesday
mght meeting uf the Middleport Amateur Gardeners .
at the home of Mrs. Edgar
Reynolds.
M1·s. G. E. Conroy , cohostess for. the meetmg, and
Mrs. Nurn'la Alnsbary provided fp rsy th 1a and
pussywillow branches for the
mem bers. Mrs . Eve rett
Taylor presented an article
entitled "lt's Nut NICe tu Fou l
Mother Nature," which explained the furcmg uf spnng
branches fur early flowers.
There was an article on
amaryllis given by Mrs. ArUmr Strauss. Mrs. Reynolds
tlisplayed piCtures and ex·
plained the , process of making a tussi e~mussie wh1ch IS
an old-fashioned bouquet
su1t.able for a wedding.

Ewrn ~

and Jamce

Refreslunent.s wet e se rved

by the CWA cotrumltee.

PREVENTION
IS THE
BEST POLICY

Mrs. Willard Hmes, Mr and
Mrs. Roy Mayer, Mrs. VIOlet
Hyse ll , Mrs.

Vn-g~ma

Wears,

Mr and Mrs. Paul Ri ce, and
M1 . anu Mrs. Opha Offutt

Cllureh , the

Mrs. Ardts Waggoner, M rs

tha Mrs. Diehl also rece1veU
over 100 cards.

Sebu, Mrs. Thelma l&lt;twson.
Mrs Bell) Enlow and Mrs
Belly Moure

Duns

Mrs. Robert Bowen and
Jerry Snowden.

Dan Stanley and so11, Mark :
Mr. and Mrs. Huger Aik1re,
Cil mtupher and Debb1e,
Mrs. Ruby Hall1day , Mrs.
Pauhne Atkms, MIS. Sharon
Jewell. Mrs Nunna Lee,

Ll:unbet'l, Mrs. V1vi&lt;.tn
Bu::i wurth , Mrs. The lma

Al an ea f'!H.!I' meeting six

were taken mtu membcrslup
by demit. They were Enuna

we1e presented tu Mr. and

Mary Diehl celebrates birthday

Anna Williams, Mrs M1lda
McClain, Mrs. Betty M a c~.
Mrs. Esther Wnght , Mrs.
Mary Clnw, M1ss My•a

Caldwell

Kestner.
Sliver star certificat es

Shower given Anita Buckley
A bridal shower was held
recen tly fur Anit.a Buckley,
bnde..,lect uf Tom Ball, at
the Rock Springs United
Mehod1st Church soc1 al
room.
The refreslunent table ~&gt;as
centered With an arrange~
ment of yellow mwns and
decorated with streamers.
Games were . played with
pnzes going to Mrs. Lou
Sm1th, Mrs. Susanne Richmond, Renee Buckley and
Mrs. Eva Schreiber.
Attend ing were Mrs.
Mr . and Mrs. Marvin Donna and Scotty Yeauger of
Lenora Leifheit, Mrs. Helen
(Lucille ) Yeauger celebrated Cheshire.
their 4oth BMiversary March
Gifts were presented and a Blackston Miss Mary Rad12wtth a surprise party given three tier cake decorated
for the couple by their with pink roses and klpped
children and families,
with wedding bells and
Hosting the party were inscribed with "4oth " was ..:
Kenneth, Ruth AM, Chris served along w1th ice cream, :)
and Terri Yeauger, Sue Ann, coffee and soda. Those · :·
Ray , Tina, Ray, Jr , Anthony, present were each given an ..·
Mrs. Mary D1ehl observed
Laura, Enc and Matthew engraved
napkin
to
Smith , Cheshire; Sharon, commemorate tlle occasion . her IOOth buthday anmver·
sary un F11day, Feb. 25, at
Mike and Suzie Parker,
Married March 12, 1937 in
Parkersburg, W. Va.; Barry, Middleport by the Rev . the home of her daugh1ers,
M1·s Stella Atkins and M1"
Peg, Barry, Allen and Jason Hundley, the couple has five
Yeauger, Addison and Jerry , children and 12 gra nd- Ruby Dtehl at Hari'ISonvl lle.
Calltng 'and pt esentmg
children.
g1fts to Mrs. Diehl were Mr.
} ·:·:·:-::·:·::·.· ·&gt;:: ·::· ·:·:·:-: :: ·:·:-:·:····:::.-·:·::::&gt;::::: :····:·":'":::. :: ':·.·.·: :::...:.:,.:: :.-:::,..: ::-::·::\: and Mrs. Felix Alkire, Mr.
and Mrs. Dav1d R1ggs, Dav1d
Roy, Mark , Danny, Paul,
Lmda and L1sa; Mr and Mrs.
,:._,_•:
.
,,.
::-:
::.
·•
.':
p.yo~W'/Im
\
1
1U
,...
:::
',:..'.:.

and

I.. Jevl n g

families.

the So ut heastern Oil1o
Hereford Sale un Sat u1liay, ·F'mtl!ing , Sara and G&lt;:.~rlam.l
Marc h 19.
Caldwell , Charles Ca ldwell,

.J

Mr. and Mrs Marvin Yeauger

meeting times w11l be changed to 8 p.m. Reported ill were
Mrs. Ethel Grueser, Edgar
Abbo1t, Mrs. Mildred Betzlng, Garland C..ldwell, Mrs.
lluth Duerr, Ruland Bearhs,
Mrs. Shn·ley Cllilter and Mrs
Joan Kautz. Sympathy was
extended 1u the Radford,

Ch apt er.
Eastern

Harnsunvi\le

Orde r uf
StC;~ r,

the

the Farmers

Ba nk and Sav1ngs Cu , and
tile ltev. and Mrs. Ernest
Stricklin and daughter, Mar-

CIRCLE MET
R~C INE -The Ruth Mlssiunai'Y Circl e uf the Racme
Fi rst Baptist Church met
J

ecer1tl y at the home of Mt s

Gene Yosl. The group watchMemiJers of lhc Z10n ed the tclcv lsiUn crusade uf
Church sent Mrs Diehl two Billy Graham and 1oiled bandozen ret! ruses ami she also dages to fill the whi le cross
received g1fls and Ouwers quota. Refreslunents were
from the Har n sonville served.

As an
Independe nt
i nsurance agency , ou r
pr 1mary tunct1o n 1s t o
provi de pol 1cies w h ich
afford f1nancial protection
m case of to ss
But, we also ha ve a vital
Inter es t m loss pr eventi on.
as should our cli ents We
en cour:age care, caution
and safety , .. preve11t ivemeasures which can keep
lhat ca r acc1dent from ·
happening , that bu1ldtng
f1re fr om sta rting, that
home burglary fro·m be ing
commi tt ed
Prevent 1on saves J1 fe,
limb and property . and
helps control . insurance
casts and prem iu ms
When lo sses do occur,
our poli cyho lders ca n count
on protecting and service
m t1me of need But we still
say preventlon is the
best pol1cy

DAtf E. WARNER
992-2143
102 W. Main
Pomeroy

NEW 1977

Mrs. Harry Davrs con-

ducted the meetmg w1th Mrs.
Conroy giving the devotions,
"God's Copyright." It was
noted that the Green Thwnb
Notes for tl1is month would be
provided by Mrs. Eddie
Burkett. The hoste ss
repUited un a telephone ca ll
from Mrs. Pearl Reynolds, a
member, ill at the home of
her sisl.er, Mrs. Nma Bland in
Akron .
The traveling pnze brought
by Mrs. Davis• was awarded
tu Miss El111ll Smith. M1-s.
Walter Crooks was winner of
th e
hos\ess
g1ft .
Refreslunents were served
from a t.able covered m green
and centered . with an a rrangement of yellow and
white carnations and yellow
candles. Mrs. Davis preSided
at the coffee ~rvice .

In 1964, Jack Ruby was
found guilty of murder in the
slaying of Lee Harvey
Oswald, assassin of President
John F. Kennedy. Ruhy was
sentenced to death but the
conviction was overturned,
and he died while awaiting a
'
newtrial.
PRAYER MEETING

CHESTER - A countywide
prayer meeting will be held
at 2 p.m. Sunday at the
Chester Church of the
Nazarene with Glen Bissell as
Class leader.

I

OPTOMORIST

'l~&lt;'FiCE HOUR5:'l.lOlo 12,2 to 5 ICLOSI:
AT HOON ON THURS.l-EAST COURT

(I~ I

25" GIANT-SCREEN CONSOLE TV

D IAG O ~AL

The PALMA • SH2527
Mediterranean styled .
console. Full , breakfront

base. Casters. Dark Oak
color (SH2527DE) or Pecan
co lor (SH2527 P), bolh w1lh
the look of fine dislressm g.
Genu me wood veneers and
select hardwood solrds on
top Front , ends and base of
s1mulated wood m matchmg
f1n1sh Chroma color P1cture
Tube 100% Solid·State
ChasSIS. Power Sentry

Vollage Regulaling Syslem

NOW ONLY

SAVE '100

1.

2.
3
•

Zenith 's Color Sentry111' does 11 all for yCJtl cdntrOis
the co lor picture when the scene changes, or the
c hannel cha nges, even when the room light
changes. You get that great Zenith pfcture -

automartcally.

EVG Tuning System has no moving parts to wear
out and no con tact po1nts to corrode In the
tuners It's deJigned to be the mo$t dependable ,
most sensitive IU(ll ng system In Zenith history.

With Zenllh's Space Command' 1000, press lh e

ZOOM bullon and gel instanl close- up. The
ZOOM piG ture 1s 50% largert Also turh set on or off
- change channels- adj ust volume-completely
mule sound.

Ingels Furniture
106 N. 2nd Ave.

. MiddlePOrt. 0.
Phone 992-2635

�--~;;,i";f;;';;""'jj;;:;s;"i[' or Trade Through The Seittinel Want Ads
Meigs Coun tv comrn rss l on ~ rs
Meigs County Courthouse
Pomeroy, Ohio 4S769

Auto Sal~•

614 ·992 -2895

TO

ALL

INTERESTED

WANT AD
CHARGES

AGENCIES , GROUPS , AND
PERSONS ·

on or about March 18 , 1977
the abov• named County wll l
request the U . S Depart m ent
of
Hous ing
Bnd Urban

Developme-nt

to

release

Federal funds under Title I of
the Housing and Commun ity
Oe ... t!lopment Act Of 1974 ( PL

93 383)

proiec t.
~nlor

for the follOW i ng
construction of a

c ltizens

Center to be
loca ted in Pomeroy, Oh io
The total estimated cost of

fhe Center is llOO,OOO

An Environmental Rev 1ew
Record respecting tl'le within
prolect has been made by
Meigs
County
which
doc u ments
the
en .
vironmental review of the
prolect . This Environ menta l

I~ W o rtb lll

Umftor

C..l,
1.00

3dll.yY

. .,
,.,

6d ll.y~

3 00

idll.y

2days

.

------:-;.- - -- ---- - 2 SIGNS. Pomeroy
OF
Motor Co.
QUAUTY
NEW 1975 APACHE TRAILER
11941
Fold-down never used, traded for Custom Van. Ready
to rol l.

In memory, Gard of Tha nh and
OU1lwtry 6 t:tmls ~~ wurd, t;l 00

1175 CAMINO TRUCK
13948
Bcylinder, automallc, powersteerlng and brakes, rally
wheels, block and black vinyl lrim.

4 ~ ents

IIUIIUII WII. Cli!&gt;h IIII:HJVIIII Cl'

Mobile Home SH lt!S ttlld Y11rd :iitll'!S
ar~ a~:ctplt!d Vnly wrth ~:ash W
tlh
Review Record is on file at
or~r . ~ L't!nt cl ~rge for &lt;~lis caiT}'·
the above address and 1S I in ~ Box Nwnbcr In Ca re of Tilt' Stu-

11448

1971 FORD'&lt;• TON CREW CAB
Body good, runs good.

IF

YOU holfe o serv1ce to offer,
wo nt to buy or sell someth1ng,
oe looking for work
. or
whatever . . you'll get results
laster w1th o Sentinel Wont Ad
Call992-2156

Business Services

L__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
PROFESSIONAL

Mobile Homeo fur Sale

Aerial
Commercial
Schools
Weddings

;c.

-;-------' · ~

DAVID BRICKLES

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

COAL, limestone, and colc1um
chlonde ond calciUm br.ne for
dust control ond special mtxrng
salt lor fo rmers Mo1n Street,
Pomeroy, Oh1o o r phone 9923a91
.
APPLES . FITZPATRICK ORCHARD,
STATE ROUTE 689 PHONE

...

"•

·c~PT AIN EASY

General Contracting

LI~TI;t,j, EMY•• CAROL 5
R:IGHn WE'RE A~~ FOR
YOU TAKI~e CHARGE'
OF M d&lt;;f:E tNDIJ$fRIE5!

Route2
Pomeroy, Ohlo4S769
Free Estimates Ph. 992·7119

(6141915-4155
Chester, Ohio
10·17-1 mo (Pd )

availab le
for
p ubli c
tint!
3 · 11 ~1_!110 . pd.
exam inat ion and copy 1nQ ,
up·on request
The PulJli.st~ r~ rves Ult! nijhl
Meigs Cou nty will un .
to L'tl.it or re/et.'t amy uds d~med obdertake the proiect descr 1bed
)t!tlitllwi T 1e Publlljhel wrllnot be
abovew1th Block Grant funds
~S\)UIL\jlbll! fur mole thin uue m ~ur·
W IL KESV ILL_E__I_61~4) 116.!,3~-­
.
·:--... ·1 ~1
. trom the U S Department Of
rt!d UISl'rtiUII
..,..-..nut
'
1t
Houslng ·and Urban Develop
FULLER Brush Products for sate .
Phone 992 2Ui6
lllowR
· ment (HUD J. under Title I of
Phone 992-3.410
ftTe Housing and Com,munity .
Route 3, Pomeroy, 0.
Insulation Seni&lt;es
I ;
POMEROY, OHIO
CAMPER $600.,,.-A:-:I~
so--.,-horse
Development Act of 1974
TRUSSES
}~
Anancina Aal~lllt
MeiQs County Is certifying to
trailer 1450 Phone {614) 698·
llown
inllllalb
I
Allies
ANY PIXH
~~
.HU 0 tha t Meigs County and
329Q.
~----~--Hertry. Wells , 1n h1 S Off ic ial
STOIM
ANYSIZE
•
lnstallalion, samples
1 BEAMS ond H Beams. 8, 9, ond
ca pacity as Meigs County
1969 1/ , ton Chevrolet Pickvp w1th
WIIIIIOWS I 110011$
1
0
.nch
Cott992-703.4
· ~om mlss.loner : consent to
tool bo~~: and C 8 Phone
brought to your home
IEPOO,EIIT
accep.f t he jurisdict iOn of the
992-716S
.
FOR
SALE
TO
THE
HIGHEST
BID·
WIIIIIOWS
with
no
charge
.
'Federal ~ourts 1f an act •on 1s
DER . SEALED BIDS WILL BE
.bro..,gtd to ·enforce respon .
1963 OLDSMOBILEBll. good cond,. 1971 VW. Super Beet le Phone
!WIIIIUI
Located in Langsville ,
.
RECEIVE D ANYTIME UNITIL
si.bit1ties in 're lation to en
l1on , $350. White bathroom
843-2613.
SIDIJJG.SOIRTT
Corpet. Lino .• Tile
''
'v~ro n mentel
rev1ews ,
Box 28-A
APRIL 5, 1977 ot 7 P M FOR A
smk , complete w1th foucet ,
GIITTE~IIRIMGS
Phone Mike Young at
1976 CAMARO 305 2 bo rre ll
'decision making , and action ,'
Muuda)
USED JOHN DEERE DOZER WITH
chrome legs and tile bor5 . $10
V~NDER
Rulland,
Oh•o
45775,,
m -2206 or 992-7630
automatic, sdver with red
anti that the se respon
Nuou unSatu1day
BLADE AND A 1965 DODGE 4
Ph (614) 142-240t
.
Phone 9'12-S323
sitt~l l tie$ have been sa t1Sf1ed
pinstnpmg Sllll unde r wo rron·
s;,...._ ...
We DeltYe r
..
DR . FORMER POLICE CRUISER .
Ttle- legal effect of the cer
1973 OLOS'88, ~ dr. hardtop, low
2-23-1 mo.
Tue~ay
ty Coli 992-5709
Ph. 9!l·l9!3 4-10·1 m~
12 22 ·4 mos
,-~
BOTH ITEMS CAN BE SEEN AT
tlficaf1on i ~ that upon 1ts
thru Ft u.lity
L...--~-------- ·
m1leoge , good ti res Must sell
RUTLAND
OHIO
CONTACT
1973 VEGA STATION . n&amp;w t1res,
approvaL Meig-s Count y may
4P.M
Also. wonted to buy ~8 1nch
BRU CE DAVIS OR CALL
use the BJock Gran t funds ,
01r cond•llonmg. Good runnmg
;
lhe d11y l.lefure publu.;atwn
springs
and
mottreu.
Phone
· snct HUD will have satisfied
742·2143 . VERNON WEBER,
cond1t 1on , excellent gos
Superior
Vinyl
and
aluminum
9~ 9 · 20 1 3
Us ·re~ponsibiti t ies under the
CLERK· TREASURER . RUTLAND
Sw1day
mileage $1.400 or best offer
Steam Extraction
siding, slorm · win·
Nat•on!l
Env.ron menta l
4P.M
VILLAGE BIDS MUST BE SEALED
1971
CHEVROLET
'/~ ton pickup ,
Phone
742·2565.
'PoliCY Act Of , 1969 HUD Wi ll
F'rtday afternoon
I
AND
IN
THE
CLERKS
HANDS
NO
dows
and
insulalion.
307
V-8
,tondard
.
Also,
1972
Automatic
accept an oblect •on to its
1969 Ford LTD motor' $200 00,
LATER THAN 1 PM APRIL 5,
Hondo Tro11 10. Both m god con
approvar -qt the relase of
Call Prolessionals
1963 Chevrolet Motor $75.00.
Transmission
Service
1977 TERMS CASH FROM THE
d1t1on. Phone992-n86.
fur'ldS an.d acceptance of the
949
2163;
___
•.
___
__
HIGHEST
81DDER
Route 3, Pomeroy, 0 .
: .;e&gt;rtifiCatlon only if 1t is on
-,..--..,.,--.,-one of the fol lowmg bases .
1974 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS S STEREO. NEW
AM·FM
stereo
·(a } 1lia1 the cert •f •cat.on was
Carpet &amp; Upholstery
36.000 m1les, good cond111on.
radio comb•noflon $129.95 or
not · irl · fac t exe-cuted bV the IN LOVING Memory of Ellsworth
Tune
uped
,
$3200.
Cotl
Phone Mike Young
A loca I contractor
easy terms Call992-3965.
chief , eKectJtive off icer or
V. D1ll who passed owoy 1 year
992 5852 onyltme.
I
WOUlD
lrke
to
thank
oil
of
my
otner. off1cer of appl1cant
At
Phone 949·2801
ago, March 14 , 1976 It's been o
SEARS ROEBUCK 100, 000 btu gos
approveet by HUD , or (b )
loend
s,
neighbors
ond
1965
FORD
MUSTANG,
289
eng
me
yeor s.nce you sl1pped far away
lu rnoce , nelfer used $150 Not
992-2206 or 992-7630
or 949-2860
, fhaf app licant env•ronmenta l
m~n isters
lor the mony
automatic good interior body
fro m us, early thot Sunday mor
adoptable for mob1le homes
review re cOrd for tl'le project
beautiful
cards.
flowers
g1hs,
rough , good work cor, $200
' ~The Origin1tors
nmg. Although your loved ones
Phone 949 2348.
1nd1cates om lss•on of a
Free Estimates
phone cols . visi ts ond oil other
Reedsville, 0. Ph. 378-6250
Phone 992·6281 or 992·5663
Not The Imitators"
re quired de-cis ton, finding , or
hove ih&amp;d ma ny tears of
No
Sunday
Calls
Please
,.
TRUCK TOPPER , 8 ft one wh1te
acts of kindnen and concvrn
step applicable lo the proje ct
loneliness for you , and the
2-25·1
mo.
3$11S1
mo.
1973
PLYMOUTH
DUST
ER
.
340.
2-23·
1
mo.
•
•
'
bedroom
su1te.
1971
canape
shown me wh1le I was o pot1enl
in. tl'le environmental review
obsence of your vo1ce hos
automatic ps., p b , take over
Ford To nno . one s mall
at
Holzer
Med1cal
Center.
A
ProceSs · Obiecf'ions must be
•
mode many people $Od. We
payments. Phone ~ - 6038
pre J)"ared and subm it ted in
refrigerator Phone (304)
speCi al thanks to the doctors .
know the lod took you away
accordance with fl'le required
nurses, ond stolf of the liosp•tol 1971 CHEVY three-fou rth ton
882·2579
from us to o place where you
!Jr()c.ediJre. (24 CFR Part 58),
and also to all my retohve5 who
up,
350
V-8,
p.s
..
p.b
..
air
pick
would
suffer
no
more
And
end mav: be eddressed to
were JUSt grot Your k1ndneu
HOMESITES for sole I ac re and
aUtomatiC , $1075 , Phone
HUD at U. S Depart ment of
though your body IS go ne from
FOR SALE
w1!1 never be forgotten .
up Middleport , neor Rutland
949-2801 or 949·2860
Hous1ng , ' anc:t
Urban
us, you wdl l•ve forever 1n our
Ne w Co -Op water sof Smcerely , Frances Carleton.
Caii'I'I2·74BI
Oevelopmer:~t
C DBG
hearts and 1n our many
tener s, mod~t VC -SVI.
' Program Mel}agement , 60
memones of you Sadly m1ssed
NEW 3 bedroom house 2 baths
Only S2J'9 95
E11st Main Street, Co!um bus.
by wife, Alto , Daughters, Mrs
One good chain Homelite
all elec I acre M1dd leport
OhiO 43216 Ob jeCtiOnS to tl'le
Chain Saw ..
suo.oo
Conn1e Connolly , Mrs Frede
close to Rutland PMone 992
release of funds on bases
5&amp;\'e 550 oo on a new
La rkins Sons-in· low and grand
74BI .
other than those state d abov e
Hotopoml Refriqentor
RISING
STAR
t&lt;tmnel
B
oordmg
child ren.
will not be considered by
NOTICE , Pratt's Meat Mkt
SMAll form lor sole, 10% down,
Nobil Summit Road
1 Good used Mccullough
HU D. No object10n rece 1ved
Indoor-Outdoor runs, groom1ng
{Pleasanton Meat Processing,
owner fina nced Monroe Coun
after Apr il 4, 1917 will be
JU. 1
- NOTICE OF SALE ol! breeds, cleon son1tary Chain Saw •••• ••. • • •••• $95
Inc.) Custom sloughtermg, ond
1 Good used 40" H otpoin.t
ty , W Va . Phone {304) 772·
considered by HUD
The real estate former ly
Middleport, 0 .
fac1ht1es Cheshtre ~hone (614) Range • ••••• • •••••••• 1100
proces smg . Rt"lod, wholesale.
3102 or 1304) 772-3227
owned by Mary Ebl in and
'192-S724
367-om
No oppolnment necessor~ Colt
Now in doCk, complete line
Steven Eb l1n , lo ca ted on the
Complete
Sales
and
of
bulk
garden
seeds
and
1614 ) S93 8655, hours , 9:00 till HOOF HOLLOW. Buy, sell , trade
extension of Umon Avenue
onion
stts.
Service
and
Supplies.
6.00
7
Pomeroy
Rood
.
Athens,
(3) 14, ltc
between the Vi ll age of
or tram horses . RUTH REEVES
I'll. 912-2174
3·14· 1 m .
Oh.
Pomeroy , and tl'le Route 7 By
trainer Phone (61 4) 698·3290.
Pass , will be offered tor sale GUN SHOOT at the Rac ine Gun
AKC REGISTERED Pek1ngese Pup·
at the off 1ces of Crow, Crow &amp;
JACKS BEE SUPPLIES, Reedsv1Ue, BRADFORD Auctioneer, Com· :'
Club every Sunday , 1 pm
Porter , Attorneys at Law ,
p1es , ready to go Phone I (3011 ) ~ Phonet91-'2181
Oh1o Bee supph as ond equ•p·
plete Serv1ce. Phone 949·2487 ,
Assorted meats .
Pomeroy , Oh10 , at 10 ·00 AM .
B82-2663.
ment Phone (6 U ) 378-6357
or 949 2000. Racme , Ohio, Crll! :
on Saturday , March 19th , RACI NE FIRE Dept. will hove o
NOTICE TO
POODLE GROOMING , reasonable
CONTRACTORS
Bradford.
1'
1977
Gun Shoot every Saturday night
40 laymg hens Phone 992·21 83,
T l'le property is ap pra1sed
STATE OF OHIO
rates. Colt for oppt 742-3162 .
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
(
6 p.m. at their building In
at S2,500 00 an d ca nnot be sold
DEPARTMENT OF
6 WEEK OLD AKC Toy Poodle pup USED HOOVER Sweeper, $27 cosh
Sweepers. toasters , irons, oil ,
Bash an , Ohto.
TRANSPORTATION
tor less tha n the appra 1sed
or te rms Col! 992·51 ~6
p1s, 2 mo te and I lemole Block
small appl1onces. lawn mower, ,
Columbus, Ohio
va lue
NEW
Febru•rv 15, 1917
Terms of Sa le : Cas h, and SKATE -A-WAY ANNOUNCES
marked w1th wh1te Hod shots 8N FORD tractor . $850. Good
ne xt to Stole Htghwoy Garage •
Schedule Open Weds., Fridoy
old frame
Contract Sales Lttal
sub jec t to th e l1en for real
and wormed Coli Coolville,
on Route 1. Phone (61~ ) 985- ;
shape.
Also
196.4
Ford
P1ckup
and Saturday nights 7.30 p m
Copy No. 77·267
estate tues for 1917
667-3915
3a2S
bedrooms
d~~~~~:l
F·IOO Phone 1614) 37a·61S2
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
t1lt 10 p m Available for
closets, 2 modern I
:;
R~
;';;:O~D
;;;E:;-L;;-1N:;:Gc--,-;;P;-Iu=m:;:b;:1n=g~.-;:-he:::o:;h;::::
ng ;.
Fra nk w Porter, Jr ,
seated proposals will be
private parties, Monday . Tues ..
SHAKESPEARE BASS Boot 14',
utility room , dining roc&gt;m.o
received at the office of t~e
Adm in rs trator 01
ond all types of general repa ir,':,
and Thursday rlights , and Sotur·
1976 Mercu ry 20 h.p w1th elec·
Virgil B. Sr., Realtor
k
itche
n
ha
s
L
Director of th e Oh•o
the Estate of
Wo rk guaranteed 20 yean ex
tnc start . 1976 hi t troller pl us
day and Sunday afternoons
cabinets, ca r port,
216 E. Second Streel
Department of
Tran.s·
Mary Ebllr'l , Deceased
penance Phone 992· 2409.
;
Phone
985-3929
or
985-9996
othe
r
extras
$1695
Phone
Just
$30,000
00
Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769
portation , Columbus, Oh10 ,
WANTED TO rent wi th poss 1ble
9'12·3126
C
P.
Rittle
.'
NEW
LISTING
I
until 10 .00 A .M ,, Ohio
(3 ) 1.4 , 16, 2tc
Phone
992-3325
SEWING
MACHINE
Repolr!
,
ser·
30th ANNUAL HEREFORD Sole. 14
opiiOn to buy 50 to 200 acres
Standard Time , Tu nd,ay ,
plan, 3 BR .. ba th , utiliilyl
v1ce. all makes. 992·2284 . The .
secluded land, some llllobfe
bulls and 16 fema les ,
Marc n 22. 1977, f or 1m ·
room , storm doors
TUPPERS PLAINS - Old
FabriC Shop , Pomer o ~ ..
South&amp;astern
Ohio
Hereford
w1th
mhob•toble
house
Cotu
m·
provements m ·
windows, porches , NG
a
room frame home on
Authorized Singer So les ond
b1o Sc1pio, Bedford. or Rutland SHOAT S, PRI CE D to sell
Association A!l dwarf fr ee
NOTICE OF
Gallla and Meig_s COunty ,
heal, garage, storage bldg .
corner lot of 31 of an acre .
Serv1ce We sharpen Sc 1 s~
PUBLIC SALE
Townships .
Wnte
Tony Pl'lone 992-7330
pedigrees both Horned and
Ol'lio, on various sections about 1 acre w ith 200 ft .
TO WHOM IT MAY CON
Partial basemen!, 2 porGAL . State Route 7 In the
Potted Saturday, Ma rch 19th
Russego, 1331 Meadow Rood
EXCAVATING, dozer . loader and .'
lronlage . $1 3,000 .00.
CERN ·
City of Gallipolis and MEG
c hes and T P. water
1977 Sole 1 00 P M , RocksprColumbus , Ohlo~3
212
bockhoe work, dump trucks 1
.
Not
1ce
is
hereby
9tven
that
NEW
LISTINGAbout
•
;,
State Route 7, by resurfacing
available. Only S5,000.
ings Fa1rgrounds , Rt 33, three
and
lo-boys for h1re; will hauL
on March 2.4 , 1977 , at 10 00
2
or
3
BEDROOM
house
to
rent
with aspMit concrete . .
acre,
(Racine
Area)
has
a
ROCK SPRINGS AREA miles north of Pomeroy , Ohio
A M a public sa le Will be held
NH.D
A
fill d1rt to soli limestone ond ,
Pavement W•dth - Vlmes
noor
Pomeroy
or
Middleport
.
nice
MQblle
Home,
12x60,
2
Nice 3 bedroom frame
For catalogs wri te to Lloyd
at Whaley's Usett Car! , Route
Project and Work Length grovel ' Colt Bob or R09'r Jaf:
Phone 992-5327
BR . balh, living room,
home , bath, nat. gas fur
Btockwood , Soles Mgr , Rt 3,
1
1, Shade , Oh10 45776, to sell
36 ,379 .teet or 6 89 miles
fers , doy phone 992-7089, I
WATER
SOFTENER
wllh
dine
in.
Oul
kitchen
nace, ci ly waler ;usl off Rl.
tor cash th e foll ow ing
Pomeroy , Oh1o 45769.
" The date set tor com ·
night phof]e 992-3525 or 992· 1
bu II ding Bx 16 $8,000.00
co lle t ert!l l, to w•t · 1975
pletlon of this work shall be
33 $22,000.
5232
•
NEW LISTING - Carry
Let Pomeroy Landmark
as set forth In the bidding
P ont ia c Astre Seri a l No
RACINE - 4 apartments
2V77
8
SC
10
7
819
,
Si!lld
Oul,
Pizzas
,
Soft
Ice
proposal."
soften &amp; condition your
EXCAVATING . dozer. backhoe ;
re nte d and recrea t ion
3 AND 4 RM lurnished ond un- water and a Co..op water
collateral being l'lel d to
Each bidd! r shall be
Cream.
Sandw iches.
ond ditcher Charles R. Hatcenter
all
in
one
building.
lurmshed
opts.
Phone
992·
secure an obligation ans rng 7 MONTH OLD femoht dog, while
re qu ired to tile with his bid a
Established a tong t ime
softener,
Model
UC
-XVI
.
Bock Hoe Serv•ce, '
field,
Good
Income
property
for
5434
.
under a retail instalment
certlfied check or cash ier's
and doing a good business.
w1th block face and ears, and
Rutland Oh1o Phone 7~2·2008
an Investment
secur ity agr ee ment l'leld by
cneck tor an amount equal to
Now Only~ f,fS
CALL
FOR
IN ·
one Iorge block spot ond two C,OUNTRY Mobile Home Pork , Rt .
SYRACUSE - 4 lots, one
General Motors Acceptance
tivt per cent of his bid, Dut 1n
Systems installed by
FORMATION.
smotler ones on her bock .
33, ten mihn north of Pomeroy
Co rporat ion as secured
no event more than fif ty
on lhe rive rside, 3 bedroom SEPTIC
let us test your water
ltcensed insloller. Shepor4
POMEROY 2 slory
party
thousand dollars. or 1!1 bond
Lorge tots w1t Mconcrete patios ,
Reword Coli anytime 992·7065
modern
home
,
2
baths
,
nice
Free.
Contractors Phone 742·2409
Sa• d publ•c sa te 1S to be
tor ten per cent of h 1s bid,
frame has 3. bedrooms,
s1dewal ks. ru nners and off
kilchen , dining, and 2 car
condu cted according to laws FOUND German Short hoir Bird
payBDie to the Director .
bath, kllchen has range
street porkmg Phone 992-7479.
SEPTIC
TANKS cleaned. Modern ;
garage.
$35,000.
Dog , found 3 mos . ago. Colt to
Bidders must apply, on the
of the State of West Viroin1a
and ref., full base men1,
Samtotion
992-3954.
u
KINGSBURY
2
bedroom
Ge neral Motors Acceptance
pr oper
forms ,
tor
2 BEDROOM TRAILER , Brown's ..,.~Jack W. CarS&lt;!y, Mgr.
1d&amp;n,hfy, 992·3165
storm doors and windows.
house wllh balh and oil
Cor poration reserves the
Qualification at least ten deys
Tr01ler Park Phone 992-3324
Will
do
roofing,
construction,
Phone 992-2181
aluminum sid1ng, carfurna ce . Also a 2 bedroom
ri gh t to bid at th is sa le .
pr1or to tl'le date set for
--·- ·-- · · · - - - - - - Ail,
plumbing and heotlng . No job
new FA gas
3 ROOM FURNISHED apt. Coli
The collatera l 1S presently
open •ng bids 1n accordance
unfurn ished lraller, drilled
too large or too small . Phon~
stored and may be seen tit
with Chapter 5525 OhiO
m.nBa or 992·234a offer s USED fORESTRY EQUIPMENT.
well and 2112 a cres for only
742·234a.
Whaley's Used Ca rs, Route 1,
I
floor
Rev•sed Code.
pm.
$12,000.
Timbeqock 230 ForwordM 8
WANTED. MAN for roofing ond
Sha de , Ohio 45776
Plans and sp.eclflcatlons
plan,
bed,room s. bath ,
CARPENTER. flooring , ceiling 1
NEAR CHESHIRE - 3
ton;
Prent!ce
Model
GOBC-RM
spouting,
some
duct
work
3
room
and
both
furn1
shed
apartare on file '"the Department
n1ce kitchen, all carpeted,
paneling Phone 992-2759.
bedroom
frame
home,
nice
wuw4•r
unil
o
Hydn,
Sa"'huck
,
Must
be
able
to
go
ahead
w1th
GE
NERA
L
MOTORS
of Transportation and tne
ment . vt•ht1es paid, 356 Nort h
all electric, carport, nice
kllchen, nat gas furnace ,
~1od ..IIOIMJ.A. Contact Lltonnis
ACCEPTANCE
job If mter&amp;s ted, wnte Box
office ot tt\e Distr•ct Deput y
4th St , M1ddleport, Oh1o.
MOBILE
Home R pair, Elec.,
lot. ALL LIKE NEW
Gallia water, garage and
COR PORATION
Smurr, t•hone 161418.18-5345.
Director
150. Pt. Pleasant, W Vo. 25550.
plumbing
and heotmg. Phone
Low
down
515
,650
.
(3 ) u , lie
The Director reser v~s the
2.42 acres . Now $20,000.
G1ve expenence ond expected 5 ROOMS and bath 1n Pomeroy 20 CU FT Refrigerator free;~er ,
992-58SB
.
paymenl
Phone 9'12·5621 or 992·2205.
right to relect any and all
KEN0 -7 rooms, balh, oil
wage.
side by side, $100 Colt
WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
bids.
ELECTRONIC T.V. CLINIC, No~
furnace , basement, porch,
'192·3373.
BABYSITTER· NEEDED '" Tuppe" REAL ESTATE fOR RENT. New 3
YOUR PROPERTY CALL
T. V. shop, Electronic T.V. Clinic
garage and carport,
2
all
etectm
home
w1th
bedroom
DAV IDL WEI R
Ptolns, J dors per week lor 3
US TODAY, THANKS .
Serv1ce ca ll , $5.95. Color, B•If!
1970 KAWASAKI 100. Aloo,
acres with an eagles' view.
DIRECTOR
garage
for
rent
in
the
Morland
pre-school ch1ldren
Phone
HENRY E. CLELAND
antenna
systems stereos , etc,
Ask
ing
$25,000.
.
Phone
985·3920.
helmet
Addit1on . Tuppers Ptoins , Oh1o.
9B5-3988 or 1614) 1167-3330 alter
BROKER
S72 South Third , Middleport.
NEW LISTING - 1'12 acre
For
more
mformolloo
call
(611)
ONE SEVEN horse rtding mower,
6p .m.
D
Phone 992·6306 Corry in o~
Rev . 8-1173
wooded building site with
667 ·3161
32tn cut. One rototlller, nearly
sovemonev
water and ele. available.
WANTED
LEAD
gu1
tormon
to
ploy
__
:::::.-=.:=
(2) 7, U , 2tc
new, !i horse PtJorie 992-7248.
Olive Town1hip.
count ry and rock . Phone
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
NEW LISTING - New 3
'192-7256.
coval •ng , septic systeml f
BW WINS AGAIN
Bu sio~•• Opportunitic•
bedroom she Il home wllh
dozer, backhoe, dump truck,
DELAWARE, Ohio (UP!) SOMEONE TO clean cars ond do
garage and over 1h acre .
limestone, gravel, blacktop
bodv
work.
Ha
ro
ld
Hysell
,
COUNTRY formlond with seclud·
- B8Idwln Wallace woo its Rutlond. Phone 7-42-3154 after 5
Buy for $12,000.00 and
pov&gt;ng, Rt . 143. Phone I (6141
Will do odd lob( roofing, poln·
/{I{STRUCl'ION
water
ond
good
oc·
ed
woods,
finish lt yourself, lhen sell.
third
Oblo
Athletic
69B·7331 .
,(
gutter
work
.
Phone
992
ling,
cess in Monroe County, W. Vo
' Omm ~-~ ., ''"" 1notcA0.1
ALWAYS ' READY' TO
PUCO Cut No . 77-I .TP-ORD Conference Indoor Track ~·--~--------7409.
$1 ,000 down , call I31J.4) 712·
w ......... rup f'81'WffiJI
EXCAVATING Backhoes, Oo~tr,; •
LISTEN TO VOUR REAL
Legal Notlce
Meet Saturday, piling up a
3102 or 1304) 772·3227 .
trencher, Low Boy, dump true!(, 1
SE W ING · AL TERATIONS .
ESTATE
PROBLEMS.
Noti ce Is hereby given tnat
51 ~int lead over runnertrucks, septic . system1 . Bill
Uph o lste r 1ng ,
drop es Commercial property approx 17
the Public Utll 1ties Co m
HELEN L. AND GORDON
Pultins.
Phont 992·2.-78 day or
mission of Ohio seeks to up Mount Unlm.
reasonable
572
South
Th
~rd
B.
ASSOCIA:rES.
acres,
level
IOnd,
locoted
at
OLD fur mlure, Ice boxes , brass
amend c napter 7, formerly
n1ght.
Ave
.
,
Midd
le
port
.
Phone
Tuppers Pla ins on Oh io . Route
BW scored 122~ points in
beds, wall telephones and
a1 ,-M ·~ M# US 0., o1J U.'Chapter 23 of the ~ode of
992-6306.
parts or complee households.
7. Phane l614) 1167·630&lt;
Rules and Regulations , the two-day meet, cunpm-ed
l•fWIIf t/,(Ukl- UMif!ltf. hfWIM II IN
HAvE YOU.ccR:--tco--- xe- ,- done by- on-. -, . NEW 3 bedroom house , bUih·.n I
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. ~ .
pertain ing to Extended Area
'Telephone Service Publi c to 71 for Mount Union.
Pomf'roy, Oh10 Cotl992·1760
NO FUTURE? IN AU RUT1
countont Also . now accepting
kitchen , both ond 'h , Phone
comment period tor wr itten otterbein came in third with bookke9ping. Phone 992·6206
7~2 · 2306 or contact M1IO B. Hut·
comments on tl'le proposed Y points, followed by Ohio CASH paid for oil makes and
or992·6173
chison Rutland, Ohio .
model'" of mobile homes .
charter 1 rev ision will extend
tNcoME TAX- s;-rv.,-lc-e-. "7w;;-allace
unt l April 11 , 1917 Persons Wesleyan with 60 points and
Phone area code 6l~ · ·f23·9531
REMODELED 5 ROOMS ond both, I
wl'lo Intend to teStify should Deni8on with 37. FiJW!bing In ~ · - - - - - - - · - Russell , Bradbury .
Colt
acre land Phone 7-42-2769
pl'ep.ue their remerks in 'order were WOOI!er, 31'»; TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Pro·
•
.• • •
... Mon .. Tues., Wed .
9'12·722B
ducts . Top pnce for standmg
Writing and · submit them on
- - ···--HOUSE with 5 lots, both ond 'h
8:00til5:00
•
sowtimber. Colt Kent Hanby,
or before April 11 , 1977 All Oblo Ncirthern, 24; Capital,
PIANO TUNING , lone Daniels . 12
with 4 bedroom s, double e ,
Thursday
Btil
Noon
r..a e
written , · testimony . and 20; Martella and 'W(ttenberg,
· ·~..0.8S70 .
years of serv1ce. Phone
gorage, outbUilding and cellar.
com m~t' should be. tUed on
'192·2082
,
'
RE"Nc:CccY-.-,tokens , old
Phone (614) 698-5607 or (30&lt;)
(tie) ·18; · Oberlin, 14; COINS, c·~u"R""
o~ blfo.re t.bf atqremefltloned
773•S759,
pocket Watches and chams. Co&lt;ioidor • Ptot-.iol Coreer
de-adline. · A public he~~irlng Heidelberg, 9; Mlllklngum, 5,
A IFICIAL I NSEMINA tiON- Se'r.
'wm be: ht:ld coml'(lenclng on
s1 tver and !Wid, We nMd 196-4
v1ce. DAIRY BEEF For service or APPROXIMATELY 7 or 8 acres
Driving a " BIG RIG". We •• •
·Aprll ·l·, 1,71, 01 ,1~:00 A.M ., and Kenyon, 1. .
and older siiV•r coins. ~uy , sell, Privote Tnining School alfer·
lnformat1on coiL TIM RINGER,
wooded land In Rock Springs.
e: ,s.'r . et the office ot the Steve , ' Biancone of or tract. Coli R~er Wamsley ,
BREEDER S
AMERICAN
Phone '192-2789.
PUblfe · ut lljfies . Cqmmlsilon,
lngoPARTlimeorFULL
r
....
702-2331.
. .
ASSOCIATION Home 662 432J
- -·-·
" .
-.--110 ·EaSt ·· I! road Stree t. Otte ~bein, who set a
' Tra~~una Progrem. tt you ere
FOR
SALE. All elec. nearly new
or An swerin g Service .
cotumb\J.s, O~ lo . copies ot all cmference record with Ida a• WANTED, CHIPWOOD. Poles ,
- . . . . Don't !luit
Job,
home in Rutland or1t0 . BoseEntries . ' •nd
proposed 9W' high julnp, was named
~93 6244.
r.no1omu111 diameter • 10 Inches ottond,.. w..kond Troining
men !, 3 bedrooms ottached
am~ded Ct),.pter 7. m IIY be
on largest . t nd, $8 . P.er ton;
WILL .TRIM or cut trees 6r shrub
obtarned ftom the .o ffices of the meet's mOlt outstanding
goroge ,
$29 ,900
Phon•
bundles slobs $6 · .,-r ton . PIOVJllm or onond ow 3 Wool&lt;
bery. Phone 9.-9.25_-45.
l~t I'Ubll&lt; UtlllfltS COm ·
742·2S31.
performer.
FULL
Trne
~~
Troining,
Delivered
to
Ohio
P.tJIIet
Gom. million, DOctu!tlnQ Depart BW'a Larry Coy wm the
11'1'11~• l,.rhr1rwiltr lNMMII~~t'.
pooy, Rt . 2. Pomeroy, Oh1o.
ONE ACRE. 3 bedrm ., 2 atory
ment .
home. drnlng room Iorge both.
' THE ' PUBliC UTILHIE S DCII' FraU Award 11 the
Phone 992·2689.
PARKERSBURG
COMMISSION OF OHIO
natural gas, Iorge porch, nice
meet'a
most
valuable
runner.
CASH• I t 'tor 1unk con . Frye's
BY : hndoll G. AppiOllolo,
742-2211
AICNOLI) ORATE
RUTLAND.•;!
block goroge $20.£:00. Phone
HOUSE
FOR
sole
1
n
Pnmeroy
422-4080
Truck and Auto WRECKER SERHe wm the mile In 4:11.8 and
s•cretary .
'192
S732
SSSOO. Phone '192 7741
VICE I Phone 741.X)81
C3l 1&lt; . nc
the tworoUe run In 9:08.311.

POM0~~~r~~!~~ co.

®

NOTICE

---

-----

5U ~ELY WE'
CAN ROUND

8UT IT 5 TI LL DOES N''!"
CH ANGE THE FACT THAT
WE HAVEN'T GOT ENOUG H
VOrE5 .. McKE E' '~ STOC K
ONL~ GIVE? U5
+8 PE~ CEN T!

McK!'Eo KNEW WO'!"

C·C· CAN' '!"
WE?

Oswald and aim Jacoby

~--------

Southeastern Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.

• A65
• 9 43
t K J 72
"' 8 6 4

LA. ;.
LARRY--,

\\ EST
EAST
• J7
• 10 B
• AQI0 52
•KJB 7
t 963
t 10 B 4
• A92
o1&gt; K 10 53
SOUTH I D)
• KQ 9 4 32

;

LOCO LOCUST$! OH , MAN !
FJIOM Wl-lAT I 'VE HEA~,
11-IEY'LL CHEW UP EVI!RY·
"1'\il~ IN SIGH,.. I

.,----;:----.----,
________,'

• 6

West

Young's Carpeting

PARTS · LABOR
GUARANTEED

would defi no tely bod two
s pades a nd Nort h moght
decode to go to three Take
away hos Jack of doamonds and
he would surely pa ss at two
yet Lhe combined ha nds would
s till belong m game."

Nor th East

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

LITTLE ORPHAM AMMIE-"DATB OF OUR . YEARS"

...

Til' BAD ACClOENT

Til'

PIA~T · • THEM

SCUTTLE AH' HIS GAHG·
THAT CAVE·· GeE t
THAT WAS A CLOSE
ONE-

AND ~"DADDY' GONE
AGAIN 01( A BC1iiBER · ··
, WITH PUruAB AN'

\H' liSP · · ·

LOOI&lt;IN' BACK TOO MUCH
IS BAO •• LOOI&lt;JM ' AHFAD
IS WHA\ ~EEPS VU H
HeALTH Y - GEE~ I WalDER
WHEN '~DOY' WILL
BE. BACK ··

··- ------

06 • • • • •

BORN LOSER
WH~ CAil'T4()J e~f.lf?.

JUS1 ()t.lU SA'-1

5ft.i{ A~i{THI~ b NI CE'
ABOUT M4 M~fl.

SOM&amp;TH\~6 1-\I C~

Ai30UT . ~E'R~ I

I w.:~ H!:f?. BETT~ R
1\1Af-l I DID t.{C\!1&lt;
FATH~R.

OWE "iC\J 1

13 Keep-as. a .

in

..

-

·-----

.

-

v....

--

--

I thouqht he'd
leave when we
did 1

The4"re not
There's
theooq

• J Netherlands

:

•
:•
e

. '·

••
•
·•••••••••
RUTLAND
FURNITURI

'······················-·l ·'~~·~·

Yor/1

N Y 10019)

5·QO-B ig Valley 3; My Three Sons 4; Brady Bunch a.
Misler Rogers' Neighbor hood 20,33 , Star Tre k 15.
5 JO.....Adam -13 4; News/,, Family Affair 8. Electric
Company 20,33; Adam -12 13.
6:oo--News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20
6·JO.....NBC News3,4,15, ABC News1 3, Andy Griffith 6,
CBS News 10; Vegetable Soup 20 ; Studio See 33
7.()()-.Trulh or Consequences 3, To Te iiThe Truth 4,
Bowling for Dollars 6; Let's Go To The Races 8; I
News 10; To Tell The Truth 13; My Three Sons 15:
Cooking Wllh a Conllnental Flavor 20; American
Issues Forum 33 .
7.3o-Hollywood Squares 3,4, Let's Dea l Wllh II 6;
Match Game PM 8, MacNeil Lehrer Reporl 20,33;
In The Know 10; Wild Kingdom 13; TV Honor
Soc lely 15

~'"'"'

Yesterday's Answer

6 Begmnong

19 hrunense

30

7 Lawyer

22 Printing
process,

31 Mr.
Massey's

for short
Adorn
Infested
25 Natched
26 One of
the

Spamsh
namesake
32 Stadown
33 LIQUid
measure
38 Haggard
novel

· (abbr.)
8 Fish

Retaoner
Marse Code
word
Toby
contents
Rockfish
Dtctatonal
Mushroom
Salamander
Slugger's

dosh
9 Courageous
one
12 Intellectual
14 Be rlioz's
" Harold

23
24

doesn't 22
in - "
have 23
26
muc h 27
1:';:--t---t--tmore 28
sense wood
than he 29 "- Rosen·

Plant pest

8 oo--Circus H&gt;ghllghts 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6,13;
Who's Who 8,10; La Boheme 20,33 .
8 30....E ight Is Enough 6,13
9 OO--Mov1e "Godzilla vs Megalon " 3,4, 15, M·A· S·H
B,10.
9 30....Three's Company 6, 13 , One Day At A Time a, 10.

39

10 oo--NBC Reports 3,4,15; Weslslde Medical 6,13; '
Ko(ak B, 10
I I :OO....News 3,4,6 ,8, 10, 13, 15, 20 ; MacNeil -Leh rer
Report 33 .
11:3o-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Movie " lsn' l II
Shocking " 6, 13; Movie " Callow" B; Mary Hariman
10; Practical Dermatology 33.
12 :00--Movie "The Secrel Llfe of Walter Mltty" 10.
12 :30....Janak l 33
1 oo--Tomorrow 3,34.
1 IO....News 1l ·

kava[oer"
Of the

dawn
34Be
ITUstaken
letter

~'-----.-J"""'------L- 36 " Exodus"
hero

ULABNER

fVIZY' TIME AH
'BCX.JT OLE e=DDIE"
~OEYB.t&gt;CK

AHM~TI&lt;Y

50\'\E SENSIBLE
FOLKS l'-

37 Evel

-:-+-+-i lrJt'ifNf fi)1t

Knievel

~~

uses one

-THEY
B£6/NS

41 Top-

one letter to each square, to lorm

TYFFA

I KJ

14
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work

Is

UVESA

AXVDLBAAXR
1, 0 N G F E L I, 0 W

One lcllcr sim)rly st.uuls fnr anot her. 1h t hos sample A is
npos lroJl hcs, the l en~; lh nnd fo rma t ion of t he "urds are all

hints Enrh day th e code lette rs arc different
VS U B

VB

PG H P

S Y I&lt;:RYPTOQUOTES
B
H E B
VS

PGBR
BDPLEB

\J HMB
WHR

ULDFPBV . - CFIBV

RSF

BARNEY

PORE Ot: LOKEY!!
HE CAN'T GO NOWHAR
WIFOUT HIS WIFEJVIATE
TAGGIN'

ALONG

I

0 S E L DA

NLXB

EBDHEW

t

II I J

I

f-L~=~=~T,r:J===~====
.

JHVPB

LD

II

· ·- --

MYLLAC .

.

Yealerday'aCryploquole: UNFORTUNATELYaJURAGE IS
ALL TOO OrrEN COMPOISED OF EQUAL PARTS OF
BOURBON AND WATER.- DOUGLAS MEAOOR

MA'{eE HE HAD A HEAIZi'
ATTACK .. MAYSE 'IOU S!IOULD
fOUND HIMON THE CKE5T. .

"""'~-"-

it :

used Cor thl' lhrr c L's, X fm the two O's, ell' S1n glc letters,

HD

byHennArnoldandBobLee

:;-,.-+-1f-+-f fou r ordmary words.

hole
42 Calis for

WINNIE

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAllE

~ ~ ~~Uil~ ®

- + -t- -1 Unscramble these tour Jumbles.,

(2 wds.)

40 Gorl's
name

•.!;

::i
•:i
::1

'W1n
th rs
489

35 Greek

• :·

ei

a copy or JACOBY

specialty

commune

\he doq

........

... :

Close Sat. At.5 P.M.

(For

MODERN send $1 lo
a t Br r dge . · ct o
newspaper P 0 Bo'
Rad10 Crty Stat ron New

3 Cut
5 Like a dog

--

l

••

when we can fmd some other
satosfactary bod

de bros

(3 wds )
15 Original
ancestor
16 Yoke
17 Conver ted,

r-:-----. 21

does 1

.;

. .

major suits
We do approve of domg thos
when you can't fond another
b1d and wan t to open , but we
don 't open a lour- card maJor

2 Figaro's

reserve

18
20

a.-,......

a

A New Mex1co reader wants
.to know of we approve of open·
ong the boddmg woth four-card

13 Snarl
DOWN
1 Foreplace

,,

•e

' l L ~
~;t,.·l~~~

ACROSS
1 South
African fox
5 Tutor
10 Get rod of
11 Patrtotoc
paean

w1U1 "over"

Pomeroy Landmallr

-----

South

by THOMAS JOSEPH

7

.: ..... •.. •.-.
:.
i! FRlDAY.TIL 5 ; ;;
:..
./•,:::.

6 ·2()--Nol For Women Only 13 .
6.Jo- Teacher' s Classroom 4; News 6; Sunrtse
Semester B; Concerns and Comments 10
6 .45--Mornlng Report 3
6 :5o-Good Morning, West Vlrgl nla 13
6 · 55--Good Morning, Tri Slale 13.
7·QO-Today 3,4,1S ; Good Morning America 6. 13; CBS
News B; Chuck Wblle Reporls 10.
7 05--Porky P ig 10
7 30....Schoolles 10
a 00--Howd y Doody 6, Captain Kangaroo B, 10, Sesame
Slreet 33 .
a 30....Big Valley 6.
9.oo--A.M. 3, Phil Donah ue 4, 13,1 S; Andy Grlffllh 8,
Mike Oouglas 10
9·JO.....Cross-WIIs 3; Edge ot Nlght6; Concentrallon B.
IO·QO-Sanfordand Son 3,4,1 5; Dinah ' 6, Double Dare
B,10, Mike Douglas 13.
10 30....Hollywood Squa res 3,4, 15, Pri ce ls Rlghla.10
11.0Q-Wheel ol Farlune 3,4,15; Morn ing Show 13.
11 30--Shoot For The Slars ),4,15; Happy Days 6,1 3;
Love of Life B,10; Sesa me Slreet 20
11 55-C BS News B, Ms F l&lt;ll 10.
12 00--News 3,4,6, 10; Second Chance 13, Name
ThaiTune IS, D1vorcoCourt 8.
12 30....Loversand Frlends3,15; Rya n' s Hope6,13; Bob
Braun 4, Search for TomorroW a, 10.
1:110--Gong Show 3, All My Children 6, 13, News B.
Young and lhe Restless 10, Not For Women Only 15.
1.3o-Days Ot Our Li ves 3,A,15, Fami ly Feud 6, 13; As
The Wor ld Turns 8,1 0
2:00 - $20,000 Pyra mid 6, 13
2·Jo-Doclors 3,4,15; One L1fe lo Live 6,1 3; Guiding
L1ght B,10
3 QO-AnolherWor ld 3,4,15; All In The Family 8,10;
Consumer Survival Kit 20.
3 15--General Hospllal6, 13; Malch Game B,10, Lilia s,
Yoga and You 20
4 oo-Misler Carlo&lt;&gt;n 3; Lillie Rasca ls 4; Gong Show
15; M1 ckey Mouse Club 6; Lucy Show 8; Sesame
Slreet 20.33 ; Movle "The Man Called Fl lnlstone"
10; Dinah! 13
4 15--Litlle Rascal s 4
4 30....My Three Sons 33 ; Parlrldge Fami ly 4,
Emerge ncy One! 6, Partridge Family 8, Fllnlslones 15.

~M'6td

-------------

••

I.

By Oswald &amp; J ames Jacoby
Jom " We covered mostakes
last week How about correcL
bods and plays !his week '"
Oswald " Here 's one on the
boddong to start woth South
opens one spade and otis up to
Nor th to choose between a
one·notrump and a two·spade
respon se Woth e oght h1 gh·
card paonts, he 1s tao strang to
pass "
Jim " The correct res ponse
IS a raose to two spades North
ha s 4-3·3·3, the flattest passoble dostributoon . He has three
' of hos partner's suot headed by
the ace and two other s uots are

TEAFORD

--

South

2•
Pass 4 4
Pass Pass Pass
Open1ng lead - 3 •

REASONABLE

....~~~&lt;~"! ~~~~~~r.

notrump response

Pass

Bissell Sidi.ng Co.

RATES

t AQ5

oi&gt; Q .1 7

East-West vulnerab le

SWAIN'S

6:0o-Sunrise Semester 10.
6· 15--Farm Report 13

completely unstopped "
Os wald . "South has 14 hogh·
card poonts and a singleton to
make hos ha nd worlh 16. The
spade ratse mcreases tts value
a nd he ca n alford lo go ngh l
lo ga me A heart lead would
hold hom to four . The doamond
lead a ll ow s ho m lo d r aw
trumps , doscard his heart an
dummy 's fourth doamond and
make an overtnck
J om "N or t h and South
mogh t gel to game after a

14

NORTH

i ·~ ~r:i

-

TUESDAY, MARCH 15,1977

Good bid makes play easier

Free Estimates

~.

B:()()....LI IIIe House on lhe Prair ie 3,4,15; Capt . &amp;
Tenn il le 6, 13; Peanuls 8, 10; Mic robes &amp; Men 20,33.
B·3o-Busll ng Loose 8,1 0.
9 oo--Movle " Rafferly &amp; lhe Highway Husllers"
3,4, 15; Mosl Wanled 6, 13; Maude B, 10, Pall lsers
20,33.
9 30....AII ' s Fair 8 10
10 oo--Fealher &amp; Falher Gang 6,13; Andros Targf iS
8, 10, News 20, Soundslage33
·
10 3o-Farm Digest 20 .
11 oo--News 3,4,6,B,10,13,15; Monty Python' s Fly ing
Circus 20; Black Journal 33.
11 :3G-Johnn y Carson 3,4, IS ; Streets of San F ranclsco
6,13; Koj ak a, Mary Hariman 10, ABC News 33
12 :QO-Mov le " Trunk lo Ca iro" 10; Janak I ~;
12:40....Dan Augusl6,13; McCloud 8.
1 00-Tomorrow 3.4.
I . 50--News 13

BRIDGE

UP ENOU(;H
PROXIE.'5!...

k~

FREE E§TIMRTES

Young's Carpeting

-~

M~ .

HE WAS DOit.JG WHEN
HE PICKED YOU .. AND
WE 'VE GOT fAIT H
1N 'fA, TOO!

---

--

WANT-AD .
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

MONDAY , MARCH 14, 1917
H l!l-- Big Val ley 3; My Three Sons 4, Brady Bunth 8,
Miste r Rogers' Nei ghborhood 20,33 ; Slar Trek 11.
5·3Q-Ada m.l2 4; News 6, Fam ily Affa ir B, Elec. Co.
20,33; Adam-12 13.
6:()()-.lllews 3,A,6,8, 10, 13, IS; ABC news 6, Zoom 20
6:3Q-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13, Andy Griffith 6;
CBS Ne ws 8,1 0; Vegetable Soup 20
7 00- Trulh or Cons. 3, To Tell the Tr ul h 4; Bowling for
Dollars 6, Bu&lt;k Owens 8; News 10: To Tell lhe
Truth 13; Mv Three Sons lS; Character ist ics of
Learning Disabilities 20; Know Your Schools 33.
7 30....Thal Good Ole Nashville Music 3, In Search of
4; Muppel Show 6; Gong Show B; MacNeil Lehrer
20,33; Price is Right 10; Candid Camera 13; Nashville on l he Road 15.

Kitchen Cabinets, Roofing,
Concrete
Pall . . ,
Sidewalks,
New
Constru&lt;tlo n
&amp;
Remodeling .

PHOTOGRAPHY

2 BEDROOM 8 • -48 portlv furn is hed Phone!JO&lt; ) 8B2·334B
GOOD 2 bedrm hous, tro ller,
10x40, $2200 Phone 742-3108

Television log for easy viewing

MANY CROOKS WHO
TUNe IN NEXT T IME
D ICK TRACY'S
DOUBTED THIS NEVER
BUT ~F&lt;Y[ ..IPOL.ICE MEMO :•

Yard Sale

Auto&amp;leo

OVt!r the IU UI\IllWII 15
per word ~r dll.y.
AWl rwunng oll-.!r lhan L'UI\St!CUtiVt!
tlHys Will ~ d1&lt;011 ije\1 at tlw I day
rule
£it'll WUrl,f

wurds uo

7- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-P om eroy, 0 .• Monday, Ma och 14, 1977
DJCKTRACV

1

--

FII'Gi ! [j

} · 14

A YOUIHFUL..

6EEF!

Now arrange the drc'ed letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gesled by the above cartoon.

Print the surprise answer here: (
,
Saturd11 s

I

l I I]

{Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles GRIPE PRUNE INFECT DISMAY
Answer· When .it comes to dl amo nds , he's ..__
u~
top autholity- AN UMPIRE

�,_,..,..Daily Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy. 0., Monday, Mat·ch 14, 1977

Cable TV reduced rate
offered all at age 65

Emergency extended by traffic mishap
.

.

That one major leak In the
Gallipolis city's waterline
was found Saturday and 20
other minor leaks were
repaired by workers and
volunteers over the weekend,
but the city's montlrlong
crisis caused by severe cold
continued this morning
following an accident on the
comer of Third Ave. , and
Pine St.
,
The major leak was found

around 11 a.m. Saturday on
the George Miller property,
33 Holcomb Hill. A four-mch
line was emptying directly
into a 12-inch storm sewer
according to James A.
Northup, water
plant
superintendent.
North estimated the city
was losing approximately 200
gallons a minute in that
single break.
NIDtleen other less serlon•

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday Admissions Ava Gilkey, Harnsonville;
Andrew Fields, New Haven;
John Drenner, Middleport ;
Michele Stobart , Racine ;
Ruth Purcell, Pomeroy.
Saturday Dischacges Michael Woolard, Ray Van
Matre, Janice DeBord,
Denzil Boggess, General
Hall, Vera Drehel, Deborah
King, William Williams,
Herman Lawson.
Sunday Admissions Betty Bailey, Vmton; John
Bechtel, Middleport; John
Dailey , Pomeroy; Eric
Stover, Racine ; Margaret
Bissell, LQng Bottom; Flint
Greer, Long Bottom; Euvetta
Bechtel, Middleport; Evelyn
Moore, Syracuse; Margaret
Spencer, Pomeroy; Jenny

Ailing, Strasburg ; Sheila
Alling, ZanesvUie; Effie Hall,
Parkersburg; Barbara Hunt,.
Rulland; Margaret Purcell,
Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges Mary Layne, Nancy Taylor,
John Dailey, Evelyn Holter,
Marcella Ailing, Ava Gilkey.
Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, March 1)
Joyce Ann BiBhop, Joyce
Blankenship, Raymond
Boothe, Mark D. Bostic,
Carol J. BUSh, Virgil C.
Chaney, Freddy M. Cox,
Hubert Davis, Samuel Davts,
Thomas Dowling, Oscar D.
Fink, Mary E. Grant,
Marilyn Halfhill, Betty D.
Hatten, Deborah Hill, Harold
Hood, Goldie Johnson, Mrs.
Alfred Johnson and daughter,
Matthew McCorkle, Mrs.
Thomas
Meade
and
daughter, Mrs. John Metzger
and son, Pluma P. Murray,
Velma Pearson, Lowie Rice,
Ann Marie Roush, Dorothy
Roush, George Senda, Jr.,
John Spees, Sr., Evelyn
Stanley, ·ollie Strickland,
Mary Wheeler, Howard
Wilson, ~rs. John Wiseman
II and son, Linda D. Yates.
(Births, March
Mr. aod Mrs. Danny Rizer,
son, Hartford, W. Va.; Mr.
and Mrs. Michael lhle, son,
Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Marvin
Markin, son, Radcllffe; Mr.
and Mrs. Jack Henson,
daughter, Gallipolis
(Discharges, March
Joseph Allen, Jenny
Bearhs, Barbara Bentley,
Karen Sue Betts, Charles
Burgess, Bruce Caldwell,

11,

12,

Willia m Carter, Mendy
Casto, Mrs. John Davts and
son, Todd Eads, Mrs. Dale
Gill and son, Loren M Glassbum, William W. Hamilton,
William H. Hoffman. Geneva
Jeffers , Douglas John·
son ,
Mary
McCarty,
Mildred Mct:arty, Marie
McKnight , Froud Mercer,
Mtles Montgomery, An·
nabelle Morgan, Amanda
Mykel, Doris J Pecoraro,
Mrs. Carl Perry and son,
Julia Rice, Sophroma
Robinson, Elsie L. Shaffer,
Juanita Sprouse, Lana
Stewart, Ruie V. Stewart,
Mrs. Roger Vanco and
daughter, Eulah Williams,
Sara Wooten.
(Births, March 12)
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Bays,
daughter, Gallipolis; Mr. and
Mrs. John Ohlinger, son,
Letart, W. Va.
(Discharges, March 13)
Cheryl Ann Bethel, Martha
Cline, Mrs. Roger Coleman
and son, Mrs. Charles Eakins
and son, Anna Glassman,
James Hinck ley , Tammy
Mae Howell, Tina Jacobs,
Margann Keaton, Grover
Lewis, Jr. , Mrs. John
Lockhart and daughter, Mrs.
Frank Queen and son,
Michael P Sayre, John R.
Spurlock, Delmar Stanley,
Palmer Trimble, Mrs. Homer
Varney, Jr. and son, Brent
Woo&lt;l, Barbara J. Young.
(Births, March 3)
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Willts,
son, Ironton ; Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Atkinson, daughter,
Gallipolis ; Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Brown, son, Wellston.
GEN. HERRON AT 100
HONOLULU (UP!) Rettred Army Lt. Gen .
Charles D. Herron, one of the
oldest living graduates of
West Point, celebrated his
1ooth birthday Sunday at a
retirement home.
Herron graduated from
U.S. Military Academy in
1899 and saw action the same
year in the San Bias
Philippine insurrection. He
also is a veteran of the
Sparush-American War, the
Pancho Vtlla campaign and
World War I.
He !ned to retire in 1941 but
was recalled to active duty
for the next eight years.
In all, Herron served 55
years on active duty and
retired as a three-star
general.

leaks, lncludiDg oue on Texas
During the first haU hour
Rd., where the city was loolng after the wreck, lhe city's
40 gallo011 a minute, were maiD supply reservoir, wblch
repa!rt·d Saturd•y and bad climbed to 9' IDcbea (just
Sunday according to Nol' sby of the 8 fool mark ) from a
thup.
record low Zt IDches at %: U
This morning , eight ad· p.m. Saturday, had dropped a
ditlonal leaks had been quarter of a foot aC&lt;!ordiDg lo
reported to the city bulldlng Northup. By ll•.m. tbe drop
as of 9 a.m. including one bad reached lhree qparters of
which alarmed local officials. a foot.
Around 8:51 a.m. today, a
Workers rushed to the
vehiCle driven east on Pine accident scene. While they
St., by Charles L. Kasee, 19, were trying to get to the right
of 123 Fourth Ave., attempted cut off valve, the city was
to tum north onto Third Ave. losing between 600 and 800
For some reason, Kasee lost ~allons of water a minute.
contrnl of the vehicle,
slammed into a tree at the
comer of Third and Pine,
then bounced into a fire
hydrant, knocking the
hydrant from its foundation .
Damage was estimated
around $1,00o to the fire •
hydrant, not to mention the
loss of precious water. No
The Order of DeMolay, an
damage estimate was made tnternatlonal youth
. .
on the vehicle, but the entire orgamzallon
that offers
front end was smashed in by teenage boys the training and
the crash. The driver ap- guidance to become better
parently was not injured. He citizens, was founded in 19.19
was cited by city pollee for as the result of a young soc_tal
reckless operation.
worker's desire to provtde
- - -- - - -- - - fatherly advice and counsel
for a boy whose fatber had
.
.
- ADVERTISEMENT
been killed In a huntmg acFOR BIDS Federal Land and Water cident.
Conse r vat ton
Fund Act
The youth Louis Lower
Pro1ect No 39 00.431 and HUD
' s La d th 28,
Comm unit y Development wentto Frank - n • e . •
BlocK Gra nt Prol ect No B 75
year-old director of the Soctal
ON 39-00 22
Service
Department of the
Se wage
System
for
Mun tct pal Park Swtm ming Scottish Rt!e Temple in
Pool. Vi ll age of Sy ra cuse, K nsas City Mo to ask for a
a
• ·
OhtO .
Btds will be r eceived until
job and to seek counsel.
12 00 NoonE S T. on Monday,
Frank Land gave young
March 28, 1977 , tor the con
Lowerajob forhehadbeena
stru ct1on of Sewage System
. d f h"'father and after
for Mun1 cipa l Pa rk Swim
fnen
o IS
'
mlng Pool for the Vil lage of
Syra cuse, OhtQ, at whtch ttm e frequent talks with Lower, he
the bids shall be opened by
reallzed that the boy's
the Clerk of the Vil lage and precicament was not con·
publi Cl y rea d by her at the
Vi llage Hall , State Route 124 , fined
to him alone,
Village of Syracuse , Ohio
but
extended
to countBids may be ma iled to the
Vil lage at Syrac use , Ohta . less other boys whether
d5779 , Attentton Mr Herman
they had fathers or not. lt
.
London , Ma vorJ
Information far bidder s, pomted out~ need for a new
form of co ntra ct , plans , youthorgaruzatton - onethat
speci fi cations, and. forms of
would provide the proper
b1d bond, performance and
payment bond , and other training and guidance to
.
.
documents may be exar.rHned
and are obta inable at the better ctbzenship that no
Vi llage HalL Syracuse , Oh10,
other boys' group offered.

upon the payment of th e sum
$10 00 , Wht Ch IS not
refundable .
All bids must be in plam
sea led en\l'elopes marked on
the ou tstde "B 1d for Sewage
Sys tem for Munic1pal Park
Sw 1mm ing Pool , VIl lage of
Syracuse, Ohio "
Each
bidder must heve on th e
outside of the bid envelope h1S
name and address , and each
bond must be acc ompan,1 ed
by a bid bond or certified
check in the amount of 10
percent of the total b1d The
bid bond shal l be conditioned years the movement would be
that 1f the b1d 1S accep ted ' a
contract wtll be entered into act1ve in several countries
and tts performance properly and territories ou tside the
United States and would have
secured
It the bid embraces both
a membership of over one
labo r and mater.al such
hundred thousand boys.
1tems shal l be separa tel y
The idea of a club that
sta ted w1lh the pr ice thereof
would
be both educational
No bidder may wtthdraw
h1s bid tor a per.od of s•xt y and msptrational was well
days fr om the date of b1d received by all ntne The
.question was raised as to
open ing
This pro1 ect is federa ll y what to call this new,
aSSIS t ed Contrt~cts to be
organ i zat1on . Frank Land
awarded un der th is
In ·
began reciting many of the
vttat ton for b1ds will be
famous
names m history, but
sub te c t to
Prestdenttal
Exec utive Or der No 11246 · none of them appea led
especially lo lhe boys. Then
requiring afflrmattve action
for e(ILHII employment op - one of the youths suggested
portunity Contractors are
fhatsince they mere meeting
furt her adv i sed that the
1n a Mason 1c Temple that
Ja nuary 27 , 1972 Equal
some
of the historic figures
Emp lo yment Opportun1ty
cOnnected
with Masonry
E)l(ecutive Order of t he
should be recounted .
Governor of Ohio Is also
It was then that Frank
appli cable to thts btd •n vitat,on
Land mentioned the name of
Th e owner reserves the
Jacques DeMolay . The name
rtght to waive Informalit ies
Immediately captured each
or to re1e ct any and all btds
of the nine young minds.
Successf ul bi dder must
When they heard how as the
comply with the Ohto Work
last Grand Master 'at the
men 's Compensation La ws
Knights Templar, he died as
and also comply w i th all
other sta te, federal and local
a martyr to loyalty and
ta xes and laws .
toleratton they unanimously
Su cc essfu l bi dd er must agreed that DeMolay was
proceed with the work with in
their choice of names .
two weeks of the signing of
Land advtsed them not to
the con tra ct and the project
act 1n haste, to think the
mu st be t ully comple ted
wit hin 30 working day s names over and decide for
th ereafter excepting only
sure at the next meellng . On
such delays as may be oc .
March 18, 1919, the nine
cas 1oned by strikes ,
un .
youths along with 2~ of their
sea sonabl e weather or ac ts of
Of

friends , met again In the

N!asonic

Temple

and

$40,000.00 Maximum Insurance for Each
Depositor. Member Feder a I · Deposit
Aouurance Corporation.

•"

•

•

other city crewmen rushed to the comer ol
and Pine St., around 9 a. m,
repair a major water leak following an accident at that int.eraection. It was ano101er
incident, one of hundreds, since Jan. 18, plaguing the city's water service. The fire hydrant
above was knocked from its foundation, and the city was losing approximately 600 to 800
gallons of water a minute from tbe already critically low main storage reservoir wben this
photo was taken.

~~~!rv~~i~ 5 [.al~i~a;~enhh~

:

In the fall of 1920, an
initlaflon team from Kansos
City went fo Omaha ,
Nebraska , to Install a chapter

there. And soon cities, and
towns all over the country
were clamoring for a

chapter, for the good work

wife,

Carrie,

The family will

d1rector.

Within 10 years there were
over 1,200 chopters all over
the .world, and over 100,000
ad1ve DeMolays
The
number of chapters today

totals over 2,500 and the

S. Senators, congressmen,
generals, governors , and
others
have
countless

climbed the lodder of success

Little Brown ·Potatoes
Vegetable
Hot Rolls
Coffee, Tea or Milk

a better tomorrow.

· Plus Tax

THE MEIGS INN
Pomeroy, 0.
Phone 992-6304
PIZZA SHACK Phone 992-6304'

r
INCLUDED: 6 PC. ATTACHMENT SET

hereofthedeathof Dr. Frank

H. Mozena. 80. at his home in

%

Canal Fulton, Ohio.
A former dentist at the
Gall ipolis State Institute, he
retired Jan. 1. 1970 and
moved to Port R1tchle, Flo.
where he resided until a year
ago He was a member o ttte

~'~

Gallipolis Shrine and Grace
Unlfed Methodist Church.
He Is survived by his wife.
Polly. Asl.ter, Mrs. Malcolm
(Helen) Huffman, Zanesville,

ADJUSTS TO DEEP·CLEAN ANY
CARPET FROM THE LOWEST
NAP TO THE THICKEST SHAG.

be

held 1 p.m. Wednesday af fhe

PARTY PLANNED
Women of the Sacred Heart
Church will 8p01110r a st.
Patrick's Day card party in
the church baaeinent at 7:30
p.m. Thurlldlly. Tlcketa may
be purchased at the door or
by caUlng 1i2·2567, 992r3312 or
~7.

'

• Exctua!ft 4rpoelllon Dlt~ArNtP"
rug helghlldJuat.,.nt

funeral home between 1 and 9

o

p.m. Tuesday.

Powtr-d~VIII

beattrrbar bruah

roll I-na ombooddod dirt and
wllllt bruehel IWMP II up

grl~

OKEY SAUNDERS

• Edge Kl-r cleiM lhaiiMI
Iough Inch •long banbo•rdl

Okey Eorl Saunders, 85, of
Henderson died Sunday In the ·
Holzer Medico! Center at
Gallipolis.
A member of the Henderson Church of Christ, he

REG. UPRIGHT S6U5
TOOLS REG. $19.95
) TOTAL REG. $8f.9o·

was a retired farmer and

as ministers, writers, movie retail grocer In Gallipolis.
Born at Guyon Township,
stars and business leaders.
The organization has also Ohio, on May 25, 1891, he wos
become well known for Its the son of the late Jacob M.
and Clemonla Johnson
charlt~ble service projects,
citizenship training , and Saunders.
Surviving are his wife,
healfhy social activities. The
Order of DeMolay hos Maude M Buckle Saunders;
genuinely assured Itself a three dauqhters. Mrs. Edwin
position of historic lm.
mortality through Its work In
behalf of training better
leaders to ossure the world of

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR
VACAnON
WATQf FOR
OPENING DATE

few minutes.' '

Porcari's wife, who was at
the airport, refused saying
she feared her husband might
turn ''nasty.''

Brandishing a rifle and a
pistol, Porcari hljacked the
Jet at Monday shortly after 11
took off on a flight from
Barcel ona to . Palma de
Majorca.
After a refueling stopover
in Algiers, he ordered the
plane to Abidjan in the Ivory
Coast
where he picked up
years ~
Margarita
and a cash
When he first landed at
payment
of
$140,000.
Zurich, Porcad at first deThe jet then flew to Seville
manded fuel Ill fly on to Lyon ,
on
the next leg of its 5,500France, airport authonties
mile
odyssey to Turin . It
said.
refuele~
in Seville and
Porcari, who officials said

E

/fNews • • .in Briefs\\

Funeral Home In Westerville

Shirer and Sons Funera I

appeared "lucid and cairn,"
later tempered hls demands
by offermg to release 10
passengers if he was allowed
"only to see Consuelo for a

Monday, then flew it to the
Ivory Coast in West Africa,
where he picked up a :J.yearold daughter. He then forced
the plane back to Europe via
Seville, Spain, to Milan where
he demanded to see another
of hiB ctaughters. But his wife
refused, and the hijacker took
off for Zurtch after releasing
seven hostages.
While in Turin, Porcari
spoke to a childhood friend on
the radio and told him "If
they don't let me see my child
there will be a massacre- !
don't care if I die." Porcari
said he had·been trying to see
the child, Consuelo, for five

MODEL
1416

NOW
ONLY

95
t«:LUOES 6 PC. ATTACIIMENT SET

()pen Friday 9:30a.m. to 8 p.m.
Other W•kdays 9::iOto 5 p.m.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

By Uolled Press International
NEW DELffi, INDIA - SANJAY GANDHI, !be
controversial30-year-old son of Prime MiniBter Indira Gandhi,
narrowly escaped assassination Monday by gunmen who fired
oo his jeep at the close of India's election campaign, the
national news agency Samachar said today. Aspokesman for
the opposition Janata People's party said the incident
appeared "stage-managed and manipulated" in keeping with
what he characterized as Mrs. Gandhi's method of operation.
Samachar said the attackers fired five shots and three hit
the jeep in which San jay was riding on his way lo Amethi, 300
miles 11&gt;utheast of the capital. His bodygyards fired b~ck but
the gunmen escaped, the report_sald. "Some of the bu_uets hit
the seat and the body of the Jeep, but Mr. Gandh1 had a
miraculous escape," Samachar quoted a district official as
saying.
WASffiNG'J'ON - THE WHI'I'E HOUSE Is considering a
Pentagon ''Working paper" that proposes upgrading perhaps
75,000 undesirable Vletnwn-era discharges. Deputy Counsel
Margaret McKenna, who Is handling tbe matter for the White
House, said In an Interview Monday the number Includes
categories of veterans who:
-Served honorably in Vietnam and later got into military
!rouble.
- Were wounded or decorated In other military
engagementa.
-Successfully 'co:mpleted a previous tour of military duty .
Ms. McKenna said the proposal also would set guidelines
baied on the age and educational background of the veteran
receiving an undesirable, discharge, his record as a private
citizen, and whether alcollol or drugs was a factor.
NAIROBI, KENYA - PRESIDENT IDI AMIN has
perlllnally guaranteed the safety of Americans and Britons
wlshlitg to live peacefully In Uganda but said any of tbem
spreading proJ188anda will be expelled. A group of black
Anglican bishops in Kenya demanded, however, the United
Natlooa and the Organization of African Uolty establish an
International pollee force to restore law and order in Uganda.
The religious leaders charged that hundreda and perhaps
thot18111lda of per10ns - mainly Olristlans and Acholi and
Lang! tribesmen - have been rnassacr¢ In a seven-week
campaign by Amln'• security forces. Ill a statement
(Continued on page 10)

Justis commands DAV
New officers for 1977·78
have been selected by Meigs
Chapter 53,
Dlsabltd
American Veterans.
They ue Raymond Juatls,
commander; Edgar Van
lnwagen, senior vice com·
mander, and Marvin L.
Kelly, ch8pter service of·
fleer, adjutant and treasurer.
The current paid mem·
berlhlp of the chapter Is 217.
Retular meetiDga are held on
the aecond Tuesday of each
~ monlll, 7:30 p.m., at lh~

chapter home 124 Butternut
Ave., Pomeroy.
Senior Vice Commander
Vanlnwagen is the last
survivor of the Bataan Death
March living In Meigs
County.
Kelly, who said the elected
officers need the support of
the
membership,
is
requesting that members
attend meetings to help
promote the programs of the
chapter.

l:'orcan demanded and
of
received
a case
champagne and another case
of mineral water so he could
celebrate the victory of his
venture wtth his 29 fellow
passengers.
Seville airport officials said
Porcari forced part of his
ransom money on the passengers threatening to blow up
the plane if they dido 'I accept
it.
Once m Turin, Porcari
ordered the plane refueled
and prepared for departure
for an undisclosed destination
and
sent
the
two
stewardesses

and

one

passenger out to pick up milk
and muffins for breakfast.
Porcari had tried hijacking
once before in July, 1972,
when his wife lsabeUa tried to
leave him and their home in
the Ivory Coast.

c nnd it t oning

processes, but no action was
taken .
Attending were Mayor
Hoffman, Clerk-Treasurer
Gene Grate, and Councilman
Marv m Kelly, Allen Lee
rate increase of .71 of a cent Kmg, Wilham Walters,
per 1,000 cubic feet as of Apnl Dewey Horton and Carl
Horky.

Globetrotter whiz shot
to death in Southside

Chicago apartment.. brawl

...

d

OWn

COLUMBUS (UP! ) -Today was Martin Essex' last day as state superintendent of public
instruction . The 68-year old educator stepped down from the $50,000...-year post after 10 years,
longer tluin any of his 29 predecessors.
.
•
"Ten years," he said, "ought to be considered maximum for an evangel~t." .
.
Essex born and raised in tlny Hamden of Jackson County, saw the states baste educatiOn
subsidy grow from $300 million a year to $1.1 billion under his leadership . Monday ~vening, he
was honored by 700 friends and public education officials at~ banquet at the Oh1~ Uruon.
Essex was a school principal In Middleport and a supermtendent ~t East Uverpool, Ferndale, Mich., and Lakewood before laking command of the Akron public school system m 19&gt;5.
He was appointed to the top
.
state education job in 1966 accomplishments of his vancements in this country, it
and during his tenure served regime was the development iB imperative that great numas president of the American in Ohio of vocational and hers of young people be
Association of School technical education, a task he equipped wtth technical
Administrators and the said is "97 per cent accompli- skills."
Council of Chief State School Shed."
But
the
outgoing
Officers.
"With the technological ad( eontmued on page 10)
' Essex traveled extensively,
conducting surveys of school
systems ru:ound the world.
Three times he visited the
USSR to consult with school
COLUMBUS (UPI) -The state Board of Education
officials.
has
chosea a "unifier" and a tnp official lo tbe current
After his visits to the Soviet
Ohio
basic ooucallon blerarcby to succeed the retiring
.
Union and his study of
state
superintendent of public Instruction, IIJartiD \f ..
Japanese and Western
Essex.
educational systems, he said,
Dr. Frankllo B. Waller, now deputy superintendent
"there was no question in my
and
an official of tbe state Department of E&lt;lucation for
mind that we must become
nloe
years, will take over tbe ~.oot-a-year post
the best artisans In the world,
Wednesday.
working with pride and skill
Waller, n, was cbosen by unanimous vote of tbe slate
to improve the quality of
.
board
Monday following a two-monlh talent search which
living."
was
Umlled
to edueatlon experts In Olilo. He wtU serve at
"If we are no! strong In
tbe
pleasure
of tbe board, whose members are elected,
productivity, we cannot surone
!rom
each
coagresslonal district, every two years.
vive," he said.
Accordingly, said Essex,
one
of
the
major ·::.·:·::··:·:· ::·:···:·::·::.:::·:.:,,: :,:,::·.;:·:,..::· ·: :·.. ,. ·: :·.··:·:···:·····'···:: ·,·::··:::..:: .,... ::·:·.· .,.,. ·: :···: ::

State board picks a unifier

Elderly man dies in fire
Coolville, a nephew of the
victim.
At the scene were Sheriff
Proffitt, deputies Robert
Beegle and David Woolard
and Dr. Ray Pickens, county
coroner.
Brief funeral services will
be conducted Thursday, l
p.m. at the White Funeral
Home in Coolvllle, with the
Rev . Richard Thomas offlciating. Burial will be In
Christian cemetery, Tuppers
Plains. Friends may call at
the funeral home aftr noon
Wednesday.
Mr. Koehler was born in
Meigs County to the late
William and l.enora Keller
Koehler. He was also
'~

water

ClllCAGO (UP!)- Leon H1llard, one-tune Harlem
Globetrotters dnbbling whiz and later the team's .::
coach, was shot to death Monday night in a South Stde ::
apartment, police said
· ;:
Hillard, 45, was dead on arrival at South Shore
Hospital, a single bullet lJ) the back of hiB head. ·::
Hillard's wife, Sandra, 38, was questioned by police ,.
and released-. ·
·.
Pollee said Mrs. Hillard ran downstatrs from their :"
1
That attempt, against an rurport "crisls squad' as
second floor aparbnent to her mother's apariment ·:;
Alitalia plane, erupted into an soon as word got around that
after a quarrel with her husband. Hillard followed and ·· ..
airport shootout. Isabella and the plane was heading for
demanded she come out, they said, and then began
Rome
airport
an Ivory Coast policeman Zurich
·..
kicking in the door.
authonbes had a t for st
were wounded.
Homicide Sgt. Patrick McGroarty said Hillard was
that
Zunch
Porcari was sent to prison reported
struck by a .38 caliber pistol fired through the door and :·
::
where he was descrtbed as authorities would not let the
fell dead on the floor .
·..
"neither mean nor mad, but plane land.
Smaller than liis Globetrotter teammates at :&gt;-foot- ..
More than 100 armed pollee
nervous and angry." He was
10 Hillard delighted crowds wtth hiB ability to dribble · :·
put to work repatrmg offictal surrounded the aircraft when
th~ ball even when he was on his knees or sitting.
:::
" •
lunousmes and for good con· it rolled up to a parking bay ...
:: " ... ' .. ".:::":'::':'"::::,:,:,:,:·,: · ::::,:·:.::::::"::::: . " ...: ·. :::: ,: . :: : ..: :. :: .:.:: .: ..........·:: :· . ·.· .,.
duct was allowed to ~ work
outside the prison during the
day.
During his free time, he
met his African girlfriend
·who later gave birth to
Margarita. He was later
expelled from the country.
Porcarl then apparently
changed his mind and ''mentioned over the radto" that he
would fly back to Turin, the
official said.
Zuroch pollee rapidly
assembled their special

SSeX steps

Clarertce R. Koehler, 72,
Rt. I, Reedsville, died last
night about midnight in a lire
that destoyed his home
located In Orange Township
south of Tuppers Plains.
·
Sheriff James Proffitt said
the fire was discovered by a
passing motorist who alerted
Mr. alld Mrs. John Hays,
neighbors of Mr. Koehler who
called fire departmenta in
Coolville, Tuppers Plains,
Chester, Pomeroy and
Middleport.
The remains, found In the
ruins at I :10 a.m., were laken
to White's Funeral Home In
Coolville.
The property was owned by
Randy Koehler, Rt. 2,

due to the tuel cost clause.
Councilman Carl Horky
reported !bat the Amencan
Paint Co. has completed
saodblastmg village hall and
will seal the building alter the
pointing up of the brick is
done. The sealing wtll be done
at cost and the sandblastmg
was don'e without charge. It is
planned to send the company
a letter of appreciation.
Council also discuss ed
holes in a street, shorter use
of the traffic lights, dogs
running loose and the 25 cent
additwnal charge per month
for water users for the new
I

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS · ·......... ..... ·. ~......................... ,.,....·. ·: ..,....... ,..,,.... ·:::":. :...,.

TUESDAY, MARCH 15, 1977

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.,,,,,~,~,,~,,,,,.;,,,,,,,~,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,.,,,., .,.,.,.,.,,,,,.,.;.;.,.;.,.,.;.,.; .:-:·;·:·:·:·: ·:·:·:· :·:·:·:·:::::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::: :

where services will be held at

once again . The organization

.

ELBERFELDS

celebrated Its 50th An - Home, Adamsville, wlfh Rev
niversary in 1969, and now James R. Kuse offldatlng.
looks back upon the Initiation Burial will be In New Hope
of nearly three million boys. Cemetery.
Senior
DeMolays are
Fnends may call at fhe

DeMolay has been the
springboard for many o man
!hot has gained fame and
fortune. Ther.e hove been U.

CLUB TO MEET
The Rose Garden Club will
meet at 8 p.m. Wednesday at
the home of Mrs. Frederick
Goegel, Tuppers Plains, with
a silent auction to be held.

receive

also survives
Funeral services will

government, the mllltory ond

-

friends from 2 lo 4 and 7 fo
8. 30 p.m. Tuesday at fhe Hill

than 160,000.
DeMolay had some rough
years dunng fhe depression,
buf soon built up Its strength

frequently
found
In
prominent positions in the

ZURICH , Switzerland
-An Italian hijacker
who forced a Spanish jetliner
to fly to Africa and back to
Europe In a bid to recover his
children' landed at Zunch
today- with 29 hostages
aboard. He took off soon
afterward when he was
refused fuel rut returned to
Zurich a half-bour later.
The Iberia airlines Boeing
'rll alrllner made Ita second
landing of the day in Zurich at
3.30 p.m. (9:30a.m. EST).
During an earlier stop at
Zurich which lasted one hour
and 20 minutes, Luciano Purcarl was refused fuel for the
aircraft. He ordered the
plane to go to Zurich after a
previous stop In Turin where
fuel had also been refused.
Porcari, a 37-year-old auto
mechanic, hijacked the plane
over the Mediterranean
(UP!)

NOW YOU KNOW
George Bernard Sahw said
in his old age: "Youth is
wasted on the young ."

DR. M'DZENA

enttne

at y

that the village's appllcatwn
for a Housing and Urban
Developme nt Block Grant
had been turned down.
The grant would have
provided help for ftle town
w1th a sewer line extension,
water system improvements
and improvements to the lore
stat1on. Mayor Hoffman did
comment that the sewer line
extension project was g1ven a
high rating on prionties and
almost was approved He
md1cated that he will attempt
next year probably another
application.
A letter was read from
Ashland Oil indlcatmg new
prices for gasoline used by
the village, an increase of
about one-eent a gallon over
the past pnces and a letter
from Columbia Gas of Ohio
was read reporting ·another

Hijacked jet crisscrossing
Europe with 29 hostages

nephews.

Word has been received

F,rank Land as the full lime

The
Middleport
Emergency Squad went to
Chester Road at 3:28 p.m.
Sunday to transport Sheila
aod LucJ11e Ailing, Injured In
an auto accident, to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
At 6:30 p.m. Sunday, the
squad transported Mrs. Mary
Archer, Bailey Run Road, to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 12:57 a.m. Monday, the
squad took George Meinhart
from hls home at 94 Hudson
St. to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. At 6:50 a.m.
Monday, the squad look Zelda
Pullins, 150 North Second
Ave., who had fallen, to
Holzer Medical Center.

two

It was not until 20 years
later that Frank Land
real ized lhat fh ls March 18

VIsit Our Sa Iad Bar

! removed to VMH

brofhers, Clyde and Olin, and
a sister, Cathy
Survi ving are a sister, Mrs .
Bertha Densmore. Columbus.
and several nieces and

Masons, (although eligibility
for DeM?Iay membership Is
not tied 10 with Masonry) , a
Grand Council of the nation's
lead1ng Masons was set up to
govern the movement, with

VOL XXVII NO. 233

Middleport senior citizens send their soc1al security
on cable television should be number to the company when
paymg a reduced rate of $3 50 they pay thetr bill so they can
per month for the service, recetve the reduced rate.
Coun cil approved the
Mayor Fred Hoffman said
Monday night when Mid- report of Mayor Hoffman for
dleport Village Counctl met in February with receipts
totaling $1,726.80 including
regular session.
The mayor said that he had $1,548.80 in fines and fees and
checked with PoinTVtew $178 m merchant police fees.
television on the charge for A letter of commendation
the
Middleport
senior citizens and has been from
advised that the company has Chamber of Commerce was
no way of knowing when read for em ployes of the town
residents reach 65 Such and the ftre and emergency
residents upon reaching 65 uruts for thetr work during
should adviBe the company of the. difficult winter months.
Mayor Hoffman reported
their date of birth and also

•

•

Accident victims

He was preceded In death by

his

DeMolay chapters was fo be
restricted
to Masonic

organi zations or lndl~ldual

employe of the street department who will operate the
equipment, and councilman Harry DaviB.

e

'

He was retired from the
Pennsylvania Ra i lroad .
havi ng served as conductor
on the "Spirit of St Louis "

8:30 p.m. Tuesday with
Richard Trott offlciafing. The
body will be brought to Meigs
County for Interment at 11
a.m. Wednesday af the Coy
Hill Cemetery, Rutland .

. and fame of OeMolay had
bec~me w tdespread.
S1nce
sponsorsh i p of

business.

·==

EARL RIJMFIELD

RUTLAND
Earl
Rumfield, 88, of 3506 Wester
v1lle Rd .. Westerville, for merly of Meigs County, died
Sunday at his home ..

achve membership IS more

THE INN PLACE
Tuesday Night Special

Salisbury Steak

Area Deaths

:;re

The ntual has been termed
ageless. Except for a very
few words, it remains
practically unchanged today .
It is so well wr ttfen that many
term if even more effective
and more Impressive as It
grows older .
Helped by such an insptrafional initiation - one
which Includes a dramatic
portrayal of the trial of
Jacques DeMolay - the
youth movement picked up
momentum like a snowball
running downhill.

(1-r ) Pmeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews, Donnie Ward,

NEW TRACTOR AND BACKHOE - Pomeroy Village
Monday received ita new tractor with front and back end
loaders and cutting bar. The equipment was purchased
from Southeast Equipment Co., Gallipolis. Above are

...

was fhe anniversary date of
lhe death of Ja cques
DeMolay In 1314
AI lhe next meeting, Louis
Lower was the first to take
lhe DeMola~ obligation on a

OeMolay.

you come tn often But we l1k~ 10 r~c~lv~ m ~~ too So. on thos~
days when you c"n't get to u ~ . let the I)OstmM le nd you" hand
h's lust ""other w~y for us to ser\le you be n er

POMEROY, OHIO

for -

mally organized the Order of

It ~easy Milyb~ that s why II sgen lngmore &lt;lnri morepo pulcu to ,
do bankmg by ma1l lust se nd us your d eposit &lt;liang with the de
pos11 slip, and we' ll send yo ur receipt right badt to you the very
same ri"Y h 5 the mosr con11enlem w~y to s.we golng 1 lven a
ch•ld could do 11! Now don 1 mlsunderMnnd u5 We ltke 10 see

' nnt .

•
••

was 12, for 10 r•ars' perfect
Sunday Schoo attendance. ~-------------------------:--I
The remaining original n1ne
members followed Lower in
takmg the obllgahon.
Af the next meeting a I
I
proposa l was brought up thaf
could have brought death lo
(Mildred) Rose, Dayton,
FRED DILCHER
fhe future greafness of the
Ohio;
Mrs
James
RUTLAND
Fred
movement
One of the
Dllcher, 81, of 77 Easf Second ( Esfher)
Blain,
Gal
members proposed lhat the Ave .. Columbus, formerly of II pol is Ferry ; and Ml.s_!
membership be limited to 75 Meigs County, died Saturday Edith McCall, at home; three
boys. All the other boys at fhe Moyfair NurSing brothers, Everett Saunders
seemed to be In agreemenf Center ending a long il lness. and Henry Saunders, both of
Then Frank Land got up
Mr . Oilcher was born f'tllay Hunf lngton, and Stanley
and pointed out how selfish 2, 1895 in Downing ton, a son of Saunders,
Northup. 0 ; one
they were being. He said that the late William and Ellen sister, Mrs. Naom1 Mcintyre,
DeMolay should not be an King Dllcher He was a Huntington ; three grand~xduslve organlzaflon, but If
construction worker before children and five great.
1fwastobegoodforone boy 1f
reti rement. He was married grandchildren
must be good for all eligible in 1914 to the former Clara
Funeral services will be
boys and to become big, we Romine who preceded h1m in held Tuesday at I: 30 p.m. at
must be b~ " A new vote was
death, and In 1937 to Dorothy the Stevens Funeral Home
Engle, who survives as do a with Ron Adams and Eugene
i~~ft~
s~r. ~~~~s~~!~i~ son,
Charles
Dilcher, Zopp officlatinQ. Burial will
year the Mother Chapter of Columbus; three daughters, follow in the Mound Hill
DeMolay,in Kansas City grew Mrs. Drexel (Edith I Lamberf Cemetery In Gallipolis.
to a membership of 3,000.
and Miss Ethel Dikher,-both
t-nends may call tram 1 10
In the tradltton of the
4 and 7 to 9 p.m. today
of
Route
1
Rufland,
Mrs.
Knights Templar, ritual was
Loyd (ElSie) Pnddy, Route 1,
lo become a fundamental Mlddleporf ; a brother,
cornerstone of DeMolay. In Charles, in Florida; nine
DIVORCE ASKED
Novembe r, 1919, Frank grandchildren, 18 greatFay
I. Gum, Rt . 4,
Marshal l, a lead1ng Mason grandchildren, three greaf.
Pomeroy,
has filed suit for
and ed1lor1al wnter for the great . 9randch1ldren, and
Kansas Cit{. Jornal was several meces, nephews and divorce from George G. Gum,
Land told Lower he would asked to wri e a ritual.
same address, In Meigs
cousins.
help form a new boy's club
It IS one that follows lhe
Also preced ing him in County Common Pleas Court.
and for him to bring some of precepts of Freemasonry It death were two brothers, a
h 1s high school fr iends and revolves about the DeMolay
sister, a great-grandson and
DOFATOMEET
they would get organized .
altar on which rests the Holy a great-great-granddaughter .
And so it was in February, Bible, and at whtch a
CHESTER
- Chester
runeral services will be
1919, Louis Lower and elghf of DeMolay obligates h1mself to held at 1 p.m Tuesday at fhe Council323, D ol A, will meet
h1s friends met In the Scottish be a better son and man, to
Rutland Chapel of the Walker Tuesday at 7:30 p.m.
hone; his parents, to love and
Rite Temple with Frank s
Funeral Home with the Rev
Land for the purpose of serve GOO, his country, and
James Goforth offici ating . Quarterly birthdays will be
forming a
new
boys ' fellow man ; to uphold the
Burial will be In Wells observed. Potluck refresh·
organization. Little did any of public schools, to slander no Cemetery Friends may call ments.
them dream, least of all one, and to exercise tolerance at the chapel at any time
FranK Land. that in just a few In the opinions of others.

(31 14 , 21. 2t c

Bank

'•

to assist boys

VILLAGE OF
SYRACUSE, OHIO
By Herman London ,
MAYOR

~ Farmers

•

DeMolay founded

God

Anyone Can Do It

The city was picking up
approximately an Inch and
one haU of water an hour In
the reservoir prior to thls
morning's traffic accident
according to Nortbup.
Meanwhile, the water
emergency remained ln.
effect in the city and for
residents in outlying areas
using city water.
The emergency will con·
tlnue until the reservoir Is
fully replenished. The
reservoir has a capacity for
121&gt; feet of water, or 2 million
gallons.

preceded In death by his wife,
Audrey, in 1968 and one
brother, Pearl G., in 1976.
A former employee of the
Republic Steel Corp., Canton,
he worked the greater part of
his life in the logging
operation of the Ohio Valley
Manufacturing Co., Tuppers
Plains.
He is survived by a stepdaughter, Mrs. Rita Dalley,
Columbus; two nieces, Mrs.
Okey (Janet) Connolly, Rt. 1,
ReedsviUe, and Mrs. Wilbur
(Marilyn) Robinson, Rt. 2,
Coolville; one nephew, Randy
~oehler, Rt. 2, Coolville; a
step-granddaughter, Donna
Jean Dailey, and 3everal
cousins.

NEW FIRE ESCAPE - Anew fire escape at the Meigs County Jail has been completed
On the steps above is Meigs County Sheriff James J. Proffitt. The escape leads to jail
facilities that Sheriff Proffitt said will be cleaned up and put to use.

Brown breaks registration
tie with his vote of 'nay'
Secretary of State Ted W.
Brown has cast the deciding
vote
agamst
voter
registration at this time in
Meigs County.
The Meigs County Board of
Elections met recently and
had a tie vote 2-2 on im·
p!ementing voter registration
in the county as soon as
practical.
In the followin g com·
munications, Secretary of
State Brown points out that
the Ohlo legislature lS con·
sidering bills which would
maodate registration and has
voted against registration at
thls time in Meigs County. He
has advised the board of
elections as follows:
We are In receipt of your
letter of March 2 posing a tie
vote on a motion made by
Virginia Blazewlct, seconded
by Ernest Wingett, that
countywide registration be
implemented as soon as
practical. Upon roll call
Vl~glnia Blazewlcz and
Ernest Wingett voted for the
mutton while Leslie Fultz and
Evelyn Clark voted against
the motion
The basis for the negative
votes by Leslie Fultz and

~

Evelyn Clark was that they
were advised by the county
commissioners that funds are
unavailable at this time to
hnance
county
wide
registration.
The General Assembly is
constdering three separate
bills whlch would requtre
statewide voter registration.
Undoubtedly one of these
measures will be enacted Into
law; and registration for your
county will, therefore, be
mandated. The proposal that
will likely be the vehicle is
Senate Bill No. 125 That bill
also contains provisions for
election day registration,
registration by ma1l, and
permanent registration. One

prov1s1on
would
also
eliminate the necessity to
open polling places for three
successive days for pre·
election registration of
voters.
We are hopeful that amend·
ments can be effected to
Senate Bill No. 125. The blll as
finally adopted will probably
result in less expense to your
county to achieve initial
registration, althoug~ other
features, particularly those
involving election day
registration and pennanent
registration, will impose a
continuing financial burden.
For this reason I am reluctant to require that
registration be conducted In
Meigs County In advance of
passage of the bill.
For the aforesaid reasons I
TWO ARRESTED
vote "ND" with Leslie Fultz
Sheriff James Proffitt's
and Evelyn Clark on Virginia
Dept. today reported the
Blazewlcz's motion.
arrest of William Kauff,
Chester, on charges of
driving while intoxicated,
fleeing an officer, and driving
NOW YOU KNOW
without tall lights. Robert
The body of nature poet
Schoonover, 41, Rutlaod, was Hans von Thummel has lain
cited to court for operating a since 1824 In the heart of an
motorcycle without an en- oak tree In the German
dorsement,
village of Noebdenitz.

..

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