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                  <text>10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, March 22, I9n

Lawmen
search for
coed killer
PARKERSBURG, W.Va.
(UPI) - Lawmen from two
states manned roadblocks
and patrolled streets of this
riverfront city today in a
search for two men who
escaped from the new Wood
County Correctional Center,
including convicted coed
killer John Calvin Bayles.
Teams of police from West
Virginia and Ohio threw up
road checkpoints and sent out
foot patrols within minutes of
the Monday night escape.
"We've got all kinds of
~-"people searching," said one
police officer. "State, city,
county- everybody."
Bayles, a 25-year-old native
of cross..-iver Belpre, Ohio,
was convicted last March '!I
in the strangulation slaying of
Jima Ann Dotson. He was
held pending an appeal of the
life sentence imposed on him
in her death.
The lil'year-old cooo from
Boaz, Wood County, was
driving to a morning class
Sept. 26, 1975, when het car
stalled along Interstate 77.
Her body wasn't found until
more than two weeks later
across t!Je Ohio River in
s.iyles' hometown of Belpre,
following an intense search
by students and police of
rura l pockets in Wood
County.
Bayles allegedly loosened
the bars in a rear window of
the jail, allowing him and
Frank
Sheppard ,
21,
Parkersburg, to escape.
Authorities were holding
Sheppard on the federal uni-

fonn fugitive from justice act
over his refusal to waive
extradition to CUmberland
County, Tenn., where he
(aces a possession of stolen
properly charge.
Neither man was believed
armed.

Schools
(Continued from page I)
since no assistant tra ck coach
was employed at the senior
high school a track program ''
.
.
~ll be put mto effect at the
]unwr h1gh for both boys and
girls with John Krawsczyn
and Charles Downie as
roache~ .

Morrtswascommendedfor
securing a two and one~ aU
ton make bed truck from a
.
surpl ~&gt;~ depot m Columbus.

The board had authomed
recently the purchase of such
a vehicle and Morris secured
· 1
bo

tt

.o r a

ut $350 . A new

~htcle would have cost between six: ~d eight thousand

&lt;illlars . Morris reported that
.
. .
the surplus ~~tude IS m excellent condition.
Attending the meeting were
&amp;!pt. Charles Dowler Goins
· f
' ·
an d. Morns o the central
office ; board members ,
Hoover,

Mrs .

J ennifer

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --- - - - - - - - - - I

resident of 1900 Chestnut Sl. .

Gallipolis , died at 7 p.m.

dealh. fie was a World Wa r I I

casua lty.
One
brot he r ,
Delmar , Pomeroy, preceded

him in dealh .
Five

s ister~ survive : Mrs . Ferrell

Diehl , senior high, and Bob

Three g~andsons survive :

teachers.

you
provide tre problem

Eugene. MIChael and Jeffery
Canaday, all ot Gallipolis.

One granddaughter , Tamm1e
Sue Fried ma n, Gahanna, and
two great -grandchi ldren,
Anthony and Amy Beth
Canaday , Ga llipolis, su r vive .
Funeral services were held
2 p.m. Tuesday at the Ewing
Funeral Hom e, Pomer oy .
Bu ri al
was
In
Letart
.Cem etery.
Honorary pa ll bearers were

Go lden , Rober t. Marshall ,

Gerald and Ronald Canaday
and Eugene, Michael, and
Jeffery Canaday along with
nephews Hen r y, Charles and
Robert Kiesling .

Mrs. Bolin to
host ·gardeners

we
supply tre soluton

Why gamble? Protect your
valuables from fire, theft or
loss ... in one of our safe
deposit boxes. It costs you
just penni es a day ... a
s ma ll price to pay for real
peace of mind!

.1\b

ao11om I Bash an RoacH . a

Fl orence M cGra,h , Athens,
and Earl Hartung, Akron ,
and several aunts and uncles. .

brother s sur vive ·

Gol den , Norlhup; Rob ert.
Ru11and ; · Mar shall, R1o
Grande; Gerald, Hall, Mi ch ..
and qonald, Gall ipolis. Three
(E dna) Nida y, Blanche
Canaday and Mrs Harr y
(Mary) Bai ley .. all of
Gallipolis.

.. '
md Ed Bartels , representing

Thelma ()"r , Route I, Long

Sunday enrou te to Hol 1er Neigs County school teacher
Medica l Cen ter .
for 45 year s, died ~nday at
A tJfe . tong resident of Camden Cla rk Ho spita l in
Gallipol is, Mr . Canada y had Parker sburg .
been in failing health for
Mr s. Orr was preceded in
several months.
death by her parents, Leon
He was born July 30 . 1903, cYid lesSie Clarke Morehead.
in Gal l ipolis, son of th e tate and
brother.
John
a
Naama n Rufus and Anna Morehead.
Swi tzer Canaday .
Surviving are her husband,
Mr . Canaday was a retired Pa ul ; a sister, Mrs. Paulin e
emplOyee of Acme Boiler Co., Darrah , Route I , Par kers a firm he wa s affiliated wi th burg, and several nieces and
for 24 years .
nephews .
Duri ng his act ive years
FlJleral servi ces will be at
wi th th~t ~ ompany 1 he was 1p.m. Thur5day at the Ewing
widely known throughout the Funeral Home with t he Rev.
Otli o Va ll ey for hi s excellent Freela'ld Norri s off"iclat!ng .
servi ce s. Fo l lowin g hi s Buria l will be in Sutton
re ti rement, Mr . Canada y Cemetery . Friends may call
ow ned and ope rated The at the funera l home at an y
Canaday and Son Wel ding li me.
and Boiler Repair for 30
years. He also had many real
INFANT SCHAEKEL
estate interests in Gallipolis .
CHESTE R - Graveside
He was a member and
cha irman of the board of r ites for the infant son of Mr .
Mrs .
Edward
A.
tr uslees of I he Bel l Chapel and
Sch aekel , Chester, born on
Church .
Mr. Canaday was also a the evening of Marc h 12 and
member of th e GallipoliS died the next morning at
Eagles Lodge, and was a Holzer Med ical Cen ter . were
March 15 al Lone Oak
com munity leader in lhe ~d held
, Point Pleasant.
French City lhroughoul hi s Cemetery
Besides the paren ts the
adult lofe.
Mr . Canaday wa ~ educated baby Is survi ved by a brother ,
in the Gallipolis City Schoo ls Ji mmy Allen , a sister, Janlne
an d was act i ve i n all Mi chel e; pa t er nal grand par ents, Dr . and Mrs. E. A.
alhletics .
Schaekei, l ewisburg, W. Va .,
Surviving ar~ his wi fe,
pa1ernal
great Florence Cumm1ns Canaday. and
Earlier this month, the grandparen t s, Mr s. Maybelle
Lewisburg , and
Ca nadays celebrated their Schaeckel,
. and M rs . Bernt 0 .
54th wedding ann iversary. Mr
Jacobsen, Rock ford . Il l .;
One daughler , Mrs. Harry ma ternal grandparents, Mr .
(Helen) Fr iedm an , &lt;;;ahanna,
and one son, Jack Canaday, and Mrs. Tom McGra th of
Ga lli poli s, also survive . One Chester, and maternal great.
grandpa rent s, Mrs. V~rneda
so~, Eugene, preceded him in Har t ung , Ches ter : Mr s .

Sleets, Dr. Keith Riggs and
. ·1 K.
p · · Is J hn
Vlrgl
mg; rmctpa
o
Mora, jumor htgh; James
Morris Pomeroy and Middleport Elmtentary Schools

MRS. THELMA ORR
LONG BOTTOM - Mrs.

CASSIUS CANADAY
Cassius M. Canaday . 74, a

RVTLAND - The RuUand
Garden Club will meet
Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at the
born e of Mrs. Janet Bolin.
Mrs . Bolin will demonstrate
Japanese floral design using
forced branches. Members
are to answer roll call by
naming a type of Japanese
arrangement or school of
orientar design . Mrs.
Margaret Edwards will have
the educational display which
will be a variety of spring
flowers in bloom and the
gardening tips will be given
by Mrs. Juanita Lambert.

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION
WATCH FOR
OPENING DATE

Graves id e ser vices for
Ryan Roger Roush , in fant
son of Roger and Chri st y
M chael Roush wil l be held at
1 p.m. Wednesday ra ther
tha n 2 p.m .

. STANLEY WAUGH
Pal lbearers for the funeral
service of S1anley Waugh, 77.
.....no died Monday m orning
have been announced .
They are Ronnie Halley.,
Jimmy Halle y, Mike Waugh ,

Olarley Waugh. All an Waugh

a1d Rog er Brumfield
,
Services are 2 p.m , Wed ·

nesday at the Waugh·Hall ey.

Wood Funera l home w ith the
Rev . . Richard Graham of .
. fi ciat ing . Burial will be in
Ol io Va l ley Mein orr Gar .
~ns. Fri ends may cal from 2
to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m . today .
Mr . Waugh' s survivors
include his wi fe, Ann Lew is
Waugh ; two daugh ters , Mrs .

Ronald

Bidwe ll

(Vio let)

(Mildred)

and

Bjg Moose would have
been happy with services

l off March 27th

Area Deaths

!

'77 Crusade kicking

Halley,

Mrs.

!an

Arun del. Los

Mgeles, Calif.; son , Charl es,
Akron and daughter -in -law,
1&gt;/rs. Dorolhy Cornell Waug h,
Columbus.

TIE UP FIDO NOW
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Mayor Hennan Lrndon today
warned re sidents of the
village to keep their dogs
oonfined to their property or
face proserution. Dogs found
running loose, or without dog
tags, will he taken to the dog
pound he warned.

PLAY BALL!!
There will be a meeting to
organize the M-M Men's Slopitch softball league Sunday,
March 27 at I p.. m. at the
Royal Crown Garage, North
Second i\ve., Middleport.
Bob Whal ey, league
president, said managers or
representatives of all of last
year's teams and of new
teams are invited.

The Meigs County Unit of
the Ameri ca n Cancer Society
will kickoff its 1977 Crusade
March 27 from 2 to 5 p.m. at
the Meigs Inn banquet room.
Throughout ·the afternoon
films will be shown and the
public may enjoy free
desserts. All board members
and volunleers are asked to

Convention
in Hartford
set April 7th
HARTFORD, W. Va
This town will elect new officials, with the de adline for
regi!tration .and town convontirn set for Ajril7, council ·
decided at a recent meeting.
Town ordinances were read
oon~erning ne\1' road laws
and appointin g a police
judge.
Mayor Charles Black asked
residents to be careful while
lltrning trash because it is
fire seaso n. He also anmunced that dogs are to be
tied or confined and not
allowed Ia rpn loose.
Cotmcil approved an ordinilnce making it unlawful
for water user s to remove
water meter box covers or
tamper with the meter in any
way.
Attending were Ma yor
Black, recorder, Maxine
Arnold and council members,
Vernon Grinstead, Rupert
&amp;ward, Kenneth Greene and
Donald Fields.

BOOSTERS TO MEET
The Southern Local Band
Boosters will meet this
evening al7 in the band room.
All parents are urged to attend .

mourners.

"Eternal God, we would like to modulate with you ...
on the channel of love ... we pray that our ears may be
on this morning, for we 1().8 and 11).4 in Jesus name."
He read a CB prayer : ''The FCC Is my shtpl)erd; I
shaD watch out . .. It fiDeth my mall with plnlnlckets .•.
My antenna rwmeth over ... "
Big Moose Is not reaDy gone, t!Je mlnlaler said, "He's
just out of range."
Big MQOse is survived by Loverbug and Uttle
Rascal, four other children and six grandchildren.

Hospital News

Cable tv
(Continued from page I )
granted since council has an
ordinance against selling on
the &amp;reels.
At the last meetin g of
cmm di it was erroneously
reported Brown and Phil
Globokar voted "yes" on the
tractor bid of . Southeast
Equipment compa ny and
'11o" on the ea~eme nt given
to Prime builders. In fact
they voted ." no" on the
tractor bid and "yes" on the
easement.
Attendin g were Mayor
Andrews, Werry, Louis
· Osborne, Davis, Brown,
Glo bokar, and fowe ll,
councilman , Jane Walt on,
Qerk, Chief Webster. The
meeting was opened with
jrayer by l.ou Osborne.

SANTA ANA, Calif. (UP!) -If Big Moose had hla
ears on, modulating up there with the Great
Broadcaster, he woulil have liked biJ funeral.
His fellow citizens band radio enthwdasts said
goodbye to Big Moose - Mounce Brady Jacillo~ as he
was prosaically known to the rest of the world - with a
CB fWieral.
·
·
Jackson , 60, a dedicated CBer who founded the
Flying Frogs CB club and belonged to several others,
was killed in a traffic accident WI week.
Ranks of antema-topped cars lined up outside the
funeral chapel to hear the Rev. George A. Wood, a
fellow enthUsiast and minister of the Lemon Heights
Baptist Church of Orange, eulog!u Big Moose as an
example of "how the Great Broadcaster uses us like
CB radios.
.
''The Great Broadcaster plugs you into biJ power
and modulales lhrough you," the minister told the

attend, brin ging their
favorite dessert.
And again it is time for
daffodil sales. Daffodils are a
symbol of hope, the hope of
curing cancer. The Pomeroy
Flower Sliop has agreed to
arrange them . A dozen
daffodils will be arranged
with greenery and be sold in
milk white vases for $4.50.
Daffodils by the dozen will be
$2.75.
On April I and 2 American
Cancer Society Volunteers
will be on Pomeroy and
Middleport streets selling
daffodils. Order in advance
by calling 992-7531 or 992-3708.

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Roy
Ellis, Pom eroy ; Fulton
Spears, Henderso n; Mrs.
Cha r les
Litcht"ie ld ,
Southside ; Roy Russell,
Gallipol is ; Lisa Hurl ow,
Point Pleasant ; Mrs. James
Gillispie, Redhouse ; Eugene
Ca rter , Gallipolis; Jesse
Chrislia n, Ripley; Ronald
Russell, Mason; Granville
Hill, Point Pleasant; Mary
Gerla'ch, Point Pleasant;
May Jones , Point Pleasant ;
Mrs. Ru ssell Akers, son,
Pliny; Mrs. Gilbert Marlin,
Buf!alo: Mrs . Roger Roush,
Racine and Harold Clark,
Point Pleasant.
Births - A daughter to Mr.
and Ms. Daniel Plants,
Jackson: a daughter to Mr.
and Mrs. Lawrence Will,
Middleport, and a daughter to
Mr. and Mrs. ·Marcus Rice,
Soulhside.
VeteraDB Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Dana Howett,
Sha de ; Charles Sto ne,
Middleport ; Martha Johnson,
Racine.
John
Discharged ·
Bechtl e, Rebecca Bailey,
Edna Stiles, Tabitha Perez,
Norma Goodwin , Judy
Buchanan, George Meinhart,
Evelyn Davis, Thomas Cook.
Holzer Medical Center
!Discharges, March Zl)
Linda Bentz , Mi chelle
· Bosworth, Robert Cassidy,
Lucy Cheatwood, William
Qements, Mrs. Roger Cosby
and daughter, Mrs. Kenneth
Q-usan and daughter, Nellie
Eblin, Ber ni ce Glassburn,
Shan non Grow, Brenda
Imbod en, Everetl Keels ,
Brian Kilgour, Cecil Kirk ,
Mrs. Timothy Lambert and
daughter, Mrs. Dingus
Martin and son, Catherine
Miller, MatTis Webster.
I Births, March 21)
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin
CUtlip, daughler, Jackson;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wellis,
daughter, McArthur ; Mr. and
Mrs. James Kuhn. son,
Timnnan .

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

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursday through
Saturday, fair Thursday
and Saturday and a chance
of showers Friday. Highs
mostly wUI be lo the 40s
Thursday and lhe In the 5()s
or low 60s by Saturday.
Lows wUI be In the 20s
Thursday and in the 30s
Friday and Saturday.
;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:::

Weather

HELL'S FIRE FILMED
The movie, "The Burning
Hell" will be presented at the
Peoples Chureh, Main and
Court Sts., Pomeroy (over
the Blue and Gray
Resta urant) April3 at 7 p.m.
Pastor Henry Cook said the
film is free to the pubUc.

JUDGMENT ASKED
A lawsuit asking $2,668.00
.has been filed in Meigs
CAlunty Col)llllon Pleas Court
by the Pomeroy Cement
Block Co., against Ronald
Thomas, dba All Weather
R~ofing and Construction,
Middleport , and Ronald
Thomas, Norwood.

Snow; with temperatures
dropping into the low 30s by
this evening. Cloudy and
colder tonight, lows in the
upper 20s. Clo udy Wednesday , highs In the mid 40s.
Probability of precipitation is
E-RCALLED
80 per cent today and 20 per
The Middleport
cent tonight and Wednesday. Emergency Squad answered
a call to the VDlage Manor
Apartments at 6:38 p.m.
;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:
Monday for Chrisline
Branham who was Ul. She
DUCK DIPLOMACY
was
treated by the squad.
WASHINGTON (Ul'l)Japanese Prime MIDlster
Takeo Fukuda calls
TO MEET APRIL 15 .
Japanese. foreign policy
The next meeting of the
" ~uck diploma cy," and
Presldeot Carter says he Meigs Black Lung Assn., has
koows
why. heen set for 1 p.m. on Aprill5
Explaining to American at the Senior Citizens Center
guesls at his working White in Pomeroy.
House dinner for Fukuda,
Carter said: "That means
CLUB TO MEET
that everything Is calm on
The Past Officers Club,
top, but ·you're paddilng
Racine Chapter 134 OES, will
!Ike crazy underneath."
meet Thursday, March 34 at
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Wllliam Stewart, 11 FremonL
Athens.
ASK TOWED
A marriage license wsa
NOW YOU KNOW
iss ued to John Edward
Canada, the world's second
McLa ughlin , 31, Pomeroy largest nation in area, gets Its
and Barbara Faye Richards name from a 16tlrcentury
23, Rt. 1, Long Bottom.
' Indian word for 14 village."

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
ijJi\~Hg';fJBlt

PRINTED VINYL

:L~
with
VELVET· TOUCH

Finish

"THE

ilibe~A~ational sink

THE INN PLACE

Wednesday Night Special

MlllDLfPOIIT to. ~
IJili~V

Awalloblo In FDIIDWIIIII Sl111
lncludllll! Frlngo '

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

54" l! 54"-lquoro
54" x 72" OWDng
62" • IS" Oblong
62" a IS" Oval
62" x 104" Oblong
62" x 1()11" Owal
62" • 126" Oblong
54" lowntll
72" ID~o~nd1

Our NEW Telephone Number lis

992-6661
Installment .Loan Departmenl Number Will
Remain The Same 992-3077
Member Federal Deposit Insurance CorporatMJn
..

DEPOSITS INSURED TO $40,000

FINALIST SPELLERS - These 16 finalists or
alternates from Meigs County schools took part in the
annual Meigs County Spelllng Bee held Tuesday night at
Eastern High School. They are front, I to r, Jeff Carson,
Rutland Elementary ; Sherri Marshall, Salisbury; Dlsna
Rhodes, alternate, Letart; Clinton Turner, Salem Center,
nmne~:-up; Jayne Hoeflich, Meigs Junior High, winner;
Tammy Meadows, Portland; Lori Warden, Racine ; back
row,! tor, Terre Wood, Chester; Sandra Foley, alternate,
Syracuse; Melissa Scarbrough, Tuppers Plains; Keith
Scoct, Bradbl111' ; Peggy Bush, Southern Junior High ;
Kathy Pooler, Eastern Junior High; Rhonda Riebel,
Riverylew ; Debrah Lewis, alternate, Harrisonville, and
Nicky Riggs, Pomeroy,

Miss Hoeflich
best · speller
Jayne Lee Hoeflich, an eighth grader at the Meiga Junior

High Scblol in '1!ddleport, won the annual Meigs County
Spelling Bee Tuesaay night at Eastern High School.
1be contest Willi one of the longer events, staged annually
by the office of M~igs County &amp;!perintendent of Schools Robert
Bowen, lasting an hour and a half. The last ball hour of the
event for the 16 finalists was between Jayne and Clinton
Turner, a fifth grader representing the Salem Center School.
1be pitfall word was "threshold" which Jayne speUed
correctly and then the following word "thrice" to win the
championship.·
As winn~~. Jayne will John Riebel, Eastern Local
represent the. county at the Schools Superintendent;
state spellin~bee to be held in Charles Dowler. Meigs l&lt;)cal
Columbus o~ April 30. She Schools Superintendent, and
was presented a personal Bob Ord, Southern Local
trophy and a plaque for her Schools Superintendent. Mrs.
schootandCiintonreceiveda Nellie Parker, librarian at
trophy . Presenting the Eastern High School, was
awarcllt"was Supt. Bowen.
pronouncer.
'
Rules of the contest were
Jayne; l2, a reading and
presented by Russell Moore, spelling student of Roger
a county school supervisor, Birch, is the daughter of Mr.
with Mrs. Greta Suttle, also a and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich, High
county school supervisor who St., Pomeroy. Clinton is a
served as chairman, in- studimt of Anna E. Turner

BEST SPELLERS -Meigs County &amp;!~rintendent of Schools Robert E. Bowen presented
awards at the conclusion of the annual Meigs County Spelling Bee Tuesday night. Receiving
the awards were Jayne Hoeflich, winner, a lrophy and a plaque for her school, and Clinton
Turner, runner-up , lrophy ..

Vi sit Our Salad Bar
Lasnagna
Vegetable
Hot Rol ls
Coffee, Tea or Milk

Plus Tax

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

Wl~e

Spills Away
• Cotton F.lannel Backing
• Naeds No Washing

You almost have to .touch it before you discover that it's really vinyl "C · 1.-.
ha s the look of textured fabric and the easy·tare of vinyl It e
·h armva
cotton fringe . Simpl¥ wipe clean! Backed with flannel Sel~ct fr~~n ihas custom
beauliful solid decorator cplors; Avocado Blue Citron · Gold G · l " ese eleven
Pink, Red , Ecru, White. Machi ne wa s hable a~d neve~ need' ray .. I me, Orange,
.
s rron1ng.

HOME FURNISHINGS DEPARTMENT-1ST FLOOR

_ ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
I

•

'
VOL. XXVII NO. 239

By BERNARD BRENNER
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Agrirulture Secretary Bob
Bergland today proposed a
four-year farm support bill
providing increased income
protection for farmers, but
with smaller gains than some
congressiona l leaders and
farm groups demanded.
Bergland was for ced, in a
White House meeting
Tuesday, to scale down
"support target" rates for
SOllie crops before presenting
the plan today to the Sena \1!
Agriculture Committee.
A Bergland aide said the
plan could cost taxpayers
between $500 million and $2
billion a year, depending on
whether large crops depress
market prices and increase
support costs.
Target prices trigger
govenunent income support
payments to growers if
markets fall helow the target
· level.
Howard Hjort, Bergland 's
chief economist, said the plan
would protect farmers from
disastrous price declines in
surplus years. He said bad
weather could still cause
"considerable" price hikes
some years, but predicted the
plan would level out "peaks

at y

e
POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

and valleys" in supplies and
prices.
Bergland's plan would set
1978 "target prices" to
provide income support for
growers of wheat , feed
grains, cotton and rice based
on estirna ted production
costs, including 1.0 per cent of
land value .
After 1978, to prevent spurring land inflation, target
prices would he ra ised in line
with gains in ''variable1t
farm costs, with no inclusion
of management and land
costs.
Under Bergland's proposal,
the wbeat income target of
$2.47 a bushel would riBe to
$2.60 in 1978 and the corn

target from $1.70 a bushel to
$1. 75. Cotton income targets
would decline from 47.8 cents
a pound to 47.5 cents and rice
targets from 8.4 cents a
pound to 6. 75 cents.
However, Hjort said crop
support loan rates , which
undergird market prices,
would riBe in 1978 for corn,
soyheans and cotton .
The bill would replace a
law which ""Pires with 1971
crops. Federal payments to
farmers reached a peak of
nearly $4 billion in fiscal 1973.
Bu t with market prices
running above target levels
rece ntly ,
no
support
payments have been needed
for most crops. ·

UFOs sighted
LOS ANGELES (UPI ) - Police, sheriff's deputies,
hi ghway palxol officers and Air Force guards reported
a rash of UFO sightings in Southern Ca lifornia - at
least seven in a ~our per iod.
The law enforcement officers reported mysterious
bright lights that hovered, cruised and zoomed in the
skies over Los Angeles, Orange, Ventura , Riverside
and San Bernardino counties .
All the sightin gs were reported Monday night and
early Tuesday.
1 Continued on page 12)

en tine

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23. 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - -, - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - ' - - -

Banks -a warded
F~I.Ew~::~:~::~ county funds
:!;News. • .zn Brzefs;\1

Bids were opened for the
inactive
and interim funds of
By United Press lntel'll8tlooal
the
county
in the amount of
UVONIA, MICH. - A BODY FOUND In a roadside ditch
$300,000
when
the Mei gs
could mark the end of the trail in the weeklong search for 11year-old Timothy King, who police fear Is the sevonth victim in co unty board of co ma series of unsolved child murders. The body, discovered missioners met in regular
Tuesday night by a passing motorist, was tentatively identified session Tuesday ni ght.
The Racine Home National
early today as that of the missing boy, police said.
Bank
was the high bidder for
Authorities saidclot!Jing on the body ''fit the description of
$100,000
of active funds at
the mlsalnl! boy" and the dead child was about Timothy's age.
seven
percent
interest. The
A skateboard was found near the body. Timothy King was
Pomeroy
National
Bank was
carrying a skateboard whef! he disappeared. Timothy left his
awarded
$250,000
at
6.8 per
home In _Birmingham, an affluent Delroit suburb, last
cent.
High
bidder
for
interim
Wednesday night to buy a candy bar, He stopped at the drug
funds
was.
the
Pomeroy
store to buy the treat and has not been seen since.
·
National Bank at6.8 per cent.
Charles Bissell, Chester
WASHINGTON - AT LEAST ONE SENATOR finds it
Township
Trustee, met with
hard to believe "it takes lllOI'e generals and admirals to wage
the
board
to reeommend
peace tilan war." Sen. Sam Nunn, Ma ., spoke up TUesday at
changes
i
n
proposed
Chester
a Senate anned services subcommittee on mllitary manpower
Township
road
names.
.!X'Oblems. AJ three generala and an admiral listened, Nunn
said that in 1988, at the height of the Vietnam War, each Names proposed by Fleming,
admiral or keneral"corrunanded an average of 2,600 persons in Pag~. Stolte Inc. for Scipio,
Letart , Chester, Bedford and
the mllitary.
Today, Nunn said, t!Jere is one general or admiral for CAllumbia Townships were
every 1,800persons. "I find it bard to believe that it takes more approved.
Wesley Buehl County
generals and admirals to wage peace than war," said the
Engineer
and Ted Warner,
fonner Coast Guard seaman. "Clearly some action is eliDed
highway
superintendent
were
for to reduce this nwnber."
advised
by
the
commission
Nunn suggested the number of top brass be cut 20 per cent
over the nell five years, at the rate of 4per cent a year. ''This that in the future, before
would give us one general or admiral for every 2,200 men," he purchasing pipe, quotations
were to be received.
said.
Com mi ssio ner Jame s
OOLUMBUS - GOV. JAMES A. RHODES met here
Tuesday with 10 Republican big&lt;!Ounty chairmen and
appeared to be getting ready to seek re1!lection next year,
according to Hamilton CoWity Republican Chairman Earl s.
Barnes.
"He ~ 't appear to be a lame-duck governor or
aomeone who's looking forward to retirement," said Barnes.
"I think he's the same man he was IOor 12yearsago."
One person was injured in
"If he's breaUting, he's running," said Cityaho~ County
me
of two minor lraffic
Republican Chainnan Robert E. Hughes.
acc ident s Investigated
OOLUMBUS - THE STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION Tuesday by the Gallia-Meigs
would be "strongly urged" to develop and adopt a statewide Post State Highway Patrol.
The injury occurred at 10
plan lor desegregating pobllc· scoools under a resolution
a.m.
on SR 160 at the enol!ered 'l'uesday In the Ohio Senate. "The quality of education
lrance
to the Holzer Medical
In Ohio Is the responsibility of the state," said Sen. William F.
Center
where Ruth B. Selby,
Bowen, OOnclnnatl, the sponsor, "and the state Board of
68,
Point
Pleasant, los t
Education Is responsible for it. It's high time we address this
ronlrol
of
her
car which
problem statewide."
!truck
the
right
c~rb, ran off
, Bowen said every major city ir\ Ohio Is engaged In
llllgatloo or federal review of Its ~ool enrollment patterns. the left side of the road into a
He lllld a statewide desegregalloo policy would alleviate ditch. There was minor
"further soci&lt;H!CO!lomlc and financial strain" of carrying on damage. She was treated for
minor Injuries.
appeala.
An accident occurred today
"Let's get it out of local politics where people don 't have
It
3 a.m. on Rt. 7 in Meigs
~ gaU and guts to lltand up lor what Ia right, " said the
County
where Larry G.
senator.
Grogan, 26, Middleport,
CINCINNATI - FEDERATED DEPARTMENT Stores, apparently feU asleep at hls
Inc., the natlpn's larglll!l deperbnenl store chain, reported ..tleel, losing control of his
Tueaday that al• in flacallt'18 hit "·4 billion, an all-time car which ran off the highway
record. 'lbe company laid dollar and per share ~ lor irto trees.
the year were the secmd highest In history and cl011e
e 1975
recorda: Resulla lor the fourth quarter of 1176, which 1~ ded
tile Chrislmu -11, were the beat the company ever
achlewd.
Cloudy this aft ernoon and
ICim1np per flhare for ~ 52 w.ka ended Jan. 29, 1m,
IXIliiPirtd with 83.63 per llhare for the 52 weeks tooight. Lows tonight in the
lllldl!lcl Jan. 31, 1978. Ftiderated's net lnccme was 8111 rnillim, mid 20s. Fair Thursday,
CCIIIIPind with fllf mllllan the previous year, a decrease of lighs in the upper 40s or low
Probablllty
of
lll:.tenllil· of 1 per cellt. 1be 1971 sales of SU billion ~s.
jrecipitatlon 20 per cent
~ted a U per cent lncreue over previOUB year's sales
today, tonight and Thursday.
~fl bUUon.
~
N

•

k

Woman hurt in

auto accident

FRIENDLY BANK"
I'ITT Sill II'"

Modest gains in
supports asked

Weather

"'" euo,

Roush told the board lhat he
expects to arrange a Federal
program tha t may provide as
many as 25 employes who
could be used in ·road
maintenance and repair by
the county highway department . He said it is a federally
sponsored program, that it
will be no cost to the county.
Barbara Shuler, co unt y
Welfare director, and Mike
Cu ll ums, employe of the
Welfare Department, with
prosecuting atlorney Ri ck
Crow
and
Assistant
prosecutor', Carson Crow
presented an agreement between the proseculor's office
and Welfare Dept. , concerning a child supp ort
progra111.
Following a long discussion
the commission agreed to
entd in the agreement
whereby the county will be
reimbursed by the state for
aU money expended on the
child s~pport program.
Th e Citizens National
Bank, Middleport, Fanners
Bank and Savings, Pomeroy,
the Racine Home' National
Bank, Racine, and the
Pomeroy National Bank,
were
designated
as
depository agents for the
county's active funds.

A letter lfBS read from
Eleanor Robson, county
recorder, requesting a copy
_machine for her office. She is
to seek pr ices and report her
findin gs.
Roush proposed an official
flag be adopted for the county
and suggested that the public
volunt ee r de signs . Th e
design s will be judged by a
committee of five people to be
named soon chosen by th e
commission.
The comm issioners expressed disappointment that
the proposed Ravenswood
Bridge had been delayed and
it was decided to write a
letter to Gov. Rockefeller of
West Virginia urging funds
for this pro ject be released in
order that, "this much
needed project be continued."
The commissioners went on

record in supporting a· State
Highway Patrol Post in
Meigs County. A letter wa s
directed to the proper official
in support of the project.
Eleanor Thomas wa s
apointcd to Buckeye Hills
Board . Attendin g were
Richard Jones, Henry Well s,
and James Roush, commissioners l:nd Mary liotr
stetter. acting clerk.

.
TiffiEE SPEAKERS - Guest speakers at the meeting of the Ladies Auxiliary of Drew
Webster Unit 39, Pomeroy, Tuesday night were ,I..-, State Rep . Ron James, Nita Wisniski of
the Me1gs County Health Department, and Charles Legar, Pomeroy Fire Chief. James
disc~sed the severity of the winter, the energy crisis, and how the State of Ohio is tied into
it. W1smski spoke on Meigs County Community services, and Legar on disaster services.
Arranging for the speakers were Mary Martin ,Rhoda Hackett and Marjorie Reuter.

Gallipolis locks, dam
is endangered project
Cmgress)onal sources in
Washington sa id Tuesday the
U. S. Army Corps of
Engi neers '
proposed
L!lgrading of the Gallipolis
J.ocks and Dam is on a new
Cllrter Administration list of

endangered water projects.
Administrati on officials
lllve heen calling members
d Congress to inform them of
what to·expect a bout the new
list.
The sources said the new ·

Recognition given service to
auxiliary, church, community
By Charlene Hoeflich
. Mrs. Carrie Neutzling ,
member of the American
l£gion Auxiliary of Drew
Websler Post 39, Pomeroy,
for 49 years was honored at
die recent Legion 'birthday
party.
Mrs. Neutzling joined the
Auxiliary in March 1928 and
bss more years of mcmb!rship than anyone else in
lhe organization. She was
recognized for her numerous
oontributlons, not only to the
Auxiliary, Oocal, district and
.tate), but to community,
church,
and
civic
organizations.
The trilltte to Mrs. Neutdi~ was given by Mrs.
Grace Pratt, · Auxiliary
p-esident, who presented her
a tetTarium. Mrs. Pratt noted
that Mrs. Neutzllng has
served as chairman of all
rommittees several times,
1;111S unit secretary for 15
years, is a past president,
ocganized a It-ill ~m for the

lilt, expected to be released
by the White House today.
includ es as many as 32
water projects, many of them
carryovers from the list of 19
jrOjects. President Carter
jreviously deleted from his
recommended fiscal 1978
oodget.
Those deletions rai sed
oowls of protest from
members of Congress of roth
parties,
and
brought
a.surances from Carter that
in the future be would notify
members from affected
areas before making a pubHc
announcement.
According to representatives and senators who
received cal ls from th e White
&amp;use yesterday, the new list
is regarded by the Carter

Otorus and currently serves
junior auxiliary members, she is a member . She
md served as Eighth District ocganized the Senior Citizens as Its director.
chairman Of children and
youth, rehabilitation and
veterans affairs and organist.
Mrs. Neutzlng was the
president of the Eighth ~·
District from 1969 1 Ia 1971
administratio.n as 1 'semiwhen she was elected a
8nal." All projects on tbe list
delegate to the National
will undergo further review
O:mventlon held in Portland,
by the administration, inOre. On the department level,
·'
dudln g public hearings.
Mrs. Neulzlng has served as
mu sic chairman , n ational
security chairm an, and
:::::: :::::::::::: :;:~;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :; :::::::::::::::: :::::
chaplain. She has won
several ftrsl and seeond place
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
awards for her work in
Friday through Sullllay,
the Department.
and mild Friday,
fair
ln th e Past Presidents
Saturday
and Suuday.
Parley of Unit 39, she has
Highs
will
be ID the 40s or ·
held all offices. She is a
·· 50&amp; Friday alliin the IIQs or
member of Eight and Forty,
&amp;01 Saturday and Sanday.
Gallla County Salon 612,
Lows will be ID the upper
where !tie is a chapeau passe
Ztlo or the 3tls early Friday
111d has served as paro• 'y
and
In lite lOs or tea
dlalnnan.
Saturday
and Suuday.
For the pa!t 35 years, Mrs.
Neutzling has been organist
It Trinity Church of which
CARRij: NEUTZLING

.

�3- The Daily Sentuw.l, Mtddleport Pomeroy, 0, Wednesday, Marrh 2.1, 1977

2- The Daily Sentmel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Wednesday, March 2.1, JP77

'The Count' predicts he '11 win 25 in '77

Marley's power touched edges of big crime

TALKS WITII MilLER- Matda Mora, Melgs County
Fann Bureau prestdent, discussed current agrtcultural
legtslalton With Congressman Clarence Miller during the
annual Farm Bureau Congresstonal Spokesmen trtp Mrs
Mora was one of 82 county Fann Bureau prestdents who
partictpated m the trtp sponsored by the Ohio Fann
Bureau Federation The prestdents spuke wtth legiSlators
oo the proposed farm blll, federal regulations on grarn
rnspection, htghway use tax, pesttetde regulations and
other problems concel'lllllg agrtculture The delegation
was In WashUtgton March 14-16

• t nam
VIe
,VASHINGTON (UP!) Prestdent Carter arranged
today lor a personal report
from hts fact-fmdmg commtsston on Amencans
rruss1ng tn Vtetnam and the
outlook for a 'new begtn·
mng" for the Umted States 1n
Southeast Asta
Pleased w1th results of the
mlSSton, Carter arranged to
recetve the members, headed
by Umted Auto Workers'
Prestdent Leonard Woodcock, thts mornmg
The Whtte House planned
also to unvetltoday the salary
increases Carter has approvedforsome50top-level
a1des Powell sa 1d the
amounts are 'substanllally"
below the 29 per cent
maximum permttted by law
Carter's top aid es are
ehgtble for salary htkes
under the same leg1slatwn
that gave ratses to members
of Congress and other top
offictals earher
Bestdes estabhshmg the
ftrst direct US dtploma\lc
contacts wtth Vtetnam and

• •
IDISSIOD

Laossmcetheendofthewar,
the Woodcock commissiOn
persuaded off1ctals m Hanot
to tum over the remams of 14
Amencans who lost thetr
hves as a result of the con·
fhct
Former Sen Mtke Mansfteld, D-Mont told reporters
"the trtp portended a new
begmmng m Southeast Asta
m the aftermath of the
V1etnam War"
Meantune, Carter forged
ahead w1th preparatiOns for
Secretary of State Cyrus
Vance's tnp to Moscow
Frtday for "sertous and
co nstructtve" arms
lomttatwn talks w1th Sovtet
ofhc1als, desp1te rtsmg
tenswns over Carter's strong
stand on human rtghts
Press Secretary Jody
Powell told reporters Carter
welcomes and agrees w1th
Sovtet Lea der Leomd
Brezhnev's statement that he
has the "nght to comment"
on Amencan mternal affatrs,
and does not feel his own
support of Sovtet dtssenters

Archbishop slain
BRAZZAVILLE, Congo
(UPI ) - Roman Cathohc
Cardmal Emil Btayenda,
archbishop of Brazzavtlle,
was ktdnaped and ktlled
Tuesday mght by three
relattves of assassmated
Congolese Prestdent Marten
Ngouabt, the ruling mtUtary
Junta satd today
The slaying was a "famlly
vendetta," and was not
directly ltnked to Ngouab1's
assassmat10n last Fnday, a
Foretgn mmtstry spokesman
sa1d
The 11-man mthtary
committee ruUng the Afrtcan
naHon smce Ngouabt's death
satd, '~ The assassmat10n of
cardrnal Btayenda wtll be
pumshed m exemplary
!ashton just llke the assassms
of Prestdent Ngouabt "
The statement satd "the
military committee cannot
accept such acts wh1ch stem

from blind passton and
bandttism and ISSues a stern
warmng to all persons who
disturb pubhc order "
It satd the murder of the
archbtshop, who was made a
cardinal m 1973 by Pope Paul
VI , "puts the Congo tn double
In)Urntng "

The Fore1gn Mmtstry
spokesman said the three
members rJ Ngouab1's family
have been arrested and were
bemg questwned He did not
1dent1fy them but sa1d the 5().
year-old prelate's murder
was a case of "a family
vendetta " He d1d not
elaborate
The spokeaman satd the
cardmal had been recetved
by Ngouabt half an hour
before a group of diSgruntled
army men burst mto the
prestdent's ofllce and gunned
tirrl down wtth a hail of
submachme gun bullets

HEALTH
Lawrence E. lamb~ M.D.
By Lawrence E Lamb, M.D

DEAR DR LAMB - I was
irterested Jn your column
l!lme ttme ago about joggrng
and vartcose verns I have
been diagnosed as havmg
mrontc phlebitis and
throm bophlebftis What is the
dfference '
In your column you sa1d
that walkrng rontracts the leg
llllstles and squeezes the
deep veins Ul the legs tn
t!llpty them You sa1d the
111perfictal vems tn the leg
drain into the deep vems of
legs and walking helps to
t!llp\y them
Just the oppostte happens
Iii me When I walk or stand
my leg swells to about tw1ce
tla nonnal slzo I have wom
an artificial leg for over 30
years but have just had this
lfllebltls condttion for the last
two years
Can you tell me what
atull!ll the phlebftis' Could It
l»ve been brought oo by
favoring my artiftclalleg and
llralnlng my goOd leg' Or
ooulcl&gt; 11 have e&gt;me from

Copyrlghl1977
lnv..tlgatl)•e Reporters
aod Editors In~
Distributed by
United Presslnlei'IIJitlooal
1\emper Marley Sr , lhe
elderly Phremx millionatre
accused of requesllhg the
executions of a newsman and
of the state's htghest law
enforcement offlctal, has
spun hts web from the edges
of orgamzed crome to the
hetghts of power m AriZOna
Marley was
named
recently m a pohce affldavtl
as the man who called for the
contract killrngs of AriZOna
Repubhc reporter Don
Bolles, slamrn a bomb attack
last June, and of Am.ona
Attorney General Bruce
Babbitt No attempt was
made on Babbttt's ) hfe
Marley has not been
crlffilllally charged
An Investigative Reporters
and Edttors Inc InvestigatiOn
of Marley, 70, has found
documents and sources whtch
reflect that the wealthy
rancher
and
hquor
wholesaler
- Fmanced a racmg w1re
service for booktes m the
19416 and htred an assocta te

falhng and lllJUtlng the
cartilage m my knee ' I also
have some foretgn bodtes
retamed from a bullet wound
that went through my leg
above the knee
DEAR
READER
Judgtng from other letters
many people are confused
about the difference between
thrombophlebttts and
vancose vems. Vartcose
vems are stmply dilated
veins, they are wtde open but
they are overstretched I am
sending you The Health
Letter number 5~, Vartcose
Vems, lll you can understand
what they are and what you
can do about them Others
lltlo want thts information
can send 50 cents for it w1th a
long,
stamped,
selfaddressed envelope for
mailing
Phlebltts means m·
flammatton of the vems.
Thrombophlebttls means
inflammation of the veins
with the formation of a clot
(thromboSIS ) tn the vems
The clot ll\lly break off and

en d e

of mobster Gus Greenbaum were

w help run tl
- Was pushed for a seat oo
th e

Arizona

Ra cmg

Comnusston by the former
state-appomted trustee of
Empnse Corp , a sportsconcession conglomerate
which has been assoctated
wtth underworld ftgures.
- Was normnated to the
ractng COffiffiiSSIOD by
AriZOna Gov Raul castro
even though Castro had been
gtven a law enforcement
agency ftle derogatory to
Marley
- Is part of a multomilhon
dollar land deal rnvolvlng
Phoemx contractor Max
Dunlap, wbo ts accused of
hirmg Bolles' klllers, and the
family trust of a Texas
mlllionatre.
Marley's public omage IS
that of the rough-hewn
cowboy who amassed a

fortune through gnt and
frontier savvy.
"Kemper Marley virtually
grew up on a horse/' one
Ia uda tory bt ographtca I
sketch states. "He learned
early how to bed down for the
mght on boulder-strewn
range land and In substst on
Jerky and beans for days at a

aw~:a~e~chh~g~~u~t~:

dtime"

wtll torpedo the talks
'We do not fear open
debate on the prmclples
whtch gutde our respecttve
SOClehes before the court of
world optmon," Powell sa1d
"
but we frankly state
that for our own part we wtll
not aUow lhts open healthy
debate to stand m the way of
our strong and publtcly expressed desire to nego\late
sertously and in good fa1th to
reduce the burden of the
arms race
and to reduce
the threat of nuclear
destructiOn that now endangers all the people of the
world"
The Prestdent met wtth the
Nattonal Securtty Council
Tuesday to wrap up a
package of plsals for a
new
strate c
arms
agreement
nee will
present the pack ge to Sovtet
offtctals
The Prestdent plans to hold
a na\lonally televtsed news
conference at 2 30 p m EST
Thursday He also plans to
see former Prestdent Gerald
Ford later m the afternoon
PROMOTED
First Lteutenant Joseph B
llatfteld was promoted to the
rank of Captarn on Dec 6 at
the U S Marrne Base at
Barstow, Cahf Capta1n
Hatfield ts a career martne
with a record of 18 years
service in the States,
Onnawa and Vtet Nam He
Jttended schools m Metgs
County and graduated form
Scott High School at Madison
W Va He ts mamed to the
former Jamce K1tchen ol
Madtson and they have two
dltldren, a son, Joey, 15, and
a daughter Julie, 12 HI! is the
llln ol the late Joe Hatfteld of,
Pomeroy, Route 4, and Mrs
Ethel Hatfteld, Middleport
BURN CROSS
LOS ANGELES (UPI) An Moot cross was horned
Tuesday on the lawn of a
home m a predomlllantly
whtte netghborhood
helongtng to black smgers
B11ly Davis and Martlyn
McCoo The couple was
away, tour111g m Flortda
The Davtses, formerly of
the Ftfth D1mens1ons,
recorded the popular "You
Don 't Have to Be a Star " A
netghbor stghted the blazing
cross and reported tt to thetr
housekeeper, who called the
ftre department.
send pteces through the verns
Iii the heart and out to the
lung That lll bow a bloodclot
devekps tn the lungs from the
leg.
Thrombophlebltts
may
liock the veins and cause the
veins below the obstruction to
dlate Exercllling will not
empty the veins tn the
p-esence of thrombophlebttls
because the veUls are blocked
and have trouble emptying It
Is true that helng up on your
feet, even wtth walking, may
cause the leg to swell rn thiS
oondition
The location d the clot
makes a great deal of dlf·
rerence If the clot lll In
snaller superficial vems tl is
less likely to cause severe
I!WellUtg Btt the dot may
involve the deep veins tn the
leg and the best treallnent
then 1s to be off the leg,
usually keeping the leg
elevated and immobilized
An\lclotlt'¥! mcdicrn.. nre
often used Thlll can be a very

from htgh school, he bought a
half mterest m one of hiS
father's farms and operated
that and hts father's other
busmess mterests unlll the
elder Marley dted m \932
When Prohtbttton was repealed m 1933 Marley organ1zed the wholesale hquor
busmess whtch eventuall)
became the Umted Liquor
Co , wtth branches all over
AriZOna
In 1948, two of htsemployes
were fmed and sentenced to
terms of unpnsonment for
makmg false reports to the
government on dts\llled
liquor sales One of those
employes had hiS Jatl
sentence suspended
In 1953, Marley's Phoemx
and Tucson dtstributnrshtps
were accused of falstfymg
records to av01d paymg
hquor taxes, but were found
mnocent
As Marley's hquor buS!lless
grew, he took part tn other
buS!lless venl\ltes- a frozen
food locker, a bottlrng plant, a
sheep..-rusmg bus1ness, and
ranchmg operations In 1946,
accordmg to pohce sources,
Marley took up sttll another
line of busmess, one that
brought hun m contact wtth
organtzed crome
In that year, he and several
others, mcluding Cosa Nostra
mobster Peter Ltcavoh took
over the racmg WU'e service

for bookies lll AriZOna, pollee
satd The service was the
ortglll31 Transamertca Wtre
Servtc.e establtshed by
mobster Gus Greenbaum for
the AI Capone mob priOr to
1941
At the ttrne, Greenbaum
was concentratmg on
establtshlng hoteJ.easinos for
the mob m Las Vegas Late m
the 19416, Marley and hiS
assoctates were rnstructed by
the Chicago Syndicate to
move Greenbaum out of the
Phoerux wtre servtce, and
they did so, pollee sources
satd
But Greenbaum had problems
The folloWlllg mforma\lon
was obtamed by IRE from a
con!idenHal Phoerux Pohce
Deparllnent report
"As Greenbaum grew
btgger and strooger In Las
Vegas, he began cheating hts
partners and he was ordered
to sell out or he would be
carrted out rn a box In early
December 1948, a meeting
was held at the Grace Ranch
of Peter Ltcavoll Sr
(Tucson) AI thts meeting

sudden death
In your long standing case
the clot has probably been
mvaded wtth scar !Issue
mstde the vems Thts
eltmlnates the 1mmedtate
danger. The amount of
!lsabtlity depends upon how
1111ch residual obstruction
remams and apparently you
have some
The causes of thrombophlebltts are varied lnjurtes to a leg may cause tt
Or 1t may occur spontaneously after such a simple
operallon as an appendectomy In a heahhy
)'oung person I can't say
what caused yours but it may
be assoctated wtth your old
wound
(Because of the volume of
mall Dr Lamb cannot answer your letters personally
but he
wtll answer
representallve letters pi
~eneral mterest in h1 ~
column Wnte to hllll m care
rJ thts newspaper, P 0 Rox
~rtous d1.sease and tf a clot 1551, Radto Ctty Station New
!fjes to tho lung 11(;6Jay cause Yor k NY 10019 )

Joe Prolact, Joe
MaghiK"L'O, Juseph Bonanno
Sr and Tony Accardo {all
mob bosses! "
The next day, on Dec 3,
1958, Greenbaum and his wtfe
were found dead m thetr
Phoerux home With thetr
throats silt James (Junmy )
Aaron , a partner of
Greenbaum who pohce satd
helped Marley run the wire
servtce, shot himself a year
later after leavtng a note
saymg he feared he was gomg
rnsane
Others who managed the
Wire serVIce operatiOn for
Marley mcluded confessed
bookie Clarence E. (Mtke )
Newman, gambler Clarenl"
E (Teak) Baldwm, who was
convicted of mcome tax
evaston lll 1956, and Pete
Abbey, pohce sources satd
Abbey, manager o! the
pnvate Cowman's Club m
east Phoemx, was Indicted
last October on 60 counts of
sports bookmakmg for an
operation at the club that
pollee satd was raking m
$300,000 a month m bets
Baldwm, who ran the
Gilded Cage and the Steak
House lll Phrenll! m the 19416
and early 1950s, was accused
by several Phoemc1ans m
1952 of doctnrmg thetr drmks
and then fleecmg them m
gambling games
He and an assoctate were
acquttted of grand theft
charges relaling to those
alleged achons , when a Judge
ruled that the vtctims had
voluntanly accepted the
drrnks and patd the gamblmg
debts A califorma man won
a large ctvll Judgment
agamst Baldwm and a
Baldwrn assoc12te m 1952
after accusmg them of druggmg and defrauding hom
Marley also served on the
old State Fatr Comrrusswn
for more than 10 years In
1966, while Marley was a
member, the commJsswn
gave Marley 's brother, John,
a $9,000-a-year contract to
sell exhibtt space and seek
conventions
Marley's abtbly to get appomted to such JObs reflected
his pohttcal influence m the
state Though he has been
prtmanly tdenhfted as a
Democra\tc power, two
Democra\tc leaders asserted
several years ago that
Marley roved across the
PQhllcal spectrum
From the rrud-19516 In the
late 1960s, Marley was act1ve
ne1ther as an advtser nor as a
contributor m Democratic
party ctrcles, but m fact
contrtbuted to the Repubhcan
party
Th at mformahon was
provtded to a newspaper
reporter tn 1969 by Gu)
Stllhnan, then-Democratic
National committeeman
from Anzona and John
Carney, then-Democrattc
party chatrman m Martcopa
County
The occaston for the reporter 's inqutry was the
discovery that 144 acres rn
suburban Scottsdale
purchased by Marley from
the state 11 years before for
$1,265 an acre was bemg
valued for property tax purposes at $695 per acre
At about the same time, 11
was revealed that 11,700
acres of Scottsdale land rn
which Marley held an rnterest
was bemg valued at $7 an
acre for property tax
purposes, while surular land
rn the same general area was
bemg valued at $275 an acre
Thmgs seemed to turn out
well for Marley no matter
what pohttcal horse he was
backmg
Marley was back m the
Democratic huddle by 1974,
when he was the smgle
largest contrtbutor to the
campaign of Gov Raul
Castro He chtpped m $19,000.
His daughter, Joyce Marley
Corrtgan, provtded another
$5,000 for the campatgn
These are huge cootrtbu\tons
In AriZOna campaigns
One Marley observer satd
the elderly busmessman
never made a political
contrtbuhon without
expecttng something m
return Early tn 1976, tt
became clear what Marley
was after this time . a seat on
the
Arizona
Racmg
Commtsston formerly
occupted
by
Robert
Kieckhefer of Prescott
As a commtssloner,
Kteckhefer had been an
opponent of Empr!Se Corp , a
nattonwtde
sports
cohglomerate that held a
monopoly on dog racmg m
Artzona.
Emprlse, long suspected of
havmg hes to orgamzed

Vegas As a defendant m that reporter already weary of
case, EmpriSe was hnked In investtgabve ca mpai gns
several figures tn orgamzed agarnst crooked pohticians,
Emprtse and the mob
crune
What happened next may
In order to conllnue dorng
have
stemmed from Marley's
busrness tn AriZOna, Emprtse
sense
of "rangeland justice,"
had to reorgamze as
one
figure
10 the case
Ramcorp In the mtertrn
speculated
perwd, whtle th e felony
Dunlap,
a
Phoemx
convtclto n was
bemg
contractor
who
has
long
been
appealed, Empr1se was
allowed to keep the dog a protege of Marley, ts
tracks open, but had In funnel accused of hinng John
track profits through a Harvey Adam son, former
operator of a toWlllg servtce,
trustee
That trustee was Chandler w klll Bolles, expiammg that
rancher and farmer Dwight Marley wanted tt done
Patterson, currently servmg because the reporter had
11
on the Artzona Board of given hun 3 bad tune" over
Regents Patterson satd he the racmg commtsston
appomtment, accordmg In
wak the JOb reluctantly
Gov Castro has told IRE Adamson
Adamson testtfted to that
reporters that tt was
Patterson, a mong others, after strikmg a plea-bargam
who urged that he nominate agreement wtth prosecutors
Marley lor the open seat on that will assure that he will
the racmg commtsston The spend no fewer than.20 years
appomtment came at a and two months m prlSOn
On June 2, 1976, Adamson
cructal time for EmprtseRamcorp, when challenges w lured Bolles to a rrudtown
thetr monopoly of dug racmg Phoerux bote! aod placed a
tn the state were bemg wtdely bomb on the newsman 's car
after Bolles entered the hotel
discussed
Adamson then departed,
Marley fought hard to gain
the comrrusswn seat, and rn leavtng Chandler plumber
fact was confirmed and James Rob1son to detonate
served several days before the bomb after Bolles
restgrung But his restgnatwn reentered the car, Adamson
had been predeterffillled by has testified
Rob1son and Dunlap are
adverse pubhctty resulbng
awa
lltng trtal for murder and
from articles Bolles wrote
consptracy
w murder m the
about Marley's questtonable
Bolles
case
performance
m
past
Bolles was not the only
apporntive posts
thorn
m Marley's stde,
After that squall blew up ,
accordrng
In Adamson
castro agreed to let Marley
Adamson
testlfted that
take the comrrusston seat
Dunlap
told
hun
that Marley
only tf he agreed to restgn
wanted
two
other
men ktlled
QUICkly
One
was
AI
"King
Alfonso"
castro told IRE reporters
Ltzanetz,
who
was
ftred
from
that at the time he nommated
a
pubilc..-elations
JOb
wtth
Marley, he was not aware of
Marley's
hquor
busmess
pollee mform ahon that
Marley had ftpanced the Lizanetz wrttes wtldly
mob-founded racmg wtre rn phrased letters to newsmen,
pohltc la ns and others
the 19416
denouncmg
Marley and
The governor also satd he
others
who
he
feels are
was unaware that Marley
dishonest
supplied 10 per cent of the
The thtrd man on Marley's
hquor to all Emprtse
htt
ilst, accordmg to
Ramcorp dog tracks tn the
Adamson
's testimony about
state, though the fact that
Dunlap's
statements, was
Marley ts the state s
Artzona
Attorney
General
prmctpalliquor wholesaler lll
Bruce
Babbitt,
a
youthful
wtdely known
member
of
an
old,
wealthy
Desptte the governor's
Arizona
family
derual that he kne\\ of any
Marley reportedly was anpollee hie mformatton
gered
by Babbitt's refusal to
negative to Marley, the IRE
drop
a prtce-fixmg case
discovered that the governor
aga!llSI
the liquor industry ln
had been supplied a f1le
the
state,
derogatory to Marley by the
Pohce have not publicly
Amona Department of
named
Marley as a suspect In
Public Safety
the
case,
desptte a pollee·
All maneuverrngs astde,
!tied
affidavtt
containmg the
one fact was clear to all m the
gist
of
Adamson's
testtrnony
sprmg of 1976 Kemper
But
pohce
and
IRE
Marley Sr , a man who
rnvesttgatnrs
have
learned
apparently had made hts way
tn busmess and polihcs lor that Adamson was g1ven two
several decades, had fmally numbers to call If he needed
mooey or lawyers after the
suffered a reversal
Bolles
killmg One number
And the man who had
was
that
of a lawyer wtth a
caused the reverse was
ftrm
that
IRE learned was
Bolles - a 47-year-old
'
:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::,::::,'·:•:,•:· .:·:.... .....: ...~···~:··=·=::::.:!{~~:c::.=-..:.=:.z«·~Z.~"*"-~
,.
.·:
"
·~

.•:

Washington
By Clarence
Report Miller

~·

handhng a multlmtlhon
dollar land deal for Dunlap tn
which Marley was mvolved
The lawyer's nam e 1s
Dwtght C Fhckmger, a
member of the PhoeniX ftrm
of Blake, Colter, Fltckenger
and Daudet Colter ts James
Colter, current chatrman of
the Anzona Repubhcan
Party.
Flickinger has derued any
knowledge of the Bolles
killmg and tis aftermath, and
has passed a pobce hedetector test on those
subJects
The land deal ttself IS
ilh~trat1ve of the masstve
bonds of wealth that lmk
Marley and Dunlap
The deal mvolved two
parcels amounting to 6,600
acres of land a shOrt distance
south of Lake Havasu Ctty m
northwest Artwna The land
was acqutred by Dunlap from
a group of Rochester, N Y
land speculators rn the 1960s
Dunlap was backed m the
land development deal by
Marley and a JOtnt venture
known as Bancom-D.D
Harrmgton
Bancom ts the Bancom
Financtal Corp ; D D
Rarrmgton IS the late Texas
millionatre whose daughter &gt;
was m'amed to Robert
Goldwater, brother of Sen "
Barry Goldwater, R-ArlZ , .:
until her death m 1972
::
Mar ley or members of hiS :;
family mvested at least $1.5 ~
mlllton m the land development,
apparently ;;.
maneuver mto a legaj ~:
posttion of\ rlonty ov~r the ::
JOtnt venture, which mvested ·
more than $3 5 mlllion
•
Last September, the
Harrmgton I estate bou ght
Bancom's rnterest m the land
tral\Sactton and now clalrllS ~
to hold a $5 mllbon mortgage "
on the ian~\ whtch a ~
spokesman !Of Bancom satd ~
has been appraised at about •
$17 mtlhon.
Desptte Marley's apparent
preemt nent tnvestment
poSition m the land deal , a
recent IRE check of records
tn Mohave County, where the '
land ts located , indicated hiS
rnterest ts not recorded there,
as ts reqwred by law
The land deal encompasses
the themes that run through
Marley 's life . fabulous
wealth, hnks to powerful
pohticlans, 1 hint of
illegality, 1n auoclatl.., with
a man ·~of violtnce

a&amp;

For TllurMof, I

Ill 24. 1t71

ASTIO•\JIIAPH
Bernice Bede Osol
ARIES (March 21 -Aprll 19)
Although condlllons generally
favor you today you re a little
hard to get along
~au

wth

At least 11

make a fa ux pas you II go

back and amend It

TAURUS (April 20-MII 20) For
best resu lls ftnttnC:I!Uiy tOday
keep wha t you r e do1 ng t o

yourself Above all don t con fide
1n pesstmlsts or wlld ·eyed
dreamers

GEMINI (May 21-Juno 20) Alew
•;:

The tax portion of the permtt taxpayers to go on a
Prestdent ' s ec~nom1c buymg spree to stomula!e the
st1mulus package has been Amertcan economy, I favor
approved by the House of and voted for a substitute to
Representativ es The the Admtmstratwn's plan
leglslatlOn as passed by the whtch would amend the tax
House calls for tax reduct10ns code to reqmre a permanent
of $13 8 b1lhon m Ftscal Year tax cut for low and mtddle
1977 and 15 9 m Ftscal Year rncome taxpayers
1978
Apermanent tax cut for the
The maJor feature of the average workrng person m
st1mulus proposal ts a one Amertca ts JUsttfted, fatr and
ttrne $50 per person tax eqmtable and tt also makes
rebate The stze of the rebate sense as far as economic
would be scaled down for sttmulatwn IS concerned
taxpayers wtth adJUSted
A permanent tax reductiOn
gross mcomes between would stomulate the economy
$25,000 and $30,000 Those tn three ways Ftrst, it would
wtth mcomes over $30,000 stomulate spendmg and mwould receive no rebate The vestment by mcreasmg the
tax code ts also modtfted to after t~x income of conraise the standard deductton sumers on a permanent
to a flat $2,400 for smgle tn· basts, allowmg the spendrng
d!v1duals and to $3,000 for of more money whtch wlll
mamed couples fthng joint create more jobs Secondly, It
returns who opt to use the would tncrease mcenttves to
standard deduction Instead of work and to htre Because the
ttemtzmg
cost of labor also Includes
Addtttonally , the House payroll and wtthholdmg
passed the version of ' the taxes , a permanent tax
Admmtstrat1on's
sttmulus reduct1on reduces costs and
progra m whtch grants • enables a ftnn to h1re more
credits to employers who h1re employees Fmally, by
certarn additwnal employees leavmg a saver more of hiS
m 1977 and 1978
tncome, and allowtng an
While I approved of some mvestor a greater return, tax
provlstons of the Chief reductions increase savings
Execul!ve's plan mcludrng and mvestments Thts leads
the rncrease tn the standard to the accelerated job fordeduction and the tax cred1t malton and real economic
for htring new employees , growth that represent the
the central measure. the $50 true solu\lon to our economtc
rebate, won't sttrnulate the problems
economy, but be assured the
Unfortunately, the more
Ca rt er
proposal
w11l sensible long-term perstimulate mflation by helpmg manent tax cut approach to
to push the federal deftcit up the creation of a nonin·
to about $68 billion for Fiscal flatlonary economtc upturn
was defeated by the House on
crune, was conVICted and Year 1977
Instead
of
a
one
shot
rebate
a
roll call vote o! 194 - 219
fmed $10,000 m 1972 in a U S
that
won
't
even
come
close
to
even
though 1t received
Dtstr1ct Court m LOs Angeles
lwlpmg
most
people
pay
thetr
support
by members 9f both
for tts part rn the hidden
hi
gh
~rwr
gy
bllls
as
a
result
of
parttes
ownershtp of the Frontier
1/
Hotel aiJd Casmo m 111s onr harsh wmter let alone

fru str atiOns are hkely today when
you re thwarted1 However
someth ing you d1dn I expect to
could pan out

CANCER

{Junt 21-July 22) You
could be !Sialled early today but
mostl y because your plans are II
thought out 1 Later you II get O't
the track lor a happier ehdlng •

LEO (July 23-Aug 22) A com!
plete change of tactics may b~
necessary today II you can t
carry the fort w1th a frontal
assault try a flank mg movement

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
The Amencan League has
tt'sMark "The Btrd" Fidrych
and the Nallonal League has
tt's John " The Count"
Montefusco
Both are modern Dizzy
DeallS who adnut they're
havUtg the tome of thetr hves
playmg maJor league
baseball . prefer reading the
sports page over the flll3nctai
page and enjoy seeing thetr
names rn prrnt even If means
saymg outrageous thUtgs
The sav111g grace for both IS
that they're swell young
pttchers who haven 't lost
track of the fact that baseball
IS supposed to be fun for the
players and the fans
Mootefusco knew center
stage was his for the asking
Tuesday when he ptlched four
hitless mrungs m the San
Franctsco Gtants' 7&lt;1 vtctory
over the Clucago Cubs and
didn 't mlSS hts cue
"Put me down for 25 thiS
year," he tnld reporters after

league I could be both the
league's most valuable
player and the Cy Young
Award wmner "

Strong words for a fellow
who had a IG-14 record m 1976
and IS p1tchmg lor a team
expected to fmtsh fifth or
Sixth m the National League's
Western DiVISIOn But they
should he taken rn the sp1nt
they were uttered - that of a
young man who says, "When
l"ee all those newspapermen
wtth thetr pads and pencils
and all those radto and 'IV
guys wtth their rrucrophones,
I Just can't stop talking ''
Montefusco y1elded a run
when Jerry Morales homered
ln the fifth IM!llg but went SIX
~nnmgs allowmg only that
run John Curtis was tagged
for the Cubs' other four runs
tn the last three rnrungs
Elsewhere around the
camps
Mtke Torrez allowed two

the game "There 1sn 't any
team In the league I can't
beat For that matter, I'll wm
at least one game agalllSI
every star pttcher m the

Today's

runs m five mnrngs and mciudmg a twoi w1 double
rookte M1tchell Page ratsed paced the New York MeL• to a
his spring hatting average to f&gt;..4 VIctory ove[ lhe Toronto
Thre e run
610 as the Oakland A's Blue .Jays
defeated the San D1ego homers by Gary Carter and
Padres, 3-2
Homers by
Wtlhe Montanez and Tom
Pactorek paced the Atlanta
Braves to a 7&lt;1 trmmph over
the New York Yankees
Juan Bernhardt hit a homer
and two trtples and Kurt
Bevacqua drove m three runs
wtth a homer and two smgles
leading the Seattle Marmers
w a 10-:i wm over the
Califorma Angels
By GENE CAD DES
Jose Cruz drove tn four
UPI Sports Writer
runs wtth a homer, tnple and
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Old
smgle m the Houston Astros' Fort's Dave Snuth, a s.&lt;;
6-5 deC!ston over the LOs senior and three-year starter,
Angeles Dodgers
The has been voted the Umted
Texas Rangers bea t the Press Internationa l Class A
Kansas City Royals, 11-5, wtth basketball player of the year
Bert Campanem, Dave May
Smtih, who averaged 211 4
and Jtrn Sundberg leadrng a pomts per game the past
16-lut attack with tbree each season, beat out Hamler
Mtke Phtlhps' three htts, Patrtck Henry 's .ltrn Hoops
and Shadystde's Ed Andes m
a vote of
coaches,
sportswnters and sportscasters aroun d the state
Those three, along w1th
Denms Nau of Caldwell and
Joe Fame of Cor) Rawson, all
semors, were named to the
high-sconng UP I all Oht o
first team which combmed ,
avera ge over 130 pomts per

Old Fort's Dave Smith
top Class A player

Sport Parade

oth"
ganl
I

Pete Mackanm were the b1g Veryzer hit homers to lift the
blows lor the Montreall,xpos Del1 u1t T1gers tn a 6-2 v1ctory
10 thetr 12-8 trtun •ph over the
ove1 the Boswn Red Sox
Mmncsota Twm&lt;;
Steve Carlton and Randy
Aureho Rodnguez and Tom Lerch teamed rn a three-

game

Sm1th, who also grabbed
17 7 rebounds per gume, led
his Old Fort team. wtth three

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Edtlor

ST PETERSBURG, Fla (UP!) - This hasn't been one of
the better sprmgs for the St. LOuiS Cardmals. It hasn't been
good at all Every tome you look up, they're betng ktcked
around by some other club, and the other afternoon after they
were beaten agam, 11 obvwusly was a little too much for thiS
particular elderly gentleman m the stands
"Get those baby-faces off the fteld I" shouted the old gent, 75
If he was a day
Some of the cardinal players heard hom and laughed The
older ooes did The younger ones, of whtch the Cardtnals have
many, kept stratght faces
Amoug those who got a ktck out of what the old fellow m the
stands had to say was LOu Brock, the Cardmals' oldest playrng
• member at 37, but sttll so far ahead of all the ktds that most of
them have no chance o! ever catching him
!!rock has 2,701 htts, third highest among all acttve maJor
league hitters, and 860 stolen bases, more than anyone else m
Nallonal League history. He needs only 28 more to break Ty
Cobb's record and maybe he'll be exctted about the whole thing
after he does 1t, but he certamiy tsn't now
"Ty Cobb doesn't mean anything speCI31 to me,'' says Brock
"I never saw him and I never met hom. From reading about
him, I know he was a great ballplayer, though "
As you can tell from hiS answer, Lou Brock ISn't all that
caught up With Ty Cobb He feels about him roughly the same
way Hank Aaron dtd about Babe Ruth when Aaron was
shooting for the bome..-un record. Brock seems a lot more
rnterested lll getting 3,000 hits than m catchmg Cobb, whtch IS a
little hard to ftgure because If he breaks Cobb's record, that's
what he'll be best remembered for after he leaves baseball, not
getting 3,000 htts
"I'm gonna play until I get those 3,000 htts, and if I'm sllll
Plow a perfect seedbed 1n
maktng
some contribution, I'D continue," says Brock, starting
one ope ration-power or
his 16th major league season
tool cult1vare, sp r.t y, com
"I honestly don't feel old at 37. The only difference I can see
post mow and more A
Gravely con vertible tractor m myself IS that I can't get down to ftrst base m 3 4 seconds like
and auachments does 11 all
I used to. Now tt's 3 9and 4 flat That means I'm runnmg wtth
Get a Gravely and see how
the crowd. If 3 9 and 4 flat 1s old, then you got guys of 22 who
you r garden grows
are old
"Fellows like Satchel Patge and Hoyt Wtlhelm blazed the
trail for playing a long time Look at what age they were when
they qwt Wtllie Mays played un\11 he was m his 416 So dtd
Stan Musial, Hank Aaron and Ty Cobb I'm 37 now Let's see,
37from 421eaves ftve,'' Brock laughs, doUtg the artthmetic "I
guess what I'm really saymg ts that there 's always some
challenge for you In thlS game no matter how young or how old
you are"
Only once durrng the past seven seasons has Brock fa tied to
204 Condor Street
bit .300, and then by only three pomts Never once tn all that
992-2975
stretch dtd be ever steal less than 50 bases, breakUtg Maury
Pomeroy, OhiO
Wllls' smgle season m,ark m 1974 With 118 thefts
Brock feels good He's lookmg ahead to the usual kind of
OPEN .
season
he has, but hasn't sat down and set hunself any specta I
9-5 Mon. lhru Fnday
goals for this year
9-Noon Saturday
"'Th.at 1S for rookies," he says 11 YOU hear them say, 'I'm
-~GRAVELY- gonna hlt.300 I'm gonna htt 40 home runs.' We call that dayLIKE NOBODY ELSE dreaming A guy at my stage, why do I have to prove anything
In anybody? The only one I have to prove anything to "
myself."

GRAVELY
TRACTOR
SALES

COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Dan
Wendell, who gmded a young
Ridgedale team to a 16-1
regular season record and the
No 1spot m the Umted Press
lnternatwnal Oh10 High
Sc~oo l Board of Coaches
ratmgs, has been voted the
UP! Class A coach of the
year
Wendell recetved 10 of the

55 votes cast by coaches,
wnters and sportscaste rs
around the state, edgmg out
Shadystde's first year coach
Terl") Smvely, who received
etght votes
Three coac hes , Char les

Hugg!llS of lnd1an Valley
South, Dan Neff of Archbold
and Bud Snyder of New
R1egel, ti ed for th~rd w1th

COLUMBUS IUPI I - The
1977

Un1 ted

Press

In
tern af 1ooal Class A Boys Ai l
Olto Baske tball Team w 1th
t'e1ght grade and sconng
average

FIRST TEAM

Denn1s Nau Ca l dwe ll 6 1

S&lt;-.243

Ed Andes

Sr 25 8

Shad ys• de 6 3,

Dave Sm 1th Old For t 6-6

29 '
t Sr 30 6
Sr

Joe Fa1n e Cory Rawson 6

J1m Hoops, Patnck Henry
1&gt;5 Sr 21 9

SECOND TEAM

Steve

C kach

Cuyahoga

He•ghls, 5 11 Sr 26 a

Brad Wes ton R1d gedale 6

l Jr , 23

4

Doug

Brandew•e
Fort
Loram 1e 6 4 Sr 24 8
Gary Egner R1verdal e 6 4

Sr

2{)

0

Jay M eye r, Cov1ngton 6 2

Sr

23 I
THIRD TEAM

Cla r k
Mapl eton
Jef f
Chanl er Lakel and
Dan e
Cook New Bremen
Cl ay
Dd t
Keystone
M1ke
Demyan
Mansf el d
St
Peter s AI Greve Botk .ns
R1ck H1ckenbo1tom Wood s
f1 eld
B1 ll Ketterman R1verdale
Ken Krebs, Buckeye Central
Don Lafon ta.ne Nev. R1 egel
Fred Loga n North Gal l1a
Brent Mark eley R1dgedal e
M:!rk M orr •soh Bn stoivdle
Don Osborn e, Wes t Jef
fer son ,
Rob
Play forth
Lock l and
Coy
Prater ,
Southeas fern (Ross) Jeff
Rupp
No rwayne
Bob
St rasbugh
Riverdale
Nelv 1n Smdh Georgetown
Fred Sommer, M1nster
Ron Stewart New Alban y
Neal Seymour Canal Wm
che ster Denn•s Sou thworth
Eastern
(Ross)
Dave
Sny der
An t werp
J 1m
St1mme l H•ck sv 1li e
Cra1g

T1m

M 1z 1k er,

Guernsey

DarrE:- 11

Creek

I NTF.Rf~"i fii F

\1 EJGS.MASON AIU \
{ HF.STER I TA NNEHi l l

Buroker

R•dge mon t , Tom Dunson
Lehman
Greg
Fos ter , fv\apleton T1m Fros t
Wy nford Larry Hu ggm s
lnd 1an Valle y Sou1th Jeff

J&lt;

Jah n,

Sparta

H1g hlan d.

Jill l

f

1!

IWRF.KT IIOF tl ICII

S1dney

Cit)' f.Lh lllf
I'JIJI1 sh ~ d dcol\ o;Xt~Jil SJt uJd&lt;tJ
L) rt t' Oluu Vt~!lcy Pu~l 1slnug Com
au) Ill Cuull St Pumu u\ Oht J
4~7li!.l Busuu;sli Uffu.;t Ph1 ~~~ 992
21 5U l-.tlltUI Ial Phunl992 2157
Scm ul dllsh 1nsl ~~ p1.1id ll
Plmtt l ~ Oluu
Nat1011al 1:1 d W1t1sl1~ rt: pr c~ n

Ar-chbold

Bert

John

rile s Ddl\lcltd b\
cttlr ltr ~her e ovall&lt;tLII 75 ccrl s JX'I

250,000 CANDLE
Pa!YER
HALOGEN
UGIIT

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23•Dtc
21) If you tlnd yoursell ca ught
between people today don t get
embroiled In their feud Play
peacemaker Try to restore harmony

as

TRW

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 18)
It s best that you keep a cool
head at work today Thmgs w1 1l
turn out to be far less crlt1cai
than they first appeared

AQUARIUS (Jon 20-Fob

FOlD AWAY
RAMPS

11)

look can solve It later

PISCES (Fob 20·Mirch 20)
Another may try to de ny you
something you feel you re entitled to today If your cause is
JUSt spea k up You ll get what s
nghtfu lly yours

•

long

RMip

•

'

• Doyli&amp;tlt

a

BrilhtniSS

WITJliJ~
~ QOwilirllil\7
Morch 24,

FW. FIOIIT FlOOII MATS

1177

Matenal opportun•tles could
presen t them selves to you th1s
year from two different sources
Each can be sound 1f you h'ndle
them properly
\

Ext~tme

fUU, REAli FlOOII MATS
'/

Rlplocament

K~

S257PIR

fou r vote s ap1ece, wh1l e
Larry Jordan of Southeastern
(Ro&amp;') and Versa11les Dan
Noms each had three
W1th two votes aptece were
Jun LOwer of Cardrngton,
Bob Hueslman of Covrngton,
Carl Wolfe of Sout hern
(Metgs) , Dan Khn e of
Stryker and Burt f'tsher of
New Bremen

Th e Ath e ns County
Snv,nq!. &amp; Lo an Co
21'16 Second St
Pom l;! roy Oh to

~~~N~£
WITH BULK GARDEN SEED

OHIO SEED COMPANY

Slanley, ~andusky St Marys
Joe Sch ul er Southeastern
(Ross) J1m Wyse Slryker
Dona ld Wdl1s
Clevel a nd
He1ghts Lu l heran East Al lan
Young Falfport Harbor
Player of the yea r ~ Dave

NOW AVAILABLE AT

PICKENS HARDWARE CO.
Mason , W. Va
Open Mon -Tn• 1rs &amp; Sat
Fnday 8-8

Sm1lh, Old Fori
Coach of the year -

Dan

1'.\&gt;ndeJI R1dgedale

a.s 30

We have some extra good one owner cars m stock, so come on m and
gel a good used car lor your summer vacal1on .

75 BUICK REGAL

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Su~~ llp ll tl ll

w~~k H) Mul u1 Ruu lt'llh~JC CHI IICI

M 1ke Bohu s, Bella 1re Sf
John, Joe Braid ic Sebrmg
T1m Blakeley , Ver sa il les,
Ch 1p
Braue r ,
Ractne
Southern , Sf eve Bu rn s,
Edgerton
Rtck
Bacon
Fayette
Joe
But cher ,
Fed eral Hock 1nQ
A l lr~n

!Jl i VIlC nol av!! lallk
~ 25 Hy mad 111 Ohru

One muulh
and W V&lt;t
Ont Yc&lt;u S22 00 Sr~ munths
$II :;o
Thl t:t: m u nth ~ $7 00
~ls~ whcrt.r $26 00 }t u Srx months
$13 ~o Tlu lC mu 1ths $7 &lt;.~ 0

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73 OLDS DELTA

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and wh tte top th 1s b1rd has
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ONLY

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vinyl top real clean car nght pn ce

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4d'l0r hardtop a1r , vmy l top local one
owner, a sharp one owner

ONLY

PLANNING A PIZZA PARTY

Trucks

There s a t1me when the best way
to treat a problem Is to walK
8way !rom It A refreshed out·

l'.llllams, Oak H II
HONORABLE MENTION

Wt~ nl

IMt mulh and

l

with us!

Fun Size and

-@

BIG SAVINGS ON ALL
SMITH NELSON USED CARS

rllF U..\ LV Sl&gt; N!INH
UE\ O'I'ED TO rll.f

Calhoh c 63. Jr 269
SPECIAL MENTION
Ralph Baylor, Kyge r

Mogadore

$15 2~

Meigs Co. Branch

3 Sr , 22 B

Rychener

Be
prepared to play th e role of a
tough horse trader toda y Hang
m there and give only what you
have to

A sub stantlill pcnalt l" ~ ~
m Yo k ed oo a ll ccrtt ft ca t e
,1c counts wtthdr;;twn pnor
to th e da l e of matur•t'l'

Mike Rengert Cardmgton
1&gt;4 Sr 20 0
M1ke Rauc h Water f ord 6

Vaughan ,

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov 22)

year certlf1cate of
dep os1t
s 1 000 00 mm1mum
deposr!. mterest pa1d
quart erly

Dan Ander son Anna 5 11

biiiVt

&amp;
DRIVING
UGHT

7 Pet per year on a 4

Sr 26 3
Curt Spotts Archbold 6 5
Sr 18 0

N'errllt Lucasv il le Val ley

G J

league b"auung complex m
Tampa
Tuesday
for
reaSSignment
The players are pitchers
Art
DeFthpp ts,
Dan
Dumoulrn, Raul Ferreyra ,
M1ke LaCoss and Mano Solo,
ca tcher
Jeff
Sovern
tnftelders Mtke Grace and
Ron Oester and outfielders
- Steve Henderson and Dan

Class A All-Ohio cage team

Jeff Numb,grs Strasburg .
Kevm O'Derl Ar canum , Cal

may not have your lull share of
savvy m business matters today
Its best to postpone dealing U!t
you have a clearer head

C1ncmnah Reds 's mmor

FROM

Associates march to th e tu ne at
a different drummer today It s
best to be a loner In Important
thmg s

&amp;

players m camp, mcluding
four who are not on the maJor
league roster

TAMPA , F1a {UP! )- Ten
players were sent w the

sophomore starters, to a 14-0
Andes , a 6-3 gua rd
regular season mark, averaged 25 B pomts per
although mtssmg the f~rst two game m leadmg Shadystde,
games of the season wtth an under ftrst year coach Terry
InJUry
Smvely, to a re g1ona l
'Dave was our leader both tnu1 nament bet th
on and off the court,' satd Old
Fame, at 6-4, was the
Fort coach Steve Srruth "He leading scorer on the three Norman
The Reds now have 3.5
IS not only the best player Class Ateams averagrng 30 6
that I have had the pnvtlege pOlnts per game for Cor v
to coach, but the most Rim son He hlt 50 3 per cent
coachable He places team from the floor and 86 1 from C1kach of Cuyahoga Hei ghts,
ltrst, self second
the free throw hne, 136 of 158 6-4 Doug Brandewte of For\
Smtih, whose top outputs of
Hoops, also 11-5 averaged Loranue, 6-4 Gary Egner of
the l ear were 39 points and 28 21 9 pornts per game for R1verdale and 6-2 Jay Meyer
of Covtngton
rebounds hit 53 per cent of Patnck Henry
cambrtdge Guernsey cathhis shots from the noor and
Brad Weston, the brother of
69 4 per cent from the free a former Class A player of the olic's 6-3 Tom Mlztker,
throw lme He also averaged year, Dan Weston heads up another Juruor, led the thtrd
four blocked shots and lour the second team
team sel ections In scormg
asststs per game
Weston, who led Rtdgedale w1th a 26 9 average
The other members of the
Nau, whose older brother, In the No I ratmg 10 Class A,
John, was a former f1rst team 1s a 6-2 JDn lOr He averaged thtrd team mclude 5-11 Dan
aii-Oh10 selection. 1s a 6-t 23 4 pomts per game for the Anderson of Anna , 11-5 Curt
Spotts of Archbold, IH Mike
guard whu averaged 24 3 Rockets
pomts per game
The other members of the Rengert of Cardrngton and 6-3
second team are 5 II Stevo Mtke Rauch of Waterford

VIRGO (Aug 23·Stpl 22)

LIBRA (Stpl 23-0cl 23) You

Reds reassign lO candidates

Dan Wendell top A coach

Baxter Jones , W•nd ham Don
LUCIU S, New R1egel JacK
Lea sure
Skyvue , Mark

AUTO PARTS COMPANY

hitter and the Philadelph12 ri an ll-run th1rd mmng thHt
Phtlhes beat the Pitlsburgh camcd the Mi lwaukee
Pirates, 6-11, at San Juan , P R Brewers to a 15-4 wtn 0\IPI t,~t
Stxto t..ezcano's grand- aevcland lndtans
sam homer was the b1g blow

PHONE
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SMITH NELSON MOTORS

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992-2174

POMEROY, 0.

�4- The Da~y Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday. March~~. 19n

Trophy deer heads to make Panthers
don't
eyes go into big circles
scare

many of them wbo had a part in last year's
record deer harvest - 23,561. That"s a
By GENE CADDES
success ratio of I in 5.
Last year's record typical rack was taken UPI Sporl8 WriU:r
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Barwith a bow by Gary Landry of Wooster. It
scored 182 7-8 points,. Hochstetler's berton's No. 1 ranked Magics
deer naturally took the non-typical honors. ·don't scare Columbus Linden
PaUl Preese's whitetail took the muz· McKinley coach Jene Davis.
"Uwe play them," predicts .
zleloading honors with a 166 2-8 score.
Davis
boldly, "we'll heat
tilchstetieralso took the Club's travelling
them.
In
fact," added Davis,
aword for the year's outstanding deer.
By lhe way, Eli bagged his buck in 1 "! feel if we had scored three
territory he'd never been in before. Right more points last year, we'd
pace, right time! One award went to Becky ' he going for three in a row."
What Davis meant was that
Lewis of Columbus for being the .only lady
Linden,
which won the title in.
inductee. .
They had some fantastic door prizes, an 1975, could have beaten
Ithaca deerslayer, two compound bows, a Barberton last year in the
Bear Kodiak bow, a Howkins mlll;zleloader, championship game. But, a
gun case, lined jacket and two slingshots. lwoi&gt;Oint l= to Middletown
Gary SiS&lt;, photographer for the Sentinel, in the semifinals kept the tWo
4
!lowed some slight disappointment when he from meeting.
Linden meets Cincinnati
won a sling shot instead of one of the major
LaSalle
in the second
IJ"izes.
semifinal
game Thursday
rerognize all the trophy racks coming from
Besides Gary , I was accompanied by
night
(9:30p.m:)
aod Davis
the small state of Ohio. Ohio is a top trophy
Henry Bahr and Harry Bailey.
believes
that
game
·is the
state, boasting 30 deer, 17 typical and 13
crucial
one
for
his
Panthers.
The fishing's picking up. I've received
nontypical in the Boone and Crockett books.
"LaSalle is the key to our
numerous reports o! some nice catches of
For a rack to make the Big Bucks Club, it
winning
lhe ~te champion·
tiue~ills, Most are heing caught in about
must score .a minimum d 140 points typical,
ship,"
said
Davis. "Our kids
160 nontypieal. lt must score 170 to make the
three feet of water oq flshworms. A few bass
are
sick
of
hearing about
Boone and Crockett books. The largest
have been taken and the warmer weather
Barberton.
U
we play them,
lt10uld be making Mr. Bigrnouth start ljit·
typical whitetail taken In Ohio was one by
we'll
beat
them."
I:on Allison in Vinton County in 1965, scoring
ling anytime.
Davis explained his confi·
187 IHI points.
dence
by saying, "the type of
As I've stated many times in den talk,
About April I (if the weather stays moist
game
they (Barberton) play
guest speakers Dale H?ney and Robert
and warm) you can start looking for those
will
make
us play a good
Teeter stressed three things Ohio sportsmen
wonderful morel mushrooms. No one has
game.
Our
guards are too
!lould be concerned about - wildlife
reported finding any yet , but I wouldn1 be
good
to
be
hurt
by pressure. A
habitat improvemlllt, good relationih1p
1W1lrised if there might not be a few around
presses
helps us."
team
that
with private landowners, and the anti·
already.
One
of
Davis'
guards
Is 5-10
trapping and hunting movements . The club
senior
Todd
Penn,
a
two-time
oontributed over $600 to the Wildli,fe
Dow Lake had now been stocked with
Legislative Fund to rombat these "anti
trout, and Forked Run Is usually right first team all.()hio selection
people."
rebind Dow. So if you're a put-and-take and an all-tournament' choice
as a sophomore,
Nearly 900 people attended the banquet,
fisherman ,· get your poles and une wet.
Barberton's Jack
Greynolds admits his team,
Uke any other, can be beaten,
"but it will take a hell of a
good night by a good team,"
· said Greynolds."
The Magics take a 2~
By BilL MADDEN
to that old saying about there will aid the offense, he'll do
record
and a 50-game
UPI Sports Writer
being no substitute foc ex- nothing for the woefully weak
winning
streak into lheir
SARASOTA, Fla. (UP!)- . perience, but the cold. hard outfield defense. Further, the
Thursday
night semifinal test
There is a new attitude of facts are that the White Sox infield defense is almost as
against
No.3
Elyria, also 24optimism and determination finished dead last . m the uncertain.
o
.
among lhe Chicago White Sox American League in pitching
STRENGTHS : Zisk, f~rst
Led by first team UP! allthis yeai which could Very with a 4.25 team earned run baseman Jim ·gpencer and
Ohioan
Carter Scott and the
Ukely fade into resignation by average and did nothing to outfielder Jorge Orta are all
Bodnar
twins, Mark and
mid..June.
.
improve lheir Jot in that proven hitters with adequate
Marty,
both
second team
Most White Sox' players department over the wiilter. power. Bucky Dent is among
picks,
Barberton
rolled over
agree that new manager Bob
And although Zisk, who hit the best shortstops in
18
regular
season
foes by an
Lemon got the team off in the 21 homers and drove in 89 baseball.
average
scoce
of
~8.
right direction by stressing runs for Pittsburgh last year,
WEAKNESSES: A woeful
That figure has dropped off
fundame11tals and defense in
pitching staff made up of
some
in six tournament
the opening weeks of ·spring Hastings takes
castoffs, has-beens and
games,
but not by much as
training. It . is generally
unproven rookies; uncertain
the
Magics
try to become the
conceded that Paul Richards, Morehead post
infield, especiBlly if Dent is
eighth
school
(Middletown
at 67, just didn 't have his
traded; weak defensive
did
it
twice)
to
win back to
heart In managing last
PORT CLINTON, Ohio outfield.
back
big
school
state titles.
season and by September the (UP! ) - Jim Hastings, head
NEW FACES; · Besides
"Certainly,"
snapped
White Sox players also gave footbaU coach at Port Clinton Zisk, the most significant off·
Elyria's
Mike
Riley
when he
up, as evidenced by their 15 High School for the past two season acquisitipn, right·
was
asked
if
the
Magics
could
losses in lhe final 16 .games. years, has resigned to hander Steve Stone, returns
be
had.
"If
I
didn!t
think
so, I
"~t's face it," sald Ken
become offensive coordinator via the free agent route and
wo.
u
ldn
'I
be
here."
Brett, who after coming over at Morehead State (Ky.).
will join the starting rotation
Riley labeled Barberton "a
from the New York Yankees
Hastings, a former after a 4-3 record with the
finesse
team which can exin mid-May became the assistant at Arkansas State, cross-town Cubs last year.
plode.
They
can put points on
White Sox' best pitcher in '76, compiled a 16-4 record at Port Other free agent signees
the
board
as
quickly as any
"this'was a horrible ball club Clintnn, including a 9-1 mai'k included third baseman Eric
team
I've
ever
seen "
last year. We di&lt;ln't stress · the past season.
Soderholmn, utility infielder
Although
the
·Magics
any fundamentals in spring
Applications fc.- the Port Tim Nordbrook aod pinch
biggest
player
Is
S.J
Tony
training and pretty much Clinton post will be accepted hitter Royle StiUJman-none
Ward
,
Riley
said,
"their
went through the motions. until May l. They may be sent of whom figure prominently
skills can nullify the need for
Most players will tell you it tn Administrative Asssistant in Lemon's early plans.
was lhe easiest calnp they John W. Hess of the Port
OUTlOOK: The White Sox a big man. They can do so
ever had."
Clinton Board of Education. should consider themselves many things well, they
Slugging ouUielder Richie
lucky to beat out expansionist compensate for no big man."
LaSalle's Bill Cady, whose
Zisk, who was acquired over
Seattle foc sixth in the AL
team
finished tenth in the
the winter from the
West in a year which will
final
.coaches'
ratings and
Pittsburgh
Prates, a
undoubtedly be highlighted
brings
a
very
respectable
21-3
perennial contender in the
by a lot more Bill Veeck
record
into
its
game
against
National League, agreed with
gimmicks.
CHICAGO (UPI )
Linden, did not see Barberton
Brett that this year's editioo
Chicago
Bears
linebacker
play this year but says "!
of the White Sox can only get
Doug
Buffone
has
undergone
hear
they are really tough."
ALBANY, Cali!. (Ul'll hetter.
an
operation
on
his
left
heel,
But
first, Cady has Linden
"You have a lot of kids on
Golden Gate Fields has won
this team and guys wbo the NFL club said Tuesday. unanimous approval from the to worry about.
The latest operation · in .Albany City Council foc a
haven 'I had such big league
Dlinois
Masonic Hospital was mmth of nighttime harness
experience," said Zisk. "But
for
the
removal
of bone spurs. racing, sch~uled to ~t
they can play. Guys like
DONKEY GAME SET
The
lower
leg
and
foot will be July 14.
·
Brian Downing, who was hurt
EAST MEIGS - The
a lot last year, Alan in a cast foc 10 to !'2 days after · The added racing will net Eastern
High
School
Balll'lister, Kevin Bell and which the 11-year-veteran the city an estimated $40,000 Business Education Club will
Chet Lemoo. All they need i~ will be able to resume in admioslon taxes if the sponsor a donkey basketbBll
more experience and they 'II conditioning. He is scheduled estimated crowd of. 6,1100 to gome at 8 p.m. on Saturday,
to he released from the 8,000 shows up nightly, in the high !!Chool gymhave us winning."
lllSillll .
~
supporters said.
True, there's a lot of merit hospital on Wednesday.

ByGregBaUey
had the pleasure of attending the Big
tsucks Club banquet at Marietta Saturday,
md the likes of trqlhY deer heads I've never
seen before. l'm not sure now what a trophy
ooks Uke as rack after rack of trophy heads
were on display ond my eyes were going in
tircles.
Dave Glick's world record bow-killed
Illllle deer was on display, but the main
attraction was the full-sized mount of Ell"
liJckstetl..-'s nontypical whitetail. It is the
largest nontypical ev..- killed in Ohio, and
will rank either fourth or fifth in the Boone
11\d Crocket books, scoring 261 6-8.
Ninely-&lt;&gt;ne new members (including
)11Urs truly) were inducted into the
!l"estigiom club. The Club wos started in
1957 by Merrill.GUfillen and Max Shipley to

den talk

Chisox have new attitude

STANDINGS
N8A Standings Associat•on
By

Unit~d

Pren International

Eastern (.o ntertnce
Atlantic Division

w. L, Pet. GB

Ph iladelph ia
,Boston
NY Knicks

-13 77 .614 ..37 34 .521 61 l
33 38 .464 10' 1
17 45 .315 17

Buffalo
NY Nets
21 50 .296 72 1 -,
central Division
W. L· Pet. GB
Houston
44 17 .620
Wi'.I Shing ton
40 30 .571
San Anton io
39 32 .549 5
Cleveland
38 32 .50 5'''
Atlan ta
29 43 .403 151/;1
New Orleans '28 42 .AOO 151/'J
Wutern conferenc.e
Midwest Division

J' '"

w.

Denver
Detroit
Kansa s Ci ty

44
40
39
37
31

L. Pet. GB
27 .620 -,...
31 .563 4
31' .535 6
35 .SIA 71 '7
41 .431 13"?

Chicago
Indiana
Milwaukee
7.'i 49 .J:1R 70 112
Pacific Oi 'o'ision
w. L. Pet. GB
LosAngeles
.44 77 .620

Por tla nd
Golden State

4'2 31 .575
40 32 .556

3

4' t,
Seattle
37 37 .soo 8'12
Phoen ix ·
28 .(2 .400 15'h
Tuesday 's Results
Atlanta 86 Bu,falo 8.4
NY Knlcks 125 Milw 11.5
Cleveland 108 Sea ttle 104
Houston 106 Indiana 99
New Orleans 106 Portland 95
Boston 108 San Antonio 104
Chicago 10'2 Los Angeles 86
Kan City 126 Golden St . 113
Wednesday 's Games,
Kansas City at NY Nets
Golden St. at Ph ilaelelphia
Boston at Atlanta
Portland at Houston
Cleve land at washington
New Orleans at Detroi t
Los Angeles at Ind iana
San Anton io at Denver
Thursday's Games
Houston at San Antonio
New Orleans a1 Cleveland
Buffalo at Plloe ntx

NHL. Standings
By United Press International
Campbell Conference
Patrick Ol 'o'lslon
W l T Pts. GF -GA
Phi Ia
44 16 14 102 '295 200
NY ISiandrS 44 19 11 99 '1.67177
Atlanta
31 33 11 73 247252
NY Rang ers 27 33 14 68 255 283

Rosselli named
coach-of·year
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio
(UP!) - Youngstown State
University basketball coach
Dam Rosselli has been
n~med NCAA District 4
Coach of the Year mballoting
by the National Association of
Basketball Coaches, it was
announced Tuesday,
Rosselli, head coach of the
Penguins since 1940, guided
Youngstown State to a 22-7
record this past season.
He has piled up a 524-313 ·
career record.
District 4 includes Ohio,
Indiana, Dlinois, Michigan
and Kentucky .
,,
"Naturanr, I am indeed
honored to l'eceive such an
award from my fellow coaches," said Rosselli. "Give
much of the credit for this
honor to my assistant coaCh
Roger Lyons and to the
dedicated players on our
squad.
·

Smythe Dhnsion
W L T Pts. GF GA
St. Louis
JD 35 9 69 116 250
Chicago
24 39 11 59 '220 276
vancouver 24 AD 11 59 216 269M innesota 10 36 18 58 2'21 283
Colo r ado
19. 42 13 51 205 282
Wales Conference
Norris Olvlsio11

Bulls roll over
Lakers in NBA

By··FRED LIEF
W l T Pts. GF GA UPI 1!ports Writer
• MOntreal 55 8 11 121 35.5 166
Tuesday night Chi'caf!&lt;&gt;
Pittsburgh 37 31 13 77 :229 240
roiled
to it.s 13th National
LosAngeles293114 72 239222
washingtn 20 40 1• 54 196 284 BaskelbaU Association win in
Detroi t
16 A1 9 Al 175 273 their last 14 games with a 102Adams Division
W L T Pts. GF GA 86 victory over the Pacific
eutfa lo
46 22 6 98 280 202 Division-leading Los Angeles
Boston
43 '22 8 9 ~ 278 219
Toronto
33 29 12 78 283 259 Lakers before 21,046 fans, the
Cleveland
24 38 11 59 220 760 largest crowd in the Buils'
x-Clinched div ision fitle
history.
Tuesday ' s Results
The Bulls' five starters all
NY Islanders 9 Colorado 2
Buffalo 6 Atlanta J
scored
in double figures with
Pittsburgh 4 Minnesota 2
Wilbur
Holland leading the
St . Louis 4 Los Angeles 2
Ph iladelphia 4 Vencouver 4
way with 24 points. But it was
Wed.nesday •s Games
tile strong play of Artis
Colorado at NY Rangers ·
NY Islanders at Toronto
Gilmore that made the
Boston at Detroi t
difference.
Los Angeles flit Chicago
Gilmore, the club's leading
Cleveland at Buffalo
Thursday 's Games
scorer,
had 19 points. But,
Philadelphia ·at Boston
moce
importantly,
the 7.footDetroit at At lan ta
St. Louis at Montreal
2 center drew three fouls on
Kareem Abdul.Jabbar in lhe
WHA Standings
By United Press lnternationil
first quarter and knocked
East
him out of the game untillhe
W L. T Pts . GF GA
QVe bec
43 28 2 88 321 265 second half.
Cincinnati 37 32 3 77 323 265
"My being out of the game
lndianapls 33 3.4 1 13 '2.48 275
was
crucial," said AbdulNew Englnd 31 37 6 68 248 204
Birmnghm '19 .42 3 61 261 280 Jabbar, who played 28
x -Minn
19 18 5 43 136 129
minutes and scored 18 points,
West
W L. T Pts . GF GA nearly nine below his game
.Houston
45 21 6 96 292 209 average.
Winnipeg
42 2'9 2 86 336 260
It is questionable whether
San Diego 34 34 4 72 2.42 257
Calgarv
28 39 5 61 215 258 the Bulls will make it to the
Edmonton 29 41 3 61 207 279
games
Phoeni x
27 42 .4 58 255 3-13 playoffs. They're
behind Midwest Division
x-Team disbanded
Tuesday's Re!lulls
rival Kansas City.
Birmi ngham 1 Calgarv 4
In other games, Atlanta
Winnipeg 8 EdmontOn 3
Quebec 6 Houston 2
edged Buffalo, 116-84, the New
Indianapolis J Cinci 1
York Knicks took Milwaukee,
Wednesday's Game!l
Quebec at Cincinnati
125-115, Cleveland clipped
Birmingham at Phoenix
Seattle,
108·104, Boston
Thursday '!! Games
trinuned San Antonio, 108Quebec at Indianapolis
Birmingham at San Diego
104, New Orleans stopped
Edmonton at New Eng land
Portland, 106-95, Kansas City
beat Golden State, 126-113,
and Houston def ea ted
Indiana, 106-99.
CORVALLIS, Ore. (UP!)Terry Batchelder, a muchsought t95.pounder from
CONCORD, N.H. (UP!) Hillsdale High School in San
New
Hampshire's two stateMateo, Calif., has signed a
owned
ski areas, proposed for
letter of intent to play football
sale
by Gov. Meldrim
at Oregon State University,
Th\)IIlson,
reported record
eoa·ch Craig Fertig said
earnings
this
w.inter ..
today. .
.
The
commissioner
of the
Fertig said he planned to·
Department
of
Resources
play him at flanker in · the
and Economic Development,
OSU offense.
George Gilman , s!J.i'l Tuesday
New Hampshire will receive
more tha.n $1.5 million from
CHICAGO (UP!) - Pat Mt. Sunapee and Cannon
Sullivan, released by the Mountain. The revenue Is
Washington Redskins before $300,000 more than was
the startof the regular season predicted.
last year; was signed by the
Two weeks ago, Thomson
Chicago Bears Tuesday as proposed selling the ski areas
the club's third quarterback. to
help solve
New
The club's other two QBs • Hampshire's economic
are Bob Avellini and Virgil problems. Gilman has
Carter.
criticized the proposal.

I""

Hawks 16, Braves 84:
Len Robinson 's jumper at
'the buzzer capped a careerhigh, 34-point performance as
the Hawks snap~ a four·
game losing streak. Randy
Smith had 26 points for
Buffalo, which has now
dropped four straight.
Knlcks 1%5, Bucks liS:
Bob McAdoo scored 29
points and Earl Monroe 'II to
pace New York. Milwaukee,
last in the Midwest Division,
was led by Bob Dandridge
with 22 points.
CavaUers 108, SuperSoalcs
104:
Austin Carr's 29 points
sparked Cleveland to its
fourth straight victory. The
Cavaliers; holding Seattle
scoreless from the field
during a six~inute fourth
quarter stretch, also got 23
point.s from Jim Chmies. Slick
Watt.s tqlped the Sonics with

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middle!)Oit·Porneroy, 0., Wednesday, March 23, 1977

Nelsonville par.amedics to
move into new home Mar.26
.

The Paramedics may
fondly remember the
holsptal's old morgue which
was their quarters when the
Southeast Ohio Emergency
Medical Servi ces started
operation in the NeisonviUe
area four years ago.
Regrets will be few,
however, when SEOEMS'
Paramedics dedicate modern
livlng quarters on March 26.
The public is invited to the
dedication at I p.m. and the
open house following until 9
p.m. The event will also mark
the fourth anniversary of the
start-up of the SEOEMS

- -

.

Fordham in 1940, he taught
history and coached football
a St. Benedict's for two
years. He began a 26-year
career at Scrantnn Univer·
sit)' in 1942 , serving as
football coach for 14 years
111d also coaching lBsketball
111d cross country. He later
was named athletic director
and chairman of the
Department of Physical
Education at the school. He is
generally credited with
boosting Scranton into
athletic prominence during
his tenure there. He returned
to Fordham Univ..-sity to
assume his present position
in 1968:
In addition to his wide
variety
of
speaking
lllgagements, Carlesimo was
rost of his own television
:flow, "Coaches Corner/' for
a number of years .and had a

service .

·
:
;.
'
Jan. 31; Hal Shane, singer-f!uitart..t-dancer and the
Orpheus Trio with dates on the latter two to he aonounced
Front, l to r, are Mrs. Evan Roderick Galli polls,
association president: Mrs. John Wolfe,' Mrs. Be~
Douglas, Mrs. Donald Hippensteel, campaign chainnan;
back, l tor, Mrs. Marilyn Wolfe, Mrs, Judy Eichinger
Mrs. Kathy Davis, Mrs. Nancy Reed, Mrs, Sibley Slack
and Mrs. Lucille Swackhamer.

TillS GROUP MET TO ORGANIZE the sale of Tri·
County Coll111lunity Concert Association tickets for the
season . at the residence of Mrs. Bea . Douglas in
Middleport. The annual memberShip drive will. begin
March 28 and continue through April 2. Concerts will he by
Thomas Schumacher, pianist, on April 22; Paul LaValle
and the Chamber Music Society of Lower Basin St. , on

'II.

celtlcs. 108, Spun 104:
Dave Cowens scored ; 15
second-half point.s tg push
Boston to a comeback
victory. The Celtics, down,
87-75, late in the third period,
were also paced by Jo Jo '
White's game-high 27 points.
Larry Kenon had 24 for San
Antonio.
Jazz 106, 'Trail Blazers 95:
Pete Maravich, igniting a ·
third-quarter raUy, scored a ·
game-high 31 points to lift the
Jazz past the Blazers. Jimmy
McElroy also helped power ·
the third-period burst and
finished with 16 points for ·
New Orleans. Maurice .Lucas 1
led Portland 'with 29.
Kings 126, Warriors Ill:
Brian Taylor dropped in 33
point.s and rooltie Rich Wash·
ington added 24 as Kansas
City handed Golden State its
third loss in the last four
games. The Kings also got 20
points from Ron Boone and 18
from Scott Wedmart. Jamaal '
Wilkes scored 27 points tn
lead the Warriors.
Rockets 106, Pacers 99:
Mike Newlin scored 18
points, eight of them coming
in the final five minutes, to
power Houston to its lith win
in the last 12 games. The
Rockets' Moses Malone set
an NBA season record by
cracking raul Silas' mark of ,
364 offensive rebounds . Rudy ,,
Tomjanovich was high with
2.6 points, while John
Williamson tnpped Indiana
with 22.

OU's 16th. annual Green and White
.
banquet · s~~~~d~ed on April 28th
ATHENS - Peter A.
Names of the five persons
Carlesimo, athletic director \\ilo will receive Certificates
a Fordham University, will ol Mer!fat the banquet will be
b! the main speaker when the mnounced later. In addition,
Green and White Club, Ohio senior men and · women
University booster lthletes at Ohio Univers~y
c.-ganization, holds its 16th will be honored , with special
Annual Recognition Banquet. awards being presented to
The banquet will be held the top Male and Female
Thursday, April 28, at 8 p.m. Athletes of the Year.
a Nelson Commons on the Carlesimo, a native of
Ohio University South Green. Newark, N. J., played foot·
The dinner will he preceded lBII at St. Benedict's Prep In
~ a social hour from 7 to 8 Newark before entering
p.m.
'Fordham in 19:li. At Rose
Carlesimo is recognized not Hill, he played under Coach
ooly as one of the top people JJm Crowley in the days of
in the country in his field, but )11re which were hallmarked
also as one of the leading ~ the "Seven ·Blocks of
after-dimer speakers. He has Granite." Carlesimo, who
a mixture of wit, humor and suffered a career-bending
athletic message which he injury before the 1939 season,
has presented before a wide hBs always demurred that he
variety of groups Including was "one oi the 700 stones
the NCAA and ECAC con· behind the Seven Blocks."
ventions.
Following Rr&amp;dlJ!Ition from

MARION
Telephone CO . of Ohio said
today some of its customers
are heing asked by phone to
sound off about their
telephone service.'
The requests are part of a
customer opin ion program
ca lled " TEL -CE L," or
"Telephone Survey
Cus tomer Expectation

~ "!'ch of the company's 29
servtce centers throughout
Chio will be called every
month .
"We plan to have a report
m all of our 243 e&lt;ehanges
b!fore the study is over," he
added,
Questions focus on one of
five service areas : billing.
diaimg , operatnr assistance,
Level !'
Started last week, the one· reprur and installation.
Only residential and small
year trial project Is being
conducted
by
Walker ruslness customers, selected
Research Ind. of Fort Wayne, a. random are being in·
terviewed now . How ever
Ind .
. A. W. HUghes, General's lsrge bus iness c ustomer~
vice presidEill of customer may he included later this ·
service, said one to two oer year.
TEL-CEL results will be
used by the company to
evaluate its own surveys and ,
to
determine service levels
1

-----------l

FREE
VALUE

CALIFORNIA

I ON JOHN ROBERTS
CLAss RINGs

I

I
I

I

'
'

want help
I
i in return for energy
•

.

ANNAPOLIS, Md. (UPI) I
I Appalachian states will in'
1
I crease coal production to
1
I meet the nation's energy
1 crisis, but area governors .
I
1 want the federal goverrunenl
1 Bring in this ad and 1 tofinancesociaiservicesand
1 order your ring by
I public projects needed. to
I
May
1 expand coal mining.
15
1 Governors or · their
I to get one of these 1 representatives from 13
I
custom features,
1 Appalachian
states · met
Monday
to
draft
I
I recommendations for
FREE :
1
I President Carter 's energy
I • Initial In stone
I program. Their main point
or Insert under atone
was that the region has
bountiful coal supplies, but
1 • Flreburat effect
1 the states have little money to
1
or sunllte effect
I finance mining support facili·
I
I ties.
, • Golden signature
I ;•1 am unwilling to see a
I
national energy policy that
I • White gold instead
I does not specifically take into
1
of yello'!l gold
I account the people's lives in
1 ,the region," said Gov. John
I
~ 1 D. Rockefeller IV of West
1 Virginia.
II ~
·
1 "It's not gelling the stuff
·
fleflelers out, but what happens to the
I
...._._ I people," RockefeUer added.
L __________ _j Rockefeller's state is one of
I

1

I

1

RIB STEAK

CELERY
GRAPEFRUIT DRINK
28. oz. Bottle

33~

MR. BEE

POTATO CHIPS
:wiENERS

'129

20 Ct.
Pkg.

JACKSON
BOLOGNA

LB.$109
.

'

CHICKEN
WINGS
LB.

39~

,.

Reg. 99c Pkg.

79~

Stalk

39~

BREAD
22 oz. King. Size Loaf

2/79~

PILLSBURY

BUTTERMILK BISCUITS
6oz. Can

~J'~!t~

BUTTER MILK
¥i GAL,LON .

79~

OLEO

EGGS
DOZEN

69~

3LB.$}OO

USDA CHOICE

OPEN

PEPSI or 7-UP
8-16 oz.
BOmES

WE WELOOME
FOOD STAMP

·'1 09

SHOPPERS

Plus tax and deposit
COUPON

~-:-.-=~"='""~

ROBIN HOOD

GOLDEN ISLE

MEDIUM

,,•

Mon.-Sat.
10 til 5
Sunday
thru

ALL PURPOSE FLOUR

ROUND STEAK ·
.LUNCH MEAT SALE
.BOLOGNA
CHOPPED HAM · I
SALAMI
I
PICKEL LOAF
DUTCH LOAF
MIN
F

,

LB.

99~
. ".

49

8916

I

PEPSI

~:· 59~
With Coupon &amp; S7 .50 Purchase
Good Only At
1/aid Cross Sons Store
~xpires Mar.ch 26, 1977

9til 7

Where can older persons
get help in dealing with a
aressfui situation, and how
can emotional problems of
aging be prevented from
becoming serious• Meigs
COunty Senior Citizens may
have answers to these
questions at an informative
program on "Emotional
Problems of Aging" to be
held Wednesday, March 30 at
12:30 at the Senior Citizens
Center in Pomeroy,
A psychologist represen·
ling the Meigs , Gallia,
Jackson Community Mental
Health Board will discuss
stresses that accompany
growing. older such as ad·
justing to retiremlllt, losing
one's spouse and learning to
live alone. Community

: Governors

Dairy Special
U.S. D. A.
CHOICE
FRENCH CITY

Hughes said action also wUl
oo taken to correet problems
cited by respondents.
Continuance
of
the
JI'Ogram beyond one year
depends upon the findings
and customer reaction ,
Hughes e&lt;plained.
TEL·CEL was developed
by General Telephone &amp;
Electronics Corp., Stamford,
COnn., parent company of
General of Ohio. Similar
!l"ograms are being con·
ducted by GTE companies in
Indiana and Southwest
United States.
Hughes "'id the company is
hoping customers wUl be
candid if called. "Their
comment.s," good or bad, will
aid us in providing the kind of
~rvice desired 1 11 he said.

$6T0$8 i
i

SEOEMS recently moved
into the newly completed
!tation, located in a
remodeled half of the
hospital's garage behind
loilunt Saint Mary Hospital.
The comfortable facilities are
a substantial improvement
over the mobile home the
lifesquad crews have oc·
cupied for the last two year~ •
after spendin~ their first

Older citizens invited tO
CHEL underway information program
General cent of the customers served expected by customers.

TEL

:JJ-minute appearant'l' onThe
Tonight Show. He is a feature
member of Jhe Sports
illustrated Spl!l!_kers Bureau.
He llld his wile. the former
wcy Rogan, are ead J from ,.,
families of 10 children and
are the parents of 10 children.
Tickets for the banquet,
IJ"lCed at $8 each, are now
available frotn members of
the Board of Directors of the
Green and White Club and at
other locations including
Sports Inc., AU-Pro Sports
and from Jim Af111Sias at the
Athllls National Bank, all in
AthlllS.
They will also be available. 1
at some out-&lt;&gt;f{own locations )
or may , be obtained by&gt;' !
writing to the Athletic Ticket :
Office, Ohio University ;
COnvocation Center, Athens, ~
lllio 45701.

BROUGHTDNS

MEET THURSDAY
RACINE - The Southern
Athletic Boosters will meet
Thursday at the high school
at 7:30p.m. Final plans for
the basketball banquet will be
made ..

,
the nation 's largest coal
producers, ·but the governor
said the boom-buS\ cyc\e of
mining ill' recent yeats ohas·•
caused economic hardships,
Rockefeller .said before his
state comniits itself to in·
creased mining, he want.s
assurances that the federal
government will help pay for
roads, housing and social
services, He estimated the
cost at f2 billion.
Reflecting Rockefeller's
concern, the governors of the
Appalachian
Regional
Commission approved $1
mlllion for a study of the
social and economic impact
of expanded coal mining.
Appalachia is one of the
nation's great storehouses of
energy supplies. The area has
126 billion tons of coal
reserves and also has vast
stoc!&lt;s of natural gas and oil.
The region's energy is
needed because the country
imports more than 40 percent
of its petroleum supplies. ·
David
Freeman,
representing Carter's energy
office, told the governors
Appalachian coal is a
cornerstone
of
the
President's energy effo~.
which he described as a
battle for the "future of thiB
country and in a way the
future
of
western
civliization."
· But Freeman said the

E-RCALLED
..l'.he
Middleport
Emergency Squad was called
to former Route 33 at 10:57
a.m. Tuesday for Lela Bailey
wbo had received a knee and
shoulder injury ~ a fall. She
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 2:51
p.m., the squad went to 742""
E. Main St., Pomeroy, lpr
Edna Wilcoxen, a medical
patient, who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where she was admitted.

GILBERT MEES ILL
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to West
MalnSt.at8:30p.m. Tuesday
for Gilbert Mees, apparent
heart attack victim. He was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. At 10:08 a.m.
Tuesday the squad went to 18
Cave st. for Mrs. James
Phillips who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.

federal government has not
made the country aware of
the ~verity of the energy
crisis: He blamed former
President Nixon for the lack
of concern.
"We blew an opportunity
in '74 when we had a
President who said the crisis
is over," Freeman said.
"Energy is the lifeblood of a
society - in a way it's the
whole government, the whole
indusiry and aU the people it's everything."
Governors attending the
conference included
RockefeUer, Marvin Mandel
of Marylal\(l, Mlils E. Godwin
of Virginia, Cliff Finch of
Mississippi, James B. Hunt of
North Carolina, James B.
Edwards of South Carolina
and Julian Carroll of
Kentucky.

resources available to assist
Older persons in limes of
emotional stre ss will be
described.
AII older persons in the
area are invited to attend this
session, which is the first of a
·series of six health education
Jl'esentations to be held in the
Meigs County area during
1977, made possible by a
grant from the Corporation
for Health Education i~
Appalachia Ohio to the
COrporation lor Ohio Appalachian Development
Senior Nutrition Program.
The Senior Nutrition
Program congregate meal
will be served at the Senior
Center immediately before
the ·program at 12. Persons
wishing to come for lunch
\\ilo do not .regularly attend
are invited to make reser·
vations by calling Alice
Parker at 992-7886 by March
:&gt;1\.

eighteen months in basement
&lt;ifices at the hospttai.
The new quarters Include
cooking and sleeping areas, a
rombination offi ce and living
area and a bathroom. The

attractive facility was
des igned, and furni shings
dlosen, by the Paramedics
themselves. It includes wood
md IriCk paneling and other
appointments giving a rustic
quality The SEOEMS life!ljUad crews abo helped in
actual construction.
SEOEMS has a five-year
lease on the hospital's
wilding, with the funds for
the renovation provided by
the seven-county re gional
Emergency Medical Service.
The recent move is also a
lrnefit to the public, as the
Paramedics now reach their
emergency ve hi cle more
quickly since they are housed
In the same building. This
arrangement also gives
better security for the vehicfe
and its equipment.
The Paramedics wiU give
tnurs of the new quarters and
the emergency vehicle during
the open house along with
demonstrati ons of the
emergency medical equiprrrnt .
The
completion
of
SEOEMS ' Nelsonville
renovation marks another
step in th e upgrading
JI'Ogram of emergency medical stations in the county,
with the work nearing
completion 'at the Coolville
and Glouster Stations and
ooru;truction of a new station
in Athens schedu led thi s
swnmer.
SEOEMS has 11 other
stations in Meigs, Jackson ,
Lawrence. Gallia, Hocking
md Vinton counties. AU but
the South Point station are
rnw in "permanent tt quarters, providing Paramedic
service to th e area 's quarter
million population with 26
life-squad s, , including 19
"advanced life-support' '
!ljuads.

/

\\\1

/

I /
'

I

I

Pomeroy ·
Personal Notes i

Jarman 's
new
slip-an
in a warm
Summer
shade is a
shoe that
knows no
sea sons! II's the
classic
slip-on updated with
new shape and
details and a slightly
higher heel.

Other topics to be covered·
Michael May , son of Mr.
during the year are arthritis; and · Mrs . Bruce May ,
·dabetes and weight control; Rutland, has returned to
sight i
cardiO·vascular Marietta College after
IJ"Oblems and the availability spending the spring break at
d emergency medical ser- home. He is a junior in
vices ; and health main· petroleum engineering.
tenance.
Aillll Hartley is home after
The COAD Senior Nutrition several days confinement at
Program is funded under
Hospital,
Title VII of the Older University
COlumbus.
Americans Act, administered
Mrs: Myrtle Harrison is
~ the Ohio Commission on
recuperating fr om recent
Aging.
rurgery at the home of Mr.
md Mrs. Homer Parker.
Rutland.
BOOSTERS TO MEET
The Meigs Local Athletic
Boosters will meet at 7:~0
tonight at the Meigs High
SchooL Plans will be made
for the sponsorship of the
spring show of the Big Bend
Minsterel Association . Of.
fleers of the junior class are
also to attend and all in·
terested persons are urged to
he ' present.

,
I

' •;•;•;•; •;•;•:•:•;•;•;•;•;•:•:•:•~•X•:O:•:o;•;-·o·o;o ·o;o;,o;.o;.o;,..o~
'•.(' • •. •.•.".•.o..o_o,o,_o,o,o,o. o,o,Y&lt;oco.-.::o.&lt;lo~o.-.~•X&gt;.'"';w9

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Middleport, o.

�arolllld Grandfather never seated himself at hls table until he
had p~sed all the dishes of fOOt\ to his guests. Of a morning
someone started cooking pancak~ and I have seen them piled
hig h as people came and went frolii eating. After breakfast left
over pancakes were given to the dogs. Alvar Adams told me
that one fall he dug 12 acres of potatoes with a potato hook by
hand for others to pick .up .
.
.
In their old age I remember my gri!Ddmother patting my
grandfather on his hand and softly saying, "He's my baby,

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday, March 23, 1977

Self-reliant, hardworking people of earlier
days were competitive, lives more rewarding

He's my baby ."

BY GAYLE PRICE
·PORTLAND - This is the last of my stories relating to
flatbuating. My grandparents' fortunes were closely tied to
flatboating_ in their younger days. What little of the records we
have left shows how self-reliant and what effort and against
what odds they worked. People did not ask lor hand-()uts in
those days. Ufe was very competitive but probably 1110re
secure and rewarding than nowadays.
On Feb. 2, 1857 Henderson Price wrote home that his
flatboat had not reached its destination. At that time the
.family was living in what was called the Merideth Price place
which was about 80acres located where the John Cleek home is
now. The Price family had bought this land Feb. 3, 1838 for $307
from the Barber heirs.
The Barber family was a prominent Meigs County family .
This land is in Town 2, R-l!.in 100 acre lots 173 and 175. At that
time there was a log house on the land and Catherine Price
said that several members of the Price family were born
there, including William H. Price, eldest son of Henderson and
Merinda Price; Martin Luther Price, G. W. McClenathan
(Young Guy ), and J . I. Anderson.
It is interesting to note than in 1840, the year Merideth
died, a real estate tax of $3.30 and one mill was paid for the
year. This tax receipt, Which we still have, was lor the year as
it was too hard to go pay them oftener. The children of
Merideth Price were Henderson, eldest; George, Martin, Sam
and Ann who married "Old Guy McClenathan (1807-1889).
The last tombstone visible in the Lauck's burying ground
is that of Mary McClenathan who was the wife of John
McClenathan. John was old Guy's father. She was born in 1779
and died May 21, 1841. He (John) was a native of Pomfret,
Conn.
Another prominent shalt that stood until a lew years ago in
this burying ground was that of Abel Sherman (Feb. 16, 1755August 25 , 1822). The stone said, Born in Rhode Island and died
in Mason County. Va. There was an Abel Sherman killed by
Indians near Marietta in the early days according to Ohio ·
Histor)cal Society publicafwns. The Abel, in Lauck's burying
ground had a son Isaac, buried at Muses Bottom, W.Va. I
think the reason Abel was brought to the Laude;' burying
ground was because of his ties With the McClenathan family.
Dilring the winter of 1857 Merinda wrote her husband,
Henderson, a letter to the effect that certain "lots of land"
were for sale at home and from all appearances she was
encouraging him to buy. He answered her by letter dated Feb.
10, 1857 from his flatboat, "I got your letter and was glad to
hear from you and that you all was well and as lor buying one
of them lots I ca!Uiot tell till l get rid of this boat and load and
then if 1 can make a payment on it and the price suits me I
would do it."
They did buy the land and signed a contract lor purchase
on March 4,1858. This was the lar111 they would eventually add
0n ro, live on, own and operate the rest of their lives. The initial
purchase was the south 100 acres in Lot 8, Town 3-N, Range 11WO.CP. and was in the middle of Sterling Bottom. This land
was purchased from Lyman Stedman, I think, "Jr. " He
probably lived at Sterling Bottom awhile. His mother was
"Old" Guy McClenathan's sister 5o you see it was all in the
family. Lyman Jr. and a sister Lucy who married J.J. White ..
who was a Justice of the Peace and first postmaster at Sterling
Bottom and was appointed in 1844. Lucy died July 30, 1863 and
is buried in Middleswart Cemetery.
The tale is told thatthe Whites lived near where the forme r
Earl Jewett house was located and that Morgan's Raiders .
treated her "roughly'; forcing her to work hard cooking for
them.
"Old" ' Guy McClenathan married A!UI Price, sister to
Henderson Price. He al ways called Henderson, "Brother,"
and took care of the tombstone erected to the infant daughter,
first born to Henderson and Merinda.
"Old" Guy and family moved to Nebraska before . 1860.
1''l'hey had at least one son, "Young" Guy who returned here
about 1918,and appeared before our school wearing a buffalo
robe. Some of the pupils will remember that! He was a big, fine
appearing man who wore a big felt-like sombrero. He
described his ranch and its many horses.
It is noteworthy that Merinda Price played a major role in
the family fortunes. She always took an active and equal part
in their business decisions and planning. Her personality was
such that she could win her points by using -her charm and
influence. All of the family recognized this. No decision was
ever finalized without consulting her.
She went about the farm keeping things humming
smoothly and soothing any ruffled fea\hers . She spent as little
time as possible in her kitchen . Girls were hired lor this work.
One girl, much ·remembered, was Annie Bower who came to
work· in the household at age 16. Still living, she married
William Price.
Let us follow some of the interesting items found in the
correspondence back and forth between the people engaged in
flatboating enterprises. The following are excerpts from some
of. the letters:
Dec. 2, 1857. Henderson Price to his wile Merinda : "I left
Jenks line at Cincinnati ro be shipped home and if it comes I
want him (a man by name of Walker) to send it home and pay
him lor the use of it." Jenks was Lawrence Jenks, head of a
family in Lebanon Twp. in 182{), and he was an appraiser on the
estate of "Old" Caleb Price in the year 1822. Jenks owned and
lived on a small tract on the river bank in front of what was

NO. 2 PRE· '
CUT STUDS

.

HOGG &amp;ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.

PRE-EASTER

SANDAL SALE

Options go back to Biblical times
By JAMES A. WHITE
UP! Business Writer
NEW YORK (UP! ) - The
nption - the right to buy or
sell something at a specific
price some time in the future

business today
- has been a way of business
since biblical times.
Now options to buy or sell
stock are the most tantalizing
and least understood means
of risking money lor profit.
Long used by the
sophisticated investor ,
options were ,introduced to
the general public in 1973 with
the start ollisted trading.
As the name implies,
options
increase
the
investor's choice of action.
The addition of put options
this summer to the call
options already traded on five
U.S. exchanges gives him far
more ways to win or lose.
A stock option gives the
holder the right to buy (call )
or sell (put) shares of a
specific stock
at a
predetermined, or striking,
price within a specific time.
Most options are for 100
shares of stock and they have
a life of up to nine months; if
not used, they expire
worthless.
Tlje cost of an oytion, called

the premium, is a fraction usually no more than 10 to 15
per cent - of what the 100
shares of underlying stock
would cost. Premiums vary
with the price of the
underlying stock and as the
option nears its expiration, its
value diminishes.
Options are tricky, which
heightens their appeal for
some sophisticated investors
and increases the potential
reward for options players
who make the right move at
the right time. The relatively
small cost of the premium
gives the options player high
leverage for potential profits.
Brokers emphasize,
however, buying options
always involves risk - at
least ro the extent that the
option premium can he lost and does not lit into the
..financial plans of many
investors. The seller of ah
option, called the writer, can
be forced to buy or sell stock ·
It a price above or below ~s
llllrket worth.
The chance the price of a
stock" will change, perhaps
rapidly, in the near future is
the reason behind both puts
and calls. The call holder can
benefit when the srock price
rises above th e option
striking price ~&gt;e~:ause he can
buy the sl&lt;fk from· the option

'

letter about buying produce to load a nat boat." "Save me a
I now believe that that sentiment 'liaS his greatest reward.
quarter lor t.hese stamps as I have more than I want." Signed, Her approval meant everything to hlmand he succeeded in his
William J . Taylor.
life time obtaining for her a nice home and a good llvrng. They
Memphis, Dec. 5, 1802, Henderson to Merinda Price: w~re constantly together. EarlY of ··~ morning they went
"Dull times here at present. Flower $4 a bbl., potatoes $1.20 a together to the field to milk their cow When they were very old •
bbl., oats .35and corn .35 a bushel ; apples $2a bbl.
and one morning they hitched up toojr driving horse and
Waugh Bottom, July 8, 1856: "I like this place, but there is prepared to drive to IU&gt;cine, all to the strenuous objection of
some inconvenience here. I broke a trace chain the other day the family. They thought It too risky for tllem at their age.
and had to go live miles to get it mendid. Write often to me and
I can see them ye~. covered with a lap. robe and
1will do the same ro H. Price. William J. Taylor." (Taylor had grandfather snapping his buggy whip. Very late in life on a trip
just moved from Sterling Botiom in Meigs County ro Waugh ro Racine grandfather killed a rattlesrui~e with his buggy ,
Botrom in Gallia County).
whip. We had the rattle until recently. ,
,
. ,
April 16, 1856, William Taylor to H. Price : "I had some
1 was seven years old when my grandfather was buried
heavy plowin(l, lor the dog killers from all appearance they will and I remember grandmother•disappeared that evening in the
be tame enough be!OI'e the plowing is done. !like the neighbors darkness and we all went to look for her in 'the rain. She was
well so far but it is not Sterling Bottom. I went to one husking found carrying a lantern, sob~ing softly ail'&lt;! saying, "! am
and it was rather odd ro see the customs of old times kept ~Pin looking for him, I saw them take.him this way."
·
,
the liquor tine but yo~ know I do not let such things trouble me
She lived seven more years but was never again the same.
any . I sold my boat at a loss of eight dollars." (The dog killers
was a team of colts).
The William Taylor family were lifelong friends of
Henderson and Merinda Price. They moved some time arolllld
1850 from Meigs County to Gallia County. Perhaps some one in
Gallia County knows about the family history yet today.
The way Henderson and Merinda Price bought and paid
for their farm was interesting. The plan was to raise or buy a
crop, boat it south and come back and each April make a
payment.
~
The contract 'was lor -100 acres at a sale price of $6500 and
delivery of the deed was to be April!, 1861 with the right to
crop
the land in 1861 with lull possesSion as of April I, 1862.
HENDERSON AND MERINDA PRICE, taken about
Lyman
Stedman was a dealer in land and handled several
1915 by Albert Price.
tracts around the area. At the time of purchase the ·Price's
land had a good frame barn and a log house which they moved
into. A part of the old house was still standing until 1940.
Morgan's raiders visited the Price cabin during their raid
once the Howard Ebersbach farm. Jenks must have been an while Mrs. Price was there alone. She had her money m a
old man in 1857. The Jenks place was bought by George Price money belt strapped about her body and under her clothes
who lived on it many years and died there. Just west of the then. When she saw the raiders coming she threw a baking of
Jenks place there was a 1 acre lot owned by George Richard- bread she had just baked to the hogs so they could not get it.
.
son who operated a store there. That place was called Sterling.
They occupied the log cabin until they were able to build a
The rock folllldation of the store can be seen today.
new house which was finished in October, 1875. They moved in
November '1:1, !858, Henderson to Merinda Price: "If you and a son was born to them on October 5, 1875. He was a child of
get a chance to sell some of them sholders of meat lor money their old age; he was my father, Abner Price.
you had better do it. That is if you think that we will have
Many stories have been told about this house. The contract
for the lumber stipulated that it must be knot free. The stone
enough with out them."
Note it was to sell for money. In pioneer days money was work was all hewed and was done by the Curtis family, all
not plentiful. Mr . Okey Paynter told me one time that when he close relatives of Merinda Price. The stone was quarried on
was growing up his family did not see $300a.year. Every thing Shade River near Fish Pot and floated down the river on a boat
and up into Lauck's Run near the building site and then was
was done in trade .
The letter continued, "I think we are getting along stone boated into place. Abner Curtis, brother .of Merinda, was
tolerable well considering the wind and low water. There is the principle and head builder. The house cost $4,000 and took
only 2 feet of water in the shallow·places so we have to stay · about lour years to build. All of the woodwork was stained with
pretty dose to the channel. We have not been stuck once since walnut juice Merinda squeezed out of walnut hulls. She alSo
we left Goos Island. The boys complain a great deal of their pounded up sand rock by hand herself to make the plaster.
sholders being sore rowlTig headway. I don't' think we will
This house, still in good condition, is our home tOday.
stand a very good chance of making any money this year.
The contract on the purchase of the 100 acre farm was as
Merinda, I would like to hear from you if it could be so but as it follows:
is not you will have ro do the best you can. Merinda, have them
$1500 down on March 4, 1858.
give our calves plenty of st raw and fodder and salt. Tell Jane
$1000 on April I, 1856.
that Martin is well."
$1180 on April l, 1859.
••'
Martin, Henderson's 20 year old brother, married Jane
$1636 on April 1, 1860.
Alexander who at that time lived on Skull Run in Virginia . The
$1836.42 on April 1, 1861.
story went around that during high water he was rowing a boat
Total paid, $6,952.42.
along the Virginia shore and saw Jane standing on the bank.
In later years acreage was added ro the original purchase
He went back, they became acquainted, and a romance lllltil they had a .total of 250 acres which at the time of my
developed. "Young" Caleb Price married Nancy Alexander grandfather's death was valued at $20,000 (1917).
and George Price. married her sister Susan. Jane was some
I came along just fn time ro see the era of my grandparents
relative of Nancy and Susan.
·.
come to a close. it took lots of laborers to do the work and a lot
V' A.
Sam, Martin and George Price were all in the Civil War at of food to feed them. Hands were kept in the house the year ' ._,.7.73;.·;;,55ii5ii4________.M.;;A.;,S;.O;;,'o~N•,~---•
the same time. Martin, shot through the head, carried a hole as
long as he lived and would never talk of war. Sam was a
lieutenant; George never receovered from the brutality he
same underlying stock can
experienced.
·
Here are a lew excerpts from letters relating ro flatboating produce benefits in the event
of a stock price move in
that contain humor and insight into life in those days.
'
· Waugh Bottom, July 6, 1856, a lady who was a member of either direction.
Beyond all .this, there are
the flatboating family added a note to one of the letters :
"Merinda, 1 have been out today in my best frock and I saw tax and financial planning
several jents,I know knot but some of them fel in love with me. considerations.
It's a complicated and
I expect to know by next Sunday."
· Best Place, July 9, 1856, Insert in a letter from the distaff dangerous game. The
side: "Merinda, I am so sorry to hear that you wore sick. I universal advice for would-he
know how to pity you ro have to lay in bed' and fight flies, options players: look ' helore
leaping.
though I have not had to do it thissuinmer ."
Waugh Bottom, September 7, !856, William J. Taylor to
Henderson Price : "Produce will be high here this fall. The
Lord knows if it gets much higher it will go to the moon. All the
chance I know is to lay low and maybe if some person does not
come along and bid against me 1can buy what there is here if
LADIES &amp; MENS
you will furnish the dough." ((Note : Corn was 50 cents a bushel
and they were trying to buy produce to load a flat-boat to
, b ''•'t.ltl ,~ ,, , l.''l'• i.tJ•) .JJ 11rrtEi. 1·
speculate on. )
Swan Creek, Sept. 28,1857, Taylor to Price: "Iwassorry to
...·.·~· .
hear of you losing your horse. If you want to do some seeding
12 oz. Superior Vac. Pkg.
'
while I am digging potatoes and picking apples come and get
one of mine to work with yours." (Note: that would be a long
'
'
f• •J
ways to go).
Swan Creek, Aug. 22, 1809, Below is the postscript to a long

•

writer for less than it costs on premium minus commissions
an exchange.
without being forced to buy or
With the stock in hand, he sell stock.
can keep it and hope for a
But this is just the start of
further price rise or sell. the possibilities. The listing of
Selling gives the option buyer put options for the first time
his profit alter su bstracting on exchanges means that
his premium and commission investors can trade options
looking for a profit only on
costs.
While the call option holder · fluctuations in premiums.
is looking for a rise in stock
Call users obviously have a
prices, the put option holder headstart understanding put
is looking lor a decline ...: or options but even the . exat least has protection perienced options player wlll
against it - So he can sell his have to digest a new set of
stock for more than it is strategies opened up by using
puts and calls in tandem.
worth.
When the underlying stock Buying puts and calls in the
ptice falls below the striking
price. the put holder can
force the put writer ro buy his
stock, sparing the holder the
full brunt of the stock price
decline after figuring in
premium and commission
CO$tS.
On the other side of the
traMaction, the writer of puts
and calls makes his mbney '
when the option buyer
guess~s wrong . If the
underlying stock price
doesn't go much over the
striking price in the case of
calls or much llllder in the
caseofputB,theoptionwriter

t'ANTY
HOSE
3 Pair '1

.

TUBE
SOCKS
Pair

2I 89~

"16 OZ. PKG.
·

'1'

Simon's
Pici&lt; -A-Pair
, ,_~omeroy, 0 .

Bag

ANY SIZE

13 11 • 14" and 15 11

p1
us

Rec~ppable

Casing and
ti Oc Fed. Ex . Tax

eigs Tire Center, Inc.

is
he wrote won't
he ~xe rcised by expiration
J
F
lA99 - ';.;1,;,01;....-;o~h:;:n.;.;:u:;:ll.:;l';,:'~·'llr.;.·
. ·ter tpockets the · 1..;,;,;&lt;~o~
_,.:;Po.::,::m:,::e;:,:ro:.ly~,,:;:0;;.·..I
an d. th e wrl

25~

~

CARROTS •••••••••

2 25e
Pkg .

9 oz. COOL WHIP•••••••••• ;.~ ••••••••••• 694 box
lib. Crisco Shortening •••• ~••••••••••••••••• 65'
\

.

12 oz. Hormel Canned Spam ••••••••••• '1.G9
3

oz. Armour Potted Meat

'

............ 2/41•

10 o~. Castleb~ry
Hot Dog Chill w/meat~........

$1195

•·

VELVEETA
$219 6 OZ. RED
RADISHES..
CHEESE SPREAD •• ~~!.. ·

BOYS

·2

'14 Lb.

PARKAY .
MARGARINE.....
2 Lb. Kraft

REGULAR PASSENGER
TREAD RECAPS

~!e~ption

,, ... '" . 994
HOMEMADE HAM SALA ·············•.
•
SLICED BACON. .....................;·•····

•........ 2/59'

46 OZ· Welchald Grape
'

20 oz.
Teen Queen Peach, whole or·
18 oz. Smuckers Blackberry

Cancer crusade -«
set for April
Store Hours:
Mon.-Sat. 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

The April Cancer Crusade
Mrs. A!UI Colwell presented
Middleport will be con- a program on federation and
dieted by the Middleport foundation of the club. She
Business .and Professional talked about new laws
Women's Club.
dealing with equal rights for
At a meeting of the club women, and scholarships and
Monday night at the grants available to women
Columbia Gas Co. office, who desire to further their
Mrs. Grace Pratt was ap- education. She noted that
JX&gt;inted to head the crusade. warn en need not be a member
Several members wUI attend of the club to receive
the 50th anniversary of the educational assista nce.
I.Jlgan Club to be held on
The fi nance and memApril 17, and they were bership committee gave
remin&lt;led that reservations reports. Mrs. Barbara Knight
must he in by April!O. Cards · was a guest. A silent auction
were signed for Mrs . Nellie was held following the
Vale and Mrs. Freddie meeting and refreshments
lbudashelt, both ill.
were served.

In

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
NO SALES TO DEALERS
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

RACINE - New officers
were elected at the recent
meeting of the Racine PTO.
Elected were Mrs. Jan
Cardone, president; Mrs.
Unda Diddle, vice president ;
Mrs. Sue Ann Beegle,
secretary; Mrs. Pam Diddle,
treasurer; ·and Mrs. Linda
!biter, reporter.
Mrs. Libby Fisher presided
with Mrs. Barbara Dugan
leading in the pledge and
lnrd's Prayer. Speaker was
Louis Vaughan, juvenile
dlicer, who talked ol the
juvenile problems in Meigs
County, their , causes .and
P,ssible solutions to some of
il\e problems. The PTO voted
to give $10 t.il juvenile

authorities toward the cost of
the tennis court improvement
II' some other project.
A report ~f the auditing
oommittee was given. It was
decided to give fir st, second
and third place prizes In each ,
classroom to the winner of
the membership drive con·
test. First price will be a
siiver dollar, second, 75
cents, and third; 50 cents. The
second grade won the room
oount.
At the April 18 meeting the
second grade will have the
refreshments. There will be
installation of the new officers and a cuhural arts
program. Donuts, coffee and
Kool-Aid were served.

69

T-BONE STEAK •••••••L!·•••
USDA CHOICE
$ 49
SIRLOIN STEAK••••••L~·
•••

USDA CHOICE

PORTERHOUSE

STEAK ••••••••••••.•••.• ~~o

$ 79

••

I

•

t::x::::::::::::::~::,~:::~::::::~:::::::::;:::;,;,~:,:,,:,:,:,:,:,:,:::;::::&lt;':':':':':':'::::::::;:::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::'1:

1\l

q
1~

Helen Help

:;1

US. • •

\\\

I

By Helen Bouel

,
Ertravagance Is Out, Out, Out!
Pear Helen :
• Those "little parsimonles" columns tickled my fancy. I
!bought of them the other day when my temperamental
tefrigerator.went on another freezing binge, and ruined a pint
Gl mayonnaiSe.
·
' Iristead of throwing the "separated" stuff away, I beat an
egg, s.ome vinegar and lemon juice and a lew spices i~ my
blender, then added my runny mayo, drop by drop as the
blades churned.
Result: · rf~constituted mayonnaise, w.hich tastes better
than the original. - SAVlNG SAIDA

USDA CHOICE

$ 19

TIP STEAK •••••.••••••••L!~ ••
USDA CHOICE BONELESS

CHUCK ROAST•••••••••• ;~
USDA CHOICE
$ 49
RIB STEAK ••••••••••••••••
LB.

Dear' Helen:
Here's another recycled saver:
During !neal times, I stopper one side of my twin sinks,
catching water that would be wasted when I use the spigot.
After dinner, I soak my dishes in this water, before putting
II!em in the washer.
·
• Also when I heat water In a Pyrex pot to make tea and
lnstant~flee,l wash and drop my husband 's eggs in it to soft\1011. Saves electricity (or gas), and we get calcium from the

shell. - E. H.
Dear E.:
OUt here in California drought country, recycled water
isn't a parsimony, It's a necessity! Coastal Marin County
dwellers last month were limited to llllder 50 gallons of water
per day per person - scarcely more tllan a good bath! (And
other central state residents are already getting their ration
notices.)
.
They siphon rinse water to starving plants, put bric.ks or
plastic bottles in their toilet tanks- and flush only once a day;
ahower with less than four gallons instead of the usual 25 or
bathe together using the water finally in their washing
inachlnes.' Rau;s have doubled, and repeat violarors risk a

$ 29
IDAHO POTATOES •.••••••
10 LB.

VALLEY BELL

$ 39

tum-off.

: By summer, unless torrential. rains co~e, we Western
jleople will feel guilty each time we take a drmk -of water,
that is. Latest party Invitations read : "B.Y.O.W. - Booze

2% MILK •••••••••••••:A;•••

We've got!"

• Farmers are suffering most, and consumers will soon
know the bllght. Look for ·hlgher prices on many foods this
year.- H.

+++

pear Helen:
.
, Dtanewentwl.lhmeelghtyears, and then married another
jnan. She still sees me regularly . I aak her why she didn't
ehciose me and she shrugs and says·I didn't propose when her
befenses ~ere down. She loves us both, she insists, but he
1
foesn't klloli' about me. .
'
' Should I cut loose? She's become ahabtt, you see.- STILL
~OUND '

•Dear S.A.:
•

.:

(
Diane might he a dangerous haoit.I'd say: cut loose. - H.

+++ .

; } PERSONAL' to "Communicating but He Isn't": Another
,.ord lor one-way communication is - nagging. Maybe your
lwsband clams up because he can't get a word in edgesie. - H.
:

.

transferred to Pleasant .Hill
Nellie Eblin, Pomeroy, who . Convalescence Home at
s been a patient at Holzer Piketon, Ohio 45661. Cards
cal Center l)as been md letters would be ap!l'ecllled.
.TRAN!IJERRED

BORDEN'S

$ 29 YOGURT••••••••••• !~: ...

JIF

PEANUT BUTTER •••2!~~...

ntes for Mrs.
' f:dythe D. Calvert, M, 110 E.
DINNER PLANNED
t.fainSt., P.omeroy, were Held
The annual spaghetti
~ 1 p.m. Sunday at Beech
dinner of the Pomeroy Fire
ve Cemetery wtth the · Department Emergency
v. Robert Hayden of- Squad will be held Saturday
' .ing. Attending from out ll the fire station on But·
• he co~mty were Mr. and ternut Ave. The charge will
•· George Joachim of be $2 for adults and $1.25 for
Clellan; Mr . and Mrs. Henry diildren. Pie and cake will""
·Joadibn, Reynoldlburg, and available. Pro&lt;"&lt;''''"' h"Om th
bart Cllvtrt and &lt;lauRhter, &lt;Inner will~~~ m tt,, l.utldi~~
Jenay, of Daytm.
fund.

BANQUET

FRANCO AMERICAN

SPAGHETTI ••••••• ;!]!~~
~~·

~~~·

COUPON

MAXWELL

SERViCE HELD.

• 59' can

$

USDA CHOICE

HOU~~·

.

COFFEE

t Graveside

•• •1"

Prices Effective Thru
March 26 1977

Racine PTO elects
new officers recently

I

200 ct. White PuH Tissues •••• ••••• 59''
32 oz. Kraft Miracle Whip S.

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Mar····: ~··~·.:·~·"~:"~"1.;• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . ,

100

$

·

. ;:
:1. I

CRISCO

:~.1

PRIC~

)

W!C

3LB.
CAN

1

Lim ill
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires J-26-77

il

:ll

..

COUPON
·)

. 'I'

&lt;I
. ·I

: ·I'

1

8.91 ~:
Per Customer
~

3 LB.

COUPON

COIJPON ~

OFF REGULAR~ :
·

COOKING BAGS.~~~•.

Limit I Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires 3-26-77

limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires 3-26 -77

. 'I

W/C. ::

: ·) .
·)
.I

LOFTS SEEDS
VEGETABLE &amp; FLOWER
REG. 35' EA.

10/$1

W/C

Lim ill Per Customer
Good only at Powell's
Offer Expires 3-26-77

�8-The Daily Senttrkl Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday, March 23,1977
&amp;'''"

I

PTA helping with
copy machine purchase
The Middleport PTA
meeting recently· at the
Middleport Elementary
School agreed to pay ap)l'oximately 1230 on a
oopying machine for the
-• 1
"''00 '

Mrs. Richard Vaughan
)l'eslded at the meeting
during which time · the
payground project was
discussed. Mrs. . Becky
Drenner reported that a
tether baU set had been or·
dered with Campbell soup
labels, and that Post cereal
box tops are still being
oollected. Mrs. Vaughan
ooted that she had talked to
Asst. S~t Dan Morris about
9eCIII'ing assistance from the
janitors toward installing the
new slide and swings pur·
chased by · the PTA. This
would
complete
the
playground improvement
P"Ogram.
It Wlllf decided (hat there
will be no cu lwral arts
)l'ogram in the Middleport
school this year due to the lost
JJ:hool time and the Jesson
makeup work required.
Mrs. Susan Baer reported
membership of 134, and the
treasurer's report by Mrs.
Donna Gheen showed a
IBiance of 1875.61. It was
ooted that there are still for
sale the giant coloring books
It $3 each.
·
Named to the nominating
oommittee were Cinda
Harris, Cherole Burdette and
Mrs. Baer. They wOI report
It the April meeting with the
&lt;ificers to be both elected and
then installed at the May
meeting. .
Mrs. Vaughan appointed
Mrs. Bernice Carpenter and
Miss Debbie Ohlinger to the
auditing committee, and Mrs.
· Donna Gheen and Mrs.
PhylliS Baker to the by-law
reviewing committee.
Speaking brieily was
Principal Robert Morris who
discussed the new rules of
conduct. To open the meeting
the Rev. George Glaze of the
Middleport Church of Christ
had prayer and Mrs. Car·

penter's first grade led in the
pedge of allegiance:
The room count award was
""n by Mrs. Rose's morning
kindergarten class.
The ~indergarten classes
,.,esented
a "spring fling"
...
which opened with both
dasses singing "When Ducks
Get Up in the Morning.''
Presenting "I ndian
Drums" were Betty Jo Darst,
Kim Kennedy , Chuckle
Jacks, Neal Richmond,
Robbie Jacks, Vinda Biggs,
Tami .Hoffman, Mike Will,
Roger Snyder, Billy Gilkey,
Brenda Hawley, Paul Kent,
Carl Nicholson, Kim Braden,
Sha·wn Sch uster·, Heather
Thomas , . J aso.n Drenner,
Chris
Barker,
Cathy
lBudermilt, Tammy Hawley,
Amy Blake, Leslie Gilkey,
Jeff Jeffers, Anthony Rowe,
Angelia Rowe, Genna Miller,
Todd Hood and Stacy Ed·
wards .
In "Peas Porridge Hot"
were Shawnns Johnson , Luke
Burdette, Kathy Thomas,
Terry Fields, ChriS Becker,
Ada King, Mathew Gibbs,
Leslie Carr, Tim Jones,
Lauria Wayland, David
Jacks, Jody Taylor, Jody
Custer, Nil&lt;ke Whitlatch,
~aphanie Acree, Shannon
Coates, Kim Chadwell,
Melissa Woods, Mindy
Spencer, Randy Bunce,
Carolyn lllam, Tina Kauff,
Brett Lilt, Matt Baker, Susie
Pullins, · Brady· Johnson,
Traci Wright, Jeff McElroy,
JeaMie Spaulding, Phillip
Richmond, Patty Martin,
Martha Nelson, Ja ckie
lBrge, Ronnie Powell, Shelly
&amp;nith and Michael Southern.
All of the children sang
'Tm ALittle Teapot" and the
litit, "Wheels of the Bus" was
given by Michael Southern,
Todd Hood, Stacy Edwards,
David Klein, Clise Melre and
Nikki Whitlatch .
Safety posters were on
display at the front of the
room. These had been made
by the fourth grade students.
Refreshments were served.

POLLY"$ POINTERS
Polly Cramer

Baking soda rids
melted crayon spots
DEAR POLLY- Acrayon had storage space hidden
that had been used to touch from view. After this was
up scratches on furniture was done I realized how helpful it
left in the pocket of a perma· would be to have shelves
nent press shirt that went under there so I found two
through the washer and identical cardboard boxes
dryer. Now all the wash has , and glued the sides together
brown stains on it and I·have and then wrapped it all with
no idea how to remove th~m adhesive backed paper. Then
and would appreciate some I had my neat shelves that
slip under the curtained table
suggestions.- TENDY.
DEAR TENDY - The where I store bleach, soaps,
laboratory of a large soap stllrch, etc. I can even keep
products company suggest my ironing basket there out
that when there are crayon of sight so I have a neater
spots throughout a load of looking back porch.
With my trading stamps I
wash that the clothes be
got
a metal bookcase and put
washed with hot water using
a laundry soap and one cup of it on the porch to hold all
baking soda. If spots remain, garden sprays and p&lt;JWders.
they say, dry cleaning is the To make a curtain for it I
only thing left to do. - POL- held a piece of material on
the lop with something fairly
LY.
DEAR POLLY - It is heavy and the rest of the
much easier to mix a can of material hung down over the
frozen orange juice if you things stored on the shelv.,;,
remember to take it out of the so there was a cupboard. I do
freezer the night before and hope some other reader can
place. in the regular benefit from these ideas. refrigerator section. In the TURA.
Polly will send you one of
morning It will be defrosted
her
"peachy" thank-you
and in a liqu,id form that is
cards,
ideal for framing or
. easy to mix with water and
placing
in your family scraphas stayed cold, too. - MRS.
book,
if
she uses your
N.J.P.
favorite
Pointer,
Peeve or
DEAR POLLY - My Pel
Pr.
o
blem
in
her
colmnn.
· Peeve is with the companies
that package cookies, p&lt;Jtato. Write Polly's Pointers in care
chips and snacks so that'one of this newspaper.
caMol see what they are paying for. It is like a grab bag.
You take a chance you are
getting what you pay for but
often do not If you open
sometliing to see the contents
they get angry and abusive. I
find many companies have
such pa~kaged things one
cannot use and some even ac·
TUPPERS PLAINS
cuse you of breaking things '{let the Most from Spring
that are already damaged. - Bulbs" was the program
EUZABETII.
topic presented by Mrs. Glen
DEAR POLLY - If I do not ~out at the March meeting of
always have the things need· the Rose Garden Club at the
ed to serve certain purpooes, borne of Mrs. Frederick
I am always searching GoebeL
around for uscw substitutes
Devotions were given by
and the following are some of Mrs. Doris Koenig with Mrs.
my recentfinds.
Jlnuny Caldwell giving the
My washer and dryer .are verse of the month . For roll
on a back porch. When l call members answered with
wondered what to do with an the name of a leaf used in
old dining table, I put it on the 1rrangements. The special
porch to use for folding laun· arrangement wss provided
dry as it is taken from the l1j Mrs. Goebel. Hints on
dryer. This led to my l.llcking gardening were presented
an old curtain around the md a si lent auction held. The
table with thumb Ulcks so I traveling prize was won by

Spring bulbs
discussed at
club meeting ·

!)

Recent Baptist activities listed

. ··~~~~;»..~:..-..:*,'

Social ~
Calendar

WEDNESDAY
SPECIAL meeting of the
board of trustees of the Rio
Grande Community ·College
Wednesday, 7 p.m. in the
comm unity college office .
Purpose of the meeting is to
select a secretary-treasurer
for the community college.
.RUTLAND Garden Club,
lllme of Janet Bolin, Wed·
nesday, 7:~ p.m. Program
l1j Mrs. Bolin on Japanese
floral design. Margaret
Edwards to have educational
display on spring flowers in
lioom.
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at
the home of Mrs. James
Titus. Mrs. Richard Owen to
review ''Roots."
CERVICAL Cancer Clinic,
Wedne sday at Veterans
Memorial Hospital. For
app&lt;Jintment telephone 992·
3382 or the cancer office,
Tuesday or Thursday, 1 to 5
p.m.
POMEROY · Middleport
Lions Club , Wednesday noon,
Meigs Inn.
POMEROY Chapter 80,
Royal Arch Masons, 7:30
p.m. Wednesday, Pomerov
Masonic Temple .
BOSWORTH Co uncil 46,
Royal and Select Masters,
stated assembly, 8 p.m.
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
THURSDAY
SIGNUP DAY for boys and
girls of Syracuse • Miners·
ville area, interested in
sununer baseba ll, Thursday,
5:30 to 7 p.m. at Syracuse
Municipal Building.
RIVERVIEW Garden Club
Thursday evening, 7:30 p.m.
. at the home of Mrs. Denver
Weber. Co-hostesses will be
·Mrs. David Chadwell and
Mrs. Ernest Whitehead. For
the program will be advice
from an expert and a
houseware party will he held.
TWIN City Shrinettes,
Thursday, 7:3C p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Beulah Ewing.
MIDDLEPORT Chil d
Conservation League, Thurs·
day, 7:30p.m. Columbus and
, Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Mrs. Mary Rose to he the
speaker: Afterwards to go to
the Pizza Shack.' Members
reminded to take bottle caps
for redemption.
MIDDLEPORT Cub Scout
Pack 245 meeting with
uniform inspection to be held
7 p.m. Thursday at FeeneyBennett Post 128, American
Legion Home.
PRE CEPTOR Chal&gt;ter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thursday
at home of Nellie Brown.
EMMA Smith Circle of the
Reorganized Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter Day Saints
will meet at home of Goldie
Clendenin Thursday evening;
a white elephant sale will be
held.
SOUP SUPPER at social
room of Bethany M. E.
Church, Dorcas beginning at
5 p.m . Thursday; vegetable
and bean soup, pie and
sandwiches. Take containers
for carryon\ ; sponsored by
Dorcas Women's Fellowship.

HERB CAPEHART

Revival
to start
Evangelist Herb Capehart
of Leon. W. Va., will be the.
guest speaker at a revival at
the Faith Baptist Church,
Mason, March 28-April 3 at
7:30p.m .
There will be special
singing nightly and nursery
services will. be )l'ovlded.
Rev . Capehart is well known
in the Bend area being a
native of New Haven. He has
pastored churches in West
Virginia. Texas and Min·
nesota. He has been
)l'eaching the past 26 years,
spending the last six years in
full time evangelism. He

1'he Executive Board . Becky South, Norma South, past yesr's activities, the
meeting of the Scioto Valley Racheal Lefebre, Clara choir worked on special
Association was held March White, Sadie Carr, Sylvia music that wUI be )l'esented
I at The Good News BaptiSt Zwilling, Donna Spencer, on Easter and during the
Church in Gallipolis.
Paul, David and Bob Dailey. revival to be held AprU 11-17.
Attending from The First
The next meetin~ will be Some of the music will
Southern Baptist Church of held April 18 at the home of . reature Gary Basham Jr.
Pomeroy were Rev. Paul ~Ma Spencer.
accompanying himself on the
White, evangelism chairman,
guitar.
and Hershel McClure. At·
The Home MISsions Week
Alter the workshop Janet
tending from The Faith of Prayer frog ram was Matthews mdDonna Spencer
Baptist Chruch of Mason, W. presented by the Baptist 1¥!8lsted in serving mresh·
Va. were Mr. and Mrs. John Women's group at The First ments of cookies and Kool·
Pauley and Paul Wears.
Solthern Baptist Church on Aid to Kathy Adkins, Silndra
March 16. The program )'oley, Karen Spencer, Rena
Women of the Pomeroy expl$ined phases of Home 'Lefebre, Debbie Pickens,
First Southern Baptist Mission work with special Cindy Patterson , Julia
Church on March 14 met at language groups and work Spencer, Jean McClure,
the home of Carolyn Dailey, llith the deaf. Special music . Cheryl Lefel)re, Becky
)l'esident, who served as was also presented by the South, Angie Martin, Gary
rmderator. They discussed a ladies.
Foley, Curtiss Spencer, Gary
Sunday church bulletin,
The Annie Armstrong Basham, Jr., Gerald Spen·
plann.ed a spring work . Easter offering, used for rer, Bill McClure, Ralph
session and a monthly Bible &amp;me Mission only, has been Matthews and Eric Spencer.
~udy to be held in various set for 1125, to be taken
The Senior High Youth
homes, and finalized plans through the month of April. class, with Clara White ,
for the Week of Prayer Taking part on the program teacher, won the attendance
Program. Mrs. Dailey served were Donna Spencer, Dlara !Boner of the Sunday, School
refreshments and tea to Lena White, Racheal Lefebre, with· I t-attending Sunday
Basham, Janet Matthews, Sylvia ~willing, Sadie Carr, School March 13. This group
Carolyn Dailey, Lena Is for youth in 9th through
received aBA degree in Bible Basham, Janet Matthews, 12th grade. There were 66 in
from North Western Bible BeckY, South and Norma Sunday School on March :11!.
College. He is married to the South. There were . 35 at·
A training clinic for leaders
former Betty Shinn of Leon tending the program.
of
Royal Ambassadors, a
md they are the parents of
P"Ogram
for boys was held
A music worksh~p wss h~ld
four children.
for
the
Youth
Cboir
of
The
March 19 at the First
The Faith Baptist Church is
)l'esently meeting in the Steel First Southern Baptist Southern Baptist Church of
Workers Union Hall on Church of Pomeroy March 18 Pomeroy, with Gary Conkle
Railroad Street between It the home of Mr. and Mrs. of the First Baptist Church of
&amp;rton and Pomeroy Streets, Hershel McClure. After Logan wbo serves as the
Mason. The public is invited. )l'Qyer and a report on the Scioto Valley Association

The Junior Hfllb Sunday
School class of The First
Southern Baptist .Church had
a bowling party In March 19
at the Pomeroy Bowling
Lanes. Donna Spencer,
teacher of the class •'
chaperoned. Attending were
Robbie Davis, Gerald
Spencer, Billy Foley, Kim
Basham, Sue Taylor and '
Kathy Adkins.

Joan Darling is
queen of dire~tors

SEATTLE (UPIJ -Seattle
Seahawks' wide receiver
Sam McCullum will undergo
surgery to repair tom
ligaments and cartilage in his
left knee, the "m:L club
announced rue'sday. '
McCullum was injured In a
pick-up basketball game
Monday. Surgery will be
performed by Dr. Ivar Blrke·
land Thursday afternoon at
Swedish Hospital in Seattle.

'
'•

•

PAST Officers Club Racine
Chapter 134 OES Thursday at
the home of Mr. and . Mrs.
William Stewart, II Fremont,
Athens.
MEIGS Christian Women's
Fellowship, Thursday, 7: 30
p.m . at the Dexter Church of
Christ. Fumiko Jwa sa~i .
Japanese exchange studen\
at Meigs High Scbool, will
)l'esent a program.
FRIDAY
SP AGH ETT I di nn er
Friday, 6 p.m. at Portland
Elementary School span·
sored by PTO.

1'

COMPARISON
SHOP
•••

RECENT VISITORS
REEDSVILLE - Mr. and
Mrs. Roscoe Hollon of
Chelter an d Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Sellers of Columbus
were recent visitors of the
Otis K. Casto family. Ml'll.
Pauline Brell'er alSo' viSited
them on Saturday evening.

OVER YOUR CUP OF COFFEE

Pamper your feet and spare your car ••• shop the
best buys befo~ you leave yoUr house. Shop the

Daily Sentinel.
Mrs. Bowman, and Mr s.
Leota Massar won the door
prize. Relreshments were
served l1j the hostess to the II
me(Tlhers and a guest at·
tending.

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

~

'·'

Jessie White, lecturer.
Mrs. Clara Paulsen and
James Smith were reported
Ul. The literary program
in c luded readings,
'·' Thr~shold of a New Year,"
11! Vada Hazelton; "Let's
Look at Ourselves" by Bob
Reed; "Quotes" by Mrs.
White. There was a ball game
with Mrs. Quivey and Leo
~ory as caplains. Questions

'

f

.I

Grange enjoys Easter supper

,•,

The annual Easter supper
of Hemlock Grange 2049 was
held recently at the hall. 1
C(Jillllunications were reaQ
from the state grange by
Master stanford Stockton.
The grange banquet was
discussed. It will he held on
A)l'U 15 and tickets may be
obtained from Mrs. Helen
~vey. Those who desire to
participate in a talent show
are asked to contact Mr..

'

SATURDAY
POMEROY Firemen's
spaghetti dinner at the fire.
station, Butternut Ave.,
serving 3to 7 p.m. Adult price
is$2, children , $1.25. Pie and
cake available. Proceeds will
~ into the buDding fund.

:-:-::::::::::::::::::::::·::::::::&gt;:·:·:::::·:::-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:;:::·:::::·:·:·:·:::·::::::::::::::·:·:·: :·:·:·:·:·::::

Brotherhood Director as
leader.
A councilors training
sesslm is plamed for Aprll
3l, where Mr. Conkle wUI
again lead the study.
The organization of an RA
group sponsored by the
church is in the plaming and
will be formed 11000 with
Gery Baaham as director.
Attending were: Rev. Paul
White, Gary Basham, and
Gery Basham, Jr.

-,;\

~

9- 'T'he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o.. Wednesday, March 23, i977

By VERNON SCOTT
HOLLYWOOD (U P!)
The chauvinistic world of the
motion picture set - where
the director traditionally is
king ~ has a brand new
queen this year in the person
of Joan Darling.
Darling, a petite brunette
actress and television
director, is making her
feature film debut dlre,cting

crew I could 'iind."
Theonlywomen,otherthan
actresses, on the film are
involved in wardrobe, hair·
dressing, makeup and script
supervision, the traditional
female film jobs.
Steven Spielberg, who
directed "Jaws," told Joan to
notice where she stood while
she watched the rehearsal
and then put the camera

"F1rst Love."

there.

,

RUTLAND - Mr. and Mrs.
&amp;eve Snowden of Cincinnati,
former Meigs Countians, are
amouncing 111 e birth of a son,
Steven Micllacl, Feb. 8.
Snowden is th e form er
~ate Farm agent in Meigs
County and his wHe was
formerly employed at the
Southern Ohio Coal Co. They
resided in Middleport before
moving to Cincinnati.
Paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs, Carol!
&amp;lowden, Gallipolis, and the
maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Taylor,
Gallipolis. Mr. and Mrs. Roy
&amp;lowden of Rutland, and
Mrs.. Harry Osborne of
Pomeroy
are
great·
grandparents.

·

'

~allon 4·.

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Boston Roll .. ..... lb.
Boneless Beef
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Rib F.ye Steaks .. lb.
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~~~:

Buy l-Ib. Deli Meister
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l-Ib. Potato Salad FREE

8·01 .
Pti9•.

RUTLAND - Mr. and MtS.
y S!XIwden entertained at
eir Rutland home Sunday
th a family dinner.
' Attending were· Mr. and .
1 ~. Leland Snowden who
•a-ve bee~ here from Paines·
e several days visiting the
wden s, Mr. and Mrs.
~
rles Simpkins, Charla,
, Iissa
and
Chuck,
; umbus, weekend viSitors,
•Orld Mr. 1nd Mrs. steven
~1no1J4en . 1an,d, ¥ichaei ,

' II

1
I
I

'C)
Kroger
"·I
I "·
1
CoHage Cheese 1
1

1
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····"·69c

I.IMIT I CTN. , .. COuPOf"'

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-· ~ ---------·

TOTALSATIS, . (tlciN GUAIAJrrttU
Wo H-WIIIIWO A4vMI .. . If ~ ol,..t.W. • • .
IIYI to (e ~tlltl;lll . .y...tl qyr tolllrol ,lwo I~IIOYI
of '" "-•rthllli tpoclol , we , . .lfhvie • ' '"' '
,.,.... ltrofltl ltl • t lll'lll•r ...,.,. or 1+~• ,ov .:
lAIN CHICII lot tho e.t..otlo... opod •l ot th•
•11ecl•l ~rlt•
ll l!lo within :tO ti•P • Wo
Q.,.ront- What We So li. II 1"" ••• , • .,
tlln•ll"ld wll~ • Jttetor IIIIF&lt;hlllto,
will
••11l«• '•~• ll•m oo r ol~n.t yowr rnonoy.

•"'I'

w•

1oC

G«~ '81Mi
~ Sftt.eial4
49
Top Soil ......... 40 81~9 5

[!!]'
KY

D'Anjou Pears,
Red or Golden .
Delicious Apples .. Each

~:~o::~i~.~.l 0~~:~$129

II

Ct" .

WITH COUPON

MIX OR
MATCH

13B SIZE WASHINGTON STATE

IOFOR$ 1.00 '

·lb.
Pkg .

rene r1es...
I
M0 rt0 n
1 ,..,.."_'_"'"'' r;'l
·-~'l-~'!".!~~L:.J Donuts ······· ··· ·· ·· ····"'I·
~·k···
-·••••••••••••
Spotlight
Bean CoHee

Sliced Into
Pork Chops .
SLIC£0 .. . lB . 69'
Whole
Smoked Picnics ..tb.

s.••.

! Wheat Bread...... .

Morton
---------.
·----------·
. . . 60 OFF ,, Pot P1es..'......
II

$119

Kroger Sliced ,
·
1
Luncheon Meats. ;i.~'·

10' Off LABEl

Crest ·
--------------------·~· 20• OFF " : T00thpaSte ,... ....
ttltU111U.1111111UICUUt71

. .CT Tl.lfft-..:nlrtl LICII. TUD

V'
I

U.S. GOV 'f GRADED CHOICE .

$149
$169

SPICIO OR PICKLE

Jr. Size Heinl :
Baby Faod 1

I

Full Cut Boneless
Round Steak... ... lb .

BOlOGNA . SALAMI , OLD fASHION ,

I

i117Vtt ·01, lAB

:

I

Kroger Meat
Bologna ..... ,.. ..... lb .

:

.110 ltiii'UIOI&amp;illlf

I
I

U.S. GOV 'T

IN THE PiECI::

'

WITH COUPON

1
1

.

KROGERHI-NU2% MILK

ONE QUARTER POR I( LOIN

Frying Chicken
Thighs..............

I

----------i -----ricoif-·71
0
VOitUTEIUTIIIUIAttMM. IIH
nEC! rt IPPllWtl. tTATt I LIIW I.UU

·---

Ballard's
lb .
Sausage .. .. .... .... Roll
Serve 'N' Save
Sl•1ce,. dBaeon ....... Hb.
P.kg .

HOLLY FARMS . U.S.O.A.
INSPECTED GRACE A

Folgers
Coffee

E
UPONPERfAMI LY
UiiVltiSATIIIITilttl!l, lt JJ

SIUCTTOlttUCAJUU.n'l l llt.lliUI.S

' IJ .S.O.A. CHOICE

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I
I

liMI T ON co

GALLON CARTON

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12'1

I

ftltUTIIU.TIIIliiAleiH , li1J
IIIKtTlll""'-ltUUITITt&amp;LIWTUU

3 1

I

-------------·
------.
·--20c OFF
1

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$

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~gL
........ o~~.
!

AIIO till M&lt;MAU Of ONI

SJ

SAG E OR HONEE B

:

•.or. JllltOGII

t

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•
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OF
I
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LIMIT ONHO UPON PER FAMILy

•I• DF
ALL KROGER STORES

MARKET BASKET GRADE AA LARGE EGGS DOZ . 77 '

WITHCOUPON

1

II

PAK PLUS DEPOSIT

,... .IJTIII.t-1 UICUUI11

~~
II~

12 I
II

II I
1P2k·Ol.
1I
I I
gs.
I I liMIT t PIC WITH COUPON liD 17.50 OR MORE PURCHISI1 IliMIT 2 PKCS WITH COUPON liD IUD OR MORE PURCHISE

19

Kroge'r
'"0'
I
"""'""'"""'"'""'''"UD
::===:.-==
c:·==--12 1 Wh't1 e Brea d.......

.,

Thursday , Frida y
&amp; Saturday

~~"~t.2
··

12.1

T · ~l .l·OJ . IOJ

Open 12 to 5 p.m.

PEPSI COLA

!
n

~WITH
COUPON
IIIG 1111 NtcMASI Of OM£

••

650 SHEETS PER ROLL

I

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I

Man y More
Item s Red uced

1

OPEN 24 HOURS A DAY

I

1 _.

Hanging Flower Pots

---------------·------------------------ --------------

:

-··---------·
- -----------25• OFF

lamps

II '

Pint Returnable Bottles
Mt. Dew, Sugar Free or Regular·

12 1

WITH COUPON

1I 1I

: I Pkg.

tllloVT'UI&amp;nD&amp;TIMCIMI, It11
SIIJlCTTiamJCMUITATtll.IWTWI

Coffee Pots

12 I 1 .

II'

DOIS NOT INCLUDI HINTON &amp; WHITI SULPHUR

---·
-------------·
~~ 75• OFF
~~~
AIICITMII'UICIWI Of OM
J.Ll , CJ.I u.c P.U

MASON, W. Va. - The
Mason Faith Baptist Church
was constituted as a church
Sunday afternoon with the
message being brought by
Pastor Cliff Coleman, Area
Missions Director of Jacksun,
illio,
The congregation and
supply pastor, Ivan Cardwell
thanked the 11 churches and
~cial singers whc helped in
the service.
Pastor
Bill Brooks,
Knoxville, Tenn., brought the
evening message.
Regular schedule of ser· ,
vices, preaching 9:45 a.m.
Sunday school 10 :30 and
Sunday night service at 7:30;
Wednesday Prayer and Bible
&amp;udy 7:30 p.m . Everyone is
invited.

EXCEPT CLOSED SAT. MIDNIGHT TILL 9 AM SUNDAY

1
Freeur
. Pleezer 1
Frozen Novelties 1
lllllmlSA111UIIIUCIH.ltl1 r;;t
.ue1"III'IIWl1 nm lllt.ll. TllD L.::.J

I

· no~dens - entertain
ith family dinner

I

4

Cliff Cokman
speaks Sunday

Be l: ::t~ 4 ·8c

ug

I
I
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I

COPYIIGitT "n - THI' IIIOGU CO . !UMS
AN D riiCU GOQO_ WNOAY MAICH 10 .
1•11 THiiU SATUIOA'f M.AIICH U , "17 IN
Wl HSEIVf THE liGHT TO UMII QU ... N·
TillES . NON I ~0~0 TO OUl fiS

J

ladies &amp; Men's
Watches

:
Family Scott : ~
Serv.e 'N' Save
: Save Bathroom Tissue : Save
Wieners

Clorox
Bleach

Q

Sets of Silverware

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

1I 1I

S· OFFLAIEL

OF GIFTS

A .do-your • odwnf • thing
auction was he1 allowing
the meeting. Mrs. Martha '
McPhail and Mrs. Carolyn
Grueser were hostesses.

12 I 1 .

!

I
I
I

Mrsd. DebbfieXFiGnlaw is nMcw
pres1 ent o 1 amma u
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority.
Meeting recently at the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co., the chapter
elected Mrs. Carol Adams,
vice president; Mrs. Kay
Adkins, recording secretary ;
Mrs . Caro lyn Satterfield,
oorrespondmg
secretary;
Mrs . Janet Picken s, city
muncil representative , and
Kathy King, treasurer.
Mrs. Donna Nease, service
chairman, asked the chapter
members to take their
redeemable bottle caps to the
next meetin~ . Mrs. Finlaw
announced the . April 5
meeting will be held at the
borne of Becky Anderson.
Mrs. Debi Buck discussed
pl ans being made for
Founder's Day.
Cultural rep&lt;Jrt was given
by ·susan Baer, president,
and Mrs . Anderson . Old
records were played and the
chapter participated in a
game of "Name that Tune."

;:;

~------------------- I W1

1
I

anclmatl; Mr. and Mrs.
lBrry Snowden, Cincinnati;
Mr. and Mrs. Caroll Snowden
md Annette, Gallipolis: Gary
Snowden, Mar s hall
University; Michael May,
Marietta College; Mr. and
Mrs. James Carpenter and
Jay, Reedsville; Mr. and
Mrs. Bruce May and Debra
and·Homef Parker, Rutland,
md Greg McCall 'of The
Plains.

·,.:.',:

TRUSTEES TO MEET
The Sutton Township
trustees will meet in special
session to review truck bids
Thursday, March 25 at 8 p.m.
;t the Syracuse municipal
tuilding.

1
II

ALL KINDS

:,'

roserved.
The Lord's Prayer opened
the meeting and readings
included "Heart 's GHts" by
Ann Mash; "My Thanks" by
Amber Lohn; "Where Else·•
l1j Mildred Bowen; "Why
Worry" by Mrs. Bertha
Parker. and "God Knows
Best" by Mrs. Donn a
Gilmore.
Garnes were played with
refreshments being served by
Mrs. Powell carrying out the
1i . Patrick's motif.

Use of hospital equipment
was discussed at the Thurs·
day night meeting of the
Luarel Cliff Better Health
Uub held at the home of Mrs.
Iva Powell.
It wsa noted that all
Ill spital beds and walkers are
now in use . The need for a
wheel choir was discussed
by the club members .
Donatims were made to the
Pomeroy United Methodist
Women in memory of Miss
Nelle Bing, and to the
lliilding fund of the Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church
in memory of Jack Wright,
father-in-law of Mrs . Lloyd
Wright, a member of the
cl ub. Mrs. Amber Lohn
. volunteered to purchase food
for bereaved famili es in the
community, . a coninuing
)l'oject of the club.
Birthdays of Mrs. Donna
Gilmore, Mrs. Ann Mash and
Mrs. Marjorie Goett were

New arrival

&amp;Ee:~f~\~ .r:::~:t.:.~~r·~:·: ~,~, ~.: :-, :
1

·.·

{"\\ening.

t

~e unions. "! picked the """'

Club discusses
equipment use

·:·
:;:

:;:
were on emblems o1 the
grange. A candlelighting :::
ceremony by the officers of .:·
thc Gran~&lt;:e concluded the ::::

She joins an elite sorority
Stanley Kubrick had a
consisting of Dorothy Armer, simpler formula: "Get more
Ida Lupino and Elaine l'jlay in sleep than the actors."
The best counsel came ·
the United States and
EID'ope's Lina Wer\muller, from Gene Reynolds who
who wss nominated ,for an said, "Get a good pair of
Oscar this year for ."Seven, shoes."
Beauties."
When she was given the job
Joan, 1!\!!di!)!l wfAAJ'me\JI ,last (lctober . Joan prepared
William Kalt aiicrS'us8n Dey by stud)'lng three or four
through their paces the other pictures a week - love
day, was patient, soft-sp&lt;Jken stories, erotic films and such
and firm in her decisions. The small but successful hits ss
abnosphere
on
the "The Graduate," "Summer
Paramount stage was no of '42" aod "The Paper
different than if a man had Chase."
been in charge.
"First Love" is a modest
During the lunch break, story about a sensitive young
director Darling nibbled at a man 's first serious romance.
salad and reflected on the
Joan says she feels more at
per9Jnal presslD'es she has hQme with this sort of film
encountered so far in this than , say, "Patton. "
male dominated field.
Does Joan foresee, the
"There's .a n internal possibility ol a woman
struggle that gives me an odd director joining such
feeling about being boss," she legendary figures as Frank
said. "! wondered whether Capra, John Ford or George
people on the set found me Stevens?
unattractive since I've
"Not really," she said.
become assertive.
"But I don't think any of
"I was brought up to today's male directors will
believe successful women are either . The oldtimers used to
pushy, tough, strong and as work every da y, making
aggressive as a man. I picture after picture. Today
debated if it was possible to they rarely make two a
be a pussycat and a general year."
Joan, a native of Boston,.
at the same time when I
began directing.''
has been married to writer
Joan got her start directing Bill Svanoe for 11 years. And
the pilot and first 22 episodes while she enjoys directing,
·of the "Mary Hartman, Mary she wouldn 't .think of
Harbnan" serles. Her Mary abandoning her acting
Tyler Moore segment, career.
"Chuckles Bites The Dust"
"There's not a chance of
won an Enuny.
that ," she said. "I'd rather
She went on to direct find a good acting role than
episodes of "Phyllis," "Doc," dlre.ct any day."
"M-A.S-H" and others. A TV
episode may cost $100,000.
But a director plays with
milllons on a feature.
NOW YOU KNOW
"I became conscious at the
AlUla
Edson Taylor, who
end of each day 's work that I
oouldn't
swim, became the
was uncomfortable with my
first
person
· to go over
role as woman and boss, sort
Niagara
Falls
In a barrel on .
of like I was wearing the
Oct.
24,
1901.
wrong clothes.
" I was standing face to face
with men and making :·:·:·:·:·:.:·:::·:·:·: ::·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:.:·:.:::::::::::::::::::::::::·:-:-:
decisions without being
50's DANCE
conscious of the !act that I
" Rock Around the
was a woman. That had never · Clock" \\ill be the theme of
happened to me before. I'd 8 SO's dance to be slaged
always been keenly aware I beglmdng at 8 Saturday
was a woman in \ all my night in th e archery
dealings with men.
building 11 Royal Oak Park
"But television lfoducers under the sponsorship of
kept hiring me to do the job. the Meigs Jaycees and
Eventually I decided it was Ohio' Eta Phi Chapter of
unimp&lt;Jrtanl that I was Beta Sigma Phi Sorority.
unconscious of being female
Kenny Hysell who was a
while I worked.
popular disc jockey for
: "I'm aware of being a local dances In the 1950's
woman after a day on the set wllJ be on hand to spin
because directing a feature platters for the dance.
)likes tremendous endurance Tbose attending, who are to
8nd physical strength. You he 21 or over, are being
have to put out 100 per cent urged to wear the dren of
i:oncentration and energy the 1950's but It is not
nery minute. You can't let required. Advance tickets
~wn.''
or those purchased at the
~ Joan Darling doesn't think door wlll be '-'1 a couple.
tenns of wo.!Pen's lib. At Prizes donated by the Pizza
.:n=.doe~Jl't talk abo~ Sh¥ek, Jimmy's Pastry
SMp, Marguerite's Shoe
~ She hasn't encountered re- store, Baker Furniture and

Debbie Finklw chosen
: : new sorority president

,•,

Krogttr

CEOICIAbl ,

Buttermilk .....
IUTTIIMILK

%·Gol.
Ctn .

6

o• HOMES TYU (10-CT.)

Kroger
•
•

.

BISCUitS .... '

I·Ol.

Tub••

'

50

1

·lb.

Mar e Chips
Bog
Michigan Peat40 81~9
PINE

Bark Mulch......

3 ~~:

$179

$1 69

$219

•

�"-::::--n~;;;S;l
.
c
hrg~r
Trade
Through
The
Sentinel
Want
Ads
CHARGES
2d8)'5

Uuih
1.00
1.50

3 Wi)'S
tida)'S

I.OJ
J.OO

hla)

Auto Sale!

Pet. for Sale

I~W'unbi.M· Undrr

"''
'"
l .7S

Eadl Wl•rJ Ull\'1" ti lt.' 11\lnlmwH 15
wottb is ~ l't'nls pt"r wunJ Jk!f W!y.
Ads runnm~ Ollwr Lhan t'onst't'l.lliw
t.la)'.!l wall bt&gt; dliir~etl at tl~ I day

RISING STAR Kennel Boarding,
Indoor-Outdoor runs . grooming
oil breeds. dean sanitary
facilities . Cheshire. Phone (614)

367 ·0292.

Mubik! Home-sales IIJK.I Yard Soil it's
Hrl:! !lt,'c-epled unl)' wi,th cash \!o'lll\

unlt'r. 2:i t:t'nl l'hargt&lt; fur ads l'al"rying Box. Num~r In Cttl't' uf Tht' St:n·
lint'I.

The Pullli.sher n.&gt;sel'\les tilt•

ri~ht

tu t'(lit ut' r·cjeL11111)' 11ds dt!t!llll'il ubjt~\'tiotU!.L T he Pubhs tlt'r Will nut bt&gt;

resputtslblt' fur rnort' them unt· illl'Or·
l~l1 Ulliei"I IUII.

Phone 992-21~

CASH paid for oil mohs and
models of mobile homas.
Phone area code 614--423·9531 .

__

__,_

----

---~

TIMBER . Pomeroy Forest Products. Top price for standing
sawtimber . Call Kent Hanby·,

I-••6-8S70.

'

638·53•5.
uSED HOOVER Sweeper&amp;, $24.50
cosh or terms. Call992-51.&amp;6.

CorNS, CURRENCY . t~..;-ns ~~jd
BROWNING EAGlE C.B.
olo·
pocket watches and chains,
tion. Phone 992-Sl"'B.
silver an d gold. We need 1%A
cond•·
and older silver coins . liuy, sell, i975 HONDA-XllOO,
tion . Pric.d $300. 1976 ZSO Hon·
or trade' Call Roger Wamsley.
do mini-trail , excellent condl.
U2·2331.
tion . $300. Phone992-5606.

ao ••

g;;oo

1972 CHEV.IMPALA CPE .
Si89S
V-8 au1omatic, power steering and brakes, rad io, good
tires, 2 tone green .
1971 BELAIR 4 DOOR
Air, V-i , ,4utomatlc, power steering and
1972 VEGA 2 Door
• cylinder, automatic,

MonW.y

CASH!!! for junk cars . Frye s
Trutk and Auto. WRECKER SER VICE! Phone 742 -2081 .

---·

OLD FURNITURE . ice boxes . brass
beds , etc .,
comp l ete
households. Write M . 0 . Miller ,
Rt . .4 , Pomerov. Ohio or call

Tu~stltiJ'

ll1111 find&lt;1y
~P.M .

lht' d!ty bt-fort' pulJht'HtiOn

992-776/J.

Sw1day
~P . M .

Friday ahi!rnoon

NOTICE ,

Pratt's Meat Mkt.
(Pleasan ton Meal Processing.
Inc.) Cus tom sloughtefing, and

procE!ssing. Re tai l , Wl'\o lesole.
No oppo inment necessary. Call

(614) S93·86SS , hours. 9:00 till
6:00 7 Pomeroy Rood . Athens ,

Oh.
GUN SHOOT at the Racine Gun

1 pm

Assorted meats .
~ACINE

FIRE Dept. wi ll hove o
Gun Shoot every Saturday night
6 p.m. at their bu ild ing in

Boshon , Ohio.
MILKSHAKES, THE old-fashioned
way . Dairy Isle, Middlepo rt.
Golden Buckey e members 10

IF YOU ha11e u service to offer,
wont to buy or sell something ,
oe looking fo r work . . . or
whatever ... you 'll get results
foster with o Sentinel Want Ad.

Coll 992-2156.

LARGE YARD Sole, Moving out .
l ots of furnitu re , cl othing , and
misc. Somethings for everyone.
Tuesday - Thursday on New
Limo Rood in Rutland .

S695

rad io.

· plori ond AquoiiOP "water
pills". VIllage Pharmacy . 271 N.
........~n d Ave_._M_iddleport.
TWO BOY ':. :2Q Inch bicycl e. baby
bed, 195S ·Chevy 6 cyl inder,
standord; RCA .Victor radio;
nice childrens ciwi~Q$ rang ing
from size 4 on LIIJ. P.hone
742-2078... ~·-HOUSETRAILER WHEELS and tir~s ,
2" i ~ch boy's biMe , C·S Homellte '
cham sow, fW? 2 wheeled
tra!ler fram ~s , f~rew~d , boby
sw1ng-o-mahc, 2 ft . h1gh truck
topper , small refr igerator.
_Phone 992-5947.

Automatic
Transmission Service

FOR SAJ.E

New Co -Op water sof te!'lers, model VC -SVI.
Only $279 :95
1 Good Used Poulan Chain
Save UO .OO on a new
Hotpoint A ~frigerator.
1 Good Used McCullough
Chain Saw ••••• • •••••• $95
1 Good used 40 " Hotpoint

YARD SALE , March 23 , 24, 25,
Route 7 Chester Rood , Pomeroy
~ Cor p orat i on ~its. 10 till4 ,

Now in stock , complete linEof bulk garden seeds and
onion se.ts.

hw.

US

Rang•••••••••••••••• SIOO

....t~~c~~ ~~~~!'~

ToY

NEED A
WATER SOFTENER

, Pomeroy Landmark
·~~Jack

ONE ACRE, 3 bedrm. , 2 story
home, dining room, Iorge both ,
natural gas. Iorge porch . nice
block garage. $20,000. Phone
992·5732.
.. __ __,......,....._

woOD

992·,.25.

CHESTER - 3 "''•' lond, 3

bedroom hoUse, 2 baths , stand·
up shower. storm doors and
w i ndows , wall to
wall
carpeting, refrigerator ~nd
stove. 2 ou!bulldlngs . Pl..-ty of
fruit trees . Very good C?:'ldition. Priced $3~ .000 . Hilton
Wolfe
Salesm an . Phone

9·9·2SB9 .

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

PARTS- LABOR
GUARANTEED

SJOIM .

·DO PI handles interference

WllllliJIIS &amp; DOORS
REPII'EM!IIT

REASONABLE

RATES

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860

AUIIIINUM
SIDIIIC-SOfflTT
1l41TTUWPINit .

~~~~

PUUitt3

3-14·1 m

Superior
Steam Extraction

HER FATH!'I&lt;. NAMED ME
TO RUN THIS COMPA NY,
50 S.HE AND WASH HAVE
GIVEN ME FULL AUTHORITY
TO SPEAK FOF!: THE:Ml

.,.l!oUT THEY 'RE
LISTEN II\!(; IN BY
I~TERCOM · SUH-1~ McKEE'S

OFFICEl

NEW

Sidewalks,

Construction

.J 15 4

Pllfi~IPENT OF

WEST

EAST
6 54
• KQI0754
• AJ983
+9
+8 732
olo A962 '
olo8 3
SOUTH 10 1
• A Q 10 6 3

M&lt;.I&lt;EE INDUSTRIES!

.8 2

Ne·w
&amp;

. 6

Remodeling,

Route 3,- Pomeroy, 0 .

t A 10 5 4
"'K Q 10
North-South vulnerable

DAVID &amp;RICKLES .. ' .

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

'

General Contracting

''

.

Route 2
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Free Estimates Ph. 992-7119
3·11-1 mo. pd .

"The Originators
Not The Imitators"

2·23·1 mo . .

ALLEYOOP

All RIGH'r, I'M

---- -------

UITLF. ORPHAN ANNIE

LITT'-E ORPHAN ANNIE-CO·OP
GAD r LOOKING
AT T"e CtOCK

11,

RealtJ

Virgil B. Sr., Realtor
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 992-3325

No. 200 - 9 lenths of an

dwellIng wj th 2 gar ages ,

7 room house with 112 bath,
out cellar and Jl/~ acres of

downstairs carpeted, this is
a good Investment, close to
mines . Price $50,000.

No. 197 - 1.21 hundreds of

corner location in Pomeroy

BR

possible of

t

Pr ice S2A,IIOO.

at Sl3,500.
MIDOLE PORT

-2

bedrooms, nice bath, large
d ining, 2 porches and level

large garden
to back
lots .

No. IYY -

1.3 acres with
24x60 double wide 4 BR and
2 bath s, close to m ine area .

Price S20.000.
Lovely 3 bedroom
overlooking the river, · fu
basement, new heatln!
system, new wiring an

·plumbing , double lot. Prlc•
$39.500.
804W. Main
Pomeroy
992-2298
After Hours Call
992-7133
CONTACT:
Lois Pauley
Branch Man1ger

lot. Nat. gas. city water.
Sl6, 500.
HARRISONVILLE - New
3 bedroom

brick veneer

home with dining, sliding
glass doors, and forced air
heat . One acre lot on 124.

Want S29,500.
MIDDLEPORT - Good
brick build ing with 3
apartments next to the
business section.
One
furnished &amp; 3 garages.

Only S20,000.
NEW LISTING - Large 3
bedroom frame home with
bafh , nat. gas F.A. furnace .
Large living with wood·
burning fireplace, storm
windows and doors and

large lot for $17,500.
NEW LISTING
3
bedroom block house, bath ,
rural water, cistern, new

Hgls. ONLY 181250.00.
CALL
CLELAND
REALTY TO SELL YOUR
PROPERTY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
Hank Cleland, Associate
9f2-22S9 -992-2561
985-4112

3 olo

4.

Dbl

Pass

Pass

Pass

~015

0 ' STUO'T'tH'
TO DO TO GET

~~~ '!f~~~~E-~,
00 YOU UK£

DII=FERENT
IN DIFFERENT ·

CAUGHT UP·•

I HOP

HER

ALL

R t~T -·

SCHOOI.S··

SURE · · SHE'S ~WElL- ·
801 MOST TEACHERS
ARE O . K . .. • THEY ' RE

·11"1 THERE PITCHiti' -··
TR.YIN ' 10 SMARTEN
UP TH ' KIDS!

(614) 985-4155
Chester, Ohio

2·23·1 mo.

BORN LOSER

garage with good cellar
and large lot In the country.
$16,500.
NEW LISTING - Trailer
lots at Five Points. All set

EXCAVATING. Backh9es, Dozer,
trencher , l ow Boy, dump truck,
trucks , septic systems. Bill
Pullins , Phone 992-2478 day or
night .
'JACK 'S BEE SUPPLIES, Reed~villv,
Ohio. Bee supplies and equip·
ment . Phone (614) 378 -6357.

----

--.-~-

SEW ING · AlTERATIONS :
Upholstering ,
d ra p es
reasonable. 572 South Third
A ~te .,
Middlepor t. Ph one

992·6306.
PIANO TUNING, Lane Danie ls. 12
years ol ser11ice . Ph one

992·2082.
ARTIFICIAL INSEMINATION Ser·
vice. DAIRY-BEEF For service or
information call : TIM RINGER;

AMERICAN BREEDERS SERVICE.
Home 662 -4323 or Answeri ng
Se r~k e . 593 -6244 .
.
WILl TRIM or cut trees or shrubbery. Phone 9-49-25.t5.

WILL do roofing, constru cti?n,
plumbi ng and heating. No rob
too Iorge or too small. Phone
CARPENTER , fl ooring . ceiling.
panelin g. Phone 992-2759.

~OJ'D BW~~ ~~C~

HELEN L.
AND GORDON B.
ASSOCIATES

HAVE PICKUP tfuck, will do houl·
ing. Phone 949-2417, Jeffrey
F. riend .

ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers , toasters, lron111 . all ·
small appliances. l awn mower,
next to State Highway Garage
on Route ZJhone (61-4) 985 3825.
·----~ '.

992·S8S8.

- - - SE WIN G MACHINE Repairs , serELECTRONIC T.V. CliNIC , New
~t ice . all makes. 992-228.4 . The
T.V. shop, Elec troni c T.V . Clinic
Fob r lc Shop,, Pome r o v.
Service ca ll , $5 .95 . Color, B &amp; W
A uihorlted Singer Soles and
antenna systems stereos, etc. .
Service. We sharpen Scissors.
57.2 South Third , Middle part .
Phone 992 -6306. Corry in and EXCAVATING, dozer . looder and'
backhoe work : dump truck s
SoiJe mane .
and to-boys lor hire; will haul
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
fill dirt , to soil , li mMfone and
cav oting , septic systems ,
gro~tel. Cal l Bob or Roger Jefdozer, backhoe. dump 1ruck,
fers. day phone 992-7089,
li mestone, grovel 1 blacktop
night phone 992-3525 or m .
poving , ~1 . 143. Phone I {614)
~

A Texas reader asked us
some questions about the Tex-

as convention . We will answer
some toda y and th e rest
tomorrow.

The Texas convention derived its · name because it was
first played exlensively in
Texas . It was invented by
Dave Carter of St. Louis , one
of the great players of lhe '50s
and '60s .
(Do you have a question
for the experts? Write "Ask
the Ja cobys " ca re of this
newspaper. The Jacobys will
answer in dividuaf ques tions
,, s ta mped, self-addressed
envelopes are enclosed. The

most interesting questions
will be used in this

JACOBY MODERN I

•••
::

own a nice rolling gqlfcourse, 50112 acres, 9 greens, nice
modern club house, outbuilding with all spraying and
seeding equlpmanl, needs some mowing and o lillie.
repair work on golf course. This could be purchuod
with the 113 acres listed above and developed Into a
beautiful 18 hole golf course, call tor appt.

We Need Farm Land
Call Jimmy Deem At 949-2388

.
..

•
.•

: a

·•

•

•

.

•••

.
.•

E GZL Z

DON'T 11-IINK YOU'LL

FRGSH

BE DISAPPOINTED.

QSRC

••

tae Sal At,S P.M.

···••••••·

•

••.

742·2211

ARNOLD GRATE

RUTLAND

lill/l 'l7"1 .. C...... -

AIO I ..... - -

..!.:N~IC~E~Wrt""'n

Ll

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.e
e

············~············~

AJW

CUIW

AZ·

CUI W

K R J ' N

K RJ

OURJE

KRJ'NZ

I· I I

1

AN

IL.L.EGAL..

ENT~I5EIN

_.,1

WH ICH
I~

A .MONKEY
INVOLVED.

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer. as auggestod by lhe above cartoon.

FRGSH

A

"0-[ I I J-0"

.I

•
tt

•

GS

KRJ

Prlnt•n•werhere:

e

e

OURJEF

t

-PIORS
CGEEGIPO ·
.
(Answerolomorrow)
Yesterday's Cryptoqaole : THERE ARE ONLY TWO
Jumbles: lWEET JOUST FORMAL CENSUS
LASTING BEQUESTS WE CAN GIVE OUR CHILDREN. ONE
Yeslerday·s
Answer: Rttponllbfe for laughter In lhe
IS ROOTS, THE OTHER WINGS. - HOODING CARTER
0011~- THE JESTER
.
e lt11 JCial PNNNI SuclM:•h, Jne.

e

,.:

RSEK

HE5 READV 1D lEAVE
NOWL?EN 15E:, A\N o·I

BARNEY

AMEN--

FRIDAY TIL 5 . ~

:•• . . RUTLAND
FURNITURE
- -.
e

•

~
I I IXJ

YERFIN

SRW

byHenriArnoldandBobLee

PAUNC

~

Ruiia'nil

• ••

~ ~~ ®

11 L o N F E L L o w
.
One letter oimply stands for another., In Ihis .sam ple A is
'i
used for the three L's X for the two 0 s. etc. Smgle letiers,
.
.
.
_ ~
apostrophes, the length end formati on of the words are all - - - - - - ,
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
•
CRYPTOQUOTES
.
~

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

Mon., Tues., Wed.
8:00til5:00
Thursday 8 til Noon

' -tff\INfl !l}i f l ~THAT SCRAMBLEO WORD GAME

1--+--l--1 ~

tODLoAngiLinYgC.RYPTOQUOTE _Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR

~

:i

•=~. •

.

THAA ?-

Do 11 yourself, with padding, . S7.i5 sq . yd. With
padding Installed SS.U
square yard.
Call742-2211
TALK TO
WENDEll GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

. .. . ~····
•• ' •
-

'\35 Canal

1, ,,,, ,\ 1

(2 wds.)

Green , gold, red, blue, rust.

Convenient Shopping Hours

••

1 ,

~

PRINTED A =,;1
WORDS UP

-

•

toME WISE
""-~

(Ceylon)
31 Had lunch
.34 Golf's
' Venturi
country
(abbr .)
36 Vamoose!
37 Joining

uE6T~CUZ
1

12 or 15Ft.

l !lil!l&lt;l·····

j

" .. . we
ain 1t

"'--'1 1"

Sq. Yd.
money· saver.

742·2211

14 Word with 28 "The Galloping Ghost "
mill
21 Four qts . 30 Backbone
31 Spry
22 Destiny
32 Champion·
23 Absorb
ship
(2 wds .)
33 Anesthetic
24 Iron
38 French
Curtain
shooting
country
match
25 On the
39
Roll of
bias
26 Auctioneer's . bank
word
notes

30 - Lanka

501 NYLON

CALL M2·2156

Yesterday's Answer

I1JCamef81 1

Good choice colors.

CLASSIFIED$

Racine - Good 3 b.,... . 0 &lt;d dining room , low
utilities, even a garden sO). ..• ced aton1y .11,soo.

ChtSttr - Ever ·dream , of ownl09 your own golf
course? Here's your chance tor you or your trlends to

Everyday

your
attic and
basement.
Stll those
unwanteds
In the

well, garden space. This house Is warm and ready for
Immed iate occupancy, come lake a look lust $18,900.

I :00-Gong Show ·3; All My Children 6,13 ; News B;
Young !1. the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
I :3()-Days of Our Lives 3,4, IS; Family Feud 6, 13; As
The Wor ld Turns 8,10.
2:00-$20.000 Pyramid 6, 13.
2:3()-.Doclors 3,A, 1S; One Like to Live 6, 13; Guiding
Light 8,10.
3:0()-Another Worl~ 3,A,IS; Al l In The Family 8,10;
Antiques 20.
3: Is-General Hospital 6, 13.
3:3()-Match Game 8,10; Lili as , Yoga !1. You 20.
4:00-Misler Cartoon 3; Little Rascals A; Gong Show
IS; New Mi ckey Mouse Club 6: Lucy Show 8;
Sesame St. 20,33; Movie " Lightning Bolt" 10;
Dinah 13.
4: 15--Liltle Rascal s A.
4:3()-My Three Sons 3; Partridge Family 4,8 ;
Emergency One 6; Fllntstones IS.
5:00-Big. \/alley J; My Throe Sons A; Brady Bunch 8;
Mister Rogers ' Neighborhood 20,33; Star Trek 15.
5:3()-Adam ·l2 A,l3 ; News 6; Elec . Co. 20,33 .
6:00-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; Once Upon a Classic 20,33.
6:3()-NBC News 3,4, IS; ABC News 13;· CBS News 8, 10.
7:00-Truth Dr Cons. 3; To Tell fhe Truth A: Bowling for
Dollars 6; Mupr•t Sho•' 8; News 10; To Tell the
Truth 13; Wild Kingdom lS; Almanac 20;
Amer icana 33.
·
7:3()-Ho ll ywood Squares 3;,4; Oh io Stale Lotlery 6;
Pr ice is RightS; Wild Kingdom 10; Nashville on the
Road 13; Dolly 15; MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33.
8:00-Fantastlc Journey 3,4, 15; Welcome Back, Kotler
6,13; Wallons 8, 10; Classic Theatre 20; Masterpiece
Theatre 33. .
o:30-What's Happening 6, 13.
9:00-Best Sellers 3,4,1S; Barney Miller 6,13 ; Hawaii
Five·? 8; Classic Theatre 33; Sandy Duncan 10.
9:3()-.Three's Company 6,13.
10 :00-Wests lde Medical 6,13 ; Barnaby Jones 8;
Honeymooners' Trip to Europe 10; News 20.
10:3()-.ln The Shadow of the Generol 33; Woman 20.
11 :00-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; MacNeil-Lehrer Report
33.
II :3()-.Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Alan King's Pleasures of
Rome 6, 13; ; Kojak 8; Mary Hartman 10; ABC
News 33.
12:00-Movle " Underworld, U.S.A." 10; Janakl 33.
12 :4()-Movle " The Deadly Dream" B.
1:00-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13,

-dames"

'10.95

,UNLOCK~

match. New porches and all new alum . siding and

Chester - 113 acres farm , 80 acres tillable land, nice 2
story farm house, 1 rooms and bath, all hardwood
floors and basement. Barn and other outbuildings, 2
ponds. A nice laying farm priced to go. Located near
Chester. call for Appl.

riqht?

,

Braun 4; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10.

~~

duck"
Russian
city

all

INSTALLED
Regular 114.95

storm windows. FA natural gas furnace and drilled

T une 15; Divorce Court B.

'..:!()-.Lovers !I. Frlends3,15; Ryan's Hope6,13;' Bob

24 "Dead

LjOU

HI-LO SHAG

new built-i n cabinets with bronze stove &amp; retrlg . to

column

and will receive copies of

-::;"::::;J-=::t.:~:-'1''" one
Caesar is
r.
kind

SAVE ON
CARPETING

New Listing - Nice 2 story country home, containing)
rooms and 1'1&gt; bath, mostly carpeted. Kitchen has all

will finish in 30 days for buyer or will sell "as is" . May
take trade. Localod near Chester .

Are

5232.

698·7331.

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

Special - 3 bedroom and atlached garage, total

HOMS, 01..1'1/'P.,

REMODELING. Plumbing, heating'
and oil types of general repair . '
MOBILE Home Repai r , Elec. .
Work guaranteed 20 years ex·
plumbing and heating. Phone
perien ce. Phonv 992 -2-409.

949·2786.

electric home under construction on 1/;z acre lot . Owner

DR IV~

BRADFORD , Auctioneer,
plete Service. Phone 949-2487
or 9-49 ·2000. Racine. Ohio , Critt
Bradford.

949-2786.

only SS500.
IF YOU WANT IT SOLD,
SEE OR CALL US AT 992-

ms.

SEPTIC TANKS cleone~ . Modern
'&gt;onl totion. 992-3954 .

FREE INSPECTION fo r termites!
Any single dwel ling residence
treated for termites, $109.
Southern Pest Contro l, Racine,
Ohio. Phone 9-49 -2803 or
FREE INSPECTION lor termitei I
Any single dwelling residence
treated for termites . $109.
Sou thern Pes t Control , Raci ne,
Ohio . Phone 9-49-2003 or

up ready ' to move on for

EXCAVATING, doier, backhoe
and ditcher . Cho rle~ R. Hal ·
l ie ld
Bock Hoe Service .
Rutlo,nd, Ohio. Phone 7.f2-2008.

742-2348.
Wi ll do odd iob's. roofing, pointing . guller work. Phone 992·
7409.

THURSOAY , MARCH 24, 1977
Semester 10.
6: 15--Farm Report 13.
6:2()-.Not for Women Only 13.
6:30--{)SU Overview 4; News 6; Sunrise Semester 8;
Urban League 10.
6:5()-Good Morn ing , West VIrginia 13.
6:S5--Good Morning, Trl Stale 13.
7:00-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS
News 8; ·Chuck While Reports 10.
7' 05--Porky Pig 10.
1: 3()-Schoolles I 0.
8:00-Howdy Doody 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame
St. 33.
B:3()- Big \/alley 6.
9:00-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4, 13,1S; Mike Douglas 10;
Andy Griffith 8.
9:3()-Cross·Wits 3; Edge of Night 6; Concentration 8.
10:00-Sanford 11. Son 3,4, IS ; Dinah 6; Magazine 8, 10;
Mike Douglas 13.
10:3()-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15.
11 :00-Wheel of Fort une 3,4, 15; Pri ce Is Right B,10;
Morning Show 13; Elec. Co. 20.
11 :3()-Shoot tor the Stars 3,4,1S; Happy Days 6,13;
Love of Life B,10; Sesame St . 20.
II :55-CBS News 8; Ms Flxll 1n
12:o6=-News 3,4,6,10; Secona .C:han ce 13; Name That
6 : 00-Su~r l se

Seaweed
sambar
Land of the DOWN
Yistula
1 Cavalry·
13 Color
man's
(2 wds.)
weapon
.15 Netherlands 2 Dodge
commune
3 Wading bird
11 Jockey ·
t "-of La
Turcotte
Mancha"
17 "Dombey
5 Unearthly
and _ ..
6 MezzoiS Former
soprano
mill!.
of note
man ;s
7 Beef mode
status
19 - out a
8 Imposing
Jiving
home
20 Son of Bela 9 Overeat
21 Lighthearted 12 Unit of silk
22 Theater box
fineness

10·11·1 mo(Pdl

'"""~. k.l 33.

2:1()-.News 13.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
41 Auk genus
42 See eye
Appear
5 Embarrass·
to eye
ment
43 Impala or

TUPPERS PLAINS·- Old
levelland on Rt. 7. Ask ing
$12,000.
RESTAURANT - Here's a
business for a family . Good

an acre with lovely
home , carpeted, I
utility room

2.
5•
Pass

1

12 : -40-Mystery ot u1e IIYt:eK 6, 13.
1:uo- t omarrow 3,4.

spades , where he lost the two
aces held by his opponents.

~

TEAFORD

acre , level gr'ound, roads
on three sides, 12x60 mobile
home plus
an
older

I'VE. GOT

5EE ~5 T\IEV
PO JHI~GS

KID --

Strout
incorporated

AN' IT

fiNE ~ 'COURSE,

AGAit -- · FOHHY
1t0W 1'1'£ COME
TO MISS nifll

w ith .f · bedrooms, double
garage. outbuilding and cellar .
Phooe (61•1 698.S6!J7 or (304)
773- 5759.

NOrtb East

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
It doesn 't happen often , bul
it does happen. If you play a
lot of bridge you will run into
it on occasion. ·Wha4 we are
talking about is . in4erference
with your Bl ac kwood four
notrump.
We won 't go into the merit
or lack of merit of South 's
Blackwood call with today 's
hand. Suffice to say that he
did use il and West interfered
by bidding five hearts. How
can North show how many
aces he holds?
There are any number of
ways but we like to use the
one ca lled DOPI . Thi s
acronym stands for double
with zero , pass with one. We
add that we bid with more

1964-;;, TON pickuP. new ti res,
goa d co ndition. Call 992-3994 .

.. _,

Weiil

12 :0Q-Mov le " Rh~psodv" 1n-

deci sion and went to five

Opening lead - K •

FOlKS SETTER

3 BEDROOM ranCh, Hl baths , 1
acre, oil elec. f inisl-led goroge .
Fully carpeted. F i~t e Points
area . $30,000. Phone 992 -2928
alter 5 p.,m .

-------HOUSE WITH 5 lo ts, both and

than one. Thus, when North
doubles five hearts he isn 't
doubling for penally - he is
doubling lo show !hat he
doesn 't hold an ace . If he held
one ace he would have pas•ed.
With two aces he would have
bid five spades- the cheapest
bid at his disposal.
After North doubled to show
no aces South had a real
problem. He might pass and
defend against fi ve hearts
doubled. This contracl would
have gone down two tricks.
South finally made the righ t

23

. 2
+ K QJ 6

VERY WELL ...THE;N THe
ilOARD WILL COME TO
ORDER AND ELECT A

Kitchen Cabinets, Roofing,
Concrete
Patios,

Young's Carpeting

No Sunday Calls Please
3SIISI mo.

CA PTAIN EASY
WHY If' Mr&lt;:;. I UBB.S NOT HERE FOil.
TODAV'S MEST INGi~ ... SHE'S J.R
McKES'S DAUGKTE~ AND HEII&lt;E55 !

l!RRl,,!!Y~DER

Service and Supplies.

Free Estimates

NORTH
1&gt; K J9 7

IIINDIIWS

NobiiSummit Road
Rl. I
Middleport, 0 ,
. 992-5724
Complete Sales and

__

Gf

1976 Mer~ury 20 h.p. with electrlc start. 1976 lilt troller, plus
other ••tros. S1695. Phone
992-3126, C. P. Riffle,
FISH£A
lu~~l~g ;~ 11 es c..nd
farm lu mber. PHONE Fo(ltnyur
ond Sn tn1vns LumbC;.· (o., Inc.
-RI. 7 Middleporl. Ohio, (614)

fllloci•l A -

949·2660.

742·2S31.

~~~~~~: J4~Pho~! (6t4~:~~~ 5ROOMs: BATH:-~tiliii;s~doubl&amp;

SHAKt,IPEARE BASS 8ool U',

1976 CAMARO 305, 2 borrell
automatic. siiiJer with re d
pinstriping. Stilt under warran ty . Coli 992-5709.

BRIDGE

__9?!·

--·- ___

Creditors are required to
file their . claims with said
fiducl•rv within four months .
Dated fh is 18th day of
March 19'17.,
Mannino D . Webster
Judge
Court of Common Plei!ls .
Probate D ivision
Me i et~Coun ty, Ohio

----· ·- ---- ---

Commercial property opprox , 17
acres , level land , located ot
Tuppers Pla ins on Ohio, Route 1%9 C-HEVEttes$391,~-;-;;;t:
power steering, power brakes.
1. Phooe (614) 667-6304 .
Con tact Lewis Pul ver at
NEW~ 3 bedroo~ house bui lt-in
949·2463, hours after 6 p.m.
kitc hen, bath and %'. Phone
742 -2306 or contact MilO B. Hut · 1974 NOVA, 6 cylinder. p.b .. p.s..
chi son , Rutland . Ohio.
automatic , ~ door , $1650. A
_ _, _ _ ..............__ " " ' - _
steal. Radia l Hres . Phone
REMODELED 5 ROOMS and bath, 1
2S2.::
4·c . _ _
-~!and . Ph~~e 7.f2-2769.__ _
1971 AMC MATADOR, p.s., p.b.,
FOR SALE. AI! alec. nearly new
V-8 automatic, new battery,
home in Rutlan d oreo . Base and front tires. Make s good
ment, 3 bedrooms. attached
wo rk car . $550.
Phone
garage,
$29 ,900
Ph one

2 STORY 4 Bedrm , bric;k home in
3 AND .f RM . furni!hed ond un WANTED : MAN for roofing and
Middleport . Phone 992-3457 .
furni!hed opts. Phone 992 spouting , some duct work .
54:14
.
6 1/ 1 ACR E FARM. 7-;;;ms ,- bath~
Must be able to go ahead with
born , pon d, and furni ture pric ;ob. If interested . write Bo x COUNTRY Mobile Home Park, Rt.
ed all for $18.500. One mile
150. Pt . Pleasant , W. Va. 25550.
33, ten miles north of Pomeroy .
from langsville , Ohio on C.R.
Lorge lots with concrete patios,
Give experience and expected
IOJPhone 742 · 2~£1.
wage.
si dewalks, runners and off
street parking . Phone992-7-479. HOUSE . 6 ROOMS. ood bolh . 6
$200 WEEKLY Possible sluffing
NEW ~ISTING - 3'1• acres
an d three-fourth acres inside
envelopes SEND self-addressed FARM ON river. 51 acres. 7 rooms
of ground In Pomeroy,
city limits . New siding and
stamped envelope to: Edroy ·
and both , Phone- 992-5908.
storm windows, 3 acres fenced
excellent bullalng sites
Mails, Box 188CO Albany, Mo.
SHULTZ MOBILE Home , turnished .
for small pasture. $18,500.
potential. Could alvlde Into
6«02 .•
Like new. hos city water and
13 lots. City water and
Phooo 992· 73S::
2 · -~-LADY TO live in for room and
gos . Phone Albert Hill , Raci ne ,
sewage available. Asking
7 ROOM HOUSE , new carpel ,
949·221&gt; 1.
board for wages . Light
15,8011.00.
roof , Insulation owner flnanc·
Ho usekeeping .
Phone
NEW LISTING In
FURNISHED APT. for rent . Phone __e_d, :~92_
,
_.
_
s•
.
992·39z.l.
Pomeroy older home with
992-3975 or 992-2571 .
1
6 /t acre s, gorden spot , some
MAN TO work on Iorge beet catpotential
for
two
posture , firewood with woodtle form . hperivnce in
apartments . 100K40 lot.
burning s to~e . fuel oil heat ,
operof'ing farm machinery reASKING $8,500.00.
ou tbuildings 2 bedroom house,
quired . if -interested . Phone
LOCATED on old Route 33,
near
hospital
and
town.
985-33-41 , Royal Oak form , Rt. FOR SALE or Trode for other proi
about
5 mil~ out ni ce
$19,500. Phooo992 · S~ -~
perty. Three river lots, Water
3, Pomeroy. OHio.
laying
ground.
10.7 acres,
Street , Syrqcuse . $5500. Phone 3 BEDROOMS home, all elec .. 1
utilities
available,
close to
992-581 • .
both. utility. room by kitchen.
school, on good blacktop
115 x liS lot, l cor garage in
r.-d.
HOOF
Buy , sell , trade
Rutland . Phone 742 -2869.
STOP PAYING RENT or tra in horses. RUTH REEVES,
GEORGE HOBSTETTER, Jr. Reol You can own this newer
trainer . Phone (61.4} 698 -3290.
COAL . limestone, and ca lcium
Estate Broker, Pomeroy . Oh~o .
home for less than you
POODLE GROOMING, reasonable
chloride and calcium brine for
RACINE · 2.46 acres . 3
think . A bedrooms. bath,
rates . Call for appt .' 742-3162.
bedrooms , li ving room, kit·
dust cont rol and specia l mixing
utillfy
connections,
salt for formers. Main Street,
chen . ba t h . carpeting ,
carpeting. Sl8,000.00.
OOBERMAN·PINCHER Pup;,.AKC,
Pomeroy, Ohio or phone 992 draperie5 , tuel oil heat, central
1" week s block and rust . Ears
AN OLDER HOUSE WITH
3891.
·
air
co ndit ioning ,
sto~te ,
cropped . toil cut.all shots .
A
NICE LOOK, - New
refrigerator . hookup lor
Phone 742-2967 otter 5 p.m.
siding, forced air furnace,
APPLES. FITZPATRICK ORCHARD,
washer and dryer. front porch.
STATE ROUTE 689, PHONE
on Tuppers Plains -Chester ·storms, 3 large BR., 1'12
baths, carpeting, paneling,
WILKESVILLE, (6U) 669-3785.
water system. Appro)(imotely
NOTICE OF
basement. Beautiful view
FULLER Brush Produc;ls for sole.
1/t 'J:llle from Racine, Phone
APPOINTMENT
of the river.
Can No. 2205f
Phone 992·3410.
9.49·2589 Pri~ed S15,900. Hilton
AN AMAZING VALUE - 2
Est1te at Effie Davis S1nWolfe, Salesman .
cher Deceued .
or 3 Br., 2 baths, dining R.
1
Notice ts hereby given that
Loafing R. , Living R.,
car garage on Iorge lot in Don Steven T . Sloan of Athens,
Olflce
Bldg. Corner Lot.
Ohio, has been duly eppolnted
_?3~~------ ~ -~~
ville on S.R. 3h. Phone
Excellent
neighborhood.
742·3017.
Administrator of the Estate STEREO , NEW 1\M-FM oloroo
All
for
just
122.000.00.
of Effie Dav is Star cher .
radio combination . $129.95 o~
HOesTETTi R Real
deceas.ed,llU'bf Rt.· l, Por t '
eosy terms : Coll992-3965.
.
GEOR
.
, 1 MORE BUILDING SITES
land, Ohio , Meigs County , · - ·
- ·-· ·- - - Estate Broker. Pomeroy . Oh1o.
- 4.3 acres near Mulb~ rry

Ohio.

1969 CHEVROLET Bisquoine: 1966
BUICK Electra , 225 : 2 Rokon
triolbikes. Phone 9-49 -2.t32.

lllllllltion Stmcts
Iloilo llltiiWIIIUIIicl

Vinyl and aluminum
siding, storm windows and insulation .
Call Professionals

COUNTRY farmland with secluded woods, water ond good oc·
cess in Monroe County . W. Va .
$1 .000 down , ca,ll (304) 772 3102or(304)712-322~~ --

Co.20,33; Adam-12 13.
6'00-News 3, 4,6,B,IO,I3, 15; ABC News 6.
6:3()-.NBC News 3,4,15; ABC Newsl 3; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Veget~ble Soup 20 ; .Lilias Yoga a.
You 33.
7:00-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tel l the Truth 4; Bowling for
Doll,..rtll: Pnn ~rwu:thA Cnnntrv 8 ; News 10; To Tell
the Truth 13; Mayor 's Report IS ; Consumer Surv~a.I_K I I 20; Big Green Maga zine !3.
1:3()-.Dorry J f SlOO;oou- Name That Tune 4; Match
Game PM 6; S2S,OOO Pyramid B; MacNeil-Lehrer
Report 20;33, The Judge 10; Break the Bank 13.
B:OO-Grlzzly Adams 3,4, 15; Bionic Woman 6, 13;
Gunsmoke 8; Nova iO ; Good Times 10.
B:3()-.Loves Me, Loves Me Not 10.
9:1lil--&lt;:PO Sharkey 3,4,1S; Baretta 6: Mov ie ' Possee"
8,10; Dan ce In America 33 ; Focus 13; Soundstage
20.
9:3()-.We Think You Should Know 3; CPO Sh~rkex4.
10:00-K ingston : Conf idential 3,4, IS; Charlie's Angels
6, 13; News 20: Scenes from a Marriage 33.
10:3()-.Montage 20.
.
II :00-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; Ma c· Nell Lehrer Report
33; Mon ty Python's Flying Circus 20.
11:3()-.Johnny Carson 3,4, IS; Rookies 6, 13; Movie
"You Can 'l Win 'Em All" 8; Mary Hartman 10;
ABC News 33.

·--------~ --

Reed sville, 0 . Ph. 378-6250
2·25-1 mo.

LOOK TRIM! Take Al9iness diet

SHOOTING MATCH at Rutland
~ Phone 992-2181
Legion Hall , every Friday , 7 SERVICE STATION for lease. Small
in~t estme nt required . Must be
p.!TI.
1~76 HONDA 750, 17\JU miles , ex oggressiiJe Ond desire to work
ce ll ent condition . Phone
Will CARE for elderly lady in
with people. Phone (304)
985-3919 otter 6 p.m.
pnvote
ho me .
Loc al
342 -8161 for deta ils .
refe rences . Phone 667-3305.
BREEDING
AGED Roglstered Poll·
OWN YOUR own business. Work
ed Herefords, Royal Oak Form ,
THE NEW Owners of o ton fema le
for yourself. Sc!lt you r own
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone
German Shepherd left at the
hours . Rewords ore there for ·
992·2671.
Meigs Co . Oog Pound 3-4
the taking. Call Mr. Ada ms,
weeks ago wou ld like to hove _j_304) ~2·8161.
REGENCY 16 Cha nnel Hi-Lo pol ice
some more information from
scanner . 10 crystals , $150.
it's p re~io us owners . Please
Phone 992 -7748 .
coll 992-7653.
MANCHESTER. #;mole 6
SWEEPER AND Sewing Machines 1973 HillCREST 12 X 70, 3
weeks old,, Also. te rrier type.
Repair, Parts and Supplies.
brown ferT'!.Qie, approximately 6
bedrooms, shag carpel , .•x·
Davis Vacuum Cleaner , IJ1 mile
months old. 1 melle Beagle,
ce llent condition . May re'nt lot'
oil Georges Creek Rood. off
m ake
o
go o d
pet .
Firs! right in Syracuse. Phone
Sta te Rt . 7. Phone (6U)
Housebroken . Meig s Co .
992·3980.
446·0294.
Humane. Society .
Pho ne
1970 12 JC 50 2 bedroom mobile
8-43·3009 or 992·5"'27.
home. 1972 12 x "'5 one
bedroom mobile home .. 20" REGISTERED HEREFORD cows wilh
calves by side. 1 mile east of
new mower. Con be seen at "'93
Rutland. Ohio on State Rt. 124.
Broadway St ., Middleport .
LOST OR Stolen : Beagle rabbit
Phone 992 -2535.
See Hiram Slowter.~
. _ __
dog , license No. 750. Reword
for information leading to the 12 JC 60 WITH 20 x 8 room , total
return of hi~ . Phone 992-52-47.
elec . at Tuppers Plains . For rent
Or992·74 13.
or sole . Phone667-3305.
lOST · APPROXIMATEl V 25 choirs 12 x 60 TRAILER on 2 ce res, sprin g
1
borrowed from the El!'ting
water on natural gas. 55900.
Funeral Home a year ago.
Phooo 992·39S5.
let Pomeroy Landmark
Nome on back . If anyone has
12x50
Mobile Home on 1 acre of
soften &amp; condition your
seef! ,
or
knows
the
land with 26 sq. ft . block
wheorobouts , please call the
water and a Co-op water
build ing ot De•ter. Drilled well ,
funeral home at 992 -2 121.
softener, Model UC-X\11.
dose to mines . Phone 742-2509.
$50 .REWARD to anyone knowing
Now Only•279,95
the whereabouts of tw o
let us test your water
aluminum eJIItension ladders
Free.
and red wheelbarrow token
from luther Sanae residence,
WANTED TO rent w ith possible
long Bottom.
option to bu'f: 50 to 200 acres
W. Carsey, Mgr.
secluded land , some tillable
LEWEllYN BIRO dog , white with
. Phone99l·2181
with inhabitable house . Colum- ·
brown spots OIJer QPtt eye in
bia , Sdp'io, Bedford , or Rutland
Portland . Phone a..!-2581.
Tony
Town ships .
Wr ite
vlci n'ity. Grey
Ru sseg o, 1331 Meadow Rood ,
mole . Phone
Columbus , Ohio 43212
APPROXIMATEl V 7 or B ocr01
wooded land in Rock Springs .
Phone 9'12-2789.

r

brakes , rad io.

WEDN F;SDAY, MARCH 23, 1977
S:OO-Big \/alley 3: My Three Sons 4; Brady Bunch B;
Mister Rog~rs' Neighborhood 20,33; Star Trek IS.
s , ~o - Adam. " 4;. News 6; Family Affair B; Elec.

EXPt.AIN THINGS.

SWAIN'S

~~o~:"~~;;~~:~h-~::_~m_'u_;~L-----------~~
- =-:~
~":__--:;:~-=~:-:-~-~=-~-:.:_-_:::._:.-_: :~.::_.~-~--~ Bissen Siding Co.
Rl!lil Est!~Ie for Sale .
-· _ - _

YARD SALE at the Racine Cor
Wosh by !he Jolly losers Club,
March 2... . 10 o.m. till 3 p.m .
Baby to adult clothing and
some miscellaneous . Cance lled
if it rain s.

per cent discount any pu rchase.

13 1 23 , 30 W 6, 31c

S895

mo~~: i mum diameter · 10 inches MAsSEY FERGuSoN-;;actor with
backhoe and loader; 197&amp; Ford
on largest end,
per ton;
trucM 700 with dump bed, less
bundl&amp;~ slabs $6 per ton.
than 6000 miles, Same as new:
Deli\'ered to Ohio Pollet Com Hydraulic post dri11er , nvw: .tOO
pan.,., Rt. 2, Pomeroy, Ohio.
boles of hoy , mixed: sandwich
Phooe 992:._·:._
268
=
9 ·c.,_~---

WANTED, ONE male goat . Phone
Dennis Rousk , 843 -283.4 .

Noon on &amp;ltuJ'tlay

Sunday,

Hough Skidd'r Model S7~ :
Michigan Model 55Ab: Rebu1lt
Morbork 3-48" Chip·Pac com·
plcte with screen . Contact Den·
nis Smurr . Phone {61.t )

sa.

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

every

Business.Services

WANTED. CHIPWOOD. Poles,

NOTICE

Club

2 SIGNS Pomeroy
OF
Motor Co.
QUALITY

USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT .

n1te.
In memory, C.m.l of Tlwnk.s aud
Obitual')': 6 l't' llls ~r word, J;l.OO
miuunum. Cash m wd\'MIH.'t'.

STRAWBEr\t(IES in baskets ond
flat! now bearing; pansies,
cobbage. lettuce. broccoli ,
cou lifl ower , Brunels Sprou t! ,
onions . Cleland Farms and
Gree' nhou~e .
Gercildj11e
Cleland.

Television log for easy viewing

HE EVEN HINTED HE'D
BE uLAD TO IAAI&lt;f A
GUEST APPEARANCE
WITH Ml!' SOME DAY TO

Auto Sales

l.,utl)(l!

l.~

11- Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , March 23, 1977
nrCKTRACY

CI4ARLE5,
WHAT'S A

Tf.IAT'S AN EXPRESSION

MEANIN6 "ZERO:: IF lf'Ol/R
' GOOSE E66" 1 TEAM DOeSN'T SCORE ANI(
~ OII~IN6 AN INNING,

't'OU &amp;ETA ''600SE E66n

TI-IAT'LL BE 1\.IE
NAME OF OV~
TEAM .. .''THE
GOOSE E665"!

THAT WUZ A
' PLUMB PLJRTY
13LESSIN',
TATER

�12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• ~nesday. Ma rch 23, 1977

UFOs sighted
(Continued from page I)
A Los Angeles Sheriff's helicopter crew - Raymond
Davit, 39, and Theodore Roach, 40 - said· they were
about 600feet over La Mirada Monday night when they
obeerved two lights in the Whittier HllliJ area .
They tried to follow them at 80 miles an hour but the
objects were faster.
About eight hours later, at 3:;10 a.m. Tuesday,
security guards at March Air Force Base in the desert
50 mlles east of Los Angeles reported mysterious
lrighUy lighted objects in the sky.
Nearby, two Highway Patrol officers, Robert &amp;holt
and L. Orchard, noied in their log ''a brigbtllght with a ·
vapor trail" that hovered over the Box Springs Canyon
area north of the air base in Riverside county.
At the same time and 50 miles to the west, Los
Angeles sherllf's Deputies Lonnie Hicks, 28, and
Robert Carr, 34, said they saw a bright light following
another light through the sky over Firestone. A
resident of the area called the sheriff's station to report
the same objects, deputies said.
About 10 minutes later and 12 miles to the south,
Deputy Joon McSorley at the sheriff's helicopter
station a~ Long Beach reported two mysterious !right
. lights eastbound over the airfield.
Another 12 miles to the southwest, and five minutes
later, two objects were reported by police in
Huntington Beach.
About the same time, officers in Ventura county ,
some 60 miles to the northwest, reported similar
sightlngs.
·

Lawyers will

Jamille G. Jamra, Toledo,
President of the Ohio State
Bar Association (OSBA l will .
address the annual meeting
ci OSBA District 17 at the
Meigs Inn in Pomeroy on
Saturday.
·
Diltrict 17 represents 120
attorne ys from Athens,
Hocking, Meigs, Morgan,
Noble and Washington
munties. Jamra's speech at
the evening banquet will be,
Neal Dillon, Logan , OSBA
District Executive Committeeman, will preside at
the afternoon meeting, .which
includes reports on Ohio's
new probate forms and a
legislative and professional
14&gt;date. A member of the
Council of Delegates will also
be elected during the afternoon session.
The meeting is · hosted by
the Meigs County Bar
Association. The Ohio State
Bar Association represents
some 15,000 attorneys
throughout Ohio .

Middleport is beneficiary of 13 offenders
Seven defendants were
fined , one was assessed costs
vnly, and five forfeited bonds
in the court of Middleport
Mayor
Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night.

Fined were Dottie L. Davis,
30, Middleport, $10 and costs,
failure to yield right of way;
sign; Robert H. Remyse, Jr.,
32, Middleport, $10 and costs,
unsafe vehicle; · Larry A.
Smith. 23, Mansfield, $10 and
costs, no signal light ; Harold
Scarberry, 19, Mason, $10 and
coSts, following too closely ;
Ricky Lee "McKnight, i9,
Pomeroy, $15 and costs.
Fined in the court of spinning tires, and Roger
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Atkins, Middleport, costs
Andrews Tuesday night were only, for assault and battery,
Ronnie Eakins, Racine, $50 and ISO and costs, destruction
and costs, no operator's of property.
license; Donald Casto ,
Minersville, $200 and CO"sts,
petty theft ; Kenneth Guinther, Syracuse, $200 and
Holzer Medlcla Center
costs, petty theft ; Karen
(Discharges, March 22)
Guinther, Syracuse, $50 and
Atricia Bailes, , Gusta
costs, failure to report a
crime ; Charles Oliver. Beckett, Regina Brisker,
Syracuse, failure to report a Wendy Carper, Oscar Cunningham, Mary Derenberger,
crime.
Forfeiting bonds in the Betty Fry, Gladys Goulding,
court; were Charles Nease, Denise Henderson. Elherta
Pomeroy, $25, posted on a Jarvis, James Kelley , Jr.,
speeding charge ; Michael Jane Lane, Evelyn LaMing,
Cullums, Pomeroy, $30 , Barbara Lloyd, Linda
speeding ; Brian French , Newell, Mrs. Floyd Newsome
Middleport, $100, leaving the and daughter, . Anna Mae
Shoemaker, Carmel Snyder,
scene of an accident.
Debera Snyder, Harry Swan,
Richard Theiss, Mrs. Michael
Wasch and daughter, An·
nabelle Welch, Mrs. Harvey
Woods and daughter.
(Births, March 22)
Mr. and Mrs . Roger
Ramsey, son, Wellston ; Mr.
and Mrs. Rondall Walker,
daughter, Oak Hill; Mr. and
Mrs. Terry McGuire, son,
Dexter; Mr. and Mrs. Mark
Foster, son, Jackson.

POffiei'Oy mayor
fines several

CHURCH
OF POMEROY
Main and Court St. over

Blue and Gray Rest. April
Jrd at 7:00 p.in .

THE INN PLACE
Thursday Night Special

MAIUE"ri'A, Ohio
- ConVicted
and kicked out the windshield.
coed murderer John Calvin Bayles and
Police ·said Randy Knots, also from
another escaped inmate are less than haU
Belpre, later stopped at the statioo on his
an hour's drive from a West Virginia jail, own volition and admitted breaking the
but it will probably take miles of legal
window. Charges of criminal damage and
documents to get them across the state "# possibly assault were pending,
line .
authorities said .
Bayles, 25, Belpre, and Frank Sheppard,
" It was a case of mass hysteria,"
21, Parkersburg, were captured by
lamented one deputy.
sheriff's deputies from Washington County
Anotber lawman, Belpre officer W.O.
Tuesday about 12 hours after they fled the
Abbott , said civilian help was appreciated,
Wood County, W.Va., Correctional Center.
"but you cannot take the 13w into your own
They refused to waive extradition,
hand«."
meaning that West Virginia · authorities
Bayles was awaiting appeal on his
must file a series of papers for the pair's
conviction last March 27 in the
release.
strangulation of Jima Ann Dotson, 18,
Pa'pers initially must be prepared by the
Boaz, W.Va. She was slain Sept. 26, 1975,
prosecutor in Wood County . After they are ., after she stopped along Interstate T1 while
approved by. Gov. Jay Rockefeller, a
driving lD a morning class at Parkersburg
governor'swarrant is then sent to the Ohio
Community College.
governor.
A two-week search by students and
Sheppard's bail was set at $12,500, while
pollee in Wood County ended when the
Bayles was held without bond in jail
body was discovered near Bayles' home. It
about 13 miles from the one they escaped
was in that same area th&amp;t Bayles and
Monday night by dismantling a rear
Sheppard were captured.
window.
During their brief freedom, Bayles and
Their escape triggered a massive search
Sheppard told police they elnded the bright
by pollee in two states and attracted a
searchlight of a National Guard
numher of CB'ers, some of whom cornered
helicopter. At one point, Bayles said they
the wrong man in an embarrassing hid in bushes and could have reached out
episode near Belpre.
and touched one of the deputies searching
Mistaken for Bayles in his car, Owen
for them.
Lester Perry, 20, Belpre, was forced off
Sheppard was beld on a federal fugitive
Ohio Route 339 by three men in autos
warrant filed after he refused extradition
equipped with the popular radios. No less
to ·CUmberland County, Tenn., where
than a dozen cars were chasing him.
authorities have charged him with
As Perry sat stunned, one of the
possession of stolen property.
vigilantes leaped aton •h• hoorl of his ear

a

Sheryl L. Walters, 22 ,
Cheshire, was assessed costs
only on an illegal exhause
charge.
Forfeiting bonds were Ray
Cox, 28, Cheshire, $25, for
.
blocking a driveway; Ken,
neth F. Mitchell, 23 ,
Langsville, $25, expired
driver's license ; Donna L.
Mitch, 26, Middleport, $27
speeding; Donald W. Hoffman, 23, Letart, W. Va. $25
speeding; Richard E. Martin,
SALUSAW, Okla. [UP!) 23, Pomeroy, $25, squealing The loose dirt beneath a
tires and $27 for speeding.
brush pile attracted the attention of a member of the
search party.
Art Lee, a Tulsa County
deputy helping search for two
kidnap victims, was riding a
motorcycle
when he spotted
Veterails Memorial Hospital
the
brush
pile. It was
Admitted- Daniel Dennis
removed
and
footprints
were
Chesh ire ; Emma Hayman:
found
in
the
loose
dirt.
Syracuse; Edna· Wilcoxen
The brush pile was serving
Pomeeroy; Charles Va~
not
oilly as camouflage, but
Cooney, Middleport; Gilbert
Mees, Pomeroy; Floyd Bush, a!so as a marker for the
grave of Kendal Gaither AshNew Haven.
·
Discharged - Shawn more, 35, and Kathy Anne
Gibnore, Ida Young, Judy Brown, 21. The week-old
McNickle, Ruby Barringer search for the former beauty
Evelyn Moore. .
' queen and her companion
was over.
"We found a brush pile with
some fresh dirt under it,"
BIONIC GROUCHO
said Capt. Don Mentzer of the
HOLLYWOOD (UP!)
Groucho Marx celebrated his Highway Patrol. ''When the
release from 19 days in a brush pi)e was removed we
hospital, where his right hip found there were · some
was replaced with a steel and footprints . We began to
plastic joint, by warbling a
few tunes with Ca/lllll
O'Connor, TV's Araiie
Bunker.
OSPBF TO MEET
The 116-year-&lt;&gt;ld . comedian
There
will be a meeting
is one of the oldest persons
Sunday,
March
27, at 3 p.m.
ever to undergo the hlp
ci
the
Ohio
Society
for the
replacement operation, said
Promotion
of
the
Bull
Frog
his surgeon , Dr. Robert
(OSPBF)
upstairs
at
the
Rosenfeld. Marx left CedarsFarmers
Bank
building.
Sinai Medical Center
Tuesday in a wheelchair, but
walked 40 feet unaided at his
home, the surgeon said.
O'Connor dropped by for
lunch to celebrate the release
COFC,TOMEET
and he and Marx had a
The Pomeroy Chamber of
belated St. Patrick's day Commerce
will
meet
celebration, singing Irish Tuesday, March 29, at noon at ·
songs.
the Meigs Inn.

R

•·

NEEDS APPROVAL
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
Jose Feliciano won a court
.
order Tuesday forbidding
RCA Recorda to release an
album of "Feliciano's
Greatest Hits" until the blind
singer
approves
the.
selections, production creremove a Ii!tle bit of the dirt dits, liner notes and .album
and discovered two bodies. cover:
The Highway Patrol later
Feliciano sued RCA, saying
identified the bodies as those sllCh an album .would harm
of Mrs. Ashmore, wife of his career if it did not meet
wealthy Jenks, Okla., builder his standards. He already has
Phillip Ashmore, and Miss approved nine of the 12
Brown, her companion and choices for the album:
horse trainer.
The women, clad in blue
jeans, had towels tied around
their throats and were bound
with their hands behind their HOSTS OSCARs ,. · I' .
backS. A preliminary
HOLLYWOOD (UP!) medical examination in The
movie academy Tuesday
dicated they had been
named
comedian Richard
strangled.
Pryor as the fourth and final
Authorities could not imhost for the March 28 Oscar
med iately determine how ceremooy, joining Warren
long .the women had been
Beatty, Jane Fonda and Ellen
dead.
Burstyn.
Larry Eugene Chaney, 34,
of Jenks, an ex-convict who
made several unsuccessful
attempts to ' borrow money
from a Jenks' bank once
controlled by Mrs. Ashmore's
husband, has been charged
with two counts of kidnaping
for extortion in connection
with the case. His bond was
set at $1 million.
Mentzer said authorities
decided to shift the search for
the missing women from
Tuisa County to Sequoyah
County after he received an
anonymous telephone call
telling hlm Chaney had been
seen in the area two hours
after the abduction. Chaney
owned the land where the
bodies were found.
A pair of Western-style
boots with the name Katlty on
them were found near the
brush pile. Chaney was
arrested Saturday after a
series of telephone calls to the
Ashmore residence in which
a $500,000 ransom was ,
demanded. Ashmore and -FBI
agents attempted to pay the
ransom, but the money was

emaJDS of two
found buried

HOSPITAL NEWS

Pleasaot Valley
Discharges - Bertha Hal],
Ha!11ord; Mrs . Kenneth
Watson, Point Pleasant ; Mrs.
Ruth Ford, New Haven; Mrs.
Audie Roach, Letart ; Mrs.
Harry Plants, Gallipolis
Ferry ; Mrs . Sam Long,
Gallipolis; James Hermo.
Leon ;
Charles
West moreland, Cottageville; Eula
Hollander, Point Pleasant;
Mrs. Thomas Bush, New
Haven ; Christina Campbell,
Gallipolis ; William Roush ,
Hartford; Barbara Kline ,
Pomeroy ; and Beatrice
Meadows.
Births - A daughter to Mr.
and Mrs. Marvin Wickline,
Gallipolis, and a son to Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas Darst,
Point Pleasant.

Bayles captured

meet Saturday
in Pomeroy

"The Lawyer on Trial."

publisher Haskell Gaither,
was
Miss Pryor ol!959.
during the next few weeks:
The secession bill stlll
needs approval ol Congress if
it is passed by the legislature,
McCarthy said.
There are sa towns on
Martha's Vmeyard, which
has about 5,700 residents.
Nantucket, with about 5,300
people, Is a IDwn itself.
Under the redlstrlctlng
plan mandated by a state
constitutional amendment,
the size of the House must be
reduced from 240 to 160
members. Eilch new dlatrlct
I '
must have about 33,000
residents under federal and
state court mandates of one
person, one vote.

BOSTON (UPI) - Saying
only an islander can truly
represent an island, officials
oo Martha's Vineyard and
Nantucket
signed
a
cleclaratioo of independence
from Massachusetts
Tuesday.
State representatives and
town officials on the two
Islands also filed a bill in the
legisl~ture lD secede from the
state lD protest a legislative
redistricting plan that would
combine the islands with
mainland coimnunitles in a
House district.
"The only effective
advocate lor the Wanda Is an
islander," said state Rep.
Terrence McCarthy, who
filed the bill along Rep. John
Your ass~ ranee of. quality. From
Cooway.
inside,
out - only the finest
"H the cotnmonwealth permaterials
are used.
sists in ita plan to thrust
arbitrary goverrunent upon
us," he told a State House
news cooference, "we !!hall
be confronted with an t"N
F\.INTIJIE
intolerable situation.
"We are prepared to with-

MEIGS THEATRE.
CLOSED FOR
VACATION
OPENING DATE

THE MEIGS INN

Pomeroy , o.
Phone 992-6304
·
rr£.L" SHACK Phone 992-6304

:~u:;:riu~~~~tov~~ ·~~

and di&amp;solve all connection
with II."
He said the islands intend
lD focm their· own country or
lllate, or join another lllate.
Residents will vote · on
11ecellion at
meetings

'f"l

three

sbter$,

.
The longer you own it,

the more you. like it.

BAKER FURNITURE

Nursing home legislation is
reversed with House action

M r s.

David E. Morqan, 73, e Wanda Reinhard. Greenville ;

resident

-of

Mrs. Juan ita Kn lghl, ·San

46

Court St..
8: t5 a.m.
Wednesday in Holzer Med ical
Cen ter . Mr . Morgan had been

Gallipolis, died at

Antonio, Tex&amp;a, and

Mrs.

Lola Mae Lackey . Guysvil le;

two grandchildren, Tommy
and Wendy Cecil, and several .
nieces and nephews.
Funeral servi ces will be

hospitalized lhe past three

WE!'ekS .

He wa s a ret ired employee

of the Michigan Consolidated held Thursday at 1 p.m. al the
Gas Co., a firm he was While Funeral Home In Cool ·
a!Soclated with for 38 years. ville with the R.ev . Father
He was born In Oak Hill on Frank Patala offlclallng .
5ept. 19, 1904, son of lhe late Burial will be In Rockland
Isaac M. and Mary Jane
Jones Morgan .
He Is survived by one son ,

Cemetery . Friends may cal l

at the funeral home after 11

a .m. Thursday .

David H. Morgan, Detroit ;

one sister, Margaret Morgan

Davis , Oak Hill. Several

nieces and nephews s~rvlve .
Funeral setvlces will be
held 1:30 p.m. Saturday at
Kuhner - Lew i s
Funeral

RUTH E. STJ!!ELE
Mrs. Ruth E . .Steele. .fl,
Home, Oak Hill, with Rev . Roule 3_. Pomeroy, died
James A. Hanns . officiating . ll'onday night al the Holzer
Burial will be in the C. M. ll'edical Center .
A member of the Flatwoods
Cemetery .
Friends may call at the Un lled Methodist Church ,
tuneral home on Friday from Nrs. Steele was prece&lt;le&lt;l In
death by her father, Clayton .
2-9 p.m.
Surviving are her husband,

Robert M. Steele; two sons.
Elton M. o1 Camp LeJeune.
N.C.. and James C. at home;
lhree daughters. Mrs. Sue
Faber.- Williamsport ; Mrs.

CLYDE C. SIMPSON
COOLVILLE - Clyde C.
Simpson. Cincinnati, died
Monday at the Veterans
Adminislratlon Hospital In
Cincinnati ending a long
illness. Mr .

Simpson

Rebecca

Broderick,

Pomeroy, and Mrs. Belinda
Connolly, Radclllf, Ky.; her

was

born In Washington Counly, 'a
son of the late Ne&lt;l and Alpha
Caldwell Simpson.

mother, Mrs. Genevieve

Ball

Roosh, Letart, W. Va. ; two

sisters, Mrs. Ruby Grimm

a1d Mrs. June Brooks. bolh of
Letart, W. Va. and nine
g-andchlldren and several

He was a disabled veteran

ol W. W. II, having served
wllh the Army In lhe Asiatic

nieces and nephews.
FlJ'Ieral services will

theatre. He was a member of

Local 18 ol Bricklayers

be

Union, Cincinnati.
He is survived by his wife,

held at 1 p.m. Friday at the
Flalwoods United Methodist
O&gt;Urch with the Rev . James
Corbett oft lclaling. Burial
v.lll ~ \" in Meigs Memory

son, at home; one son, John ,

Gardens . Friends may call at
the Ewing Funeral Home at

Esther ; two daughters .. Mrs.
Thomas , (Sandy) Cecil .
Cincinnati. and Cindy Simpat home ;

two brothers r

il'lyti me.

Howard, of Stewart, and Ned .

SPLIT AGAIN
SANTA MONICA, Calif.
(UPI ) - Cher Bono Allman
and rock musician Greg
Allman have split lor the
third time.
An attorney far the 3tl-yearold singer filed a Superior
Court petition Tuesday for a
legal separation from Allman
after 21 months of marriage:
It said she separated from
Allman last Saturday and
asked lor custody of
unspecllle&lt;l property and.
child support ' for their 7mooth-old son, Elijah Blue .
Five day~ , after Cher
marrlecj A'llman she flied for
a divorce, but they reconciled
three weeks later. Mooths
later, Allman filed for
divorce,
but
another
reconciliation was effected·.

URBAN STUDY"
COLUMBUS (QPI)
A
resolution to create a ISmember "Urban Crisis ci.mmittee" was imended and
returned to the senate by I~
House
Tuesciax •, over
Republican. objections I, th8t
the lliembersh!r! ,WJ~ l~ed
m favor of the ·Democrats.
An amendment to reduce
the number of oerrloctaiic
member from 12 to 10 was
defeated 36-5! before the
House adopted,the resoluttoo
7&amp;-15.
' ~. ..... - . . . .
Rep. Alan Norris, RWesterville, observed that he
didn't think "ilrllan problems
had become a partisan issue"
in offering the amendment to
cut
Democratic
representation. on the
committe.

d·

...
•I• I

''

Cross stilch sampler
with hand-embroidered look
on Ange l Skin.~ a heavenly
blend of poly/colton The
f.lounced shill gown wilh its
sampler yoke has coordinaling snap-lront
coat wilh embroidered scalloped collar.
Aqua. pink or champagne. Gown-Sizes S-M-L".
Coat-Sizes
X-XX·
S-M-L
. X-XX

a

(~~

C9S!
KATZ

You'll want to IH all the new styles in
the lingerie department on the 2nd
floor.
·
Open Friday 9:30 ,.m. to 8:00 p.m.
Other weekdays 9:30 to 5 p.m . .
r
;

'

Elberfelds In ·Pomeroy

I

By J .R. KIMMINS
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio House, citing a mistake
of last session, has passed
and sent to th e Sena te a bill
replacing the 11 -member
Ohio
~urs ing
Home
Commission with a similar
panel dominated by state
legislators.
"We are here to admit we
made a mistake and stand
ready to correct it," said
Rep . Dennis Wojtanowski, DChesterland, chief sponsor of
bill which cleared Wednesday
on an emergency basis
Wednesday .
Wojtanowski 's bill would
abolish the Nursing Home
Commission created by the
General Assembly last year
over the veto of Gov. James
Rhodes, and replace it with
another panel to investigate
Ohio's $185-million-a-year
reimbursement to 840 nursing
homes.
But the new commission
would be composed of eight
legislators and
three

the director of
the one of which was represented inspect ail eight state prisons apartments for prospective
Commissio n on Agi ng, on the commission.
ea ch
year .
Another renters for a fee to be
directnr of Public Welfare
'The new commission will amendment would give the lic-ensed by the •1ate as real
and director of Health.
not have public members committee day or night estate brokers.
The new commission duties because none of us can fi gure access to any part of a ~r ison .
The House also sent to the
would be unchanged.
out how lD institutionalize or Athird floo r change to the bill Senate a bill to increase from
~~our mistake was in !actor in representation of all
would limit the committee's $10,000 to $18,000 the amount
setting up a membersh ip that factions of th e (nu rsing expenditures to $20,000.
of retail butcher shop sales
did not and could not work ," home) industry," said Rep.
In other floor votes, the before the firms become
said Wojlanowski.
Michael Fox, R-l-lamiiton , House sent to the governor a subject to full state meat
The Gen eral Assem bly who is a member of the bill requiring firms or inspection.
gave $300,000 lD the current current commission but a individua ls wh ich locate
commission which met for strong advocate for its
the first time last summer . abolition .
But since then , the
Members of the new
commission has done nothing commission would be barred
except spend $5,000 on travel from receiving campa ign
expenses, hire a small staff contributions from or having
and hold a lew meetings in any financial interest in the
which no substantive busi- nursing home industry.
ness was transacted.
Meanwhile, the House sent
The new commission would to the Senate a bill setting up
be given $55,000 for the rest of a second study committee,
this fiscal year and $200,000 thi s on e composed of eight
each year thereafter through state legislators required to
June 1979.
'
"establish and maintain a
THESE "COOL CATS" ARE DECKED OIIT in Fonz outfil&gt; in preparation for
WAS!flNGTON (UPI )- President Carter has decided to
Wojtanowski
said
the
continuin
g pro gram of
Saturday's 1950&amp; dance to he staged begirming at ilp.m. in the archery building of Royal Oak
appoint
former Congresswoman Bella Abzug of New York to
failure
of the first inspection of all state and
Park. Behind the disguises are Janet Downie, president of Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta
chair
the
National Commission on Observance of Women 's
commission was because of lo c al corr e ct io nal
Sigma Phi Sorority, and Bill Young, president of the Meigs Jaycees. The dance is being coYear.
White
House aides said today.
.
bickering among the three institutions."
sponsored by the organizations. Dress of the 195Us is not required , but encouraged. Those
The
a~inbnent
will
be
announced
shortly,
along
with a
major fa ctions of the state 's
A fl oor amendment would
attending should he 21 or older .
panel of some 40 members which will conduct conferences in 56
nonvoting representatives of nursing home industry , only require the new committee to
states and territories by mid.July on eliminating barriers to
women's equality. A National Conference will be held in
•
November and a final report will be made to Carter in the
spring of 1978, the aides said .
Ms. Abzug bas been consid- United Auto Wor kers'
ered for a number of positions P res id e nt Leo n ard
in the Carter administration, Woodcock, told Carter in a 22and reportedly refused one page report that the
offer, as a member of tbe Vietnamese goverrunent "exFederal Power Commission . pressed a strong desire" to
She currently holds no office , move toward dipl omatic
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 1977
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS since losin g New York 's relations with the United
VOL. XXVII . NO. 240
Democratic Senate prima ry states.
to Daniel Patrick Moynihan
The commission said it
·: :~::;:;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;.;:;.;~:::::::::::::::::::~:: :;:::::::::::::::::::::::!:::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::.:::
who went on to win the seat in found no evidence that any
November.
prisoners of war stili survive
Carter also arranged to in Vietnam.
hold his fifth nationally
televised news confere nce
today and scheduled a
By Uoite-:1 Press IDternatiou•l
•
.
meeting later with former
SACRAMENTO, CAUF. - A WEEP:.LIKE African plant
President Gerald Ford, who
that grows as much as two inches a day has infected a Maryswas
arriving in Washington
vtlle, CaW.,lake and easily could spread to scenic Lake Tahoe,
Wday
for a series of meetings
a state legislator warned Wednesday. Assemblyman Eugene
and
social
affairs.
Chappie said the aquatic plant, formally called hydrilla , could
Also
on
tap
for Carter was a
even destroy rice crops if not controlled .
morning
coffee
reunion with
The Assembly Ways and Means Committee Wednesday
U.S. Represent a t iv e
the
Ge
orgia
con
gressional
agreed to weed pases a danger and voted 17-il to send to the
Clarence
Miller (R. l Oth
delegation,
another
session
floor his bill aimed at eradicating the plant. The "urgency
Court House
Meigs
County
residents
are
invited
by
their
Regional
&lt;llio
)
Monday
called the
with
AFL-CIO
President
measure" would appropriate an unspecified amount to clean
Buy 3 new, 25-&lt;!ubic yard, back~oading trash collection
Planning
Commissioner
to
express
their
opinions
on
the
use
of
Foo
d
and
Dru
g AdGeorge
Meany
and
a
private
up Lake Ellis near Marysville where the plant apparently is
trucks
county
mooey
for
capital
improvemenl&gt;.
The
following
ministration
's
proposed
ban
dinner
party
for
House
isolated and would take effect irrunediately is signed by Gov.
Const.ruct a !00-bed nursing home near Veterans Memorial
proposed projects come from many sources during the last 10
ri
the
artificial
sweetener,
Speaker
and
Mrs.
Thomas
Edmund G. Brown Jr.
Hospital
saee"hat\n , "\otal\y
Olapple said the plant originated in Africa, spread to years .
Buy a document copier for the County Recorder's Office O'Neill.
·
There
is
no
possibility
that
all
the
following
82
projects
can
unr eason abl e and una cThe
President
was
moving
South America and then i)lto Florida. It probably was brought
Group 8 (Assign Priority Numbers !hod 15)
be
accomplished
within
the
next
five
years
from
current
reptable." Miller and a group
to
dispatch
a
negotiating
to CaWqrrila in an aquarium.
Remodel the Court House 2nd F1oor (Auditor, Treasurer,
revenue. However, outside sources will be explored for Commissioners, etc.)
of
Hou se · members are
team
to
Paris
to
resume
·
additional
revenue.
diplomatic
talks
with
sponsoring
legislation that
LONDON - PRIME MINISTER JAMES Callaghan 's
Revise the County property records
Thill
study
of
"Capital
Improvements
Capabilities.
197$Vietnam
delegates
at
Hanoi's
""uld
encourage
the FDA to
minority Labor goverrunent has won at least six more months
Gro14&gt; C (Assign Priority Numbers 111-ZO)
1982"
has
been
undertaken
by
the
Meigs
County
Regional
request.
relay
the
ban
until
Congress
in office by tying lis future to a handful of votes from the
Extend SR 124 lD CR 38 between Pomeroy &amp; Middleport.
Planning
Commission
to
assist
county
officials
in
their
Carter
a!Ulounced
he
would
illlds
hearings
to
determine
Ubei'al party. Alter a bitter and often noisy six-hour debste,
Resurface CR 38
Parliament voted, 322 to 298, Wednesday night against a "no decisions on capital improvement spending. Thereon Johnson
Resurface CR 18 in Bedford &amp; &amp;ipio Twps. from US 33 "respond immediately" lD llllether normal conswnption
is
commission
chairman.
the suggestion , brought to ci saccharin is unsaf e.
coolldence" motion proposed by ConservaJlve opposition
west to SR 143
Residents
are
asked
to
review
the
Usting
below
and
give
him
by the White House
"The Canadian tests upon
leader Margaret Thatcher that could have brought down the
Resurface CR 30 in Sutton Twp. from SR 7 east to TR 125
each a priority number from I to ·62 according to the
Commission
oo
the
Missing
in
·
llbich
the FDA is acting are
Restore and renovate the Court House exterior
goverrunent .
instructions
included
on
this
initial
listing.
Action
on
its
return
from
a
technically
suspect and in no
Remodel the "Old" Jury Room in the Court House
Adefeat would have forced the government to submit to a
.
When
finished,
please
return
by
Apr.
8
to
the
Planning
fact
finding
trip
to
Vietnam
way
link
normal human
general election that - opinion polls indicate - could sweep
Group D(Aas]£n Priority Numbers 2laod 22)
Commission
office
in
the
CETA
office,
3rd
Door
of
the
Court
and
Laos.
con
sumptlon
to cancer ,"
Mrs. Thatcher into power as Britain's first woinan prlme
Buy 2, 50-acre sanitary landfill sites to serve east &amp; west
House
or
mail
to
Box
551,
Pomeroy
or
to
James
M.
Jennings
The
commission,
headed
by
Miller
said
minister. The liberal party provided its crucial13 votes after
Callaghan agreed to consult with it on future goverrunent Associates Co., P.O. Box 5762, Columbus, Ohio 43221.
If the respondent feels the particular pr6ject cannot or
policies.
should
not be funded from current revenue he should mark an
For the liberals, out of office since !924, it meant the first
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
X
in
the
front of the priority number.
taste of political power in more than half a century.
Saturday through
Group A (Aaslgn Priority Numbers 1-13)
Monday,
fair Saturday and
Resurface
CR
I
in
Columbia
Twp.
from
SR
143
north
lD
WASillNGTON- A SURVEY OF FOURTH, fifth and
his fist through a
Monday
with
a chaoce of
Athens
Co
.
An escapee from the Gallia Valley Livestock Company, !lammed
.llxth graders in unidentified West Coast schools indicates 45
light
bulb
and struck the
showers Suuday. Lows will
Resurface CR 1 in Salem Twp. from SR 124 south to SR 325
County jail was in satisfac- escaped from custody at 1:45 reiling of his jail cell.
per cent of the children consider themselves users of alcohol.
Improve the CR 3-0ld SR 7 intersection west of Middleport be lo the 30s Saturday and
tory condition this morning at p.m . Wednesday.
The study, done for the Department of Health, Education and
In his escape try Lambert
In
the
40s
Suoday
aod
According to Sheriff James
Resurface
CR
28
in
Racine
&amp;
Olester
Twps.
from
SR
248
Holzer Medical Center where
Welfare, said eight per cent of the children drink at least once
ran
toward Secon d Ave .
Mooday. Highs wW be In
south to IU!cine
he was admitted Wednesday Montgomery, Deputy Robert where he hailed a cab. At that
a week.
Resurface CR 28 in Chester &amp; Orange Twps. from SR 248 the 50s north aod the 60s
afternoon after bein g shot Meade was returning Lawson tim e, Sheriff Montgomery
"By the fourth grade, the majority of students surveyed
south.
north
to
SR
7
during his dash for freedom from the Holzer Medical put out an all-points bulletin
already ha4 at least ooe experience with alcohol," it said.
Replace
the
Ogden
Run-TR
25
bridge
in
Columbia
Twp.
SW
"Nearly half the students surveyed 45 per cent considered
by Chief of City Pollee John Center when Lawson ran to the Gallipolis Poli ce
from Meade between the
of
Dyesville
themselves to be ongoing users of alcohol."
Taylor.
Department, the Ohio HighQear
and
cold
tonight,
lows
Replace
the
Wolf
Run.CR
33lrldge
in
Sutton
Twp.
north
of
"Clearly, apos\D"e of youth to alcohol occurs.at an early
Clarence Alonzo Lawson. bullpen area of the jail and way P~trol and his deputies.
in the upper 20s. Sunny and Jr., 18, Rt. 2, Vlrton, indicted the Holzer &amp;oool of Nursing,
age," it said. Thestudy concluded that much of the alcohol use Racine
Chief Taylor was cruising
·\lllrmer
Friday, highs in the by the Gallia County Grand between First and Second
Resurface
CR
28
in
Letart
&amp;
Sutton
Twps.
from
SR
338
reported by achool-age children occurs within the family, a
on
Second Ave. at Mill Creek
low or mid 50s. Probability of Jury two weeks ago for Aves.
pattern that gives way to "frlenda" and "sacial occasions" for north to SR 124
st.
He turned south onto
Resurface CR 46 in Olive &amp; Orange Twps. from SR 248 NW ]l"ecipitation near zero per aggravated robbery in
Lawson had been taken to
older yo\Dlgsters. The findings were disclosed by HEW, but
Th
ird
Ave. and radioed Sgt.
cent tnday and tonight and 10 amnectlon with an armed the hospital for treabnent of a
with Uttle detail, at recent.hearings in Congress on a budget for to SR 7
Hollis
North lD go south on
Remodel 2,000 square feet of court-related offices in the per cent Friday.
HEW's Natlonallnstitue on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism.
robbery Feb. 12 at the Ohio hand injury suffered when he First.
Aoout 15 minutes later
Chief Tayl or observed
Lawson in the rear of a pickup truck near North Produce
snake in the walls. Yeah. A blue
By ROSEMARY ARMAO
what he saw and thinks Mrs.
a the 09mer of Vine St. and
Three minor traffic ac- Spencer, 21, Minersville, had Whm Starcher swerved to
racer with a sledgehammer . ·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - The
Hmsinger attacks him because she
Garfield Ave. Lawson, a!)cidents- in which no one was his auto parked in his the left to avoid collision, his
"I even got calls from strangers
next time Mrs. Charles Hunsinger
wants to keep people away from her
parently realizing Chief
injured and no citations driveway at his trailer. vehicle got into soft benn,
hears strange noises in her house,
asking
if
they
could
come
and
spend
Taylor
had seen him , jumped
buuse.
Isaued - were investigated Deborah Powell, 22, had her and into a ditch on the left
she says she wonl complain, she
the riight and listen to noises."
"The only time the beds move in
from the pick-up truck and
by Sheriff James J. Proffitt's auto parked at her trailer side of the road, and tipped
wonl ask for help - she'll "just sit
Several professors sent requests
this house is when I move 'em to
ran toward the top of
across the street. Her car's · over on its left side.
Department.
and listen to them/'
for invitations too, Mrs. Hunsinger
sweep," Mrs. Hunsinger retorts .
Otickamauga Creek behind a
he first incident occurred !rakes failed or it came out" The other vhelcle was
said . "They wanted to come here
Her surburban Blendon Township
"No ghost was haunting my
house near the produce
early Tuesday morning. of gear, as it ~oiled out of her operated by Daniel J. Roush,
and study the house. I didn't even
house is quiet now and Mrs
daughter . I deliberately had her
mmpany.
!leven A. Yon ken, 22, of Rt. 2, .t-iveway, across the street, 91ade.
1
Hunsinger once again answers her
answer the letters."
spend nights wi!h neighbors, and 1t
' Taylor, giving chase, orRacine, (Letart) reported md struck Spencer's auto.
Sheriff Proffitt said his
Things really got bad, Mrs.
door and her phone which is
never followed her. But if anybody
dered Lawson to stop. After
that between I a.m. and 9 There was minor damage to department is investigating a
Hunsinger said, when her husband
lDllisted. But she hasn't forgotten the
banged oo the walls here, they got an
several war.nin gs, Taylor
a.m . when he had his jeep · ooth vehiCles.
report by I.owell Wingett, Rt.
and son "were corralled" into doing
Great Columbus Ghost Hunt.
answer ."
·
fired his .38 caliber snub-nose
parked along Rt. 338 SQmeone
The third accident was at 2,
Pomeroy
that a
a television news spot. "I blew my
Last month, the faiJiily began
"No poltergeist would go lD all
Jistol. The bullet hit"Lawson
threw a solid object through 6:55p.m. Wednesday on the refrigerator, sofa, two chairs
hearing strange poundings and
top,'' she said.
that trouble,' ' she said.
in the left thigh. Lawson was
the canvas door, damaging New Lima Road when and a lawn mower were
Most of ail she protected Beth, · rushed to the Holzer Medical
crashings in the night. Neighbors
As the ghost story got nationwide
its plastic gla~&lt;~.
Stanley R. Starcher, 18, Rt. I, otolen from his house at
protesting
that she was an A student
several houses away also beard.
attention, so did the Hunsingers.
Center by the Gallia County
The second incident oc- Middleport, was driving Thomas fork .
and
didnl
need kooky publicity. Ail
"We figured it was pranksters,"
"People came to the house in the
Volunteer Emergmcy Squad.
curred a 8:56 a.m. Wed· north on CR 3. As he rounded
picture requests were rejected and
Mrs. Hunsinger said, "and I called
middle of · night, in a downpour .
He is now under 24-bour
nesday at Brown's Trailer a slight curve he observed a
Mrs. Hunsinger spoke with the
the police. A lot of news people have
They'd came right up to the
guard at the hospital.
FINED $50, COSTS
Park inMlnersvOle. Terry M. car about to enter the road.
school
principal about protecting
bedroom
window
and
shined
in
these scanners, you know and I
Lawson has been in jail
Linda Moore, Syracuse,
her from harassment there.
guess one policeman said to another
flashlights.
since his arrest Feb. 13 in Heu
has been fined $50 and costs
Mrs. Hunsinger says she never
"Some kids came to the door and
'We got a goost ' or something. That
ci $30,000 bund.
.
in the court of Pomeroy
believed
''that witchy stuff" but
did it. No one paid attention to
said 'can we see your exorcist
Assisting
in
the
search
DARN GOOD SHAPE
Mayor Clarence Andrews on
admits she did look up the word
daughter?' We had three deputies
looking for pranksters arter that."
were Sheriff Montgomery,
·WASHINGTON - A l!pOkeiiiiiUI In CaOil. Clare!K!e
a marge of failing to repol1 a
poltergeist and read some
She especially blames Sgt. Sonny
keeping the people away. I stopped
deputies Meade, BOb HarM1Der'1 olftce IAHiay llld WedDelday'• llory releue-:1,by
crime.
pamphlets about their habits.
Yinger of Franklin County Slerlff's
answering the door," Mrs.
tenbach,
Alva Sullivan, Leo
Allocllled Prell eo~~ceralJIC lbe cucelbolioa of lbe
"After everything died down," she
Deparbnent who played a thumping
Hunsinger
said.
Johnson
and
Jay Cremeens,
pnpmd Glllipolll Loeb ad Dim project wu ''lolally
said "there's no trouble. I think
recording
for
reporters,
!Did
them
Worse
were
the
phone
calls.
NOW
YOU
KNOW
Taylor,
Sgt. Hollls
Ollef
' 11Dtl'lle."
woo~er was responsible was scared
about moving beds and mirrors
"Somebody called, knocked on a
Katherine
Hepburn
won
North,
Ptl.
Paul
North,
Sgt. J.
'lbe 1po'um11 llld the GaUipolil Dam project rellllilll
off by all the people and police. But I
crashing to the Door and explained
table and said 'how's that sound?'
more
actlrjj
Oscars
-:
threeL.
Vaughan
and
Ptl.
Carl
L.
•w.ebed ud li In aood abapo. He ado.led projeeu put oo aid was nominated more how the noises followed 14-year-&lt;&gt;ld
never want to go through that again .
And all the suggestions. Somebody
Boggs
of
the
Ohio
State
High·
the
bu.- · were "lbooe on lbe verse of
if I heard noises again , I'd jtist siL
Beth wherever she went.
told me to rub oll on the woodwork.
times- 11 - than any other
way Patrol. Sheriff MontCGIIIInJetiOoi."
Yinger says he only descrilled
Another one said iL was probably a
and listen to them."
performer in Academy
!Jlmery thanked everyone for
Award hiotory.
their assistance .

•

at y

e

l:News. •.•in Brief~

1

Job found
for Abzug

•

enttne

Opinions invited
•
on Improvements

Miller calling
for slowdown
on·sweet ban

Escapee shot, captured

''·. ,,.,"

~~~~

t::.rutO.SrESeT EEC

Plus Tax

loca1 ;

Sounds of Fort Sumter
Mrs.
Ashmore ,
the
now from New England daughter
of Pryor, Okla.,

new

Visit Our Salad Bar
oz. Top Butt
Home Fries
Vegetable
hot Rolls
Coffee, Tea or Milk

DAVID MORGAN

Elberfelds ln. Pomeroy

WATCH FOR

4

r------------r------------1
Area Deat~s

'

·Three accidents reported

Pranksters moved beds, thumped floors, rwt ghosts

•et

.....

..

.,

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