<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15000" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/15000?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-09T21:47:19+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="47777">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/026cc746270f21fef756e10e88712e3d.pdf</src>
      <authentication>d118c57313a13ec961878923717b424a</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="48200">
                  <text>••

_,

••

~ iM~"-''\\111lllli,/~;J~

•

20-Cal. TRASH CAN

BOOGIE WOOGIE IS BACK - The ~~ Sl.sters
aren't back but their pop number of the 19401, "Boogie·
Woogle Bugle Boy fi'OOI Company B" Ia still going big,
'lbla vocal quintet rehearsing the number at Meigs High
School !a I tor, Jenl Grate, Jo Mc!Qnney, Laura Hoover,

• lightweight! Sturdy!

~~~///111/llll\\~'-'''~SSS'il.
.

B

N

FR

~

•

e

...

.

NKLII)I

VOL. XXVII

~-·

Prices bound up 1.1%
in ·record March ·gain
By LEONARD CURRY
WASHiNGTON (UPI)
Wholesale prices soared 1.1
per cent in March for Uteir
Ute biggest monthly gain in
almost a year and a haU, the
Labor Department said
today _ Higher prices on
coffee and oUter food were
chiefly to blame.
U tile March continued
continues for a year, it would
raise Ute wholesale price of a
$10 market basket up to $13 .
Much, if not aU, of Utis price
increase would he horne by
consumers.
Farm and food prices,

Bev Wilcox and Paula Eichinger. The girls will be singing
In .the spring concert of junior and senior high vocal
students to be presented at 7:30p.m. April21 in Ute Meigs
Junior High at Middleport. Direction is by Mrs. Paige
Hunt. Accompanist for Ute senior high vocal students is
Teresa E:Uia.

•

,,

en tine

at

NO. 250 · POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

THURSDAY, APRIL 7, 1977

means business paid an eJ:tr'
$1,919 to buy goods which cost
$1,000 In 1967.
Wholesale prices, which
many economists believe are
the government 's best
inflation barometer, have
nearly doubled in tile past
deCllde for tile worst Inflation
rate since the decade
beginning in 1941.
It was the Utird worst
March In 30 years, surpassed
only by Ute 2.4per cent March
gain in 1973and 1.4 per centln
1974 when. Qlllldrupled oil
prices and runaway food billa
Utrew Ute natioo into Its
deepest recession since
World War D.
The department said prices
of industrial commodities
escalated for the fourth
consecutive month. These ·
;.;.;.;:;:;:;.;:;:; :;.;.;:;.;.;:;.:·~·:·:·: ·:· : ·:· :·: ·:· : ·:·::;:; .;:::;: ; :;:;:
goods, including metals,
glass, chemicals, clothing
NOW YOU KNOW
and plastics, rose O.B per
The sea gets its blue color cent. The index rose 0.3 per
from Ute sun by reflecting cent In December, 0.5 per
blue rays and absorbing the cent In January and 0.6 per
rest.
cent in February.

whose moderate growth
commodities,
Industrial
contributed most the reduced whose price Increases persist
inflation rate of 1976, much longer In the
accounted for most of Ute rise Inflationary cycle, were also
last montll.
a troublesome aspect of the
Raw coffee, ~oa and tea report.
pushed farm prices up 2.5 per
The depattment _said the
~t while prices for pork,
Wholesale Price Index, which
roasted coffee, cereal, bread measures Ute price of goods
and animal feeds boosted Ute sold in large quantities within
processed food lnde&gt;: by 1.9 the business community,
per cent.
stood at 191.9 in March. That
Major coffee roasters
raised prices about 25 cents a ·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·;·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::;.;:;:;.;:;.;.;.
pound last month in tile wake
of price increa'ses by Brazil, · EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Saturday through
the world 's major coffee
Monday,
lair with highs
producer.
Saturday in the upper 40s
and Iowa In the 20s or the
lower · 30s. H lghs by
Monday wlll be in tbeiOs or
tile lower 70s and lows wUl
be in the 40s or lower 50s.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Chamber opts for beer over chicken
The Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce made it official
Wednesday : Chicken and
beer don't go together !
It likely was economics, not
palatability, that led the
chamber following its regular
luncheon meeting at the
Meigs Inn to rule against
paying "Thunder Chicken" to
bring his act to the June Big
Bend Regatta at a cost of
$1,300 in favor of accepting an
offer by the Fall City Beer
Company to provide its 75 by
55 foot gai!y colored balloon
at no charge whatsoever.
Meeting with the chamber
were Phil T_ Weissinger,
Louisville, Ky., and Robert
Marchi, Gallipolis, both
representatives of the b~r
firm .
They said the balloon could
not be used for rides two and
one-half to three hours prior

CHAIRPERSON NAMED - Mrs. June Van Vranken, 1977 chairperson for tile 1977
Community Division Sustaining Membership fund drive for Ute Boy Scouts of America, is
shown above with Meigs-Gailla·Mason Scout Executive Pete Meadows. A $1,000 goal has
been set for Meigs County. ·
\

Mrs. Van Vranken 'heads drive
4

Mrs. June Van Vranken,
Spring Ave., Pomeroy today
became chairperson of the
1977 Meigs County Community Division Sustaining
Membership fund drive for
the Boy Scouts of America.
M·G"-M District Scout
Executive Pete Meadows, ·is
announcing Mrs.
Van
Vranken's decision to accept
tile responsibility of the fund

drive for · the third consecutive year, praised her
interest in the scouting
program that serves some 400
youths of Meigs County.
Mrs. Van Vranken, who
serves on Ute City Council of
the Beta Sigma Phi
sororities, revealed thai a
$1,000 goal has been
established for the Com-

munity Division of the Meigs
County funmd drive for
scouting.
Representatives of the
three chapters that mske up ·
the City Council of the Beta
Sigma Phi sororities will
serve as volunteer workers
for the drive, according to

Mrs_ Van Vranken . ·
The three chapters of the
City Council of the Beta
Sigma Phi sororities, through
which Mrs_ Van Vranken is
coordinating Ute drive, are
Preceptors Beta Beta, Xi
Gamma Mu aild Ohio Etta
Phi.

to sunset and two and onehalf to three hours before
sunrise. It will give free rides
Saturday, June 18, in those
limi.ts.
Fall City will also donate
replicas of the balloon 15
inches tall that will be sold by
the chamber. They also
pointed out that the balloon
could not be used if the wind
is blowing 10 miles an hour or
more. On the rides children

.

By United Presslnternallooal
'WASIDNGTON - COLUMBUS &amp; SOUTHERN Ohio
Electric Co., which has announced It would ask for a $44.1
million a year rate Increase, Increased liB net income by $6.1
mUllon In 1976, It was reported today.
Scripps-Howard newspapers said a check of records filed
with Ute Federal Power Commission showe&lt;j !he u\lllty had a
net Income of $66.9 million last year, a $6.1 million Increase
over 1975. The report also showed · some of Ute utility's
e&gt;:penses Including Ute $131,000 salary paid to C&amp;SOE
President and Chief Executive Officer A. G. Green and tbe
$111,000 paid to President R. J. Grueser.
11o.

CLEVELAND- THE EATON CORP. is showing off a new
auto engine device which Would allow cars to
with some
cylinders idle for fuel savings of up to 15 per cent.
The device Is caUed a ·dual displacement or variable
dlapl&amp;cement engine. It Involves valve selectors which shut
down cylinders on commands from an electronic device
attached to Ute.engine housing when fuU power Is not needed.
Ford Motor Co. Ia experbnenting with Ute device w!Ut plans to
Initially offer It on Its 300-cubic-inch six-cylinder engines used
in V&amp;rul.

run

DAYTON, OHiO- STRIKING WORKERS at the Dayton
Power &amp; Ught Co. will vote again Friday on a new contract
foilowlng Invalidation of ballots cast Thursday by members of
lDcal175 of Ute Utility Workers of America.
lAical President Ted Potts said Thursday's vote was
nulllfied after it was discovered that more ballots were
received Ulan the number o( members attending a meeting to
vote On Ute pact. The 1,600 membel'S ·ef· L&amp;Gal..175 struck the
ut!Uty Utree months ago in a contract dispute.
WASHINGTON - TEAMSTERS PRESIDENT Frank
Ftt:islmmons, seeking to shore up support wiUtin Ute scandalridden union, lnalsts charges of corruption will not force him
h·om office. Fitzslnunons' determination won him a rousjng
vote of confidence from 2,000 officials of union locals
throughout the country Wednesday during an unusual three•!0111' meeting that dissidents described as a "pep rally."
The dlalldenta, who picketed Ute heavily;!uarded meeting,
!ll'Uer rued an internal union complaint demanding Fitzlllmmona' ouster on chargers of nepotism, squandering funds
and de8lln8 wiUt organized crime figures. But top union
leaders Ignored the complaint, and Fitzsimmons aMounced he
Intends to finish out his five-year term and run for another in
IIIII.

State Auditor Thomas E. form; either or both, the
Ferguson reported tod.ay that Actual Use Report (AUR7)
a total of 252 Ohio cities, due March 1, and or the
villages, townships and Statement of Assurances
(PUR6) due Marcp 10.
countie~stand to lose revenue
Assistance
can be provided
sharing funds because of
by.
contacting
the Infailure to file required forms
tergovernmental
Relations
on time. He said the subdivisions
can
receive Area Coordinator for Ohio at
payment under a special 202-634-5200_ Replacement
procedure if the forms are forms, if needed, can be
requested in writing from
filed by April 25, 1977.
He urged the political Intergovernmental Relations
subdivisions involved to Division, Office of Revenue
immediately process the Sharing, 2401 E. St. , NW
Washington, D.C.
Meigs County stands to lose
$70,917 and Lebanon Town!ilip, $2,057.

DETROIT - A REPUI'ED CRIME syndicate l&lt;ingpin has
been lndlcted wlUt Utree oUter. men for extorting pension
maney fi'CIIII members of !he Teamsters' local that was the
pi&gt;werbase for Jimmy R. Hoffa and Frank S. Fitzsimmons.
VIncent A. Meli, Identified before a Senate committee In 1963
(Continued on P&amp;Re 12)

secure

'

Meigs County Sheriff
James J . Profitt said to·day
his department was [)lfonned
by Max Davis of the
Columbus Southern Ohio
Electric Company that a
power pole was cut off and
stolen.
The pole was located on the
Mont Vance property on SR
684. '{he incident is under
· investfgation.
Sheriff Proffitt also
reported Utat one of the
.suspects in the theft of John
Tillis' car Sunday, March 27.
lias turned 18 years. of age
before his · escape from
Fairfield School for Boys .
, Charges have been filed
and a warrant has been sent
to Ute Fairfield School for
Boys to be used as a detainer
when the suspect is returned
to the Lancaster Institution .
Identified as Raymond
Brown, from Lawrence
County, he is still at large.
A ~econd ·person , . a
juvenile, was apprehended in
Cl~rk County in an auto.
Charges have been filed
against the juvenile.

Paul Simon, chamber vice
president, Will be responsible
for concession stands and
exhibits which will be located
on the streets of Pomeroy
ratller Ulan on · the parking
lot. Before any space Is sold
the opinion of local mer·
chants will be obtained.
Bill Mayer Is chairman of
the annual art show, Mayer
said an arts and craft show
involves lots of work.
Last year the Regatta
event took in proceeds In the
amount of $4,705.54 and spent
$3,798.80, Crow said.
Quickie and Barbara
Chapman, secretory wlll be
in charge of booths.
Attending were Crow,
Mayor Clarence Andrews,
Bill Mayer, Jim Frecker,
Quickie, Joe Young , Jack
Carsey, Mrs. Chapman, Ted
Reed, Simon, Carpenter, Bill
Grueser and Sherman Mills.

James on
committee
touring OU
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) Four state legislators, including three members of a
House Insurance, Utilities
and Financial Institutions
subcommittee which is
studying sites for a coal
research center, toured Ohio
University Tuesday and
Wednesday.
The three subcommittee
members, chainnan Irene B.
Smart, D-Canton, WilHam
Batchhelder, R·Medina, and
Callre BaD _Jr., R-Athens,
were joined by Rep. Ronald
James, D-Proctorville.
Officials of Ohio University, · which is ·competing
against Ohio State University
in Columbus for the research
. center, stres$ed the school's
location in a heavy coalprodUCing area, lis present
research related to coal and
its ability to convert unused
dormitories to research labs.

Licenses on
sale at Gibbs
on Mulberry
William A. Gibbs, deputy
said
today
"\!' residents are purchasing
auto, truck, trailer, motorcycle and house vehicle
licenses or stickers at Gibbs
. Grocery , Mulberry Ave .,
Pomeroy_
All auto owners whose last
n1i'mes begin with A through
K will·· get their plates or
stick.ers during April . The
initial L through z get theirs
during the month of May .
Truck licenses or stickers are
on sale during March, April
and May and do not go by),_ •
initials.
The Deputy Registrar
offi~e in Pomeroy also issues
Franklin store In Middleport, and James P. Kearney,
operators and chauffeur 's
saies manager for Ben Franklin. Mr. and Mrs. RaU were
licenses. All people who wish
present to extend Utelr congratulations to Mr . ""d Mrs:
to obtain drivers license
Kelly on the opening of the store which has been
renewals may apply 30 days
remodeled, redecorated lind restocked over tbe past
prior to their birthday .
several' months preparatory to the grand opening .
,~ · . registrar ,

'· ..•

necessary .

signatures of Pomeroy residents sbould the
measure be enacted by
councU to place the issue on
the ballot, a •pokesman of
the group sold.

Legion details
are reassigned
to fairground

Ohio utilities to use western · mines .
coal and pass-an the costs to
Utilities could have used an
Ohi •
o s consumers "could additional 26 per cent of Ohio
eventually wipe out Ohio's coal, 16 per cent tllat would
coal Industry and increase not have required scrubbers
tile cost of electricity to Ohio and 3.7 million or eight per
Members of Drew Webster
residents.:•
cent, by lnatalllng scrubbers. Post 39, American Legion,
• Region V of Ute· Federal
By 1965, utilities could he will again be in charge of
EPA in Chicago In its report using 88 per cent of the coal parking cars at the Meigs
said Ohio's electric utilities Utey burn from Ohio mines by County Fair in August ac·
· could have used an additional using scrubbers, tile Federal cording to plans made by the
18 per cent of Ohio coal EPA said.
post Tuesday night with
wiUtout scrubbers and still
Hollern, who has testified Commander Clarence Sch'
have met federal air quality at EPA hearings on air mocker in charge .
standards.
quality standsrds in Ohio,
Members was reported at
The .Federal
EPA's said utilities refuse to install ' 344. It was agreed to clean
summary of coal used by 25 the scrubbers to remove and repair the stone wall in
majpr investor-owned suUur dioxide from Ohio 's front of the post home. A fish
utilities In 1975 showed that of high-sulfur coal. Utility fry was planned for the next
45.9 million tons burned, 27.3 spokesmen say tile scrubbers meeting on April 19. Charles
million came from Ohio
(Continued o..n p.ag-e-12)
Hayes served refreshments.

standards, tile Ohio Lung
Association (OLA) said
today.
Instead, utilities are
Playing "Russian Roulette"
with tbe health of Ohio's
citizens, said Dale&lt;;:. Hollern,
OLA executive director.
Electric utilities . are
Importing costly low-sulfur
western coal rather than
Installing scrubbers to
remove gas pollutants when
Ohio coal is burned, Hollern
said.
In a new Federal Environmentsl Protection Agency
study, Hollern said only 59
per cent of Ute coal burned by
Ohio. utilities in 1975 came
from coal mined in Ohio.
Furthermore, figures '
released by Ute Federal EPA
show Ute use of Rue gas
desuUurization (scrubbers)
by utilities would increase
Uteir use of Ohio coal to B5 per
cent of the total coal burned.
"We should not ,~ asked to
cpoose between good lleo!llUt .,.
and economic stability," ,, '~'-'" · '"'!'.:''"'''
Hollel'n said. "We can have
both."
'
I
Hollern said the move by
ACTION PROMISED
Refereodum action
against the .. $5 permissive
auto license fee approved
in . Its flrsj reading by
Pomeroy Vjllage Council
Monday night will be taken
by a citizens' group.
A committee will be
formed to plan acUon and

agreed.
Fred Crow, president said
regatta programs will be
printed in advance containing
more ads from out of Ute
county and more information
of past regattas.
Jim Frecker wiD head the
parade.
Crow appointed Joe Young
chairmAn qf the mounted
posse in ·which 15 persons will
take part in the parade.
Bill Quickie, was named
chairman of boat races with
Jack Carsey and Bill Grueser
co-chairman. It was pointed
out that the last races cost
$1,200 and it was suggested
that sponsors for the boat
races this year· be obtained .

Revenue sharing
funds of $72,974
still available
Utility
pole is
stolen

Scrubbers claimed feasible
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Ohio's electric utilities could
burn far more Ohio coal and
still meet sulfur dioxide

' be raised and lowered
will
from 150 to 200 feet in the air.
The balloon will he in the
parade opening the regatta.
It was announced that Mrs.
Toni Davis is chairman of the
Queen contest with Ralph
Werry co-chairman. Mrs .
Davis asked that two floats be
used this year in the parade,
one for past queens ·and one
for the candidates at a cost of
$50 a float. The chamber

STORE OPENED -A ribbon cutting ceremony was
held Thursday morning to mark the grand opening of Ute
new Ben Franklin Store In Pomeroy. Taking part In Ute
ceremooy from the left were Jim Mobley, Cincinnati,
store opening manager ; Don Kelly and Mrs. Don Kelly ,
new owners ~ Mr. 11nd Mr ~ F 0. Rail, owners uf the Ben

,.

.

•

�I

2- The DailySPntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Apri17, 1m

i

•

3- Tbe Dallv Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Thursday, April 7, 1977

selects a hearing aid tllat will
best help you .
Not all hearing losses are
IJJe same and not all hearing
aids are alike. New
equipment makes it easy for
us to find out about ears. We
can find out about infection
and dizziness as well as
finding oul how well you hear
and bow well you understand
someone else has said.
what
time every year.
Who t~ts hearing? An Lots of time you hear, but
don't always understand
audiologist.
The audiologist is the first what you have heard.
Nowadays a lot can be done
person you should see or talk
ID
prevent problems wiiJJ
to about hearing. The
ears
and to help people hear
audiologist is capable of
voices
louder and clearer.
testing your hearing and
Hearing
loss is very common
determining whether or not
and
we
can do something
you should see an ear
about
it.
We test all ages,
specialist or be referred for a
even newborn babies. We test
hearing aid evaluation.
The audiologist does the to find out what can be done
hearing aid evaluation and to prevent problems and to

Submitted by
Malcolm B. Orebaugh
Center Administrator
GalUa, Jackson, Meigs
Comm\Dllty Mental Health
Center
Participate in the hearing
screening.
· Even though you Ill ink your
hearing is good, you should
have it checked at least one ·

WASHlNGTON - Jack
Carter, the President's 29year old son, ssys he does not
plan to have his general
discharge from the Navy
upgraded to honorable.
President Carter recently
signed an order giving
recipients of both general and
dishonors ble discharges the
opportunity to apply for
review of tlleir cases.
Jack, discharged from the
Navy for smoking marijuana,
said he's not going to take
advantage of that order

because he doesn't want

loans would be provided for
tile emergency purchases of
water.
Also, payments due the
federal government this year
on existing contracts would
be deferred where justified
by the -financial squeeze of
the drought.
The bill authorizes $100

facilities on an · emergency
basis.
Carter was winding up his
official business before
taking his family to Calhoun,
Ga. for an Easter weekend
sojourn with his eldest son,
Jack, and Jack 's family.

flOOple to think his fatller did
it just lor him .
'

]

read about it in the

newspaper," young Carter
ssid Wednesday on ABC's
Good Morning America. "As
far as I'm concerned, it
doesn't make a great deal of
difference. I'm one of those
people who were lucky in a
sense.
I
didn't
get
discriminated
against
because I had a general
discharge.
"! don't personally intend

May 15, tbe band will travel
to Cl'(lar Point, in Sandusky,
for an afternoon of parades
and concerts.
' SENTINEL
THE DALY
DEVOTED TO THE

INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER I.. TANNEHilL

FANCIED UP HOME
LONDON (UP!) - King
!&lt;haled of Saudi Arabia has
agreed to pay $5.1 million for
a 20-room umdon home for
his nephew, Prince Faissl,
real estate agents said.
Benham and Reeves, an
,estate agency, described ,the
home as ~' mock Tudor." It is
situated on several acres in
the exclusive Hampstead
area of north London and was
the fonner home of Indian·
He a !so said he no longer born tanker tycoon Ravi
Tikko.
smokes marijuana.

to take advantage of what
was offered for a number of
reasons. The first, and most
obvious, is thst my father is
President and he's the one ·
that's kind of autllorized this.
And I don't want people, to
think he did that lor me,
because he didn 't.
''And, like I said, it doesn't
do me any good or/.; WilY or
another to have it. rln-f,retty
much set in my life."

, . Exer.Ed.
ROBERT HOEFUCH
City Editor
Publl.shed daily euoepl Saturday
by The OhLo V~:~lley Publlilhing Comlilly, lll Court St., Pumeroy, Ohiu
~769 . BUSltlttl.!l Of(il.' t Phone 9922156. Ed.ilorilll Phooe 992.-2157.
Sec.:ond class po8\agt! plllid al
Pomeroy, Ohiu.

The 31klegree cold?· "Un·
bearable ," said George
Foster.
And tile caliber of play ?
" Horrible,'' said ,Sparky
Anderson .
Even though Wednesday's
Opening Day '77 was
unbelievable, unbearable and
horrible, it still was a success
for the worfd rh•mpi o n

S1,1bscripUou rates : ~livered by
carrie!' where available 75 cents per

week. By Mutor Route where carrier
Sttvice nol BVBilable, One month,

p.2!i. By Jruiil in Ohio and W. Va.,

One Year, $22.00; Six monUts,

UUO; Three months, $7.00:
Elsewhere $26.00 year; Six monlhll
UUO; Three mor1lh11, •·uo.
Sultl&gt;criplion price in cludes Sunday
Ti.me!l-&amp;ntinel .

ren~r.

,

Fisk came up and Figueroa 's next pitch was close to his

That had to be more than sheer coincidence because
Figueroa is a low-ball pitcher and his control had been
excellent until then.
For a moment, Fisk stood at the plate, then began walking
toward Figueroa on tile mound, yelling at him to "get tile ball
over IJJe plate." Figueroa hollered something back and in a
scene reminiscent of last summer's rumble between these two
same clubs, the Yankees and Red Sox players.siarted charging
towatd each other. The affair was broken up quickly and
·nobody was h\lrt, but looking back at tile episode, Red Sox leftbander Bill Lee says, "They always pick on Fisk. What do they
want from him? I had my sandals on or else I would've run out
there, " laughs the Boston southpaw who came up with an .
injury that put him out for the rest of the season during last
May's brawl at Yankee Stadium. "I had tllat strange urge to
jump on the field or go get a beer," Lee says about last montll's
Couliuuect on page - 4

Next week , Carter has

Anderson's Reds a :;.;J victory
over the San Diego Padres on
a day meant for snowballs
instead of baseballs .
Opening Day had dawned
wiiJJ a freak April snowstorm
and just live liours before
game' time a couple of inches
of snow had pilerl atop the

was

" It
ordeal.
unbelievable ."

Republic native.
But Geronimo beat both the
cold and San Diego ace
lefthander Randy Jones by
blasting a Jones sinkerball
cold," said Geronuno, who tllat didn't sink over tile right
like most pi,»yers wore two field wall for a two-run homer
shirts underrieatll his jersey. in the fourtll inning IJJal
" I felliike a mechanical man ' turned out to be the big blow
out there. My hands were of the game .
numb.
Geron imo only hit two
" It was only IJJe second home runs all last season .
"And this may be IJJe only
one I hit tllis year because
I'm going for a good average
and not home runs ," said the
man best known for his
brilliant catches in center
field .
Foster. !he major league's
RBI king last season wiiJJ 12t.
got off to a good start by
driving in two rWlS wiUt a
triple and a sacrifice fly.
But Reds officials weren't

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Snowplows
roamed the outfield. Wheelbarrows
of snow were carted across the
warning paths. Groundskeepers
pushed snow shovels instead of
rakes.
ll was weird- but it was IJJe only
way baseball's Opening Day came
off here Wednesday.
In spite of weather tllat even
football players would call bad, tile
Cincinnati Reds and San Diego
Padres were able to take the field
and play a baseball game .
Although the Reds won 5-J, Cincy
manager
Sparky
Anderson
· conceded the weather made the
brand of baseball "horrible."
Still, it was miraculous any kind of
baseball was played at all because
just eight hours before game time, a
surprise snowstorm hit Cincinnati .
At T-minus five hours and
counting before game time, the
Astroturf field had become a freezer
badly in need of defroSting. A couple
of inches .of snow blanketed tile
stadiwn.
Disbelieving players wanderOII in
like shortstop Davey Concep~lon,
who _pulled a winter cap over his

manager

Dick Wagner. ' 11t "S

Opening Day."
"We're going to make every effort
to get Ill is game in," he decided and
ordered snowplows, shovels and
wheelbarrows into action.
And so, during tile time when the
Reds and Padres should have been
taking batting practice, three
snowplows were pushing large piles
or snow from the artifical grass onto
the warning track.

A dozen men formed a shovel
brigade and placed the snow into
wheelbarrows, which were cartoo
into tile underbelly or the stadium.
The snow was dumped near drains
on a concrete walkway beneath tile
stands.
Despite IJJe snow, faris began filing
in when the gates opened a couple of
hours bef9re game time . The 50,001).
plus seat park was near capacity for
tile game.
"This is lbe only place in IJJe world
where notlling bothers these fans,"
observl'd Anderson. "This is tile
baseball capital of the world and a
little snow is not going to worry
anybody." .
Head groundskeeper Lubie Veal,
frantically running about trying to
supervise tile snow removal effort,
insisted tllat it was not as bad as
when he once worked lor llie Expos
iii Montreal.

ears, eyed a pile of snow near his

shortstop position and asked , "You
mean we're going to play ?'.'
"Sure," shot back Reds general

•

11

.(

"Let's

! removed ten inches of snow in

two days up in Montreal," boastoo
Veal. "But I have to admit this is
bad when you don't start getting the
snow until a few hours before game
time and you have til ge! it off almost
as fast as it comes down.''
It wasn 't until 30 minutes before
tile game that a snowplow operator
was able to remove the last big pile
of snow from left field .
·
Cincinnati Coach Too Kluszewski,
a Reds star player for many years,
said it was tile worst snow-baseball
combination he had ever seen.

"Once we played an opening day
game in some slight Ourries but I've
never seen it this bad/' said Klu,

bundled up in a jacket he wished was
thicker and peering out at
groundskeepers wading IJJrough the
snow.

Just before game time, Reds
leftfielder Geor~e Foster was
shivering in the 38 degree cold
despite cleaning out his locker
looking for clothes to ·wear.
urve got on everything I own/'
said Foster.
Most of tile fans came bundled up
like eskimos.
"Just give me some hot coffee and
I'll be alright," insisted one die-hard
Reds fan, peeking out' from
underneaiJJ a wool blanket.

'

Reds, Angels, as expected, win opening game~

J

--"PS,St! Have all the collegeliids gone back north
yet?"

·.

lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
· By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
I'm not very enthusiastic .
DEAR DR. LAMB - My about a shoulder supjlort.
doctor
says I
have Why? Because splints and
osteoporosis and I have a lot supports do the work your
ofpaininmyback.lfearthat muscles should be doing.
I will get a dowager's hump They allow your muscles to
since I have trouble keeping grow weaker and make you
my back straight.
dependent upon the support. I
My questions is would a would prefer that you be on a
be program of exercise to
sh.oulder
support
beneficial? I am 61 years old. . strengthen the muS&lt;;Ies be·
· ALso my doctor does not tween your Shoulder blades.
prescribe calcium tablets. He These are mostly the type of
ssys to drink a quart of milk a movement 8 swimmer uses
day which · is not always for a backstroke.
convenient, especially while I
1 am sending you The
am at work or gone from 'Health Letter number 6-10,
· home.
Osteoporosis: Bone Sol·
DEAR READER - The tening, to give you more
on
what
purpose of drinking the milk information
is to give you 1000 to 1200 osteoporosis is and what you
milligrams of calcium a day. can do In tenns of diet and
If you are not going to drink exercise to help yourself.
the quart of milk or use an Others wbo want this In·
equivalent amount of cottage formation can send 50 cents
cheese then you should take with a long, stampejl, self·
calcium tablets. Remember addressed envelope for it.
the rule tllat you need to get
DEAR DR. t;AMB - I've
at least 10110 milligrains of had mild heart trouble for
calcium a day. It doesn't several years. Frequently I
matter bow.
read tllat organ meats are
It ts not always convenient bed for the heart. In what
to drink milk and some way and why? 1 keep my
people can 'I tolerate 1.1. . weigbt down and walk two
Others want to use a limited miles dally .
1
calorie budget for other smoking to
foods. You can get some
Wild game
suitable calciUI;Jl
favorite
your local drug
It generates
yau are In doubt
tllan other
'ones I'm sure
DEAR
rna~ will be
concern about
eating tt

Calcium aids
soft .bones

~

Cincinnati Manager Sparky
Anderson said made the
caliber of play ''horrible, "
the Reds tied the score at 2-2
in tile third inning when Ken
Griffey tripled and George

Ce.sar Geronimo's two-run

Foster 'doubled. Geronimo,.

homer .
Some eight hours after the
first ball was thrown in
Cincinnati, tile Angels sent
19·game winner Frank
Timana to tile rno\)11d in
Seattie and the curve-balling

who hit only two homers last
season, gave tl)e Reds a 4-2
lead witll his two-run homer
in the fourth , offsetting a
fifth-inning homer · by San
Diego's Bill Plwruner.
Woodie Fryman, acquired

lefthander scattered nine hits
for a 7-0 victory over the
Mariners. The loss spoiled
the Mariners' debut in the
American League from a
competitive point of view, but
IJJe crowd of 57,792 set a
major league record for a
night opener and suggested
the .new franchise may be a

roaring financial suG·cess.
Playing in 38-degree
tempera tures

which

during tile winter,'went 5 1-3 key players acquired by the
innings and received credit Angels in tile re-entry draft,
for IJJe Reds' Victory with the · drove in four runs with a two·
relief help of Pedro Borbon run homer and .a two-run
and Rawly Eastwick. Randy double to lead tile Angels'
Jones, tile National League's nine-hit attack which tagged
Cy Young Award winner in. Diego Segui with the loss.
1976 when he won 22 games, Rudi cracked his homer off
suffered IJJe loss.
Segui in IJJe IJJird and greeted .
Tanana, reputed to have reliever John Montague witll
IJJe best fast curve in the IJJe double in the fourth.

RIVERSIDE
V.W.-AMC-JEEP
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

'75 CORDOBA

'75 MALIBU

V-8, A.T., P.S., P .B.. V-lop .
A.C .. radials ,

King Kong is back!
Fighting for his life
atop the quartermile high World
'Ifade Center!
Destroying
aNew York
suburban train! ,
Locked in a death grip 'with a huge
serpent!
Glaring at you from a glass at
Burger Chef!

Free with a meal!

Come into any participating Burger
Chef and get a King Kong glass
free with purchase of a Big She£,
or Super Shef,large fries and a
large serving of Coca-Cola.
C....-... C ui~ '" " I C"lo.ll i&lt;ttl "111'~ ~• \'lllr,uht ll1ottk$ l•• ho.;n

• 00·~·1 ~

•

•n.· ~~'"'~ ''""h" 1 ,.t

l nu

l~•~ "

r "~ '

tu •uuan ~

'$3599

Or••• !
You can also get a King Kong glass
when you order a medium size Coke for
the suggested 'retail price of 59 cents.

Colle(t all four!
There are four different King Kong
glasses to collect. They're handsome,
durable glasses. And Burger Chef is the
only place you can get them.

Offer 'limited!
King Kong glasses will be available
only while supplies last. So come in to
Burger Chef today and start collecting
your set.
.

V-8, A.T., P .B., P .S., lilt.
A.C. . V-top.

'73 CADillAC

'73 CHEV. C-10
v.e, 3 spd .,

sharo!

"'

'74 GREMLIN

'73 MUSTANG
Mach 1. A. T .• P .S .• P.B ..
top.

. Sed . Dev ille. Loaded!

v.

6 cyl. , 3 spd .. · Le• l' Int ..
33.000 miles:

$1999
"WEEKEND

SPECIAL"

'76 PLY. VALIANT

NEW SHIPMENT
OF JEEPS

4 dr. sed ., 1 Owner .

JUST ARRIVED!

League's Eastern Division

title andprol)aply a second
straight pennant.
Strengthened , by the
addition of slugger Reggie
Jackson, pitcher Don Gullett
and shortstop Bucky Dent,
the Yankees open their
season with an afternoon

walked two. He was touched tlleir sea·sons Thursday with
for at least one hit in each of tile major event the unveiling
the first five innings but two of tile New York Yankees"

game against IJJe Milwaukee
Brewers. The Yankees are
sending Jlni Hunter (17-15) to
the mound against Bill
Travers ( 15-16) . .
In other American League

double plays helped him out

openerS, it's Kansas

league, struck out nine and

Eighteen more teams open

"Morister team," a creation

of trouble.
. of George Steinbrenner's
Joe Rudi, one of IJJe IJJree money, which appears to be a

C it~

cit

Detroit, Chicago at Toronto,

H 1. k
av ICe has 25,000 points .
By CHRIS TURKEL
UPI 'Sports Writer
John l!ilvlicek became the
fourth player in NBA history
but the Houston Rockets were
not impress~'&lt;~.
They dumped Havlicek 's
Boston Celtics, 104-93,
Wednesday night to clinch
first place in the Central
Division, tlleir first divisional
title ever.
After Havlicek reached the
25,000-point plateau , the
Boston Garden fans gave the
15-ycar veteran a two-minute
,oVation.
Not ones to stand on

ceremo ny, the Rockets
immediately tuml'd the game
around, using six points by
Johp Lucas and five by Rudy
Tomjanovich in a 17-4 burst
that gave tllem a 52-44 lead
that held up to tile end.
14
'111 is puts a capper on it,"
said Houston Coach, Tom
Nissalke. "About six weeks
ago I started to tllink we
could do it. This puts tile icing
on the cake.''

And Tomjanovich,
Houston's captain, who led all
scorers with 28 points, ·said,
"This is unbelievable. For
me, it's like coming out of a
tunnel. This feels really

while Dave Cowens and Jo Jo
white each chipped in witll14
lor tile Celtics.
In
other
·games,
Washington nipped Chicago,
97·96, San Antonio drubbed
Philadelphia, 131·109, Buffalo
downed New O{!eans, 107-102,
.and Denver blasted Atlanta,
11().95.
Bullets 97, Bulls 96:
Dave Bing and Elvin Hayes
scored 19 points each to spark
Washington to its third
straight victory. Phil Chenier
17 for IJJe Bullets, while
Wilbur Holland scored 23
points (or the Bulls, who are
fighting for tile final playoff
spot in the Western
Conference.
Spurs Ill, 76ers 109:
Larry Kenon scorro 31
points and grabbed 14
rebounds to lead San Antonio
in its final home game. The
Spurs' Billy Paultz addl'd 21
points,
whiJe
George
McGinnis and Doug Collins
had 18 each for Philadelphia.
Braves 107, Jazz 102:
Randy Smith scored 15 of
· his 25 points in the final
quarter as Buffalo sent New
Orleans to its fourth straight
defeat. Rookie Adrian
Dantley lro tile Braves with
28, while the Jazz' Pete

good."

The closest the Celtlcs
came was IJJree points early
in the final quarter, but Mike
Newlin, who scored.19 of his
21 points in the second half,
shut tile door with three free

Maravich topped all scorers
with 30.
Nuggets llO, Hawks 95:
Dav.id Thompson's gamehigh 28points Bobby Jones' 16
powered Denver as the
Nuggets concl uded their
home season. The victory
assured tile Nuggets of the
homecourt advantage in the
upcomin g
Western
Conference
playoffs .

there,'' he said.

Anderson, asked to swn up
the caliber of play, replied,
· ~Horrible."

" ! IJJought somebody was
goinglto get killed out there,"
the white-haired skipper ssid .
"Line drives were hilling
four feet in front of people: It
was so cold nobody was
moving .
"You can't get any feel for
the ball on a day like IJJis. I

don't think anyone was enthused ."

Pete Rose, who pleasoo
Cincinnati fans by ending his
holdout and signing a twoyear contract for a total
topping $700,000, went a
disappointing f&gt;.for-4 at the
·plate.
uBut it doesn't matter as

long• as· we win," insisted

Rose, beginning his 15th
season with IJJe Reds.
rRose figured he has now
gone IJ.fot-19 over til¢ past
two seasons against Jone~.
IJJe loser in Wednesday's
game.

,AGOOD
NEIGHBOR
OF YOURS
See
him
for
a II ·
your
family
insurance
needs.
,BILL FLETCHER
149 South Third
Middleport. Ohio

.._a_
. .....

, - -,,- - . . Ph . 992-llSS

OD
· ~· ~ ·· ~'',

like a
good neighbor, .
State Farm

is' the~e .

St~fe

Farm I nsurance
Compan ies
HOme Offlces : Bloom inQton ,
H\inOiS

PAINT ItiATES

AGRAVELY!

~ 11: tl.'/.1

srRf

tlnx Sf!NI (!L!J,.~ f

.,

II.,..

A Perfect Pair For Woodwork
And Walls In Every Room!
It\, \r)(' cllotle of !ht~ 1.1ro!:i lor a
tot ol gorxJ rc,l:-&gt;Qfi'O A GrClVely
'r.;Jrlor i'&gt; tougt1 Pnough to t&lt;lh"

dSktllP, lor u tort' You wn !)tow a
seedbectrn ()ne
operatron. Cti'lt\iitte. soray
rOI!IP9'.&gt;i ur rnc;w Mill a c.t1nH e

JJerfrf~

:ARLINGTON, Tex. (UPI) of l!tlc;Khrlt!nb And OllT
·- The Texas Rangers made e•diJ',f\oC' o~ll ~~~Jr clrtvf' rs
11e&lt;&gt;rgr1NI c~nrl butl! In ht•
.tll'eir final roster cuts dlrrabte
and tlr·r,endabiF No
Wednesqay, sendlflg pitcher belt~. t: r ~hp.
l Ullll" II)IJ'&gt;~ Or
Bobby Cuellar, outfielder • hrectk If 5L1tr luve btg g-"'rden
Dave Moates and infielder Nnrlo: trJ tk v,el&lt;t \,ravely I r!.P
Ken Pape to. the ini"N;.
leagues.
That brought the Rangers
down to the major league Gravely Tractor Sales
204 Condor St.
maximum of 25 players,
Pomeroy.
Ohio
including Len Randle, who is
Phone 992 ·2975
on a month's suspension for
slugging Manager Frank
Hours
Lucchesi.
9 a.m. to 5 p.m . Weekly
9 to noon Saturdays

.

'

;.; &gt;41 '

'

'After the first inning I was

hoping tile next eight would
hurry up and get over with
because it was really cold out

We had Ule opportWJities,

no doubt oboul it,"
McNamara moaned . "We
had the chances, but I'll have
to admit, 38 degrees mskes It
a little rugged out there."
Reds ' starter Woodie
F'ryman got credit for the
win, even tllough he issued
six walks and yielded seven
hits, including a bomer by
Mike I vie, in IJJe five and onethird innings he lasted.
After an off-day today, the
Reds and Padres reswne
IJJeir fourilame series here
F'riday night. when hopefully
the snowplows won't be
neoooo .

TODD-GET

on &lt;HJY JOIJ 3tltl corre bm.k.

Will give a free demonstration and
beginning class April 8th at 6:00
p.m. in the Meigs Jr. High ~Y'."
located in Middieport. The public IS
invited to attend.

1

11

IF IOU HAVE
GARDENING

Denver's regular season
home attendance mark of

703,133 made the Nuggets the
only team besides IJJe New
York Knicks in NBA history
to top tile 700,000 mark.

see, " chu ckled

Foster after the game, ''two
RBis a game times 162 games
tllisseason ... Yeah, that ought
to do it. 11
Foster figured the cold was
just about' "unbearable."

nThe cold may have hurt

him, but be lookoo like Cy
Young out there to me," said
Rose .
Said JO'!ies, last year's Cy
Young award winner who had
arm surgery over tile winter,
"The cold didn't affect me at .
all and my ann felt great. I
just wasn't careful wiiJJ my
pitches and we made some
mistakes out there."
Besides commitling two
errors. San Diego stranded a
dozen baserunners, which
irked John McNamara, the
leader of the Padres. band,

..,.

The Ohio UniveiSity
Karate Club

throws .

"They're a good club," said
Havlicek, who toppl'd Boston
with 21 points. "They came
down and did exactly what
they wanted to do. They
mntrolled the tempo and got
11~ in foul trouble."
Malone addect 19 points for
Houston and Lucas had 18.

Cleveland at Boston in
afternoon games. Also,
California at Seatlle meet in a
night game.
The three National League
openers, all afternoon games, ·
have St. Louis at Pittsburgh,
New York at Chicago and San
Francisco at Los Angeles.
Atlanta will be at Houston
in a National Leag ue opener
on Friday with Montreal at
Philadelphia (NL) and
Minllesota at Oakland (AL)
rounding out IJJe openers on
Saturday.

Texas at BaltimOre a nd •

shoo-in for the American

to score 25,000 career points,

is that many of them contain

large amounts of cholesterol.
Fatty-eholesteror deposits In
arteries is the usual cause of
heart trouble In our society.
Brains contain more
cholesterol, ounce for ounce,
tllan almost any other food.
Fortunately few people eat
many brains. Liver contains
300 mllllgr8lllllln a threH~nd·
a-half ounce (100 gram)
serving but It is low in fat.
Sweetbreads are rich in
cholesterol and fats. Tongue
is fatty. 'Lean heart muscle Is
acceptable but' It is muscle
ratller tllan glandular tissue.
Limit your cholesterol
Intake to 300 mllllgrams a
day. Since there is some
l:bolesterol in red meat, fish,
poultry and dairy products it
IS best to save your dally
budget for these esaentlal
Items In your _dally diet.
There Is no Important
difference In wild game and
domestic animals other than
the relative fat content of the
carcass. Wild game tends to
be leaner.
Because of 1the volume of
mall Dr. Lamb caMot an·
swer your letters personally
but
he
will
answer
representative letters of
general interest In his
column. Write to him In care
of this newspaper, P.O. Box
1051, Radio City Station, New
York, NY t0019.

By ·FRED DOWN
UP! Sports Writer
The Cincinnati Reds and
California Angels celebrated
. baseball's opening day in the
manner expected : the Reds
with tlleir hitting and the
Angels With their pitching.
The Reds, seeking to
become the first National
League team to ·win three
straight pennan~ since the
1942-13-14 St. Louis Cardinals
and the first ever to win three
·consecutive World Series,
won their traditional advance
opener in Cincinnati by
beating th e San Diego
Padres, :;.;J, with the help of

time ill roy life I've · seen
snow," added the Dominican

about to let Opening Day be
snowed out or frozen out if
tlley could help it .
" It was hard to play in the

til minutes before play ball! call

'

1. head.

Foster bore down enough for
two more RBls to give

Rive rfr ou. t
.Sta d i um
Astroturf .
Sy-o wpiow s
we r e
dispatched to roam the
outfield and it wasn't until 30
minutes before the first pitch
was thrown that the last big·
pile of snow was scooped
from left field.
"1 got up this morning , saw
it was snowing and said, 'No
garnet'" recalled Geronimo,
trying to warm up in the
locker room after IJJe outdoor

Riverfront Stadium outfield

I manage, tllere's pressure. For me, it's no different than it
ever was. But I'm not the one who wins IJJe ball games; the
players do." . .
..
·
Billy Martin learnoo well at the foot of the old-master; Casey
Stengel.
Nonetheless, tile battle lines between tile Yanks and Red Sox
were drawn last month at Fort Lauderdale during tile fifth ·
inning of a scoreless exhibition contest.
Ed Figueroa was pitching for tile Yankees and was doing
well enough until Carl Yastrzemski hit one out on him . George
Scott followed that homer up with an even longer one to dead

N11.tional ttdvertising repr~en..
tlllive Wwrd • GrilfiU1 Company, Inc., BotUnelli wnd G~;~liltgher Div.,
751 Tiaird Ave., New Yurk, N.Y.
10017.

Cincinnati Reds.
Geronimo believed enough
to crack a two-run homer and

Sno._t_.Vplows, wheelbarrows roamed

team," says Martin. " I'm always under pressure. Everywhere

aLTanged to unveil his an·
program ,
million for water acquisition ti~inflation
with up to $15 million of that probably at a news conlor
building
physical ference.

HEALTH

YW·

The following day, Sunday,

Young Carter won't have his
general discharge upgraded

savings for tax. rebates
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
. WASHINGTON (UPI) President Carter will not
trade water projects for tax
rebates, but still expects
Congress to include the $50
tax returns in his economic
stimulus package, White
House aides said today . .
"He's looking at them
objectively," said one aide of
a list of 30 water projects
which the administration is
reviewing. An earlier
announcement that the
projects might be scrappecl
haS drew strong PfipOsitiolll
from some lawmala!rs.
"His credibility wlllld be
stake,'' if he simply approve.!
water projects in order ID
IJJe tax rebates passed, sa d
tile aides. But they also notl'd
that no final decision has
been made on the water
projects yet.
· "He tbinks.the tayebate if....
winnable," said one aide.
Another called it a ''delicate
political situation."
Carter, meanwhile,
prepared to announce his
major policy ·statement on
nuclear proliferation,
including a warning that the
spread of nuclear fuel
processing plants threatens
tile world.
The President also was
scheduled today to sign the
Emergency Drought Relief
bill which gives the Interior
Deportment emergency
powers to help the West get
through Its worst drought on
record.
The bill would set up a
"water bank" for growers or
perennial crops - like fruit
orchards - to buy enough
water ior the crops to sur·
vive; five•year, interest-free

Band will play Capitol, Cedar Point concerts
Saturdsy, May 14 at the Ohio
State Capital Building in
Columbus.
The noon concert will take
place on the lawn facing High

snow "! " Unbelievable," said
Cesar Geronimo .

.l\!11

NEW YORK (UP! ) - The New York Yankees, quite
properly, feel they 're the best team in baseball and they're not
alone because most everybody else feels the same way.
Witll the lltll-bour addition of Bucky Dent as tlleir new
shortstop, IJJe Yanks don 't have a single weak spot: Pitching ?
They're loadoo with it. Hitting? They've got sluggers coming
out of their ears. Catching' Outstanding, and the Yanks have a
sound defense and a strong bench as well.
Oddsmskers in Las Vegas make them lopsided favorites to
dominate their division again tl1is season, and tile only
contradictory note comes by way oi Boston where some of the
: Red Sox say isn't tllat nice llow everybody and his brother is
conceding tile division title, tile pennant and practically
, everytlling else to the Yankees, but lliere still is a little matter
~consider, llkel62 games.
"All of us feel nobody wins the pennant until the last day is
~·over," says Red Sollt' catcher Carlton Fisk. HWe won two years
' ago and¥ they told, us last year, it's a lot harder to repeal than
it Is to win IJJe first time."
Nobody knows that better than Billy Marlin. He has a
standard answer for all IJJose who keep asking him how he's
holding up under the pressure of,feeling he must win now with
all tile talent George Steinbrenner and Gabe Paul have
providoo him. •
"!don't feel any more pressure than I have with any other

IN SOUTHERN BAND- Flutists Kim Ward, Lisa Warner and Penny Smith, 1..-,
IX'epare for Capital Building concert.

RACINE - The Southern
High School "Tornado"
Marching Band under tile
direction of Jess Browning
will be perfonnlng in concert

By RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI CUP!) - The

Sport Parade
~~tMl;.T~NE~:~MAN
I ,\~

Ill

St .

1

II

..

csre.
For more Information
concerning "Senior Citizen
Screening," call your lQcal
Community Mental Health
Center or Senior Citizen
Genter. Senior Citizens office
In Gallia County is 44&amp;-7000,
Jackson County Is 286-2909,
and
Meigs
992-7886.
Community Mental Helatll
Center telephone numbers
are Gallia 446-4950, Jackson
286-5075, and Meigs 992-2192.
Call and sign up for the
hearing screening which will
be held on May 3,4,5, and 6.
Screenings will be May 3-1
in Jackson, May 4-.&gt; in Gallia
and May 5-6 in Meigs.

Carter won't trade water

.

~

help those who need to hear aobut it.
The Gallla.Jackson-Meigs
better.
Community
Mental Healtll
When you participate in the
Center
is
providing
this
hearing screening, an
program
for
the
Senior
audiologist will be wiiJJ you at
all times. In fact, you '!'ill get Citizens. Malcobn Orebaugh,
to meet more than one Center Administrator, Dr.
Audiologist. Our audiologist George Greaves, Center
will help you fill out a case Director, and Maxine S.
Executive
history by asking you some Plummer,
Director
of
the
Gallia·
questions about your ears,
Jackson-Meigs
Community
will test you hearing, and will
talk to you after IJJe testing ID - Mental Health and Mental
tell you the results of IJJe test, Health and Retardation 648
I you need to see an ear Board feel !hat the addition ~~
specialist or need to have speech and hearing will
mOre- testing done, our help cloie current service
audiologists will be right gapo and provide the com·
tllere to help. Participate in munlty with more comtile hearing screening. H you prehensive mental health
tllink your hearing is good,
still have it test~'(! so we can
have record to iollow. If you
tllink your hearing is bad,
tllen let's find out what the
problem is and do something

a

Snow unbelievable: so was Geronimo's homer!

l:t~r:tT:muawaw;wf.tt:!!~~:l:~r:r~~:mtt::I::r==i:= =~~w=t~,
Wi odity's
f!i!

Senior Citizens urged to take part
•
zn hearing ·screening on May 3, 4, 5

.

'7·

't!; "'t

·oCIUJiteolthePrus.

Tou -Tes\ SAT ·N·HU E Latex Fiat and MARVELUSTRE
Latex Sem i-Glo ss were made for Path other. All colors
cq rn c rrr IJ (}t h finrshcs, so you can corn bme ·the beau ty of .:1
velvet flat on walls wi lh the ex 1r.1 sod rem tam;~ of serm .,
gloSs dn t r un , d oo rs and cabr rw1s. Both an! ea&lt;;y to .tpply.

hrgh hrd•ng· and fully washuiJie . Av a•l able m "House &amp;

Ga rden " Magazines lat est co lor&amp;. Corne see them , tud cry l

ON SALE NOW

SAVE UP TO 13.00 GAllON

Tru -Test Paints Are Sold Exclusively by True Valu e:
Hardware Stores Who Own Thre e Modern Paint Facto·ries.

VALLEY LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY

CORPORATION
i

Middleport . o.
99L·'HOQ
OP·EN
7:001o5:00Mon . thru Fri.
7:00to4:00 Saturday

923 S. Jrd Ave.

,--------~----

�•

4-Th• Daily Sentinel, Middlt;POrt·Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Al&gt;ril7.1977

:·:· :·:·:·:·:· :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·~:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·

Ali rakes boxing bosses as racists
By STEVE Wll$EIN
UPI Sports. Wr!ler
NEW YORK (UP! )
Muhammad AU 'blasted the
World Boxing Association
and WOI'ld Boxing Council
Wednesday,
denouncing
them as " racist" f'or
threatening to take away his
heavyweight championship
because he wanted tD take on
challengers they didn't Ust in
their rankings.
"This fight that's coming
up is gonna be criticized, I
realize that," Ali said after
the announcement
by
promoter Don King tbat AU
would defend his title against
Alfredo Evangelista of Spain
on May 16 in the landover,
Md., Capital Centre. "But all
my fights ibat have been
criticized before have been
close fights."
Evangelista is getting the
chance to meet All because
he is one of the top 10 ranked
boxers in the world,
according the WBA and WBC
listings. 'fwo previously
considered opponents,
Italians Alflo Righetti and
Lorenzo
Zanon,
both
unranked, evoked threats
from the WBA and WBC that
they would strip Ali of his title
if he went ahead with either
of those fights.
"They (the WBA and WBC)
act like this was still 1962,"
Ali said. "They're pulling the
same kind of racist bleep they
pulled back then. Joe Louis,
Rocky Marciano , Floyd
Patterson, all the cbampions
fought unranked fighters
sometimes but nobody ever
threatened them. They're
making
up
special
. Muhammad All rules.
11
This man's ranked now,
right?" Ali said, amid
laughter . "They ranked him
just in time. Don't let them
just take my title, take every

champion's title who doesn 't
fight top-ranked fighters ,
flyweights, bantamweights,
featherweights, lightweights,
welters, middles, everybody.
Let them all light only ranked
fighters and don 't give

STANDINGS

\

NBA Standings
By Uni1ed Preu International
Atl•ntic Di vision
W L P&lt;:t.
X·Pilill!l
Boston
NY Kn ic ks
Buffa lo
NY Ne ts

49

30

GB

.620

41 38 .519 8
38 41 .481 11
30 50 .375 19 \f~
2'1 51 .218 27
Central Division
W L Pet . GB
49 :t 1 .613
Houston
Washington
47 33 .588 2
San Anton io
44 36 .550 5

Cleveland

42 37 .532

All Series Best-of· Three

P:;·

a t mosp h ere,

ec ar-e

d

Nabor, wbo won folD' gold
medals in the Montreal
Olympics last year. ''There's
always the temptation to not
make it hurt, but I wanted to
go out with a 100 per cent
effort here and that's wbat I
did," he said of the first of his
four scheduled events.
Bruce Furniss , and Joe
Bottom, Nabor's USC teammates, and Scott Spann of
Auburn, impressive in' the
NCAA meet in Cleveland two
weeks ago, took the other
men's events in near-record
time but the girls rewrote the
women's pages.
Tracy Caulkins, 14, of
Nashville, Tenns., and Nancy
Hogshead,
14,
· of
Jacksonville, Fla., each
broke records twice. Jennifer
Hooker, Iii, Mission Viejo,
Calif., and Unda Jezek, i7,
Santa Clara, Calif., each
lowered her own record.
Caulkins dropped the 100.
yard breaststroke mark tD
1:03.8 and calmly delcared:
"It felt real good.,.
•
~e swam the first :;o yards
' In under 30 seconds, her
• fastest start ever, and
"brought it back as fast as 1

co~~ad became the first

Phoenix
28 48 .4 60 281
l(.c unched.ctivlslon title

v· Teom disbonded

WO&lt;Inosun '"'""'

Quebec 2 C•nclnnatl 2, ot

April 1
Muskevo1 1 1
April 2 Sog tnow 1
April 3 sooinow 1

April

3

Muskegon

s

Muskegon

3

Soglnow

s

Muskegon

at

Sa!iJ inaw

at

6 -

Muskegon 3
Apr il 8 -

S.gthaw

x -Apri t

Saginaw

9

Musk~gon

-

Muskegon · at
sagtnow
• ·If necessorv
NEWPORT, R.I. (UPI) The New York Yacht Club
plans to license official
America's Cup souvenir
items for sale through iocill
merchants this summer.
"By licensing products ,
we're trying to stop the
invasion of the junk dealers,"
Frank Snyder, chairman of
the yacht club's marketing
committee, said Tuesday. "It
is becoming a commercial
bonanza for a number of
people and we don't want to
see it become another
Dlsnejlland or Coney Island."
The international series of
races between sleek 12-meter
yachts gears up off Newport
in· June with trials that will
lead to a hest-of-oeven series
between one defender and a
foreign challenger in September.

)(,.April 13 -

fill new places
lineup after a meeting with
his coaching staff . " I'm
trying to put the best men out
there and Yaz is an
outstanding outfielder."
Cleveland's revisions also
bave heen forced by injuries.
Newly acquired Johnny
Grubb and Charlie Spikes
were expected to be starting
outfielders before both
suffered leg injuries.
"I still don't know who's
going tD open In rightfield,"
said third-year Indias
manager Frank Robinson.
"It either will be (Paul) Dade
or (Jim ) Norris," both
rookies.
"This whole spring has
open at third .
been a rollercoaster for us.
'!be lineup shuffles for both We were high as the sky for a
teams were the result of couple of weeks, then
spring trainina injuries.
shooooommmm. B!lt It was a
a
The · Boston outfield good spring overall."
changeswerenecessitatedby
The Indians will start
Dennis
Eckersley against ·
the · March 24 injury to
centerfielder Fred Lynn. The fellow righthander Ferguson
Red Sox learned Wednesday Jenkins. Following a day off,
Lynn will remain in.a leg cast AI Fitzmorris will face
for. two more weeks and will Boston's Reggie Cleveland
miss at least one additional Saturday and Pat Dobson will
weekbecauseofslowhealing, oppose Rick Wiile In Sunday's
windup of the three-game
torn ankle ligament.
·
With Yastrzemski playing · series.
ightf
Jenkins, appearing in his
r
ield, Jlm Rice 'W8S to
open in left and Bernie Carbo ninth opening game, was
was slated as designated rooting for warm weather. "!
hitter. Yastrzemski and Rice hope it's not col!!. I hope I
bad battled aU spring to see don't get snow in my eyes."
who would start in the field
and who would be the
designated hitter.
"I hadn't made a decision
AKRON,Ohio (UP!) -The .,
on whether Yaz or Rice was Professional Bowlers
going to open in left field and Association announced
now I don't have to make that Wednesday that three men
decision for three weeks,' ' had heen elected to its Hall of
said manager Don Zimmer, Fame here and will be
who divulged the revised Inducted in ceremonies on
April 18.
Chosen in the Performance
Category
were
Billy
Hardwlck,Louisville, Ky.,
and Don Johnson, Las Vegas,
Saturday Beginners
Nev. Both are still active on
March 26, 1977
th~
pro bowling tour.
Team
Won Lost
Steve
Nagy; who died in
No. 2
70
18
No . ~
48 40 1966, was named in the
No. 1
46
~2
Meritorious Servi.ce
N.o. 5
~2
46 Category. He was onR of 33
No. 6
38 50
No. 3
18 68 founding members of the
High Ind. Scores - Bill PBA and served as PBA
Jeffers· 422· 159, Clif Murry president i.n 1963 and 1964.
381 -140, Jerry Howard 349142.
By GIL PETERS
UPI Sports Writer
BOSTON (UPI) - Some
familiarfacesweretoplayin
strange places this afternoon
when the BOston Red Sox
hosted the Cleveland Indians
in the American League
season opener for both clubs.
Carl Yastrzemskl, Boston's
37-year-old marvel, was to
play rightfield far the first
time in his career, while
Dwight Evans the Red Sox'
regular rightfielder was to
move to centerfield.
For . Cleveland, third
baseman Buddy Bell was to
start In leftfieid and well
traveled Bill Melton was to

Local Bowling

High Team Scores - No. 6,

~.

Sports Parade
ConUEed from page 3.
confrontation In F1orlda.
·
Fisk doesn't believe Figueroa was ordered to throw at him
by Martin. He doesn't even have any hard feelings toward the
Yankee pitcher.
"It was rather early In the spring a.nd after Yaz and Scott hit
those back-to-back homers off him, I'in sure Figueroa was just
trying to justify his position," says the Red Sox receiver.
So there It stands and It would be wrong to conclude that
some kind of feud Is riow simmering between the two clubs
over what took place In one of their exhibition games.
By the same token, It would be perfectly right to Infer the
Red Sox put the Yankees on notice they don't intend to let the
New Yorkers walk all over !hem even If everybody else Is so
SID'e the Yanks will win in a breeze.
~ybe they will, but.they still bave to play tllose 182 games,
starting with that first one today against the Milwaukee
Bcewers.
Be~ore he died, Red Sox owner Tom Yawkey said he was
convinced mooey could buy a lot of things but not a pennant.
This Is the year the Yankees find out whether he was right or
not.

No.
1941 ·698.

9,

March 29, 1977
Newell Sunoco
G. &amp; J , Aula Parts
Sears
Karr &amp;

142
118
91

VanZandt
86
Roach's Gun Shop
80
No. 2
61
High tnd. Game- Marlene
Wilson 209, Diana Lewis 117.
High Ind. Series - Marlene
Wilson 487, Diana Lewis 466.

High Team Game- Team
No. 2. 788 ..
High

Team

Series

Roach's Gun Shop 2271.

-

WASHINGTON (UPI ) The Washington Redskins
have signed linebacker Greg
M•lor League Stlmdlngs
Hartle as a free agent and
8y United Press lnternltionJI
don't
have
to
pay
N•tional Lugue
to
Hartle's
compensation
Ent
W l Pet. GB former club, the St. Louis
Ph I I Ide( ph Ia
0 .. 0 .000
Cardinals.
·
0 0 .000
Pittsburgh
0 0 .000
New York
Redskins' Coach George
0 0 .000
Ch icago
Allen in announcing the
0 0 .000
St . Louis
0 0 .000
Montreal
signing said no compensation
-ttJest
w L . Pet. GB was involved, indicating
Hartle signed for less than
Cincinnati
1. . o 1.000
1/.2
Los Angeles
0 0 .000
$50,000.
!I he had signed for
Houston
o 0 .000 11h more, a draft
choice would be
San Franc·isco 0 o .000
h
112
Atlanta
0 0 .000
required as compensation
San Diego
0 1 .000 1
under tlte·new National Foot·
Wednesday 's Result
Clnc,innati 5 San Diego 3
bali League collective
Tad•r•s Probable Pilchen
bargaining agreement.
AU Times EST I

BASEBALL

St . Louis

Plftsburgh

p.m .

CHICAGO
(UPI)
Funeral services were
scheduled for Saturday for
James W. Jardine, Chicago's
first water commissioner and
father of University of
Wisconsin football Coach .
John Jardine.
Jardine died Tuesday
night, apparently of a heart
attac~. He was 68.
In addition to John, he Is
• survived by his widow,
Louise, a daughter and three
sons, one of whom - Leonard
-was a former ho!ad football
coach at Brown University.

I
1
1
I
1
I

announced Monte Clark,
highly successful in 1976 in
turning around the sagging
fortunes of the 49ers as a
rookie coach, would not be
back to handle the team
because of a disagreement
over contrac!ID'al authority.
DeBartolo, however, jwtt
as quickly·insisted that Clark
still was the new ownerllhip's
No. 1 choice to run the team
- provided his dutllll can ba
clearly defined against those
of Joe Thomas, whom
DeBartolo named executive
vice president and general
manager of the 411ers.
ui , more than anyone In
this room, want Monte Clark
to coach the San Francisco
49ers," said DeBartolo,
whose wealthy Youngatown,
Ohio, family owns a string of
· shopping malls acr088 the
country and several race
tracks.
"I chose Joe Thomas to be
general manager and tile
duties that went along with II.
Unfortunately, the contract
Monte had was in direct
conmct with that of a general

1
1

p.m.

Milwaukee (Travers 15-16) at
New . York (Hunter 11 ·15), 2
p .m .

Cleveland (Eckersley 13-12)
at Boston (Jenkins 12 ·11 ), . 2

p.m.

California

(Ryan

17·18)

at

Seattle (Romo 0-0&gt;. 10; 35 p.m.
Friday's Game
California at Seattle

Mljor League Results
By United Press tnternltional
·
National League
San Diego
002 010
3 92
Cincinnati
011 210 Ooo--:- 5 10 0
,Jones , lomlin )6), Bernal (7),

~rfect sli cing and blend ing action mixes up soil and
organic matter thorough ly ... forms a loose, aerated
seedbed: As a result. plant roots penetrate and reach
out easily ; moisture Is absorbed more rea"lly;
decomposition of soi l minerals and organic waste takes
place quicker. Your garden gets o.ff to a faster start
and flow~rs a"!d vegetables grow bigger than ever"
before. G1 Iso~ fillers feature extra heaVy construction .
~uaranteed tmes (~eplaced fr ee if ever broken), cast
~ron gear case, adjustable tilling widths .

(8)

and

Tenact ;

ooo000 000 ooo- o

92

Tan.ana Cl -0) and Humphrey;
Segul,
Montague
(4)
and
Stinson. LP- Segui (0.1) HRCalilornla , R:ud l (1) .
·

Ebersbach Hardware
"Everything in Hardware"
110 W. Main
Pomeroy
Open Fri. Til8- Sat. Til5

John 's
Arena .
Mrs .
Eden News Otester·
Eichinger's son Charles an
assistant coach for th e
Columbus Mifflin team.
·
Hols.!Dger.
Attendance at Eden &amp;mday News Notes Mrs . Barbara Sargent
is

• Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ruth cake ~nd ice cream to her
( and Mr. and Mrs : Carl home and serving it to all that .
• Buckley Visited with Mr. and were present.
l'l!rs. Del Buckley at
James Rose of Connecticut
, Parkersburg, W. Va. The been her.e to visit with his
. Three couples ate out at a • lather, lawrence Rose who is
~ restaurant to celebrate the ill.
.
{ birth~ays of Mrs.. Ca)'l··" ·I'f!r. ahd'.Mrtl,'!!oy Maul of
, Buckley and the 81 birthday Parkersburg, W. Va. and
; of Del Buckley.
Mrs: Roy Fick and Beth of
• Mrs. Pauline Brewer is
Columbus, visited at the R. E.
~ patientatVeteransMe!fiorial William~ home Saturday.
, Hosp1!1!l at P?meroy. · ,
Recent · visitors of Mrs.
·I The Bible study · group df ·Bess Larkins were Rev. and
1 the United Methodist Church Mrs. Bruce Smith of Athens,
7 surprised Mrs. Carl Buckley Mrs, Lucille :)mith and Mrs.
• on her birthday with bringing Margaret Brown, local.

t

a

~

},-------------~--~--------------~

~

lliE

..~

"PRINCESS~
· bv

••

..~

llush

c

•~

ooo--

Fryman, Borbon (6} , Eastwlck
(7)
end
Plummer .
WPFryman 0 -0). LP.- Jones (0-1) .
HR:s-San . Diego, I vie n&gt; .
Cincinnati , Geronimo (tl
'
American League '
.california
112 210
7 91

I

spe nt several days with Mr.
Mrs Clarice Allen .
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Cleland and Mrs. Rodney Gaul and
and Mr . and Mrs. larry family, Beverly. The Gauls
Cleland were in Columbus are announcing the birth of a
son.
Monday, pn business.
Mrs. Letha Wood, Miss
Mrs. Opal Hollon and Mrs.
Lenora
Betzing, Mrs. Freda
Ross Cleland visited Mildred
Miller
and
Mrs. Roy Christy
Arnold. a patient at Veterans
vi
sited
'recently
with Mrs.
Memorial Hospital.
Don
Bet~lng
,
Pomeroy.
Sunday dinner guests of
The firemen enjoyed a fish
Mrs . Opal Hollon were Mr .
supper
at the firehouse
and ~ Mrs .
William
·Wednesday
.eve !ling bef.ore
Kh!c'kortl berge r of New
•
• ' '.
J
thetr
regular
meellng.
It was
Jersey, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
by
Mrs.
Ross
prepared
Parker
a nd
children,
Cleland
and
Mrs
.
Opal
Marietta, Mr. and Mrs .
James· Hollon and children, Hollon .
The firemen were quite ·
Viehila ; ' W. Va. Mrs. Ivy
busy
last week ')'ith several
Rayburn and children ,
brush
fires and three house
Syracuse, Mr. and Mrs. Rick
fires.
Hollon and Mr.. and Mrs . .
Mr. and Mrs . Darrel
Roscoe Hollon, local.
Weber,
Fort Wayne, Ind.,
Mr . and Mrs. George
spent
a
lew
days with Mr. and
Genheimer and Mrs. Earl
Mrs.
Ralph
Keller.
Dean
returned
home
Mr
.
and
Mrs . Don
Saturday from Akron, having
Williams,
David
and Deanne ,
been called there by the death
Columbus,
were
weekend
of Mrs. Ge nheimer 's brother
guests
of
Mr.
and
'
M
rs. Ralph
Harry Rose.
Keller.
'·
,Mr. and Mrs . larr y
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Will,
Cleland, Greg and Mary
Rutland
were recent visitors
Hibbs were dinner guests of
of
Mr.
and
Mrs. Ross Cleland .
Mr . and Mrs. Ross Cleland
Cleland,
Columbus,
D.
D.
Wednesday evening.
called
on
Denzel
Cleland,
Mrs . Ma e Holter and son
Friday.
'·'
Harry visited Sunday with
.Mr. and Mrs. Geor ge
Mrs. Edna VanMeter ,
Youngstown , has been
spending some time with
Mrs. Mabel VanMeter at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. T-om
Nice.
Denni s Eichin g·er has
returned w his studies at Ohio
State a fter Visiting his
mother Mrs. Opal Eichinger
and visiting in Daytona
Beach, Fla .
Mrs . Henry Hartman has
returned home alter a two
weeks stay at the Camden
Clark Hospital, Parkersburg.
:. Mrs. Opal Eichinger, Don
ai\a Lauta Jean, Mis Jan
Wilson and Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Nice attended the basektball
games in Columbus ""
Friday and Saturday at St.

'"

..
~

t.,.
&amp;

•

'
~

r

•

..
comfortable suburban sandal with style

•
••
I

I

FILM SPECIAL

POLAROID 108 FILM

A su~erb,ty
befitting 1ts name ... Princess. The sling ankle strap
!s elastlcized , up front for slip on , slip off ease . The
msole Is cush ioned for added comfort . Co lors '· Shinny
Black 'Patent,, Brown .
·
"

------

Come in and register to win an
Eas~er basket to be given away
Apnl 9th. No purchase necessary.

l

•'

Mr. and Mrs . Douglas
Johnson of Racine, Mr. and
Mrs . Lloyd Johnson and
daughter of Middleport spent
Sunday afternoon with Mr.
and Mrs. Arthur Johnson and
family. RQIJI:r~~~.,was al3o
at the Johnson home.
Mr. and Mrs .. George
Circle, Mr. and Mrs. James
Circle were at the home. of
Mary Circle on Sunday . ·
Mrs. Robert Lee and
daughter Becky called at the
home of Mr . and Mrs .
Douglas Circle Sunday. Brinker called at the home of
Becky spent the afternoon Laura Byers of Tanners Run
recently.
with Kim Folirod.
There were 26 present for
Betty Van Meter, Sheryl
Sunday
School on April 3.
Leann Johnson , and Eunie

WHILE IT LASTS

•••

. THE SHOE BOX

REG. 16.75
SALE

'Dutton Drug Store

~

t.

..,

... .... . . . ..,.. '

'· ' ..

122N.2,ndAve-.

.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

----

.

, ·· '

'

Harrisonville
honor pupils
are announced

Genheimer .

By the Day

You duplicate nature 's own method of building soli
fertility with a Gilson tiller. Here's why; Gilson's

among economists about the
strength of the curr ent
ipflation cycle and the effects
that government, business
and la bor actions will bave on
it.
" It's' not getting any ·
-..:orse." said Arthur Okun of

I

:Reedsville News Notes C,mael News,

3¥a. AND
MODElS

•

·1

HEAVY-DUTY MOOELS
or Ia rge ·g ardens

Chicago
(Brett
10- 12) at
Toronto (Singer 13 -10), 1: 30
p .m.
.
Texas ( Btyleven 13·16) at
Baltimore (Palmer 22· 13), 2

The Wholesale Prtce lntlex ,
The trend moderated last
which is often considered the month altl!ough there were
government 's best inflation large in creases for far m
measure, rose at an annual goods and a wide range of
rate of 6 per cent In January . industri a l commoditi es
It then surged 10.8 per cent in inc luding glass, copper and
February for the biggest gain chemicals.
in more than ;:~ veflr
But there is mixed resoonse

very

-For sma ll ·g ardens

5 HP

,

Dear Sit:
By Martha
Yes, there is an advocacy program in Meigs County.
Through the patience and the work &lt;!f·Mrs. Mary Skinner
School the past &amp;mday was
and others, we have a very good on,. How do we know ? We
bave a 3&amp;-year-old son who is In the program. He gets lots of 92. A revival is now in
enjoyment from It that we could not give him. It's a program in progress at the church. Rev.
which the advocate takes your child places, Charles has a. Elden Blake is the pastor .
Rev. Robert Blaine is the
wonder~ql advo_c!lt~;. Rev . Robert' Bumgarner. Rev .
BumgBfi\Or and his wue Ruth have been so kind to him. If it's evangelist. There, ts sllfcial
singing
every
night .
just a rie\e or otllf~or a 1\1'&amp;.1 ilef lalks about It for a·week.
Sometimes the program puts on a party or picnic or takes·a Everyone is welcome to
little trip someplace. It helps Charles to have others to talk to attend .
~- and Mrs. Sol Bigley
besides his famllY,, .
,
If you nave SOjile tlll\e'youmtght want tD be an advocate and and Mr. and. Mrs. Robert
Webb visited Mr. an4..Mrs.
belp som~pe$tl\'~ I! lit!!~ fflfl!'e activity j~ir.Jil~•.
Reuben
Bigley, R~~..itio;w'~,
Mrs. Skinner haf~
good at matching an advocate
recently.
.,.
._,
with a child. Lots of people doh 't understand them. They have
Mrs.
Susie
Kerwin
visited
feelings and a soul just like you. The next time you see one,
please don 't tum your head. Juat saying \'hello" to them Mr. and Mrs. William
Hoselton.
,,.-,.,.,
makes them happy: ' .,
., .'
Mr. ~nd Mrs. Rol;&gt;,ert Webb,
May God bless all the people who help and· the person, too.
We love our son. He Is a joy to us. We have a daughter who has Mr . and Mrs. Eddie ' Bigley
helped in times we could not care for him. Our two and Martha Holsinger spent
grandchildren are in the program and are very kind to the Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Sol
Bigley.
retarded. - Richard and Jessie Grueser, Rutland .
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Weaver
and family and Mr . and Mrs.
John Dupre and family spent
Opposed tQ.. Easter store hours
Sunday with Mr . and Mrs.
Alvin Reed.
Dear Sir :
Ray Shaffer, Pataskala,
It bas come to our attention that S.veral business
visited
recently with Mr. and
establiShments ar~ going to be open (or business Easter
Mrs.
Clinton
Holsinger and
Sunday. We feel, With this being a special holiday, it is more
family.
Important tD allow their employees to spend that day with
Martha Holsinger and
family and friends, than to he open for a small percentage of
Fannie
Bigley visited Thursshoppers. (These individuals, knowing in advance the store
day
evening
with Mr. and
\ was goin~ tD be closed, could he prepared.) We ask that these
Mrs.
Paul
Holsinger
and
:stores close on East~r and celebrate in their own way,
Timmy,
Hockingport.
; hopefully m some religiOus service, but at least observing it as
Sandra Kay Gillilan, Long
a special day.
Bottom,
called on Geraldine
We sincerely ~ge all shoppers to buy in advance and be
Holsinger
Sunday evening.
, prepared for holidays. - For the Administrative Board
Mr.
and
Mrs. Jim Eddy,
;Enterprise U. M. Church, Pomeroy, Ohio, by Karyn D. Davis:
Belpre,
visited
Saturda Y.
...memller.
evening
with
Martha
Holsinger.

"As of the moment,"

p .m .

•

'Advocacy program appreciRted

DeBartolo said, "as far u
we're concerned, he has
elected not to stay with the
San FranCisco 49ers."
Even Thomi!S, a hlgbly
successful but sometimes
controversial NFL executive
at Minnesota, Miami and
Baltimore, said he joined
DeBartolo in making a pitch
to Cl!l.rk to remain.

Kansas City (Spllttorff ll -8)
at' Detroit (Roberts 16-17), 1:30

I
I
·
I By LEONARD CURRY
I
WASHJNGTON (UP! )
I Wholesale prices have nearly
1 doubled in th e past 10 years
for the worst inflatipn rate
since
the World War IT era,
1
1 acco rding to the. Labor
1 Department.

i

'

~tifl/Di
·
IJII.~..
··
•

t

COMPACT MODELS

.,. Todar'• Problble Pitch er s
All Times EST)

fJ~~ ~
'1/l•

GILSON
TILLERS

Wednesday's ReSult

ltor ) and must be signed wltf!Jhe •lgnee's adNames may be withheld upon publication.
~owev.r, on request, names will be disclosed. Letters
ould he in good taste , addressing Issues not personalltles.
'
11 ·

1
I
1 • • •-'

manager .... "

Start )'OUr
garden this way ••
·and
watch ! i!!!_

Cal ifornia 7 Seattle 0

Seetlle

! .m:~~::~•.-~:~~o~;~~.w:~r:.~i!t~~d:bc~!:~ ! Wholesale prices nearly doubled last 10' ye·.o•Q
u• ~

&lt;Denny 11 -9) at
( Reuss lA -9 ), 1:35

New YOrk (Seaver 1.4-lll at
Chicago (Burris 15-13), 2 :30
p .m .
San Franc isco (Montefusco
16· 1") at Los Angeles &lt;Sutton
21 -10) , .o1 p.m .
Friday's Games
san Otego at Cinc innati
Atlanta at Houston
American League
East
W L Pet. GB
New York
0 0 .000
0 0 .000
Baltimore
· aoston
0 0 .000
0 0 .000
Cleveland
0 0 .000
Detroit
0 0 .000
Milwaukee
TOronto
0 . 0 .000
, West
W L Pet. Gl;l
California
J 0 ·1.000
Kansas City
0 0 .000
112
Oakland
0 0 .000
112
M irinesota
0 o .000
11~
Texas
0 0 .000
1!2
Chicago
0 o· .000
112
Seattle
0 I .000 1

Ftngers

1997-708 ; No ..

POMEROY
BOWLING LANES
MORNING GLORIES

ily GORDON SAKAMOTO

. - -- --------- - ------- - -

'

.. ' 992-3106
. ..

~

': Middleport

Fairview
News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mrs. Russell Roush en·
tertained with a dinner
Sunday in honor oi her
husbaM Russell •Roush who
was celebrating his birthday.
Attending' were Mr. and Mrs.
Dana 'l'.ewis of Clifton, Mr.
and Mrs . Ronald Russell,
Mandy and Michael of
Wolfpen, Mrs. E'dna Roush,
Mrs . Gladys Shields of
Racine, 'Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa
ParsollJj, Mr. and Mrs. Ar·
nold flupp, Edward and
Rocky, Brenda Lawrence or
Portland . Edward David,
Cindy : and Sharon Roush.
Russell was presented two
cak~ baked by his daughters
Mrs. Dana Lewis and Mrs,
Ronald Russell and he
received lovely gifts and
money.
·
Mi~e. Rhodes or Griffin Air
Force Base, Indiana spent a
weekend with his· parents Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Rhodes and
Karen.
Cindy and Edward Roush
spent Monday and Tuesday
nights with Mrs. Ronald
Russell, Mike and Mandy at ·
Wollpen .
Miles Childress of Mt. Alto,
Frank Hudson of Racine
visited Don Manuel Sunday
afternoon .
Mrs. Bertha Robinson is a
medical patten! at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Manuel,
Donnita and Robin visited
Friday with Mr. and · Mrs.
Charles Pyles at Racine.

HARRISONVIlLE - The
Harrisonville Elementary
School honor roll for the
fourth sixth weeks of school is
announced. Pupils with all A
are in capital letters.
First Grade - laura Cobb,
Tiffony·Dillon, Roger Fraley,
BRIAN
MARKIN,
JONATHAN MILLER,
Roland
Morris,
Scot-t
Oberholzer, Brian Shuler,
Scott Williams,, and Tammy
Wright.
Second Grade - Jeff
Arnold, Susan Arnold ,
MARTY CLINE, JASON
MORMAN, Chris Haning ,
Clara Whittington, Gary
Haning, Bobby Hail, Jodi
Wells, Lois Eblin, Gary Tillis,
Tommy Stover, and Jay
Peavley.
Third Grade . - Kenda
Donohue, Clyde " Buddy"
Gaus, Melissa Howard,
Bridget Largent, Lisa Riggs,
Mary ' King, Vincent King,
Beverly Napper, Ric helle
White, and Roland Will.
Fourth Grade - Cathy
Jones, Bettyann Loftis, and
Linda Riggs.
Fifth Grade - SHERRY
ARNOLD and Eugene
Phillips.
Sixth Grade - ROBIN
BARREIT, Brent Finlaw,
and RENEE WilLIS.

NEW YORK (UPI) - Johti
Evert - Chris' and Jeannie's
kid brother - continued his
family's winning ways
Wednesday afternoon by
posting a 6-2,6-1 victory ·in the
opening round of the Easter
Bowl Tennis Tournament
here for the top juniors from
all over the world.
Evert, of Ft. Lauderdale,
Fla ., who is four days shy of
his 16th birthday, had little
trouble in defeating Rusty
Wright from Scarsdale, N.Y.

the Brookings Inst itutipn.
" On the other hand, it's'i!Ot
getting any better."
Okun told UP! business and
labor are locked in a 6 per
cent inflation cycle fr om
which neither is willing to
acce~t the first d!H!scalation.
Okun believes President
Carter's economic stimulus
would contribute to employment and produc tiv ity
without increasing inflation .
But Jack Carlson of the
U.S. Chamber of Commerce
blames big federal spending
for iilflation and believes
profits and wages have not
been primary factors.
The 90 per cent rise in
wholesale prices since 1967 is
surpassed only by the 102 per
cent surge of 1941 to 1951 - a
decade during which the
United States fought a war
and followed it with the
biggest peacetime productive
~xpansion of the century.
In contrast, the current
inflation
has
been

by high
accompanied
unemployment and idle
machinery.
The Federa l Reserve
Boa r d
es tima t e s
manufacturers operated at
only 70 to 80 per cent of
capacity for the past two
years while the Labor
D e partment says
unempl oyment hovered
around 8 per cent o( the work
!OI'ce.
Carlson
said
some
producers need
price
increases of 10 to 15 per cent
more to begin rehiring
wtirkers and using idle machinery.
Despite these signs of hard·
ship, employed workers have
been able to keep pace with
the inflation spiral.
The Labor Department
estimates average weekly
earnings before taxes have
Increased 92.2 per cent since
1967 including wage gains of
more than 8 per cent this
·
year.

~

Spring
SUITS • DRESSES - PANTS · SUITS &amp;
BLOUSES by

~~~~
BAHR CLOTHIERS
N .~n d Ave.
Midd leporl, Ohio

lliE EASTER BUNNY Will VISIT
lliE KIDDIE SHOPPE ON FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
---------------------~----------------·

PICTURES Will BE TAKEN SATURDAY ONLY
FROM 12:00 to 5 P;M. SO BRING YOUR CHILDREN
IN AND GET A5x7 PICTURE OF lliEM Willi lliE
EASTER BUNNY FOR ONLY s2.00

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

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ·• • • • • • • • • '
•
:
~•
&lt;
,
•.
•

EAS
. "''E'R SP.'ECJALS

•

Ulies ········.. ··········s2.50 to '5.50
Mums
s . to a:::;J,OO
, • • •••• • • • • • • • • •..... 3•50
&amp;-1
N411eas
.•..•.••••••••........ •.. •••$3.50
1iu1.IP5 ...................... ' ....... s2.50
Hyacinths ........................ }3.00
u.....;;-· ·
'
• ....;ng Baskels .. ..S2.00 to '6.00

••

Open Daily 9-5, This Week Only
Open Evenings 6-9

~

H bba ds G

. i=~l~E : 992·517~
firll eight of their 30 eventa.

383

Familiar faces

2()38- 7~9;

:
• and only woman to go under . •
" 55 seconds in her event.
•
Jezek, who bad a bad cold •
last week and considered not •
coming here, trailed Cheryl •
Gibt!on In the preliminaries . •
and said "It helped motivate •
me, having someooeto beat." :
'!be Ml.lsion Viejo team, a •
llltong favorite fOI' the team •
title, carne first in Hooker's •
thouChlll. "! was hoping we · •
would flniah one, two, three, •
four," she said. "I figuritd •
whoever won the race would •
: bre.ak the record."
•
:
Fumia took
500-yard •

l t:'~~~y~r~,~~~ier~:Wrn

x-April 12 - Columbus at
To ledo
· Saginow ••· Mu•keoon
Series tted. , _,

NHL Playoffs
By United Press I;J1ternatlonai
Preliminary Round

CANTON, Ohio (UPI) Toronto leads PIHsbgli, 1-0
John Nabor and collegiate Apr 5- Toronto 4 PitiSbgh 2 ,
7- Pittsbgh at Toronto
veterans dominated the x.Apr
-Apr 9- Toronto, at Pittsbgh
men's events as expected
x.lf necessary
(Pha ., Stt. Mil . and Bos.
Wednesday as the AA U di'aw
1st -round byes)
National Swimming
Championships opened, but a
rtet 0 f teen-«g ed giris By United
WHA Standings
qua
Press I nternolionoi
served record-breaking
eut
notice that youth will x Quebec ~f 3~ ~
~J; ~9~
eventually be served.
Cincinnati 39 37 5 83 354 303
Nabor, in the last tndtonopls 36 37 8 80 276 3P5
ch.ampionship event of his New
Enotnd 35 •o 6 76 175 290
Blrmnghm 31 46 4 66 289 309
amazing four-year careerm v-Minn
1918 5 &lt;3 136 129
won the 200-hard backstroke
west
W L T Pts: GF GA
in 1:46.57'1o ring up his 14th x-Houston 50 1• '106 320 w
AAU title In backstroke Wtnntr,eo &lt;5 32 1 91 360 287
' ·san D ego 40 37 4 84 284 283
events alone.
Edmonton 34 43 4 12 243 304
"This is still an Olympic Co lgorv
31 42 7 69 2'" 190
1

Flint vs . Kalamuoo
Kalama roo le.ads, 3-1
April 1- Kalami!!IZOO 8 F lint 6
Aprll 2 - Kal a ma zoo 3 F l int 2
3 ot s
·
Apri l 3 - Ka lamazoo 10 Flint
1
Al)ril6 - F lint j Ka !emazoo 2
X· Aprll
8
F li n t
at
Kalamazoo
X·Apr il 9 K&amp;ll!lm&amp;ZOO Jf
Fl int
x -AprJI 12
Flint ot
Kalamazoo

DeBartolo quick
to stir 49'ers

UPI SportA.Wrller
SAN FRANCISCO (UP! ) It didn't take Edward J .
DeBartolo Jr. - at 31 the
youngest franchise owner in
the National Football League
_ long to make his presence
felt in San Francisco.
DeBartolo, In _town for the
first time - s1nce bemg
approved by the NF C as new
owner of the San Francisco
49ers only a week ago , was
expected to go through the
motions or being introduced
to the area at a longscheduled news conference
Wednesday . .
Instead , it turned out to be
:-:·.·:::::=:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:
one of the year 's most
stunning sessions when he

of-Seven

6V1

NY hllnden VI. Cti1CI90
Serlea "A"
NY tslndrs lead Chi, 1·0
Apr S- NY Islanders S Chi 2
Apr 7- Chi i't NYI .s landers
x -Apr 9- Chl at NV Islanders
Buffalo vs. Minnesota
Series "B"
Buffalo leads Minnesota , 1·0
Apr S- Buffalo 4 Minn 2
Apr 7- Buffalo at Mlnn
K-Apr 9-Minn at Buffalo
Los Angeles vs. Alianta
Series "C"
· LoS Ang leads Atlanta, 1-0
Apr 5- Los Ang 5 Atlanta 2
Apr 7- Los Ang at Aflanta
)( .Apr 9- Atlanta at Los Ang

"I
haven't
ducked knocking out 16 of 18
anybody," Ali said. "My opponents.
record's too good to go down
In going 101' the title in a 1~
as a ducker .. .. They're acting round bout, Evangelista will
like a bunch of racists, trying receive $85,000 to Ali's $2.7·
to get me out of the way. But million . The bout will be
I'm bigger than they are, I'm telecast nationally in prime
bigger than boxing."
timebyAB~TV. WBCsuper
Both the WBA and WBC featherweight champion
gave promoter Don King Alfredo Escalera of Puer!D
their
approval
or Rico is also expected to fight
Evangelista , a 22-year-old on the card but an opponent
who said he has never· gone bas oot yet .heen named.
beyond eight rounrl.&lt; while

IHL PllyGffS
United Preu tnternitionat
Q~~arterfiniiS · AII Series Best·

New Or lea ns 34 46 . 42 5 15
At lantl!l
3 1 ·50 . 383. 18 11?
Western conference
Midwest Division
W L Pet. G8
x -Denver
49 30 .620
De tro it
4'1. 11 .532 7
Ch icago
42 38 .525 7'1'
Kansu Ci ty
40 39 .506 9
lnd ian·a
35 46 . 432 15
M ilwaukee
28 52 .350 21112
Fort W1vne vs D1yton
Pacific Division
Fort Wayne leads, 3-0
W L Pet. GB Apr i l 2 Fort Wayne S
)( -Los Ang
5 1 28 .646
Dayton J
Portland
47 33 .588 41h
Apr i l J Fort Wayne 7
Golden Stat e .44 36 .550 J1h Dayton l
Seattle
39 41 .488 12 lh Aprll 6 Fort Wayne 4
Phoenil(
32 A7 .405 19
Dayton 1
X· Clinched division title
Apr i l 9 Dayton at Fort
Wednesday 's Rtsl.!ltS
Wayne
Houston lOot Boston 93
' ~· Apr i l ·10 :- F Ort wayne at
Buffalo 107 N~o: w Orleans 102
Dayton
Wash ington 97 Ch ic ago 96
X·April 11 - Oav ton at For t
San· Antooio 131 Phil a 109
Wayne
.
Denver 110 Atlanta 95
x -Apr i l 13 - Fort wa y ne ot
Thunda .v 's Games
Dayton
Indiana at NY Knlcks
Denver at Cleveland
Toledo vs. Columbus
Kansas City at PhOen ix
Cotumbusleods. 2· 1
NY Nets at Golden State
March i 29 Columbus 2
Friday's Gamts
Toledo 1 3 ots
.
New Orleans at Boston
AprilS - Toledo 4 Columbus
NY Knicks at Buffa lo
1
Houston at Ch lcago
April 6- Columbus 7 Toledo
Ph iladelphia at Detroit
• 1 ots
Ati&lt;l!nta at Milwaukee
April&amp; - Toledo at Columbus
NY Nets at Los Angeles
X·April 9 Columbus at
K~nsas City at Seattle
Toledo
Phoenix at Portland
x-Apr ll 10 - To ledo at
.Co l umbus

Pitttb!Jrgh v1. Toronto
Series "D"

d

PhoeniK 7 lhdianapolis J
Edmonton 6 Birm inQham .4
Houston S San Diego 3
Thursdav ' s Game
Winni peg at Cal gar y
( Ends regular season }

Eutern Confertnce

Nahor
has his
14th win

"

nobody else a cbance."
All complained that at 35 he
was too old tD go on fighting
only
the
top-ranked
challengers and wanted to
mix in several bouts a year
against lesser opponents.

BENCH BENCHED
IUPI) CfnclUaU Reds manager
Sparky Aaderson uya be ·
hopH otar uteber Jolumy
Bench, auHerill1 from a
stralaed rl&amp;bt lmee, wiD be
able to get back In the
Uueup Ill a couple of days.
Beach didn't play Ill tile
Redl' W OpeniDI Day wiD
over lhe SaD Diego Padres.
Wedneodoy aDd was
replaced by BID Plummer,
wbo camelltrou1h with two
hill and an RBI.
"I don 't tblnk 11'1
anything serious, " An·
denon uld of Bench's
strained lmee. "I didn't
want to take a chance 'of
blm wonenlng the knee ID
this cold weather. He
should be ready to go ID a
couple of dayo."
.
CENC~ATI

":The ~y Sentinel, Middieport·Po~eroy, 0 .. Thursday, April 7 1977
I

:

- ..

Ho

:

:•
••
e
•
•
••
•
•
•
•
•

:

:

rT reensvrac~~io :

I • • • :. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ~ • • • • •

DON'T GO
UNPROTECTED.

Coats • Jackets

Rest assured with solid
insurance coverage for
your home and your
auto. We're equipped to
handle all your ·needs.
Count on us for fast
claims handling and
superior service.
Lightning Rod Farm Insurance.
Automutual. Western Reserve.

and
Windbreakers

It's Like a Dream. Come True!
Now .you can afford to live the life of luxury! Because
our manufactured homes are equipped with everything
you could want., •. spacious rooms, modem.eppliances,
decorator furnishings! Plus much more! Free delivery
and set-up. Convenient terms. See. ua!
State

. KINGSBURY

IL----~~~~~::E::~M=a:ln:S:L:_!____:•:~:7:oM:_____~~~~·~~----j.J

Pomerov .=o. .. .

BOYS SUITS
"

20%0FF

GIRlS
LONG DRESSES

12 MONTHS TO SIZE 14

20% OFF

2 · 12
.

2Q%0FF

HOME SAI.ES INC.

"FOR THE FINEST IN MANUFACTURED
-- .
HOUSING"
.

DAVIS INSURANCE SERVICE

ALL

ALL

omeroy,O.

KIDDIE SHOPPE
992-3586

Pomeroy, 0 .

�•

r~s;;;z;; ;~;;;;-;;};;J··· "'-ffl

II-'The O.ily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, April 7, 19'17

Council hears
rallies reports
. CHESTER - ReportS on
noWea at South Webster and
Grove City were given by
Mrs. Dorothy Rltchle, district
deputy at the Tuesday night
meeting of Chester Council
323, Daughters of America, at
the hall.
Mn. Ritchie, accompanied
by Mn. Thelma White and.
Mn. Mary K. Holter. attended a rally March 19 at the
Ramada Inn in Grove City,
the 82nd annual one of•
DIBtrict 8. There were 65
. national and state officers,
8late committee members,
dlltrict deputies and visiting
council deputies. .
Mn. Doris Grueser. Mrs.
Holter, ·Mrs. Marcia Keller,
and Mrs. Charlotte Grant
accompanied Mrs. Ritchie to
the March 26 rally at South
Webster where Opal Smith Is
deputy.
Mrs . Mae
McPeek,
councilor, presided at the
meeting with Mrs. Margaret
Tuttle reading a communication from Lura
Larrick, state councilor,
advlalng of the March 23
death of Ollle Towles, past
national councilor. The
charter was draped without
ceremony for her for the next
30 days.

POLLYi POINTERS

Btr,• thdar
brat ed

f' ::E~' l

were

.

_.an

Rejoice
In The
Spirit
Of Easter

.
::
...
"

The annual motherdaughter potluck to be held in
May was planned during a
meeting of the B.H. Sanborn
Mlsslooary Society of the
Middleport Firat Baptist
Church.
Mrs. Freda Edwards Ia
chairman ' with
Mrs .
Elizabeth Searles, Mrs. Lillie
Hubbard and Mrs. Elizabeth
Slavin on the committee.
Mrs. Sarah Fowler will
handle the table decorations.
The new officers will be instaUed at that time.
Prelude to open the
meeting wi.s by Mrs. Dorothy
Anthony and Mrs. June
Kloes, president, manded
the welcome. Devotions
entitled, uRemember Me,"
were given by Mrs. Beulah
White. A report·was!Jiven on
the scholarship student.
Mission contributions to
Bunna apd Latin America
were made. Mrs. Marjorie
Walburn reported on the
recent
Rio
Grande

HEY KIDS!

GET YOUR PICTURE
TAKEN FREE WITH ME
THE EASTER BUNNY
12:00 to 6:00

SYRACUSE - A contribution . to the Christina
Smith Fund to be used for the
expenses of the grandparents
was made by the United
Methodist Women or the
Syracuse Asbury Church.
Meeting at the church
Tuesday night, Mrs.Mary
Lisle presided at the meeting
which opened with a
meditation, "Shepherds for
Christ." Judy King read
"Happy Easter" and the
secretary and treasurer's
reports were given. Both a
free wlll and an Easter offering were taken. A total of
42 shut-in calls were repor·
ted. Mrs. Usle read a•.letter
from the district president,
and Mrs. Helen Teaford read
a card from Ruth Robinson,
. missionary in Bollvia.
· The program entitled
"Living the Resurrection.
LUe" was given by lfls· Lisle

FREE CHOCOLATE EGGS
FOR THE KIDS.

Save $3.00

Save $4 on every gallon

Chief Latex Wall
Paint
Guar~nteed

Cover in
One Coat!

ENAMEL
Mfr.'s sugg,

ret a i I price
$ll.89

_,.'!~~.':!

Special Sale Price
ONE COAT

l FINISH LATEX

To be amor.q the firte:sJ qua lity
mode . One coat will cove-r u-p
lo 400 square feer per golloo .
wh en applied 03 d irKled o'n
the labe l. U it does oo t cover
in ot~e coat. cdd1hona! pmnt
will be. fw-rnshed 10 insure

Mfr.'s suggested
retail price
s11. 99· galion

sg99-

w.

GAL.
Heavy duty plastic por·vur·•-•
th ane tor lnt e ri o r-ext er io
use. Colors and White.

•
•

•

•

•
'

,'~·
•

:I
••
••
''

•••

.,......
.,'· ..'

...·-.,.
'

'

,
',' 4

v
tr. ,.
'

'

.

NOTE FIWM HELEN : And don't be quite so generous
about your bird-dogging friend . I'd guess she enjoys
oonqueall, Olen if they're at the expense of her best buddy.
Get out of her shadow !
· ·
·

+++

Rap:
I'm ldopted. My mother has given me everything 1 ever
ck'eamed ol, but not much demonstrated affection. She loves
me, bul we Clll'ttalk aboutthinga very well .
I'd love to find my natural mother, llut Mom says if I try,
lhe'llneverspeakto me again. Why ? -CURIOUS, AGE 17

Olrloul! :
n•a easy to label your adoptive mother jealous and
lnlecure, but unleu we hear the whole story, we can't pre-

Judie her.

Ferbapube knows 10mething about your backgiound she
all mllbt hurt you blocny. And since talk doesn't come eaally,
l1he lbreall to protect you from lt.
It lime you broke tbe barrier and triad for real

liD'

•)*'itiJ"mlceUon?

her;

"'-""" 18 troubling
we think she •u help you find
Jllllf rooll wileD l1he learns how much you .care for her. ~AND SUE

+++

Dlar Helin and Sue :
I'm 14. JlmllhiiiUY of 211 who's getUng a divorce, and is
beln( chased by an older woman (who gives him what he
W8llla that I don't give). He says he loves me. He's nev&lt;!r lried
.,elllne, but he wanta us to. My rolks won 't let me go with
l*a. Wl1ld dance~ do l have? - HOOKED

·

REVIVAL SLATED
A revival at the Firat
Southern Baptist Church,
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy,
will get underway Monday
and will continue through
April 17. Speaker for the
revival, which will begin at
7:30 each eveilliog, will toe the
Rev . George W. Bryant,
pastor of the c First Baptist
.Church, Circleville. It was
erroneously reported tluit the
revival is now underway.

FUN PLANNED
Following morning worship
at the Pomeroy Church of the
Nazarene, Easter there wlll
tie an egg hunt held at the
roadside park on Route 33.
The Rev. Clyde Henderson,
pastor, invites the ·public.

~So-ti-al»'- Youth elect officers
Officers were elected at a
recent meeting of the st. Paul
United Methodist t:hurch
Youth Fellowship.
.
Elected were Keith Brooks,
president; Ebby Crow, vice
president; Donna Bennett,
secretary; Janet Brooks,
treaaurer; Judi Perry, news
reporter and representative.
A study of the book of

Calendar

muRSDAY
MEIGS County Council of
PTA's Thursday, 7:30p.m. at
Salem Center School.
SOUTHERN Local Board
d. Education Thuraday 7:30
p.m . at, the high scmol.
ORDINATION, COMMUNION and root washing
services
Thursday
at
Syracuse First Cfourch of
God. Public invited.
EV ANGI!:UNE Chapter
172, Order of the Eastern
Star, 7:30 Thursday evening
MASON, W. Va, - Apat the Middleport Masonic pro•lmately 60 persons atTemple. Officers to wear tended the Mason Faith
white.
Baptist Church skating party
SATIJRDAY
at the Neof Haven ComBAKE SALE Saturday at munity Building Monda y
Racine Junior High begin- evening.
ning at 9 a.p1. sponsored by
The young adult class will
Southern Junior High PTO. hsve its class meeting
FIVE POINT star stitchers Friday, April8 at 7:30p.m. at
4-H Club wlll hold a bake sale the borne of Mr. and Mrs.·
Saturday, at Gaul's Market in Winfield Van Meter, Fourth
st.
Chester, starting at 9 a.m.
Sunday school attendance
CAR WASH Saturday, 10 on April 3 was 58.
a.m. to 2 p.m. at Vista SerThe morning and evening
vice Station, Racine, by services were brought by
members of Racine Baseball Herb Capehart, evangelist of
Assn. pony and junior girls
Leon.
league. Members to take own
The regular · schedule of
sponge and bucket; rain date,
April!&amp;.

Famous for its one ~oat hiding power!
Covers most old colors in a single appli cation! Dri es in minut es with no

LATEX
HOUSE
PAINT

strong after-odor. Use rooms same day.
Easy clea nup ; water .wash~s hands and
tools. Save on newest colors!

liVE

Mfr.'s sugg ,
retail
19.99

EASTER RABBITS
AVAILABLE

Finest a crylic! 30 minute
dry . Wa ter cl ean s tools .
Lead-free

. SUNDA~

WEEKEND REVIVAL at
Pomeroy Church of the
· Nazarene 7 each evening,
Friday through Sunday, with
Rev . Parker Husselton ,
Wesleyan Church, Poipt
Pleasant, speaking and
music by The Glory Landers,
Wllmington. Pastor, the Rev.
Clyde Henderson invites the
publlc at 7:30 each evening.
EASTER Sunrise O.rvice at
6 a.m. Sunday morning at the
Independent Holiness Church
Fourth and Lincoln, Middleport. O'dell Manley Invites
·
·
the pubUc.
OHlO Valley Conunandry,
Knights Templar, sunrise
· services at the Minerf!Ville
United Methodist Church
with all Sir Knights aiJd their
farnlllea to meet there at 5:45

a.m.

MONDAY
INSPECTION OF Bethel
62, International Order of
Job's Daughters, 7:30p.m. at
the Pomeroy . Masonic
Temple, Monday. All master
masons,
Eastern
Star
members, an~ members of
the .OeMolay are invited.
MEIGS· County Salon 710,
Eight and Forty, will meet at
7:30 p.m. Monday at the
home of Mrs. Julia Hysell.
TIJESDAY
WINDING Trail Garden
Club, home of Mrs. Judy
Bolin, Rt. 4, Pomeroy for a
wildflower tour, early
Tuesday evening. Jackie
Brlckles to have garden
calendar. There will be a
display of wildflower pamphlets and books, and the
arrangement theme wlll be
wildflowers.
BIG BEND Citizens Band
Radio Club, Tuesday night,
7:30p.m. at the Rock Springs
Grange Hall. Anyone interested Invited to attend.

SERVICES SET
Revival services will be
conducted at the First Southern Baptist Church, 282
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy,
April 11 through April· 17 at
7:30p.m. Former pastor, the
Rev. George Bryant of Circleville, will be the speaker.
There wlll be special music
and testimonies during the
services. A nursery wUI be
provided and the public Is
Invited to attend.

Carl King
given party

Easter. It's a time
lo look upon the
world around us with
a renewed sense of
peace and Jove ...
faith a~d hope. ·
A time lo reflect
on the Easter miracle . . . ond all that
its meaning holds
for us. We wish you
on~ your loved ones
oil lhe blessings of
_this Holy ~olic!ay .

'
Mfr/ s sugg .
ret•ll price

Sale! Save '2.31

Save $3.40! Finest Chief

fiNEST CHIEf
GLOSS ENAMEL

I-COAT LATEX SEMI-GLOSS
ENAMEL ,

sou•

$

Durable alkyd gloss enamel fo
&amp;9 wood, metal, plaster; made
Aead-free pigments! Save on
go~qo~· ' colors and White.

11

• • .and Bunny Supplies
• Master Mix Feeds
• Rabbit Pellets
• Pet Dishes
• Litter

• Rabbit Remed les
• Bunnv Salt Soools

WASHABLE!
STAINRESISTANT!
leact.Fre• Plgn.ent1

Prevents Rust!
Chief Metalex~

METAL PAINT
Protects, beautifies Iron, steel, all
metal! For gutters; tools, outdoor
fumiture, etc. Locks out ruatl

ALL COLORS &amp; WHITE
Mfr:s
GUARANTEED .

suggested
retail m .99

l.iVE CHICKS

sg59
{

GALLON
Idea l tor kitchen walls,
woodwork throughout your
home! Water cleans tools.'

EGG HUNT SET
RACINE. - The Racine
Portland ·Branch of the
Reorganized Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter Day Saints
wlll hold an egg hunt for
children at I p.m. saturday at
the church.

Our office will close at 12: 00 noon, Aprlllth .
GOOD FRIDAY

Mon .• Tues .• Wed. If, Sat..- 8:30 til 5:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANcE
C:ROY, 0.

Get the CB Z· Ways
the truckers use.
COBRA29
23-Channel Mobile
Trucke rs c all il l he "Die sel Mobile ."
features exclusive Cobra Dyna ·
mike. RF Gain Conlrol. De lla Tune .

mWESTMAINSTREET m -2164 POMEROY,O.
Th..tarewlth "ALL KINDS OF STUFF"
FOR PETS - STABLES - LARGE AND SMALL
ANIMALS, LAWNS -GARDENS.
tr.

• Maximum
,

Legol Power
• fCC Typeacc ep ted

.

$15995

chase or a T.V. for education
purposes, with the possibility
of adding another one or two,
was voted.
A slate of officers
presented by Mrs. Lue
Shenefield was Mrs. Joan
Councll for president ; Mrs.
Leta Fetty, vice-president;
Mn .
Paula
Haynes ,
secretary, and Mrs. MiMieRiggs, treasurer.
An auditing conlmlttee of
Mrs. Wykle Whitley, Mrs.
Leta Fetty, and Mrs. Barbara
Black was appointed.
The PTA voted to sponsor
the Cub Scouts and a report
was made that $94.64 was
made from the pancake

supper.

presented a choral reading,
and an action song. Pupils
participating were Michelle
Barr, Krist! Haynes, Missy
Rife, Paul Co~il. JennHer
Carter, Barbira Carter,
Cathy Neutzting, Christine
Goble, Sbane Smith sod Joey
Reynolds.
The attendance banner was
won by Mrs. Page's room.

STEVENS POINT, Wis .
Ron Steiner, 311,
former
University
or
Wisconsiin running back, was
elevated Tuesday to head
football coach at University
of Wisconsiin.Stevens Polnt.He has been aulstant
coach since 1969 and .
succeeded Monte Charles,
who resigned last week·
because of leukemia.
(UP!) -

A meetipg of the County
National Grange Chainnan PTA Council was announced
of Women :s Activities, Mrs. for Thursday evening, April 7
George (Jenny ) Grobusky, at 7:30 p.m.
Wahalla, .S. C., along with
Mrs. Page's second grade
Ohio Grange Chairman of
Women's Activities, Mrs.
Campbell (Jeannette ) Lewis,
Lebanon, attended a district
grange meeting hosted by
Mrs. Justice (Ruby) Harden,
McArthur, In the new
Community Building there.
Mrs. Grobusky explained
the contests that are listed by
the National Grange, who
sponsors the cmtests and
revlew'l'l the rules. Many
pointers were given to aid
those who wish to sew.
Meigs County grangers
attending this district session
were Mrs. Dorothy Smith,
Mrs. Gene Yost and Mrs.
June Ashley, Racine Grange;
Mrs. Dorothy Bolen and Anna
Halllday, Star Grange ; Mrs.
Robert Holllday , Laurel
lho• te&gt;n11&gt;~r•· ? I •ond1oi&gt; lffld~rly t.vok11d by
V o~U ··· (o; e a! I &lt;~
"lllo ! Sl,.nder "'"" ' O'l d
Grange, and Mrs. Waller
,,..... t, lo(•• !•:d .... ,, p tur &lt;-d wo•h 9H!O I
Jordan and Mrs. Mendal
Tt&gt; o Al u11
1H• 'l&gt;t!&lt;' gl&lt;&gt;l with
Jordan, Columbia Grange.
8
Mo.,l t n n olon\1 ho.!&lt;lo on lh• l our wo lh
Mrs. Mendal Jordan, Meigs
""!·'"'''""'••&lt;! 1111'' "'opo l ot o &lt;Omp loi "'""'
'" .,;, , "''"d•ob··
County women's activities
chairman, urges everyone,
granger or non-granger, who
would like to participate in a
sewing contest, obtain tbe
BETH' OHLINGER
""
Pom eroy . 0 .
9'n · l U'i'
necessary infocmation from
10'1 E. Main
her or other grangers ..
II

~,

d~llca&lt;y

"'ippo~•g

f,

lh ~

MARGUERITES SHOES

SMART BUNNIES VISIT
FISHERS SHOPPERS MART
•

FOR BASKET NEEDS!
QUALITY - SELECTION ;... VAWE
WE'RE CANDY EXPERTS • • •

15~

WRAPPED'

All Candy
Cello Wrapped

. EASTER

LUDEN'S
EMPTY

GRASS

EASTER
BASKETS

3 COLORS
49tBAG

Many Shapes,
, Sizes, Colors

DUCKY
EGG
BOXED
2 OZ. CHOCOLATE

24~TO$l 89

colcite

STORE HOURS

CUT THROUGH THE SOUND JUNGLE
WITH COBRA

Adjuflt,able Squelch.

Women attend
district meet

352 E. Main, Pomeroy
Your FTD Floris t

MASON FURNITURE

,

MODERN SUPPLY

PH. 992-2644 .

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

Matofltng colora In l1tex nat.

..:
..•·

FLORIST

VISrrENJOY
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich
. and Jayne, High St .•
Pomeroy, visited over the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
~son, W. Va .
Herman Grate
Mike Hammer and family,
773-5592
Columbus.
1,1-&lt;H. . . .H . . . .H . . . .H . . . .H .....H . . . .

·'- '1£:
' ... ~
•

'.

The Middleport United
Pentecostal Church Men's
Fellowship held Its monthly
meeting Monday night.
A devotional per!nd offered
prayer, song service and
special speaking. Speaker for
this meeting was Eugene
Smith, his topic being,
"Growing and Harvesting,"
using an ear of com aS an
lllustration, showing the way
God can multiply from one
grain of corn planted to as
many as 500 grains per ear
harvested. So as with one
word .of God planted . into a
person's heart, from this as
w!th the corn a great harvest
can be reaped.
Following the devotions,
business matters were
discussed, with the greater
emphasis directed toward
outreach and pr.oviding
transportation throughout the
county and surrounding
areas.

SALEM CENTER - The
Salem Center PTA ' meeting
Monday evening, April 2, was
opened with devotions using
the Passover theme by Mrs.
Roberta Wilson.
Mrs. Minnie Riggs opened
the business meeting with the
secretary's report being read
by Mrs. Joan Council in the
absence of Mrs. Barbara
Lester.
The principal thanked the
PTA Tor name plates purchased for the rooms. Pur-

77~

MASON FURNITURE

..

I Sold In Lots of Not Less Then 6)
parakeets
'
GERBILS

Men hold
meeting

r---------.

./·-.

/...- .

services Is preaching, 9: 4S
a.m.; Sunday school 10:30 ·
and Sunday night service at
7:30; Wednesday prayer and ..
Bible study, 7:30 p.m. Ivan ·
Cardwell, The Plains, Is
supply pastor.
Faith Baptist Is presently
meeting in the Steelworkers
. Union Hall on Railroad Street
between Horton apd Pomeroy
Sts. Everyone Is welcome to
an services.

MASON, W. Va . - Carl
Loren King, son or Mr. and
Mrs. Phillip King , Mason,
was recently honored on his
oecond birthday with a party
at his home.
A Winnie the Pooh cake, ice
cream and punch were
served to Mr. and Mrs. Edwin
King, Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Norton, Mr. and Mrs: John
King, Mrs. Stella Morgan,
Mrs. Allan Lee King, Ada and
Allen Lee Jr., Mr. and Mrs.
Lew King, Ramona nd
Nancy, Mr. aq!J Mrs. Keith
Curtis and Gayla, Mr. sod
Mrs. Thomas Edwards, Miss
Chaslty Miller. and Mr. and
Mrs. Phillip King. Carl
received cards and _gifts.
Sending giftS were Mr. and
Mrs . James Norton and
daughters, Christina and
Paulette, Wheeler Ali For~e
"
Base, Ha.wall and Carl's
SERVICES FRIDAY
great-grandparents, Mr. and
The
Temple
United ·
Mrs. Allan Lewis .
Methodist Church will hold
sunrise services at the church
at 6 a.m. with Charles Cadle
as leader. Special songs wU.I
be used for the services and
REVIVAL TO START
also
in regular services on
GUYSVILLE - A revival
will get underway at the &amp;mday. Doughnuts will be
Guysville Community Church served following the Sunrise
services and ·Sunday School
S~nday and will . ~ontinue
through Aprlll6 with the Rev. will be at 9 a.m. An egg hunt
Marvin Markin of McArthur is planned for the children.
as speaker. On Friday ioig~t Rev. Paul Yeun will have
special music will be services at 10:15.
presente.d' by the Sommerville Family of Mineral
Wells, W. Va. and on
Your "Extra Touch"
Saturday night by the Adkins
Florist Since 1957
Faraily of East Logan, W. Va .
Services wm begin at 7:30
each evening and the public is
lr\vited.

WEEK OF APRIL 4TH

Give Thank5
For All Of
Life'5 Joy5

Revelations Is being carried
out at the meetings .
Plans were made for a car
wash durin' the summer and
for a trip to King's island and
dlurch camp.
The fellowship program is
open to those over 13 and
meetings are held each .
Sunday from 5:30 to 6:30p.m.
at the church .

Church skating party
enjoyed on Monday

CHIEF

+++

'

·· ~Eaa:ter . "

Save s2.00

$ 99

Mltehlng colora awallabla Itt sernl-glo ...

and Included songs, scripture
and readings. She was
assisted by Mrs.~se Ann
Jenkins, Mrs. King, Mrs.
, Teaford, Mrs. Aiona Hllldore,
Mrs. Betty Koch, Mrs. Opal
Kloea, Mrs. Christina
Grimm, Mrs. Margaret
Eichinger and Mrs. Bernice
Winebrenner, A review of the
second section of the study ·
book was given by Mrs:
Rllldore, and Mrs. Kloes
closed with a reading entitled

' ENTERTAIN
NORTONS
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Norton,
Pomeroy, entertained with a
dinner Sunday honoring their
brother-in-law, Kenneth
Saunders, Ewington, on hll
retirement from · FrickGallagher Mfg., Wellston.
Saunders had been with the
company II years. Others !'
attending· were Mrs. Saunders and Mr. and Mrs. Phillip
King and son, Carl of Mason,
Va.

"POLY"
FLOOR

to

AssoCiation meeting held at
Racine.
It was aMo~ed that the
Women's Conference will be
held at Denison Unlveroity in
Granville, June 8, 9 and 10,
and members were reminded
or the layette to be taken to
the conference. A letter was
read · from Bacone College
concerning their work there
and thanking the society for a
donation. It was decided that
a donation wlll be sent annually.
It wu noted that the
Association officers will be
installed at WeliBton on April
15. The love gift dedication
waa by Mro. White who used
u her tlleme "The Way of the
Cross Leado Home."
Mrs. Sara Dawn Owen
~ted the program which
~luded the dedication of
white cross material. A
dessert smorgasbord was
i!eMied by the Dorcas Circle
members.

UMW contributes
towards expenses

SUNDAY, THE lOth FROM

Sunrise
serotces
slated

'.
::
:

.

.:::

Careful ironing rids rug of wax

New officers elected

.

Mother-daughter
potluck planned

the u n·ot _:. Meth.odillt Women bridge. Ohio 43149.
Athens District of United . at St . ~Andrew's Unite_d
· Coor dlna,or
• 1or
MissiOn
Methodist Women will hold a
·
1
p
hood
ch. Music woll tJ orlst an erson
, Mrs.
PollyCra~
Spiritual Life Retreat at Methodist Chur
ld J ff of "--ksvlll
. ion of Mrs. Haroed • ers
"'""
Camp Otterbein, near Logan, be under the direct
Chao·rperson
·e.
April 22-2:1.
·
Evelyn Dunkle, chalrper90n serv
as
ln
'~oa
· n Per90nhood for planni ng
and
makin g
Chr
for
District Officers will greet
""
t
f
th '
those who attend the Retreat, Columbus South District.
arrangemen s
or
os
By PoUy Cramer
bottle w1th a ~LTew on top. in the lodge. Registration will · Those who plan to attend Spiritual Life Retreat.
PLANS COMPLETE
DEAR POlLY - How can · Put some ·ammonia in the begin at 5 p.m. in order that the retreat are to bring a
campers
may
be
assigned
·
Bible,
notebook,
bed
.lmens,
•
Carpenter
Baptist Church
I remove wax that ran over bottle, put top back on tightly
lodging
prior
to
the
evening
comfortable
clothes,
and
a
has
completed
plans l or
on to my pale green plush and then sprinkle the rocks.
meal
District
President,
covered-dish
for
the
6
p.m.
Su
nrise
services
at
6 a.m. on
rug' I tried Ice cubes but they Repeat when the .cats start to
Mrs.
Walter
Mathias,
urges
meal
on
Friday.
A
fee
of
$2
th
e
hill
by
the
home
of Mr.
did not ·work. I would ap- come baCk again, as well as
eachUnilofUnltedMethodist
for
registration
and
~.50
for
and
Mrs.
Earl
Starkey.
Rev.
preclate any help. - O.P.
after every rain. It works for
Women
to
be
represented
for
Saturday
meals
and
lodging
Freeland
Norris
will
be
in
DEAR O.P. - Gently dogs, too. -'- MILDRED.
the
tw~ay
Retreat.
is
required.
Reg
istrat
ion
charge.
A
program
will
be
scrape off the excess wax
DEAR POLLY - My
"Whatszit Gonna Take?" is forms have been sent to each held at the church at 6:30,
with a dull knife, then place a Pointer is for those who may
the
theme for this year.. local Unit of United with doughnuts and coffee to
· •clean white blotter over the ~ putting down self-sticking
Leader
will be Mrs. Joe Methodist Women in Athens be served !!Iter the program.
stain and place a hot Iron on floor tiles . We have just put
Freed
of
Findlay. She has District. The forms must be Sunday School will be at the
it. Be careful that the iron them down in our bathroom
served
as
spiritual growth completed and returned by church at 9:30a·.m. An Easter
does not touch the rug. Keep and kitchen and would like to
chairperson
for the Toledo April 15 to Mrs. Everett Egg Huntfor the chlldren will
moving the blotter so there·is pass on some information
always a clean area over the that we learned for ourselves. District , and as president of Mowrey , Route I , Rock- · be after Sunday School.
stain. Fouow with a dry
We had cleaned the noors
cleaning fluid. - POLLY.
and had them ready for
DEAR POLLY - My Pet laying the tiles the next day
Peeve Is with the "check-out but neglected to read over the
aisle in so many super- instructions until the next
markets. I find it . almost morning when we were ready
impossible to get my ca rt to start work. We noted that
through due to the candy, the til~ were to be kept at65
gum and magazines that are degrees for 12 hours previous
placed so close at one side. _ to installation and since our
MRS. N.M.
thermostat Is set at 55
DEAR
POLLY
degrees during the night the
Whenever mending un· tiles were too brittle to "'"'"~---Ito
derwear, socks or whatever without breaking. Instead
cut a piece of gauze bandage wiatlng all day for the tiles to
the necessary size for the spot warm up we took them out of
to be mended, tack it on the box and laid them down,
llghtly with a single thread two at a time, on the sheet on
and have a good base to start our bed. Then we .turned on ·
the mending job. - UNA.
the electric blanket to "High"
DEAR POLLY - This is to and covered the tiles. In a
answer the lady who wants to very short time they were
keep nelghborhood"llats away plable and ready to be laid.
from her yard. Make some Ours were the self-adhesive,
holes In the top of a soda pull·the-back-o!f tiles that
COm&lt; about 45 to the hox. We
thought this a great idea. DIANNE .
Polly will send vou one of
AT
her " pea chy " thank~you
•
cards, ideal for framing or
LOCATED AT
placing in . your family,
scrapbook, if she uses your
698 WEST MAIN STREET
favorite PQlnter, Peeve or
. NEXT TO THE .._
Problem in her column. Write
Polly's Pointers in care of
JONES BOYS IN POMEROY
DEXTER - Easter sunrise this newspaper.
services will be held at the
Church of Christ here
Sunday, -April 10 at 6 a.m.
Breakrast will be served in
the basement. Sunday School
will begin at 9:30a.m. 81ld the
remainder of the servlcO. will
be held. The public is invited.
Candlelight services will be
held at the Columbia Chapel
Church Thursday, .,_prU 8 at
7:30 p.m. Jack Cedrlck will
hold the service, The public is
invited to attend.
Monday , April 18, the
00
Meigs . County
Men's
Fellowship meeting will be
•
held at the Middleport
CHIEF
Church .of Christ at 7:30p.m.

Mrs . Esther Ridenour ,
deputy state councilor. read a
letter from Mrs. Faye
Hoselton ,
state outside
sentinel thanking the council
for a gift presented to her at
the
rally
and
also
congratulating Mrs. Ritchie,
district deputy, for the work
at the rally.
It was reported that Maude
' '
Ross is in Veterans Memorial
))
Hospital for a broken hip,
that Pauline Brewer is home
from the hospital and that
RACHAEL HENSLER
Mrs. Fern Morris has a son.
Also reported were grand90ns to Mrs. Barbara Sargent .
1/
and Mrs. Mary Showalter,
'J
and a gra nddaughter to Mrs.
Eileen Martin.
1
Games were conducted by Ce~te
the home and orphans ·
committee and refreshments
were served to those named
Rachael Renee Hensler
and Mrs. Ada Neutzling, Mrs . . recently celebrated her first
Erma Cleland, Mrs. Letha birthday at the home of her
Wood, Mrs. Ada Morris, Mrs. parents, Mr. and Mrs. David
Goldie Frederick, Mrs. Leona Hensler, Racine.
Hensley,
Mrs. Margaret
A Raggedy Ann cake, lee
Tuttle, Mrs. Ada Bissell, Mrs. cream and punch were
Zelda Weber, Mrs. Ada Van served. Attending the party
Meter, Mrs. Ethel Orr, Mrs. were her grandparents, Mr.
Dorothy Myers, M.iss Julie and .Mrs. Raymond Hensler
Rose; Mrs. Mae Spencer, and Mrs. Betty Sayre, and
Mrs. lnzy Newell, Joe Bissell, Mr. and Mrs. Dale Sayre,
Mrs. Opal Hollon, Mrs. Betty Timothy and Stephanie, Mrs.
Roush and Mrs. Jean Patty Hensler and Kelly, Mr.
Frederick. .
and Mrs. Lynn Mallory and
Brandi. Sending gifts were
her great·grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. William Woods,
Racine, and Mr. and Mrs.
Uoyd
Sayre, Albany.
New officers were elected
Games were played with
' at the recent meeting of the Mrs. Bowers, Mrs . Buchanan
Friendly Nelglibors Club held and Mrs. Elsie Hines winning
at the borne of Mrs. Lucretia prizes. The traveling prize
Smith.
was won by Mrs. Werry. The
Elected were Mrs. Mildred next meeting will be held at
Arnold, president ; Mrs. the home of Mrs. Janet
Eleanor
Werry,
vice Venoy. Mrs. Pat McKnight
Several members of the
president;
Mrs. Vera also attended the meeting.
Pomeroy First $outhern
Buchanan, oecretary; Mrs.
Baptist Church were in
.Eileen Bowers, treasUrer ,
Jackson
Sunday for the Scioto
and Mrs. Elizabeth Well,
RECENT
VISITORS
Valley
Associatlonal
flower fund.
Recent guests of Florence • Vacation Bible
School Clinic.
Preceding .the meeting a Michael of near Chester were
Going from here were the
potluck dinner was held in her cousins, Mr. and Mrs.
o! the 28th an- Cecil Hulme and Mrs. Blanch Rev. and Mrs. Paul White,
•• oblerva!ICl!
nlversary of the club. Plans Hervert, Ravenna, Neb. This Rachael Lefebre, Lena
IJUide to lake 8 fruit was their first visit to Meigs Basham, Cheryl Lefebre,
r..llket to the Meigs County County. They left Tuesday Cindy Patterson, and Rema
Infirmary for Easter.
morning to return to Lefebre.
Bible school wlll be held at
'
Nebraska. '
the church In June for
children, ages four throdgh
VilrrFAMR.Y
the sixth grade. A youth
;,
TAKEN IN
Mr. and Mrs. Chester
retreat will be held for youth
; :' Knlgbt,
Pamela Crooks, daughter In grades seven through 12 in
Pomeroy, spent the
weetend in Bellaire visiting of Mr. and Mrs . Eddie July with exact dates to be
their 1011 and daughter-in- Crooks, . Middleport was announced later.
: I
law, Mr. and Mrs. Dick received Inio the fellowship of
''' Knight. He had just returned the Middleport First United
Church by
from Chicago for a training Presbyterian
in conjunction with affirmation of faith during
,,• hll employment at American the Sunday service. The Rev.
SCHOOL STARTING
Dwight Zavltz Is pastor.
• Electric Power.
The
Providence Area
'
School of Religion will begin
Sunday at the Naomi BapUst
•'
Church In Pomeroy and
A thought for the aay :
continue for six consecutive British
poet
William
Sundays at ·2:30 p.m. The Wordsworth said, "Minds
'
Rev. Samuel Jackson wiU that have nothing to confer
,I'
have charge of the school.
find Uttle !n perceive."
·
,•
Sbe Wallla lD Friend's Sbadow
•••
Rap:
•.
.
.
'•
My belt girl friend Ia prettier than I am, and a flirt. Sbe
I'
Clll't help It, but when we're together, the guys only look at
her .If l happen to get one Interested, I know he'll only last until
'•
'
he meets Margie, which Is almost right away as we hang
around all the Ume.
'
••
9le
feell
awful
about
this.
She's
jUBt
started
going with
'
'
another
bo)'
I
found
first
and
really
like.
(But
not
for
long, she
••• doest't lllJnlt much of him.)
'
Don't say "Learn from her." ltlan't me. She's the star and
I'mTHE SHADOW (WHO WANTS TO DO BETTER)
'
'
Shadow:
You'll never do better as long as you see yoursell as the
lllar'uhadow. That label makes you a loser : each time a new
••
IUYcoines along, you mentally hand him over to Margie, even
,f
before they've met, right?
•'
Get of! thla negative kick and think proud! Count your
i'
,.'
IOOd polnta; make them better. Don't dissolve into the
,
hecqround : work at keeping the guys you like.
•
ADd remember, not all fellows fall for insincere Hlrtlng ...
•
•
or at lea811hey recover aoon . Be there when the latest wises
••
"'' oby?- SUE
•

.:
..:

7- 'The Daily Sentinel, Middlepurt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday,April7, 19'17

UP
TO
1,1"

EASTER TALL
BUNNIES
A LARGE VARinY OF
SHAPES AND ANIMALSI
Lucien's Hollow Molds in milk chocolate or white.
Many have cut out toys on back of box. Hurry on in, for
they ar.e selling fast. We're open tonight.

t~~Es59~

10

$1 79I

I IN CRATES .---M-AL_TE_D.....,
CHOCOlATE MARSHMAU.OW
MILK
EGGS
'I EGGS
EGGS
IN FOIL

1~

.L-...:.;

12FoR56~

66~PKG.

RHONDA

YEllOW
PEEPS

10g46

Whether you want a Citizen's
Band Radio for safety, business,
convenience or jusl plain fun,

yo\j'lllike the Cobras. Dependi!ble. Fully-warrantep.
They're the pioneer name in
CB radio
SPICED OR I!LACK

Punches through lOud ilfld dear.

JELLY 56~
BEANS
PKG .

THERE IS ONE NEAR YOUI

•

�. '

,
8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, April ?, 1977

Kingsbury
News Not.ea
Mr. and Mrs . Wayne Beal
has as recent visitors Mr. a nd
Mrs . Kirk Chevalier of
Chester, Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Young, Wesley and Yvet e.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. John Walter Dean and
Jeremy were Mr. and Mrs.
John Dean, Mr. and Mrs.
Gerold Gilkey, Rick, Tammy, Cindy, Jason, Scott, and
Melodi of Athens, Mr. and
Mrs. Clair Wa ggoner of
HorrisonvlUe, Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Paynter of Carpenter.
Recent visit ors of Mrs.
H'azel Arnold were Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald McNally and
dauglltersof Athens, Mr. and
Mrs. Patrick Williams and
family of McArthur. Mr. and
Mr~. Natllan Arnold and sons
of Chester.
Mr , and Mrs. Roger You_ng,
Wesley and Yvette visited
Sunday in Columbus with Mr.
and Mrs. Maartin Smart and
Roma Sue and Mr. and. Mrs.
William Murray and son.
Mr . and Mrs. John Dean
and Mr. and Mrs. John
Walter Dean and Jeremy
accompanied Mr. and .Mrs.
Ga rold Gilkey to Columbus,
Sunday, where they were
.. dinne r guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Ried , Rodney and
David. Other guests were Mr.
and Mrs. Walter Terrell and
Billy, Mrs. ·E ddie Weekly,
Missy and Sharon, and Mrs.
Anna Mae Terrell. Later
Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Garold
Gilkey left Columbus Airport
for Pheniox, Arizona where
they will visit Sgt. and Mrs.
Richard Dean and · son
Kenneth and Mr. Gilkey's
aunt wHo also lives in
Arizona.
~
_
Recent visitors of Mr. and
IMrs. Nev White and Mrs.
·Jennie Holly were Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Swearington and
i""n Bobby of West Milton,
Ohio.
The prayer group of the
·Carleton Church met at the
. home of Mrs. Anita Deari.
Guests in the morning were
;Mrs . Charles Hysell and
,'friend who gave a talk on
.cancer to these who were
' present, Mrs. Janeth Beal,
' Mrs. Yovonne Young, Mrs.
,Karen Murray, Mrs. Mary
'Lou
Houdashelt, Mrs.
'Virginia Dean, Mrs. Paulette
:Harrison, Mr~. Eli~ab~th
' Murray, Mrs. Anita Dean,
:Trevor Harrison, Jeremy
1
,;Dean and Yvette Young.
'Potluck iunch was served at ·
." noon witll a Bible study In the
1 aft ernoon. ·
, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Carl
, visited with her fa tiler Mr.
· Clyde Harrison, Middleport,
· receri:tlY ablo Mr, Richard
~ HiellDan who is a patient at
Veter'ani Memorial H~spital.

j

Laurel Cliff

'.

.: News Notes

I

Attendance at the Free
was
: 92.
~-~r(J' Easter sunrise sei'vice will
Jbe held at the roadside park
1left side on route 33 public is
! invited, meet at the church at
,t 6:30a.m.
·
~
Mrs. Betty Ann Jacobs,
, Columbus, spent the weekend
t with her mother, Mrs. Pearl
Jacobs and attended S1111day
. services at the local church.
Mrs. Bertha Parker, spent
last week with her daughter;
Mrs. Geraldine Ferguson and
1
son James. Miss Cleo Parker,
! Mrs: Cheryl Alkire,
: Columbus.
I Mr. and Mrs. PhiU Wise,
Beverly attended services at
tlle local church and visited
Mr. Wise's parents Rev. and
Mrs. Cecil Wise.
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Karr
1 and Bertha Parker attended
the Senlor ' Citizens Easter
program held at the Trinity
Church, Ponteroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Wright
have returned borne from a
visit with relatives in Florida.

~i,

I

·! Metho&lt;)iSt Chprch April

I

Democrats' voter liberalizing
hill
.
clears Senate with GOP opposition
'

By LEF. ' J:;'fl:\l u .t.U

.,
·';..,_

'·'
REV. SCO'ITY TEETS
Tbe Middleport United
Pente&lt;!oslal Church was
honored Sunday evening to
have the Rev. Scotty Teets,
outgoing m lsslonary, as
guest speaker for Its
evangelisllc service. His
message was entitled,
" You have your Soul In
your Hands. " Rev. Teets,
\be former paslor of the
AP,Ostolic Christian ChurchIn MI. Vernon, Ohio bas
been doing bls deputation
work since January In
pr-•paration for departnre
lo Uruguay, the smallest
republic of South America.
Uruguay has a population
of approximately three
million people of which
Spanish Is tbe universal
language.

Carpenter
Personals
Mr. and Mrs . Roy
Wiseman, Harrisonville,
were recent guests of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Starkey.
Murl Galaway was a guest
at the home of her son-in~aw
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Leon Woodrum in McArthur.
Mrs . Herman Cordray,
Athens, Route, spent an
afternoon with Mrs. Beulah
Cordray at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Reed Jeffers. Other
guests in the evening of Mrs.
Cordray and tbe Jeffers were
Mr. and .Mrs. Guy Beatty,
Bremen, and Mr. and Mrs.
Lavern Jeffers.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Stansbury and Wanda Turner
visited in Reynoldsburg with
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Stansbury and sons. Clair Stansbury and daughter jOined
them for dinner there.
Mr. and Mrs. Reed Jeffers
called on Mr . and Mrs.
Woodrow Wilson and Mr. and
Mrs. Warren Reeves on a
Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Crabtree spent Saturday
night in Columbus and visited
with Bernice McKnight, Mr.
and Mrs. Ed Seaser and ·
daughter, and Mr. and Mrs.
George McKnight, while they
were there.
Mrs. David Woodrwn and
children, Canal Winchester,
call!!&lt;! on Mrs. Murl Galaway.
Mr. and Mrs. Granville
Lyons called to see his sister,
Mrs. Minnie Tedrow at
Jenkins Memorial Health
Center in Wellston and
stopped enroute home In
McArtllur to visit his brother
and slster-in~aw, Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Lyons.
Mrs . Rolland Crabtree
entertained with a pro-Easter
dinner on Sunday. Those
present were Murl Galaway,
Dale Dye, Mr. and Mr~.
Kenneth Crab~e 8!ld •Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Crabtree
and Cindy.
Mrs. Noble Hamon has
been confined to O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital in Athens
lor treatment. She is
improving at this time.
Several of tbe women frorll
Temple Church met at the
church on Wednesday for a
fellowship hour. Plans are
made. for the group to
complete a quilt top. They
will meet on · Good Friday
with the children and youth to
color eggs for an egg hunt and
Mrs. Paul Yeun will explain
the meaning oi the colors in
the Bible.

registration .

0

register by mail, at alternate
county sites and at deputy
motor vehicle registrars' offices. It also would permit
house-to-house registration
drives by political organizations.

He said any election day
·be
registran t
could
challenged at the polls.
"There is considera bly less
fr aud on election day than
there is after swearing-in
day ," Sen. Harr,y Meshel, D" I think it's time we Youngstown, said laughingly ,
abandon the idea thai the , Al so
defeated
were
governme nt should sit back Republican amendments to:
and register voters only at
- Eliminate pe rmanent
t h e b u rea u c r ats' registration and purge the
convenience," sa id Ha ll . names of voter s who did not
noting that the bill also vote in four years.
expands the hours boards of
- Require th e state to
election must be open at the rei.n)burse county boards of
close of the reg istration election for the estimated $1.8
period.
million cost of administering
"The government should the new procedures.
make an attempt to register
Prior to passage , the
as many people as possible," Democrats added a pair of
said Hall.
amendments of their own.
''There are some features
One would ens ure that
in tllis bill we think are polling places be located in
good," said Sen. Thomas A. barrier-free places by Nov . I,
Va n Meter, R-Ashland, who 1960.
led ' the
Republican
The other would allow
opposition . " But there are county boards to charge a
also some problems."
Chief problem for the
Republicans , who had
already resigned themselves
to incre'a s ed registration
opportunities, wa s the
elec tion day registration,
which Van Meter said, would
open the door to potential
fraud and create long lines at
the polls.
"This isn 't going to encour~
age voters," said Van Meter.
"They may go and vote once,
but it will be a cold day in hell
be lore they do it again."
Van Meter urged removal
of election day registration to
"preserve the sanctity of the
ballot box and maintain order
at the polling place."
"Once that ballot is in the

SAFT·BILT

..

FAMILY

'

'

OPEN FRIDAY &amp;

'

ORDINANC. 41t

follows by the Council of the
Village of Pomeroy , Ohio, all
members elected thereto
concurring .
An Ordinance to regulate
the use of Amusement
Devices and Providing tor a

99~.?

15995

Reailst 1c ® p roves h1-ft doesn't have to
be h1gh l List en to rad1o. pia y Japes and
ma ke yo ur own. Phono tn put .
headph one jack. au to-st op. "At 3 7 % otf
it's well w orth a test-liSten at The Shack®.

---~-------,
, RADIO SHACK 1
.CB SLANG AND 1
10 CODE CHART 1

Save

CAR CASSETIE/FM STEREO

Reg.79¢ : $3Q

10 ~_68_ 1 032

I
I

.I
I
I

k5~s:S Off er

I

NAME -

I

ADDRESS . '

exp tr es 4

I
1

Reg .

9995

·-----------.

69~§

Save
42%

30 77:

I

.

I

COMPACT
CASStTIE
RECORDER

-· ...

$4995

Save 41%

Reg.

6995

- Polyester Cord
with Fiberglass
Belts

- Silky
Ride

The

Smooth

_..,

- Available

\Mllte

-~9egg5

in

Sidewall

Design

Ea.

3 A 95
~

10 51

39~

·- ·-:·:""-~o:,ti~·..,...F,-',t.:...;:·:.. .

.......

C h ro n omat 1c~I04 gently wak es
you to mus1c or 24 hour alar m.
Snooze Bar . Sleep Sw1t ch. B1g
d1g 1t s1 Wood gram sl y ltngl A
Real1stic barga1n!

AM-FM DIGITAl
-CLOCK RADIO
Reg .

4995

2-STATION
INTERCOM

Middleport, 0.

'1

Bernice Bede Osol
ARIES (Morch 21 -Ap;U18)

'•~

~

~ - ~-77

Approved:
Clarence Andrews
Mayor
(A) 7, lA, 2tC

members of the council of the
Village of Pomeroy, Ohio, ail
members
thereto
con ·
currtng:
·
.
Sec . 1: That the N1gt'tt
Watchman, who Is personallY
employed by the merchants
of the VIllage of Pomeroy, Is
hereby declared to be a
member of the
Pollee
Department of the Village of
Pomeroy, Ohio, powers and
dUties
of
a
Village
Pollce'm an;
,
Thattne s.alary of the Night
watchman. presently held by
Russ Eschelman , and his
successor.s In office, shall be
ttxed at sso .oo tor each
quarter of _a year, making a
total of $200.00 per veer that
the Village of Pomeroy pays
for the selary of the said
Night Watchman as a VIllage
Policeman .
That this Ordinance shall
be in force and effect from
and after the eearllest per!od
allowed by law .
Clarence Andrews
,,,. J \
MBvor
, , Pass~d : Apr II 4, 1977

handled in the pAst. The sarr.e
solution Is applicable,

TAURUS (April 20-Moy

20)
There's a condition you've been
wanting to change. You can now
bring about desired alterations if
you don 't move too abruptly.

GEMINI (Moy 21 -June 20)
Things th at re quire team play
have favorab le aspects for you
today . provided you assume the
more assertive, or leadership,
rO le,
22)
Worthy serv ices you perform today w ill noi"'QO unnoticed . Those
in htgh places will m ake sure
you're reward ed.

LEO

In in-

assert auth.orlty . you 'll know
when and t1 ow to act so that
other s will nOt take offence.

·. ,

22)
You're prolit-co nscious today.
You kn ow how to took out tor the
interes ts of those in your charge
muc h be tt er tha n they c an
them selves.

'

The State of Ohio, Meigs
county, Court of Common
Plees, Probate Division.
To the .A.dm inlst.-ator of the
estate , · to such of the
following as are residents of
the State of Ohio,. viz- the
$Urtt1vtng spouse, the next of
kin , the. beneficiaries under
the' will: and to the attorney
representing any Of the
aforementioned persons :
Bertha . Neimeyer,
Deceased , Pomeroy, Ohio,
Salisbury Township , No ~

21994.

You are hereby notified
that the Inventory .and AP ·
praiSement of the estate of
the afo-re mentIoned ,
deceased, late of said County,
was filed in thiS Court ~ Said
~n' Ventory and Appraisement
will be tor ·hearing before this
CotJ.-t on the 19th day of April,
1977, at 10 :00 o'clock A .M .
Any person desiring to file
exceptions .thereto must file
them at least five days prior
to the date set for · h'eerlnu. ·~
g Jven under my h end and
seal of said Court , this 4th day
Of April 1977.
Manning 0 . Webster
Judge

Ann

BY

DICK TENNANT

Spom operator
Tennant honored

NEW HAVEN, W. Va. ·Dick Tennant, Assistant
Chief Operator at the Sporn
Substation,
has
been
presented the "People are
Great Award'' by WOWK-TV
in
Huntington,
~~ tn
recognition
of
the
praiseworthy, kind and
of
charitable
acts
humanita-rian goodwill
unselfishly performed, thus
proving that people truly are
CAPRICORN (Doc, 22-Jon. 19) great."
Don't wo rr y about your lig ht beWOWK-TV
airs
an
ing hidden under a bushel today.
of
the
award
announcement
. Your good deeds will be noticed
. several times each day, with
and duly applauded :
a new award recipient each
AQUARIUS (Joft. 2D•Fob. 19) week. During the week of
You can be a super salesperson
today , part ic ularly with March 21 , Tennant was
so mething you 're enthusias tic shown with the. Area YoU:th
about. Believe in your cause. Choir and Bible Study Group,
The world will also .
which be leads, in one of their
meetings .
PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20) weekly
He
There's opportunity around you explained the group's activity
today. but you must move qu ick- with obvious pride, "The
ly. Be aggressive in matters that
youth group is a nonpro mise .material gains .
denominational . organization
in the Waharna High School
area (ol Mason County, W.
Va.):'rhey have already tried
and rejected the many
artificial mndes of 'finding'
themselves, and are looking
April B, 1177
Fresh hor izon s a:nd broader to the Bible for answers to
vistas will .be open to you th is life's basic questions."
The youths, numbering
year 1hrougl1 new knowl edge
you can gain . Eagerly pursue op- about 30, have been singing in
portunities to learn .
ar·ea churches and plan to

B.
watson
, Deputy Clerk

and Distributive Account of
· Lawrence Boyd, John P .
Boyd and Char les L. Boyd,
.AdministratorS of the Estateof Elsie B . Bryant, Deceased .

First

and Final Account of Joseph
E . Beckwith, Executor of the
Estate of Isabel Simpson ,
Deceased .

CASE NO . 21772 -

Flrsl ,

CASE NO . 219SO -

First

Final and Distributive Ac .'
count of William Darst,
Executor of the Estate o.f
Bernice Darst, Deceased ,
and
Final . Account
of
· Elizabeth
B.
Hibbs,
Executrix of the Estate o.f
El i zabeth
8.
Leifheit.
Deceased .
CASE No'. 22002 - First
and Final Account of Fred

Wakl/v Aaiiilnlstrator of the .

Wake_Y~,

r1uya U . Wakely,
Deceased .
Unless exceptions are filed
thereto. s&amp;ld accounts will be
for hearlno before said Court
on the 4th dey of Mav, 1977, at
whi ch time said acCounts will
be consi dered and continued
from diY to day until f inally
disposed of.
Any person Interested may .
file writte-n exceptions to said
accounts or to m etten
pert11n1no to the execution of
the trust, not tess than five
days prtor to the date set for
hear~ng .
'

' MliNNING D. WEBSTER
JUDGE
COMMON PLEAS COURT ,
PROBATE DIVISION,
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
(~ )

7, ltc

'"

NOTICE OF SAL-E ·
acre ot real estale bn R1 , 1,
Reedsville, Ohio, which Is
localod on State Route 611
about~ m 1111 east of Tuppers
Plains
and on whiCh Is
locoled the residence of the

tatt Ruth E. Barton , Said real
estate was appraised at $5,000

and cannol be sold . lor less

.

an

• •

1 ~e office oflhe crow. crow a.

Porler. Pomeroy. Ohio onl
Wednesday, April 13. 1977, a
10:00 A.M. Sole subltct lo the

The inspections would be
etwork oI
a n
private and public inspection
staUons approved by the
DeplrtJllent of Highway

approval of Probate Court of

Safety

tho arprolsed value. - • ted t
slhan
ld sate wll be coOducttd at ~~,;uuuUC
a

..

Molgl County.
Gladys
•- '
cl
.lned ......
Borton . Rt. 2, Coolville, Ohio,
.,.,y
vllbi e ju..,. ..,_.e
Admlnll!ralrlx .
'I&gt;'OU!d have to be repaired
GLADYS
BARTON, within a certain length of
E)(ecutriK of · Estate ot Ruth time. Vehicle registration
~ - ~arion. Docease~ .
would be 11111pended . until
rep8irs were completed.
W 1, 1. tO. 11. "c

~

-

\

.

feel
like
. ~ro'?- you're
living in
a -shoe?
.
-

,,

.

lt'Jtime to turn to the

SPECIAL
,.

SLIDING REAR WINDOWS
FOR PICK-UP TRUCKS

•
VALUE

•
\

VEJliCLE INSPECrlON
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Several Democratic ·state
I t d
d
senators
n ro uce.
legislation Wednesday
requiring BJUiual Inspection
•
· ·c1
af
Ohio motor vehl es
after neJI Jan, 1 at a cost of

.

\

~\'\~\
'

real. estate section
of our 'classifleds. You'll find a
neVI;' house that can make
cramped living seem like something
out of a fairy tale.

(4, 7, 1A, 2tc

'' '

perform in other areas soon.
Tennant's other activities
include lay leader and
Sunday
School
superintendent at Bachtel
United Methodist Church,
and Play-By-Play announcer
for Wahama High School
football games. The Tennants
and their two daughters
reside here.

" S·il~nt Screamer," the
controversial turbocar
Parnell! Jones raced in the
1967 Indy 500, .is also on
display.
Fitted with a light turbine
engine which ran on
kerosene, the car led every
lap until the !97th when it
failed with a broken gearbox
bearing and finished sixth.
Th~ gift of the STP Corp. ,
they will remain on view until
Labor Day .

WASHINGTON (UP! )
The backup racing car which
was taken out of storage and
IN THE COMMON
to victory by Mario
drivel\
PLEAS COURT,
· Andre!ti when his own car
PROBAtE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY, OH 10
failed in the 1969 Indianapolis
IN THE MATTER OF 500 is on display at the
SETTLEMENT OF ACCOUNTS, PROBATE Smithsonian Institution's
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY. Museum of History and
OHIO
Accounts and vouchers of
Technology.
the
following
named
The three-year-old H2c
fiduciaries have been flied in
powered
by a turb&lt;&gt;&lt;!harged
the F»robate Court, Meigs
County, Ohio, for aporovat
Ford engine, was nicknamed
and settlement.
the "Cinderella Car."
CASE NO . 21244 F inal

(41 1. 14, 21c

AtteSt :
Jane Wal·ton
Clerk

." .

PM:II MAY\'Mfr AT ..DIVIOUAl STORES

22)

stances whe r e you need to

NOTICE ON FILING
of inventory
AND APPRAISEMENT

•

_,

'

(July 23-Aug.

frost. " I have buildings, benefits.
By CAROL COOK
"The money you earn illl't
MEXICO CITY (UP!) - · borne, land, an apartment in
Rising coffee prices are Sao Conrado (an exclusive enough for anythlns," lbt
prov ing to be a mixed neighborhood in Rio), cars said.
Inflation spurred by on
blessing for Latin America 's and comfort. All this at the
Inflow of new money hu been
coffeei!rowing countries.
cost of coffee ."
The doubling ol prices in
By contrast, h1111dreds of a troubling side effect of the
the past year has brought thousands of migrant coffee boom in many
infl at io n , sm ugg lin g, workers--had nothing to pick countries.
In Colombia, 300,000 caftee
speculation and shortages in and thus no income last
growers
are mailing more
some producing nations.
harvest .
than
double
what they 1!lld
On the positive side, big
Mexico, Latin Amerlca ~s
grower s are making big third largest coffee producer to. But farmers were 111 poor
(after Brazil and Colombia) before that U)e in~ do
will earn $600 million f1'om not allow them any luauriea.
Tiny El Salvador Gpedlllll
money, small farmers are co ff~e exports this year .
getting more for their crops, About !05,000 producers are earn $1 billion from coffee
and the dollar income is a getting aboUt $130 a sack for exports this year to help pay
welcome boon to the balance their coffee now, in contrast its foreign deb\ and invllt In
of payments picture. But the to about $20 three years ago. public works. But coff•
"They are living better, money has not helped
benefit s are not filte ri ng
eating
better, investing more improve living stmlu'dtl for
down to the poor.
in Brazil, where last year's money in their farms," said the peasants.
" I . rather think (the
frost was a major cause of the Fausto Cantu Pena, director
stai1dard
of living) hu 110M
of
Mexican
Coffee
Institute.
worldwide coffee shortage
down,"
said
Dr, Ricardo
Coffee
taxes
have
led
to
that led to the price boom,
Jimenez
Castillo,
.. an
irilprovements
in
municipal
coffee income of $4 billion will
economist
who
workJ
wltb
town
of
services,
helping
the
pay for oil imports Ibis year.
World market prices of Atoyac de Alvarez in the Companla SalvadGnna
coffee have about doubled in Guerrero state, for eumple, de Cafe.
"The high price of coftee
the past year , and u-.s. pave its streets.
c
onstitutes
another
But
life
hasn't
changed
consumers were paying $2.96
inflationary
presaure.
Tile
much
for
the
pickers
who
·
for a one pound can of roasted
peasant's
salaries
have
IOIIfl
bring
in
the
crop.
Julia
coffee in F~bruary , in
contrast to $1.61 in February Campos, an Illiterate mother up , but only · nominallJ,
a year ago, according to the of five who picks coffee at an because In real term11 incc1me
latest statistics &amp;:om the U.S. experimental plantation near has declined due to tllt
Bureau of Labor. Prices ha~e Jalapa, Veracruz, earns increases in the price ol
about 9 cents for every 2.2 sugar, beans, cereals, IIIII 10
gone up since .
1
' We are swimming
in pounds of coffee beans she on. A piece of bread thlttl!lld
gold," said Francisco Dos picks. Last year she made to cost 5 centavos now _ .
Santos Ries, owner of 200,000 only about 5 cents, but 1.5 and salaries have not 1PJDe
coffee trees in Minas Gerais, Inflation has eaten away the up in proportion," he llllid.
an area not affected by the

commentary

CANCER (June 21-July

NOTICE OF .
DRAWINGJURORS

,

40-1980

SILVER ·BRIDGE PLAZA

You

may race a s ituation today
similar to one you successfully

Office of commissioners of
Jurors, Meigs County, Ohio LIBRA (Sopl. 23-0cl. 23) Diners ·
.
~1rch 31,1977 will
be p l e a~e d wlt.h
To Atl Whom It May Con - arrangements you make II you'r e
cern :
putt ing a deal together today.
On Saturday , the 16th day
and balance guide your
rFairness
of April 1977, at 10 : 00 o'clock.
A.M ., at the olflce of the actions.
Commissioners of Jurors of
Meigs County, Ohio, Jurors SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) ·
will be publicly drawn to.- the You're a sharp trader tod ay, You
May Term of the Common can get thtt best (leal in eith er
Pleas Court M said County . buying or selling , so long as you
stand by your terms.
Free land S. Norris
L:auren E . Hoffman SAGITTARIUS (Nav. 23-Doc.
Commiss i oners 21) Tllere may be something you
of Jvrors want to accomplish tod ay but
(.U 7, ltc
you'll need some help, You'll find
social con tacts the most willing
to assist.

ORDINANCE 411
AN ORDINANCE AMEN DING ORDINANCE NO . 31'
PERTAINING TO SALARY
OF NIGHT WATCHMAN
BE IT ORDAINED by the

'-

Realisti c's M C 1-000 d ei1ver s
dyn ~Hnt t o soun d m ;1 tj(:nuine

21

'

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl.

CASE NO . 2175' -

EA.

RADIO SHACK'S 1977 PRICES ARE ON AVERAGE WITHIN I'll, OF OUR LOW 1975 PRICES

N. 2nd. Ave.

7

I am offering tor sate one

wDI11ut vnn r: f:r' f:nrJu•, u re l

GENERAL TIRE SALES

•

34~§

Save 23%

HI-FI BOOKSHELF ·
SPEAKER SYSTEM

'

Attest :
Jane Walton
Clerk

I

I
I
I
I

Sec 1: That no person , firm
organ"tzetlon or corporation
shall have In the Village of
Pomeroy, Ohio, in his or her
possession In a place of
business, rent, offer for rent
or allow to be operate&lt;! in a
place of business, any pinball machine or other similar
skill or amusement machine
without first having obtained
from the Village an annual
~ license. The license fee for
• each such device shall be
•· $50.00 e.a ch for the first three
machines or devices and
$25 .00 for each additional
machine or device .
All . machines for
the
dlspenslnu of food, son drinks
or other retail merchandise
are specifically excluded
from the application of this
. Ordinance .
Sec . · 2: No person. firm,
organization or corporation
shall operate In any public
place, eny juke box or other
musical
device
wh i ch
requires the ·deposit of coins
for its operation without first
obtaining a license from the
VIllage . The license for 1 luke
box shall be 150.00 per year .
Sec . 3: No person, firm,
organlratlon or corporation
shall operate In any public
place, any, r,ool table without
first obta n ng a license from
the Village . The license tor a
pool table &amp;hall be .SSO.OO per
year .
Sec . A: No coin operated
gambling
machines
or
devices are to be operated In
a:ny public establlhment
within
the
V i llage
of
Pomeroy, OhiO.
Sec. 5: Whoever violates
any provision ·ot this Or dlnanceshall be fi!'led not less
than $100.00 and not more
than 1'200.00 for each offense .'
Each day that a personoflrm
or corporation violates this
Ordinance shall be deemed to
· be a separate offense .
Sec . 6: All_ fines Imposed
and license fees collected
under thiS Ord inance from
this date May 1, 1977 shall be
credited to the General· Fund . ·
Sec . 7: That'thls Ordinance
shalt take effect and be In
force from and after the
earliest perlocfallowed by lw .
Passed:

: Ad d "no l ade"
casse tl e ta pe
WITH COUPON play and FM stereo 10 your
I car or boa1. Sl ereo/ m ono
Sj1 de Chart t r anslates sw 1tc h Rea iiSitc makes 11
10 co des and CB
I easy to 1nstall . ch eap to own I
1arg o n. Per sons
under 16 must be
accoinpanted by ad uit I

I
I

•

AMUSEMENt DEVICESAND PROVIDING FOR A
TAX ON SUCH DEVICES .
BE IT ORDAINED as

STEREO STRACK
RECORD/PLAY SYSTEM

ASTRO·GRAPH

By Ann B . Watson
Deputy Cter k

-~~GUL0A~~~~~Ccrs E' b~..,, ~• '/!-

AM~FM

HR78-15

992-7161

'

FOR THE
WHOLE

Save$6Q

ALPHA II RI\DIAL

Commission is aoliclting trom tho public
propoHCI ru ..s ,.. gukleHnu. Subjocts·
wtlldl lilt rulft ,.. guldtllinu or• to covtr
moy bt obtolned from lht Dockllfng
Division, PvbHc Utlllllos Commission of
Ohio, 110 East B,...d Strftl, Columbus,
Ohio, 43215, or by calling, toll free, lho
Comitllsslon'l Public lnlertsl Center: 1-100282-0198. Proposed guidelines are to be filed

Secre ary

r

maS tft, charge
'"' ···-•• &lt;• ••

Premium Glass Belfed 78 ~eries

utility sponsortd . home Insulation
installAtion and finoncing and olh•r similAr

Randall G. Appler.le

OUTfiTS

TaJC on such devices:

built with a dependable difference

rules or guidelints lor the development of

1977.

SUITS

fill£$

Balanced

with the Cammission's Docketing Division
on or before the clos&amp; of· business, April 22,·

DRESSES
FOR

OFFI·

No. 77·515-AU-ORD, Is developing
r,rolects.

BOYS

Collect f amliy event s.
favorite vo1ces w1lh
Aeal1stic's CTR -39 portable ·
sound collector. Now $30

The Public Utiliti.s Commission of Ohio. In

conservation

SHORT

Reg.

and Mrs. Jerry Saunders.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Hayman, son Keith, spent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Ted Hayman and family at
WeSterville. Mrs. Lillie Hart
·and Brice of Racine were also
visitors of the Haymans at
Westerville.
Mr. and Mrs. Jess Anderson spent Monday and
Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs.
Jess Anderson spent Monday
and Tuesday with Mr. and
Mis. Leo Wiggington at St .
Albans, W. Va . They
celebrated the 82ne birthday
of Mr. Anderson during their
visit.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Jackson
and son, Leetonia, spent the
weekend with their grand·
mother
Mrs.
Mildred
Spencer.
Raymond Bell, father of
'non Bell is still a medical
patient at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs, Dorsa Parsons have purchased a mobile
home and moved it to the
former Charles Sayre !ann
and have moved frqm the Ott
Boston residence at Racine to
their mobile home.

LEGAL NOTICE
energy

"r easonable fee "
for
registration appllq tions if
more than 15 are tali'en out at
a time.
Hall said the bill contains
ple nty of safeg uards for
screening voters rolls for
persons who died , moved,
committed felonies or are
mentally Incompetent.
"This bill is more fraud·
proof than the old law," be
said, noting identification will
be required to register on
ele&lt;!tion day. "By passing this
bill , we will effectively
eliminate all obstacles to
registration and increase the
participation of voters."
" We (Republicans ) hope
more people will be
encouraged to vote In 1978,"
said Van Meter, "because
with the type o( legislation
we're passing, we 'll win.''
The Senate was to
reconvene at 10 a.m. today
and the House at I p.m.

Apple Grove News Notes

Mounted&amp;

·case

AND APPRAISEMENT
IF YOU ho..,e o a..-... ice to oUer, Tht Slatt of Ol'llo, Me i11
want to buy or .sell somethi ng, County , Court of Common
ae looking lor work . . . or Pltlt, Probate Oi vl1-ion .
The the Adm in istratrix of
whatever ... you'll get resu lfs
estJfe, to su ch of th e
foster w ith o S..,tine l Want Ad. the
follow ing as are residents of
Call 99'2·2151&gt;.
t ile St•te of Oh io , vi z: - the
·--~
i v ing spouse, the nex t of
PORCH SALE , Apr il 8, 9:00 a t the surv
k in , the benefic iari es \JI"t der
John Teaford home in Chester . · the w i ll ; and t o tt1e attorney
Ctothirrg, jewelry, many misC . or attorneys repre sent ing ahv
items. Sponsored bv t he of the arorem en tl oned per ·
Chester Grode School Safet y sons :
Hayman ,
G l adys
Patrol. Watch for si g_~ ·
Deceased , Syracuse , Oh io,
THREE FAMILY Garage Sole, Sutton Townsh ip ,' No . 22021 .
Thursdoy and Fr idoy. Lots of · You are hereby noti fi ed
children and adult summe r that the tnYentory· and Ap ra isement of th e estate of
clothing , excellent condition.
he
aforementioned ;
Misc. items . ' First street pa st
decea$ed, late. of said County .
Pomeroy Elementary. Wotch was flied In th is Court . Sa id
lo r signs.
Inventory and Appra isement
wil l be for hear ing before th i5
LARGE BASEMENT Sale. Weds ., 9 Court
on the 19th day of API" II,
a .m. Saturday , 4 p ,m. All site 1977, al 10 :00 o'c loctcA .M .
clothing, furniture , appliances .
Any person dllldng to f ilemiscellaneous . Eagle Ridge , S ex ceptions thereto must f ile
mila• off Rt . 7 (Co . Rd. 32} 8•1 · them at least f ive days pr ior
ween Meigs Memory Gardens to the date set tor hearing .
Given under mv hand and
and Bashan , Phone ?-4'i'-2358 .
seal of sa id Court , this 5th day
YAJm SALE . First Sat. otHorrison· Of AprH 1977 .
ville. Phone 7_.2'-2.t07 .
~
Manning 0 . Webste.Judge

LONG &amp;

umE

Democrats claim ed it
would produce more voters at
the polls, and thus· a more
representative democracy.
Republicans said similar pro·
grams in Texas and
Minnesota have resulted in
thinner turnouts and long
lines on voting day.
The bill, sponsored by Sen.
Tony P. Hall, D·Dayton , calls
for
mandatory
voter
registration in all 88 counties
and eliminates the current
requirement that an elector
vote every two years or else
re-register.
Gov . James A. Rho~es
vetoed a similar bill last
session on grounds it would
increase the burden on local box, it's irretrievable," said
boards of election without Van Meter in pointing out
~oper compensation .
that an election day
Hall's new bill, however, · registrant's vote would count,
adds a variety of registration even if later proven
opportunities ,
including fraudulent.
signing up at the polls on
But Hall led the defeat of
election day and then voting Van Meter's amendment,
immediately.
saying it would "take out the
It would allow voters to heart and the guts of the bill."

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr . and Mrs . . Edward
Morris and family of Bowling
Green spent the weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Alex
Wheeler, Mrs. Larry Foster
and children of ColQmbus,
Bill Wheeler of Bowling
Green were recent visitors of
the Wheelers.
,
Mr. and Mrs. David Jones
of New Haven spent Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Jess Anderson.
Mr. and Mrs. James
Preston of Clifton, W. Va.,
Mrs. Pearl · Norris were
visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Warner Sunday .
Herschel Norris visited
Mrs. Pearl Norris Sunday. ·
Mr. and Mrs . Jay
Gloeckner, daughter Sandra
of Zoorsville, 0. visited Mr.
and Mrs. Erwin Gloeckner
recently.
Mrs. Erwin Gloeckner
visited her mother, Mrs. Ada
Norris at Christian Nursing
Home at Marietta, Sunday.
Mrs. Sally Gloeckner,
Merta Queen visited a day
recently at Saint Mary'S
School of Nursing at Huntington and also visited Mr.

For Frldlly, April 8. 1177

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY

'

liPI Stalehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPTl ~ A
major Dcuwcralic policy bill
revo lu tionizi ng vo ter ·
registration in Ohio has
cleared the state Senate and
is on its way to the House
d espite
Rep u blican
predictions it will creato a
11
chaotic nightmare" on elec~
lion day.
The plan, sought by the
Ohio Democratic party and
organized labor, received 21·
12
Senat e
a pproval
Wednesday, as expected.
.It includes election ,day
registration and a variety of
new opportunities for eligible
voters to sig~ up.
- Although not a sing le
senator broke ranks on the
final party-line vote, the bill
generated' 90 minutes of
debate, during
which
Democrats and Republicans
waged a statistical war on tbe
possible effects of liberali zed

High coffee prices not all
so beneficial to producers

· 9-TheDaily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, April 7, 1977

You'll find the home you're looking

'

"' I
SPECIAL THRU THE MONTH OF APRIL

Clear Glass Installed .................. s7o w.
Tinted Glass Installed ................ s76 w.r

for in the Oassified Section of the

T

All windows are of top q\Jality construction and c us~om

designed to fit lhe contour of truck backllte open mg .
Anodized aluminum frames with w~lded . seam
construction , autornottve type w eatherstnppi~g,
tempered glass and spr ing loaded, sel f. lockrng

THE DAILY SENTINEL

handles.

PT. PLEASANT ~ MASON
AUTO GLASS
Route33

Mason, W. Va.
773-5710
Specialist In Auto Glass All Types Of
(:.I :ace Work .

.,

•

�&lt;

••

.

r4--~--~~-

Buy, Sell or Trade Through The Sentinel Want Ads
•
.
·f Business Services
2 SIGNS . ;.:ero_y-

WANT AD
CHARGES
C..h
IOQ

ld«y

a~'l!t!

150

125

"''

tdll)'ll
3 dlfy~t

1.1!0

2.2:&gt;

I daly•

I.OQ

J7:)

Each wurd U\' l'f lht• lllll llii!WII ]:)
words is 4 l'l"IIU per wurc.J per d11y
Ads running other than t-'tlrl.!oa'Uuv.!
tMlY• will be t:hlrgttl llt u~ 1 !.l~ty
filt.t- .

J'n memory , Cll.ni of Thanks atltl
~ttWiry : 6 cenl!i ~r word , J:l 00
nwumwn, CH.sh in ji(Jyatw;e.
Hwnt !Aiks and Va t J :HileS
are l'l't.'e pl...U only wtlh ca10h wt lh
onJer. 25 cent clwrgt! fUf" 01 ds carrybtl( Box Nwnbt'r In Care o ( Tht St&gt;ntinel.
Mubll~

Tilt! Pl.ll:Jli.s:l)t:f

rt-servc:. llk! ntj.hl

t.u t.'dil or rejed any 1tds deeule\1 objet•liorwl. The Publisher wlll nul IJt!
n:spun~ t ll le

for 11101 e tJmn vu1: Ulrt.Jr·

~

ft\.1 U l ~rtiloll .

NOTICE

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Monday
Noon on SllturdH}'

Tuc.'id.:lv
Lhru F'ritf~:ty
4P.M
Ule u.. y bt!rvt epublt t'C!.I H.&gt; II

A uto

WE WISH to &amp;Kpreu our gra tllude
a nd tha nks to ma ny friends .
nei gh bors ,
rel ati v e s
schoolmates, Ro ri ne ,. Pome roY
and M1dd le por t Squa ds Oh 1o
Sta te Pat ro l. Meigs Coun ty
S ~er~ fl , Ew mg Funera l Home .
Raci ne American Pos t b01
Mason iC Lodge 461 and al i
Mosom who too k po rt 1n the
Masonir Services , Re... . Don
Walker and Will iam Suff ,von
and pallbeare rs fo r the many
acts o f kmdness praye rs , food
flowers and cords a nd oil those
who hel ped in any way dur ing
the dea th of our bro th e r
bro the r-in -law, and uncle :
James Roy H1 ll .
The Families of David , George ,
and Clare nce Hill .

1975 JEEP CHERO KE E, p,b., ps
Ouadtahack
Good l~res
PhQne (30.4 ) 877 ·2340

-·

SU.nd~ty

~

NOT ICE
Pratt's Meat Mk I
1
(Ple asanton Meat Processmg ,
Inc ) Cus tom slaughtering. and
process,ng . Retai l. whchtsole .
No oppoinmenr necess a ry Coli
(61 4) 593-8655 , hours , 9·00 till
6 00 7 Pomeroy Road . Ath~n s ,
Oh

1971 CHE VROLET 4 w heel dr we
P1ckup truc k . Big 11rei , e )( ·
ce ll e nt condit ion Co lt 992 371 4

I
II
I
II

I
II

nJRN YOUR
UNWANTED
ITEMS
INTO
CASH!

I
I

I

.

·

f£ijj@J{&gt;.,~I'f
FOUND SOME Money m 'front o f
Gibb's
. Identify a nd
d ai n.
I

... I

I
I
I
1

1
I
I
I

.:.11..-___......_

"' .I

I 1.:·- ..-...-........-..--

SJ--------

MERRI-MAC has opening for Party
Pion
Su p erv1so r s
and
Demonstrators m your arecl
Highest
co mmrssion ,
no
de live ry or co lfect1n g
Dem onstrate top qual 1ty roy$
and g1fts . Call colle ct to Ann
Baxter (319) 556-88(11 or wfi te
MERRI -MAC , 801 ' Ja ckson ,
Dubuque , Iowa 52001 .
SELL TOYS . Play house t he world 's
largest toy drst nbutor is look·
ing for o person to open and
supervise MEIGS Ct Work from
home, ea rn top money expense account given . Frett incentive tnps Coli Collect 1
(5 13) 667-2136',

: ·I
_,; I
.. I
·II o•.....,_ _ _ _....,.

I ,. __________

SELL TOYS . Playhouse the world's
la rgest loy distributor is look·
mg for o sho rp person to ope n
and superv1se ME IGS Cty, Work
from home, earn top money ,
e~e pense a ccou nt given. Free
incentive tr ips. Call Collect I
_ (51_3) 667 · 213~:;_·~--­
NEED BABYSITTER 5 days per
week for 5 month old chdd
Must come to my home. Will
pay $25 per week . Phone
949-2772

, ·I .,,-'-_ _..___ _

·-

'".I •·--------.:. 10._.,.;._ _ __

•'. JI n.-~.......- - - 112.------

.i

-

SHOOTING MATCH AT Rutland
leg1on Hall. every Fndoy .
-~mng . 7 p. m.
SHOOTING MA TC H just off Rt . 7
by-pass e11ery Sunday ~oo n

1
1oneword on each line.
1 Each group of figures
I or letters counts as
... 1one word.
Rate Per Word
.OS
; I 1 Day
3 Days
.12
1
.20
1' Days
" 1 Minimum 1S words.

~·

2 GARDEN SPOTS to re nt out on
Wolfe Pen Rood Con plant
onyth 1ng . Coil Moe Ha wk ,
q92 -6172.

--

Ithis
Write your own ad on
coupon. Place

~I

--

RACINE GUN Club We hoOJe
changed our gun $ho ot to FRI DAY, nigh ts , stortmg at 7 p m

13.- - - - - , . - - -

CAT LOADER Operator , must be
e xper1enced . Coli 742-2806
after 7 p.m

1 14....,._-----__.,
II
_ _.....,_...
II 16.._...,..
_ ___
.
1
·17.--.-........--.-•
I
I 11..•-- - - - - - - - 1 19.~· -.....,_ _,..._ _,.,_..,..,;
I ·.r~s,....,_

I 20.'
.1
. 1 21
I '
'1
' I 22.

' "'L
I,

1

-~-

.

I
II
I
1
1
I
1
I

•I 23. ··
:1
1 24.
I ·
I 2S.

-I1
I
I
I

1--·

I

!I 17._
I
•I '
: I ~~·------'----'· 1
1
1
" 1 :at.
1
'I ~ .
I
I

I

MUSTANG H, V 8, 302
p ,S., p.b . IUXU II OU!
1n tenor , e)(celle n t cond11io n .
Pho ne 991-2426 .
OUt Q ~OI IC ,

,, I
.I
., I

I
I

32

,1

•I
I
I.......,
I
... .' ... .... , .... .. ... .

I
' I
;.' I

.,.. ._

•' 1

..

.,

i~ l

--:.:..:....-~---

CASH !I! for 1unk cars . Frye's
TrLick and Auto . WRECKER SERVICE! Phone742-206 1
OLD FURNITURE. ice bo)(es brass
beds . etc .
complete
households . Write M. D. Miller,
Rt . ... . Pomeroy, Ohio or coli
9'12. 77 6iJ .
W~NTED

OLD pian os , any condil1on , Poy1ng $10 and $25 ea ch .
Ftrst floor only. hperl mov ing .
Fully insure Company. Wri~
grvmg d ~rec t r ons . Wrtten Piano ,
Box I 611 SO'di•, OH 43946 .
Phone(6 14) 463- 1605.

o . . . . . . . . o o o .. o • • •

tion Poytng $10 ond $25 each ,
Firs t floo r on ly. Ellpert mov ing .
Fully insu re Company. Wri te
giving direct1ons . Willen Piano,
Box 168 Sa rd rs, OH 43946.
Phone (614 ) 463-1605.

SMALL SIZE English riding habit.
Phone 985 ·,.227 for further in·
forma tion .
=--~--

0 ••

......

I :. I
' ' ' .': '.lo i! • ool ... · • • · · · · · ·
I. I
I •
'.I
! I ...,c.,in
', I ............ tlli:
I•
', I
I
1
: I G me.
I. I
I Dally Sentinel
'· I Pomeroy, Ohio
1
I ~
'
~-----------·

r

TIM BER . Pomeroy Fo rest Prod ucts . Top price for standing
sawtimbe r. Coli Kent Honbv ,
I ·446· 8570
COINS , &lt;-;C;;U;;;R:::
RE;;N;:C:;:
V-, -c,o--:k-e-ns-, ~o'"'
ld
pocket watches and chain s
sii OJe r and gOld We need 19bA ·
a nd older si l&gt;~er ca 1ns. Buy, sell ,
or trade ' Call Roger Wam·s lev .
742-2331.

'I

nm

1973 CHEVROLET C&amp;C2 TON
Big S t JC. 292 cu in ., 4 speed, 15,000 2 speed rear aKie.
Ready to work . 825 tires.

1968 DODGE , ma roo n W1lh blod
bucket seats
Mediam coff~
A: 1· $400. Coll992-3341 .

•

Camping Equipment

Wanfed1o

Hent

WANTED TO rent wtfh posstble
ophon to buy . 50 t o 200 oCies
secluded land. so m e tillable
wi th lnhobitab le house . Col um·
bio , Sci pio, Bed ford , or Rut land
Townships .
,Write
Tony
Russego , 133 1 Meadow Saod
Columbus, Ohio 432 12

... ----.ii~n~t~~~- ~. ·

3 AN D 4 RM ILirnish&amp;d and un furnished opts Phone 9925434
.
CO UNTRY Mobile Home Pork Rt
33 , len miles north o f Pome,roy
Lo rge lois with com:re le patios ,
Sidewa lks. runner s on'd off
_ sir!!.' por~ng Phone 992·7479.
FURN ISHED APT for renl . Phone
992 ·3975 or 992-2571 .

-

----.

-

Real Eslite fol' Sale For~nle

COAL , limestone , and ca lc ium
chloride ond calcium b rme fo r
du st cont rol and $peci ol mi)( ing
salt for farmers Main Streel
Pomero y. Oh1o or pho ne 992:
369 1
APPLES . FITZPATRICK ORC HAR D
STATE ROUTE 689 . PHONE
WILKESVIL LE, (6]4 ) 66q ·3785.
FU LL ER Brus h Products for sole .
Phone 992-3410
CA MPER , $bOO . Also, horse
tra tl er , $450. Phone (614 ) M8 ·
3290.
STEREO , NEW AM ·FM stereo
radio combmo tion $129 95 or
easy terms Col l 992 -3965
FI SHER WOOD Burnin g s toves and
form lum ber PHONE Focemyer
ond Solmom Lumber Co , Inc
Rt. 7 Midd leport , Ohio . (614)
992 ·7-4 25 .
SINGER GOLDEN Touch N' Sew
doe s tt o il. Z1g-Zogs , sews on
knit , automatic buttonholer
makes de s1gns and many o the~
l eo tu re.s
Just like new
Ot tginol pnce, $549 95 Must
sell . only $129 ,95 , Cos h or
te rms Coll992-51 46 .

~OP PER FOR Odtsun P1ckup . $140
Phone 991-3453.
RUG ER SINGLE Sb; c 0~ 11e rl 1 ble
22LR . on~ 22VMR towrence
HoJs te r ond ca rtri dge bell , DBIBBL .41 0 Fox Mod B. Phone
985-4227.
USED DISHWASHER ond wringe r
l)lpe washer See Ha rvey lea·
mond by Wagner's Hardwa re
AlUM A~T~ O wheel ! • G60 lh e! !or c
Chev ~ lryck o r cor . h SO Phone 8d·'11l t

4

SPECIAL:

ful l ba se·

ONION SETS
lb.

45'

SET OF CASE drag plows .
hydrou f1c lilt . Also, garden
tractor . Phone 985· 3849

420

JOHN" DE ERE Bulldme-r
located on Rt. 14 3 about th reefourth to 1 mile out. Boyd L
Kenze l.

1973 450 HONDA. Al so , locust
fence posts . Phone 742-23 12 .
_,__-

--

'

--

----

--

--

- ----

3 BEDROOM house for ~le near
Eastern H1gh School. 2 cor
goroge ,
full
ba se ment
fireplace in IIOJing room . Phon~
985 -38V
4

UNDEVElOPED a cres 1n Me igs
County V1n lon moil rou te Coli
742 2867 o r see D1c k lomberl .

TUPPERS PLAINS, 3 bedroom , liv·
ing room , d inelle, 2 bolhs. fullv
ca rpe ted, lull basement , central a ir conditlonrn'g , .83 acre .
Phone 992·3731 .
ONE ACRE. 3 bedroo ms. 1 .story
hom e , d1n111g roo m , Iorge both ,
natura l gds , larg e porc h, nice
block goroge , $20,000 Phone
9'12-5732 .
BY' OWNER , 9 roo m s and bo th
ba sement , carpeting. f~re plo re :
loads of storage . Two porches ,
s tee l s1d1ng. sto rm wm dows.
Double ca rport and workshop .
O lher building s Riverview in
Syracuse . By appOint me nt
992-72 &gt;0 .
'
BY' OWNER, 9 roo ms and bat h
basemen t, corpetmg , f~reploce :
loods of storage. Two porc hes,
steel siding. storm windows .
Double ca rport ond wor k s ~o p
Other bu t!dtngs Ri verv iew in
Syracuse
By oppo1ntment ,
992-7210.
,'EDROOM , 81-LfvEL .~ l yr :id .
r utly carpeted, 2 cor garage on
1 acre in Wildwood Es ta tes on
Flatwood s
RooO
Ph one
992-2012 oller 4·30 p .m
HO USE FOR So le i~ Mmersv ille._5
room s ond bOt h , forced ~rr
heal , natural gas, 3 porc hes
and basement Pho n e 992-5833 .
GEORG E HOBSTETTER Jr . Real
Esta te Broker Pomeroy, Oh1o .
RACINE - 2 46 acre!', 3
bed rOOfl!S , li vi ng room , ~\i t·
c~en,
both,
carp e t ing.
draperies, fuel oil hea t, central
air
cond itioning,
stoOJe,
r e l r~ge rat o r ,
hookt,~p
for
was he r and dryer , fr on t porc h ,
on Tuppers Plotns -Cheste r
water system. App rox imately
'1, mile from Ra ci ne, Phone
949-2589 Priced $15;900. Hilton
Wolfe Salesman
, '
•
oOUilE - W
cc:ID:-:E:--:-h-o~
use trolle r - 3
bedrooms, both , shower, 'tull
basemen t wlth cool or wood
furna ce. loca ted on I .06 acres
of grou nd on Silver R1dge off ol
Sto le Route 7 near Eastern
School Ruby Eynon , 'owner .
Asking price $7500. Coli or see
George S. Hobste11e r, Jr. REAL
ESTATE 6ROKER . P.O . 6ox 101.
Pomeroy , Ohio . Phone
985 -41B6afte r4p m .
.....
15 ACRES OFF New lime Rood
nea r Forres t Acres Pork . Phone
742-2336.

-

------

-.,.----

~

~----·

NEED A

WATER SOFTENER?

Let Pomeroy Land~ark
soften &amp; condition your
water and a Co.op wa1er
softene r , Model UC-XVI

279.95

No..y 0nl) 4
SEA-STAR ALUM . Boat, 14 ff
long . ex tra deep sides Foam
flotation under seat s. 9% ho rse
Evmrude motor. Montgomery
,Word trai ler, til e jacke ts, pod·
die ar1d fire extingu1sher, $450 .
Phone 247·2868 .
· .:c__~

Let us
Free.

test your water

, Pomeroy Landmark
~~ Jaci&lt; "w . Carsey , Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

~t!id:ESIDe'iOiSiil_e: ·

EASTER FLOWERS , Lillies, tu lips ,
hyacinths, hydrangeas, mums , Co~merciol. pro perty opprox . 1
7
', roses. azaleas , gen;:rnrums , and
acres, fe11el land, located at
. hanging baskets, Pnces from
Tuppers Pla1n s on Of11o , Rout e
$1.25 t~ $8.98 Best selections .
7 Pho ne (61 4) 667·6304 ,
M1dway Ma rket,
Pome roy ,
RISING STAR Kenne l Boarding
Ohio , 992-2582 , Bobs Market, N-EW 3 bed;~o; h~u se , b uilt-In ,
Indoor-Outdoor runs, groomi!'lg
kitchen , bath and •; , , Phone
Mason , W}!o~ 3 -57'l._:
l • _~
oil breed$, dean sanitary
742-2306 or contact M•IO B. Hut ·
faci li ties . Cheshire . Phone (61 4) 23 IN . lawnmower: boards fo r
duson , Ru tland , Ohio
be .d s :
3 · _.
plywood ,
367-02'12 .
i
dehumrdifier, b &amp; w T.V. 24 in . FOR SALE. All efe~~ near ly ~
HoOFHoL~OW. Buy . sell, ~ color T.V., 24 in , Brand new prt ·
home m Rutland area . Base ·
or train horse!, RUTH REEVES
ment , 3 bedroom s , ottoc~ed
che r pump . Phone 992-7794
troinar. Phone (614) 698 -3290 .
garage ,
529 ,900
Phone
after.4 :30p, m.
742-253 1
PO'OoLE GRoOMING,' r;~sonobfe 19"73 .. jEEP-( J5 , · g~od cond1tion~
rates. Coli for oppt 742-3 162.
Plus extras. $2900. Bunker H11f 2 STORY 4 Bedrm . brick h~me in
Midd leport: Phone 992-3457
CHIHu:\Hu AMALE
1 yr . old. _Road across from cemete ry.
housebroken , shots , good wtth SWEEPER AND Sewing Mach1nes 6V, ocres . garden spot , some
_ children . $25. Phone 992-22b5.
past ure . f1rewood wtth wood·
Repair, Ports"' and Supplies
1/, mile
burning
stove, fuel oil heat,
Dov1s
Vacuum
Cleane
r.
AKC REGISTERED Female Cocker
ou tbuildings 2 bedroom house
up George's , Creek ' Road off
Spaniel Puppy , 7 weeks o ld ,
near hospital an d town :
Slate RJ' 7, Phone (614 )
Buff color . Me lvi n Cross, pho11e
$i9 .500 Phone 992 5947
446·029.4 ,
..
742·3176. ~

Oo9.

COMMl:RLIAL !i+o:t&lt;..K. t:IU !LIJING tn
downtown Pomeroy, Oh1o .
Present ly rented with Income
over $5000 per year Two ren ·
l ois downstairs and o ne
upsta~rs . Has unfins 1hed oporl ment upsto~rs . Entire upstairs
con easily be mode 1n to 3
apa rtments . W-olf cond1 tion
upstairs. 3 separate wate r, gas
and electnc meters. Con be
financed IOOpercent to reliable
party , Conloct Paul Simon o r
Guldo Giro lami to secu re on
oppOintrnen!. Pnctk-d upon In ·
spect1on of propert y only .

---TOMATO STAKES, •600. Also, 225 2 WINDOW
FANS , Infra- red het
bean posts . Joe B1 ssell, long
lamps, t hree-fourth metal bed
Bo tt om Ohio .
and s prmgs1 tab le fan Bulovo
wris t watch. 356 Nor th Fou rth
LOCUST FENCE Posts .- ~ Phorle
St .. Middleport Wil liam Smith .
742 ·2312.
BROWNING EAGLE Mark Ill 23 SLIGHTLY USED 8 H. P 36 Inc h wt
Craft sm an power mower
c hannel AM Base Stohon C. B
Phone (61 4) 667-3063.
$450 fi rm. Also . BLACK CAT 50
Watt Base Linear , $75 Call REG . GUERNSEY bul ls ready for
949-2322
use. FOR SALE OR FOR LEASE
Phone 949-2175
2 MILK COWS , one 3 yr. old
Guernsey 4 yr . o ld Holstein , MAHOGANY TABlE , 6 chciirs,
$250 each Phone Corl Findlmg ,
tab le pod for $70 . Foir co nd ition , near Horrisonv tlle . Phone
~.~
8 5~·~
41~3~
7·~----------~
(614 ) 696-3296
· 1976 C.B. 750 HondQ , e)(cetl ent
co nd1t1on . 1760 miles. 1970 BSA HOOVER UPRIG HT Sweepe rs,
250. good cond ition . Cal l
1977 . Mode ls on sole for just o
985 -3919 after 6 p .m .
froc llon of lh r;? original cost.
Cosh or terms only . SJ2. Co lt
SPRING GARDEN Supplies, Cob·
9'12-5 146 ,
boge. caulifl owe r , broccol i,
VA-FHA . 30 yr . frnoncmg . Irela nd
and head leftuoe plants , FREIGHT DAMAGED Zig Zag Sew·
Mortgage , 77 E. State, Athens,
yellow white , and red onion
ing Mochmes. Buttonholer , e tc.
_£hooe (6 14) 592-3051.
sets , onion plan ts, Kennebec ,
only 5 le ft ortginally $1 49 95
cobbler, Katahdin , Red Pontiac
Will sell $39.95 cos h or te rms
and Red lasodo seed potatoes .
Phone 992-51 46.
Bulk garden seed s. potting sod ,
peat man , fru 11 trees and rose
bushes
Midway Market ,
Pome roy , Oh io , 992-2582 ,
Bob ·s Market , MasOn , W.Va .
(304 ) 773·5721.
POL VESTER SPORT Coot , size 40,
never been worn. Priced to
_ seii .:....Salf 992-7252.

m~

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

~h. H2-Z174

~-

CAPTAIN EASY

MA~BI' ,;,o, WA!&gt;H"
SUT MARK M~ WORD$•
-THE RE'S ?OMETK&gt;OO
PHONY ASOUT TKAT
liTTLE WITCHL .. l
INTEND TO FINO
OUT WHAT MAKe!&gt;

.CHESHIRE
ASHlAND ·
Cheshire. Ohio
Pho.ne 614-367-0626

HER liCK!

3-16-1 mo.

LL............:_;__....._ _...:....:_::; . - - - - - - - - - - - . ,

Superior
Steam Extraction

Patios ,

Young's Carpeting
Route 3, Pameroy, Oo

:,

~

4·10·1

--

-

Remodeling.

men t, patio , carport mile
be hrnd Raci ne, Prefer older
couple, re ferences . Phone
949-2414
'

--

G~=~ ~sLARR1,,~..~'~DER

Concrete

ment . polio, car p ort , mrle
behrnd Ro rrn e Prefer olde r
co uple , referen ces. Phone
949-24 14

__,P_hone 949-2089,

IIIINDOIIS
AlUIIINIIII
1

Sidewalk$ ,
New
Construction
&amp;

'2 BEDROOM All e lec. full base-

-· - - 3 TRAILER A)(les o ff house irml er.

AT

Ki1chen Cab inets, Roofing ,

---

---2 BEDROOM All e lec

Service
F•lloo ......
....... lloo ,- otflooll

:=::::::===::

~

2 BEDROOM mobile home on
Bro adway , m Rocme. See
Harvey Leomond by Wagner's
Ha rdware
,

Wlnt OIL CHANGE
AND FILTER

IE~LM:lMEIIT

Ph. HZ·JHJ

1973 ROAD RUNNER , 4 speed
mags. lots of e)(tros . ' $1695
1971 Pont1a c Bon,otcville , e)( j
cellent shape, $625 . 197 1 AMC
Hornet Sportobo ut Wagon 6
cylinde r automatic tronsm is·
sion $500 . Pho ne ofler 5 p m
V92 -6014.

289 ENGINE and headers for $100
4 speed Me rcury transmission
$65 1967 3 speed automati c
Ford transmiSSIOn , $30, Phone
992 -3611.

Radiator

STORM
WIIIIIOIISIDOOR$

1972 CHEV. 1f2 TON
12095
8' Fleets ide, v.s, power steering and power brakes,
radio, good tires .

1975

1972 MERCURY' MONTEGO new
brakes , new shoc k s , ~~let~ or
e)( cellent cond 1t ton . hler~ o r
good
Call a fter 5 p m .
949 -2540.

BlOwn
Insulation Semtes
FHLinciiiJ AwlilabM
lkrwn n•t41 W1llt: I Anics

MAIN
POMEROY, 0.
JUST LISTED -

18 acres

in Pomeroy, sectioned ofl
in lots for home sites. For
information call us .
JUST LISTED - Cottage, 3
bedrooms . bath, Alum .
siding, gas heat. over 1.000
ft. liv ing area, 11:2 acre.
Ll S'TE D Ranch
-4 bedrooms, bath,
gas h ea t, Alum .
siding, About 6 yrs. old .
$16,1100.00.
ROUTE 124 - Lovely br ick
8. frame (ranch type )
home. 4 bedrooms, bath,
utility R., large kitchen,
nat. gas heat, air cond . 112
acre. About 4 yrs. old.
$28. 500.00.
RUTLAND '- About 1 acre.
nlce 3 bedroom home, nat.
gas furna ce and central air
cond., bath , nice kitchen ,
enclosed
side
porch ,
fenced . JUST $13,000.00.
EVERYTHING -IN REAL
ESTATE,45 LISTINGS ON
OUR BOARD FOR YOUR
APPROVAL. DROP IN
AND SEE .
HENRY E . CLELAND
BROKER
992-225t, "2-2S.8
985-41.12

"

DAVID BRICKL£S
General Contracting
Route 2
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Free Estimates Ph. 992--7119
3-11 -1 mo. pd .

SWAIN'S
Automatic
Transmission Service

PARTS · LABOR
GUARANTEED

Nobil

Summit

Rt. I
Middleport, 0 .
992-5724
Complete
Sales
and
·Service and Supplies.
3· 1.4-1 m

Vinyl and aluminum
siding, storm windows and insulation.
Call Prof_e ssionals

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

Reedsville. 0 . Ph . 376-6250

3·27·1 mo.

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860

l SURE HOPE FCJ0ro&lt; AN ' ZEL MADE IT
T ' MOO SO ~EY COULD Wt&gt;S&lt;:N 6Uz .. ,

FRIDAY, APRIL B. 1977
6· 15-- Farm Report 13 .
6 ,2()-Nol for Women Only 13.
6 · 3()--Columbus Today 4 ; News 6: Sunnrlse Semester
8; Overseas Mission 10.
6 : 4~Mornlng Report 3.
6 : ~Good Mornlna . West Virq lnla 13 .
6 : 55--Good Morning, Tri State 13 .
7 ' DO--·Today 3,4,15; Good Morning America 6,13 ; CBS
News 8; Chuck Wli lte Report s 10.
7 o~ Por ky Pig 10
7:3()-Schoolles 10.
6 oo- Howdy Doody 6 ; Ca pt . Ka ngaroo 6,1 0 ; Sesame
51. 33.
8:3()-Big Valley 6.
9 ·()0--A .M . J ; Phll DotJ,ahue 4,13,15; Andy Griffith 8 ;
Mike Douglas 10.
9 3()-Cr oss-Wits 3; Edge ot Night 6; Concenlratlon 8.
10:0()-Santord &amp; Son 3,4,15; Dinah 6 , Double Dare
6,10: Mike Douglas 13 .
10 :3()-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; Pr ice Is Right 6,10.
ll :oo-Wheel ot Fortune 3,4.15 ; Morning Show 13.
11 · 3()-Shoot for the Stars 3,4,1 5 : Love of Life 6,10;
Sesame St. 20,33 .

"The Origlnolors
2-23-1 mo.

PROFESSIONAL

PHOTOGRAPHY
Aerial
Commercial
Schools
Weddings

KEN GROVER

PHOTOGRAPHY

Free Estimates
No Sunday Calls Please
3$11$1 mo.

U'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

(614) 985-4155
Chesler, Ohio
10-17· 1 mo IPdl

LIT'l'LE ORPHAN ANNIE-WHO'S · CRAZY

---=--~~- -,

NOW!

~---=~~~

Young's Carpeting

~·

Route 3, Pomeroy, 0.

Free Estimates

ANY PI'KK
ANY SIZE

by

lnstallatiOJI, samples
brought to your home
with no charge.

Southeastern Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.·

tarpet-Lino .. Tile

Located in Langsville

Phone Mike Young at
992-2206 or 992-7630 '
2-23-1 mo.

ACROSS

music
· assembly
12 Actress,
Dorothy 13 Actress
Lanchester
14 River in
Nebraska
15 French
marshal
16 Prompt
17 Pronoun
18 Without
ethics
20 Polish
wifely
title
21 Thames
estuary
22 Sea eagle
23 Shabby
25 Airport
' need
26 Yodeler's
delight
Z7 Actuality
28 Actor,
Will 29 On famiiliar

owner financed . Monroe Coun·
ly , W. Vo . Phone (304) 772·
_?102 or (304) 772·3227 .
COU NTRY farmland wrth sedLided woods, water and good access in Monroe County . W. Va .
$1 000 down , call (304) 77'1·
3102 oc (304 ) 772· 3227 '

TEAFORD
Virgil B. Sr., Realtor
216 E. Second Street
Pom~roy, Ohio 45769
Phone 992-3325
OPPORTUNITY
Restaurant with good going

business.-'

Centrally

localed. All equipment.
dishes, etc. Just 513,500.
today.
1'12 ACRES Building
loca1ion in Olive Township.
Utilities available.
5 BEDROOMS - SS.OOO for
this older home In Tuppers
Plains. Frontage on Rt. 7.
RIVER FRONTAGE Like new 3 bedroom brick
veneer home with 2 car
garage. 4 lots and ail
electric on Ohio Power.
Only $37,500.
MEIGS-GALLIA LINE - 3
bedrooms, bath, nat. gas
furnace , rural
water,
garage and trailer space.

$22.000.
APARTMENT BUILDING
- 2 story brick building
with 3apartments. Buy this
and let the renters pay for
" II for you . 517.500.
COUNTRY 7 rooms,
bath, basement, g-arage &amp;

carpor1 on 2 acres. $25,000.
INVESTMENT
Apartment building and
pool
hall
with
all
equipment .
Needs
ambitious person that
wants to. make money .
SHELL HOME Flnslh
this 3 bedroom home
yourself and save. Has all
studs up and under roof. 2
lots for 512, 000 .
OUTSKIRTS OF TOWN A 3 bedroom home that sits
back by itself on 8.68 acres.
Natural
gas
central
healing . Cellar house and

nice

sidewalks .

Only

520,000.
JUST LISTED - Modern 4
bedroom home, nat . gas
F.A. furnace, eaf. Jn birch
kitchen wilh disposal and
nice level lot. $16,000.
JUST LISTED - Modern 3
bedroom frame home,
bath •. birch kitchen , large
utility room and large level
lot In Racine. Only S9,000.
GET MORE OUT OF LIFE
TlfAN JUST A LIVING,
INVEST!
G . Bruce Tulord
Helen L. Tuford
Associates

&lt;;TUFf 1\lAT

BRADFO~D .

Auct ioneer, Com·
plate ServiCe. Phone 949· 2487
or 949·2000. Rocrne , Ohio, Crill
Bradford ,

On..-"' r .. pi&lt;()~J ltr 1-...-r 11'11ri1111K CQIIO! ·
Nntlllli

{lj

.~. $18,300 ,;·
•• q•nH.U hJ• lkt' US lhpt aj Lllbnr.
Bot/Nil V/ L•bor Jlfii/J!in 1!11/k/1" 111175.

Don't just be satisfied with a
joa - Plan NOW for a Prof~:?nal career D~iving a " Big
Atg. We are a Private Training
School and if you meet our
qualifications. you wtll be trained by Professional Instructors on modern equipment.
Train on a Part Time b&lt;Jsis (Sat.
&amp; Sun I and Keep your job, or
anend our 3 Week Full Time
ReSident Training.
R••YN• ,....,, lor I ruil~r ''""""II. I~~

PARKERSBURG

422-4080

.

W1ll do odd jobs, roofing , pain·
ling , gutter wo rk. Phone 992.
7409.
SEWING .' AlTER A T1 0 N 5 ·
Upholst eri ng ,
drap es
reasonable. 572 South Third
A'{e ., Middleport . Pflone
9'12 -6306.
PIANO TUNING , Lane Daniels. 12
years of service. Phone
992-2062.
WILL TRIM or cut trees or shrub·
bery . P~ne 949-2545.
'
RELiABLE MOTHER wonts steady
bobys rlting 1ab in her home
Weekdays . Phone 992-2265. '

1956 !NTERNA TIONAl Mobile
home . a x 43 . good condition,
$1500. Phone9'12·3611 .

WRI(~W~

il

ELWOOD SOWERS REPAIR Sweepers . toasters , iron s, all
small opplrances . lawn mower ,
next to State Hi ghway Garage
on RoLite 7. Phone (614) 985 ·
3625 .

&gt;

REMODELING . Plumbrng . heating
and all types of general repair.
Work guaranteed 20 yeors ex·
periente. Phone 992-2409.

GASOLI N E ALLEY

To warn

SEWING MACHINE Repairs . ser·
vice , all makes. 992· 2284 . The
Fabric Shop , Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Soles and
SerOJice. We sharpen Scisso rs.

Clovia 1

EXCAVATING. dozer , loader ond
bockhoe work; dump tru cks
and lo-boys lor htre; wdl haul
frll dirt, to soil. limestone and
grovel. Coli Bob or Roger Jef f~rs ,
day phone 992-7089 ,
n1ght phone 992-3525 or 9925232 .

• 6I
•Q.IB 52
... 10676

1 Bullring
2 Oregon city
3 Long on
(4 wds.)
4 Oklahoma
city

5 Sealed
vial
6 Narrative
7 Palm leaf
3 See 3 Down

(4 wds.)
9 Teevee
appurten-

ance

(2 wds.)
32 Colorado
indian
33 Lady lamb
34 Sesame
35 Nonprofessional
3'l Stick of
candy
38 Contented
(2 wds.)

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned. •Modern
Sanitat ion, '192·395.4 .
ULABNER

WILL do rooffng. construction ,
piLimbing and Meoting . No job
too Iorge or too small . Phone
742·23.48.

COLJR'OE NOP- HIS
PAPPI IS A LI'L MORIZ
THAN A RABBI! rr-

CARPENTER , flooring , ce iling,
paneli ng . Phone992·2759.

10 More
ca utious
16 Author,
Joyce 19 Part of a
turbine
20 Part of Ty
Cobb's
nic kna m e
23 Habitual
'21 Kind of
rayon

25 Appraise
. 27 Ac ted
like
a toady
30 Under
legal age
31 Pupil (Fr. )
33 Facility
36 Tumbler 's
safeguard
37 Wheel
projection

No rth-South vu lnerable

WeSI

Norlh EaSI

Pass

Pass

S.ulh
3N T

at least nine tricks , which is a
lot 'better than the ant's seven
o r eight.

Pass

9

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
In Aesop 's fabl e of the
grasshopper a nd the a ni , the
grasshopper was ted his s ub·

:-=-+-1-+-l-+-1

f.o.--1--+--1 stance in riotous· livmg in
-+--1---t;'.u,,mmer and sta rved in winter
' the frugal a nt lived happil y for years
This doesn ' t a lways work

= +-1&gt;--+-1
-+-1-+-1 out
in a bridge game .
. Eas t wins the first

A Montana reader wants to
know lhe cor r erl rebid wi t h :

• AKlOxx • xx t AKx .-. xxx
after you open o n e s pade and
partner re s p o nd s tw o

diamonds
This 1s an easy one. Ra ise
your partner t o thre .e
diamonds .

tri c k
with hi s ace of clubs and the
frugal ant plays his tmy thr ee
spot. The artl is sure to take
the next tw o cl ubs as well as
=+-'1--l two di amo nds, two spades a nd

I

"""+-l-

ltllN't ID'il ~ TH'-TSCRAMBLEDWORDG'-ME

=-+-+-!--'"" ~ ~~ ®

byHenri Arnold andBoblee

Unscramble these lo ur Jumbles,

-,--1--+-1-- one lener to each square, to form
tour ordinary wo rds.

Here's how to

work

lt :t__::.,::.....:,..:....::;---+:,...,.,.,...,

AXYDJ. BAAXR
LONGFELI, OW

,,

One letter simply stands for another In this sample A i

hints E ac h day t h e rode lett e rs arc different
C RYPTOQ UOTES

J SF

x.u

UDR

DUGAN's FRONT End Alt~nment .
formerly Odell's Alinement
behind Rutland Grode School .
Alignment, wheel bolonctng ,
tune -up , brakes and minor
repair. Phone 742· 2005 or
AUCTION, Friday. 7 p. m. large
742· 2004. Evening work by op·
collection of Avon bottles two
pointment.
14 in . Chev. Crogor whee ls.
Lots of new and used merchan - HARRISON'S T.V. Repair. s'ervicll
Calls . 276 Sycamore, St. , Mid ·
dise af Mason Auc tion House
_dle~ort . Phone 992-2522 .
Horfon St., Mason, w. Va
'

1971 12 x 65 KING Mobile home
untur. Phone 992·5496.
'

I COULDN'T BELIEVE MY
eYE&amp; WHEN I &amp;AWOUI?
BI LLY ON 'T:V. WJTI-1
THAT BEAUTI F UL
HOLLYWOOD
5TII RLET'

' HOW COULD I BE
SONAIVE ... BO

STUP/0 .A&amp; ID
A
TRAP LIKE

FALL INID

I OUESS HE '&amp;
•\ CHIP OFF 7HE
OLD BU:X:K 1
E1-1 ? ( H~H -1/E/1 ')

I AQQDE

Q DS J

DT

SPGY

NGWM

QSFJGPS
XYY

·- D T

M G I

K D D ,Q

W M S
WMS

X

THIB?

-

±

zs

I I .

/.. OW!EZY .~1 G IT TO TH'

Gcing Out of Business Sale

FENCE -·1 GOT SOME
GOSS IP FER '-IE

LANGSVILLE

OUT OF THE HOLE ...

'14 Off Price Marked
'

Mt1 CADD'I FALLS
IN THE HOLE!

.

"1.;- -/ ~..,;i-.,1 - ..,.

_, ,.. _.,...,..._

.

.

I I

V
~

~
A

j
K

WHAT THOSe 6RE¥HOUND5 WERE AT iHE

END OF THE ~ACE.

r-o:---=-=.,.....,

k)LEIE(j
Anewerhere:

Now arrange lhe circled leners to
form the surpnse answer. BS s uggested by !he Bbove cartoon.

rIX )-[Ill X]

{Answers tomorrow )

EARL Wlll&gt;ON

BARNEY

THE'f' I-1AVE CADDIES
WHO TAKE TI-1E FLAG

'I

F Y S X I R J!!

N G H V S Q

.

z DRIFOL

SPGY

() 1917 KlnJ Features Syndicate, Inc .

TURNER'S GROCERY

I I

YSD
WDYIWDU
Yesterday' s Cryptoquote: TO SELL SOMETHING , TELL J
WOMAN IT'S A BARGAIN ; TELL A MAN IT 'S DED UCTIBLE

ONLY 3 DAYS LEFT

J

t AK
... KQ4 3

us ed f or the three i.'s, X for Ih e t wo O's. etc . Si n g le lett en L_:...;.::...:;::..:::_;:;;;..,
- :17"'&lt;'1'-i
apostrophes, lhe l ength and form a ti o n of the words are al

EXCAVATING , Backhoes , Dozer,
trencher, Low Boy , dump truck ,
trucks , sepflc systems: Bill
f:'ullins. Phone 992-2478 day or
nrghl .
'

Groceri~s, !lardware and miner;s - boots.
Everythtng must go. Phone 742-9576. Sale
ends April 9th, at 7:30p.m.

• Q10B
•K 532
+ 104
.9 763
... J952
.... A
SOUTH 10 1
• A K J
• A J9 J

i-o--+-1-+-1--+-1

is

HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
covoting, septic systems ,
dozer, backhoe, dump tru ck,
l1mestone, grovel , blacktop
paving , Rt . 1.43 . Phone I (614)
696·7331.
•

EAST"'
• Q 10 6 s

o ne heart. In addition , he
should be a ble to find an
e ighth Irick somewhere- but
the all-important ninth won ' t
be forthcoming .
Now loo k at the spendthrift
grasshopper . He drops the
kong or queen of clubs und er
the ace'
Later on he will cas h his ace
and king of diamonds and king
of clubs an d lead a low club .
Dummy' s 10 of clubs will
become an entry for North ' s
last 'three diamonds and ' the
grasshopper South will pick up

Opening lead - 2 ,.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE -

MOBILE Home Repair . Efec. ,
piLimbing and heating . Phone
992-5656 .

WfilllT
• 9643

Yesterday's Answer

looks

turf

EXCAVATING, dozer , backhoe
and ditcher. Charles R. Haf·
field , Bock Hoe Service ,
Rut land , Ohio . Phone 7.42· 2008

7

•n

DOWN

11 Dutch

··y-o,"""'... 11111\l 1'71T

NORTH.

41 Bare

in

key,

Box 28-A

IN!JTHUCTif) N

Grauhoppef wins one

measure

5 Having no 40 Let up

Rutland, Ohio 45775
Ph . (614) 742·2409
We Deliver
12 2'2 ·4 mos .

,.ltif.l lf~J """""' ll&gt;'r/'14~

39 Yugoslavian
liquid
·

ocean

ho:;:2

SMALL'-;1-o-,m---;l~o ,~,-o-:-l-e ,:-:,-:0::"!.-.:--d:-o-wn,

THOMAS JOSEPH

1 On the

TN'.I~ 50
l.0~1D
HOMESITES for sale , I acre and
up . Middleport, near Rutlan'd
Coll992-7481
NE.WJb;d roo;;,
baths
all e lec. , 1 acre , Middl e port.
close to Rut land . Phone 992·
74Bl.

II : 5~CBS News 8; Ms . Fl•ll 10.
12 :DO-News 3,4,6,10; Second Chance 13 ; Name That
- ~1une 15; Divorce Court 8.
12 :3()-Lovers &amp; Friends 3: 15; Ryan' s Hope 6.13; Bob
Braun 4 ; Search for Tomorrow 8,10. ·
I ; DO-Gong Show J ; All My Children 6;-lJ; News 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10: Not for Women Only IS.
'I :3()-Days of Our Lives 3,A,I5 ; Family Feud 6.13; As
The Wor ld Turns 6, 10.
2:DO-S20.000 P yrami d 6, 13
2:3()-Poctors 3,4,15 : One Life to Live 6,13; Guldlng
Light 8, 10.
3:()0--Another World 3,A,15 ; All lnThe · Famlly 8,10;
Americana '20 .
'
3: !~General Hospital 6, 13.
J 3()-Malch Game 6,1 0 ; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
4 :DO-Mister Cartoon 3; Little Rascals A; Gong Show
15; New Mickey Mouse Club 6; · Lucy Show B;
Sesame St . 20,33: Movie " Botany Bay" 10; D inah
13.
4: 15-Little Rascals 4 .
4:3()-My T~ree Sons 3: Partridge Family 4 ;
Emergency One6; Partridge Family B; Fllntstones
15.
5 . oo-Big Valley J; My Three Sons 4; Brady Bunch 6 ;
Mister Rogers' Ne ighborhood 20,33; Star Trek IS.
5:3()-Adam -12 4 ,13; News 6; Faml. Aftalr 6 ; Elec .
Co. 20,33 .
6 :DO-News 3, 4,6,6, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6 ; Zoom 20,33 .
6 :3()-NB V News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Vegetable Soup 20; VIlla Alegre 33 .
7 DO-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the tr uth 4; Bowling for
Dollars 6 ; S126,00!Wuestlon 8; News 10; To Tell the
Truth 13; My Three Sons 15: Ohio Journal 20 ;
Marshall University Report 33.
7:3()-Porter Wagoner 3; Easter Story 4; Cand id
Camera 6 ; Treasure Hunt B; MacNeli· Lehrer
Report 20, 33; Andy Williams 10; Name That Tune
13; Pop Goes the Country 15.'
6:0()-Sanford 8. Son 3.4. 15; Donny &amp; Marie 6,13: Here
Comes Peter Cottontail B, 10: Washington Week ln
Review 20,33.
8:3()-Chico 8. the Man 3,A,1S; Wall Street Week 20,33.
9 :DO-Rockford Flies 3, 4,1 5; Movie " Bang the Drum
Slowly" 6, 13; . Nashville 99 6; Movie " Easter
Parade" 10; Lowell Thomas Remembers 20;
Documentary Sl'\owcase 33 .
9 : 3()-The Way It Was 20 .
lO · oo-Poilce Woman 3,4 ,15; Hunter 6; In lhe Shade
of the General 20; F iring Line 33 .
10 .3()-Lock, Slock &amp; Bal rel 20 .
li :DO-News 3,A,6,8, 10, l3.1 5; Manly Python' s Flying
C ircus 20: Black Perspective on the News 33 .
11 : 3()-Johnny Carson 3.4.15; SWAT 6,1 3; The Masters
6 ; Mary Hartman 10; SWAT 12; ABC News33.
11 . 4()-Movle " Let' s Switch!" 8
12 :0()-Movle ",Jhe Time Machine" 10; Janakl 33.
12 : 4()-Mod Squad 6;, Irons ide 13 .
1 :0()-Midnlght Special 3,4, 15.
1 : 4()-News 13 .
2· 3()-Ne w s 3 .
3:00--Movle " You Were Meant for Me " 3.
4:3o-Movle " Remember the Day" 3.
6 : DO-FBI 3 .

THURSDAY. APRIL 1,1911

6:0Q-Sunr lse Semester 10.

Not The Imitators"

Bissell Siding Co.

REASONABLE
RATES

•·

ALLEYOOP

•-.

'

s · oo-Big Valley 3: My Three Sons., Brady Bunch 8;
Misler Rogers' Neighborhood 20, 33 ; Star Trek 15..
5 . 3G-Adam-12 4,13; News 6 ; Family Aftalr 8 ; Elec .
Co. 20,33.
6 .DO-News 3,4.6.8. 10,13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20 ;
Who Knows One 33 .
6 :3()-NBC News 3,4,6, 15; ABC News 13: CBS News
6, 10; Once Upon a Classic 20, 33.
7 · DO-Truth or Cons . 3 ; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowllna for
Dollars 6; Muppet Show 8; News 10; To Tell lhe
Truth 13; My Three Sons 15; Almanac 20; Con·
s umer Survival Kit 33 .
7 3D- Hollywood Squares 3,4; Ohio State Lollerv 6 ;
Price ls Righi 8; MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20.331
Wild Kingdom 10; Dollv 15 .
e :oo-F antastlc Journey 3,4, 15; Future Co~ 6.13;
Bugs Bunny 8.10 ; C,lasslc Thealre 20; m Master ·
piec e Theatre 33.
9 :DO-Besl Sellen 3, 4,15:
Barney Miller 6, 13:
Breakthrough '77 8 : Classic Theatre 33 ; People's
Command Performance : 1977 10.
9: 3()-Three's Company 6, 13.
IO · O(}-Westslde Medical 6,13 ; Ne ws 20 ; Nancy Wilson
Special 6.
lO :Jo-Wom an 20.
11 DO-News 3, 4,6 ,6.1 0 ,13,15; Mac Ne ll -Lehre Report
33.
11 :3G-Johnny Carson 3. 4, 15; Geraldo Rivera 6, 13;
·
Mary Hariman 10; ABC News 33.
12 :oo-Movle " Nothing but l he Best" lO ; Janakl 33 .
12 · 4()-M ovle " Cry Panic" 8.
1 oo- Tomq_rrow 3,4 ; News 13 .

,

FREE WBE JOB

FREE ESTIM TES

steering and brakes. rad io .

1972 VE.GA , $800, 197'2 Plymouth
S1400. Phone 949· 2307 .

I WANTED OLD pianos, any condi-

I 31 .

I

CASH paid fo r aU makes and
models ·ot mobile homes.
Phone area code 61.4 ·423-9531,

Motor Co.

1974 MONTE CARLO CPE .
13795
Green ftnlsh , green cloth trim, a lr, automatic, power

1971 VEGA, SBOO , 1q72 Ply mout h
S1400. Phone 949-2307 .

CODNER 's CAMPERS See quality
of SWISS COLONY , BARTH :
CRICKET truck campers. MAPLE
LEAF spocemoker , PLY MOR ,
CAP KI T cops . NEW- USED Soles.
rental , service , supplies Toke
Me
igs 28 or 32 to Bashan .
RACINE FIRE Dept. w1/t havo a
Located
on Rainbow Ridge .
Gun Shoo t every Saturday n1ght .
Long Boflom, Ohto , Robert
6 p.m. at t he~r buddmg 1n
Codne r, owner.
Boshon , Ohio .

i-----------,

OF
QUALITY

1976 (AMARO , 305 2 barrel
outornat ic, siiOJer w1 lh ret
p1ns tr iping . St 1fl under warren
ty . Coll991-5709

4P.M

Frtday 11ftemoon

'

Auto Sales

Sales

Uml or 'Iluutks

THE FAMILY of Viola Jeff e n e x·
presse s their most sincere
thank s and grat itude to the
Ho lze r Medical Cetlter. the
phys1c io ns . and nursing stall
and emergency room o f
Gall ipolis , Oh io, Ew ing Funeral
Home , organist Thank s to Re11
O'dell Manley . Rev . K1ng and
Rev . Weaver lor t he~r consol1ng
prayers . Words cannot e)(p ress
our def]p oppredotion to all our
many fr iends and ne1ghbors fo r
r he~r prayers , food . and other
a cts of kindness dur ing the los sof ou r dear and mos t beloved
mother. II will neOJer be forgotten .
Children , G ra ndchildren and
great-grondch i ld ren

Phune 99'b2 1::.6

-,

MR. TRACY, FOR YEARS
SHIOD Ti&lt;E .JUDGE'S . HOR SES •
THE JUDGE •

•

15 Wurd:; o. Under

Television log 'for easy viewing

11-The Daily Sentinel, Middlei&gt;ort· Pomeroy, O . •.Thursday Apnl 7 1m
DI\..'K
•
.

111-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pom•rov. 0 .• Thursday , Apr\17. 1977

J umbles : PRIME
Yesterday'S

LIGHT BOLERO KlNGLY

\ Answer What the profeSSional assassin said he ,
had- TIME TO KILL

�1'2 lht• Daily SentineL Mlthlll'purt Po nWrH). t&gt; . 'l'llur~dil}. ,\ ,, n l 7. 1!171

-------- -------------·

.Ice figured in
pair of mishaps

Area Deaths

SAMUEL E. CLARK
Samuel E . Clark , 83, RL 1,

Middleport, died Wednesday

ley road condi tions were 29, Rutland, went out of
biHmCd for tWO of four tralfiC co ntrol in th e ice-snow
occlde nt s
investiga t ed covered overpass.
Wednesday by the GalliaThe Combs vehicle spun
Meigs Post Stute Highway around striking the guard·
i&gt;atrol.
rail , then went backwards to
The first occurred at 6:45 hit the front of a car operated
by Phillip N. {;arlic, 31, Ht. I,
d m. on SR 7 at th Middleport
by-pa&lt;&lt;, three and two tenths Gallipoli s.
There was
miles north of the {;allia moderate dam age; no charge
County hne where an auto was filed .
dnven by Peggy Lou Combs, · A short time later at 6:58
a.m. Frederick G. Weaver,
23, New Haven, lost control of

Gen. Allen

nominated
AIR FORCE ACADEMY,
C&lt;Jlo. (UP!) - Lt . Gen.
James R. Allen, has been
nomina ted a~ chief ol staff of
Su preme Hea dquart ers
Allied Powers Ew;opc.
The Department of Defense
Wednesday sa id Allen, Air
F orc e
A ca demy
superintendent since Aug. 1,
1974, also was nominated lor
promotion to four-&amp;ar rank.
If conlinned by the Senate,
Allen will assume the rank or
r,cneral and be~in his new
duties at SHAPE, head·
quartered in Brussels, Au g. I.
A DOD spokesman said Lt .
Gen: Kenneth L. Tallman,
deputy chief of staff for
personnel at Ail" Force headquarters at the Pentagon, had
been nominated to succeed
Allen
as
academy
superintendent.

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION

WATCH FOR
-'

OPENING DATE

News •. in Briefs

-- I
I
(C&lt;Jntinued from page I)
I
I as a syndicate "capo," was charged along with two trucking
I company o·Nners and a Teamsters' bu:;lness agent in a plot to
force truck drivers to pay employers' shares of contributions
Schuler . bOth ot Lol umbus.
C1nd sev err.l nieces. and
to various union pension funds.
nephews
The drivers were threatened with loss of jobs, loss of
A veteran ot Worl d War I
equity
in their equipment, lighter loads and "a IJtUe rilugh
and an active Member of
stuff"
if
they failed to agree to the scheme in writing, p. S.
Feeney . Bennett Post 1:18,
Amer ican Legion ,
Mid
Attorney Philip Van Dam said. MeU,'55, and J&amp;J Cartage Co.
dleport , he bel(y.\ged to the owners James A. Russo, 35, and Joseph P. Cusmano, 47, were
Fraternal Order ot Eagles,
arrested at their offices Wednesday and arraigned before U. S.
Columbu s lodge , and at .
tended the HObson church . Magistrate Chris E. Smith on charges of conspiracy and
Funeral services wil l be I extortion. They pleaded Innocent and were released on $10,000
p.m . Saturday at the Ewing bond each. Roby G. Smith, 53, business agent for Detroit
Funeral Home . Bul' ial will be
Teamsters' Local 299 at the time of the alleged offenses, was
in Gravel Hill Cemetery,
expected
to be arraigned today.
Cheshi r e. Friends may call at •

his car on the same icy place.

His car also spun around.
striking the bridge railing.
Anoth er early morning
accident occurred on SH 7,
four tenths of a mile south of
CR 4 when Derry E. Finley,
32, Rt. 2, Crown City, lost
control of his . car which ran
orr the road, stri king a
guardrail and sign. There
was minor damage and no
charges were filed.
Cora A. Loftis, 31, Rutland,
was ci ted to Meigs County
Court for failure to yield the
right of way following an
accident at 3:45 p.m. Wed·
nesday on SR 124 in Rutland .
The Loftis car pulled into the
path of an auto operated by
Cheryl A. Long, 31, Rutland.
There
was
moderate
damage.

nighf .·at Veterans Memor ial
Hospital.
A sooor the late-William H .
and Nanc y Roach Clark , he
was also prec eded in death by

three

brothers .

George,

Charles. and Walter ; his first
wi fe, Dorothy M . Turner
Clark and second wife
El izateth Manley CLark .
'
Surviving are his w i fe ,
Freda
Ri fe
Clark ;
a
daugh ter , Mrs . Anthony
{Ma)(ine) ·Schuler , and a
gr&lt;Jndda uqhter ,

Linda

Lee

the funera l home after 7 this
evening .

HOSPITAL NEWS

Holzer Medical Center
(Dla&lt;harges, Apr118)
Francis Bakies, Alice
Beckett , Paul Bradbury ,
Margaret Bray,
Mary
Brokins, Ollie Campbell,
Cathy Cooper, Dorothy Cox,
Betty Denny, · Dorothy
Dodrill, Donald Douglas,
Marvin Ourst, Mrs. Clyde
Evans ·and son, ft!argaret
Francis, Ruth Goody, ~ohn
Hall, Mrs. Ronald Hatfield
and daughter, Janet Hu~hes ,
Goldie Johnson, Lori Jonas,
Chad Jordan, Grace Lemley,
Harley McCully, Peggy
Moor e, Brenda Oldaker,
Brittani Phipps, Raymond
Riley, Phyllis Russell, Mrs.
Richard
Sexton
and
daughter, Ted Trotter, Ellen
Wood.
(Birth, April 6)
Pleasant Valley
Mr.
an4
Mrs. James Me·
DISCHARGES - Danny
PALLBEARERS NOTED
Kna pp,
Leon -;
BessiE Corkle, son, Oak Hill.
Pa llbearers for Mrs. Edith Whe eler, Leon; cudith
A. Abbott of Middleport will Lieving , West Columbia ; ::;:;:::::;:::::;:;:;:::::;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;::
be her grandsons, Dick and Mrs. Howard Van Matre,
BREAKDOWN VOTED
Gene Abbott, Jerry and Mason; Mrs. James Shinn,
Dave Bowen, President
Hoger Swartz, and Paul Point Pleasant ; Mrs. Melvin
of the Meigs Local
Wears , and her great- Halstead, Point Pleasant
Teachers Association, said
grandson , Ma rty Ingels. Mrs. Valerie Stowers, Raven·
today negotiations between
Abbott was preceded in death · swood: Perry Shirley,
the Meigs Local Teachers
by her husband; Sterle. Hartford ; Louis Burton, Jr.,
Association and the Meigs
Mrs.
George
Services will be 111 2 p. m. Mason;
Local Board ol Education
Friday at the Si lver KrUskamp , Vinton; Mrs .
have broken down. A
Memoria l Free Will Baptist Roger Lu ikart, Mason :
g-e nera·l emergency
Church at Kanauga.
Hamilton Johnson, Point
meeting has been called lor
Pleasant ; and · Melissa
all
teachers Wednesday
Williamson, 'Henderson.
Aprill3, at 4:15p.m. at the
Too la t e ro classify
Births- A daughter to Mr.
G ARAGE SA L E April6 and 7.
high
school.
Don Headley . R t . 7, Tuppers and Mrs. Alfred Sprouse,
Plains . Organ, clo t h i ng , old Point Pleasant, and a son to
.dishes . mis cell ane:ous, mini
Mr. and Mrs. Ash Robinson, :;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:
bi ke .
Henderson.
CLOSED IV. HOURS
Schools or the Meigs Local
School District closed about
an hour and a half early
Wednesday due to weather
, BOWLERS TO MEET
conditions which for a period
Pomeroy A.B.C. and threatened to make road
W.LB.C . Associations will travel dangerous.
meet today at 7 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
RITES ANNOUNCED
where plans will be made lor
Masonic rites for Franklin
the bowling banquet and the Hudson, former Pomeroy
Wom e n 's
Bowling Police Chief, will be held at
Association will elect of· the Ewing Funeral Home at 8
· ficers.
this evening by Pomeroy
Lodge 164, F&amp;AM.

SALE PRICE

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED Jenny
Williamson, Rutland; Glenna
l,.ittle, Middleport ; Alice
Capehart, Syracuse: Venedia
Knight, Pomeroy: Linda
Hawley , Middleport : Barbara Warden, Middleport :
Thurman Martin , Jr. ,
Syracuse; Billy Midkiff,
Langsville; Michael GiJkey ,
Al b a n y;
Madolyn
Shoemaker, Middleport ; Ada
Clark, Pomeroy; Sara Congo,
Portland ; Jo hn Harrison,
Rutland.
DISCHARGED - Betty
Baronick, Helen Leifheit,
Freda Martin, Kelty Hum·
phrey , Mandy Hubbard ,
George Hupp, John Fleming.

SHOW, OR ELSE
SYRACUSE - Everyone
interested in playing in·
dependent baseball with
Syracuse this ·year should be
at the ball park here Sunday,
April 10, at 4:30p.m. rain or
shine. This is an organ·
izational meeting. If not
enough persons attend, in·
dependent baseball in
Syracuse will be dropped this
year.

ROLLBACK PAID
A total of $2,150,827.52 in
first hail 1977 property tax
rollback and homestead
exemption reimbursementS
have been sent to six counties
with Meigs included the office
of State Auditor Thomas E.,
Ferguson reported . Meigs
County received $37,520.46.

Area's Best Section Of
Easter Lillies, Tulips, Hyacinths,
Hydrangeas, Mums, Roses,
.
Azaleas, Geraniums And
Hanging Baskets.
'
'

inflation .''

BERKELEY, CAUF. - A MALODOROUS RAPIST
reeking of foul breath, body odor, oil and gasoline is
responsjble for some 200 rapes, according to outraged .
corrununity leaders calling lor his capture. A 46-year-old
woman told police she was attacked by the rapist Wednesday
- his first known asault in three months. She said he entered
through an open window.
The City C&lt;Juncil posted a $5,000 reward lor the capture of
the assailant. Police said they had 46 cases in which "Stinky "
was identified as the attacker. However, community leaders
said he has been responsible for some 200 rapes. The Rev.
James Stewart, a Baptist pastor, said the latest attack "was a
direct attempt on his part to flaunt himself in the lace of the
police and the community ,
NAPLES, ITALY - A CLEVELAND neurologist said
Wednesday human head transplants COilld be performed .
"within a year," but cautioned he now sees rto purpose in sue~
operations. "We are not . preparing to trallllplant a human
bead," Prof. Robert White of Cleveland University told Italian
medical experts on a nationally broadcast television program.
"I am just saying the technical problems o! doing it could
be solved in a year. But there are moral questiQns involved.
"Let me make one thing cl"''r. What I am saying Is that it
should be possible to perform such human head traniplants
within a year. But I am not saying they will be performed. I do
not see what purpose could be served at the moment by head or
brain transplants."
WASJUNGTON - THE UNITED STEELWORKERS
union sought improved job security from tbe nation's big 10
steelmakers as negotiators approached today's self-imposed
deadline for a new basic steel industry contract. Union and
management negotiators expressed confidence Wednesday
that the deadline could be met, averting the arbitration
process laid out in the union's existing n&lt;Hltrike agreement
wtth the industr:r..
But there were indications the union would be forced to
accept something considerably less than the fullblown
progtam which the union described at the start of negotiations
as "lifetime job security. " Although the no-Btrike pact
prohibits as a nationwide walkout, wtion official:l expected a
growing dissatisfaction over local issues might prompt a
number of strikes in ·individual -plants wben the current
contract expireli JAug. 1.
The 1974 no.strike agreement calls lor arbitration of any
wtresolved economic issues by April. Both sides agreed earlier
on an April 7 target date.
BERKELEY, CALIF . - FORMER TELEVISION
reporter Daniel Schorr says he made a."colossal mistake" in
the way he disclosed a secret report on U. S. intelligence that
was printed in the New York newspaper, tbe Village Voice.
The blunder, Schorr said Tuesday, was that he attempted to
hide his part irr the dl~~Closure.
. ''There was only one copy of the Pike committee report in
the free world not under lock and key, and I had it," Schorr told
a news conference at tbe University of California, where_he is a
visiting lecturer. "I thought it would be an added layer of
protection lor my source if I remained anonymous," he said.
But he has since decided, he said, "to turn an act of
clisclosure into a covert act was a clossal mistake."

CAR WASH, SALES
SYRACUSE - There will
be a car wash and bake sale
at Syracuse Fire Station
Saturday, April 9 beginning
at 11 a.m. sponsored by the
Eighth Grade class at RBCine
Junior High . A rummage and
bake sale will also be held at
the junior high building
Saturday beginning at 9 a.m.

Freeport .senator argues scrubbers
can.save Ohio's big coal industry
' COLUMBUS (UP!) - The

PLAQUE PRESENTED -Syracuse Mayor Herman
Londcm, .right, 18 shown presenting a plaque to Robert
Flanagan during Tluinday night's meeting of the town
couilcU fir the civic-minded role he has laken in the
community the past several years. Flanagan, durin~ the
swmner montha, can often be ' fowtd volunteerinj! his
time to clear weeds and other debris from vacant lots In
the ccmmunlty as well as doing his part in L'Utting brush,
picking up candy wrappers and other debris at Syracuse
Municipal Park. "We need more people like Mr.
Flanagan; he is Indeed a big asset to our village, and this
plaque is simply a small token of our appreciation," said
Mayor London upon the presentation.

$}29

10

$898

MIDWAY MARKET
992-2582

SYRACUSE - Syracu:;e relative to the bid were Jay
VIllage Council ThUrsda y Brown and Dick Karr.
night awarded a contract in
Charles Hamilton, coach.of
the amount of $4,925.35 for a the
American
Legion
sewage system serving the baseball team, told council he
new swimming pool. to the secured a home plate and
B&amp;K Excavating Co.
two score hoards for the ball
The only other bid sub- lield but he needed gravel lor
mitted-was by Bill Pullins in drainage holes . Council
the amount of $9,495. The agreed to secure the graveL
B&amp;K bid was approved by Hamilton · rePorted the
. HUD. Meetlilg with council

AT

ELBERFELDS

$21400

By United Presolnteraat!on81
JERUSALEM - PRIME MINISTER Yitzhak Rabin has
resigned as head of tbe ruling Labor party and bowed out ol ·
nell! month's elections, abruptly ending a meteoric career
over a scandal Involving an illegal U.S. bank account.
The 55-year old general who turned to diplomacy and then
to politics made the announcement Thursday on nationwide
radio and television In what could spell a setback in U. S.•
Initiated peace efforts in tbe Middle East. RBbin's move
reopened the struggle for leadership within the Labor party,
The party's 815-member central conunlttee was scheduled tAl
meet Sunday todiscuss a replacement.
YOUNGSTOWN, OffiO - TilE MAHONING COUNTY
grand jwj has been asked by the sheriff to investigate
thousands of dollars worth of 'missing courity equiprn~nt he
claims former sheriff's department employes took home.
Sheriff Michael Yarosh says employes of fonner Sheriff
RBy T. Davis left without returning up to $40,000 In vehicles,
guns, radios and lights'. Areport on the missing equipment was
llled with the grand jury , Yarosh, who assumed office in
January, said Thursday the missing items include a car and a
van.

Reg , S284.oo includes 42" round table with

one leaf and 4 side chairs In maple or dark

TOLEDO. OIDO - POUCE ARE ON THE LOOKOUT for
anyone carrying a yard-long green lizard taken fi-om the
University of Toledo's biology illhoratory, The lizard, a
cabnan, Is similar to a crocodile or an all!gator.
· "He could have been a rep We collector," said biology
professor Robert E. Gatten, "Or be could have bl!lln a very
shrewd thief. That lizard was worth a lot."
· ·
The animal, which has sharp teeth and a powerful tail, was
being used for research on metabolism.

Reg. S379.00 Round table, 2leaves, 6
chairs.
Slle $299.00
Reg. $533.00 Drop leal table, 2extra leaves, 4
side chairs.
Slle $424.00
Sale

$495.00
Reg. S620.oo 48" Double pedestal table, with
2leaves, 4 chairs.
Slle $495.00
Reg. S449.oo 42' table, lleal, 6 chairs. Sale
$369.00

CINCINNATI - OFF1CIALS OF THE Catholic archiocese
of Cincinnati report that Catholic Bishops of Ohio are calling
for an examination of alternatives to capital punishment. The
bishops have called upon society "to examine the question of
whether there are other and better approaches to protecting
our people from violent crimes than resorting to executions."
. The bishllpa noted that because "crime In our society
cannot be ignored," there must be "swill and certain
punishment for the perpetrators of crime (but) the more
pertinent question at this time in our history is what course of
action best fosters that respect for life, all human life, in a
society such as ours in which such respect is so sadly L!lcklng,"
said the bishops.

ELBERFELD$

LARKINS DIES
COI.UMBUS, Ohio (U P! )Richard C. Larkins, retired
ASK TOWED
Ohio State University athletic
A marriage license was
director, died Wednesday at issued to Wendell J. Ervin,
Ohio State University 21, Rt. I, Racine and Peggy
hospital where he was ad· Edith Cunningham, 18, Rt. 3,
mitted Monday following a Pomeroy.
heart attack. He was 67.

WNDON - PRINCESS ANNE, daughter of Queen
Elizabeth n, is expecting a baby in November, Buckingham
(C&lt;lntinued on page 12)

POMEROY, OHIO

]\
1

And
BOB'S MARKET MASON, W. VA.
773-5721

BY EDWARD K. DeLONG

PLANNING A PIZZA PARTY
PHONE
" 'THE ALL NEW

.·

'MEIGS INN PillA SHACK

,

. Of tbe four key thruSts in
Clrter's major nuclear policy
· c:ban1e, only one would
reqlilre CODIP'easlonal action.
The otben would be achieved
by budgetary measures and
by diplomacy at l!ome and

OF SHOES
r. t. n. t.no Ave.

WASHINGTON {UP!) Pretddent Carter will rely on
hla peraonallnfluence and the
power of the purse, rather
than appea)lng to Coogreas
for new laws, to switch the
United Slates away from
deldly plutonium fuel as an

- o source.

heritage house
Middleport, 0.
OPEN

MQnday fhru

Th,orsda• &amp; Satul'day 9;30 to s

abroad.

to8

•

Importing
to
meet slate low-&lt;~ullur
and federalcoal
sulfur
dlo:xlde standarda, the state's
sagging coal Industry could
increase production 26 per
cent, or some 11 million tons a
year.

'

"If 25 major Investorowned Ohio utilities had
utilized all the Ohio coal they
could under exiltlng (air
pollution) regulations and In
addition installed serubbers,
they would have lncreued
their use of Ohio coal by lll
per cent or 11.735, 280 tons."
Milleson's bill would also
allow the Public UU!Itles

Commission of Ohio to
prohibit a utility from
charging Its customers for
the higher price of low-&lt;~ulfur
coal Imported !rom wmern
United State1 coalllels.
Incomplete
figures
compUed by the state show
Ohio
coal
production
decrealed in 1976 to 45.4
million tons, down 2.5 per

The Pre81dent announced

!

•

~ new policy Thursday,

saying the benefits ol the 110caUed fast breeder reactor
and of reprocessing spent
uranium reactor luel are
more than offset by the
danger that plutonium thus
produced would be used to
produce nuclear weapons.
Carter relled solely oti
budgetary
powers
in
suspending a $2 billion
breeder demonstration
, program at Oak Ridge, Tenn.
The reactor would produce
more plutonium than it burns
and previous administrations
considered it vital.
Carter also conunltted the
United States to an Indefinite
suspension of plans to r~cle

cent from 1975 and the fourth
tl.me in live years Ohio's
mines have - produced less
coal than they did the
·
previous year.
The
con t inued
deterioration of the industry,
according to state olflclala,
was attributable to the
increased uae of low-&lt;~ullur
coal from western United

States coal fields.
Milleaon's bill would allow
utilities to include the cost of
buying
and installing .
serubbers in their rate base,
and therefore chargeble to
their customers.
Manufacturing planls
would also be granted tax
advantages is they install
(C&lt;Jntinued on page 12)

Schools in
$$$ trouble
.

CIN CINN AT! {UP!) More than 100 school districts
in Ohio will have to close their
doors for an average 24 days
this fall if additional lunda
are not obtained from the
state or through local tax
levies, an Ohio School Boards

Chamber

playing schedule is not
oomplete but the opening
game is with Portsmouth on
May 211•
Robert Wingett, president
of council, said the tennis
courts have to have a grade
run made to- go ahead with
the project. He stated that he
hoped before ihe next
meeting of council to be
.ready to advertise for bids on
The Middleport Chamber of
the tennis courts.
Commerce
Thursday afCouncil named the RBcine
Home Natonal Bank and the ternoon went on record in
Fanners Bank and Savings opposition to building a
Co. as depositories for village proposed coal loading tipple
near Clifton, W. Va., at a
funds for 1977-78. ·
regular
meeting at the
It. was allio reported that
C&lt;Jiumbus
and Southern Ohio
patching of streets will be
Electric
Co.
done on Saturday, pr9vided it
Meeting with the chamber
does not rain Friday, Council
in opposition to the tipple wu
voted to use the revenue
sharing money for park Gerard Hilferty of the local
development
· architectural finn, "A Couple
Attending were Mayor of Designen." Hliferty said
Herman London, Eber the tipple in his opinion would
Pickens, Wingett, Barry be detrimental to tlle beauty
McCoy, Katie Crow and of the area. He indicated he
Jimmy Joe .Hemsley, ~ouncil would oppose It at a hearing
members, Mary Chancey, on the Wahama High School
clerk, Milton Varian, police by the U. S. Corps of
.Engineers. The meeting will
chief.
begin at 7 p.m.
Middleport Village Cowtcll
and the Middleport .
Pomeroy Rotary Club earlier
took Stands against the tipple
which would be located
across the Ohio River .from
Middleport.
At yesterday's meeting,
presided
over by President
A television documentarY
Emerson
Heighton, the
about southeastern Ohio and
chamber
also
went on record
the• economic "shot in the
in
support
of
the establishan'n" created by the opening
ment
of
a
Slate
Highway
of several coal mines and
P_
atrol
Post
.
i
n
Meigs
Count~.·
construction of electrical
Don
Mullen
is
heading
a drive ·
power plants will be shown at
to
have
a
post
here.
Mid·
10 p.m . this evening on
dleport
VIllage
Council
also
Channel 2C or Channel 11 for
recently
voted
in
support
of
residents with cable.
the
establishment
of
the
local
The program is entitled "In
the Shadow of the General." post.
.The chanlber approved a
Mrs. Leona Ebersbach,
$300
payment to the village to
Racine, who earlier saw a
be
u:;ed
in helping maintain
portion of the show on
the
Middleport
Marina, a
Channel 20 has advised or the
recreational
and
boat
repeat showing.
launching facility.
Attending the meeting were
Heighton , AI wilda -Werner
FEES DISTRIBUTED
who gave the treasurer's
The first quarter 1977 liquor report : Edna Wilson who
pennit ol $146,568.43 to Ohio's gave the secretary's repor( ;
cities, villages and townships John Warner, Edison Baker,
have been dist.ributed . Cad Horky, George Ingels,
Salisbury Township in Meigs Hichard S. Owen and
County received $561.64.
Hilferty.

•

aga1nst
tipple
•

•

Mines' impact
described on
fihn tonight

Association official testltiect
'Thursday in Hamllton CountY
Common Pleas Court.
Jerry Gumbert, OSBA
associate
director
of
management Information,
appearing as a wltneas in the
Cincinnati
Board
of
Education's school financing
law suit against 11M! state,
described a survey his
organlziltion made of Ohio's
school districts.
Assuming the governor's
proposed budget is adopted
·a nd no new operating levies
are passed, superintendents
were asked il their districts
would liave to close lor the
lack of funds thla year,
Gumbert said .
He said 617 school districts
were surveyed and 503
responded.
"G u m b e r t
said
superintendents In 113
districts, representln8330,000 .
students or 16 per cent o{ the
state's school children, sald ·
their schools would have
to close from two to 80 days
this fall if additional funds
were not avallable.
The
superintendents
Indicated they would need a
total of $45 million In new
funds to a void closing, he
said.
When asked about 191. 213
districts reported they wOuld
have to close lor an average
of 30 days that year wtless a
tax levy was passed or they
received more money from
tlie slate than the state now
plana to give them.
There are 800,000 students
in those 213 districts,
Gumbert said, and those
districts would need an
addiUonal$117 million to stay
open.
·
Last fall about 10 districts
had to close because of a lack
of funds, he said.

Crest at 52
.'

'

spent uranium to extract
plutonium. He relied on both
budgetary power and his
Influence as President In that
decision.
. The nation's only nongovernment reprocessing
plant, a f500 million venture,
Is being built by AlliedGeneral at Barnwell, S.C.
'The company wants federal
help for the last half of Its
financing, but Carter said It
will get "neither federal encouragement nor lundlng,"
Administration officials
said tnat should halt 11M!
project.
If Allied-General does get
private funding to complete

. • t-

:

'

-

.

GOLD MEDAL WINNER - Win!Jer in the Southeast Region Skill and Lelldership
Olyinplca of the Vocational Industrial Clubs of America wa$ Bruce C&lt;Jttrlil of Meigs High
School, left, who won a gold medal in mig and tig welding competition Saturday at Licking
COunty Joint Vocational School at Newark. Shown with Bruce is Richard Roseberry,
Instructor. Bruce was presented a trophy and a $20 savings bond. He will compete in state
competition in C&lt;Jlwnbus on Aprtl23. If he would win there he will compete on a national ·
level. Fifteen schools in the region competed. See page 7for other wlilners.

Teachers, hoard agree
RACINE - An agreement
between the Southern Local
School District Board of
Education ·and the Southern
Local Teachers Assn. was
approved Thursday night by
the board In regular session.
Details of the agreement
including salary and insurance provisoons were not
diaclosed.
The board approved the
finance
and
activity
statements and granted
permission lor United
Methodist Church members
to use the junior high

auditorium on Saturdays and
Sundays from I to 5 p.m.
during April and May in a
youth recreation program.
Pennission was given for a
citizens band radio club
group to use the Portland
Elementary building for a
coffee break activity on Aug.
28.
An educational trip to
Washington, D. C., was approved for eighth graders o~
April 28 and 29 and a com·
prehensive plan for education
of handi~appcd children . of
the district was approved.

Hazardous weather ~ay s .
were approved. Student insurance was given to the
Personal Service Insurance
Co. with Dale C. Warner as
agent. A discussion was held
on the renewal of teacher
contracts with action to be
taken on April 18.
· Attending the meeting were
Supt. Bob Ord, Clerk Unda
Spencer, board member s,
Robert Sayre, Jack Bostick
and Dallas Hill, Charles
Bailey of the CB radio club
and principals of all of the
schools.

,

Smith resignation accepted

EAST MEIGS - Meeting in
regular session Tuesday
night the Eastern Local
School
District Board of
United Presslnlenlallonal
Education
voted to advertise
The Ohio River, continued
bids
on
two new 88for
to surge upward Thursday,
passenger
school
buses and
with a crest or 52 feet exaccepted
the
resignation
or
pected at Cincinnati shortly
its
president,
Oris
Smith.
after midnight.
·
The hoard voted to place a
No major flooding is expected along the Ohio, but five mill operating levy
business interests, riverfront before voters ol the district in
vacation cottages · and June arfd discussed the status
marinas aJong the Ohio and of contlilulng negotiations be·
its tributaries could be af- tween the hoard and teachers
of the district.
fected.
The
resignation
of
The Ohio from Ashland to
Smith
was
ac·
President
Evallllville, Ind., rose three to
cepted with regret. Smith
(Continued on page i2)
earlier this week was na!'led
to serve as a member of the
·•
county board of education
&amp; J m S·replaclilg the late Gordon

predicted

the plant, they said, Carter weapons.
has no legal way to interfere
Officials said serious talks
with its seeking a Ucense to already are wtder way with
operate. But officials 20 nations on how to achieve
expressed doubt the Nuclear nonproliferation goals, and
Regulatory Commission· the reception has been gotid .
would grant such a license In Diplomatic pe1'8U8slon will be
opposition to the President's the key to that lo!lf!-tenn
pOlicy.
effort, they saiC:.
Carter said abandoninl
Carter's final thru.lt was to
plutonium Ia necessary If the pledge to make the United
United States is to lead the States a world supplier of
way In persuading such uranium reactor fuel so no
nations as Britain, France, nation need go without
Germany, Japan atid the nuclear energy for want of a
Soviet Union · to · join in breeder or reprocessing
keeping energy facilities
plant. In that area alone,
inyolving plutonium from Carter said he will seek
reachinll countries that might legislatiOI) from Congress to
use it to obtaip nuclear back up the guarantee .

.~.

.'•'

Plutonium power switch four· key

with us!

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

equipment Ia the only "nearterm alternative" available
to electric uUiitifll in order to
meet air polhlt!on reguiat!Oil3
and save Ohio's coal
industry, according to Sen.
Kinsey Milleson, !)..Freeport.
Milleson made the remarks
Thursday in testimony before
the
Senate
Energy
Conunlttee, which hejd its
first hearing on Milleson's
bill to provide lax advantages
to eleclric utillties if they
install "scrubbers."
Milleson said If Ohio'i electric utilities would stop

syat~ma

Contract awarded

.

PRICES FROM

"Flue gu desulfurlzation
are ·the only
significant near-term
alternative to the Ule of
scarce, expenalve low.ftullur
fosall luela in many power
plants," aald Milleson.
''The cost for fiue gas
desulfurlzatlon syaterna are
not considered expensive,"
he added.

use of flue gas desulfurlzation

DINETTE SPECIALS

11eaf, 6chllirs.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS
'

Scrubbers

R~ . S619.0048"table,

FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1977

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL XXVII . NO. 251

ALSO AT SPECIAL SALE PRICES:
REVIVAL NOTED
EAST MEIGS - A rev iva I
will be held at the · South
Bethel Church on Silver
Ridge Road April 10 through
17 with Evangelist Biil
Sydenstricker at 7:30 o'clock
nightly. Theme for the ser·
vices will be "Christ is the
Answer. '' Pastor is Duane
Sydenstricker. The public is
invited.

enttne

at

TRENTON, N.J. (UP!) indicated the high court may
Chief Justice Richard J. lower the age at whldJ a teenHughes says the New Jersey ager may be tried as an adult
Supreme Court has decided to in cases of violent offenses.
allow the news media to He said suggested ages
publicizethenamesolyoung, ranged as low as 14.
sters charged with seriolls - CUrTently, an 18-year-old
crimes.
may be takl!ll Into adult
In
an
interview court. The court does not
Wednesday, Hughes also plan, however, to require
mandatory sentences for
youngsters, Hughes said
more than half of all violent
crimes
are commiUed by
(cOntinued from page I )
.
are too costly and they won't · juveniles.
The release of names would
work.
apply to youngsters charged
"Since 1971 when the with offenses such as
national ambient air quality
standards were set, new and breaking and entering,
mugging, burglary and those
disturbing inlonnation has crimes classified as major
come to light showing that the
public's health is being crimes lf committed by
harmed to some extent, adults.
It also would apply in cases
perhaps seriously," Hollern
of
extensive vandalism or
had testified,
theft
considered " damaging
The Federal EPA last
to
the
community."
August promulgated sulfur
_und~r
estreme
Only
dioxide standards. for Ohio
circumstances
would
a
but the Ohio EPA rejected the
juvenile court judge be able
regulations.
Jack Wunderle,.Ohio EPA to waive the publl~hlng
requirement, Hughes said.
air pollution chief, said the
The justice said the
state plans to draft its own
Supreme
Court plana to adopt
regulations since federal
the rule changes fonnally by
regulations were based on
Jl!lle.
erroneous data.
Also, the legislature will be
"We hope to demonstrate
asked
to write the rules Into
the federal plan was In
lilw; and Hughes said he
error," he said.
expects
immediate action. by
"Criticism relating. to the
the
lawmakers.
validity of current air quality
standards for sulfur dioxide
TO MEET MONDAY
are ina'ppropriate," a
There will be a meeting
Federal EPA spokesman Monday,ApriiiB, at 7:30p.m.
countered.
at Pomeroy City Hall, council
"The standard has been chambers, for the apset.
The period lor propriation of 1977 revenue
challenging its validity is sharing money, Dr. Harold
lolig past," he added.
Brown announced today.

FROM

•·

•

pine. Sale S214.00

ADCCOMES!N
State Auditor Thomas E.
SERVICE NOTED
Communion Strvices will Ferguson announced tQday
be held Friday at 7:30p.m. at the April distribution of •
Mt. Union Baptist Church. 34,522,164 in Aid to Dependent
Sunrise services will be held Children to 554,012 recipients
Sunday at 6 a.m. John Els· in Ohio's 88 counties. Meigs
·a,unty received $54,655 of the
wick is the pastor.
total for 911 recipients.

EASTER FLOWERS

GENEVA, SWITZERLAND - THE -U. N. Economic
Commission lor Europe today predicted a gloomy year for
Western Europe : record unemployment and high inflation. In,
its annual economic survey, the commission said
unemployment is likely to reach a new postwar peak.
Economic growth in Western Europe will either remain
unchanged or ev'lll slow down this year, the commisslon
preclicted .
"And there are no grounds for optimism 'in surveying a
labor market which gradually worsened in 1976," it said. "The
modest growth of about 3 per cent in gross domestic product
forecast lor Western Europe in 1977 will not be sufficient to
reduce unemployment."
The commission blamed the gloomy outlook on a failure by
goverrunents "to get recovery going without renewed

Court w.ill give
names of youths

Collins . David Smith,
Eastern board vice president,
will move up to the
president's seat and hoard
member Doug Bissell was
named the new vice
president. The board has 30
days to name a replacement
member.
Several parents co mplained about a school bus
route and a conference was
held with a driver on the
matter. The hoard accepted
the resignation of Sue Kidd as
business office education
instructor as of the end or the
current school year, The
board entered into a contract
with the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department for
police protection during

Weather

SERVICE AT8
RACINE - Easter sunrise ' Clear tonight, lows in the
services will be held at the upper 20s. Partly cloudy
Racine Wesleyan United Saturday , highs near 60.
Methodist Church at 6 a.m. Probabitity of preciptlatlon
followed by a breakfast in the 10 per cent today, near zero
church annex. The public Is tonight and Saturday ,
invited.
::;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;:: ~:: ;:; :;:;:;:; : ; : ; :: :;.;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;.;:;.;:;:;.;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::

Ages ?·11 welcomed to hunt
Cblldrea through 11 yean old are Invited to the liDDual
Euler egg bunt ol the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club to
be held at Zp.m. SUIId8y at tbe Middleport Municipal park,
Approximately 500 pluUe egp eotlU.Intag aUpo for
redeemable prb:eo will be blddea for the bunt and tbe top
prizes will be gold and silver eggs which win prlzea of $10 and
ts, respectively.

.

;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::-t,:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;·: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;

)

varsity football and basket·
ball games.
Several letters of ap·
plications for secretarial anct
substitute cook posts wero
read . Mrs. Eloise Boston and
Mary Ja ne Headley, clerk
and assistant, respectively,
were authorized to attend a
clinic in Athens on June 9.
Tom Gumpf was named to
serve as a -substitute bus
driver_A comprehensive plan
for education of handicapped
children was approved.
The board cancelled
Saturday school on Saturday,
April 16, for a one day period
which will not have to be
made up due to the energy
crisis. The board recessed
until April 25.

Saturday work

party is off
Don Hunnel, president of
the Pomeroy Youth League,
announced today the work
party scheduled for Sat u~day
at the ball fields has been
cancelled due to weather
conditions.
A work party has been
scheduled for Saturctay, April
16 fl'Qm 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the
bail field at Meigs High.
Several projects must
be completed before any
practices lor the year can
begin . All parents who can
help with the work are asked
to assist.

)

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="789">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11324">
                <text>04. April</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="48202">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="48201">
              <text>April 7, 1977</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="205">
      <name>clark</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
