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•

IS - The Daily Sentinel, Middlepon-Porneroy. 0., Wednesday, March l , 1m
7

•••
~-----A~-.;;-o~;ih~-- -! : :;;I¥0S~I~~;:,: Water
(Continued from page 1)
1

"
ANNA M. GRIFFITH
Coolville - Anna M .
Griffin, 66 , Coolville, died at
camden Clark Memorial
Hospllal Tuesday aflornoon
following an extended Illness"
INs . Griffin was born at
1/onaca, Pa .. the daughter of
Caroline Beaurs Bird, and the
late James Bird. Mrs. Griffin
was olso preceded In death by
a son. John J. Gr iffin and
three sisters .

Mrs. Griffin was a member
of the Coolville United
Nethodlst Church, Sunday
School Class Five,

United

7 Pc.t . per year on a 4

year certificate of
deposit.
$1,000.00
m1mmum
deposit, interest paid
quarterly.
A IUbJtantfal p'e nalty is
invoked on all certificate

•tcounts withdrawn prior
to the

d•h~

of maturity .

Meigs Co. Branch

..@
The Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan Co .
296 Second St .
Pomeroy , Oh io

was knocked loose by the
force of the water. Most of the
I sem~llnal action of the
water drained from the mine
,.,.,.thodlst Women and Troy Class A Sectional TourSenior Citl zons Club.
nameat at Meigs High
by late Tuesday .
In addition to hOf' mother School.
The anthracite coal in the
she is surv i ved by her
So the
Porter tunnel is mined
husband. Myrle ; three sons,
U vldorlous,
u m
vertically in shafts called
Mvrle J. and Gary E. both of will t.ttle the wtoner of
UHie Hocking , and Robert I.. Thursday's Kyger Creek • breasts. State mmmg
of
Pa r kersburg ,
five
South western 'game officials said the men •may
da ughters, Mrs. Edward
to
have strvived If they were
(Evelyn ) Shartle, and Mrs. Saturday even g.
able
to climb ladders up the
Olarl es Uoan I Breakfield, ::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::·:·::::::::::::::
bolh of Dayton ; 1/n. Beulah
shafts when lhe water swept
M!rtln; New Philadelphia ;
OFFICE 1U CLOSE
through the twmel.
1/n .
Stephen
(Pam)
The
Farmers
Horne
A~
"I don~ know what their
Atkinson, Little Hock ing, and
Miss Lee Griffin at home : ministration office In chances are, but our hope is
Pomeroy will be closed that they were.able to climb
three si s ters , Mrs . Carl
(Margare·tl Fila, Mrs . Thurlllay and Friday, March up the,ladders to high ground
O:lrothy WoO:ds. and Mrs.
Charles I Lois ) Setzer. all In 3-4 due to an out-&lt;~f-town when the mine Oooded," said
Walter Vincinelly, Pennsyl·
Pennsylvania ; 20 grand- meeting.
chi I dren , and 11 great vania's chief deep mine
grandchildren ..
safety officer.
DINNER PLANNED
Funeral services will be
MASON
The.
V.F.W
.
The sow-re of the water is
Thursday at 1 p.m. at White
Funeral Home In Coolville Stewart Johnson Post 9926 not known, but one Kocher
with the Rev. Roy Rose of. will bold a free spaghetti Coal official speculated the
flciatlng . Bur ial will be in clnner Sunday at 2 p.m. for burst may have come from
Torch Bapti~t Cem-etery .
Friends may call at the · all members and guests at an abandoned mine near the
Funeral Home anytime. The the V.F .W. Post in Mason.
Porter tunnel.
fam i ly ~quests that in lieu of
t
The first rescue attempt
flo.....ers donations be made to
failed
Tuesday night. TearnB .
CLUB TO MEET
the hear I fund.
working
from either side of
The Western Boot Citizens
the
shaft
were W18ble to
Band Radio Club will meet at ·
7 p.m. Saturday by the break through the tons of
mine timbers swept into piles
ALBANY - Lawronce D. RaCine Fire Station,
Dlicher. 62, Rt. 2, Albany diep
that blocked the 111-foot.IJigh
Tuesday at Holzer Medical
' main channel of the mine.
Center .
FUND DRIVE SET
"The water came through
Mr . Dilcher· was born
CINCINNATI (UP!) -The
March 25. 19151o the late Earl Roman Catholic Archdiocese with a tremendous force.
and Emma Oilcher.
Umbers
came
of Cincinnati is asking 140,000 Those
He is survived by one
a'whistling,"
Vincinelly
said.
daughter, Anna Lee Aelker, Catholic famllles in 19 south·
Using
mine
air
shafts,
the
Middleport ;
two sons, western Ohio counties to
lawrence M., LaSalle , Mich., contribute $2.2 million in a first rescue team got within
and Jeffrey,' Rt. 2, Albany :
200 feet of the area.
two br others .
Eugene, fund drive.
"You just can't see a thing
.A.Ibany and Clyde , Colum ·
Archdiocese officials said
in
there," said James Laird,
bus : one sister . Jessie
lll(lre than 1~,000 persons will
a
regional official of the
Reeves, Albany ; seven
begi,n calling on Catholic
grandchildren and several
Federal
Mine Enforcement
homes in the
\\'hen the
nieces and nephews.
Safety
Administration.
drive kicks off Sunday
Funeral services will be
"We've got to get an access
Friday, 1 p.m. at EWing afternoon. ·
Chapel with the Rev. Robert
The Cincinnati archdiocese route in there to see if we can
Elkins officiating . Burial will
finil the men."
be in Wells cemetery . includes 'the counties of
The second rescue attempt
Friends may call at lhe Adams, Auglaize, Brown,
funeral home after . 7 th is Butler, Champaign, Clark, involved another assault on
evening.
Clermont, Clinton, Darke, the debris in the main
Greene, Hamilton, Highland, channel, along with an
Logan, Mercer, Miami, atternpt to clear secondary
Montgomery, Preble, Slelby channels called monkeys.
The te811lll hoped to dlg down
and Warri!JI.
to
the trapped miners from
"Funds raised by the
the
monkey chaMels.
appea'l are used for
About
100 miners were
retirement expenses of
working
some
5,000 feet from
priests, sisters and brothers,
the
entrance
of the mine,
lor supporting Catholic social
which
is
located
about a mile
services p~ograrns and for
from
this
illlall
hard coal
numerous other Catholic
region
town
in
Schuylklll
Church
agencies and
Cmmty,
when
the
disaster
hit.
services," said archdiocese
Most
escaped
through
an
officials.
emergi!Jicy twmel.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

THREE DAY
ALE
tHURSDAY, .MARCH lrd
9:30 TO 5 P.M.
JE;WI;LRY DEPT.

JEWELRY
SALE

FRIDAY, MARCH 4th
9:30 TO 8 P.M.

SATURDAY, MARCH 5th
9:30 TO 5 P.M.

LINGERIE DEPT.

FURNITURE DEPT.

BESJFORM
BRAS

:,

Selected group of necklaces,
bracelets , earrings, rings
and chains.

$295

THE MEIGS INN
992-3629

T

ax

Hartley 's Shoes
·Middle of Upper Block
Pomeroy, o.
OPEN 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mon.thru Thurs.
9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Friday
Sat. 9 a.m.to 5 p.m.

Total
Casual
Comfort

Pleuant Valley
DISCHARGES - Thomas
Rowley, Rio Grande; James
Gaskins, Leon; Mrs. David
Long, son, Gallipolis Ferry;
Richard Fielder, Henderson;
Mrs. Thomas Daniels;
GaUipolil; Harry Bates, jr,,
. Gallipolis; Mrs.· Samuel
Long, Gallipolis; Sheldon
HiD, Point Pleasant; Betty
Leonard, Point Pleasanl;
Mrs. Charles Adkl!lll, Crown
City; Marvin' Cox·, Mid·
'dleport; Jamie Woomer, ·
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Elvis
Russell, l'olnt Pleasant, and
Tanya Plantz, Kanauga .

From top to bollom lh1s IS Ihe most
contemporarily slyled. comlortably

designed men 's casu al eve r to bea r
t he fam ous - fo r -comfo r t H us h

Puppies • name All made poss•ble
by an unusua l pillow l1ke padded

construction process Total ly foam
padded upper surrounded by glove
lea ther on th e out srde and comfort
lrnlng on the inside. And srdewa lk

sollenmg plantation cre pe sole s,
loa THai's Hush Puppies· comlort

MEN'S 55!11

NECK
TIES

CAMEL GLOVE LEATHER

'I

QIHOSPITAL
.
The Mjldleport E·R Squad
answer~ a call to . 999
BrowneJ: Ave. at 10:10 a.m.
Tuesday lor Clara Gilkey,
who .... having dUficulty
breathilll!. She. was taken to
V~em~. Memori!ll H111pltal
was admitted.

Wrangler and
Leggs jeans in
. 29 to 42 waist,
leg
style, ·
western sty I ing.
Regular ties and pie tied
a famous brand.

Mr.
sizes
flare
true

FOR THIS SALE

styles,

For this special sale

•J.

primary elections to be held
June 7 in Pomeroy and
Middleport are availa.ble at
the Meigs County Board of
Elections oUice, located in
the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple building.
In Middleport, the terms of
lour councilmen expire this
year. They are Dewey
&amp;rton, Marvin Kelly, Allen
Lee King and George
Meinhart. Middleport voters
will name one member to the
town's board of public af.
fairs. The term of Willis
Anthony will expire.
In Pomeroy, four coun·
'dlrnen . will complete their
terms of office this year.
They are Harry Davis, Philip
Globokar, Louis Osborn and
Ralph Werry. Also in
Pomeroy, two seats on the
board of public affairs will be
open this year. The in·
rum bents are Robert Hysell
and Charles Legar. In
Pomeroy, the term of Mr!i.
Phyllis Hennessy, village
treasurer, a1flo expires this
year.

SOCKS
Men's sizes 10 to 15,
boy's sizes 7 to 11.
white with color tops,
solid dark colors with
co~trast trim and
numeral socks .

ss~
MEN'S '6.95

PAIR

TAKE; . TIME TO SEE
WHATS NEW FOR SPRING
77.
MEN'S AND . BOY'S
WEAR.

PAJAMAS

Sizes A,B,C and D. solid
colors and fine selection of
patterns. coat style tops.
adjustable waist
band
boltoms. ·
MARCH SALE DAY

2

PAIR

$1195

2ND

New slyles and colorsl double knit
Buy lsi gallon · dress slacks tor men. Men's 1nd
Spred Satin while boy's 3 plt&lt;e veSied suits, new light
latex Will paint at weigh! jackets for sp(ing and
the regullr price of summerwear, pre-washed denim
510.49
.ieans, short sleeve shirts In sport
styles, knits, dress shirts. Toke lime
to look around, you'll enjoy it.
GALLON
SJOO

THREE DAY SALE

SALE S2'f

RED HEART

ALBUM
SALE
.

'1"

33¥3 R.P.M. RECORD ALBUMS

WINTUK
YARN

OOUBLE KNIT

REG. '5.79·............................ SALE '4.00
REG. '6.79. ••••••••••.•••••••••••••••• SALE '5.00
REG. ? .79 •••••••••••••••••••••••••..••SALE -'6.00
REG. '8.79 •••• ••• •••••••••••••••• •••••.SALE $7.00
REG. ''9,79 .............................sAL£ '8.00

selection of solid colors,
variegated, stock up on

what you need now during

cur three day sale.

POLYESTER

A nic$ selection of albums, new stock added
everY.week. Popular, western, sacred and
easy listening :

A new shipment, excellent

.

$}l9

..'

YARD GOODS
spring and summer
colors.
SAVE DURING
THIS SALE

REG. Sl0.79,.,.,, ...... ,,,.. ,.• ,,,, ... ,SAL£ '850
REG. '12.79 ........................... SALE '9.00
SALE; PRICES,
FAMILY.

PECIAL PURCHASE &amp; SALE

CANNON

ROYAL

Regul~r $7.79 Full Bed Sire (Filled or Fl11) ....... $6.79 ·
Reguilr 55.49 Twin Bed Sire (Filled or Fit!) ..... • 14.79
Regular ·S5.59 Ptlr Slandard Silt Pillow c..es .. .,Pair

leans, slacks.

SJOO

14.89

•

Regular $10.69 OuHn Bed Sire (Fitted or Fltf) '" st.39
RoaulorS11.99 King Bed Sire (Filled or Fltll""ll0.2f
. FURNISHINGS- 1st

AND

HAMILTON BEACH
...$24.9.5 . .

-

ELECTRIC KNIFE

Gofd 0.. flame tlnlsh. easy to
operate.

$

gg

18

LADIES DRESSES
Selected from slack, odds and ends

·2·2"

KANSAS CITY, MO. -OUTGOING FBI DIRECTOR
Clartlloe Kelley, conceding he was no ''swashbuckling"
admlnlltrator, today ouUlned his "significant" improvements,
including moves to end the legacy of the tate J. Edgar Hoover.
In a speech prepared lor delivery in IU native city, Kelley
said he bad lrled during the lUI tlree and a half years to
"retain the many e~:cellent features of the FBI, "bile brfnCing
~bout meaningful changt!tl. Kelley announced pla111 to retire in
January. Attomey General Griffin Bell dltl'lni confirmation
hearinp said tbe Carie~' aclminlltratlon planned to replace
Kelley, ~ted by Richard Nison in 1973.

of winter dresses,limllodquontllies.
Rogullr $14.00 to $32.00

'10

00

· Regular S12to $22 ........ $7.00
Reg ul•r $34 to $42• .... "$1 5.00
Regular S44to sse ... ;.,

. REG. $1.19

.

REVERSIBLE PLACE MAlS

A MAJOR WINTER STORM SHRIEKED OVER the
nation's mld1anda today, dumping loot-deep .1110111 over the
upper Mldwell and aendlng tornadoe and thunderstorms
IIJIMlnll over parts of &lt;lr:laho!D8 and Teu.a. Wind""hlpped
IIIOW-nearlng billiard intlllllty in 110111e areas ~ 11prtld from
tbe Colorldo Roctiel to the Dakolas 111d Wilconaln early

Machine washable, solid colors. F,.. ·
thiS sale
Home
ld

today.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

~

··~

..

~

..

.

A bUaard wam1n1 was in effect in northeastern Colorado.
llelvy anow warnlnP. were in e~ for portions of Nebruka,
(ConUnued on page 10)

I•

...

By United Prea IDtet'llldonal
WASIUNGTON - SroNG BY SEX, payroll and expe!llle
acCOUilt scandals, the House has adopted its first strict code of
ethics to force members to reveal their finances, abolish
"slll8h funds" and Urnlt certain outside earnlnga.
Final ap(rowl of the reform package came Wednesday
night after rnor~ than eight hours of debate that included
strong opposition from Republicans and some Democrats and
ended with an appeal lor passage by Speaker Thomas P.
O'Neill Jr., [).Mass. The vote was 402 to 22. U the Senate
approves much the same code next week, as eipected, a
special House committee wlll be created to establish ways to
enforce the new codes and to draft federal laws providlog
penalties for violations.

WASIUNGTON - VIOlENCE PORTRAYED on the
televillon networks is on the Increase, but the Federal
Communications cmuiusSlon opposes governlnenwrdered
reslrainl.
.
FCC Chalnnan Richard WUey jolned IO!twork oUicU.ls
Wednesday in testimony before a House . commerce
subcommittee. VIolent episodes oil televtalon are a problem,
witneslles agrees, but network aecutlves said they are cutting
down withc!ut government involvement. Wiley RUWQrled the
..,tworks' position. ''The cornrnlsalon believes that this not an
area in which government regulaUm ill either feasible,
deairable or constltuUonaUy appropriate," he said.

In gold , green, pink, tan or blue.

Sizes small, medium , and large,
solid colors. stripes and prints.
short sleeves, Ideal for wear with

1200 Watts, ilghtwelght. J heat
seHings, special sale.

~~

' ...

Lows tonight between 45
and 50 and highs Friday
between 60 and 65 .
Probabillty of precipitation
60 per cent today and 70 per
cent tonight and Friday.

three

5o per cent c;nion, So per cent' polyester tioral pattern

to Jaw school in January.

•

at y
OHIO

"Maybe I cap be a country
lawyer," he said. "It's a sure thing
I'm no fanner."

Some of the old hands also are
feeling the pinch .
Albert Piescowicz has spent about
10 years Ianning in the Beloit area
of southern WisconBin.
"I've never seen two worse years
than these last two," he laments.
"I've got a lot of money tied up in
land and equipment and I'm in hock
up to my eyeballs. II things don't get .
better this year 1 don't know what
I'm going to do. I might have to get
out.u

But things aren 'I looking up.
The prospect lor many Midwest
farmers is another year of drought
in 1977, and for some, that will be the
end.
Wisconsin Gov. Patrick J . Lucey
told an aide to President Carter that
even if the state gets Its normal
spring rainfall, lts agricultural
losses this year could · total $1.5
billion. He said if 1977 crop losses
equal or top those of 1976, the
agribusiness loss will fall
somewhere between $2.5 bUUon
and $3 billion for Wisconsin alone.

en tine

THURSDAY, MARCH 3, 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

~

expressed ''appreciation" to reports from refugees of

Arnin for his assurances on
the wel!are of U.S. citizens,
arid
asked
Uganda's
presi·dent·for·life for
on
how
suggestions
Arnerica!lll wishing to leave
the East Alrican nation could
do so.
Although details could not
be independently verified,

widespread atrocities and
murders by Ugandan troops
continued to filter into Kenya,
which Arnin has accused of
aiding U.S., British and
Israeli mercenaries planning
to invade Uganda.
One rengious teacher in the
army who escaped three days
ago said he had personally
seen Arnin's troops round up

scores of Acboli and Langi
lribesrnen fu his t.rracks
and march them away in
handcuffs, apparently to be
shot.
A priest from Uganda said
be knew of instances where
lroops shot patients from the
same two lribes in their
hospital beds.
Scores of
Ugandan

Fate of co-workers unknown

Weather

.

. NO-IRON SHEETS

WOMEN'S TOPS

fall back on and they lost what little
they had."
Drought has cut into crop
production in much of the Midwest
during the past two years, stretching
from western Illinois to Iowa,
Nebraska and the Dakotas and into
Minnesota and Wisconsin.
Kmieck bad invested $15,000 in a
small !ann north of Fargo, which he
operated with "whatever band-medown equipment I could keep running." But two years of shriveled
corn, wheat and soybeans left him ·
unable to pay the bills.
"I like the country. I like farming.
I guess It just didn't like me," he
said.
So, Kmieck headed bark to
Chicago, where he spent most of his
life, to lind a job in industry.
Jim Judson , a one-time law
student who left school to seek a new
life in rural America, found himself
in a similar plight. He spent a year
farming leased land in usually
fertile northwestern Illinois near
Galena, on the banks of the
Mississippi River.
But Galena, too, is in the throes of
a two-year drought. Judson returned

Most Americans .staying in Uganda

NAIROBI, KENYA - KENYA HAS DISMISSED as
nonsense charges by Ugandan President Idi Arnin that 2,600
U.S., British and Israeli mercenaries are preparing to invade
Uganda from Kenya. In a broadcast oo Radio Uganda
Wednesday, Amin said the mercenaries ''were advancing on
Uganda" with the help of some Kenyans. He appealed to all
Ugandans to send information directly to him on the invasion
so the govenunent could crush 11.
Amln also charged that the United states hid sent a
squadron of warplanes to the Kenyan alrbase at Nanyukl and
that a U.S. destoryer was in the Kenyan port of Mombasa with
mercenaries abOard. An official Kenya statement dismissed
the charges as ridiculous.
.
.
"Hallucinations and Rhadow-boxing are a commonplace
thing with themllltaryreglrne in Ug&amp;Jlda," the statement said.
"You can expect to even hear that God•bas shaken banda with
Amln."

60 inches wide, new

MeigB school. Officials as a
result were unable to narrow
it do\vn to one school so joined
forces in checking out all the
schools.
At Middleport Vill)lge Halt
a call about a bomb threat
and the schools was received

By John Lesar
Unlted 'Press International .
Ron Krnieck dumped his few
belon gln~s into an aging pickup
truck, packe&amp; up his wile and 2-year·
old son and headed down the dusty
dirt road.
A two-yea r experiment in country
living in the prairie of northern
North Dakota was over. Kmieck,
dislilusloned, was heading back to
the city.
Two straight years of drought had
broken Kmieck's spirit - and his
bank account. Uke a lot of other
young would·be fanners, Kmieck
had learned there' s more to farming
tban fresh air and honest hard work.
Two years of drought have put a
lot of fanners In dire financial
straits and have drivep hundreds mostly young fanners - off their
land.
"Almost everybody's heen hurt,
but its the young ones that feel it the
most," said Red Hardesty, a fanner
who dabbles in real estate in the
Fargo, N. D. area. "They put
everything they had into making a
new life in the CQuntry. When the
drought carne they had nothing to

e

a

FOR
WATQf FOR
OPENING DATE

TUBE

BLUE JEANS

THEATRE
~anON

available
Petitloos of candidacy for

sn95

shorts,

I

Petitions
for Pnmary

MEN'S &amp;BOYS

MEN'S
&amp;
YOUNG
..
MEN'S

HOSPITAL NEWS

Visit Ovr Salad Bar
Danish Melts
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy ·
Vegetable
.·
Hot Roils
PI
Coffee. ~ea or Milk
US

·

0

THE INN PLACE
Thursday Nrght Special

Holzer Medical Center
(Dlsch1rges, March II
Edgar A. Abbott, Anna M.
Bachtel, Autye M. Baker,
Rhodna Bush, Mrs. Gregory .
Clin and d!ughter, Mary E.
Cain, Frances L, Carleton,
.~ra M. Folmer, Elmer W.
mil, Ruth A. Holt, Gary F.
Hysell, Mrs. Steven James
and son, Barbera AM Jones,
Gina M. Kemper, Emma . C.
La~drurn, Beatrice May,
Katie Morgan, Emily Peyton,
Mary V. Riggs, Mary
RuSsell, Flora E. Scarberry,
Isaac Sheets, Chad E.
Stapleton, Shannon Wheeler,
Mrs. Ronald White and son,
Roger L. Wilbur, Helen R. ·
W'ISernan, Elizabeth Woods.
(Birdts, March 1)
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Swain,
daughter, Jackson; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Flesher, son,
Waverly; Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Scott, daughter,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Ben
H. Ewing, son, Pomeroy.

)lfelgs County Sheriff
James J . Proffitt reported
today
Rudy
Stewart,
Syracuse, came to his office
at 2:38a.m. today suffering a

~ PRICE

SELECT GROUP

at 7:02 a.m. and all Mid·
dleport
schools
were
checked. Middleport police
when completing the check
there assisted in checking
schools of other communities.
. At Racine, Southern Local
Supt. Bob Ord extended
thanks to officers, emergency
squadrnen and others who he
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
said did an excellent job in
S~turday
through
checking out the schools
Monday, chance of showers
there. Confusion was kept to a
Saturday, Sunday and
minimum and students were
Monday. Highs Saturday
able to enter the building, he
gunshot wound, reported will be to the 50s and tows
said.
Classes were underway at
uoofficlaUy in his abdomen. will he to the 40s. Highs
The Pomeroy ER Squad Suaday and Monday will be
all schools following the
thre~t. Last spring one youth
was called and transported In the 40s and lows :will be
wils sent to a penal institution
Stewart to Holzer Medical In the 30s.
lor making bomb threat calls
Center. The sheriff reported
that a man is in custody ·,:,:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::;:::::::::;;; to Meigs Local Schools.
pending investigation. No
further information was
released.
The sheriff's department is
also Investigating two
hreaking and enterings. One
was Tuesday when the
Woodrow Shaffer residence
Rt. I, Reedsville, was broken
into. Entrance was gained by
ktcking in a basement door. VOL. XXVII NO.
225
Property worth $1,389 was
POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT,
taken and damage to the door
and house was estimated at
approximately $155.
HennanHenryoftheBCiis
assisting in the investigation.
A truck parked at Newell's
Sunoco at Chester was broken
into. The truck was owned by
· By RAYMOND Wll.KINSON
Aspluodh Tree Experts Co.,
NAIROBI, Kenya (UPI) and driven by Keith John
Nearly
all American
ijoops, Rt. 2, Jackson.
missionaries
plan to stay in
Locks and hasps were pried
Uganda, despite reports of
from tool compartments and
more atrocities and the
missing are a 1\f. horse
threat
of
further
Briggs and Stratton pump,
by
unpredictable
actions
nylon rope, tree climbing
President ldi Arnln, church
saddle, axes, sledge ham·
officials said today.
rners and socket set. Both
Radio Uganda said today
incidents are . under in·
that
President Carter has
vestigation.

Gunshot man
turns self in

SELECTED GROUP .

2

threats were received.
Dave Edward! reported to
the sheriff's depariment be
had received a threat that
there w~s a bomb planted In a

The department of Sheriff
James Ptoffltt and firemen
and emergency units of the
county were busy early today
checking out all of the·schools
In the collnty after bomb

PICTURES &amp;
W~LL PLAQUES

Sizes 32 thru 42 A thru D,
cotton tricot and fiber fill.

lh PRICE

area

Ve$erana Memorial
ADMITTED
Rose
Hooper, Athens; David
Hutton, Albany; Clara
Gilkey, Middleport; Roscoe
Scarberry, Racine; Sharon
Buffington,
Pomeroy;
D&gt;rothy Greene, New Haven;
Fred Stewart, Cheshire; Eric
Stover, Racine; Edith
Woolard, Pomeroy; Dora
!Ievens, Slade; Dena Good,
Long Bottom; Martin
Mlllahan, Tuppers Plains.
DISCHARGED - Leopold
Hysell, Carrie Judson,
Barbara. Pierce, Minnie
Johnson, Tamara Tallent,
Edna Hart, Glenna Grueser,
Eber Gillilan.

Bomb checks ran
in Meigs schools

Down on the farm isn't all that great anymore

By DAVID A. MILNE
TOWER CITY, Pa. (UPI)
- The only one of eight
· . b'apped miners known to be
allve in the Kocher Coal Co.
mine disaster told would-be
rescuers today he doesn't
know the condition of any of
his seven coworkers.
HEW SECRETARY
John Shutack, a federal
Joseph CaiUano Jr. bas
.mine
safety official, said
recently proposed the,
there
have
been unconfinned
. creation of a aew federal
reports
that
the miner,
agency to control the cost
Richard Adley, beard sounds
of hospital services.· from other parts in the mine,
Hospital bills repreRent · which could indicate other
about 40 per cent of all miners are alive.
health care coals, which
But, Shutack added,
have been rlstog much sensitive seismic listening
faster than. consumer devices have been unable to
prices ID general.
pick up any human sound
other than those made by
Adley.
NOW YOU KNOW
Shutack said the escape
Ul!lled Presslnleruatlonal
route
they are drilling to
French satirist Francois
rescue
Adley would also' be
Rabetals wrote in his 1532
the
main
route into the area
will: "I have nothing. I owe
where
the
other miners are
much. I leave the rest to the
believed
to
be trapped.
poor."

Carter wants jobs

Adley told rescuers the broke into the Kocher mine
other men were working near here Tuesday, leaving
below hlrn, but he did not two miners dead, three
know where they were.
critically injured and eight
The rescue team, using air rnissiDg. ·
drills and handwielded piCks,
Shutack said communlca·
is making slow progress in its tlon lines have been installed
effort to reach Adley, between rescue workers and
· entombed in a four by six by Adley. ·
·
eight-foot space.
"He is in good health and is
Shu tack said in six to seven responding very well,"
hours of digging today, Shutack said. "He has asked
rescue workers hadJldvanced for a plug of chewing tobacco,
through only about lour feet which he got. And he wanted
of the SO-foot coal vein a drink of whiskey, which he
leading to the area where didn't get."
Adley is waiting:
Shutack said Adley, who is
He said they should make married and has two
laster progress now that the children, has been told not to
initial breakthrough bas been move and to wait patiently
accomplished.
while rescue workers
State and federal officials complete their efforts to open
still bad hopes the other a four-foot diameter escape
seven miners were safe, but luMel.
said there was oo positive
Shutack said they may not
evidence that they were _ reach Adley until late afterallve.
ooon.
Millions of gallons of water
from an abandoned mine

sla~hed

employment ceilings for the
By HELEN THOMAS
UP! While House Reporter flSCal years 1977 and 1978
WASHINGTON (UP!) - have been established."
"We must hold federal
President carter says be

his recent tour of the
Mediterranean to seek a
solution of the Cyprus
dispute. ·
wants cabinet and agency employment to the lowest
Press Secretary Jody
head! to reduce their hiring number needed to operate Pow~ll announced
by 25 per cent pending effectively," he said.
Wednesday Carter has sent
The President was concen· letters to 450,000 individuals
issuance of a federal payroll
b'ating heavily on foreign and groups representing a
ceiling in April.
In a mernoranduni to, his affairs today with an early cross section of the
official family, Carter said National Security Council population; seeking
the nwnber of appointments meellilg, whose subject was recommendations by March
to full time permanent not disclosed, and a 21 on a new comprehensive
positions must be llmlted to scheduled appointment to energy policy. .
not more than 75 per cent of discuss Alrican affairs with
In fact, he said, all Arneri·
the vacancies occurring since . El Hadj Omar Bongo, cans are welcome to sutmlt
March 1.
president of Gabon.
·
their ideas on eiO!rgy to P.0.
He said the Urnltation "will
He also summoned special Box :ma, Washington D.C.,
remain in effect until new emissary Clark Clifford to the 20013.
White House for. a report on

.

EPA
.

Legion party
set March 15

Plans lor the annual
American Legion birthday
party to be held March 15
were made when Drew
Webster Post 39 met Tuesday
night at the post borne.
According to plans made
&lt;inner will he served at 7
p.m. with the event open to
members of the post, the
auxiliary and their farnllles.
A meeting will follow with
Frank Cheesebrew, . Ohio
RENAME ROAD
Department Chaplain, a
member
ri Drew Webster
COLUMBUS (UPI) -Rep.
Post
and
a past post comA. G. Lanclone, [).Bellaire,
mander,
as
speaker.
proposed legislation Wed·
A
program
·wm be
nesday renaming the Ohio
portion of Interstate 80 presented 111der the direction
"Christopher Columbus of Mrs. Carrie Neutzllng. A.
Highway." He said the name · past . commanders and
change is being urged by trustees dinner was an· ·
Unlco National of Bloomfield, rouoced for March 29 at the
N. J., the ·nation's largest post horne and rnernbersblp
ltalian'Arnerican community was repOrted ·at 340.
Refresllnents were served
service aod public affairs
by Charles Hayes.
organization.

'\

1.

'

A bus driver's certificate
was issued to Allan Holler
\\hen the Meigs County Board
d Education met in regular
session Tuesday night.
The board adopted a policy
on the release of personal
information and Supt. Robert
Bowi!JI was named as the
responsible person to oversee
the operation of the policy.
The board also authorized all
staff members to use the
records malrtalned In the
office. The vocational courses
of s\udy were approved.
Attending were Supt. Bowen
llld board members, Gordon
Collins, Harold Roush,
George Perry and Roher!
Burdette.

REPEALr..,.W
COLUMBUS (UPI) -State
Rep. Sam Speck, R-New
Concord, Introduced a bill
Wednesday to repeal a law
psssed last session requiring
that abandoned service
stations he tom down. Speck
said the law requires service
station operators to purchase
bond to insure they will raze
their stations if they close. He
said rural station owners are
finding it difficult and ex·
pensive to purchase bond.
Speck said the ell\ra cost
for one-pump Stations makes
it not worth operating and
could. reduce the number of
gas stations in rural Ohio.

no.threat to Ohio co·al industry growth

By J. R. KIMMINS
Committee and House
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Energy Committee.
George Alexander, regional
Electric utilities, which
administrator of the U. S. have challenged the propoSed
Environmental Protection standards in a federal cowt
~gency, aaid Wednesday suit, have predicted .that
proposed federal .sulfur Ohio's coal industry would be
dioxlde standards (or Ohjo ruined If the proposed
"in no way'' threaten growth standards are fully lrn·
of the state's coal industry. plemented by late 1971.
"II I were a citizen of Ohio,
Alexander said Ohio coal,
I would be beating on my most of which contains high
state legislator's · door concentrations of sulfur, can
demanding the .use of Ohio still be used If electric
coal," said Alerander, In · utilities in'!lall "scrubbers"
separate appearance• before to remove sulfur dioxide from
the Ohio Senate Environment

·.

Certification
awanled driver

Tiie families ol the trapped
miners were briefed m the
rescue effort. Most of them
are waiting in tiie privacy of
the mine lockerroorn. ·
The first lreak carne when
rescuers preparing to drill a
communications hole from
one pari of the mine to
another heard what sounded
like someone tapping on the
mine walls.
"They tapped back and
there was a response,n said
Walter Vicinelly, state
commissioner for deep mine
safety. "And every time they
stopped drilling, the tapping
would start."

refugees have reported
similar atrocities by bands of
troops roaming nortbern
Uganda and church ·leaders
have expressed fears Amin is'
systematically killing lliany
of Uganda's 6 million
Christians.
among
A
survey
missionary societies
operating in Uganda showed
that with one or two possible
exceptions, all American
rnlsslonaries had decided to
stay in the country.
Several missionaries who
were out of the counlry when
Arnin sparked the latest
crisis have returned to
Uganda in the last few days,
officials s&amp;id.
A spokesman for the Holy
Cross Order with I)Oille ~
Americans in Uganda said,
"Everyone is in very good
spirits. All of them are going
to stay in and no ooe has
pressed the panic button yet.
'!One old-timer even
returned to Uganda, saying
he didn't want to miss
President Amin's party. He
will help seltle down some of
the newer, young people.''
Kenya has dismissed as
nonsense charges by Amin .
that 2,600 U.S., British and
Israeli mercenaries are
preparing to invade Uganda
from Kenya.

stack gases.
Instead of that, electric
uUiltles predl(:l they wiD
import low.,!ulfur coal from
. the western United States,
Kentucky or West Virginia.
"That management
decision could be made in
good faith," explained
Alexander, since the higher
coats of Imported coal can' be
immediately "passed
through" to a utility's
customers.
Recovering the cost 'of
pollution control equipment is
regulated by the Public

Utilities Commission of Ohio.
Alerander said aU. S. EPA
economic study showed that
only six generating plants in
Ohio would have to instaU
scrubbers. The others are
already in compliance or
could use other sulfur·
removing techniques lo
comply with air pollution
regulations.
In fact, said Alexander,
"they (Ohio's electric
utilities) could be using more
Ohio coal right now than they
are - 18 per cent or 8 milllon

\,

•

tons more - and not harm Rhodes and Ohio El'A ·
, director Ned Wllllarna plan to
the environment.;,
"We do not have the reject the proposed federkl
authority to say "you shall plan and write one on the
comply in this way,"' said state level. It stl1l must be
Alexander . Installing approved by the U. S. EPA.
scrubbers would boost
"We took every effort "" .
homeowners electric blllli could to minimize the COli
about 88 cents a month, said and ntent of proposed
federal contro~1 '' said
Alexander.
"We
did
Aleunder . predicted that Alexander.
whenever a sulfur dloxlde everything in our power to
plan is approved for Ohio, it leu Its impact on the cltllena
will be no less stringent than of Ohio.
"It's the most lenient plan
the current propOsed plan.
He said Gov. James A. we could draw," he added.

'I

�t ~ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., ThW'sday, M3fch 3,1977

School income tax bill in house subcommittee
Miss Mceolll88.
.
on team in

subcommittee headed by or lower property taxes.
Rep. Arthur R.. Wilkowski, !).
The board. would have the
UPI Statebou~ Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Toledo, who also happens to option of asking lor an in·
Legislation empowering local be chief sponsor of the come tax to reduce property
boards of educa!ion to ask original bill offered in behalf taxes by a specific number of
district voters to enact In· of the Toledo city school mills or to ask for an income
tax to allow a combination
come taxes to raise money district.
Joining Wilkowski on tl)e . property tax reduction and
for schools or. replace real
estate taxes is in the hands of panel are Repa. Robert J. increased fund ing for
a five-member House sub- Boggs, !).Jefferson; Rocco schools.
Colonna , D-B rook Park;
Corporations would be
committee.
Robert
E.
Netzley,
R·Laura;
subject
to taxation under
Rep. a-ge D. Tiblack, Dand
Robert
A.
Tali
II,.
RWilkowski's
blllfor that part
Campbell, chainnan of the
Cincinnati.
of
their
business
conducted
·House Ways and Means
"I
think
we
have
.
a
pretty
within
the
school
district.
Committee, Wednesday
balanced
subcommittee,"
Any
ne
earning
Income
or
0
turned the matter over to a
observed Tablack. "There's living in the district would be
somebody from the north- subject to the tax .
west, southwest and north·
Three Republicans on the
•
east, and representatives of Ways and Means Committee,
small towns and big cities." including Netzley, have
Wilkowski is not expected different versions of the
Sunday school attendance to waste any time getting a school district income tax
Cll Feb. 27 was 50 the offering bill reported out. He wants which will be discussed by the
$25.17.
the measure to he enacted to subcommittee.
: Worship services were held allow the Thledo Board of
Me an wbile,
House
111 10 :45 with the Rev. Education to place the tax Republicans Introduced
'Richard Thomas, speaking . question on the June ballot. legislation requmng
from Matt. 21 :16-22, on the
Wilkowski submitted a reduction In the gas and
subject, "Mountain Movers" substitute bill Wednesday. It electric bills of elderly or
"Faith ·Moves Mountains" .aUows a majority of mem- disabled persons earning less
~imlsm II' pessimission can bers of a boart' of education than $10,000 a year.
spread). Prayer is necessary, to place on the ballot a
The bill, sponsored by Rep.
God knows our limitations, proposed flat rate income tax Scribner L. Fauver, R·
we do not bear our burdens to raise additional revenues Elyria, would require utilities
alone. "He will help liS over
the mountain of defeat, if we
!lJ( our trust in Him", attendance at worabip service
was 38, Howard Flanders was
oongleader and Joyce Ar·
cher, !ianist, Special song by
Nina Robinson and Thelma
Hende~son " Beyond the
Sunset
Arthur Atherton is a heart
patient in the Camden-Clark
ATHENS, Tenn. (UP!) On the d'y before Melisha's
Hospital in Parkersburg, W. The mother and stepfather of death, Mrs. Maddux said
Va. He has not yet been , 4-year-old Melisha Morganna alter beating the child,
removed from intensive care Gibson defended themselves Maddux "took the stick be
llld at this time, is holding his at their murder· trial Wed- was using to beatMellsha and
own. Ills family has been with nesday by blaming each set it on the table like he. was
him , as much as is allowed. other In the child's death by a big king or something."
Our prayers are with him.
torture.
She said her husband
In a day of sordid forced Mellsha to walk and
Saturday - and Sunday
guests of Genevieve Guthrie testimony, Ronald Maddux run around the bouse and fed
were Mr. and Mrs. Russell took the witness stand in his her hot sauce. She said the
Yost and daughter of Lan- own defense and accused his torture began on the morning
a.ster R.D.
wife of heatjng Mellsha t.he of Tuesday, Oct. 12, and
Garland Caldwell is quite daY before she died. His wife continued into the night.
poorly; but .Emma Findling also t0$tlfied and accused
"He was ~aving her walk.
is inproving, it is ·reported. hlm of torturing the child.
When abe would slow up he
Earl Dean of Swnner area
The trial, now in its fourth would tap her. When abe
is reported to be a patient in day, could go to the Criminal would slow up again he would
Holzer Hospital, recovering Court jury this afternoon.
hlt her harder," Mrs. Mad·
from recent·surgery.
Mrs. Maddux said Maddux dux said. "He kept her
Mr. and Mrs. Wald Swartz was jealous because another walking and trotting lor a
rf. Athens, 0. recently visited man - now serving time for long time.
Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Swartz armed robbery - fathered
"He started giving her that
and Mr. and Mrs. Vere the child.
hot sauce somewhere about
SWartz.
She said Maddux, taking lunch lime. I had a full bottle
Hobart Swartz recently pills and acting "plumb of bot sauce and he gave her
visited his brother Vere wild," beat the cblld with a every bit of it. She asked for a
swartz.
sawed-off baseball bat the , Coke. He said he would give
The UMW · wiU . obaerire day before she was found her a Coke, but he gave her
''World Day of Prayer" at the dead.
more of the bot sauce."
home of Dan and Janet
ldaddux, who said his wife Mrs. Maddux said the torMoore, at Lottridge, 0 ., took "energy pills" that lure abated somewhat after
Friday evening at 8:00, made her irritable, testified dinner, and Melisba went to
March 4. Anyone is welcome. that Mrs. Maddux beat bed. •:1 kissed her goodnight.
The 89th birthday of Vere Melisha with a wooden ruler She was snoring."
Swartz was observed with and a flyswatter.
When she awoke the next
refreshments of ice cream
Melisha was found dead of morning, she said, Maddux
and cake at his horne here on shock and exposure on a wet went Into the living room to
Sunday afternoon. All his mattress at the Maddux' wake the child.
children and famUies were · home at nearby Cleveland
"I heard him hollering,
present and Richard Swartz last Oct. 13.
'Missy, ·Missy,'" she said.
of Ravenna, o. and Cash
Prosecutors charge "Then he hollered, 'I can't
Bentz of Saltm, o. There Maddux actually tortured the get her awake.' Something
were 26 or 27 present in· child, but claim Mrs. Maddux · came over me. I knew what
dueling a neighbor, Dorsel is equally guilty because abe • abe had been through the
Bibbee.
did nothing to stop it.
night before."

to grant 10 to 25 per cent
reductions for minimal
amounts of gas and elec·
tricity used by ellgl ble In·
dividuals. .
·
To be eligible, a consumer
would have to be 65 or over,
or pennanently and totally
disabled. He also would have
to be personally liable for
payment of his utility bills
and live in a residence
equipped with individual
metars.

By LEE LEONARD

Pa~sengers

Alfred
Social.Notes

EDWARD K. DeLONG
WASffiNGTON (UP! ) Airlines must post warnings
next month that passengers
may be bumped from
confirmed reservations
because airlines deliberately
sell more tickets than there
are seats available.
The Civil Aeronautics
Board said Tuesday the
warning must include
reminders that bumped
passengers may collect on
the spot cash compensation
for resulting delays.
The warnings already lie
buried in thick official tariff
book listing airline fares and
regulations, ·. but L ihe
government regulatory
·agency said ii was "clearly
unrealistic" to expect airline
passengers tn read Ia riff
By

will be warned

documents.
The board said a blunt
statement of overbooking
risks' and rights !J!USt · be
displayed on all ticket
counters and included with .
all tickets. The board's order
even dictates the wording of
the statement.
Foreign as well as domestic
airlines were Included in the
order. But the board said its
requirement for a notice In
the ticket envelope applies
only to tickets sold in the
United States.
A nwnber of airlines have
objected w public notices,
saying the information
already is contained in tariff
documents. ·
. As of April 3, the board
said. each airline counter and
·

·

Cltester News Notes

Tornadoes win 20th; defeat Eeagles 110-38 in tourney action

Dianne Lee McCornaa, 14,
daughter of Marine M-8gt.
Edward and Mrs. McComas,
made it to the pinnacle In
Indiana girls basketball
oompetitloo last week.
A member of the Mt.
Vernon ~lor High girls
te.am aa a freshman, Dianne
Lee is the granddallllhter of
Lee McComas, Main St.,
Middleport.
The MI. Vernon team of
Fortville, Ind. lost In the

MISS MCCOMAS
llnala of the state tournament
at lndlanapolia last Saturday
tD East Chicago Roolevelt
111gb.

High school cage scores

Girls
Ohio High School
ticket envelope must include
BaslletbaU Resulto
the following notice:
United Press Interoallooal
"Airline flights may be
Wednesday
overbooked, and there is a Waverly 126 Portsmouth W12
slight chance that a seat will Olmsted Falla 54 N Ridgeville
not be available on a flight for 42
which a person has a Bellevue 56 Margaretta 36
confirmed reservation. A Clyde 56 Genoa 26
person denied boarding on a Youngs Mooney 56 Youngs
flight may be entitled to a Ursuline 54
·
compensatory payment. The Berlin Western Rsv !1i South
rules for denied boarding Range 37
compensation are available Portsmouth E 49 South
at all airport ticket Webster 41
counters."
A passenger bwnped from
a confirmed seat could collect
Boys
up to $200 cash, depending on
Ohio High School
the cost of the ticket, if the
BasketbaU
airline cannot get him w a
United Press International
domestic d~tination within
Wednesday's Tournament
two hours of his original
Results
arrival time or to a foreign
ClassAAA
destination within.four hours
AI Cleveland South
of the original lime.
Cle Collinwood 83 Cle Heights
.
In addition, the pasaenger 67
may keep and use his ticket.
AI Easllalle Nortb
Many airlines deliberately Wickliffe 76 Hudaon 54
overbook, giving confirmed . AI Asbland
reservations to more people Mansfield Madison 51
than a flight can carry Mansfld Malabar 49
because so many travelers Sandusky 74 Gallon 72
make reservations then faD
AI Dayton
wuse them.
Xenia 92 Dayton Col. While 89
Computer calculations of Dayton Mead.owdale 42 Day
!I)-show averages are used to Stiv-Pat 38
determine how many extra AI Troy
reservations to accept.
Dayton Wayne 87 Troy ffl

Trotwood-Madison 63
springfld s 61 (ot)
Vandalia-Buller 51 Sidney 29
AtUmll
Bowling Green 59 Napoleoo
52
Defla!lce 66 Wapakoneta 57
At Clllcimlall
Cln Xavier 71 Cin HUghes 52
Glen Este 61 Cln Purcell 55
At Newart
Granville ffl Bloom-Carroll 54
Lakewood 86 Fairfield Union

80

'

At Columbus
Col Linden 115 Col Whetstone
58
Franklin His 63 IIIUiard 60
AI Steubenville
Steubenville 39 Dover 38
Cambridge 95 Wintersville 63
AI Canton
·
Glen Oak 53 Greensburg
Green. 44
Louisville 70 Alliance
Marlington 57
AI Athens
Mil!mi Trace 78 Logan 75
Marietta 75 Cblllicothe 64

Laurel Cliff
N
N

Slimming tip: avoid gimmicks

lwf

u.-.

~

I

FULL COURT DRIVE - Joe Brown (24 ) of Southern

grabbed the ball on a rebound off the defensive board
dribbled full court, and laid the ball up and in for tw~
points in Southern High's whopping 100 plus victory over
Eastern. It was the third lime this season Southern
defeated neigtibor Eastern. Their seasons have been in
total.contrast this year. Eastern b8sn't won a game, and
Wednesday mght bowed out of the Class A tournament at
Meigs High. On the other band, So11thern is 20-0.. and
already lookin~ toward Colwnbus. - Gary Sisk picture.

7

l

halftime they had roared out
to an insurmountable 55-17
lead. In that fast pace first
half, Southern hit a sluling 68
per cent of their shots,
canning 25 of 40 tries.
Brauer led that onslaught
with 13 points while senior
Joe Brown added ten. Goebel
had seven fQJ" Eastern, but
the Tornado defense forced
the Eagles into a costly 23
turnovers in that half and ·
that was about 23 too many
mistakes. Eastern did cash in
on their foul shots by canning
.9 of 13, but the stingy
Southern defense allowed
Eastern just 14 attempts
from the Door in that half,
with just four of them finding
the mark.
·In the third quarter
Southern just kept zipping the
nets while Eastern couldn't

find the mark until Dave
Carn ahan sank a short
jumper with I :08 remaining
in the third period. That
quarter ended with th e
Tornados of Coach Carl Wolfe
in command, 81·21.
With 3:03 remaining in the
contest, it was only fitting
that the big center Brauer be
the one to put the Tornados
over the hundred mark as he
calrnly sank a foul shot to
reach. that plateau. Brauer
ended the night as the big gun
as he netted a big JO points on
i3 field goals and four foul
shots.
Junior
Kelly
Winebrenner came off the
bench to play another superb
game and canned 17 markers
while speedster Eric Dunning
hit double figures with 16.
Brown played a fine defensive contest and also con·
tributed 14 poin~• ·

As a team, the Tornados hit
a hot 60 per cent from the
floor (47 of 78) while making
good on 14 of 18 free throws.
Southern outrebounded the
Eagles 39-16, with Brauer
getting II carom s while
Brown and Winebrenner each
got seven. Southern com·
milled just 14 turnovers while
getting 24 steals, Brauer and
Brown each getting seven.
Brown also had five of his
team's 16 assists.
Sophomore Jeff Goebel was
the only Eagle to get into
double figures as he had 14
markers. Sophomore Da n
Spencer was held to just five
points, but he did get nine of
his team 's 16 rebounds.
Turnovers proved costly lor
the Eagles as they committed
47 miscues, and they had a
cold ni~ht from the Door,

canning just 1a of 34 attempts
for 35 per cent. They made
good on 14 of 22 foul shots.
SVAC Champion Southern
will batile Saturday night
with the winner of the Han·
nan-Trace Kyger Creek game
to be played tonight. That
sectional winner wlU go to
ChiUicotbe to play one game
for the right to go to the
Regi onal Tournament in
Athens. That one game in
Chillicothe will be played
next Friday night.
EAST ERN Da ve Car nahan 1-0-2,M ik e Sm Hh Q-00.G arv Nelson 1-J -S,B r ian
Mathews0-2-2, Dan Spencer 21-S,Je ff Go ebel 6-2-14,Ste ve
U ti le l -6- B,Ru sty Wigal 1-0-2.
TOTALS lZ-14-JB .
Car l
SOU T HERN
Johnston J-1-7, Steve Baker J .
0· 6, E r ic Dunni ng 7-2·16, John
Sa yre 1-0-2, R ick Findley J . J .
7, Joe Brow n 6-2-14, 0 . Hifl 2-0·
4, 0ave Roush J-1-l, Richard
T e a f ord
2 - 0 - 4,Ke ll y

Redskins come back to win
United Press International
The Miami Redskins keep
rolling along but not the easy
way.
"We don't do anything
easy," coach Daryl Hedric
said Wednesday after his
Redskins came from behind
to whip Bowling Green 76-66
In Mid-American Conference
play.
"We got ahead easy early
on and '- our kids started
turning the ball over,'' Hedric
said. "The pressure was on us
and they we~;e playing free
and easy.''
The Redakins, 12-3 in the
loop and llkl overall, were
down ~28 at halftime but
scored the first seven points
of the second half to take a
five-point advantage and
never trailed the rest of the
way.
However, the Falcons
didn't give up, tying the score
twice and coming within two
points several limes. ·
Chuck Goodyear paced the
Redsklns, scoring 25 points in
the final home game of his
career. The fifth all lime
leading scorer in the

conference, Goodyear hiked
his career total to 1,194
points.
Ron Hammye was high lor
Bowling Green, now 9-16
overall arid 5·9 in the
cotlference, with 22 markers.
First .year BG coach John
Weinert, who worked for the
Procter &amp; Gamble Co. last
year, found no joy in the loss.
"Selling Crisco was so
much more fun than this,"
Weinert laughed.
At Kalamazoo, Tom
Cutter's lo points and 12
rebounds led Western
Michigan to a 7~ MAC win
over Ohio University.
The Broncos enjoyed their
second best shooting periormance of the season, 55.6 per
cent, to even their MAC mark
at 7-7 and improve their
season standing wl:l-12. Ohio
fell to 4-10 in the league and 9-·
15 on the year.
Western Michigan took the
lead for keeps, 23-21, with
5:20 to go in the first half on a
basket by Mark Throop and
proceeded to build a 37·29
halftime margin. Throop and
Herman Randle finished the

game with 12 points each.
In the second half, the
visiting Bobcats closed the
margin to 49-46 with II·: 14 w
play, but never managed to
get any closer . Western
Michigan enjoyed its biggest
advantage, 66-50, with &gt;:24
left on the clock.
Forward Tom Joyce of
Ohio led all scorers with 22
points, while Steve Skaggs
and Buckey Walden had 17
and 14 respectively for the
Bobcat cause.
At Kent, Junior forward
Ted Williams poured in 21
points and teammate Dave
Speicher added 15 as Toledo
downed Kent State 92-81.
The win pills Toledo at ll-4
in Mid-American Conference
play and 20-6 overall, whlle
Kent is 4-10 in the MAC, 11-17
overall.
Toledo led 45-26 at the half,
and even with Burrell
McGhee, a 6·1 guard,
shooting for 33 points, Kent
could not pull closer than nine
points to that lead throughout
the second half.
In other games, Cleveland

Winec r en ner 7-3 · 17 , Ch i p
Br auer 13-.ol -30. TOTALS .aa.
l.a-110.

QUARTERS

Sou thern

11 28 26 29

Easte rn

8 9

4 17

E

See

AGOOD
NEIGHBOR
OF

him
for
all
your

family
insurance
needs.
BILL FLETCHER
149 Soulll Tlllra
Middleport, Ohio

··CRD
.a:·

,.............. Ph. 991·71 55 ·

State defeated Xavier 7J..65,
Akron handled Eastern
Dlinois 86-61, and Central
State won the NAJA District
22 finals with a 611.&lt;12 victory
over Malone.

1-' Like a

good

neighbor,

' '"' ~ '•""

S1ate Farm
• is thPre . ·
State Farm ;nsurllnc e
Compan-ies ·
Home Off ices : BlOOm ington ,

1\TlnOlS

lnhoducing the
'77RCib6it
with fuel-iniection.
Volkswagen's done 1! aga1n
They ve rnadefuel·lnjecl,on s1ondord equ1pmen1on

11-e 1977 Robb"

~riffey

.$port Parade

DR. LAMB

By.Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB- Today
I read a letter in your column
that could have been written
· by me. I have gone on diets
and have lost weight but can·
not lose my twnmy or slim
my fat thighs. One of my
lrlenda actually aaked me If I
was pregnant because !look
like I am four or five months
along. It Is so maddening to
diet day after day and still he
lllbamed of my figure.
· Could you pi~ aend me
The Health Letter number
. 3-7, Girth Coptrol: Avoiding
The Big Ml'ddle, that you
mentioned?
Allo what are your views
oo the slimming glmmlcks,
such • waist bella, that are
found advertised in
mapllnel?
DEAR READER - My
view Cll the lllrnmlng gimmiclll II -watch your wallet IIIey In UHieal.
tNnp ~ will help

By Greg Bailey
The Southern Tornados, 260 on the season, adyanced to
the finals of the Meigs Sectional Basketball Tournament last night as they
showed everyone just why
they are ranked sixth in the
state hy the Associated Press
by· downing the Eastern
Eagles by the lo!H'Ided score
of llo.38.
That was the first time this
season that the Southern
squad bad topped the century
mark, and the first time in
years.
It was the third time this
season that Southern had
downed Eastern.
Southern got the opening
tip, but missed three straight
shots. The Eagles c!ldn't do
any better as they went down
the floor and missed their
first shot.
Finally the Tornadoes pivot
man, Chip Brauer, broke the
deadlock as he tipped .in a
rebound with 6:« showing on
the clock and the Tornados
were on their way. They
roared out to a quick 8-0 lead
before Eastern got into the
scoring act when Steve Little
sank two free throws at the
4:08 mark. The first quarter
·ended 27-8.
The second quarter opened
with two three-point plays,
one by Brauer and then one
by Goebel. But the Tornados
kept, on blowing, and by

cage finals

'Ciaas AA
By Oarlce ADen
returned whis home from the
AI Cbagriu Falia
Mr. and Mrs. B. K. Holzer Medical Center.
Twinsburg 76 Painesv!Ue
Ridenour entertained with a
Dlmer guests at the home
Harvey 68
party in honor of Mr. and rf. Mr. and Mrs. B. K.
AI Sa!Miusky
Mrs. Oris Frederick Sunday Ridenour after the funeral of
Huron 81 Port Clintnn 78 (ot)
evening at th~ir borne. A her sister Mrs. Erma
AI. Ada
decorated wedding cake was Heilman, were Mr. and Mr., .
Coldwater 68 St Marys 57
served with punch, coffee and Bill Cogar and daughters,
Kenton 66 Vin Wert 61
. wedding bell mints, to Mr. Pomeroy, Billy Heilman,
At Conlon
and Mrs. Harlan Ballard, · Naples, Fla ., Do.uglas
Massillon
Tuslaw
56
Pataskala, Mr. and Mrs. Wickham Sr., Douglas
Doylestown 54
John Wickham, Mrs. Bar- Wickham Jr. and Don
Coventry 64 Manchester 55
bara Sargent, Mr. and Mrs. Wickham, Richmond.
AI Fede!'lll-lloetlq
James Ridenour, Lowell and
The firemen enjoyed a
Nelsonville-Yort 74 Belpre 62
John, Mr. and Mrs. John B. spaghetti supper Wednesday
AI W.eslerville
Ridenour, Jason and Jerod, evening at the firehouse
Bexley 74 Col Wehlre 61
and the honorees, Mr. and before their
business
Col StCharles 55 Col Hartley
Mrs. Frederid&lt;, all local.
meeting.
44
Mr. and Mrs. James
Noah Haskins, Middleport,
AI Marloa
Riderlour enterti!lned with a called :on Mr. and ·Mrs.
Olentangy
59 North Union 55 .
birthday party, Friday' Qayton Allen, Sunday.
Mai-ysville
70 Big Walnut 62 ·
By MILTON RICHMAN
evening, ai their home in
Mrs.
Sandy
Wood,
At Teays Valley
UPI Spo~ .Editor
honor, of tlleir son John Parkersburg, is recovering
Madison Plains 58 Westfall 41 ·
Lesn. Blrthdaf"Cake, made frOm a tonsillectomy, at the
By MILToN RICHMAN
Hamilton Twp 71 Logan Elm
like a football field was borne of her parents, Mr. and
NEW YORK (UPI) - They can change anything they 63
served with home made Ice Mrs. Bob Wood.
want, his locker, his number or even his swnmer address, but At Dayton
cream and punCh to Mr. and
Weekend guests of Mrs. the one thing they'll never be able to change is Mickey Rivers' Mason 72 Preble Shawnee 54
Mrs. John Wickham, Mr. and Opal Eichinger and Laura style.
Dayton
Oakwood
71
Mrs. John Hayes, Mr. and were Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
It's the only one he lmowa, the one which has become his ·springboro 61
Mrs. B. K. Ride~our, Mr. and illenclk, Barbara and Tom trademark, his own personal sunshine, and after aU, how At Clncimlatl
Mrs. Oris Frederick, Bar· Girard, Mr. and Mrs. Charles would you feel if somebody came along and tried to take that East Clinton 64 Western
bsra Sargent, .· Lowell and Eichinger and Suzannah, away from you?
'
Brown 53
John Ridenour:
Miss B~rbara Fisher,
Mickey Rivers, who a.n get his back up sometimes, isn't Mariemont 68 New Ricl!mond
Mr. D. D. Clelland and Mrs. Colwnbus, Earl Williamson, going to let the Yankees do that to him even though they're 64
Carpenter, Coliunbus, visited Youngstown, and Don convinced he could become a completely dlfierent ballplayer, Cln Turpin !1i Goshen 41
Friday with '·Mr. Denz~l Eichinger, Rio Grande.
a mueh better one, if be changed his style at the plate by taking AI Lucasville ·
aeland.
'·
Denzel Cleland recently more pitches and dragging more bunts down the fll'st baae line. Wheelersburg 61 Norlhwest
Mrs. Opal Eichinger and called on Mr. and Mrs.
Rivers says why Should he change? What's wrong with the 49
Laura Jean spFnt a recent George Abbott, Mt. Hemian. ballplayer be Is now? He has a point. Leading off last year, all
Sunday in Columbus with Mr.
he did was lead the club in hitting with .312 aild stolen bases Class A
and Mrs. Charles Eichinger.
with 43, while driving in 67 runs with 31.doubles, Bhomers, the AI Fairport
Mrs. Jessie Weber was
same nwpber of triples and 184 hits in aU.
Fairport 72 Newbury '69
peasantiy surprised, with a
The Yankees' 28-year-old center fielder drew only 13 At Groveport
dinner In honor of her bir·
walks, though. Nobody can remember the last time he ever Canal Winchester 63 .West
thday, at the home of her
tried to drag a bunt, either-tand these are two of the areas Jefferson 55
extra days among June, July one-third by "eliminating the granddaughtei, Mr. and Mrs.
eWS OteS
Rivers keeps hearing about fro!D the Yankees.
licking Hts 63 Uberty Unloo
and August to save on fuel. coldest days of the year and Roy Grueser, Pomeroy.
"My style is my style and nobody Is gonna cha1J8e it," 79
"Thie bill makes as much increasing the nwnber of OOlers attending were Dr.
By Btrtba Parker
AI HU!sbore
sense as many others relating wann summer days."
Attendance at the Free Rivers says. "If they don't like it, they can trade me."
and Mrs. David Belcrasto,
Now Mickey Rivers may sound like he's being plain mule- North Adams 39 West Unloo
"l.am trying to light a lire Amy and Sara, Mr. and Mrs. Methodist Church Sunday
to the energy crisis and is as
headed about all thia, and not especially brillht, either, but It's. 82
constructive as many of the under the forces that control Carl Offutt, Columbus, Mr. morning Feb. 27 was 811.
easy
to see that the way be's thinking and It's hard to say he's AI Shadyside
laws enacted by the General the legislature in hopes they arid Mrs. Opha Offutt,
A hu·ge number of .persons
Bellaire St Johna 58 JewettAssembly and Congress," the can do something besides Pomeroy and Mr. and Mrs. · . &amp;tended the funeral of Mrs. wrong, at least as far as taking more pitches Ia concerned.
Ever
since
he
put
on
his
first
profesalooa\
uniform
eight
.
S
cio 53
Republican lawmaker said. hand-wringing and Arthur DeTray, local.
Pearl Jacoba which was held
years
ago
with
Magic
Valley,
Idaho,
in
the
Pioneer
League,
At
Marlelta
Galbraith said Ohio could generating hot air," he said.
John Call has been at the local church. Two
cut its energy needa by about
hymns "Just Inside The Rivers bas been a free swinger. That's how he hit .'¥¥1 his first Woodsfield 63 Waterford 61
Eastern Gates"· and "In The year and how he led the Texas League with .343 playing lor El AI Dove~:
Srasburg 67 Hiland 84
SWeet Bye and Bye" were Paso his second year.
By nature, Mickey Rivers Is higb strung, nervous and At Warsaw
SWig by the congregation
which was Mr. Jacobs I!Itremely !ldgety. He manifests theae characteristics whether Lakeland 60 Guemaey Zane
he'sln a baseball uniform or not and probably will be the same Trane 53
request.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Howell way the rest of his life. He's so animated, so eager to jump out At Willard
Aston spent the weekend at there and swing at the baD's it's extremely difficult for him to Seneca East 56 Plymouth 44
restrain himself enough so that he can take any pitches. Ted At Nelsonville
their home here.
WUilams
)lad that same boundless nervous energy but worked Crooksville 70 Trimble 55
Mrs. Clarence Curtis has
so
bard
to restraint It that be did. Not everyone Is Ted At Metg1
returned home
from
Williams,
though.
Southern Meigs 110 Eastern
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
If
the
pitch
Is
anywhere
near
the
strike
zone,
Mickey
Meigs 38
-eliminating excess Tyou a!IDost doubled in size in the ·can't grow any more because
Mr. and Mrs. PhiU Wise,
Rivera
Is
going
to
swing
atlt.
You
can
make
book
on
that.
At St. Marys
The Health Letter you re- last two years. The,doctors do they have calcified but the McConnelsville attended
Dragging
bunta
Is
something
entirely
dlfierent.
Here
Minster
110 New Knonllle &gt;18
quested. Others who want not know what is wrong with hands and feet can enlarge.- aervlces at the local church
Rivers
is
playing
It
safety
first.
Being
a
left.banded
hitter,
he
New
Bremen
78 Mendoo·
this issue can send 50 cents him. He bas bad headaches The nose and jawa may also Sunday morning.
has to hang in there against the pitcher a little mon!, risk Union te
lor it with a long, stamped, and wrings and twists his enlarge changing the apgetting hit with the ball, especially by a left..banded pitcher, If ·At MI. Vernoa
self-addressed envelope. hands ·constantiy. He entered pearance of the face.
1
.---'------_..,
~
he'sgoingtDtry
and drag a bunt. Rather than do that, when he Danville 18 Newark c.th Ill
Send your request to me in the hospital this past week
The condition is often
~~~=L
does bunt, he does it the safe way, toward third baae where he Cardington 82 Fredericktown
care of this newspaper, P.O. with occasional loss of asaoelated with an erllarging
INI'EIII!IJI"oF
can
push the ball away from him.
60
Box 1561, Radio City Station, memory. I would appreciate pituitary gland just
At Perilmoalll
CH':!ru~~
I
can
understand
some
of
the
Ya'*-'
Impatience
with
New Yor~. NY 10019. .
., yotir oplnloo of what could be underneath the brain. Thie
Ene.F.d.
Rivers. Still, I don't think they have any big llld&lt; coming with Lucasville
Valley
70 1
There IS no such thing as wrong with him. I am very master'horm6ne gland is-par·
ROBI:RTHOF3LICH
htm
overaU.
The
Yanks
knew
what
kind
cl
player
be
waa
when
Porlllnouth
ND
&amp;2
spot reducing. You can't worried aboul him.
\Ially encased In a bony
Publilhod ~~':,. s.turday
they pve up Bobby Bonds to get him and Ed Flperoa from AI Mlalord
reduce the stomach without
DEAR READER - It may socket. Its e$rgement may
br Tho 011!• van.,. Publlal!lni c.... the Angela two winters ago. They knew the belt thing Rivers Eaatern Pike 92 Irooton St
getting the fat of( and the fat take some detailed studies to
111
cause severe headaches.
Pomeruy, Ohio
oill. There is usually as much be certain and 1 am sure your
..any,,... aCourt
-St.,
oau...
Phcone m. could do was run. They also knew he threw Iolllpopa from the Joaeph 63
!Ugh
blood
pPBSure
often
ac21111. Editorial Phone 990-2157.
outfield and wa'a no Rhode&amp; scholar.
fat inside the abdomen as out- dad Is getting those In the
companies the diaorder.
Sei.'OIId • ilau pootac• pok! •'
•••ela' ezecudve vice ,...
-aldent
and
Potneroy,Ohlo.
1: ... ~, Dalton, the n.aae·
...
&amp;de.
. hospital. If your deacriptioo
Of CourSe, ·if you reaDy
N•U'IIJII
llllverlillnjj
.
.
.
_
general
manager,
waa
the
Clle
who
made
the
deal,
which
aent
The best way to do that IS . is accurate and his feet and mean that · your father's
with a combination of dieting banda have actually enlarged banda and feet are just lliUve Wtr&lt;l · GrUIIIh Company, In- Rivers and Figueroa to the Yankeee. He IIYI he'd make tha
&lt;., BoUlneliJ IIOd Gallagher Dlv..
same •--• •••in because the •••ell needed "-•·• pow- but
757 Third Avt., New ·York, N.Y.
uau _...
'""'6
DUINil
~
~nstbly and regular exer- conalderably there is • a
deformed from arthritis or
111011.
he
thlnb
Riven
Ia
"a
very
exciting
ballplayer."
BEATI'YTOO
CIBe. Daily walking aa part of pouiblllty th~t be has
some other dlseaae then the
SublcrloU"'
"'•'"
Delivered by
That'sa
cood
d--'"''oo
of
thl!
Yanks'
free-whee"•• Utile
BEVERLY
lULLS, calif.
your program will help more acromeply.
when available 75 ctrQ per
\Hilfto'...,...
.....
problem of acromegaly is out -carrier
(UP!)
Watnn
Dealt)' wiD
.BrMIAi&lt;Rwlawhe
..
earrier
leadolf
hitter.
than you realize. You can adfl . What is acronlegaly? It is a the window. 11 am sure your
Join
Jine
Fonda
and Ellyn
~~Y~~·~~
~
~~:
He'll
st8lll
there
and
let
some
eaay
fly
ball
drift
put
him
that wthe exerclaes lisled in condition caused by over pro- dad's doctors will check for
B~
u
a
muter
cl
an.
Year,
122.00;
Silt
montlll,
one
time,
then
steal
a
base
or
pop
one
out
to
win
a
game
tha
The Health Letter. Stick with duction of pituitary growth acromegaly if he really baA
'11.50; Three months, S7.00 ;
nest.
eeHI!Ionlee
••
t
the
amual
it and you will eventually be a hormone in an Individual true enlargement of his feet E-hm 1211.00 y..,., Six mon11u&lt;
hlm
Oacar awania March a, thl!
113 .50; Thr" '"""'h•. 11 .:.0.
That's what makes
eiCiting.
new, allmmer you.
· after the nonnal growth and banda. '
Motion Pleturt Acadtmv·
Suiolw.T~·~·
P&lt;k•
lndudos
Sunday
Doo't
chanCe
a
thing,
Mlck.
Nobody
would
aver
recognile
DEAR DR. LAMB - My pbaae is over. The IOOg bone.a
Timeai .. !:ntir)el.
you anymore.
announctd Wecl!aeedar.
dad's hands and feet have
-1o

Winter legislated away
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)State Rep. John A. Galbraith
has come,up with the perfect
solution to the energy crisis
- eliminate winter.
Galbraith, tongue firmly
implanted in cheek, in·
troduced a bill Wednesday to
abolish
January
and
February in Ohio starting
next year and to divide the 59 ·

government and financing of
townshlp park districts.
'
Legislation creating a
divison of credit unions
within the stale Department
of Commerce was introduced
by Rep. Vernon F. Cook, 0Cuyahoga Falls. The administration of Gov. James
A. Rhodes had asked for the
new agency.
The Senate was to reconvene today at 11 a.m. and the
House at I p.m.

they may be humped

Blame heaped
on the . other ·

II

'

The reductions in monthly
utility bills would apply to the
first 40,000 cubic feet or the
first 600 kilowatt hours of
electricity.
On the floor, the House
ratified Senate-passed
legislation extending the life
of the Land Use Review
Conuhittee through June 30.
The vote was 75 to II.
Cleared to the Senate on an
· 80 to I vote was a bill
providing for changes in the

1'- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Thursday, March 3, 1977

And tho! mcbns !os1er occelerohon. eos~tr starts and
a cleaner runn1ng eng1ne
Fuel -~n~c t 1on w1ll ol&lt;;() make the Robb11 cheaper to

even better? .·

dnve
Smce 11doesn t need a cotolylll cn11VCrler · anymore,

FRUSTRATION - His team losing badly,Dave Carnahan spread-eagled himself on the
floor after losing the ball on a traveling call Wednesday night in Eastern's loss to Southern
in the Class A sectional basketball tnurnament at Meigs High School. -Gary Sisk picture.

State baseball champs
plan reunion in June

TAMPA, Fla. (UP!) Cincinnati Reds outfield&amp; i&lt;;en
Griffey d,oesn't need much in
the way of batting Improvement considering he
barely lost out on the
National League batting title
to Bill Madlock on the final
day of the 1976 season and
finished up with a .336
average.
But, Reds Manager Sparky
Anderson is looking for im·
provement elsewhere Griffey's base running.
Griffey stole 34 bases last
year. His total was 16 in 1975.
"Ken says he hopes he can
steal about 40 this year and
say there's no reason why he
shouldn't steal 60," said
Anderson.

"and Griffey can outrun him.
What Griffey has to do is
make a study of .opposing
pitchers the way Morgan
does and he has to seek Joe's
advice. I'm going to keep
after hlm to do just that."
Griffey's .336 average did
not surprise Anderson last
year.
"The ability has always
been there,'' said Anderson.
"Now though, Ken knows
there's no limit to what he
can do if he pushes himself.
"Griffey's personality is
one of hls big plusses. He's a
pleasant guy and rare is the
occasion when he's not
smiling. That's why you want
to work with guys like
Griffey. They appreciate
what you're trying to do for
them,'' said Anderson.
Steve Henderson, a 24•year· ·
old rQOkie outliel\l.er who
batted .312, stole 44 bases and
hit 17 homers for the Reds'
Three Rivers farm club in the
Eastern League last year,
has the same makeup as
Griffey.

'arrangements In Marine M·
Sgt. Ed McComas, first
baseman on· the cham·
pionship team, now on
delached marine service in
the IndianapoUs area. He and
"Joe Morgan does,"
his family reside In Fortville, continued the Reds manager,
Ind.
Tenlative plans call for a
private dinner at a place to he
announced. Among the
special guests will be Nolan
Swackhamer of Mason, W. Regular Season Result
Greenevlew 61 SCharleston
Va., coach of the team.
contract.
Bascl.au
SE56
Swackhamer has retired
Pro Football
Atlanta .Signed pitcher Max
Tampa Bay - Signed from teaching and coaching.
Leon . .
Other members of the team
Los Angeles - Signed former U. of . Virginia In 1957, some rf. whom remain
pitcher Tommy John to a one- quarterback Scott Gardner to be located and notified of
as a free agent.
year contract.
the reunion, were Dave
College Basketball
San Francisco - Signed
Western Illinois-Head lllndy, James Bowles, Bobby
abort&lt;~top Chris Speier to a
basketball Coach Walt Moore Hennesey, Eddie Crooks,
one -year $90,000 contract.
Milton (Yogi) Wayland •.
Boston - Signed first resigned.
Bobby Nelson, Jr. Kennedy,
Hockey
baseman-outfielder Carl
Jan
Hauck, Jr. Rowley,
St. Louis - Sent goalie
Yastrzemski to two-year
Sonny
Knapp, Tom Davis, .
Yves
Belanger
and
Bailey,
Roger Ughtfoot
steve
defenseman Bob Hess wtheir
and
'Harlan
Whitlatch. The
Kansas City (CHI.. ) 1 farm
team
record
that
year was !5team.
GAMES LISTED
o.
GREEN BAY, Wis. (UPI)
- The Green Bay Packers
Wednesday announced their
home pre-season game
schedule for this year.
The Packers wlll meet
Cincinnati Aug. 6 at Green
Bay; New England Aug. l3 at
MUwankee; Washington Aug.
Insure your home and belongings
27 at Milwaukee; and
with our specla• policy for home·
Cleveland Sept. '3 at Green
.
'
_Bay.
owners or · apartment renters. You
All the games are on
will be Insured for fire, theft and other
Saturday nights with an 8
p.m. starting time.
damag••· to your hoult, your fuml· ·
PHONE
1 ne

only high school
athletic team in Meigs
County in history w win a
state championship did it 20
years ago this spring.
That was Middleport High
School - The Yellow Jackets
- that won the state Class A
baseball championship in

19&gt;7.
To mark this anniversacy
members of the team are
looking forward to a reunion
on June 3, 20 years alter
Middleport won the cham,
pionship in Columbus.
Setting the-above date and
making other ne cessary

Transactions

yoo.. ll be obi~ to use 1he mo;.t ecrmol' •·cJI grade ol gas

·" Henderson ," said An-

So come on Pl to our showroom 011d I&lt;J ke a look at our
new luel -1nlectcd Rabb1t.
Ard whde '{OLI re the re, we can tell v.-;u aOOul the
other 68 changes ond 11nprovement:, on~
I he 1977 Robb1t

derson, "has great. ability.
But right now he's a scared
kid, just like Griffey was the ·
first spring he trained with
the club."
Anderson has asked Griffey
to be young Henderson's "big
brother" this spring.
"! want Ken doing for
Henderson what guys like
Pete Rose, Johnny Bench and
Tony Perez did lor him when
he first joined the dub,"
said Anderson.
The Reds were scheduled
for their first full scale
workout of the spring today.

•c ahforn10 excluded

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Gallipolis, Ohio

195 Upper River Road

446-9800

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--

PLANNING APillA ·PARTY
THE ALL NEW

MEIGS INN PillA SHACK
Ohio College
·
lltkttball Results
Unl1tcl Press lnferna11onal
HAIA Olstrlc122 Fln111
Centrlllil State 68 Malone 62
Cleveland State 7:1 Xav'ltr ~5
Eastern Illinois 71 Akron 86
Miami 76 Bow ling Green 66
Tole~o 92 Kent State 81

Western Michigan 75 Oh io
ul7fv·e rsllr 63

- Eiiloy three sizes of your favor4Te
pizzas.
-Try our delicious subs while you
sip your favoril• suds.
· Eat In Or Carry Out
Phone
992-6304

turt and your personal property.
Don't walt until IfI too late. Calllodlly.
SEE US ABOUT A:

UGHTNING ROD POUCY
Slate Auto Mutual • WesTern Reserve

.Davis Insurance Service
Phone 992·5120

114 Court St.

Pomeroy, Ohio

ELECTRIC
WATER HEATER
ONLY

'11995

Jacket diameter lO if1", height from

lnc:ludlng nipples 32", nipple size 't•"•

floor

bet ~

ween nipples , .. , helgftt ol electric outlet
241Jt". lmmerlion type 4$00 w•tt lower ind
upper twin elements. Capacl1v 52 gal .~ well
Insulate~ white enameled outer jacket. 5·
YEAR OUTRIGHT WARRANTY .

EBERSBACH
HARDWARE

.GAS MODELS
30Gallon

40 Gallon

sgs95 $11295

Phone 992·2111 ·

noW. Mlir

'

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Pomeroy,()~

•

~

�Vault (in termed iate
Blaettnar (M).
Uneven bars - Blaettnar
(M ), Legar (M), Yeauger
(M) and Miller (W), tie.
Beam - Thomas (M),
Wyne (M), Yeauger (M).
Floor Exerdaes - Thomas
(M), Blaettnar (M), Kibler

Gymnasts are 1-1 in recent competition
The Meigs High Girls
Gymnastics squad last week
dropped a meet to a line
Parkersburg team at Meigs
:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::;::~::;:;:;:::::::::::::: :::::::.:·: .;.;.: .;

SVACTOMEET
The annua 1 Sprtng
meetlllg of the Southern
VaUey AtbleUc Conference
(SVAC) wUI be held March
7 at Kyger Creek High
School.
Basketball coaches wiD
selec.t the league's Most .
Valuable Cage Player and
the aU conference squad.
Other items to he discussed
Include the sprlag sports
• schedules an~ SVAC Spring
Banquet.
'

event and the heglnnlng floor
High, 73.5 to 69.4.
.
Meigs ' Mary Blaettner exereises . Blaettnar again
continued her fine season by took first in the intermediate
vault and the uneven bars:
capturi~ a first pillce and
She
also took a seeond lri the
two seconds. Parkersburg
·
fioor
exercise. Following are
gals swept ·the beginning
(W) .
vaul~ a feat that carried .the results.
Vault
(beginning)Baker
Floor Enrcises (in·
them to victory.
(W
),
Skinner
(W),
Miller
termediale)
- Evaf)S (W),
Following in 1st, 2nd, and
.
Jay
john
IWI
(W
).
3rd place order, are the
results:
Vault hegiming - Greiner
(P ), Meredith (P), Brant
(P),

Tntermedlate Vault Snyder (P), Blaettnar (M).
Bars - Blaettnar (M),
Showalter tP), Yeauger (M).
Beam - Parker (P) ,
Thomas (M), Griener (P),
Wyne (M(.
Floor Exercises - Greiner
:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;.:·:·:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;
(P), Blaettnar (M), Thomas
tMJ, and Grant (PJ tie.
HE'LL SIT IT OUT
On Tuesday of this week,
BOSTON (UPI)- Veteran
Meigs
avenged an earlier loss
Boston defenseman Dallas
as
they
downed visiting
Smith, a. throwback to the
Wellston
72.5
to 69.7. Wellston
earlier era of the six-team
swept
the
beginning
vault,
NHL with his crewcut hair ,
but
this
time
Meigs
had
two
Wednesday told the Bruins he
girls
pid&lt;
up
two
firsta
each.
will sit out the rest of the
season and it was speculated Becky Thomas made a strong
mowing as she won the beam
he would retire ,

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

Il Pro
\
1 Bullets
lStandings \ United Press ltitematloaal
Eastern Conference

Atlantic Dfvis ion
W L Pet . GB

Phila

3623

Bos t on
NY Knicks

3 1 31
76 34

Buffa lo

23 39

NY Nets

20 43

610

61 2
9V'
371 141 11
.317 18
.500
.452

Central Divisio n

W L Pe t. GB
Washing .

37 24

.607

Houston
San Anton io
Cleve .

3 4 26
34 28
32 27

.567
548
.542

New Orleans

26 35

.426 11

At lanta

25 38

.39? 1-3

21 2
31"
.1.

It wasn't an all-star game,
although there were. enoUgh
stars bn the court to seem so'
and it wasn't a playoff game,
although it may have been a
preview of the NBA
charniionship this spring.
The Denver Nuggets
brought the best team in the
Western Conference into the
Capital Center Wednesday
night aga inst Washington,

Western Conference

M idwr! st Division
W L Pet. GB

Denver

41 21
37 26

661
.587 41h
Kan . City
32- ~1 .508 9112.
Ch i cago
29 34 ,460 12111lndiana
28 35 .444 13 11?
M i! w.,u
2 1 44 .323 2Jl 11
Pac ific Division
W L Pet . GB .
CINCINNATI (UP! ) - The .
Lo s Ang .
39 23 .629
Portland
38 25 .603 J! 1 Riverfront Stadium ticket
Golden St
35 28 .556 4112 office opens Friday, signaling
Seattle ·
31 33 .484 9
Phoenix
26 25 .426 12 111 the start of over-the-counter
Wedn es day 's ReSult s
sale of 1977 Cincinnati Reds
Kansas Cltv 112 NY Net s 100
tickets.
Indiana 116 Buffalo 108
Prior to the opening of the
wash ing ton 115 Denver 113 . ot
Houston .120 Los An9ele s 113 season on April 6, the ticket
Chicago· 108 Phoen i)l 104, bf
office is to be open Monday
Clev el and 105 Seatt l e 85

oetro it

Reds' ticket
office open

Thur sday 's Game
Ph i ladelph ia at Gol den State
·Friday's Games
San Anton io at NY Nets
Wa shington et Atlanta
Boston at Detroit
Buffalo at New Or l ea ns
Go lden State at Phoenix
Chic ago at Lo s Angeles
Clevela nd at P.ortla nd

through Saturday from 9 a.
IT) . until 5:30 p. m. It will he
open seven days a week from
9 a. m. until 5:30 p. m.
throughout the season.
Tickets for all 1977 home
games will be on sale, but
only standing romp tickets
are
available for the April 6
NHL Standings
United Press Internationa l
opener against San Diego.
campbell Conference
Ticket prices are $4.50 for
Patrick Division
W l T Pts GF GA box seats, $6.50 for club box
Ph it a .
39 13 12 90 258 173 seats and $.1.50 for reserved
NY Isl and . 38 17 9 85 121 156
Atlanta
26 27 11 63 205 213 seats. Standing room tickets
NY Rang 2J 29 IJ 59 219 235 for op~ning day are $3.
·

Smythe Di vis ion
W L T 'Pts GF GA
51. L ouis 27 30 7 61 189 217
Ch ic ago
23 33 10 56 207 23 7
ColOrado 19 34 1l '49 190 23 1
Minn . · 16 33 15 47 189 '251
Va ncou .
19 39 7 45 173 2d4
Wale s Conference
Norr is Division
W L T Pt s GF GA
M ont.
dB 7 10 106 ·31 5 152
P itt s .
27 26 12 66 199 705
Lo s An g . 26 27 12 6J 211 195
Wa sh .
18 35 13 49 174 251
Detroit
16 39 8 40 160 234
Adams Division
W L T Pt s GF GA
Buffalo
39 19 6 84 23d 178
Bo ston
36 21 7 79 242 200
Toron to
29 27 9 67 251 229
Cl eve .
20 34 10 50 189 125
Wednesday 's Re sults
Butfelo 6 Ch ic ago 3
Vancouver 2 At lanta l
Cleveland 4 To r onto 1
Lo s Angeles 5 Pittsburgh 0
St . Louis 2 Colorado 2
Thursda y's Game s
Boston a! NY Rangers
Chicago a t Washington
Pittsburgh at Mon i real
NY Islanders al Detro it
va ncouver at Philadel ph ia
Los An ge les at Bu ffalo
Fr iday 's Games
No .games sch edu l ed

NO. 14 RETIRED
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.
(UPI) - All-time major
league home-run king Hank
Aaron will have his No. 44
uniform number retired
during a ceremony at
Atlanta's first home game of
the season April 15, the
Braves announced Wed·
nesda y.
Aaron played 23 seasons in
the big leagues and became
the leading career home run
hitter when he hit No. 715 on
April 13, 1974, in Atlanta. He
finished his career this pas(
season with 755 home runs.
~

-- --------

WHA Standings
United Pre ss Inte rnational
GF
272
279
209
718
225
136

GA
235
231
233
244
236
129

W L · T Pts GF GA

Houston
VV Innfpeg
San o,ego

Calgary

38 l9 6 82 248 185
35 26 2 72 784 ·232
33 27 3 69 212 212

25 31 5 55 191 204

Edmonton 25 36 2 52 174 230
Phoenix
24 37 3. 51 222 299
!( ·Team d iSt:landed
Wedne sd!ly's Results
VV Innl peg 4 Quebec 3, ot
New England 2 San Diego 0
Thursd~y ·s Gam es
Bir mi ngh am at Calge ry
W innipeg at Edmonton
. Friday 's Games
Houston at New England
Sen Olego at Indiana polis

LUMBER. HARDWARE &amp;
BUILDING SUPPLIES

SEOAL FROSH

I FINAL ) '

tum

Athens
Logan
Wellston

Gallipolis

Waverly
Jackson

Melgo

W L P
6 3 405
5 J 361
6 &lt;t

420

OP
J39
322
408

5 ' 357 318
J

270
1 2 129

0

4

6 w

2 8~

139

"95

TOTAL$ .
26 26 2101 2l0!
WedRIIdiV'I result :
Ath~S JS G&amp;IIIJ)OJf$ 34

VALLEY WMBER &amp; SUPPLY 00.
992-2709

Middleport, ·o.
HOURS :
7:00 to S:OO Monday thru Friday ·
7: 00 to 4: 00 Saturday

923 S. 3rd Ave.

By Helen and Sue Holtcl

Chlldblrtb Clus for Unwed Too
Dear Helen and Sue :
I don't have a husband or even a boyfriend, since I told him
I was pregnant.
MCID wants me ID get an abortion, but I can't go that route.
I guesa I'll have to give my baby up because I'm only 14 and
couldn't take care of hirn. l want to have a natural childbirth . at least I can remember that much about my baby, after he's
been adopted.
MCID says I can't take a Lamaze class because I need a
partner to practice with, and I'd embarrass the teacher and
everyme by showing up alone . Is it fair that I can't have these
lessons just because I'm - UNMARRIED

-

Prepared childbirth classes are open to all eXPectants,
married or not. The only embarrassment here is in your
mother's mind .
You may attend alone; but bow much better if she came
along to act as your coach. It might prove she cares -and you
need this badly right now. - HELEN

.

\:\
I

g

.

AWORD FROM SUE : I hope I'm wrong, but I suspect your
mother is sllll punishing you for (first getting pregnant and
(second) not having an abortiun. ·
'
(If you're reading this, "Un's" Mom, be kind. A pregnant
14-year.old needs support, and concern for her welfare, not a
"shamed mother.")

•

+++

FLAG ETIQUETTE - The Rutland Brownie Troop
1293, like most of the scouting programs in Meigs County,
offers a variety of activities and projects. Currently the
girls are working on Easter craft projects making posters
in preparation for the March 27 Thinking Day, and using

the flag recently presenied to the troop by the Junior
American Legion Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post 39 in
their study of flag etiquette and patriotism. Here with the
crafts are, left to right , Christine Hysell, Sherry Wilson
and Greta Kennedy, with their leader , Mrs. Shirley Wilson
holding the troop flag.

A worl&lt;..l missions service
was held Wednesday night at
the Middleport United
Pentecostal Church under the
direction of Mrs. Louise London, Syracuse, director of the
Foreign Missions Depart.
ment of the local church.
Prayer and devotional
singing opened the service
with Mrs. London asking appointed members of the
department to give a brief
summary of past missionary
meetings and a financial
report.
Prayer was given for the
six members of the depart·
ment and for the foreign missionaries with the emphasis
be1ng that through the
leading of God and a willing
heart great things can be
achieved through the local
church as we ll as other churches throughout the nation.
The Rev. William Knittel's
message was entitled " !
Have No Man" with the
thought being that throughout

the world in cities and town5
both large and small, there
are people crying out for help
and the truth, people who
have no one to tell them about
Christ, and il is the Chri&amp;tian's responsibility to "go
out into the highways and
ht'&lt;lges and compel them to
come in that His house may
be fi lled."

·:=:-:=::::;::::::::::::::::::.;:;;::::::::;:::;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::.;:;:

CLINIC SET
The next cervical cancer
clinics of the Meigs Unit of
the American Cancer
Society will be held from l
to 3:30 p. m. 'Wednesday at
Veterans Memorial
Hospital. The clinic is open
to all Meigs County women
and Is free of charge. There
are a number of ap·
polntment openings and
women wishing to make an
appointment may call 91!23382 at anytime or the local
cancer office, Tuesdays
and Thursdays from 1 to I
p.m.

SPRING
FABRICS ,
NOW

AT

The Sewing
Center
Come in toW.y!
Tomorrow!
Many great buys on sale,

too, at

ONTHET
IN

MIDDLEPORT

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

+++

NarE FROM SUE: Unless it's more than a "second
chance." You didn't say how often you'd been caught drunk. U
November 23 was as last straw thirtg, you may he proving
yourself unW spring vacation.

Youth enjoy hockey game
Youth of the Bradbury
Church of Christ were in
Athens Friday night for · a
hockey game and skating
party.
After watching the hockey
game between Ohio Universi·

DIET-RITE
COLA ·

ty and Bowling Green, the
midnight skate was enjoyed.
The youth then went to the
Pizza
Sha ck
fu r
refreshments.
Attending were Don R&lt;!ley,
pastor,. Beverly and Bryan
Wikux, Greg Browning ,
Sherrie Barnhart, John
Blake, Rita Bailey, Kevin
Kmg, Kathy Miller, Cathy
Hess, Tina and Mike Miller,
Tammy · and R&lt;lndy Haynes
and Christi Stanley.

8-PAK

99~

CUTS15

Day of Prayer

FROSTIE
ROOT BEER

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end Dey of the Week

RADIO SHACK'S 1977 PRICES ARE ON AVERAGE WITHifl! 1!1. OF OUR LOW 1875.PR1CES

Pomeroy, 0.

World Day of rfayer will
be observed Friday night,
1:30 p. m. at the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church.
The program will be under
the direction of the Women's
Missionary groups of both the
Laurel Cliff and the Hysell
Run Free Methodist Chur·
ches.
The Rev. Herbert Ailing,
pastor of the Hysell Run
Church, will show slides of
missionary work in Haiti.
Special musical numbers will
he presented by both chur·
ches. Time will he spent in
prayer lor world needs. The
public Is invited to attend .

''Even if you
use the short

form, it
could pay-you to

Even the short form is more complicated
this year. ~o to be sure yo!.) pay the
smallest legitimate ta&gt;(-it could pay you to
see Block. And if switching to the long
form will save you money, we'll show you
just how much.

H&amp;RBLOCit
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

o,.n' a.m . . 6p.m. Weokdlys, 9-5 S1t.
Phont"l-1795

PniCES MAY VAAl' ATINO!VIOUAt SlORfS

.'

PROJECTS DISPLAYED- Crafts are popular with
and here J ill Nease, Regina Nance, Becky
Roush and Sherri Sisson with their leader, Joyce Sisson of
Syracuse Brownie Troop 1120 display recent projects.
.
younge~scouts

.

NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY

They have painted plates, made egg carton wastebaskets
• and match stick wall plaques. New scouting rules which
now permit Brownies to eam badges are undergoing
review by the leader.

Meigs joining national celebration
· Meigs County's 272 gi rl
The laws of girl scouting
scouts and 51 adult leaders ca ll for trust, loyalty,
and l1~l pers will join the 38 a ss is tance to uthtlr S,
million gi rls and adults in coUJt eous beha viour, kind·

six through 17, the opportuni·
ty to develope values, deepen
self-awareness, contribute to
sudety and relate to others
scouting across the nation in ness tu anima ls, a Cheerful through community service
celebrating Girl Scout Week , and thrifty spirit, obedience, projects.
March 6-12.
On March 27, Meigs County
and cleanliness in thought,
girl scouts will observe
The 65th birthday of Gi rl word and deed.
Scouting wa s founded in Thinking Day with an mter·
Scouting In America io March
12.
.
Savannah, Ga. by Juliette national theme. Each troop
The celebration will begin Gordon Low on March 12, 1912 lms selected a country .and
· Sunday when scouts ac ross with the first troup being will present at Think ing Day
the county attend church se r· organi,ed there with 18 a song, dance, skit or gam!!
from that country. Costuming
vices in uniform . Special gi rl members.
.
Meigs County has a total of and fouds from the land will
scout bulletins have been pr&lt;.&gt;vided to nwnerous churches 17 troops which offer a wide also be featured at the
for use Sunday as a specia 1 choice of activities tuned to celebmtiun. The program,
way of recognizing youth who the interests of today 's girls, open to parents and friends of
prodaim in their (fromise -,- activities which stimulate the girls in the 17 troops, will
"On my honor, I will try : to self-discovery, provide fun be held fl·om l to 4 p.m. but
do my duty to God and my and friendships, help develop the place, due to energy con·
COWllry, lo help other people skills, and build self· se rvation and the lack of heat
in buildings on weekends, h::ts
at all times, and to obey the confidence.
The troops offer girls, ages yet to be secured. Becky
Girl Seoul Laws."

Year Around
Spring &amp; Summer
Weights .
Sizes 36 to SO

Mankin is chairman of the
Think ing Day program.
Plans for day camp at
Camp Kiashu!&lt;J near Chester
are already underway and
again this year Mrs. Judy
Werry will be the camp direc·

An Excellent Selection At:

tor.

Service unit director fur the
Meigs County troops is Mrs.
Pal Thoma, Pome1·oy. She
lists "promoting patriotism"
as a prime goal for scouting.

BAHR CLOTHIERS
N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport, 0 .

fast on the curves
Your .joy ride begins on th is sleek, curvy
wood wedge topped with convertiblebreezy leath er weavings. It 's traveling with '
the classy dash we know you like!
or natural leather uppers,- S 18.50

Council announces Belpre rally
CHESTER - The charter
was draped in memory of
Lucy Kim at the TUesday
night meeting of Cilester
Cow1cil 323; Daughters of
America, held at the l1all.
Mrs. Mae McPeek, councilor,
presided at the meeting.
The rally to be held St.
Mark 's Methodist Church in
Belpre was discussed and , it
was announced that a prac·
Ike will be held Sunday at
1:30 p.m. At the m~ting a
practice was held for tile
memorial service to be con·

see us."

618 EAST MAIN

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
TANDY COOPOAATION COMPANY

SIMON'S
MARI&lt;ET

to be observed

Reason No. 15 why H&amp;R Block
should do your taxes.

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Frosh 11t.andings

~

!i.
:~:

Sandy:
,
By the time your letter reaches print (a month after you
wrote it) the problem may already be solved. Most parents
relent when they realize their children have learned lessons and we assume you have.
If you're sllll grounded, then perhaps a family discussion
lnlght belp. Taik about your feelings, your need for trust and
respect; show you deserve a second chance, and we think
you'll soon he out m probution. - HELEN

The StlinleM Steel
Wlllhlr 1nd l)l:y•

llec:t1 onlc
Coold~tt Canten

Generation Rap

+++

MICRONTAl~)
~

)!j

Rap:
About two monlhlf ago I went drinking with friends at noon .
When I came back ID school I smelled of liquor and I was pretty
drunk.
.
The principal called Mom to pick me up and she was
:disgusted. Dad was more so.
.
·
They have lost all faith and truBt in me and tell me I won't
he allowed to go out With boys till I'm 18. I'm 16 now.
I know I weuld he punished, but I've been in the bouse
since November 23, 1976. How can I win back my parents'
respect? - SAD SANDY
'

PRICE CUT s13

East

W L T Pts
Quebec
31 25 I 75
Clnci n .
31 28 3 65
l nd ianap . 27 29 7 61
New En g . 27 34 6 60
S irmn ghm 25 36 3 53
x ·M inn .
19 18 5 &lt;13
W e5t

NOW IN PROGRESS

edge Nuggets
just a shade behind coming in for starting
Dan
center
Philadelphia for the best Indiana
record in the Eastern Roundfleld when Rounfield
Conference. The exciting twisted his ankle in the first
contest wasn't settled until period.
Rockets IZO, Lakers 113:
Phil Chenier swished a If&gt;.
Moses Malone scored a
footer with six seconds
remaining in overtime ID giye · season-bigh 26 . points and
the Bullets a 11f&gt;.113 victory. combined with Kevin
" It sure looked like a Kunnert to limlt Kareem
playoff game tonight," said Abdult.Jabbar In the pivot.
Niggets' Coach Larry Brown. Ja bbar scored 23 points but
"You couldn't ask more from ha~yeight rebounds.
lls 108, Suns 104 ol
a game than what went on
Wilbu Holland capped a
!Dnight."
·
Chenier, who finished with 26iJoint performance with a
31 points including eight in steal and a layup to lead
the overtime, shared the Chicago to the overtime win.
spotlight with all-star Holland had six points in the
teammate Elvin Hayes and overtime, including the layup
the Nuggets' all-star David off the steal that put Chicago
ahead, 106-102, with 40
Thompaon.
Hayes, the game's )eading seconds remaining.
scorer with 44 .points, got the
Cavs 105, Sonlcs85:
Bullets off to a great furst
Jim Chones took control of
half with '29 points. Chenier the backboards In the third
took his turn next with 15 quarter for Cleveland and
third-quarter points as \eamma te A~stin Carr scored
Washington appeared to 16 of his 25 points in the
lreak open the game, 86-70. second ha If. The Ca Vs
But the sensational outscored the Sonlcs 17.0 in
Thompson led the Nuggets the closing minutes of the
back and his three-point play third period with Chones
with 24 seconda remaining in · ieadjng a 19-7 rebounding
regulation gave Denver a 105 advantage for Cleveland in
103 lead. Tom Henderson, the period.
who finished with 16 points
and 10 assists, hit on a If&gt;.foot
jump shot to send the game
into overtime.
Thompson finished with 36
points for Denver.
Elsewhere, Kansas City
beat the New York Nets, 112100, Indiana dumped Buffalo,
116-108, Houston beat Los
Angeles , 120-113, Chicago
edged Phoenix, 11Jil.104, in
overtime and Cleveland
whipped Seattle, 101Hl5.
Klngs112, Nets 100:
Sam Lacey scored 20
points, grabbed 11 rebounds
and made four steals to lead
Kansas City over the sluggish
and injury-riddled Nets. Ron
Boone added 19 points and
former Net Brian Taylor had
16 points for the Kings.
Pacers 116, Braves 108:
Billy Knight's 27 points
paced a balanced Indiana
GAS RANGE
attack. Dave Robisch came
up with 17 points and a ·
career-!llgh 21 rebounds after
@JSPEED QUEEN\

World missions·
service slated

~:::%:*:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;.'!::~;:::::~::::::::::::::::::::~;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~:;:;:;:;;;.:·:·:·~::~:~

Dear Unmarried :

pictures show girls ill action during the game at Southern
High School gymnasium taken by Gary Sisk. In the shot
above, at left, Brenda Lawrence goes up hard for the ball
- and came down with it- and at right, Jaye Ord has
fired off a short jumper to the basket. She scored six
points in the game.

ON RIGHT FOOT - Everything Is corning up winners
these days in the Soothern Local School district. Its high
school basketball team Is ~and favored to win a ticket
to district basketball play. Its girls' team now Is looking a
lot like the boys, winning its opening sectional game
againSt North Gallia Tuesday night 57..11. These two

N BA Standings
United Press Internat io nal

warehoUse

g(-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, March 3,1977

IN HOSPITAL
LETART FALLS - John
H. Rowe of Letart Falls and
Middl eport is a surgical
patient at the Veterans
Hospital, Ward 4-North , 3200
Vine St., Cincinnati, Ohio
45601. Mr. Rowe who has he en
confined to the Cincinnati
hospital for two weeks would
appreciate hearing from
local friends. Cards may he
sent to him at the above
address.

•

HOSPITALIZED
Paul Eugene Bu1·ton is a
P"tient at the Vetemns
Hnsp1 t11l in Huntington, W.
Va . Ilo u; " " the third fluor,
302B.

dueled by Chester Council at
the rally.
Acommunica tion was read
from Mrs. · Lura Larrick, .
state secretary concerning
the 83rd state session to be
held at the Neil House, Col·
umbus, Aug. 15-17. Also read
was a letter from Dorothy
Henthorn, state councilor,
concerning the spring rally.
On hehalf of the council,
Mrs. Dorothy Ritchie
presented a past councilor's
pin to Mrs. Dorothy Lawson.
Mrs. Lawson was escorted to
the altar by \he nagbearers.
Plans were made for a
layette shower for Fem
Showalter Morris at the hall
on May 18 at 7:30 p.m. All
lodge members are invited.
Quarterly birthdays will be
observed· at the March 15
meeting with potluck
refreslunents to be served at
that time. It was announced
that Mrs. lnzy Newell has a
new grandson. Mrs. Kathryn
Baum· was pianist for the
meeting .
Others attending were Ada
Netuzling, Mary Showalter,
Ada Murris , Goldie
frederick, Mrs . Leona
Hensley, Mr Mrs. Margaret
TUttle, Mrs. Mary K. Holter,
Mrs. Ada Bissell, Mrs. Letha
Wood , Mrs. Zelda Weber,
Mrs. Ada Van Meter, Mrs.
F,:thei Orr, Mr s. Doris
Grueser, Miss Julie R11se,
Mrs. Mae Spt:ncfr, Mrs.

The~na White, Mrs. Joe
Bissell, Mrs. Sadie Trussell,
Mrs. Charlotte Grant, Mrs.
Eileen Martin, Mrs. Opal
Hollon, Mrs. Betty Roush and
Mrs. Marcia Keller,

- •"

PIONEER PRO
MODEL P21

'

unmistakably

conn1e

._f'·'

.~

• Weighs only 10.9 Ibs (les
attach.)
• Powerful 3.1 cu In engtn•
• Quieter muffier
• AutomatiC chatn otltng

NOW
1

194.95

H you 11ave had equipmenl
in for repa lr or service

please chock now 1o see if

your

work

has been done.

WILKINSON
SMALL ENGINE
SALES &amp; SERVICE
Ph. 992-3092

Middleport, Ohio

heritage house
OF ·SHOES
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Open : Monday lhrv Thursday &amp;
SolurdiY 10 nt 5, Friday 10 1il8

I

-

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

•

�.
•- The JJally Sentlnei,Middleport-Pocmroy, 0 ., Thursday, March 3, 1977

-

Potluck dinner
honors birthdays
Mrs. Mabel Van Meter,

.

p· IIIMIIIio111¥ioW1W~~

Social
Calendar

-

Beth·Ann Weaver to represent Bethel

Be th An n Weave r , Job's Daughters, to represent the Pomeroy Masonic Tem- 14, obligation night will be the ham and the girls are to
daughwr of Mr. and Mrs. the bethel in the Ohio MiSs ple the pageanl to he held at observed, proficiency testing take coveres dishes.
Plans were made for a .
Gene Weaver, Mason, W. Va. Job's Daughters Pageant.
the Masonic Temple in Col- will he taken care of and Mrs.
Meeting _Monday night at wnbus on April 16 was Elhel T. Weadmlck, bowling party at the Mason '
has been seleded by Bethel
Bowling Alley followed by a·
62, International Order of
. discussed and Miss Weaver foWlder, will be honored.
Jean, Geral'd; Jan Wilson,
In preparation for the profi· piwl and slwnber party at 0
was selected as delegate by
TIRJRSDAY
Pomeroy; Ear! Williamson,
vote of the membership. ciency test, there will be a the home of the guardian.' "
FREE CLOTHING day, 10
Youngstown ; Miss Leda Mae a.m. until noon, Thursday at ·
Named as alternate was Ruth practice at the Mliier home Members of DeMolay and · '
Kraeuter; Mr. and Mrs. Dale Salvation Army, 115 ButAnn Blake, daughter of Mr. Monday evening at 7:30 p.m. other guests will attend the ·..
Maidens, Colin and Cluisty, b!rnut Ave., Pomeroy ; all
and Mrs. Eddie Blake, Mid- Inspection was announced for bowling and pizza party with
MASON, W. Va . - Apizza
Mr. and . Mrs. Larry Wolfe, area residerts in need of party was held for the.Young Meter, Rick Ohlinger, Tim dleport.
April Uwith a potluck dinner the Jobies. Paula Eichinger,
Roush,
Tom
Glover,
David
Kent and Laren, Racine; and cl&lt;thing are welcome.
Mrs. Kathy Miller, guar- to be held.that evening at 6 honored queen , presided at
Adult Class of the Faith Roush, Jayne Coleman,
Alta Dill, Reedsville.
EVANGELINE Chapter Baptist Church at the home of.
and Nancy Anderson, dian, announced the girls will p.m. The coWlcil will furnish the meeting.
Nternoon callers were 172, Order of the Eastern their Surid~y School teacher, Chuck
Jerry and Susan Coleman, seek sponsors for $10 dona·
Thelma Farnsworth, Susie Star, 7:30 p.m Thursday at
lions, and patrons for $5 donaWolfe and Dena Kessler. The the Pomeroy Masonic John . Pauley of Pomeroy David Dudding, Gene ., and tions. Tickets for the pageant
MASON FURNITURE
recently.
Shirley Coleman, one visitor
honored guests received gifts Temple. Initiation has been
will
be
given
to
all
sponsors
Attending were James and Kim . B~sham , and John,
and cards.
postponed until the April Joyce Pauley, Jackie Van Bobbie and Heather Puuley. and patrons. There is a $1 adSTORE HOURS
mission charge to the
meeting.
pageant and orders for
Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat.-9:00tll5:00
tickets must be placed with
FRIDAY
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON
Mrs. Miller by March IS.
SHADE RIVER Lodge No.
on
Sunday
afternoon
at
2:30
No. 453 F&amp;AM, Chester, will
REVIVAL PLANNED
Inltlated into the order at
,,,
hold a special meeting p.m. 1'he Rev. E. E. Cox is
There will be revival the meeting were Melanie
the
pastor.
The
public
Is
Friday, at 7:30p.m. Work in
services at . the Chester Sisson, daughter of Mr. and ·
tile Masb!r Mason degree. All invited to attend.
Nazarene Church beginning Mrs. John, Sisson, Mason,
master masons welcome.
March 7 through March 13 at and Angie and Stephanie
THURSDAY
7:30 nightly. John Lanier of Houchilis, daughters of Mr.
MEIGS HIGH School
MIDDLEPORT Chamber !unclion City will be · the and Mrs. Steve Houchins,
Athletic Boosters, 7:30 p.m. of Commerce Thursday at.
Friday at the high school to 12: 15 in the meeting room of evangelist. Pastor is Herbert Middleport. Initiation · will
Mason, W. Va
773-5592
Herman Grate
discuss sponsorship of spring the Columbus and Southern Grate. The public is invited to also be held on March 26.
At the next meeting, March
and kept in separate books musical by Big Bend Minstrel Ohio Elecirlc office. Anyone attend.
with plastic tape holding the AsSn. along with Other ac- wishing lunch to be brought in
cards in place. I should add tivities ; all persons in· should contact Edna Wilson.
that the first sheet of every terested in athletic program
SUNDAY
scrapbook [las an index and invited.
VFW Stewart Johnson Post
POMONA Grange, Friday 8 9926 Mas&lt;in free . spaghetti
each kind is kept separately
and on a different page from p.m. at tile ·Rock Springs dinner Sunday at 2 p.m. for
Grange Hall with Hemlock all members and guests at
others, -M.K.W.
Polly will send you one of Grange to be hosts.
post home in Mason.
her " peachy" thank-you
SA1URDAY
cards, ideal for framing or
MONDAY ·
RIVAL now in progress at
placing in your family scrap- Church of God, Chester,
MIDDLEPORT Garden
book, if she uses your favorite through .Saturday. The Rev. Club, 7:30 Monday at
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in Martin Hocker, Rich· thehome ol Mrs. Arthur Skin·
O HWI
her colwnn. Write Polly's mondale, Ohio, guest ner. Mrs. Rosc-oe Fowler and
Mr, Friendly
Pointers in care of this speaker. Special singing each Mrs. E. 0. Tewkshary to be
newspaper.
evening. Services at 7:30 c&lt;rhostesses.
nightly. The Rev. Mike
2'6" x4' x 2'8" •4'
VINYL LAMINATED
Southard, pastor, extends an
LOUVERED
FRUITWOOD- STEELITE
invitation to the public to
LADIES
attend.
HARRISONVILLE i..odge
Permonent contour steel
~~""'-Two-panel loover desion door
1-1/8" unfinished ponderosa pine doors
door wi!h heavy-;ouvo
o! 1-318" lh&lt;k unllnlshed pine.
411 F&amp;AM Saturday, 7:30
screen without blocking. Ch00$t from 2
vinyl finish . Mogne1k
Provides v11ntila1ed pt"ivocy.
sites.
p.m. at the temple. Work In
knch. Includes hlrdwore.
]PAtRs$139
master .mason degree:- All
2' X 6'8" X 1·3/8"
2'8" • 6'8" . Sam space.
YOUR
n\aster masom invited.
REGULAR 16.98
CHOICE
HYMN SING Saturday,
SALE
3·
MASON, W. Va. -Sunday 7:30 p.m. al the Freedom
PRICE
REGULAR 29.25
School attendance ·•I the Gospel Missioo, Bald Knobs.
Faith Baptist Church SUnday, Vocal
groqp,
The
'!6" X 6'8" X 1-3/8"
Feb. 'll was 54.
Messengers, to be featured.
A revival is being planned Public invited.
S]OOPAIR
SALE
for I!Je week of March 28 by
PRICE
MIDDLEPORT
Fire
Evangelist Herb Capehart, department public!ish fry, II
MEN'S
Schumacher
Leon, W. Va. with special a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, at
singers nightly.
·
fire department headquarChoir practice iS held each ters.
Sunday, 6:30 p. m. Services
'OOPAIR
SYRACUSE Methodist
are at 9:45 p. m. Sunday and
BOY'S&amp;
7:30 p. m. Sunday and OJUrch yooth group, I p.ril.
Saturday
to
collect
pop
TYLO .By btii1ll
Wednesday
by ' Ivan
MEN'S
•
eardweU, The Plains. Sunday bottles and caps in Syracuse.
CONVERSE
PASlAGE
LOCKSn
The
money
to
be
used
for
School is at 10:30 a. m.
Plain knob on either side with
The church is (l'esently summer camp funding.
no locking rriechonism.
meeting in the United Steel Bottles, caps and small
Green
&amp; Black
SALE PRICE
Workers
Union Hall, chnations will be accepted. '
BlACK
DIE CAST
Railroad St., between Horton
SUNDAY
~00
COLONIAL PULL
COLONNADE PULL
and Pomeroy Sts. Everyone
REVIVAL
NOW
in
• Weather8d &amp;tlilel pul l
• 5 W' loog
· • 3 y, " center
Is welcome to all services.
progress at Middleport
• AntiQue English flnial'1
SIMON'S
Church of the Nazarene
through Sunday, 7:30 nightly.
I
{;;)
REG. 7U 55~
The Rev. John Lanier is the
Pici&lt;-A-Pair
evangelist. The Glory Lan·
ders quartet will be featured
Pomeroy, 0.
OlE CAST
Friday through Somday and

~

TL The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Thursday, March 3, 1977

Porno must go say page ads
OOLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI ) A group of Columbus
l'elidents who believe their
ri8hts "are getting washed
away" today took out full
page ads in the city's two
dally newspapers caUing for
the removal of pornographic
llteralure from bookstands
and
magazine
racks
throughout the area.
The top headline in the .ad

Pizza party given

years old on Feb. 27, and her
brother, Eldon Kraeuter, 76
yeat'll old the same day, were
entertained with a potluck
dinner at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Tom.Nice.
Attending were Mrs. Opal
J!;ichinga:, Don and Laura
Jean, Chester; Mr. and Mrs.
CharleS Eichinger, Susie and
Barbara Fisher, Colwnbus;
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas II·
.lenick, Tommy and Barbara

Bananas keep in
aluminum wrap

DEAR POLLY- My problem is trying to remove rust
spots from venetian blinds. I
· have hied rust removers,
nail polish remQver,
powdered cleansers and a
cleaner with anuoonia but
nothing seems to remove the
spots. Does anyone have lillY
suggestions? MRS. R.J.D.
DEAR MRS. R.J.D. - I
preswne yours ·are metal
blinds. I have never found
anything that worked successfully for such spots as tbe
rust has probably eaten
through the original enamel
finish but I am sure if any
reader has the solution we
will be hearing about it and
will pass it on to you. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - I screw
old burned out light bulbs into
unused outside light sockets.
to keep them free of mud and
dirt. -J.D.P.
DEAR POLLY - I have
finally found a way to keep
bananas from ripening too
quickly. I used to always feel
they !lad to be eaten very
quickly but now I wrap each
. banana separatelx In
alwninwn foil, twist the ends
and then put tllem in the
refrigerator.! have had them
slay perfect for as long as two
weeks. -MRS. L.T.H.
DEAR POLLY - I am
answering the reader who inquired about mounting old
buttons. I have been collec-·
ling them since 1941 and have
over 7,000 in my collection.
Moat of my buttons are
IIIOIDlted in loose leaf albums
or scrap books. When mounting them· I use two sheets
together for extra support.
&lt;· So that each button stands
out more pi'ornlriently I draw
a double black line about one:
hall inch in from the edge of a
sheet and then line off the
center in blocks one or more
inches square, dependiing on
the size of the buttons. I then
BOARD TO MEET
place (!De button in . ea&lt;;h ·The board of the Meigs
block. If the buttons have . Unit, American Cancer
holes 1 sew them on with dou- Society, will meet at 7:30 p.
ble duty threlld· If the buttons m. Tuesday at the cancer
. have shanks 1press the shank office, located in the
through the sheet and insert 8 basement of the former
safety pin of the proper size county children's home
on the back Ill secure the but- building. The unit is
ton. On the back of the sheet I preparing for the aMual
writewheretheywerebought crusade and any person
or who gave them to me, willing to work as voiWlteer
prices and any other impor- is asked to attend Tuesday
tantinfonnaUon.
night's meeting. Also any
Trays covered with velvet person wiJIIng to serve as a
can be bought and then stack· volunteer but unable to •be
ed in shallow drawers but this .present Tuesday is asked to
can be expensive if one has phone 99~, or the cani:er
many buttons. Many of mine office, 992-7531, Tuesdays or
are on their original cards Thursdays from I to 4 p. m.

MASON FURNITURE

54 attend

LOUVER DOOR

FOLDING DOOR

PANTY HOSE

CAFE DOORS

"Colwnbua atlzena Take
No
Pride
In
the
Advertisement: 'Colmnbus,
The Home of the HusUer."'
Richard H. Trelease,
director of Missions df the
Melrod poUlan Church Board

:0:0

Public Morallty, said the r
of the advertiament
was not aimed specificaliy at
HU$11er magazine and its ~:3
publisher Larry Flynt.
However, he said the recent
publlclty concerning Flynt's ....,..,....
coovictlon in Cincinnati of
paridering obscenity and
dealing in organized crime,
..d made the publisher "a
sort of anti-hero" In a batUe
over freedom of the press.
.., "We simply said to one
1
'_... aother
'aren't there some
' we have as private
• • rights that
: ~ dtizens that somehow are
· ~ tettfng washed away'," said
' Trelease.
"Part of what has
. ·,
' • happened is that several
. ,' people had some bad
experiences with Hustler
magazine in particular," he
said. "The kind of experience
where a family walks into a
drug store and all of a sudden
IIW'Jl()ae

a

:~:· 33~

t

TYLO By btiiid
PRIVACYLOCISET •

'Prescription~

l@lecoratille

COLONIAL KNOB

Interior tumbutton ond plcin

• 1 '!~ " dia meter

exterior

• Srhan . Distinctive

with

;}brdv:am ~¥,I5'e'""fP

BLACK

emergency key-

way.

PoUIIIID
IUSS

Service
with a

~\~E

~me rock

37~

I'OliiiiD IUSS
&amp; a.olll

333 ~~\~e 311

BlACK

8T£EL

.

COLONNADE HINGE

COLONIAL HINGE

,OlIN Ill

FOl OYULA,P!NG DOOIS

OYULAPPINO DOOIS
• Antique English fi nis h

• Black. weathered ste•l

smile ...

• AntiQue Eng li ah finl1h

• For 3/ 8'' Inset doors

TYLO By btii1ll

ENTRY LOCKsn

•

Tumbutton interior. bferlor
key in knob.

-

SALE PRICE

Need o prescription fjllecl? We will fill
any prescription quiclcly ·and accurately.

for
SPRING
Nylon or Poplin

WIND BRWERS
From

$7,

To

sggs

WE ALSO HAVE

I

GOOD SELECTION OF

Ame-ri~n

(annon (rat•
CARDS FOR EASI'ER lo: PARTY SUPPUEs

FREE
-

SH1RTS
MEN.'S
SHORT SLEEVE

SHIRTS
From S]W To

LOUYIRED SHUmRS

NIGHTLATOI
WHILETHEYLASTTO
THE FIRST 2110 CUSTOMERS
COUPON

-

Ladies, just present this eoupon for your
FREE trial size · of Coly's Spring
Fragrance or Revlon Intimate
Fragranee. HURRY IN NOW WHILE
111EY LAST.

71NCH x20 INCH
INSERT PANEL

7"120"

lndependenl Lock

SHunERS

Pilll ohU!ten art Jouvmd !o .·
ponnk
ond air circulolion. R
10 pain! or lloln.

::1,'

Revertible - lotch for doots
1\14'' to 21!•''.

REG. ~.59

\

·!BONUS(

REG.

3.19

.'

277

fin

244

ot window. Un.
Lis• fabric, l!onl,

HOLLOW CORE
LAUAN

FLUSH DOORS

Verso!lle door con olso be used
... !able, desk lop. Ready "'
point or stain.

2' 16'1" X I·J/1"

2~~

REG.
2.89

EACH

BEl~~~

AVAILABLE

'

~ ...

.......

SHUnER

COUPON GOOD ONLY ATDum&gt;N DRUGSTORE
MIDDLEPORT!).

wn.

For

(Ltuhordwort).

Door

SAlE
PRICE

1088

r•" .,.... •1·1/1"
SAl!

PRICE

1133

POMEROY·CEMENT
BLOCK CO.
\

$415

Dutton Drug Store
122 N. 2nd Ave.
992·3106

The Department Store of BuUding Since 1915

Middleport
~

\'

•

Bollen

By Jewel Welch
I like my job of being a ·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ::: :: ::::::::::~:·:·;;: ·: ·:·:·:·:·:: .
Senior Friend because i\ has
given me the privilege of
meeting many nice people.
They are sincere In their
confidence in me when I visit
and try to bring some cheer
into their day. I know from ·
personal experience that
when someone assures you
there is a better way a
problem ·can be worked out,
you do feel better. ! also enjoy
working with my co-workers,
The Meigs County Bookour
coordinator
and roobile t:ifers many services,
secretary. And I have learned Mrs. Vilma Pikkoja, director
much at our training of the unit, said today. She
workshops that can help my made these points:
friends and myself.
- Like a millionaire living
In the middle of January in poverty and leaving his
during the snow a,nd freezing fortune untouched, an
&gt;
"
weather we began to plan our average American, or even
main holiday activity for Imre suprlsingly , an average
February which was a Meigs Countian, is often
Valentine Party for our maware of the real wealth at
friends at the Athens his disposal that he never
Hospital. After clearing uses.
things 'hith the staff, we were · -Money from taxes is not
ready to start. First, we lnwnded to be removed from
decided what to have in circulation. Quite the conrefreslunents, decoration and trary, it is to he concentrated
entertainment. It was fom in various services for the
helping make invitations, benefit of the people.
decorating plates, cups, and
-When two years ago a
engineering estimates.
the usual favors. When the contract was written between
Officials of the Milam firm weather kept us from going the Meigs County School
will now formally tabulate . on our regular day, we went District library Board and
the bids and make recom- on an alternate day so that the Ohio Valley Area
mendations during meetings everything would get libraries (OVAL) a tax
on February 14. The finished. During this time, we dollar that the Meigs County
Development AuthorKy will also had regular personal Board invested was matched
. meet for a noon session on conllicts with our friends.
by approximately 30 more
that date and then ·.Point
February 14 was a wo&amp; chllars.
Pleasant CoWlcil will hold an derful. We sang valentine
- A year of active service
evening meeting to conSider related songs, two poems
lids submitted on its project. were read by patients, and
another told the history oo the
beginning d. Valentine's Day.
The movie ''Red, White, and
Bluegrass" (country music)
was well received. We had
refreshments of cookies,
mints, and punch. Piano
music was furnished by a
COuPle of friends at the
women, age groups, regions hospital. Two door prizes of
blge red hearts were also
or city size.
won.
Slightly more than a third
Oh yes, we must not forget
(38 percent) of the adults 21
new
friends we have at Ar·
and older had heard of the docadia
Nursing Home in
it-yourself test for colorectal
Coolville.
They are a woncancer and other gastroderful
group
and seem to
intestinal disease. There is no
enjoy
our
friendship.
One of
data from earlier years for.
our
co-workers,
Wilma
cOmparison. One in eight
adults (14 percent) said Sargent, has already started
they'd had the test, and about a craft skill in the form of
·half of these (8 percent) making small entrance rugs
reported they had it in 1976 . . out of strips made from bread
Knowledge of the proc- wrappers.
We wish to thank the staff
toscopic examination for
It
the Athens Hospital and
colorectal cancer was
Arcadia
Nursing Home for
slightly lower in the 1976
the
warm
welcome and
survey than in 1974. The
assialance
they
give us in
decline was from 61 percent
being
a
friend.
to 56 percent.

"

survey showing that 93
percent had heard of it, as
opposed to 87 percent in the
1974 survey, 78 percent in
1963.
The proportion of women
who've had the test is now 80
percent as opposed to only 48
percent in 1963. Fewer nonwhite women (60 percent)
than white women (82 percent) have had tile test in
1976.
Knowledge of the chest xray e18rnlnation for cancer
was about 90 percent among
aU adults, compared to 88
percent in 1974, and 83 per·
cent in 1963 with no
significant differences in
awareness between men and

Staton. major owner of the
Inn , and Heald, acti ng
manager , said the dome
restaurant
has
been
remodeled in a bright red and
gold colo r scheme. Ne w
carpeting has been inatalled

Driver cited
to city court

REMOVE SEX
COLUMBUS (U P! )
Seventeen members of the
Ohio House, led by Rep.
Virginia Aveni, D-Lynhurst,
in trod uced
leg islat ion
Wednesday to take sex out of
the Ohio Revised Code. It
changes the words "widow"
to " surv iving spouse 11 ;
11
mothe r" to 11 parent"·;
"man" or " woman" to
"person," " mem ber" or
"secretary " and "fireman "
to "fire fighter ."

Mary S. Baldwin, 54, Crown
City, was cited to Gallipolis
Municipal Court for driving
left of the center following a
traffic accident Wednesday
on Hannan Trace Rd. five
tenths of a mile west of Rt. 7.
The Gallia-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said
Baldwin's car sideswiped an
auto operated by Russell
Nitz, 63, Pomeroy. There was

·'hith more Door space for
dining.
The Inn has scheduled a
formal open house on Mardi
211. There are 90 rooms ready
for occupancy. alid 11 ef.
fec iency apartments have
bee n created. Heald in·
dicated that on the 31 acres of
land included with the IM,
apartmen ts will be con!tructed. The Inn will he
landscaped as soon as the
weather permits.
Heald, a former deputy
!lleriff of Ironton, Is coordinating the projects. Mrs.
Mildred
Son ger , who
operated a restaurant, "The
Patio" in Ironton for over 17
years , will be in charge of the ,
food and restaur ant purmasing.

Sa¥e up to s8.91 on the No.1 MUL1'1·
VITAMINS with MINERAt.S PRODUCT

In REXALL STORESI7leXi1/(

SUPER. . . .
Mulfi.Vftlmlnl with Mlnlrlll
BUY 2111d SAVE BUY 2 end SAVE BUY 2 and SAVE
S1.81 2 boltlel of S4.81 2 bottlel of $8.91 2 bottlel of
38 In Twin Pick ?21n Twin PICk 1441n Twin PICk

on this contract warrants a
report of services .offered and
delivered and maybe - an
acc ountin g of services
onused and availabl e to
Meigs Co111tians. In otherwords, it is your report on the
company.. You are a
stockholder. Take stock of
your wealth, Meigs Countians.
THE BOOKMOBILE ,
M1ich also serves Jackson
and Vinton Counties last year
circulated 109,901 volumes.
One of the big boosters of
the onit is Pat Winebrenner
who has been attending
classes at Ohio University
and found tbe bookmobile
staff invaluable in providing
many books needed for her
independent study. One day
Pat gave the bookmobile staff
a list of some 12 boQks on the
theater and drama and the
next day, 'the bookmobile
staff had them for her.
She comments that the unit
has so much materfal on
hand , not only available but
material which would be far
beyond the costs a student
could afford to buy.
Do you have a speical book
need? If so, just contact the
Meigs
Bookmobile
Headquarters at 992-3745.

1

VOOUI
a nee

VOGUE 'S CUSHIONED SUNDANCE
Total ly cas ual with grac eful lines 'to accent
your ye ar-round wa rd robe. The go-a nywhere,
do-anything s hoe rid es high on a soft c ush ion
lor yo ur ali-day feet. Comfo rt a nd fashion like
you 've neve r seen befor e.
Availabl e In : 1-javy Blue, Red. BoneS. While

MARGUERITE'S SHOES
BETTY OHLINGER
POMEROY, O.

102 E. MAIN ST.

Buy now! Its a better idea.

Upt0$186*offon ·
Limited Edition
Ford Pinto.

Special Limited Edition Features
You get standard Pinto features .. . plus
these sale-priced extras:
• Bright Window Moldings
• Styled Steel Wheels/Trim Rings
• Lower Body Tu·Tone Paint
• Over· the· Roof Dwat Paint Stripe
• AII'Giaas Third 0001 (3·Door Pinto Runabout)
• All that, PLUS .. . Flip-Up Removable Open Air Roof
Also, see the Limited Edition Pinto Wagon models.
•More t~bout price: Sal e prices ba sed on th e difference between
tradilionat.manulacturer's suggested re tail pricing ot options
purchased separa tely and as a pa ck age.

\·

Pinto 2-Door Sedan also available
wllh lllp-up open air rool.
This Limited Edition leatur e gives yo u a choice
of ways to en joy the sun and flesh air, In the Pinto
Runabout or 2-0oor Sedan. And il's easily
removable for a " convertibl e" feeling whenever
YOlJ !e el like it. See your Ford Dealer now for a
greal buy on a Uml!ed Edl1ion Pinta.

It's
I

llelte&lt;
kiN

'Kenni1!i MCCulloltli, M. Pit. Dlerlot ltifflo, R. Ph.
Ronold Hannl111, R. Pfl.
Mton.lhru Slot. I:De1.m. to tp.m.
Suncfly 10:3010 12:301nd S!of p.m.
PH.tn-2955
•
l'rlontlly S.rvlco

PRESCRIPTIONS
E.MAUl

~NIP.tatUt'

.... _____ .......-2$

POMEROY.•"-; i

.... ·-------·~

i

,..................................... i'

Specially equipped, specially priced models
of the best..selling car in its class.

l

l

POINT PLEASANT Ongoing developme nt
(I'Ojects at the Point Pleasant
Inn wer.e described for the
Kiwanis Cl ub here Tuesday
evening by Fred Staton and
Jim Hea ld.

Bookmobile minor dsmage.

About half of population
.. had health checks in. 1976
Anew Gallup survey for the
American Cancer Society
just released found that
nearly half of a represen-.
tatlve sample o( Americans
had health checkups In 1976.
The survey, completed last
December, also showed that
nearly aU adult women in:terviewed know about the
Pap · test, and Breast SelfExamination.
In the same survey a
majority of cigarette
smokers (71 percent of those
who smoke a pack or more a
day) said they wouid stop if
urged to do so by their
physicians. Moreover, about
. half of the eHmokers in·
lerviewed (49 percent) said
that If called upon, they
would be willing to help
others lltop smoking. Among
smokers of at least a pack a
day who plan to stop
1111oklng, 55 percent said they
would like such help to stop
IIIIOking.
Awareness of breast
examination to detect cancer
continuos to lncrease, the
December survey showing
.that 90 percent of the women
21 and over had hearo of the
procedure, compared to 87
perCent in 1974, and 83 percent in 1963. The proportion of
women having had breast
examlnatioo at some time
increased to 75 percent
compared to 67 percent in
.1974 and 43 percent In 1963.
. Women reporting having had
a breast examination for
cancer in 1976 totalled ~~
percent or about the same· as
in 1974 (48 percent).
· More than nine out of 10
women uid they had heard of
breast self examination,
repreten~ a gain over the
a percent who reported
awarenea of the practice In
1974. About three out of four
11Ullen uld they had done
88E compand to ea percent
I
Ill the 1974 surveys. However,
e1J one in lour say they do
1
' • at least once 1 month,
I _,.nc~ to 21 percent 1n
I ltl4, 18 pertenl In 1973, and 14
fli cent in 1970.
.
Jlore of the women (63
,
.,.eent) than of the men (31
·- ~ parcent) reported having had
'l~ ubeck-ap In Jtml. It was also
• found that about half (45
percent) ltl 1 complete
btaltb check-up yearly.
A n - of the Pap test
for cervical cancer Ia almolt
Ullivenal among women, the

Projects at inn reported

compensation

•
serwces

POINT PLEASANT- Bids contractors are in their slow
·to construct the Point season.
The
Mason
County
.Pleasant water system
Development Authority was
~ened here Tu~sd~y af' lernoon came in ap- not so fortunate with its bids
proXimately $400,000 under to construct a 60.7 acre l&amp;
dustrlal Park. That project,
the estimate.
Mayor John C. Musgrave . !Wich was advertised with
and John Hart, J. H. Milam the city water system work,
Inc. engineer, credited the had bids totaling about
low bids to timing them when $21,000 higher than the

21~?

TENNIS SHoES

By

Senior friend
tells why she
likes her job

worker' s

fraud scheme.
crew pleaded . guilty to
forgery, three counts of
grand theft and uttering ·
Issuing false statements.
Cuyahoga County Common
Pleas Judge Roy Mcmahon
dropped 10% other charges
against Crew . Kozma
pleaded guilty to two
counts of grand theft aod
Common Pleas Judge
!,loyd Brown dropped 17
other charges.

Bids come in under estimate

DRESS SHOES

.

magazine racks throughout
the metropolitan area of our
community.
" Families , churches ,
schools -and youth groups
should be encouraged to
educate children and youth
toward healthy forms of
sexually which puts persons
above objects to be used and
abused.

has many

.-

144

3466

FUNNY BUSINESS

SEE 1Hitr Tt-E C(aiT'iCS LA6E!L.. THE.
IUVUI.- PLA-It~ I~)OtSI~ ...'A ~TIN~
~! ~v: ,im':n"g;~ PiE~E OF Ft:JROO I..OilH '-lO ~e()eE'Nll~
a . group called atizens for 1~~f~lij1~/J;~ir-;:SO~E~V_:E~FZ.:!~

Sunday school

BOYS BOOTS &amp;
DRESS SHOES

points of affront."
The ad urged :
"That every family in our
community should stress
their right to rear children in
an atmosphere which Is free
from
pollution
by
pornography.
" That pornographi c
literature should be removed
from bookstands and

reads:

Polly's Pointers

FRIDAY UNnL 5 PM

there it is obvioW~Iy In front of
them alllj they are standin~
next to somebody paging
through Jt."
"This is aimed at
pornography that is reaching
new hounds and rather boldy
being displayed in the public
arena," said Trelease. "It is
basically aimed at any
magazine that reaches those

TWO PLEAD GUILTY
CLEVELAND (UP)) Dr. William E. Crew, o
Cleveland ph ysician, and
Dr. Emil Kozma, a
chiropractor from Lynd..
hurst , pleaded guilty
Wednesday to submitting
phony bills as part of the
multi-million-dollar state

.

.

Buy_ or lease now at your
Ford Decder Limited Edition Sale.

�'
1- Tbe Dally Senlinel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., ThW'sday, March 3,1977

'Buy, Sell or Trade Through The Sentinel Want Ads
PUBLIC NOTICE
sea ted bids W1ll bE' rece1vec
In the uffice of the VillagEClerk. Second Street, Vtlloge
O.f Pom e roy , Oh10 until 17
O'clock noon on March 7. 1977,
for the following propos~ I

For the purchase of a 1977

dtese l engine dr tven rubber
ti red Indust rial tractor loader
backhoe complete with

the

r.unufacrurer•s
standard
accessor.es . All components
and .accessories shall be new.
unused, servtced &amp;nd ready
tor operation upon delivery A
oea ler 's representative shall
r.trOIIide instruction In the

proper operalton and main
tenance at the t.me of
del t't'ery One set of parts ,
maintenance and ope rator 's
manuels shall be provided
The dealer and manufac

turer shall prov1de a one year
Wi!rran ty 1nc lud1ng parts and
tabor for th~ traC tor and at
tachments supplied
The
warran tv penod shall not
llm•t operating hours
1, Further spec ifications
will be on f•le Wtlh the Vt!!age
Clerk, Second Street , Village
of Pomeroy , Oh10
2 For sa e by the VIllage of
Pomeroy Its 1969 Ford
Backhoe With a front end
loader and 1959 Wayne Street
Sweeper

WANT ADS

INFORMATION
DEADLINES
PM . Dav
Before
Publ ication .
correc
Cancellation&amp;.
rt ons accepted first dll'JI of
publication .
REGULATIONS
The PubliSher reserves
lhe nght to edit or relect
any ads deemed ob
jectlonat The publisher
will not be respons ible for
more than one Incorrect
1nsert1on
R:ATES
For Want Ad Service
S cents per word one
•nsertton
Mmlmum Charge S1 00
14 cents per word three
consecutive insertions .
2:6 cen'ts r,er wotd siK
consecut ive nsertlons
25 Per Cent Discount on
paid ads and • ads paid
wit!'\ In 10 days
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
S2 00 for so word
rlnlm~m

Eac
cents

aadltlonal word 3

BLIND AOS
Additiona l 2Sc Charge
per Aelverttsement
OFFICE HOURS
8 30 a .m . to 5. 00 pm
Ol!llly, 8 •30 am to 12 oo
Noon Sat urday
Phone today 992 2156

Th e b•dder may state either
Wh81 he Wtll g ive for the 1969
Ford Backhoe wiTh front end
loader and 19.59 St r eet
Sweeper or whaf amount he
NOTICES
Will allow as a trade m tor t he
ATTN :It
1977
lnd uStfla l
trl!tctor
ALL HOUSEWIVES
described above
All Y11 rd S11tes . Rumm age,
Each bidder may b•d for
Porc;,h and Basement Porch
e1ther th e purchase of the 1969
and Basemen t Sales, etc
Ford Backhoe w•lh front end
must be paur 1n advance
loader and 195 9 wavne Street
Get rours in ear ly by
Sweeper or for the sate to the
stopping by our offi ce at
Village of Pomeroy of a 1977
The Dally Sentinel, 111
lndustrtal Tractor de scribed
court
St or wr •ting Box
above or both Each bid must
729. Pomeroy , Oh to 45769
contain the full name of every
wit h your rem tttance
person or company Inte rested
•n the same, and the bid must
be accompan1ed by a chE!ck or
bond tn the sum of S100 00 to
the satisfac llon of the Vt lla ge
Counctl as a guaranty that •'
the btd Is accepted , contract THANKS TO Mrs Stella Thoma s
wil l be en te red 1n1o and 1IS
for be1ng chotrmon , Bob
performance properly
Hoefhch , Publtc•ty, ond our
secured
many frtends who helped Floro
These checks or bonds will
Bmley
1n gettmg leg brace ond
be r eturned at once to all
~pee tal shoes plus the Cnppled
e)(cept the successful bidd er
Children s Soc1ely
H 1S checks or bond Wtll be held
_ __
until the cont ra ct or btd ts Floro Bo•ley.
propertv elCecuted by h•m
WISH to thank the staff of
The rtght is reserved to
Veterans Memonol Hosp ttol ,
reject any and all bid s
Dr Blezew tcz Also thank you
Jane Wa lton , CIE!rk
for oil the cords coils pryers
VILLAGE OF POMEROY
and gtfts I recer... ed whtle I "'t'os
s•ck.
God bleu you all
(2J 24 131 3, 2tc
EmmoAdoms
PURCHASE OF THREE
SCHOOL BUSES
FOR
MEIGS LOCAL BOARO
OF EDUCATION

Board of Education
of Metgs Loca l Sc hool
DISirt tiS
Jane Wagner
Cle rk Treas urer of
Me•gs Local Sc hool
Dtstrtct
South Tht rd Avenue
Middleport. Ohto 45760
(2) 24 (3) 3. 10, 17, Ate

PUBLIC NOTICE
Offers wtll be received at
the Offlc~ ot Bernard V. Fultz,
Pomer oy Nat•ona l Bank
Building , Po meroy , Ohio, until
saturday , March 5, 1977 , at
1 10 .00 O'Clock AM , for the
' sate of the L1111an Stleff real
1 estate,
situated at 570 s
Second A-wenue , Middleport.
Ohio The real esf.!tte consists
of a two story frame dwell ing,
w1th Brooms and 2 bathrooms .
The Guard ia n rese rves the
r ig ht to reject any or all bids .

Astro-

SKATE A WAY
ANNOUNCES
Schedule. Open Weds , Fndey
and Saturday mghts , 7 30 p.m.
hit 10 p m
Avatloble for
pnvote port1es . Monday Tues
and Thursday ntghts and Sotur·
dov ond Sundoy afternoons
Phone 985-3929 or 985-9996.
SHOOTING MATCH, Rutland
Leg ton ~aU _!._2 ~o~n Sunday

ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 11)
Don t take thmgs for granted to·
day They could turn out to be
thorns in the flesh. Be extremely
detatl-consctou s

LOST · TREEN and Welker coon
hound dog , lost in Chester
Mole, block ond wh1te , tog wtl h
name Harten Mtlls' Coli
Lester Parker 985·3661
LOST In Pomeroy oreo femole
dog 7 mos old , while wtth
bloc~ spots Her head is oil
block Reword Family pet Ph
9'12-7085
LOST MALE S1berton Huskte
onswers lo nome ' Sandr ' Lost
tn vlctn•ly ol Bu nker H1ll Rood
Phone 992·7889
FOU ND TRI COLOR fema le
beagle Phone 985·4244

-

-

--

..

IF YOU hove a serviCe to offer,
wont to buy or sell somelhmg ,
ae looktng for work
or
whatever, . you II get results
faster wtlh a SenttnE:I Want Ad
Coll 992 2156 .

I --

p-~~12:~¥¥:~.
- - :=.-=--- :..-

HOOF HOLLOW Buy , sell , trade
or tram horses RUTH REE VES
_trat ner .Pho~e_( 614)698 3290
AKC COLLIE Puppies sable ond
whtle 1 male and 2 fema les .
Hove been wormed and shots
started
Coli 949 2571
weekdays after 4 p m or
on~~ e~ So~u!~X~~ Sunday

ST ARC RAFT Winter pnces on
mt nt s trollers ond fold downs .
We sell servtee ond quai1fy
Open Sundays Camp Conley
Storcroft Rt 62 N Pt Pleasant

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

WANTED
Mill Right

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sop1. 22) Don't
raise ISsues over little things wtth
your mate today You re better
on going along with the deal

with foreman
capability. Willing
to do production

LIBRA (Sop1. 23-0c1. 23) Plan
all your moveS carefully today. A
small factor overlooked could
later balloon mto a much larger
problem

work.

Call 446-8570
or 992-5965

SCORP10 (Oct. 24-No•. 22)
Even though friends may try to
draw you mto a condemnation of
so meone , don't partrclpate
What's said wilt get back to her
8AOITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc.
21) One who's a bit resentful of
you wlll undermtne you It you do
somethmg she can talk about
Keep your guard up today

PUBLIC NOTICE
In com plia nce wtth Sectton
121 (b) (lJ of the State and
Local FISCal ASStStllj'lCe Act of
1972, the
governmental
authorities respons ib le for
preparing a budget wtll hOld a
hear ing on how the Revenue
Sharing Funds are to be used
in the 1977 appropriation It
- . h 4, 1177
has bl!!l!!n proposed by VIllage
Council that the ntne .month An Interesting propositton with
allocation of $11,200 OObe used far-reaching possibilities could
as follows
.
come to you thts year Get
Tennis Courts. ss,ooo 00. everything In wntl ng before comwater condition ing, SLOOOOO .
Recreation , S500 00 ; Fi re mltlng yourself
Department equtpment ,
(Are you a Pisces? Bernice
Sl ,OOO 00 ; Street ma intenance
Osol has written a special Attroand nsurfaclng, J3,700
Th is hearing will be he ld at Graph Letter for you. For yout
Middleport VIllage Counctl copy send 50 ce"'' tnd a seH/ Chambers at 237 Race Street eddre,.ed, stamped '"velope to
at 7 30 PM , March lA, 1977 Asrro-Grsph, P 0 Box 489,
Gene Grate,
Clerk Treasurer Rsdjo C1ty Station, New York,
VIllage of Mldd ~port N Y 10019 Be lure 10 Uk lor
Pllctl Volume 5.)
·
Mar 3 (1 fime)

~~m
~~

•(

Sentinel c.rier
Wanted In
Syracuse Area.

Free Priles.
Phone 992·2156.
'

MOtOR ROUTE

DRIVER NEEDED
IN
WEST VIRGINIA
Across
from
Pomeroy- Middleport
area by the Daily
Sentinel.

CAU
992·2156
For Appointment

, ,'
•I

SWAIN'S
1976 VEGA ESTATE
S3595
Like new white finish , automat ic, alr conditioning ,
power steering. radio and tape, luggage ~ack, radial
tires, less than 10.000 miles

IMUIIIiol Senices
F-•tA-

Iftn inlfW* &amp;AHICS
STOIII
1111111011$ ' !lOOn

1976 MALIBU CPE .
13848
Automatic, air C'?fldl tion lng, 8 cylinder, powr r steering
and brakes. radto, good rubber, ligh t green.

AUIIIIIUII
SIDII1G-5Gf'fiTT

~.M.

~
~

OPEN EVES. 8:00
POMEROY, ,OHIO ·

Located in Langsville
Box 28- A
R uttand, Oh1o 4$175
Ph ( "4 ) H2•2409
We Deliver
12 22 "'mos

Superior
Steam Extraction

Young's Carpeting

Young's Carpeting

Route 3, Pomeroy, 0.

1972 NOVA 4 crogar mags Ex
cellen t condtt •o n
Phon e
992 22S7
1970 2 OR Che11elle tn good con·
dtt10n $850 See ot b05 W Motn
St Pomeroy , Oh•o
350 CHEVROLET engine , excellent
runnmg cond1tton , $150 complete Phone 992-3502
1972 CHEVY VAN
Phone
992 7lJB9
1974 CJ5 RENEGADE Jeep , 19,000
mtles l1ke new condttlon
$3200 Phone 9~9 2860
1976 PLYMOUTH Volare 4 dr
sedan, vmy l roof, low mtleoge
outomot•c. 6 cylinder , e~ecelle nl
shape Phone I (6 14) 378·63 12
19b9 PONTIAC otr cond1110ned
56 000
excellent condtflon
mtles $950 Call992-2987
197b V W Robb1t , Am·FM , CB
rodtos roof ro.ck Rodtol ltres
plus pa1r of rod1al snow lt res
15 000 miles $3200 Coli
992-2776.

1969 CHEVROL ET 8tsquotne, 1966
BUICK Electro 225 2 Rolo.on
tnolbtk es. Phone 9-49 2432
1975 FIREBIRO outomoltc, power
steenng power brakes, bUilt m
tape deck Phone 949-2722 for
more tnformat ton
1976 OLDSMOBII E ~torftre P s
p b ,
7000 mtles
Phone
843·2698
1971 VW Super Beetle Phone
843·2613
1968 CUTLASS Supreme, 350
engme
p s, O lf,
Phone
992-7BMil

t'orSale - -:. '

ry

.

- -

-

F'llrlli!IIt~
- ·::.

3 AND 4 RM fur n1s hed ond un·

lurntshed opts . Phone
5434

~2

COUNTRY Mob1le Home Park Rt.
33 ten mtles north ol Pomero y
Large lots wtth concrete pollos,
s1dewolks runn e rs ond off
s!reet pork mg. Phone 992 7479
2 BEDROOM house 1n Rutlond.
Coll992-5858

New Co · OP water sof .
teners, model VC -SVI
Only 1279 95
One good chatn Homehte
Cha1n Saw.. ..
SllO.OO
Sa~re
sso oo on a new
Hotpomt Refrtgerator
1 Good Used Hotpolnt
Range
S100

P•eq Landmark

9.

----

~-

--

- -~--

- --

.--- --

--

-

II)

'279.95

.»/:~Co~~

DAR~

'iOU,f:ASY! WHY MU~T
YOUSE SO liUWlEADED': CAN'T
~OU SEE WHAT A I;I&lt;&amp;AT TEAM
WE'D MAKE~

REASONABLE

RATES

Reedsville, 0. Ph. 378-6250

PHOTOGRAPHY
Aerial
Commercial
Schools
Weddings

QUI TE A PICTURE

YOU PAI'-Jr,
5WEET1E ~

WEST
4 K J 65
•K 8763
t9 6

Will do odd tobs , roottng pmn
ling gutter work Phone 992·
7409.
eveni~t~s
SE WING ALTERATIONS
Blown in tiberglass walls
Upho l!'i te r1 ng ,
drapes
and
illlcs. 20 Pel. S.Viii\1S
reasonable 572 South Thtrd
on
Vinyl
and Steel Sidi...,s.
Ave . Mtdd leport
Phone
Repa.c:ement and storm
992-6306
PORTABLE WELDER , Iorge and windows. 33 years ac:tual
small 1obs Con also thaw expeirence.
Ftn1ncing Available
frozen water pipes Phone
C. A. Newman. Pres.
949 26A6
1 25 I mo., pd .
HA VE YOUR !o)(es done by an ac
counlont Also now occept1ng
bookkeepmg Phone 992 6206
or 992 ·6173
INCOME TAX Servtce Wallace,
Ru sse ll ,
Bradbur y
Call ONE LOT in Syracuse Phone
992-3714
992·7228
DEPENDABLE SERVICE Get your TUPPERS PLAINS Oh1o New
three bedroom house, ltvmg
furna ce cleaned ond service
room, Iorge kttc hen cerom1c
now Save money thts wmter
both, carpeted , attached
Phone 843 2165.
goroge, Iorge tot $22,900
Phone (614) 6b7·bJ04
39 ACRE Form 20 ocres hlloble
SIX room house, both furnace
born, shed, corncrlb , 'ellor
AUCTION . FRIOAY 6 30 p m New
house basement loyed up for
dmette sel5 and other new ond
another ho use Also, 12 )( 60
used merc hondtse of th e Auc
mce mob1le home .nduded , 1f
t1on House Horton 51 Mason
not sold prevtously Pmed and
Pt1one (30.4) 773·5471
shown by oppomtment Coli
(614)667 3866
72 ACRES , partly fenced , 8 room
Saf~~-~~~ remode led house, full bose·
men!, fuel otl , forced 01r heel
COUNTRY formland wtth sec.lud·
ut•l•ty room , c:orport and
ed woods, water ond good oc
storage room Phon&amp; 742-2819
cess 1n Monroe Countv, W Vo
535 000
$1 000 down , c:all (304) 772·
10
to 20 ACRES off New L1ma
_3!~-0~(30
_4_
) 7_72_3227:-'---Rood . JERRY CLINE . CONCommerCial property appro)( . 17
STRUCTION Phone 992·7790.
ocre5 , level land located ot
Tuppers Plains on Oh•o, Route REMODELED 5 ROOMS ond both, I
ocre land Phona 742 2769
7 Phone (614) 667 ·6304
-- - 1
3 bedrooms, 1 /, baths , Iorge hv•ng room, dtntng room ond ki t
chen fully carpeted Phone
992 3129 "'992 ·S43A.
NEW 3 bedroom house but!t-m
kttchen, bath ond lfJ Phone
742 ·2306 or contact M1IO 8 Hut·
chtson, Rutlond, Oh1o .
~

..._....._~

---- ------

tt.ia! EBIHiefer

~

~-

TEAFORD

SOUTH iDI
4 AI074
• J 10
t AKQ
o1o A K Q3
North-South vulnerable

OI&lt;AY TREE! I
GUESS 11-iAT MAKES
US EVEN!

Roofing &amp; Siding
Room Additions
Garages
Homes BuiH

Virgil B. Sr., Rullor
216 E. Second SlrNt
Pomeroy, Olllo 45769
Phone m-3325
FINE HOME - Solid 9
room stucco home, 3
bedrooms with dosels, nice
equipped kitchen and
dining . Full basement,
good coal furnace, 2 car
garage wlfll storage, nice
wrner lot on RI. 124 at

$35.000.
NEW LISTING - 11 room
Irick In Middleport out ol
flood. Has A bedrooms, 2
baths, nat gas furnace,
basement, front and back
i»"Ches . Over 1 acre of
land. $13,000.
PAGEVILLE - 1 room
frame home with 3
bedrooms, 2 boths, front
porch, nice siding and
g11rden In back. $7,500.
MIDDLEPORT A
bedrooms, 2 baths, frame
house on 4~120 corner lot.
All utilities and nice view ol
lite Ohio River. $12,000.
IV• ACRES Large 4
bedroom home with If&gt;
blllh on Rl. 1 In Tuppers
Plat ... . Good location for a
business Only $12.000
LOOK HERE - New 3
bedroom brick veneer,
dining with glau doors, 2
car gar age and almost one
acre of nice laying land.
REDUCED.
FAE E GAS - With tile
Mil, all mlnerol•. bllrn, old
house, 115 acres with 90
fenced. Good hunllng and
flshlll\1 . Would like $30,000
ALL HIRED HANDS WILL
TRY TO SELl THE
PROPERTY THAT YOU
LIST W1TH US.

POMEROY,

0.

I NEW LISTING - Brick
ll!lnd frame about 4 years
~d. 4 nice BR, modern
blllh, large kitchen, NG
furnace and central alr
mnd., carpeting, paneling,
112 acre. S28,SOO.OO.
NEW LISTING- About 2
miles out, 6 acres with 1
room home. 3 bedrooms,
bllth, dining room , nice
kitchen , lovely paneling
and carpeting, 2 car
garage, other buildings.
tl7,234.00.
LOOK - Nice level lot ..:.
1'17 story frame home has 2
bedrooms, bath, dining
room, bll•emenl, fireplace
ln living room, verv nice
neighborhood . ASKING
$14,000.00 ..
NICE FARM- 103 acres.
25 flllable, 15 pasture, 60 ln.
flmber , 3,000 lb. tobacco
bllse, 7 room, 5 bedrooms,
blllh. large barn and sheds.
tl1,666.00 .
MIDDLEPORT - Corner
tot wt1h Iorge 2112 story
frame home, 5 bedrooms,
blllh. carpeting, porches,
carport. 18,500.00
POMEROY - Buy this and
pay the ,..,nl to yourself. No
car needed lust walk to
shop. 3 bedrooms, bath,
utility room, carpeting,
ponellng, porches Only

•• liiO.OO.
PHONE "2-225f NOW
AND IN A FEW DAYS
YOUR PROPERTY WILL
BE SOLD.
HENRY I. CLELAND
BROKER

r

North East

South

Pass

3 N T. Pass

2N T
Pass

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
The Professor looked at h1s
Jack·lO of hearts w11h a Jaundiced eye If only he could
g1ve one of them to dummy he
would have an easy two heart
tncks As 1t was East had won
1he heart lead w1lh the queen
and returned the su1t and West
had been mean enough to hold
back h1s kmg. There was that
good ace of hearts in dummy
and no way 1o gel to 1t
There was s\111 a play for
the hand . Maybe clubs would

Quality Work At
Reasonable Rates

Al. TROMM OONST.
Free Estimates
Work Gu.ranteed
742·2328

...

D. Bumgardner
Pool Safes
Nobll Summit Road

.],

t"' \,llflf'Rf'S MI.{

BRADFORD , Auct1oneer , Com·
Plete ServiCe Phone 949 2487
or 94.9-2000. Rocme, Ohto, Cri tt
Brpdford.
----~--~- ........._,_., -·
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers, toasters trons all
small oppl1onces Lawn mower
next to Stole Htghwoy Garage
on Route 7 Phone (614) 985·
3825
'
REMODELING Plumbmg heotmg
end aU types of general repo1r
Work guorenteed 20 years ex
pertence. Phone 992 2409

-

ACROSS
1 Galvanize

1

IT'S 8ASI~R 10 &amp;lNB "l
UP i&lt;CA.PIIJ0.

c:&lt;Df.I'T !(;()
~AD THOSE
ARnLLE'S OJ
\\lEO E'VIt.S OF
DRI~K TH,.I.,T

t.ATCHH1&gt;.1.11.11;.R
L(QUZ

~

-------

havinq a
musical feast'
Ma4 I serve L)ou
somethinq?

An4wal! ...

I just ate!

EXCAVATING. Backhoes. Ooz•r.
trencher, low Boy. dump truck.
trucks, septic systems Bill
Pullms Phone 992·2478 day or
• night
JACK ' S BEE ' S SUPPLIES ,
Reeds11llle. Ohio Bee suppl•es
and equipment . Phone (614)
378·~:?.. _ _ _ _ ..._

·---

Malef1c
Utah city
Rifle part

28 Arthurian
maiden

Am.

30 - R1vera
31 Lyric poem

patriot

36 Grammat-

(1740-99)

ical case
(abbr.)
26 Locomotive :rl Hezekiah's
27 "Bad trip"
mother

25 Planted

unit
24- down

??-Yo' GoT

THAT

-/f

SCt.Vr::'D 22-

35 Crown
:rl Exchange
premiwn

38 Infuriate
39 Link
Ill One owing

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how
Ia

to

work It:

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter Simply stands for another. In 1his sample A Ia
used for the 1hree L's, X for Lhe 1wo O's, etc Sin gle letters.
apostrophes, t he length and formation of the words are all
hints Each day the code le t1ers are diflerent

CRYPTOQUOTES
TFAWLEK

WINNIE

L CA N HAI:?DL'r'

AOMAT . .

WAIT 106ET
SOME EQUIP-

EWLS

M

LE
GMY

IKMFIT

M

GOFF

N

IKMFIT
MHT

YKT

tKLFA . -CMIP

MFR

M

EMS T

KTHDTHY

Yetlerday's Cryptoquole: SOME OF TilE NEW BOOKS ARE
SO DOWN 'IO EAR'lll THEY SHOULD BE PLOWED UNDER.
- ANNA HERBERT

A CHAN6EI

'

e tt1T Klnl fta\\lftt bn41tl&amp;l, lac.

I (J

W MF-

MENT THAT

WORK8 FOR

I KI

tMAYLIF

J

j

t

(AnswerolomotrOW)
VesJerday's

Jumbles: GUILE ERASE HARDLY BURIAL
Answer: WhtnH'athls,H'snotllkolytobe
mllttd b)' the aucttencei-AUDIBI.E

I

'

I
:
1
'

r-- J.

"--

'
"''""'"'0...0'-

I WAS MA01THAT STUPID
TREE ATE Mif KITE !

WI-IAT DO I{()() THINK
THEI{'LL DO TO I{()() ?

TEN-To-oNE Tlo!EV THROW
HIM IN THE SLAMMER!

IT AIN'T BAD

ENUFF I GOT
TO SLIP OFF
TH' DADBURN
FOOfLOG --

Now a•ange lhe circled letters lo
form the surprise answer, as sug·
ges1ed by the aboVe cartoon.

(J ] I
-:[]]His r..,......x:,.....x~x~x~x'"'\Iix~xT"iiJ

:

•I• ,

-~

16
19
22
21

1

HOMESITE$ for tole, I acre qnch
up. Middleport, near Rutlonct;;•
Coll992-7481.
1 :
-.--"' f
NEW 3 bedroom houae, 2 barh1 , ,
all
l acre, Middleport. 1
dote to Rutlond Phone 992· ;
7A81 .

--

Yesterday's Answer

t,

'

-----

11 Arrow

winks

ULABNER

,
•
'
;
•

J•

SMAll farm fer sole, 10% down
owner financed Monroe Coun:
Jy . w. Vo. Phooo (JOAI 112.
3102 or (lOA) m ·3227

N Y 10019)

poison
DOWN
1 Ferber novel
indigent
(2 wds. )
ll French
2 Barnstorm
nver
3 Stark-naked
12 lnsplte
(3 wds.)
13 Curse
I
Caddoan
14 Whine
1
Indian
15 Marsh elder
5 Jeopardized
16 Squeeze
6 Spiritual
(out)
7 Greek letter
17 Wagnerian
8 Be stark
lass
naked
18 Surmount
( 3 wds.)
(2 wds. )
9 Theater
20 Cargoquittmg tune
21 Coarse
at times
22 Motller
10 Tell
Hubbard's
quest
23 Electncal

-- '

HOUSE PAINTING, inlertor and
extenor Quohly work ot •
reasonab le roles
Phone ~
7A2-232B
.

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN send $1 to "Wm
at Bndge · clo thiS
newspaper. P 0 Box 489.
Rad1o City Sta t/On , New Yor/&lt;

one as
Z7 Wash
29 Pulver was
one (abbr.)
30 Pliant
32 Heckler's
IDISSIIe
33 "- Little
Teapot"
(2 wds.)
31 Forty

~

CARPENTER , floon ng, cetling, ~!
pone.'-1-'
ln"'g'. P""o"oc_n_:•.c9c.
92:_·~S9____ ~
MOBILE Home Rep&lt;1lr, Elec., 4
plumb•ng ond heattng Phone !
992-SBSB
'
ELECTRONIC TV . CLINIC . New •
T.V shop, Electrontc TV Chnlc :
S.rv•cecoll, $5 .95. Color, B&amp;W •
antenne systems stereos , etc. ;
572 South Thtrd, Mtddleporl. •
Phone 992-b306 Corry tn end •
:
save money '
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex '
covaltng, septic systemt,
dozer , backhoe dump truck,
limestone, gravel block top ,.
poving, Rt 143 Phone 1 (614) ~
69B·7331

A Texas reader wants to
know what we bid as declarer
With
•K xxxx •AK •x• AK Jxx
This IS one of the very lew
times we vwlate the rule of
b1ddmg 1he higher rankmg of
two ftve-card suits first and
open one club

(crush)

SEPTIC Svstems installed by
licensed tns toller
Shepard
Contractors. Phone 742·2409 ...

Sonttolton, 992-395-4.
---.......,......WILL do rooftng, construction• ...

the fourtlt club

25 Str1ke

------•'\

----SEPTIC TANKS cleaned. Moderr\ :

WIth

Tha1 gave1he defense three
tricks and East cashed h1s last
diamond for a fourth after
which he had to lead a heart to
dummy's ace

5 Less

R5 Vi;R6~D

SEWING MACHINE Repairs , ser
viCe all makes, 992-2284 The
Fobnc Sho p , Pom ero y.
Authortzed Singer Soles and
_ S~rv1ce We sh~n SCIS_!Or~
EXCAVATING, dozer loader and •
backhoe work ; dump trucks
and lo·boys for htre wilt haul
fdl dirt, Ia soil. hmestone and
grovel Call Sob or Roger Jef·
fers doy phone 992·7009/
mght phone 992-3525 or 992·
5232
~"
EXCAVATING. doze&lt; bockhoe •
ond dtlther. Charles R Hot ~
ftel d, Bac~ Hoe Service ,
Rutlond, Oh1o Phone 742·2008,

m

by THOMAS JOSEPH

BORN LOSER

-,

and

break 3·3 Maybe t he defense
would shp and maybe a n end
play might develop
Therefore Lhe Professor led
a low spade at trick three
East won w1th the mne.
1hought about leadmg a th1rd
heart . but planked down the
Jack of clubs mstead .
Thmgs looked bleak , but
there was always some hope
The professor cashed the ace
of spades. the three top
d1amond s and the other two
Lop clubs Then he drew East

FRIDAY, MARCH 4,1917
6 DO-Sunrise Semester 10
6 15-F arm Report 13.
6 21)-Not For Women On ly 13.
6 31}-(olumbus Today A; News 6: Sunrise Semester 9;
Overseas Mission 10.
6 45-Mornlng Report 3.
.
6•.5()-Good Morning, West VIrginia IJ
6·55-Good Morning, Tr l Slate 13.
7.0Q-Today 3,4, IS, Good Morning America 6, 13; CBS
News 9: Chuck Wh ile Reports 10.
7·05-Porky Pig 10
1 31)-School les 10
8.0Q-Howdy Doody 6, Capt Kangaroo B.IO, Sesame
St. 33
8 30--Big Valley 6
9 oo-A .M. 3: P hil Donahue 4,13,15, Andy Griffith B;
Mike Douglas 10.
9 Ji}-(ross Wits 3, Edge of Night 6; Concentration 8.
10 oo-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15 , Dinah 6, Price Is Right
B,IO, Mike Douglas 13.
10:31)-Hollywood Squares 3,4, IS.
11 OQ-Wheel of Fortune 3.4,15; Double Dare 8,10;
Morning Show 13
II 31)-Shool for the Stars 3.4,15, Happy Days 6,13;
Love of Life •B, 10; Sesam e St 20,33
II 5~ BS News 8 , Ms Flxll 10
12 .0Q-News 3,4,6, 10: Don Ho 13; Name That Tune 15,
Divorce Court 8
12 31)-Lovers &amp; Friends 3, 15; Ryan's Hope 6, 13;
Search for Tomorrow 8,1 0, Bob Braun 4.
I .OQ-Gong Show 3, All My Children 6, 13, News 8.
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not lor Women On ly 15
1 3()...0ays of Our Lives 3.4.15; Family Feud 6, 13; As
The World Turns B.10.
2·0()-$20,000 Pyram id 6,13
2·31)-Doctors 3,4, 15; One Life to Live 6, 13; Guiding
Light 8.10.
3·0()-Anolher World 3,4,15 , All In The Fam ily B,IO.
Crockett's VIctory Garden 20

~

' ,,.

Rl. I
Middleport, 0 .
992-5724
and service

.

West

Pass
Openmg lead - 6 •

plumbtng ond heating No to~.,:
too large or tOo small Pho ~
m 23A8
__ __ :

MAIN

EAST
• Q9
• Q5 4
tJ 1092
• J 10 9 2

olo74

BISSELL SIDING 00.
A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860
Free Estimates
No Su1141ay Colts Plene
1 - ~J mo

3

"'8 6 5

"•

12 •0()...Movle "The Hucksters" 10: Janak! 33.
12'4l&gt;--Movle "The Adventures of Nick Carter" 8,
News 13
1 oo-Tomorrow 3,4

WIN AT BRIDGE
Ace almost out of reach
NORTH
• 8 32
• A 92
• 7 54 3

ECONOL1NE HOME
INSULATION , INC.
1815 Washington Blvd.
Belpre, Phone (614) 423·
7564 day, or 991-6039

.

BUT" I 'M SfiLL MAKII.J6 NO
DEAL5 UNDEI&lt; THE TABLE-! . .
THANKS JUST THE SAME,
SHIVAUN!

WE'D HAVE THE
WORLD BY THE
TAIL-- RIGHTZ .. ,

--~

2·25-1 mo

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Storm
Siding,
&amp;
Windows
lnsu lation.
Call Professionals

PROFESSIONAL

aJ~;~~t~~ : -" -

THIS SET UP 15 JUST
THE eEG I NN I N G~ WITH
McKEE INDU5TRIE5 AS
OUR SPRIN6BOARD,
NOTHIW(j COUlD
STOP US!

6:0Q-News 3,A,6,9, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6, Zoom 20;
Zoom 33
6 31)-NBC News3,4,15, ABC News 13, Andy Griffith 6,
CBS News 9,1 0: Once Upon a Classic 20.33 .
1 oo-Truth or Cons 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Muppet Show B. News 10. To Tell the
Truth 13 , My Th ree Sons 15, Almanac 20. In Search
of the Real America 33.
7·31)-Hollywood Squares 3,4: Ohio Stale Lottery 6,
Pri ce Is Right B, MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20.33,
Wild Kingdom 10. Nashvi lle on the Road 13; Dolly
15

2 23-1 mo.

2·23 1 mo.

----·-- - ~

SMALl APT m Mtddleport Coli
992 5262 Kay Cec: t1.
:!_liCk w. carsev. Mgr
~ Phone992·1111
3 BEDROOM opt. furni shed. un
furntshed 128 M1ll St , M1d
dleporl Contact Ben Dov1dson
over Spencers Morket Or FOR SALE TO THE HIGHEST 810
phone (513)731-4142
DER SEALED BIOS WILL BE
RECEIVED ANYTIME UNITIL
2 BEDROOM trailer 1n downtown
APRIL 5 , 1977 at 7 P M FOR A
area w1th good pnvacy Phone
USED JOHN DEERE DOZER WITH
(614) 367 7101
BLADE AND A 1%5 DODGE 4
2 BEDROOM TRAILER , Browns
DR FORMER POLICE CRUISER
Trotter Pork Phone 992·3324 .
BOTH ITEMS CAt-! BE SEEN AT
RUTLAND. OHIO CONTACT
BRUCE OAVIS OR CALL
742-21A3 VERNON WEBER,
CLERK· TREASURER. RUTLAND
HA ¥ FOR sale or trade for catt le
VILLAGE 910S MUST 9E SEALED
Phone 995 38A6.
AND IN THE CLERKS HANOS NO
LATER THAN 7 PM Al'l!ll 5,
JOHN OEERE DOm No 40 $2000·
19n . TERMS CASH FROM THE
1971 Dodge Von, 6 cyl.
HIGHEST BIODER
outomot•c s1de doors ond win·
~
-~- -dows, $1000 Wtll sell or !rode CARPET , BREAKFAST Sel , dub
tor !rector ond equ•pment
chairs Magnovox elec. orgon .
Phone (614 ) 66713319. Tuppero
2 and table,, Phone 992·7476.
Plo m•:. '?hio t
WARM MORNING 1Gas 65 000
BTU like new Phone 992-2905.
1 ¥EAR OLD Nanny goat , $25.
rhMe 742-2769.
1977 GOVERNOR 14 I x 70 3
bedrms both and 1/ l unfurntsh ,, .· v FOR ~uft• Also, washer ond
d1 , ••, rhone,cU ) Mf8.,.499
ed May rent lot
Phone
7&lt;2 2577 .
TOBACCO b f'o ... • 0 m... i l ;'l 201 ..
.
MOBILE HOMES lor sole 1973
Shulb, 3 b&amp;droom , total e lec
central a.r, e_,cellent cond 1tlon
N!
r~
Coli McnG., , W Va , (304)
773 5691.
I'Yf&gt;ll[, 'ilfiiNifl
MOBILE HOME 12 x 00. 3 bod,m .,
underpinn,d wtlh c•ment dnve
Ltt Pomii'Oy La1141m•rtc
ond wallt. 10 K 10 me tol
soften
&amp; condition your
buildtng , lflduded on 1 1-1 0
w•tor and 1 Cll.op Wiler
acres , 3 miles off Rt 7 on Co
sollenor, Modtl UC-XVI.
Rd 3 Phono 7A2 2029
Now Only
PACEMAKER HOUSE troller, 8 ~~:
~0 2 bedrooms NeY~~ hot water
Let us lost your water
top Phone W~ 4151 oftot 5 30
Free.
pm
1~7U WINDSOH Mob1le Home 12
11
o:J elf 1 or1d!t1on Phm1"
'I'll :190~
....... ,.1111

~~~~~~

"The Originators
Not The Imitators"

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

FOR SALE

~·-

CAPTAIN EASY

Corpei· Lino.-TIIo
Phone Mike Young at
992-2206 or 992-1630

-FITZPATRICK ORCHARD

---

~:

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

-

.

'

Installation, samples
brought to your home
with no charge .

KEN GROVER

APPLES
STATE ROUTE 689 PHONE
WILKESVILLE . (614 ) 669·37B5
OLD furn•ture tee boxes br,oss FULLER Brush Products for s~le
Phone 992-3410
beds wall telephones ond
parts or complee hou seholds CAMPER $600, Also horse
Wrtle M. D. M1fler, Rt 4
holler $450 Phone (b14) b9d
Pome roy._~hto 'S~I ! 992-77fJ9
3290
CASH po1d for al l makes end STEREO, new om-fm fm stereo·
mode ls of mob1le home s
rodto c:omb tno1ton $ 129 95 or
Phone area code 614· 423-9531
terms Call992 3965
TIMBER Pomerov Forest Pre I BEAMS and H Beams 8 c9,- ·and
du cts Top pnce for stondtng
10 tnch Coll 992·7034 ,
sow hmber . Co!l Kent Honby,
CAPTURE TOOAV forever wllh fu ll
1 446·8570
cblor portrOIIs from The Photo
CO INS CURRENCY tokens, old
Place (Bob Hoefl1rh) For op·
pocket welches and chat ns
potntm_ent ,5ol~9_92 5292
Si lver and gold We need 1964
and older s1fver co1ns Buy sell , 4 ROW No Ti ll Cote corn planter,
or trade Coli Roger Wamsley
Eilts
2 row
Vegetable,
transplan ter pot setter, 15 us·
742·2331
ed farm gates , 48 ft e levator
POMEROY AUTO RECYCLING
Andrew Cross Leta rt Foils
NOW BUYING SCRAP Turn
Phone 247 2852
1unk eutos mto cosh Also buy ·
mg metols, battenes, etc
23 CHANNEL C B Base stallan ,
01 mco Satel1te Super Phone
Open Mondoy, Tuesday ,
Weds , Frtday , 8 00 · 4 30,
985 3534
Saturday 8 00 · 12 00 Phone
HOTPOINT ElEC RANGE Phone
992 6337 Old Rt 33 jUSt across
985 4227 lor fu rther lnformo
_Grucser s Chipper
!ton
WANTED OLD p1onos , any condt · CLAM SHELL luggage corner , like
!ton Poytng $10 and $25 each
new, $40 Chom saw Rem ·
Ftrsl floor only Expert mov tng
tngton :,14 $75 Phone 742·2577,
Fully tn!'iured c;omponv Wnte
gl111ng d~rect1ons
Wttten FREIGHT Damaged only 5 left .
Pianos Box 188, Sardts Oh•o
J977 Dressmaker Ztg Zog sew
43946 Phone (614) 483-1 605.
mg mochmes. Buttonho les .
monogram , et c Ortg1nol
WANTED , CHIPW6oD Poles,
$149 '95, wdl se ll $3'9 95 Cosh
mox tmum dtometer 10 tnches
or terms 011odob le Coli
on largest end , $8 per ton
992 514b
bundles slobs S6 per ton
Del1vered to Ohto Pollet Com· HA¥ FOR sole. Harold Roush ,
Por tlan d. Oh •o
ponv Rt 2 Pomeroy Oh•o
Phone
Phone 992 2689.
843·2255.

•

Free Estimates

COAL, l1mestone ond calctum
chloride and colc 1um bnne fo r
dust control ond sp~Ci ol mno: tng
PHOTOGR~PHY
salt for formers Motn Street
(614) 985-4155
Pomeroy. Oh!o or phone 992
3991.
Chester, Dhlo
COAL for sole, Open 6- do-y; p;r , _ _ _ _ _.;..10;..·..17_·.;. 1;.m;..;o.;..(.;..Pd...;..;.l--1
week and evt:tnings For further
•nlormotton ro ll (614}367·7336

...

I

PARTS- LABOR
GUARANTEED

Southeastern Ohio
Truss Rafter eo.

REPL!a,EIIT
WIIDOWS

1976TORIN04 DR. SEDANS2148
Atr, automatic, _powet' steering, 8 cylinder, good
rubber. light green

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

ANY Pil-CH
ANY SIZE

,.

AutomaticTransmission Service

a ·oo-Mo.,.ie " The Ou1er :,pace Connection" 3,4,15;
Welcome Back, Kotter 6,13: Waltons 8.10. Classic
Theatre 20, Masterpiece Theotre 33
B J()...Whal' s Happening 6.13
9 oo-Barney Miller 6, IJ. Hawaii Five 0 B; Classic
Theatre 33, Ten Who Dared 10
9 J()...Tony Randall 6,13 .
10 00--Las Vegas E ntertalnment Awards 3,4, 15;
Streets of San Francisco 6, 13; Barnaby Jones 8;
Honeymooners' Trip to Europe 10: News 20
10 JG-Woman 20.
11 oo-News 3,4,6,8,10, 13,15: MacNeil -Lehrer Report
33
11 31)-Johnny Carson 3,4,15 ; SWAT 6,13; Kojak 8;
Mary Hartman 10: ABC News 33 .

THURSDAY , MARCH 3,1977
I ·OQ-Big Valley 3; My Three Sons 4, Brady Bunch 9,
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Star Trek 15
5·31)-Adam 12 4; New s 6; Family Altair 9; Elec Co
20,33; Adaml2 13
·

"'

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TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20)
Frt en d s w1ll not respond
favorably to yo ur cnt1clsm today WANTEO
BABYSITTER Poone
Say nothtng tf yo u can't be com·
742 3122.
phmentary
WANTED
BABYSITTER Also
housekeeper needed to ltve tn
GEMINI (Moy 21-June 20) II w1ll
Phone 742 3122
only cause tndtgestlon for those
at the d tnner table If you bring SALESMAN NEEDED to coli on
home petty bus mess problems
dealers 1n W Va Oh1o ond od
leave them at work
to mmg stotes. Represents no
!tons
largest manufacturer of
CANCER (June 21-July 221 One
portable bu1ldings . Salary plus
who likes to take apart your
comm1sston STURDI HOUSE
tdeas should not be let In on preMonulocturtng
Com pa ny
sent plans She could start you
phone Potnt Pleasant, (304)
thinking negatively
675 4079
LEO (July 23·AIJil. 22) Keep
current on present obligati ons
and try to clear up any small bills
you can today Their neglect
cou ld multtply your woes

PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20) If a
companton says so me thmg
derogatory to you today, don't
respond m ltke manner. It's
better to turn the other cheek.

Business Services

Pomeroy
~OF· QUAUtV Motor Co.
2 SIGNS

Alilu~""

,. Bernice 8 - Otol
For Frldoy, Morch 4, 1177

Q\

•

•

Route 3, Pomeroy, 0.

Grap~

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 11)
You have goad ideas, but you
don't have a corner oo the
market today Give others an
equal chance to express their
views
AQUARIUS
(Jon. 20-Feb. 11)1n
Robert J Lewis
Guardian of JO•nt ventures today make sure
lillian Stieff you're not the fall guy who pays
the b1ll If tnere are llabtlittes,
.: !21 2A, 27 Ill 1, 3, A, 5tc
spread them evenly

'

NOW occ&amp;ptm'g p•ono students
beginners 1nterm&amp;dtates . od·
vonced students Coli 992
2210
NOTICE , Pratt's Meot Mkt
(PI&amp;osanton Meat Processtng
Inc ) Custom slo"fgtnering and
prousstng Reta1l, wholesale.
No oppotnment neces~or y . Call
(hU ) 593·8655 hours q 00 1111
6 00 1 Pomeroy Road Athens
Oo.
GUN SHOOT at the Rocme Gun
Club every Sunday I pm
Assorted meats
RACINE FIRE Dept w1ll have a
Gun Shoot every Saturday mght
6 p m at thet r bu ildmg tn
Boshan Ohtp,

RISING STAR Kennel Boordtng ,
Indoor Outdoor runs groomtng
oil breeds clean son•tory
loc•f•hes . Cheshtre Phone (614 )
3b7-0292

NOTICE TO BIOOERS

Sealed proposa ls wilt be
recejved by the Soard of
Educa tion of the Metgs Local
School Dts~.rict of Mtddleport.
Ohto at the Clerk's offtce unt il
7 30 o'clock PM on March 21 ,
1977 and at that t1me opened
by !he Clerk of said board as
provided by law for three (3 )
66 passeng e r school buses,
accord mg to s pe cif •cations of
sa 1d Board of Education
Separate and •ndependent
bids will be rece ived w,th
respect to the chass ts and
body type and Will sta te that
the bus when assembled and
prJor to delivery comply w1tH
all
schoo l
d•strict
specif•cat•ons, al l safety
regu lattons and current Ohto
M1n1mum Standards for
School Bus Construction of the
Department of Educat•on
adopted by and wtlh the
consent of th e D1rector of
H1ghway Safety pursuant to
Section 4511 76 of the ReYtsed
Code and all other per tmen t
provtston of law
Spect fi Cat .on s and
tn
strttct tons to bidders may be
obtai ned at the offtc e of the
Clerk , Mtddleport , Oh •O
A cert•fied check payable to
the clerk treasurer of the
abo11e board of edu ca t•on or a
satisfactory b1d bond executed
by the bldcter and the sur ety
com pany , in an amount eQua l
to f1ve percent of the btd s hall
be subrrptted with each b •d
Satd board of education
reserves the nght to · waive
tnformal ities, to accept or
re1ect any and all , or parts of
any anC al l b1dS
No bidS may be withdrawn
for at lea s t thtrt y {30) days
after the sc heduled clostng
t1me tor rece1p t of b1ds

Noli""•

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AutuSale&amp;

AutoSaleo

Television log for easy viewing

•

NOW MV
DAD BURN

NOSE
ITCHES\!

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Je- 'lbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, March 3, 1977

Sources identified in

Fascist cult demands
return ·of old ways
BySEIOGAWA
TOKYO (UP!) - Rlgnust
followers of a Japanese
nowllst who committed hara
ldri in 1970 stormed into the
office of Japan's top busineBS
organization today, seized
.lour hostages at swordpoint,
and demailded that Japan go
back to rule by the emperor
. and the mlUtary.
Two of the hostages were
released tonight alter 41&gt;
hours of captiVIty.
The loor raiders, disciples
of the late noveUst Yuldo Mishima, : rushed into the
headquarters of the Japan
Federation of Economic
Organizations (Keidanren)
about 4:30 p.m. (2:30 am.
EST).
They· wore Japanese style
headbanda decorated with
the Rising Sun emblem.
Three were armed, carrying
a pistol, a ShotgUn and a
Samurai sword.
Seized by the raiders, were
Tetsuya
Senga,
67,
Keldanren 's managing
. director, and three ol his
assistants.
Keidanren is an elite club
made up of Japan's most
powerful
banks
and
industries. It has great
political influence. Its
chairman, Toshio Doko, often
is called "the prime minister
of Japanese business." JHe

MEIGS tHEATRE
CLOSED FOR
· VACATION

WATDf -FOR
·OPENING DATE

was oot in the office at the
time.
Senga
and
Norio
Nakamura, 24, a Keidanren
public relations man were
released unharmed 41&gt; hours
after their capture. The
raiders still held Kazuio
Koike, 43, and Makoto Ike, 3$,
members of Senga 's staff.
Senga and Nakamura
quoted the raiders as saying :
"We will not harm you
because we are not leftists."
Charging that Japan has
been corrupted by post-war
democracy
and
the
leadership of businessmen,
the four demanded an
interview with Doko. He said
be would talk to them only if
they laid down their arms.
Senga was meeting with
Brazil~ busineBSman wllen
the four stormed into . his
office. The raiders let the
Brazilian go, along with
seven women secretaries
they had captured on their
way in.
Police cordoned off
Keidanren's building in
downtown Tokyo about half a
mile
from
Emperor
Hirohito's palace, and talked
to the raiders by telephone.
They identified the rightists
as Shunichi Nishio, 11, Yoshio
Itoh, 29, Ta&lt;!aaki Morita, 27,
and Shunsuke Kiffiura, 42.
Nishio and !tanh are
fonner members of "Tate .no
Kai" (Shield Society), a
right-wing youth group
organized by Mishima before
his 19'10 suicide. Kimura and
Morita were members of
other far right political
·
splinter groups.
Mishima was ~pan's top
postwsr novelist and a Nobel
Prize candidate. He killed
himself in 1970 alter carrying
our a similar raid with four of
. his disciples on the eastern
headquarters of the Japanese
army in Tokyo. The five
seized the commanding

general, and Mishima madtl
an impassioned speech to
troops urging them to rebel
and overthrow Japan's
postwar constitution.
The soldiers ignored him,
and Mishima slashed his
stomach with a knlfe in a
gesture of harakiri. One of his
followers then beheaded him,
and then took his own life.
Thursday's raiders styled
themselves The "Youth
League for Abolition of Y-P,"
a reference to the 1945 conferences at Yalta and Potadam
where conditions lor Japan's
1945 surrender alter World
War n were worked out by
allied nations.

a

The action look is here In the Condo r . .. and it's a com-

fonable, walk around shoe .ln classy smooth cowh ide. The
fa shioned moe toe adds an extra sharp look. And Hush
-Pupp1es,._ Casuals are born comfortable ... just for yo u.

THE SHOE BOX
BANK MERICARD

Middleport, 0.

Social
Calendar
FRIDAY
WORlD DAY of Prayer
observance, 7:30 p. m.
Friday, Laurel Cliff .Free
Methodist Church. Program
by women's groups of Laurel
Cliff and Hysell Run Free
Methodist Churches. Slides
on Haiti and special music.
Public invited.
SATURDAY
WESTERN BOOT CB Club
meeting, 7 p.m. Saturday at
Racine Fire Station.

. CAUTIONING that it wm
be "a dilllcuit road
ahead", Secretary o1 Slate
Cyrus Vance reeeatly
returned from a Middle
East mlssioa to aaaeoa the
poaalbffillet of peace Ia
that region. Vance CODeluded that undenlaudlng
and patience are required
of ail parties If a
meaalagfu! peace Ia to be
achieved.

HOSPITAL NEWS

KRAMER BROKE
SEATTLE, Wash. )upi) A. Ludlow Kramer, who Veterana MeJDorial Hoopilal
ADMITTED - Pauline
coordinated the $2 million
free
food
giveaway Derenberger, Pomeroy;
demanded by the Symbionese Mary Ha mm, Pomeroy;
Liberation Army following Pearle Sigman, Middleport;
the 1974 kidnaping of Patricia Warren Reeves, Albany;
Hearst, filed for bankruptcy Virgie Blake, Middleport;
Wednesday in federal court. Virginia Napper, .Racine;
Kramer, ·former Secretary Karen Cremeans, Coolville;
of State of Washington, said Herbert Reedy, Albany;
he has run up debts of nearly Virginia Musser, Long
$221),000 while holding only Bottom; Ida Young, Shade;
Rose Marcinko, Reedsville;
$77,000 in real aBSets.
James Will, Pomeroy; Vera
Drehel, Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Vinas
Lee, David Hutton, Virginia
Mus8er.

Rhodes would hit hard
at bootleg cigarettes

COLUMBUS'(UPI) - Gov. tax stamps would be subject
James A. Rhodes, saying to seizure as cmtraband. The
Ohio is losing about $22 offender would be subject to
million a year because of the fine and jail term.
bootlegged cigarettes, today
The legislation also
submitted legislation to tbe increases flle penalties for
Genera I Ass em b I y counterfeiting tax stamps
stren·gthening the stale's and )J&lt;l8Se8Sing or selling
enforcement powers and ~taxed cigarettes.
increasing penalties.
It also increases the reward
"This bill will save the lor providing information
taxpayers of this state leading to the recovery ·of
millions of dollars per year in cigarette tax revenues. The
lost tax revenue," Rhodes reward Is now 10 per cent of
IDid legislative leaders in· a · the net value of the
letter accompanying the bill. contraband up to $1,000. It
The
bill
grants would go to :IAl per cent or up
investigators in the state 11&gt;' $10,000 under the bffi.
Department of Taxation tbe
Rhodes' proposal also
power to arrest cigarette authorizes the state to revoke
bootleggers. It also, for the cigarette vending and liquor
first time, establishes tbe Ucenses of persons holding or
crime of transporting more dispensing
untaxed
than 2,000 cigarettes into Ohio cigarettes, and to revoke any
for the first time without illegal transporter's driwr's
obtaining permission of the license.
·
Taxation Department.
The penalty lor this new
crime would be a maXimum
90 days In jail or $750 fine .
Subsequent offenses would
draw six months to live years
in jaU or a muimum $2,500
fine.
HORNUNG NAMED
In additioo, quantities of
WINCHESTEH, Va. (UP!)
cigarettes in e:.:cess o' 5,000 -Former Green Bay Packer
transported into Ohio without halfback Paul Hornung
Wednesday became another
in a long list of prominent
sports figures to be chosen as
marshal for a parade when he
was picked· as this year's
Shenandoah Apple Blossom
Festival sports marshal.
· Hornung, now a television
sports announcer, and a
queen to be named later will
preside over the 5th festival
April 29, 30 and May 1.

NEW SJORE HOURS
The Following Furniture
Stores Will Observe New
Store Hours Effective

Holzer Medical Center
DISCHARGES _ John C.
Benedict, Karen K. Brumfield, Mrs. Carl Burton and
da ght
B bbi J 0 De ·
U er, . o
er,
Leah J. Eichinger, Helen L.
Fal'ley, Joyce M. Foglesong,
Loretta J. Friend, Fred W.
Glbba, Dollie Haselip, Susan
L. Hoffman, Helen M.
Howard, Diana L. Ihle,
Norman R. Jarvis, Jerry W.
Johnson, Jr., Carlton L.
Mays, Mary J. McCarty,
Billy G. Morris, Patricia .A.
Peck, Frona K. Riffle, ·
Elvena Roberts, Sheila Sue
Saunders; Kathleen L.
Smith, Reba F. Tucker, Rev.
Pleasaat Valley Hospital
Kenneth · C. Vance; Yvonne
DISCHARGES - Diana M. Walker, Elizabeth Wasch,
'
Builder, Henderson; Mrs. Pribble Wilson. ·
BIRTHS - Mr. and Mrs.
John Blutson, daughter,
Gallipolis; David Spear.&lt;, Mark Halley, son Gallipolis;
Point Pleasant; Alice Mr. and Mrs. Charles J arreli,
Gleason, Point Pleasant; son, Point Pleasant, W. Va.
Mrs: Hollis Cole, Point
Pleasant; Richard Fetty,
Gallipolis; Mrs. Pearl · McDermitt, Point Pleasant;.
Richard Hatfield, Dexter, 0. ;
Kevin
Taylor,
West
.
Columbia; Mrs. James
Watterson, Apple' Grove ;
Mrs. Gilbert Buzzard,
Comfort, WV; and Elma
McGuiness, · Point Pleasant.
. . BIRTH - A daughter to
Mr. and Mrs: Willial" Burris,
Apple Grove .
·
CHARDON, 01Uo (uPI) ~
Winter's long, col&lt;! grip has
been a blessing to the maple
syrup industry, accurding to
state forester Ture Johnaon
of Geauga County.
BACK IN LINE,UP
The prolonged deep freeze
INDIANAPOLIS (UPI)
Indianapolis Racers' left has acted "like a cold
wing Hugh Harris, the team's storage" for thousands of
top scorer before he was syrup-producing maple trees
sidelined by a lorn knee and also "has prevented
ligament Jan. 25, should be bacteria frtlll entering the .
back in the lineup In time for syrup and contaminating it!'
"The proper cold-thaw
the
World
Hockey
AssOciation·playoffs in AprU, cycle in the next lew weeka
should result in good quality
the club said Wednesday.
The Racers also announced maple syrup," Johnson said
that defenseman Bryon today.
Unle11 there's an unUIUBlly
Baillinore, out 24 games with
a pulled stomach muscle, kllg warm spell, the annual
would be hack on the ice Maple Syrup Festival
Friday night In a home game scheduled for April 15, 16 and
17 will be held as usual.
against San Diego.
"'!be ideal weather In the
Indisnapolls also said II
nell
few weeks would be a
had acquired veteran
warm
period of about three
·goaltender · Paul Hoganson,
days
with
temperatures of
27, from the Cincinnati
between
32
and 50 degrees,
Stingers for future confollowed
by
a
cold snap down
siderations.
to about :lA!," Johnaon said.
"A few cycles like thai' and
Nature's purhps will start
working and the syrup will
start flowing."

Map1e Syrup
Prospects

excellent

I

His parents, his wife and

one brother preceded him In
death.
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p.m. Saturday at the
Ruffand Chapel of the Walker
Funeral Home with Denny
Coburn officiating . Burial
will be In Meigs Memory
Garden . Friends may call at
the chapel anytime after 10
a.m . Friday until time of
services. The fam ily will be
atthe chapel from 2 to 4 and 7
to 9 p.m. Friday.

Local Bowling
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Monday Nlte Mixed
Feb. 2s, 1977
Standings

Team

W. L.

No. 5
No.2
No. 6
No.3
Nn 4

42 14
38 18

28 28

24-32

2432

No.I
1244
Team high series - Team
No. 2 2275; Team No. 6 2188 ;
Team No. 5 2154.
Team high game - Team
No. 6 784; Team No. 2763 and
758.
Men ' s

high

series

-

Raymond Roach 555; Bill
!Vwlrcum 5&lt;17; Mose Norman
493.
.
Men's high game - Bill
Marcum 227; Raymond
Roach 191 and 189.
Women's high series Naomi Floyd 467; Lucy
Hendricks 460; Debbie
Dobbins 423.
Women's high game Naomi Floyd 182; Lucy
Hendricks 178; Debbie
Dobbins 170.
DINNER ENJOYED

Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Logan
were Tuesday dinner guests
ri Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
Wamsley.

·

MANY
GIFTS

40%

INGELS FURNITURE

AND

50%

OPEN 9 TIL 5 MONDAY thru SATURDAY

BAKER FURNITURE

OFF

OPEN 9 Tfl 5;30 MONDAY thru SATURDAY

OPEN:

RUTLAND FURNITURE

12 to 5 PM

.

OPEN 8 TIL 5 MONDAY thru SATURDAY

THURSDAY FRIDAY

.. MASON FURNITURE

&amp; SATURDAY

OPEN 9 TIL 5 MONDAY thru SATURDAY

r
'I

CINCINNATI (UP!)- Dr.
Raymond F . McCoy, coholder of the record for
kllgest continuous service as
a graduate school dean, Is
retiring this y~ from his
Xavier University post,
school officials said Tuesday.
McCoy, 83, dean of Xavier's
gra&lt;!aate scboolllillCe it was
(ounded in 194&amp;, will step.
down · Sept. 1, and then
assume a speclsl XaVIer
"distinguished prole11or-.
ship."
McCoy's 31 ~an • grad
acbool dean lies him with Dr.
Robert Koenbr of Ball State
Univtnlty In Muncie, Ind.,
for lonpllt continUQlll service
in I1Ud1 a pollllion.
McCoy Clint to laviw at
the Sid of World War U, In
Which he wa1 a special agent
in milltarY intelligence,
"He I'OIIIlded ~ itplel left
by the Germani on the
Frencbltallm front and was
relpCillible for rounding up
hi&amp;b Nul offtclala in flle area
around MWlic:h as the war
ended," xavier ollclsllllkl.
lavler Preaident Robert
Mulligan called McCoy'•
leadership at the school
''remarkable."
I'
i

·Archie scores .again in.
MGM 'Scouting night~
By Hobart Wilson Jr.
Featured by the appearance of two-time
Reisma n Trophy winner
Archie Griffin , the Tri-State
Area Council Boy Scouts of
America lea dership dinner
wa s
smashing success,
Thursday night at Oscar's
Restaurant in Gallipolis.
Arecord 18,690 was pledged
to scouting by commuolty
leaden in the Tri-8tale Area
Council, which includes the
Meigs-Gailla-Masoo District.
Fifty-eight persoas attended.
Griffin , former All;
American foothali player at
Ohio State University and
now a running back for the
Cincinnati Bengals in the
National Football League,
was guest speaker, and Vitus
Hartley, Jr., Pt. Pleasant,
chairman of the MGM
Leadership Division, was
master of ceremonies.
Ha rtley also refereed
"Running Up the Score for
Scouting."
"Tonight 's sum is twice

a

'

MILLARD CLAGG
Millard Melvin Clagg, 66,
Gallipolis, died Wednesday

rortunate 11 811 my life."
Griffin continued, "I've got
a floe lamUy. The Lord
blessed me with skllb! to play
athletics. It's stiU bard lo
visualize wbat bas happened
the past lew yean."
The Columbus native said
priorities established by his
parents was another reason
for his success. "My parents
taught me first to he a
Christian. Th~n , they urged
me to get an education and
lastly, be a good athlete and
Ways campaignS in the area . set a good example."
The Tri-State Area Council
is orgaaized into four

that what we received last
year," Hartley to ld the
audience aft er the final
pledge was turned in.
Leo M. MacCourtney, vice
pres ident and general
manager of WOWK-TV,
Channel 13, Huntington, is
cha irman of the 1977
sustaining membe r shi p
enrollment drive for the TriState Area Council.
The yea rl y fund-raising
dinner is held to supplement
funds received from United

Center. He was a son ot the
late Charles and Melinda
Hawthrone Clagg .

•

Funeral arrangements are

under the direction of Miller's
Home for Funerals.

GAG ORDER ISSUED
CLEVELAND (UPI) -A
gag order was issued
Toeaday in the case of Dr.
Stuart Kutler, a hospital
emergency room physician
charged with murder in the
disappearance of Arthur
Nosk~, a, Brecksville.
CUyahoga County Commoo
Pleas Judge Harry Hanna .
issued an order JrOI1!blting
the police, prosecutors,
defense attorneys and Kutler
from discussing the case with
the news metla or the public.
He said be took the action to
Jrotect Kutier'sright to a fair
trial.
The missilig hoy and his
mother, Ann Noske, 32,•
moved in with Kutler, Who is
separated from his wile, late
in January.
Miss Noske, a respiratory
therapist, told pollee Feb. 8
her son had disappeared at
Parmatown ShOJlping Cent&amp;r
in suburban Parma. · Days
later she gave detectives
from the county sheriff's
department a statement
accusing Kutter of beating
the boy to death earlier in the
month. The boy's body has
not been found.

a1 y

e
VOL XXVII NO. 226

than 7,900 boys, age 8 to 17, in
a 10-eounty area in Ohio,
West Virglata and Kentucky.
Griffin was introduced by
another fonner OSU Buckeye
pla yer, Atty . William
Eachus, Gallipolis.
Griffin , a down-to-earth
type person who has not let
success interfere with his
. own life style, told community leaders he has been

ree

•

Ie ID

TRAGEDY REFLECTE~ - Shortly after Thursday night's fire which clsirlled the
iiws of three persons on Neighborhood R.d., two exhllusted Gallipolis Volunteer firemen,
. Neil McMahon, left, and Wayne Elliott, take a break in rain on lawn in front of the victims'
OOme,

COLUMBUS - MARK WHITE, secretary ol state of

hil .

state s 11!nnanent voter registration by mail system Is 110
convenient the electorate would compt8in If it were
discontinued
White leatlfled before the. Senate Elections Committee,
which is considering a similar syslenl for Ohio. He said a drive
by voter interest grou)JII last year distributed more than ·s
mllllon registration forms and raised the number of reglltel'el\
voters in Teras from 1.4 million to 8.3 million, ''probably the
largest increaae in flle nation."

lberfelds In Pomeroy
Take advantage of the special sale prlcas
Frlclay and Saturday

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 P.M.
Jewelry 112 price, Bestlorm Bras 2 for SS.OO, Select group pictures
and wall plaques lf• price, Men's $11.95 Blue Jeans sale $8.99, One
group men's ties 'h price.
·
Plus men's $6.95 pal•mas sale 2 for $11.95, Tube socks 88c pr. ·
Glidden paint sale at Warehouse on Mechanic Street, Save on Wintuk
knitting yarn $1.19 skein, $2.49 yard l;louble knit polyester for Sl.88
yard, Sale prices on record albums, Sale of Cannon Royal Family
sheets and place mats In Home Furnishings Department 1st floor,
Save in the llousewares Department on Schick Hair Dryer, Prato
Hamburger Cooker, Hamilton Beach Electric Knife, and a final
clearance sale of Wif.nen's winter dresses.

berfelds In Pome

(Continued on page 2)

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

By U.Dited Press IDteruatlooal
COLUMBUS, OlllO - GOV. JAMES A. RHODES may say
a White House snub at a black-tie dinner was no "great
concern to me" but the grandchildren he attempted tO take to
the dinner don't agree. "fie was mad ,n said Jamie Moore,
Rhodes' nine-year old grandson. "It's just that he didn't act
like he was mad, but he was mad."
Rhodes attempted to take Jamie and Jamie's 12-year-&lt;Jld
sister, Missy, to a White House dinner Tuesday night but was
turned away because of the children. A White House spokesperson said President Jimmy Carter and his wife were
"extremely distressed" when notified of the incident. "It
wasn't a great coocern to me ," said Rhodes. "The Presfdent
was very gracious to call. The matter is closed."
WASffiNGTON - TAX SHELTERS AND OTHER
provisions of the income tax system allowed 182 persons who
earned $200,000 or more to escape paying any income taxes in
1975. Another 6,000 rich persons used special provisions in the
law to get their taxable income down to an effective tax rate of
20 per cent - the same ra!e as a family of five with an $11,000
(Continued on page 10)

aze

urs

Agent Herman Henry of the acting Gallia County
Ohio Bureau of Criminal Coroner, and Prosecuting
Identification, London, and Attorney Joseph Cain.
The two-story frame home
State Fire Marshal Frank
was
rented by Lawson. It was
Eisnaugle of Jackspn have
located
on Neighborhood R.d.
been called in to assist Gallia
just
south
of SR 141 southwest
County Sheriff James l!lontof
Gallipolis.
The structure is
gomery and his staff in the
owned
by
Mr.
and Mrs.
investigation of a fire ThursKessler
Adkins
of
Columbus.
day night which claimed the
The
fire
alann
sounded
at
lives of a young mother and
8:53
p.m.
according
to
her two small children.
Gallipolis
Fire
Chief
James
The victims were identified
as Phyllis Ann Owens, 20, Rt. A. Northup. The blaze was
2, Gallipolis, and her cilnfined to the second floor
children, Ronnie Thomas rooms and stairway.
The woman's father ,
Owens; 4, and Valarie Lynn
'
Clarence
Alonzo Lawson, Sr.
Owens, 14 months. They were
was
treated
and released at
found by Gallipolis firemen in
the second floor bedroom of
the home of her father,
Clarence Alonzo Lawson, Sr.
According to Sheriff Montgomery autopsies on the
victims were scheduled this
morning at ·the Holzer
Medical Center. However, a
hospital spokesman said no .
autopsies were performed.
On the scene Thursday
night in addition tO the 24
volunteer firemen headed by
Chief Northup were Snerifl
Montgomery and members of
his staff, Dr. Edna Gettles,

the Holzer Medica I Center for
third degree burns of the left
hand and first degree burns
to his face.
Lawson was burned while
attempting to rescue his
daughter and grandchildren.
Marvin Ours, Eureka, a
volunteer fireman , al so
suffered first degree burns qf
his left hand fighting the
blaze . . ·
Damage was set at fl ,000 to
the building and $3.000 to the
contents. Cause of the blaze
has not been determined.
Phyllis Ann Owens was
born Nov . 29, 1956 in
Chillicothe to Clarence

Alonzo Lawson , Gallipolis
and Loretta Frances Prince,
Columbus.
In addition to her parents,
she is survived by her
husband, William Ronald
Owens whom she married
March 8, 1g71 in Florida; a
sister, Sheila Marie Lowson,
Columbus; a brother, Lonnie
Lawson , paternal grandmother, Edna Butterfield,
paternal grandmother, Edna
Butterlield, and stepmother ,
Glenna · C. Lawson, all of
Gaillpolis.
·
Her son, Ronald Thomas
was born Aug. 8, 19'12 In
. Deland, Fla. and her

daughter, Valerie Lynn, was
born Jail. 10, 1976 in GainesviDe, Fla. The Owens family
lived in Deland, Fla. until
Oct. 18, 1976 when they moved
to Gallipolis.
Funeral services wiD be 1
p.m. Sunday at Miller's
Home for Funerals with the
Rev. Bill Beegle officiating.
Burial will be in Centenary
· cemetery. Frienda may call
at the funeral home alter 4
p.m. Saturday.
,
Pallbearers will be Jerry
Sparks, Larry Stewart,
Henry Snapp; Alva Sullivan,
Tom Sheets and Lonni.e
Lawson.

Pool admissions set

'

Teu~, told an Ohio legislaUve panel Wednesday .night

en tine

•

News •• in Briefs
(Continued !rem page I)
.
Colorado, North Dakota, Minnesota and Wisconsin and winter
storm warnings were posted {or South Dakota and Iowa.
~early a loot and a half of snow plied up in Salt Lake City and
more than two feet of snow was on the grolind in nearby foothill
areas.
· Heavy snow clogged portions of northwestern Iowa and all
roads in the area were reported snow-packed. Schools In much
of the area were ordered cloaed today. Rock Rapids, Iowa,
reported a foot of snow on the grolind, Spencer reported etcht
inches and Sac City and Cherokee each reported a1x Inches.

•

FRIDAY, MARCH 4. 1977

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Griffin said he has been
fortunate tomeet many good •
people in college and
athletics, and that he still
believes strongly in the three
Ds - desire, dedication and
determination.
Speaking of Woody Hayes, .
his college coach, Griffin "'
said:
"Everybody may not like
Woody, but they respect him
for what he believes in."
Griffin called Hayes one of

districts and serves more

evening at the Holzer Medical

.--------.'DEAN SETS RECORD

MARCH 1, 1977

'

Rovernrnent revenues plus

Area Deaths. l

:

.
-I
BLAINE CARTER
DALE DARST SR .
Blalne ·Carter, Sr ., 63, died
Mrs. Odell Manley has
Wednesday night at his home received word of the daoth of
makes projections of future at 479 La Grande Blvd., her un cle, Dole (Dustr. )
Gallipolis, following a six n . t 5 u f Za
11
county government 'income months Illness.
""'" , r .• ~ . o nesv e.
IW. Darst was a former
Ievels thatmightbeavailable
Mr. Carter was born May resident of Middleport.
for capital improvement 27, 1913 at Mohawk, W. Va ., a
He died at his home In
son of the late Kenney and Za
111
f
a
t
uses.
Ella Hatfield Carter. He
nesv • 0 an ppar~
Possible new sources of married the former Ruby Surviving
heart attack
Feb.
18.
are hisonwife,
Peggy
local financial aid are Frye on Dec. 2, 1933 and she Lewis Darst; 10 children ,
described, as are alternative preceded him In daath on Oct. three sisters and a brother.
levels of future funding for 26• 1975· Mr. and Mrs. Carter Funerel ser vices with
operated a restaurant In
1111
lte
d ted
local capital improvements Rutland tor some 15 rears. on
m ··Feb.
ary r 22 s were
conBryant
uc
at
the
eda
ne .
The Carters resided In Funeral Home In Zanesville.
Thereportwaspreparedby Rutland Townsh.lp for 25
James
M.
Jennings ~ars and In Gallla County
MAXINE E. SAYRE
Associates , a Columbuse past two and a halt years.. Maxine E. Sayre, 5s, 537
. lk . Carter was employed as Wayne Drive, Falrborne,
based conaulting firm , for the a coal miner for a number of Ohio, former Ma~s County
Meigs County Regional years.
Surviving · . a.re
fi ve res ld en t • dl e d ed nes da Y
Planning Commission daughters, Mrs . Gerald evening at Miam i Valley
(MCRPC ). A copy is (J uan Ita I clar k• New Haven, Hoopltal,
Dayton
.
Mrs. Sayre
Is survived
by
available for public in- W. Va .; Mrs. Paul IBlanch ) her husband, Ashton, her
speclion during normal Parsons , Gatllfolls ; ·Mrs . mother , Ethel Stewart,
busineBS hours a the CETA Bobby (Jo Ann Spaulding. Pomeroy, one olster, Mrs.
Office located on the third Route 1, Cheoterhlll ;· Mrs. Evelyn Lucke, Syracuse, and
Denzil !Barbara) Welsh . one brother, VIctor Stewart,
Door of the Court House. The Route 1, Middleport, · and Merritt. Fla. She was a
report is the fourth in a series Mrs. Clean (Sharon) Pratt, retired stenographer from
Pomeroy; a son , Blaine w
A F
of six that will result ·in a Carter, Jr ., New Haven ,· two . right Patterson lr orce
Base where she was emMeigs CounIy Capt'tal im - sloters, Mrs. Willie (Ava) . played
for '19 years.
provements Program for Ferrell , Glen Alum, W. Va.,
Funeral services will he
1978-1982 io be reeominended · and Mrs. Wendell !Allee I · held · Saturdar at 2 p.m. lit
1Q the Meigs County Com- .Veley, Portsmouth ; 16 Ewing Chape with burial In
missioners by the MCRPC. grandchildren , six great. Beech Grove Cemeter,y.
grandchildren, and a number Friends may call at the
of nieces, nephews and funeral home Friday from 7
cousins.
to 9

· improvements funding
The Meigs County Regional
Planning Commiss ion
(MCRPC) is currently
reviewing a preliminary
capital Improvement report
that lists 12 local sources,
seven state sources, and
numeroiL'! Federal sources of
funds that may be available
for capital improvements
needed in Meigs County
during the period from 1978 to
1982.
This report shows that
about $300,000 has been spent
annually on roads, bridges,
and other capital improvements in ~eigs County
during the past five years.
The projected toea I
revenue Increases In the
existing tax base indicates
that about $600,000 might be
available annually for Meigs '
County capital improvements
during the next five years.
The complete report
defines aod describes the
major sources of local

r ----- -- - -- - -- ------------- ~

MGM DISTRICT WELL REPRESENTED - The
District of
, Tri-State Area Cowicil, Boy Scouts of America was well represented
• night's aruwalleadership dinner meeting at Oscar's Restaurant in Gallipolis. t'lfllv-&lt;'ll•ht
_""i persons attended. Community leaders pledged a record $8,690 toward area scouting.
left was used to tally flle results during the "running up the score for scouting." Left to
are VitusHartiey, Jr., Pt. Pleasant, Chainnanof the MGM Leadership Div!Bion whd
·as MC and "referee" during the pledging; Ediso~ Hobstetter, Pomeroy; Archie Grilffin.
speoill:er and Paul
Gaitipolis.

SYRACUSE - Swinuning proper identification and so
pool admission charges were cents for pre--school ~hiidren
. set by Syracuse Village who must be accompanied by
Council in a regular session a parent. Swimming lessons
Thursday night.
will be $10 for 10 lessons.
A family season ticket for
The pool will be open daily
two persons will be $30 pius $3 from 1 to 8 p.m. except
lor each additional member Wednesday when It will close
of the same family; single ·at 7 p.m. On Wednesday
season ticket $20; single day eveillng will be adult night
admission $1.25 lor adults, 75 from 7 to 9:30p.m. The pool
cents for students, which wiD also he available lor
includes college students with Jl8rties at $25 an hour for a

E-RCALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to Cave St.
at10 a.m. Thursday for Mrs.
\
James Phillips who was
minimum of two hours.
It will be announced later taken to Holzer Medical
when tickets will . be Center.
available.
Council in other business
IN HOSPITAL
granted permiBSion to the
American Legion Baseball
Mrs. Pearl Jacobs, Laurel
team to use the hall Held for Cliff, was taken to Holzer
home games. Meetmg with Medical Center Thursday
council about the field were where she was admitted for.
Charlie Hamilton, coach .of treatment. Her room number
the Legion team, and Jun is 535.
Soulsby, busineBS manager.
Hamilton, thanking everyone for the use of the field in
the past, said all the teams
that have played at Syracuse
like the facilities. Soulsby
disclosed the Legion is
considering night games,
probably Wednesday
evenings.
Ohio Power Company
Council asked that a
schedule of Legion games be today .announced a plan to
supmilted · as soon as help its residential customers
poBSible.
insulate their homes to
11 was pointed out that conserve energy.
whoever uses tbe lield at
Under the proposed plan,
night will be charged for the the company would loan its
use of .the lights, a cost to be customers a maximum of
. detemlined soon.
f/50 each to be repaid at8 per
Also meeting with council cent interest over a threewas Jack Wllliams about a year period.
C. A. Heiler, executive ·vice
hole in the road at Sandhill
· that makes it impassable. president of Ohio Power,
C~uncil agreed to make said:
.
"Our proposed plan is one
necessary repairs to the road
as soon as finances permit. way we could assist our
Attending were Mayor customers to conserve in
Herman London, Eber their use of enetgy ior home
Pickens, Robert Wingett, heating and cooling, and it
Katie Crow, and Jimmy Joe also is consistent with the
Hemsley, council members, national effort to · conserve
Mary Chancey, clerk, Pollee energy. Good insulation can
Chief
Milton
Varian, make a sii!Dificant impact."
The loans would be
Williams, Hamilton and
available
to aU nisting
Soulsby.

PREP ARE FOR CRUSADE - These representatives
of Meigs County's Retired Senior Volunteer Programs
were amoog the workers helping prepare for the April
fund crusade of the Meigs Unit of the American Cancer
Society at the cancer office Thursday. This group
:::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::;:;:;::::::~::::::::;:::::::::::::;::::::::::.

Insulation loan

Bond set at $20,000

in shooting mcident
Auston Newsome,
Syracuse, has been arrested
in connection with the
shooting of Rudy Stewart,
Syracuse, Thursday morning, the Meigs Countr
Sherill's Department
reported today.
The Incident occurred near ·
one of the Meigs Mines.
NeWIOme appeared before
County Court Judge Robert
E. Buck Thui'lday afternoon
when bond was set at I:IA!,OOO.

Weather
Windy and cooler tonight,
cbance of showers. J.ows to
40. Cloudy S.turday. lnghl
1111r 116. Chance of rain 90 per
cent today, 40 per cent
tonight, 3l per cent Saturday.

The prosecution asked that
the bond be set higher than It
was.
Newsome posted bond and
was released. The incident Is
still under investigation. II
was reported unoffielally that
Stewart has been released
from Holzer Medical Center.

TWO ASSISTED
The Middleport
Emergency Squad was call~
to582PalmerSt., at5:23 p.m.
Thursday for Faye Wallace, a
medical patient, who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospibli. AI 7:'11 p.m., flle
aquad went. to the LaSalle
Hotel lor Robert C. ·Roush,
New Haven, 'who was also
taken to Veterans Memorial
·Hospital.

prepared envelopes"' be left at home where no one is at
home when volunteer workers do their door-t(Hjoor
campaign. Around the table from the left m:e Dayton
McElroy, Frances Roush, Lincoln Russell and Kermit
McElroy.

P.lan ann()unced ·
residential customers, but
limited to customer-owned
and occupied residences.
Ohio Power's pian requires
approvals by the Public
Utllitles Commission of Ohio
and the Securities and Exchange
Commission .
Necessary documents.
seeking that permission will
be filed with those agencies in
the near future.

CANVASs SET
Meigs County Heart Fund
volunteers will canvass
Pomeroy Saturday, March
12, Cor contributions. SiJrty-'
live percent of the residents
of Meigs County are affected
by heart disease.

EXTENDED 0lJ'n,()()K
Suuday through
Tueaday, chance of raiD
Sunday and ~day, lair
Monday. Hlgha Ia the ~s
and low ·50s. Lows in the
upper %Is and -30s.

Street crew is

Five Churchills
bring $146,700

Meeting in regular seBSion
Thursday at the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric
.Co. buUdlng, the Middleport
Chamber of Commerce
highly commended the
vUiage street department.
The chamber commended
the department lor its work
on the streets not only during
the onow and icy weather but
also In the cleanup work now
being carried out. U was
reported that the chamber
has purchased six new trash
containers for streets which
will be turned over to the
village for placement.
During the meeting
presided over by Emer110n
Heighton, president, a Jetter
was read from the Small
Business Administration
announcing that bustnesaes
Which suffered or are likely to

LONDON (UP!) - Five
paintings belonging to
Baroness Spencer-Churchill,
the 91-year-old widow of Sir
Winston Churchill, were sold
for $146 ,700 today at
Christie's art auctiqn house.
Lady Churchill, financially
squeezed b e.t ween
mushrooming inflation and
falling investment Income,
put the five treasured
paintings on the auction block .
tO help delray her living
expenses.
The paintings, including
two by Str Winston, were sold
for 2~ times the revised presale , estimate,
which
Christie's doubled just before
bidding began. Ali live Were
bought by London dealers.

•
•
gtven
prmse
suffer irom the energy crisis
are eligible for emergency
enetgy loans.
A meeting of the
Southeastern Ohio Economic
aod Industrial Development
group was announced for
March 31 at the Ohio
University Inn at Athens. The
chamber discussed the
holdup In the construction of
the bridge over the Ohio
River at Ravenswood and ·
agreed to contact Gov. Jamea
Rhodes on the matter, urging
that the project proceed.
Atleliding were President
Heighton, John Wariter, Mrs.
Alwilda Warner who gave the
treasurer 's report; Ml'11.
Edna Wilson who gave the
secretary's report; Mlnnll1l
Kloes, Eclllon Baker, Carl
Horky and Richard s. Owen.

.\~

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