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Area superintendents review Education .trends

12- The Daily Sentinei.MiddlePOrt·Pomeroy, 0., Thurscjay, Mar~h 17, 1917
I

..

l'

.

Senate receives

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

•

.insulation hills

ster as ton

.

By LEE LEONARD
in certification for housing
UPl Statehouse Reporter
starts.
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Tbe
"It 's been my experience
Ohio Senate has received that the Board of Building '
from the House a MiT of.bills Standards has been less than
requiring minimum effectjve,"saidRep. JohnE.
instilation standards for new Johnson, D-Orrville, "and I
homes and conimercial see no reason to extend their · ...~-~-~.
buildings,and bringing motor control to residential boil·
vehicle and mobile home dings."
.
'The House also passed, Tl
sales under the wnbreila of
the state's buyer protection to 19, and shipped to tbe
Senate ·B bill allowing cities,
Iaw. .
The first bill, requiring the counties and boards of
state Board of Building education to contribute to
Standards to adopt instilalion arts councils, . symphony
rules in two years, cleared associations and other
the House oil a vote of 65 to 31 organizations.
Wednesday after surviving a
Prime objection was tbe
heavy barrage of questions use of school money for such
oo the floor.
purposes.
"!cannot see how listening
Prior to passage the House
inserted an amen~ent ex· to the Cincinnati Symphony
empting farm buildings, · will help a youngster in my
warehouses and other area get a job," said Rep.
unheated structures from the James W. Rankin, D·
insulation requirements.
Cincinnati.
Sent to the Senate on an 88-7
"We oughi to educate our
vote was the proposal kids in reading and writing
applying the provisions of the before we send them to
Retail Installment Sales Act concerts," echoed Rep. John
to motor vehicle and niobile Wargo, D-Lisbon. "For $2 or
home sales for the first time. $3, you can hear a concert on
That measure was part ofa a transistor radio:"
more sweeping consumer
Johnson complained the
protection package adopted bill would permit the
by the legislature last session " plundering" of funds
but vetoed by Gov. James earmarked for public
Rhodes.
education at a time when the
Rhodes, saying he agreed le~islature is "bombarded"
with the Intent of th.e With requests lor more school
package, had vetoed it on money.
grounds part of it was
He attempted to eliminate
already covered by Federal boards of education from the
Trade Commission rule. He bill, but lost narrowly on a
expressed no opposition to voice vote.
extending consumer credit
The Senate was to
protection to motor vehicles. reconvene at 11 a .m. today
Under the insulation bill and the House two hours
sponsored by Rep. C.J . later.
McLin, D-Dayton, the Board
of Building Standards wotild
have until March I, 1979, to
·
·
· adopt minimum instilation
requirements lor one-to·
three-family homes and
apartments, and industrial
and commercial buildings
Mr. and Mrs. R.R. Durst .
constructed alter Jtily I , 1979. have received news of a son,
' Insulation requirements Kirk Thomas, born recently
wotild have to cover ex\efior to Mr. and Mrs. Victor Durst,
walls, foundation
and The Plains.
basement areas, roof areas,
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
attics and crawl spaces.
Birch, Waterford, Mr. and
No building could be Mrs. George Roe and
completed after the deadline daugllters, Beverly, visited
If it did not meet the Clint Birch and Leota on a
minimum standards. The recent Sunday.
penalty for violation would be
Mrs. Fannie Durst spent a
up to six months in prison, a 'few days in Columbus with
maximum line of $1,000, or her daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
both.
Tim Wilkinson, Shawn and
McLin said the insulation Kevin, last week.
·
requirements wotild reduce
Jack Cornell has returned
heating costs and save fuel. home after a recent
He said reasonable insulation hospitalization at VMH.
standards would cost .about
Carl Autherson has sold his
$1,500 for the average three· property and is now residing
·' bedroom home.
. in Syracuse with his
Many of the opponents daughter, Mrs. Eiva Dailey.
indicated
they · were
Mr. and Mrs ..Harold Long
uncertain about how far the · and · (amily, Canton . were.
.. rE:qllirem~ntB · might reach. weekend guests of his lather,
.Rep ..Myrl H: Shoemaker, D- Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Long.
Boumeville; said he did not
Mrs. Ada Van Meter spent
know whether attached Sunday afternoon with Mr.
garages would be covered. and Mrs. Tommy Holter at
They also expressed Racine.
concern about the Board of
,Mrs. Mary Greer, Leah and
Building Standards setting Flint, Mr. and Mrs. Forrest
construction requirements Teaford and Ruby Van
for residences.
Meter, Long Bottom and Ray
"Next, they'll be telling you Wilson, Canton were recent
you'll have to build your guests of Mrs. Merle Evans
house out of brick, or stone, and Paul Dean.
or straw," said Shoemaker.
Mike ·Evans and Dan
Reservations also were Talbott made a business trip
voiced about potential delays to Steubenville last week. ·
'
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Hilton hosted the Lebanon
Golden Age Club at their
home on Wednesday af·
ternoon.
David A. Bryant, Dunbar,
W. Va. visited Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Bryant, Debra a nd
David, on a recent Saturday. _
Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Abels,
Long Bottom visited
W~TCH
: with Mr, ·and .Mrs . . Louis ·
DeLuz, an. ·Tuesday a f-

Stt"versville

News Notes

OPEN FRIDAY c·NIGHT TIL 8
IAL PURCHASE AND SALE!

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

SPORT SHIRTS

MEN'S
SUMMER
, WEIGHT

MEN'S
3 PIECE

CAPS

VESTED
SUITS

$595
Sizes smal r. mea1uin, large
in solid colors and assorted

patterns ! 65 per cent
polyester, 35 ·per cent

cotton permanent press,
very well made.

Other men's short sleeve

sport shirts $6.9.5 to $18.00.
Also a fine group of men's
short sleeve dress shirts In
neck sizes 14'12 to 17V2. Tall
men's sizes, medl
large, and e)(tra large.
men's sizes 18 through

The new spring selection, sizes small
· through large, sonie are adjustable size.
solid colors and patterns.

MEN'S AND YOUNG MEN'S

BLUE JEANS
Regular denims, pre-cwashed denims
In a fine awray of basic and fashion ·

styles. Waist sizes 29 to SO. lengths
from 30 to 36 inches. Plenty of
Wrangler, " No Fault" blue denim
that don't shrink, don't wrinkle or
pucker. Flare leg and straight leg . ,
styles.

'

. . . .'

'

'

·''

., .. ' ';

·

Coats $39.95
To $45.00
Slacks To Match
Vests .

BOYS' SPORT SHIRTS .

MEN'S '
SPORTCPATS

Sizes 8 to 16, Short sleeves, 50 .per .
· cenf cotton;. 50 per cenf poly~ster . . ·
SOlid . colors
and · P,atterns,
permanent p,ress.

SUf1'nier . wear'.' Sol d . colors
· and patterns. ·sizes 36. to ~'
. regulars and longs.
.

The new spring styles and
colors ready for
your

selection. Sizes 29 to
colors and patterns

KNIITED SHIRTh
Small (34 -36), medium (38 40). large (.4 l .'oi4J, e)(fra
large (46-48).

Rugby knits, crew necks,

tank tops, collared styles,

plenty of action shirts for
golf, tennis , fish_ing , etc .

The Wallace Berry sh trt, number
shirts.

11 lik e ·the new colors
spring, the new stripes,
..-:·.•• •,. new m-esh weaver. Stop
n right away and buy what
1

you need .

$3,95 $12,95
Select men's fasn,o .. ,.,., ••

to wear with kni
sizes 28 to 42
colors anct neal oaito~...~

boy's blue leans and fashion
jeans, regular sius, Stims,
Husky sizes and student sizes 26

to JO waist.

HEMLICH MANEUVER, with the victim lying face
up is, demonstrated here by Frank Petrie of. the Ohio
Department of Health during sessions held Thursday at
the Meigs County Seniors Citizens Center. He used Susan
Oliver of the ~nior Citizens Center staff to show the
technique.

UNLINED
JACKETS
Style

as pictured, sizes

sma ll , medium , la rg e and
e)(tra
la rg e.
Regular

Shoulder for comfortable
wear, 65 per cent dacron
polyester, 35

per

cen t

com bed cottCin , 1ight green ,

blu e, mai ze and putty .

'

TO

Be sure to see the new Hlection of

«. Solid

MEN'S

MEN'S
SHORTSLEEVE

Crew necks. collared styles, tonk
tops, solid colors, Ru~by stripes .

A new selectlori for •r.· i:ing and .

MEN'S DOUBLE KNIT
DRESS SLACKS

Other boy's SPGrt and dress ohirts,

XNIT SHIRTS

'6,95

'15.95
Other men's light weight

SPORTSWEAR
New Spring

Styles &amp;

Colors
Dresses in
Tones and
Textures.

.

Waltz Gowns,

with us!

CHILDREN'S

NOW IN THE

SUMMER FASHIONS

JEWELRY DEPARTMENT

EASTER DRESSES

MEIGS INN PIZZA SHACK

thru XX larRe.

-Enjoy three stzes ot your favorite

MEN'S ANDLADIES'

New Ia rge

en tine

FRIDAY, MARCH 18, 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

eartmgs, chains,

Lor1111 selection of pastels and
summer

prints

LATEST STYLES
VINYLS, LEATHER
I

In .co1ton,

&amp;SlRAW

polyester, terry cloth or nylon.
Sizes S-M· L, 32 thru 38 and edra
sizes.

OPEN SATURDAY 9130 A.M. TO 5

IN

through April 24th by Adams

rings.

HANDBAGS

y

LICENSE PLATES
COLUMBUS (UP!) - On
another motor vehicle
matter, the House authorized
the sale of old Ohio license
plates to collectors and sent
the bill to the Senate.
.Rep. J . Leonard Camera,
O:Lorain, said Ohio is one of
the few states which does not
offer its outdated license
plates for sale. He said the
previous y~ar's plates could
sell for $5 apiece, with
revenues going to.the Bureau
of Motor VehicleS.

,}

WASMING'roN (UP!) The
"Mountain eer , 11
Amtrak's Chicago-Norfolk
passenger train which passes
through Cincinnati, will be
running until at least APril 24,
a spokesman for Sen. Robert
Byrd,
D·W.Va.,
said
ThUI'IIday.
'
TriNportatlon Secretary
Brocll Adams informed l!yrd
Wednellday of the Jlklay
eztenslon on life given tbe
train.
Byrd had Informed tbe
Tra!Bj!011ation Depertment
In a iiubconunitt.ee hearing
1ut week thill he would be
eslremely displeased if
Adal(lllet the train expire at
tlie end of its two-year
"n:perltnental" period.
March 24. He hinted he might

a post-World War li peak-have consumer prices risen as 4.1 per cent because of the freeze in citrus growing regions.
much in one month. Vegetable prices have never risen as
Coffee, poultry, eggs and sugar also increased substantially,
sharply in one month since the government began ~eepin g but prices were lower lor beef, dairy products , processed fruits
records.
and vegetables and bakery goods.
Economists promise no relief from this trend in March .
Commodities other than food rose 0.7 per cent, the same
Inflation is not expected to cool significantly until April at the increase registered in January. And service costs rose 0.6 per
earliest.
cent, reflecting a cooling trend from the previous month .
The C'onswner Price Index was 177.1 in February, reflecting
Fuel oil and coal rose2 per cent, while gasoline and motor oil
an increase of 6 per cent over the past year. This means that were up 0.9 per cent. Used car prices increased 3.3 per cent.
goods and services costing $100 in 1967 now cost $177.10.
A cooling trend among household services helped to
About half of the Febi1J&lt;lry increase was blamed on food compensate for continuing increases in the costs of medical
prices. But higher costs for fuel. oil, gasoline and natural gas and transportation services. Property taxes, mortgage inter·
also contributed substantially to the increase.
est rates and natural gas charges increased less than in
Vegetable prices rose 20.9 per cent in February as a result of January .
crop failures caused by the weather. Fresh fruit prices were up

Township road name~ offered
Wesley A. Buehl, Meigs
County Engineer today an·
nounced the road names have
been submitted by township
trustees fo r use in con~
junction with the coun ty
house numbering project:
Additional township roads
have been named, but require
coordination with adjacent
townships , because of
duplications, or for other
reasons. These ro.ads will be
presented later as problems
Bre resolved,
The listed names be·
low
will
be
submitted to the . County

Commissioners for adoption
at the next regular meeting
March 22. Persons not
satisfied with the names
J tected should contact their
respective township trustees
and County Engineer im·
mediately, or attend the
commissioners meeting.
Jim Page, project engineer

for the house numbering, said
the road names will be used
as part of the new rural ad·
dress in place of the rural
route number so problems
should be resolved prior to
the names being used. The
names are being published so
that residents can view them
prior to use. Page said county

Body identified ·
A body found along the Ohio
River in Letart Township on
March 9 has been positively
identified, the office.of Dr. R.
R. Pickens, Meigs County
Coroner, reports.
The body was identified as
that of Stanley J. Thomas, 51,
of McKees Rocks, Pa.,

reportedly a·s uicide victim.
The body was identified by
his wile, Kathryn . Dr.
· Pickens office reported that
Mr. Thomas jumped from a
bridge in McKees Rocks into
the Ohio River on Dec. 5. The
hody has been returned to
McKees Rocks for services.

road names will be announced soon.
Below , he proposed name is
gi ven first and is followed by
the present number of the
town shj p road to which 1he
new name applies :
Chester Township

Thomas - T.s1 , Oak Hill . T·
59, Boatright . T·61, Crew Rd.
· T-79, Lovers Lane · T-81,

Lake Wood · T·85, ~ew Hope ·
T.91 , Showalter . T·92, East
Shade . T·94, McKay . T· l10,
Scout Camp . T·l12, Riebel .
T-113, Baer · T.152, Me Do le .
T-154, Sugar Run . T· l55,
West Shade . T-156, , Mt.
Hermon . T-160, Lost . T-213 ,

Frank -T-218, Russell . T·219 ,

Ba iley ,- T-220 , Pooler . T-221 ,
Old Forest . T-224, Sum -

MIA Americans in
12 black boxes
lllR, MOUSE

Mr. Mouse
·to college

By RICHARD H. GROWALD
UP! National Reporter
HANOI, Vietnam (UP!) In the cemetery that stands
for hell in Hanoi street
language, an unsmiling
Vietnamese official today
showed lour White House
emissaries what they had
come lor - 12 black metal
boxes holding the remains of
Americans missing in the
Indochina War,
"Please - in ~here, " said
Vu Hoang, director of the
Vietnam Foreign Ministry's
Consular Services.
United Auto Workers Union
President Leonard
Woodcock, Rep. G. V.
Montgomery, D-Miss., for·
mer U.N. envoy Charles Yost
and Director Marian Wright
Edelman of the Children's
Defense Fund mounted the
three concrete steps into the
red tile roofed "House of the
Reposing Soul" in the center
of Van Olen cemetery.
In Hanoi, one does not teD
another to go to bell or Hades
or the devil - one teUs
another "Go to Van Dien."
Woodcock, Yost and Mrs.
Edelman stopped inside the
middle of the three doors of
the yellow plastered building.
On a table covered with white
sheeting sat 12 black boxes
with Alilerican names pasted
on the top and front of each.
At first there was no sound
except a cool: wind blowing
through 50-loot pine trees
beside the House of tbe
Reposing Soul.
\. There was no music, no
flags, no prayer, no
ceremooy.
"Sad," said Mrs. Edelman.
'l'he Vietnamese to whom
this cold day In Hanoi might
form but a smallish footnote
to their Thirty Year War
began talking to Woodcock
about delivering the boxes to

the Alilericans' plane that
departs Saturday morning.
It was too much for Sonny
Montg&lt;mery.
Montgomery, chairman of
the House Select Conunittee
on the 2,5!i0 Americans
Missing in Action, shook his
head, He came far closer to
tears than anyone. He saw
and heard talk and
movement dealing with how
to move boxes and when and
where.
The
Mississippi
congressman raised hi s
hands and his voice.
"I do believe ceremony is
in order," he said. "I do wish
for there to he ceremony
when these remains are
delivered unto us at the
airport."

"There are feelings and
emotions here to be considered," he said.
The Vietnamese fell silent.
Woodcock nodded and sum·
moned State and ,Defense
Department aides.
A planeside ceremony was
arranged.
Montgomery examin.ed
photo replicas of ID cards
and listened as the
Vietnamese explained how
they used plane crash debris
and infol11l11Uon supplied by
Washington to tag the black
boxes with names.
Woodcock said absolute
identification wiU be made by
Defense Depertment experts
when the plane reaches
Hawaii next week.
He turned to Montgomery
but the congressman had
stepped back into the
winqowless room with tbe
boxes.
".! wotild like a moment
alone," the tall courtly Southerner said.
This was the congressman
who in December, 1975,.came
(Continued on' pege 12)

JACK WELSH

merfie ld - Tc298, Dean . T.J08,

Warner Hil l - T-356, Betz - T357, Sorden · T-359.
Bentz . T-372 , Bookma n . T-

380, Singer . T·381, Gun Club .
T-393, Bahr . T·404, Foster · T·

413, Taylor . T-41.::1 , Weber . T-

415, Fr!!cker , T-416, Bush - T·

418, Wilson . T-419 , Hol ter . T-

In the next two weeks the
Meigs Unit of the American
Cancer Society will be sen·
ding envelopes home with
day learned at demonstration maneuver "really works" by Meigs County school children
sess ions on the Hemilch relating actual experiences asking them to "send a
Maneuver by Frank Petrie of ..mere lives have been saved. mouse to college" for 51
the Logan office of the Ohio He said the universal sign of cents.
The money collected will be
Department of HeaKh.
. dloking is when an individual
used
to purchase mice for use
It was not only a time of clutches at his throat, and
in
the
cancer research labs.
lllltching the ll'Ocedure being cautimed that any hesitation
Scientists
use thousands of
performed but of actually rnused by embarrassment or
mice
in
their
research
!l'acticing It on each other. whatever can mean a life
dealing
with
cancer
causes
Petrie emphasized that the lost.
and
treatment.
Children
are
Petrie said that the first
asked
to
return
the
envelopes
sign of a person choking is
, ·that he cannot speak or to their respective schools
lreathe. He then turns ~lue where a representative of the
md collapses, and if not local cancer grpup will pick
them up.
given assistance, wtthin four
minutes he is dead.
take legislative action tq
The health department
oontinue !lie train.
official described the
The Mountaineer was maneuver as exerting
E-RCALLED
begun at .the insistence of JftSSUre In a center location
The Middleport
Byrd and the other member~ below the riho which ,.,...,.. Emergency Squad was called
of the West Virginia the dl1phragm upward, to the Grant St. area at 6:06
delegation. It cuts across . compressing the air in the p.m. Thursday for eight-year·
West Virginia along the New lungs, wh!eh e~pe!J the object old Scott .Frazier who had
River through Williamson blocking - the breathing fallen, over a cliff. He
and Bluefield, W.Va.
fiiiS&amp;J!e.
received a possible fractured
The Byrd ,Ude said he also Choking persons should not ankle. He was taken to
understood the Amtrak hoard' be slapped on the back or Veterans Memorial Hospital
wotild meet . March 30 to given ' water, he saW. He by the squad.
consider a restructuring of reported that •hoot 4.000
passenger train service .people die· every year in the
across West Virginia .
United States from choking,
PTA TO MEET
Byrd has recommended tbe md that last year 181 known
CHESTER - The Chester
Mountaineer · run
to , dloklng deaths occurred In PTA will meet at 7;30 p.m.
Washington instead of l)Uo, an eighth of these In Monday at the school with
Norfolk and that the trains restaurants.
Carl Hysell, "!elgs County
The "Good Samaritan Juvenile Officer, as speaker.
across West Virginia be
rescheduled to run tbrough Act." hesal~!8!!iJ protects Election of officers will be
that state In daylight.
(Continued on page )
held.

Mountaineer's life extended

of ileckl·a~e$, hro.rl..·t•:l

pinas. ,

E

s~lection

WOMEN'S

TOPS &amp;BLOUSES
Sizes Petite

(u,tst;on®

JEWELRY
'

NEW SHIPMENT

&amp;Robes

PHONE
THE ALL NEW

2nd FLOOR

SPRING &amp;SUMMER

Buy now while the selection
is good.
Sizes 6' mos. to 14.

Pajamas

PLANNING APIZZA PARTY

992·6304

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
The Hemlich Maneuver is
no complex technique as the
name might imply. It's a very
simple first aid procedure
that may save the ·lives of
choking victims.
That's what alxlut 60 Meigs
Countians gathered at the
Senior Citizens Center Thurs-

Misses, Juniors
&amp; Half-Sizes.

5~

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Sunday
through
Tuesday, a chance of
showers northeast Sun.
day and over the entire
state Monday. Fair
Tuesday. Lows will be in
the upper 20s or low 30s.
Highs wlll range from the
40s north to the inld 50s
extreme south.

Life-saving maneuver
helps choking ~ictims

. Spring's Nicest

Babydoll,

-Try our delicious subs while you
sip your favorite suds,
Eat In Or Carry Out
Phone

TECHNIQUE USED on the choking victim, who is
standing, Is shown here by Petrie. Member of the class
assisting him was Margaret Eskew.

Fresh New

Pastels &amp; Prints

::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

Cloudy, co 0ler tonight and
Saturday, chance of showers
tonight; !ows.in the mid ·30s;
highs Saturday between 45
and 50. Probability of ·
precipitation near 100 per
cent today , 30 per cent
tonight, 20 per cent Saturday.

jackets, S11 .9S to S22 .9S.

COORDINATED

Jackets, sleepwear, knit
tops, blouses, slacks, jeans,
shorts, and gouchos.
Sizes 2 to 14.

WASH!NG'roN (UPI) - Consumer prices rose a full 1 per
cent in February, the biggest monthly surge of inflation in
nearly two and one-half years, the Labor Department reported
tnday.
The increase, reflecting a 12 per cent annual rate reminis·
cent of the deepest recession days of 1974, was caused largely
by higher fond prices. Severe winter weather brought a record
increase in vegetable prices.
.
.
·Food prices rose 2 per cerit last month, the largest increase
in three years.
·
FebrUary's increase comes on top of a 0.8 per cent jump in
January. These big increases compare to average monthly
rises of no more than 0.3 per cent in the last four months of
1976.
Not since ~ptemher, 1974- when inflation was approachin~

Weather

SPRING -&amp; SUMMER

Spfing &amp; Summer

POMEROY·MipDLEPORT, OHIO

:::·::··::·::··::·::.. :···:·:::·:··::·-::·-:-:-·.·.··:·····:···:···:::·:.:·:

·

LINGERIE

a1 y

•

SPECIAL GROUP!

BOY'S
SHORT SLEEVE

TO

•

representatives also voted to submit
the qu estion of continuation of the SEO.
SERRC-RESA Center to their local
school hoards. Th e decision is placed
before the schoo l boards because of the
voluntary cooperative nature of the
Center.
The computer demonstration was
conducted because of interest in some
of the school districts to form a
cooperative computer network that
would initially be used to run school
payrolls· and assist the distri cts in
meetin g new state a uditing
requirem ents.

onsumer prices ·pushed up

Sl1.95tos21.95

coats S24.9S, matching slacks $13.95,

'2,95

superintendent in Ohio for 15 years
way to mee t stale and federal
prior to tak ing the AASA post, also
manddtes for providing special
thou ght that creati ng a se para te
education. A comprehensive plan for
cabinet level posi tion for education the education of handicapped
would increase the effectiveness of children ln the Southeastern Oblo
educators in work ing with the federal region wa s developed by the
government. He also discussed the superintendents and th e SEO·
AASA position on dispensing money for SERRC·RESA staff.
compensatory edu ca ti on programs,
energ y measures, pu bli c works
In oher business, the Authorized
projects, zero-based budgeting, pension
.
Representatives
approved the subportability, and local impact on state
mission
of·
grant
proposals totaling
1nd national poli cies.
more
than
$700,000
to support various
A majo• portion of the business
educational
projects
in the region. The
during the tw.,.day meeting was
devoted to finding the most effecUve

29 to 42 .

TO

VACATION

·

VOL. XXVII NO. 2.36

matching slacks in walsf sizes

vests $9.,5.

Sizes 8 to 20.

compu ter technology could be applied
to educational administration.
"The Carter administraiion is still
in a shak e-&lt;lown period," Kirkpatrick
said, in his keynote address. "The
career bureaucrats are still running the
show in HEW until Carter's ap.
pointments are approved."
Kirkpatrick did see a Carter style
beginning to emerge with informality
being mixed with a good understanding
of the symbolic role of the presidency.
"Placing Amy in a public school
shows a real commitment to public
education," Kirkpatrick said.
Kirkpatrick, who was a school

e

Coats, slacks and vests to
match. Coats In sizes 38 to 4.4,

Boy's student sizes 3 piece suits,

CLOSED FOR
FOR

The conferees he'ard inside views fo
the current federal trends affecting
education as.part of the two-day spring
Authorized Representatives' meeting
of the Southeastern Ohio Specia l
Education Regional Resource Center·
Regional Edu cation Service Agency
Tuesday and Wednesday here at the
Hocking Valley Motor Lodge.
The superintendents met to plan
the best ways to provide special
education for the districts' handicapped
children; to act on ihe •submission of
gtant proposals, and to discuss . the
future ofthe SEO.SERRC·RESA. There
was also a demonstration of how

$11.95 to 517.95

MEIGS THEATRE

.. · OPiNING DAiE : .:temoon . · · ·
.
.
'-:

NEI.'IONVILLE - The . Carter
style remains to emerge, with career
bureaucrats still running the show in
HEW, school superintendents lrom 10
southeastern Ohio counties were told
this· week in .Nelsonville.
The speaker was James R. Kirk·
patrick, senlor associate director of the
American Association of &amp;hool M ·
rninistrators in Washington. He was
speaking to superintendents from T/
school dlstrlcts and five joint.vocational
schools. He warned against expecting ·
any major changes in educational
policy during the first year of the
Carter ad!ninlstration.

420, Morgan . T-422, O' Neal -

Welsh has
Hillsboro

T-424, Parker . T-.::125, Chester

Cemetery · T-426, Smal ley ·
T.m , Epple -T·428, Weed - T-

430, Hartinger . T-601 , Pine
Grove Cemetery . T·607,

Luthern Cemetery . T·608,
Baum Add . . T-633, Hood

Cemetery · T-639, Chambers ·

T-640, Mill . T.1022, Court

Ho use · T-1023, Ridenour · T-

1024, Gaul · T.1037.
Bedford Township

Kingsbury - T·l4 , Bryson .

T-171South West) , McGrath ..
T-17 (North East), Brlckles
Hill . T·40, Helwig Ridge. T236, Jones . T·237, St. Clair .
T-241 , Will iams. T-242.
Also. Eastman RidQe . T-84,
Kings Hill · T-89, Gold Ridge .
T-130, Smith . T-143, White
Oak . T·145, Gilkey Ridge · T·
235, Park · T·243, Cull ums - T·
244, Mlcheals . T-252, Hooper .
T-254, French . T·255. Landaker · T.2so. De Venny . T·
258, Baker - T·367.
Scipio Township

Woodyanj . T-3, McGinn is T·4, Mount Un ion . T-14,
Gibson Ridge · T-53, Haning T·l4l,
T-55 , Weaver
Pagevi lle . T.142, Dead End T-147, Warner . T-178, Chase -

T·232, Vance . T·259, Myres .
T·282, Stanley . T-284, Reeves
. T·384, Buddy - T·3116, King

Ridge · T-396 1 Cemetery . T-

397, Elli s · T·453, Blackwood T·455, Grahm · T·45B.
Columbia Township
Rutherford - T-1, Throck-

division
John M. · (Jack) Welsh,
formerly of Middleport, has
been appointed division
manager of the newly formed
West division of the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co.
Welsh, formerly manager
of the company's Middleport
division , left Middleport
several years ago to become
the assistant Southern
Division
manager
at
Columbus. Mrs. Welsh (Ann)
was a Meigs Loca 1 School
·District teacher during the
family's residency here.
The family has been living
in Westerville but now has
moved to Hillsboro where
Welsh has assumed his new
duties. Mr. and Mrs. Welsh
have
two
daughters,
Marianne, . at home , and
Diana, who is in Texas.
Welsh began his work with
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. in 1946. as a
groundman.

morton · T-2, Woodyard . T.J,
McGinnis · T-4, Erickson - T-

(Continued on page 2)

Sales tax take
off last month ·
Both retail and motor
vehicle retail sales tax
receipts in Meigs County
were down in February this
year CQmpared to Februllry,
197~, according to the report
of Mrs. Gertrude Donahey,
state treasurer.
Receipts lor motor vehicle
sales taxes during February,
19TI, totaled $26,706.75 while
receipts for February, 1976,
amounted to $31 ,7T/.51, a
decrease of IS:S2 percent.
Retail sales tax receipts for
February, 1977 , totaled
$60,472.07 compared to
receipts of $61,250.37 for
February, 1976, a decrease of
1.27 percent.

,I

ST. PATRICK
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
0

Wearin' of the green" . was

much in evidence Thursday
as the Ohio House and Senate
commemorated St. Patrick's
Day in their usual manner,
The !().member Shamrock
Club pipe and drum corps of
Colwnbus entertained with
two lively Irish tunes before
the Door sessions began. The
legislative calendar of each
house was printed in bright
green ink.
Sen. · Robert
O'Shaughnessy, D-Columbus,
spoke on the only bill on the
Senate floor surrounded by
the United States and Irish
flags. Most lawmakers wore
green carnations and about
half the legislators wore kelly
green ties, socks, shirts ot
suits.

'l

�2-The Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 , Fnday, Ma rch (8, 1977
3- 'J'he uauy llentmei,
,
Mtddlepott-Pomeroy, O.,Frtday, March 18,1977

Urban development bank under study
Urbank IS httle more than a
locate and proVIde JOOO m concept now, but delatls are
betng worked out by a team
would provade loans to cJtJes depressed c1ties.
WASHINGTON (U P[) by
Treasury
- Fede ral backing of hea ded
at 1 per L'ent above the
The Carter administration •s
fede r al gover nQlent 's mumctpal bonds to free a c1ty Secretary Michael
stuclying proposals to create
borrowmg costs, now less to rruse more money in public Blumenthal. Other members
an urban development bank
come from the White House,
than 5 per cent. It also would markets.
to provide low interest loans
- An option for cities to the Off1ce of Management
proVIde guarantees to enable
for financially troubled ctties
shaky c1tles to raise money in offer taxable bonds m and Budget and the Treasury
and busmesses wtllmg to
bond markets without paying exchange for a 35 per cent Department
locate in cities, UP! learned
Admtntstration sources
subsidy from the Treasury on
premiwn prices.
today.
Other proposals under the federal taxable income. sruil the planning will be
Admtmstrat1on sources
Muntc1pal bonds now are tax complete enough that tl
consideration include ·
said the concept of an
Carter accepts the concept be
Government-backed exempt.
"Urbank" IS still under study
can announce 1t at the June
11-15 meetmg of the National
Conference ol Mayors m
Tucson, Ariz.
"I imagine 1t would be stlly '
to have the forwn then wait
until three weeks later to
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - The performance of h1s duttes," legislature.
actual mileage on a used car announce the program,'' satd
Oh10 General Assembly is m read the code.
- Establishes the Senate when 1t is bqught or sold.
John Gunther, execullve
weekend recess followmg
Several se nators director of the Conference of
"The code provides for a Ethics Committee to hear
· adoption of a revised Senate member abstaming from complaints brought before 1t complamed that the b1ll Mayors.
code of ethics and legislatiOn votmg if he feels he has a "which allege a breach of any would add an unnecessar
ll g c1ty majors were
mvolvmg motor vehicles.
conflict of mterest, prohtbits prtvilege of the Senate." The layer of bureaucracy to tl
10ng the first to support the
The code of ethics mfluence peddltng and committee can censure, state a ttorney general
bank concept.
governing, for the ftrSt time , outlines the hearing and expel or take other act10n if offtce, whiCh would enfor•
&gt;ources
tn
the
employes as well as members complamt procedures before two-thirds of its members the law.
CHILDREN ARE; frequent choking victims. Mrs. Melody Larkins Is instructed by
lministration and
ol the Senate, was adopted the
They also sa1d tl
Senate
Ethics agree.
Petrie
on how to use the Hemlich maneuver on her daughter, Angela .
•sociated wtth the mayors
unaniJnously Thursday wtth Committee," said Sen. MarlNext week, the Senate Will mandatory fines impos
nphas1zed the Urbank will
no debate.
gene Valiquette, 0-Toledo, vote on its operating rules for upon conVlc\ton would be I
ot be the final solution for all
by
Rules chtef sponsor.
Drafted
the current sessiOn of the harsh
tty problems.
Committee, tt was nearly
Meanwh1le, the H01
legislature.
1
The code:
'lt ts not an easy way out,''
1denttcal to the code which
In other busmess, the passed and returned to
- Prohibits senators from
me said.
governed senators m the actmg, etther for free or for Senate passed and sent to the Senate a b1ll authonzing -··Creation of the Urbank
111\h General Assembly, pay, on behalf of any state House a btll brmgmg Ohio Bureau of Motor Vehicles to would require legislation that
except for the inclus10n of agency or department of the law mto !me w1th federal sell outdated Ohm license would be proposed for
(Continued from page 1)
Senate employes.
statutes maktng 1\ Illegal to plates to collectors for $5 inclusion in the fiscal 1979
state or for a client.
"A member or employe
back"
vehtcle ap1ece.
- Prohibits a member from "roll
mdiVIduals givmg assistance.
budget, wh1ch will be sent to
COLUMBUS (UP!) - salaries to $8,900 a year if .Peine said that many times
shall conduct hunself at all usmg
The Senate adJOurned until Congress next January.
or
disclosmg odometers
State-mandated staffing and enough state funds are not the fu'St thrust does not
time so as to reflect credi t confidential informahon
The btll d1rects the Bureau 7:30 p.m. next Monday and
Blumenthal tipped off the
upon the Senate and shall gained while he was a of Motor Vehicles to reVIse the House unlll 11 a m
admimstration 's thinkmg salary requirements for local available to finance the dislodge the food or ob ject
obey all rules ... and all laws member of the Senate for two the vehtcle title to mclude Tu esday.
md that many times several
about an urban bankmg school diStricts would be "equal y1eld" formula .
reduced
1f
there
IS not enough
relating to his conduct m the years after h1s leavmg the mformation concernm~ the
In
a
related
development,
are requtred. The
thrusts
structure , during a news
conference last week when be money to pay lor them under Sen. Charles Butts, ~leve­ maneuver can be performed
announced the government legisla\lOn offered m the Ohio IJlnd, introduced a bill m a standing posttlon, skting
would lend an additiOnal $255 General Assembly Thursday requiring a minunwn pupil· PJSltion or lyin g down.
A b1parllsan b1ll , the teacher ratio of 27-lm gr~des
F oc older p!!Ople confined
million to New York.
product
of the Oh10 EducatiOn one through three.
to a bed , he said getting that
He satd
long-range
Carter, meanwhile, makmg choppmg mottons na\lon - and talked with the solutions to ctly financial1lls Review Comm1ttee, wa s
By WESLEY G. PIPPERT
person to a hard surface,
WASHINGTON (UP!) planned to stgna b1ll today to , with hiS hands for added SoVIet members
!llch as the floor , ls necessary
could mclude "a banking submttted m both the Senate
Rejecting claims that the bring the Umted States into emphaSis.
Hasan Abdel fulhman of mechanism that works m the and House under the
before
the
Hemllch
LOTTERY WINNERS
Umted States IS mterfermg m compliance with the United
Carter said he Will work for the PLO told reporters: "I fteld of urban fmance m the sponsorshtp of Sen Anthony
Maneuver can be performed
This week's winning Ohio
the mternal affairs of other Nattons' economic sanctions congressiOnal ratificatton of shook hands wt th the same way tn which the World J Celebrezze Jr. , Delfecttvely.
Lottery
numbers:
Cleveland,
and
Rep.
Robert
nahons, President Carter against wht\e-dommated th e U.N covenants on PreSident and srud 'How are Bank or the International
If you choke on food and are
PolO' Gold
economic, cultural and soctal you ' Carter only smtled and Regional Development banks J Boggs , D-Jeffer son,
used his first maJor lrlp to Rhodesia.
alone,
attempt the Hemltch
Three-digit number
stress that concern for
The Umted States, under rtghts, and on ctvtl and sa1d nothmg "
Maneuver on yourself, he
work m the mternat10nal cha1rmall of the House
311.
Educa \ion Committee
human nghts should not be the
so-called
Byrd poi\Ical nghts, the longRahman call ed Carte r's f1eld."
!llggested, or thrust your
Three-digit number
The
measure
would
alter
1Im1ted
by
nat10nal Amendment, has 1gnored \be delayed U.N. Genoctde speech "very unpresslVe."
abdomen agamst a porch
917.
the state's "equal y1eld"
boundaJ'les.
sancttons to pernut unportmg Convention; and the Treaty
Aboard hts plane, Carter
ra1hng or chair back.
Five-digit number
school foundatiOn formula
"No member of the Uruted chrome from the south for the Elmiinat10n for All elaborated on his Wednesday
The technique to use for a
81999.
and lunit state requirements
Nat10ns can claim that miS- African nation
Forms
of
Racial mght statement that "ther~
standing
or sittingv1ctim lB to
Double Play
on loca l school d1stncts 1! the 1
treatment of its citizens 1s
Everywhere Carter went DIScrimination ."
has to be a homeland
!tand
behind
the victim and
Three-digit number
state cannot adequately fund
solely Its own buSiness," on his two-day tr1p to Massa.
The representatives at the proVIded for the Pales\lruan
wrap
your
arms
around his
616.
the formula
Carter told the Umted chusetts, West Virgirua and UN gave him a standing refuges "
wa1st, place your fist, thumbFive-digit number
The new budget proposed
Nahons Thursday mght. the United Na\lons, he was ovation, although the Cuba
"! think what I sa1d IS
Side,
uto the ·VIc\un's ab69716.
by the admimstration of Gov
"Equally, no member can enthustasllca lly rece1ved delegate stood without ap- appropnate ," he told
domen just below the r1b
James Rhodes would allow ' Sil-dtgil number
avoid its respons1btlities to despite- or perhaps because plaudmg . At a receptiOn reporters "! thtnk some
cage, shghtly above the
for
only 50 per cent fundmg of 176229.
review and to speak when of- the potency of h1s words afterwards, Carter shook proVISIOn has got to be made
Winning color - green. navel , grasp your fist wijh tbe
the formula by fiscal 1979
torture or unwarranted
"The search for peace and hands with most of the for the Palestlmall.'l m the
&lt;Xher band, and then press
The Rhodes administratiOn ·:&lt;·:·::;.;:;.':.';·.: .·:·:·.:.::'::·: ':::·:::':·::·: ••• '• .
SUNDAY
depnva\lon of freedom justice means also respect for delegallons - including the framework of the nation of
. ·· . .· your fist forcefully with qwck
MIDDLEPORT Ftrs\ al,so favors a reduction in
occurs m any part of the human digntty ," srud Carter representative
of the Jordan or by some other
upward thrust into the vicUmted Presbyterian Church state staffing and salary
world."
at the Umted Nat10ns, Palestme Liberation Orgav- means .~~ '
tim's abdomen.
famtly night potluck, 6 p.m mandates on local school
For the person who has
Sunday at the church wtth the distriCts to help them meet
rollapsed, or IS 10 a lying
showmg of a film concerning operatihg costs
down position, see that he IS
Under the revis1ons m the
the Stxty Mi!lton Fund of the
face up and then kneel astnde
, U S Presbyterian Church school foundation formula
him, fa ce to fa ce, and with
Tins ts a drive for m1ssion prnposed by Celebrezze and
one of your hands on top of
momes. Association mem- Boggs, rewards would be
the other, place the heel of the.
bers are to take a covered giVen dtstr1cts w1th below
bottom hand on the victim's
average fanuly mcome, high
dtsh
abdomen below the rtb cage,
numbers of welfare fanulies
MONDAY
and Wl(h a qwck upward
and
greater taxmg effort.
SOUTHERN Athlett c
thrust, press mto the abPuptl-teacher ra\tos m the
Boosters Monday at htgh
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The domen
classroom would be held to Oh10 Supreme Court today let
school at 7.30 p.m
25-1 and nnmmwn teachers' stand a lower court decis10n
TUESDAY
which allowed the admisston
AMERICAN
Leg10n
of evidence discovered by
Auxthary , Post 602, 7· 30
Alliance police without a
Tuesday mght at the hall.
warrant.
Jus\lces unanimously diSMEIGS Area- Hohness
missed
the appeal brought by
Association at Hysell Run
Robert
MICk, operator of
Free Methodist Church
Sam's
Place,
a tavern in
Tuesday, 7.30 p.m. The Rev
Alliance
John A. Coffman, pastor of
Pomeroy Bowling Center
Alliance police charged
Wednesday Afternoon
the Racine Nazarene Church,
League
M1ck
with
operattng
a
guest speaker Public invited
March 16, 1977
gambling
house·
when
they
WEDNESDAY
Standings
discovered three sp~ral Team
CERVICAL Cancer Clinic,
W. L.
notebooks containing alleged Pm Busters
56 2.4
Wednesday at Veterans
ENTERTAINERS AT LEGION PARTY- Among the
party of Drew Webster Post 39, American LegiOn,
54 26
'~gambling
mformation' ' Village Pharma cy
Memorial Hospital. For
Watd Cross &amp; Son
54 26
entertainers in a comedy presentation wr1tten and
Tuesday night, were, from the left, Orval Wiles, Mtckey
beneath the bar of his tavern
appomtment telephone 992Fonzte Followers
34 46
directed by Mrs. Came Neutzlin~ for the 58th birthday
Wil11ams, Eddte Burkett, Roy Reuter and Edgar Van
Police
had
been
called
to
3382 or the cancer office,
Team 6
22 58
lnwagen.
the bar to tnvestigate a Team 2
16 64
Tuesday or Thursday, 1 to 5
High single game - Selby
breaking and entering, and
p.m.
after they arrested a suspect, Manley 176 ; Jenny Wh itlatch
Selby Manley 156
decided to call Mick. The 174;
SUNDAY
High series - Selby
notebooks were found when Manl ey 474; Jenny Wh itlatch
CE REMONY to confer
police officers were looking 441 ; Betty Wrltese l 414
rank of Eagle Scout on Mark
for a telephone directory.
Allen Casto, 2 p.m. Sunday at
Mick challenged hls arrest
the Drew Webster Post 39,
Wednesday Afternoon
on
"operating a gambling
League
American
Legion
Home.
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
Mareh 17, 1977
MRS. NEWSOME
house" because police did not
Members of Troop 249 and
Standings
have a warrant to search for
friends invited.
Team
W. L.
the notebooks, but the Stark Pin Busters
Another aspect ts the dtf· By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D. puttmg on a pound He tellB lose _weight but tt does so
MONDAY
62 26
County Co!!fl of Appeals let Village Pharmacy
58 30
DEAR DR. LAMB - I've me tf I would get some exer- slowly. That 1s why you need ference m calories tn a pound
MIDDLEPORT Busmess
56 32
stand Mick's arrest because Waud Cross &amp; Son
been reading your column for CISe I could do the same to be consistent wtth your ex- of muscle and a pound of fat. and Professional Women's
Fonzle Followers
38 50
poll~ were conducting the
· some time now and I also thmg. But how much more erL'tse program. That mile If you increase your muscle Club meeting, 7:30 p.m .
Team
6
28 60
you ran probably used an ad- mass from healthy exercise, Monday at office of Columbia
search "in furtherance of the Team 2
; rea d
yo ur
book, exerctse do I need to get ?
22 66
executton of their duty to
As you can tell I am very dttwnallOO L'alortes at most - you build a pound of muscle Gas Co., Middleport.
High single game - Jenny
: "Metabolics." It was very minvestigate the claim of a Whitlatch 193 ; Jean Province
. teresting and I sure learned a discouraged. I've been trymg probably less &gt;onstdenng wtth only 600 calories. So you
186, Selby Manley 164
Mrs Jo Ann Newsome, burglary ."
; lot about losmg we1ght. You to get these last f1ve pounds your s1ze. The hour of tenms can be losmg calories and
High series - Jenny
Route 3, Pomeroy, has been
; have ftnally convmced me off for the last four montha. perhaps only 350 calories, gam wetght as you lose fat
Whitlatch 441, Jean Province
you hav e any dependmg on how vtgorous (3500 calories per pound) and- , - - - - - - - - . . . . . , named instructor for the
440, Sel by Manley 437
· that the way to lose weight is Do
am
muscles
(&lt;M
calorieS
TIIEOA~Y
SENTINEL
s
ugge
s
tion
s?
the
game
was.
There
are
3500
Conway
Diet
Institute,
g
: to take In fewer calones than
!J1,(V
DEVotED TO THF.
Columbus, in Me1gs 'County.
And can you tell me why I calories m a pound of body fat per pound). That IS healthy
INTERE-'1l'OF
: your body uses.
nught
have
gamed
after
all
or
17,500
m
the
f1ve
pounds
and
YOU
shouldn
'
t
be
MEIGSMASON
AREA
Under d1rectton of Mrs.
OLD RELIABLE
• I am 20 years old, 5 feet 2,
CHE."'iTERL TANNEHIU
Newsome,
a
weekly
seminar
COLUMBUS
(UPI) - Sen.
that
exerc1se?
I
need
some
you
want
to
lose.
If
you
walkdiscouraged
abuut
that
ExE""
..
· and weigh ll5 pounds. I only
ed
three
miles
a
day,
m
four
will
be
held
at
7:30
on
each
Harry
Meshel,
D·
MONEY TRANSFERS
advtce
qmckly
erc1se
may
also
~1unulate
ROBERTHOEruc
u
' want to lose ftve pounds. It is
.n 'd
City ~Ltlr
Monday
evening
beginning
Youngstown,
said
Thursday
a
DEAR
READER
Con111onti1S
t1me
you
would
use
COLUMBUS (UP!) bod
t
Ia
· very hard for me to lose when
your Y ore · mmore ·uw
Pullhsht d illuly ~:xct1J\ &amp;.tunJa)
bill
making
it'
tl!egal
to
roD
the
calones
m
ftve
pounds
of
Aprtl
18,
at
the
Meigs
Inn
Legislation
now on Its way to
gratulati
ons
on
gettmg
nd
of
to
expand
your
blood
U
y
11rt:
Oluu
Valley
PubHshmg
corn·
I eat only 800 calones a day,
111 Comt St , Pumt1uy, Oluu
volwne
that
is
C:l limtted af·
u~ly,
back
a
vehicle
odometer
the
!5
pounds
of
fat.
Not
body
fat.
banquet
room.
Anyone
the
gOVei'IIOI''S
office would
so I cut my mtake to only 500.
~.,769 BUIIUJl!/i:l OffJl'l' Phuuc !141.!·
must
have
been
written
just
everyone
has
enough
wtll
The
oU1er
problem
you
allow
the
state
Controlling
wishing
to
attend,
be,mne
a
fair
too
l
think
you
need
a
~100
Edltoruu
Phont:9!l"l·2157
For the last few days I have
comnstent
program
and
a
hl·
Sc~vml
claSb
J){)lllllgc
JW~
I
d
at
have
IS
that
pounds
on
the
Board
to
temporarily
power
to
do
that.
member
or
who
needs
infor
him
alSo been nmning a mtle tn
Pu m~J uy, Oluu
The ill IJ was pasSed by the transfer elnergency funds to
I don'\ l1ke you to res\rld !;calc are a poor mdtcatwn of Ue more patiCit&lt;:e
formation about the program
Nll lluriid allvl!rtislng r~ p• esc 11 •
the monung and the other
(~ca
use
of
the
volumt!
of
w
uv~
Ward
·
Griffith
CumiJllnY
In·
SenafJl
viLe• Meshel noted his state agencies and to get the
body
ful
loss
As
fat
IS
your
calones
that
much
I
am
Is
asked
to
call
~rs
rught I played tenms for an
mat
I
Dr
l,amb
"atlnot
c.
HuUIJ!l!lli lllld Cail&amp;ghc r Orv
1973
l•
ord LTD, which he 'noney back when the
sending
you
The
Health
letter
metabohzed
11
breaks
down
Newsome
at
992-3382
Mrs.
hour. The other mormng
'157 f hnd Avt, New Yolk N y '
intendo
to oell In a couple ol d nergency Is over.
into
carbon
diOXIde
and
number
4-7,
Wetght
Losing
,answer
your
letters
personal11~11
•
Newsome
is
avallable
also
to
, when I got on the scale after
}y but ht WIIJ CUISWtf
.SubsnJr,tlu/I
Ja\..t:s
DeiPieli:t.J by
The House took final
Diet,
which
will
giVe
you
a
water.
The
body
may
retam
monU••·
had 120,000 miles on
gtve
lectures
at
church,
club
· all the exercise I've been getliU 11~1 W ICI C llVMilll blt! 75 Ct'lllli pt!l
legislative
action Thunday,
it
and
had
worn
through
five
the
water
As
you
rewm
four
plan
you
can
foll~w
and
shll
repr~sentat1ve
letters
of
1u•ck
6}Mutul
Rout~wiM.!Ie
c
m
c
and
sorority
meetings
1 1 1
' ling and the few CHiones I
agreeing
with a Senate
gencl'al
interest
ill
his
col
~
M'n'llt'
n
ot
nvaiiMble
Oue
month
sets
of
tb
es.
have
a
balanced
dtet
Others
or
fiVe
pounds
of
water
1t
Mrs.
Newsome
is
married
, eat, 1had gained a pound
S:l.!..! fly mall 111 Olun ft/1~ W Va '
"When
I
get
ready
to
selllt,
amendment
forbidding
looks
like
you
are
not
nmkmg
who
want
thts
tssue
can
send
to
Benjamin
(Frank)
umn
Wrtte
tn
hun
111
c'(U'C
of
Oru
YL'lll
I
Xllkl
Sl:t
munllu/
I have to watch everything
this
ncwsp.tpCI.
p
0
Box
Jl
l
~~~
I
hn:t·
~~~~
~~~~~~~~.
tl
110'
I'm
going
to
break
a
bottle
of
which
"ould
result
transfers
progress
After
three
m
four
50
cenL~
for
1t
w1th
a
lung,
Newsome
and
the
couple
with
: I eat so I don't get back to 130
co
R d
l b~ whl l l' $ll101l)l&lt;n , Sl!tllwnl iJS
champagne
over
its
h!rod
in
in
new
Pf081'8111S
or
servtcea
Wl!ckS,
SUddenly
there
Will
be
stamped,
self-addressed
their
two
sons,
Terry,
7,
and
luJl. a IU Ci ty ::iti.ll iOf\, New ~~· Jll 'hrl'o lll"lll h ~ $7;,t:l
' pounds lllttl J was My husSu b" 11J&gt;I1 11tl It ,, • uu Jud~ .. ~utlo l, 1 \
a WitSiwut of we~tcr wuJ yuw Y~11'k . N'{ 1001\,, 1
Rodney, 3, reside at Five the Statehouse parking lot," not authorized by the General
band can eat any\hmg and envelope for matltng.
I UIIl ~ I!Ji u
Assembly,
joked Meshel.
Exercise
hclp1;
i.l
r.&gt;erso11
\wtght
will
dr'Op
Points.
. everything he wants without
By LEONARD CURRY

an1 JAMES HD..DRETII

and could be scrapped if
President Carter dectdes it is
not needed.
But they called 1t unlikely
that plannmg would have
advanced to this pomt
wathout "active mterest" at
the White House.
Any legtslatiVe proposals,
the sources srud, probably
wtll mclude provlstons for a
rural deve lopment bank to
gam the widest poss1ble
support lh the administr.ahon

and Congress
UP! learned U1e Urbank

loans to busmesses w11lmg to

Assembly adopts new code of ethics

Life-saving
Legislation would cut
maneuver
mandated programming

No boundary on human rights

decision
stand

BOWLING

HEALTH

•

Calories cormt in diet

Instructor for
diet group is
announced

I

,

•

9
'

r-----------,
:l . Pro 1I
:Standings I

Idaho State stuns
UCLA five-, 76-75
lly JACK SAUNDERS
UP! Sportlt Writer
Ask the average sports fan
to name a college basketball
powerhouse and he '11
probably respond with UCLA
Michigan, North Carolma 0 ~
Kentucky.
Three of the above proved
worthy of their repulatton
Thursday ni ght but the
fourth , the No. 4-ranki!tl
Bruins of UCLA, acted more
llke pussycats in a shocking
7S.75loss to unheralded Idaho

State, in the NCAA West
Regional semifinals. The loss
was only the third for the II).
lime national champton
Brums in their last 52 NCAA
appearances.
"This was our greatest
VIctory ever - tt's got to be,"
srud Idaho State Coach Jim
Killmgsworth. "We've never
played a No. 4 team before,
let alo ne beaten one.
Unfortunately we don't have
long to celebrate."
" The best team won

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ara e

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tonight," srud UCLA Coach
Gene Bartow "It's history.
We lost. Jim's got a great
team and they're very
deservmg of their as-4 record
H we played 10 times, I don't
know how many they would
win But they won torughtand
that 's what counts "
"I'm not really surprtzed
we won. I'm excited and
happy, but not surprised,"
said Steve Hayes, who led all
scorers w1th Tl points. The 7foot center also grabbed 12
rebounds.
Idaho state trailed by slX at
halftime, but battled back to
gra b the 1ea d wtth etght
minutes to go and were
ahead, 62-56, when UCLA
went into a fullcourt trapping
press. But the harassmg
def ense resulted in eight
Bruin fouls in the final six
minutes and the Bengals
scored 15 of the1r final 17
pomts on free throws to stay
JUst ahead of the fast closing
Pac-ll champions.
In the !mal 37 seconds
UCLA fouled reserve Erme
Wheeler twtce And the ,5-f'!"t11 freshman, wbo hadn t hlt a
shot all game, made all four
free throws to preserve the
VIctory.
Ed Thompson followed
Hayes m scormg with 14
pomts and Greg Griffm had
12. Griffm, playmg the entire
second half w1th four fouls ,
also held Player of the Ye1r
Marques Johnson to JUS\ two
foul shots tn the !mal 20
mmutes. Johnson, playmg

By MILTON RICHMAN
;:;:;:;
~W
UPI Sports Ed1tor
:;~;:;
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI) -BoWie Kuhn tells me he feels a great
sense of satisfaction and vmdicatlOn
That's perfectly understandable. ·
H I were he, though, I'd also feel some sense of cautton
because Charlle Fmley never quits, no matter what. Three
different people could tell him he 's dead and he sttU wouldn't
lie down, and besides Charlie Finley, Bowie Kuhn shouldn't
forget Ted Turner now waltmg to take a legal crack at him.
The way I see it, the commissiOner won one and lost one.
He struck out Wednesday when u.s. District Court Judge
Newell Edenfield ruled in Atlanta he had to remstate Turner,
the BraveR' suspe nded owner, until aU the facts can be heard in
court and then hlt a home run Thursday when U.S. District
Court Judge Frank J McGarr ruled in his favor in denying
Fmley's request for $3 5 million damages in Chicago
"You take fllm gs as they come," Kuhn says, about gomg
one-for-two "What happened in Chicago is tremendously
' unportant What happened lll Atlanta IS a preliminary step m
an important deciSIOn "
Be that as 1t may , Bowie Kulm 15 far from bemg out of the
woods.yet
Finley says he'sappealing, wh1ch comes about as much of a
surpriSe as hts hirU)g another manager.
~or
No matter whether he w1ns or loses his appeal, he will keep 1
1
after Kuhn. That's the nature of the man It ISn't that he really
despises Kuhn so much, 1t's sunply tbat he'd be crltiClll of
anyone who was corrurussioner Charlie can't stand authonty
ROCK ISLAND, m. (UPI)
unless he 's the one exercismg 1t.
- Wittenberg will be out for
As for Turner, he may g1ve Kuhn more trouble m the end revenge torught when tl goes
than Finley. When the Judge ordere&lt;j Kuhn to reliiS\ate Turner, up against Scranton (Pa. ) m
suspended for "tampermg" w1th Gary Matthews before the NCAA DlVIslOn III
signing him as a free agent, he made tl clear he meant nght basketball semifmals.
now.
Wittenberg and Scranton,
Referring to Kuhn, Edenfield sa1d, "He's going to have to do which went into overtime m
tl or I'll do It for hun. You have a man enjomed from looking last year's champiOnship
after his business right at the tune 11 needs lookmg alter the - finals before Scranton
most."
prevailed ~7 , meet in the
What puzzles me about thiS entire bliSiness IS how one U.S. second game on the
DIStrtct Court judge CHn rule that the baseball commiSsioner Augustana College campus.
dlles have authority over the owner of the Oakland A's and how The opening contest matches
another U.S District Court Judge can rule doesn 't have any Oneonta State (N.Y.) aga1nst
author1ty over the owner of the Atlanta Braves Can somebody llam!me (Minn.) with the two
please explain this laugbable riddle to me because my legal wtnners playing for the
expemnce IS rather limited. I suppose 1\ has a lot to do with national tiUe Saturday mght.
what distrtct you' re in when you cballenge the comnuasioner's
"I guess t\'s appropriate
authm tty Anyway, I think they should get together. Some of that we should be playing the
our courts are as mconststent as some of our baseball people , team that beat us in the
and th•f 's what I would call the hetght of mconsiStency
national finals last year,"
Desp•te his setba ck in the Turner case, I'm sure Bowie Kuhn srud first-year coach Larry
feels better about h1s stature as commisstoner in hght of Hunter, who was then an
McG arr's decis10n
assistant to Tiger coach Bob
li e should feel better 1f for no other reason than he's not Hanulton .
hunbng so much anymore, he 's swmgmg away. At least, he's "We know what we are up
acting, doing somethmg, which to my way of thinktng is far against," satd Hunter.
better Utan stepping back and dmng nothmg. Remember how "Scranton is a scrappy, wellthe conumss10ner said he couldn't do anything about CatfiSh coached outfit whtch plays
Hunter's contract problem w1th Fmley? I remember t\, and you tooth and nail."
st11l say he could've brought his Influence to bear.
Wittenberg and Scranton
I'rn renunded of how the late Kenesaw Mountain Landis took turns during the regular
once pomtect,, to the rule dealing with the ,action any season at being rated No. lin
comnusstoner could take "in the best mterests of baseball ." the NCAA Division Jfi
The rule 1s somewbat elastiC \be way it was written, and basketball poll, with the
during his commiSSionership, Landis once asked his attorney, Royals finishing on top and
Uw late Leslie O'Connor, about Its legality.
the Tigers No. 2.
" What does this mean?" he sa1d, pointihg to the rule in the Scranton is led by 6-6
book.
sophomore center Irvin John·
"It means whatever you make it mean," O'Connor replied. son, averaging 15 points and 9
Landis understood that and made the rule reflect the force ot rebounds per game. Three
his personality
other Scranton starters
Slowly but surely, Bowie Kulm, I think, is growing to average in double figures.
understand what that rule means, too.
Wittenberg, which beat
Rose-Hulman (Ind. ) 71~7 In
the quarterfinals to get to the
semis, IS paced by a triO of
veteran senior players m 6-4
Rick Whtte, the leading
scorer at 18 points per game,
&amp;.7 Greg Seay and lh'i Clyde
Eberhardt. Sophomore Robin
Gregory and freshman Bnan
"The play out there was Agler round out the Tiger
By DAVID MOFFIT
just
slow enough to give me lineup.
UPI Sports Writer
time
to thmk my shots out,"
PONTE VEDRA, Fla.
(UPI) .- Some of golf's S8ld McCullough. "This is my
biggest names dread the wind lowest round this year. On shots to withln a few feet of
that whips off the ocean thts golf course, it's the pin and watched \be ball
across the tough Sawgrass tremendous. It might hold up bounce 25'feet away, clean off
course but Uttle-l&lt;nown Mike as my lowest round thlB the green."
J .C. Snead went Into
McCullough figures that's year."
today's
play three strokes
McCullough went into his
just an alibi.
back
after
an opening 69 that
final
two
holes
Thursday
at
4
"Wben you are hitting the
tied
him
for
fUth place with
ball weU, wind conditions under. If that hadn't changed,
newCCJmers
Bill
Kratzer\ and
don't matter," said the be'd have wound up in a fourEd
Sabo
and
Australian
way
ue·
for
the
first..,ound
former elementary school
Bruce
Devlln
who
finished
physical ~ducatlon te11cber, ~d with Tom Watson, Ray
with
a
nourish
by
making
a
who outshot everybody else in Flol'!l and Qon Bies.
!!).foot
eagle·putt
on
the
final
Thursday's opening round of
But McCullough sank a ~
the f300,000 Tournament foot birdie putt at No. 17 to go hole.
Only three others in tbe
5 under and take a one&lt;llroke
Player&amp; Championship.
openin«
field of 144 were able
"I waa too cold out there to lead, then widened that
to
break
par, They were John
be nervoua. I wish I could m.argin at No. 18 when he
Schroeder,
Hubert Green and
play lhe next three days like placed 11 sandwedge eight
Peter
Ooslerhula
of England,
feet from \be cup and sank
this."
all
with
71s.
Nicklaus,
the
McCullough, who will be 31 that one lor his 11eventh birdie
defending
champion,
had
a
73
nut Monday ancl who haa of the afternoon.
but
didn't
seem
displeased.
"It's
impoNible
to
play
apenl five years on tbe PGA
"I didn't play too badly,"
tour without much success, textliook golf on thiS golf
said
Nicklaus, "I just wasn't
said
Floyd,
went Into today'• second course,"
good
with the putter. I "asn't
round with a twoo~~b·oke lead "especially when the wind Is
Wlhappy
lth the way J played,
after polling a 6-\lnder1J8r 116 blowing and the greens get
just
the
way
I scored." hard. I kept hitting mgh, so;,
on Thunday .

Tigers out
revenge

Lower grade Phys·Ed
teacher leads in TPC

,

N BA St•ndings
By Un1ted Pr.ess lnternat•onat
Eastern Conference

Aflanttc DIVISIOn

W L Pet

GB

Philadelphia

" ' 27

603 -

NY Kn1cks

31 38

449 JQI,'l:
391 U ll7
304 20v1

Boston

Bullalo

34 34 500
27 42
21 48

NY Nets

7

Centr,al D IVIStOn

the last two games Wlth im
infected wisdom tooth, led
UCLA With 21 pomts, Dave
I :reenwood added 20 points
and 14 rebounds and Roy
Hamilton scored 11.
The wm upped ISU's record
to 25-4, tying their best season
mark ever m 1957 and
sending the Bengal.&lt;; mto the
regiOnal championship finals
for the fu:st time mthe team 's
history.
North
Carolina
and
Kentucky earned berths m
the East Reg10nal fmals , but
the third-ranked Tar HeeL•
were sorely tested before
prevailing over Notre Dame,
79-77. Kentucky was an easy
93-78 winner over Virginia
Mihtary Institute.
North Carolina, which
practically has a patent on
the four-comers offense took
advantage of the inability of
Notre Dame to exeeute one.
The Fighting Irtsh led by 14
early in the second half but,
up by five with 5.45
remammg, Coach Digger
Phelps tried to run out the
clock and got burned.
Four
Notre
Dame
turnovers off the four corners
brought the 26-4 Tar Heels
back and Phil Ford shook off
an elbow m)ury to make a
patr of foul shots with two
seconds left
"Phil 1s about an 80 per
cent free throw shooter ( 85
per cent, actually ), bot he's a
99 per cent shooter m
Slluahons like that," sa1d
North Carolma Coach Dean
Smith of hiS ace guard.
Rese rve guard Truman
Claytor, used mostly for
defensive purposes, h1t 13 of
15 shots from the floor and
scored a career-high 29 points
to
key
ftfth·ranked
Kentucky's vtc\ory
"I was putin to harass their
point man (Kelly Lombard).
They wanted me to deny him
the ball , and we were
successful," sa id Claytor,
who brought a 5 a scoring
average into the game.
"When I hit my first four
shots, I knew I had it."
Jack Givens overcame a
slow start to add 26 points for
the Wil4cats, 2&amp;.3, who shot 80
per cent from the floor to
VMI 's 43. Ron Carter led the
Keydets w1th 28 pomts.
North Carohna
and
Kentucky square off m
Saturday's fir st reg tonal fmai
game, at 12 noon EST
Top-ranked M1ch1gan,
second m the NCAA tourney
last year, defeated mtrastate
nval Detroit, fl&amp;.81 in the
Mideast Regional semifinals.
"You know a lot of people
made a big deal of a nva!ry
or a feud between us and
Detroit," Orr said "But 1t
was overplayed They've got
a good team and if 1\ can be
worked out, we'd be willing to
play them again."
Michtgan had not played
Detroit m four years, and
Titan Coach D1ck Vttale was
also ready to discount any ill
feelmgs that might bave been
sunmering,
The game was close
throughout and the decision
wasn't settled until seruor
John Robinson, with a season
high 25 pomts, scored three
key baskets in the closing
minutes to tee Michigan's
26th win in 29 games R o b 1 n
s o n and sophomore center
Phil Hubbard, who scored 22
points and grabbed 26
rebounds, proved too much
for Detroit.
In the other M1deast game,
UNC-Charlotte used a
balanced scoring attack, led
by 19 points from Cedr1c
"Cornbread" Maxwell, to
whip No. 9 Syracu,se, 81-69.

Houston

San Ant onio
Wasl1 1ngton

W L Pet GB
47 16 618 J9 29 574 3
39 JO 565 3112
3.t 32 515 1

Cleveland
Atlanta
28 .4 1 .406 l.d 'h
New Orleans 26 41 388 15'12
Western Conferenc:e
M1dw est Di v ision
W L Pcf
GB
Denver
43 27 614
Detrotf
dO 29 580 21h
Kansas C1ty
37 31 544 5
ChiCi\gO
34 35 493 B'h
lnd1ana
31 38 449 11 1!~
Milwaukee
25 47 347 19
Pa c1f1C Dtvis10n
W L Pet
GB
Los Angeles
42 26 618
Portlan d
41 29 586 2
Golden State 39 30 565 3'h
Sea ttl e
35 35 500 8
Phoent x
27 41 397 15
Thursdav ' s Results
Houston 88 Cleyelan d 87
Kansas Ctt y 125 Buff alo 104
Milwaukee 100 Boston 91
NY Kn1cks 115 Denver 107
Portl and 115 Golden Sf 106
Fnday 's Games
Atlanta a t Boston
Cleveland at NY Nets
Ho uston at Philadelph ia
Kansas C1 ty at Ch1cago
Seattle at Detr o1t
Go lden St at Los Ange les
New Orleans at Phoen1x
lndta na at Portland
Saturday's Games
Atlanta at NY Kn lc ks
San Anton to at Cleve land
Seatll e at Ch1c ago
Buffalo at Houston
ln d1ana at Golden St ate

Rockets sharpest
United PreSBinternatlonal
The Houston Rockets don't
have the most expensJve
team lll the NBA, they don't
have the most well-known
players and they don't have
anyone who can really
dominate the game.
What the Houston Rockets
do have, however , IS a 42-26
record that IS second to none,
a mne-game wtnning streak
that IS the longest m the NBA
thiS season, a thre~ame
lead m the Centr.al.DiviSwn
and the best record in the!r
1fl.year history wt\h fllote
than three weeks remammg
to tmprove on tt
All-Star forward Rudy
TomjanoVIch, haVIng the best
year of h1s dtstmgutshed
seven.year career, scored 23
points and front-eourt mate
Moses Malone hauled down 24
rebounds to keep the Rockets
streaking Thursdav night as

NHL Standangs

By Unti ed Press International
campDell Conferenc e
Patnck DIVISIOn
W L 'T Pts GF GA
Ph1la
43 16 13 99 286 193
NY lslandrs 43 19 10 96 256 173
Atlant a
31 30 11 73 236 236
NY Rangers 25 33 l4 64 245 278
Smythe D1 vu•on
W L T Pts GF GA
Sl Louis
29 34 8 66 ~05 239
Ch1cago
23 39 10 56 215 272
Mmnesota 19 35 l7 55 215 27 6
Vancouver 23 40 9 55 204 260
Color ado
19 39 13 51 202 264
Wales Conference
Norns CIIIISion
W l T PIS GF GA
x Montreal 54 8 11 119 350 165
PittSbur gh 31 29 13 75 221 230
Los An ge les 29 29 l.t 72 234 213
washon 9 tn ,, J' " s&gt; 189218
Det ro II
1646 9 41 174 27 1
Adams OtVI S IOR
W L T Pts GF GA
Bu ffal o
u 22 6 94 268 197
Basi on
43 21 8 94 277 214
Toronto
32 28 12 76 176 24 8
Clevela nd 22 38 10 54 206 257
lt ·CIInched
1st
place
1n
dl~lsion

Thursday's Results
Atlan ta 4 Ph tladelph 1 a 1
Boston 4 Buffalo 2
Los Angeles 3 Detro•f 2
Fnday' s Games
Color ado at Washmgton
Mmnesota at Cleveland
Saturday ' s Games
NY Rangers at PttfSburgh
I d er s
Ch JCago at NY ISan
Allan t a at Toro nto
vancou&lt;.Jer at 51 L ou 1s
, PhdadelphJa at Los Angeles

WHA Stand ings
By United Preu International
East
w L T Pts. GF GA
Quebec
41 27 2 84 304 256
o nc1nn at• 36 31 3 75 315 259
lnd1anapls 3232 7 71237259
New Eng lnd 29 37 6 64 236 263
81rmnghm 28 41 3 59 25 1 272
X M1nn
19 18 5 43 136 129
West
W l T Pts GF GA
Houst peg
on
43 20
276 249
197
W1nn1
39
29 62 92
80 317
San D1eg o 33 33 4 70 23 1 249
Calgary
28 35 S 61 710 23 1
Edmonton 29 40 3 61 204 27 1
PhOentx
26 40 4 56 244 326
x·Team d1sbanded
Thursday ' s Results
Quebec 4 Phoenix 3
lndpls 5 Btrmtngham 2
Edmonton 4 Winn ipeg 3
Fr iday's Games
Calgary at New E:ngland
Quebec at Cmc1nnah
Phoen1x ai Houston
W1nn1peg at lndtane pohs
Saturday ' s Games
Calgary at Quebec
San Du~go at Ph0en 1x

they edged diviSIOn nval
Cleveland, 88-87
"We Just got out there and
played hard," Houston Coach
Tom NISsalke satd. "Malone
is sensa ltonal, the best
rebounder in the league.
(Center Kevin) Kunnert has
been very responsive and
consistent. And Tomjanovich
IS just a superb shooter Our
bench has helped a lot, too,
especially wben we got three
guys lll foul trouble early
tomght."
Elsewhere, Kansas City
wa lloped Buffalo, 125-104,
Mllwaukee stopped Boston,
1()1).91 , the New York Kmcks
beat the Nuggets tn Denver,
115-107, and Portland downed
Golden State, 115-106.
Kings 125, Braves 104:
Brtan Taylor scored 24
points to lead seven Kansas
City ptayers m double ftgures

as the Kings posted their
seventh straight wm and
snapped a three -ga me
Buffalo v1ctory skem
Bucks 100, Celtlcs 91 :
Milwaukee scored 10
straight pomts, mcluding four
each by Bnan Winters and
Qutnn Buckner, to break a
4th quarter tie and g1ve the
BuckS their fourth WID in a
row and their loth straight at
home. Winters led the Bucks
with 21 points John Havhcek
psced Boston w1th 24 while
Dave Cowens scored only 8
pomts, all m the final period.
Knicks 115, Nuggets 107:
Bob McAdoo scored a
gam e-high 34 pomts and
helped blunt a bnef fourth·
quarter Denver rally as tbe
Nuggets lost only their fourth
game at home this season.
Knicks' rookie Lonme Shelton
scored 20 pomts, double h1s
average, and teammate Earl
Monroe also fllllshed w1th 20
High-pomt man for the
Nuggets was forward David
Thompson
w1th
30
Moskau when they bunched Teammate Dan Issei bad 21.
three of their nine hits m the Blazers 115, Warriors 106:
Reserv e fo rward Larry
third inning.
Steele
scored 27 pomts to help
The homers by Henderson
secondplace
Portland extend
and Revermg were three of 13
1ts
lead
over
Golden State to
hits by the Reds
1'k games tn the Pactfic
DtVIston Jamaal Wtlkes led '
the Warriors wtth 24

Reds wallop Astros 10·1
TAMPA, Fla (UP!) outfielder Steve
Henderson hit two homers
and Dave Revermg added a
gra nd slamer to power the
Cincmnati Reds to a 11).1
Vlctory over the Houston
Astros Thursday.
The ftrst of Henderson's
two homers came off G1l
Rondon and touched off a
ftve..,un seventh 1nnmg
fuly Knight followed wtth a
double, John Summers added
a single and a walk to Dan
Norman set the stage for
Revermg's homer.
The Astros' only run came
off rookie righthander Paul
Rook~e

Transacti'ons
~ports Tran sact 1on s
By Um1ed Press lnt ernahonal
Thur sday
Baseb all
FORT LAUDERDALE , Fla
Shortstop
Fred
Stan ley
Signed three yea r contr act w1th
the New York Yankees
Colleg e Bask elllall
STORR S, Conn Donal d
'' De e" Rowe nam ed asSIStant
dt r ector of alhlei1 CS at Umver
S1ly of Connect1cu t and Dam
Perno r ep laces Rowe as head
basketball coa ch
HUNT INGT ON, W Va - Slu

tHISTLEDOWN
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
(UPI ) - Capt. B1lly Bud ran
the five furlongs In :59 1-li,
just off the track record of ·58
3-5, Thursday to wm the
featured etghth race at
Thistledown
The four-year-old, ridden
by Tony 0-Amtco, patd $2 60,
$2.40 and $2 20 Aurebob was
second and Na\tve PromiSe
was third
School Crossmg won the
mnth race for a $116 40 payoff
to set up a &amp;-5-2 \rlfecta worth
$6,133 50 Wl\h Sweet Lolhplp
and Teal Blue
The ~ datly double of
Classic B1bboo and Haley's
Mark patd $31 60

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Aberdeen named head basket
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Slty
Tt'nn1s
NEW YORK - Fred Stolle
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TV &amp; Apeliance
World Team Tenn1 s
Football
Gas
WASHINGTON Redsktns
Racme,OhiO
released w ide re ce11Jer Roy
Chester- "'""l
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Mtchig&amp;n-ana UNC-Charlotte
will meet in\ eh regtonal title
game Saturday at 2 p.m
EST
In the other West game,
Robert Smith, Reggie Theus
and Eddie Owens scored the
last 29 pomts for sixth-ranked
Nevada·Las Vegas, boosting
the Rebels to an 8IWI3 victory
over 10\h..,ated Utah. UNLV
opposes Idaho State Saturday
at 2 p.m. MST.
In the Midwest Reg10nal
semifinals, Marquette edged
Kansas State, 67.j!S, on a
Batch Lee layup w1th 18
seconds left and Wake
Forest's delay game proved
more than Southern Illinois
could handle, IMH!l. The two
winners meet Saturday at 1
p.m. CST for a berth in tbe
final four at Atlanta, Ga.,
March 26 and 28.

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�4----The Daily Sentinel, Middlepot·t·Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, March 16. 1977

F·o rem3n upset

South Webster outshoots Southern 65-51

SOUTiiERN HIGH'S GffiL basketball team lost at'
Chillicothe last night 65-01 in district play against the
South Webster Jeeps. Here Jaye Ord, daughter of district
superintendent Bobby and Mrs. Ord, scores two for South· .
ern , on a cleverly executed drive and layup.- Gary Sisk
picture.

'
Room
'Home Run
now available
CINCINNATI (UP! ) - The
Cincinnati Reds announced
tqday they will open a new
area for groups to watch
Reds' games at Riverfront
Stadium for the upcomng
season.
The grou p-s eating area is

to be called the "Home Run

Room."

Av aila ble for gro ups
numbering between 38 and 50,
the "Home Run Room' ' is a
glass-enclosed box on the

our grou ps, 1 ' said Dan
Hunter, Reds' director · of
group sa les.
"We make use of the 'First
Base Press Box' which has
been very popular. with our
fans, but the minimum is 78
and that's oft en too big for
many groupo who would like
the privacy of their own
~nail £!'

box. "

stadium 's "clu b~ ' level above
\ell field. •

MEETING CALLED
RUTLAND ,.. The Rutland
Baseball League will meet at
thr ee tiers of cushioned 6: 30 p. m. Tuesday at the
Gene Wise res ide nce in
cl&gt;airs.
"The Home Run Room Rutland . All In terest ed
should fit the bill for many of persons are asked to attend.

The room is carpeted, ai rc on d itioned a nd feat ures

By Greg Halley
The Southern Girls basket·
IBll team ~n ded ' its seasm
Thursda y night; but tl!ey still
took home the runnerup
troph y in the District
Tournament at Chillicothe, as
they fell p'rey to a strong
South Webster club, 65-51.
That was only the second loss
in lour years for the Tornados
of Coach Connee Williams,
both losses coming in tour·
nament play,
·
The hot shooting of Webster's Robin Hagen and foul
trouble plagued the rornados
as South Webster juinped off
with a fast first quarter, but
from then on the game was
even. The South Webster
Jeeps got off to a 4-0 lead with
7:20 showing on the clock, but
two str aight buckets by
juniors Cheryl Roseberry and
Jean Ritchbart tied it at 4-all
with 5:40 rem.aining on the
clock. Two buckets by Jenny
Lauro and two by Hagen let
the Jeeps go out in front 12-6,
bul then Roseberry drew her
club within four at 12-8, but
that's as close as the Tor·
nados came the rest of the
night as the first period ended
21·10.
After that last bucket by
Rosebe,rry, the Tornados
scored only four points in the
next fi ve and one-half
minutes!
Webster opened the scoring
in the second periQ&lt;I to go up
23-10, but with 3:08 showing in
the second period the
Southern team had got back
into the game within nine, 26·
17. But midway through that
second period, rebounder
Brenda Lawrence picked up
her fourth personal foul and
had to go to the bench.
The half ended 32-21 with
Hagen getting 14 points, 12 of
them on steals and layups.
She had 10 the first quarter.
Ritchhart and Roseberry
each had 10 for the Tornados
in that first half.
Lawrence came back into
the game midway through
the third period and played a
superb game the rest of the
way, but it was too late. At
one point in the third period,
the Tornados trailed by as
much as 21 points, but they
fought back to within 13 twice
in. the third a nd fourth
quarters. That's as close as
Webster let them get.
Hagen topped all scorers as
she pumped. in 31 points, but
right behind her was Lauro
with 20. The ' board work of
Lauro proved a pig factor as
she collected 17 of her team's
45 rebounds, most of them in
the first three quarters. No
other Jeep was in double
figures, but the team was hot
from the field as they hit 50
percent (30 of 60) and cashed

a three-ye'" contract with the
Yankees, which , he says,
UP I Sports Writer
r~gives me security for the
The guy who'·s already been
first time in my life."
singled out as the whipping
Elsewh ere around the
boy if the New York Yankees
campo : Rusty Staub hit a
should lose the 1977 American
two;un homer and Jason
Lea gue pennant
feels
1
Thompson a three;-un homer
'needed ."
as the. Detroit Tigers routed
He 's shorts top Fred
the Montreal Expos, 11-3 ...
·Stanley and lor a man who
Roy Howell and Juan
has never committed a felony
Beniquez homered in tbe
on the ball field he must be
Texas' Rangers' 7~ win aver
the most maligned player in
the Minnesota Twins ...
the game . The Yank ee
Rookie outfielder Steve
clubhouse is an elegant room
Henderson's two homers
with prima donnas and
paced the Cincinnati Reds w
milliomiires wall to wall.
a 1().1 triumph over the
You 've got a tough act tO
Houston Astros.
compete witll when George
Dave Kingman, holding out
Steinbrenner, Billy Martin,
for a $3-million contract
Re ggie
Jackson, Ken me."
Stanley batted .238 in 110 spread over six years, hit his
Holtzman and Thurman
Munson are all talking at games last season and signed tllifd homer in four games in
the New York Mets' 5-2
victory over the Pittsburgh
Pirates ... Ross Gr4nsJey and
Myrl Smith shut out Kansas
City for seven irmings as !be
Baltimore Orioles scored a 21 victory over the Royals ...
Charlie Chant's two-run
homer gave tbe st. Louis
Cardinals a 3-2 decision over
WAREHOUSE CLEARANCE
the Chicago White Sox.
once but that's not Stanley's
problem. They get the credit
when the Yankees win and be
gets the blame when they
lose.
The
Yankees
wer e
criticized during the winter
for not ·getting either Bert
Campa ncris or Bobby Grieb
in 'the re-en try sweepstakes.
Then they failed wgel Bucky
Dent from the Chicago White
Sox. Now they're stuck with
Stanley.
Stuck' Well, maybe that's
not the word. As Stanley says,
"Okay, I 'II give you
Campaneris and Grieb, but
.name me another shortstop in
the league who is better than

JEAN RITCHHART (10) , shoots a jumper, and hits
for two of the 10 points sbe scored against South Webster
· in the Soutllern Local girls ' 65-01 basketball loss at
Chillicothe. This group of girls lost just two games, both in
tournament play,in four years. Their record this year : 141. Gary Sisk picture.

.Manny Mota, 39 and still
going strong, hit a two-run
single that enabled the Los
Angeles DQ&lt;Igers to defeat the
Yankees, 5-2 ... Homers by
George Scott and Bobby
Darwin paced the Boston Red
Sox to a :;.2 triumph over the
Atlanta Braves ... Pinch·
hitter Dane Iorg's grand·
slam homer was the big blow
in the Philadelphia Phillies'
12-6 win over the Toronto
Blue Jays.

YES

Dreams of a state tourney berth were shattered Thursday
evening when the Wahama White Falcons lost a 70-63 heart·
breaker to Doddridge Court, in the opening round of the Class
AA Region One Tournament held at Gl e ~v ille State College.
The loss brings an end to the 1976·77 cage season, that
began som e three months ago. The Whi)e Falcons of Coach
Jim Schen· finished the campaign at 1().12 and a sect.ional
tourney championship.
.
Six Wahama seniors made their final appearance on the
hardco urt m htgh school competition and that includes Duk'e
Smith, Rob Ntcewantlcr, Tim Sayre, Tim Davis , Mike
Goldsberry and Jerry Tucker.

The LINFIELD • G4746M
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co nsol e wilh brac ket fee t
and casters . AFC.
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1

March 2D . F'mi ~hin g last )'ea r

The KELSTON
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AFC. Simulated
Wood Gra ining with
Wood Veneer Top
and Ends.

Southern ha s to be one of the
fAvorites to finish n[!ar the
top again as they lost only
three stHrters from last
year's squad. Graduawd are
pitchet Brady Huffman , his
batterym at e ·s l u~ger
Greg
Dunn in~ . 1111tl hard-throwing
southpaw pitcher and slugger
Jim Riffl e.
Senior lctt cnm:n returning

NOW

HAS
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SAN JUAN , P.R. (UPI )
George· Forerrmn was taken
to a hospil.i1l early ~' riday
morning alter his loss · to
Jlmmy Young by unanimous
decision in a 12-round £ighL
Fore man complained of
hand
critmps
and
dehydrati on
and
his
managers asked for a
neurologist when the former
heavyweight champi on of the
world was wheeled into the
Professional Hospital in &amp;m
juan at about 12:20 a.m.
Foreman had rel~sed to
speak to the ph-:;s"after the
fight and ap~e a re4 &gt;in bad
shape as he lay face down on
a table in hiS dressing room.

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LEON, W. VA.

,,

to the starting lineup will be
Steve Hendricks, Scott Wolfe,
Greg Cundiff , an d Eri c
Dunning. J uniors who made
the start ing nine last year are
Mike Huddleston and John
Sayre. Sayre set a school
rec·ord last season with 28
base llits. Other juniors who
saw Jots of action and often
broke into th e starting nine
and who 11ill be pushing for a
starting berth are Richard
Teaford and Mark Forbes.
Senior Do ug Warden and
juniors Steve Hill and Herb
Ervin showed lots of im·
provement last year and
they' ll undoubtedly ~e getting
some starting roles. Greg
Huffm an, a brother to Brady,
also hopes to find a spot as he
tcies out this yea r. Jun ior
Kelly Winebrenner, a trans·
fer from Meigs, will be
counted upon for a starting
position, somewhere but will
be getting a late start due to
recent surgery on a finger.
Prom isin g sophomore s
include John West, Dwight
Hill , Seth Hill, .Jim O'Brien,
.Ji m Po well a nd J ackie
1

Lyons. In all , 19 players are
vying for positions on the
varsity.
Work ing out on the reserve
squad are John Pape, John
Davis. Jonathan Rees, Mike
Nance, Jack Duffy, Tom
Bass, Chuch Michael, Chris
Wolfe, Steve Collman, Mark
Parsons, and Ron Davis.
Following is the schedule of
thi s
yea r 's
Tornado
baseballers:
VARSITY
March 29, Miller, Away.
April I, Symmes Valley,
Away.
April 4, Eastern, Away.
Ap ril 6, Ky ger Creek,
Away.
April 8, Wahama, Home
Apl'il II , Eastern , Home.
April 12, Hannan Trace,
Home.
April13, Alexander, Away.
April 14, Kyg er Creek,
Home.
April 18, Southwestern,
Home.
April 20, Federal Hocking,
Home.
April 25, Symmes Valley,
Home,

tallies to give him 22 lor the
game. He also controlled the
boards for a total of 20 in·
dividual rebounds and had
live blocked shots.
Tim Sayre also turned in a
line performance in his final
game as a White Falcon
eager. The 5'10" guard put
five of eleven field goals
. through the hoop in addition to
adding six of eight charity
tosses to g lv~ him a total of 16
points on the night.

,,I

MAR1J NSV[LLE, Va .
(UPJ ) .,.. Harry Gant
ca ptur~d the . ijolc po~ition
and broke hiS own llo!§WoQ&lt;I
500 Classic qualify ing n cord
Thw·sd~y for t~e. J.~te Model
Sportsman hall of Su~da y's
$81,810 NASCAR Natio nal
Championship double header.
The Taylo r$Vil le, N.C.,
driver powered his Buick
Apollo to &amp;1 .9.15 miles 'per
hour on th e .525-n\ile
Martinsville Speedway track
to brea k his 2-year-old record
of 86 n\.p.h.
On ly last mon th he
capture4 the 2().lap modified
race .l at
Oa yton&lt;J
Inrernational Speedwuy .

April 26, Green , Home.
April 27, Federal Hocking,
Away.
April 28, Nort h Ga lli a,
Home.
May 2, Caldwell, Away.
Ma y 3, Hann an Tra ce.
Away.
May 4, Wahama , Away.
May 5, Southw estern ,
Away:
May 10, Green , Away.
May 16, North Gallia Away.
May 17, Alexander, Home.
RESERVES
April1 5, Kyger Creek Res. ,
Home.
April19, Meigs Res., Home.
April 22, Alumni, Home.
May 2, Meigs Res., Away.
May 6, Kyger Creek Res. ,
Aw ay .
May 12, Eastern Res .,
Away .
May 18, Eastern Res.,
Home.

Duke Smith wa s the only
other ~'al con scorer to break
the double figure plateau. The
teams leading scorer netted 12
markers in the game.
Wahama took con trol of the
game throughout the first six
minutes of action by postin g a
commanding 16·10 lead behind
Smith, Sayre and Nicewander.
After a time out the Bulldogs
changed to a zone defense
wh ich stymied the local
charges by forcing them to
take outside shots. The bend
area team managed to hold an
1g.14 lead after one .period of
play but quickly fell behind
once action resumed in tne
second canto.
Doddridge Court. pulled to
a 20.20 tie at the four minute
mark and then proceeded to
outscore the White Falcons by
a 14·7 margin aided by a rash
of Wahama turnovers. The
b•llldogs held a commanding
34-21 edge at intermission. ·
The momentum seemed to
stay with Doddri dge Co.
into the th ird stanza as they
opened up an even wider bulge
threaten ing to make it a
runaway contest. The
Bulldogs built up their biggest
lead of the game by the
quarters end and it looked s if
it was all over fo r the White
Falcons as they were down by
fourteen (53-39) with just
eight minutes to play.
Nicewander, after scoring
all 12 of Wahama's third
quarter points, cut the lead
down to ten points at 53-43 with
two quick buckets. Wahama

right arm and has ordered
Garland not to pitch until the
pain and stiffness subside .
The Indians scheduled Gar·
land lor a complete physical
examination today at Tucson
Medi cal Center for the
purpose of obtaining an
insurance policy on th e right·
bander.

•
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kept scratching and clawing
unti l Greg Bl essing, Tim
Sayre and Tim Davis all sank
two pointers to suddenl y ma ke
1t 57-53 but that was as close
as the White Falcons could
geL For the next four minutes
the local qqintet tr aded ·
baskets with the Bulldogs
before tiln e ran out with
Doddridge Co. on top by a 7().
63 score.
A look at the fi nal statistics
show both teams with 27 fi eld
goals. Doddridge Co. connected on 27 of 63 field goal attempts for 42 percent wh ile the
Wahama charges hit on 27 of
68 for 39. percent.
The Bulldogs won. the l{ame
the free throw line where they
connected on 80 percent (16 of
20) of their attempts. Wahama
managed just 60 percent (9 of
15 ) on their chari ty tosses.
Wahama held the edge in
reboun din g 41 to 39 but
'committed 16 turnovers to
Doddrid ge Co.'s 14 miscues.
So ends another hardcourt
campa ign. Despite the bitter
taste of defeat th e White
Fa lcons can hold their heads
up high for a job well done.

Jeri

By MARABEL MORGAN .
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By Greg nnil&lt;v
T11 e Southern lli~h Sch00\
baseball squ ad uf r oac·h
Hi lton Wolfe . .J r. is takin~
advantage of the warm
weather to prepare fo r thei r

season opener at Mill er on

CONTEMPORARY

TRADE 1161.95

SPRIN&amp;

Althou gh Wahama came
away as losers their 6'4"
center, Bob Nicewand er
eme rged as everyone's
favo rite. The blond·ha ired
senior put forth a superhuman
effort in the second hall to
take gam e scoring honors as
well a s being the top
rebounder of the contest.
Nicewander scored but lour
points in the first hall but
came through in the final two
quarters for eighteen more

Southern opening at Miller March 29

Slight Cabinet Damage

Middleport

--·-·...--"...

AY GARYCLARK

REG. 1769.95

EARLY AMERICAN

USING ENTIRE FRAME :... Bob Nicewander (34), Wahama's 6'4" pivotman, was the
only Falcon to score in the third period against Doddridge. The big man blazed the offensive
hoards on a lay-ups such as this in the third perind for six fi eld goals, good lor 12points. He
Jed all Falcon scorers in the game with 22 points.

Doddridge knocks Wahama out 70-63

GREAT
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ON
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SET

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BATTLING FOR THE REBOUND- Senior forward Mike Goldsberry (12) at .5'10" for
Wahama. cha ll e n g~, Doddndgc's big man 6'3" Ford Lloyd for the re bound .

KROGER

FREEZERS

UPRIGHT

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BAUM TRUE VALUE

in on just 5 of 9 free throws. 8-4-20, Sheri Fenton 2.().4,
Roseberry 's 16 points led Patt i Miller 4·0·6, Sandy
Southern , followed by Ritch· Thornton 1~2 . Totals 30-5-65.
hart's 12 and Lawrence's II.
Jaye Ord added nine lor the
losers . The team was very
SAN JUAN , P.R. (UPI ) cold from the floor as they
Jimmy
Young said early
canned just 23 of 77 shots for a
Friday
that
George Foreman
cool 30 percent, but they
nearly
lou~ him out of the
could have made a closer
game of it if they had made fight in the seventh round but
more than their 5 of 18 free be managed to go on and win
throws. The local · team did through "desperation".
"I didn't think I could make
manage to· come out even on
it,
so I really had to get off my
the boards, gettin g 44
combination
for tlle last few
caroms, Lawrence leading
seconds,"
Young
said of his
the way with 19. But they got
recovery
in
the
nearly
fatal
ha rdly any in that fir st
"I
saw
my
best
seventh.
quarter.
defense
was
an
offense,"
be
Southern bowed out with
said.
the Sectional title, the SV AC
Young sa id that he didn't
title, and a line 14·1 record.
plan
to light a new match
South Webster now goes to
right
away
with Muhanunad
Delawar e lor the Regionals
Ali bqt he was looking
with a 16·1 record.
·' to
another
forward
By,Quarters
ll(Ofessional
fight.
S
lb II 18 12
SW
21 II 21 12
' Southern- Jean Ritchhart 6·
().12, Cheryl Roseberry 7·2·16, ·
BOOSTERS TO MEET
Brenda L&lt;lwrence 5-1·11, Lisa
RACINE
- The Southern
Allen J.l·3, Jaye Ord 4-1·9.
Athletic
Boosters
will meet
Totals 23-5-51.
Monday
at
the
high
school at
South Webster - Robin
7:
30p.m.
Hagen 15·1·31, Jennie Lauro

• PLOWS

8 Cubic ft ....... .. .. ................ •15.0
15 Cubic ft.... ,.. ....... ............ •aoo
20 Cubic ft ........................ . •350
25 Cubic ft ...................... ... •400

TUCSON, Ariz. !UP! ) The Cleveland ·Ind ians had
their second straight 14-run
game T h ur s d ay,
manhandling the Milwaukee
Brewers 14·7 in exhibition
action .
The Brewers he ld a !Ml lead
at one point and had 13 hits of
tll eir own, but could not hold
on .
Erich Raich got the victory
and Cardell Camper took the
mound in the seventh to pick
up a save. Larry Sorensen
was tagged with tlle loss.
La rvell Blank s, who
ban ged out three hits in
Wednesday' s 14-8 victory
over the Chicago Cobs, bad a
three-r un homer in the
Cleveland's six..rWl seventh
inning. Ra y Fosse hit a pair
of doubles and Johnny Grubb
also had two hits.
The Indians scored three
times in the third innin g, four
in the fifth , six in the seventh
and once in the eighth.
The Tr ibe, now 6-2, entered
the game with a team batting
average of .370.
Pitcher Wayne Garland,
who won a $2.3 million multi·
year contra ct with the
Indians, was examined again
Thur sday by Dr . Earl
Brightman, the Indians' team
physician. Brightman stuck
with 1his diagnosis of a mild
ease bE tendonitis in the upper

1h ROUND ...................s2a~
FULL ROUND ........... )2

OF QUALITY ,ADMIRAL

CHEST

By DANIEL DROSDOFF
for Madison Square Garden was an offense."
After the seventh, Young
· SAN JUAN , Puerto Rico .in New York May 11. The
dominated
the rest of the way
(UPI ) -Jimmy Young won a winner of the seoond Young
with
jal&gt;s
and
.hooks with both
new chance for a crack at the , fight will have a cbance at
hands.
world heavyweight boxing Mqhanunad Ali, he added.
Young said the cheers from
Iitle Thu rsday night by
In the post-light news con·
the
crowd "kept me gotng."
handing heav il y favored ference, Young said that
"I
heard them/' Yoq
George Foreman only tbe Foreman nearly knocked him
said
in
.describing his best
second · defea t of his out in the critical seventh
In the 12th
performance
professional career.
round with a left hook to the
round.
"I
think
I had him on
The
28 - ye ar -o ld head.
the
verge
of
a
knockout
three ·
Philadelphian went tbe 12But he recovered and had
or
four
times
."
,
round distance with the Fm·eman on the defensive
Young,
who
has
been
criU·
hulking Foreman, who tried against an assault of lefts and
· cized for lacking punching
vainly to land a knockout rights .
·
blow before his swifter
"I really didn't think I was power, said he did not "put
opponent racked up enough going to make It," . Young Geor~ away " .in the final
(Continued on page 6)
points to give him a said. "I saw my best defense
unanimous decision.
Foreman, , suffering from
hand
cramps
and .
dehydration, was taken to
Professional Hospital after
the fight for a checkup.
Foreman was badly
haltered in the final round
when Young scored a .brief
NOW IN STOCK
knockdown and hammcr"r
away
repeatedly
at
Foreman 's he ad with a
combination of lefts and
rights.
·
A delirious crowd of 12,000
75
light fans urged him, screamilfg, "Jimmy Young,
Jimmy Young !"
BOTH IN 7 FT. LENGTHS
Promoter Don King said
after the bout !bat Young
would have a chance at tbe
winner of the Ken Norton·
;
CHESTER, 0.
985·3301
Duane Bobick bout scheduled

CREOSOTE
FENCE POST

Stanley? Who's he? Uh, Yankees' shortstop
By FRED DOWN

Indians pound
Brewers, 14-7

L1mited to ava 1lable mventory

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�Foreman
Cootinued from page 4
round be&lt;;ause "I had to be
careful. George can hurt you
even when he's going down.
In the first four rounds,
11

Foreman was warned
repeatedly by referee
Waldemar Schmidt, who
docked Foreman one point in
U!e U!lrd for what he called

''unnecessary roughing."
Young said Foreman

hit\

him with his elbows "and

nearly broke my left arm" in
one of the clinches.
The U!ree scorecards had
Young ahead by 118-111, 115114 and IIS-112.
Young upped his record to
21 wins, includ,ing seven KOs,
five losses and four draws
and earned $60,1100. Foreman
dropped to 45-2, wilh his only
olher setback to Ali in Zaire
in 1974. He got $80,1100 for his
losing effort.
On the same card, a
savagely-punching Alfredo
Escalera of. Puerto Rico
retained his World Boxing
COuncil share of U!e world
junior lightweight crown wilh
an easy sixtl!,round TKO over
challenger Ronnie McGarvey
of Baltimore, Md.

Bonnieswill
play Houston
in NIT final
NEW YORK (UP! ) - If
nothing
else,
the
championship game of the
40th Nationa l Invitation
Tourname nt Sunday
afternoon flgUI'es to he highscoring, physical and
punctuated wilh outstanding
individual play.
·
St.· Bonaventure, U!e tournament's Cinderella team,
and Houston, which has won
more games U!an any other
major
college
team,
advanced to the finals
Thursday night, though each
had to struggle to victory
after a&amp;Slllning commanding
leads midway through the
second half.
The Bonnies, 22-6, defeated
Villanova, ~2, as Glenn
Hagan scored 22 of his
seasonhigh 26 points in the
second half and provided key
floor leadership when the
club was plagued by deep foul

Court explains
Finley ruling
By ED SAINSBURY
UP! Sports Writer
CIUCAGO (UP!) -Major
league baseball owners
intended to give their
commissioner virtual
dictatorial powers, a federal
judge ruled Thursday, so
Oakland A's Owner Charles
0 . Finley lost his $3.5 million
damage
suit · against
CO~oner Bowie Kuhn.
"It is U!e judgment of U!is
court U!at plaintiff Charles 0.
Finley &amp; CO. Inc. has failed to
sustain U!e allegations of its
complaint," Judge Frank J.
McGarr ruled , "and U!e relief
sought therein is denied.
Judgment is consequently entered for defendant Bowie K.
Kuhn ."

Finley said he would appeal
the decision.
·
"My only hope now is wilh
the appellate court," he said.
"This is U!e decision of just
one man. We· believe U!at 90
pet cent of the judges in the
United States would have
reached
the
opposite
decision, and we think the
judges of U!e appellate court
DATE ANNOUNCED
SANDUSKY, Ohio (UPI) . The 1977 Women's Ohio Slate
Gqlf Association tournament
will be held at Sandusky's
Plum Brook COuntry Club
July 11-15.
Gail Clayton of Portsmoulh
has won U!e event the past
two years.
The last time the
tournament was held at Plum
Brook was 1968, with current
, LPGA tourist Pam Higgins
taking the title.
trouble.
Houston, 29-7, became the·
first team from the
Southwestern COnference· to
reach U!e NIT finals when
Otis Birdsong broke loose
from a tight defense to score
the go-ahead jumper with
I:46 left and feed off for an
assist 18 seconds later in an
8:!-76 victory over Alabama.
The win was U!e 400U! in
·Coach Guy Lewis' career.

r

occupational safety problems
of rapid expansion of coal
mining will be extensive and
difficult, espe~lally where
strip minin~ is mvolved.
It
soon
will
slag
up,
so
Filially, tliereisthematter,
By LeROY POPE
gas.flred boilers wi\hout any
UPI Business Writer
interruption of service and to conversion to coal means new Heyburn said, of finding the
•
proper balance,
both
NEW VORK ( UPI) - The build some new coal-fired boilers."
Finding
and
training
economic
and
ecological,
United States' best hope of pcwer plants from U!e ground
enough coal miners to supply between nuclear and fossil
achieving reasonable self- up.
sufficiency in energy is for
Heyburn also said it is idle U!e amount of coalthat would fueled plants. A study of
U!e government to finance to hope U!at the fast breeder he needed is another big comparative costs indicates
conversion of electric utilities nuclear
reactor
or problem. Transporting the as a general rule, nuclear
to coal burning, according to magnetohydrndynamics, the coal not only will involve big , genera~ IS cbeaper 011 bo!h
combustion experts.
direct
production
of investment but d'elicate ' the AtlanllC · and Pacific •
There isn 't any bope of electricity from fossil fuels decisions as to whether a 'coasts while fossil-fired
finding enough additional pe- without making steam and particular utility should be 1 plants are cheaper in ~he
· turning a mechanical genera- supplied by ra,llwa)' urilt ' heartland. But every location
trains or coal slurry pipeline·. presents its own problems.
l, oday· tor' ~an solve U!e nation's
It may be advisable to
Time is getting short, he
energy crisis any time soon.
"These U!ings require new relocate some power plants said, because the United
troleum supplies or quick scientific breakthroughs, not closer to coal supplies. A Stat~s is losing ground in the
progress in coal gasification just money and engineering," mine head location of the dri~e fo~ energy self· '
or liquefaction, said DOnald he said, "and nobody can generating plant is the ideal. sufficiency and petroleum
The enviromental and imports are rising too fast.
E. Heyburn of Barberton, predict when a scientific
Ohio, head of Babcock &amp; breaklhrough will come."
Conversion of electric
Wilcox's fossil power
power plants to coal, on the
generation division .
LeRoy Culbertson, a vice olher hand, requires only
president
of
Phillips engineeri ng - although
Corp.
of extremely · expensive
Petroleum
Bartlesville, Okla., also said engineering.
"Many persons pr{)bably
coal must play U!e key role in
achieving ·energy self. find it hard to -understa.1d
sufficiency. He and other why it is so much more cosLly
Phillips officials agreed that to convert a power plant b.ack
fa ce to coal than it was to convert
ele.ctric utilities
formidable obstacles in it to oil or gas some years
converting to coal, however. ago," Heyburn said. 41There
I
Babcock &amp; Wilcox 's are many reasons. A boiler
Heyburn said lhe utilities are heated by coal also can be
not in financial shape to solve heated by gas or oil but a
the problem by themSelves. modern boiler built for clean
CE~HER
What is needed, he said, is to gas or oil heat has too narrow
build new coal boilers tubes for U!e fly-ash laden
alongside the .present oil or heat of even the cleanest coal.
I

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, March 18, 1977

Ed Holter is
FFA president.

EAST MEIGS - The
Eastern High School Chapter,
Future Farmers of America,
has elected new officers who
will begin their duties this
Will ' t 00 .
"Natur ally I'm month.
disappointed with the
They are Ed Holter,
decision. 1've been in president ; Blain Windon. vice
baseball 18 years, and 1 president; Don Putnam,
couldn't help but think this is secretary; Rocky Van Meter,
18 years of blood, sweat and treasurer ; Jim Jackson,
reporter; Greg Hamon,
sacrifice down \he drain."
McGarr's decision did not advisor, and Bill Kautz
grant a request by Kuhn 's · sentinel. At a ~ecent meeting
attorney that Finley be of the chapter, Walter J.
forced
to
pay
the Robb spoke to the group on
commissioner's legal costs. various levels of banking and
However, the two major record keeping.
leagues voted to indemnify
Kuhn, should he have lost the
etty aVO .
suit, so presumably his tegat m'
fees will he shared by 26
major league clubs while
HAMPTON, Ga . (UP!) Finley must pay his own
Richard
Petty fans may see
expenses. It was estimated
their
star
win his second race
legal fees would substantially
of
the
1977
season Sunday in
exceed $1 million for each
the
Atlanta
500.
side .
"King
Richard,"
as they
Finley's suit was based on
like
to
call
him,
set
a track
Kuhn's action last June to
at
Atlanta
record
nullify Oakland's sale for $3.5
million of pitchers Vida Blue International Raceway
and Rollie Fingers and during qualifying Thursday; ·
outfielder Joe Rudi to the driving his familiar red-and·
New York Yankees and blue DOdge around the 1.5mile superspeedway at
Boston Red Sox.
Finley charged Kuhn not 162.501 miles per hour.
" We knew from the
only acted arbitrarily and
laps U!at the car was
practice
capriciously but beyond his
really
working
good, but we
He
sought
authority.
don
't
usually
anticipa
te the
damages
from
the
jlole
because
I'm'
not
that
conunissioner.
good
a
qualifier."
McGarr said, in his ruling,
He broke the old mark of
"The
major
league
161.652
m.p.h. in taking only
agreement ... provides that
one
qualifying
lap, besting
when the commissioner
U!e
record
set
by Buddy
suspects that any act,
Baker
in
a
Ford
last year
transaction or practice is not
when
Baker
won
t.
h
e
pole for
in lhe best interests of
U!e
Dixie
500.
baseball, his function is to
d eter mine
what
College Bask etball Res ul ts
preventative , remedial or
By United Pres s Inte rnational
Tournaments
punitive
action
is
Tournam ent
appropriate, and to take such National Invitation
( Semif ina ts l
action.
St. Bonnie 86 Villanoy&amp; 82
Houston 82 Alabamil 76
"Neilher U!e major league
P;ICAA University Divis ion
agreement itself,
the
·
(Second Roun~ l
East!'!rn Regional
principles of constr.uctlon
College· P~rk , Md .
applied to it, nor the history . Kentu cky
93 VM I 78
of its formulation and the No . Car . 79 Notre Dame 77
Mideast Regional
exercise of power under it,
Lexington. Ky.
support U!e contention that UNC.Chrltte 81 SyracuSe 59
aulhority so broadly granted Michigan 86 Detroit Sl
Midwest Region al
and so conspicuously
Oklihoma City
unlettered was intended to be Marquette 67 Kan . St . 66
86 So . Ill . 81
limited to the areas of rules Wake Forest
West Regional
enforcement, dishonesty and
Provo, Utah
Nevada-L V 88 U~ah 83
moral turJ)itude .... "
r Idaho St . 76 UCLA 75

p

£ red
Atlanta 500.

Coal best energy hope

business

SUGAR.
RUN MILLS
YOUR
ONE STOP
FOR

Cage .scores in
boys, girls play
'

Girls
Ohio High School
Baske tba ll
Un ited Press International
Thursday 's
Tournament Resu lts
(:lass'AAA
!At NOrth Ridgeville]
Bay 67 Westlake 57
·
(Ato&amp;yton)
Dayton Co l. White 44 K et .
t eri ng Alter J7
Ke tt ering' FairmOnt E 63
Ce nter11ille 36
(AtO.IIford l
•
Hamilton Ta ff 47 Flnneytown
J2
Cin Colera in 43 L akota 36
Class AA
(Af Hud son)
Co11en try 49 Chagr in Fa ll s 37
Class A
(At kent Rog sevelf)
Ca rd ina l 48 Br is tol 40

Southern Loca l 61 Cuyahoga
H ts 42
1;)0YS

Ohio High School
Basketball
U l'lited Press International
Thursday's
ToUrnament Results
Class AAA
(At ·c antgn)
Cle St. Ignatius 9' 1 War_r en
Wstrn Rsv 74
Class AA
(A t Oav t on l
Dayton Je ff 55 Sp ri ng fld
S h~wnee

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Mrs.
Simpson
hosts
circle
Girl Scout Diary ~~
~

sy charlene Hoeflich

Training sessions for leaders in preparation for swmner
a slate of officers at the Aprll camping programs have been scheduled to be held at Camp
.
meetmg were Mrs. Maxine Rotan in Athens County.
Mrs. Pat Thoma, service unit director, announces there will
Goeglein, James Soulsby and
Mrs. Dorothy Roach. Also at be a basic skills session on March 31, from 9:30a.m. to 1:30
the April meeting Fathers p.m. A troop camp training program has been set for two days,
Night. will be observed ~nd Thursday, April 7, and Thursday, April 28, 9:30 to 1:30 p.m.
members of the school pa'trol Those interested are asked . to register with Mrs. Dee
Lawrence, 891 Beechwood Estates, Athens, 45701.
will he honored.
Robert Morris, principal,
POMEROY JUNIORTROOPI276
spoke on the new discipline
Meeting
in
the
first aid room at Pomeroy village hall, the
guidelines established for the
time
was
spent
in
preparing
for Thinking Day. The scouts have
school. Mrs. Linda Mayer,
selected
Hawail
and
will
he
doing the hula and a game
prestdent, announced that
. Iat the
h
'll
Th
led
h
fl
d
M
h
arc
program.
e
p
ge
tot
e
ag
an
t
e
gtr
scout
Jack Monte, retired fire mar- promise opened the meeting.
shall, will be guest speaker
and will show a film at the
HARRISONVILLE JUNIOR TROOP 1155
April meeting.
The Harrisonville juniors worked on activities for Thinking
The attendance award went
Day
where U!ey will present Mexico. A trip to the Country
to the third grade. To open
COusins
Cooke Shop was planned and work was continued on
U!e meeting Pomeroy Cub
projects
at the meeting held at the home of Mrs. Rhea Willis,
Scout Pack 249 led in the assistantleader.
pledge and Morris had a
The Lord's Prayer, pledge and girl scout promise opened the
poem and prayer.
meeting.
Refreshments were brought by Barbara Wills and
Refreshments were served
Renee
Willis.
by the executive committee.
·
SYRACUSEJUNIORS1204
Badges were awarded at the Tuesday night meeting of U!e
Syracuse Junior Troop.
Receiving badges were Kim Morrow , the magic carpet,
storyteller, health aide, and cook; Shari Cogar' home heallh
•
and safety, storyteller and health aide; Dreama Owens, health
aide, storyteller; Debbie Michaels, health aide.
Work was continued on the raffia (comhusk dolls and
animals) projects. A vote of thanks was extended by the troop

Personal advocacy

program explained
The personal advocacy pr&lt;&gt;gram and its role in assisting
retarded per sons wa s
presented by Mrs. Mary Skinner at the Tuesday . night
meeting of U!e Salisbury
PTO.
Mrs. Skinner said that an
advocate must meet the
needs of the person he is helping and he able to adapt to differences. She said that the
role of U!e advocate is to supplement U!e help which the
parents give. The particular·
need now, she noted, is for
male advocates and she asked U!at anyone interested in
working with the program get
involved by calling her at the
local Mental Health Center.
Mrs. Skinner also talked
about other U!ings which the
mental health agency does
noting the assistance given in
obtaining social security for
disabled persons, along with
dental and mental health services.
• During the meeting plans
Were made to serve U!e April
15 Pomona Grange dinner.
Mrs. Charles Warth is kitchen chairman and Mrs.
Rollin Radford is chairman of
the dining room. Workers are
asked to he at the school at I
p.m. that day.
Mrs. Ernest Swindell an·

'

Plans for Youth Night to be
observed at the Bradbury
Church of Christ were made
during a meeting of the youth
group Wednesday night at the
church.
r
Kevin King and Desi Jef.
fers will be organist and
pianist for the program, with
Beverly Wilcox as song
leader. Greg Browning will
give the sermonette, and
there will be special musical
numbers by Tina Miller,
"The New Hope 11 , ' jThe New
· Creations" and "The Pro-

RACINE - Mrs. Gretta
Simpson was hostess at her
horne Monday evening,
March 14 for the meeting of
the Esther Circle. The theme
for. ddevotions
was " March
Wm sand sunshine" by Mrs.
.
Marte
Th Roy .
.
ere was group singing of
the hymn
"Sunshine In the
Soul ," Scripture, Deut. 33 :12,
Lamentations a:25 , prayer by
Mrs. Roy and readl'ngs . and
poems by Mrs. Helen Sim~
son.
•
In .the business session the
nomtnatin g co mmittee of
Vera ll eegle, Mildred Hart
and
DOrothy Rad"ley
"'
was

named. A get-well card was
signed for Mr. Martin
Wilcoxen , who underwent
surgery at University
Hospital, COlumbus.
The program topic was
''Missions and Mlssl·onart'es"
presented by Vera Beegle.
She gave a history of the first
missionary soc1'ety formed by
the church over 100 years
ago, July 1862. The hy11U1 ,
"0
M E
Th
pen Y yes; at I May
see " preceded readings by
members : " The Best of
America, The greatest thing
to come o"t
of Amert'ca has
y
been
the
American
Missionary" . "Missionary

Boo k, The Bi ble" "What
Price Discipleship? The
p rtce
· J esus' u·lsctp
· 1es pal'd
for serving Him," "Christ as
a Missionary," "We must
never give up,' • u Give Us
Drive, But keep us from
he'mg driven, so all of us may
live on earth as God wants us
to, " and on Wh'tte cross work,
Keams Canyon. Arizona,
Bethel Neighborhood Center
and Baco e "'· !lege
n '-"'
·
Singing "My Prayer" and
The Lord's Prayer in unison
c1osed. the meeting, Refreshments were served to 15

members and guests. - Mrs.
Francis Morris.

r·en ten P-¥" G-¥/1m G"Ven
, .'T'ues· Jary
1

6

VO 1 U

.
A P1ogram for the Lenten
season was presented by Mrs.
Roy Mayer when Friendly
Ctrcle met Tuesday evening
at Tnruty Church.
Mrs. Mayer's readings in·
terspersed with scripture
were followed by a question
and answer period. The account of the nsen Christ as
recorded in St. Matthew was
read by Mrs. Donald Hauck.
Mrs. Lawrence Stewart was

1. l

It

.
pianist for group singing of
"Ten Thousand Angels" and
''Christ Arose."

U4

Miss Mary V. Reibel, presl
dent, conducted the business
meeting when reporis were
given on project activities
:::::::::,::,:,::,:,::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: earned out during the past
few months.
BOOSTERS TO MEET
Mrs. Thomas Yo.ung
The Meigs Local Band
reported on the ill and shutins
Boosters will meet at7:30
of the church. Notes of app.m. Monday In the band
predation were read from
room ol the high school.
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Dailey,
Several upcoming events
Mrs. Donald Smith and Mrs.
will be discussed and the
Mars.h, mother of Mrs. W. H.
group wtll plan for the
p
ernn . .
.
spring band banquet,
A Illy Will be placed m the

Social
Calendar
FRIDAY
LAYETTE shower for
Ferne Showalter Morris, 7: 30
Friday at the Chester
!Aiughters of America hall.
REVIVAL
1 e at Faith
serv· ch F 'da
T her 1 Ch
a nac e
urc ' n y
U!rough SUnday at 7:30 each
h
Sell
evening wit William
ers
't"'aking. The public is in·
· d
Vlte
·
TffiRD
F"'d Cl b 6 30
u f• M:
F 'da t th" ay
h
n Y a e orne 0
rs.
Dale Smith.
PAST Matrons, Evangeline
Chapter, OES, 7:30 p.m. at
the home of Mrs. James
Buchanan.
.
. .
.JITNEY supper,. Semor
CtttzensCenter, s~rvtce 4 to 7 .
p.m. Frtday eventng. Square
dance to follow the dmner.
Public welcome.
SIGN-UP DATE to par·
tlc1pate in the Pomeroy
Youth League Summer
Baseball
program
at
Pomeroy City HaD, bottom
floor, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
~ regiltration fee must be
paid on U!is date.
SATURDAY
CH ICKEN DINNER
Saturday at Syracuse
Municipal building. Price of

,

:;~~~~~~!n;:~~~~~ire~:~~~~::s;~~~~:!~t~i 1;!' ' ' ' ;;:;~,, :;;~~,, ),.'. ~~r,~~~:~o,f::~::1~:::: :~:c;:~lt~~ ~:~~~:~ ~:~:r~~~~tF~~I!

nounced that there will be an storyteller badge during . the meeting. Kathy Riffle was ::::
&lt;·: new officers and operation
salad course was served by Ladies Auxiliary
.
....
~J
::: of a food booth at the C.B.
Mrs. Slewart and Mrs. Dav1'd
HYMN SING Sa. turday at
organizational meeting for a
Icomed at the mee tmg.
we
·
:,:
R d in
pare nt-teacher forum at · Shari Cogar led in the Lord 's Prayer, Jennie Bentley, the- \
:::: or"'!:,t~Pjuni~a:~:~~:~= fRusshell.fi Arrangemdents of Hazel Community Church at
Meigs Junior High School pledgetotheflag , andallrecitedthegirl scoutpromisetqnpen :::,
owers
7:30p.m. Dan Hayman and
students are asked lo
tares
· d ant thgreen
cafeteria, 7:30p.m. J'uesday. the meeting.
·
::::
::: band
attend.
pe~s came ou
e St· th e Hymn timers. Public
•:::
:;:;
Patmk's Day mob!.
invited.
All interested sitfh grade
:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;·
RACINE
Post
602,
parents at U!e Salisbury
Final plans for a family
school were invited to attend.
MIDDLEPORT JUNIOR TROOP 39
American Legion, birthday
The PTO voted to send a
To complete their work on the cooking badge, the fourth and night potluck to he held at 6
party 7:30 p.m. Saturday at
donation to 'U!e industrial aris fifth graders prepared a spaghetti dinner for the others of the p.m. Sunday at the Mid·
the hal l. Legionnaires,
class which recently com- troop . The sixth graders presented a play about Juliet Lowe, dleport Fir st United
Auxiliary members and their
pleted benches for the school. founder of scouts in America as a part of U!eir sign of the star Presbyterian Church were
families invited. Auxlliary
discussed at the Tuesday
John Lisle, principal; an· requirements.
members to take salads.
nounced that U!e fourth sixlh
On girl scout Sunday, the troop attended the Middleport night mee ting of Group II at
.
SUNDAY
weeks' grading period will · Heath United Methodist Church in a group.
the home of Mrs. William
Polly Cramer
FREE CORN BEEF and
cabbage dinner Sunday 2
end on March 25. The closing \1~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~:~:::::~::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::~::~~~ Morris.
At the fami ly night a film
p.m. for members only of
date of school this year, he
&lt;'~
:
&lt;
:
concerning
the
Sixty
Million
. VFW Stewart Johnson Post
said, has not been determined
1: Fund of the United States
yet.
9926 Mason .
.. Presbyterian Church will be
· GOOD NEWS Singers at
Mrs. Clarence Lambert '"
Pomeroy Church of the
opened the meeting with the
Nazarene, Sunday morning,
pledge to U!e flag. Mrs.
By Helen Bottel 'II
corner of Mulberry and Union
James Will had devotions j:[
:::; new year books which were
DEAR POLLY - Face and dribble it on any weeds or Ave. The Rev. Gene Musser
which included two prayers .....
made by Mrs. Eddie Crooks. hand creams have left greasy grass coming up. If they are will be guest speaker. Pastor
for fathers since fathers '
A
COward
Except
AI Home
She
also an nounced an stains on my solid color saturated they will not return Clyde .Henderson invites
night was· being observed.
Dear Helen :
Association
meeting to be sheets a nd pillowcases. Has or at least not before the next public to attend.
Each counted twice in the at·
My husband is a coward in his shop. He needs tw.o men to held Thursday night at the anyone had 'Success in remov- spring. I even go along the
GOSPEL SING at First
tendance check. The first help him run it. They seldom last over three months. By that
edge of my sidewalk in front
church.
ing such stains?- AJ:lNE B.
Church
of God, New Haven,
grade was the winner of toom time U!ey've figured him for an easy mark, to he laughed at
M,rs. Wallace presided at
DEAR ANNE B. - One of the house where they Sunday,
at 2 p.m.
count.
overlap the walk. (Polly's
and degraded. But instead of firing them for incompetence, he
It was announced U!at of· makes up a story about "hard times" and tells them there's no the meeting with devotions authOrity suggests plac1ns, note - Be sure the container Calvarymen ol Charleoton
being given by Mrs. Thomas · the stains face down on paper
fleers will be elected at the more work . He weaSels out.
has a small spout so the fea iur ed singers. Public
Rue.
Theme
was
"Devotional
towels
and
then
applying
a
welcome .
April meeting. Mrs. Bruce
But at ~orne, he "demands." We only watch "his " TV Challenge of a New Life for dry cleaning solvent to back gasoline only goes where
MONDAY
Zirkle gave a report of the s!Jows. The kids are limited to three-minutes on the phone, no
needed and don't smoke or
You."
The
least
coin
was
side
of
stain,
brushing
from
MEETI
NG OF Salem
nominating committee. Also radio unless it's "his" preference. We do his bidding and he
lig ht matches while doing
taken
by
Mrs.
Myron
Miller
the
center
to
the
outer
edges
Township
Trustees to discuss
at the April meeting the Ri o gets furious ~ crossed. We can't talk to him as U!is threatens
this.) - MRS. E. F E.
who
read
"Free
and
Respon·
with
a
clean
white
cloth.
formation
of township
Grande Chorale will present his authority.
DEAR POLLY. - When
· sible." The book study was on Dampen stain wilh water and
voluneer
fire
department,
U!e program.
How can a man be so "split, ~~ and what can we do? - the first chapter of Book 3.
rub with BAR soap or light sho pping for ski rts or 7:30 p.m. Monday at Salem
Refreshments were served. D.N.W.
Mrs. Morris and Mrs. duty liquid detergent. Rinse trousers take along some Center School; public invited.
small safety pins. Pin one inDonald Lowery, co-hostess, and launder.
SOUP Sale at the Star
Dear D.;
served a salad course with
I have had gond luck side the fronl cente r~- ·
Scratch a coward and you'll find a bully looking for a crackers and coffee to 13 removing lipstick stains band of wha_l:!:l~M"1'!l'u decide Grange Hall on Monday.
victim (to bolster up his ego). In this case, the family is the members attending.
(greasy ) from pillowcases by to buy and have no more wor- Sandwiches will be served
rubbing petrolewn jelly into ries about whether or not the and the public is invited to
victim. Your husband can 't make it as an employer so he takes
stains and then applying li· tag is in the front or back. either eat at the hall or:take
out his frustrations on the few people he can "boss."
·quid
detergent. With a light Modern pins do not rust so containers of the soup liome.
He
needs
expert
help
and
so
do
you
.
When
you
1top
phets." Alove offering wtil be
rubbing stains ilisappear. can l&gt;e left in when garments
playing
the
doormat,
he
may
start
seeing
himself
as
he
really
taken. Youth Night will he
Rinse out and then launder as are washed and the ability to
is.
observed Sunday at 7 p.m.·
feel a pin is a grea t help in
usual.-POLLY.
A
fir:t
step?
Why
not
enroll
yourself
in
an
assertiveness
During a business meeting
centering skiris.
DEAR
POLLY
Thor·
U!e youth decided to meet at training class? - H.
Tired of losi ng buttons? If
A
birthday
party
was
given
roughly
clean
a
roll
·on
+++
U!e church at I p.m. Saturday
so
put on that blouse or shirt
deodorant
bottle
that
the
top
.
in honor of Shari Coimer, 16
and turn in the bottles and Dear Helen:
and button it most of the way
In
the
crowd
I
married
into
(second
marriage,
four
monlhs
on
Saturday,
March
12,
at
the
comes
off
of
and
fill
with
bottle caps collected earlier
ago) separation oflhe~xesis a way of life.
home of Tanuny and David water to use when pressing up but leave enough space
for redemption.
seams. This is great as one open so it can he slipped over
At parties, men gather to talk business in one room, · Johnson, Lincoln Heights.
Work was continued on U!e
Refres hments of sand· never gets too much w'ater in the head. Then sew the but·
Easter drama, the choir had women aiSCUss cooking and family things in another. Men sit
tons through both sides of the
place.
rehearsal, and devotions in U!e front seat, women in the back, when we drive wiches, chips, pretzels, cake one
blouse up just that far and the
When
putting
on
gripper
and pop were served to Anna
Cash 'N Carry
were given on "Trust." somewhere wilh anolher couple.
blouse will look as if it was in·
snaps
sew/'four
stitches
U
women
work,
they
seldom
talk about U!eir jooo, and McKinney, Dave Tyree, Jay
Sentence prayers in a circle
a living gill
never when men are present. I'm stifling. My husband thinks Manley, Cindy Faulk, Trina across the base and they tended to he that way . .:. T.M.
concluded the meeting.
Polly
will
send
you
one
of
to brighten
I'm odd - "This is the way it's always been" in his small town. Faulk, Jackie Ohlinger, Betty nev~ip. The threads can
Should I just give in and try to adjust ? I do love him. - Templeton, Cheryl Arnett, be pulled out after they are her " peachy" thank -yo u
someone's day.
cards, ideal for framing or
FEELING LIKE A STEPFORD WIFE
'Belinda Whittington, Deloris on.-MRS.C.A.W.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet placing in your family scrapElliott, Randy Snider, Jinlmie Snider, Debi King, Nancy Peeve (and believe me it book. if she uses your favorite
Dear Wife :
Possibly other women feel as you do. At the risk of Whittekind, Marilyn Whit· peeves me plenty) concerns Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her column. Write Polly's
were Mrs. Albert Tromm and . irritating your men, I'd say - "Shake 'em up a bit." They need tekind, Brian Johnson, Bren· the merchants in this country Pointers in care uf this
da Johnson, Roger Nelson, who sell products made,
Miss Barbara Nash, both of you! - H.
Quazy Nelson, Roger Barnett manufactured and prnduced newspaper.
+++
Rutland, and Paul Hutchins
in foreign countries. Often
and Carol DeLong.
of Chester. Mrs. Tromm Dear Helen:
they are made of the poorest
My
husband
is
a
long-distance
truck
driver
wilh
two
presented a demonstration of
quality
materials and cost
wives.
For
a
long
whlle
I
sensed
he
was
shacking
up
wilh
Christian witnessing in dally
outrageous
prices. What is
another
woman
on
his
long
hauls.
Then
he
told
me
she
had
two
Ufe. Mr. Hutchins, 22, related
much
worse
is .that they are
children
by
him
,
and
loves
us
both
equally.
,
his experience of finding
paying
or
supporting
those
We're
still
married
and
he's
here
more
often
now.
Our
genuine happiness by coming
countries
while
thousands
of
children
tpink
he's
the
greatest.
I
can
't
help
loving
him.
Shall
I
to personally understand the
people in this country walk
settle
for
HALF
A
LOAF
Bible.
TO GIVE SERMON
the streets jobless, hungry
Regular meetings resume
The
Rev . Art Kishbaugh of . and homeless. - N.S.
Dear
Half
A
Loaf:
this week at the Kingdom
Galion will give the sermon at
DEAR POLLY - I have
U you thiilk it's better than none -yes.
Hall, one mile east of Rutland
the Sunday morning worship help for Janis who has grass
Many
women
do,
but
they
fall
into
two
categories:
Either
on Rt. 124.
they don't really care about their men, or they've sublimated service · of the Middleport growing between the bricks
jealousy by insisting, "What he does away from me isn't Church of the Nazarene. in her sidewalk. I have had
Besides giving the sermon he this probleni for .1·ears. First
important so long as he always comes back."
will present a puppet show at thing in the spring ~ to put
So why aot give ber u eiepat
DO you qualify ? - H.
blrtblt011e riq mOUIIIed Ia a tolld
both the Sunday school and some gasoline in a· "'~all
!OK
gold seUiq wldl .... lor
the worship service.
wat•ring can with a spout ahuMEETING SET
each member Ill lbe famDy or a
The Meigs Area Holiness
blrtbltoae jail for ber .. .10 rtpt
.
...
,
Asaodation monthly meeting
for
g1vtngl Prk:e1 lllartlq !rGm
... • '.Vl '
;v.··~
MASON
FURNITURE
will bj! held at U!e Hysell Run
~,.-.~
'
$Z4.tli.
.
Pomeroy;
Mrs.
Vt!Ua
l.hlvu;,
ATTEND PARTY
-·"H· ' • ·:-;~ .- ,
l"ree Methodist Church
~- .......;.·_&gt;
advisor of the Junior Aux·
STORE HOURS
Tueaday at 7:30 p.m. The
Miss Erma Smith, Eighth lliary of Post 39; and Mrs.
Rev. John A. COffman, Pulor District conununity service Lula Hampton, president of
STOP IN TODAY
of the Racine Nazarene chainnan for the American Lewis Manley Post 263
Mon ., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat.- 8:30 ti 15: 00
Church, will be the speaker. Legion Auxiliary; Mrs. Mar· American Legion Auxiliary,
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON
The public ill invited.
jorie Reuter, community ser- were in Athens Tuesday
vice chairman for the unit of afternoon for a party at the
Drew· Webster Post 39, Athens Mental Health Center.
.
p·

/a nS maue }

at ChUtirh

:·:·

POLLY·s POINTERS

t

H eIen H eIp

E:i~~::~i :~~~~~~;!~

US. • •

Greasy makeup stains
take speci41 handling

GAUJPOUS, OHIO

Party honors
Shari Colmer

FOLIAGE
GARDENS

20~

Several attend convention
, Several local residents
&lt;Were among 740 Saturday and
· $unday at the regional
~onventlon of Jehovah's
:Witnessea in London, Ohio.
~·Follow . the Way to Ufe"
.Was the subject of the main
addrell by John D. Busby,
lllatrict superviser.
Appearinli on a seminar
program Saturday afternoon

!

l' fO UNDERGOSURGER\'

lj;WIIIIWlp,
CIN~ATI (UP!)- Pat
the University of

t:Inclnnatl balkelball player

lor~ milaed the entire 1976-77
jleaiOII becaUM of a broken

foot, II to Wldergo llll'8et'Y
' xt Wedneeday.
Dr. Olc.k Jol.lon said a bone
aft II nocNArY to repair·
punmlnfl' foot. The bone II
~ ~·.~lUll tile &amp;-foot-It for.

~

.IWII'd'l hlp.
'•

,(

Founder's Day with U!e
recognition of past presidents
was observed at the Monday
night meeting of the Pomeroy
PTA held at U!e school.
·
Past presidents recognized
were James Soulsby, l975and
1976; Pat Thoma, 1973 and
1974; Mrs. T. A. DOwnie 1958 ·
Mrs. Annette Knight, 1!154 and
1955; Mrs. Robert Warner
1941 and 1942; and Mrs:
Everett Thomas, 1951 and
1952.
For the program, Furniko
Iwasaki, Rotary exchange
student from Japan talked
about the educational program there and showed slides
on Japan. She will he returning to Japan U!is swnmer.
Currently she is the guest of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Buck.
Named to the nominating
conuruttee which will present

i~:x,:,:~l.::::::&gt;:::~:::::::::::&gt;::::;::::::::&gt;.:::::::::::::::::::::~:::&gt;.&gt;.&gt;i-""';:~W . :m».:i».&lt;::&lt;:?&amp;::~~

Youth night planned

12xl6'4" Light Green Plush ... ;......1323.40 1144.40

5 COLORS TO CHOOSE
FROM _.........,_ '12x9 -

PTA 0 b
·
Jerves
I Founders Day

7- The Daily Sentinel,
Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Frt'day, March 18, 1977
.

I &lt;iummlnel, 1

~'!l~~k.'~D,

native ol

PI .,

WIB

~ thl.l pall hu two more yun of
blllty left. He wu •
l h t - before Jut.

=
t

'

' A thoucht for tbe day :
lPrul+nt Grever llewlul

lAid, ''Your .,..,.

~urely

u

vale,

u

your chief
m~ilatrate, eaercllea 1
public lrull."

\

Eastertime Is
On Its Way!

I

--~

... -

-

HOSPITAWED
Mrs. Amanda Murray ,
MJddleport, is a patient at the
Pleasant Valley Hospital,
Polnl Pleall811(, W. Va. Cards
may he sent to her· there at
Room211.

CANDY'S

FRIIMY UNTIL 8 PM

Oassic Collections

MASON FURNITURE
773·-5592'

Herman Grate

Mason. W. Va .

.,

.

'

106 N. Second Ave.

Middleport, 0.

The New Addition To
INGELS FURNITURE

~----·-----------"-------J
\

.

�· 1-'l'hP Oailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Frid"y, March 18, 1971

TRINITY CHURCH, Rev . W H.
Perrm, pastor: Ro~ Moyer, Sunday school supt Church School ,
9 15 a .m.; wo rsl·up servtce, 10:30

a .m. Choir rehearsal, Tuesday ,
7 30 p m. unde r dirft(fiOn of Mrs
Paul Nease.

POMEROY CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE : Corner Umon and
Mulberr)l , Rev. Clyde V. Hender-

son, pastor Sunday school, 9:30

9:3()o m , R1chard Vaughan . supt .

POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST ,
Rt chord hanson , poster , Bib!&amp;
school, 9:30a .m., wouhip , 10 30
o.m , adult worship ser'i lce and
young people's me•t1ng, 7:30
p.m Combmed 81ble study and
prover meehng, Wednesday , 7 :30

p.m
THE SALVATION ARMY , Envoy
Ray W W,1ntng, off1cer '" charge .
Sunday, 10 a m , Holiness
meetiMg; 10:30 a .m. Sunday
School Young People's leg1on, 7
p m , Thundoy , 1 to 3 p.m ,
ladles Home league , 7 p.m Prep
classes
BU~UNGTON

Monday

Act&gt;
11.1 -30
Tuesday
Act&gt;
17.22-34
Wednesday

Romans
12 1-21
Th ursday

Romans
13 1-14

It was such a cold \.Vimer The trees were stark. dead The church
looked old, tired. Spirits sagged.

Fnday

Then, one day, there was a miracle. There were buds, swelhng into
flowers, the grass began to green, and the church seemed to straighten
itself, thrusting the cross htgh toward the heavens.

Romans

Agam. the promiSe had been fulfilled Again.life began anew and hope

Romans

stirred and somehow God seemed closer, even though actually He had

15·1-13

14.1 -23
Saturday

been right there, all along

Copyrigl'll 1977 Kerster Adv6rttstng Servrce1Strasburg Vll'gmra

Scriptures selectee by The Amenca n Bible SociEltY

tHE FINESTtN MOBILE HOM ES
Pomeroy
1100 E. Main
Ph . 992-7034

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.

TJM~S-SENTJNEL

Pomeroy

BIG JIM'S PlAZA

Serving Meigs, Mason

RACINE PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

LINDA'S LADY FAIR BEAUTY SALON

" HE l L': DEA LE R

Cal\949 -2838 For An Appointment
Racine, Ohio

Ph. 949-2882

Racine

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Main

Pomeroy

PAUL'S BARBER SHOP
Open 8 to 5- Closed Thurs.

Ph . 992-5130

Racine, Ohio

ELLIS &amp; SONS SOHIO

GROCER! ES &amp; GENERAL
MERCHANDI SE
Racine
Ph . 949-2550

COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE
Locust &amp; Beech Sts .MiddleportPh. 992-9921

P. J. PAULEY. AGENT
Nationwide Ins. Co. of Colurnbus, 0 .

Ph. 992-2318

Pomeroy

HEINER'S BAKERY

BETSY ROSS BAKERY
BAKER S OF GAY90 BREAD
Middleport
Ph. 992-3030

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY

BAKER S OF GOOD BREAD

wE FI LL DOCTORS
PRESCRIPTI ON S

Huntington , W. Va .

Pomeroy

992-2955

.

SEAR'S CATALOG MERCHANT

THIS SPACE AVAILABLE

LOUIS W OSBORN E
220 E. Main
Pomeroy
Ph. 992-2178

GOEGLEIN SAND &amp; GRAVEL
Middleport

F2Ri'~~VENI ENT MARKE~~S
Pomeroy ,
MIDWAY MARKET Ph.Mason
992-2582 ·
.,

THE ATHENS COUNTY SAVINGS
&amp; WAN CU.
.Pomeroy

·Ph. t92-3"3

1~or a real auction call the Real McCoy)
1.0 . \Mac) McCoy
985-3944

~n. 949-9130

RACINE FOOD MARKET
THE STORE WITH A HEAR!
Ph. 949-2626
R1clr1t

BAPTIST

CHURCH- Orewy Gore , s up!.
Sunday School, 9.30 a .m . morn·
ingworsh1p, 10 45o .m
THE HilAND CHAPEL . Geo rge
Casto , pastor . Sunday School,
9:30am .; evening worship , 7 .30.
Thursday evening prayer serv1ce,
7:30pm.
Peter Grandall. po~tor William
Watson. Sunday school sup!.;
Sunday !iChool, 9.30 a .m., BYF , 6
p.m .. Bible ~t udy Wednesday , 7
p.m .. choir practice , Wednesday ,
8 30p.m.

FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST , 2B2
Mulberry Ave , Pomeroy, Pau l J
White , Pastor Gary Basham, Sun·
day school s upl . Sunday schoo l,
9:30 a .m.. morning worsh1p
10.30 evening worsh1p , 6 30 p m
Midweek prayer serv1ce , 7.30
Oel(ter Rd .. langsv1lle, Ohio. Rev .
Clyde Ferrell , Pastor . Sunday
11
a .m . Saturday
School
preoch1ng serv1ces 7.30 p.m .
Wed nes day evening Bible study
ot 7:30 p. m.

FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH ,
Bodey Run Road , Rev . Emmett
Rowson , pastor . Ha nd ley Dunn ,
su p! Sunday schoo l, 10 a .m . Sunday evening service 7.30; Bible
teaching . 7:30p.m. Thursday

DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH . Roger C. Turner, pastor.
Su nday school 9:30a .m .. Sunday
mornmg worship , 10 :30: Sunday
even ing service, 7:30.

THE SALVATION ARMY , 115
Sutternul Ave .. Pomeroy. Envoy
and Mr s Ray Wining , officers in
charge. Sunday holmess meel ing ,
10 a .m.: Sunday school 10:30
a .m. leader VPSM Eloise Adams :
7·30 p.m sal'o'al1on meetmg
lod1es Home league, 12 noon to 2
p m , Thursday : prayer meeting
and Bible study Thursday. 7:30

l awrence Manley, pastor; Mrs .
Russell Young , Sunday School
Su pt Sunday School 9·30 a .m.
Evenmg
worship ,
7 : 30 ,
Wedf'l9sday prayer meeting , 7:30
p.m.

MT . MO~IAH CH~RCH OF GOO,

RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN STORE
Midd lep?rt, Ohio

K&amp;C Jt.WELERS

SALEM. SIREET.MARKET

Gerald a. Melva Elbln. Owner
Ooen 8 to 7 dally; 12-5 Sun.
'
Rutland
Ph . 742-2424

RACINE PLANING MILL
~yracuse

RIDENOUR
Chester

Racine Route 2, the Rev . James
M Muncy , pastor. Sunday school,
9 AS a .m , morn1ng worsh1p , 11
o m .~ even1ng worship , 7 30.
Prayer meeting , Tuesday , 7 30
p.m .: Young people's meellng,
7 30 p m. Thursday

MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST,

Keepsok.e Diamond Rings
212 E. Ma1n St.
Pomeroy
Ph. 992-3785

ROSEBERRfS PENNZOIL
tc•c•ne

FIRST

MIDDLEPORT CHU~CH OF
C~ RIST IN CHRISTIAN UNION,

McCOY AUCTION SERVICE

lJtE DAILY SENTINEL

""MEiGS C~_UN_TY

~UTLAND

MIDDLEPORT

. Ph . 773-5721

llldlcaled to the Interests of
Molgs-Ma!On Ar..,
Phone 992-2156

ADVENTIST.

Mulberry Heighls Road , Pomeroy.
Po~tor , Gerard Selon , Sabbath
School Superintenden1 1 Clara
Mcintyre. Sabbath Schoo l. Salur·
day afternoon at 2 00 . w1th Wor·
ship Serv1ce follow mg ot3 .15 .

MT MORIAH BAPTIST . Corner
Fourth and Mom, Middleport
Rev Henry Key , Jr , pastor · Sunday School. 9:30 o .m : Mrs £rvln
Baumgardner , supt. ; Morning
worship , 10:45 am

'

2" W. Second

CHURCH . Rev .Ralph Smith .
pastor. Sunday school. 9:30a .m.,
Mrs Worley F'rancis superinten·
dent Preachmg services firs! &amp;
ti'w d Sundays following Sunday
School

pm

M1oa1eport, Ohio
WE HAND LE ONLY
U.S.D.A. CHOICE MEATS

Middleport, Ohio

1'11. 992-al84

Phone 992-2156
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

MARK V STORE

~MARKET

OlD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN

p.m
MIDWAY COMMU~ITY CENTE~ .

WAID CROSS SONS STORE

804 W. Main

POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH
OF CHRIST , 200 W. Main St .. Jerry
Paul , minister , phone 992-7666.
Conservative , non -instrumental ,
Sunday worsh ip. 10 a .m .: Stble
s tudy , I I a .m .: worsh ip. 6 p.m
Wednesday Bible study. 7 p.m .

POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST , Rev.

Middleport, Ohio

And Gal !Ia Area
?hone 99'2-2156

.

John F. Fultz

Ph . 992-2101

Ph. m -3978

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE
Nac1ne
949-2020

MIDDLEPORT. Sunday school ,
Morn ing worship , 10 30.
SYRACUSE , Morning worship. 9
a .m : Sunday sthQal, 10 ~:~.m . Mn .
Sampson H~:~ll. supt ,

RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD .
Rev. Jome! 0 . Guynn , pastor .
Sunday school, 10 a .m., Sunday
worship. 11 a .m. , Sunday evening
service, 7 p.m.; Wednesda~ wor ·
ship serv1ce, 7.30 p .m .

HAZEL COMMUNITY

Corner Sixth and Palmer, the Rev .
Peter Grondol , pastor; Monn~ng
Klees ., 5upenntendent Sunday
School. WMPO Rodto program
7.45 om .; Sunday School , 9; 15
a .m., Morning Worsh1p , 10:15
a .m
Youth activities and
fellowship for 1unlor ond ltnlor
high students. 6 p m . Sunday
evenmg worship , 7:30 p.m . Mid·
week prayer services, Wednes·
day , 7:30p .m

CHURCH

OF

CHRIST,

Mid-

dleport , 5th and Main , Georg•

Glo1e , mumter , Mike Gerlach ,

CH U~CH ,

Near Long Bottom, Edsel Hart ..
pastor. Sunday school , 10 a .m .,
Churc h , 7 30 p .m ., prayer
meetmg , 730p m. Thursday .

MIDDLEPORT

PENTECOSTAL ,

Third Ave., the Rev William Knit ·
tel, paslor Ronald Dugan . Sunday Schaal Supt. Classes for all
ages , evening serv1ce, 7 30 ; B1ble
study, Wednesday, ·.7·30 p.m .·
youth servi ces , Friday , 7·30 p m.

MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST , Corner Ash and Plum : Noel
Herrman, pastor . Saturday 9\/Gn lng serv1ce. 7·30 p.m . Sunday
School, lO:lOo m

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PAR ISH
METHODIST CHURCH

ST . PAUl LUTHERAN CHURCH ,

Corner of Sycamore and Second
Sts Pomeroy The Rev. William
M1ddl eswarth. Pastor. Sunday
Sc hool at 9 45 a .m. and Church
Serv1ces 11 o .m
SACRED HEART; Rev . Father
Paul D Welton. pastor. Phone
992-2825 . Saturday evening Moss .
7 30 j Sunday Moss , Bond 10o .m.:
Confession Saturday. 7-7 :30 p.m.

SEVENTH -DAY

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
&amp; SERVICE. INC.

Third St .

TIST CHAPEl Route I , ShadePastor Bobby Elkms. Sunday
schoo l, S p.m., Sunday worship.
5 45 p m : Wednesday prayer serVICe, 7·30 p m

Prebching 9:30a .m., l1rst and se·
cond Su ndays of each month,
th1rd and fourth Sundgy~ 8!JCh
monlh worship se rvice at 7.30
p m Wednesday evenmgs ot
7·30. Prayer and Bible Sludy.

special nme. for God and His Church.

SUNDAY

SOUTHERN BAP -

GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST,

Spring is a wonder time. A time for hvmg, a time for loVIng A very

Ow1ghtl. Zov1tz, director.
HARRISONVI l l E
PRESBYTER IAN , Rev
Ernest
Stncklin , pastor. Sunday church
school. 9·30 a .m .. Mrs. Homer
lee·, supt.: morning worst-lip ,

10·30

Harold Oeeth, rector . Church ser vices. 10 30 a.m .. Holy commu·
nion f tnl Sunday of month; chur·
ch school, 10:30 a .m. jQr nursery
through 12.

13-31-38

UNITED PRESBYTERIAN
MlNlSTRY Of MEIGS COUNTY.

ing wDf'shlp , 10:30 a.m .; &amp;vening
service , 7:30; mtd-week service.

GRACE EPISCOf'AL, The Rev.

John

Sunday
e vange h sh c
meell ng, 7.30 p m . Prayer
meeting , Wednesday, 7 :30 p.m .

a .m .. Glen McClung, supt.: morn·
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Su nday

a.m .:

CHURCH , Sunday School servic•, Wednesday , 7:30p.m.
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN ,
10 am : Prayer m•e lmg, Thurt·
day , 7 p m .. Sunday even ing ser· Bru(e Smilh, pastor . Wallace
Oomewood , Supt. Bible School.
vic•. 7 p m.
· ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST. 9:30 om . Prooch lng service,
Pom• roy-Hom sonville Rd , Don 10·4.5 a .m . No .v•nlng s•rviu.
HYSELL RUN FREE METHODIST
Kennedy , pastor: B,ll McElroy,
Sunday CHURCH . Rev. Herbert All ing,
Sunday school supt
school , 9·30 a .m : morning wor- pastor . Sunday Sct.aol 9:30 a .m .,
ship and communion, 10:30 a .m. ; Mornlng service, 10:30 o .m ,
Sunday e vening youlh Christian youth servic•. 6: 45 p. m .
Endeo.,or, 6 p .m. worship ser- Evangelistic service 7.30 p.m.
.,ice . 1 p .m . Wednesday evening Prayer meet ing . Thursday , 7:30
prayer muting and Bible study , pm
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION 01
7 30 p.m.
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH , Bold t&lt;nab . Rev lawrence
Pine Grove. The Rev. William Gluesencomp, Sr .. pastor; Roger
Middle1warth , Pastor . Church Williard, Sr. . Sunday school supt.
serv1ces 9:30a .m. Sunday School Sunday ~etlool ~ : 30 o ... Sunday
!0:30a.m.
•vening service, 7 p .m. Pro)'er
B~ADBURY
CHURCH
OF meet ing , Tuesday. 7·30 p.m.
CHRIST, Mr. Donald Raley, po1tor. Ernest OHler, doss leader.
Sur:~doy school, 9:30 a .m. war· Youth meeting , W.dnesdoy , 7·30
sh1p servtce, 10.30 am : Sunday p.m. w11k Don and Marthg
services , 7 p .m ., youth group , Meadows , leoders.
WHITE 'S CHAPEL, Coolville RD.
Wednesday , 7 p m
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST, Rev . Earl Rev Roy Deeter, pastor. Sunday
Skuler. pastor. Su,day school school 9: 30a.m.: worship ser¥ice .
9 ·30 a m : Church serv1ce, 7 p.m.; 10:30 a .m . Bibl• study and prayer
youth meeting , 6 p m.Tuesdoy Bi· service. Wednesday. 7:30,P.m·
RUTLAND
ble Study, 7 p.m

Robert T Bumgarner,
Director

POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev Robert Hayden
R&amp;\1 James Corbitt
CHESTER , Worship 9· 15 o m .
Church Sckool I 0 a m
POMEROY, Worship 10·30o m .
Church School 9 30 a.m . UMYF
6 30 p.m
ENTERPRISE , Worship 9 o m
Church School 10 a m .
ROCK SPRINGS, Worship 10
o.m Church Sc hoo l 9 ·15a m
UMYF 6·30 p m
FLATWOODS, Worship , 11 a .m .
Church School lOam .

MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
Rev Robert Bumgarner
HEATH , Rober! Bumgarner,
Pastor
Worship 10:30 a .m .
Chu rch School 9 ·30 a .m. UMYF 6

pm
RUTLAND , Wilbur Hill , Pastor .
Worsh1p 10 30 a .m. Church School

9·30o .m
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Rev Richard E. Jor'o'IS
ASBURY. ' Worship 10:40 a .m .
Church School 9 30 a .m. UMW
f~rst Tuesday Bible Study Thurs.
7·30 p m.
FOREST RUN Worship 9 a .m
Church School10 a . m .
MINERSVIllE, Worship 10 a .m.
ChurCh Sckool9 o .m
SYRACUSE , Chruch School 9.30
o .m Worship service 7 30 p.m.

SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev Timothy Sm1th
Cluster leader
Rev. Steven Wt lson
Associate
BETHANV , (Dorcas) , Worship
9·30 om Church School 10:30
a .m.
CARMEl, Chruch School 9.30
a .m. Worship 10:30 a.m . 2nd and
41h Sundays.
APPLE GROVE . Sunday School
9·30 a .m. Worship 7 :30 p.m. ht
and 3rd Sundays : Prayer meeting
Wednesday 7:30 p.m . Fellowship
supper first Saturday 6 p.m. UMW
2nd Tuesday 7 :30p .m .
EAST LETART . Chruch School
1st , 2nd, Jrd Sundgys . 9.30 a .m.
Fourth Sunday 10:30 a.m . Worship 2nd Sunday 7·30 p.m . -4th
Sunday 9:30a.m .. Prayer meeting
Wadnesday 7:30 p.m. UMW hi
Tuesday 7:30p.m.
WESLEVAN (Racine) , Sunday
School 10 a .m . Worship 11 a .m .:
Jr UMYF Wednesday 3:30 p.m.:
Bible Study Thul"$day 7 p.m Choir
Pract1ce Thursday 8 p .m.
lETART FAllS, Churck School
1st , 2nd, 3rd Sundays 10:15 o .m
41h Sunday 9· 15 am ; Worshlp
lst, 2nd, 3rd Sundays 9·15 a .m .:
4th Sunday 7·30 p .m
MORNING STAR, Worsh ip 9 :30
om .: Church School 10 30 a .m :
M1d·Week Serv1ce Wednesday 8

pm
MORSE CHAPEl , Worshp 11
a .m .; Church School ~ : 30om .
PORTlAND. Worsh1p 7 30 p.m :
Church School9·30 o m.
SUTTON , Church School 9 ·30
a.m . Worship ht and 3rd Sundays
1030o .m.

NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev. Richerd Thomas
Pastor
Duane Sydenstr1cker
John Douglas
Assoc1otes
JOPPA , Worship 10 o m., Church School9 o .m , Prayer Meeting
Wedne1day 8 p. m.
LONG BOTTOM, Sunday school
al 9.30 a .m. Worship services at
7:30 p.m. Bible study and Youth
meeting at' 8 p .m . on
Wednesdays .
NORTH BETHEL, Worshtp 11
o .m .. Chu rchSchoollQg ,m,

ALFRED . Sunday School 9.30
a .m., Wgrship 10.45 a .m., Prayer
meeting Wednesday_ 7 .45 p .m ,
UMW 3rd Tuesday 8 p.m.

THE

RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST ,

NAZARENE , Re\1 John A. Coffman , pastor. Sunday School, 9·30
a .m.; Gerald Wells , supt. Morn ing worship , 10:30 a .m . : Sunday
evening worship, 7:30. Prayer
meeting , Wednesday , 7:30p.m .

Dennis Smith, pa1tor; Frank
Voung ,Sunday 1chool supt. Sun·
day school and communion , 9:30
a.m . Worship and comunian ,
10:30 a . m .

RACINE

CHURCH

OF

RUTLAND COMMUNITY
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Don L. CHURCH , Sundoy School, 9 :30

Walker. Pastor, Ronnie Salser , a .m. : wantllp service 11 a .m.:
Sunday school sup!.; Sunday Wednesday prgyer meet1ng 7 :30
schggl, 9 :30 a .m .. morning war · p.m. youlh services , Sunday 7
ship, 10:40 a .m .. Sunday even1ng p.m. ; Sunday night worship , 7:Xt.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE
worsh!F,• 7.30, Wednesday even·
ing Bib e study , 7 30.
NAZARENE . Rev . l loyd 0 Grimm
DANVILLE WESLEYAN , Rev. R. Jr .. pastor. Sunday school , 9 :30
D. BroWn , paslor. Sunday School , a .m.; worsh1p serviCe, 10 30 a m
9:30 a . m .~ mornmg worsh1p Broadcast 11¥8 over WMPO; young
serv1ce ,
6 -45
10.45: youtk serv ice, 6 :45 p.m .. people ' s
evening worship, 7:30 p.m .. evangelistic service , 7·30 p m.
pra~er and praise, W•dnesdoy , Prayer meeting, Wednesday , 7:30
p.m., Missionary meeting, 7:30
7:30p.m.
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST, p.m . first Wednesday of month .
MASON COUNTY
M1les Trout, pastor . Sunday
MASON FIRST BAPTIST, Second
school , 10 a.m , Ste¥e little, supt
E\lentng service, 7 p.m .. prayer and Pomeroy Sts ., Ston Cr01g,
pastor Sunday school , 9:4.5 o .m ;
meetmg , Thursday , 7 p.m .
CHESTE~
CHURCHOF GOD, worship service, II am .; training
R&amp;Y. Bobby Porter, pastor Sun· union, 6 30 p m &amp;ven~ng war·
doy school, 9·30 am ., worship sh1p ser.-ice 7 30 p m . Mid Week
serv1ce, 11 a m .. evemng service, prayer service, Wednesday. 7:30
7 30: youth serv ice, Wednesday, p.m
MASON CHU~CH OF CHRIST, P
7 30 p.m.
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHUR· 0 Box 487. Miller St .. Mason , W.
CH, Ted Jones , pastor. Sunday Vo. Sunday Bible Study 10 a .m.;
school. 9 .30 a .m., Roy S1gman, Worsh1p 11 om , and 7 p. m . Bible
5Upl .. morning worship , 10:30; Sludy Wednesday 7 p m., Vocal
Sunday evemng service, 7:30; music
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST. Cormid -week. serv1ce, Wednesday,
ner of Second and Anderson ,
7,30 p.m.
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE Mason . Poslor, Walter Cloud .
NAZARENE, Rev
Dole Boss , Sunday school 9:45a .m.: worship
pastor; Sob Moore , Sunday service, 11 a .m. and 7·30 p.m.
School supt , Sunday school Weekly Bible study, Wednesday ,
dosses for all ages. 9 30 a .m.; 7 JOp .m .
MASON ASSEMBlY OF GOD ,
morning worsh1p 10 45 am .;
NVPS , 6 30 p .m . eva ngeliStic ser- Dudd1ng lane , Mason , W. Va .
vice , 7:30 p.m Prayer and Chester Tennant Pastor. Sunday
fosl 1ng Tuesday , 10 am .: School 9:45 a .m.; Children's
M1dweek
prayer
service, Church 6 ·45 p.m Young People's
Wednesday , 7 :30 p.m .. men's Ser'llke 6:45 p.m. Evan~ellstic
prayer meeting, Saturday, 7 p m .; Serv1ce 7·30 p m Women s Mls
miSSIOnary meellng , second slonary Council 10 a.m . first and
thtrd Tuesdays. Prayer and Blble
Wednesday , 7 ·30 p.m.
UNITED
FAITH
NON -, Study, Wednesday . 7 ·30p.m
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST
DENOMINATIONAL , Rev Robert
Smith, pastor. Sundov School , IN CHRISTIAN UNION, The Rev .
9 30 o m.; Class leader , leo Hi ll ; William Campbell, pastor. Sunday
worship serv1ce , 10:30 am .: chur- School , 9·30o.m .: James Hugkes.
supt , evening ser'o'lce, 7:30 p.m
ch 7:30pm
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN Wednesday even 1ng prayer
CHRIST, Elden R Bloke, pastor. meeting , 7:30p.m. Youth prayer
Sunday School 10 o.m Howard service eoch Tuesday.
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH
McCo~
supt .; Morn1ng sermon ,
11 a.m ., Sunday n1ght seryices letart , W Vo. , Rt. 1, Re'o' . Charles
Chmtion Endeavor , 7 :30 p.m.; Hargraves, pastor. Worskip serSong serv1ce , B p.m ; Preochmg vices. 9 30 a m · Sunday school
8·30 p m . M1dweek Prayer 11 a.m.; evening worship. 7 :30
meeting , Wednesday , 7 p m. ; Roy p.m. Tuesday cotlage prayer
meeting and Bible study. 9 :30
Adams , loy leader
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST , a.m. Worship service. Wednes·
located at Rutland on New llmo
Rood , next to Forest Acre Pork .
Rev . Roy Rouse , pastor Robert
Musser , Sunday School supt Sun·
day s.choo l. 10:30 am : worsklp
7 · 30
p m 8 1ble
Study ,
Wednesday , 7 ·30 p.m.; Saturday
n1gh t prayer service, 7·30 p.m

the

HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN ,
Roger Watson , pastor. Jessie
Wh1te , Sunday school supt. Morn ·
ing worship , ~ : 30 a .m.; Sun
doyschool , 10:30 am . : evening
ser¥1Ce , 7 30 Wednesday Bible
Study 7:30p .m
MT . UNION BAPTIST , Rev . John
Elsw1ck , pastor; Sunday school
superintendent, Don Wilson. Sun·
day school, 9 45 a .m .: evening
worship, 7 .30 p r'· Prayer
meetmg , 7:30 p m. Wednesday
TUPPE~S

PLAINS CHRISTIAN

CHURCH , Eugene Underwood ,
pastor, Howard Caldwell , Jr. ,
Sunday School Supt , Sunday
School, 9:30 a .m., Mormng Sermon , 10:30 a .m., Sunday evening
service, 7 p.m .

LEIART

FAllS

UNITED

BRETHREN. Rev. Freeland Noms ,
pastor: Floyd Norm , supt Sunday
school. 9;30 a .m.; morning sermgn , 10:30 o .m ., Prayer serv1ce ,
Wednesday. 7:30p .m.

CHURCH OF GOD OF

f~O ­

PHECY. O .J . White Rood off 160,
Rev . Gegrge Groyle, pasforSun ·
day School. 10 a .m .. Arthur Hen ·
son, Supt.. Morning Worship , l1
a .m., Young Peoples 1ervice, 7
p.m.: Even ing urvice , 7 :30p.m ..
Wednesday Mid·Week Prayer
Service, 7 ; 30 p.m .. Youth
meeting , 6:30p.m. Even1ng war·

ship, 7:30p.m.
CHESTER CHURCH

OF

THE

NAZARENE , Rev . Herbert Grote.
pastor Worsh lp.service, 11 a .m.
and 7:30 p .m Sunday . Sunday
School, 9:30a.m. Rtchard Barton ,
supt
Prayer
meetlng ,
Wednesday . 7:30p.m.

BRADFORD

CHURCH

OF

CHRIST, Jack Perry, minister. Sun-

REEDSVILLE, S.undoy School 9:30 day School 9·30 a.m .; morning
a .m. Worsh1p 7:30 p.m.; Prayer
Meeting 7.30 p.m . Tuesday.
Visltation7.30 p.m . 1sf Thursday .
SILVER RIDGE , Wortk1p 10 a .m.
Church School9 a .m .

' doy, 7.30p.m.
CALVA~Y BIBLE CHURCH , 26 N

church 10:30 a m .: Sunday even·
lng
service , 7:30
p.m.
Wednesday service, 8 p.m.

LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH , Rov. Floyd F. Shook,

.•
DID AFTER 20 YEARS!
_- :oou AND A CHEAP SUIT

Second , Middleport; pastor, Cur·
tis Stephen Church school , 9:3Q
a .m .. preaching services , 10:30 . ~
o.m. ond 7!30 p.m . Wednesday · I
evening Bible study , 7.30 p .m .
,
INDEPENDENT HOLINESSCHUR r ~'
CH. INC. - Corner Fourth and ~
lincoln Sts .. Midd leport: Rev .
O 'Dell Manley. po1tor: Sony Hud· • ~
son. SunckJy School super inten· ,....
der\t Sundgy •chool , 9 30 a .m.. ' 1
evening worsh1p, 7·30 p.m .. r ·~ •
prayer and pra1se ser\'ice, ~
Wednesday. 7.30 p.m .
1

nn~~::;;;;l~E::.,FT THE PRISON

1

PEOPLE'~

THE

CHURCH OF

POMEROY - Corner Ma in and
Court Sts., third floor over
,
Lighthouse Restaurant. Henry
,
Cook pastor Sunday school 1 10 ·--'
1
a .m .;' mornmg worship , 11 am.; '
evening service , 7 : 30 .
•,
Wednesday even ing service , .. ~
7:30. Interdenominational. full
,..

WELL, A.R5, TU565 ~ ... HAVe YOU
AND 'IO U~ ( ...5M) M50CIAT'E$
DE CID'D TO LET TKE SOARD PI CK

gaspe!.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD -

OUR FIRM '$ ~E~T PRESIDE~T ~

730pm
POMEROY

SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF

'THAT 111EE'S TOO
MLJC~ FOI&lt;: '&lt;OU , MY
~lEND.' PULUNG
"1}4/rr I'.OuLD BE
YOU R END.'

•

GOD - Not Pentecostal , Re¥ ~ 1'
George O iler, pastor. Worsh1p\ •,!:
service Sunday, 9 45 o .m , Sun· it
day school. 11 a .m .. wars kip se r· ;, ~ .
v1ce , 7:30 p.m. Thursday pra yer """ '
meeting , 7:30pm .
,:1
MT HERMON United Brethren ,..,,
Church Sunday School 9:30 o .m.
!1
Worsh1p service 10:45 om ., .~
Preaching ser'o'ices every Sunday , 1

BEA~WALLOW

~oush ,

posw ,

Tom

RIDGE CHURCH evening ~ervice 7 p m . W~dnes ~~evonong proy•• oo.vlco, 7:30

avperintendenl. Terry Yankey , OF CHRIST , Doug Seamon,
youth minister. Bible school , 9:30 - mmlster. Bible study , 9:30 o .m,;
a .m.. morning worship , 10:30 morning worship. 10:30 a .m. ;
o ,m.; e vemng worship , 7:30, &amp;'llenin g war~h1p , 7:30 p.m.
' prayer servicv. 7 p.m . Wednes· Wednesday Bible study. 7.30 p .m.
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST.
day .
MIDDLEPORt CHURCH OF THE George Frederick , supt. Sunday
NAZARENE . Rev. Erie Co.11 , supply morning ser.,ice, ~ · 30 a .m . with
pastor, Mr~ Mary Lothey , Sunday preach ing on first and third Sun·
schoo l sup!. Sunday school , 9 30 day ol month by George Pkkens.
STIVERSVillE COMMUNITY
a .m,1 mornmg worship, 10.30

ship, 7 .30 p.m. Prayer meeting

east of Rutland JUnct ion of Route
124 and Noble Summit Rood (T·
17.tl). Sunday Bible lecture , 9.30·
a .. : Watchtower study , 1 0. 3~
a.m .: Tuesday, Bible study , 7 ond:
8:15 p.m.: Thursday , lheocrai iC,
sc hoo l, 7:30 p .m.. service•
meet mg . B 30 p.m.

SOCKS--HAMDKERCHIEFS • •
5HlRT5 -- ALL CLEA~

GOTTA~-

0: COURSE -- ·
BUT UN11L HE

A 'GOOD .J06 WELL.
DONE ' WILL EvER LOSE

BATH - AND THE
"'1EAL6 '

AAD FRESH- ·

DOES ··· 'I'OU'RE

lTS THRILl FOR.
THAT KID-

NOTHIN'
OOir-IG!

DoiNG NElliE'S

JOB .. l 'D LIKE. TO
~y

HOPE BAPTIST - 570 Gronl Sl. ,

wti'f, lHiS
IS FUN -

YOU THE SAME--

Middleport . Bobby Elkins , pastor.
Sunday School. 10 a .m. : worship
ser\lice. 11 o.m, evenmg serv1ce ,
7 :30 p.m . Thurs day prayer ~
meeting and Bible study , 7.30 ~
p m.
it&gt;i'~

RUTLAND FREEWILL BAPT1Sl11"

Church - Leland Hgley. pastorl,:i
Sunday school. IQ a .m., evenln~
service
7:30 p.m . Praye
meeting. Wednesday , 7.30p .m.
CHURCH OF GOD of Prophecy, •
locoled on the 0 . J. Wh1te Rgod. ·~,
, off highway 160. Sunday School
10 · o .m. Supenntendenl John, ~
Loveday . F~rsf Wednesday nigh t 1
of month CPMA serv ices, second- :
Wednesday WMB meeting . lh ird 1
thrgugh fifth youlh service:
George Croyle. paslor.

HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL -

LOOK/T
11-1/sr-A~ ONCE TCCK IT TO

DETROIT. AH lbLE EM-

-IT WOULD OlJTLAST
ANY CAA,rr- THt:=Y TOLE

IN

A61N-

...--------....._, M--1'D LAUG[---j
IN ':&gt;ORE FACE
IFAH\IASNT
SOFOLITE-

THEY'D 51-JCOT ME
ME IF THEY EVAH FCUND DONN- WITHOUT
ME - t------~ ~:-----·r---=-. WARNII'J' rr-

570

~..-v....'" AT THESE 6ROJELING

5~ESEEME'D

APEsr- TRYiN' TOGA ii'J
OUR &lt;3CODWILL-

VEFY
NICE rr-

Gran! St ., Middleport: Rev . Bobby
Elki ns . Sunday school. 10 a .m ..
morning worsh1p , 11, evenmg 1
worship , 7:30 p .m , Thursday ~
evening Bible study and proye r?-.-4:
meeting , 7.30 p m Aff1lioted 'w 1tk ' ~ !·
S.B.C
N'

'"

.t,;;

BUT 50ME1HI'i6 CAME.
YES, I PI&lt;OMISED- uP AND ICAN1T GO
YOU'D DE D:JIN6 M[
TH IS YOUNG

(

'

.'

f , BIG

ACTRESS :CD

I

COME OV'OR ID MY "LJ'u'
l ll-IINK I CAN Fl)(

OH-OH, l SUDDENLY
"&lt;EALI ZED ..1 DON'T
HAVE E.VENIN0
CLO Tl-IES I

WHAT ARE:

HERE IN HOLLYWOOD A

YOU UP WJ'Tl-4 SOMETHING SUITABLE

shame? Are the Goope the ones to '

Grand slam takes finesse

up a

scheme,

ll'oUI~

Score'

'

a

BORN LOSER
I '
i/

"

"'

•. .l1

00~'1 ~. ;;cA!&lt;BD1 .~D04 (1T'S JUST, M~ A~D
~UI&lt;RII)At-lti AflO DIRT~ ~~!' AI-)D DUST4 .. .

W~'l&lt;~ A OR~I-l 11-l\H&amp; 'scAoo~ P~A4,
WA~I&lt;-ON,WA~K-D~,WAtK-DN
.
' , . r'

' ' " r, ~
J,'
f. ''
' • LI ,'

•H

.'
'

....

·

•

EAST
"'J9 72
'7 3

t8

•AJ 10754 3 "'KQ 9862
SOUTII
"'A K Q3
¥Q109 B42
t A 62

·-

Nor th ·Sout h vulnerable

EM llf'~ ~ 611::&gt; D'i'A~, JIJST A WA~I&lt;-ON,
West

North Ea1t

Pa ss

2.

Pass

4•

Pa ss

5N T

Pass
Pass

7•

Pa ss

Pass

Opening lead - J •

,/~ ;J

South

I•

V1

V

fines sed agamst West and

made the slam .

~~--, ~.~~~~~~------J

'' .

WHAT SEEMS
TO BE Alt:IN'

\IOU I SNUFF!-t?'''
•

0

'

"l'i&lt;&gt; •o•o

'"

,,

A Tennessee reader asks 1f
we have ever heard of a convention called the " Short

AN' HOW
LONG HAVE \.IE
HAD THIS
LAR'INGITIS?

Ameri can market.
In 1937, an explosion at the
Consolidated Public School in
New London, Texas, killed
426 persons, most of them
children.
In 1962, the French and
Algerians signed a cease-fire
agreement ending a sevenyear civil war and bringing
independence to the North
African territory.
In 1975, It was revealed the
CIA had financed the building
of a multimillion-doll ar
salvage ship lor use in a 1974
attempt to bring up a sunken
Russian nuclear submarine
in the Pacific Ocean.

I DUWNE[l
I

:s.~ m~r ... u.. ... ,......

~ U~ ~NOROH

J

electln required to place li·~
charter form Gt gowrnmem i
011 I local ballot,
•'

·-

WEST
"'10 8
¥ .1
• Q9 5

--

l

IB

NORTH 101
"'6 54
¥A K 6 5
t K J 10 7 4 3

Mr.

·•~

' oenare,
go 011 the
November gent!'tll election ;:
ballot If ratified by the HoUle. ;
Other'parll of the propoaed (
a ccmltitutional amendment amendment allow a defeated - ~
permlttln&amp;uplofourofthe I&amp; tounty charter. to be ~
members of I county charter reiUbmltted to tile voten a ;
COIIIIIIiuiDn to be elected tteCOIId time, and reduce 11'0111 •
offldall
10 to per cent the number ol&gt;•

The Almanac
United Press International
Today lS Friday, March 18,
the 77th day of 1977.with 288 to
follow.
The moon is approaching
its new phase .
The morning star is Mars .
mond f rom his own hand .
The evening stars are MerTherefore, Marshall M1l es
cur
y, Venus , Saturn and
of San Bernardmo , Ca ll f.
Jupirer.
opened the jack of trumps. It
Those born on this dare are
did h1m no good in the long
under
the sign of PISCeS.
run . but 1t dtd put quite a
Grover Cleveland, 24th
strain on declarer.
Harold look two rounds of president of the United States
trumps and played out four was born March 18, 1&amp;'!7.
rounds of spades. while rufOn this day in history:
fing the last one m dummy.
In 1931, the first electric
Then he slopped to coun t the shavers appeared on the
hand . Wesl had onl y two
spades and one heart which
lefl htm a total of 18 diamond s
and clubs. Hence, if anyone
held three or four diamonds 1l Unscramble these lour Jurnbles ,
one letter to each square, to form
would be West Harold cashed lour ordinary words.
his ace of diamonds, decided
that Miles would have found a
bid w1lh eight clubs and so .
~
played him for seven clubs
"l
1 f, j
and three diamonds Harold
U

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

•I

COUNTY CHARTER

I I TH INK 50 .YOU r;;:~;:-;-;;-;-::::-;-;~~7-:;-;::;;::;:;;:;-'i-:;;:;;;;nil
MEAN 'IOU HAVE
SOME:1141NG IN MY
EXACT &amp; IZE ?

BRIDGE

found'

::

••
.. , ·"

REGULA!( ?

PRACTICA LLY A
NECESSI1Y I

fmd'

el usive purse
has been

'/OU ... A 38

1AI2GE WA~DI(OI'\E 15

What did I

Ah 1 l see our

~:·I

••

(

MESSE,AN'
MEBS'E NOT!
Ell"MER WAY.1

50to'4;HOW I ~'T THINK

MEAl AS A Plr-1 - --

f:RES H TOWELS IN niE

today.

· ·

MIS$l~ G

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-JOINT
THE WHoLE HOUSE

...

~

FAfHEJ:t!

'IOU"-

'
.••'

.,.,''

"

BETHLEHEM BAPTIST, Rev. Eorl
Shuler, pastor. Worshlp MfVict,
9.30 o.m. Sunday school, 10:30
• .m llble Study ond prayer - 'lbe ~' drafted by
voceThundoy , 7,30p.m.
Obi
,._
II II
I
CARLETON CHURCH, Kingsbury lhe
0 ...,nil U ona
~ood Gory King, poslor . Sundoy Revlalon
Commtnton.
school, 9 30 o.m.: evening wo•· anci paued 30 to 3 by the

MA~AG~MENT!

JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES , 1 mile: I •

OOL',.'BUS (UP!
Tbe
Slobart Sunday S~;hool Olretor
um
) Sundoy ' School . 9:30 o.m.; Ma&lt;n-• Ohio Senate Wednetlday
'"9 wo,.hlp, 10·30 o.m ; Sundoy puaed tmd tlelll to lhe Houe

Wolllom

WOULD PLEASe

alternating with C. E. Wednesday .... ::
prayer meeting 7.30 p.m. Rev. · • '
James leach. pas tor
Oovid · '~
Holter , loy leader.
,. -

When I was a boy I learned In school about Goops. They were
mi'88Y little creatures who did things with no manners at all. ·'
They were mannerless Imps void of beauty and grace. The)' --'
were rude, lmpoll!i!, gluttonous, selfish and just plain horrid; ;:,'
I just recently saw a book about the Goops and sent for It I ~~
really enjoy tt. One verse set me to thtnklng. I had been taking
pictures of ice on the river and I saw the ugliness of the parking
lot wall with the names of people spray painted on it. It was an '
ugly sight. Not a ""ry nice way to greet strangers to Pomeroy.
We see this along the roads everywhere. It appears we hav11
a lot of Goops In Meigll County. People who have no manners or:-"
coocem about the rights &lt;r property of others. Sad to see such
ugllneal In downtown areas. Disfigurement of the classic '
llonewalla that give Pomeroy an unique stY.le Is sad to see. ,
How tragic that we still have Go4?pe around today .
•'
The verse I saw about the scrawls goes Uke this:
· Have you ever seen the scrawls
,.
On lhe fences and lhe waDs,
. All the horrid little pictures and the horrid
little names?
, •
Don't you think it Is a shame?
. :-'
,Afe the Goopa the ones to blame?
,,
Did you ever catch them playing at their
:·
horrid little games?
.
• ~·
This vene about the Goops and dlsftguratlon was new to me
but the parking lot walla Cl1lll! to mind at once. Not everything
man makea lias lovely u what God has made, I think the h"'ie '
llone walla are one area man has Indeed created something as ·
lovely u God has, They stand •troll« and majestic except for '
the dllfigurement of spray painted names.
'
It Is a shame aome Goope are playing ~t their horrid little:·
games of !!pOUlt for everyone, let's scrawl the waDs and signs. :
Let ua i!how the w&lt;rld we haVe no manners, no morals and no
cooalderatl011 f&lt;r other peoples' property. GOO will make them
answer for the mess, but that does not help our eyes and senses

MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD , JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY

PERFECTLY WILLIN&amp;
TO GI~ E CAPrAIN E'A?Y
A ~MA~~ VOICE 11-J

WESLEYAN

HOLINESS - Harrisonville Rocd ,
Dewey king , pastor; Ed1son
Weaver . asslstahl Henry Eblin,
Jr , Sunday schogl supt. Sunday ~
schoo l. 9:30 a .m .. morning wor · ..,
sh1p 11 a .m. Sunday evenmg . :
serv1ce, 7:30: prayer meel1ng · ·
Tiolursday 7:30p.m.
'

TAKE HEI2 ..

blame?

WEl,,NOW! l MU?T SAY- · THAT':5
MIGHTY 811~ OF YOU ~ENHEM EN~

""J

RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH,

Sermonett~

think it Is a

l

··IF YOU
THINK T'HAT

OF JESUS CHRIST. Thomas L. • ~·
Holmes, pastor. Bible sludy,: ~
Saturday, 7·30 p.m .: Evangelisllc 1 ~·::_?
p m.; prayer meeting, Tuesday , ~,,
7 30 p.m.; B1ble Sludy, Thursd a y,: ~ 4

ARE THE GOOPS TO BLAME?

Dul't you

MIND "t'OU-- WE'RE-

Pastor Denn is Boles Sunday
·school, 10 a .m.; worship serv ice ,
11 :30 om. and 7.30 p.m . Prayer -~
meeting, Wednesday , 7 .30p.m. ; 1.,..1

Preaching first and third Sunday• e.-•nlng worship 7 ·30 p.m.; Choir
of montk by Clifford Smith, 9 :30 Pracllc• Thuradoy , 7 p.m.
a .m.
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST,
HOBSON CH~ISTIAN UNION. Charles Russ•ll . Sr. , minister:
Doi-rell [lgddrill , pastor. Sunday Rick Macomber, supt . Sunday
School, 9:30 a .m. i l•tmord school, '9:30 am .· worship sar·
Gilmore. f~rst elder: •v•ning s.r· v1ce. IO::Rl o .m Bible Study.
vice, 7:30 p .m. Wednesday Tueaday. 7:30p.m .
prayer meeting. 7 .30 p.m.
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF
SAINTS , Portland Racine Rood .

.JUST PRACTICING,
MOTHER. WE' AMATEUR
5 1-lUTTERBUGS TRY .

..:E

No, I gueu It Is not the Goopa, but just some people who don't
TUPPERS PLAINS. Worship 9 poster; lloyd Wright, Sunday careaboutanylhlng acept !tpOU it, spotlit, spotlit! They make
a .m. ChurchSchool10o .m.
School Supt.; Moming Warship
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, 9 30 o.m.; Sunday School 10;2() a meu and are proud It II. How ead'we ha"" these little people ,,
George Frederick, supt . Sery1ce a .m .; Wedneadoy Praytr and BI- In Mete-a County. I wish we could eay 11 was the Goopa Instead :·
weekly , 9:30 a .m. on Sunday. ble Study 7:30 p.m.; Sunday It aome ol our youth. -Rev. Wllllam Mlddleswarth,
'

Rodne Rout• 2. The Rev. Charles
Hand, pastor. Sunday school. 9:_.5
o .m : morning worship, 11 a .m .
Evening s•rvic... Tu•lday cmd
Frldoy, 7:l0 p.m.

WHY DO YOU WASTE
YOUR FILM ON~ ?

diamond "
The answer is " Yes " There
are several complica ted and

rather useless systems that
employ bolh artificial onec lub and one - diamo nd
openings . We suggest you
shun the dmmond ones like Che
plague

(For s copy of JACOBY
MODERN, send $1 lo. " Win
at Budge ." c/ o this
newspaper. P. 0 . BoK 489.
Radio City STation. Ne'w Yor~
N Y 10019)
'

[

b

..u ,,....,,, ... .,.

I

[

IRYPTANl

I I K J

IYONNAC

KJCJ

I

I

Now arrange the circled laners

form the surprise Bnswer. as sug•
gested by the above cartoon.

Answer here: ... ,.,...["""I""""I.,......I""""""I'""""J

rI I J
(Answers tomorrow )

Veslerday·s

Jumbles. BOOTY NOOSE P~PTIC GENTRY
Answer: ll's not poets who pr duce lhem
but slngers!-"TC' NOTES"

I

�:

, _,. ., . . .B;y;s;;p;;;
.
Trade Through The Sentinel Want Ads
lnLMz~~r-------,
-.

IN MEMORV of Mn Garnet E.
Fnl•v who passed owoy .f yrs,
ago on March 18th, Sodly m1ss~
ed by hu 5bond Char les E Fnlvy
children

WANT AD
CHARGES
lSWurdsor Under
C&amp;d1 • Churge

ldMy
2 dMys
3da) li
6d&lt;t) .!l

I 00

I 25

Ul
180
300

I 90
2Z5
375

Eadl word over Ult' mumnwn 15
wunbi Ui 1 1.:t&gt;nb ~~ wurU ~r ilily.
Ads runmng other lhiln corl'St'Cutlve
tlltys Will Ut d un get! at tht' I day
rate

In memtll') , Cllrt.l of Thanks 10nd
Olntwuy 6 1.;enU.: p:r "on.l, $:l 00

nwumwn Cs.sh mHti11.11r~"

Mobile Home SHies 11.1kl Yanl Sllles
are ~tect"pted only With clbh w1th

, ordt!r :t$ toem charge for ads carry-

.

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
M -y

Noon on&amp;turd!!y
1\u~sda~

4P M

the Wiy ~fort&gt; pubhcalwn
Sunday
4PM

F'mlay af~n1 oo n

lifo
~
S~~iEBc~~~~~~i
RO~ANCE NO. 1053-n

.p lflv ~~~g~yT,~~
IN '(u ION /5/( CERTAIN
aEVW&lt;i,T,S ' ~t PARTS

w61~R~~ v~PJiJi
~~M~~fu'We..§AI\A

~

D P~Sfrf&amp;uo'.n\ ~~
modl"ed Ordinances of

M'~'Tton1o.

i&gt;Y

tt;,'i

Coun&lt;:ll of cm:.""tmege
MlddloporiJ!S fOllows :
SeC. 1. Tllll tile odlll!'9,
arrangement and numberlf19
renumbering of the
olh;twlna ordinances and
J)lrts of ordinances are
hereby appriM!d as P!lrhl of
tile various comj)(lfltlll codes
of the Codified Ordinances of
Middleport so as Ia conform
to the cilosslllcallon and
numbering system of the
Codified Ordlna~. to wit :
Ord. Number, Dale and C.
~Section , are listed In or-

r.

1005-7-1, J.ll-74, 1331.01 to
1331.05, 1331.99
D20- 75, 1-13-75, 1135.01.
11 1.02
.
02~·75, J.lD-75, 153.01 Ia J.

~

(Cl026-75.... -4-28·75,

723.01 to
723.Q.41 7:cJ.99
102Y-75, 6·23· 75, 705 .01,
705 .99
1031·75, 6-t-75. 953.01, ,953.02,
1Q.41.761 -4-12-76. 139.U4
- 1044-16, 8-23·76, 513 .01 to
513.10
10«~6- 12-1 3-76, 153 . 0~.
153.05 a), lbl
lo.49· 6. 12-13-76, 953.01
Sec. II. A copy of such
ordinances or J)llrfs of ordinances as edited, arranged
nd numbered 91" renymes parts of tne Codified
ne
Is
ched Ia this
or na::1n te."1orm of 1977
RtP.I'OI:W.ent"Ja~ to the

Cotilled

dl!lllnc .

Sec. 1 1. This ~nonce
shall :re effect a
be..!~
tor1;11 rom and a
"'"
eerlltrl period allowed by

la~assod

the 28th day of
February 19n. M. L. Kell
President of Counc~
Alles!:
Gene Grele
Clerk
(3) 11 ,

18, :tic

IN THE
PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY , OH 10
IN THE MATTER OF
THE CHANGE OF NAME
OF
JULIA MAE MILLER
NOTICE
Julia Mae Mll ler , R. 0 . 1,
M iddleport , Ohio
45760 ,
hereby gives notice that she
will f ile her Petttion m the

Probate

Court

of

M eigs

County, Ohio , pra ying for an

order of said court chang ing

her name fr om Julia Mae

Miller, nee Haley to Judy
Mae M ille r , nee Haley , that

sa ld Petlt1on will be heard on
the 2Jrd day of April , 1977, at
9 . 00 A. M
or as soon

thereafter as said court may

hear

if.

JULIA MAE MILLER .
Applicant

{J l 18, He

POU£D
HER~RD

SALE
SOUTHEASTERN
OHIO ASSOCIATION
FRI . NIGHT
APRIL 1, 7:00P.M.
At the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds. Breeding oge
bullund heifers. All cattle
strictly polled , clean
pedigree end will be
graded at 2·00 P.M. For
catalog, write or call
Buckeye Polled Hereford
Association. 6292 Old Troy
Road, Urbane, unro 43078.
Phone (513) 788· 2~ .

'

NOTICE Protfs Meat Mlo.t .
(Pleasanton Meat Proce51ilng,
Inc ) Custom sloughtenng ond
processtng Ret01l , wholesale.
No oppo1nment necessary CoH
(614 ) 593-8655, hours, 9 00 hiJ
6 00 7 Pomeroy Rood. Alhem .
Oh
GUN SHOOT at the Roc1n~ Gun
Club every Sunday , 1 pm
Assorted meats
RACINE FIRE Dept w1 ll hove a
Gun Shoot every Saturday n1ght
6 p m at the1r bu1 ldmg m
Boshon Ohto
SHOOTING MATCH at Rutland
Leg1on Hall e\lery Fndoy 7
pm
FREE HOUSE Just haul1t away or
tear down for salvage Phone
992-3892

thru Fmla}

-

-·-

8o• Nwnber Jn Cllreof TheSen·
tim~ I
The Publlsl~ re~rvt!S tl ~~t rit;ht ·
lO edit or re}ect 11 nv !ids ll~fled 00.
~lionill Tht• Pubhs!Mir wiD not ~
reSpoi\Sible for mor e tha n one meurre&lt;-1 utsertloll
Phunc 992-2156

--

-

SKATE A-WAY "NNOUNCES An·
mversory Party. Saturday
March 19th Races pmes
balloons Free tee cream and
c.oke for everyone Everyone
welcome
ODDS &amp; ENDS Sole Saturday
Ma rch 19th only Good me~·
chandise, come and buy pmed
toseii.From8am till 3pm at
689 N. Second A11e . Mtd
dleport Look for stgn In yard
MILKSHAt&lt;ES THE old foshtoned
way Dairy Isle , Middleport
Golden Buckeye members• 10
per cent dtscount any pure. hose

----- FOUND German Short ho1r Bird
Dog found 3 mos ago Coli to
1dent1fy, 992-.~
31:c6~
5'--~~
REWARD for return of a block
wh1te and brown mole Walker
coonhound lost 1n VICmtty of
8urlmghom on C R 33 . Phone
(304) 67 5-3707 oc (61• 1
446-7441
TWO ST. Bernards , found I mole
Approx I to 2 yrs old. Call
Me1gs Co Huma ne Soc1ety
8-&lt;3·3009

LOST· RED ond wh1 te Beagle lost
m Mmersv1lle area
Call
949-2805 or contact Jerry
Grueser, Minersville
LQST OR Stolen - Beogfe rabb1t
dog , L1cense No 750 Reword
for 1nformo llon leadmg to the
return of f·um Phone 992 5247
Or992 7413

---

POODLE GROOMING reasonable ---~-~..,.-,,.-;;
_r~t.es . C_oll foe op_p_
r. _74_2 3162_._
FOR SALE
DOBERMAN PINCHER Pvps. AKC , f-lew co-:-op water · sot ·
14 weeks block and rust Ears teners. model VC -SVI.
cropped loti cut .oll shots
Only S21' 95
Phone 742 _2967 after ~ - One good chatn Hom elite
-~-Cha1n Saw • ••••••• • SlJO 00
Save SSO 00 on a new
Hotpo1nt Relrt9.!_rator _
1 GoOd used McCullough
Chan, Saw ••••• •• ••• • •• S95
1969 CHEVROLET Btsquome 1966 1 Good used 40" Motpo1nl
BUICK Electro 225 2 Rokon Range,, ... ••• ... , ,. , SIOO
tnalb1kes Phone 949 2432.
Now in stock, complete l1n e
--C
AMAR
0
borrell
of
bulk garden sel!ds and
1976
305 2
anton ~ets
automatiC, sliver wtth red
pmstnpmg St1ll under worron
~meroy
n rna
_!L__Cell992 5709 .
Jack w Carsey, Mgr
18 1
1973 OLOS 88 4 dr hardtop. low J..!!~~~.!:P.!:h~on::;•:_9:.:9:..2 ·.2:..:.:
:.:.-l
m1leage. good fires Mus t sell
Also . wonted to buy 48 1nch STRAWBERRIES tn baskets and
sprmgs and mattress Phono
flats, now beonng, pans 1es
949-2013
cabbage, lettuce , broccolt
caul1flower , Brussels Sprouls
1973 VEGA factory air. t1 speed
omons Cleland Forms and
Phone 99lt?332 after 5 p m
Greenhouse .
Gera ld 1n e
1912 NOV"- 4 dr., rod1o and
Cleland
,
--~~-heater ovtomot1c p s. low
USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT
mileage . Phone 742 2880
Hough Sk 1dder Model S7B
1974 FORO MAVERICK a c ps .
Mtch 1gon Model 55A6, Rebvdt
rod1a l f1 res delull:e lr1m 200
Morbork 348 Chtp Poe com
cu. In 6 cylmde r. 19,000 mdes
plete w1th screen Contact Oen
Colt Mtke Young . 992 2206
nts Smurr
Pho ne (614 )
838 5345
197 1 LTD Wagon , 50,000 mtles
p$ .
pb ., o c, 4• speaker 20 IN lawn mower Hoover por·
stereo, luggage rock good
table washer Phone 992-7465
cond 1tion Phone 742-2524
.........
CORN PLANTER, 4 row w1th d1sc
1974 WRECKED Ford PICio.up. w1!1
openers , F1bergloss belies, her
sell ports. Phone 992-7757 offe r
bl(tde and 1nseclic1des . Phone
s p.m '--~-~-~-.,.... Cole Kautz 985.·3831
1974 V W . 2 dr . sunroof, rod1o USED HOOVER Sweepers , $24 50
pnced $2195 Call evenmgli. oncash or terms Coll 992·5146
ly . ~~-7~2~~~~------::.~
1976 DATSUN 11J ton p1ckup w1th
NlED A
outomoltc tron5m1ss1on 12.000
mites . Mus t sell Phone e'&gt;~en ·
lnQS only , 992·7283.
WATER SOFTENER 1
1970 CADILLAC Co up&amp; D&amp; V11le
let Pomeroy Landmark
Loaded good cond1hon , $1050
soften &amp; condition· your
Phone 9n-3517
water and a Co-op water
1969 CHEVELLE SS 396, 4 speed
softener,
Model UC-XVI
power steenng, power brakes
Now Only~
,
Con ta ct Lew1s Pulver of
992-3498 hou rs 9 30 • 5 00
Let us test your water
1972 NOVA 2 dr hardtop 307
Free
oulomoflc, Crager mags , ex
cellent condll10n . Phone
992 2257
Jack W Carsey , Mgr.
1971 HORNET lovr door, one
Phone 992-2181
owner , good shape Phone
992-75.14 al ter 5 p m.

p

La d rk

. . .:c::.==--------

~

--

APPROX
15 ACRES . born
hayfield on Sand R1dge. Phone
(61&lt;) 367-7401
__ _ _ _
J BEDROOM ranch, 1'It baths , 1
ac re , all elec fm1shed garage
Fully carpeted FIVe Pomts
ore(l $30,000 Phone 992 ·2928
ofter5p m,
15 ACRES OFF New l1mo Rood
near Forrest Acres Park Phone
742·2336
HOUSE WITH 5 lots , both and '!~
w1th 4 bedrooms , double
goroge outbutldtng and cellar
Phone (614) 698-5607 or (304)
773 5759
3 BEDROOM 2'11 both bt level
WBFP tn fom1ly room . 2 cor
goroge, d1shwosher, n1ce loco
lion on 1 acre lot m Me1gs Co
Ask1ng
$t16 ,500
Phone
992·2492
APPROXIMATELY 7 or 8 acres
wooded land 1n Rock Springs
Phone 992 2789
2 STORY 4 Bedrm bnck home m
Mtddle port Phone 992·3457
1
6 /1 ACRE FARM 7 roo ms both
born pond and fur ni ture prtc
ed oil for $18,500 One m1le
from Longsv1lle, Oh•o on C R
10 Phone 742-2668

~--

79 95

Pomeroy landmark

'J:i

WANTED TO rent with poss1ble
opt1on to buy 50 lo 200 acres
secluded land , some t1lloble
w1 th inhob1toble house Columbia Sop 1o Bedford. or Rutland
Townshtps
Wrtte
Tony
Russego . \331 Meadow Road .
Columbus, Ohto 43212

FRIDAY , 7 p.m. Rtdmg
lawn
rotory mowers .
lots of new and used merchon
d1se ol the Auction Hovse , Hor·
ton St , Mason , W Vo Phone
(3(14) 773 547_':......~~~-

WANTED MAN for roofmg and
spouting. some duct work
Must be able to go ahead wt th
MOI)ife-~Ho,.,..;:--ror~"SIIi
jOb If Interested wnte BoJC
----- --ISO Pt . Pleasant . W Vo 25550
2 BEDROOM B" t18 , portly furmsh
G1ve expenence and expected
ed Phone (304 ) 882-3348
w&lt;1ge.
TRAI LER WITH lot tn Rutland,
MIODLEAGEO LADY to hve m
Phone
- -992·
- 7454
_,.:c.:._ __
Free roo m and board for
1973 HILLCREST 12 x 60 , 7,. 10 ex
hovsekeepmg Wages to be 3 AND 4 RM fur ntshed 011d un
panda, furn1shed, o.c ex lroli 1 •
discUssed Phone 992 3923
fvrn1shed opts Phone 992
$5300 Phone Be lpre 43:1~
5434
R N NEEDEO for Saturday and
Svnday shtfi Cell Arcad1a Nur COUNTRY Mobile Home Parle. , ~I 1973CAMERON MOBILE Home 12
" 60 2 bedrooms, completely
smg Home. Coohnlle Oh10
33 , ten m1les north of Pomeroy
furnts hed . All electnc Porch
Phon e (614) 667-3196
Large lots wtih cohcrete pot1os
and underpmn1ng tncluded
s1dewalks,
runners
ond
off
$200 WEEKLY Poss1ble stuff1ng
Phone (304) 675-5540
street porkmg Phone 9'92-7479
envelopes SEND self-addressed
stomped envelope to Edroy 2 BEDROOM TRAILER, Browns
Mails Box 188CO Albany, Mo
Tro1ler Pork . Phone 992-33.14
64402
Real Eotatefor Sale
S ROOMS and both m Pomeroy
LIFE GUARDS for Syracuse
Phone 992-5021 or 992 2205.
MuntCipol Sw1mmmg Pool let FARM
ON nver, 51 acres 7 rooms
ters of oppltcatton to be sent to
both . Phone 992·5908 .
and
Jesse Brown.ng, Manager Rt
1, Bo~e 38, Portland , OH A5770
ONE BEDROOM unfurmshed all
~lee apt Phone 992·5742 after

--

- - - - - ---

OLD fur n1lure tee boJCes , brass
beds wall telephones and
ports , or complee households
Wn te M 0 Mtller. Rl 4
Pomeroy . Ohio Colt m 7760
CASH paid for all makes ond
models of mobile homes
Phone area code 614 423 9531
TIMBER . Pomeroy Forest Pro
ducts . Top pnce for stondmg
sawtimber. Call Kent Hanby
l- 4&lt;6 B570
-~=~~~--­
COINS, CURRENCY rokens old
pocket watches and chams,
silver and gold. We need 196-4
and older silver cams Buy, sell
or trade' Call Roger Wamsley
742-2331
WANTED CHIPWOOD Poles
moJCimum dtometer - 10 mc hes
on largest end . $8 per ton
bundles slabs S6 per ton
O(lhvered to Ohio Pollet Com
pony Rl 2. Pomeroy Oh1o
Phone
992 2689
.

Spm ~-~~~--~-3-ROOMS and bath furntshed opt .
All ul dt lt es patd 356 North
Fourth Street , Middleport.
W1ll1a m Smtih
SHULT Z MOBILE Home, furntshed. '
L1ke new , has c1ty water and
gas Phone Albe rt H1ll Racine,
949·2261.
HOUS E, NEW HAYEN responstble
morned couple, no pel&amp; Calf 1
(304) 'e82-2B52 oflet 5 p m ,

------·-

~--==

- - ..:!::::--="'"

SHAKESPEARE BASS Boot 14 ,
1976 Mercury 20 h p w1th elec·
tnc start. 1976 ti lt trotler, plus
other extras . $1695 Phone
992-3126, C. P. Rilflo,
LIVING ROOM set , bunk beds,
twm bed , breakfast table etc
Phone 992-7454
1976 M.F G Gypsy Boot 16 h
with walk thru wtndow, 1976
Chrysler 75 h.p motor Phone
992-Sl26 .

CASH••! for tunk cars. Frye s
Truck and Auto WRECKER SER
VICE' Phone 742 2081
USED PONY saddle for small
pony For Sale
good used
Wh1tman Engltsh horse saddle
Phone 992 638B
PIGS WANTED. Everett Holcomb
Rt. 3 Albany Phone (614)

FISHER WOOD Burnmg stoves and
farm lumber PHONE Focemver
and Salmons lu mber Co , Inc
Rt 7 Mtddleport Oh•o. (61 4}
992-7&lt;25.
NIGHT CRAWLERS , Mike ond
Mark Goegle1n Rt 3, Pomeroy ,
Ohio Phon&amp;992·7625
TWO He&gt;s::;S for sole. ready to butcher Phone 9i9·2463

----

.

-------- - - -

r=ir,G~-1 - ----- --- -1 EquiPment Co. I

1

II

· POMuov,
o.
PH. ' "·217.

I

.IInternational

1
IH•rveattr
fNtw Idea Equipment 1
IMcC : ::ul'ojl

ISaws

HANDMADE DULCIMER, n&amp;ver
been used Phone oe::; 3574

Chain 1

1

·----------

1973 YAMAHA SCSOO troilbike
excellent cond1110n $350 Also.
1959 Army Jeep . 4 wheel drive,
good cond1tlon , $575. Phone
985 3806
HAY, 3 mtles east of Chester on
R1ebel Rood W1lbur Monroe ,
phone 985-4230.

SMITH &amp; WESSON modol 28 157
magl"'um v. .: ' .. Isler belt . 3
box~s ~hells . Perfect c..ondlt1on
$200. Phone992 3517

MAIN
POMEROY, 0.

NEW Ll~ riNG - 1 yeac
old frame and bn ck. 3 nice
bedrooms with double
closets, 2 modern ba ths,
util ity room , drn ing room ,
kitchen ha s L s haped
cabinets, ca rport , 1 acre
Just $30,000 00
NEW LISTING - 1 fl oor
pla n, 3 BR • batn. uti li ty
room, sfor m doors and
wmdows, por·ches , NG
hea t , garage . storage bldg .
about 1 acre w1th 200 ft .
fronlage $13,000 00
NEW LISTING - About •;,
acre, (Racine Area ) has a
n1ce Mobile Home, 12x60, 2
BR bath, living room,
kitchen with dine ln . Out
buildmg 8&gt;16 . se.ooo oo.
NEW LISTING - Carry
Ou t, PIZzas, Soft Ice
Cream ,
San d wiches .
Establrshed a long t ime
and do1ng a good business.
CALL
FOR
INFORMATION.
POMEROY 2 story
frame has 3, bedrooms,
bath, kitchen has range
and ref , full basement,
storm doors and windows,
aluminum s iding , ca r petmg, porch , new FA gas
furnace . $10 1500.00
MIDDLEPORT - 1 floor
plan. 3 bedrooms. bath,
nice kitchen, all carpeted,
all e lectric, carpor t , nice
lor
ALL LIKE NEW
$15, 650
Low
rl own
paymen t.
WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
YOUR PROPERTY CALL
US TODAY. THANKS.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
HANK CLELAND
ASSOCIATE
991' 2259 . 992 2568

---

Vrrgrl B. Sr .. Realtor
216 E . Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohro 45769
Phone 992-3l2S

;laln~d
ll"on~Tn the f~'rc
Ia lng the Pt'OVISIOI)J

Business Services

'&amp;

L_--------------~----~ '

s

Young's Carpeting

Firlon&lt;IAI Allllrrlrlo
BloooloiiWolllliHics
STOfiM
IIIIIIIOWS l 0001$
IEPLACEM£111

Free Estimates

ANY PI'KH
ANY SIZE

-

Installation. samples
brought to your home
with no charge.

Located in Langsville
Box 28-A

I

Cupet-Lino.-Tile
Phone Mike Young at
992.22 06 or 992-7630
2-23-1 mo.

SWAIN'S
Automatic
Transmission Service

Vinyl and aluminum
siding. storm win dows and insulation .
Call Professionals

P~RTS • LABOR
GUARANTEED

Ball Siding Co.
A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860

REASONABLE
RATES

~

Free Estimates
No Sunday Calls Please
3SllS1 mo

Reedsville, 0 . Ph. 378-6250
2251 mo.

Service
F1011 Uri 111&amp;111

-

MMiigl

Nobil Surn. 1 ,~ :t Road
Rt. 1
Mrddieport, 0 .
992-5724
Complete
Sales
and
Service and Supplies.
3 14-1 m

TUPPERS PLAINS - Old
Kitchen Cabmets, Roofing ,
8 room frame home on
Concrete
Pattos ,
corner lot of 31 of an acre
Srdewalks.
New
Part1al basement, 2 por
Construction
&amp;
ches an d T P water
Remodeling.
available Only $5,000
ROCK SPRINGS AREA N1ce 3 bedroom frame
home , bath , nat. gas fur nace, citv water 1vs t off Rt
33 $22,000
RACINE - 4 apartments
rented and recreat1on
Route 2
cen ter all m one buildrng
Pomeroy , Ohro 45769
Good 1ncome property for
Free EstrmatesPh. 992-7119
an Investment
3 111 mopd
SYRACUSE- 4 lots, one
on the n vers rde , 3 bedroom
modern home, 2 ba ths, nrce
kitchen , dm1ng, and 2 car
garage . $35,000.
KINGSBURY- 2 bedroom•
HOMESITES for sale, 1 &lt;1cre and
house w1 th bath and oil
up M1ddleport near Rutland
furnace AlSo a 2 bedroom
Coii992·74BI
unfurntshed trailer, dri lled
well and 2112 acres fo r only
NEW 3 bedroom hovse, 2 baths,
$12,000.
a ll e lec 1 acre, M1ddleport,
NEAR CHESHIRE - 3
close to Rvtlond Phone 992·
bedroom frame home, ni ce
kitchen , nat. gas furnace,
748 :lc--~------------SMALL form lor sole , 10,. down ,
Gallta water, garage and
owner fman c.ed Monroe Coun·
2.42 acres. Now $20,000.
ty . W Vo Phone (304) 772·
KEN0-7 rooms . bath. oil
furna ce , basement, porch, I 3102 or (304) 772-3227 _ __
garage and carport.
2 CO UNTRY farm land wtlh seclud·
acres w1th an eagles' view
ed woods, woter and good ac·
Ask rng $25,000.
c.ess m Monroe County, W Vo.
NEW LISTING - 1'12 acre
$1 ,000 down , call (304) 772wooded butldtng s1te w1fh
3102 oc (304) 772·3227
water and ele. available
Commercial properly opprox 17
Ohve Townshtp.
acres, level land, located at
NEW LISTING - New 3
Tuppers Plo~ns on Oh1o, Route
bedroom shell home with
7, Phone (614) 667·6304.
garage and over 112 acre
Buy for $12.000 00 and
NEW 3 bedroom house, bull! m
fln1 sh It yourself , then sell
kitchen, both and 1/ 1 P~on e
ALWAYS REAOY TO
742·2306 or contact MilO B HutLISTEN TO YOUR REAL
chison Rutland, Ohio
ESTATE
PROBLEMS .
REMODElED 5 ROOMS ond bo rh
HELEN L AND GORDON
acre land. Phone 742 2769
B. ASSOCIATES

sMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
,_.

Young's Carpeting
Route 3. Pomeroy, 0 .

Real Estate For Sale
Wildwood Estates. Flatwoods, between St.
Route 7 and 33, have lots, one or two acres.
for sale. All utilities available. If interested
contact:

George S. Hobstetter
Box 101, Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 985-4186 After 4:00p .m.
J

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
New Listing - Ni ce 2 story counrry home. contalnmgT
rooms and w, bath. mostly carpeted. Kitchen has all
new built in cabinets with bronze stove j. refrlg . to
match. New porches and all new alum. siding end
storm windows . FA natural gas furnace and drilled
well, garden space. This house Is warm and ready for
Immed iate occupancy , comt take a look just $18,900.

0

Rae me - -Good 3 ~
utilities, even a garden S()\.

td dlnu ty room , tow
, •Cod at only $8,500

Special - 3 bedroom and attached garage, total
electrtc home under con1truct1on on '12 acre lot Owner
will finish In 30 days for buyer or will sell"as Is". May
ta ke trade. Located near Chester.
Chester - 113 acres farm , 80 acres tillable land. nice 2.
story farm house, 7 rooms and bath, all llardwood
floors end basement. Barn and other outbuildings, 2
ponds A nice laying farm priced to go. Locotod near
Chester. oall lor Appt.
Ch..ltr - Ever dream of owning yoor own galt
course? Here's your chance for you or your friends to
own a nice rolling golf courH, 501/a acrea. 9 greens. nice
modern club house, outbuilding with all spraying and
seeding equipment. needs some mowing end a little
repair work on golt course This coold be purchased
with the 113 acres listed above end developed Into a
beautiful 18 hole ooll course, call for .appl

We Need Farm Land

Call Jimmy Deem AI949-2J88

m-~~~
· "'-,&amp;Wtt
~~n~
AH~A~ I'

76 Ford Granada, PS.. •.•••••••....••••••• '4695
74 P~. Duster, PS, air •••...••....•.••.••.• '2795
74 Olds Cutlass Cpe., Was 13895 •••••••. '3695
74 Vega GT Cpe............................ '1995

comply wl h

lfte IIW .

(31 11, 11, 21c

Carpel &amp; Upholstery
Phone Mike Young
At
992 -2206 or 992-1630
' 'The Originators
Not The Imitators"

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
. MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
NO 16,239
A ·T H ENS
C 0 UN T Y
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO
PLAINTIF F

2-23-1 mo

PHOTOGRAPHY

vs

WILLIAM C GADDIS , ET
AL ,
DEFENDANTS . '
LEOAL NOTICE
Pursuent to an Order of
Sale Issued by the Court of
Common Pleas of Me igs
County , OhiO, 1 will offer tor
ule at public aUction on the
9th day ot April 1977 at 10 .00
a ,m , at the- C!ourt Hou.se steps
In the Vll1age of Pomerov.
Meigs County, 01'11o, the
followlnt described real
estate :
Sltuattd In Township of
Or•noe. County of Meigs and
State of Ohio . being Lot No. 6
ln,Riggscrtst Manor Addition
11 recorded in Volume 4 page
AA1 Meqas
Countv Plat
Rtcdrds .
xc:eJ)tlng and reser111ng
al ,mlr,erals with right 10
m ne and remove same.
Reterance Deed Volume
255 pagt 191 Meigs Countv
Deed Records.
Terms of Sale . Cesh for not
less than two-thirdS ot ap.
pri iMd vetue. su.~lect to nen
tor real estate taxes ~
Proptrtv appr:alud ,t

Aerial
Commercial
Schools
Weddings

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY
(614l91S-415l
Chesler, Ohro
10-17· 1 mo (Pd)

FREE WBE JOB

i.

WITH OIL CHANGE
AND FILTER
AT

CHESHIRE
ASHLAND

General Contracting

~~~N~f~:on~~
~~';fbRE~I!Il

Sec. V. That Form er
Secttons 313.DJ, 331.38 and
333.03 .art. hereby repealed .
Sec. V. This ordinance shall
!eke ell..:t and be In Ioree
from and after the earliest
Pll!:iod allowed bv lew.
r?ossod tnt 28th day of
F~ruery 1977. M. L. Kelly
President of Councrl
Attnt: Gene Grote
Clerk

Superior
Steam Extraction

~ll.fti·Z174

DAVID BRICKLES

USED CARS
74 Cadillac Cpe DeVille .............. .......'5600
74 Cadillac Cpe. DeVille .................. '5500

cumtn

PROFES5rONAL
Radiator......,~.,_

cu~ltII rtY~nod
by lfw:
, t Village
Q1
;r.T~1 ol)i,:~bifl.
;

b'ittA
~~

Rutlillnd, Ohto 45775·
Ph (6U) 741-2409
We De liver
12 22 .4 mos

L ______:.::_.:.:.:.:.::...l

t'l':plrance wllll

em
ed to
comply with curren Stele
lew

Southeastern Ohil
Truss Rafter Co.·

AWl INUll

1

Af TE
S AN'!SHTk Is amondod to
(IIIJiply with current Stele

ln1111ation Smkes

Routt 3, Pomeroy, 0 .

---------

TEAFORD

VALUE
RATED

4]!'D~~NCE N0~054-77

FOR SALE&gt; All elec nearly new
home m Ru tland preo Basement, 3 bedrooms , attach~
garage ,
$29.900
Phone
742 253 1.
ONE ACRE, 3 bedrm , 2 ! tory
home, dm mg room Iorge both ,
natural gas, Iorge porch n1ce
bkxk go roge $20.000 Pi'lone
992 S732
HOUSE FOR sole In Pomeroy
$6500 Phone992 5741.
~
HOUSE WITH or without tr01ler in
Pomeroy Good mvestment
Coll992-745&lt; .
2 BEDROOM HOUSE ond bolh on
R1ver Fro11t Street. Mason
Phone (30&lt; ) 773 5697

---

,

~Nmi;., _

Heal t:otalc for Sale

IF YOU he ve a serv1ce to offer . COAL limestone and tolcium
chhm de and colc1um brine for
~o n t to buy or S(lll somethmg .
dust control and special mix mg
oe look mg tor work . or
salt lor lormen. M&lt;1m Street.
whatever . , you'll get results
Pomeroy, Oh1o or phone m .
foster wtth o Sentmel Wont Ad .
3891
Coll992 2156.
.
3 fom1ly yard sale Fr~doy and APPLES, FITZPATRICK ORCHARD,
ST" TE ROUTE 689 PHONE
Solurdoy , 9 a .m. unltl 5 p.m
WE WISH to thank all of our many
WllKESVILlf , (614) 669·3785
Don Hubbard resideoc.e, Se
fnends and n~tighbon for th9
-cond Street , Syracuse, Oh1o .
FULLER Brush Products for sole
many lovely cordi, flora l offer·
Phone 992-34 10
lngs
contnbuhons to our
church bu1ld1ng fund and
CAMPER $600 Also. horse
words of consolollon Words
trader. S-450 Phone (614} 698ore modequote to e:~epress our RISING STAR Kennel Boordmg
3290
opprec.1oflon Just knowmg we
~
Indoor-Outdoor runs. groom•ng hove so many fnends who core
all breeds clean samtory 1 BEAMS and H Beams 8 9, and
10 tnch Coli 991-7034
help! so much God bless oil of
facilities. Cheshire Phone (614)
you
367 0292.
STEREO NEW AM FM stereo
Mtldred ond Cliff Jacobs and
rad1o combmatton $129 95 or
HOOF
HOlLOW
Buy,
sell
,
trade
Fomdy
_easy
terms Call992 3~5
or tro1n horses . RUTH REEVES
~a~ Phone (6 ~) 698 3290

ill~

:

.

for Sale

Yard Sale

11 - The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Fnday , Mar~h 18, 1971

S32,SOO.OO.
James J Proffitt, Sheriff

Cheshire, Ohio
Phone 614-367-oo26

of Meigs County, Ohio
(Jl 11. 18. 25 141 1. a lie

PICK YOUR PICKUP
PICK YOUR PRICE

Full power and rur

74 AMC Hornet 2 Dr....................... '1995
73 Cutlass 4 dr., air .. ...................... '2495
73 Olds ·as 4 Dr., power &amp; air ••..••..•.• '1595
73 Buick ReRal HT Cpe................... 13495
73 Olds Cutlass S Cpe., power &amp; air ••.•.•s2795
73 Olds 88 4-0r. Sedan power &amp;air...... '2495
72 Chevy Impala 4 Dr., air ............ ,.... '1295
72 Olds 98 4 Dr., air ..................... 12295
72 Buick Elec. HT Cpe..................... '2495
72 Ford Torino 2 dr.... :.................... '1395
71 Ford ¥z Ton Pickup .................... 11695
1
71 Olds 98 Lux., power &amp; air .... ........ '1995
71 Ford LTD 4 Dr., power &amp; air ••.•••••... 17Qii_
70 Ford LTD 4 Dr., power &amp; air........... '895
70 Buick Skylark HT Cpe., air .............'1495
67 Chevy Caprice 4 Dr. HT.............. ,...'395
67 Cadillac HT Sedan, air ...................'995
See one of these courteous salesmen : Pete
Burris. Lloyd Me Laughlin or Marvin
Keebaugh.

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
"You'll Like Our Quality Way
Of Doing Business'
992-5342
GMC FINANCING
Pomeroy
Open Evenings Until6:00- TiiS p.m. Sat.

1974 CADILLAC ELDORADO
Gold meta llic with bla ck v1nyl top , ful l power,
Cltmate ControL AM FM stereo, 33,000 miles
SHARP•
.

SEE DAN THOMPSON FORD
FOR ADEAL THAfS
MIGHTY NICE
15 TRUCKS IN

S~CK

TO CHOOSE FROM

NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED
OUR GOAL IS TO SELL 15 TRUCKS
BEFORE APRIL 1ST

-----

..

Mi dd leper! . 0.

BRADFORD Auctioneer Complete Serv1ce Phone 949 24187
or 949-2000 Roc1ne. Ohio Crltt
Bradford
ELWOOD BOWERS RE PAIR Sweepers, toasters, trans all"
small appliances. lawn mower
next to State Highway Garage
on Rou te 7 Phone (61.- ) 985
3B25
REMODELING, Plumb1ng heahng
end oil types ol general repo ~r
Work guaran teed 20 years e JC.·
pertence Phone 992·2409
SEW1NG MACHINE Repo1rs ~ er ·
v1ce , all makes, 992-228Ai The
Fobr• c Shop . Pomeroy
Authom:ed Smger Soles and
Servtce We sh_orpen Sc 1 ss ~

EXCAVATING , do1e r. loader and
backhoe work, dump truck&amp;
gnd lo ·b&lt;~ys for h1re, will hou (
ftl l dirt, to soil, limestone and
grovel. Call Bob or Roger Jef
fers day phone '~J:2 -708'il .
n1ght phone 992·3525 or 9925232.
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
covot tng , septic systems
doter. backhoe , dump truck
hmestone. grovel blocktop
SAVE ON
povmg. Rt 143 Phone I (61 A)
698-7331
EXCAVATING, Back hoes , Dozer
trenc her, low Boy, dump truck ,
trucks, septic. systems BtU
Pullms. Phone 992-2478 day or
INSTALLED
ntghl
Regular $14.95
JACKS BEE SUPPLIES, Reedsville,
Ohto Bee supplies and equip·
Sq . Yd • .
men! Phone (614) 378-6357.
Everyday money saver.
Good chorce colors.

CARPOING

HI.W SHAG

'10.95

W1ll do odd jobs . roof mg pam
tmg guller work . Phon e 992·
7409
SEW ING · Al TERA TIONS
Upholstertng ,
drapes
reasonable. 572 South Th1rd
Ave .. Middl epor t. Phone
992 6306.
PIANO TUNING. Lone Oon1els 12
years of service Phone
9922082
ARTIFICIAL INSEMINATION Ser·
vice DAIRY -BEEF For service or
information coli · TIM RINGER.
AMERIC"N BREED ERS SERVICE
Home 662·-4323 or Answering
Service, 593·62t14
Will TRIM or cut trees or shrub·
bery Phone qt19-25A5 _ _ _

'"•
•

:•

r2or 15Ft.
Green, gokl, red , blue, rust.
Do it yourself, with padding, 17.95 sq . yd. With
padding Installed 18.95
square yard.
Call 742-2211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

FRIDAY, MARCH 18, 1977
S:OD-Big Valley 3; My Three Sons 4; Brady Bun ch 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Star Trek 15
S·JD-Adam-12 4; News 6, Family Affair 8. Elec Co.
20,33, Adam -12 13
·
6:0D-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15, ABC News 6. Zoom 20,33.
6.3D-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griflllh 6,
CBS News 8,10, Vf9elable Soup 20, Villa Alegre 33.
7:bo-Truth or Cons . 3. To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Dollars 6, $128,000 Question 8. News 10; To Tell the
/Truth 13, My Three Sons 15; Ohio Journal 20,
Marshall University Report 33
7. 3D-Porter Wagoner 3; Gong Show 4; Candid Camera
6; Treasure Hunts , MacNeil -Lehrer Repor t 20,33;
Andy Williams 10; Name That Tune 13; Pop Goes
the Country 15.
8 ' oo-Sanlord &amp; Son 3,4, 15; Donnny &amp; Marie 6, 13; Pilot
8, 10; Washington Week In Revl~w 20,33.
8:30-Chlco S.lhe Man 3,4,15 ; Wall Street Week 20,33.
9·0D-Rocklord Flies 3,4,15; Movie "The Women Who
· Cried
Murder " 6,1 3; Hunter 8,10; People's
Government 33 , Lowell Thomas Remembers 20.
9.Jo-The Wey It Wes 20.
•\'0: ()()--&lt;;lulncy 3,4, 15, Sonny &amp; Cher 8, 10. News 20;
Firing Line 33
:
~ 0 : 3D-Lock , Stock II. Barrel 20.
l :OD-News 3.~.6.8.10,13 , 15 , Monty Python's Flying
t' Circus 20; Black Perspective onthe News 33.
1:3D-Johnny Carson 3; SWAT 6,13; Johnny Carson
1. 4 15· Mary Hartman 10; ABC News 33.
2:00-Movle "The P icture of Dorian Gray"JO; Janek!
• 33.
:'1 2·4D-Mod Squad 6, Ironside 13
!1:OD-Midnlght Special 3.4,1S.
b ·4D-News 13.
!.: 3D-News 3.
f .a:OO-Movle j'Mother Is a Freshman" 3.
:.:3D-Movie "The Jackpot" 3.
~: oo-Salnl 3

::

~~FLUGG

FURNITURE -~
742-2211

Rutland

•.,

•••

··--··~··
•
w
•
Mon .. Tues.. ed.

8:001i15 : 0~
Thursday 81il Noon

...
-• .

.•

by Jon Peterson

' •.

NOW THP.i 'I'M
Q&lt;Je,RWf:l6Ht; 1 DON'T
\-1.1'-VE TO · \NOR~
A60UT - wAiC.~IN6MV 011::-T/

RUTLAND

Convenient Shopping Hours

•
'•
•
: :

..:~

501 NYLON

''

'.
••

•
••
:• :..

~·

•

-:;

!•

••

Close Sat. IU,5 P.M.

··•••••·••·

• ·

,1! "'"'"'

ARNOLD ORATE

e:·

$. . .•

RUTLAND ftiRNITURE ·

:

.:

RUTLAN.D..l!

: ···-~·······~············-

6 oo-suntlse Semester 10
6.3D-Matlers of Life 6, TV Class room B. Ken tucky
AfiP1rf 13
7 oo-Saturdav Report 3; Chlldrens Theatre 4; Eddie
Saunders 6,' Treehouse Club 8, U S. Farm Report
10 : Gr ll l a~n 13.
v lley of the
7.3D-.Bullwlnkle 3; World of Survival 4 • a
Dinosuars 6, Dusty's Treehou se 8, Man from
C 0 S I 10. Oddball Couple 13. Sesa me 51 , 20. .
8 oo-Woody Woodpecke r 3,4,15 Tom g, Je rry 6,13,
Sylvester 1!. Tweety 8, 10.
Cl b
8· 30-Pink Panther 3,4,15, Jabi1eriaw 6.13. Clue u
· 8,101 Mlsler Rogers' Neighbor~ oo d 20
9:oo-Scooby -Doo Dynomutt 6 , 1~; Bugs Bun ny B,IO,
Sesa me St 20 '
Upon a
10 :0D-Speed Buggy 3,4, 15. Tarzan 8,10, 0 nee
Classic 20
h
6 13
10 .3D-Monster Squad 3,4,15. Kroflt 5uper s ow ' •
Batman 8,1 0: Zoom 20
II oo-Space Ghosts, Fankensteln Jr. 3,4, 15. Shazam lsls B,lO ; SSI Redeterm ination 20
II 3D-Big John, Utile John 3,4, 1S; Superlrlends 13,
Big Blue Marble 6; Characlerl•tlcs of Learni ng
Disabilities 20
VI
1 t
12 oo-NBCAA Basketbaii3,4,1S; Hoi Dog 6; ewpo n
B; Fat Albert 10; Action News for Kids 13,
Crocketts Victory Garden 20
12· 3D-Amerlcan Bandstand 13. Soul Train 6, Ark II 8,
. Gomer Pyle, USMC 10. Crop Game 20
..
1·oo-Way Out Games 8. Movie "Seven Days In May
10 · Infinity Factory 33
J•Jo.-:Polnl of View 6; Children's Film Festi val 8,
Hogan 's Heroes 13. Zoom 33
2·0Q-NCAA Basketball 3,4,1S. Golf 6,13 ; Racers B.
Nova 33.
2 3o-Antlque Furniture 8
3·oo-Movle " Carnival Story" 8; Solar Energy 33 .
3: 3D-Pro Bowling 6, 13; Call II Macaron i 10, Book Beat

4 . ~NCAA

lfasketball 3,4,15; Urban League 10 •
Woman 33.
1
ec
4·3G-Outdoors with Ken Callaway 8; por s P .
tacular 10; Anyone for Tennyso_n? 33 .
5,oo-Wide world ot'Sporls 6.i:i; Catch 33 33.
5.30-Consumer Experience 33.
God Has the
6 ;oo-News 3.4.10; Lawrence Welk 8;
Answer 15
6 3o-NBC News 3,4,8, 10; BC News 13, News 6; CBS
. News 10' Lilias Yoga II. You 33
7
Music' Hall Alnerlca 3; Rifle man 4; Lawren ~e
·OO,V. 1k 151 Hee Haw 6,81 $128,000 Question 10. Lets
Make a Deal 13; World War I 33.
7 ·30-Dolly 10, In Search of 13; Oasis In Spa ce 33.
·oo-Emergency 3,4; Blansky 's Beauties 6; Mo vie
8
· "Robin Hoodnlk" 15. Mary ;Tyler Moore 8.10, High
School Basketba ll 13; Fall ol Eagles 33
8:3D-Fish 6; Movie "Robin Hooctnlk" 8; Bob Newhart

.

.-

3.18 ~ 1977 by HEA, Inc

s

s

10
~Movie
" The Man Who Loved Cat Danc Ing·"
3,4,1S; Stersky g, Hutch 6. All In The Family lb.
Leonard Bernstein 33 .
9 3D-Alice 8,10 .
IO ·oo--Dog &amp; Cal 6,13. Carol Bu r nett 8,10.
10 3D-Scenes from a Marriage 33 .
11.oo-Jaycee Auction 6, News 8,10.
11·2D-News 3,4.15.
"T~ w ld of
11:30-Mrs. America Pageant 8; Movie
e o~
.
. Suzie Wong" 10; Movie " Wall Until Dark 13.
Monty Python's Flying Circus 33
11 ·35--PMA Pulse 15.
11·5D-Mary Hartman 3; Saturday Night 4,15.
12:oo-Janakl 33.
12 3D-Mary Hartman 3
..
1:oo-Sammy&amp;Co. 6, Movle " TheOblongBox 13
1 · ~News 3
2:~Movle "My Gal Sal" ~2·30-ABC News 13.
3:~vie "Smoky" 3.

?

FRIDAV TIL 5 ••=::
••
• "
f •..
:

GEr
ATrENTIOI

SATUROAY, MARCH 19,1971

s · oo-~alnt ~-

6.oo-FBI3 .

73 Ford Ranchero, V-8, auto., PS
&amp; PB. vinyl roof.
$2695
71 Dodge '121on LWB, V-8,
$1000
auto .

RIGGS USED' CARS
Roger Riebel
Located on St. Rt. 7

Dan Thompson Ford

Television log for easy viewing

EXCAVATING . dozer, backhoe
ond ditcher. Charles R Hot·
f1 eld , Bock Hoe Serv1c&amp;,
Ru tland, Oh1o Phone 742-2008
SEPTIC Sy1tems mstolled by
ltcensed mstoller
Shepard
Contractors Phone 742·2409.
SEPTIC TANKS cleaned Modern
Samlolton 992·3954
WILL do roofing. construchon ,
plumbmg and healing No job
too Iorge or too small Phone
742 234B
CARPENTER floonng ceilmg
panelmg Phone 992-2759
MOBILE Home Repo1r Elec.,
plumbing and heotmg. Phone
992-585B
ElECTRONIC T V CLI NIC, Now
T V shop, Electrontc T V Clmtc
Servtce call, $5 95 Color, B&amp; W
antenna svstems stereos etc
572 Sout~ Th1rd, Middleport
Phone 992-6306 Carry •n and
l!&gt;ove money

74 Chev. C-10 LW.B., V-8, std.,
heavy duty suspension.
$2695
73 Chev . C-10, custom deluxe, 350
auto., PS &amp; PB, LWB.
$2695

See Pat Hill, Rocky Hupp
or Darrel Dodrill
For a good deal on a new or used vehicle.
Open Evenings Ti16 :00
Except Thursday and Salurday
Closed Sunday

992-2196

74 Chevy Vega 4 cyl ..••••.••• '1995
73 Buick LeSabre Custom ..•• '2495
73 Ford Gran Torino .......... 12195
73 Chev. Impala 4 dt..•.••.•. '2495
73 Ford Wagon 4 dr.......... '2495
72 Chevy Nova 4 dr. 6 cyl... ••'1695
72 Ford Galaxie 4 dr.•..••.•. '1295
72 Toyota Celicia 4 cyl, 4 sp ...'995
62 Olds Cutlass ............... 1150

USED TRUCK SPECIALS

3·16·1 m o.

n-::
~;,.~.,

76 Chevy Malibu 2 dr.••..••.. 13695
76 MercuiJ Bobcat Runabout 12695
74 Pontiac Catalina 2 dJ ...... '2895
74 Buick Regal 2 dr...........13295
74 Pontiac Catalina 2 dr...... 12995
74 Dodge Dart Custom 6 cyl. '2495
74 Ford Mustang 11... ....... ..12495
74 Ford Galaxie 4 dr..........12695
74 P~. FuiJ 4 dr.............. '2495

$4995

Ray Riggs
Chesler. Ohio

985-4100

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

2 SIGNS

tase No. 22062
Estate of Cora Schartfger ,

OF

Deceased
•
Nottce Is he reby g1ven tha t
Cleyton Schartfger, of R 1,
Long Bottom, Ohio, has been
duly appo1nted Adm ln iStre tar
of
th ·~
Es tate of Cora
Schart11)er, deceased, late of
Mergs Count¥, O_blo
Cred1tors at'£ required to
file thei~.. cla tms w1 th satd
fidu~iary
wi thm
three
MJ-on1hs
Oared l his 7th dav ot
March, 1977
Manntng 0 Webster , Judge
Common Pteas Court,
Probate D lv•slon
Meigs County, Ql'llo
(3) 11 , 18, 25 - Jtc

QUALITY

Pamerov
Motor Co.

1971 FORO'!• TONCREWCAB
Body good , runs good

$1448

1976 MALIBU CPE .
$3848
Automatic, air conditioning . 8 cylinder, power steenng
a nd brakes., rad1 o, good rub ber , light green .
1976 TORIN04 OR. SEDAN

$2848

A1r , automattc, power steering, 8 cylinder, good

rubber, light green .

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I U.S Navy
person
5 Cloyed
tO "- 1n
Calico"
(2 wds.)
il Feeblemmded
i2 Salesman's
ID (2wdsi
15 "Johnny -Nolen
16 Poem
11 IndoChmese
language
18 L1ke Berg's
mUSIC

20 I.odgmg

DOWN
1 Texas crty
2 Guam's
capital
3 Man's man
4 Edifice
extension
5 Footwear
6 Lms FlriMJ
7 Nervous
twitch
8 Rapture
9 DriVe
mad
13 Neighbor
of Lyd1a
14 Railroad
car

YesterdaY's Answer
30 Covering
24 Of
for
the
shipboard
Eternal
goods
C1ty
31 By
25 Menu phrase
itself
(3 wds. )
32 Trace;
26 Put m
shade
motion
3li Czech nver
28 Bantu38 Gam
speakin g
39 Trerra African
Fuego

23 Gather

19 Monster
place
22 One's
21 Man's nickname
busmess
22 Theater box
.--...--.--.-23 Macaw
26 Coal seeker
27 Burrowmg
ammal
28 Good ( Fr. )
29 Candlenul
tree
30 " - emptor"
33 "Casa-

OHIO COAL
COLUMBUS (UPI) - State
agencies a nd slate"upported
colle ges a nd universtlms
would have to purchase and
bu rn Ohio coa l under
legislation introduced in the
House Wednesday by Rep.
Ronald
James,
D·
Proctorville

James' b1ll would also
require the Ohio Environ·
mental Protection agency to
renew air quality variance~
to the stale institutions. for th~
lise of high-sulphur Ohio coal.

IN THE

COMMON PLEAS
NOTICE FOR BIDS

Not ic e 1S her eb y gtven tha t
btds wtf l be rec etved by
C olumb i a
TownSh i p
Tr ustees , Me1gs Co , Rt J
Box 82. Albany, Oh10 &lt;~57 10
un til Apnl 6 1977
~/dast ~~~~ b~ opel)ed April 7,

19

Bids will be rece1ved tor 1
1971 mode l 2 ton dump truck
a t least 10' bed
900x20 10 ply front t 1res
900x20 10 ply mlJd and snow
rear l1res
Spare r im
Heavy duty h0 1SI , H ea'&gt;~y
duty 6ump cr and fron t to w
blanca''
hooks, Heav y duty clutch ,
p1amst
--1--l- -1-- Power steer ing , Cab t1g hts ,
Dtrect tonal Signa ls, Horn ,
34 Peer Gynl's
a nd
Defroster .
Heater
mother
Wtndshleld wipers
and
35 You (Ger. )
washers , LH li nd RH west
coast mi rrors. Undercoating ,
31 Fl~ffy
mud flaps , 2 speed rear axle ,
dessert
5 speed tranSmiSSIOn, 350 cv
In V-8 gas engme or larger ,
(2 wds.)
~-+--- 3t.t cab protector wi th 211
40 Nincompoop
wmgs Heavy duty factory
reinforced fr ame, 7000 lb or
41 Brink
h-,---I-~-.J-- larger 1 beam front axle .
42 Patchwork
Heavy duty brake s 15" x3 "
poem
front and 15' 'x6" rear
The Board of Townsh ip
43 Chilling
Tr ust ees reser ves lhe right to
glance
relect anv or 1!1 11 bids
By order of the Board of
Towns111p Trustees
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it :
Glor ta Hu tfon, Twp Cler k
(3 ) 18 ltc
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
NOTICE OF
One letter simply s tands for another In thiS sample A is
APPOINTMENT
C!!lse No 22065
used l or the t hree L's, X f or th e tw o O's, etc. Single letters,
Esta te a t Max Manuel , J r
apostrophes, t he length and !ormal10n of the words are all
Deceased
hmls Each day the code letters arc t:hftcrrnt
NOI1ce Is hereby given that
Gloria Jea n Manuel of Rout e
CRY PTOQUOTES
No . 2. Box H, Ra cine , Oh10
h &amp;s been d uty appointed
RWGXWHLL
BL
BYRGLLBIAH
Adm lnis•r atrlx of lhe Estate
of
Max
Ma nue l,
J r .,
de ceased , late of R:t No 2,
ZEFKXH;
MBCEGQC
FKJ CEGLH
Racine , Me igs County , Oh1o
Creditors are requ 1red to
file tt'letr claims with sa id
MEG
ZFKKGC
ZEFKXH
CEHBW
fiduciary
within
thr ee
mon ths
Y B K J L
Dated this 161h aa v of
ZF KKGC
ZE F KXH
March , 1977
Manning 0 Webster
FKNCEBKX.- XHGWXH
I.
LEFM
Judge
Court of Common P!l! as,
Yesterday's Cryploquole: THE MIND OF MAN IS LIKE A
Probate Div1sion
CLOCK THAT IS ALWAYS RUNNING DOWN AND REQUIRES
Meigs Countv , Ohto
(3) 18, 25 ; (4) 1 3 tc
TO BE AS CONSTANTLY WOUND UP. - WILLIAM HAZLITI
t) 1977 Kinl Peat\lns Sudlt:l\t, lftC,

COURT

PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY,OMIO
IN
THE MATTER OF
SETTLEME NT OF AC
COU NT S.
~ROBATE
COUR T, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
Accounts and voucl'1ers of
t ne
foll ow tng
n a med
f1 du clanes have been t il ed In
!M e Pro ba te Court , Meigs
County , Oh 10, tor approl,ja l
and settlement
CASE NO 13,497 - A
Fourtel!n t h Account of the
Hunt mgton Nallona l Sank ol
Co lum bus . Tru stee of thl!
Trust created under the Last
Will and Testament of Albert
0 Ebersbach , Deceased.
CAS E NO 19 ,135 - First
and F1nal Account of
Theodore T
Reed, Jr ,
Executor of the Estate of
EliZabeth
M
Reed ,
Deceased
CASE NO 20 ,23.tl - First
Current Acco unt of Bernard
V. Ful tz , as Successo r
Tru s t ee to Anderson 8
Kibble , of the trust under the
Wilt of Edna K S'/ war t.
CASE NO . 20,8 1 - l'lrsr
anct Final Account of DIJC ie
Smit h , Executrix ol lhe
Esratl! of Ch arles Waynl!
Hoba ck. Deceased .
\ CASE NO 21 ,063 - First
and Fmal Account of Charles
Jacob Metnh!!lrl , Executor of
the Last Will am~ ' Testament
of
Carru~
Me in ha rt ,
Deceased
CASE NO 2l ,t173 - First
and Final Account of Cassie
Hall , Guerdlan of Charles
Kevln Ha ll , a minor .
Unless except i on~ ere filed
therl!to, said accounts will be
for hear ing before said Court
on the 18th day of April, 1917, '
at which time sald accounts
w11 1 be cons 1dered and conti nued fro m day to day until
final ly diSposed of
Any person Interested may
file written e)(ceptlons to said
accounts or to m etters
perta1n1no to tM eKec ut ton of
the trust , not less than five
days pr ior to the da te set for
hearing
MANNING D. WEBSTER
JUDGE
COM IliON PLEAS COURT.
PROBP,TE DIVISION .
MEIGS COUNTY ,O HIO
(31 18 . lie

�12- The D~Uy Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Frid•y, March 18, 1977

MIA Americans Township
(Continued from page I)
to fetch the f(rst remains . It
was he who dealt with the
wishes of the families of the
2,550.
He loo~ed down the list of
boxes. The Vietnamese left
him alone with the 12.
Montgomery read the
nam.s -Capling, Marshall,
Metz , Kolstad, Kiener! ,
Diamond, Eaton, Waters ,
Bqwling, Ducat , Goldberg
and J ollnsOn.
He did not seem to notice
the
Vietnamese
had
mispelled one
name:
omitting the 'd' from
Goldberg. '
He bent his head.
There, at last, was
ceremony. There was prayer.
Outside, beyond the rice
padd ies, hor ned water
buffaloes knee-deep in water
stood still on the hori:wn .
Earlier the While House
held its secood day of. "very
cooperative" talks with Vietnam~ leaders .

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR

VACATION
WATCH FOR
OPENING DATE

(Continued from page I)
6, Cone T·7, Happy Valley .
T·B, North Run . T-10, Laurel .

-i~r:::::;:=====:=::;::::=:=:::=:•::;:;:;:;::-:-:·=·=·=·=·=-:-=-=·=·=·=·=-=-:·=-=-:-=-:==-=-=-==:=:-=·::=:=:=::;::::==:==:==========:===:===:==?

Host team

Hospital News

Veterans Memorial Hospllal
ADM ITTED
Ruth
Sellers. Portland; francis
Klein, Middleport; Evelyn
Davis, Racine : Edward
Bowen, Pomeroy; Rebecea
Thomas, Pomeroy: Jane Ann
Snouffer, Pomeroy.
RACINE
Southern
DISCHARGED - Edith
I.;x:al, in defeating Shade 63- Wollard, Doris Adams, J udy
48 to win first place in the McDaniels, Gail Hart, Katie
Southern Seventh Grade Lewis, Unda Dye, Mildred
Basketball Tournament last Hudson, Harvey Bush,
week started out fast- Gilbert Mees, Euvette
~ break,ing, playing a tight Bechtle, Betty Bailey.
man-tO-man defense lor 8
first quarter lead of \7-10.
The teams traded basket
Holzer Medlc•l Center
in the second quarter whic~
IDischarges, M~r&lt;ih 17)
thern came
. , Edwm D. Adkms, Mrs.d
ended 27..20 . .~
~u
.red
.
f
th
d Ronald
Atk inson
an
out 1
da ughter, Katherme
· Auston,
h Kt'
kup24 or . t et secon
131
s~ad~-~~a~e t~~nt~ ~akeo~ Keith D. Baker, George E.
comeback in the fourth Ben~ett, Tony D. Blanton ,
.
Jamce G. Board, Mrs. Roger
perwd, but the game was out B
d . J hn C
of reach
rown an son, o
arey,
So uth~rn had ba lanced · Da~id E. Culpepper, David
Dalley, Joyce Deer, Wyman
.
scormg as Jay Rees and Kent E D
R0 Lo G 'f
.
h
e~ne~,
G ~ff'trhl •
Wolfe each had 17 points and fl
Richard Wolfe 15 and 9 1 • an ra · r1 I s,
rebounds. Rebounding m d Ferne Hayman , Otha Jeffers,
. , ·
a e St even Kanou se, Suzanne
the difference for So uth ~rn as Klbbl
Ph ill 1. . Law
they got 17 in the first half
e,
P
son,
and 31 in the seco'nd. Other Ta mF ara Ma sse.y, Donna
Southern scorers were Tom Me arland, Glor1a Morgan ,
Roseberry, S; c. T. Chap- Jam~s Perry, Mrs. James
man , 6; and Brian Ash, 3. Rece and daughter, Shelby
Other members of the Roberts, Mrs. Herschel
champ ion ship team were Smlth and son, Ralph A.
Robert Brown J oe Bob Thompson, Leshe Tre.adway,
Hemsley and Allen Pape.
Mrs. Bobby Tucker and. son,
Wayne Cremean s, for Golden Watson , Shlr.l ey
Shade, was high scorer for Watson, Mrs. Bruce Willis

:!) News. • .1n Briefs!j- wins grade
'

By Unlte&lt;l Press lateruational
T-11, Sisson R un . T-12,
KJNSHASA,
ZAIRE - INVADING KATANGAN exile
Slanearl - T-13, Mt . Union . T.
forces,
which
Zaire
says were led by Cuban officers across the
14. Ogdin . T 25, Folden . T·26,
Angolan
border,
received
warm welcomes in the four towns
Fauber la ne - T -65, Cross . T225. Stout Lane . T-368, they have overrun in the copper..-ich Shaba province, a U. S.
Cemetery lane - T-392,
Cas tor Cemeter y - T-394. Embassy spokesman said today. But the official denied
reports that Kolwezi, a mining center in the area about 900
Harmon
T -405, Mt . Olive
Cemetery Lane - T-431 . Or
miles southeast of Kinshasa, had also been ~liken.
ch ard - T-616, Peck Lane - T"We just talked with our folks in Shaba -:-the consulate in
61 7.
Lubumbash1
and the U. S. coostruction frrm m KolweZJ - and
Ltlar t Township
East Letart - T-95, Hi ll . T- · to the bes.t o! our knowledge, the town has not fallen," the
96, Rowe -T-97, Manuel . T-98, official smd. 'Our people there s;~y the town lS calm and has
Blind Holl ow . T-99, McNickle not fallen." But he said Methodist IIUs:'ionaries in the south of
· T-JoO, Can ter . T· 101, Mile the country mnf1rmed mvaders had se1zed the town of Sandoa,
Hill · T-102, Ours · T·103, Waid
Sayre Hil l - T-104, Plants . T- about 55 miles ':"st of the Angolan border and about 200 miles
214, Arnott - T·459 , Cleland . east of KolweZI .
T-611, Lawson . T -612, Wolfe .

T-613, River - T-614, Adam s -

tournament

GARRETTSVILLE, OHIO - TEACHERS in the Garfield
T-623, River Fronf - T-1006,
local
school district struck the system today in a contract
Buckfown
T-1007
dispute and claimed they had effectively closed the three
Lighthouse • T-1009, FerrY
La nd i ng · T-1025.
schools as ol7 :45 a.m. A teachers ' spo~esman said the schools
were being picketed and non-teaching personnel were
observing the lines. Buses were not making their runs, he said.
GREEN LIGHTS
Ne.gotiations continued until midnight Thursday,
COLUMBUS (UP!)
. accordmg to the spokesman, and the teachers concluded that
House members went out of while the system had even more new money available than In
their way to celebrate St . the past, they were being offered an even lower percentage
Patrick's Day Thursday . than formerly. The last lull-time contract expired last
They gave lUlanimous votes September ; a short-term one was negotiated in October ; and it
to four bills.
expired Dec. 31, according to the spokesman, who said
The electronic scoreboard negotiations had continued since then.
shows 'green lights for "yes"
votes, and each roll call
A NEW SNOWSTORM SPREAD OVER THE UPPER
decorated the wall with a sea Great Lakes early today. Heavy snow stretched from
of pure green lights.
Minnesota through Wisconsin and Michigan and into oorthern
Ohio. Heavy snow~arnings for up to eight inches of snow were
ASK TO WED
posted for lower Michigan and eastern Wisconsin. Travelers
Marriage licenses have advisories were posted lor Michigan, Wisconsin and
been i'lSUed !o Wesiey Lee Minnesota .
Wise, 34, Middleport, and
Five inches of snow stacked up in Toledo, Ohio, in a sixMinnie Virginia Wise, Rt. 1) hour period ending early today. Detroit and Green Bay, .Wis., ~~e!~~~er~i~~u)~g : i~~~
Vinton and to Mark Robert each reported four inches. Showers and thundershowers
Hayden 18, Lancaster, and roamed from eastern .Iowa to north&lt;im Illinois, Indiana and scoreboard was Thompson,
Janet Dea VanVranken, 17, Ohio. A combina tion of snow and rain, interspersed with 3; Skinner, 8; King, 2; Lee,
II ; Moore, 4.
Pom~roy .
thunder and lightning , hit Chicago.
Southern finished the year
with a very fin e 15-1 record.
PROVIDENCE, R. I. - HAVE YOU FELT GUILTY about They are coached by James
that towel or hath mat you took from a Holiday Inn ? You can Lawrence.
give it back anonymously Saturday for a good cause.
For each towel, face cloth or bath mat returned , local inns
around the nation will donate 25 cents to the Easter Seal
Society. "A majority of the inns are participating in it nationwide. !!.is an option," said Michael Vautrin, assistant innkeeper of the downtown Providence Holiday Inn.

f

l\)1 make the cifferencc·

"INN PLACE"

5 PIECE GROUP

FROM lANCASTER, OHIO

OUR NEW TELEPHONE
NUMBER IS 992-6661
.INSTALLMENT LOAN DEPARTMENT
NUMBER WILL REMAIN THE SAME

S. Air Force, he was born

Sept.

A,

1914 at Wells1on to

Sylvester and Frances ut.

Heiohn Goodrich.

He married Ma rv

Lou

Voris Nov . 3, 19:!8 at Cln·
ci nna tl who survives along
with one daughter, Mrs . John

(Ma rilyn

J ea n)

Sayo,

brother s; and a sister.

She lived In The Pla ins area
the. past A2 yea rs.

He resided In Gall Ia Cou nty

three . yea rs coming fr om
Wellston . He

w~s

a member

of St. Stephe n's Catholic
Church, Cinci nnati.

..
Funeral serv ices will be 1
p.m . Sunda y a t Waugh Ha11ey -Wood Funeral Home
with the chap lain fr om ~
Rickenbacker Air Force ba se
off ici ating. Burial will be in

Ridgew ood Cem et er y.

Well ston . Fr iends may cal l at
the funeral home from 2 to 4
and 7 to 9 p.m. Sa1u rda y. Full
milita ry serv ice wi ll be
condu cted by mem ber s of

Ric kenbac ker Air Force

ease.

Pomer oy:

chlldron,

three

.th ree

992-3629

POMEROY

gra nd -

great-

(Margaret) Brodback, Seal
Beeco, Ca lif.

Funeral services will be 1

p.ni. Sunday at toe Hughes

Funeral Home, Athens, with
the Rev. Fred Shaw of. .
ficiatlng . Friends may call at ·

PLANE WRECKED - Heavy wind caused a plane crash
at 12:40 p.m. Friday at the Gallia-Meigs Regiona l Ali-port
just .north of here. According to the Gallia-Meigs Post Stale
Highway Patrol, Robert KeMeth Dyer, Rt. i, Northup, had

the funer al home anytime ·

after 2 p.m. Satu rday.

'
Third payment

'

COLUMBUS - A $3,679
check has been lorwprded to
the Gallla County Commi ssioners by the Ohio
Department of Mental Health
and Mental Retardation.
Dr. Timothy B. Moritz,
department director, said the
check was the third payment
on the state's share of construction costs for a $1.2
million mental health center
to serve Gallla, Jackson and
Meigs counties.
The 19,600-square-foot
center iS 1ocated near the
junction of U.S. Route 35 and
State Route 160. outside
Gallipolis. Construct ion is
presently 55 per cent complete.
The state will contribute
$77,868 to be matched by local
fundin g. Th e federal
government will provide
$1 ,105,220 of the total
$1, 260,95~ cost.

Lanham will be teaching a
course in golf Tuesdays and
Thursdays from 6 to 7 p.m.
beginning March 29. That
class bas a 20 person size
llmlt.
.
Horseback riding will be
available at three different
times with all sessions
meeting at Bill Wells Riding
Stables on Jackson Pike.
Those,interested may choose
a Monday class (12:40-2 :40
p,m.) beginning April 4, a
Wednesday class (12:40-2 :40
p.m. ) beginning March 30 or

RECLINER CHAIRS
by BERKLINE
SPECIAL SALE GROUP
'
lNCLUDES' WAll-A-WAYS, RECLINERS,
ROCK.o-LDUNGERS IN HERCULON,
NYLON OR VINYL UPHOLSTERING

REG. VALUES
s2ogoo TO $25goo
ON SALE NOW
FOR JUST

$
SHOP DOWNTOWN AND AT THE MECHANIC
STREET WAUHOUSE TONIGHT TILL8:00

•

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

PRICE 25 CENTS

of $86,635

'
,
'

FRIDAY 'S HIGH WINDS caused quite a bit of damage
throughout Gallia ColUlty . Photo above was taken of the new
Thaler Ford Agency building oow under construction on

J~ckson Pike. An 80-foot section of a 120-lool long wall24 feel
high 1\'llS leveled hy the winds . No official damage estimate
had been made as of noon Saturday according to Jim Thaler.

Geologist will address
40th chamber mee.ting
GALUPOUS .,.- Richard J . Anderson
· of Columbus, profes sional geologist,
teacher, write- and lecturer, will be guest
speaker at the lOth annual dinner meeting
clthe Gallipolis Area Chamber of Commerce.
The event will be held Wednesday,
March 30, beginning at 7:30p.m. in the Rio
Grande College Cafeteria . Admission is
$7.50 per person.
A native New Yorker, Anderson .attended gramme- school, high school and
oollege there. He earned a Bachelor's
lEgree from Columbia Univer~ty In 1935,
111d a Master's deg ree in 1938.
His first professional assignmmts
took him to the Middle West and Far West
a&lt;1 well as to Alaska and abroad.
Anderson has taught geology on th e
oollege level at th e University of Min·
nesota , the Portland campus of The
Univershy of Oregon, and currently is on
the facuky of Ohio State Unlvershy.
From 1948 untlll971i, Anderson was a
member of the staff of Battelle Memorial
Institute, th e world's largest contract

research organizatioo. During his 28-year
caree l with Batt elle, Anderso n held
wrioos staff assignments, ranging from
research engineer to associate director of
the Institute's energy program. Now
retired from Battelle, AndersOn continues
to serye the Institute as a consultant .
Since going to Columbus, Anderson
became one of the most sought after
speakers on a va riety of technical an d
.,ientilic subj ect s, which he successfully
ilterprels for lay au diences. His ability as
a speaker has earned him numerous
awards.
He was designated as the Henry
Krumb Mem11,ria l lecturer by the
American Institute of Mining Engin ee rs in
1969, and has se rved the American
0\emlcal Soc ietY as Distinguished Lecturer in 1971 and 1972, He has lectured at
IIDBI of the Ohio colleges, as welt as
aunpuses in Michi gan, PeMs ylvania and
West Virginia . Overseas, Anders on has
IJ'esented both technical papers and
txJpul ar talks in Australia. Ca nada,
Col ombia , J apan , M.exico and New

GALLIPOLI S - Asuit totaling $86,6:!5
was filed Friday in Gallia County Common
Pleas Court by H and R Investment Corp.,
450 Pike St., Kanauga, (Holiday Inn )
against the motel's major contractor
Rodney McCorkle, Jackson, and a subcontractor, Homer Hoover, Portsmouth.
Plaintiffs' petition to the cou rt states
McCorkle entered into a writte n
agreement on Nov. 15, 1971 to furnish all
labor and materials and to erect a Holiday
lnn · in Addison Twp. according to plans
and specifications prepared by Hood-Rich
Architects lor the sum of $800,000.
Defendant McCorkle subcontracted
construction of the roof to Homer Hoover.
According to the complaint, plaintiff
performed all conditions of the contract
and erroneously overpaid the defendant
$10,994.52 which he has refused to return.
Plaintiff charged that the defendants
have breached the contract by failing to
construct the roof in a workmanlike
manner.
The roof has leaked causing extensive
water damage to the interior of the
building and as a result of the negligence,
plaintiff has been forced to repair and
replace roofin g, ceilin g tile, paint ,
carpeting and other materials in the total
sum of $74,726.53 and has be&lt;n charged
$3,842.10 by the subcontractor for alleged

lETART FAW - James R. Hill; «, Coroner, said death was 'caused by
Rt. 2, Racine, was killed instantly here massive head and chest injuries. It was the
Friday afternoon in a headon colllsion on . second traffic fatality recorded this year
811 338. ·
in Meigs County,
According lo the Gallla-Meigs Post
Funeral services for Hill will be held
&amp;ate Hll!hway Patrol, HUI 's car was left of Mlnday at 1 p.m. at Ewing Chapel with the
·oenter when lt slammed headon into a Rev. Doo Walker officiating. Bur ial will be
W!np truck drivm by Larry G. Duke, 36, in Letart Fails Cem etery .
Rt . I, Crown CUy.
.
Mr. Hill wa! a lifelong truck farmer
Dr. Rily Pi ckens , Meigs County here . He was a member of Racine
American Legion and Racine Masonic
lodge 461. Mr. Hlll was the son of the late
Jei-ry and Flor•nee Elliott Hill.
He is survive d by three brothers,
David, 1111d George A. Hill, both of Racine,
. and ClarPftce, of Syracuse ; lou r nepnews
111d two nieces.
Masonic services will be held at the
funeral borne this evening at 7:30 p.m.
Friends may ca ll at the funeral home at
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County's 1977 any time.
Wet pavement was blamed fo r a
Cancer Crusade co-Chairmen Donald and
trafll
c accident at 7:20a.m. Friday on SR
Judy Warehime Saturday announced
7,
two
miles south of Cheshire.
lormatiQO of an exclusive group of Gallia
The
patrol said Clarence A. Tucker,
Countlaps dedicated to "Wiping out cancer
41,
Rt.
I,
Galllpolls, lost control of his ca r
in their lifetime."
This new segment of the Gallia County
Unit of the American Cancer Society Is the
"Century Club," an eatablished part of the
Ohio Division , but new in Gallia County.
Spearheaded by volunteer Merr!ll
Evans, 10 area individuals and businesses
have donated at least $100 each to become
members of lhls select· group of Cancer
Crusade supporters across Ohio.
POINT PLEASANT - The .United
Gallla County's Charter Century Club Mine Worker' Supporters Club will bost a
members who wlll be honored at the 1977 party on April I at the Point Pleasant IM .
CrUBIIde Kick-off. on March '!1 are The M.
Called a ''political pru:ty,'' Mrs. Gene
T. Epling Company, Jim Mink Auto Sales, Oiler of Middleport · said se veral
Inc., Warren S. Sheets, The French City candidates for high positions in the
Meats, .Inc., 'J'he Wiseman Agency, Inc.; lnternalionat United Mine Workers have
Carter ond Evans, Inc., Evans ·En- confirmed reservations to attend.
·
terprt... , Inc., First National Bank of
Among them are Harry Patrick,
GallipollJ, fbe Ohio Valley Bank Com· secretary-tr easurer, runnin g
for
pany, and Commercial and Savings Bank. president; Cart Kaston , vice presidential
It lJ hoped that these individuals and . candidate, and Kinnard White,
01111nizatlooa will oerve as an inspiration lntematlonalauditor candidate. There , a
to other• to help in any way possible to llrong possibility thai Arnold Miller,
re11ch Gallla County's 1977 Crusade Goal UMW pr.. tdenl, and Leroy Patterson, an
and malte a l!iant otrtde in the continuinR opponent, wlllattend, she said. The dance
effort against cancer.
party will be held frotn9p .m. to 2a .m.

Cent ury· Club
is helpm"g to

erase cancer

Candidates will

attend UMW party

RECEIVING THE FIRST SERIES of new Meig$ County house numbers ~
Tom Reuter, superintendent of postal operations at the Pomeroy Post Office . The
lir~t numbers released are lor Stale Route 124 west of State Route 7. They are
bemg presented by Meigs County Commissioner, Henry Wells . ·othe~s pictured
fr om the left ate County Eil gineer Wesley Buehl, Dorms Thornton, nun:iera tot who
trave ls the roads to obtain residents' names, and James Page , project engineer.

Numbering proceeding

POMEROY - The current Meigs
County
rural house numbering project,
'
Plaintiff seeks a judgment ol $10,994.52
from McCorkle with interest and costs and made possible by the combined effort of
$75,640.53 jointly and severally from oounty officials woo obtained a 100 percent
federal grant from HUD , will give each
McCorkle and Hoover.
RICHARD J . ANDERSON
rural residence a house number similar to
city house numbe rs so t hat emergency
vehicles, a n4 other services can easily
t'ealan d.
locate persons in the rural area.
.He now devotes his time to teaching,
Numbering will cont inue at a rapid
"riling and lecturing, and hopes one of
!llCe now that it has commenced: The most
these days to give h~ ga rden the attent ion
c&lt;gnlflca nt impact of the number is that
it deserves.
GALLIPOLIS - William " Billy" it eliminates the rural route designation
Dray, Jr., 19, Gallipolls, indica ted in
January for breaking and entering and
grand theft pleaded guilty to the B&amp;E
charge last week in Gallia ColUlly
m the wet highway. His vehicle left the Common Plea s Court.
'
·
roa dway striking a fence owned by Ohio
Judge Ronald R. Calhoun ordered a
Valley Electric.
liALLIPOUS - City police here
pre..senlencing investigation be made
prior to sentencing. Bond was continued at Friday investigated vandalism at the
GalUa Roller Mills, Fourth Ave. and Grape
$5,000.
The case of Edward J. Harrington , 20, St. Don Brown , owner, said someone
Rt. I, Bidwell, indicted Jan. 24 for opened 12 25 pound bags of peat moss and
trafficking in marijuana and selling or dumped it on the fl oor. The moss was
offering to sell marijuana was set for 1n!lued at $48.
Meanwhile, Ga ll ia County sheriff 's
March 29.
The trial-of Terry Stephens, 21, Rt. I, &lt;Eputies invest igated vandalism at the
Patriot, charged with a two county indict- Skyline Lanes Bowllng Alley Friday night
ment of trafllcklng in marijuana and l&gt;llere someone bent an antema on a car
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Columbia Gas selling or offering to sell marijuana was OM!ed ·by George Henninger of Gallipolis.
cl Ohio sa ys its commercial and large set lor May 4.
industrial customers will receive their full
gas
a llo ca ti ons for the se ven-mon th
1
summer period sta rt ing in April.
:"1
· But, William Chaddock, Co lumbia
spokesman, sa id those allocation s will
include present curtailments. He said
e:nergency pur chases and mild March
·--::;:,~"'
wea ~her has a llowed .the gas utility to
.avoid nny furth er cutbacks.
Curtailment to industrial users wbo
cannot switch to another fuel will rcmain
at 10 per cent and curtailm ents to in&lt;klstrial users who can convert to another
fuel is 70 per cent. Large indu st rial boiler
toad users will still be curtailed 100 per
cent , Chaddock said, because th e Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio places the
ooiler loads in the first category for cur·
!ailment.
repairs.

Guilty plea is
made to court

Letart Falls farmer killed in crash

,.
r ,

SUNDAY, MARCH 20, 1977

•
·
•

NOW YOU KNOW
General
Jan
Zizk a
bequea thed his skin to lhe
Bohemian army at his death .
in. 1424. It was made into a
milita ry drum lor use in wars :
against the Germans.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANT

Myers and Andy Lowry , Ohio Development Te&lt;:~m member s and industrial
development specia l i~:~i s for Columbia Gas
and Colu_mbus and Southern Ohio Ele(:tric,
respectively ; Da le Hilema n, J &lt;:lckson
Chamber of Comm erce and Dan Washam··
Ja ckson Community Improvement Cor:
poration; plus Stitzlein and Closser.
March 24 is the regi.'.'tration deadline.
The cost of attending the 9:15 a.m. to 4
p.m. s~m i na r at The Ohio University Inn
here IS $6.50, including lunch and
materials.
Payment should. be made to The Area
Exten sion Center , Box 32, J&lt;~ ckson. Ohio
45640, 1n care of John Stitzlein.

tntint

tmts
NO. (

Developmant Division of DECD ; John

Suit asks
judgment

'

a Thursday s~slon (3-S p.m.)
beginning March 31. Each
session wlU be limited to 12
people. ·
All classes mentioned
carry one hour of college
credit and the tuition lor each
Is $13. Horseback riding has
an additional $50 fee.
Registration for aU spring
quarter classes wlll be held
on the Rio campus Monday,
March 28, 9 a.m. to 11:30
a.m., 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. and 6
p.m. to 9 PJD. For' additional
information, phone 24&amp;-5353.

to remove some of these attitude barriers,
and to strengthen the development skills of
southeast Ohi o leaders. Trend:;, con·
straints, ~nd opportunities for eronom ie
31.
development and sources of technical and
"We can't co rnpetc ... ,''" We can 't do financial assistance will also be discussed .
l.eaders from the region and the Ohio
anything about it .... ~o "Nobodv helps us
·: ·". "If we'd just get that ~-:r a rit ... ~"a nd Depa rtment of Eeonomic tmd Cummunity
Sim ilar statements are heard too often Developm ent hel ped Extension and the
according to the organizers of the con: Development District organize the one·
feren ce. John Stitzlein, area development day event ,
Speaking at the confer ence will be
agent for the Ohio Cooperative Extension
Donald
Barrett. Development District
Service, and Tom Closse r, Executive
Director of the Buckeye Hills Hocking Vice-Presid ent and At~ens Mayo r ;
Kenneth Rainey, Vice· Prcsident of the
Vall ey Regional De velopm~nt District.
They said th e con ference is desi~ned Ae&lt;:~demy for Contemporary Problems; A.
L. Wa llace . Director, Eco nom ic

•

VOL. 12

' '

at Rio in tennis, golf, riding

touched down in a southbolUld landing when a gust of wind
caused Dyer 's taxiing plane to leave the runway . The plane 's
nose went into a small drainage ditch on the west side of the
runway. Dyer was not injured . There was heavy damage to
the plane's right landing gear and left wing .

''

received here
and son.
(Birtbs, Marcb 17)
Mr . and Mrs. Timothy
Lamb e rt , daught e r,
Wellston ; Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Crusan, daughter,
Jackson ; Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Parker, daughter, Wellston.

'

ATHF:NS - The rcc1pe to build a
SU!'l'e ss ful indust rla l -development
program will be the main topic of a !.'Qnferencc for southeast Ohio leaders March

grand children , and on e
sister ,
Mrs.
El mer

992-30.0 7 .

.THE MEIGS INN

.

Albany .
Mrs . Shrieves was born in
Jackson Cou nty, Ohio to tho
late Frank and Lottie Reed
Sm ith . She was also preceded
in death by her llrst hus band,
John . L. Edwards. ·two

'

People who have wanted to
learn a new sport wm have a
chance to try tennis, golf or
horseback riding this spring
at Rio Grande CollegeCommunity College. Classes
in all three subjects will be
offered for residents of
Meigs, Jackson, Gallia and
Vinton ColUlties as well as
Rio students.
Tennis, with a class size
liil)it of 32 students, will be
ta ught on
Saturdays,
beginning April 2, at Lyne
Center from 10 a.m. to noon .
Ba sketball coach Art

Industrial development
theme of 2-day meeting

Torrence, Cali f. and three
gr andchildren . Two brothers · Survivi ng are her husband,
Earl ; !)ne son, Vernard 0.,
pr eceded him In death., •

'

TONIGHT
&amp; SATURDAY
'
10 TIL 2

Medical Center.
A retlred .captain of the U.

afternoon at the "'Angel of
M~rcy Nursing Home In

p .m . Thursday In Holzer

Spring c(Jurses being offered

FLOWERS

992-2039

I

LU LA F. SHRI EVE S
ATHENS - Mrs. Lula F.
Shrieves, 80, ot 8 Sou to Plains
Road, Athens, died Thursday

COLuMBUS (UPI) - Utility company officials
Thursday said a bill setting stringent requirements
before homeowners' utility service can be shut off isn't
needed and would boost already-lligb fuel bllls.
Most people who are tardy with monthly utlllty
payments, said one natural gas company executive,
could pay the bill if they wanted to but are "taking
advantage of every opportunity" and leaving the
utility company with millions of dollars of
"lUlcollectable" bills,
The bill, oow in hearing bt!fore lhe Ohio Senate
Energy committee , woUld require a utilitY bill be at
least 30 days in arrears; the utility company
personally cootact the tardy customer ; and the
appropriate county welfare department first
determine the impact of the shut-off before any service
is terminated .

r--------..

VELVET

\

MIL ES GOODRI CH
Miles C. Goodrich, 62, Rt. 2.
Gall ipolis, dled .suddenly at •

'

at title

-==~na

Area Deaths

I

No more laws needed
says utility executive
about winter's unpaid bills

have shot

6tJ

:

????~ ?~ ::::?~ ~:~ ~:~r:~:~:~r~~:::::::;::~ :::~: : ~::::~~:::::~:::~:::~ ~::~~~::::::~r::::::~:'''t''~~~r:~:::t;:~r

Angels may

PHILADELPHI A - THE PIIILADELPHIA SCHOOL
District, on behalf of school districtS in 25 states, has flied an
aplitrust suit claiming 13 of the nation's sugar firms coospired
to fix prices. The suit, filed Thursday, asked the U.S . District
Court to enjoin the cane and sugar beet finns from continuiug
a conspiracy allegedly begun prior to 1970.
It sought unspecified treble dii1J)8ges from the defendants
By JOE SARGIS
on grounds they combined and conspired to fix and stabilize
UPI Sports Writer
sugar prices in violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act. The suit
PALM SPRINGS, Calif.
named as defendants seven New York City-based firms :
(UPI ) - Norm Sherry is
Amstar Corp., Borden Inc., North America n Sugar · excited and so, too , is Harry
Industries, Colonial Sugars, Industrial Sugars Inc. , Sucres! Dalto n, and neither the
Corp., and Sugar Refinery of Palm Beach Inc.
mana ger nor
general
manager of the California
HUNTINGTON, W. VA. - FIVE PERSONS, including a Angels ever has been known
Roanoke muple, have been indicted by a federal grand jury on to ra ise his temperature
charges of gun running "Saturday night specials" to a anywhere near the boiling
Japanese radical group.
point.
Brian
Douglas
Browning
of
Roanoke
and
his
wife,
lko,
a
But after Dalton signed
Save by ma il I
Japanese citizen, were charged Thursday in U. S. District free agents Joe Rudi, Don
Anytime. ln any weather
Court indictments with buying firearms under false pretenses Baylor and Bobby Grieb and
We like doing things your
and conspiring to transfer them to foreigners. Also charged picked up the veteran Mike
were Robert "Butch" Spears and Richard Spangler, of Logan Cuellar for free after being
County, and Katsumasa Shinozaki, 25, wbo entered the United released by Baltimore, there
States on a tourist visa and also is known as " Mr. K."
certainly was justification for
Dalton and Sherry to get
excited, and they did .
CHICAGO [UPI )
PLEASANT VALLEY
"! honestly feel we have a
Minimum prices for football
DISCHARGES - Mrs . legitimate shot at the division
tickets for Big Ten teams Howard And erson, Point title," says Dalton, meaning
have been established at $8.00 Pleasant; Mrs. Roy Woomer, the American League West.
for 1977, it was learned Point Pleasant ; William "Sure, we have some holes,
"'""'"'"'"'
·"'..,., III)O!anml4
..
11roP'GVr
Thursday. Six schools will . Legg, Buffalo; George hut I don't think we have .any
have to boost their prices to Lanier, Southsid e; Maude problems we can 't solve with
conform.
Mall~ tt e, Po int Pleasant ;
the people we already have.
Fiiic
The increase could amount Mrs.
L.
K.
'"S imp- It '.s been a long time since I
to a $100 ,000 per game kins, Sr. , West Columbia; felt this confident a bout a
windfall for Michigan, which pkins, Sr., West Columbia; team."
previously was one of six Mrs. Frank Capehart, Point
"We didn't do all that bad
schools with a $7.00 price. Tbe Pl easant ; Romeo Salt s, lilst year without these new
Wolverines' stadium seats Ripl ey; Carolyn De em, players," says Sherry, 11 50 I
100,000 fans.
Mason; Mrs. Vernon Bing, don't think I'm going too far
Gallipolis ; Connie Thornton"' oul on a limb by predicting
Point Pleasant : Mrs. Marvirl we will be a lot stronger this
Wickline, Gallipolis ; Mrs. year with them. Kansas City,
APPEARING THIS WEEKEND AT THE
Joseph Oldaker, Hartford ; as the defending champion, is
Mrs. Gilman Grimm and son, the team to beat and Texas is ·
Point Pleasant ; and Mrs. strong, but I feel we are right
John Moore and daughter, there with those two clubs."
Sherry, who replaced Dick
Pomeroy.
•
••
Birth - A son to Mr. and Willimns in mid-stream last
Mrs . Dou glas Preston, year and was 37·29 in the
second half, is a strong
Vinton , 0.
·.believer in. hard work and
dedication , and to this point
in spring training he says he
never has seen a team put oul
as
much aS his Angels.
For All Occasions
" Reportin g time each
day," says Sherry, "is 9:30,
We Wire Flowers
yet we have some fellows
Everywhere .
running and exercising as
early as 7 o'clock. Now, that's
the kind of dedication thai
'18kes for a winning attitude,
Pomeroy Flower Shop ;,nd that's what I feel around
this club this spril)g, Having
Mrs. Millard Van Meter
U1e players is not eoough.
Ph . 992-2039
Ph . I!? !781
Even good players have to
want to win, and winning
involves a lot of hard work."

,-----------~ --------------1

which is replaced by an exact address.
According to James .Page , project
engi neer, each res ident will receive
ootifi cation of his new house number by
mail. All new number releases are verified
by the post office prior to release.
Page credits the 090peration and help
r1 the Count)' Commissioners, County
Engineer, Township Trustees, and thr
f)lstmasters for being able to get thr
IJ'O)ect started wtthin a reasonable time
Th e townShip trustees are working on
road names for their respective township
roads. Several townships have alreadl
submitted their lists. The name s will lx
tt ilized in the mailing address.

Moss opened dumped

Gas as usual
by Aprill

• ----

SIGNAUl 'INSTALLED
RIO GRANDE - Mayor Marli n
Wedemeyer ann ounced Saturday that ne~
lour-way flasher signals were instalied on
Rt. 35 and Rt. 325 Friday ncar the 35-mile·
an-hour signs at the village entrance.
TIE UP YOU RDOG
POMEROY - Complaints are beim!
received at Pomeroy Village Hall on dog'
run ning loose, police said Saturday. Dog ,
must be kept confined; owners of dog;
running loose will ~;" prosecuted, polk •
warn.

.'"'

Neutding is first
POMEROY - James Neut zlin g,
Uncoin Heights, is the fi rst resident of
Ponur ny to file for a village post In th e
June ·prim ary etecuons. Neutzllng, who '
filed his petition with the Meigs Count y
Board or Elections, Friday .· is seeking
oomination as a Republican cand idate to
run (or a seat on village coun ril.
The dead lin e fo r filing petitions is 4
p.m. Thursday . Both Midd leport and
Pomeroy will nominal!· and (' \(' ct fflU I
villa~r rnunl'il mrm~wr:-; this year.

PINNED IN WRECKAGE - James Ray Hill Letart
~'alls, was piMed in the wrecka ge above when 'hts car
ranuned headon into the dump truck at right, Hill, well

known area Iarmer, apparently died instanUy of massive
head and chest injuries. - Picture by Katie Crow.

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