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                  <text>lQ-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomerux. 0 ., Monday, April25, l!l77

Local news, briefs
" That Girl From Texas ." a
comedy in thi"ee acts will be
present~ by the senior class
of Southern High S4;hool
Friday , April 29 at 8 p m . The
comedy IS by Alber t Green
and ls being directed by Mrs .
Carla J . Shuler Admission ts
Sl.SO tor adu lts and 75 cents
for students .
The Meigs Coun ty Co~ ·
missioners wi ll meet In
spec ial session Thursday .
April 28. at 6 : 30 p .m for the
purpose of open ing bids on
ag gre~at e and bitum inous
mater 1als .

The
Tuppers
Pla i ns
Boosters will sponsor a yard

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION
WATCH FOR
OPENING DATE

---------------------------,
!1 . Area Deaths
:I

sale Friday , April 19, to be
held in the .school gym from
NOAH PATTERSON
tO a .m. until 4 p .m . ttnd on
Noah Patter son. 85 , a
April JO, from 10 iJ m to 6 res•de-nt
of lnt ercess1on City,
p.m . Proceeds will be used . Fla ., died early Sun day
tor school improvement s
morn ing 1n Community
Hospital in Kissimee. Fla .
He was born Jan . 11. 1892,
A few openings are still
available tor WednesdaY 1 S s.on of the late Will iam 'and
!Vo.olly Hutton Patterson in
free cervi cal cancer clinic to
Meigs County.
be held tram 1 to 3 p.m . at
He is survi~o~ed by his wife,
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Bertha McCully Patterson
Women wish ing one of the
wt1om he married in Oc tober ,
appointments shou ld call 99'1
1936, in Pt. Pl easant.
3382
992 7531.
Two chi ldren survive . Otho
Pa tte r son, Logan, Ctdo and
Mr s. . Faye Ma Cafferty ,
Chauncey, Ohio . Four step·
·:::::·:·:·:·:·:·:::::·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·. c; hi!dren survive : Erne st
Bennet t , Phoenix. Ariz .; Joh n
Benne t t. Mass il lon, Ohio :
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Mr s . ' Arlena
Cottre ll ,
Wednesday through Delaware ; Mr s Witladean
Yost ing , Massillon . Several
Friday, a chance of
grandchildren
survi~o~e .
showers Wednesday. Fair
Mr. Pat1erson was a refired
Thursda y and Friday . employee of the Army . Tank
Lows In th e 40s Wednesday, Depot, Lima , and had spent
past six years in Florida .
and In the upper 30s to mid theFuneral
arrangemen ts wi ll
40s Thursday and Friday.
be announced by McCoyHighs In the 60s Wed· Moore Funeral Home.

o'

uesdny, and In the 60s and
to lowers 70s Thursday and

Friday.

ROSE CUNNINGHAM

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

TilE INN PLACE
Tuesday Night Special

Visit Our Salad Bar
Pepper Steak
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy$
Vegetable
Hot Rolls
Coffee, Tea .or Milk

295
Plus Tax

THE MEIGS INN
Pomeroy, 0.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holzer Medical Ceoter
1Discharges, AprU 2%1

I

church to tie in state one hour
prior to the ser vices.
Bur ial will be in Pine St r~t
Cemete r v . FriPnric; m~v
call at Miller 's. Home for
Funerals between 2· 4 and 7 9
p .m . today .
Pallbearer-s will be James
Northup , Silas Ham ilton ,
Runyon.
John
Dougl a s
Taylor, Ray Bush, and Andy
Lem ley .

MORLAND PROVENS

John Ackerman, Tammy

Bays, Cora Boster, Martha
Brown, William Buchanan,
Paul Cantrell, Earl Clark,
Constance Cottrill, Mary
Derenberger, Charle s
Garvin, Paul Haptonstall,
June Hubbard , Daniel
Hughes, Ann Hysell, Mary ·
Hysell, Mrs. Billy Johnson
and daughter, Bessie Lee,
' Mrs. Joseph McCarty and

Morland Edi50n Provens ,
62 , Rt. 1, Norihup, died
Sunday evening at his
residence. He had been in
failing health several yea rs .
A reti re d ma intenance
man, he was born Jul y 7, 1914

son, Charles McCloud, Mrs.

Thomas McKay, William
Mu II"lnS, Mern"II MUSIC
· k
Unda Nea l, Carol Nicholson,
Polly
Parsons ,
Hearld
Patton, Francis Rathburn,

in Walnut Twp. to the late
Grover and Cora Shee ts
Provens .

Bethany Reynolds, Marie
Rogers, Mar~aret Scurlock.

Survivor, include his
c hildren , Willard James ,
Lancaster ; Mr s . Nancy Kay
Gris ley, Hartford , Ind .;
Ernes t Pr ovens, Austin ,
Te)l.a s; John , Terre Haute ,
Ind .; Calvin , Green fi eld and
Nina Jane, Hartford City.
Ind .; 10 graodchildren ;
brothers and s isters. Mrs.

Patricia

John (V irgie) Robertson ,

Cincinnati ;
Wil l ard,
Mrs. Rose A . Cunningham , Spring
fi e ld ; Mrs . Glenn
89 , a r esident of Gal lagher, (Estella) Hinkle . Pickaway ;
W. Va ., died April 17, in Harold. Northup ; Jaspar ,
Cha r l eston
Memo rial Columbus ; Mrs . Ernest
Hos pital .
Mrs. Cunningham was the I Ethe l) Frye, Columbus ;
Edd ie !Juanita)
moth er of Mr s.
Pe arl Mrs.
Bowling, a resident of Rt . 141 Br~seki~~·s s:r~~~e~~~ of the
in Ga llla County. Nine other VFW in Columbus and the
children survive, a long wi th Eagles Lodge of Gallipolis .
32 grandchildren and JJ
He was a ~o~eteran of World
grea t.grandchi ld ren .
War II.
Funeral se r~o~ices were he ld
Funera l services will be 2
April 19 , at Pryor Funera l p .m . Wednesday at th e
Home , East Ba nk , W. Va . WauQh -Hal ley -Wood FU(leral
Bur iil l w~s in Montgom ery Home with the Rev . Ernes
Memorial Pa(k .
Baker officiating . Burial will
be in Bethesda cemetery .
Fr iends may call at the
AZILE LONG
funeral
home. from 2 to 4 and 7
Azile Elizabet h Long , 78,
Gal l ipolis, died Sa tu rday in to 9 p.m Tuesday
Holzer
Medi ca l Cen ter
EMILY PEYTON
around 10: 30 a .m. She had
DEXTER - Emily Peyton ,
been hospfta lized the past few
48 , Route 1, Dexter, died
days.
She was born June 10. 1898, ea r ly Sunday at the Holzer
In Gatlia County, daughter of Medical Center fo ll owi ng a
the
la te
Georae
and four month ill ness .
Mrs. Peyton was born Dec.
Samant ha Py les Crom lish .
She was one of 10 children 18, 1928, in Dunlow, W. Va., a and last of her imm ediate daughter of Polly Frye and
the late James H. Maynard .
family.
She married Grant Long .of In 1950 she married Lloyd H.
Gallipolis on July 14, 19 17. Peyton , who s urvives, as does
Three sons we re born to this her mother .
Ot her s ur~o~ i vors are four
un ion : Grover , Gallipolis ;
Wal te r , at home and Forrest , sons ,. Ri c haro, Rou te l,
Dexter ; Wayne , Athens :
who d ied in 1972 .
Six gr a ndchildren and eig ht Steven Ray and Ja mes Earl.
at
hom e;
seve n
grea t-grandchildren surv ive . both
She was a member of the daughters, Mrs . Jane Bare,
Fi rst Church of the Naza rene Columbus; Mrs. Iris Jean
Gon zales . Fayette ville. N.
of Gallipolis .
·
Funera l ser vices wi ll be C.. and Joanna, Patricia ,
he ld at fhe chu rch 2 p.m . Barbara , Cindy and Jenniter .
Tu es day with Rev . John all at home ; four grand·
Ut terback offi c iating . The children, four brothers. John
bodv will be taken to the B. Mayn a rd , Oakland , Va .;
Owen , Cl ifford and Sponcil
Mayna rd , all of Dunlow; four
sisters, Mrs. Lucitle Queen ,
Cin ci nnati ; Mrs . Hulda
Bucki ngame,
Clevela nd ;
Wilma Jean Maynard an d
M.ary F. Maynard, both of
Dunlow, and se~o~eral niece s,
nephews and co usins .
Funeral services will be
·held at l p.m . Wednesday at

the Rutland Chapel ot the
Walker Funera l Home with

the Rev . O'Dell Manl ey of·

fi ci ating . Burial will be in
Standish Cemetery . Friends
may call at the chapel any
time after ·2 p.m . Tuesday
unti l t ime of services . The
family will receive friend s
fr om 2 to 4 and 71 to 9 p.m .
Tuesday.

Goodyear
searching
for gas
I

AKRON, Ohio (UP!)- The
Goodyear Tire and Rubber
Co. will qrill a 6,500-foot
e~perimentsl well in Jackson
County this week seeking
additional natural gas for its
;nanufacluring operations, It
was announced today.
Goodyear has already
. drilled three successful well•
on its property in Akron but is
hoping to hit the "Rose Run
stratum"

which

SmaUlers, Dav1d
Swain, Dorothy.Walters, Dan
White, Tom Woodward, Jr.

(Births, Aprll22)
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Null,
son , Gallipolis ; Mr. and Mrs .
Th
M"l
1 8t ea d • son,
omas
Gallipolis .

(Discharges,AprUZ3)

Phil
B k

Luckey,

ningham,

Marysville and Ashland.
The Time Always Comes

Another car makes more sense than another repair bill. It doesn 't
have to be a frightening experience. Your friends at the Farmers
Bank can arrange to finance your new or used car and ayoid another
repair bill. Come in today and ~alk to us at Farmers Bank.

Farmers Bank

Fa
• •

• -

• ..... 1

a

POMEROY, OHIO

~o,ooo .oo

Muimum Insurance For Each. DeDOsitor
~rii!Mr Federal O.poslt Insurance Corpi,ration

'

'•

MANSON DENIED
WASHINGTON (UP!) Tbe Supreme Court tnday
denied a bearing to former
cult leader Charles

Beve rly
B kl

Audrey Davis,

Eulah Deweese, Roy Grose,
Grace Hughes, Daryl Jent,
Karen Johnson , Mrs . Frank·
lin Jones and son, Eleanor
Keels, Joanne Kincaid ,
Donald Mayes, Mrs. Gary ·
McClaskey and son, Hilda
Meek , Mary Messer, Sandra
Osborne, Elmer Painter,
· ·
R l"ff
J
Virg lma
at I •
ean
Thienel, G~insford Upton ,
Grace
Warn er,
James
Warner, Darrin Watson,

(Birth, April 231
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Wise,
daughter, Middleport.
(Discharges, April Z4)
Virginia ...Adams,

Betty

Ashburn, Mary Broyles, Mrs.
William Burns and son, Mary
Elliott, Doldie Ewing, Jef·
frey
Gardoer,
Stanley
Gibson, Karen Gussler, Alene

Head, Donald Henry, Debra
Howell, Edward Mapes ,
Teresa McGowan, Donald
Mora, Mrs. John Mounts and
son, Lewis Pauley, Mrs,

Raymond · ·Pope
and
daughter;
Mrs. John
Redovian and daughter, Mrs.
John Roush and son, Mrs .

William Snedegar and son,

Injury. • •

Haven;

Carrie

EAST MEIGS - Schools of
the Eastern Local School
District may be closing
during
October
and
November unless more local
and state funds are forth·

School concert
well received
ATarge crowd attended the
vocal
spring
concert
presented
Sunday
at
Southern High School by the
high school choir under the
direction of Mrs. Lee Lee.
Well received were such
nwnbers as "Praise The
Lord," " Thank You Lord,"
"Clap Your Hands," and a
modem arrangement of "The
Lord's PraYer.'' The choir

also presented a montage of
"Rock Around the Fifties,"
· and "A Sentimental Journey
Through the Forties."

REUEF COMMERCIAL - Taking part in a "relief
commercial" at the variety show to be staged Wednesday
night at PorUand Elementary School are, 1-r, Charlie
Weddle, announcer; Jamie Pauley, Tony Connolly and

VOL. XXVIII NO. 8

FUll

,..

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Look what's
"growing" on
Toni Todd"s
smash sunback!
Supersize sunflower appliques
1
with petals of
fluffed· out yarn.
Elasticized in the
middle and
tied with bows.
Polyester/ cotton
kettle cloth.
Orange or
white.
Machine
wash-dry.

By United Press lnternatioual
BERT LANCE, PRESIDENT
carter's chief budget adviser, says there Is no "cheap or
Pl!inleas" solution to the energy crisis. Speaking at an
Association Press luncheon meeting during the 91st annual
convention 9fthe American Newspaper Publisher Association,
Lance said the Carter administration was the first to have a
full energy plan .
"We haven't had any energy policy in times past," he said.
Lance also indicated the inflation problem would ease as steps
were found to come to grips with the energy shortage. Lance
said inflation would "demand hard choices on the part of the
American people." He added the administration will have to
show increased fiscal responsibility and balance the federal
budget to win the confidence of tbe business community.
He said his own personal philosophy toward goverrunent
• SAN FRANCISCO -

6·16.

$29.00

fiscal matters is: "If it ain't broke, don 't fix it."

I
Open Friday
9:30 to 8 P.M.
other Week Days
9:30to5 P.M.

ELBERFELDS
INPOMEROY

WASffiNGTON - OffiO DEMOCRATIC SENATORS John
Glenn and Howard Metzenbaum are 'to meet Wedoesday with
President.Ca(ter to discuss the future of the proposed $4.4
billion.' expansion of the uraniwn enrichment plant n"''r
Piketon in southern Ohio.
Energy and ·Research . Qevelopment Administration
officials had originally said the plant was to be expanded, but
last week Carter's energy adviser, James Schlesinger, said the
money may go to build a plant in Tennessee. Both Glenn and
Metzenbawn attended a rally last weekend in Portsmouth,
which is south of the proposed plant, and told residents they
would do all they could to keep the plant in Ohio.
J
WASffiNGTON- ATTORNEY GENERAL Griffin Bell
flatly rejects the idea that he should not prosecute FBI officials
for Illegal investigative acts committed in a pre-Watergate era
wben they believed the tactics were acceplable .
GBI Director Clarence Kelley persuaded Bell to hear
complaints of rank and file agents about how agency morale
. has been damaged by the indictment of a former supervisor in
New York for mail openings and wiretaps. But after three
hours of meetings with Kelley and two successive delegations
of hand-picked FBI agents, Bell told reporters they discussed
ways to restore morale and did not even discuss the merits of
. the New York Indictment .

CINCINNATI - EARNINGS FOR THE firot quarter of
•1971rose56per cent to $4.7 million, compared with earnings of
$3 million for the first quarter last year, the D. H. Baldwin Co.
reported Monday. Earnings per common share of stock for the
three month period ending March 31 increased 59 per cent to 70
cents per share from 44 cents. Fully diluted earnings per

.

23'!-.

common share rose 66 per cent to 68 cents per share .

Baldwin, best known for its manufacture of pianos, has
branched into the savings and loan, insurance and banking
business.

The KIMBERLEY • H2310W
Swivel - base consolette at the
low price .ot table TV. Durable

vinyl -c lad metal cabinet

WASINGTON - A LEGAL BATTLE is brewing over
Agriculture Secretary Bob Bergland's decision to dismiss 33
.state officials of two department agencies, the Agricultural
Stabilization and Conservation Service and the Farmers Home
Administration. Bergland disclosed Monday he had fired the 33
Republican4!ppointed officials effective last Friday. The
dismissalllst included 19 directors of state ASCS offices, an~ 14
Farmers Home Administration state directors, including the
FHA chief in Ohio.
Bergland said the last Republican administration
"blanketed" •tate ASCS and Farmer&gt; Home directors into a
"schedule A" federal iob category in"'which some officeholders
(Continued on page 10)

finished in simu lated Walnut.

$52995 v

(Continued on page 10)

among board members who
met in recessed session

Mnday night. Due to the

econonnic

pic tu re

in

the

en tine
TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 1977

Middleport will be" a part of radio equipment for the
the new Ohio police radio expenditure.
network at a minimal cost,
Council voted to issue a taxi
according to plans made by license to Robert Rinehart
town council in a regular who will operate a ninesession Monday night.
passenger van . Council also
Meeting with council was discussed again a car lot in
Pete Simpson, director of the Middleport on which nine
project which will establish a wrecked cars are now
new radio system in Meigs located. Mayor Fred HoffCounty tied into a five-county man 'has been making consystem. The five-county centrated efforts to get titles
system will in turn be tied . on the vehicles so that they
into a system to be used can be disposed of. The
throughout Ohio.
mayor again pledged to
A federal and state grant continue his effort and will
has been given to Meigs enforce a muisance orGounty totaling $18,155 for the dinance lo help speed the
new system with the local process of getting rid of the
share by the communities of vehicles. Council generally
Pomeroy,
Middleport,
· Racine and Rutland as well
as the sherifrs department of
only $956. The grant was
made by the Administrative
Justice Division of the
Department of Economic
Development. ~
Of the total to be paid by the
communities, Middleport is
the hardest hit, being
assessed $637.97 because two
remote units are used. One
unit is required in the police·
United
Press
mayor's offices in the By
International
daytime and another for the
Wildcat strikes by United
dispatcher in village quarters
Mine
Workers
union
upstairs in village hall during
members
and
roving
bands
of
night hours.
pickets
shut
down
seven
The new system will be
operated through a trans· mines in Ohio and two in the
mitter in the office of Meigs Northern Panhandle of West
Sheriff James Proffitt. The Virginia early today, idling
system will tie in with five 4,700 miners.
Pickets from eastern Ohio
couties on a particular were
reported in Meigs and
Ire ency and these include
Vinton
County early today
Ga
, Jackson , Vinton ,
where
three
mines of the
' Lawrence and Meigs County.
On another frequency, the
system will operate only on
the local county level. The
SPECIAL NOTICE
third frequency is for use on a
Area caooel5ls are In·
state-wide emergency basis. vlted · to join the lzaak
Simpson, who has been Walton League on a canoe
working on the project for the trip down scenic Shade
past two years, said that the Rlverne~tSundayat 12:30 ·
present radio system will be p.m.
used probably for a county
The group wDI meet at
wide fire and emergency the Keno Bridge oo the
radio setup so there will be no Basban Road and canoe to
waste of equipment. It was the Ohio River. There will
pointed out that Middleport be return transportation
would have a problem if it did for yw and y&lt;Jur canoe.
not participate in the plan

PRICE Fl FTEEN CENTS

INGELS FURNITURE

SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY

"nmaway costs of hospital

Mllkshakes 59c
We'Have25 Flavors!

. TrY Qvr Qellclous
Cnic~&lt;en snac~.
Dinners ..
Or Buc~et•

four others were murdered
at her home, and Mr. and

Mrs. Leon LaBtaoea were
found dead by Mrs.
LaBlanca's son at their
home.

,

care" by passing a law to
keep costs from increasing
more than 9 per cent a year.
The American Hospital
Association said today this
would force some hospitals to
reduce their services.
Health, Education and Welfare Secretary Joseph
Califano said hospitals "have
become obese ... They are not
trim."
J . Alexander McMahon ,
president of the 6,000member AHA, said, "Tbe
real victims would be sick
ind Injured people, and for
their sake, hospitals across
the ~ountry will unite to
oppdle this proposal."

Mayor Hoffman was
authorized to· proceed with
advertising for bids on the
tennis court project if it is
ready before the next regular
meeting of council. He also
announced the meeting on the
coal loading tipple for
J'hursday ev~ning at 7 p.m.
at the Wahama High School.
Attending the meeting were
Mayor Hoffman, Clerk·
Treasurer Gene Grate, and
Councilmen
George
Meinhart , Marvin · Kelly,
Allen Lee King , William
Walters, Carl Horky and
Dewey Horton.

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

Weather
Clearing tonight, lows
around 40s. Sunny and
warmer Wednesday, highs in
the 70s. Probability of
precipitation 50 per cent

since the town uses the trans-

mitter of the sheriff's
department and the present
equipment would not work
with the new transmitter to
be installed. Council voted
unanimously In the ex·
penditure of the $637. It was
pointed out that the town will
receive about $5,800 worth of

On Monday,
Carter those
quality
proposi!d two laws, which irnprovemenls," he said in a
aides said were the first·,step statement.
in his proposals for a national
The legislation would
health care program.
prevent hospitals from
One would set a ceiling on increasing service:S to
the annual rate of increase in patients and require some
hospital costs, from 15 per . hospitals to cut existing
cent to about 9 per cent in services, McMahon said. He
fiscal 1978, less thereafter. argued that the bill would
Another would set up a $180 restrict hospital revenues
million expansion of the pro· without cutting the cost of
gram of subsidized medical expensive reqirements like
care and diagnosis for malpractice insurance and
children.
energy .
McMahon said 10 per cent
AHA, representing nearly
of that 15 per cent increase in 6,000 ·hospitals, said the
hospital costs is due to industry has supported cost
inflation ar)d the rest to control measures in general,
improvement in care .
not just for hospitals. "Some
"To comply with the 9 per results have been achieved
cent restriction, the first already, more can be
thing that would have to be ex]iected, and this Is the
done away with would ~be orderly way to moderate

Repair team begins task
of stopping oil leakage
STAVANGER, Norway (UPI ) - High .winds and
waves suddenly decreased today, allowing a six-man
team to board an ' offshore oil well and begin
preliminary work to stop the flow of 4,000 tons of oil and
mud leaking daily into the North Sea .
A PhiUips Petrolewn Co. official said if the actual
capping work got under way today, the leaking Bravo
rig could be brought under control by Wednesday.
The six-man team, led by two oil experts from the
famed Red Adair Fires and Blowout Co. of Houston,
was able to get on the rig after a special barge loaded
with capping equipment and cranes pulled to within 50
feet of the Bravo well, the spokesman said. The other
four were Phillips employes.
"The Adair-led team are hopeful that if they can
start work this...orning they wiU finish capping the
well by Wedoesday, but this is optimistic," said Svein
Abrahamsen, industrial relations representative for
PhiUips.
Angsar "Boots" Hansen and Richard Hatterberg,
two of the world's top blowout experts, were in charge
of the project to cap the well.
The rig is located 175 miles southwest of Stavanger In
the Norwegian Ekoflsk Field, where 4:Hnlle4!n-hoor
winds and waves 15 to 20 feet high Monday kept the
special barge away from the rig.
The bad weather was forecast to continue for foor
da~s. but winds today unexpectedly dropped to 22
miles per hour and the waves fell to four to six feet. The
latest for ecast called for furth er decreasing winds and
light rain.
Norwegian pollution control officials said Monday
the rough seas had begun breaking up a major oil slick
from the well, the result of the blowout Friday of a 4'h
inch diameter tubing strip 20 yards above the sea's
surface.

Four arrested
3;t beer party

today, tO per cent tonight and
Sheriff J . J . Proffitt
Wednesday.
disclosed today that deputies
last Saturday morning broke
up an apparent "beer party"

Southern Ohio Coal Co. were
shut down. The three
Southern mines employ about
1,500 persons.
Nearly 3,200 UMW miners
at fow- Eastern Ohio mines
and two m ines in West

·virginia remained off the job ·
today despite urging by UMW
officials to return to work.
The Belmont county
Sheriff 's office in St.
Clairsville said early today
there appeared to be no
attempt on the part of the
strikiing miners to return to
their jobs.
John Guzek, president of
UMW
District
6
headquartered in Bellaire,
said the strikes were
unauthorized.
"I told the men to get back
to work," said Guzek. "They
have got to get back on the
job."
The series of strike• began
·last week and at one time
shut down a total of 13 mines
in Eastern Ohio.
The miners Monday struck
:-:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-::;:;:::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::.:::: the North American Coal Co.
No. 7 mine at Clarington, the
CALL ANSWERED
Franklin No. 25 mine of
The Pomeroy Emergency Consolidation Coal Co. at
Squad answered a call at 3:40 Cadiz, the Saignaw mine of
a.m . Tuesday to Lincoln
Heights for Flora Williams
who was having difficulty
breathing. She was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

in which three adult males
and one female juvenile were
arrested,

an

unknown

number of others escaping.
The arrests came at an
abandoned barn in Scipio
Twp. located between SR 143
and CR 338. Deputies were
answering an alarm that a

possible fire was starting in
:he structure known as the
'
"old
Reeves farm ."
the Oglebay-Norton Coal Co .
When d'eputies arrived on
and the · Peabody Coal Co.
the scene an undetermined
mine at Coshocton.
Guzek said the North number of young men and
American mine was struck ' women ran from the bam.
when a miner who bad left hls The three were apprehended,
job for one day and then and charged with trespassing
attempted to return to work and contributing to the
delinquency of a minor were:
was turned a way.
Roger Steven Wright, 18,
· "At the Franklin )lline a
boss assaulted one of the men Rt. I, Albany .
Eddy Ray Woodyard, 20,
and at the Saginaw mine it
Athens.
was insubordination on the
Richard Allen Russell, 19,
part of a miner," said Guzek .
Rt.
1 A!hens.
"At the Peabody mine the
strike was caused by an The female juvenile was ·
absentee program Peabody is released to the custody of her
trying to implement other parents pending a hearing iri
than what is covered by the j~venile court. She was from
Vinton County. Several other
contract," said Guzek .
Guzek said the Valley persons at the scene have
Camp No. 1 mine at Short been identifred and apCreek, W.Va. · and the propriate action will be
Windsor mine ~ at Windsor , taken, the sheriff said. In
W.Va ., owned by American other action :
Deputies early Sunday
Electric Power Co. were shut
morning
arrested Tom Durst ,
down by roving pickets.
· 21, Rt. 1, Portland, charging
him with contributing to the
delinquency of a minor by
COFCTOMEET
The Pomeroy Chamber of furnishing beer, and also with
Commerce will meet ·wed- possession of a controlled
nesday at noon at the Meigs substance, to-wit : marijuana
Inn to adopt a theme and in an amount less than 100
complete plans for the Big grams.
He has posted bond and is
Bend Regatta.

to appear in Meigs County
Court Friday, May 6.
On Monday, deputies Ron
Hollon and Dana Aldridge
transported Robert Lewis
Coffey, Belpre, and Michael
Pierce, Rt. 1, Middleport to
th e Ohio Correctional
Medical and Reception
Center at Columbus to begin
serving sentences recently
imposed by Meigs County
Common Pleas Co urt Judge
John C. Bacon. Coffey was
sen tenced for aggravated
robbery of Thomas Zano and
Pierce was sentenced for his
escape from the Middleport
Jail.
Saturday morning deputies
investigated an accident on
priva te property at Jack
Ward's Night Club parking
lot at SR 143 and SR 7 bypass.
Charles W. Chapman, 39, Rt.
4, Pomeroy, told deputies he
wa~ pulling into the southeast
end of the parking lot. As he
passed, Joan Wears, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, apparently did not
see Chapman and started
backing. Chapman's car had
heavy damage. There were
no iJ,ljuries or citations.

At ·4:30 a.m. Saturday,
Arthur L. Miller, 51 , Rt. t,
Rutland, traveling north on
TR 58 crested a hill and
smashed his car into an
abandoned auto at rest with
its back end on the road.
The aba ndoned auto was
owned by Vickie Lynn Six,
White Pigeon, Mich., who
was cited to Meigs County
Co urt for parking on a
roadwa y. She advised
deputies she couldn't get her
car o1arted and just left it .
She di-dn 't think anyone would
be traveling the road.

Nursing home in top priority

Hospitals fight Carter plan

Middleport. o.

was of the opinion that the lot
is an eyesore.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
·Thursday through
Saturday, a thance of
showers Thursday and fair
Friday and Saturday.
Highs will be In tbe low 60s
north and lbe mid 70s south
Thursday, rising to tbe mld
70s or low 80. by Saturday.
Lows will be In the 40s
Thursday and In the upper
40s or tow 50. by Saturday.

Foreign pickets
shut mines down

qualify goes in before the name goes on®

106 N. 2nd Ave.

term is the rest of thi.s year.

This was the consensus

Middleport in new radio net

SUIIFLOWER
DRESS.

By CRAIG A. PALMER
WASHINGTON (UP!)
President Carter has asked
Congress to stop the

&amp; french Fries
ONLY 79c

at

issue supplemental contracts

for tea cher aides, elementary

coming .

:::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:;:;:::;:;::::::::.

Ill THE SUN~

A similar accident occurred at 1:10 p.m. on SR 1 on

ALL THIS WEEK! I
Sloppy Jo Sandwich

•

district, the board did not

secretaries, athletic coaches
and
yearbook
and
cheerleader advisors for tqe
new school year during last
night 's session. The district
has a ta~ levy to be voted
upon by voters in June.
The board appointed Bob
Davis, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, to fill
the unexpired term of Oris
Smith, who was recently
1 named to the county board of
education. Remaining on the

•

A GREAT PICTURE FROM
ANY
. AHGL€·YOU CHOOSE.

Union Ave. in Pomeroy
where an auto driven by
James W. Wright, 75, Flatwoods, Ky. started to pass as
an auto driven by Michael L.
Triplett, 16, Pomeroy, turned
left. Wright was cited to
Meigs County Court for
passing at an intersection.
Three persons were injured
in an accident at 4:i5 p.m.
Sunday on SR 248, three
tenths of a mile east of SR 7 in
Meigs County.
Officers said an auto driven
by Charles D. Woode, 75,
Coolvllle, turned left into the
path of a vehicle operated by
Rose M. Burris, 30, Letart, W.
Va. Both drivers claimed
minor injuries as did Angelia
Burris; 7, Letart, W. Va. a
passenger in the Burris auto.
Woode was charged with
failure to yield the right of
way.
·

Michael Holter. Curtain time Is 1 p.m. Directing the show
Is Larry Wolfe, Joyce Ritchie, Cathy Simpson and Mary
Felts. Shirley Johnson is the accompanist. See page Zfor
more pictures of this upeoming event.

e

TONI
TODD

REVIVAL BEGINS
SYRACUSE - Revival
services will begin this
evening and continue through
April 30 · at the SyracuJ!O
Church of God with the Rev.
Richard
Bradley
of
Charleston guest sp'eaker.
The, Rev. Bradley will speak
on "Daniel and Revelation
each evening at 7:30 p.m.

1

(

Rice,

Jackson; Jeff Sowards·,
Ewington, 0 .; Rondall
Given•, Sr., Point Pleasant ;
Charles Utterbach, Point
Pleasant ; Mrs . Richard
Thomas, Point Pleasant;
. Mrs . William Kinnaird,
Gallipolis Ferry ; John
Lambert, Point Plea•ant ;
Thomas Gardoer, GaUipolis;
Mrs .
Ronnie
McCoy,
daughter, Crown City ; Mrs.
Pattie Haynes, son, Point
Pleasant; and Mrs. Leon
Putz, Point Pleasant.

Manson, convicted of the

1969 murder of actress
Sharon Tate and others In
Los Aogeles.
Tbe brief order leaves
standing a decision last
December
by
the
Catuorola Supreme Court
denying review after the
state appellate court had
afllrmed the conviction.
Besides Sharon Tale,

Two-month·· school
shutdown feared

News •• in Briefs

(Continued from page 1)
Norris, 52; Syracuse.
Amy J . Hoskins, 22, Rio
Grande, was taken to the
Holzer Medical Center in a
SEOEMS ambulance for
treatment of injuries suffered
in a traffic accident ·at 10:25
a.m. Sunday on SR 7, four
tenths of a mile &gt;;outh of Little
Kyger Rd.
The moon is approaching
Officers said she lost
its
first quarter.
control of her car which ran
The
morn'ing stars are
. off the roadway, over an
embankment, and into a Mars and Venus.
The evening stars are Merculvert and telephone pole.
There was heavy damage. cury, Jupiter, and SatW"n.
. A two-car accident oc·
curred on US 35, at CR 3
where an au\0 driven by
Frank H. Capehart; Jr., 61,
Point Pleasant, attempted to
pass as a · car operated by
Betty J . McCarty, 38, Point
Pleasant, turned left. · There
wasmoderate damage.

some

Logan,

Baird,
J ff

ec ner, e rey er ey,
Kelly Cox, David Cun·

geologists feel could be five
times more productive.
The
Ohio
Energy
Resources
Development
Administration will pay onethird of the cost of the test ·
well which will be operated
tiy Nucorp Energy Inc. of
East Liverpool, Ohio.
Besides
Akron
and
Jackson, Goodyear has other
Ohio plants in Stow, St.
Mary's ,

INFANT HELPED
FREE CLO'n!ING DAY
The Pomeroy Emergency
The Gallia · Meigs Com·
munity Action Agency will Squad aJillwered a caU to the
hold its Free Clothing Minersville traUer court at
Janet Wolle.
Day
for
low
in- 9:12 p.m. Sunday lor three
!Birth, Aprll%4)
month old Sabrina Hawlev
Mr. and Mrs. Alan Stock· come persons on Tues· who was Ul. She- was
moister, daughter, Jackson. day, April 28 from 9 a .~. taken to Veterans Meuntil 2 p.m. The Agency •
J-lospital.
At
Clothing Bank is loc;ated In morial
VETERANS MEMORIAL
6:10
a.m.,
Monday
the
the old high school building m
Saturday Admissions squad went to SR 7 for Simon
Rema 'Chatin, Pomeroy ; Cheshire.
Newell who was taken to
'
Angela Grueser, Minersville;
Holzer Medical Center.
Anna Alley, Racine ; Martha
CALLED TwiCE
Haggerty, Middleport.
The
Saturday Discharge - EmergencyMiddleport
Squad went to 975
Martha Bailey.
Maple
St.
at
3:11 p.m. Sunday CIDEFNAMED
Sunday Admissions - Kay
CLEVELAND (UPI)- Lt.
Hockman, Cheshire; James for Marissa Baker who was Michael P. Ahrens has been
taken to Veterans Memorial
Reitmire,' Hartford, W. Va.;
Hospital, then at 9:29 p.m. named head of tbe city's 2fiG.
Arch Markin, Athens; Myrtle Sunday
to the sherlfrs office member detective bUreau.
Durst, Syracuse ; Evelyn
For the past eight years
Murray, Middleport ; Robert In Pomeroy from where Ahrens has been coordinator '
Calvin McCune was taken to
Roush, Letart , W. Va. :
of the bureau.
Marissa Baker, Middleport ; Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Dano King, Rutland.
Sunday Discha rge
Elizabeth Templeton.
(Continued from page 1)
appointed to President carter's Advisory Conunlttee on
PLEASANT VALLEY
Discharges - Mrs. Virgil National Health Insurance Issues, which, he said, will give
interns and residents "an opportunity to participate In the
Patterson, Gallipolis Ferry;
planning of policies whkb will dramatically affect our lives
Mrs. Donald Russell, Mason;
Patricia Parling , New and the welfare of our patients."

hecilth care cost increases, "
said McMahon.
Th e administration's
proposal, he continued, is
"extremely complicated and
would require a huge
bureaucracy to enforce it,"
further adding to hospital
costs, McMahon charged .
Walter McNern e y ,
president of the Blue Cross
Association - one private
insurance plan that would be
affected
tentatively
endorsed it. Infla~ion in
health care costs, he said, "is
a trend that must be
moderated ... The problem of
rising health care costs must
be addressed quickly and
firmly ."
Joint hearings were an·
noun ced by two House health
subcommittees for ll!aY 11-13.
t

The need for a nursing located library building. The
home in Meigs County has study assigns which years
number one · prioritY ac· from 1978 through 1982 that
cording to a ca pital im· the projects might be carried
provement capabilities study out.
Based on current ihcome,
being conducted for the
county.
20 projects could be carried
John Jennings of Jennings out over the next five years
Assoc ., the consulting firm with local funds and 22 others
retained by the Mel'gs Co unty throu gh state or federa l
Regional Planning Com· funds. Thirteen oth ers would
mission, reported the nursing

have to

home as the first priority

through some additional tax

item

measures.

to the commi ssion

Monday at the conference
room of the Farmers Bank
Building.
.Priorities on some 62
projects were assigned by the
firm after a ·survey ~as
conducted. Rankin g'second in
priority as a result of the
survey is the purchase of
three new trash pickup
vehicles and the third rated
priority project was the
purchase of a copier for the
county recorder' s office.
Rankin g 62nd was th e
construction or f! ccntrallv,.

be carried out

A film shown by John Stitz·
lein, showing the effect of the
touri st trade an d th e
dama·ges caused to the land
and

environment

unl ess

planning Is done before it
happens, opened the meeting
presided over by Thereon
Johnson. president.
The commission discussed
s ub-division procedures from

the standpoint of the
acreage needed for housin g
on rural sewage systems and
also from the standpoint of
lhe need U· keep the land

usage as low as possible due
to the agricultural value for
th e land being used for
housing.
It was reported that the
local commission has filed a
701 grant application for a
study which would answer
some of the questions on
s ubdi vis io.ns

relating

to

sewage .
The cost of the study would
be $9,600 with about one third
of the funds provided locally.
The application was ·given
third place In priority when it
was reviewed by the Buckeye
Hills- Hoc king Valle y
Reg ional Planning Com·
mission recently. The local
group will know more about
whether the more deta iled
application will be needed by
May 10.
The group discussed the
abandonment of the Pomeroy
• Middleport area by the
Chesapeake and Ohio
Railroad and it was noted by
Mayor Fred Hof!II)an that the

only hope is that CONRAIL
will take over the service to
both towns .
The comm ission a greed to
employ Jennings' services

for co nsulting purposes
during th e next year.
Clearinghouse items ap·
proved included two grants
bein g so ught for the
Southeastern Ohio Educa tion
Service Agency of wpich
Meigs Co unty is a part and
fin ancing fo r the continuance

of the Buckeye Hills-Hocking
Valley Re gional Planning
Commission which also
provides services for Meigs

County:
Attending the meeting were
H. E. Shields, Rick Crow,
Hen ry Wells, Stitzlein ,
Johnson, C. E. Blakeslee,
David Fox, John Rice. E. F.
Robinson, Geo rge Colli ns,
John Jennings, Boyd Ruth,
Naomi Brinker. Jeffrey Burt,
Fred Hoffman, Gene Lyons,
Arch Stegall , Orion Roush,
Joan Culp ~d Milton Rljj!Sh.

�3- The Daily Sentmel Maddleport Pomeroy 0 Tuesday 1prtl26 1977

2 _ The Daal) Sentinel Maddleporl Pomeroy 0 l'uesdav Apral26 1977

GM offers to swap new for old cars
By EDWARD S LECIITZIN
UPI Auto Writer
DETROIT ( UPll - In an
unprecedented act1on to
repaar ats tarnashed amage
General Motors sa d Monday
at wall swap cars wath 128 000
Ameracans who bought 1977
model Oldsmob les Pont acs
and Buacks equapped wath
Che' rolet VB engmes
!I customers don t want a
new car they wtll rece ve a
three \ear 36 OO(kmle msur
ance policy CO\ ermg th e cost

of any repa rs tlley m ght
need for their engmes
transmtss ons or rear axles
GM
saad
the
two
alte rnah ves would be
ava table to customers who

bought cars equapped watll
tlle Chevrolet engmes from
tllc start of tlle 1977 model
year last October through
Apral 10 The 128 000 ca rs
amount to JUSt under 6 per
cent of the 2 6 mtlhon cars

sold by GM durmg thas model
year
The company would not
estimate how mu ch at m ght
cost m repa1rs or auto swaps
It saad the vehacles at takes
back

from

customers

probably wJII be handled as
used automobales
GM Presadent Elhott M
Estes saad the eX&lt;hange plan
does not change GM s plans
to contest lawsu ats faled by

Red oil fields
about dried up
By WILLIAM E CLAYTON
WASHINGTON (UPI ) What the CI(\ found out about
Russ an oal s what prompted
Carter
adnumstrat1on s
gloomy \1ew of the energy
futur e
Stansf eld Turn e r
mtelhgence director test faed
Monday before the House
energ) subcommattee whach
as lookmg mto energy
supphes as well as the effect
of auto fue l maleage on the
energy pacture
Turner dad not talk cars
but he did talk supphes
Russaa lie saad the worlds
leading oal producer wall I nd
ats productaon levelmg off m
the next year or two and wall
have to look elsewhere for
some of ats supply
The key pomt of tlle CIA
report - tllat the rate at
which 01! as pumped from the
groiUld wall began to fall
behind the world s tharst for
01! m tlle 1980s - was
announced a week ago and
mentioned by Carter as one
reason he as pressang for
conservation
But Turner told the
committee Monday detaals
not hatllerto revealed One as
that Russian oal wells are
mcreasmgly havmg a water
problem
The CIA study mcluding
data from highly sensatave
mtelhgence sources

not

available to other federal
statisttclans predtcts jlussta
wall change from an
exporter to a substantaal
!Jilporter of oal m tlle early
1980s
SoVIet oil productaon wall
soon peak possably as early
as next year tlle study saad
Turner saad the RusSians
have a problem of
productaon tn that those faelds
tllat account for the bulk of
Sovaet producllon are

exper encmg severe v.;ater
encroachment As a result
mcreasangly large quantihes
of water mu•t be hfted for
each barrel of 01! produced
Government fagures show
tlle Uruted States led n oal
productiOn an 1973 for
example wath the Sovaets
second and Saudi Arabaa
thard In 1976 tlle Russaans
had boosted !hear produchon
to lO 4 mllhon barrels per
day the figures showed the
Saudis were second wath 8 6
mallion and tlle Unated States
was !hard wath 8 1 milhon
The Soviets five year plan
for drilhng has a goal of 75
malhon meters of 01! we lis
and even wtth mrunmum
effort the &amp;mets wall not
come close to tlle 1980 goal
Turner sad
He estunated that by 1985
Russaa and Eastern Europe
wall need amports of 3 5
nulhon to 4 5mllhon barrels a
day

Girle defeat
Wellston 11-4
Meags Hagh School s garls
fast patch team unleashed a
13-hat attack agamst host
Wellston Monday evenmg
enroute to an 11-4 victory that
raased Metgs fme season
record to 6-1 Wmnmg p tcher
Kun Grueser tossed a SIX
hatter faMmg seven and
walkmg but one
Tonya Ash led the Mei gs
hatters wath a double and
triple Glenda Brown had two
doubles and Pat Vaughan
Grueser and Mary Boggs
each cracked two smgles
Stahn of Wellston led that
team wath two hats Me gs
next game IS Thursday at
Ironton

whatever eng me ts avcnlable
The cred at wall be for the
and b) 17 pravate catazens
GM s aMouncement was orlgtnal purchase pr1ce less 8
made an Detroit hours after cents a mile for use of the car
company attorneys sagned a from the time at was
consent order m Manhattan dehvered to the time Of Its
Supreme Court an New York return to tlle dealer A draver
City grantang the exchange to who already put 10 000 males
on a n model would have
5 000 New York owners
Estes saad that when the $800 deducted from the
facts are presented We wall credat
The problem arose when
prevail m the courts He
saad the exchange and GM began anstallmg 350ansurance plans are des gned cubac mch V8 enganes bualt by
to make sure the customer tts Chevrolet Dtvlslon m
Oldsmobale Delta 88 models
IS satasfaed w th his GM
when 11 ran short of the
product
A customer decading to Oldsmobale Rocket VB The
take a new car w 1l recetve a shortage dev!oped because
credat toward that purchase Americans m thetr renewed
of the sa me makt&gt; w1th
attorneys general m 10 sta tes

Offer by GM inadequate
say plaintiffs with suits
By Unlted Press International
Motors offer to swap new cars for

A General
128 000
Buacks Oldsmobales and Pontaacs sold wath Chevrolet
eng nes to unsuspecting customers drew fare Monday
from most of tlle plamliffs sumg the nations No 1
automaker for alleged deceptive trade practices
A nonprofat auto safety group called the plan
madequate and ansultmg
An assiStant distract attorney m San Francasco
branded at totally unsatisfactory and Jlhnoas
Attorney General Wallaam J Scott vowed to go to court
to force GM to pay car owners $300 each for !hear
aggravation
GM Monday proposed to exchange the 1977 Bmcks
Oldsmobiies and Ponllacs equapped wath Chevrolet V8
engmes for new cars of the same make if the owners
want to swap
Owners not destrmg new models would receave a
specaal ansurance pohcy coverang tlle enUre power
tram mcluding engme transmtsslon and rear axle
The discovery last month that 128 000 customers
unknowmgly receaved Chevy enganes an !hear 1977
Buacks Oldsmob1les and Pontaacs sparked the fating of
class actaon lawsuats by attorneys general of 10 states
Seventeen other lawsuits have been filed by pravate
c1ttzens
The strongest reaction to the GM plan came from the
Center for Auto Safety an Washmgton D C a frequent
crallc of tlle auto mdustry
C~nter ofhcaals dubbed the trade olf plan
madequate and urged affected car owners to a walt
results of tlle lawsuats before accepting at The center
wants GM to take the cars back and return the
purchase pr ce to tlle customers
Jllm01s Attome) General Scott who anltiated the
controversy watha nataonwade federal class action suat
agamst GM called tlle plan a step an the raght
direction But Scott sa ad he will ask tlle federal court
to order GM to pay people for the aggravation of
returmng tlle car they bought Scott saad $300 would
be a faar figure
Ray Bonner head of tlle San Francasco DIStract
Attorney s consumer fraud lUll! saad has offace has
been flooded watll telephone calls and letters from
persons outraged about tlle engme swtlch Bonner
called GM s plan totally unsatiSfactory for tlle
consumer and saad he wtll file a cavil actaon agamst
tlle automaker thas week
In New Orleans tlle attorney handling Louasaana s
swt against GM saad tlle proposal appears reasonable
Assastant Attorney General Charles Palm saad tlle
state will decade m several weeks whether to accept the
settlement and drop ats sua!
Kentucky Attorney General Robert F Stephens saad
the GM plan maght satisfy has states legal claam
The offer as reported certainly comes a lot closer to
what we think 1s raght than what some of the other state
attorney generals think he saad I m very pleased
that the sua! brought some action l think GM has
adrrntted they were wrong and are trymg to make 11
raght

Cars selling like hotcakes
•
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DETROIT (UPI) - US
auto executives WlCertam
what effect tlle Carter energy
proposals wall have on tllear
comparues reported Monday
thiS past mad April was the ar
best an hiStory
New car sales were up 3 per
cent crackmg a 12-year-&lt;Jld
rec&lt;Jrd
'The sales results for the
April 21--19 peraod due m

early May wall provade the
ftrst andication of any rush to
beat Presdent Carter s
proposed gas guzzler tax
on bag cars or an even further
slowdown m small cars sales
by would be buyers wa1tmg
for rebates to began
Amencan
Motors
executives already have
warned that tllear slumpmg
small car sales wall be hurt

HEALTH

even more unless the rebates
are made retroactive to Apnl
21 tlle day after they were
proposed
It s unportant for the
goverrarnent to consader the
consequences of ats actaons
AMC
Executave
Vace
Presadent Gerald Meyers
saad Maybe they don t see
tlle effects of what they re
domg but we sure do

The sales reports for the
Apral 11 20 penod were good
news
for
Dettoat s
automakers who hope
nothmg an the energy
proposals wall dampen the
strong recovery from two
recesston years
The four comparues sold
289 648 cars m the pertod 10 000 more cars tllan most
analysts had predacted
Truck sales of 94 125 vehacles
topped last year by 17 per
cent and also were a record
for a madApril peraod

Best athlete diet?

Lawrence E Lamb, M D
DEAR DR LAMB - From
what I ve read I ve ah•ays
thought any athlete \\OU!d
need a high protean diet but
at the last Olympac games
some of the athletes were
supposedly on hagh car
bohydrate daets
Would such a diet be
recor!unended for a we ght
lifter trymg to buald muscle
as well as a runner or a boxer
who needs long lastang
energy? Would you gave an
example of a hagh car
bohydratedaet'
DEAR READER - The on
ly reason one needs prole n
as opposed to carbohydrate
or fat In the daet as to provade
enough of the ammo acids m
protem to replace lost protem
from the body or to bu ld new
protem as m new muscle
growth
The calorae needs of the
body for energy can be supplied by any of these three
basac foods Your quesbon as
a bit hke asking me af you
should burn c011l or wood to
~~ the houser There ts no

advantage n consummg Weaght Traamrlg for Energy
more protean than IS needed and Weaght Control It ex
lor the bullding processes I plams thiS an more detaal for
mentwned
you Others who want this m
Carbohydrates are a good formataon can send 50 cents
source of energy because the for 11 With a long stamped
body can process them rapad
self addressed envelope for
Iy and they requare less ox maaling
ygen to enable your cells to
Vegetables fruats and
release the energy than does cereals are mostly car
eather fat or protem That as bohydrates For concen
because
carbohydrates !rated carbohydrates you
already contam some ox want foods devoad of
ygen
roughage and water The
Whether you ate usang car ultunate on this scale for
bohydrates protean or f~t energy IS sugar All of the
you need to conswne enough sweets are concentrated car
calortes to meet your needs bohydrates obtamed from
and still leave the protean vegetables fru1ts and cereals
avaalable for bualding pur - corn syrup beet sugar
poses So 100 grams of pr&lt;&gt;- honey from nowers nectar
te n a day w th adequate total Starch IS also concentrated
calorae antake from an) carbohydrate and IS broken
source as more than adequate down to sugar by the
for most muscle bualdang prn- digestive process before at as
grams despate what you may absorbed The advantage of
have been told by people m the carbohydrate foods also
terested an selhng protem u; thctt one can mcrease the
supplement,;
calorae mtake wtthout m
I am send ng you The creasang the fat aa d
Health !.&lt;!lei 1 umbea &gt;-I cho!eSl:erol c on.umptaon

•

r

L

Many of the so called high
protem foods conta m lots of
fat and cholesterol A hagh
percentage of the calortes m
a porterhouse steak or many
roasts are from fat not protem
You should know that an
excess of any calones above
what you need for real mus
cle growth maan!ammg your
body and provadmg energy
for your actavataes - wall be
converted to fat and
cholesterol by your body
Your body can change sugar
to cholesterol A good dtet for
everyone mcluding athletes
wall thus avmd obesaty while
provadmg the needed energy
requarement,;
(Because of the volume of
maal Dr Lamb cannot
answer your letters personal
ly but he wall answer
representative letters of
general anterest an hiS col
wnn Wr1te to h m m care of
thas newspaper P 0 Box
!5o! Ratho Ca!y Stallon New
V k NV 10019 t

mteresl m large cars alSO
were selecung large engmes
rather than tlle standard V6
engme
The first lawswt was fated
by Uhnms Attorney General
Walllam J Scott who
char ged GM s faalure to
mform customers of the
swatch
amounted
to
materaal concealment and
deceptaon
GM s~ad at wall contanue to
offer ats ca rs equapped watll
wha lever eng me at decades
wall be putm the cars but will
promanentl y label the
engme s ongms

Today's

Sport Parade

h

NEW YORK (UPI) - Don King says nobody wants to hear
his stde
He has been ae&lt;:used of gavmg bolWig a kack m the kidneys
plus a black eye as an outgrowtll of a federal grand jury
mveshgation mto charges of extortaon kickbacks and
falsification of faghters records surrounding the US Boxang
Champaonships he promoted
Don King IS unhappy over some of the things which have
been saad and wratten about hun lately ancludmg a recent
colwnn wratten by me Under our legal system he says even
an ae&lt;:used man as allowed to speak m has own defense and
be s raght about tllat
When l was asked whether I dcome to his offace and listen to
his sade I saa&lt;t, sure and when I got there Don King satd he d
answer any or all questions He did and heres how the
quest1ons and answers went
Q Farst of all are you saymg your hands are clean in all
thiS'
A Absolutely I categoracally deny any wrong.Ooang That
goes for any kickbacks or any anvolvement m faxed faghts
Whatever other charges have been leveled at me are assamne
anll radiculous
Q What about some of the men who worked for you an the
lournarnent like Pat Flood and AI Braverman' How do you
feel about some of the allegations agalllSI tllem •
A Flood and Braverman are my advasers and consultants
l m not a boxmg man so an an undertakmg of this kind l
needed people who knew boxmg I was gomg to pay tbem
$20 000 apaece to adVIse me and help make the tournament a
success My feeling about them 1s tlley are mnocent unbl
proven gualty If tlley are proven gualty tllen tlley have to
answer for at Nobody who was assocaated wtth me can tie me
up an any way By acquiescence by tacat agreement or any
other way I have not shared m any revenue - if there ever
was any to begm watll
Q In other words you re not gu.alty of anytllmg that may
come out of tllas mvestagation'
A The only thmg I m gu.alty of as trymg to do somethmg for
Ameraca trymg to contribute somethmg to boxmg which has
been so good to me The tournament has been suspended and
l d lake to see at resumed because l believe m at wath all my
heart I want to contrabule something that has purpose and
meaning toward a better Ameraca
Q How do you feel about the personal attacks on your
character•
A Saddened and hurt I resent when they say he s a con
man I have never traed to hide my past the fact I was a
nwnbers man and that I was an priSon but I tllmk It as totally
IUlfaar when they brmg 11 up an a demeanmg and derogatave
way I served my time I paadmy debttosocaety butm one fell
swoop of the pen they reduced me to what I was
Q You feel you belped boxmg then•
A I most certamly do I brought a refreshmg breeze to at and
put at on a new stage I proVIded entertairarnent made at
something With appeal agam for the little guy m tlle street as
well as for presadents kmgs and shahs
l love boxmg For
me 1t s a labor of love
Q Howmuchmoneyhaveyoumadefromat?
A Millions - for others I haven t made much for myself I
constder myself rtch though Rach wttll people
Q Dadn t you get $1 5 million from ABC TV for putting !has
tournament togetller?
A I was not makmg any money on this tournament I worked
myself to the bone - for free that s raght for nothmg because I believed m tlle concept I m a farmer l planted my
seeds today for the harvest of tomorrow I paad fighters more
tllan anybody s ever paad them So what happened? I was
gomg agamst the system Now peop}e hke those who run
Madison Square Garden want to get rad 1o! me Tbe whole thing
IS an economac problem nothmg more
Q What made you getmto boxmg m the ftrst place•
A When I was 16 I went mto the Golden Gloves an Cleveland
Some of the pros where I tramed told me a black couldn t make
1! an bolllllg unless he dad busmess took orders took a dave l
saad to myseH if I ever got an a posation I would do everytllmg I
could to clean at up

'
ASUPPLY OF FERTILIZER to be spread over a wade area of land reclaimed by Ohao
Power Company an Soutlleastern Ohao as loaded onto an aarplane for aeraal applicallon
Grass seed and fertahzer are apphed from tlle land and the aar depending on the
accessabahty of tlle area to be reclaimed

grading, seeding tree planting
some 1 530 acres grass
seedmg of another I 700 acres
and plantmg tree seedhngs about 730 000 of them - on
other areas By the end of !has
year the company wall have
planted some 38 3 mall ion
tree seedlmgs as part of a
cont1nu1ng fore s t
management program
Much of the land the
company has reclaamed
dunng the past 3j) years has
been turned anto a vast
recreatiOn area - complete
wath well stocked lakes

Two bills sent
to Ohio Senate
By J R KIMMINS
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohao Senate Monday sent
balls to Gov .fames A Rhodes
elunmatang the Jury duty
exempllon for contributing
members of the Ohao
Nataonal
Guard
and
broademng the coverage of
gross sexual unposataon
laws
Both balls were passed
unanarnously m a brae! Senate
floor sessaon The upper
chamber was to reconvene at
II a m today followed by the
House at I p m
After the floor sessaon !be
Senate Energy Comnnttee
heard executives of Columbia
Gas of Ohio suggest several
ways the General Assembly
maght help tlle state s utililles
m offsettmg tlle effects of
another hard wmter
Marvm White board chaar
man of Columbaa Gas saad
tlle best thmg tlle legaslature
could do would be to clarify a
b1ll lawmakers passed last
sessaon which prohabats all
natural gas customers from
paymg the cost of emergency
purchases of gas
Before adjournmg the
Senate also sent to the House
on a 24 3 vote a ball
mandatmg employers to pay
a day s wages to employes
who are requared to attend a
Bureau
of
Worker s
Compensallon bearmgs
Now on Rhodes desk are
balls to remove tlle automatic
JUry duty exemption gaven to
contrabutmg
nataonal
Conttabuting
guardsmen
members are tho&lt;e who
annually donate money ID the
guard but who are not
subject to any acbve duty
requarements
The other b1ll cleared for
the governor s s1gnature
arose out of a Hanulton
County court case and
expands Ohao morals law to
cover tllose people who force
sexual acts to be comnutted
by other people
A court dasrmssed a morals
case agamst a Cincannata
man because of the more
strmgent defimtton now
contamed m law
Among the five balls mtroduced Monday evenmg was a
measure sponsored by Sen
Robert D Freeman D
Canton whach as desagned to

reconcale separate state laws
on access to pubhc records
open meetings and protectaon
of pnvacy
Some offactals have used
tlle Pravacy Act to htde
information from the news
medaa and taxpayers of
Ohao saad Freeman While
tllas was not the mtent of the
Pravacy Act the statute as
wratten an a manner tllat can
be mterweted by offacaals an
many ways
This legaslataon Will
clarafy tlle Issue and reaterate
the behef that pnvate
busmess as pnvate but pubhc
busmess IS public
The Pravacy Act adopted
an 1976 was desagned to
preserve confldentialaty of
mformahon stored
m
government computer banks
much of tt about the
of
publac
background
employes
The law came under fare
when at went mto effect last
January and newsmen
discovered they were beang
derued access to records on
gro\Ulds the personal pravacy
of the public employes would
be mvaded
Freeman s btll would
ensure that the Pravacy Act
would not be construed to
- Bar the release of publac
records or the dtsclosure of
personal anformatlon an
pubhc records that are
requared to be open for
anspection under the Pravacy
Act
- Pennat a pUblac body to
hold an executive sess10n for
tlle dascussaon of personal
inlormation if tlle executive
sesSion as not autllonzed by
tlle state Open Meetings Ia w
The author of the Pravacy
Act Sen Stanley J Aronoff
RCmcmnati has proposed an
amendment seekang to
reconcale his Ia w wath the
state s Open Records Sta\jlte
Aronoff s bill wall be gaven
a hearmg Wednesday by the
Senate Judacaary Conuruttee
Tuesday tlle Senate Com
merce and Labor Conunittee
wall began diSCUssiOn of the
Sen
Harry
Meshel s
collectave bargammg ball for
pubhc employes
Later Tuesday the House
Finance Comnnttee has sche
duled a meeting to revaew a
revased $13 2 ballion general
appropr1a1tons bill drawn up
by House Democrallc leaders
over tlle last two weeks
Republicans are expected
to offer a seraes of
amendments before the
measure 1s voted out of
comnuttee Wednesday

ROADTOWN
BritiSh
Vargm Islands (UP!)- Dack
Doran of Puerto Raco has won
tlle saxth annual verSion of
tlle Brallsh Vargan Islands
Sprang Regatta
Doran won the champion
yacht award m the tllree-day
Vargm Islands race and had
tlle best tame among 69
entrants wath hiS 44 foot swan
yacht Gatana

campmg facahtaes hiUltmg
land and hakmg !ralls
The recreation land whach
features parksates used by
campers and pacmckers from
all over the Umted States and
visited by a number of people
from foreagn nataons as open
to the public on a free permat
baSis Permtts are available
at any company office
In addataon about 8 300
acres of land have been
leased to fanners mvolved m
cattle grazmg operatiOns
Add bona! acreage becomes
avallable annually through
reclamataon efforts In

formataon about the grazmg
land as avaalable through
Ohio
Powers
Land
Management Sectaon at
McConnelsvalle and Canton
Cost of reclamation under
the cu!Tent Ohao law ran
about $2 37 per ton of coal
maned last year Prtor to
passage of that law In 1972
Ohio Power s wadely praised
reclamation program cost
about 25 cents per ton of coal
mmed
The company s maning
operations are closely
followed by gradang dascmg
fertllizmg and grass sowing

TV•••in Review
NEW YORK (UP!) - ABC w1ll cancel eaght of ats current
programs mcludmg The Baomc Woman an order to present
sax new comedy shows and two mma.,seraes when the 1977 78
teleVIsion season opens next September
The new shows mclude a soap opera spoof that sounds like
another Mary Hartman Mary Hartman
a comedy
tentatively titled Carter CoiUltry that IS set m Georgaa and
a satcom tllat soiUlds lake 11 was left over from Gale Storm s
Oh Susannah I except tllat at stars Gavm MacLeod who was
left over from The Mary Tyler Moore show
The bag sur prase m Uae sera tched shows was the zappmg of
Lindsey Wagner s baomc counterpart to The Sax Million
Dollar Man despate decent ratings and a generally 30 or
better share of tlle audaence an the Naelsen ratings
Usually a 30 share-mother words 30 per cent of those with
tllear sets tuned m - proVIdes an msurance policy But an ABC
spokesman saad at was not the numbers but a matter of
direction - ABC was goang all out for comedy
The other shows to bite the dust mcluded Most Wanted
Streets of San Francasco
Dog and Cat
Blansky s
The Captam and
Beauties and The Tony Randall Show
Tenmile and The Brady Bunch Hour are off as regular
contenders but wall turn up as specaals
ABC whach ran away wath the lead an the past season s
Naelsen ratings tllanks m part to tis comedies and an part to the
mam.,serles Roots and How The West Was Won
announced plans for two new mmiS
Washmgton DC wtll be a 12-hour dramatization loosely
based on John Ehrhchrnan s novel The Company and
James Arness will return In a 2~our tO-part continuation of
How The West Was Won
Of the new shows m tlle schedule only two boast really well
!mown names One as Redd Foxx an 'The Redd Fon Hour
and the other as MacLeod who played Murray to ~ary Tyler
Moore s Mary Richards MacLeod will star m a half-hour
comedy Love Boat as the captam of a luxury !mer whose
passengers land fiUl and romance on tlle hagh seas
John Astm who appears an many television movaes and Is
marraed to Patty Duke Astm stars m another half-hour
comedy Operataon Pettacoat loosely patterned after the
movae of tlle same name Astan plays the long.,suffermg
captam of a World War II submarme who must deal wath a
wheelmgdealing farst offtcer and a clutch of Army nurses has
sub has rescued
Carter Country as the tentatave title of a half-hour comedy
an which a New York !tamed black policeman goes to work for
tlle chaef of a smalltown Georgia force
The San Pedro Bauns IS an hour comedy about a gang of
f1ve young men whose dreams and ambitions are always m
conflact wtth reality Sounds like the sweathogs relocated
Then tllere s Soap It as described as a radacally new and
outrageous form of adult comedy a soap opera serializing
the exploits of the Tate and Campbell familaes ABC says
Never have two familaes had more problems or secrets The
family plots and problems are not only msurmountable they
aremmd boggling The best way to approach Soap IS warily

Needs assessment completed
for 'Alternatives' program
Steven Dawson director of
Alternataves - the substance abuse program of the
Gallaa
Jackson
Meags
Communaty Mental Health
Center - has announced
complet10n of an areawide
evaluatlon and needs assess
men! of Jackson Gallaa and
Meags countaes an the areas of
recreataon facahties and
servace socaal clubs and
orgaruzat!Ons
The reason for thiS needs
assessment
as the lack
unavaalabahty or Ignorance
of strong recreataonal and
socialization groups and
facalitaes It s a fact tllat
members of socaal clubs and
actave participants an
recreataonal programs have
a sagnahcantly less ancldence
of socaal problems than do the
normal population possably
because they are JUst too
tared from good honest
recreat1on to commit a
crt me
Two documents are bemg
{&gt;roduced from the needs

assessment The first as a
catalog that lists all the
known recreataooal facabtaes
recreataonal programs and
socaal servace clubs in Gallla
Jackson and Meags counties
Thas catalog IS Intended to be
used by anyone to make
them !hear neaghbors thetr
fnends thear clients and
!hear pataents aware of what
as avaa!able an their com
mumty
A second document Is an
evaluataon of the inlormation
gathered In the catalog and a
praoratazed list of needs per
county Also mcluded are
recommendataons on how
these needs maght hest be
met Thas report will be part
of a packet that will describe
step by step how any In
terested mdivtdual group or
orgamzat10n maght began
toward meetmg some of the
needs an their conununlty
Either the catalog or the
packet can be obtamed I&gt;Y
wratmg your local conununlt)'
menta I health center ~

Behind the hattang and
patchmg of JUnior John Sayre
the Southern Tornadoes
gained sole possessaon of first
place last mght when they
downed vasatlng Symmes
Valley by the narrow score of
3-2 Sayre went the distance
laMing sax and walkmg lave
and he ~upped an wath a
double and smgle m the sax
hit attack
Southern took an early 1~
lead an the bottom or the flrst
when Sayre cracked his
double and came home wath
two outs on a Make Hud
dleston single
Synunes taed at an the top of
the thand when Ralph Ingels
belted a home run anto nght
Southern
center faeld
reg a med the lead an the
bottom of the mnmg when
Greg Cundiff socked a double
and came home on Sayre s
sangle They plated the

W L

sw nme blanks

Amer can League
east
W L Pet GB
M waukee
9
4 692
Bal more
76.5382
New York
885002
8 9 47 3
To on o
6 8 429 ) 7
Boston
6 10 375
4V
Det o
Cle ve land
•
9 308 s

Wildcats, 3-0

Ma or League Results
By Un ted P ess lnternat on at

Nat onal League

St Lou s a Ch cago ppd

co d

c nc nnt 630 2 12 o OOQ--73 s 2
A I an a
400 000
410 9 17 6
B ngham Borbon 91 and
P ummer N ek o Easterly
Bea d (5)
Johnson
8 and
Pocoroba WP - B 1 ngham (2
1)
L P N ek o
03
HRsC nc nnat Bench 2) Foster 2
3)
Geron mo
7
A lanta
Poco oba (1)
Los Angeles 2 1 002 0 0 7 10 0
San D eqo
002 000 00
J 70
RhOden CJ 0 and Yeager
Jon es Fre s eben (7) Berna
(81 and Tenace LP - J ones
3
HRs Los Ange es Cey 2
(7) Garvey (5
San o ego
W nf eld 1 Su her and
A mer can League
( st game
Bo slon
000 0 I 010 3 9 0
ioron o
000 010 03x - 4 11
T an t
Campbe I
8
and
F sk
Garv n Vuckov Ct'l (8
and Roof WP Vu cko v ch ( 1
LP Campb e I
(0 3
HRs

and two doubles
Foster and Cmcmnall
Manager Sparky Anderson
took the Reds outburst pretty
much m strade while Jackson
led the Yankees m cratacasm
of the Baltunore fans
l d been expectmg some
thmg to happen but nothing
like 23 runs m one game
saad Anderson We were due
to break out
It had to come
saad
Foster
We needed an
outburst like tllas We had to
let people know the Bag Red
Machine as stall around It
sounds Silly but professaonals
sometunes need a game like
thiS
The fans can scream and
holler but when they throw
bolts rocks and paper aar
planes that s when you draw
the lane Vulgaraty an sagns
too IS bad They shouldn I be
wlgar The faghting and the
mcadents took the fun out of

TRY OUT DELICIOUS
lWIST

4/~~~Sfy~

ADOLPH'S

~fuAIIY)Gl

DAIRY VALLEY
•

l :rOODS )
~

HR5 IO 00 AM Ioiii oo PM Sun Thurs 10 oo AM

t I 12 00 PM Fndav and Sa1urday

See Us At tl&gt;e Pomeroy Be~
(

~rad

what should have been a fun
rught
Fans an the Baltamore
crowd were unruly durmg
most of the game and 14
arrests were made Included
among Uaem was the fan who
accosted Jackson and had to
be separated from hun by
New York teammates
Foster hat the hrst of has
Ulree-run homers m a SIX-run
farst ummg and doubled home
a run m a three-run second
He hit has second tllree-run
homer an tlle 12-&lt;'un faf\h.
durmg which Draessen drove
an four runs wath a three-run
double and a s,angle The Reds
!mashed tlle fafth mnmg wath a
23-4 lead and tllreatened the

GB

Wednesdays Games
St L.ou sat Ch cago
Mont eat at New York. n gh
Ph Ia at P t sbu rgh n ght
C nc nnat a A lanta n gh
Los Ang a t San Diego n gh
Hous on at San Fran n ght

•

Gene Layton tossed a twe&gt;hitter Monday mght to lead
the Southwestern Haghlan
ders to a 3-&lt;1 SVAC victory
over HaMan Trace
In gomg the dastance
Layton fanned nine and
receaved fane defensave help
from httle second baseman
Joey Crouse who saved the
game with two over the
shoulder catches
Crouse also paced the
Htghlander attack wath two
hats Also getting hats were

Pet

wmnmg run an the faith on a St Lo~ s
9 6 600
1 6 538
walk to Cundiff who went to Mon1rea
Pittsburgh
7 6 SJB l
second on a fielder s choice Ch
cago
6 6 SOO
I ,
6 8 "29 2
and came home on Kelly New York
Ph ladelph a
.s 7 otl7 2 ..
Wmebrenner s sangle
Wesl
W L Pet GB
The Vakmgs came wathm
Ange es
12 3 BOJ
one when they pushed across Los
AI an a
8 8 SQO 4 "2
one run U\ the seventh on two San Franc sco 7 1 500 4
SanD ego
8 10 &lt;444 S h
walks and error and a Hous
on
6 9 400 6
ground-&lt;Jut Other hatters for C nc nnal
5 10 J33 7
Monday s Results
the vlsators were Terry
S Lou sat Ch cag o ppd cod
Chrastlan and Stuart Malone C
nc nnat 23 A anta 9
Los Angeles 1 San D ego 3
wtlh a single each
Today s Probable Pitc hers
Winebrenner cracked two
cAll T mes eon
Slllgles Cundiff had a double
s Lou s Ra smussen 1 2 a
Ch ca ge (R Reusche
1) 2 30
and Huddleston had a smgle pm
to round out Southern s
Ph ade ph a {Ch s enson 1
hittmg Losang hurler Miller a P ltsburgh {Cande ar a 1 0)
p m
fanned seven and walked just 1 30
Cnc nna
(A c:a la 1 1
a
three as he went the distance At ~n a (Messersm th 2 n 7 35
Southern as now 3 1 In the pm
Monreal
Hann~hs
1 ) a
SVAC
New Yor~ (Koosman 1 II 8OS
SV
001 000 1- 2 3 I pm
Los Angeles (Suuon 2 0 a
S
101 010 x---,'1 6 I SanDego(Sh
ey2 1) Opm
Hous ton (Lemongel o 0 3) a
Maller and Payne Sayre
San Franc sco (Ha ck 2
and Forbes
10 JO p m

Gaihpohs plated single
runs an the fourth and fifth
annings then held on to edge
v1s1hng Wahama 2 1 m a non
conference baseball contest
on Memonal Faeld Monday
evemng
The traumph left GAHS
wath a 6-3 season mark
Wahanna dropped to II 10
overall Today Galhpolls IS
at Athens for a Southeastern
Ohao League battle Wahama
plays at Rapley
Gallapolls took a 1~ lead m
the bottom of the fourth With
one out Deryl Jones singled
Mark Dobson walked Jeff
Whaley scored Jones on a
sacraface fly to center
The Blue Devals upped !hear
lead to 2~ an the ftfth when
Terry Wall doubled wath one
out and scored on Gary
Swam s single
Wahama s lone ron came in
the saxth on a home run by
Tim Thompson
Brent Johnson was cre,llted
with the vactory In gomg the
distance Johnson faMed SIX
and walked four He allowed
four hits GAHS had one
error
Jeff Collier was charged
wath the loss Colher faMed
four and walked lave He gave
up ftve safeties The Falcons

Sherman Potter Layton
Jackson and Lewas
Tom Bel valle and Ron Pack
stroked safetaes for the
w~' L "" GB
Wildcats The wm pushed
Ch
cage
9 s 6•3
Southwestern s league mark
Kansas C v
9
6 600
'
to 3-3 while HaiUlan Trace as O~k and
10 7 588
M
nneso
a
10
7
588
2-3
Texa s
7 7 500 7
Southwestern hosted Ca
torn a
8
0 444 34
Seat le
1 2 368
Eastern this evemng
Mondays Results
Lane score
1
0
HT
000 00 IJ--0 24 ~~s~~~ 6 \~~~~~ ; 2~ d
SW
101 010 X---,'1 6 0 New York 9 Ba t mo e 6
torn a Oak and 6
Whitt (L) and DelllllSOn Ce lToday
s Probable P tche s
(All T mes EDT)
Layton (W) and Carter
Toron o
Ha gan
at
cnoon
evelanc;i
Ga land O2 12
C::h cago B e 2
at Det o t
Rozema 0
30 P m
Sea 1 e
Montague I 2
a
M nneso a Zahn 3 0) 4 p m
To onto Ve ez 2 (5
Boson
Boston (C leve and 1
at
Sco 12)
(2nd game&gt;
Boston
000 100 4 o- 6
To onto
200 120 000 5 0
loughby
and
Stanley
F sk
Lema nczy k
Vu ckov ch
7
1 s 8) and Ashby Roof
7 WP- W loughbV
0 LP
Vuckov ch ( 2)

w

s

w

New York
202 031 0 D- 9 2 0
Ball more
00 400 00 - 6 l1 I
Gu let T dow (4
Lyle (9
and Mun son
Gr msley
D
Mar nez (41 T Mar nez (5)
Holdswor h 5) M ler (9 and
Dempsey
WP Tdrow
21)
LP- D Ma t nez o
HRsJac k
New York Munson (

son 2

Oak

00 03 0 0 6 3 3
301 40 IlK20
Med ch Bahnsen 5
Co e
man 6 i!!nd W I ams Ryan
Monge (6) and Humphrey WP
- Ryan (3 2 LP - Med ch 1 1)
HR s Oak and No t h
Ca l
torn a Bay o (5 So a ta (3)
G ch 3
and

CCI fo n a

Reds take it out on
Braves in 23-9 win
By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
The Cincmnati Reds who
entered !hear game m Atlanta
wtth a 4-IOrecord fmally tore
loose from !hear slump
Monday with a 23-9 romp over
the Atlanta Braves
George Foster drove m
seven runs wtth two tllree;un
homers mcluding one m a 12run faith ummg and a double
and JohMy Bench and Dan
Draessen each knocked in
four runs m the Cmcmnall
assault
And the New York
Yankees rolling to their saxUa
straaght VIctory downed the
Baltimore Oraoles 9&lt;1 before
a crowd that mcluded fans
who roiUldly booed Reggte
Jackson throughout tlle game
and one who accosted ham as
he made has way off the faeld
after 11
Jackson respohded to the
boomg wath a two-run homer

M&lt;tjor Lugue St&lt;tnd ngs
United Press tnterna1 onal
Nat onal Le ague

East

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

Power company begins its annual
CANTON - Favorable
weather has permatted Ohao
Power Company to swmg mto
ats aiUlual gradmg seedaAg
and tree plantmg program
The area Involved Is ats
Central Ohao Coal Company
property an Muskangtum
Noble Guernsey and Morgan
counties The reclamation
projects as prescrabed by
current Ohao reclamation
laws Iollows Central Ohao s
surface mmmg for CQal
Thas year re clamat on
efforts wall anvolve gradang of

Tornadoes ~
BASEBALL
top league

Blue Devils nudge
•
Falcons; JVs w1n

modern maJor league record
of 29 runs an one game
The Braves pounded out 17
hits mcluding four Singles by
Jeff Burroughs who knocked
an four runs and Ball
Pocoroba s tllree-run homer
Thurman Munson s two
run homer helped the
Yankees to a 4-lllead but the
Oraoles kayoed Don Gullett
and !ted tlle score With four
runs m the fourth The
Yankees took the lead for
good as tlley scored three
r\Uls m the fifth wath Jackson
dehvermg hiS two-r\Ul homer
Dick Tadrow who took over
for Gullett was the wanner
while Demus Martmez was
the loser

Officials end
strike
s!J'tking referees

NEW YORK (UP!) - The
Nataonal Basketball Assocaa
tion s regular referees will be
back at work tomght after
reaching agreement on a new
contract With the league
The referees have been on
str1kesmce the last day Of the
regular season April 10 m a
dtspute
over
their
assoctatlon s status as a
umon and because they
wanted to negotiate a
contract that would mclude
tills year s playoffs along
wtth next year s regular
season
A compromiSe agreement
~mwaukee Augus ne 2
7 was achieved dw-mg lengthy
New Yo k Hoi zman
o a negotiation sessions over the
Batt mo e May 7 7 30 P m
weekend and the referees
Te)(as Perry 1 2 a Kansas
c 1y Ha ssler 1 8 30 p m
agreed to retw-n to work even
Oak and ( Slue 0 2) a Ca
though they have not yet
forn a ( S mpson 2 10 30 p m
Wednesdays Games
Signed a contract
sea tt e at M nneso a
We didn t get the whole
Ch cago a De o t
1oa f an d .c
Boson a! M Iw w lg hl
uoey d1c1n 1 get t he
Toron o a1 c eve land n gh
whole loaf
sa1d Rachard
~::"ai~ \~n~:s Cmt~ en ~~t
Ph1ll1ps attorney for the
Oak and at Calton

a

n gh

Ma o L:eague Leaders

By United Press Internal onal
Batt ng
(bas ed on 35 a ba s
Nat Onill League

Officers
reelected

CINCINNATI (UP!) - All
offacers and darectDrs of the
Cey LA
15 57 4 25 &lt;39 Cincmnati Reds Inc were
Mathews AI 16 61
3 26 426
Smmns S L '&gt; 57 3 23 d04 reelected at the annual
Pa ker P t
13 54 3 2
389 shareholders meetang the
Sm lh L A
15 6 8 21 375
Yeage L A 14 44 9 16 364 ballclub announced Monday
Evan s SF
13 42 a 15 357
The officers are - LouiS
Cash M
3 55 0 19 345
Napper!
board chaarman
hnstn Ph
0 38 4 13 342
T
0 Ch
12 41
6 !A 34
Bob Howsam presadent and
Amer can League
chael executave offacer Dack
G AB R H Pet
Ve ez Tor
13 39 8 a 462 Wagner
executave vtce
M cRae KC 15 64 5 27 422 presadent
and general
Bu sn Bos
4 60 1 23 383
manager
Walham
J
Sng ton Ba
3 47 8 6 38
Page Oak
17 66 A 25 37 9 Walhams vice presadent
Ga
Ch
9 40 9 5 375
R
Walhams
Aut To
17 67 7 23 37 James
Cubbge M n 15 57 2 21 368 treasurer
Andrew Hopple
May De
13 4.4 2 6 36.4 secretary and Henry W
Ha g ve Tx 13 .48 6 7 35.4
Hobson
Jr
assistant
Home Runs
Na11ona League Cey LA 7 secretary
Bu oughs A
6 Ga vey LA
Other members of the
and Car e
Mt
5
seven
p aye s ed w th 4
buard are Walliam Hacketi
Amer can League
Bay o
Ca Z sk Ch Ha rah Te" and R C Hunt A E Knowlton
Charles Landberg Mrs LouiS
ve ez Tor 5 Bonds and Rud
Cal H 5le M nn Page Oak Napper! John Sawyer and
Bernha dt Sea and Au
To 4
Wtlliam J Wtllaams Jr
Runs Batted In
Nat onal league Cey LA 25
Lewas Crosley former
Bur oughs At and Tenace SO
Reds
offacaal was named an
19 Foste C n and Ga 11ey LA
16
honorary darector JOlnang
Amer can League Rud Ca
Warren
C Gales and FranciS
26 Pag e Oa~ 8 A en Oak
Dale
both former
and Ve ez Tor 16
Bas o c ~ L
M fin and Chambl ss NY 15
of
tlle
Reds
presadents
Stolen Bases
GABRHPct

National League Lopes LA
10
Cabel
Hou 9
D one
Moreno and Ta ve ras PI 5
Amer can League Remy Ca
10 Patek KC L n z and Nor h
Oak 1 Bonds Cal and No s
C ev 6
PitCh ng
Most V cto es
Nat onal League Denny 51 L
A 0 Hough an d Rhod en LA and

Baird stops Lancers
as K C wins 4-3 tilt
Green (L) and Poston
Kyger Creek s Steve Baird second frame the I an(( rs
struckout 15 batters enroute took a 3-1 lead on a walk Baird (W1 and Baylor
to a 4-3 non-conference vtc stolen bas• and error
Kyger Creek plated ats
tory over Federal Hockmg
Monday mght at Cheshare wummg runs an the second on
The wan snapped an eaght an error two helder s
game wannang streak for the ch01ces a walk and sangles by
Lancers lromcally the last Westfall and Von Taylor
Poston led Federal Hockmg
Lancer loss came at the
wath
two h1!s Westfall placed
hands of the Bobcats FH
the
Bobcat
attack wath three
scored two runs an the farst
mmng on a walk stolen base hats
Kyger Creek 84-1 will
squeeze bunt and smgles by
host HaMan Trace Wed
Green and Poston
Kyger Creek bounced back nesday
Imescore
wath a run an ats hall of the
210 000 0--3 4 2
farst on doubles by Jamae FH
130
000 X-4 8 1
Westfall and Baard 1n the KC

made two errors
Thompson and Colller each
had two hits for the Falcons
Swam had two hits for the
Galllans Wall s double was
the Blue Deval&amp; only extra
base hit
In the nightcap the
Galllpohs Jayvees upped
!hear nnark to 7 1 watll an 8-3
vactory over the vasating
Wahama reserves
Strong wands hail and ~
degree temperatures failed to
stop the Blue Imps Boo
Weaver was credated wath the
vtctory Weaver was
charged wath the loss
GAHS was led by Greg
Eutsler who had a single
double and triple Chuck
Deraheld had a single Art
Foglestrom a double and
smgle
K Riggs and F Smith each
had doubles for the losers
Honacher had a smgle
The Blue Imps will host
Athens at 5 thts evenmg on
Memorial Field
Ltnescores
(Varsity game)
Wahama
001 001 0-1 4 2
GAHS
000 010 X-2 3 1
Batteraes
GAHS
Johnson (WP) - Mink
Colller (LP ) &amp; Thompson

We are pleased the strike
IS over
saad Simon P
Gourdane
deputy
cormmssaoner of the NBA and
labor negotaator for tlle
league 'The referees have
agreed to return to work
wathout a contract Next
year s contract wtll be
negotaated durmg the off
season
The agreement between the
NBA and the National
Assocaat10n of Basketball
Referees ancludes the
followmg pomts
- Regular referees return
tD work for the remamder of
the
playoffs
Playoff
compensation Is $750 $850
$950 for each game an across
tlle buard mcrease of $130 per
game
- The referees uruon wtth
draws allegations of l!nfaar
labor practtce agaUlSt the
league whach are pending
before the Nataonal Labor
Relations Board
- The umon agrees not ID
strake or participate m any
other work stoppage by
others durmg the playoffs
- NBA recognazes the
NABR as the collectave
bargaining representatave of
the referees based on
evidence showang
autllorazataon to NABR by
mdavadual members to repre
sent them
- NBA and NABR agree to
co llectiVe bargaan1ng
negotaallons after the
playoffs If tlley faa! to reach
an agreement by Aug 1 1977
eather party may request
medaatwn
-Referees who are
members of NABR must
remam members as a
condatwn of employment
Referees hired an the future
must also joan wtlhin 30 days
of !hear employment

1Ja)'llt.. game
Wahama
200 001 0-3 3 0
GAHS
000 233 ~~ 6 1
Batteraes GAHS - B
Weaver (WP) and Eustler
Wahama - Weaver (LP ) &amp;
K Riggs

'

Tackett

too much
for Eastern
The visiting North Gallia
Pirates jwnped out to a 4.(1
lead enroute to a 0-2 victory
over the Eastern Eagles
Monday night wath Brett
Tackett pltchmg tlle distance
fanning four and walking two
He also had a hot bat as he
cracked a traple and single
The Parates got one in the
second when catcher Cisco
Mtnrus walked and came
home on Tackett s smgle In
the tllird they mcreased it to
2-0 when Mike Casey tr~pled
_,d walked home on a balk by
the Eastern pitcher
North Galtia won it In the
fourth when Glassburn and
Casey singled with Mundell
_,d Luckadoo aboard They
added an Insurance run In the
fifth

Eastern tried a comeback
In the fifth wben Dan Spencer

sngled stole secood and
came on home on a Johnnie
Evans double They got one
rrore In the sixth on Rusty
Wagal s sangle a walk to
Brian Bassell and a single by
Jim DaVIs Oilier Eastern
litters were DaVIs wath two
sngles and Kuhn w~h a
sangle
Bruce Riffle was
tagged with tbe loss as he and
Evans faMed ten blt walked
aght
Tackett and Casey both had
a traple and smgle to lead the
Pirates while Plants Mun
dell and Glassburn each had
a single
N
011 210 ()--6 7 3
E
000 011 0-2 7 1
Tackett and Mlllrus Riffle
(LP) Evans (6) and Bassell
THIS WfEK S SPECIAL
VALUE
RATII!!D

USED CARS

1976 CU1tASS
SUPREME CPE.
Meta I c blue w th

blut!
roof b ue cloth nterior
power a r 6 way seat Ti t
wheels sport m rrors &amp;
wheels 14 000 m les

'5495

Kan &amp; VanZandt
You II Like Our Quality
Way of Dotng Busmess

GMAC FINANCING

992 5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenings I 16 00
TIS p m Sat

We're Reasonable

Seaver NY 3 0 Ru hven A
Fo sch St Land Ba rr SF 3
Am c 1can League
Tanana
Ca
Knapp Ch
Zahn M nn
and Ga v n To 3 0 Pa mer
Bal
Ruh e De Colbo n KC
and To ez Oak 3
Ryan Ca
32
Earned Run Ave r age
(based on 8 nn ngs p tchcdl
Nat onal League Su on LA
and Sh ley SD
08 Fo sch
S L
7 Roger s Ml 1 33
Hough LA and Le ch Ph 1 57
Am e can League
Pa mer
Bal 0 73
Ba r os Ch 0 90
F gue oa NY
20
T ave s
4 T d ow N Y 96
M
Str keouts
Nat anal League Mon e f ~co
St= 18 Rv h ven A 25 N ~ k o
A 1 and
Seave
NY
74
R chard Hou an d Sh r ey SO

2

Ame can League
Ca 39 Ryan Ca 35
Tex 27
P8 mer
Ecke s ey C ev 73

Tanana
B y even
ea t and

Denting Your Budget?
Ch~;c k out our Auto Jnsur

a nee 1 ateo Our prcmmms are
lowcot And out reputatwn for
&lt;puck payment s the best 1

�o..

~pril:!G,

1977

First TV ·
For an l!l'l!ninl( of t'ilriety he ill l'urtland Elem£•ntury Sl'lwol
tomorroll' eveninl( ( lf'IYfllt'sdax) at 7 p.m.

and fun, tht•rt• u·ill he u pupil 11rt

He.~ide.~

.~lwm l'it ·ture.~

climdug,

tilt is

.~ingi111(

ASTRO·GiiPii
Bernice Bede Osol
TAURUS ( Apr ii2 0 ~ May 20) rn.s
1S .1 qOoct dew to c; ta rt that homP
prnr"ct you vp bt•t~n fu1d1na
do:Pns ot e ~ cuses tor avo1ci1nQ
y,lU IJ IJNIOtnl enthUSI11StiCflliy 1
21 · J~ne

20) YOll

...

)

PXCI IIflO

CANCER ( June 21 -July 22) Your

\

pros pects !or oenmo what you
ClO after today nrc very s trong
G1vf&gt; the rmitt er ttla t rneans the
most to you top prto r1ty

LEO (July 23- Aug. 22) Mentally ,
vou'rc very alert tod&lt;ty Vou are
111-.Piy to p1ck up some valuable
~nowledqe you w rll t&gt;e able to

"'c

VIRGO (Aug. 23- Sepl. 22) The

wa~· VOlJ tl a fldled a prev 16us
srtuatron has convmc cd a person
vr tal to toda y·s plans thul ht' c~n
p'1C(' hrs lull con ftden ce rn you

LIBRA (Sept. 23 -0ct. 23~ Your
"'urest slrccesses today wtll be
fnund 111 proJec t s yOlfve most
recen tl y become rr1 terested 111
Try 10 concen tr a1e rn these
Areas

PRESENTING ART WORK at the variety show will be front, 1-f', Dolly Hill, Krista
&amp;!Her, and Johnny Cornell ; back, Danelle Weddle, Kittie Sellers, Debbie Bryant and Danny
Pickens.

DANCE TIME - This group will be dancing to "Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head"
at a vanety show. Makmg up the Raindrop line are, 1-r, Cheryl Sellers. Lisa Willford, Mini a
Conger, Tammi Proffitt, Norma Evans and Theresa Barper. Curtain time is 7 p.m.

SCORPIO (Oct . 24- No, . 22)

Sp(lrts Briefs
LOS ANGELES ( UP I)
Mayor Tom Bradley asked

Ct'lat!engrnq Sl l uatiOtl S evoke the
b€'51 tha1' s ttl you tod ay Meet th e
d1 rt tcult head "on
S A GITTA RI US (No1.1 . 23 -Dec .
21) Y-ou have a wn y o l rnakrng
JUS t about everythrng you do tOday tun and excr t rng
It ' s
oecalrse you l1ve wrth a sonse of
ndventwe

the City Council Monday to .
start deliberations on the
possibility of submitting a bid
to host the 1~84 Summer
Olympics.
Bradley urged the council
to hold public hearings in the
near future so the city can
make a proper presentation
at the International Olympic
Committee si te selection
meetings in April, 1978.
"Los Angeles would not

C APRICORNo (Oec . 22.J an. 19)

have to emba rk on a maSsive

A co ndt!IOn that has been a
«O urce of annoy af)ce 1s begrn nrt'lq to change more to your lrkrnq You should see \he f1r st rndrcatJons. today

construction program to host
the

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) An
ally wh o Knows how to advance
somethrng tha t you can 't do on
vour own tlas been won ove r to
your cause Thrngs will soon
start perkmg .
PISCES (Feb . 20-Marcn 20)

ARIES (Minc h 21 - April 19)
You :re even more attractive and
aop~ahng to the oppost te sex today than usual. Be ready to duck
Cuprd 's darts

THE GLOBETROTTERS will be featured in the
variety show at Portland Elementary School Wednesday
at 7 p.m. p(lrtrayed by front, 1-r, Troy Ward, Wade
Connolly and Steve Souder;.back , Robert McHaffie, Dave
Talbott and Bruce Johnson .

WHA playoffs

April 27, 1977

.

. .
BEULAH RESULTS
GROVE CITY, Ohio (UP! )
-Go On Dreaming led all the
way in runn ing the mile and
70 yards in I : 42.2 Monday Io
win the featured race at
Buelah Park.
Go On Dreaming, with
Tommy Myers up, paid $3.20,
$2.60 and $2.40. L&lt;&gt;rd Adams
was second and Our
Vindicator finished third.
The 10-1 daily double of
Pierce Quill and Pocket Lady
paid $65.80.
A crowd of 3,924 bet
$533,717.

said,

~i~~~~~~~n~offshore
IX&gt;werboat
~'
is hopin~ to make

' SINGING AND DANCING TO "Candyman" will be,
fro nt, 1-r, Joey Riffle, Sherri Lawson, Ray Laudermilt;
back, Kevin Clark, Steven Teaford and Bryant Young.

p r eviously Slow-movrng sr tu atiori
1nto one wh1 c h pays all. Oon·t
abandon that old enterpnsel

he

MIAMI BEACH, F la.
(UPH - .Veteran offshore
racer Bob Magoo n will
attempt this summer to make
60-mile -a nhour
crossing from
~~.:;,~"~to Rhode Isiand· in a 36
""
outboard.
Magoon, a noted eye
and five-time U.S.

Overt ook no pQSSibtlllleS today
wtlere you can tu rn your tal e nts
1nto a prolr l

It writ take bu t an add ti!Onal little
push thiS yea r to cha ng e a

Games,"

" because almost all needed
Sp(lr!s facilities are already
built."

t Ar e you a Taurus? Bern1te
Osol has written a special Asi m Graph LeUer fo r yo u For your
c;;o py sen d 50 cents an d a sel fad d ressed . stamped envelope to
A stro -Gra ph . P 0
Box .489 .
Rad 10 C1 \y Sta tron . New Yo rk .
NY 10019 Be sur£: ta ask lo r
Tauru s Volume 7.1

Bible preaching serviCes
are being held this .week at
Hope Baptist Chapel, 570
Grant St., Middleport, with
Rev. Joe Mobley as
evangelist. Pastor Bobby
Elkins invites ·the public.
Special nights will be as
follows: Monday, Pack a
Pew ; Tuesday, Family
Night; Wednesday, Men's
night ; Thu rsday, Ladies
night: Friday, Mystery Guest
night ; Saturday, Yo uth
night: Sun day, High At·
tendance Day in Sunday
School.
There will be a breakfast
for the men at the pastor's
home, Wednesday morning at
8:30. Rev. Joe Mobley will be
bring_ing the devotions at the
.Prayer Breakfast.
Thursday, lhe ladies will

3,4t;o-nu·ll ecrossmg in less
60 hours.
Magoon
and
three
crewmen plan to leave Rota,
Spain, on July I and arrive at
Newport,
R.I.,
on
Independence Day .

LAKE PLACID, N.Y.
(UP! ) - Fo urtdation work on
the controversial 70 and 9~
meter ski jumps for the 1980
Winter Olympics here will
. begin in June, Olympic
organizers said Monday.
Construction

Services being held at church
meet at the chapel at 10 a.m.
for pray~r. There. will be a
mystery guest and the first
member who invites him or
her will receive a nice Jl!ift.
The myste ry guest will be
revealed on Friday night.
Saturday night at 6 there ·
wilJ be a wiener roast for

youths on the lawn of the
chapel.

WHA Playoffs
By Un ited Press lnternariOnal
Eastern Di Visio n
Finai Round
( Bes t of Seven)

Qu ebec vs . Ind iana poli s
(Quebec leads, I -OJ
Apr 23 - 0u eb ec J l ndpl s l
Ap r 25 - l ndpl s at Quebec
Ap r 28 - Quebec at l ndpts
Ap r 30- Quebec at l ndpls
lC May 3 or -'1

lndianpolis at Quebec

l!

NO DEALERS PLEASE I

MiJ Y 6 Quebec at ln dpls

x M ily 8- lndpl s a t Qu ebec

.Western Division
Final Ro und
( Best of Se\·enl
Houston I.'S . Wi nnipe·g
Apr 26- Winnipg at Hous
Apr 28 - Winnipg at Hou!&gt;
Apr 30 - Hous a! Winnipg
May 1- Hous at Winr)ipg
x May 3- Winnipg at Hous
x May 5- Hous at Winn i pg
x May 8- Winnipg ill Hous
x-if necessal'"y

plans were

outlined by organizers after
the Adirondack Park Agency
Friday issued a permit
authorizing construction of
the jumps one mile south of
the village.
Over the winter, objections
by conservation groupa that
the jumps would destroy the
beauty of the Adirondack
high peak areas threatened to
delay construction.

NHL playoffs
Montreal vs . NY I sla nders

( Montre_a l leads, 1-0)
Apr n - Mtl 4 NY tslndr s 3
Apr 26..;_NY tslndrs at Mtl
Apr 28- Mtt at NY l slndrs
April 30 or May l
Montreat at NY Islanders
X·May ) - NY ISindrs 01 Mt l
x -May 5 ~ Mtl at NY islndrs
x -May 7 or 8
NY Islanders ar Mon1real
PhitadelphiJ vs. Boston
f Boston leads, 1-0)
Apr 2.:1 - Boston 4 Ph i la 3, ot
Apr 26- Boston at Phlla
Apr 28- Phlla at Boston
Apr il 30 or M,ay l
Philade lphia at Boston
x -May J- Boston at Phila
x-May 5- Phila at Boston

x-May 7 or 8

A total of 157 persons attended the ded ication of the
new Kingdom Hall of
Jr. Hi, 9-11 a .m.; Riverview
Je
hovah's Witnesses on
Ele. , 12:30-2 :30 p.m.; Reeds· Route
124 Saturday evening.
ville, 3-3 :30; Stiversville, 4Speaker for the occasion,
4:30; Portl and. 4:45-5: 15 ;
Underwood of the
Great Bend, 5:30.() ; Miners· Donald
headquarters staff of the
ville Hill , 6:30-7 ; Nease . Watchtower Society of
Settlement, 7: 15· 7: 45: 7·33 Brooklyn, N. Y., who stressed
Market. 8: !5-8: 45,
that it is not the building but

its purpose that is important.
"It isn't the building but
those who study the scriptures here who ca n make
known the good news of God's
Kingdom," the speaker
commented.
Presenting a history of the
congregation were Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond Hummel of
Pome roy. The . Hummels

at Ph i ladelphia

K-if neceSsary

ASH SELECTS
ATHENS, Ohio (UP! )
Chris Ash, a 6-5, 2QO.pound
forwa rd-guard from Newark
has signed a national letter of
intent with Ohio Unive rsity,
basketball coach Dale Bandy
said Monday.,
Ash averaged 17 points and
13 rebounds a game last
season and was the Central
Ohio League player of the
year. He hit 60 per cent of his
field goals and contributed
four as.sists per game.
He is the fourth player to
sign a national letter of intent
with the Bobcats.

..
.

'

•

•
I

'·
,,

.

LEAN &amp; TENDER

CUT UP
TRAY PAK

•'

RED
·RADISHES

•'•

DEL MONTE

9to6

.

Sunday
lto6

3

'

Vegetable Plants, .
Potted Plants,
Hanging Baskets

STORE HOURS

46

No. 85

9e

oz .

Can

VELVETTA CHEESE

MASON FURNITURE

'.

Mason. W.Va.

DUNCAII

BAKING

WHEATIES

BETSY ROSS

LB.

IDAHO

COUPON

II·

TOMATO JUICE

9e

32 oz.
Bottle

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

U.S. NO. 1

DEL MONTE

CATSUP

Mon ., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat. - 8:30 til 5:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

BAGS

r.: --:- .~.'-: - . -.~. ~

89°

CANS

DEL MONTE

992-5776 Syracuse, o.

.•.. , ....,...., ..

•WHOLE KERNEL CORN
•SPINACH

•CREAM STYLE .CORN
•GARDEN PEAS

HUBBARDS
GREEN HOUSE
•
Open Daily

Her man Grate

~-~.:...~

GLAZED DONUTS

99°

HINES

POTATOES

W/C

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

BEITY CROCKER

:

175

2~x:· 99~

5th &amp; Pe~rl

69~

Racine, 0.

LB .

PHEBE' STORE
April 26111 -

'\

Apd l 29th

BOILED
HAM

'12 GALLON

39¢

LB.

LAR D.......... L~; .. 79
BOB .EVANS

STALK

Right Reserved To li mit Quantities
We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Stamps

.

9: 00to7 :00
Saturday 9 to 1

PRIDE CRACKERS ............................................. .l~b.

CLOSED

WAGON TRAIN

7-UP
8- 16 OZ. BOffiES

$}19
PLUS TAX &amp; DEPOSIT
'

•

'

.

3~

.

PANCAKE SYRUP ........................... :...................:~.~.':.4~
AMERICAN BEAUTY

PORK &amp; BEANS ........................................ 4 Jo~;~~· s1.00
DEL MON TE

ORAN~E

OR GRAPEFRUil jUICE............~~-~~·.~.".'.~~~~~~~~.. 59'

DEL MONTE

CATSUP.
... :.. .................................. ··················••••
1• .,. 39'
STOKE LY
• •••
WHOLE KERNEL OORN .................................. 3 &lt;J:~. s1.00

HAMBURGER HELPERS
No. 255
Boxes 89~ W/C

2

W/C . )

:-r
. .I

$139

COUPON

TASTEE

'
COUPON r

COUPON

sv~-·

BOLOGNA
2 lb. Sliced

,

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Coupon Exp . April 30, 1977
Twin City Gate~&lt;IV'

• I

.I

Coupon Exp. April30, 1977
Twin City Gateway

No. 105
16 oz. pkg.

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KEEBLER FRENCH
. :: ::VANILLA CREME COOKIES

'

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Coupon Exp. April 30, 1977

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SLICED
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Coupon Exp. April 30, 1917

W/ C.

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22 oz. btl.

bag

Coupon Exp. April 30, 1977
Twin City Gateway

CHEER .
SOAP POWDER

29~

·28UNCHES29e

Coupon Exp. April 30, 1977
Twin City Gateway

No. 155
16 oz. btl.

Coupon Exp. April jo, 1977
Twin City Gateway

WIENERS

LB.

ONION.$

'I
.. .I

•'

$189

BEEF LIVER

:I
.)

COUPON

~.

Monday thru Friday

\

FRESH GREEN

.I

GINGERBREAD MIX
·· No.

'129

10 LB.
BAG

Coupon Exp. Apri l 30, 1977
Twin City Gateway

9

'

49~

12 oz. box

79°

PKG.

COUPON

CELERY

LB.

.: WIMERS

...

Denver vs. Por tland
(P ortland lea ds, 2-1)
Apr 2Q--Portlnd 101 Denvr 100
Apr 22- Denvr 121 Portlnd 11 0
Apr 24- Por t lnd 110 Oenvr 106
Apr 26- Denver at Porf l a ~C:
Apr 29- Por ttand at Denver
'K ·May \ - Denver at Por tland
'K -May 4 - ~ortland a t Denver
x- il necessary
·

'

- .

FRYERS •••••••••••••••••••.!-!·••

MASON FURNITURE

BUnERMILK

,
13
Tl p STEAK....
.=·CHUNK
39
..
o
:.BOLOGNA ••~~
BONELESS SIRLOIN

.. .

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

TOMATOES

6

Western conference
Semifinal Round
( Besl of Sevenl
L os Angeles vs . Golden State
CLos Angeles leads, 2-1)
Apr 2Q-LA 115 Golden St. 106
Apr 22- L A 95 Golden St. 86
Apr 2.:1-Golden St . 109 LA 105
Apr 26-L A at Gold en St.
Apr 29-Golden St. at LA
K-May 1-L A at GOlden St .
x -May 4- Golden St . at LA

Water Polo
Named Dante
Stan ford Dettamanti as coach .
Soccer
Washington Traded f or .
ward Leroy Deleon to San Jose
for forward Mark Liverlc ,
BaskelbaU
Ph i ladel phia - Signed guard
Wil l ie Sm i th , free agent from
Un i versity of Missour i.

773-5592

CUBE STEAK ...~.] !

WHOLE
FRYERS ••••••••••• ~ ••••••••~~ ••

Houston vs. Washington
(Washington leads, 2-1)
Apr 1 9~Wash 111 HOuston 101
Apr 21- Hous 12.4 Wash 118, ot
Apt 24 ~ Wa sh 93 Houston 90
Apr 26- Rouston at Wash
Apr 29- Wash at Houston
x-May 1- Houston at Wasl'1
'!;- -May A- Wash at Ho~ston

Mond ~y

ca me to Meigs County in !957
from Jay County, Ind. Also
attending the dedication of
the new structure were the
Hummels' son and daughter·
in-law, Ronald and Ellen
Hummel and two daughters
of Muncy, Ind.
The regular s.chedule of the
church will resume at 7:30
p.m. Tuesday with a Bible
study.

•

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

NBA Playoffs
B y United Pres s Internat ional
Eastern c _
o nference
semifinal Round
I Best of Seven)
Philadelphia' vs. Boston
cSeries tied , 2-2)
Apr 17- Boston 113 Ph i l·a 111
Apr 2Q-Phila 113 Boston 101
Apr 22- Phila 109 Bostorr 100
Apr 24- Boston 124 Phl ia 1119
Apr 27- Bost on at Pllila
Apr 29- Phlla at Bostorr
x -May 1-Boston at Phil&amp;

Sports Tra nsaclions
By United Pres s Intern ational

Dedication is attended by 157 p.e rsons
BOOK SCHEDULE
The Meigs Bookmobile
schedule for April28: Racine

OPEN SUNDA '! 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M.

NBA playoffs

·NHl Playoffs
By United Pr~ ss Int ernationa l
Semifinals
(Best of Seve n)

Boster.~

OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M.

NEW YORK ( UP!)
Notre Dame, Pittsburgh,
Alabama, UCLA, Southern
California and Houston are
among the college football
powers which will be seen
nationally on ABC·TV during
the first month of the 1977
season, it was annoWlCed
Monday.
Notre Dame,' a prime con·
tender for the 1977 national
championship, will meet defending national champion
Pittsburgh on &amp;!pt. 10 to
begin ABC-TV's nine weeks
of football programming.
UCLA will visit Houston oo
Monday night, Sept. 12, in
another nationally-televised
contest and Alabama will be
seen against Southern California on Saturday, Oct.. 8.
There are also some outstanding match ups which will
be televised regionally diD'ing
the season,
including
AlabamaNebraska on Sept.
17,0klahoma at Ohio State on
Sept . 24 and Southern
CaliforniaUCLA on Nov. 25.

For Wednesday, April 27 , 1977

GEMINI (May

WE ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS

Sept. 9

by Kiitie Crow.

rn:w act il IJSI ·n1•nu tc 1rwltat10n
10 ,, SOCilll tunC\ICn today By all
nH•nn!-i oo It Cotl ld prove qu 1 1 ~

PRICES GOOD THROUGH SATURDAY, APRIL 30, 1977

•

•

•

•

•

•

· :1

* ... ·I

. ., .
•.

GOLDEN ISLE ,

FROZEN ORANGE JUICE

6

8 oz.
cans

$}49

W/C

Coupon Exp . April 30, 1977
Twin City Gateway

~

\

�6 - The Daily &amp;&gt;nlinel, Moddleport-l'omoroy, 0 . Tuesda) , Apnl tli, 1~ i7

Parish improvements planned

:;t;..;·x·:·:·:·:·:·:::::::~:::::::::::::::::;.;.:::::::::;:~:=:~:=:=:=:-:::::::·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:&lt;·:·:·:·:·;·:·:·:·;::-:·:-:-::»:·~~~

I Girl ;~~~~~iary I

Purnsh

GIRL SCOUT DIARY
A plan of help to those residin~ in the flood disa ster areas
of WeSt Virginia has been initiated by the Slack Diamond Gorl
Scout Council of which Meigs County is a part .
Mrs. Pat Thoma received wurd F'ridav of an ass astance

program. It has been suggested that girl s~ou ts coiled tmlel
articles and cosmetics suitable for a teen-age girl, and color·
ing books, crayons, and toys for smaller children. All items are
to be sealed in plastic bags with each bag to eonUun the narneand address of the contributor inside the bag . Contnbutions

are to be sent to the Council at 708 Bigley Ave., Charleston, W.
Va.

(

.. -

Brownie and junior girl scout leaders met Thursday at the
Middleport firemen 's lounge for a training session on all
phases of scout work. Dee Lawrence, Athens, the Area3 chair-

man, Mrs. Mary Wise, Middleport, scout leader, and Ann
Broadbent of Parkersburg, field director, were on hand to handle the instruction. Most all Meigs County troops were
represented at the session. Donna Taylor provided baby sitting
service for the leaders.
SYRACUSE BROWNIE TROOP 1120
The bike-a-thon for the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation to be held
in Syracuse May 7 was discussed when the troop met Thursday
night at the Syracuse Elementary School.
The Brownies turned m their woo·k charts which qualify
them for badges. Plans were discussed fu r the trip to Huntington Wednesday to be on ".Mr. cartoon" with the scouts to
leave the school at I p.m.
· Badges were presented to those who participated in Think·
ing Day. Receiving these were Jill Nease. Sherri Sisson, Kim
Adams, Kathy Pickens, Mary Baldwin, Veronica Provo, Jane
Imboden, Kim Cogar and Tracy Hubbard. Hefreshments were
served by Jane Jett and Jane Imboden. Jill Nease led in the
pledge, Kathy Pickens in the Lord 's Prayer, 'leronico Provo
the scout promise, Becky Roush, the Brownie B's, and Sherri
Sisson, the Smile Song.

.' : :;•:•: : p;·;;~;:;:~:~ · · d;;~·~;;·· · · ·i

I
:·:
:· children 's services Ill
Personnel of the GalliaJackson-Meigs Community
Mental Health Center talked
on children's services

at

ACOMPOSITE of the scenes from Gallia Country, a historica l musical drama depicting
the history of sou!-heastern Ohio from 1792 to the 1890s, is shown above. Drama is entering its
fifth season at the Bob Evans Farm Outdoor Theatre with performances July 8-10, 1!&gt;-17, 2224, and 29-31.

Musical plans fifth season
'
College.
Auditions for "Ga llia Rio Grande
GALL!POLfS - For the
Ticket information for the
fifth season. the historical Country" will be :
Saturday, May I (2-6 p.m.) 12 performances beginning at
mu s ical drama " Gallia
Country" will be performed in the Lafayette Mall 9 p.m. can he obtained from
in the Bob Evans Farm auditorium, Gallipolis; and · the Gallia Dramatic Arts
Outdoor Theatre,
Rio Saturday, April30, 10 a.m. to Society, 16 Sta te St.,
Grande, on four consecutive 2 p.m. in the Music Building, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
weekends: Julyll-10, 15·17, 22·
24 and 29-31.
The popular ou tdoor ::;:········ ····•:•:•:•:•:•:•:••· •·•·•&lt;·:·: •:·,······•:•·············•:-:•:•:•:·:•:•:•:•:•:::::::::::::::•:•:• : •:::•:•:::::::::::::::::•:::•:•:•:•::;:~.::
production based on the

pioneer

development

of

southeastern Ohio from 1792
to the 1890s, js produced
annually by the Gallia
Dramatic Arts Society.
The drama traces th e
colorful characters who
carved out the settlement of

:\[)~ Columbus chosen i
II as pageant host .
:;::
:1:

The All American Gi rl
Pageant
offi~c lias anthe Gallia area now comnounced
that
Columbus has
prising Gallia, Jackson,
selected
as
the host c.UX.
been
Lawrence, Mei gs and Vi nton
for
Ohio's
first
All
American
... co unties.
Girl
State
Pageant
on
July 18The Bob Evans Farm
19
at
the
OSU
Holiday
Inn .
cerned citizens; Ve r non natural amphitheatre, where
Kim
Smith,
Publicity
Nease, Hed Cross; Robert T. the drama is performed, is
Bumgarner ,
Mei gs located in the immediate Chairman, has announced the
Min is terial Associcttion; area where J ohn Hunt state pageant will include th e
Chris Zimmer and Sandy Morgan and his famo us categories of the All
Brown, Ga!lia-Meigs Com- "Morgan's Raiders" staged American Tot, ages 3-6; All
munity Ac~Mary F. Skin- the northernmost battle of the American Little Miss, ages 7rier, persoirnf advocacy; and Civil War. The Morgan battle 9; All American Miss, ages
Nan Mykel, Nancy Raming, is depicted along with other 10·12; All American Teen,
Helen E. Bailey, Mental famous incide nts involving ages 13-17, and ·th e All
Health Center.
area notables like Daniel American Girl, ages 18-26.
Pageant officials anticipate
Boone, who once trapped in
16-20
girls · will vic for the
the area and Odd Mcintyre,
FIRST CHILD BORN
coveted
title in each age
Mr. and Mrs . Er nest Broadway's first synd icated group.
Hawkins, Rutland , she the columnist.
Winners in each category
The two act production was
former June Clark, announce
will
receive a trophy, crowri,
written by Lee Durieux of Mt.
the birth of their first child, a Vernon,
and will advance to
banner,
Greg' ~iller, of
son , Royden Albert, April II , Jackson,Ohio.
nat-ional
competitio·n .
.is the director and
at Holzer Medical Center. N ian Cadman,
Youngstown, Trophi es will also be
The infant weighed ·eight
will'
serve
as
choreographer
pounds and six ounces.
Grandparents are . Mrs . . for the grpupe of 85.
Nearby Rio Grande College
Eileen Hawkins, Rutland,
will
be offerin g class credit
and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth D. .
for
interested
parClark, Maso n. Great· ticipants in this student
_year's
play.
HARTFORD, W. Va. - A
. grandparents are Mr. and
miscellaneous
shower and
Mrs. Dorsey Roush, Letart,
potluck
supper
wsa held
W. Va . , and Mrs. Eutha
recently
at
the
Hartford
McDaniel, Mason.
CLUB MEETS
Community Center honoring
The Meigs 4-H Pleasure
Mr. and Mrs. David Smith.
MEETING PLANNED
Riders met at the Rock SprAttending were Kim Roush,
Envoy Ray Wining an- ings fairgrounds Saturday
Nancy
Kimes : and family,
nounced a com bined praise for a coggins clinic in
meeting of the Pomeroy and prepa ration for .horse shows Cecil Smith, Joe and Ruby
Jones, Hazel Smith, Cecilia
Athens Salvation Army Corps and the Meigs County fair.
Harris, Dennis Harris, and
at 7 p.m. Thursday . at the Following th e cl inic,
Joann
Goulart.
Meigs Headquarters, 115 members of the cluB cleaned
Peggy
Reitmire , June
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy . up the fairgrounds where the
Maxey
and
Susan,- .Nancy
There will be special horn OVHSA held an auction
Anderson
and
Carol, Tim
and vocal numbers with Lt. Saturday night. A ~ontribu­
Stewart,
~"ranci
s·· Stewart ,
Daniel Griffin of Athens tion was made to the Club for
Garah
Gibbs,
and
Rosalee
speaking. All present and the work.
Kearns.
past soldiers are urged to
Christi Kearns, Helen
attend and the public is in. vited .
SALE SLATED
TOHOLDSUPPER
NEW HAVEN - The New
MASON - A spaghetti Haven Volunteer Fire
supper, sponsored by the Department Auxiliary will
Wahama Band Boosters, will hold a rununage sale May 4-5
be held Saturday from 4 to 8 starting at 9 a.m. at the city
p.m. at the high schoo l buildin g in New Haven .
cafeteria. Price will be $2.25 Anyone wishing to contribute
for ad ults and $1.50 for is asked to call any member
children under 12 including of the fir e department or the
dessert and beverage .
auxiliary.

Tuesday's meeting of the
Meig s County Hu man
Resources Council.
Mrs. Gl'enna Crisp presided
. at the meeting held at the
Meigs Inn and at the suggestion of Steve Dawson of the
Mental Health Center an
organizing committee for
children's services was formed. Named to the committee
were Dawson, Robert B.
Morris, Eleanor Thomas and
Gene Lyons.
Dr. Harriet Kaufman talk·
ed to the group on the new
children's home which will
open in about a year as a part
of the mental health program. She noted the increase
in. children's services in the
past quarter reporting t~at
the three child services
workers saw 120 children in
March. She reported that in
Meigs County services have
increased 20 percent in the
past quarter. Outpatient serVices include play and familY
therapy.
Information about the
children involved is available
to schoois only on the
parents' signature, it was
pointed out. Referrals are
made from doclors, schools
and churches and there is
cooperatlon from the
Juvenile Court: Dr. Kapf~an
noted that parents must sign
for a child to be seen.
Lygia William s, a
psychologist, talk ed on
preventative programs in
schools to determine needs
and readiness and noted
· cooperation with the school
psychologist.
Kris Walker, caseworker
from District 8 office, talked
about cooperation with other
agencies geared to keep the
mentally retarded in the l',_,_...._......_...._._...._.._.,_. _ _ ._. __ ,_.,_...__,_..._.,_
community. She spoke of trySimple facts everyone wno .
I
ing to get the client's rights,
such as food stamps and Sup- I owns a home. car or business should knllw
plemental Social Security Insurance, taken care of, and of
the legal aspects such as
managing the client's money. 1
Mrs. Walker is in an office
selec tinq your cov erage . A
!
company's r cputntion for
which handles eight counties
se r vice
and
c ta.im s
I
with her respoosibilities be- ~ Th!!bcstwilyfo'getatrue
.
barga1n
on .
m su rance IS to paym e nt is critica l.
I
ing in Athens, Hocking and
~ hop t or it. Bu t there are
And if you ha ve a claim,
morc , lh iln thre e th ousand your independe nt &lt;~gC nt is
I
Meigs Counties where she
companies
selli ng
in - in a posi t ion t o support you .
has a caseload of 300 persons. I svrance policnes to protect To be on vour si d e m ~
The bike hike was announchome !.,
Ciln
and h elping yo u ob ta in a just ,
!
ed by Hank Cleland for Satur- I bu s in ess e s. and 11 is n ' t e quitabl e se ttl e m e n t
!
. 1. 1or you t o · ~ h eck Promptly .
prac l 1ca
day. Next .meeting will be a
eac h and every o 11 e .
B eca use he i s a se lf .
presentation on Southeast
Ttlal 's why it's a good emploVed l oca l business
j
Ohio Emergency Medical I id ea t o cons ul t an in- m~n . el M independent ~qc nf I
d ependent
in sura nc e knows hi s r cspo n ~ i bthtv •s
Serviceby Mrs. Joan I agent.
An indepcnQent to hts Cus tom ers . H is
i\
Stewart, Rutland.
~gent do~ s not work for an succ ess is based on serving
!
•
Others attendin g the
1nsuranc c company , H e h1s cu st omers In tflr ee key
works i or you . Wfl it h areas .
1
meeting were Mrs. Eleanor I m
ea n s h e c&lt;1 n plan th e
1: He prov ide., th e best
Thomas, Jan Shoots, Meigs I cov~rage that protect s you in suranc e coverage &lt;If th e ~
County Council on Aging ; ~ be st. And th en plac e it with l Ow es t true cost ttl you ..
!
the
most
su•tabte
o
f
th
e
2.
H
e
IS
avilil&lt;~blc
day
iiMCI
Aspin,
Gene Lyons, Gary
severa l if1surance com . niqht f9 rcspof1d to your
~
Meigs County Health Depart- !\ panie s h e deals wi th .
needs .
I
ment; Lee Norman, Ohio Job • Many pcDpl e mak e th e 3. H e hahdlc s a ll type s ol
s tly mtsfake of ass uminq •n sur,,ncc,
and
deal s
Services; Robert B. Morris, ~ co
th at in s urance poltc• cs arc fhrouqfl s trong , rcliabl('
Meigs Local Schools; Mrs.
I'll th e so1mc . The t r 'u th is compan1e s.
To milk C S Urt;' YOU h&lt;tVC
Margaret E. Lewis, Coun cil I 'h cy are no ' N o l on y d ocs
I
' c raqe "" mel epc ndcn t i nsurancc
quiltttv o t cov
secretary; Mrs. · Doroth y ~ the
vary from poticv· to poticv . aqent o n vou r si de, took for
I
Retired SeniOr
Wlll
but the cos.t often \/aries fh J&lt;; symbo l or cono;lllt your
I
V ~· llow Paqcs , If h e can ' t
Vol~teer of the Council on I toG .
Remember that pr i ce •S h •' 1P you.
.,..
Aging; Mrs. Phillis Bearhs,
not the ontv ba sis tor IIObody can .
-.oW~IPlanned Parenthood of
~~~~·;,
I
" The In surance Store "
~ ·.:- ..
Southeastern Ohio; Kathi ~
Howard, student at Gallia·
Reuter-Brogan Insurance Service_
Jackson-Meigs Community
114 E . M.:11n
992 SIJO
Pom eroy
~
Mental Health Center; Pearl
,_,.._....__,_._...__,_.,._...._..,.~
Williams, Hank Cleland, con· (_.._..~ _....__..

·I

I

I How to Get

1

!

the Best Insurance Buy for
I Your Monev

presented to the talent
winners in each category and
they will have the opportunity
to compete at the national
pageant as candidates-atlarge. The National Pageant
will be held at Holiday City in
Memphis , T.ennessee the
third week in August. At this
time the contestants will be
competing for over $0,000 of
s·c holarships and awards.
Parents of would-be contestants are invited to inquire
fo r further information and
application by writing All
America n Girl Pageant, P. 0.
Drawer 1630, Dothan, Ala.
36301 or by calling 205-792·
4907. PTA's, band boosters,
dance schools, civic clubs and
other ·organizations interested in sponsoring a local
pageant as a fund raising a~e
also invited to inquire.

Smiths entertained
Riffle, , Evelyn Maring,
Robert Maring , Bess K.
Smith, Sue Kell, and Edward .
Keu.
Esther MacKnight, Edna
Wayland, Earl and Maxine
Fields, Vernon and Ruth
Grinstead, Dorothy Fields,
Karen Finnicum and Linda
Fields .
Nellie M. Smith, Lee Gibbs,
Mildred Gilibs, Maxine Arnold, Lois Ann Gibbs and
Sharon Cole.
. Sending gifts were Mr. and
Mrs. John W. Kell, Sandy
McComas, Kim Gibbs, Mr.
and Mrs. Mac Howard, and
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd McMillin.

I
1
i

w•

\

i

-·-··..-·

were Mrs. O'Brien,

~

Send flowers to your
secretarY. and all the
terrific ladies who
help
things
run
smoothly at work.

Mrs.

Freda Hartinger, and Miss
Bichman, with Mrs. Larry
Brogan and Mrs. Irving Karr
contributing. Mrs. O'Brien
opened the meeting and the
Lord's Prayer and devotions
by Mrs. Fowler included
reading of the 25th Proverb
and the message of April 29
from from Forward, Day by

your

We're proud to present

.

~n ow

th c ·hca uty

Lhl' Filign.:l' dinner ring. Nmv you '
knuw Ilk c h.:g&lt;llll..' l: whkh ti d ll rn l'tl lo vely
lac.lic.., g..:nt.:r~l lion:-. &lt;1!!-ll. Ouality anJ
ll f

· A !&amp;-year-old should have the right to her own religion, but
whether you can legally demand it or not Is a question for a
lawyer. Get your Presbyterian minister's opinion first and ask
him to discuss the situation with your grandmother.
: If your mother and stepfather are using the strap as a
P.oselyti~er, I think you have a case. - HELEN

on this exclusive
Frigidaire
Laundry Cenler.

+++

• A WORD FROM SUE : If parents can win
oonservatorships of their grown children to "deprogram"
them from so-called brainwashing religions, then I'd think
. teenagers might have rights against overzealous parents.
And certainly "converting" by the strap is overzealous!

4!' Complete home
Laundry Center just
24 ~

wide

• 4-position Water
Temperature,SeleCto r
• Automatic Dry cycle
• Cycle-end signal

Only

$48995.

You'll be as proud to own Frigidaire
Appliances as we are to sell them.

BAKER

FURNITURE
'

MIDDLEPORT

POLLY'S POINTERS

•

Polly Cramer

i' Hot iron melts wax on rug
, POLLY'S PROBLEM
•
,LDEwAoRf aPnOyLwLYy-I cDuan ygoeut
8
"''0
· .l.ax out of a fur sofa and
wool-nylon rug' The wax was
:l.':l~lted when it was spilled
"""""· ·Help me, please. · :::PE;GG Y.
:tt;&gt;EAR PEGGY - You
&gt;.ght scrape the excess wax
~f the rug with a dull knife.
~ce a clean white blotter or
=:-:several thicknesses of paper
~els over the stain and appa hot iron but be sure the
'-'1'011 stays on the towels and
·:ooes not touch the rug. Keep
~ nging towels as they
!iS:":ome saturated with the
_.., !ted wax and when all is
o;;(iff. clean stains with a dry
=aeaning fluid.
:'::The fur sofa will doubtless
much more difficult but
= u might try \he same treat-Ment. Stroke the cleaning
-=awd in one direc-tion and then
~~ other so it penetrates.
~en dry, fluff up with a
;;;;;&amp;;ish.- POLLY.
= DEAR POLLY - My Pet
:Peeve is with the way potato
:!lips are packaged. Most
:tJags are only about half full.
We are paying our good
. money for food, not air that is
packaged. Air is free. CHERYL.
DEAR POLLY - I am
answering R.A. who wanted
to know how to cover wire
coat hangers with yam and
not use a crochet hook. Cut
two strands of yarn each 10
feet long. Put strands
together and fold in half.
· Match half way mark to
hanger just below the hook
and tie a knot. Hold two
strands of yarn in each hand
straight out to the sides. Take
top strand in right hand and
push under the wir_e, bring
back over the top to right
s1oe agam. The strand of
yarn will then be below the
other strand rather than 'being on top. Take top strand in
left h~nd and push \Ulder wire
and bring back over the top to
left side again. This strand
will then he below the other
strand on the left side. Continue this for entire hanger
and always remember to
work with top strand of yam
and to alternate !roll\ the
right to left sides. Pull yam
taut as you work. At the end
tie a kno\ a od then make a
bow.- TF:rtRI.
DEAR ll.A. - We had
many answers to your questions and all very much alike,
but use two wire hangers
together for extra

=tr

CITY LOAN

&amp;.SAVINGS

thl' past.

.GOESSLER'S
Pomeroy , 0,

125 E. Main Street 992-2171

taP&lt;f

Social
Calendar

+++

Dear H.!.:

wash cycles

1r;a.l it i11n t:nl.llhine to bring you ~ l ylt- unJ

JEWELRY STORE

" It hasn't been an easy
fight ," she said in an
interview. "We've had to
change the mentality of the

.:e. _as:~

I'J

.I

When you need money for your kid's braces, or any good reason,
talk to us. We handle Personal Loans quickly, easily and with
consideration. You can borrow with tmst where people save with
·trust. City Loan &amp; Savings.
We find ways to help,
Only' ' a granJrllnLhl'f woultl

W(Illen were sex objects or
they worked in the home."
11

w&lt;man?

Qear Helen and Sue:
Mom just married a man who is into a far~mt religion.
she•s taken it up, and expects me to join toO. I want to stay with
my own church (Presbyterian), but- witll threat of tile strap
-+ they're forcing me to attend their home meetings four times
a~ week, sing on street comers, etc . l can't believe the stuff tlley
teach .
1 Grandma says I can live witll her, but Mom I;VOn't allow it.
Doesn't a !&amp;-year-old have a right to her religion?-HATING

~

.

By JOHN VIRTUE
HAVANA, CUba (UP!)
Cuban wmnen already have
achieved tl)eir Equal Rights
Amendment.
Complete equality was
written into the n~w
coostitutioo drafted in 1975
and additional rights are
embodied in tile Family Code
laws of the same year.
"We inherited the concept
of 'machismo' from the :
Spanish," said Ana Maria
Navarro a top official of the
Cuban Women's Federation.

About too frequent visits and calls, try directing her to a.
singles club, a bobby, different interests, new friends.
; Divorced people who cling to relatives bore everyone,
irlcluding themselves. - HELEN .

Donations
presented
Donations to the firemen
and the emergency squad
were made by the Bradbury
Variety Club meeting Thursday at the home of Mrs.
Evelyn Murray.
Mrs. Bernice Winn presided at the meeting with Mrs.
Murray giving Bible
readings and devotions. She
had a poem entitled "Turn of
the Year." Mrs. Arline Davis
gave the secretary and
treasurer's report and Mrs.
Murray gave the flower fund
report. For roll call members
named a spring flower.
Potluck dinner was served
at noon with Mrs. Winn giving grace. The afternoon was
spent workil\g on individual
projects.
Mrs. Hilda King will host
the May 19 meeting. Read at
the meeting was a letter from
Veterans Memorial Hospital
for Easter favors provided by
the club.
Attending besides those
named were Mrs. Peg Hutton, Mrs. Kathryn Werner,
Mrs. Olevia Cotterill, . Mrs.
Hilda King, Mrs. Carolyri
Searls and Amy, Mrs .
·Susanne Richmond and Mrs,
Virginia Whitlatch, Mrs.
Jackie Hoover and Mrs.
Diana Stewart · joined the
group for the dinner.

courage~

strength and also two dif·
ferent colors of wool so it is
easier to tell which is left and
which is right. - POLLY.'
DEAR POLLY - Arthritis
in my hands made it very difficult to remove lids from
sealed jars and bottles Wltlll
stwnbed on to the following
way. I put about an inch of
very hot water in a pan and
invert the jar or bottle in the
water for a minute or so and
then the lid or cap is easy to
get off. I do hope this helps
others. - MARTHA T.
Polly will send you one of
her signed thank-you
newspaper-&lt;!oupon clippers if
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her column. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS · in care of this
newspaper .
:-~t~:::::::::::%::~:::.~~·

:-:·
·~{

&lt;

ij

Social
Calendar

WEDNESDAY
TWIN CITY Shrinettes
Wednesday, 7:30p.m: at the
home of Mrs. Lawrence
Stewart.
POMEROY Chamber of
Commerce Wednesday, n~n
at the Meigs Inn.
THURSDAY
REVIVAL servtces in
progress at Syracuse Church
of God, 7:30 nightly. The Rev.
Richard
Bradley
of
Charleston will speak on
Daniel and Revelation.
FIVE Points Bucks 4·H
club Thursday 7:30 p.m. at
the home of Rich Long. Final
enrollment.
SATURDAY
BABY SHOWER for
Mathew Douglas, infant son
of Mr. and Mrs . Doug
Seaman, minister of the
Bearwallow Church of Christ.
Shower to he held at 7:30p.m.
at the Modem Woodman Hall
at Burlingham. Friends and
neighbors of the Seamans are
invit.ed.
."

BAKE SALE SET
Forest Run United
Methodist Church will hold a
bake sale at the Dale C.
Warner Insurance Agency
Friday, W. Main St.,
Pomeroy, beginning at 9 •·{"·
Th~

SUPER
MARKET

Cuban women already
achieved equal rights

A NOTE TO HELP'S MOTHER: A few (Maybe many) . pople."
well-&lt;!hosen words would stop Beth's criticism without
W&lt;IIIen now make up 28 per
completely severing family ties. Each time she starts up, tell cent of the work force, up
her you're in charge here, and change the subject. Where 's

'

Court St.

Rap :
My aunt has nothing to do but snoop into our business ! She
calls Mom five times a day asking where we've been,,where we
~going, what we kids are up to,.and how come we didn't take
her aloog last Sunday, etc., etc.
We doo't, like to take her along because she complains all
tile time, and criticizes how we're being raised, which makes
Mcm mad.
• But Mom won't tell her off because she's tile older sister,
·IIIKI has bossed her all their lives.
' Aunt Beth is •divorced, and her kids are grown, so she's
laking us over. When she isn't calJin&amp;, she's over here
gossiping- Mostly about us kids, and how all teenagers are no
good. - HELP!
Help :
Your mother can help - if she had the gumption. And
when she finally gets mad enough , she may stop kowtowing to
til is bossy older sister . Hurry things along by teUng her how
you feel - and wondering out loud how two people in tile same
family could be so different. - SUE

National
Secretaries Week

out at
Loan.
t.: h;.~rm t':tl lll

Snoopy Aunt Need• DlrecUon: OUT'

April 24-30 Is,

The Old Fashion is·
the New look

(illl

~~~~'"=I

OFFICE MEMO:

to make Mother haPfY

I
I

1

· provemcnts were discussed
at the recent meeting of the
Episwpal Church Women of
Gr~ ce Church at the home of
Mrs. James O'Brien.
Miss Marie Bichman
reported on the new drapes
for the facility · with Mrs.
James B. O'Brien noting that
the Parish House wiU be
painted next month. New
chair covers will be purchased for the chairs. Mrs. Paul
Eich was thanked for her job
of c&lt;lllecting food for baskets
which were given to the
Salvation Anny.
·
lt was noted that Mrs.
O'Brien and Mrs. ·Kenneth
Amsbary will attend the
Episcopal Church Women's
conference at the Worthington Hilton Inn, April
29-30. Mrs. Eich reported on
the presiding bishop's fund,
Appointed
to
the
nominating committee by
·Mrs. O'Brien were Mrs.
Eleanor Crow, Mrs. Eich and
Mrs. Mildred Fowler.
Secretary's report was given
by Mrs. Iris Kelton in the
absence of Mrs. Harold

Day, which was an explana.tion of the 25th Proverb.
A silent &lt;~,uction was conducted by Mrs. Nancy Reed
and Mrs .. Eich following the
meeting attended by 17
members:

Deeth. Mrs. O'Brien gave the
treliSurer's report in the
absence of Mrs. James Titus.
Plans were made for a
potluck at the May meeting
to be held at the home of Mrs.
Thereon Johnson with
memoer's husbands as
guests.
For the program, Mrs.
Patrick Lochary reviewed
11
The Man Who Moved a
Mountain" by Richard C.
Davis. This was a story of his
life and family and the people
of the mountain area around
Buffalo Mountain in Virginia.
Hostesses for the luncheon
which preceded the meeting

GREAT GIFTS

I

I

im ..

="'

l

!

house

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pmneroy, 0 ., Tuesday .\pril26, 1977

TUESDAY
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary, Racine Post 602,
7:30 Tuesday night at the
American Legion Hall,
Racine. Members urged to
attend.
·
MEIGS County United
Methodist Men Tuesday, 7:30
p.m. at Asbury Church in
Syracuse. Refreshments. All
men welcome.
Legion
AMERICAN
Auxlliary, Drew Webster
Post 39, both junior and
senior units, 7:30 Tuesday at
the hall. Carl Hysell, juvenile
&lt;ificer, to speak, along with
the Rev. Frank Cheesebrew
111 national securhy, and a
representative of Pomeroy
my scouts on bicycle safety.
Mrs. Olan Knapp will have a
foreign relations program.
Special guests will be
members of Meigs Chapter,
!Xder of DeMolay.
PAST Matrons, Pomeroy
CbajXer, OES, 7:30 Tuesday,
IDme of Mrs. Ella Smith.
OHIO Eta Phi Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30
Tuesday at the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
MEETING on the formation of a Parent-Teacher
Forum for Meigs Junior High
School at 7:30 Tuesday
evening in the school
cafeteria . Parent of this
year's seventh grade and of
youngsters who will be en·
tering the seventh grade next
year urged to be present.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY · Mid,dleport
~Uons Club, noon Wednesday
the Meigs Inn. Annual
election of officers. All Lions
lJ'ged to. attend.
OIUO Valley Commandery
24, Kniglts Templar, stated
ronclave, 7:30 p.m. WM·
nesday, Pomeroy Masonic
Temple. All Sir knights urged
to attend.
WU..DWOOD Garden Club,
Wed!}esday, 8 p.m. at the
Star
Church
Morning
!Jlsemmt with Mrs. Dorothy
Smith as hostess.
PYTHIAN Sisters Wednesday, 7:30p.m. at the K of
PHaU.
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at
the ·home of Mrs. Forrest
Bachtel. Mrs. Arthur Strauss
to review th.e book, "The Life
Beyond Death." For roll call
members are to comment on
ihe book.

af

OPENINGS still available
for Wednesday's free ce~­
vical cancer clinic at
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
1 to 3 p.m. For appointnient
call 992-7531 or 994-3382.

from 13 per cent before the
Jan. I, 1959 revolution. There
is no unemployment in Cuba.
"But before, women
worked as maids or in bars
and cabarets," said Tamara
Colombie, also a federation
official. "Now we 're invading
all sectors of the econOilly."
There are now more than
1,000 women taxi drivers in
Havana . There are even
more w&lt;IIIen carpenters and
plasterers.
The problem of the abandoned mother, which drives
so many Latin American
women into prostitution, has
been solved in Cuba. There's
no prostitution and the father
must pay one-third of his
salary in child maintenance
- deducted at tile source.
But w&lt;IIIen also have financial obllgations to tlleir husbands.
"If the man is unable to
work, tile woman has to
supper! him," said Navarro.
The same is true of
ali!llony . Either men or
women can receive it,
depending on tile financial
circumstances.
"Nooe of this changes could
have made been had there not
been a revolU,ti0fi 1 II Said

Navarro.
Abortion was legalized
after tile revolutioo, but there
d existed before a highss, clandestine abortioo
s vice whi.ch catered to
American women, said
Navarro.
11
We have bitter memories
about abortion before the
revolution," she said. uThe
CUban women couldn't afford
proper ones and many sui·
fered,"

But abortion is not encouraged and is only
permitted after the woman
explains why she needs one.
"lt's better to avoid
pregnancy instead of getting
an abortion," said Navarro.
"Abortion is harmful to the

children."

"We're still not satisfied
with everything," said
Navarro . "There are still
some taboos, but we ' re
working oo them."

FRESH &amp; LEAN

GROUND

PICNIC

BEEF
SLBS.OR
MORE LB.

HAMS

69¢
LB.

HOMEMADE

59~
SLICED

HAM SALAD
LB.

79¢)..

SUPERIORS

POLISH
SAUSAGE
LB.

LB.
SUPERIORS

69~

All MEAT

.

WIENERS

)

~·

79~

FREE

BLUE
BONNET
SPREAD

Dairy Specials

DISPOSABLE RAZOR
WITH THE PU
OF

CRICKET
LIGHTER .

2 LB. BOWL
(

BROUGHTON'S

2% MILK
LlffiE FRISKIE

STYROFOAM

PlASTIC GALLON ·

CAT
FOOD

ICE
CHEST

$ 29

lARGE SIZE

8 LB. BOX

BROUGHTON'S

Several attend
funeral services
Funeral services for L. E.
Reynolds, Middleport, were
conducted at 2 p.m. Saturday
at the Rawlings-Coats
Funeral Home with burial in
Middleport · Hill Cemetery.
Mr. George Glaze officiated
atthe services. ·
Here from out of town for
the setvices were Mr. and
Mrs. Keith Massie, Harold
Snider, Terry Snider, James
M. Hartley, Morgantown, W.
Va.; Mr. and· Mrs. George
Stace, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Horton, Findlay; Dr. and
Mrs. Joseph D. McKay, Sally, Cinda and Victor, Warren; Mr. and Mrs. George E.
Conroy, Jr. and Kim and
John Rarnian , Mr. and Mrs.
Hugh Conroy, Akron; Mrs.
Alice Ferguson, Mrs. Keith
Rhodes, Huntington, W. Va .;
Mrs. Bernice Stewart, Lancaster; Mrs. Barbara Sayre,
canal Winchester; Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Reynolds, T. Gardner Reynolds, Lebanon; Mrs.
Mary Rupe, Charles and
David, CoolVille; and Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Wiley and
family, New Haven, W. Va.

the Ri,ght To U111 it Quantrti~
\'~

We Accept Federal Food Stamps -

woman's health."
Cuba does not have the
demographic problem faced
by most Latin American
countries and tllere is no birth
control program.
"The couple decides the
number of children they
want," said Navarro. 11As the
woman gets better educated
and works, she wants less

MIDDLEPOR!, 0.

CORNER MILL &amp; SECOND ST.

·

OPEN DAILY
9 TO 10
SUNDAY
10 TO 10

COFFEE
MATE
16 OZ. JAR

HOMO

·

MILK~.~~~~N

VALLEY BELL

conAGE
.

COFFEE
FILTERS

oz.

24
CARTON

CHEESE ••••••••••••.••.
Frozen Food Specials
BANQUET
MACARONI &amp; CHEESE
.
.

MR. COFFEE

79¢
PURINA

PUPPY
CHOW
25 LB. BAG
BEEF FlAVOR

EACH

BUFFET SUPPERS ••••

COUNTRY FRESH

SCOT lAD

ORANGE
6 oz.
JUICE •••••••••••••• ~~~. ~

50 COUNT BOX

Produce

EGGS
DOZEN

$1
BANANAS ••••••••••••
5 LB.

PUBLIC HEARl NG
The U. S. Army Corps of Engineers,
Huntington District, will hold a pu~lic
hearing regarding a proposed coal loadmg
facility.
TIME: 7 P.M.
DATE: 28 April, 1977
PLACE : Wahama · High School
Gymnasium
.
.
The hearing will consider a request by
William F. Zuspan, P.O. Box 108, Mason, W.
va·., for a permit to construct a coal loading
facility on the Ohio River. The proposed
location .is immediately downstream from
Clifton; W.Va ., and directly across the river
. from MiddlepQrt, Ohio.• 252.5 miles below
Pittsburgh, Pa.
All interested parties are invited to be
present at the hearing. They will_be g_iven
an opportunity to express thetr vtews
concerning the proposed facility.

THURSDAY ONLY

RC
COLA
8-16 OZ. BOffiES

'1"

DR. PEPPER
8-16 OZ. BOffiES

c

DIET RITE
COLA
8- 16 OZ. BOm.ES

.,29

�'
9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesd~.J, April26, 1977

8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, April~. 1977

Let ·The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES
15 \\' ul'tl"''"' Umli•r
r .,~lt

l'orSale

CIUU j.!l'

1 d.:t)

1. ~

1 da~s

1.50

1,!;1(1

:hi&lt;J) S

l, lltl

~.:!5

:too

bda~il

1.2;;

"' l 'f"th ts ~ H' tlh 1&gt;1.'1 1.1.'\Wd po.•l' lll:l)
"ds I'Utllllllll utht.•t lha n t'tii\St'I'UI!Vt' _
lli;t~ t. Will l.k! t• l~l f!.t~l oil Iill' I da~
l'&lt;ill

In mt•muf} . Con..l uf Tlllj!Hb aud
OUilU~I) ti tTtiLS pt.'l "'"•U. Sl l~
IHIIIUIIUJll C&lt;il&gt;hlil&lt;i\.1\itlll't'

Mo•balt• llomt&gt; !&gt;&lt;!Its andY Ill LI!Uiil'l&gt;
at'tt'pll'd only 111£11 11 t a;,h \ulh
vnlt'l' &lt;!:l t't'nt dUit!(t•l ur atls t 'llrl'\'·
m~ Box Num l.k•r 111 C.trt' of The St~l­
tmt!l

dll.'

Tlw Publis her tl'~t' ri c:. tl~ • l~ht
to l'llil ur ll'jt.., l &lt;illY 11tl1&gt; Un•nl!.-d v!J.
Jt"t: tluu&lt;~l Tlw PuUIISht•r "1llnot lA·
r t'SV\)Ill&gt;lbk ro1 lllut~ than &lt;'Il l' IJilvl'·
ll't' l LIIM'I\IUJL,

Pl\tllll' 9!rl·~ 150

Jfeai'

STEREO, NEW AM·FM stereo
Estate for Sale
radio .combmation. $129 .4i5 or
easy terms . Call992·39b5
HOUSE FOR Sole Syracuse. :._
bedrooms and both lot 100 M
SPRING CARDEN Supplies , Cab·
150 Garage, cement drive ond
boge. caul iflower. brocco l• ,
small $1oroge bldg Furnished
and head
lelluQa
plants ,
or unf urnished. Call 992-71 47.
yellow , white , and red on1on
sets , onion plants , Kennebe~: , HOUSE IN Pomero( . • bedrooms .
cobbler . Katahdin, Red Pontiac
both and v~, lu I basemen! , 2 1
ond Red losodo seed potatoes .
parches . Phone 992-70?4 or
Bulk garden seeds, pott1ng soil ,
m -3-465
p&amp;at moss , fru it trees and rose
House. 2 bedrooms,
bushet . Midway Mar ket , 5 RM
3 '/r oc r es ,
Sutton
Twp .
Pomeroy ,
Ohio, 992-2582.
Miner$v•l1e . Phone 992 -6268 or
Bob .s Market , Mason , W.Va .

benefits.
There are Branch Representat ive posi tions open
now for hi gh school graduates Must have auto.
Phone Mr . Snodgrass today for a confidential,
personal Interv iew . Cal l 992·2111.

(J0&lt;! 77~:_5721

WANT-AD .
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

TOMATO .

M unday

Noon on Smu1 tlay

Tul ~tlcn
Uu·u F' r uiay
..!PM

tht•dl:l) Uefm ~ puiJht'allun

Sw1dav

-IP. M~
flll.bt) &lt;tfl~ti !IIIOil

CASH pa 1d for all makes and
models of mobde homes .
Phone area code 614-&lt;423-9531 ,

WANTED · BEAUTIC IAN with

TIMBER . Pomeroy Forest Pro·
ducts Top pr ice for standing
sawtimber , Coli Ken t Hanby ,
1-446·8570

ATTENT 1=00::N
- -M
- A-N"'
A-::
G-::E"'
RS: --::&amp;

manager's

WE WISH to thank Or. Bo1ce , Dr
Teile and nurses of Veterans
Memor~ol
Hospital. Mrs
Clor1ce Erwin , Organist, ladies
of the Middleport Church of
Christ, George Gloze , minister,
Rowlmgs·Coates Funeral Home
end fr1ends and neighbors for
all their kmdness shown during
tl'le deotn of L. E Reynolds
Family of L. E. Reynolds .

WE WISH to tl'lonk all tl'le friends ,
ne ighbors, and relohves for
flowers and food during the
death of our father . Theodore
Custer. Thanks to Rev . Harvey
Kock, Ew ing Funeral Home ,
M1ddleport Emergency Squad ,
Dr Ridgeway ond pallbearers.
May God bleu you all.
rna chlldrens , Janet, Jean , Jane,
Jim . Joe , and Jerry.

license .

Phone

..'192.3333.
0

Demonstrators . Sell toys and
g•fts the party pion way,
Friendly Home Toy Part•es has
openmgs for managers ond
dealers in your aroo . Part y Plan
expenence helpful. No cosh Investment , no collecting or
dehver•ng. Cor and telephone
necessary. Coli Collect to Carol

COI NS , CURRENCY . tokens , old
pocket watches and cha.ns .
silver ond gold We need 1964
and older silver co1ns. Buy , sell,
or trade ' Coli Roger Wamsley,

7&lt;2-2331.

8·30 and 5:00 or write Friendly
Home parties, 20 Railroad
A... e., Albany , N. Y 12205.

OLD FURNITURE, 1ce boxes , brass APPLIANCE SERVI(E man , ex beds , etc ,
comp let e
perienced. No phone calls .
households. Write M. D. M1ller,
Goll1a Refngel'at1on Co.. 611
Rt. -4, Pomeroy, Ohio or coli
Third Ave .. Gallipolis, Ohio.

!_'B-77~
60~-------- NEED LADY to live in and core far

WANTED · CHIPWOOD Poles.

Max . diameter, I0 Inches on
largest end . S8 per ton . bundl ed slobs . S6 per ton Deli'o'ered
to Ohio Pallet Company . Rt. 2
Pomeroy , O hi o
Ph one

992-2689.

71 yr. old lady 1n Syracuse Not
bedfast , tight cookmg, no laundry ,
room ,
board
and
reasonab l e
wages .
Call
992·3914 after 4 pm
WAITRESS, must be 21. Apply In
person at Meigs Inn.

CODNER 's CAMPERS. See quality
THE FAMILY of Ollie Erdman wiJh
of SWISS COLONY : BARTH:
to express their heartfelt op·
preciotion to our rel atives,
CRICKET truck campers, MAPLE
LEAF spocemoker, PlY MOR ;
friends . and neighbors for their
CAP KIT caps. NEW-US£0 Soles ,
Coil m-2156
OJislts , cords, gifts of food and
rental. service, supplies . Taka
floral arrangements and tt'le I AM having a Yard Sale on Tues.·
Meigs
2B or 32 to Bashon .
prayers during the illness and
doy and Wednesday , April 26 &amp;
located on Rainbow Ridge,
deott1 of our mother and sister
21. RodefiCk Grimm's on BroodLong Bottom, Ohio. Robert
T~nks to Or. Telle , the ent1re
St . In Recine , Ohio. Th1s
Codner , owner
staff of Veterans Memorial
wil be o Four Family Yard Sale .
Hospital for their kind and pa TRUCK CAMPER , excellent condi tient care, Ronolfil Shepard for YARD SALE , Apnl 7.7 and 28th .
h an . Length 10ft. 6 10 . New
First
house
post
Vista
Station
his loving words ol encourageHoven . (JO&lt;) 882-292&lt;.
At
Five
Po1nfs.
Loh
of
nice
ment from God's word , and to
cloth1ng and other ort jcles .
13 FT. SHASTA travel trader in
Ewing Funeral Mama . Mrs . Joan
good shope. $55Q. 1966 GMC
Carnahan and
·
YARD SALE. April 28 and 29 on
Von , $500 Phone 992 -5&lt;465.
Horton St.. Mason . Clothing
and misc .
)Jijl74 19FT Bonanza SC : 18 h . 6 fl .
Travel Star, $3800; Fold-downs
5
FAMILY
Yard
Sale
,
Friday,
Apn
t
, We hove
start $1850. Parts and DC·
29,
10
a.m.
t1JI
4
p.m.
Baby
changed our gun
to FRI ·
cesones. We sell service and
clothes , dis hes , curtains ,
DAY, nights, ~otorting at 7 p.m
qual ity , Camp Conley Starcroft
bedspreads 5 speed b•cycle,
Soles, Rt . 62 N. of Pt. Pleasant.
SHIRLEY "Jeffers" Wolfe Is now
lawnmowen ,
Women ' s
the new owner of lola's Beauty
clothing and ather misc. items .
Salon In Syracuse. Ohio, John
Lee Circle , Rust l e Hills ,
St
Shirley was formerly
-1~
yr~a~'::."'=e~·~O~h:::'o~·----------­
employed at Lindo's Lady Fair ,
RUMMAGE
SALE at Letart Foils , HOUSE SOLO, couple 'With -4
Racine Ohio. Any of my former
daughten In need Immediately
Quillen's old store house . Starpatrons wishing appointment,,
ling
26,
27.
2B.
2'1.
and
30th.
of home , 3 or 4 bedroom Jn or
may call 992 -2S..9. Phone now
9 ·00 5:00. lots of women s,
around Middleport oreo. Phone
listed under lola 's Beauty Shop
'
mens , ch1ldrens, babies things .
992-6294 .
until f'lew directories ore issued
.f'-nd some cor ports. Odds and
at wh1ch time the nome w1l l be
COUPLE WITH 4 dau~hters need a
Sh1rley's Beauty Nook .
end~·~·----~----------3 or 4 bedroom home Must be
nice. Phone 992-6294.
POMEROY GOLF Club under new
management. Please claim
'
carts , clubs and shoes before

war

11lt •

...,,' ·'

_:S::u:::n::d::.aY
&lt;:·.::M
:::a:!yc.l:.:5:::1h:::·e,.__ _ __
THREE lamlly yard sale
Wedne sday , the 27th j ust
Inside the corporation
l imits , Main St ., Rutland.

RISING STAR Kennel Boarding,
Indoor-Outdoor runs, groomlf'!g
all breeds , clean sanitary
facilities Cheshire . Phone (61.4)

367·02'12.
t:tfJ o

... ~ ,

:!"'

MALE DARK red Irish Setter lost in
Five Points areo lost seen lues·
day morning. Answers to the
name of "Zak". Reword. Phone

m-6072.
:;.:

",,

LOST. femolt poodle , silver with
black face . lo!llt near Darwin .
Mother's g1h from children .
Please call992 -7671.

HOOF HOLLOW . Buy , sell, trade
or train horses. RUTH REEVES .
trainer . Phone (614) 6Jijl8·3290.
All, BREED Dog groomi ng ,
reasonable rates. Call for appomtment, J &amp; B Kertnel s,

7&lt;2·3162.
SIBERIAN HUSKY , female , 6 mon·
th s, shots Nice pup $75.

Phone 992·5055:c·- - - --

,.
NOTICE OF

Cest No . 22091
Estttt of Ruth E . Stttlt
Dtctlltd .
Notice Is htreby given that
Rebecca J Broder ick Of Rt .

2, Pomeroy, Oh io &lt;5769, Ohio

, HI&lt;~ 1

has been dulr appointed
Acrm in!stretr/)( of the Estate
of Ruth E. Steele, deceased ,
late of Chester Townsh ip,
Mtit~S County , OhiO.
Crtditors are requlrea to
file tt'lelr claims with said
fiduciary
within
tiHee
months.
Dated this ltth day of Aprlo

1971

Manning D . Webster

.

Judge

Court of Common Pleas,
Probate OiOJ islon
12, 19, 26, 3tc

fifes

Phone (30&lt;)B77-23&lt;0.
1972 VEGA. $800. 1972 Plymouth.
$1100. Phone 949-2307 .
1971 POrHIAC F1reb1rd 350 'I ·B, &lt;4
new tires , Am -Fm rod1o and
tupe , AC . ..-myl lop. $1900 or
best offer Phone 992·607 1.
1%7 MUSTANG with 1968 289
motor. Fair shocks. 3 speed
standard transmission . Good
cond1tion Just been painted ,
troc tio n ,b~Jrs _!~n e !_B5·3861
1970 MAC semi tri-oxle and
trai ler, $10,000. Call (614)

___753-3430. ---....._-

....'
I \1 I

LAFF - A -·oAY

197.4 PONTIAC F1reb1rd air , Am
tope, 111t wheel , Michei.n tires .
36,000 miles. Call 742-2211 and
ask for M1ke Grote or after 5,
coll7.42-2287 .

~

-· ---

.

""

.·-·,......
:

j

;!,

r-

,

Skid

steer motor . $-tOO bucket w1 th
For,ette troller. Shmn 's Tractor
So es Leon . W.Va . Phone (b14)

_4_58_-1_630.-'--'1_ _ _ __

Route

STOIII
WI11110WS' llOOIIS

3 AND 4 RM. furnist1ed and unfurn ished opt~ . Phone 992·
_J~3A .

COUNTRY Mob1le Home f:lork, Rt .
33. ten miles north of Pomeroy
L.9rge lots with concre te patios,
si de.,...alks, runners ond off
~~ rking . Phone992-7479

I"IAC{fiiENT
WINDOWS

IWIIINUII'
SIOI NG-SOFI'IIT
GumiiS-IWIIINGS

LARRl,~~J~!DER
n

H2·3993

4·10·1

m•

$24,000. Phone (614 ) 667-6304
or 667-334q

S-YRACusE home overlooking
river. $28, 500 For details and
_ ~po~men t , 992-7210.
ONE ACRE lot in Tuppers Plains,
Arball Addi tion . Very n1ce lot .
CoiiB-43 -29..45 , must sell .

Young's Carpeting
Route 3, Pomeroy, 0 .

Free Estimates
Installation, samples
brought to your home
with no charge.

Ph. H2-Zl74

NEED A
WATE.R SOFTlNER 1
Let Pomeroy landmark
soUen &amp; condition your
water and a Co-op water

Pomeroy Landmark

~Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

TOMATO PLANTS, James Hill
farm , Letart Falls , Ohio .
'
10 H.P. Simplicity garden tro(tor,
Complete w i th plow, disc .. harrow , tiller, 42 ln. mower and

blade $800 Phone 992-23R
l973 YAMAHA 360 . MX , new
motor , $.350. Phone 992-2595.

.

VEGETABLE

-----PLANTS, cobboge.

mango ,
bill
pepper s,
caul1flower, tomatoes , broc coli , main varieties . We g•ve
&amp;JCtro plants . Sweet potatoes.
plants around May 10. 2 miles
off Rt . 7 on West Shade Road .
No Sunday soles . Dwight
Spencer . 985-3838 ,

Brown's
Troller Pork . Phone 992-3324

MOBILE HOME, cit y water and
gas. Nice location . Phone
A lbert Htll , Racine , OH .

heating . City water, and

14 FT. TRI-HULL'~Ith tra1le;~976

949 · 226.~1.:..==--:--::TRAILER , ADULTS only. Phone

992-31B1.
----·-'-::--TUPPERS PLAINS. OHIO. New 2
-·~

35 h.p . Evinruda motor, 12 volt
Electnc trolling mo~ ~·th fish
locator and depth li er Phone
Drexel Lambert, Rut I nd , Oh 1o.

742·2676

·-------

21 IN . ZENEITH Color- T.V., excellent condition . Trov•s rod ,
new, 86 In to 150 in . Phone

742·21B7.

~~¥

-

FOR-SAL(, 10 horsepower Bolen's
tractor and mower Like new ,
Price $1500. See Rev. Wise,
m -3B74.
--~---- ·
2 BR MOBILE Home, $125 month: __ _F~v~e_Polnts or ~ne 99_~ ·~ :........
poy own utllilles, deposit . REDUCE SAFE &amp; Fast with GoBese
Tablets &amp; E·Vop " water pills"
Wnte Polly Bowland , Rt , 4
Thornvilie,Oh .
Nelso~ Dr ug..:_. __ ~- . _ ··- _
~---..-·- -·SMAll 2 BR Mobile Home, $65 8 TRACK Tape player and topes ,
record player and recores .
month
Pay own utilities .
Boy's 26 in . bike, 13 in. U in . &amp;
Deposit. Wr ite Polly Bowland ,
Rt . .4 , Thornvi lle , Oh1o.
15 in . t~res . 1958 Chevy , new
-.
.
battery , good motor Phone
MOBILE HOME space for rent . $35
] 42 ·~~8..:.. ...
- - -----month . Pay own utllit1es. Write
Polly Bowland, Rt. -4 , Thron· OLIVER DIESEL 0 C 9 Bulldozer
v1 lle , OH.
wi!h 8 It, blade. Coli (61&lt;)
J"'
~• -- 592-2605 oher 9 p .m except
20 x 24 bid . for rent. Polly
_ ~-~·-a~~ Sunday nights
Bow land. Rt. 4 Thornville,
Ohto .

FURNISHED 2 bedroom opt.
Adults only Middleport Phone

----

--

-

-~-

--

--~

NtW

CO•Op

weter

long at just $9,000.

$17.500.
COUNTRY HOME - A 3
bedroom frame home w i th
bath,
furnace (
full
basement, carport. garage

and 2 acres. S25.000.
BUSINESS INCOME -

ttntrt, m•CIII VC-SVI.

gas furnace , carpeting,

apartments up and large
business room down . With J

paneling , lots of cabinets.

pool tables and other
equipment included In the
sale .

SOMETHING NEW - 2
bedroom bungalow with
bath. naf . gas heat, city
water, front porch &amp; small
back yard with metal
vtility building. Want only

$12,900.
SHELL

HOME

t=r1111r

12ft

Pomi!GJ Landmark

9-. ·..:. .l•ctcPhone
W. C•rny, M~r
ltf2 ..2111

~

3

bedroom plan, finished on
the outside. Complete It to
suit yourself. Just $12,000.

, OVER 8 ACRES -

of

near town , 3
bedroom home , modern

privacy

bath and kitchen with
dishwasher . Utility room.
nat . gas F.A. furnace and
Leading
Creek water
system .

WOODED LOTS - In
Meigs School District. All

sizes. all utilities, some on
sewer .

SITE LOCATIONS. LET
US HELP YOU. A HOUSE
CAN BE YOURS FOR A
FEW HUNDRED DOWN .
G. Bruce Teaford

has everything, formal

dining room. 5 bedrooms.~
baths, utility, basement.
Thos you must see. $2~ . 000.
lift STORY FRAME - 4
bedrooms , bath, utility.
basement. Excellent buy at
jost $7,225.00.
HARD TO BELIEVE?- A
bill . 3 large BR with
closets, 1112 baths, formal
dinmg R.. large kitchen.
utility R., basement with

garage, new alum . siding.

See now at just $18,500.
ABOUT 1 ACRE - Very
nice 1 floor plan. 3 BR,

MISTUR

PARTS- LABOR
GUARANTEED

I I I

REASONABLE

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860

fenced .

513,000.
FOR new adventure see

and own one of these dandy

homes.
TO SELL YOUR HOME
PROMPTLY AT FULL
MARKET VALUE - LIST
WITH
CLELAND
REALTY .
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
Hank Cleland

BRADFORD , Auctioneer , Complete Service . ' Phone 9-49·2487
or 9.49-2000. Racine . Ohio, Critt
Bradford .

NEW HOMES
&amp; REMODELING

L"ilNo AroUND AS

A ll:E~CT'OF

THE: FALL.

7. Phone (614)667·bl04
NEW 3 bedroom house. built -in
kitchen , bath and 1/ , , Phone
742·2306 or contact MilO B. Hutchison, Rutland , Oh1o .

WILL do roofmg . construct1on ,
plumbing and heating. No job
too large or too small. Phone
7~2 - 234B .

CARPENTER , f looring, ceiling ,
paneling. Phone 992-2759.
MOBILE Home Repair , Elec ,
plumbing and heatmg. Phone

m-5858.
Ohio. ' HOWERY AND MARTIN 'Ex·
cavatlng , septic systems,

COMMERCIAL BRICK BUILDING In

downtown Pomeroy,
Presently rented w1th income
da~:er . backhoe, dump truck ,
over $5000 per year . Two ran ·
limestone, gravel , blacktop
tols downstairs and one
pov1ng, Rt. 143. Phone 1 (6U)
upstairs . Has unflnsihed aport·
69B-7331
ment upstairs. Entire upstairs
con eo!111ly be mode into 3 DUGAN's FRONT End Al1gnment,
apartments. W-air condillon
formerly Odell's Allnement
upstairs. 3 separate water, gas
behind Rutland Grode School.
ond electric meten. Con be
Alignment, wheel bolol)cing ,
flriOnced 1OOpercent to reliable
tune -up, brakes and minor
party . Con'tact Paul S1mon or
repair. Phone 7-42-2005 or
Guido Girolomi to secure an
7.42-2004 . Evening work by ap·
oppQintment. Priced upon m- _ _pointment .
s_pection of property only .
HARRISON S T.V Repair . Ser\lice
4 UNDEVELOPED acres in Meigs
Calls . 276 Sycamore . St .. Mid·
County Vinton mail route. Call
dleport. Phone 992-2522.
7.. 2·2867 or see D1ck Lambert.
BROWN'S FIRE ond Safety Extin VA·FHA. 30 yr . financing ireland
quishers. All sizes. business ,
Mortgage , n E. State. Athens ,
home , boot Refilled , tested .
phone (614) 592-3051.
Bill Brown , Rut land . Ohio .
Phone742·27n.

70. Will do odd lobs, roofing , pam ·

$9000 . 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths,

ting, gutter work. Phone 992-

Phone (JO&lt;I 773·5233 offer 4

J &lt;09 .
SEWIN
G · A LTER A Tl ONS .
-~·m'--------~------10 M 50 TWO Bedrooms, unfurnished . Phone 992-3877

Upholstering ,
drapes
reasonable . 572 South Third
Ave . · Middleport . Phor=~e

NEED CENTRAL Air conditioning
992·6306.
tor your mobile home? We
hove the best . let our experts . PIANO TUNING, lone Daniels . 12
install o worry free Coleman
years of service
Phone
unit. We service what we sell.
992-20-;::
82:-·- - -.....,..,.---Kingsbury
Home
Sales, WILL BABYSIT in Middleport on
Pomeroy,
Ohio . Phone
evemngs and weekends.! Coli

Associate

03
99}_·7~·-·--- - - _

-

m -6212.

······-~---················

:

BUY, SELL OR TRADE? :
••

••
•

LISTEN TO THE

••

:

SWAP SHOP

•

•:•

~

I

Jumbles· BRIAR SKIMP ASYLUM THIRTY
.
Answer: Wllat he said to the quobbhng barber DON'T SPLIT HAIRS

by THOMAS JOSEPH

· ~250~·--------------­

REMODELING , Plumbing, heating
end all types of general repair.
Work guaranteed 20 years eM·
penance. Phone 992-2.409.

.4-13-1 mo. pd .

M

XJ I I X]

~

Sweepers, toasters , irons , all
small appliances . lawn mower :
ned to State Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (614) 985·

Phone 992·3339

U

Yesterday's

ELWOOO BOWERS REPAIR -

HARLEY HANING

19]5 MOBILE HOME.

2:QO-S20,000 Pyramid 6.13.
2·31)-Doctors 3,A,I5; One Life to Live 6,13; Guiding
Light 8, 10.
3·QO-AnotherWorld3,4,15; Allin The Famlly8,10; On
Ag ing 20.
3:15-General Hospital 6,13.
3:31)-Match Game 8.1 0; Lilias Yoga &amp; Vou 20
4:0(}-Mister Cartoon 3: Little Rascals 4; Gong Show
IS; New Mickey Mouse Club 6 ; Lucy Show B;
Sesame St. 20.33; Movie "The Lone Ranger" 10;
Dinah 13.
4: 15-Litfi e Rasacals 4.
4.31)-My Thhree Sons 3; Partridge Family 4;
Emergency One6; Partridge Family B; Fllnlstones
15.
5:0(}-Big Valley 3; My Three Sons 4; Brady ·Bunch B;

(Answers tomorrow)

•
GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr .
: 7 PM - WMPO • 92.1 FM ~
'Real Estate Broker
•
•
Box 101, Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 9BS-4186 after 4:00p.m.
92 in the Counby r.i
_______________, :• •••••.•.••••••••••.•••.

~--.

1 Jo-Oays of our Lives 3,4,15; As The World Turns

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

3-27-1 mo.

CARPENTER &amp;
BUILDERS

Braun 4, Search for Tomorrow 8,10.

Emergency One 13; Star Trek 15.

Reedsville, 0 . Ph.378-6250

mo.

St. 33.
8:31)-Big Valley 6
9:0(}-A.M. 3; · Phil Donahue A,13,15; Andy Griffith 8;
Mlke Douglas 10.
9·3fl-Cross-Wits 3; Edge of Nlghl6; Concentration 8.
10:0(}-Sanlord &amp; Son 3,~. 15; Dinah 6; Double Dare
8,10; Mike Douglas 13.
10 :31)-Hollywood Squares M, 15; Price Is RlgM 8,10.
11 :ro-Wheel of Fortune 3.4,15; Happy Days 6, 13; Elec.
Co. 20.
11 :31)-Shoot for the Stars 3,A,IS; Family Feud 6,13;
Love of Life 8,10: Sesame St. 20,33.
11 :55-CBS News B; Ms. Flxll 10.
12 :0(}-News 3,4,6,10.13; Name That Tune 15; Divorce
Court B.
12 · 31)-'Lover~ &amp; Friends 3,15; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Bob
I :oo-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6, 13; News B;
Young &amp; lhe Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.

Print surprise answer here: [

992-2259-992-256B
985-4112

TUPPERS PLAINS, .MAIN ST., 2
story frame, 8 room, house with 1112
acre ground and garage. Nice
garden spot, own water system. This
is a good buy at $10,500.00.

byHenriArnoldandBoblee

b

RATES

Free Estimates
No Sunday Calls Please
4-24-1

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

I I C

bath, central air cond. and

building , garage,

HE fl.!

A'u tomatic
Transmission Service

heat. Iall new) porches. out

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

Only S21U5

ChAin Saw
us
Now in atoek, complete lint
01 IIUik llrdtn seeds 1nc:1
onton aeta.
1 900CI McCultough Chain
S1w
IU
I Good UstCI PQUian Chlin
Saw
SSO
SUrvlv~r Safes ontv U9 .95
Onion Sets l tbs .
S1.00
1 Ntw 15 Cubic Ft .

$18,000.
SOUTHERN
STYLE
HOME- Beautiful kitchen

large house with a low gas

IOf·

Save SSO.DI on • ntw
Hotpolnt Rtfrleerator .
1 Good Ustd McCullough

JUST LISTED - NICE
RANCH TYPE . • Small
yard, 3 bedrooms. bath.
large li v ing R. full
basement, utlllly R., Nat.

5MADOWIN6

SWAIN'S

3102 or (30&lt;)772·3227.

MAIN
POMEROY, 0 .

ourr

8, 10

SEWING MACHINE Repairs , service, all makes , 992·228-4. The
Fabric Shop , Pomeroy .
Authorized Smger Soles and
Service. We s~orpen Scissors .

4

Helen L . Teaford
Associates

FOR SALE

~~ ~~~ :;~ :+~;~~~

nice kitchen . Won't last

HE- FOUND

8 :0Q-Howdy Doody 6; Capt . Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one leHer to each SQuare. to form
four ord1nary words.

CommerCial property opprox . 17
acres, level land , located at
Tuppers Plains on Oh1o, Route

3

home

&amp;LAZES! .•.
W~Ar ~!\5o

ll' lfl}rul ffi'\1

one 3 bedroom unit down &amp;
one furn ished '2 bedroom
and studio apartment up. J.
car garage. All for only

RIGHT -

test your water

bedroom

~EE&gt;J

~ ~ ~~~ ®

INVESTMENT - 3 unit
brick apartment building.

PRICED

with 112
acre. Natural gas central

Free.

SOME NEWS:

HdUSE FOR Sale , .4 rooms, one HOMESITES for sole, 1 acre and
up. MiddlepOrt , near Rutland .
both , ponnelled o"nd carpeted ,
EXCAVATING , dozer , loader and
Ca11992 -74BI.
tiv1ng room . Reduced for qu1ck
backhoe work , dump trucks
sale . 10 lynn Street , just off NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 baths ,
ond la-bors for hire ; w ill haul.
Grant and V1ne , Middleport.
all elec., 1 ocre. Middleport ,
fill dirt, to soil. limeitone and
May see after 5 p. m.
close to Rutland . Phone 992·
gravel. Coli Bob or Roger Jef74BI.
REDUCED $2000 . 3 bedroom , 2Vt
fers . day phone 992-7089.
night phone 992-3525 or 992baths . double
goroge, SMALL form for sale, lO'Y. down ,
f1reploce, air conditioning , 1
ow11er financed . Monroe Coun ·
5232:~·- - - - ---- acre lat. Phone 992·2492.
ty. W. Vo. Phone (304) 772· EXCAVATING. dozer. bo&lt;khoe
3102 or (JO&lt; ) 772·3227.
and d1tcher. Charles R. Hotfield , Bock Hoe S&amp;r\ll(e,
COUNTRY farm land w1th secludRutland
, Ohio . Phone 7-42-2008
ed woods , water and good ac,
cess in Monroe County, W. Vo. SEPTIC TANKS cl eaned . Modern
$1.000 down . coil (304) 772Sanitation , 992-3954 .

softener, Model UC -XVI.
Now Only '279.95
Let us

P-

Virgil B. Sr., Realtor

restaurant m the hea rt of

CAME OVEI&gt;.
T' 3RING VA

CAROL.'5

5U5PI CIOU'S OP
S~IVAU IJ AL.l. ALON6!
SHE:5 EVEN HAD A
PRIVATE EVE

6:5s-Good Morning , Trl State 13.

7:oo-Today J,A,I5; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Chuck White Reporls 10.
7 .os-Porky P1g 10.
7.31)-Schoolles 10.

(614) 985-4155
Chester,Ohio
10·17·1 mo(Pdl

BISSEll SIDING CO.

4-15-1 mo.

town. All equipment and
fixtures . Ready for you to
take over for $13.500.

a.O AHEAD-·
DON'T MI!.JD
ME: I J U5T

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

Vinyl &amp; Alumin-um
Siding,
St'orm
Windows
&amp;
Insulation.
Call Professionals

by appointment.

216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 99~ ·3325
BUSINESS - Good going

~ lo I'IA'SH ~ C'MO&gt;J l!.l

AND JOIN Mr; .. I WA'S
JU5T 1W5Wt./G LIP
$0ME DIN!.JER:

Aer4al
Comme,rcial
Schools
Weddings

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

m -3360.
-··

TEAFORD

CAPTAIN EASY

PHOTOGRAPHY

..........

-- Shirley's Beauty Nook.

FOUR IS 1n.~olly wheels off
Monte Carlo like new . S80 .
Phone9-49·2631 or~A9 -2181.

3. Pomeroy, 0 .

7·3&lt;&gt;-Hollywood Squares 3; Baseball ~; Lei' s Deal
With II 6 ; Match Game PM B; Ma cNeil-Lehrer
Report 20,33; In The Know 10; Wil d Kingdom 13;
TV Honor Society IS.
8 · 00-Hig~llghls ol the Gong Show 3,15; Happy Days
6, 13; Who's Who B, 10; American Short Story 20,33.
8:3!&gt;-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13.
9:00-Ann-Margaret 3,15 : Elghlls Enough 6,13: Mash
8; Mulrfleld : Revamped &amp; Revisited 10.
9:3()-()ne Day At A Time B.IO; Best of Ernie Kovacs
20.33.
10:00-Mac Davis 3.4.15: Family 6.13: CBS Reports
B.10: News 20: The Way It Was 33.
10: 3!&gt;-Biack Journal 20: Amer icana 33.
11 :00-News 3,A,6,8,10,13,15; Mac-Neil -Lehrer Report
33.
.
11 .31)-Jollnny Carson 3,4,15 ; Movie " Midnlgght
Cowboy" 6, 13; McMillan &amp; Wile 8; Mary Hartman
10

PROFESSIONAL

EXPERIENCED

992-5626.

house . carpeted, Io rge kitchen
attached garage , Iorge lot

7 · DO-Trutlt or Cons 3; To Tell the Truth 4, Country
Carniva l 8; News 10; To Tell the Truth 13, My
Three Sons 15; Anyone for Tennyson? 20.;
American Issues Forum 33.

"The Orlglnotors
Not The lmitotors"
2·23·1 mo.

---

2 BEDROOM Troller.

One 13; Slar Trek 15.
5: 30--Adam -12 4; News 6. Family Affai r B; .
6: 00-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15, ABC News 6; Zoom 20.

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

PICKING UP a plano •n your or&amp;a.
Looking for o responsible party
carpel-Line .. Tilt
to assume net balance . Call .RACINE . 6 rm .. both , ut ility roo m,
Phone Mike Young at
Collect , Cred1t Manager (b1.4 )
newly redecorated
Phone
992-2206 or 992-7630
775-2150 or write Room 124,
949·2286
Ch1llicothe Mall , Chillicothe,
2·2J.1 mo.
13 A . and 1974 Mobi le home one
Ohio &lt;560"-1.:......~---other mobile hqme s1te. Drtlled
USED FORESTRV Equipment
well , on 681 near Tuppers- , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - T1mbeqack 2&lt;40 Skidder; Husky
Piolns , $10,900 . Phone (614)
Brute rode! 12S-B· 60 In , Bush
667 -3668.
Metallurg 1ca l Chipper; Contact
·--------~- J11hn St.
Syracuse
_ E _ennls Smurr, (614) 838· 5~~~ ._ 56 ACRE FARM w-cottle and !roc ·
tor with equipment. Phone
INTERNATIONAl 330 Form trac247-22-41 after 5 p.m . for more
tor. Fost hitch with 3 p .t . adapi nfarmotio~~n::.·--c---tor, power st•enng , eJCcellent
condition , $1500. Phone (61 4) HOUSE IN Minersville, 5 ~ooms
Formerly
and both . Forced air heat ,
667-61bs.
.
lola's Beauty Salon
natural gas. 3 porches and
o
- NE C oLORED T.V.. SIOO . Col·
bbsement . Phone 992-5833.
For
appointment ca II
ored T.V . stereo-radio com·
6
RM
.
Home
and
both
.
Phone
992-2549
Tuesday thru
bination , $200. Co11949-2.49S.
Saturday 8:00a.m . to
197-4 SUZUKt TMlOO, newly rebuilt
engine, eMcellent cond1hon .
5:00p.m. Open nights
Caii 843-294S, must sell

1968 GTX &lt;444 speed. Excellent FORO 100 Lawn and Gar-den Trac con dJt iOl')
$1000 . Phone
tor . -40 inch rotary mOwer, new ·
m -3259.
I
twin blades , all n•w belts ,
good battery , motor o¥erhaul·
1972 VEGAo.,$800. '972 Plymouth,
ed . 10 h.p. Kohler cast iron, air
$1000 Phone 9&lt;9-2307.
cooled Smooth ruM•ng. Oo11 'r
1967 NOVA , 6 cyl. posi -troct
use oh. good point, grey and
'
Good condi tion . $350 See at
blue Good lurf type tires , S
168layne, New Hovetn ,
speed transmission , flooting
I
action
mower w1th wheels , 4
I • •
1968 BUICK , good condition , $400
11n, cuttmg. heigh1s hand ltft ,
Call after 5 p.m. 992 -7876.
~
drowbor , ompmeter and
11~71 MONTE tARLO , air condi ·
I '
CJgoretle l1 ghter
Exce!lent
tio'ling, p.s. p.b . radial tires.
tractor , ready to work. Also .
'
rally whHis , low mileage, eM·
have good dry ear C()fn., ony
tro &lt;.leOn. Phone 9C'il2·3230 offer
omount ova.IOble-. Motket P.' ~c ·
"By tile way, I promla~d 6p.m.
ed. Pawuf W Soyr•. Pottl6nll
~-· . Tammy 11181 II 11e - t to bed 1975 FOliO GRANADA. 4 door. b
Ohio . Rt. 338, I mile bl'i' " "
Novenswood Ferry . Phono 1hl&gt;l
I ~: wltlloul • fuu, JGU'd buy him 8
cylinder automot•c . Phone
H-43·228i
985·•2&lt;5.MW bllre In the .......1n11."
·
f)

.••'...

Cabbage.

MASSEY FERGUSON 711

-1975 JEEP CHEROKEE. p.b.. ps.
Good

PLANTS.

po'int , new battery and King·
Queen seat , Phone 992-6 I 92
after 4 30 P M.

thly . Phone .(614) 667·639&lt; or
667-33&lt;9.

Quodrotrock .

Young's Carpeting

___..

Aft~er 3 p.m.
9B5·&lt;117_c·~=-::~-~
TuPPERS
PLAINS, Three bedroom
1970 TRIUMPH 650 Chopped. new

bedroom apartments. Fully
carpeted . No pets, $170 mon-

APOINTMENT

'

lnsulalion Senices
Financ••t A••litMt
Blown lftlo Wolh Ullicl

Owner
Shirley (Jeffers) WoHe

IF YOU have a serv1ce to offer,
want to buv or Sell something ,
ae looking for work .. . or
whate\ler •.. you 'll get results
faster with a Sentinel Wont Ad .

• 5' '

742-2685.

FREE ESTIM TES
BIO.n

12:0(}-Movle " None but the Brave" 10.
12 : ~Janak l 33.
1:00-Tomorrow 3.~ .
1·31)-News 13.
WEDNESDAY APRIL 27. lt77
6.oo-Sunrlse Semester 10.
6.15-Farm Report 13.
6.21)-Nol For Women Only 13.
6:31)-AG-USA • : News 6 : Sunrl"" Semesler 8;
Christopher Closeup 10.
6.45-Mornlng Reporl 3.
6:50-Good Morning, West VIrginia 13.

TUESDAY. APRIL 26, 1977
S.OO-Big Valley J ; My Three Sons 4 : Brady Bunch B:
Mister Roqers• Neighborhood 20,33; Emergency

Superior
Steam Extraction

broccoli, cauliflower. brussel HouSE FOR sloe on Lincoln
sprouts, egg plants , hanging
Heights . 3 bedrooms. l•v•ng
baskets , pofs, geraniums .
room , T.V. room , ver y large
begonias ,
flpts , petun1os .
Nobil Summit Road
kitchen , built in double oven,
morigolas ,
pansieS , solz•a.
counler top range . plentv ol
Rt. 1
ba lsam ,
dionthus .
snapcabinet space and close t spoce,
Middleport, 0 .
dragons , a lyssum , Vinca , col·
all fully carpeted , Iorge bo se
992 -5724
eus , Cleland's Greenhouse.
' ment with garage
large
Complete
Sales and
Rocine . Geraldine Cleland.
recreation
room ,
ut ility
Service and Supplies .
room ,and laundry room. Seen
3- 14-1 mo.
1976 CUSTOM KZ750 Kawasak i,
by appo1nt ment onlv . coli L _________:::.:,:::.:-:~~1
low mileage. Cushioned SISsy
992 ·2-40.4 lor more informa tion.
bar , excellent. cond iti on. Call

Day (518) 489-8395 between

CASH t • I fo r junk cars. Frye's
Truck and Auto. WRECKER SER·
VICE I Phone 742-2081 ,

~

--- -

AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

Television log for easy viewing

Business Services

1973 JEEP CJS, good cond1 tion . 8 RM. HOUSE plus lot , 2 baths .
Con be mode into 1 aport·
Plus e11tras . $2900 Bunker Hill
ments . Phone 992·6263.
. _Rood ~~!~~m cem__!_.!_~ry.
..--- ...
B. Model ALLIS Cholmer tra ctor, 6 ROOM House for sale . 33 acre in
Rose Valley Phone 992·3792.
plows and cultlvotor included .
Run s, 9ood , $800 . P~one 13 ACRES, 3 Bedroom , all ut1l1fles ,
Rt . 12.4. Cook 's Gop H1ll. Phone
·- B&lt;3:~."
83-4
:.:.:...-----~-

CAPITAL FINANCE SERVICES
300 West Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

UP ANOTHER
CAR WITH TWO"""';-~,.:::
OF ROPE4()FEETLvrn•.l

Pomeroy, ~===========:-:=====::::::::::==:-::::::::::::~

32'10.

Gain recognition and prestlege through a career 10
consumer finance. Consumer f inance is an integral and
Important force In our country 's economic security .
The consumer finance .,business is s teady - even
dur ing recessions.
You can wm promotion rapidly You will be pa id a
good star t ing salary and recei ve exceptional employee

NOTICE

..

For Sole

APf-'LE~ . F-iTZPATRICK ORCHARD. COAL , !Jmestone, ond calcium
c:hlonde ond (Qicivm bhne l or
STATE ROUTE bll9. PHONE
dust control and special rnhung
WILKESVILLE . (614)669-37B5,
salt fot formers , Ew.celsior Salt
CAMPER, $600. Al5o , horse
trailer, $.450. PhOne (6 U ) 698·
Worlr
s phone
Main Street
,
O~io or
992· :)Sql
•

ACAREER JOB IN
CONSUMER FINANCE

J .;5

Ein'h • •·n.l ,,,.,.,. Ilk' munn :wn 15

IJI I

DICK TRACY

ACROSS
~ Construct
5 - for one's

BORN LOSER

mill

DOWN
I Bulk
2 Cornmedia
dell' 3 Said " uncle"

_

5:31)-Adam -12 4; News 6 : Family Affair B; Elec. Co .
20,33.
.
6:DO-News 3,.4,6,8, 10,1 3,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20 ;

Educating Handicapped Children 33.
News3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Vegelable Soup 20; Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 33.
7:0(}-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Liar's Club
6; Pop Goes the Country 8; News 10; To Tell the
Truth 13; My Three Sons 15; Consumer Survival Kit
20: Big Green Magazine 33.
7.3!&gt;-Dolly 3: $100,000 Name That Tune 4. Match
Game PM 6; 525,000 Pyramid B; MacNeil-Lehrer
Report 20,33; The Judge 10; Break the Bank 13;
Wild Kingdom 15.
B:oo-Grlzzly Adams 3,4,15; Bionic Woman 6,13; Good

6 · ~NBC

Times 8, 10; Nova 20,33.
8 ·39-Loves Me, Loves M e Not 8, 10.
9 :0Q-Movle " The Savage Bees" 3,4,15; Baretta 6,13;

Movie " Paradise, Hawaiian Style" 8; Theater In
America 33; Movie "GI Blues" 10; Soundstage 20.
IO :oo-Charlle's Angels 6, 13; News 20.
10 .3!&gt;-Montage 20.
11 .0Q-News 3,4,6,8,10,13, 15; MacNeil -Lehrer Report
33; Monty Python' s Flying Circus 20.
11 3!&gt;-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; RookleS6,13 ; Movie " The

10 Noted
{2 wds.)
cartoonist
I Eternity
11 Lease
5 Mourn
holder
6 French
13 Benumb
Keegans" 8; Mary Hartman 10; ABC News 33.
annuity
II Write
Yesterday's, Answer
12
oo-Movle
"The Mating Season" 10; JB.nakl 33 .
One
of
Ky.'s
7
15 Wall St.
12
·4!&gt;-Mystery
ol lhe Week 6,13.
21
Made
an
32
Theater
neighbors
watchdog
1
:oo-Tomorrow
J,.t .
uproar
group
8 Pickpocket's
org.
22 Make a
33 Symbol of
asset
16 Wager
recording
(2 wds.)
17 Oriental tea
Russia
23 Brittany
9 Wearing a
I8 Rascal
35 Ntgerian
native
halter
20 Sheep tick
city
21 Undulatory
21 Irish county 12 Bookworm
36 Part of
26 Airtight
22 Phoenician 16 Poet
GASOUNE ALLEY
Chou's
28 Milan's
19 Zola
port
name
--~.;,__---v All those
Lanovel
23 Tobacco
easy wtthout that d1amond
NO RTH
26
Sure,
Clovia!
You're upset becaw;e embraces and
mixture
lead . but that diamond lead is
• K Q 10 2
niqhts
4ou're so tired,
tender kisses
24 Eucharistic b-1----1-+-what hit her
¥ A7
form
She drew trumps w1th two
Mr. Score!
.work
+ A1
25 Ukraine
leads after tak1ng the first
.K 1086 5
ruined,
r
d1amond and noted that
legislature
because
WF;ST
EAST
tru mps had been accounted
26 Palatable
•
9
7
•
4
3
Then she played three
for.
of that
27 ''Down
•
J
8
3
2
•
Q
10
9
4
rounds
of hearls to ruff the
under' '
no•
• 9 54 2
+K QJ 63
m dummy. A d1a·
th1rd
one
bird
.J4 3
.Q 1
mond
was
led to her 10 and
28 Lucky
SOUTH 101
West's
jack
.
number
• &lt;IJB65
West
made
h1 s bes t lead IHI
29 Coal
¥ K 65
the queen of clubs. Now Mary
weight
+10 8
"
Zita remembered that honors
• A 92
30 Islet
were supposed to div1de She
East-West vul nerable
31 Chew the
"'
rose wtth dummy 's k1ng ,
'fat
finessed agamst East 's jack
West North East South
.u ULABNER
34 Trying time b:--1----1nd made the sla m
a
1.
' 10Dc0nffFEs:&lt;R\'~;-;:iEE::Tor;::ti)ll 36 Unaspirated h-1--1"' 1.----___l HAINT Y0 1 TI-115 IS A R'~Rt:BE~n~ifAMJN1
Pa ss 4 N T Pass 5 ¥
consonant
Pass 5 N T Pa ss 6.
ASf-IAHED To SFBJD
-AN' AH-15
TO
$ 5tt:J ID ANY
:r7 Goad
Pass Pass
Pass
YORE'. MCNEY ON A
5Pbi\ID ALL MAI-J
WAITFR
38 Greek river
Pass
A Cal i forni~ reader wants to
Opening lead - K t
39 Abject fear
LI'L 60LD-DI~f!'- .MCNr=::Y ON HEWWHO'LL IDS5
know
her correct rebid w1th
10 Bavarian
'&gt;tX.J
• - \'J xxxx x t11 x x x 4 xxx
By
Oswald
&amp;
James
Jacoby
river
alter partner has ope ned w1th
Mary Z1ta Jacoby never
a game·fo rc1 ng bid of two
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's · how to work it: has become a really expert spades
'
and reb1d three clubs
player , but her 1,500 master over ou r co r respondent's
• AXYDLBAAXR
pomts are mostly of the red negative two notrump .
b LONGFELLOW
. va nety since s he usually
Thi s is a hanged if you do,
One letter simply stands for anoth er. Jn this sample A 11 played m maJor events with
hanged
1f you don ·t s1tuatton.
u sed for the three L's, X fo r the two O's. C'lC. Si ngle letters, som e of the fatml y .
apostroph es. the leng th and lormat! on of the words are all She sa t South today. while We (avor th ree hearts with
hints. Each day the code I•llers are d11fcrent.
Oswald held th e North cards. fou r clubs as a second choice,
but don 't have much latlh m
CRYPTOQUOTES
Hts bidd i ng c a n bes t be either ca ll
WINNIE
descnbed as typica l hu sband·
(Do you hove s quoSiion
J 0 w1 fe slam bidding. For all he
AND
HAVING
BEEN
A
CR BBYD
lOUT BHE:S
I DON'T
P J Q B H
H A R
tor the exports ? Write " Ask
knew
.
when
he
settled
for
s1x
PROSPECTO~ SHES GOT
"
A0UT5YOLD
•WHY WOULD A FRIEND ,&lt;NOW THAT
R P P J 0 J R 0 H spades the comb1ned hands the Jacobys " core of lh/s
A GAIJie&gt;LER'v SPIRIT
GAL HERSHE WILL., .
OF YOUR&amp; WANT 10
HAWH
JB
OJUJOB
m1ght produce seven spades newspaper. Tho Jacobys will
AND INBnNCT I
SELF ...
HELP M E WI'T}j MY
or seven notrump , but he answer tn dtviduo l questions
••• FILM ?
BAY X CT
S R L J D dec1ded to settle for the sma ll 11 stamped. self-addressed
LYURQD ERDH
envelopes are enclosed The
slam
WH AVER . - OAWQCRB RUWDB AXLARB Mrs Jacoby was unhappy most i nteresting questions
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THE MUSICIAN WHO ALWAYS w1th the dummy. She could w11J be used in th is column
PLAYS ON THE SAME STRING IS LAUGHED AT. - only count to II tri cks. Of and will receive copies of
•
HORACE
co urse. 12 would have been JACOBY MODERN.)

A

Ozzie's partner makes slam

r---"',..-•

.

1

dumml.j!

FREE

6.

oorrr-

..

.

..••
....

-

..
.,

••
~·

••

••

.

e 1977 KJn~ Fea\ures Synd icatt,Ine.

BARNEY

DAOBURN
LEAKV
ROOFH

/r

�•

10 - The Daily Sentuwl, Mlddlcpo(t-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday , Apnl ~li , 1V77

Next year

Low-key caution Good weather expected Th~e scratched up m
£
Hik.e-n·k
'
accident on Grover Rd. it's 90 kph
• marking talk s . .tOr
1 e s start
.

IS

By JAMES ANDERSON
WASHINGTON (UP! )
and
President Carter
Jordan 's King Hussein are
expressing both wariness and
a cautious optimism about
prospects for achieving a
Middle Eastern peace this
year.
In toasts ·at a "working
dinner " in the State Dining
Room Monday night, Carter
warned that unless progress
toward peace comes this year
"it may be a long time in the
future before such an effort
can be made again ."
Hussein, responding, promised " I will do all I can so
that future generations can
enjoy a better life. "
Huss ei n and
Carter
scheduled their third talk
today in a series of meetings
deliberately low-key a nd
somber.
"! don't know if we will be
successful this year," Carter
told dinner guests Monday.
" It is very difficult to
predict. "
But he said he and Hussein
have "had a very fruitful
discussion about past history
and the future. We recognize
t.ie difficulty of resolving
animosities that have existed
for so long."
Carter repeated what he
has said to both Arab and
Israeli leaders : that 1977
"can be propitious for
ASK TOWED
Marriage licenses were
issued to Raymond Rufus
Cline, 24, Rt. 2, Coolville and
Teresa Elodia Crumrine, 24,
Rt. 2, Coolville; Michael
Allen Capehart, 29, Middleport , and Reva Lucille
Patterson, 31, Rutland.
LEAGUE TO MEET
• The Middleport Youth
Baseball League will meet
Thursday at 7 p.m. in the old
council rooms at city hall.
Coaches are asked· to attend
and submit a list of equipment they have on hand.

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION
WATCH FOR
OPENING DATE

peace."
"All of us feel ... our effort
is worthwhile, " he said .
" Unless we make an effort it
may be a long time in the
·future before such an effort
can be made again."
Hussein told Carter that
"despite the feeling that I
have had , which has caused
me to be cautious as to the
real possibility of progress
toward a solution, I have,
after meeting you and our
friends, felt more encouraged
and hopeful than I have for a
long time ."

Saturday. Apri130 the HikeBike for Retarded Citizens
will leave the Senior Citizens
Ce nter in Pomeroy with
everything in order and good
weather expected according
to Hank Cleland, chairman.
The ride will go as planned,
regardless of weather conditions. Registration is from
9-10 a.m. the day of the ride
and the Hike will begin at 10.
Cleland , on behalf of the
Meigs Association for
Retarded Citizens. expresses
its si ncere thanks for the help
and coopera ti on to the
followin g individuals and
John
or ga nizations
Tucker, Barbara VanMeter,
Ben Tom Cons!., Farmers
Bank, Quality Print Shop.
(Continued from page 1)
Meats Inc., Guy
Superior
The board tabled until May
Hysell
and
the Meigs County
3 a negotiations agreement
REA
CT,
Powell
's Super
between the distri ct's
Valu,
Royal
Crown
Bottling
teachers association and the
Co.,
Pomeroy
Home
and
board. It was felt the postAuto,
Boy
Scout
Troop
249,
poneme nt was due to a
County Sheriff,
technicality which has been Mei gs
Middleport,
corrected and will be cerified Pomeroy,
by the teachers' association. Rutland Police Dept. , Meigs
Teachers hired for the new Co unty Jay cees, Senior
school year were Roy Alan Citizens Center, Jones Boys,
Holter, Christy Caldwell, Pomeroy Pastry, Jimmy's
James KolJr, Patricia Pastry , Betsy Ross Bakery,
Schrivers, one year; Nancy Meigs County Gara ge,
Larkins, Joe Mitchum, Pomeroy Fabric Shop.
Hopefully, 300 riders will
Robert Wilson and James
participate.
Wilhelm, Jr., two year; Joe
Checkpoints have been
Bailey, Tom Kelly, Carol
established
at intervals along
King , Archie Rose, three
the
25-mile
course . Pop ,
year; David Chadwell, Fred
and other
·sandwiches,
Kessinger, Robert Sanders,
refreshments
will
be
five year, and Rose Jonas,
provided.
The
lunch
stop
will
continuing.
Non-teaching employees be Fort Meigs. Anurse will be
given contracts were Otto
Marcinko , Tim Spencer,
LEGAL NOTICE
Dorothy Myers, Doris
REQUEST FOR
PROPOSALS
Koenig, Ruth Ann ScarFISCAL YEAR 1978
brough, Sally Mitchum, two
COM .PREHENSIVE
years; Diane Benedum, June MANPOWER PROGRAMS
is h er eby given that
Griffit1, Bruce Myers, two theNo t ice
R e gional
Manpower
years on a part-time basis, Se rv ices Counc i L A r ea 7, is
es t in g proposals for th e
and continuing, Sandra rFequ
isca l Year 19 78 Manpow er '
Cowdery and Barbara Program s . Progra-ms are
funded lhrough Till e I money
Masters.
authorized by the Com ·
The board gave leaves of prehensive
Employment and
absence to Mildred Bissell Tra ining Act of 1973 ICETAI .
As a compon en t of CETA , th e
and Rubal Cal~well, non- general
purpo se of T it le I
teaching employees. It was program s is to prov id e job
train i ng and e mployment
agreed to repair sewer line opportunities
for
th e
damage Qn the Tuppers economically disad v an taged,
and
un ·
Plains school playground and unemploy ed,
ed p er so ns and to
to check with the. health deremploy
assur e that the se se rvi ces
department on two open lead to ma xi mum e m ·
opportunities .
drains near the playground. ployment
However , the prim e spon sor
Attending the meeting were for th e Balance of Stat e
quir e
th a t
only
board members David Smith, rece onom
ica II y disadvantag ed ,
Douglas Bissell, Dorothy un employ ed.
and
un Callaway, Dorsel Larkins der employed persons and lo
su re that these se r vices
and Davis; high school as
lead
to
max i mum ' em
opportunit ies .
principal Chester Gooding; ploymen·t
Howeve r , th e prim e sponsor
clerk-treasurer, Eloise fOr
the Balance of Slale
Boston; Bea Douglas, Tup- r equire
that
only
ec onomi ca lly di sadvantaged
pers Plains principal and persons
will be served und er
John Riebel, superintendent. Title 1 for Fiscal Year 1978 .

Two month

A ll opportunit ies
made
availabl e

1- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -..

"'

for the Scotch in You

·-..

MORE
FOR
YOUR
MONEY

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politi cal affiliation
regard
to
race ,or cbelief.
olor ,
sex , or national or igin . Th e

group des ignated by RM SC 7
to
be
served
are
th e
economically disadvantag ed .
Primary co n sidera ton is to be

given lo heads of household ,

~I~

-

will be
without

We've got something to satisfy the
wee bit of Scotch in you ... high
interest paying savings accounts
and certificates . . Come, be a part
of our savings clan.
' .

youth , and V ie tnam Era
veterans . Any irJdividual or
organization may submit a

'proposa I, however , th e
regulations disa llo w th e
funding of a program whi ch
would produce profit for th e
contractor . Geographic area

to be se rv'ed is RM SC 1 :
Athens . Gallia . Hock ing .

Jackson . Lawr ence. Meig s,
and v .inton counties . Ap ~
plications may be obtained
from Mary Ann Crawford ,

Title I Field Repres enlativ e,
2636 1n S. Fifth 51 .. ' lrOnlon .
Ohio 45638 (6141 533-1150 or
Che·s ter White , Planning
Coord ina tor . Off ice of
Marpower Oevelopment , 30
East Broad 51. , 271h Floor ,
Columbus . Ohio 43215 (6141
466 -8297 or 1·(8001 ·282 -1050
ltoll .fr eel . Compl eled ap .
plications shou ld be return ed
to Chester While at th e sa me
address . no laler lhan May 6,
1977 . Proposals must be
submitted in tr i pl ic at e i n th e
form provided by r equ est.

(41 26.

on hand to care for minor
scrapes. and the Meigs
County REACT will handle
tr affic con trol of th e
cooperation of the Me1gs
County Sheriff's Dept. and
local police departments.
The $5,000 goal for this
year's event should be surpassed based on the two
previous Hikes, since each
year more participation has
bee n provided by th e
residents of Meigs County.
The Mei gs County Jaycees
and Meii!S f!F:Ar1' will hp in

charge of discipline during
the ride and participants are
reminded that misconduct
and failure to obey safety
rules will result in the offender being asked to leave
the course.
Sponsor
sheets
are
available at all three Meigs
Co unty High Schools, the
Communit Mental Health
Center, and Cleland Realty in
Pomeroy . For more information call 992-3232, 742·
3089 or 985-4112.

Thrt'e persons had minor
injuries in a traffic accident
at 3:50 p.m. Monday on
Grover Rd. one and five
tenths miles south of SR 554.
The Gallia-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said
Mark A. Curnutte, 16, Rt. 1,
Gallipolis, lost control of his
car which ran off a hillcrest
and hit a tree.
Curnutte
and
two
passengers in his car, Jon
Thompson, 15 , Rt. 1.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted
Timothy
Evans, Reedsville ; Elizabeth
Martin, Redhouse, W. Va.;
Bruce Gheen, Pomeroy;
I Alma Hayman , Pomeroy ;
Crawfo rd , Columbus ; five Lowell Halfhill, Gallipolis.
Discharged - Norman
grandchildren ; two brothers :
Bill and Ronald . Wes t Evans, Floyd Bush, Louise
Virginia .
Hawkins, Martha Haggerty,
Mr . Crawford was a bar- Melvin Forrester, Harrison
lender at !he Baviaria Haus
in Columbus. He was for - Rood, Jr., John McGuire,
merly a safety director at the Marissa Baker, Virgie Fetty,
Mari etta Plant in Pt. Mamie Buchanan.
Pleasant .
He was a member of the
Moose Lodge and Minturn
PLEASANT VALLEY
Lodge of Pf. Pleasant .
DISCHARGES
- Mrs.
Funeral servi ces will be
Brannon,
Point
held 10 a.m. Thursday at the John
Sc hoedinger East Chapel , Pleasant; Mrs. John Lewis,
5360 E. Li vings ton Av e., Mason; Mrs. David Jeffers,
Columbus.
Graveside services will be Mason; Mrs. Rex White,
held 3 p.m. at Mound Hill Mason; and Edith Simpkins,
Cemetery in Gallipolis .
Point Pleasant.

Area Deaths

VERN CRAWFORD

Vern Poe Crawford. 59, a
residen t of Columbus and a
form er resident of Gallipolis
and Marietta , died unex ·
pectedly Monday at hi s home.
He was born IV\arch 11.
1918. in Winfi eld, W. Va .. son
of Margaret and Herbert
Crawford . He was preceded
in death by his father and a
brother. Marvin .
He married Mary Anne
Wetherholt of Ga llipolis in
1938. She survives. along with
foll owi ng children : Mrs. John
(Palti ) Kunzelman , Sf.
Louis; Mrs. Steven ( Kristi)
Blum, Groveport ; Mrs. Gene
(Martha) Hi ckl e. and Mrs.
Clyde IDerri) Hall ey, both of
Columl-j uc; ·

M Ad i n

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·Teacher strikes
spread in Ohio

Cheshire, and Debbie MeClellan, 15, Rt. 1, Gallipolis,
were not immediately
treated. There was moderate
damage. No charge was filed.
Another accident occurred
moments later at the same
location in which an auto
driven by Rhea Gilbert, 16,
Cheshire, attempted to stop.
Her can ran off the roadway
into a tree stump. There was
minor damage, and no
charge was filed. She was not
hurt.

Hospital News

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

l.

•

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, April 25)
Norma Barlow, Halcie
Burdette, Dianna Canterbury, Christopher Carpenter, Rufus Dorsey, Nellie
Eblin, Heather Hall, Gloria
Hanning, Glispie Howard,
Arda Howell, Estella Hyman,
Mrs. Oscar Jordan, Jr. and
daughter, Carol Keaton, Cecil
Lewis, John Lewis, Emma
Moodispaugh, Vernon Nicely,
Donna Ratcliff, Gregory Ray,
Joseph Simpkins, Jeremy
Swick, Katie Walburn, Ed·
ward Wolfe, Velma Young.
(Births, Aprll 25)
Mr. and Mrs . Darrell
Detty, son, Oak Hill; Mr. and
Mrs. Jeffrey Haskins, son,
Gallipolis.

By United Press International
School teachers, firemen and policemen were on strike in
Ohio today in a series of disputes that has curtailed classroom
activity in Cincinnati, Coldwater and Barnesville and left
Alliance and Canton with limited police and fire protection.
The strikE: by teachers entered its lOth straight school day
today with a hearing scheduled by the Ohio First District Court
of Appeals on a request for a restraining order by the
Cincinnati Board of Education. The strike has kept half of the
2,950 teachers and 63,400 students away from the classroom.
The teachers are asking for
a 16 per cent wage increase. fire stations.
The city has 191 firemen
Eighty-two of the 84
and
about 170 were reported
teachers in the Coldwater
off
the
job early today.
school system in Mercer
Local
249 of the Canton
County went on strike
Professional
Firefighters AsMonday and continued the
sociation
have
asked for pay
work stoppage today in a
raises
but
the
city
says there
dispute over the firing of two
will
be
no
raises
becuse no
teachers and a principal.
money
is
available.
Only 520 of the system's
The UMW strikes in
.1,870 students showed up for
Eastern
Ohio were a
classes Monday · as the
of a series of
continuation
· system's
five
schools
remained open. The schools wildcat walkouts that started
were to be open again today. .last week and at one time had
In Barnesville, a strike by shutdown 13 mines. Four
Be
52 of the system's 72 teachers, mines were reported closed
which began Thursday, con- in Eastern Ohio Monday and
tinued today in a dispute over two in the northern
the dismissal of an Panhandle ,of West Virginal
elementary school teacher. were shutdown by roving
The Barnesville system has pickets.
"I told the men to get back
1,700 students.
to
work," said John Guzek,
Negotiations were
president
of UMW District 6
scheduled to resume today in
in Bellaire.
headquartered
Alliance in a strike by 38
"They
have
got
to
get back on
members of that city's police
department which began the job."
Friday night.
Alliance City Council has
offered a three per cent wage
hike while the policemen are
asking for a nine per cent
wage boost.
Three captains and the
chief of police have been the
only officers on duty in the
ROOF VENT
northern Ohio city of 26,000
Aluminum ventilator , opening si ze of 83 . " .
since the strike began.
Firemen in Canton, a city
SALE PRICE
of 110,000, went on strike late ·
Monday night in a wage
dispute that forced the
closing of nine of the city's 10

SUPPORT SOUGHT
Martha Dorst, formerly
Martha L. Fox, Middleport,
filed for support under the
Recriprocal Agreement Act
against Larry Fox, Clifton, in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court. Filing foF divorce was
James E. Winebrenner, Rt. 2,
Albany, from Elaine P.
Winebrenner, Rt. I, Albany.
Nancy Musser was granted a
divorce from Frank Musser
and Doris Ellen Halfhill from
Wilmer E. Halfhill. The
marriage of Gordon Proffitt
and O'Dessa Proffitt was
dissolved.

News •• in Briefs
(Continued from page 1)
have a, degree of job protection if they are armed service
veterans or have previously held civil service career jobs. The
officials dismissed, Bergland said, were non-veterans.
WASffiNGTON - PRESIDENT CARTER believes he has
awakened the nation to a "much greater acceptance" of the
energy crisis, according to his aides. Deputy Press Secretary
Rex Granum told reporters Monday that Carer had Informed
his Cabinet he was hartened by j&gt;olls showing a growing public
awareness of the energy problems.
Carter's personality came under discussion in the White
House press room Monday when Press Secretary Jody Powell
branded as "totally inaccurate" a New York Times story
describing Carter as occasionally "brutally brusque and sharp
tongued" with his staff .
At the same time, Powell conceded that Carter is not
generous with comp!Unents. "I have not made a secret of the
fact that this President is not overly given to pals oh the back,
or stroking his staff or a kiss on the ear," Powell said, who
added he had received only seven compllmenls from Carter
since he joined his staff in 1970.

Mother's Day, Sunday, May 8
sure to see our beautiful Hallmark Mother's Day cards!

HALLMARK CARDS AND GIFTS • FIRST A.OOR
Open Friday 9:30 to a P.M.
Other Week Days 9:30to S P.M.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Attention: oo-lt-Yourselfers
fi;rYJJ

8"xl6"

UNDEREAVES VENT

Aluminum vent with l /8'' louver openings.

screen ,

388

SALE
PRICE

ASPHALT

ROOF
CEMENT

Neot. onrocfive. asphalt roofing shingles with
self·sealing odhesive to bond overlapping

THE INN r :LACE

shingles for storm ·tight snugness.

Wednesday Night Special

12·4/5 oz. waterproof
seal for small repairs.
SALE
PRICE

47(

Overall
G:~•.••1 . WETSURFACE

..,

. ROOF CEMENT

Tough. weofherprool seal.

'"'

:~·
.,.

.'

PER SQUARE
DURING OUR SALE

11\1'

·~·

.."-

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

CASH &amp;CARRY

I

I•

.••-

I

Visit Our Salad Bar
Meat Loaf
Scalloped Potatoes
Baked Beans
Hot Rolls
Coffee, Tea or Milk

Our NEW Telephone Number Is

I •

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992-6661

•

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,. .

Installment Loan Department Number Will
Remain the Same 992-3077 .

...

Member Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation

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DEPOSITS INSURED TO $40,000

HANDY-PATCH TAPE
FOR ROOF &amp; GUTTER

2'1.'' x 30" long. cut and
press info place.
' sALE
PRICE

122

GibsonHomans
ALUMINUM

HANDI·MAN COIL
Eosy to cut. form ond

shope aluminum.

14"x10'
SALE PRICE

866

SALE
PRICE

5 GALlON

20"x10'
SALE PRIC~

337
477
,

.·

Pomeroy Cement Block Co•
Plus Tax

THE MEIGS INN
992-3629

The Department Store of Buil,Iing Since 1915

Pomeroy, 0.

~
~

Phone 992 -6304
PIZZA SHACK Phone 992-6304

•

533

ltc

ASPHALT SHINGLES

FRIENDLY BANK"

-ff};~ 14"xl8"
ALUMINUM VENT

2'12'' louvers set of 45', 8 mesh

SALE PRICE

SELF-SEALING

"THE

WASIDNGTON (UPI)
By late next year, you'll be
risking arrest if you drive
more than .90 k.p.h. on federal
highways.
That "k" is the catch. It
stands for kilometers, and Is
the approximate metric
equivalent of 55 miles per
hour.
The Federal Highway
Administration said Monday
it will propose a $100 million
program to convert road
signs to metric by 1982, with
speed limit signs to be
changed over entirely by the
end of next summer.
The agency plans a notice
of intended rule making
Wednesday under which a
complete changeover of all
road signs would be finished
by Sept. 30, 1982.
The proposal will be
published for comment and
could be revised.
If the original timetable
stands, drivers would begin
to notice the impact next
summer when, in a 91kiay
period, all speed limit signs
would go from miles to
kilometers per hour.

•

.

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