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                  <text>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

.....

..

.,

�•
•..~.:;-,The Dallv Sentinel, ~ddleport·P~oy, 0 ., Thursday, March 24,1977

2- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Thursday, March 21,1977

Arizona's best real estate confidence man knows all the tricks::~
lllvtllipllve JUponenl!ld Edlton IDe.
Dlltribaled by Ualled PreP IDierlllllloul
Ned Warren Sr. says one way to clean up Arizona's real
estate industry would be to appoint Ned Warren Sr. as real
estate ccmmissioner.
"I know every Irick and every way to steal," he says. "I
could clean up this state in six months."
,
Warren's oovel proposal came during a seven./lour, onthe·
record interview with IRE reponers at his circular home built
Into the side of rugged Camelback Mountain, overlooking
Pboen!J;.
Warren's suggestion that he be made Arizona's No. 1 real
estate policeman is remarkable, considering that many regard
him as the major cause of the state's land fraud sickness, not
the cure.
He i&gt; known as the godfather of Arizona land fraud - a
nickname traceable to an incident years ago when close
l890ciates, as a joke, gave him two directors' cbairs IIIith "The
Godfather" lettered on the backs. The name stuck.
Warren, an accomplished con man and ex-&lt;'Onvict who arrived in Arizona in 1961, bas been the dominant figure among a
band of wheeler-dealers trying to ride Arizona'slahd boom-to
quick wealth. lte has had an enormous impact oo Arizona 's
social and political fabric and, by his own admiBsion, he has
made milUons.
"He had an instinct for the jugular," said a former partner.
"Depending on your viewpoint, he's the best or the worst con
man who ever came down the pike."
As puppetmaster of a maze of corporations, Warren refined
land fraud into a science, a multimillion dollar Industry that
spawned an army of imitators. He proved to have a shrewd eye
for making friends, especially rising political stars, sometimes
cutting them m oo land deals.
Later, when real estate conunissioner J . Fred Talley
resigned under fire, AriZOnans learned of a more sordid side of
the land fraud business - the corruption of public offtCials
with payoffs and bribes.
Said one source who partied with Talley, Warren and
associates : "Anybody that could be bought, their name was
brought up at the parties. They found so many people here at
such low prices -I'm surpriBed how cheap some of these local
people went, If they would have held off a little bit, they could
have got some big money."
Until recently, Warren operated with virtual Impunity.
While a few associates went to prison, Warren darted from one
corporate entity to another like a broken field runner, several
steps ahead of the rrosecutors.
"!like to build up companies for 18 months or so and then seU
them and walk away from them," he IIJld IRE reporters. That
was biB explanation for why he remained free while others
were cooVJcted: The projects that went bad, such as COchiBe
College Patk, Lake Mootezuma and Great Southwest Land &amp;

•

Low cost
power
•
Is gone
•

Cattle Co., were aU projects that he technically had sold to his
colleagues, who then ran them into the ground. But in most
instances, he actually directed those companies in various
conaultant capacities.
Warren was friendly but cool, a bit nervous, when he first
met with IRE reporters. He kept tapping his fingers. On a
subsequent visit, over a dimer table, he was a gracious host,
smiling frequently and joldng about his dlslike of Spanish-6\yle
houses with bars on the windows -an allusion to his earlier
Jl'ison days in Sing Sing and Danbury, Conn.
Warren was candid about his past.
"I was a thief,'' he said. "And I WaHB good thief.''
This theme was repeated again and again; he has always
Uved by his wits, the game has been flm and he is proud of his
ability to "make mllllona" by biB wits.
The aaga of Ned Warren (born Nathan Jacques Waxman in
Boston, Mass.) resembles a Horatio Alger story- con man's
versloo. Ills family had money, he dld not have lo steal, he
explained. Yet he stole.
''I enjoyed the challenge and the thrill of It ,,. the matching of
wits," he said.
While he had Jre-war brushes with the law, the blossoming
of Ned Warren as a confidence man came following World War
n as he crisscrossed the country - New York, Chicago,
Denver, San Francisco, Minneapolis - usually with sidekick
Bill Steuer, a onetime West Point cadet, a relationship that
continued in the Arizona Ian~ business.
'They worked two basic scama. One Involved buying steel on
credit, then selling it the same day to someone else for cash
and skipping town. Another gambit was to sell advertismg
time m radio stations with which they had no connection.
New York newspapers were CJubarrassed ·after they had
toured the two "bright young men" who collected some $39,000
from mvestors for a nonexistent Broadway musical comedy
called, "The Happiest Days," and then skipped . Warren, with
Steuer as his cellmate, ended up spending almost two years in
Sing Sing for that taste of show biz.
Aprison classification study found that Warren had an IQ of
133. He was rated ''very superior" in general inteiligence and
performance, with a high learning capacity but "inferior
moral and social capability ."
Released from prison, he headed west to Denver to open an
advertising agency. Two of his employes were roommates Barbara Stewart and Donna Stevens. They became an
inseparable trio, Barbara became Mrs. Warren, and Donna
was Warren's alter ego in business ventures In New York,
Florida and finally Arizona.
Warren became the kingpin of a get·rlch.quick chinchilla
Jromotion that swept the country, selling breeding animals.
Selling special chinchilla supplies was a lucrative sideline.
"Special chincilla earth" at $3 a pound was really sand that
Warren bought for $3.50 for 100 pounds. Chopped up straw was

New prime minister sworn
NEW DEL!n, India (UPI) - Morarji Desai, a
former deputy premier jailed under Indira Gandhi's
regime, was sworn in as India's Prime Minister today
and pledged to restore democracy, a free rress and a
strong judiCiary.
Desai, 81, met the press a half hour after taking the
oath as India's fourth prime minister since
independence from tile Briish 30 years ago and said
laws passed after Mrs. Gandhi's emergency was decreed June 26, 1975, would be repealed.
Desai was selected for the post earlier today during a
meeting of the newly elected parliament members of
the victorious Janata (People's) party and their allies,
the Congress for Democracy.
The new prime minister said India would follow "a
rroper nonalignment policy" and that if the 25-year
Indo-Soviet treaty of peace and friendship, signed in
1971, harmed friendly relations With other nations "it
will have to change.''

*'

Bad problem: bad breath
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Very
simply, I have had breath. I
brush my teeth four times a
day, use mouthwash and see
my dentist twice a year, but I
still have this problem.
I do have a smus problem.
They drain most of the iime
and both ears feel stuffed. I
went to a doctor to relieve th~
stuffed ears, but decongestant pills did not good. I am
really gettmg very nerous
abuut this conditiOn. Can you
help me?
DEAR READER - Bad
breath Ia a symptom. It can
be caused by dental pr&lt;&gt;blems. The disease that may
develop around the root of the
teeth IS really an Infectious
process and you can't brush it
away. In your case, regular
visits to the dentist suggests
that you do not have dental
disease or your dentist would
have recommended treat·
melj! for it. Nl!\l!rtheless, I
want to emphasize that

anyone with regular bad
breath needs to see his dentist. He may see something
yhou don't see.
Bad breath can be caused
by an infectiOn m any of the
passages related to respira·
lion. This includes the lungs,
throat and nasal passages.
Chrome diseased tonsils may
he a constant source of bad
breath. Removmg infected
ones may correct the condi·
lion but otherwise, removmg
normal tonsils Will not cure
bad breath.
You need to give your doc·
tor a chance to cure your
chronic smus infection if that
IS what you have. Many kinds
of organiSms give off a bad
odor. You can't eluninate
these odors from infections
around the teeth, in tht ton·
sils or in the smllses with
mouthwash. The mouthwash
only masks the odor for a
while but does not cure the
underlyinl!o.cause.
Anyone With chron ic lung

"•··•
'

tax evasion .

1

His criminal record came back to haunt Warren, however . •:

CUStomers who dreamed of striking it rich by raismg little
chinchillas for sale ended up with shatrered hopes. Not
Warren.
"Eight million dollars In two years,': he said with a smile.
In Florida, he branched out In business IIIith a brickyardjlllld
an air conditioning firm. He also dabbled in sales of Florida
swampland. Warren maintains he was not in the Florida land
business, hut concedes that he arranged for a friend to seU
some "rotten" land in Monroe County which he and his mother
owned.
But the ascendancy of Ned Warren was rudely interrupted
when he went to prison in 1959 for violating federal bankruptcy
lawa. Hepleadedgulltytoconceallng$25,000'inassetswhenhe
flledforpersonalbankruptcyinNewYorklnl954.
A friend, Nathan Voloshen, who ran an lnfluence.peddllng
racket out of the Speaker of the House's office In Washington,
D.C., claimed he could fix the charge for $25,000 In cash. He
didnt. Voloshen aiso claimed he helped Warren get out of
rrison midway through his three-year term; Warren denies it.
But the Warren-Voloshen interlude was to have more farreachmg consequences.
Not long after biB release from federal priSon, Warren
moved from Florida to Arizona . Warren is fuzzy about the
reasons why, saying only that hiS mother told him during the
194lli that Arizona would be a good place to go. He remembered her advice.
,
Warren arrived in Phoenix in the faU of 1961 with three cars,
two women, three kids, two dogs, a cat and $800 in his pocket,
Warren Immediately went Ill work hustUng land - despite
thefacthlsappllcationforarealestatesalesman'slicensewas
turned down because he was still on federal probation. He
followed a practice developed In the East, setting up a
succession of corporations, often IIIith Donna Stevens as the
front, bringing in others for the capital. He provided the sales
ability and business acumen.
One land company president remembered answering
Warren's advertiBement: "I can seU anything." He hired
Warren, and the claun seemed justified. Warren revealed a
dazzling ability to make money, and this soon made him "in"
in a society where that meant a great deal. He was introduced
into top Arizona social Circles by State Sen. John Roeder , a
former assistant U.S. attorney from New York State. Roeder 's
mother and Warren's mother were friends , he says.
He was an "extremely bright, talented guy,". very ·
personable and good~ooking, who could have made a milUon •t
dollars legitimately, remembers a lawyer once mvolved m a
lawsuit against Warren. "If he played it straight, he could
have been an adviser to presidents,'' sald a former business
partner with grudging admiration.
Warren sometimes told people he had spent, time in jaU.
Those he told, however, usually got the Idea it was for·inoome

AI least twice, business associates checked out his background ··.

and confronted Warren with the findings. He Insisted that he ·::
was going straight.
'.{
Once, in 1963, he was forced out of Arizona Land Co. when ;·:·
directors learned what was In his FBI record . Within days , ..
Warren, asoociale Steuer and two Arizona Land Co. dlreciDrs
snutten with Warren's selling abilities formed another corpo·
ration , Grace &amp; Co., to handle sales for Arizona Land. Warren
formed still another corporation, Diamond Valley Inc., which
later handled ALC land sales, while Grace &amp; Co. peddled the
ALC contracts.
_
"
- In 1967, Investigative reporter Don Bolles. of the Arizona
RepubUc made Warren's criminal past a matter of public
knowledge In a series of atorles about his involvement In the ·.
bankruptcy of Western Growth Capital Corp., a land firm
under investigation for possible criminal violations.
In the Western Growth Capital Corp. venture, Warren aWed
himself with Lee Ackerman, Democratic national oom·
mitteell)8n, unsuccessful candidate for governor and a person
with an excellent reputation.
Warren says Ackerman carne to him and said, "look, you •
know how to seU land. You know how to make money. I have '
the name, let me front for you."
"lmadealotofmcmeyforus,"Warrensays.
Western Growth reported fl mllUon In assets shortly before
it collapsed. But a bankruptcy trustee's report later revealed
only $909,137 worth of unobllgated assets. The ~2-page report
contained details of numerous paper transactions between
intercoMected land companies, d!IPlicate sales o! lots, and ·
numerous unorthodox procedures. Afederal official described .
Western Growih's books as "spaghetti ... meaningless."
Warren left Western Growih prior to the collapse because of
a dispute with Ackerman. Warren admits pushlhg the courts to
put Western Growth into bankruptcy. Acke~ suggested he
was outsmarted.
"Those fellows were thinking two steps lihead of me, and I .
just was stupid,'' he said. The tangled web included a curious •
series of events in which Acketman gaVe up his' Democratic '
national committeeman post to Dr. John ~llck, also
associated with Warren lh the land business. '
A Phoenix attorney who dealt with Warren during his early ·
land dealings says a favorite Warren quote was : "Everybo·
dy's crooked - I'll show yOU."
Said the lawyer : "cOrrilp~g peOple'- this was his delight,"
As AriZOnans ~entUally learned·; the ~te 'real estate .
department, the su~sed watchdog, had been compromised. '
Warren associates told In sworn testimimy of payoffs being
collected monthly for Talley. A real estate Investigator re- .
ceived a $2,601,1 ''lq~ . " An!!,a land fraud Investigator In the
councy attorney,~ office wa, ~cted on a brlbei')'cliarge .
MeanwhUe, Warren's land empire mushroomed. He created
an elaborate web of oorporations - more than 100 of them
were under his influence. He often ran them with old
associates Iii ey positions - former cellmate Steuer,
disbarred Oretb Lawyer J. Kelly Farris, mob figure Tony
'
Serra, itineran1 s esman James Cornwall, among others.
Warren selddm ppeared out front as an officer or director
of the corporatio . Other associates would be president or
secretary-treas\Ir r. But, as a grand jury was told in 197~, ·
ss.
where the power is in this Warren was th
"He controll the corporation,'' said Edward lazar,
country."
onetime
presiden !Consolidated Mortgage Co., a key Warren ·
Connally said he would be
firm.
Lazar
was
dered live weeks later, one day before a
helping campaign for
(
ntmued on page I0)
Republican congressiOnal
candidates in 1976 If asked,
)
' but denied he would be trying
to build up lOU's for a 1980
presidential bid as former
President Nixon did in 1966.
If
He said he does not believe :::!
either former President Ford
By Helen and Sue Bottel
::::
or Ronald Reagan will be the jjj
Republican candidate in 1980,
and pointed out he will be 63
Is "Making Out" "Making It"?
that year and is "on the outer Rap:
edges" as far as age is
When a guy says, "Let's go somewhere and make out"·
concerned.
does that mean "making it" or just hugging and klsslng and
stuff? My married sister says "make.oot" was necking when
she went to school, but I don't think I should be - TOO
TRUSTING

Connally wants GOP take
on new image before 1980

By LEE LEONARD
COLUMBUS (UPI)
By J.R. KIMMINS
Former Texas Gov. John
Connally says his adopted
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - One
of two Ohio legislative
Republican party has to
,comrruttees mvestigatmg the
change
unage, become
state's energy crisis was told
and
more ilggressive
Wednesday that the "days of
concentrate on electing
low-cost power generation
congressmen If tt IS to return
are gone" mainly due to the
to natiOnal powk
""
high cost of pollution control
And, the former Democrat
" People are making
told a news conference
utilities the scapegoat,'' said
Wednesday, it has to start
Donald E. Heyburn, vice
before the 1980 presidential
president of Babcock-Wilcox
campaign.
in Barberton. "They aren't.
"I think the Republican
" The days of low-cost
party
has . a great
power generation are gone.
responsibility and
There is no way you can meet
opportunity to do things
pollution control standards
before 1980,'' Connally said.
and generate power at low
"Frankly, I'm diBappointed
cost," he added .
in
the progress we've made.
"Not too many years ago- developmg , ana tney are
Heyburn briefed the Ohio m the early 60's - the total expensive and require some· We're not aggressive, we're
House Energy Cmnmittee on power plant was b\lilt for degree of diligen ce m not articulare, and we're not
pollution control eqwpment about that cost,'' said mamtenance."
unaginative enough. We have
manufactured by
his Heyburn .
to
redefine the issues."
"Bag houses" have also
co mpany and energy
Connally,
a cabinet
Last year, Babcock-Wilcox shown to be effective m
research projects oow under employed 16,000 Ohioans and removing fly ash from stack member in the adminisway .
of
. former
did $1.7 billion in business. gases, he said. That type of trations
Another Witness, retired
Kennedy
and
Presidents
Concernmg on-going pollution control "strams"
chief of the Battelle research projects, Heyburn smokestack emission through Nixon, made his remarks
Memorial Institute energy said ~is fll'IIl was workmg in thousands of cloth bags, followmg an address to the
program, Richard Anderson, for areas: coal gasification, much like a vacuwn cleaner Ohio Petroleum Marketers
echoed Heyburn 's magnetohydrodynamics, filters air and collects dirt. Association.
statements.
He said Republican leaders
fluidized bed combustion and
Heyburn said studies by his
"!am absolutely apoplectic solvent...eflned ooal.
in
recent years have allowed
firm had shown that it would
about the press and political
an
image of the party to build
Any results in the research be cheaper to build and
figures ' search for a programs are still a long way operate a coal-fired eleclric up as ''the party of the
'whipping boy' - it's a off, cautioned Heyburn.
and
the
generating unit, rather than a privileged
continuation of the Watergate
handmaiden
of
big
business"
Heyburn did note that nu clear-fueled facility,
syndrome: 'Let's find the "there
and that in reality,
is
eqUipment depending on its location.
bastard who did It to us!'"
available (from Babcock·
Nuclear fueling is more Democrats have been
Heyburn said the cost of Wilcox
heavy
and
other feasible on the east and west receiving
pollution control equipment manufacturers) which can coasts of the United States. contributions from those
to remove sulfur dioxide from remove both partlcolates and But in the Midwest, the ready sectors.
smokestack gases was ap- sulfur from coal."
"We carry the burden of
avilapility of coal makes
proaching $100 per kilowatt of
big
business, and the
"Scrubbers are shU fossll.fuel generation about 20
plant capacity.
Democrats
carry their (big
Wldergoing some de~ree of per cent more cost effective.
business') cash in their

disease, with an infection In
the bronchi, or even localized
m the lungs will have the air
pass over the areas of inlet'
lion and have a malodorous
breath.
Any chel1llcal chan)le.Iil the
blood, such as alcohol, 'W1U
release chamicals into the air
you are breathing out and
cause a person to hav,e bad
breath. To give yhou a better
idea of the ways bad breath
can he caused' I am sending
yhou The Health Letter 9-4,
Halitosis : Bad Breath.
Others who want thiB information can send 50 cents
for it with a long, stamped,
self·addressed envelope fm·
Ruuhng. Just send your letter
to me in care of this
newspaper, P.O. Box 326, San
Antonio. TX 78929.
Many people do not know
hey have bad breath. If yhou
know someoue who needs
help With this condiiiO~ you
may want to have a copy of
The Health Letter sent to him
or her. You can but hts name

peddled as ' speciaJ chinchilla hay."

on the self:addressed
envelope if you wish to have it
mailed directly to him or her.
DEAR DR. LAMB - My
wife was just operated on for
gallstones. Some of my
friends tell me that if you
drink a little vinegar now and
then you can keep gallstones
from forming. Is thiS truth or
fictiOn •
DEAR READER - Pure
fiction. People seem to forget
there is such a thmg as digestion. Everything you swallow
is acted upon by the digestive
system before lt is absorbed
Into the bloodstream. Simple
elements like the sodium and
chloride ions in salt are
una)tered but many chemical
compounds are broken down
before they can be absorbed.
There is a national pr()o
gram to study the possible
uses of medicines to dissolve
gallstones that I have
discUBSed before. However,
the chemical is a bit mot·e
complex than vmega1·.

pockets,'' Connally said.
The former U.S. Treasury
secretary said if he were the
party's national chairman, he
would be mapping strategy to
gam Republican seats in
Congress
and
state
legislatures in next year's
elections
. ,
"We get captured and
wrapped up like a cocoon in
the election of a president,''
he said. "We (Republicans )
had the presidency for 16 out
of 24 years and dido 't change
the course of history. History
IS made by Congress That's

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

Generation Rap

Organized labor loses

common·situs.·attempt
By SARA FRITZ
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Organized labor has IDst 1ts
first major battle -in the
heavily Democratic 95th
Congress with an attempt to
overturn Gerald Ford's 1975
veto of a controversial
contruction industry picketIng bill.
The bill, known as
"oommon situs picketing,"
was defeated by the House
Wednesday night on a vote
217to 205. The outcome raised
doubts about many other
items "n labor's big
legislative agenda for 1977.
"ThiB is the end of situs
picketing for a long time ,''
concluded Rep. Frank
Thompson Jr ., D-N J ,
closing the book on a 20-year
lobbymg effort by the
nation's building trades
Wlions.
Thompson, chairman of the
House labor committee, predicted there would be .110
effort to revive the measure
In the Senate -where it was
certain to face a lenghty
filibuster.
The bill would have allowed
striking building trades
workers to picket an entire
construction site in a dispute
with a smgle subcontactor . It
also provided for a labor·
THE DALY SENTINEL
OEVOTEDTOTIIE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AR EA

CIIFSfllRLTANNEHIIL
Ex" F.d

ROBF~ HT HOEFLICH

Cit)' Edllor
Publlsht d dar!)' ext.-.:pl SatunWy
by n~ Oluu V~:~lley PubllshUI~ Com·
any, J II COUI1 St, Pomt!fu} , Oluu
4571l9 Bll!!! lle!&gt;S ()(fll'l! Phone Wb
21[16 Ethlorlal PllmJe!N'l-2157.
Set:ond dus VQtila~t !laid Ml

Pome1uy, Oh10

N&lt;ttlor~al 1:1 dvc r lrarng r epr·esim·
tallve Wurd · Grltrlth Company, In·
c , BoHinel h t~rtd Gt~llagher Dlv
757 Th.h!.l Ave., New Vork N y '

10017
'
Suh&lt;;t·nptwn urtcs· Dellvc1t!tl by
ca r·r rcr wher(' l:IVIIli1:1Uie 75 Ctfll.!i pt.'l
"t:ck By MotorRumewl~reGHrtur
~CJ'VIL-e not IIViiJJ:tble One month
$3 :Q By mt~r l 111 Ohl1; and W Vw :
Otrt· Yc11r' $2:l 00. Srx munth1:1 ,
$11 :iO, Thrt•t• IIIOtr lhll, $7 00 ,
l.lxt•wlrcrt· llh 1111 Yt'iH , Sill lllOilt/Ui
~1.1 ~ 0: l'lrrt•t• l llutrlh ~ $7 50

s,uJJ.~r rrplillll lll k 11' Ill! ludr'li Sumhl}'

1 Ulll '!i St ~Ill d.

management committee to
oversee contract talks.
The'vote'was a blg.vtctoby
for the ''right to work"ldbby,
Republican conservatives
and many big industry
employers who together
waged a relentless campaign·
against the bill.·Ifhese forces·
were responsible for· Ford's
veto two years ago.
AFL·CIO ollictals were
stunned by the defeat. After
contnbuting some $8.2
millibn to congressional
candidates last year, big
labor had expected to reap
the benefits from an
increased
Democratic
majority.
Robert Georgine, head of
the AFL-CIO Building Trades
Department, blamed the
defeat on a ''massive·array of
forces that want organized
labor knocked down and
knocked down at any price."
But Hilton Davis, VIce
president for legislative
action in the U.S. Chamher of
Commerce, caUed the House
action "a magnificent victory
for the business people across
the country" who helped
defeat ·a bW that was "not
only unfair but would Impede
economic recovery."
Although President Carter
promised to sign the bill,
House Democrats suggested
labor failed to lobby
effectively for lt. "Labor
worked hard, but it may have
started 1oo late,'' Thompson
said.
The defeat spelled trouble
for other pendmg labor biils,
inclllllng repeal of the so·
called right-to-work laws and
an increase in the minimum
wage. Labor also seeks to
overturn three other Ford
vetoes.
The defeated picketing blll
was sunilar to the one vetoed
by Ford, and considerably
weaker than one labor had
hoped to obtain.
A total of 88 Democrats
joined 129 Republicans to
defeat the bill, while 191
Democrats and only 14
Republicans voted for it.

T.T.:
•

Nor do I !

Aguy whoasks you to go somewhere and make out expects

to ~o ~s far as you'll Ie.t him. And if you accept that kind of
mvitation, his expectations will be high. - HELEN

, ,,, +++

NOTE FROM SUE: The phrase "make&lt;&gt;ut" mea~
dlffei'ent things to different people these days. Some still go by;
your sister's definition, but there are others who insist'
"necking and petting" are passe - either you do or you dun't
and skip the in-tletweens. •
, .. ~, , , ,
'
II

T&lt;\n&gt;11

Lf-+f!

Dear Helen and Sue : "• ·
...
Can you get a pregnancy examination without letting 00.:
parents know? Can a girll!et an abortion without her parents,'
consent? And how abllut'birth control· Information •
I know you·can be•b&gt;eeted for •VD ~or get tl!e .;,am) at a:
county venereal disea!t!' clinic, no matter what, your age, and
no one need know - especially your parents. But l'Mlw about the
others? - JUST ASKING (Not for myself, butfor everyone t

,..

Dear Asking:
We can't give blanket answers to your questions because
our column appears in most states and some foreign countries
-:- and laws vary from place to place. Also, age makes a
difference.
In your state (California), a minor 's privacy Ia pretcy well
upheld. Pr~gnancy examinations and even abortions can be
had here Without parental consent, but if a girl is much under
16, don 't always count on this.
California aiso allows contraceptive service~ for girls of
any age, as do 11 other states and the District of Columbia but
by the time our column reaches print, laws may change to
Include more (or fewer) areas.
,
Over half the states have laws rrotecting certain aspects
of teenagers' privacy re sexual decisions. It would take several
columns and days of research to define them aU, for statutes
are widely different, and subject to frequent revisions.
,
Our .best advice: call your local Planned Parenthood
~sociation (League, Council, Committee, whatever it's called
myour City), and get the facts. If there Is no such organlzatiori
nearby, contact the free County VD cUnic, a telephone hotllne;
a doctor, the District Attorney's office, or try your public
lil:rary, if you enjoy pormg over law booka. - HELEN AND
SUE

+++

Rap:
.
"StlU In Love" who married at 16 and doesq't regret 11

needs an answer.
'
I too married af'!6, and my marriage has luted nine
years. My husband and I love each other and our three
chUdren beyond telling, But we also know what a tough uphiU
fight it's been and stlllla.
'
Marriage at 16 II a poor gamble. It takes lllperhuman
maturity, self-~acrlflce and alol ol hard wort emotlonally and
physically. I know I would have been a llJich kinder more
understanding and patient wife and mother had 1 been 1 lew
yean older.
, So Usten, all you eager romantica out there. Jllll because
thmgs are tense at home or In some other area o1 your llvea
don't be silly enough to think a baby and'or rnarrtage wiU eol~
your problema. Don 'I play Rusalan roulette with 101neone
else's life, especially a child's.
Before you can glw of youraell, you have to IPIIld 101ne
growing-up time finding out who "you" II. - BEEN THERE
AND KNOWS
1

~ Smith likes Mifflin's AA chances
~

~

g Svort rna ... ~de *~~

By GENE C,\DDES
UP! Sports Writer
~::::·
4
• "
·:·=·:·
COLUMBUS (UPI)
·~~
~.:::;
Columbus Miffiin coach John
Smith likes his chances in thiB
?.?;;.
By MILTON RICIIMAN
:···:·: weekend's Class AA SUIte
"'· ·
UPI Sports Editor
~:!;!; Hi gh School Basketball
DUNEDIN, F1a. (UPI ) - Back in the good old days when Tournament.
"I think we can wm tt ,·•
you could buy a lot of things but not a ballplayer Uke him
said
Smith, whose team
Bobby Doerr gave everybudy his money's worth.
'
Dayton Jefferson
meets
He played second base with the Boston Red Sox H years the
Friday
night
(9:30) at St.
~ay nobo&lt;jy ever played it for them before or since. He played
John
Arena
in
the
second AA
It with grace, with style and with remarkable ease.
semifinal
conrest.
The
6 p.m.
Bobby Doerr iB 58 now, he 's a part.tlme coach and batting
AA
opener
matches
instructor for the Toronto Blue Jays, one of the new expansion
clubs, and to look at him, with not a line m his face or an ounce Cleveland Cathedral Latin
of fat around his stomach, you'd have to bet he could go right agamst Ottawa-Glandorf.
The Class A semifinals,
out there to second base now and do okay.
scheduled
for II am. and 2:30
He laughs at that suggestion but admits he has stayed m
p.m.
Friday,
pits Continenta l
Jretty good shape doing some work as a guide for a lo&lt;jge near
(26-6) against Fort Loramie
where he llves in southwest Oregon.
E~ery time I see Bobby Doerr, I automatically think of Ted (I~ ) in the first game and
Williams because of how close they were when both were with Ross Southea stern ( 23-1)
theRed Sox. They were drawn together originally because of against Mansfield St. Peter's
their mutual love for fishing. Although Bobby Doerr hasn't (22-1) in the second.
Mifflin, led by ll-2 all.Qhio
seen Ted Williams in some time now, it's easy to see how he
second
teamer Dewey Milton ,
feels about him by the way he talks about the former Boston
slugger,
"He's the most unique person I ever met, very strong in his
beliefs, mtense and tremendously generous," said Bobby
0
Doerr here at the Blue Jays' camp, keeping his eyes on
1-Q
Toronto's yoiDlg hitters taking batting practice.
"I honestly think you have to know his background, and how
he grew up, to know something about him as an individuaL
Some years b'ack, I remember going on a scouting trip with
Ted to San Diego where he was born and brought up. Neil
Mahoney, who used to be the Red Sox' farm director, and Ray
.
Boone also were along on the trip. AU of us were gomg to San By GENE CAD DES
Diego to look over Dave Morehead, the pitcher. Remember UPI Sports Writer
him?
COLUMBUS (UP!) - It
"When we got to San Diego, the four of us had lunch together sounds so simple: "Get the
and Ted said he wanted to take us down to where hiB Dad'~ haU inside and beat the
photography shop used to he. We aU went, and Ted described press."
ever)'thing ffiSilch exact detail when we got there, I really had
That 's what Elyria's Mike
the feeling I was wallcing back into the past," said Doerr.
Riley says his team must do
"!suppose you know Ted's mother used to do work for the to beat the No. I ranked
Salvation Army. When we left this building where his father Barberton Magics in
had his shop, we..,._,ed to the street corner. 'This ls where the tonight's opening semifinal
Salvation Army used to parade around the block,' Ted told us. game of the Class AAA State
He didn't say anything for another second or so, and then he High School Basketball
said, 'My mother would make me parade with the band and r Tournament. But, 50 other
used to get behind the big baas drum and try to hide.'
teams have tried and failed
"When Ted told us that, I had the feeling right there was the over the past two years.
place he became the type person he did. Something that
The Pioneers and Ma~cs,
happens to you when you're young can stay with you the rest of both 2W, meet at 6 p.m. at
your life. Ted wanted to be a perfectionist m anything he did . Ohio State's St. John Arena,
That went for fishing, h!tting a baseball or even playing golf, while Columbus Linden
which he tried for awhile.
McKmley
(24-0)
and
"He was the greatest hitter I ever saw,'' said Doerr, with the Cmcinnati LaSalle (2!.,'3) play
kind of cooviction that shut the door to any possible argument. at 9.30 p.m. m the other AAA
"For JUst hitting the baseball, I don't think there could've been semifmal.
anybudy much better than him ... ever. He never ran fast
Barberton, which takes a
, enough to beat out any base hits and still had a lifetime 501!ame wmning streak into
average of .344 Think of that for a second. Then bear in mmd the game, boasts three allhelostfiveofhispeakyearsinservice."
Ohioans m Carrer Scott, a
Bobby Doerr talked about the first time he ever saw Ted first team selection, and
Wllllams in June of 1936. Doerr was playing with San Diego of twms Mark and Marty
the Pacific Coast League and Williams, who had barely Bodnar, both named to the
fmished high school, came out to the ballpark for a tryout,
second team.
"He was only 17, and our manager, Frank SheUenback said
Scott leads in scoring at 24
'Let this kid hit a few, " Doerr recalled. "He hit only flv~ ba~ per game, Mark and Marcy at
and three of them went out of the ballpark. There was this 18 and 16 respectively, and
player, I wish I could remember his name, standing near the the other two starteri; Fred
batting cage, and he said, 'Geez, thiskid'U be signed before the Grisby and Tony Ward, are
week's out.' Sure enough, he was signed four or five days later. also in double figures.
That Sunday night, the whole team went to the train station.
" We've got a lot of
Ted was there. He looked like a nervous race horse. He threats ," understated
couldn't walt to get started "
Barberton coach Jack

I

I

brmgs a 21.3 record into its
game agamst Jefferson,
whose 17-7 mark is by far the
worst among the four AA
semifinalists.
But, Jefferson 's record IS
somewhatdeceivmg smce the
majority of the Broncos'
regular season games were
against AAA competition.
Although Milton made the
aU.Qhio squad, Smtth mstSts,
"we don't have a key player
Our key IS balance. We 've
had six different kids lead us
lll

scormg.''

Miffim's only size comes
from 6·7 junior Marvin
Walker, who "has become a
lot more physical and been
scormg Inside for us."
Mil!lin, making its first
appearance m the semis, also
lost mly to AAA reams during
the regular season, Columbus
City League opponents
Unden, Marion -Frankhn enrl

South.
Jeffer son coach Norris
Brown admits " 17-7 IS not a
very good record to be here,"
but pomts to the Broncos•
schedule
Cedric Hayden, a 6-1

games.
Lowrie, a &amp;-foot guard,
averaged JUSt over 20 points
per game for the Lions, who
lost on ly to Cleveland St
Ignatius and Parma Padua
during the regular season .
Pothast 's 24.3 average
leads Ottawa-Glandorf , but
he has sohd support from B.J .
Dickey at 16 points per game
and !Hi center Joe Moss at 17.
"We hke to get the ball
out, " satd 0-G coach Ron
Niekamp. "Our kids have
outstanding quickness and
speed and we like to take
advantage of it."
Forl wram1e is led by IN
Doug Brandewie, a second
team
aii-Oh'toan
who
avera ges 24 8 points per
game.
Cont menta l ha s four
pla yers scormg m double
figures , led by JUruor guard

Kevm Homier at 16 per game
and 6-6 juntor J ody
Wassermann and 6-3 seruor
Ron Harter at 14 each
Both teams have good s1ze,
neither starting a player
under SIX feet taU.
semor, is Jefferson 's top
"Team unity and balance
scorer With a 17-pomt
has been the key to our
average
and
Brown
gettmg here," srud coach Don
described him as "the best
Huber. ~~Someone has always
all-around kid we have."
picked up the slack "
The second AA game
Southeastern , coached by
between Latin and OttawaLarry Jorda n, is small, but
Gandorf, both 22-2, matches a
quick and well balanced.
pair of aU.Qhw guards m Bob
"We're not much m size "
wwrie and Ken Pothast.
said Jordon, "but the kids
Lowne , a three-year
have made up for It m desire.
regular, will be the only
We try to press and move the
senior in the starting Latin
hall up and down the court. "
lineup unless ll-2 Mike HarriS
Jordan's two leading
recovers unexpectedly from
scorers are Coy Prater and
a shoulder injury.
Jeff Schuler, both averagmg
"I don 't think he 's gomg to
16 per game
make It," Latin coach Don
St. Peter's, under ftrst year
Gacey said of Harris, who
coach Pal Maurer, has been
also missed both "~ional
picked by some as the team to
beat m Class A.
As usual , the Spartans
played one of the toughest
Class A schedules in the stare
and they had littie trouble m
their two regiOnal games.
Mike Demyan, a 1).3 seruor,
Is St Pete 's leading scorer
wtth a l~omt average, but
Maurer srud, "our big asset is
the key to the Magi cs' only player , either.
our overall team play We
success.
Sterling W1lharns, a IN feel we've got some good
"Teams lose their poise senior forward, lS a fme
against Barberton's press, n shooter and rebounder and
said Riley. "They play pamc the DaVIs twms, James and
basketbaU "
· John at IN and 6-4, given the
Tonight's other semifinal Panthers good scorilig and
matches seco nd ranked reboundmg.
Unden, the 1975 AAA state
LaSalle is the lesser known
champion, agamst ten th- of the four AAA semifmahsts
ranked LaSalle, makmg Its
The Lancers of coach Bill
first St. John Arena Cady are a sohd , well·
appearance since 1967.
balanced
club
with
Unden is led by two.t1me "adequate height" and ail
aii·Utio guard Todd Penn , a five starters averagmg m
lightning quick 5-10 senior double figures.
who has led the Panthers to
Gary Woeste at 6-6, Tony
the state tournament three Roehrich at Ch'i and 1).3 Bob
straight years He was Schroeck, all se ni ors,
mmed aiHournament as a represe nt LaSa ll e's size,
sophomore.
•
while JUnior guard Ted
"Todd has an enormous Duggms IS the La ncer floor
amount of confidence and its leader
co ntagwu s," said Linden
"We have adequate height'
coach Jene Davis "He could . and pretty good experience,"
go one for 20 from the floor SBld Cady, "and our scormg
and It wouldn 't bother his IS well distributed.
confidence. He' ~ the maj or
" We had a lot of close
reason we've been here three games ," added Cady. "Our
straight years."
kids have a lot of
But, Penn iBn't Unden 's con{idence."

Elyr"J• must beat press and

t ball
e
inside against Magics
e.
D'

Greynolds. "The kids are so
unselfish. If anythmg, we
overpass sometimes.''
But, with aU Barberton's
guns, Riley lSD 'I awed.
"Barberton iB the class of
the state, l'U have to agree
with that,'' said Riley. "But
there is no basketball team in
Ohio which IS unbeatable. "I
hope we can make a good
showmg. Our kids have been
looking forward to this aU
year. 11
Riley's big man IS 6-9
Richard Montague, another
first team all.()hioan, who
averages 21 pomts and 10
rebounds per game.
Elyria'sNo. 2 scorer is 5-10
Hubert Oliver, an all.Qhio
defens!Ye back m football,
averaging !4.5 point per
game, while IN Junior Steve
Undquist IS the Pioneers'
second leading rebounder
and "takes a lot of pressure
off of Montague."
The Barberton press, which
Greynolds jokingly catis "or·
ganized confuSion ," has been

Warriors whip 76ers
By FRED LIEF
UPI Sports Writer
Rick Barry, playmg with
the savvy of a schoolyard
hustler, boosted the Golden

Rose fans going to bat for h(!ro
By RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI (UP! )
Pete Rose fans are going to
bat for their hero - With their
pocketbooks.
Rose, an extremely pop~lar
Cincmnati Reds player the
past 14 seasons, has not
signed hiS 1977 contract with
u.e club. He complains the
ream IS not offering him what
he IS worth, compared with
the reported salaries of other
players.
' If Rose doesn 't Sign, he wlll
become a free agent and
could wind up with another

Dawson, mana ger or a
department store, says he
will turn over 10 per cent of
his gross sales this weekend
to Pete.
Ma xwell , a
college
freshman , spent $35 on a
newspaper ad telling fans to
write the Reds and demand
that Rose be g~ven a "fall'
contract." He is planrung
another ad , if he can scrape
up more money.
Dawson, manager of the
Richter
&amp;
Ph1lhps
department store in suburban
Delhi Hllls near Rose 's home,
team next season . . ,
said he is starting a "Let's
The thought of Rose m Get Pete Signed" project this
another uniform pamcs fans weekend.
"This Friday, Saturday
like Mike Dawson and Blll
and
Sunday, we're going to
Maxwell

donate 10 per cent of our • manager Dick Wagner's ad·
gross sales to Pete. We figure dress, "askmg them to give
it'llcomeouttoabout$1,000. I Pete Rose a fair contract."
know Pete probably won 't
Maxwell , 18, a Xavier
take the money, so we're University freshman from
telling him to donate lt to the Latrobe, Pa., said, "I want to
charity of his choice .
see Pete play in Cincinnati
"But, It S8ld Dawson, this lmtil he retires. I'm from the
symbolizes that we want the Pittsburgh area, but I'm a
Reds to sign Pete. We don't ' Reds fan because of Pete.
want him to become a free That's one of the reasons I
agent. He's as good as the came to school here."
rest of the P,layers making the
Maxwell said he got a letter
bigger money. The reason the from Rose 's agent, Reuven
stadiwn is filled is becauae of Katz, thanking him for
players like him."
running the ad and saying
Maxwell's ad m the sports Pete probably would contact
section of the Cincinnati Post him when he arrives in town
was headlined: "We Want from spring training.
Pete Rose m Cincinnati.'
Maxwell also talked to Reds
"Write the Reds," said the olllclala, asking about the
ad, which gave Reds' general response to his ad, but they
refused to give him any
Information .
"If I can dig up $35.70 I 'U
run the ad again,'' he added .
"Or, if I really can find some
money, I might take out an ad
in Sports illustrated. That
probably would be an astronomical cost. I'll be
paymg for It tiU f 'm 106 years
old, but it'd be worth lt to
to Milwaukee in the Colborn· keep Pete in Cincinnati.''
Porter deal which leaves
either AI Cowens or rookie
Joe Zdeb to flU the hole there.
"We're hoping Zdeh can
replace Wohlford," says
Herzog. ''He hit weU at
Omaha last year and we're
waiting Ill see if he can hit up
here. But we know Cowens
can do the job, too.''
Of course, the Royals are
not without their plusses.
Designated hitter Hal McRae
(who will Ukely see a lot of
'
action In left field too), third
baseman George Brett and
PHONE
outfielder Tom Poquetre all
'THE ALL NEW
hit .300 or better last year,
with Brett nosing out McRae
for the batting title. And
there's aiso John Mayberry
-Erijoy three sTzes of your favorite
and Amos Otis who drove in
pin as.
95 and 86 runa, respectively.
With those kind of hitters
- Try our delicious subs while you
plus adequate pitching,
sip your favorite suds.
Herzog makes a good point
Eat In Ot Carry Out
when he says California and
Phone
Texas still have to prove
992-6304
they're better than O.kland
11

Herzog feels Royals
still team to-beat
By BILL MADDEN
·least this year the Kansas
.UPI Spotta Wrtrer
City skiwer doesn 't have to
FORT MYE;RS, Fla. (UPI) worry about that happening
- Ills best pitcher may never again. He's not counting on
throw again, his two closest Busby coming back.
division rivalS are said to be
"Oh sure, I'd like to say
the most Improved teams in he'U be hack by July or
baseball and his left fielder August," says Herzog . "But
JlliiY be an unproven rookie. reaUstlcaily, you've got to
Nevertheless, Whitey Herzog figure at least a year to
sees no reason . why his recover from an injury Uke
Kansas City Royals aren't that - maybe more. I'm not
.still the team to best In the counting on anything for that
American League West.
reaaon.''
"Peo!ile seem to forget that
Instead Herzog will go with
We went down to the final a starting rotatioo of Dennis
Inning of the final game Leonard (17-10 ), Andy
before we lost out on being in Hassler
(5·12),
Paul
tile World Series last year," Splittorif! (ll.a), Doug Bird
reminds Herzog. "I know (12-10) and Jim Colborn (!1everybody II saying that 15), who was acquirecl'along
Califcrnla llld Tuas are so with catcher Darrell 'Porter
much lmprond. But can they in a trade with the Milwaukee
be better than the O.kland Brewcn. Larry Gura, who
club we had Ill beat out lUI filled in 110 brtlUanUy as a
ytlf?''
late seaaonlllarter in '76, will
One of Henog'a biggest be relet!ated to shcrt relief
louel has been Steve Buaby, alq with Steve Mingori.
who tore • rotator cull ~Iy
The left field problem also
lui ltUOil and was placed m concerns Herzog, but not
.the dilabled list for the greatly. Last year's left
remainder of \he year. At fielder, Jim WohUord , went
llo

State Warriors to a 128-120
victory over free-wheeling
Philad e lphia 76e r s
Wednesday night.
After gomg two~or...,ven
from the floor in the first half,
Barry played his trump card
m the fmal two periods with a
IJ.for-19 shooting spree to
snap Philadelphia's fourgame winnmg streak.
ASpectrwn crowd of 17,406
saw the damage begin late in
the third quarter With the
76ers leading, 89-85. Barry
reeled off nme points in less
than four mmutes and pushed
Golden State ahead, 91&gt;-91,
going mto the final period.
However, Philadelphia 's
two-man demolition squad,
George McGinnis and Julius
Erving, kept matters within
rea ch. With 4:31 to go
Philadelphia trimmed the
Warriors' lead to 11().108.
But
Barry, Charles
Johnson , Phil Smith and
Clifford Ray aU hit baskets to
send Golden State to a 118-108
lead and seal the game for
good.
'
McGinnis finished with 34
points and Erving with 28,
Doug Collins had 20 and
Smith, on a superb !0-lor-15
shooting night, finished with
20 points as did Jammal
Wilkes.
"I'm happy that we won the
game,'' sald Barry, now in
his loth year of professional
ball. "We needed thiS game
badly.''
Still, with the Lakers' win

with us!

PlANNING A.PIZZA PARTY

MEIGS INN PIZZA SHACK

O.nttaued on

P••• s.
'

over Indiana Wednesday
mght Golden State remains
4!k games behmd the Pacific
Division leaders.
In other games, Kansas
City defeated the New York
Nets, 107-96, Boston downed
Atlanta, 103-96, Houston
topped Portland, 109·104,
Washington took Cleveland,
95-90, New Orleans bea t
Detroit, 95-89, ws Angeles
stopped Indiana, 105-97, and
San Antonio tripped Denver,
122-120.
Kings 107, Nets 96:
Brian Taylor scored a
ga me·high 29 points and
reserve Jim Eakins added 14,
all m the fmal period, as
Kansas City reeled off Its
ninth victory in Its last II
games. Bubbles Hawkins' 22
points and Jim Fox's 21 paced
the Nets, who have lost six m
a row

personnel and we like to rely
on ow- bench."

''Qperations and
hospital rooms cost
a lot more
than you think."

BIU. FLETCHER
149 South Third
Middleport, 0
Ph. 992-71S5

hospital/surgical insurance.
Like a good

neighbor,
State Farm
is there.

l!a1t lUll

1IOJIO IAJ•(I

•

State
Farm
Mutual
Au t omobile
Insurance
Company
Home
Oftrce
Bloom ingto n. lll 1nors

Introducing the
'77Rab6it
ith fuel-iniection

Volkswagen s done 11 ogo•n
They ve made luel 1n1ect10n standard equ1pment on
the 1977 Raob11
And Ihat mea ns faster occele,ohon easrer sloris and
a cleonet runnrng en g1ne

Fuel rn1eCI1on v,, ll also make the Rabb11cheaper lo
dnve
S1nce rl doesn t need a cotalyt1 c converter • anymore
you II be able louse Ihe most economical grade of gas
So come on 1nlo our showroom and take a look al our
new fuel •n1ected Rabb1 1
And wh&gt;le you reI here, we con lell you aooul the
olher 68 charges and •mprovemenls on ~
Ihe 1977 Robbll
*Caldornra excluded

Riverside Volkswagen
195 Upper River Road

Galhpolis, Oh1o

446·9800

ITS JUST

AROUND THE
CORNER

�•

4 _ The Deily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., 1bursday, March 24,1977

STANDINGS ·
Smythe Divis lon
W L T Ph . GF GA
St . Louis
30 35 9 69 716 '2SO
Chicago
24 AO 11 59 n1 279

.. BA Standings
By United Press International
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Di vision

w.

L- Pet.

PhiiMelph la AJ 18 606
Boston
38 34 .528
NY Kn lck.s
JJ 38 .464
Buffa lo
27 45 .375
NY Nets
21 51 .29'1
Central Division
W- L - Pet.

GB
-

5'

2

10
161 2
?2 1 1
GB

Houston
45- 11 .625 wa sh ington
.tl JO .577 3' '
San Anton io
40 32 .556 5
Cleveland
38 33 .535 6 1 '2
New Orleans 29 4'2 .408 15' '
At lanta
29 44 .397 16' '
.~·
Wester n Conference
Midwest Division

. w.

Denver
Detroit
Kansas utv
Chicago
Indiana
Milwaukee

~acific

44
40
39
37

L28
32
33
35

Pet.
.611

GB

.556
.54'2

4
5

.514

7

.425 13 1 2
25 49 .338 20

3 1 42

Division

w.

L - Pet

GB

Los Angeles
&lt;~5 27 .625
Portland
42 32 .508 4
Golden stare 41 32 .562 41 '?
Sea ttle
37 37 .500 9
Phoenix
28 &lt;12 .400 16
Wednesday 's Results
Kansas City 107 NY Nets 96
Golden St . 128 Phila 1.20
Boston 103 Atlanta 96
Houston 109 Portland 10.4
Wa shington 95 Clevela-nd 90
New Drl e ~ns 95 Det ro it 89
LoS - Ange l~ 105 lndiema 97
San Antonio 122 Denver 120
Thurs~ay's Games
Houston at San Antonio
New Orleans at Cleveland
Buffalo at PhOen ix
Friday's GCimes
Wash ington at Boston
Portland at NY Nets
San An tonio at Ph ila
Kansas City at New Orleans
NY I&lt; nicks at Chicago
Golden Sta te at Detroit
Atlanta at Indi ana
Denver at Milwaukee
1 Phoenix at Los Angeles
NHL Standings
By United Press International
campbell Conference
Patrick Divi!ion
W L T Pts. GF G.A
Ph ila
44 16 14 102 295 200
NY lslandrs 44 19 12 100 268 178
At lanta
31 33 11 73 247 252
NY Rangers 28 JJ 14 70 260 286

Vancouver

74 40 11 59 716 269

M innE&gt;sota

20 l6 18 58 721 283

Colorado

19 .U 13 51 708 ?:87
Walts Conference
Norr is Division

• W L T Ph.
x Montreat 55 a 11 121
P ittsburgh J2 31 1J 17
Los Angeles 30 31 14 7-4
Washingtn 20 40 14 54
Detroit
16 48 9 41
Adam s Division
W l T Pts.
Buffalo
47 22 6 100

GF GA
355 166

2211
242
196
115

240
223
284
219

G F GA
284 204

Boston

44 22 8 96 284 219
33 2.9 13 79 284 260
Cleveland 24 39 11 59 212 264
x-Ciinched d ivi5ion title
Wednesday ' s Results
NV Rangers 5 (OIOro!ldO 3
NV Islanders 1 Toron to 1

Toronto

Detroit at At lanta
St . Louis a I Montreal
Friday 's Games
NY Rangers at washington
Vancouver a t Cleveland
1 Buffa lo at Colorado

•

WHA Standings

By Un it ed Press International
Et~st

Quebec
Cinc innati
lnd ianapls
New Englnd
Birmnghm
x-Minn
'

W
44
37
33
31
30
19

L- T Pts.
28 2 90
33 3 77
34 7 73
37 6 68
42 · 3 63
18 5 43

GF GA
327 269
327 271
248 275
248 264
265 280
136 129

West

W l- T Pts. GF GA
Houston
&lt;~5 21 6 96 292 209
Winn ipeg
&lt;12 29 2 86 336 260
San Diego
34 34 4 12 242 257
Calgary
28 39 5 61 215 258
Edmonton 29 41 3 61 207 279
Phoenix
2743 4 58 255347
x -Team di sbanded
Wednesday 's Results
Quebec 6 Cincinnati 4
Bir mingham 4 PhOeni)( 0
Thursday 's Games
Quebec at Indianapol is
Bir mingham at San Diego
Edmonton at New EJ"Igland
Friday's Games
Calgary at Houston
Edmonton at Cincinnati
1 San Di~o a t PhOeni x

Bryant takes
R~dskin post
'·

OXFORD, Ohio (UP! ) Miam i University . has
complet ed its football
coaching stall with the hiring
of Cleve Bryant, a former
Ohio University quarterback,
and two Miami grads, Jack
Himebauch and Randy
Walker, as assistants.
"I am pleased to get three
·men of their caliber as they
will fit in nicely with our
stall," head coach Dick Crum
said Wednesday. "This
completes our coaching staff
and we can now concenta.te
on the opening · of spring
practice next Monday.' We
plan to hold our annual spring
game April 30."
Bryant, who will coach
quarterbacks and wide receivers, is a 1970 graduate of
Ohio U. and was Inducted into
the Bobcats' Athletic Hall of
Fame in 1975. He led OU to
back-t(r]iack Mid-American
Conler~nce titles in . 1967.&amp;1
and was the MAC's offensive
player of the year in 1968.
Himebauch, a 1966 Miami
grad, earned three letters as
a tight end under coaches
John
Pont
and· Bo

such as the nagging San
Francisco Bay area problem,
inter-league play and
expa nded post season
playoffs are also expected to
draw considerable attention
from the owners.
The American League,
seeking to solve the
scheduling problef!lS ol its
expanded 14-club ci rcuit,
favors li geographical
realignment into three
divisions of five, five and lour
teams. However. as AL

Boston 6 Detroit 0

Los Angeles 3 Chicago 1
BUffl'llo 4 Cleveland 2
Thursday's Games
Philadelphia at Boston

Schembechler. He spent the
past year as an assistant at
Fordham University. At
Miami, he will be in charge of
tackles and tight ends.
Walker, a 1976 graduate of
Miami who will work with the
running backs, was a
graduate assistant on the
football staff this past season.
Miami's sixth all-time
leading rusher,' Walker was
the team's most valuable
play.er in 1976.
Meanwhile, ~iaml officials
announced that Archie
Aldridge, a junior from
Middletown, has been voted
the basketball team's most
valuable player for the
season just completed.
The IK&gt; forward led the
Redskins
in scoring,
rebounds, field goal and free
throw percentage.
"I am very proud of this
team," said coach Darrell
Hedric. "They did all that
was asked ol them. They
shared the Mid-American
Conference championship
and became only the third
team in · Miami· basketball
history to win 20 games."

Heritage Classic begins
HILTON HEAD ISLAND, marsh,
"I really enjoy playing this
S.C. (UPI) - Jack Nicklaus
can be forgiven if he's partial course/' Nicklaus said
to the 6,655-yard Harbour Wednesday after shooting a 2Town golf links where today's over-par 73 in a Pro-Am
$225,000 Heritage Golf Classic event. "I wouldn't be fair il I
didn1 say I am partial to it.
is being played.
The PGA tour golfers came
After ail, he helped deSign
the course, which features to Ibis resort island hoping to
narrow fairways flanked by recover from the windswept
disaster
called
the
moss~aden trees and salt
Tournament Players
Championship. Mark Hayes
survived the winds that
sometimes gusted more than
40 miles per hour at the TPC
to win the event wiih a 1-&lt;Jverpar 289.
The Heritage will be Nick·
laus' final tournament before
he attempts 1n win his sixth
Master's title two weeks
hence .
. TAMPA, Fla. ('IJPI)
Hubert Green is the defend·
Doug Rau arid Charlie Hough
teamed up to scatter seven ing champion ol tile Heritage,
hits while pitching the Los ooe of three straight tournaAngeles Dodgers to a 2-1 ments he won last year.
victory over the Cincinnati Green Is 33rd in mmey
winnings thus far this year
Hens Wednesday, •
Both Dodger runs came in with a total of $?3,464.
the first inning ·off Santo
Alcaln. Reggie Smith doubled
home Dave Lokes with the
first of the two runs after the
Dodger second baseman
reached first safely on Joe
Tbe SVAC All·Lea«ue
Morgan's error,
Banquet
has been changed
Rick Monday, an off -~~eason
from
1:30
to 6:38 p.m.
acquisition, from the Chicago
Sunday,
April
3 at the Rlo
Cubs singled home Smith
Gnade
College
Cafeteria.
with the second run.
Highlli#Jt
of
lbe
baaquet
After the first inning Alcala
wm
be
the
pre!enlatlon
of
blanked the Dodgers through
trophies
to
all
league
the next five innings before
giving way to Joe Henderson. football and basketball
Manny Sarmiento pitched a teams plus the Most
scoreless ninth for the Reds. Valaable Player award1
eo·•pon•ored by Radio
The Reds' only 1'111 came in
Station
WJEH and lbe ·
the second inning when Joel
Suadly-Times
SenUnel.
Youngblood singled home
Bob Bailey. The single was
ooe or three straiglt hits for
Yollllj!blood.
,

President Lee MacPhail with it too. Then there's also
points out, that could change the 13-13 proposal which will
if the National League have a lot of bearing on what
doesn 'I decide to realign we ultimately decide." ·
The "13-13" proposal Macsimilarly.
" I think there is Phail referred to concerns
considerable sentiment both inter~eague play and the
wnong our people' for three San Francisco problem. At
divisions," conceded Mac- both last winter's annual
Phail. "You never know, meetings at Los Angeles and
though, how that sentiment an informal gathering of
mlghi change once we begin American League officials in
formal discussion of it. A lot Phoenix last month, it was
depends on whether or not the proposed that the Oakland
Nalionill League goes along A's franchise be purmaaed
from Charles 0 . Finley and

Reds, 2~1

smiled 1n Washington as a
National League team. That
would alleviate the over·
populated Bay Area and
create two 13·dUb circuits
with the inevitability of interleague play.
"I wouldn't think all of that
could nil; be approved at
these meetings," said
MacPhail, "but it will
certainly be discussed. ... "
It has be!!n suggested that
Finley, wllo recenUy lost his
$3.5 million lawsuit against
baseball Commissioner

McGuire feels NCAA tickets cost too much·
By l&gt;AVID MOFFIT
UP! Sports Wrfter
ATLANTA (UP!)
Marquette's AI McGuire
closes out his coaching career
this weekend at the NCAA
hasketballlinals, but says Ill!'
only thing l!othering him
allout it is the high price
they're charging for tickets
here.
"I really believe an
amateur event should not be
charging $14 a seat," said
McGuire. "That's the only
hangup I have about going 1n
Atlanta."
The fans had to buy tickets
for all four games (two
sessions) at a cost of $28. That
was last spring. Now, that
price looks like a real bargain
because scalpers are asking ,
and getting, up to $375 a
ticket.
Saturday's semifinals pair
Marquette (23-7) vs. UNC·
Charlottle (28-3) at 2:15p.m.
EST and third-ranked North
Carolina (27-1) vs. sixth·
ranked Nevada-Las Vegas
(28-2) at 4:15. A consolation

game between Saturday's
losers will be played Monday
at 5:35 p.m. with the
championship game at 8:15.
All four ~owns get their
first look al the 15,000&lt;1eat
Omni Friday afternoon.
Marquette will practice there
at 1p.m. EST, Las Vegas at2,
UNCCharlotte at 3, and North
Carolina at 4.
McGuire, who has coached
for 13 seasons at Marquette
after spending seven years at
Belmont Abbey in Olarlotte,
N.C., said he tried to retire
earlier.
"You can't have a lame
duck season," · he said. "I
dldn 'I want to coach this
year. I wanted (assistant'
Hank) Raymond to coach and
let me be athletic dlrec1nr.
But, it ·just didn't work out.
"I have no special feeling
about retiring. It's been a
nice nm."
North Carolina Is goipg !pto
Saturday's semifinaJsoiJI (he ,
poorest physical shape.
Center Tom LaGarde is out
with a knee inlurv. second·

team AIJ'I\merJca guard Phil
Ford has an injured elbow,
and forward Wall Davis has a
broken finger oil his shOot!ng
hand.
Ford was 1n practice 1nday
in Chapel Hill, N.C., for the
first time since last Saturday

when he sat out most of the
second half in North
Carolina's victory over
Kentucky · · ln the East
Regionals. Davis is playing
with his linger in a splint. Robert Smith, Las Vegas'
playmaking ''!"ard, played

with
a
102 . degree
temperature in the Midwest
finals Saturday and was
hospitalized when . he got
home. He was .!ll'pected, to
return to practice today and
be ready for Saturday's
game.

.

Cecil Cooper one each for the
Brewers. Menawhile, Bobby
Grieb, Dan Briggs, Bruce
Boehle, Dave Chalk and Ike
Hamp1nn heightened the in·
securities of the Brewers'
pitching 'staff with a home·
run apiece.
·1
In Tempe, the Seattle
Mariners scoroo eight ·fUllS in
the first inning, : collected 18
hits and had 10 walks - and
lost. The San Diego Padres
came up with ' 20 hits and
seven walks for a 17·15
victory, It· was a defensive
performance which would
bring shame to the
Pittsburgh Steelers.
Gene Tenace, Mlke lvie
and Gene Richards each
drove in three· runs for the
Padres, while BW Stein had
four rbi for the Marmers.

Sports business. .
and Angel Tor.res to. minor
league complex lor reass(gn·
men!.
Pro Basketball
New Orleans
Fired
General Manager Barry
Mendelson.
l)ollege Basketball
Kansas State -Jack ~­
man quit after two days at
Oklahoma State and returned
as head coach.
Soccer
Chicago (NASL) - Signed
midfielder Jim M~lliog.

The new 1976 tax taw is full of changes.
New credits ...new deductions ... new
rules that affect you and every taxpayer.
EM Block people are ready.to help save
you money by taking every allowable
deduction and credit.

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: TUCSON,' Alii%. (lm) - fOiirth to stiark San Francisco
:The Cleveland Indians 1n a 9-0 victory. The Giants
·, received good news and very mounted a 13-hit attack.
bad news · during batting · The winher was john ilarr,
: . : ;wactice Wednesday, losing who gave up five runs in six
·· starting left fielder Johnny innings. Jim Bibby took the
, .;;~rubb to a knee jnjury and loss, surrendering eight runs
, ~ egaining the services of in four and one-third innings.
: • fuillionuire pitcher Wayne
The Indians got two of their
: ,• ,Garland.
runs on Rico Carty's first
1· Grubb was chasing a fly home run of the Spring.
: ~ :ball when his foot caught in
• the turl and he suffered torn
HELLMANN PRESENTS
"ligaments and a dislocated
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) right knee. He will be in a Playwright Lillian Hellman
castlorsixweeksand will not will present the best
• be able to play for two weeks doc till en!B ry Oscar at the
· after the cast is removed.
annual Academy Award
, The 28-year-&lt;Jid fielder was ceremony Monday night, the
hitting .467 with ten RB!s and movie academy. announced
two home runs.
Wednesday.
Garland, out of action the
past two weeks with
BENEFrr SHOW
tendooitis in the bicep of hls
WINNIPEG, Manitoba
pitching arm, was able to (UPI)
Heavyweight
pitch hatting practice for 18 mainpion Muhammad Ali
minutes. Manager Frank will tap on a triangle and flhn
Robinson has scheduled him tar Sophia Loren will give a
·:to pitch Sunday againSt tbe red a! April 29 in a benefit
Olicago Cubs.
performance for the defictt·
The bad news continued puued Winnipeg Symphony
~ after batllrig .ptactice as the Orchestra.
•Indians lost fheir fourth
Other celeprities who have
straight exhibition game.
pedged their aid include
· Gary Thomasson tripled in panl!t Van Cliburn, dancers
~two runs in the third and Jose Greco and Nana Lorca,
.,delivere.\1 another in th~ -...,fl!lor Harry Belafonte.

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The farm previously had
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U1eir tusks. thev were nnt.
good animals to stock. Also in
stock at one time was a pair
of llamas which are af.
lectionate animals, hut when
irritated. can spit accurately

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formation, referral and
follow -up ; information on
architectural barriers; ad·
· vocacy projects; legislation
monitoring, and research
grants to find causes, cures
and prevention for crippling.
National chairman ol the
1977 Easter Seal campaign is
actor Michael Landon, NBC.'
TV star of "Little House on
the Prairie." Theme of the
1977 national campaign is
"Money Walks."
"Inflation has taken a
special toll on the nation's
physically handicapped,"
pointed out-Landon. 11Senior
citizens on Social Security or
a llxed income suffer the
most. The price of wheel·
mairs, canes, crutches and
walkers has skyrocketed, and
many disabled · persons
depend on Easter Seal loan
equipment . programs for
these Items."
More
than
353,000
physically handicapped
persons received services
from Eastern Seal societies
across the· nation last year.
The nonprofit organization
was founded in Elyria, Ohio
in 1919 and is the nation's
oldest and largest voluntary
health agency serving the
handicapped, It has 77 af·
flliates in Ohio. Last year, the
Society provided 110rvices to a
total ol 27,486 physically
disabled children and adults
in Ohio.
"As in past years, Easter
Seal donations are received
in Columbus to expedite
hllndling and are then for·
warded to local afliliates
where the funds are expended
for direct services," Crum
explained.
The Easter Seal Society is
fully approved by the Better
Business Bureau and the
National Advertising Council,
Inc. Copies of the state and
national annual report and ,
financial statement are
available free upon request.
Easter Seal societieS are
independently operated and
funded, and requests lor
assistance should be directed
to the chairman ol the local
110ciety, to the city or county
public health nurse, or to the
Ohio Easter Seal Society, 5 N.
Broadleigh Rd., Columbus,
0 , , 43209', phone (614 ) 237•
7641.

Easter Seals are being
mailed to thousands of area
residents this month,
marking the annual lund·
raising appeal for the local
Society lor Crippled Children
and Adults. The 1977 campaign extends through Easter
Sunday, April 10.
"Easter Seals are mailed
without obligation for persons
to use on personal letters or in
any other way they choose,"
said Jimmy Crum, 1977 state
campaign
chairman.
Donations are used to support
local services lor han·
dl~apped children and adults.
"Easter Seal societies
adaPt their services to meet
specific community needs,"
Crum said. "Through
referral
to
qualified
professionals, rehllbilitation
treatment is available in such
programs as physical, oc·
cupatlonal, speech · and
vocational therapy,
psychological iesting and
counseling."
In Meigs County the
Middleport· Pomeroy Rotary
Club served as Society for
Crippled Children and
Adults ln lts alternate
identity. Vern Weber, im·
mediate past president ol
Rctary, is. president of the
society. Local mailing of
Easter Seals will be com·
pleted this week following a
"stuffing" session Friday
evening at Iieath United
Methodist Church . Rotary
Anns wlll be special guests
lor dinner at 6 p.m.
Some of the services
available through local
Easter Seal societies are:
resid~ntial camping for
hllndicapped children and
adults; transportation to
clinics, medicailon, shoes for
orthopedic correction,
e]i.Uwsy clinics, sP.ech and
l!f~r!nl, ~lnics, and loan of
wheelchairs, braces and
crutches.
Other services provided
through the local or state
Easter Seal Society includu
special education ; in·
Spurs 122, Nuggets UO: .
Mike Gale stole a pass and
made an easy layup with
eight secoods remaining 1n
push San Antonio past
Midwest Division-leading
Denver and nullified David
Thompson's season-high «
point performance. George
Gervin hit a team-high 38
points for the Spurs.

·

Legislature
at a glance

POLLY·s POINTERS

United Press International

HOUSE
Bill Introduced

Polly Cramer

HB 462 Carney . Establishes
a state board of soci al work
examiners and prov ides for

Remove ad'hestve
' wtt· h vegetablA
'/
1-e ot
HB 463 Nettle . Chaliges one

licensing social workers.

of the ~rounds upon which the
trial Judge of a court of
record may suspend or
r evoke a per son's driver 's
license .
HB 464 Kurfess . Requires
gas and electri c uti lities to
draft a plan to meet energy
demands .
tiB 465 Me Ewen . Increases
and fixes the commissions
received by agents operating
agency liquor stores.

BYPOLLYCRAMER
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve Is with the price
!tickers that are put on the
face of pastic items. If there
is a safe easy way to remove
th e adhesive left by these
!tickers I have not disc'Overed
it. Such !tickers should btl
applied fo the underside
HB 466 Me Ewen. Exempts where they woul d not even
sales of residential heating hav e to be removed. fuel from sales tax .
ANNA.
HB .467 Carney . Provi des
DEAR ANNA - Have you
tax exemptions for energy
conversion facilit ies.
ever tried rubbing vege!Bble
HB 468 Smart. Exempts oil on this adhesive' sales of res idential heating
POlLY.
fuel from sa les tax .

HB 469 Nader . Provi des for
terminati on of driver 's
license suspension for refusa l
to take alcohol test if an

DEAR POLLY - I need
advice on how to clean
six
beautiful
ne edl epoint
accused pleads guilty to OWl.
dlair
a&gt;vers
with
a black
HB 470 R. James. Permits
Economic and Communi'ty wool background.
Development Department to
My Pointer is that I always
make energy conservation !tore Ice cream cartons in
and retrofit effort grants to
communlty action agencies pastic bigs to eliminate frost
for a hol)le weatherization and re!B in the freshness. program for the poor and

elderl y.
HB 471 Ba ll. Excludes

retirement income from the
definition of adjusted gross
income .

HB

472

DeerIng .

Pemberton . In creases to
the
l ump
sum
paymen ts
payable
to
designated or qualifi ed
beneficiaries upon deaths of
$1,000

retirants under PE RS , STRS
or SERS.
.
Resolutions Offered

HJ R

23

Maddux .

Memor ializes congress to
propose
co n stitu t iona l
amendm ent to prohibit
congress from requiring state
compliance with federal law
as a prerequisite for federal
grants .
HR 124 Murdock . Requests

PUCO to examine throughly

the proposa I of Cincinna ti
Bell to cha rge i t s te lephone
suscribers on a use basis for
local calls .
ConCur in State Amend ments

Am

HB 23

Sweeney .

Requires rental l oca t ion
agents to be licensed as r eal
estate agents . 90-l.

Bills Passed
Am HB 276 Woitanowski.

Abol is hes Nursing
Commission . 80-14.
Lands

Administrator
Lake

agreeme~ts at Grand

St. Marys. 95-0.
Am SB 37 Speck . Confirms

Lake Lands Adn1inis trator
agreements· at Buckeye

Lake. 95-0.
' Am HB

305

BEA.

DEAR BEA -

Many

House kills picketing bill
WASHING TON (UPI) The House Wednesday voted
217·205 to kill a controversial
construction picketing blll.
The
common
situs
picketing bill would have
allowed striking building
trade workers to picket an
entire construction site, even
in a dispute with a single
subcontrac1nr.
The Ohio delegation voted
this way :
Democrats for : Douglas
Applegate, Thomas Ashley,
Charles Carney, Thomas
Luken, Ron Mottl, Mary
Qakar, Donald Pease, John
Seiberling, Louis Stokes and
Charles Vanik.
Republican for: Charles
Whalen.
Republicans against: John

Ashbrook, Clarence Brown,
Sam Devine, Willis Gradison,
Tennyson Guer, William
Harsha, Thomas Kindness,
Delbert Latta, Clarence
Miller, Ralph Reg ula, J.
William
Stanton
and
Chalmers Wylie.

ALL DRESSED UP
FOR EASTER
LADIES
COATS-DRESSES
AND 3 PC. SUITS

Home

Am SB 65 White . Confirms

Lake

~me

needlework and arts and
cralts shop sell a spray
deaner that does not leave a
powdery residue which would
be important when the
·background is a dark color.
The spray is left on lor three
minutes and then rubbed with
a damp towel. Read direction s on can. Do not brush as
t!lat might raise the nap and
give a fuzzy look to the work.
We are assuming that the
wool used was colorfast but
do be sure. I once ruined a
needlepoint piece that was
not. Another method is to use
only the foam gf mild
detergent suds. Apply with a
sponge and rinse of( the same
way. II work is on chair seats
do be careful not to saturate.
- POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - Shower
curtain hooks make great
plant hang ers. Link them
together to make a chain and
~ray paint to make the color
you want. For the price this

Mcli n.

Establishes a correctional
institutional inspection
committee. 88-8.

HB 203 Lehman . Permits

the payment of delinquent
first half real estate ta xes
without making payment of
second
half
taxes
simultaneously . 92-0.

HB 100 Chr istman . In ·

creases to $18,000 the amount
of sales allowed retail butchers before · they become
subject to full meat in spection of state law . 95-0.

SENATE

Bills lntrodu~ed
SB 186 Cox. Al lows employes to make direct
deposits of wages to an
employe's bank or savings
and loan .

SB 187.':While. Changes

from three days to two days
the credit for each day a
person held in jail in lieu of
ba ll receives for purposes of
computing the t ime within·
which preliminary hearing
and trial must be held .

Bills Passed
HB 11 1 J. Thompson.

Changes the membership of
the Ohio Retirement Study
Comm ission . 29-1.

GIRLS DRESSES
AND·

Local Bowling
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Pick 'N Shovel
March 20 , 1977
Roadrunners
Farmers Bank

Salem 51. Mkt.
Team No.1

FUR CAPS

w
.
76

L.

60

36

20

MEN'S

48 {8
44 52

SPORT COATS

Seldom Rest Ceramics 42 54

Ed's Crossroads Gr 0. 18 78
Men's high series -

beats buyln~ Ju\e and
macrame and they are. sturdy
enough to hold large pots.
Save those plalltlc mDk
amtsiners as they make good
jugs 1n hold lemonade, water,
Etc., when going on a picnic.
You can freeze water in them
1n put in your cooler later and
this will save the eipense of
lllving to buy ice as It Is
expensive. - MRS. H. K.
DEAR POLLY - 0110 of
the readers wanted to know
what she could do with some .
leftover wallpaper. Doorway
mtries can be enhanced •by
the addition of mains that
appear to be beaded hangings
but are really made w•h
·wallpaper. You can cut the
wallpaper into diamonds,
drcles or squares and roll
EBch piece around a large
rEedle or a lollipop stick and'
paste together . String to
make chains that reach to the
floor at either end but then
taper up gradually so there is
a slight arch over the center
where one walks. - !UTA.
DEAR POLLY - To make
my windows shine I clean
them with one-fourth cup of
a&gt;rn starm put in one cup of
water. Wet a paper towel or
linlless cloth with this and
dean the windows and then
polish inunediately before it
!ties using a dry paper towel
oc cloth. This is excellent and
I like it better than any
window cleaner I buy. E.J.B.
.
Polly wiD send you one of
her "peachy" thank-you
cards, ideal for framing or
placing in your family
..:rapbook, il she uses your
favorite Poinler, Peeve or
Problem in her column. Write
~'\lily's Pointers in · care ol
this newspaper.

Roger

Carpenter 537' Tom Crisp
529 ; Charles Searles 462.
Women's high

series -

Chris Bowers 422; Shirley

Harris 410 ; Sue Searle~ 405.

Men 's high game - Roger
Carpenter 213 ; Tom Crisp
202 ; Roger Dingess 182.
Women 's ' high game Chris Bowers 160; Iva Dalton

152 ; Debby Ti ll is and VIck i
Russell 147.

Lead The Simple Life
ITJ~mfort For Only '19.50
Uncomplicate thing s with ou r carefree
and comfortable uncluttered classi c - the perfect
com fort match for skirts~ pants . . . and
the perfect price for your wallet! In red , white.

SB 151 Meshel. Authorizes

continuation of federal
programs not otherwise by

law until July 1, 1977. 31-0.

Herzog

"

SaveS20

as· far as 15 feet .
Other domestic animals on
the farm are Angus cattle,
sheep, horses, mules and
donkeys .
The pupils were par·
ticularlr impressed with
Frecker's anecdotes con·
cerning one of his first pets, a
boa constrictor which shared
his home. Because its eyelids
are marked to look Uke open
eyes, one cannot easily tell
whether it is asleep or awake.
Consequently once when he
picked the sleeping reptile
up, he was bitten.
These speakers' presentations provided curriculum
enrichment to the social
studies assignments, and to
the
science
cha pter,
"Animals on our Planet."

care.

He made a turnover!

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BIG ,sAV..~s· OI(;Jti·Pt;;;IWI~aS;";~A,I;CULATOR$,

"If there's a
waythenew
tax law c~n
save you money,
we'll fmd it."
A brand-new reason why H&amp;R
Block should do your taxes.

1

are cared for In an almost
identical fashion as cattle;
fallow deer , a small white
species which are very timid,
and Canada geese, peacocks,
and various species of ducks.
Frecker said many of their
animals are shipped from
Missouri and Kansas when
\he weather Is sulliciently
warm. One does not pay for
exo(ic animals until t)ley are
delivered to the new home,
therefore shippers are quite
cautious about the shipping

explained to the class were a
clay pipe approximately 200
years old; linger bowls for
use in cosmetic or war
painting, tomahawks, war
axes, and hammers.
Flat rectangular pieces of
fine-grained stone were
thought to be types of armor
which some warriors wore on
their bodies to deflect enemy
arrows.
Also shown were a
geometrically incised pen·
da n! and several pestles for
grinding gra4;.
Frecker, of the Frecker
Fanns, Minersville, visited
the class to comment on some
of his farm animals not
native to Meigs County.
These include elk, an animal
which is so deadly accurate
with its antlers that the
handlers do not approach it
until the antlers are shed;
buffalo, of which the farm
now claims live, and whim

fnd~~s lo~e lef(fi.elder

Reg.
, United Preu International
Wedn ..day Baseball
St. Louis- Acquired relief
pitcher Clay Carroll from
Chicago (AL) lor pitcher
Lerrin LaGrow.
Milwaukee - Obtained
pitcher Rich Folkers on
waivers from San Diego.
Oakland - Signed pitcher
Doc Medlch to three-year
contract.
Mootreal - Sent pitchers
Dennill Blair, Dave Gronlund,
Joe Keener, Larry Landrith

Guests in the fifth grade
room of Mrs. Mary Hysell,
Pomeroy Elementary School,
the past week included Mrs.
Jeanne Braun of Meigs
, County R.S,V.P., Thomas
Hysell, RD Pomeroy, and
George . Frecker,
RD
Pomeroy.
Hysell, whose son, Scott, Is
a class member, displayed
his collection ol artifacts, all
collected in Meigs County,
from the Maumee, Miami, or
Scioto Indian tribes. These
included arrowheads ol
graduated sizes, from bird
arrow to lar~c hunting
arrows. The war arrow$ w~e
vicious with ingenious·
· methods lor wounding. One, a
. side-winder was almost
identical to a hunting arrow·
liead of today. Some arrow·
ljeads seemed to be purely
ornamental, being of
beautiful shades of flint.
·· . other Items shown and

Kansas State," said Hart~
man, "I realized I made a
lllsty and rash decision. This
is where I want to coach. I
realize that a decision such as
I made on Monday in·
conveqiences and embirr sses.
"I made a mistake; I made
a turnover. The only way I
lcnowtohandle a mistake is to
. lllmh •it. 1-got caught up in
• "Due to ·.'-'rsonil~ ~ns th~ : fac.t 'Oklahoma State
_;..d havmg ;tllne to Meet oil tt11de .., appeal to me to
tnY past tseven years at -mme back."

Brewers outslug
Angels, 10 to 9
United Press International
The Cactus League is a big
ego trip for the batters.
The problem loc major
league teams training in the
wild and windy West is the
mental health of their
pitching staffs. High winds
and small parks make
Arizona a hitters' paradise.
instance,
the
F.or
Milwaukee Brewers and
California Angels got
together in wind-blown SUn
City, Ariz., for an exhibition
Wednesday and it turned into
a home-run derby.
The Brewers popped six fly
balls out of the tiny park to
only five by the Angels to pull
out a IIJ.9 victory.
Gorman Thomas hit two
homers and Mike Hegan,
Robin Yount, Steve Brye and

Fifth graders' study enriched

I

Bowie Kuhn, might now be
more recepUve to offers for
his club, However, he ls stW
m record as saying he isn't
about to be run out ol
baseball. In the meantime,
there is a move afoot among
some of the owners to censure
Finley for hls inflammatory
remarks made against Kuhn
during and after their recent
court proceedings in Ollcago.
The owners were also
e~pected to discuss another
lawsuit brought against Kuhn
by an owner. Atlanta oWrler
Ted Turner brought suit after
the commissioner sat him
down for one year lor
"tampering" wlth former
San Francisco outfielder
Gary Matthews during last
winter's free agent sweepstakes. A federal judge in
Atlanta, hOwever, has
ordered Kuhn to lift Turner's
suspension unlil the facts can
be heard in court.
The meetings were to begin
at lOam. EST.

March 24,1977

MANHATTAN,Kan. (UP!)
.,.. It look Jack Hartman 26
)Durs to realize , bow good
, 'things were at Kansas State.
_Hartman jilted Oklahoma
State, his alma mater, two
days after Pffeptlng t~ post
, as head baBketball'Coach and
announced ' W·ectnesday he
had c·hanged his mind and
iwuld retll!'lj to ~ eighth
)'ear at Kansas s~. •
•

Dodgers

edge by

'I .

Baseball brass gather for talks
By BilL MADDEN
UP! Sports Wrlter
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI) - A
three-&lt;livision realignment of
the American League and a
major revision of the postseason playoffs are in the tbe
offing today when major
league baseball officials
gather for their annual spring
meetings.
·
Although the principal
topic of discussion Is
expected to be realignment,
numerous other related items

~-The Deily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Thursday,

"'
•

\

iZ2 N. Znd Ave.

Middleport
992·3106

Contl111ed !rom jllge 3.
was last year.
STRENGTIIS: Solld hitting
with Mayberry, Brett, Oils
and McRae in the middle of
the batting order, A deep but
unspectacular pitching staff.
WEAKNESSES : No one
"stopper" among the starting
pitchers. Very Utile offense
frocn middle infielders Fred
Patek and Frank White and
the catchers, Buck Martinez
or Porter.
NEW FACES: Porter wW
alternate with Martinez
behind the plate. Colborn
figures in· the starting five
pitchers. Utility lnllelder Bob
Heise, acquired from Boston,
will silck as will backup first ·
baseiJUin Pete LaCock,
obtained from the Chicago
Cuoo. Amoog the rookies,
Zdeb given good shot to win
left lleld position while Steve
Patchin ( .300 at Omaha last
year) could puah one or both
of the 11!'0 Cltchera.
Otrrl.OOK; Royels may
not have done 'enough 1n
retain their No. I spot in AL
West in the face of California,
. Tuas and Minnesota
challenges. A drop Is likely,
either to second or third.

Spring .
SUITS • DRESSES • PANTS • SUITS &amp;
BLOUSES by

\i.,

• Jantzen • Coddington
Berkshire • lady Manhatten

q~~~
BAHR CLOTHIERS

heritage

N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport, Ohio .

.........
N. 2nd. Ave.
()ptn Monday thru Thurtday a

house
OF SHOES
Middleport, 0.
Saturday 10 tit 5. Friday lottll

�' Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, March 2411977
7- The Daily
6-The DaUy Sentin!!l, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, March 24, 1977

Fumiko Iwasaki
speaks at meeting
Miss Fwniko Iwasaki, an
.exchange student from
Japan, was an invited guest
of the Women 's Auxiliary of
the Veterans Memorial
Hospital at its regular
monthly meeting March 14.
Miss Iwasaki, a 17·year-old
high 8Ch!Kll senior, is spon·
sored by the Rotary Club and
., pres•ntly residing with
Judge ond Mrs. Robert Buck,
who accompanied her to the
meeting.
She was introduced by·Mrs.
Buck and narrated the slides
of her home land which were
shown by JU!,Ige Buck . Miss
Iwasaki was attired in the
traditional costume of her
country. After the films were
shown,
she answered
questions concerning her
home and school. She
received an appreciation gift
from the auxiliary,
·
. Following the program, the
meeting opened by prayer
read by Ethel Hatfield. Mrs.
Je8sie White, presided. The
secretary and treas ury

reports were read and •I"
proved. and Sherri Might was
welcomed as a new member.

A fund-raising project was
(iiscussed.
The auxiliary voted to
purchase a plaque for names
deceased members. Mrs.
Janice Daniels was presented

a past president's pin and a
gift by Mrs. White on behalf
of the members.
Acommittee was appointed
to deliver flowers and visit ill
members. Ill and bereaved
members were remembered
with cards.
A silent auction was held
with proceeds going to the
Christina Smith Fund. The
traveling prize furnished by
Mrs . Donna Aleshire was won

by Mrs. Nettie Hayes.
Hostesses

were Donna

Goo~e ; Donna Aleshire,
Janet Jeffers and Helen
Jeffers. A St. Patrick's Day
tbeme was used on the
refreshment table.
The meeting closed · by
IX"ayer by Mrs. Jessie White.

Sorority
selects
officers

lntt&gt;mational Thinking Day will be celebrated by Meigs
County Girl Scouts.
The celebration will take place Sunday from I to 4 p.m. at
the Olester Elemmtary School and the public is invited to see
the scouts present songs, skits, games and readings from other
lands. Many of the scouts will be in ·costume for tl)e Thinking
Day program Which is headed by Mrs. Becky Mankin. Jane
Wise will be pianist. F1ag posters will be featured in the
decorations, and refreshments will be mini-bits of foreign
foods.
·
RUTLAND BROWNm 1293
.
· Girl Scopt Week was celebrated by the RuUand Brownie
Troop by attendance at the Rutland Nazarene Church. Eleven
of the girls attended and were joined by a seoul from Colwnbus
Troop 123.
At recent meetings of the troop thinking day cards were
made with Germany being selected as the country to
represent. One meeting included the presentation of slides and
music from Germany and the girls contributed to the Juliet
Lowe Fund. Speaking for the Thinking Day program will be
Laney Hankla.
.
WelcOmed into the troop .this past month have been
Rebecca Vance, Charlotte Patterson and f.lindy McDonald.
Angelia Kennedy registered as a junior aide along with Mrs.
Sharon Black and Mrs. Judith Eblin as adult helpers. This
brillgs total membership to 20 girls and four adult leaders.
Tuesday evening the traop visited the Country Cousins
Cook Shoppe for supper. Greg Gatrell, manager, took the girls
' on a tour of the food preparation and storage areas before they
were served supper at reduced rates. Accompanying the
scouts were Mrs. Shirley Wilson, Mrs. Sonia Parsons, Mrs.
Black and Mrs. Eblin, leader and assistants.
Providing refreshments for the month's meetings were
&amp;leParsons, Tracy McKinney and Michelle Peterson. The flag
ceremony and Brownie promise opened tlle meetings.
SYRACUSE JUNIOR TROOP 1204
Olristy Arnold read a story and a poem to complete her
story teller badge work at the meeting Tuesday "night of the
Syracuse Juniors. She received the story teller, home health
safety, and health aide badges at the meeting. The sixth
graders agreed to assist on the junior fair board. Practice was
held for Thinking Day.
Sherry Ritchie ·gave the Lord's Prayer, Becky Arnott, the
pledge, and all of the girls recited the promise:

Mrs. Bernice Harley, state
Several nrw offi cers were which followed a covered dish . cross and world relief; Mrs.
Riggs Kirby, second term, representative of District I,
elected at the Saturday luncheon.
Co u n t Y
Elected were Mrs. Ervin spiritual growth chairman . . La w r e n c e
spring mee ting of the
Women's Organization of the Baumg3rdner, second term, Mrs. Gene Yost presented the Association, South Point, was
Rio
Grande
Baptist secretary; Mrs. Frank Snare, report for the nominating :he speaker for the aftem!Kln
Association at the Racine division of interpretation; committee of Mrs. Maria 1rogram .
Mrs. Diane Sprinkles, Foster and Mrs. Florence
'Baptist Church.
Mrs. Ralph Rife, president, division of Christian service; Richards. It was aMounced
had charge of the meeting Mrs. Marjorie Grimm, white that the installation semice
for the new officers will take
place at the. Aprlll5 meeting
at Wellston, 7:30 p.m.
The June conference was
announced for . Denison ·
Unlverslty at Granville, June
11-10, with the national con·
terence to be held in August.
Mrs. Norma Brown of Gallia
RIO GRANDE - Middle formed at a variety of func· County suggested that a
Eastern Dance and Danse lions in the area including contribution be given on
Orientale are official names fund · drives for Ohio drapes for the Ohio Baptist
for a popula\' form called University and international Headquarters at Granville.
dinners.
Mrs. Rife announced that
"belly dancing ."
Mrs. McClain said she newsletter subscriptions
Middle Eastern Dancing is
also the official title for a new became interested in belly should be sent to Mrs.
Hughes
at
class to be offered for 10 dancing as a form of exer- Kathleen
weeks beginning March 30 at cise. She said the dance helps Loudonville. .
A report on scholarship
Rio
Grande
College- a person gain coordination
Community College (RGC- while firming and toning students was given by Mrs.
body muscles.
Bea Kuhn who noted thai the
CC).
NOW AT
Registration for this class, name of James Odhe remainS
The continuing education
course Is open to the public as well as ali spring quarter on the list , It was voted to
for a fee of $25. It will be classes at RGC-CC, will be contribute $40 to Jane Garst
taught at Lyne Center on the held on campus Monday, for a campus ministry and to
Rio campus Wednesdays March 28. Those interested in send $2.1 to Greenlakes.
Middle Eastern Dancing may
Devotions
on
the
from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m.
Instructor Sandra McClain also reg ister at the first class resurrection of Christ were ·
has studied Middle Eastern session. Class size is limited given by Mrs. Rife who
Dance extensively. She has to 20 participants. For more stressed that we pray without
Middleport, 0.
taught in Wellston, Jackson information phone 24S-li353. ceasing. Officers reports
992-7161
'
were given and for roll oall
and Pomerov. ::.nrl h~~ Mr·
approximately 50 women
from 12 churches responded.

TIR
BUYS

GRAB 'EM'
GENERAL
TIRE
SALES

Minister conducts study .

Rest assured with solid
insuranc:e coverqge for
your · home and your
auto. We're equipped to
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Count on us for fast
claims handling and
superior service.

KROGER

HAS

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Automutual, Western Reserve.

FRESH FISH

DAVIS INSURANCE SERVICE
o.

992-5120

SAVE UP TO

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PAINT SALE CONTINUES

THIS WEEKfND ONLY
AT CHAPMAN SHOES

BUY 1 PAIR OF CONNIE OR FOOTWORKS
AND ANY HANDBAG AND GET

%
20

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Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat.- 8; 30 til5:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOQN

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The perfect pain~ for ceilings, walls and wood,v.'ork in e~ery toomf
Most dirt and statns can't readily penetrete ..• they scrub off eesil'l'
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pamt. Ideal for liv1ng room, bad.rooms, kitchen, bath, lnywhere.
Easy to apply. Dries fast. Water cleanup. White or custom color~.

NEXTTOELBERFELDS

( __ ~_~
__E_._~.~i-n·--·--·-~--~-._.P_o_m._e.~r-oy_._o,_h,~io___)

MASON FURNITURE
773-5592

Herman Grate

Mason, W. Va.

•••••••••••••••••

Valley Lumber &amp; Supply COrporation
923 South 3rd Ave.
992-2709
..
Middleport
OPEN-7 :001oS:OO MONDAYTHRU FRIDAY-7:00to 4:00 SATURDAY
(

Marl&lt;rie Kay Hoffman to
Parcels,
Salem .
'
J
Rita Colleen Arnold to
~ Viola I.
Cundiff, Lot,
: Syracuse.
• James Drehel, Phyllis
~ Drehel, Fr.ank t&gt;rehel to
~ ltS.D. Oil &amp; Gas Co. R-Way, .
•, Rutland.
Dma Hoffman, Lauren E.
~ Klffman, Merlum V. Hoff.
man to Leon Carol Pierce.
. Parcelo, Sal1111.
E Sharolette J. Goody to
• Farmers f!ome Adm .. Lots,
" Middleport.
~ Marjorie Clooch to Richard
r Taylor, Elda Dorlene Taylor,
~ (1_.033 A. 1 Rltland .
~ Dena Hoffman,

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

CHAPMAN SHOES

Property

•I

STORE HOURS

,

~

REG. 12.98

MASON fURNITURE

Pa rsons , Mary

Vi rgin ia

Riebel , Anna Elizabeth
Turner, Maxine Whitehead,
Robe rta Wilson, Mild red
Hawley , Doroth y Woodward ,
Olive Paige, · Nellie Parker,
reco r ding s ec retary , and

Mrs. Philson.

Mi ss Hull, a guidance
at Whitehall High

counS~lor

GLENNA LITILE

Birthday
honored

School, Columbus, reviewed

the seven purposes of the
crganization with attending ·
members and stressed the
importance of becoming
involved with activities from
the local IeveI through the
&lt;tate level.
She said involvement will
help achieve the purposes
inclllling the advancement
ri professional interests and
positions

of

·EASTER GARDS

women

educators, stimulation of
professional growth of
members, to honor women of .
distinct service, to aid outstanding educators in
graduate work and to unite
educational women all over
the world.· A painting by
Donna Stanley, Della Epsilon
member, was presented to
Miss Hull as a gfft of appreciation.
The Delta Epsilon Chapter
hosted the meeting with Mary
Nut! as chairman. Tables
were decorated wtth the St.
Patrick's Day theme in green
and white for the 6:30 p.m.
dinner. Following the dinner,
members were entertained
with Irish songs by Jack
Warner accompa nied by
Rachel Warner on the piano.
A barbershop quarle\,

7'(11le!tiA':Uilb

f!ff~A

The Fresh Idea Company ..
FRIDAY
ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
special meeting 6 p.m. at the
hall for the purpose of a mortgage burning ceremony. The
national grange building has
been paid off and granges
around the country are
celebrating Friday with the
mortgage burning ceremony.
BOSWORTH Council 46,
Royal and Select Masters,
special assembly, 7:30 p.m.
Friday at the Masonic
Temple. For purpose of
conferring royal and select
master degrees.

·r_..._._.._._.._........._.._. _ _ _ _.__..._...__.,

I

•

l1

ti

I
McCullough , R. Ph.· Charles Riffle. R. Ph . i
Ronald Hanning , R. Ph .
\.
1
Mon . thru Sa f . 8:00a .m. to 9.p.m.
~
1
Sunday10:30 tol2: 30andlto9p.m.
1
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•

Nolan , Nan Moore, Martha
Husted, Rosali e Story,
Wyckle Whiteley, Margaret

FERRY-MORSE

~
•·'
.•-•• Meigs

GALLON

Now I'm walking with the Lord, and finally I'm free
From the awful misery I was in before God came to me.
He Is my light in lime of storm, be guides me night and day.
How thankful! wiD always be, that he taught me how to pray.
- Carolyn Van Meter, Clifton, W.Va.

composed of Hope Keller, when candidates fo r new
Helen Pfancuff , Lois Hess members were voted upon by
and l.ouc•e Hugh es delighted tllose attending. Notes of
the group with several appreciation were read from
numbers.
Mrs. Ne llie Vale. Avi ce
Individ u al bu s i nes s Frecker and Martha Husted
meetings of three chapters fur re membra nces while ill
concl uded the evening. and recently hospitalized.
Maxine Philson conducted
Mei gs Count y members
the meeting of the local att ending were Carolyn
chapter, Alph a Omicron . Smith, Betsy Horky, Geneva

Jackson.

Melania Waldnig feted

'

LATEX
FLAT ENAMEL

I felt as though the entire world had turned it's back on me.
I felt that! was all alone in despair and misery.
But I thank God he saw my need before it was too late,
He filled my heart with love and look away aU hate.

Miss Phillis Hull , first vice
presiden t of the Alpha Delta
&lt;tate organization, was guest
'f&gt;eaker at th e annual
combined meeting of the
three area chapters, Alpha
Omicron, Beta Alpha and
Delta Epsilon of Detta Kappa
Gamma, International
Tea cher Honorary Society,
Friday evening at the Christ
United Methodist Ch urch in

A surprise birthday party
was given for Mrs. Glenna
Little, 77, on March 21 at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Gary
A $25 dona lion to the Class of the Middleport church.
Drenner, Middleport.
Christina Smith Fund was Church of Christ at the
Mrs. Ella Mae Daugherty Those attending were Mr.
made by the Loyal Bereans meeting Tuesday night at the presided at the . meeting and Mrs. Marvin Little, Mr.
which opened with prayer and Mrs. Sid Lillie, Don Little
and reading of the 121st and Dennis, Mrs. Dwight
Psa lm of Mrs. Martha · Haley, Mrs. Jack Phillips,
Childs.
Mrs. John Tyree, Mrs.
George Meinhart agreed to Charlie Wise, Mrs. Robert
Melania Walnig, bride· prizes going to Mrs. Carter pay· for the newly installed Clonch, Mrs. Grace Welch,
elect of Wesley Barnett, was French, Tammy Michael, railing on the stairway . Mrs. Ike Neal, Miss Janet
honored with a'bridal shower Mrs. Steve Hupp and the d!Klr Reported ill were Mrs. Neal, Mrs. Lucy McKinney,
Thursday evening by Cathy prize to Mrs. il.ichard Kosmo. Mildred Belzing, Mrs. Mrs. Joe Moodispaugh, Miss
Meadows and Sheila Carsey
Cake, mints, nuts and Cynthia Gohring, Mrs. Pearl Vaiarie Lane and Stephanie,
at the home of Mrs. Danny L, orange sherbert punch were Reynolds, Mrs. Lavinia Tammy, Kelly, Mark and
Meadows. ,;
, • ··• served. Gifts were presented Ebersba ch and Mrs . Ida Stacy Tyree, Mrs. Gary
The table covered in ·white to · Miss Walnlg by those Childs. Areport wes giv·en on Drenner and Darrin and
featured a blue umbrella with named and Mrs. 'Sandy the recently reupholstered Jason , Middleport ; · Mrs.
a bride and groom on either Johnson, Pat and Wayne chairs in the fellowship room. Herman Taylor, Doreen and
A pancake and sausage Christine, Mrs. Andy Batey,
side and ,pipk ai)&lt;IJ&gt;l~~ ~lis ~ Garter, Sue ~ arter, Lori supper was plaMed for the Chesler; Mrs. Charles Wise,
suspende( from above. Hupp, Debbie Fife, Rita
Centering ttie' table ·was a Laudermilt, Mrs. Don April meeting. Mrs. Alice Cheshire; Mrs. Gene Wise,
cake decorated in pink and Collins, Mrs. Bob Waldnig, Robetlon read "Golgotha", a Mrs. Danny Wise and Becky,
blue roses and inscribed Mrs. Bonnie Theiss, Mrs. meditation from "Bible Rulland ; Dorothy Little and
" Best
Wishes
and Earl Holman, Mrs. Roger Mountains" by Wilma Hope, Columbus, and Mrs.
Phyllis Haley, Middleport.
Congratulations to Melania ,Holman, Mrs. Barb Gatrill Schaefer.
Mrs.
Kathryn
Ervin
closed
Refreshments were served
and Wesley.r • •
. w ~~Mrs. qlna·Kosmo.
with
prayer
and
refresh·
and
games en joyed. The door
Games M!re played with
ments were served by Mrs. prize was awarded to Mrs.
Gertrude Miller and Mrs. Marvin Lillie.
Childs.
7 p.m. Thursday at Feeney·
~Bennett Post 128, American
'
Legion Home.
PRECEPTOR Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
meeting, 7:30p.m. Thursday
The Grace Episcopal charge of arrangements for
at home of Nellie Brown.
Church Women met Thurs- the day.
EMMA Smith Circle of the
day, March 17 at the home of
Mrs. Paul Eich spoke of the
Reorganized Church of Jesus
:Mrs. A. R. Knight for lun- Presiding Bishop's Fund for
THURSDAY
'cheon and meeting.
Wolrd Relief and said baskets
SIGNUP DAY for boys and Christ of Latter Day Saints
will meet at home Of Goldie
: Mrs. James Titus and Mrs. had been placed in the church girls of Syracuse • Miners· Clendenin Thursday evening;
&gt;Roscoe
Fowler
were and parish hall to receive ville area, interested In
white elephant sale will be
assistant ' hostesses. The donations of food to be summer baseball, Thursaay, aheld.
.meeting opened I with distributed by the Salvation S:30 to 7 p.m. at Syracuse
SOUP SUPPER at social
:'devotions by Mrs. A. kelton Army of Meigs County.
MuniCipal Building.
room of Bethany M. E.
concluding with The Lotd's
Mrs. O'Brien announced
RIVERVIEW Garden Club
•Prayer.
the Episcopal Church Thursday evening, 7:30 p.m. Church, Dorcas beginning at
5 p. m. Thursday i vegetable
· : The president, Mrs. J . Women's Conference to be at the home of Mrs. Denver and bean so up, pie and
:O'Brien announced the . held April 29-30 at the Wor· Weber. Co-hostesses will be
Take containers
~nited Thank Offering thington Hilton ' Inn. Mrs. Mrs. David Chadwell and sandwiches.
for ca rryout ; sponsored by
:,Workshop to be held at Grace Vema Dozier of Washington, Mrs. Ernest Whitehead. For Dorcas Women's Fellowship.
-Church Tuesday March 29th D.C. will lead the conference. the program will be advice
PAST Officers Club Racine
'at 10 a.m. The U.T.O. Her theme Is "You in the from an ex pert and a
OJapter
134 OES Thursday at
treasurers · of the Eastern Service of God." Mrs. J. · houseware party will be held.
the
home
of Mr. and Mrs.
Region Of the Diocese WlU O'Brien, Mrs. James Titus,
TWIN City Shrinettes,
William
Stewart,
II Fremont,
attend, also Mrs. W. Maull and Mrs. K. Amsbury were Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the
Athens.
· chairperson J&gt;t lj)~ dioces~~R. ,appoint~ ,delegates of this home of Mrs. Beulah Ewing.
MEIGS Christian 'women's
l U.T. O. and Mrs. Robert parish.
MIDDLEPORT Child
Fellowship,
Thursday, 7:30
i Cowden, president of the
The •program
was Conservation League, Thursp.m.
at
the
Dexter
Church of
.• Diocesan Women will be .presented by Mrs: H. Deeth day, 7:30p.m,. Columbus and
Christ.
Fumiko
Iwasaki,
~here. Mrs. Harry Moore is in who spoke about the Com· Southern 0\!Io Electric Co.
Japanese
exchange
student
;;,
·
·
m,unity
of
Coventry, _Mrs. Mary Rose to be the
•
, •
l England(Ats.center of studies · speaker. -Aftetwards t~ go to at Meigs High School, . will
IX"esent a prqgram.
~
·,: an]! '.ita ~ l'elationship of th~iiZj!. ~- Members
FRIDAY
~
r~onclliation with churches rerniflded to take bottle caps
SPAGHETTI
dinner
J RUTLAND - The Rutland ''· worldwide. Slides were for redemption.
,
Friday,
6
p.m.
at
Portland
MII&gt;DLEPORT ~ub Sco.ut
JGarden Club wl\1 m~et shown.o( the Cathedral and
•Monday nlgbt at 7 : 3b ~at tlte the CijVentry area.
Pac ~45 meetmg with Elementary School spon·
~ home of Mrs, R,.,S. V!tl~ with
'
uniform inspection to be held oored by PTO.
l Mrs. Ever~t Colfell as co' hostess.
~ For roll call, membels' ate
; to name plants ·suitable for
•hanging baskets. Mrs. Harry
~ Williamson &gt;Wlll give th
~ program
on ~· macr..ame
~ hangers for flower containers
:and there will be an exhibit of
~ floral macrallle hangers . •,
, Guests will M '11\embers of
~the Star Garden Glob. MiSs
JEdna Mae Swic'k will give
ogardening ideas for April.

~

But then one_day I realized my life was just a shell,
I saw how miSerable I was: Just one step out of hell.
I didn't really want to live, but yeti couldn't die,
All I seemed Iowan! to dnwassitaloneand cry.

'

Loyal Bereans make donation

.•'

SAVE 1101

Alii really cared about was the bottle in my hand;
I thought as long as I bad a drink, aU the world was grand.

would be to spread lhe ol&gt;jectives and get more
women, particularly younger
women, involved. She said
the goal would be to develop
more pro jects by em·
powering young adults to
assist in the church and social
affairs which would tend to
erase the generation gap.
Neighborh!Kld development
was encouraged as a way of
improvin~ the comm•mity
life, regardless of ra ce or
church affiliation.
It was decided to continue
the objectives of the service
with a follQw-up at the next
meeting. Mrs. Ernest Shuler
will host the April meeting.
Refreshments were served.

Club to meet ..

SPRING

The Poet's Comer

urged the women to consider
the meaning of personal selfdenial and stewardship and to
corporate action as people of
God called into missions in
the whole world. Members
were urged to give
sacrificially in response to
the real need and to enter into
intercessory prayer for the
persons and programs for
which the offering is given.
One-haU of the offering
goes to missions · in other
lands while the remainder
stays in the United States.
Mrs. Cross also spoke of a
quiet day and planned prayer
day for talks on how and what
gifts are to be given and said
that the purpose of the talks

Mrs. Knight entertains
Jipiscopal c.hurch women

DON'T GO
UNPROTECTED.

YES

fiPt;GIJ\L'

LETART FALLS - A ca ll
to prayer and self-denial
service was presented by
Mrs. Andrew Cross at the
recent meeting of the United
Methodist Women of the
Letart Fails Church at the
Cross home.
Mrs. Cross explained the
call to prayer and self-denial
service is an annual event
initiated by the Women's
Division of the Board of
Global Ministries of the
United Methodist Church.
She said it is an opportunity
for Methddlst women to
become involved in the
mission of the church· in a
special way tbrough study,
worship and prayer. She

Belly dancing on
Rio class schedule

A study on the B!Klk of Acts Peter Granda! at the Tuesday
was conducted by the Rev. night meeting of the Golden
Rule Class of the Middleport
First Baptist ·Church at the
RACINE BROWNm TROOP 1.247
New officers were elected
home of Mr. and Mrs. Don
SPEAKER NAMED
Wilson.
An Easter party was planned for March 31 with a visit to
md several projects planned
the
Country
Cousins
Cook
Shoppe
at
a
recent
meellng
of
the
DANVILLE
The
Rev.
Prayer by Mrs. Kathryn
It the Tuesday night meeting
Peter
Maginde,
~
native
of
Metzger
opened the meeting.
Racine Brownies.
d Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of
New
Gumea
who
IS
a
student
There
was
a discussion on a
Melinda
Hill
held
the
flag
for
the
pledge
led
by
Wendy
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority at
Wolfe.
Kenda
Rizer
led
in
the
promise
and
all
of
the
girls
sang
at
God's.
Bible
School
in
visitation
program
as a way
the Columbus and Southern
Cmclnnati,
WI~l
be
speaking
.
of
getting
more
people
in·
the Brownie Smile Song.
ctlio Electric Co.
Refreshments
were
served
by
Carrie
Beegle,
Dixie
Dugan
at
the
DanVIlle
Wesl~yan
volved
in
Sunday
School.
Elected were Cathy
and Juanita Fredericks. Lisa Pijpe had prayer. Mrs. Charlotte Church at 7:30 p.m. Friday. Mrs. Wilson had devotions
CU!nmings, president ; Sheila
Wamsley is leader, and Kay
Hill,
ber assistant.
There wUI be ·special vocal entitled "God's Will for My
Reeves, Vice President;
.
'
numbers.
T~e Rev. Mr. Life" taken from Romans.
Maw-isba Nelson, recording
.w{J;SONVIILE
BROM
TROOP
1052
Magmde
will also be
Refreshments were served
secretary; Linda King,
BRANDI
JOY
A
visit
to
the
Pomeroy
Fire
Department,
WMPO
Radio,
speaking at the Midway by Mrs. Wilson to Mr. and
corresponding secretary ;
MALLORY, daughter of
&amp;!san Lanning, treasurer,
Mr. and Mrs. Lynn L. and the Country Cousins highlighted a trip to town for the Community Church at 7:30 Mrs. Manning Kloes, Fred .
p.m . Saturday and at Pine Klein, Mts. Metzger, Mr. and
md Bette Jean Krawsczyn ,
Mallory, Racine , Harrisonville Brownies.
Mrs.
Gloria
Riggs
and
Mrs.
Pat
Arnold
,provided
the
meal
·
Grove Baptist Church during Mrs. James Brewer and the ·
city council representative.
celebrated her first birthMrs. Reeves.,.,ported oii
day at the home of her a( the courtesy rates at Country Cousins where the scouts the Sunday morning services. R~v. Mr. and Mrs. Granda!
·
final plans for the 50s dance
parents, March 19. A toured the cooking and storage areas of the restaurant. Ice The public is invited to all of
the
services.
cream
cones
for
the
outing
were
provided
by
Mrs.
Wanda
Winnie the Pooh cake, Ice
to be held It Royal Oak Park.
The chapter planned an
cream and Kool·Aid were Searing en .
Mrs. Esther Scragg, leader, Miss Julia Gheen, Mrs.
Easter egg sale and bake sale
served. Presenting gUt. to
Arnold,
and Mrs. Swearingen accompanied Lisa Riggs,
to take place April 9 at the
Brandl were Carla and
Melissa
Howard,
Bridgett Largent, Darla Hatfield, Kenda
New York QothingHouse at 9
Angle Sefdenabel, Jason
LEAGUE TO MEET
Donahue,
Susan
Arnold,
Darla Norris, Clara Whitlin~on ,
a.m. Orders for Ihe decorated
Hlll, Rachel Hensler, Lori
The
Pomeroy youth
eggs may be placed with Mrs.
and Brian Warden; Sean Terri Gilli!liii, Tiffany Dillon, Beth Ann Swearingen, R(lbin l:usebell league will meet
·
Walton and Belinda · Potter,. and Cynthia Bailey.
Reeves, 992-2449 or Mrs·.
Friday at 7 p.m. at the
Bowling. Sending a gUt was
Nelson, 992-731.3. Deadline for
American Legion Hall in
SYRACUSE BROWNIES 1120
ctdertng eggs is April L The
Janice Leffle, Brandl's
Visits to flle Pomeroy library, the bowling lanes and the Pomeroy. Managers are
grandmother who was
pice will be' $1.2S a dozen.
· requested to submit a list of
unable to attend the party. Skate-a-way have been made during March by the Syracuse equipment needed.
Mrs. ,King presmled the
Brownies.
cultural report and in·
Going bowling at the Pomeroy Lsnes were Sberri Sisson, Assignment of players to
troduced Mrs. Pat Holter who
Regina Nance, Kathy Pickens, Veronico Provo, Tracy teams md plans made for tag
!flowed the group how to
MINSTREL SET
Hubbard, Wendy Fry, Shelly Wolfe, Becky Roush, Jane Jell, day will he made.
make velvet roses.
CHESTER _ Plans are Jane Imboden, and Angie Davis, accompanied by Mrs. Janet
Refreshments were served
being
completed for a min· Pickens, Susan Provo, Edna Lavender, Julie Nance and Mrs.
by Mrs. Libby Sa)Teand Mrs.
Karen Goins.
strel and variety show to be Joyce Sisson.
staged at8 p.m. Friday, April
In the group to visit tlle library where Miss Susan
1, at the Chester Elementary F1eshman read a couple of stories were those Brownies named
REVIVAL PLANNED
Sch!&gt;Ol auditorium. Proceeds above and Kim Adams, Mary B8ldwin, Heidi Cobb, Kim
GREAT BEND- A revival from the show as well as a Cogar, Karen Cook, Jill Nease, Wendy Triplett, Alicia Van
will be held at the Bethlehem bake sale to be staged during . Meter, Paula Winebreruier and Carol Hendricks. They were
Baptist Church, Great Bend, the evening will go to the accompanied by Mrs. Carol Adams, Mrs. Pickens, Mrs. Betty
from April 4 through April 9, safety patrol. Some 25 Van Meter, Kathy Baldwin and Mrs. Sisson.
In the group going skating were Jill Nease, Mary Baldwin,
with services at 7:30 each members of the group will be
Silerri Sisson, Darla Lambert, Paula Winebrenner, Shelly
.
evening. The public is in·.
gomg on a trip to Washington Wolfe, Tracy Hubbard, Karen Cook, Angle Davis, Kim Cogar,
vited.
D.C. this spring.
' Regina Nance, Alicia Van Meter, Becky Roush, Veronico
Provo, Jane Imboden, Juanita Ginther and adults, Mrs. Judy
Roush, Cllristy Roush, Mrs. Donna Nease and Travis, Mrs.
Baldwin and Mrs. Sisson.

Speaker reviews society 's purposes

Mrs. Cross gives program

Baptist wornen. elect officers

~
ALL ITEMS
CASH&amp; CARRY
I ~

e

a

Garden Trowls
Hoes
Shovels
Spades

Everything Is Herel .
M'ETAL
AND PLASTIC

(

FLOWER
BOXES

Rakes

GRASS SEED
ON THIS SPECIALLY EQUIPPED 2-DOOR SEDAN

·PACKAGE VEGETABLE &amp; A.OWER SEEDS

Ebersbach Hardware
MAIN STREET

'

·Novvs the time to buy! 11 FORD

POMEROY

\.

\

�9- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, March 24, 1977

Television log fo!:~Nf!!~~rAB£!~!£!~lf

DICKTRACV
ARIES (Mon:h 21·AprH 11) As

WANT AD
CHARGES

tong as you rely on your com-

mon sense today, you'll do all
r ight. Ig nore hu nc hes or
premonit ions.

IN MEMORY OF HANK ,

15 Wurds or Undtr

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Be
satisfied today with small proflls
and steady gains Reach too far
for the brass ring and you may
come beck with a fistful of air.

GEMINI (Mil 21-Junt 20) Your
appraisal today Is more on the
mar ~ than that of one you're
closely Involved wrth , wno·s too
much a dreamer Yo u sho uld
have fin.ll say.

CANCER (Juno 21-Julr 22) You
should go out of your way today

to aid one who is willing to try
nard . Conversely, shun those
who'd let you do all the work

LEO (Julr 23-AUf. 22) Some unkmd thmgs regardrng someone
you're fond of may be voiced in
you r presence today It w ill be up
to you to set the record stra rght.

Cash
I 00
1.50

I day
2Wtys
3Wtys
6tl11 ys

Cbl.rge
1..2)

uo

I.IMJ

! %5

:1 00

:173

EaL·h wort! uvt"r Olt! lllUiimwn 15
Wi.lrlb LS 4 teu\.s ~I' word p!!r dliy.
Ails rwmmg other Ulll ll t.'tii~St:t'Uilve
thtys Will t:..&gt; ch&lt;lr~l"tl at lilt! I day
1ale.

In memUI'y, C!ml of Thanks and
ObitU&lt;Iry · 6 t.'tntll ))1:!1' wurd , $J 00
rninUnwn. Cot.sh utadvomt-e

Mubtlc Home SMM!s and Yurd Sll.les

art! II.Cl&lt;tpted only with cash wtth

ordt:r 2S l'flll phitrge rur ads cttrrying Bux Nwnl.ler In Ca l'f of Tl~ Senlmel.
Tl~ Publisher re~rv t!.s liM! nght
lu OOil ur !~Jed "ny oltll.ll! deem~ uliJet'\UHIII.l The Publ15het' Will not be
ll!SpoliSLlllc for more tlwn one mmr-

rt!d

mstrtion.

Phone 992-2156

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sapt. 22) You
may be a bit shaky rn compet itive sr1Uatrons today Act
brave I'm sure your 1nsecurlty

NOTICE

w1t1 vams n.

LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0cl. 23) Normally your diplomacy tloes tne
10b for you . but not so today . You
may have to Mammer your points
home hard

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Jo1 n t ve ntures should be
successful today prov1ded no
one gets more than the1r share
You cou ld be bitter If you feel
you're being short-changed .

Mvnday
Noon onSaturW!y

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dao.
21) Today. you see th ings as
they are. However. you may lack
the courage to act in your own
behalf

~.sd.ay

thruFnd.ay
•P M

U1e d ~y be fort: publicilhon
Swulay
4P M
Jo' riday a£lt!ntooll

CAPRICORN (Dtc. 22·Jan. 19)
Be singular of purpose toQay
Keep th ings m order of priority If WE WOULD like to thank Dr
Jamora, nurses and staH of
you vac11tate you'll cut your
Plea5ant Volley Hospital , the
productivity in Malt.
Lauro Cliff Method1sf Church
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 19) A
for thetr concern , all ti'le flora l
sensitive friend's feelmgs will be
arrangements and food gi ven
us during the illness and death
wounded tl she's not included 1n
of our husba nd and father ,
your social plans today . She
Morv1n Cox .
should be first lo get an in vitaMrs . Nell1e Cox and Family
tion
PISCES (Fob. 20·March 20)
Loo k around today, lo r you
could turn a n1tty little prot1 t as a
middleman It's poss1ble you NOTICE , Prot!'..t · Meat Mkt
(P iea~onSot'l 'Meat Process1ng,
could bring e buyer and seller
Inc ) Custom slaughtering, and
together
procen1ng. Retail , wholesale.
No oppomment necessary Coli
(61.4) 593-8655, hours, 9·00 ttl!
6:00 7 Pomeroy Rood. Athens ,
Oh.
GUN SHOOt at the Racine Gun
Club every Sunday, 1 pm
Assorted meats .
Morch 25, 1977
RACINE
FIRE Dept . will hove a
Seve ral persons you thought
Gun
Shoot
every Saturday mght
had left yo ur life w11l be reunited
6 p m. at their buildmg m
w1th you th1s year All parties will
Bashan, Oh1o
be h appy t o renew the
1nendshlps.
MILKSHAKES , THE old fash1oned
(Are you an Aries ? Bernice
way . Dairy Isle. Middleport .
Golden Buckeye me mbers 10
Osol has wntten a spec1af Astraper cent discount any purchase
Graph Letter for you For your
copy send 50 cents and a self- SHOOTING MATCH ot Rutland
addressed, stamped envelope to
Leg1on Hall , every Friday 7
Asrro-Graph , P 0
Box 489 ,
pm
Radto C1ty Sla tton, New York,
WILL
CARE for elderly lady In
NY 10019 Be sure to ask for
private
home .
lo cal
Aries Volume 6.) .
references. Phone 667-3305.
THE NEW Owners of a tan female
German Shepherd left at the
Meigs Co . Dog Pound 3· A
Tile Almanac
weeks ago would like to hove
By
Ualted
Press
some more information from
Interoalloaal
it's prev1ous owner• Please
Today is Thursday, March
col\9'12-7653 .
24, the 83rd day of 1977 with SHOOTING MATCH , just oH Rt 7
282 to follow.
by, pass every Sunday 12 noon .
The moon is approaching
its first quarter .
The morning star is Mars.
The evening stars are Mer- LOST OR Stolen . Beagle rabbit
dog, License No. 750. Reward
cury, Vernis, Jupiter and
for information leading to the
Saturn.
return of him . Phone 992-5247
Those born oo this date are
Or992·7o413
under the sign of Aries.
LOST . APPROXIMATELY 25 choiro
U.S. Treasury Secretary
borrOwed' from the Ewtng
Andrew MeUoo was born
Funeral Home o year ago
Nome on bock . If anyone has
March 24, 11150.
5een
. or know') t he
On tlrls day in history:
wheorobouts , please coil .._.
In 1902, one of the earliest
lunerol home ol 992·2121
"advice to the lovelorn" coS50 REWARD to anyone knowing
lumns received this question :
the whereabouts of two
" Can two people live as
olummum e~etens1on ladde r,
and red wheelbarrow token
comfortably as one on $12 a
from Luther Bortoe residence,
week?" The answer: ~~we do
Long Bottom
not approve of marriage on a
LOST: LEWELLYN BIRD dog white
financial basis."
w1th brown spots over one eye
In 1934, the United States
in Portland. Phone 843·2561.
granted the
Philippine
LOST IN Darwin vicinity , Grey
Islands Independence to
Ca1rn terrier, male. Phone
become effective July 4, 1946.
992·3702 .
In' 1956, white civil rights
worker VIola Liuzzo of
Detroit was shot and killed oo
a road near Selma, Ala. Sbe $200 WEEKLY Possible stuffing
envelopes SE ND self-addressed
was following a protest
stamped envelope to: Edroy
march demanding equal
Moils, Box 188(0 Albany, Mo.
voting right.s lor blacks.
... 02
In
1976,
Argentine
LADY TO li ve in for room and
President Isabel Peron,
board tor wages . light
widow of fonner strongman
Housek•ep 1ng .
Phone
9'12·3923.
ruler Juan Peron, was
removed from power aild MAN TO work on Iorge beef.-'aftle form . E.-pe nenctt. ~
arrested in a milltary coup,
operating form moch.il'ltirr 1"e·
qu tred if intere.Jted.. Phone
A thought for the day:
~55 · 33-41 , Royal Oak Form, Rt.
Brltllh King George VI said,
io'---3, Po~.,!_u&gt;f_:·9~;.:;
''The highest of distinctions is
service to others."

t::J\

2 SIGNS Pomeroy·
~OF QUALITY Motor Co.

.... -·::-...:;:.";"-:.
Waaieil!oL
~ ---~-- )'.
CASH poid for all makes and
models of mob1le homes.
Phone area code 61A·423·9531
TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Products. Top pr1ce for slondmg
sawtimber Call Kent Hanby ,
1·4•6·B570.
COINS, CURRENCY, tokens , old
pocket watches and chains ,
silver and gold. We need \96.4
and older '-ilver coins. Buy , sell ,
or trade' Call Roger Wamsley ,
742·2.:33
:::.1:...
. ~----WANTED, CHIPWOOD . Poles ,
mox 1mum dtameter - 10 1nches
on largest end, S8. p&amp; r ton:
bundles slobs $6 per ton ,
Deliver&amp;d to Ohio Pollel Compony , Rt 2, Pomeroy . Ohio .
Phone 9'12-2689.
CASH 1! 1 for Junk cars Frye's
Truck and Auto WRECKER SER·

'

lntuiltion Senkn

251t . CAVELCAOE trailer , air
cond1ttoned and s&amp;verol other
extras in good condition . Call
ofter6p m. 992-5394 .

WANTED TO rent wlth possible
option to buv SO to 200 acres
secluded land,· some tillable
w1th tnhobitoble house. Colum·
b1a , Scipio, Bedford, or Rutland
Tow ns hip s.
Wrtte
Tonv
Russego , 1331 Meadow Rood,
Columbus, Ohto 43212

--,--

CORN or Soybean ground lh
Rutland or Middleport area, S
acres and up Phone 992·2703.

3 AND 4 RM. furnished end un·
lurmshed opts Phone 992·
5A3A .
-'
.
COUNJRY Mabile Home Pork , Rt .
_.a:r, 'ten mtles north of Pomeroy
Lorge lots with concr&amp;te patios,
sidewalks runners and off
street pa rking. Phone 992-7479 .
FARM ON river , 51 acres. 7 rooms
and both Phone 992·5908.
SHULTZ MOBILE Home, furnith&amp;d .
like new , has ctty water and
gas Phone Albert Hill , Rot:me ,
9•9·2261 .
fuR NISHED APT. for rent. Phone
992·3975 or 992·2571 .
LARGE 60 FT. unfurnished troller
in excellent cond1tion on corner
lot m Mtddleport . Mas expando
living room and patio. Adults
only . Mu1t provide references.
Call 992·2101 In doyt• me and
992·2319 after 6 p.m.

FOR SAlE or Trode for other pro·
perty. Thr" river lots, Water
Street , Syracuse $5500. Phone
992·5814 .

be&lt;i , 19"' Chevy 6 cylln(M,,
standard, RCA Victor rod1o;
niCjo chlldrens clothes ranging
from 1ize 4 on up. Phone
7.2.2()7B . ,_ _!._ __

HOUSETRAILER WtiEELS and hres,
2.A Inch boy's. bike, C-5 Homellte
chain sow, two 2 whHied
trailer frames, •firewood , baby
swi ng·o·mollc , 2 ft . high truck
topper , smoU refrigerotor.,
Phono9'12-59o7.
.. ~·------·-HoNDA 750, 1700 mites, ex·
cellen t condition . Phone
985·3919 after 6 p.m
aREioitiG AGED.~ ....,~ Po!t ·
ed Herefo rds , Royol Ook Form,
Rt. 3, Pomeroy Oh1o Phone
992·267 1.

;m

·--

...'

llownlllllfW.hiAttlcs

SlOIM

miACI,EIIT

1969 BUICK• DR.
Local 1 owner, good tires, automatic, radla.

$69l

Nobll Summit Road
Rt. 1
Middleport, 0 .
m.sn~

Complele
Sales
and
'Service and Supplies.
3·14. J m

POM~!~!v~~~~~ CO. '(j)
POMEROY. OHIO

~

CH:EVR:OLioT Bisquoine, 1966
BUICK Electro, 225 2 Rokan
1r1alb1kes. Phone 949 2432.
~
CAMARO 305, 2 bwell
outomat1c, s1 lver with red
pmslrip1ng Sllll under worran·
ty . Coll9'12·570'1.
1969 CHEVELLE SS 396, • speed,
power steer~ ng , power brakes .
Con tact Lewis Pulver at
949-2463 , hours after 6 P:_m.
1974 NOVA, 6 cyl1nder, p b , p s.,
automatic, 4 door, S16SO A
steal. Radial tires. Phone
_9'1_2_·2_5_2_
4· ---·~~~--~
1971 AMC MATADOR , p s .. p.b..
V·8 automatic , new battery,
and front tires. Makes good
work co r $550 . phone
949·2660 .
1964 Yr TON pickup , new ti res ,
good condilton Coi i992-399A .
1974 CHEVY CORVETTE , 350 4 bar·
rell. 29.000 m1les, silver w1th
· ·block leather 1ntenor, power
stndows factory air cond1hon
ing , AM·FM radio , T top,
telescopic a nd tilt steering
wheel , new set ot M1chelir'1
rad1ol ttres w1th le!s~n 500
miels. Phone 742-2025 aftet 5
p.m. or 7.42-2211 before 5 p.fm.
ond ask for Dav1d
197• MUSTANG II . Mach I. A•k lor
Rick at (304) 675·3375 before 6
p.m. Good cond1l1on , must sell

W1ll do odd jObs, roof1ng , p01n·
tmg . gutter work . Phone 9927409.
SEW ING · AL T ERA TIONS
Upholstenng
drapes
r&amp;asonoble. 572 South T h ~rd
Ave , Midd leport . Phone
992·6306.
PIANO TUNING. Lane Daniels 12
years of serv ice . Phone
9'12·2082
ARTIFICIAL INSEMINATION Serllice. DAIRY-BEEF For service or
1nlormol!on call TIM RINGER ,
AMERICAN BREEDERS SERVICE .
Home 662 4323 or Answenng
ServiCe, 593-624A ,
WILL TRIM or cut trees or shrub·
REGENCY 16 Channel Hi ·Lo police
bery. Phone 949-2545.
scanner, 10 crystals, $150
FREE
INSPECTION for termites!
Phone992·7748
Any smg!e dwe lling re!idence
treated for term tles, Sl()q,
Southern Pest Control. Rac ine .
New Co · OP water sof Ohio. Phone 94~·2503 or
teners, mod!l VC · SVI.
949·2786 .
Only $219.95
I Good Used Poulan Chain
FREE INSPECTION for termitesl
saw .
SS5
Any single dwellinQ residence
Save 150.00 on a n e w
treoted for termites, $109.
Hotpolnt Refrloer1tor .
Southern Pest Control , Rocme,
1 Good Used MtCUIIOugh
Oh10. Phone 9.49-2803 or
Chi In SIW •••• ••• •••• o $95
949·2786.
1 Good used 40" Hotpolnt
Range ••••• •••••••• •• $100
HAVE PICKUP truck , will do haul·
Now in stock, complete line
1ng Phone 9A9·2A17 , Jellrey
of bulk g1rden seeds and
Friend
onion se1s.

FOR SALE

·-~~,~~
~r~~~!~r
IAiil;
Phone 992-2181
TOY MANCHESTER , lemole 6
weeks old. Also , temer type,
brown female , opproxtmately 6
months old. I mole Seagle.
make
a
good
pet.
Hou sebroken Me1g s Co.
Humane SoCiety
Phone
_::..:::..o.:.:.....:...=.c.,.:.:.
843-3009 or 9'12·5•21 .__ __
REGISTERED HEREFORD~~ with
calves by Side. 1 mile 8lJsJ of
Rutland , Ohio on State Rt . 1,..,
See H1rom Slowter.
197A HONDA 360, 2000 actual
mdes, over S6CX&gt; of e~etros , om·
fm radio wtth tape. cigare1te
lighter, cargo carrier, w1nd·
s.hield wtth wind breaker , crash
bars, lots of chroma, many
more e.-tros not mentio ned .
Phone 742-2025 ofler S p.m. or
7A2-2211 befor&amp; 5 p m. and ask
for David.
RABBITS FOR Sole. Ideal for
Easter. All colros and s-Izes,
$2 50 ond up. Coil 992·7013,
Gene Wholey, Darwin , Ohio .
SINGER GOLDEN Touch N' Sew
does 1t alii Zig-Zags , t.es on
knit, automotit buttonholer .
makes design5 and many other
features . Just like new .
Ortginal prtce $549.95 . MUst
sell. only $129.95. Cash or
_._eo_m_!, ~all m
.~·5c.l4.::6::.. .,--....,-......,..
TWO FENDER Amps. Pre ·C.8.S.
Showman 15 in. speaker . Bondmaster reverb, two 12 inch
spe~k__!r~ !hone 99'2·~!37 :_

NHD A
WATlR \,[)fliNIR 1
Lot Pomeroy L•ndm•rk
sofle,n &amp; condition your
w•tor •nd 1 Co-op water
soflenor, ~I uc.xvl .
Now Only•279,95
let• us test your w1ter:
Free.

Pomq Landmark
¥.{Jock W. C.rsty, Mgr.
llliil, Phono 992-2111

Superior
Steam Extraction

Young's Carpeting
Carpet &amp; Upholstery
Phone Mike Young
At
992-2206 or 992-7630
"The Originators
Not The Imitators"
2-23· 1 mo.

61/1 acres , garden spot, some
pasture, f1rewood with wood·
burmng stove, fuel oil heat ,
outbuildings 2 bedroom house.
near hospital and town .
$19,500 Phone 992-59A7
3 BEDROOMS home , all alec., 1
both , utility room by kitchen .
115 K 115 lol , ) cor garage in
Rutland . Phone 742·2869.
GEORGE HOBSTET.TER, Jr. Reol
Estate Broker, Pomeroyr Ohio.
RACINE · 2,.A6 acres , 3
bedrooms . l1vlng room, kit·
chen , bath . carpeting ,
1droperles, fuel oil heat, central
otr conditioni ng, stove ,
refrigerator, hookup for
washer and dryer , fron t porch,
on Tuppers Plains-Chester
woter system. Approximotely
'It mile from Racine. Phone
9-49·2589 Priced $15,900. Mil ton
Wolfe , Salesman
5 ROOMS . BATH . utllotles, double
car garage on Iorge lot in Don:
ville on S.R . 325. Phone
•..7!2·301..:.
7:...
.
GEORGE HOBSTETTER , Real
Estate Broker. Pomeroy, Ohio.
. CHESTER - 3 acres land, 3
..bedroom house, 2 baths , stand·
up shower , storm dootl and
w1ndows , wall to wall
carpeting, refrigerator and
stove, 2 outbuildings, Plenty of
fruit treet. Very good condl·
lion . Pnced $35,000. Hilton
Wolfe . Salesman . Phone
949·2589.
IS ACRES OFF New Limo Rood
near Forrest Acres Pdrk Phone
742-2336.

==

CAPTAIN EASY

.

lARRZ.~~~DER
4· 1~ 1

HOLD IT, Mf;ECHAM !
THI5 !lOAt&lt;:D HA!' NO
i':IGHT TO OVE'Ri':IDE.
McKEE'S DECI!!'&gt;IOIJ! ...
AT MOST. YOU CONTROL
30 P~R Ct:NT OF TH&amp;
COMPANY STOCK !

Free Estimates
No sunday Calls Plene
311111 mo .

mo.

FREE WBE JOB

kitchen Cabinels, Roofing,
Concrete
Patios,
Sidewalks,
New
Construction
&amp;
Remodeling.

THAT'!&gt; I!&gt;LINTOfoJ
VOICE··

ALYWARD'~

H~' S ~IVAUN

?HAFTOE'S UNCLE-!

•H

AT

DAVID BRICKLES
Route2
Pomeroy, Ohio •5769
Free Estima1esPh. 992·7 119

.'
~!
..
• I

CHESHIRE
ASHLAND

General Contracting

I

East
I•
Pass
Pass 4 •
Pass
6 + Pass Pass
Pass Pass Pass
Opemng lead - J

.''

rr; OOP!
FE!AiT DESE~S .a. CHEEII:I

WAY'S NCW ClEAR! SUCH A

Southeastem Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.

-

Rolhlnllao

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
I'lL MU174

Route 3, Pomeroy, 0 .

ANY PIXK
ANY SIZE

, _.

Free

Estimates

Installation, samples
brought to your home
with no charge .

Located in Langsville
Box28-A

C.rpet-Lina.-Tile
Phone Mike Young al
991-2206 or 992-7630

Rutland , Ohio 45775
Ph . (614) 742-240f
We Deliver

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

2·23·1 mo.

12 22 -4 mas

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-"BACK WARD, . TURN
PROFESSIONAL

l HIRTY '1'fAR5 6RIHG CHANGES
CHILDRfN I k'NE'tll, PARENTS N0¥1~~DDL£ - AGeD •• STRAMGER S
MOVED It-\ ·· ALL THE 1&lt;105 ARE
NEW TO ME -

SWAIN'S

PHOTOGRAPHY

Automatic
Transmission Service

Aerial
Commer,ial
Schools
Weddings

I

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

PARTS · LABOR
GUARANTEED

REASONABLE

4

.'.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
10 New Guinea
1 Arctic sight
town
~r~r=:-:: 5 Wood sorre l II Eden's

Reedsville, 0 . Ph . 37842SO

8 Extol

2-25· 1 mo.

HO USE, bROOMS. ,;;;dboth , 6
and three·fourth acres 1nside
city limits. New siding and
storm windows , 3 acres fet,ced
lor sma ll pasture $18 ,500.
Phone 992 -7352.
7 ROOM HOUSE , new carpet ,
rool, Insulation owner fmanc·
ed. Coi1992-7A5A

HOMESITES for sale I acre and
up . Mtddleport near Rutland .
'Coii992 ·7&lt;BI.
-NEW 3 bedroom house 2 baths.
all elec. 1 acre. Middleport ,
close to Rutland . Phone 992·
7481
SMALL farm for sole, 10'1. down ,
owner financed. Monroe Coun ·
ty , W. Vo. Phone (30.4} 772·
3102"' (304) 772-3227
COU NTRY lormlond with · ~.,d:
ed woods , water on~. §1&gt;od access 1n Monroe (pdnty, W Vo .
$1 ,000 down_. coli (30.4 ) 7723102 0' (Ja.t ) 712-3227 .,_ __

-

~---

1 Motorist's
lo shave
13 Before
woe
(Lat. 1
2 Wood or
14 Chant
Turner
15 Siamese
3 Slighted;
(var.)
abandoned
16 Zsa Zsa's
(4 wds.)
sibling
I Netherlands
17 One-time
commune
chess
5 Lionel Bart
champiOn
musical
18 Kind of
6 Gondolier's
orange
passage
20 Mr. Burrows 7 Lawyer
21 Glib talk
(a bbr.)
23 Actress
10 "Bull·
Lee of the
thrower"
1920s
( 3 wds.)
21 Gray
25 Dullards
26 Carbine lor to-+-t-+a Tommy
27 Ten years
28 Eugene
Debs, e.g.
(abbr. )
29 Sir
Lancelot's
business
attire
30 Spanish

MAIN
POMEROY, 0 .
NEW LISTING - 3'1•
of ground In Po·merav,
excellent building I
potenllal. Could divide
13 lots. City water
sewage available. Asl&lt;ln!il
S5,800.00.
NEW LISTING In
Pomeroy older home wllh
potential
for
two
aparlmenls. 100 x~D lot .
ASKING SB.500.00.
LOCATED on old Route 33,
about 5 miles out nice
laying ground . 10.7 acres,
utlll11es available, close to
school, 011 good blacktop

road.
STOP PAYING RENT
You can own this newer
home for less than you
think. 4 bedrooms, bath,
utility connections,
carpeting. S1B,OOO.OO.
AN CLOER HOUSE WITH
New
A NICE LOOk aiding, forced air furnace,
storms, 3 large BR ., l'h
baths, carpeting, paneling,
boumenl. Beautiful view
of the river.
AN AMAZING VALUE - 2
,.. 3 Br., 2 baths, "dining R.
Loollng R, Living R.,
'Oiflce Bldg. Corner Lot.
Excellent
neighborhood.
All for just $22,000.00 .
MORE BUILDING SITES
- • .3 acres ntar Mulberry
Hg1s. ONLY SU50.00.
CALL
CLELAND
REALTY TO SELL YOUR
PROPERTY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
Honk Cltlond, Aaaociate
992-2259 . 9'12-2~
915-4 112

=

BRAD FORD , Auct1oneer Complete Servtce. Phone 94q·2.S7
or 949 20C&lt;:l. R.oclne. Ohio. Crltt
BrodJord .
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers , toasters Irons , all
small appliances . Lawn mower .
n.e~et to State Highway Garage
on Route 7 Phone {bl4 ) 985 ·
3625
REMODELING . Plumbmg . heating
and all types of generol repai r.
Work guaranteed 20 years expertence. Phone 992·24;.:;0'1cc.'-'_
SEWING MAO-liNE Repa1rs, ser·
vice , oil makes , 992·2284 . The
Fabr1c Shop
Pomeroy .
Authonzed Singer Soles ond
Serv1ce. We sharpen Scissor$ ,

1

GASOUNE ALLEY

Matt
told
me
not
to

==:::::--;"""-,-

VIrgil B. Sr., Roonor
216 E. Second S1retl
Pomeroy, Ohio ~5769
Phone 992-3325
TUPPERS' PLAINS - ~d
7 room house with v, beth,
out cellar and 1112 acres of
levelland on Rt. 7. Asking
$12.000.
RESTAURANT - Here's a
business for a family . Good
corner location in Pomeroy
at $13,500.
MIDDLEPORT
-2
bedrooms, nice beth, large
dining, 2 porches and level
lol. Nal. gas, city water.
$16,500.
HARRISONVILLE - New
3 bedroom brick veneer
home wllh dining , sliding
glass doors, and forced air
heat . Q1e acre lol on 124.
Want S29,500.
MIDDLEPORT Good
brick bu ilding with 3
apartments next to the
business section ; One
furnished &amp; 3 garages.
()1(y $20,000.
NEW LISTING - Large 3
bedroom frame home wl1h
belh, nat. gu F .A. furnace.
Large living with wood·
burning fireplace, storm
windows and doors and
large lot for Sl7 ,500.
NEW LISTING
3
bedroom block house, bath,
rural water, cistern, new
garave with good cellar
and large lot In the counlry .
$16,5011 .
NEW LISTING - Trailer
lois at Five Points. All sol
up ready to move on for
only $5$90.
IF YOU WANT IT SOLD,
Sci ....,,.. ............ US AT 9921325.
HELEN L.
AND GORDON B.
ASSOCIATES

alma mater

DOWN

9 Prepare

Commercial property opprox . I 7
ocr&amp;s , level land , located ot
Tuppers Plains on Ohio , Route EXCAVATI NG dou~r lood&amp;r and
backhoe work: dump trucks
7. Phone (614) 667·6304 .
ond lo·boys lor hire: will haul
NEW 3 bedroom house, built-in
fill dirt , to soil . limestone and
kitc hen : bath ant;! •;, , Phone
grovel Coli BoB or Roger Jef742-2306 or contact MilO B Hutfers, day phone 992·7089,
chison, Rutland, Oh1o . ..
mght phone 992-3525 or 992·
5232.
FOR SALE . Al l elec. nearly new
home in Rut land oreo Base- EXCAVATI NG , doter , backhoe
ment , 3 bedrooms , attached
ond dltcher. Charles R Hot·
garage ,
$29 ,900
Phone
field. Bock Hoe Service ,
742-2531 .
Rutland, Ohio . Phone 742-2008.

TEAFORD

P'~

~J-~tlt'

BORN LOSER

ONE ACRE . 3 bedrm .. 2 story
home, dining room, large both,
na tural gas, Iorge porch, mce
block ga rage $20 000 Phone
992 ·5732
3 BEDROoM.ronch, 1 1/~ boths, I
acre oi l elec f1n1shed garage
Fully carpeted Five Potnts
area. $30.000 Phone 992·2926
after 5 p.m.
APPROX IMATELY 7 or 8 acres
wooded !and in Rock Springs.
Phone 9'12·27B9.
2 STORY 4 Bedrm brtck home 1n
Middleport Phon e 9&lt;12 3457 .
1
6 /1 ACRE FARM. 7 rooms, bafh,
born , pond, and furn1t ure_prk·
ed oil for $18,500 One mTii!
from Langsvi lle. Ohio on C R
I 0 Phone 7.ti2-2668.

+

Contmutng ye s terday 's
answer , the Texas conventwn
What ha ppens when
someone really interferes IS the !trst of the transfer
bids In response to a one· or
with Blackwood by stic king m
two-notrump opening bid , the
a defenSive b1d at the s1x or
JUmp to fo ur diamond s asks
possibly the seven level?
partner to bid four hearts The
Here you can't use the doujump to four hearts asks
ble to show no aces. the pass
parLner lo b1d lour spades . A
to show one and the b1d lo
typ1cal Texas transfer m
show more because t here are
response to a ope notrump
lots of hands where responder
would be a lour heart b1d
w11i hold two aces a nd he
with ·
won 't be s ure that they are
4AQxxxxx¥x t x xx•xx
enough lor a slam .
Responder wants to play
Here we recommend that
rour s pades and also wants his
the double say "Partner, 1
partner lo be declarer .
don 't want lo bid any more ."
(For a copy of JACOBY
BACKWARD''
The pass say : " Partner , go
MODERN, send $1 to. "Win
5&lt;JRE 1
ahead ."
IT WA5
And lhe bid say '1Partner, I at Bfldge, " c l o this
MALT
... KATIE
SHE
"'~·••t~~'sEo
'"T"'""
rnewspaper. P. 0 BoK 489.
W06 A liTTLE
YOUR MAMA - really like my hand "
GIRL WHEN
W~~y Nor th didn 't want to bod SIX RadiO C1ty Station, New York
1
YOU
GIRl - with only one ace a nd two
N Y 10019)
S HE WEM
USED

."v~a:;E~R

RATES

(614) 915·4155
Chesler, Ohio
10·11-1 mo I Pd)

tell

a

soul,
Slim ..

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned. Modern
Sont!OIIon , 992-395A
WILL . do roaf1ng. construction ,
plumbing and heating. No job
too Iorge or too small Phone
742·2348.
c""A
,:,R
:.:Pc:
EN
:=:TC:E':R.- -:1::lo-o,-:-in~g~.·-,- eiii-n-g.
-~~eling . Phone 9V2 · ~~ · ~
MOBILE Home Repair , Elec ,
plum bing and heating. Phone
9'12·5858
ELECTRONIC T.V CLINIC , New
T.V shop, Electronic T.V. Clin1c
Service call , $5.95. Color, 8 &amp; W
antenno systems stereos, etc. ·
572 South Third, Middleport .
Phone 992·6306 . Carry in and
save money .
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
covatmg , septic svs tems,
dozer , backhoe, dump truck, '
limestone, grovel, blacktop ,.
paving, Rt. 143 Phone 1 (61A) t,
698·7331.

SO- SHUT' LJP !r-

25 Old
12 Liberate
pulpit
16 Synunetrical 27 Fish up
19 Symbol of
29 Combat
Ra
setting
21 Circulate as 33 Architeccounterfelt
tural fillet
34 Nwnerical
money
suffix
(2 wds.)
22 Oregon port 36 " Diamond
23 Crazy;
"
37 Bind

AH DIDN'T AX YO'
TO COME ALONG-

YO'AXED ME.-

lots
38 Dimming

39 Elba,
lor one

DAILY

CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

it :

One letter simply J;lands for another. In this sample A is
used for the lhree L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letlers,
apostrophes, the length and formal!on of the words are all
hints Each day the code leiters are d1fl'ercnt.
CRYPTOQUOTES

0 1

WINNIE

Q 01
ITIG

UEQ

BKD

DQETZ;

K

FS

FTEMJOQ

01
NKU

BKD

GIVYR·

PTE N

DEXYIQS

F S

Q0 I
WIT·

DE .U KVVS . - P T IG
KVVIU
Yeslerda)"s Cryptoquole: NOT ONLY SHOULD YOU
BEUEVE IN WHAT YOU'RE DOING, BUT YOU SHOULD
KNOW WHAT YOU'RE DOING. - MASON WILUAMS
C UI'J'7 K1a&amp; f'•t\Uel Srad..Jea\1, lao.

I.

I

1970 12 x 50 2 bedroom mobil•
home. 1912 12 x -45 one
bedroom mobile hom•. 20"
" new mower . Can be sHn at-493
Broadway St , ~lddleport .'
Phone 99H535.

SNUFFY!! I

WELL,MILO.

TODAY'5 THE
816 GAME

HERE COME5 THE OTHER
TEAM, CHARLES .. THEI(
LOOK PRETTI{ TOU6iol ...

Dollars 6; Muppel Show 8; News 10; To Tell the
Tr uth 13 , Wild Kingdo m IS; Almanac 20;
Ameri cana 33.
7 3~Hollywood Squa res 3; •• , Oh io Stale Lottery 6;
Price Is Right B; Wild Kingdom ID; Nashville on the
Road 13; Dolly 15; Mac Neii · Lehrer Report 2(),33.
a:oo-Fantastlc Journey 3J4,1 5; Welcome Back. Kotter
6, 13. Waltons 8,1 0; Class ic Theatre 20; Masterpiece
Theatre 33.
B 3~W h al ' s Happening 6, 13.
9 . ~Bes t Sellers 3.4,15; Barney Miller 6. 13; Hawaii
F ive. ? B: Classic Theatre 33 ; Sandy Duncan 10.
9 · 3~Three' s Company 6,13.
IO : ~Westslde Medical 6, 13; Barnaby Jones B:
Honevmooners' Trip to Europe 10, News 20 .
1 0 · 3~1n The Shadow of the General 33 ; Woman 20.
11 : O~News 3,4,6.B. 10, 13. 15; MacNeil Lehrer Report
33
11: 3D-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Alan King' s Pleasures of
Rome 6,13; ; Kojak B; Mary Hartman 10; ABC
News 33
12 : ~Movi e " Underworld, U.S.A " 10; J anakl 33
1 2 : 4~Movle " The Deadly Dream " 8.
1: ~Tomorrow 3.4: News 13.
FRIDAY, MARCH 2l, 1977
6·oo-Sunrise Semester 10
6· 15-Farm Report 13
6 . 2~Nol tor Women Only 13
6:3o-&lt;:olumbus Today 4; News 6; Sunrise Semester B.
Overseas Mission 10.
6:45-Mornlng Report 3.
6 : 5~Good Morning, West Virg inia 13
6.55-Good Morning, Trl State 13
7 ~Today 3,4,15; Good Morning Amer ica 6,13;
Chuck White Reports 10.
7 05-Porky Pig 10.
7 · 3~Schoolles 10.
B. ~Howdy Doody 6; Capt Kangaroo B, 10 ; Sesame
St. 33 .
B : 3~Big Va lley 6.
9 · ~A M. 3; Phil Donahue 4, 15 ,13; Andy Griffith B;
Mike Douglas 10
9 . 3~Edge of Night 6; Concentration B
10 O~Sanlord &amp; Son 3,4, 15, Dinah 6, Double Dare
B. 10; Mike Douglas 13.
10 3~Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; Price Is Right B,10 .
n · ~W heel of Fortune 3,4,15; Morning Show 13.
11· 3~Shoot for the Sta rs 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6,13:
Love of Life 8, 10; Sesame St . 20,33.
1 1.S~BS News B; Ms. Flxlt 10.
12 :0o--'--News 4,6, 10; Second t.:hance 13, Name ll'lat
Tune 15; D1vorce Court B
12 :oo-News 3,4,6, 10; Name That Tune 15, Divorce
Court B
1 2 . 3~Lovers &amp; Fnends 3, 15 , Ryan's Hope 6, 13, Bob
Braun 4, Search for Tomorrow 8.10.
1: ~Gong Show 3: All My Children 6, 13; News B;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15
1· 3(}-0ays of Our Lives 3,4,15 ; Fam ily Feud 6,13; As
The World Turns B, 10.
2 0().....$2D,OOO Pyramid 6,13 . 2 . 3~Doclors 3.~. 1 5 ; One
Life to Live 6, 13; Guiding Light B. 10.
3 · ~Another World 3,4,15, All In The Fam 11y B,10;
Crockett' s Viclory Garden 20.
3 15-General Hospital 6,13.
3.3(}-Match Game B,10, Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
4 ~Mis ter Cartoon 3, l illie Rascals 4, Gong Show
15; New' Mickey Mouse Club 6: Lucy Show B;
Sesame St . 20,33; Movie " The Hellions" 10; Dinah
13.
4.15-Little Rascals 4.
o~My Three Sons 3;
Partridge Family 4;
Emergency One 6; Partridge Fam ily B; Flintstones
15.
5 : ~B i g Valley 3: My Three Sons 4; Brady Bunch B;
Misler Rogers' Neighborhood 20.33; Star Trek 15.
5:3(}-Adam 12 4; News 6; Family Affair B; E lee . Co.
20,33; Adam. 12 13.
6 : ~News 3,4,6,B, 10 ,13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6.l0-NBV News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Grlftllh 6;
CBS NewsB,10, Vegetable Sou p 20; Villa Alegre 33.
)·~Truth or Cnons . 3; To Tell the Truth 4, Bowling
for Dollars6; S12B,OOO Question B'; News 10: To Tell
the Truth 13; My Three Sons 15; Ohio Journal 20;
Marshall Un iversity Report 33.
7 3~Porler Wagoner 3, Gong Show 4, Candid
Camera 6, 1 reasure Hun1 8; MacNeil -Lehrer
Report 20,33; Andy Williams 10: Name Thai Tune
13; Pop Goes t he Country IS.
B ~Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15, Donny &amp; Mane 6, 13, Movie
" The Wav "west" B,10; Washington Week in Review
20,33.
B:3().....Bob Hope 3,4 ,15; Wall Slreet Week 20,33
9 . ~Future Cop 6,13 ; People's Government 33;
Lowell Thomas Remembers 20.
9·3(}-The Way It Was 20.
10 ·0(}-Rockford F iles 3,4,15; News 20; Firing Line 33 .
10 :3()-Pilot "Bravo Two" 8,10; Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel
20.
11 ·0(}-News 3,4,6,B, 10,13,15; Monty Python's Flying
Circus 20; ~lack Perspective on t he News 33.
11:3()-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; SWAT 6, 13; Movie
" Female Artillery" B; Ma ry Hariman 10; ABC
News 33.
12 ·!10-Movle "Snake People" 10; Janakl 33.
12 :4()-Mod Squad 6; Ironside 13.
1 ~Midnight Spacial 3,4, 15.
1 . 4~News 13.
2 · 3~News 3.
3 · ~Movla "Cafe Metropole" 3.
4:3(}-Movle " Father Was a Fullback" 3.
6 : ~Saln1 3.

37 Fatigue

KMGMFEU

•

11 Empowered

~~gold"

JACK'S BEE SUPPLIES, Reedsville, •
Ohio. he supplies and &amp;quip·
ment . Phone (61.4) 378·6357.

12 x 60 WITH 20 x 8 room, totol
elec. at Tuppers Plains. For rent
or sole. Phone667-~.
12 x 60 TRAilER on :Z ac:rn, sprint
.woter on natural gas. 15900.
Phone 99~ · 3f1~5.

Yesterday's Answer

31 CartooniSt, 1:;;;-t--JGardner32 Tyke
t.;;+-J-35 Like many
parking
ltc-+-J--J~

EXCAVATING , Backhoes Dozer,
trencher, low Boy, dump truck,
trut ks, sep11c svstems. Bill
Pullins. Phone 992-2-478 day or
mght.
_J

1973 HILLCREST 12 x 70, 3
bedrooms, shag carpet, e•·
ceUent condition . May rent tot'
First right in Syracuse. Phon•
992·3980.

SIX .

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

Young's Carpeting
Service

have gone past

~1

'rOU'VE DONE

3·t6·1 mo.

Radiator ,.......-,

~orth

West

Cheshire, Ohio
Phone 614-367-0626

3· 11 ·1 mo. pd·

the nght Utree ktn gs so South
went all the wa y to seven
hearts ."
It is mteresling to note tha t
We s t ' s d es perat e bid
boomeranged aga1n st h1m
Left to themselves it lS doubtfu l if North and South would

•AQJ8 5 1
tA
,foAJ74
NorUt-South vulnerable

WITH OIL CHANGE
AND FILTER

Route 3, Pomeroy, 0 .

SERVICE STAliON for lease Small
investment requ ired .' Must be '
aggresstve and desire to work
wdh people. Phone (30-4}
342·8161 fordetolls
OWN YOUR own business. Work
for yourself. Set your own
hours. Rewords ore there for
the tak1ng. Call Mr Adams,
(304) 342-8161. .

ALUMINUM
SIDijK.SOFfm
GUTIU$,\WIIIRiS

potential losers m dta monds
On the other hand , he did ha ve
lull va lues plus, m sp1te of
holdtng JUSt one ace , and
there fore passed to show this
1 good hand.
WEST
EAST
Now Soulh d1d a l1tt le thmk·
• 75
• 10 9 8 6
ing on his own He said to
.7 2
. 10
hom self : " My part ne r has
t J10 98 65 4 3 tKQ
opened the b1ddtng w1 th only
• 2
• Q 10 9 6 6 5 one ace and does not want to
SOUTH
discourage me He must have
24

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-21160

IIIRIIOIIS

Ph. H2·3M3

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

Bissell Siding Co.

I

IIIIIIIOIIS&amp;DOO~S

$14o18

1971 FORD'oH ON CREW CAB
Body good, runs good.

~==========--=~~;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;::~~~

1~75

FillncioaARi~blo

1973CHEVROLET C&amp;C 2 TON
$3695
Big six 292 cu . ln .• 4 speed, 15,000, 2 speed, Oem axle.
Ready to work.

BRIDGE

Vin'yl and aluminum
siding, storm windows and insulation.
Call Professionals

FREE Tl

llown

VICE! Phone
WANTED
, ONE 7.2.2()81.
mole goat Phone .
Dennis Roush, 8A3·2
, cB.c.
34__..'"7'--0lO FURNITURE , ice box•s , brass
beds. et c.
t:omp let e COAL, hmesrone, and colc1um
hll•lseholds. Wnte M. D. Miller,
chloride and calcium brine for
dust control and spedol mhong
Rt. -4 , Pomeroy, Ohio or call
salt for formers. Mo1n StreeT ,
9'12-77W.
P,omerov. Ohio or phone 992SMALL HOUSE THA IL EI\, in good
3891.
condition . Call or see CnrLMor·
APPLES, FIT ZPATRICK ORCHARD,
rts, Rutland, 742·2932 .
STATE RO UTE 689 PHONE
SULKY FOR Gravely tractor.
WILKESVILLE. (614) 669·3785 .
Phone 992·7202 in any condi·
FUlLER Brush Products for sole
lion .
Phone 992 3410.
CAMPER , $600. Also, horse
tro1ler, $450 Phone (614 ) 698·
3290
IF YOU have a service to offer ,
wont to buy or sell somet~Hng , STEREO. NEW AM·FM stereo
ae lookmg for work . . or
radio combinot1o n. $129 95 or
whateve r , , you II g&amp;l results
eosy te rm$ Coli 992·3965
faster wilh a Sentmel Want Ad
SHAKESPEAREBASS Bo,;-u:
Co1 1992·2156
1976 Mercury 20 h.p. w1th elec·
YARD SALE Morch 23 , 24 , 25,
tnc s ta rt 1976 ltlt tro ller , p\us
Route 7 Che ster Rood , Pomeroy
ofher extras. $1695. Phone
Corporolton Ltmits 10 till A
992·3126, C. P.. Rillle
lARGE GARAGE Sale. east on FISHER WOOD Burnhlg stov&amp;s and
681 , 2nd house I rom Tvppers
form lumber. PHONE Facemyer
Plo1ns School , Saturday and
and Salmons lu mber Ca., Inc.
Sunday . Hou sehold Items . baby
Rt. 7 Mi ddleport , Oh1o, (6hl)
clothes and swing . Extra nic&amp;
992·7A25.
chi ldren and women 's clothing,
STRAWBERRIES in bo5kets and
gouges . m:..'=
":;_----~
flats , now beonng, ponstes ,
cabbage , lettuce, brocroli ,
cauliflowe r. Brussels Sprouts .
onions. Cleland Farms and
Greenhouse
G&amp;raldtne
RISING , STAR Keruiel Boardmg ,
tndoor.Qutdoor runs, groom!,pg
Clelan.~d~----~~~coil breeds , dea n s_pnlfQry USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT .
facilities . Cheshire. Ph~ne (6 1.4)
Hough Sk1dder Model S7B ·
367-0292.
M1Ch1gon Mod&amp;! 55A6; R&amp;bull l
Morbork 348 · Ch1p Poe com ·
HOOF HOlLOW. Buy . sell , lrade
plete W)th screen . Contact Den ·
or train horses: RUTH REEVES,
nis Smurr
Phone (6 14 )
trainer Phone (614) 6'98·32'90
836·5345.
POODLE GROOMING, reasonable
USED HOOVER Sweepers. 124.50
rates, Call for appt. 742·3162 .
=
c~a•-;:h:_.:o~r-;;te:C';'-m':;''O:C';o";11 9.~-46_
DOBERMAN PINCHER Pups, AKC,
BROWNING
EAGLE
C 8 Base sta·
lA weeks block and rust. Ears
han . Phone992-5348.
cropped . toil cut.oll shots .
Phone 7A2-2967 after 5 p.m.
1975 HONDA XllOO, good cond1·
hon Priced $300 1976 Z50 Hon·
do mini-trai l. excellent cond1 ·
lion . $300. Phone 992·5606.
MASSEY FERGUSON tractor w1th
AUCTION, FRIDAY 7 p.m.
backhoe and looder 1976 Ford
Truckload of new merc hond1se ,
truck 700 w1th dump bed. less
as well as used m1sc at the
than 60C(l m1les, Same as new ,
Auct1on House. Horton St ..
Hydraulic post drtver, new; _.00
Mason , W Va , Phone (30-4)
boles of hoy, m1xed. sandwich
773·5•71.
machme , 3 po1nt hitch tufmn~
plow , ·th ree 14 ' bottom plow .
Phone 8A3-2900 . •

TWO BOY's 20 lhch bicycle. bobv
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Cue No. 22051
Est1t1 of Virgil E. RousPI,
Dec .. ncl.
Notice Is hereby given that
Mary S. R:oush, of R 0 . 12,
R~clne, Ohio, h!IS been du ly
'appolnt&amp;d Executrix of the
Estate of VIrgil E. R:oush ,
deceased, late Of R. D. 2,
Racine, Meigs County, Oh io.
Creditors are required to
file their claims with sa id
't"'"lliUI flducitry within three
months .
·
Dated this 9th day of MarcPI
1977.
Manning 0 . Webster,
Common Pleas Court,
Probate Division
to 10?"
Me igs Countv,Ohio
!31 17, 24, 31, 3tc

Business Services

7 · ~Tr uth or Cons 3; To Tell the Truth o; Bowllnq for

THURSDAY, MARCH 24,1977
5 · ~B i g Valley 3; My Three Sons 4; Brady Bunch B;
Mlsler Roger s' NeighborhOOd 20,33, Star Tre k 15.
5 .3~Adam · 1 2 4.1 3; News 6; Elec. Co. 2&lt;1.33.
6 . ~N ews 3, 4,6,B, 10,13, 15; Once Upo n a Class ic 20,33
-

KNOW
"'O'RE IN THAR,
'-IE DADBURN
CHICKEN (I
THIEF!!

11

~H~E=..;.W:.:l~Sr-+.:o-&lt;::1?'"::1

I

KI

b:
I. K) I _)
t
) I I J I
LEMETH

tGINOUT

Now arrange the drcled loners to
torm the surprise answer, as suggesle&lt;i b)' the above canoon.

A=rn ~a~r"'"""'J r r xxJ
(Answers 1omonow)

.Yestorda(s

I

Jumbles UNCAP WINCE FINERY JOCKEY
Answer: An Hlegal eni!II)IIM In ~lch a monkey Ia
involved-A C-APE-R

�10- The Dally Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, March 24, 1977

Local news in briefs

· Opinions

Junior

Jack Crisp and 0 A Mf'rf in
ha ve been cance lled accord ing to an entr y in lhigs

wash from 11 a.m . to 4 p.m.

Cou nt y Comnion Pleas Court .

Saturday at

In other entries :
The Carp et Installa ti on
Suppi y of Cha1tanooga,
Tenn .. tiled a suit lor 51.339.01
etgain st D. 0. Parsons ,
Sy racuse ; The Georgia
Paci fic Corp., Columbus Is

RACI NE -

grade of

The eighth

Southern

High School will hold a car
the Pennzoil

Service Station in Ra cine.

MARY SHRINE 37, OR·
DE R of Wl11te Shrine of
Jeruulem .

will

ho ld

a

rehearsal at 2 p .m . Sunday at
the
Pomeroy
Mason ic
Templ e In preparation for

Installation of olllcecs to be
held on April 2.

.

-marriage llc;:ense

A

has

been Issued to Lewis G.
Berkhlmer,

JJ,

Cincinnati.

and Cathy Sue Smith , 24,
Long flOIIom .
The deputy sherlll commissi oos of Gary Griffi th,

suing Oh io Valley Mfg . Corp ..
Tuppers Plains tor S801.SO;
Janet J, Cremeans . Rt . 1,
Rutlan d f iled fsult for divorce
from Gary L. Cremeans , Rt.

1 Rutland, an d Belly JordM
.;,d Rodney Jordan both of
Rutland, filed lor dissolution
d marriage .
Divorces were qrented to

(afhy A. Tyree fro m Lanny

D. T'l"ee and Robert A.
Hartl ey from Eva !{Hartley.
•

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

:
I

i

Area Deaths

·

1

CURTISS IVAN POWEL L
CATHORENE LOVE
RACINE - Curtiss Ivan Cathorene Love, 60, New
(Dobbin) Powell , 75, Racine. Haven , ~ l ed Wednesday at
&lt;led Wednesday afternoon at the Pleasant Valley Hosf ltal.
Veterans Memoria' Hospital.
Mr . POwel l. a son Of the late
'Mi l lam and El izab eth Roush
Powell, w as also preceded In

A former em ployee o the
New
Ha ven
Por celain
Company, she was born April '
4. 1916, In New Haven, a

death by six brother and daughter of the late Ira and
three sisters.
Addie Ord Wolle .
A retired employee of the

Sur vivi ng

are

t wo

State Highway Dept. with 27 daugh ters, Bill ie June Hayes ,

years service, he attended
the Racine Baptist Church.
He is sur vived by his wife,
Wanda Grad y Powell, three
dau9hter s, Li l l ian Weese,
Ra cme ; Shirley Shiveley ,

Ru th 'Ann Boyd, both of New
Haven; ooe son, Jack E.
Cartwright, Weir ton , W.Va.;
10 gr andchil dren and two
grea t-grandchildren . She was
preceded in dea t h by a

Columbus, and Cheryl Wood, lr other, Raymond.

M1rlon ; one son Ivan

C,

Fun eral se. ·vices will be

Powell, with the U.S. Air held Friday at 1:30 p.m. at

Forc.e in lta lv ; 10 aran d- the New Ha ven Un i ted
chi ldr en ,
one
grea t . t-tethodist 'Church with Rev .
gra ndchild , a
brother , John Camfbell officia ting .
William
Hoyt Powell , Burial wit follow in the
Columbus,
and several Graham Cemetery .
nieces, nephews anc cousins.
Fr iends m!l y ~all at the
FL.rl eral services wi ll be Fogl eson g Funeral Hom e
Saturday, l p.m . at Ewing from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9
Chapel with the Rev. Don p.m. toda y. The bOdy will be
Wal ker of fi cia ti ng . Bur ial taken to the chur ch 011e hour
wi l l be i n L etar t Falls ~ i or to ser vices .
Cemetery . F r iends mar call
at the funeral hom e a fer 3

p.m. today.

THURMAN BOROEN

CLARENCE H. CURTISS
Cla-ence H. Curtiss. 86, Rl.
3 Pomeroy, d~d Wednesday
night at O'Bien ess Hospital ,
Ath ens.
Mr. Curtiss. born Sep t. 26,
1690 to the tale James and

R.osa Pl ye Curtiss, wa s also

preceded In· death by a
brother. Albert ; one sister,
Rhoda Roush , and two
daughters, Ruth Dra hos and

•

I .

Thurman J. Borden, 75, a
resident of Bidwell , died in
Hol zer Medical
Center
around 5 p.m . Wednesda y.

He was born April 17, 1901 ,

in Bidwel l, son of the late
Al eX and Lidia o'e nne y
Borden Bunch .
.
l-Ie married Bernice Pa yne

In 1927. at Portsmout h. She

survives, along with one
t:rother and three sister s:
1-ial Borden, Mrs. Geraldine
Ma yo and Mrs. l ure t h~.

1Wir1ha NQ"ris.
Surv ivin g ar e hi s wife ,
Della F renc h Cur t iss, a

Smith, all of Bidwel l and Mrs.
Irene Jackson , Rl. 1, Bidwell .

11/echanicsvil le,

Three brothers preceded him
in death .
He was a mem ber of the

daughter,

Ru by Fri ck,
Pomeroy : two sons, Olho,
Iowa ;

and

Home r, Shellsbu rg, Iowa ;

me brother , Roy , Pomeroy;
1! grandchildren, 32 great.
grandch ildren. and several
niece s and nephews.
He is a member of the

U.urel Cll.l Free Method ist
Church. •

Fl.f'eral services will be 3 '

p.m. Saturday at Ew fng
Chapel with the Rev . Floyd
Shook olllc iating . Burial will

be In Beech Grove Cemet ery .

Friends may call at the

funeral home after
evening.

7 th is

Bidwell Mt. Carmel Baptist

Church .
F1.11 era l se rvices will be

held 1 p.m. Sunday at the

chu rc h w it h Rev .
Watson and Rev .
WcGhee officiating.
will be In Pi ne

Cemetery , Gallipolis.

Van ce
Elber t
Burial
Street

The body wil l ie in state at
the church one hour pri or to

ser vices.
Friends may cal l at the
N-cCcry -/More F uner al Home
fro m 2-4 an d 7.9 p.m .

Saturday.

Hospital News

IG?ntinued from page I)
Meigs Co..
Remodel non.('.ourt offices on the Urird floor of the Cl&gt;urt
House
"
Group E (Assign Priority Numbers %3-%$ 1
ElJ)8nd and remodel the Clerk of Cl&gt;urts Office in the
Court House
Buy about 250 acres-year of reclaimed surface.minded
land for recreatioo
Build a 30-foom lodge near Forked Run State Park
Group F (Asslga Priority Num~ 26-28)
freate a Flood-Route By-Pass east of Rutll!nd between CR
3&amp;: SR 124
.
~surface Cll 26 &amp; CR 34 in Chester &amp;Sutton Twps. from
SR 7 SE to SR 124
Remodel the Pomeroy Library to conserve energy &amp;
increase accessibility
Group G (Aallga Priority Nlllllben %9-fe)
Resurface CR 19ln Olester &amp;Salisbury Twps. from US 33
east to CR ro
Resurface CR 31 in Sutton Twp. from CR 28 to CR 31
Resurface CR 31 in Lebanon &amp;Sutton Twps. from Portland
west tD CR 28
Resurface CR 36 in Chester &amp; Orange Twps. from SR 7 tD
SR 681 (Alfred )
Resurface CR 43 in Olive Township from CR 46 to SR 681
Resurface CR 46 in Olive and Orange Twps. from SR 248 tD
SR7
Remodel and ~and the COurt House space for the Bureau
of Support
·
Establish an abuseiJrotection and counseling center for
women and children
Bulld a Health Department Bullding with expanded

services
Develop permanent Meigs County Museum exhibits and
showcases
Prepare a historical media shoW about Meigs County
Remodel the Meigs Cl&gt;unty Museum for better lighting and
pennanent seating
Group H (AIIslga Priority Numbers U-43)
Buy a new bookmobile &amp;overhaul the existing bookmobile
Build a COWlty ProsecutDr's Office
·
Purchase needed modem office equipment and furniture
for the Court House ·
Group I (Asslga Priority Numbers H aDd l5 1
Build 10 cabins &amp; 100 caml"ites next to the proposed
Forked Run !Jldge
Acquire the three old Corps of Engineers Ohio River locks
and darns
Group J (AIIslga Priority Numbers 48-491
Renovate &amp;remodel the Children's Home for CoWlty office
use
Develop 3day-care centers for children of working parents
Parks at Racine, Olester, Tuppers Plains, Rutland,
Pageville &amp; Portland
Provide hunting BDd fishing at the parks on reclaimed
surface.mined land
Group K (Asslga Priority Numbers 50-551
Build a special .education wing at Meigs H.S. for
handicapped children
CMstruct a complete Animal Control Center near the
County Highway Garage
Remodel part of the Children's Home for a County Park
Board Office
Develop a 200-acre park near Salem Center
Develop a 'riverfront recreation area at Pomeroy and
expand Middleport's
Build a Meigs County Civic Center with a ~t
auditDriwn.
Gro.., L (Assign Priority Numbers 58-Q)
Build a CR 4 By-Pass of Deller and resurface CR 4 from
TR 47to CR 3
Resurface CR 10 &amp; CR 17ln Salem &amp; Rutlsnd Twps. from
Dexter to SR 143
Build a SR 143-CR 75 Connector Road oorth of Pomeroy
Resurface and straighten CR 50 in Olive Twp. from SR 124

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
TWO DAY SALE
FRIDAY MARCH 25th AND SATURDAY, MARCH 26th
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

Stop in on the 1st floor , buy the Easte r cards
you need now for everyone on your list wives. husband s, daughters , sons,
grandmas, grandpas, someone special and
many, m;my .others . .
Also Hallmark Easter wrapping paper
ribbons , napkins , paper cups, cookie
cutters, fun books.

SALE! DISCONTINUED PAITERN
DAN RIVER

Regular $5.99 Full Bed sheets
Fitted or flat
Regular $4.69 Twin Bed Sheets
Fitted or flat
Regular $4.49 Pillow Cases
Regular $8.99 Queen Bed Sheets
Fitted or flat

$4.49
$3.49

COMFORTABLE CASUAL

Electronic
Cooking Centers

I
I

I

-

Erafl

MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

WATCH FOR

-----OPENING nATF
r

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Men's $49
Sport '·cOats
Sizes are

selection of solid colors,
plus patterned sport coals.
. I

Select mens knit
slacks to wear with
sport coats. Slacks·at
sale prices Friday
and Saturday.

Mens 5.50 Ties ................. Sale 4.74
Mens '6.50 Ties ................. Sale '5.54
Mens 17.50 Ties ............ .... Sale '6.44
1

1

TWO DAY SALE

TWO DAY SALE!

BOYS
JEANS AND SlACKS

MEN'S
DRESS SLACKS'

Includes al l of our boys pants,
blue jeans and fashion jeans,
corduroys.

Sizes 8 to 18 ln. regulars, sli ms,
and huskies plus student sizes In
waists 26 to 30 choose your length,

solid colors and patterns .

Bovs 56.95
Jeans-Slacks ----~6 .06
Boys 17.95
Jeans-Slacks - ----16.96
Boys 13.95
Jeans-Siacks _ _ _ _ _ 57.76
Boys 19.95
\•..lnS-:&gt;IaCKS - - -- -18.66
· - - - - $ 9.56

- -- -

510.36

J8

throygh 46 In
regulars, and longs, fine

Fa mous maker , ou r
new spr ing an d
sum mer selection ,
sot i d colo r s and
neat pa11erns F ou r
in-han d and read y
ti ed ti es .

PHIUP KING WAS ONE OF 42 PERSONS eurnlned at a hearing clinic Tuesday in the
basement of the Trinity Church in Pomeroy conducted by the Meigs CoWlty Department of
Health. Observing as the otologist conducts his examination are Mary Myers, left, and Opal
Grueser, both registered nurses working with the county health department.

100 per cent polyester double
knit.

''

Mens 11o.95 Slacks
Sale $9."
Mens $11.95 Slacks
Sale110.l9
Mens 111.95 Stocks
Sale 511.39
Mens $13.95 Slacks
Sale 5tU9
Mens 514.95 Stocks
Sale 513,29
Mens $15.95 Slacks
Sale 114.19
Mens $1U5 Slacks
Sate $14.89

granddaug~ter this weekend and take advantage
of our sale prices. Sl1es 6 mos. to
size u .
1
' ' ~

Regular $7.00·:------ Sale$6.29
Regular $10.00
Sale $8.99
Reg. 14.00
Sale $12 .59
Reg. S17 .oo
•
Sale $15.29
Sale $17.99
Reg. $20.00

. . . -----·-1
BOYS AND GiRLS

·-----------~---

EASTER HATS &amp;BONNETS
.
.

Reg. $2 .9 9 · - - - - - - - S a l e $2.59
Sale $2.99
Reg. $3.49
Sale $3.39
Reg. S4.00
Reg. $4.50
Sale $3.89

KNIT TOPS
Tubes. halters , prints ,
solids, terry, jun lor sizes
S,M, L.
Reg . $4.00 - -Sale$3.59
Reg . $5.00
Sale $4.49
Reg . $6,00
Sale $5.'39
Reg. $7.00
Sale$6.29
Reg . $8.00
Sale$7.19
Reg. $9.00
Sale$8.09
Reg . $10.00
Sale$8.99

----------Wrangler Denim

WOMEN'S

WALTZ LENGTH
GOWNS
Dacron and cotton

S,M,L,XL,,JSXL

REG. 13;so •••• SALE '2.99
REG. 14.00 .... SALE 1339
Lingerie Dept.
2nd Floor

Skir1s

·

FRIDAY, MARCH 25, 1977

There will be no primary
election$ in Pomeroy and
Middleport ne.xt June 7.
When the deadline for filing
d. petttioru; for village, posts
&gt;t 4 p.m. had passed Thurs·
day , there were no contests.
However, although there
will be no primary elections,
there will be a special election in voting precincts of the
Meigs Local School District
on June 7 when voters will
decide on the renewal of a 7.5
mill operalil18 levy .
In Middleport, four seats on
rouncil will be refilled this
year. Just four Republicans
file!. They are Marvin L.
Kelly, Dewey M. Horton,
incumbents, and Bernard D.
Gilkey and Robert Ma&lt;
Pooler. Allen L. King,
mother incwnbent, filed a
petition , but as an in·
dependent.

Unauthorized people are education workshop plan
collecting funds in the name ning committee met at
cl. the local unit of the the
office
of
the
American Cancer Society, local unit Needs of the
111it officials declared toda y. P'Ofessionals and of a local
Any resident having a munty-wide cancer nursing
d&gt;u'- about a collector is mnference were discussed.
asked t0 call 992-7531 or 992- Tentative dates of July 7 or
:1107. Volunteers of the unit July 14 were sete for such a
collecting fund s will wear mnference at th e Meigs High
nam e tabs, will ha ve School.
·
!lliicitation kits and iilfrature
Attending th e planning ·
available.
OEssion were Warren Parrish.
Representing Meigs County &lt;lvision representstive of the
in Zan esville on March 26 at a American Cancer Society;
"Stop Smokin g" clinic Mrs . Fra nces Helmick,
WASHINGTON - A 1S-YEAR Clfl!L in relations he·· training session will be Mrs. professional education
tween Cuba and the United States appears to be warming a bit Jane Brown , Mrs. Ruth drector, Ohio division of the
with the dlBclosure that direct U. S. negoUations. with Fidel Grind.staff and Miss Mary !llciety; Mrs. Margi e Skid·
Casll'o's regime are going on in New York. This initial step Boggs. Plans are underway rmre, L.P.N., breast cancer
toward eventual oormallzation of relations with Cuba Involves to hold such a clinic in Meigs clinic nurse; Mrs . Mary
tslks on offshore fishing limits. It is the first direct contact of County. Anyone wishing any Myers, R. N., Meigs Cl&gt;unty
top officials from both countries since diplomatic relations further information may call Health Nurse, and Mrs.
were cut in January 1961.
Mrs. Brown, R.N., at the Rhonda Dailey, R.N., in·
The long political and ideological U.S .• CUban struggle' local tuberculosis office, 982- service director of Veterans
reached its climaJ: later that year with the unsuccessful CIA· 3722.
Memorial Hospital.
sponsored Bay of PillS' invasion. The CUban missile crisis
Yesterday, a professional
came a year later. The tslks, disclosed Thursday by the Stste
Department, are the second Carter administration gesture
tDward CUba·in less than a week. On March 18, Carter ended
the IS-year travel ban for Americans going to Cuba,
·
'Employes and students of District are protected against
Cambodia, VIetnam and North Korea.
the Meigs Local School &lt;EX dis.crimination, Supt ..
0\arles Dowler said today.
WASHJNGTON - FREEING NATURAL GAS prices from
"As Superintendent of the
their federal controls will bring more gas, but not enough to
Meigs Local District, I cert~y
solve the severe supply problems, an official of the Federal
that the Board of Education
Power Commission said Thursday. "The decline in avatlsble
sates its intention tD assure
natural gas supplies ... Is an event whlch prestigious
rompliance with the rules
authrrlties warned lL9 about 25 years ago," Gordon Zareski
md regul!tions as set frcth in
told the House energy subcommittee. "Unfortunately, the
Title IX implementing the
warning was Ignored by the government, by the industry, and
Education Amendmerts of
by the public."
.
BRATTLEBORO, Vt. Zaresld, who heada the resource evalua~on division in the Susan Eich, 162 Lincoln Hill, 1972 and as affected by Title
FPC's Bureau of Natural Gas, said, "Discussions of our Pomeroy, is training at The VI of the Civil Rights Act d.
current gas supply problems have now largely degenerated E&lt;periment in Internatinal 19&amp;1," he said. And added:
" If any student or em.
~ · Into attempts to fix blame, on the one hand, and to demanda for
Living here before going to
massive welUJead price increases, on the other · hand. Senegal to serve as a Peace Jioyee believes thst he or she
has been discriminated
"However, If our analyses concerning characterislics of the Corps Volunteer.
against
on the basis of sex,
resource base and future productive capability are correct,
Miss Etch will be working
call
Dwight
Goins, Ad·
then we C8JDiot expect price increases to provide the solution to on Rural Dev.elopment. She is
minlstratlve
Assistant,
South
decllnlnc gas production." ·
a graduate of ~he University
Third
A
venue,
Middleport,
of Cincinnati.
HAMPDEN, .MASS. - SOME ORGANIZATIONS raise
Once they leave Vennont auo 45760, phone 992-2153,
lunda by ae1llng candy-oc nowers. The Hampden Uons Club the Peace Corps Volunteer~ the person appointed by me
sella manure. "Prochlctlon seems tD be the easy side of our will receive an additional as Title IX Coordinator of the
buslnell," Club President Edward E. frowley !!Bid.
four to six weeks of in- Meigs !Jlcal Schoo!District."
Crowley said members' horses provide an ''unlimited country training. The Peace
production line" for the manure which members package in SO Corps Volunteers will serve
LODGE TO MEET
to 60 pound bags. The ballS sell .for $1 each as fertilizer. lor two years. More than 6,000
Amual inspecUon of Shade
Crowley Blys money so raised goes lor eye research projects. Peace Corps Volunteers ' are River Lodge 453 F&amp;AM at
now serving in 84 countries. 0\ester wiD be Saturday,
OOLUMBUS - OlllO MtJ!!T SPEND MORE M0111EY for
Founded in 1932, The Ex· March 26 at 7:30 p.m. InIta mentaUy ill and retarded in the nut two years than the periment in International spect ion will be in ·the
Rhodel admlniatratlon Slys Is available, Dr. Timothy B. Living is a non-profit, fellowcrafl degree. All
Morill, Director of the Department of Mental Health and educational e xcha nge master masons are invited.
Mental Rellrdatloo &amp;ald. Moritz said his department needs organization working to
million to finance programs lhroogh 19'19 but the further peace and mutal
NOW YOU KNOW
lldmlnlllration propoled ~ $826 million.
11
understanding on a person-tcr
Home
Sweet Home" was
''llllUII caution you that, due tD liacallirnitstions related person level. The Exwritten
by
a man who never
to the ecmomy, even lull funding ol the executive budget lalla periment's academic arm,
owned
one:
Jolrt Howard
far abort of meetlnl the prellling lmnan needs of Ohio's The School lor lntwnsUonal
Payne
conceived
the lyric In
mentally Wand rellrded," Moritz said. Moritz pleaded his Training, faa lully accredited
a
cheap
Paris
hotel
during a
caae Tluraday before the Hollie Finance-Appropriation senior college and gr&amp;dll3te lifetime spent wtirely
in
Conlmlttee'a education section·. ·
school.
travel.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

tw o Democrats, Jo hn petitions were Louis W.
IA!vid Gerard and Charles B. Osborne , inc um bent, and
James Neutz iing and Charles
Mullen , filed.
'The seven candidates will Jackson Handley.
Another incumbent, Ralph
settl e the issue in th e
IL Werry, D.. filed a petition
November election .
There Is no candidate for as did democrat Larry D.
the Middl eport Boa rd of Wehrung. William A. Young
Public Affairs. Incumbent fil ed a petition for C()uncii as
Willis Anthony did not file for an indepen den t candidate.
In the fall the six canreel ect ion . In cumbe nt
George Meinhart ( a p~ intee) ddates will be seekU.g the
dd not file a petition for four council vacancies.
In PII!leroy, although two
councU.
In Pomeroy, two in· rnembers are to be named to
rumbent candidates did not the town's board of public
file petttions of candidacy for affa irs, on)y one, incwnbent
council. The y are Harry Robert ij. Hyse ll , fil ed.
Cllarles Lega r, incwnbent,
IA!vis and Phil Globokar.
·
Three Republicans filing did not file.

Miss Eich is
training for
Senagal work

t

UP lllGH IN A TREE was an employe of the tree
cutting service Thursday trimming a large Sycamore on
the site where the new Athens County Savings and
Loan Cl&gt;mpany building, Pomeroy braiiC!i, . wm-· l)p
erected. The site facing the Ohio River on West Main
formerly was the residence of the late Theodore Ebersbach.

Labor coterie angered
over 20 cent proposal
•

WASillNGTON (UP! ) Organized
labor
and
congressional Democrats are
outraged by President
Carter's proposed minimum
wage formula, charging the
pian would keep millions of
workers " permanently
locked into poverty,"
Labor Secretsry Ray Mar·
shall
told a House
ll!bcorrunittee
Thursday
the administration wanted an
inunediate 2D cent increase,
which would raise the
nation's minimwn wage to
$2.50 an hour.
Marshall also outlined a
system of automatic future
incre11ses to bring the
minimum wage tD $2.73 on
July 1, 1978, and $2.95 a year
later. The system was much
less generous than labor
leaders
and
House
Democrats were expecting.
Some Re~bllcans liked the
idea, but Rep. Phillip Burton,
0-Callf., spoke for the Demo·
crats when he described it as
a "completely indefensible
proposal."

• • • • b
DIscnmmabon
anned·in~:e ~an:, ,:d~~::.,~

'sm

OPEN SATURDAY' 9:30 TO 5 P.M.

''~ cheating 9n ACS

By United PresaiDtei'IUitional
MONTPELIER, VT. - CAN THE "SALTY CASTOFFS"
from the islands of Martha's Vineyard and Natucket find
bapplnesa in "the land of milk, honey and syrup?" The
Vermont House thinks so. Lawmakers unanimolL!Iy passed a
resolution Thursday offering to annex the two popular resort
Wand!t, which have announced their intention to secede from
Massachusetts.
The resolution , introduced by Rep. Hugh Moffett, DBrarulon, asked Vermont "tD offer a refuge tD these salty
castoffs" and urged the governor to send two emissaries - one
Democrat and one Re~bllcan - to "open talks" with officials
of the two islands. "There is no reason the natives of the
mountains, the land of milk, honey and syrup, caMot dwell
hspplly forever with the tidal tribes and catchers of the cod,"
Moffett said.

EASTER DRESSES
Buy on Easter dress lor your daughter or

•

enttne

lr N;;;==:=
= ·=
'=·:'=·='=
·=:=
·=
i:; ,,.,B ;,i ;/;\j Fake collectors

Sizes 29 to « waist In solid
colors, patterns, our new
spring and summer selection,

Ch~dre~ 's Dept.

.\

The road names are then formally adopted at the
scheduled County Conunissioners meeting.
Any road name which appears in conflict, is questionable
,.. otherwise unsuitable, is recycled for review to eliminate
the problem. This Is the reason for some township road names
not appearing in the newspaper.
Page said not all townships have been completely
processed, so persons shouldn't worry that their road has heen
forgotten.
Additional tDwnship road names and county road names
will appear in the palll'r and be accepted as time progresses.

No primaries in
two Meigs towns

TWO DAY SALE!
95

$6.69

CIDSED FOR
·VACATION

VOL XXVII NO. 241

S3.39

MEIGS tHEATRE .

The
Shoe Box

at y

19 Inch cut Lawn Boy at special savings,
adjustable cut height, 2 cycle engine, easy
to start.
·

~

• Freezers
• Stereos
• DishwashetS

•

'15995

MEN'S
TIES

Arizona 's•••

respective tDwn.ship road names tD the COunty Engineer. The
COunty Engineer reviews the names and forwards them to Mr .
Page who reviews them with respect to the house numbering
project.
County road names were compiled from road record! and
submitted to the township trustees for review and returned to
the engineers. (Somewhat in reverse of the township road
naming).
.
Ail road names passil18 all reviews are ~blished in the
local newspaper for public interest and notification when the
Commissioners expect to formaUy adopt the names . .

e

Reg. 11.50
Fanny Farmer 7 oz. Boxed tandy '1.00

TWO DAY SALE!

Bulld a modem CoWlty Sheriff's Office.and Jail
Develop playgrounds &amp; picnic areas on acquired,
reclaimed, surface.mined land
Construct a centrally~ocated Library Building

How MelliS County's rural roads are getting their names
was further explained today.
Jim Page, of Fleming, Page, StDlte, Inc., project engineer
for providing every rural dwelling in the county a nwnber and
stret:t name, eiJ)Iained that the county commission Is
recen1ng so many complaints procedures being used will be
reviewed here. Said he:
Road names will be used for county and township roada as
part of the new numbering project. Stste routes do not requlrl!'
names.
Township trustees hsve been asked to submit theil"

SPECIAL NOW

LAWN ·BOY SPECIAL

.

DUPLEX

A big variety including chocolate bunnies,
chocolate eggs. pastel chicks, plus boxed
candy in assorted creams. home
assortment. marshmallow eggs.

AT THE WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC
STREET,

NO-IRON SHEETS ,.

toCRH

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED. - Marta
(Continued from page 2)
Schaefer, Pomeroy, Dana scheduled return appearance before the grand jury.
.
Covert, Pomeroy.
Warren's "control," in many cases, was exercised through
DISCHARGED - Dana management or "consultant" contracts with corporations he
Howett; Evelyn Young, ostensibly had sold to others, which paid him $500 a wee~ or
Charles StDne.
more. These included : Prescott Valley Inc.; Arizona Valley
Development CO., Great Southwest LaM &amp; Cattle Co.; Queen
Holzer Medical Center
Creek Land &amp; Cattle CO. ; and Cochise College Park. He was
{Discharges, Marth 23!
lllso consultant tD the bankruptcy trustee for Western Growth.
Wesley E. Allen, Verna
The conunon denominator among many of these WarrenBlankenship, Lula Christian, linked corporations was "bad paper" - fraudulent contracts
Mildred Clark, Ace! Cline, and mortgages used to swindle land buyers and investors
Emma Donohue, Hom er throughout the nation of millions of dollars.
Elliott, Mary Evans, Earthel
Hall, Pearl Hensley, Robert
Hoff, Jr., Mary Keeler, !JJ!s
Lawrence, Charlene Lewis, Watts, Virginia Williams,
Pleasant Valley
Dorothy Lewis, Maggie Delores Wooldridge, Helen
DISCHARGES - Raymond
Logan, Beulah Baynard, Wroblewski.
Adkiru;, Point Pleasant; Billy
Virgil McCoy, Marsha
(Births, Marth23)
Daniel, Point Pleasant ;
Napier, Herman Ohlinger,
Mr. and Mrs. James A. Willard Laudermllt, Mason;
Barbara Phillips, Ca~rie Crow, daughter, Pedro; Mr. Betty Angel, Mason; Lula
Powell, Linda Priddy, Alice md Mrs. David Fout, son, Wilson , Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Rutan, Inez Sheward, Violet Wellston; Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lme, Evans;. Shirley
Santon, Wilma Tillis, Michael Bailey, son, Point Bennett, ReedsvUie, 0.; Mrs.
Florence Trainer, Elizabeth Pleasant.
·
0\aries Adkins, Crown City;
Mrs. George
Plants,
Gallipolis ; Michael Lee,
Henderson ; Micha e l
Williams, Gallipolis Ferry;
Eddie Bumgarner, New
Haven; Donald Johnson,
THE ARNIE ...
l..etart; Minnie Wheatcraft,
Point Pleasant ; Mrs.
Lawrence Will and daughter,
Hush Puppies"
"'lddleport ; Mrs . Marcus
Shoes that you can wal k
Rice
and
daughter,
away In, no breaking In,
Mrs.
Daniel
Southside;
they're that comfortable.
Plants
and
daughter
,
And the good looks are
there too.
Jackson ; Polly Collins,
Colors - Bone
Gallijwlis Ferry ; · Mrs . .
Robert Bailey, 0\arleston;
Mrs. James Hartley, Point
Pleasant; James Belcher,
Gallipolis; David HUI, Point
Pleasant; Danielle Ireland,
Gallipolis ; and Robert
Bishop, Point Pleasant.

FANNY FARMER EASTER CANDY

HALLMARK EASTER CARDS

Road naming explained

subcommittee has been
considering a formula tD

Court actions
go on docket
Entries in Meigs county
Common Pleas Court docket
today showed Rolla G. SpaWl,
Rt. 2, Racine , has filed suit
for divorce from James E.
Spaun, Rt. 2; Ra cine;
dssolutlon of marriage is
8'1ked by Julius Belle Wright,
Rt. 2, Pomeroy, and Chsrles
C. Wright, Jr., Middleport,
md an appeal ~ been flled
by
Marjorie
Snider,
Pomeroy, against The Izn.
perlal Electric Co., Akron,
Ro~ert Daughterty, ad·
ministrator of Bureau of
Workmen's Compensation,
COlwnbus, and the Industrial
Commission of Columbus , in
mMectioq with a ruling by
the Bureau of Workrnen's
Compensation.

FIREMEN CALLED
The
Pomeroy Fire
Department was called to
Route 33 at 4:16p.m. Thursto extinguish a grass fire
near the Clifford ~e!fhelf
residen ce. At 9:04 a.m.
Friday, the emergency unit
Wl!llt to Route 33 for Dana
Howett, who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

"'Y

co

increase the mmunum to
12.85 an hour with subsequent
automati c i nc r eases
surpassing $3 next Jan. I.
"The administration 's
proposal is · shameful. "
ci!clared AFL-CIO President
George Meany. "This is a
bitter disappointment to
everyone who looked to this
administration for economic
justice for the poor."
Meany noted the minimum
wage already has fallen 38
cents an · bour below the

level. He argued tne was overruled by o!ner
President's sugge sted Carter economists. He noted
formula for future increases the
President
never
"would guarantee that the threatened to veto a larger
nation 's minimum wage increase and denied the plan
workers will he permanently would be inflationary. ·
locked into poverty."
Subcommittee chairmsn
The admi nis t ration John Dent, D-Pa ., told
acknowledged its program Marshall the Democrats
would benefit only 4 million · intend to enact a "more
low-wage workers, while the reasonable" pian. He said no
House version provides self-respecting congressman
increases for 8 million.
could endorse a 20-cent
Marshall said he had lx&gt;urly increase for low-wage
argued for ·a more generous earners after just getting a
administration proposal but 113,000 yearly increase.

~verty

Old friends meet with Ford
WASHINGTON (UPI) Former President Gerald
Ford, on a nostalgic first visit
to Washington since leaving
office, called a meeting today
of old Republican friend!
from Congress and the
party's national chairman.
The
meeting
with
Republican lawmakers and
GOP chairman William
Brock started off Ford's
second day in the city where
he tAllied for 28 years as
congressman, vice p-esident
and President.
Ford spent 75 minutes
Thursday in the Oval Office
with President Carter getting
"an update on domestic and
international matters that
concern a President and a
former President."
What's It like being out of
office?
"I enjoy what I'm doing,"
Ford told reporters, without
speciflc mention of the
reported $1 rniWon contract
he has with NBC for
television appearances over
the next five years, the night

Schools subsidy
payments made
The March State School
Foundation subsidy payment
of $78,642,740 .58 to Ohio
schools wsa report•d for
March by State. Auditor
Thomas E. Ferguson.
Meigs County's local school
&lt;lstricts received a tots) of
~94,594 . 46 after deductions
for teachers and ·employes
re tirement. Amounts
received by · each local
district include · Meigs,
$110 ,338.96 ;
Southern ,
$39 ,194.28, and Eastern ,
45,061.22 . In addition the
Meigs County Board of
Education received· a direct
allotmeni of $13,706.62.

clubbing he has done with
"You look good yourself,"
Frank Sinatra or the two Ford replied, asking Carter
majoc speeclles delivered on bow he is getting along.
Carter's energy proposals
" I'm enjoying itt'' Carter
and the Soviet weapons said, smiling. "You got me
buildup.
off to a good start."
"We have a fine mixture of
Then they went into the
work and pleasure and more Oval Office, sat in wingback
opportunities to be with the chairs before a blazing fire
famlly, so thst makes up for and, while reporters were
some of the nostalgia," he present, discussed British
said.
Prime Minis ter James
When Carter saw his prede- Callaghan's recent visit and
. cessor, he was moved to Carter's other foreign
exclaim, " You look so visitors.
heal thy and tan , I'm
The former President, who
envious."
still gets regular intelligence
briefinllS, looked solemn as
be talked with Carter. But he
told reporters after the
meeting it was "friendly and

Meigs growth

shown in new
construction

constructive.''

Pomeroy firem en
serving dinner

Meigs County Auditor,
A spaghetti dinn er wB! he
&amp;ward E. Frank, today
held
at the Pomeroy Fire
reported the new con·
Department
on Butternut
ltruction pick-up for the tax
ve.,
Saturday,
with serving
A
year 19'17.
from
3to
7
p.m.
C~t
will be $2
Following is a list by
for
adults
and
$1.50
for
subdivision, which indicates
dlildren.
There
will
be
.
b
ake
the growth area of1be county,
8'1 well as adding to the sale in conjunction with the
dMer. All proceeda will go
l!lsessed value of each :
ilto the firemen 's building
Bedford, $54,890.
Chester Eaaem, $124,980. !md ..
Chester Salisbury, $18,560.
Columbia, $6,930.
Lebanon Eastern, -4610.
· Lebanon 'Southern, $25,52Jl.
OOURSE PLANNED
Letart, $25,500. ·
Olive, $39,890.
A course on real estate law
Orange, $141,850.
through Rio Grande Com.
Rltland, $1111,7711.
!lllllity COllege wUI begin ·
Rltland Village, $9,710.
March 29 at Room 103 of the
Salem, $49,6«l.
Meigs Junior High School
Sa!i!ilury, $33,420.
1\ith Pomeroy realtor, Vlrgll
MIQ;UfPOrt, $16,590.
Teaford, as inltructor. Those
PCI!IBt'OY, 140,900.
who have not already
Scipio, $31,100.
registered through the
· Sutton, $114,900.
QJllege may do so when the
Syracuse, $41,020. Total, Qlurse opens at 8:30 p.m.
1882.620.
Tuesday.

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