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                  <text>8- The DailySenth&gt;d, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday. M_arch28. 1!177
E-RC'AU.EDTWICE
The Middleport
Emergency Squad answered
a call to Syracuse at4 :51-p.m.
Hotzer Medical Center
Saturday for Kathy Adkins,
(Discharges, March !5)
~&gt;ho was ill. She was taken to
Ferd BalL Carla Bays,
Holzer Medical Centlll'. At Jessie
Bowman, Dlnna
7:15 a.m . Monday, the squad
Olatman,
Marilyn D. Crowe,
l'OW wen t to Mechanic . St., Co ra Dewitt,
Michelle
Pomeroy, for Pauline Ferencz , Kimball Ferris,
Derenberger who was taken Edith Greer, David Gross,
By JX'MEs HIWRE111
to
Veterans Memorial Her liert Henderson, Wilma
WASHINGTON (UP!) al where she was Hosdlar, EJS:e Lakin, Janine
Hospit
The United States had a
treated and released.
Larch, Jodi Mannering, Mrs.
record trade deficit' for the
second straight 'month in
Terry
McGuire and son,
TAKENTOVMH
Februar~ as imports exWilliam
Norris, Mark
The P&lt;Ineroy Emergency
ceeded exp 0 rts by $1.87 Squad "'swered a call at 1:15 Phillips, Eloise·Riggs, Cheryl
billion, the Commerce p.m. Sunday to Mechanic St., Robie, Mrs. Lewis Sayre and
Deparlplent said today.
for Terry Dermberger who daughter, Julia Shaver,
Exports last month totaled was ilL He was taken to Robert Stevens, Hazel
~ - 8 billion, age 2 per cent
Veterans Memorial Hospital Taylor. Mrs. Rendall Walker
from January's depressed Where he was admitted.
and daughter, Mrs. Robert
level. But imports were $11.67
Wells and daughter, Velma
IJ'lSPECTION SET
Young.
Iilli on, the highest amount of
The annual inspection of
foreign goods ever purchased
(Births, March 25)
Mr. and Mrs. ROger Jarvis,
in one month by the United Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM,
\\ill be held at 7:30 p.m. daughter, Ewington; Mr. and
&amp;ates.
Tbe previous largest trade Thursday at the Masonic Mrs. Gary Perkins, danghter,
deficit - $1.67 billion - was Temple. All Master Masons Jackson ; Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Fry, daughter, New
in January when the nation are invited.
Haven, W. V&lt;11.; Mr. and Mrs.
was .suffering from the ef- ROCKY TOURS
Gary Doddard, daughter,
fects of severe cold weather,
DAMASCUS, Syria (UPI)
causing plant shutdowns and - Former Vice President Buffalo, W. Va.; Mr. and
transportation problema.
Ne!Bon Rockefeller arrived Mrs. Thomas Kibble ,
The nation has recorded Sunday for a two-day private · daughter, Pomlll'oy; Mr. and
trade deficits every month visit to Syria during which he Mrs.
John
Robinson,
S:nce May, 1976, the Com· is scheduled to meet daughter, Gallipolis Ferry,
W, Va.
merce Department said. President Hafez Assad.
February was the third
(Discharges, March 26)
Rockfeller has already
ruccessive month that im- visited Egypt, Jordan and
Drema Aeiker, Mrs. Carlos
ports have exceeded $11 Israel during his current Ayala and daughter, William
lillion.
Bcwman, Betty Clark,
Middle East tour.
Phyllis Glon, Eric Creel,
Joan Cutlip, Richard Davis,
Hobart Dewees, Edna
Deweese, Floyd Exline, Mrs.
Mark Fosttll' and son, Wade
PL~CE
Fox, Nora Han!fr, Arda
lbwe, Leah Johnson, Aris
Langdon, Emily Leach,
Harvey Lea!liond, Wesfey
Meeks, Louise Morris,
Elizabeth Nelson, Mrs. Roger
Ramsey and son, Flain
Ratliff, Juanita Sprouse,
John steele, Jr ., Mrs. John
Upton and son, Esta Welch.
(Bh1h, March 26)
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Channell, son, J-ackson.
(Discharges, March %7)
Mildred Arnold, Mrs.
Michael Bailey and son,
Margaret Bartelson, Ruth
Bell, -Paul Bradbury, John
Carr, Mary. Easter, Matthew
Visit Our Salad Bar
Felesky, Mrs. David FoUl
Cream Baked Turkey
and
son, Ernestine Gillenover Biscuit
water·, Mrs. James Kuhn and
Vegetable
o;m, Zelia Pullin, Lois Riffle,
Hot Rolls
Gerald Ring, Perry Sayre,
Plus Tax
Coffee, Tea or Milk
&amp;., Minnie stapleton, Estil
sturgil!, Mrs. Larry Wright
and dauehter.

"' Reconl deficit

HOSPITAL NEWS

in February is

•
Seoond W

THE INN
Tuesday Night Special

992-3629

THE MEIGS INN
Phone 992-6304

~~~===P=IZ=Z=A=SHACK

(Birtha, Marc~ 271

Mr. and Mrs. Gregory
Layne, daughter, Gallipolis;
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Nichols, daughter, ·Jackson.

Pomeroy, 0 .

Phone 992-6304::l!

SENIOR CITIZENS
Are Preferred People
At Farmers Bank

'

PI.F.ASANTVAU.EY
DISCHARGES - Mrs.
Luke Coffee , daughter,
V'mton ; Mrs. Edward Crum,
Mason ; Grace Russell,
Gallipolis ; Mrs. John Bartell,
West Columbia; Rebecca
Kinder, Gallipolis; Mrs. Fred
Lamb, Crown City; Mrs.
Richard Elliott, Gallipolis;
Mrs. Anth~y Platzer, Point
Pleasant: Romeo Staats,
Ripley ; Birdie Blain,
Gallipolis Ferry; Steven
Norville, Point Pleasant;
Amy Dawn Bates, Southside;
Cecil Sines, Point Pleasant;
Clarence Castle, Point
Pleasant; Udia Evans, Leon;
Mrs. Charles Duncan,
Southside; Herbert Halstead,
Leon; Amanda Murray,
Middleport; Joseph Hughes,
Poca; Jesse Stanley, Point
Pleasant, and Courtney
Watson, Point Pleasant.

and Tim Sayre followed with Weaver, Jack Smith, and Rick
two hits each.
Buzzard aU with one base
Wahama
had
ten
base
knock each. Tim Thompson's
The Wahama White Falcons
knocks
in
the
opener
with
two
triple
in the opening frame •
gained a doubleheader split in
of
those
going
for
extra
vases.
was
the
lone extra base_hit for
their season opener Saturday
Thompson
blasted
a
two
run
the
White
Falcons.
afternoon at Belpre, by taking
toe first game, 6-D and
double in the seventh and - Wahama" 1~ scheduled to
DukeSmithbeltedasolohome return to acbon today when
dropping the night cap, 7-3.
run leading off the final' they · enlertaln the Me1gs
Jell Collier, 6'0'' junior
frame.
Marauders in a 4: game
r---------~---------------- I
Thompson scored the locals Tuesday brings Parkersburg
1 first run of tlfll season in the Catholic to Mason with
I
1
1 -third inning after reachin~ Hannan-Trace visiting the '
1
1
.
·l&gt;ase on an error. Seconds Bend Area school on
1
later the big catcher rode Wednesday.
MARY H. RADCLIFFE
Rev. Albert Hill , and a sister, home on Davis' RBI single to
123 4567 R H E
-SYRAC\)SE - Mllry H. Edna Paynter .
give
Collier
all
he
needed.
The
Radcliffe, 78, Syracuse, died
She is survived by her
Sundav at Marietta Ntemorial husband, Ralph ; one-brother, Bend Area nine went on to add WAHAMll"
f-bspital.
Ira Hill. Rockledge, Fla.; another tally in the fourth and
0 I 0 I 0 0 4 6 10 0
Mrs. Rlldctifle was the three nieces and seven four m~re in the seventh to
daug~ter Of the late Eliza W. nephews. She attended the
BELPRE
a~d Clara Morris Hll i. She Middleport MethoQist insure the victory.
0 0 00 000 0 42
was also preceded in dee~1h by Olurch.
In the nightcap Belpre
two brothers , W~llace and
fl..fleral services will be rallied for five third inning ERRORS-DeVore 2 Sacrlfflce
reid Wednesday at l p.m. at runs for a 7-3 win and a split on • Riggs 2BH • Bierhower, ·
Ewing Chapel with lhe Rev.
Veterans Mem•rlal HospHal
Thompson HR ·D. Smith RBI·
·Robert Bumgarner . of · the twin bill.
Saturday Admissions flclatlng . BtKial will be in ... Wahama had the base!&gt;' Thompson .2, Davis, Gold·
Greenwood
Cemetery. loaded no less than three sberry, Colller, D. Smith,
Eliza Birch, Racine; Glenna
little, Middleport ; George Edna Wilcoxen, William Friends may call at the times in the game but failed to Winning Pitcher • Collier
. fun.eral home at 7 this
Foss, Athens; Edna Russell, 9;eele.
eve~ing.
come up with the big hit.
Loser • Gates.
Sunday
Admissions
-Fred
Rutland ; Terry Rowley,
Rick
Buzzard
started
on·
toe
SECOND GAME
Middleport ; Mabel Swan, Shain , Racine; Pauline
.
mo!IDd
before
giving
way
to
I 2 3 4567 R H E
Langsville; Effie Watson, Brewer, Reedsville; Helen
MARY
WOODWARD
T
Th
d
F
h
WAHAMA
Mary Beth Wobdward, 36, om
ompson an
res •
Coolville; Doyle Ord, Mason; Preston , Cheshire; Terry
'&lt;laughter
of
the
late
Capt.
man
Vince
Weaver.
Buzzard
20 00I 00373
Deren
berger,
Pomeroy
;
Daniel Talbott, Portland.
Edward
Woodward
and
Viola
was
tagged
with
the
loss.
BELPRE
Linda
Toban,
~meroy;
Saturday Discharges 1 15000X78 2
Daniel Dennis, Martha Mary Edwards, Middleport; Woodward, died Saturday in _Randy Sizemore and Tony
Ft. Thomas, Ky. following a Blake carried the big bats for
Mary
Eblin,
Pomeroy.
Johnson, Helen Hersman,
lengthy illness.
Sunday Discharge
FIXleral services will he the Ea~les with two hits each. ERRORS · Bierhower 2 J.
Dana Howett, Adrienne
1-eld
in Ft. Thomas at 10 a.m. Both of Sizemore's safeties Smith, Buzzard, 2. Sacrifice .
Margaret
Bissell.
French, Frankie Stafford,
Tuesday. BlKial will he at
tf
·
\'~\!IIston , Ohio. Friends may . wen or extra bases With a Riggs 2BH • T. Blake,
Sizemore 3 BH Sizemore,
call at the Dabbling Funeral triple and a double.
'i:e~t;-...- ;~;n-i~ ~cl.;;;;~.-The; ~;u;;;
f-bm e in Ft. Thomas from 9 Duke Smith collected two of Thompson Winning Pitcher •
less than 300 worda long (or be subject to reduction hy 1 a.m. until 10 a.m. Tuesday. Wahama's seven total hits Bierbower Losing Pitcher
the editor) and ~uot be signed with the signee's ad- 1
followed by Davis, Thompson, Buzzard (&lt;l-1 )
MILDRED BAKER
dress. Names may be wllhbeld ·upon poblicatlon. I Mildred Baker, 77, a
However, on request, names wlU be discl06ed. Letters I resident of Vinton , died
U'lexpectedly at her home
should be In good taste, addressing !~sues, not' per·
Saturday evening.
sonalltles.
1
She was born Jc&lt;1e 23, 1900,
(Continued from page I ) ·
I in VInton, daughter of the late
Cush and Cora Wile a~ Strong .
I
St-e married Clark (Bar- because of the heavy diunage caused to the runway by the
I ney ! Baker . He preceded her
collision and subsequent fire.
I in death .
Air minister General Carlos Franco arrived at Santa Cruz by
I One sister survives, Mrs. helicopter. But a U.S. embassy team ofeight sent to assist with
1 Nola Parker, Columbus. One arrangements f&lt;r the survivors and the dead had to land in Las
I nephew and three nieces
Palmas on Gran Canarias island and embark on alive-hour
surviVe, a1ong With several
ferry ride,
·
cousins.
One
brother
No door s_lamrned in her face
.p-eceded her in death·.
Clfra said operations were "normal" at Santa Cruz's Los
, She was a member of the
Rodeos airport until shortly before the accident, despite
Dear Sir:
Vinton United · Methodist
I would like to answer Mr. Hubbard's letter about the Owrch and' of the ladies Ul)usually heavy traffic caused by the cloaure of Las Palmas
airport.
Meigs County Welfare Dept. For several yea_rs I've been going wscs.
Fooeral services will be . Thecrashoccurredabout4:40p.m. (11:40a.m. EST Sunday),
there and I have never had the door siarrqned in my face. The t-eld 2 p.m. Tuesday at the
girls, Ann, Dean, Jane, Barbara, Margie, Marilyn, Lucille and /W:.Coy -Moore Funeral Home Shortly before the ground colllalon thick ground fOg moved
Effie have always been polite and courteous. Sure, sometimes wi_lh Rev . .John Bryant Qf· ~ross Los Rode~!$ airport ·wl¥!re' the. two Jumbos, both
you have to wait -because of papers not filled out right, or not ficiatinQ ~ Btkial will" ' be rln diverted to Santa &lt;'l~W&gt;frtilli' llall 'Palllias, were waiting for
Memoriai 'Park .
permission to takeoiHOl'the hopto Las•Palmas eo miles away.
the-fight receipts. These girls are understaffed, overworked Vinton
Friends may call from 7-9
Spanish air safety has been a controversial issue since last
and probably underpaid. Instead of complaints, they should be this evenl1'9 at the funeral
year when air controllers staged a montba-long go.&amp;ow work·
congratuU!ted for the fine work they do. No one in need, if they h:&gt;me.
lot'ules strike to protest what they said was ~!dated
can help 11, IS turned away .. Keep up the good work, girls. equipment.
·
Mrs. William Fink, 249 North 3rd Ave., Middleport. _
Arthur Hess, 39, of Phoenix, Ariz., one of the survivors, aald
about 30 secmllat lfll!t'~ct the' Pariamq umbo exploded,
We, our brothers' keeper
trappblg him aild·hl,.rUt/Milcy Kay 11D&lt;lhMorward first claS.
(eoritlmioo'!rom~pa'ie
•
•
section .
· , 1•
Dear Sir:
"We were trapped for three .to five minUtes, but it seemed
Well, I guess the cold weather is over. What a great,relief! loners have seen unexplained
There is an organization that carried on during the bad times sights - including visions of like six months," he said. "There was so much black smoke
and reached out ilnd helped others less fortunate. I mean the the host suspended fu the air you couldn't see your hand in front of your face, then the front
and of Mary, St. Michael the part of the plane fell off and we wer.eable to get out."
Senior Citizens' &lt;rganization.
Hess said he jumped to the' 81'ound( then 'Ilia. wife wbo was
You can visit the center and you will see meals being served, Archangel and Jesus.
A spokesman for the critically injured, leepedJnto his· lirmrJ, ,
'
lonely people playing cards, square dancing, quilting, doing
"A lot of the people in 11\e'flrst cta!ls sectidn got out and one of
crafts aod arts, people singing and laughing, cheering up each diocese said Olszewski lost
other. And If you go behind the scenes you fmd that hot meals his license because he the stewardesses pulled the captain free," he said.
Hess said the jumbo had just started to taxi when the KLM
were delivered in zero yeather to many elderly people who violated church regulations
were not able to come out. T~ bus brought many to tbeir hy conducting the Maas in plane slanuned into Its side.
"It seemed to hit rlght.beldnd first class," he said. "It must
doctors ana many a poor old person was delivered coal or other Latin and by improperly
giving out Communion,
have been the KLM wing that hit us."
hare necessities. All ages were helped.
The priest conceded the
One of the survivors, a :Ill-year-old girl from Los Angeles who
1 visited the Senior Citizens . Center recently in another
ritual
violations probably had aaked that ber name be withheld said the collision iiccurred
·county and state. I discovered that Meigs County did more
than anyone else. This we should he proud of. They reach out something to do wlth the without warning.
"I felt a PrJ!88ure and heard the sound of the crash and things
for many people who need help to obtain various services, revocation of his-license.
''The Epslcopal Church has werefaWngon top of me," she said. "We were up front next to
Although they have friends, I'm sure they need more.
a tremendous hang-up about an escape hatch and the collision was behind us. ·•
Contribute to this project. It is worthwhile.
All the survivors staggered from the Darning wreckage
Remember, that wrinkled, gray-haired old man or woman anything that smells 'of
'
that is helped could be your mother or father, or perhaps some Roman (Cathollc) ritwil," Spaniarda at the airport rushed out to help.
The girl said her father will ldlled in the crash, but she and
day, you! We are our brothers' keeper. - Thelma Berry, Olszewski said. "It leaves a
bad taste in their mouth."
her mother were able to reach safety,
Middleport.

of

---

We Invite you to use ttils preferred service with no
s.:rvlce char~e 7 All tho~e 65 years ahd over are
welcome to open an account any time. Stoo In and
see us now.

.......

~

Farmers Bank
POMEROY; OHIO

S40,000.00 Maximum Insurance For Each DtPOSitot
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporitlon

~ ··········~·······~···~····
I

(

.•

Area Death S

.

-;;;-:

Panam 747's wrong

Ble~ .
1,

A vacant house on Dark
lbllow expected to be razed
was destroyed by fire at 2
am. Sunday. The house was
completely engulfed In
fl~mes
when Pomeroy
firemen arrived and the
firemen only stood by to keep
the fire from spreading.
The house was owned by
Lorenzo Davis, Pomeroy,
ll!lo placed no value on the
structure. At 10 :40 a.m.
Sunday, the Pomeroy Fire
Department went to the
HarrisonviDe Road to extinguish a brush fire.

Free Checking Account For You ·

righthander pleked up his first
varsity \\in iri the opener by
shutting ·out the Eagles
through four innings of work.
Tim Davis was the leading
hitter for the Falcons in the
fjrst game with three singles
in four tries. Tim Thompson

BVGARYCLARK

I

Vacant house of
no value bums

Because We furnish A

Falcons Split

. BAZAAR OOMING UP
The Meigs County Humane
Society will sponsor Its an·
nual Easter a&gt;zaar on Friday
md Satuiday at the Thrift
Shop, located across East
Second St. from the Pomeroy
Post Office. Craft items,
laked Jfoods and vegetable
s;,up will be available.

MEIGS THEATRE
'

CLOSED fOR .

VACATION
WATCH FOR
OPENI~G DATE

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
DRESS UP YOUR WINDOWS

New selections of curtains and
drapes in the Home Furnishings
Department.
Sheers in white .and beautiful solid
colors. tape cods.with v81ances to match.
New draperies in all the popular lenghts
- Priscilla curtains.
Tailored curtains • window shades ·
venetian blinds. ·
Plus a compleh! selection of Kersch
traverse rods ·curtain rods · sash rods ·
"drapery hooks. .
You'll want to stop in on the first floor
and see what's new lor Spring and
Summer 1977.

HOME FURNISHINGS • FIRST FLOOR

E[BERfE.LDS IN POMEROY

Ohio Power to
use more coal ·
mined· in Ohio
l,ANCASI'ER, Ohio (UP!) -The Ohio Power Co. can use
more high-tiulfur coal mined In Ohio and still meet air pollution
regulations, Quinton Stultz, a spokesman for the American
Electric Power Co., said Monday.
Stultz said Arrlerlc8J! Electric, which owns Ohio Power,
plans to "phase out" its use of ouk&gt;f-titate coal at .three of Its
Ohio power plants.
'lbe move might not mean an increase in Uie utility's
.purchases, however, since most of the utility's coal comes
from the Southern Ohio Coal Co., a wholly-&lt;Jwned subiidiary of
Ohio Power.
The utility had been im· power plants.
porting aboul3 million tons of
Several years ago, officials
low-sulfur, coal a year from of the AEP system decided to
Colorado and Utah for its import more low-sulfur coal
Gavin, Kyger River and rather than install pollutionCardinal power plants. Most control equipment on its
plants in Ohio cannot burn c~isting plants.
high-Sulfur coal and still meet
AI · Ohio
Power's
the
federal pollution Mus~ingum plant, the utility
regulations.
'
currently "blenda" high-and
Stultz said proposed sulfur low-sulfur coals to meet air
dioxide regulations would pollution regulations.
allow high-sulfur coal to be
Most of the coal Ohio
burned at the plants and the Power uses at Gavin and
utility would "diver!" its Muskingum comes from the
purchases of low-5ulfur coal -,0 uthern Ohio Coal Co. ,
to other plants within the which operates mines near
utility system.
the power plant sites and
The proposed regulations transports the coal by conare
currently
being veyors.
challenged in a suit before the .;:;:;:;:;:;.;.;.;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:::
5th U. S. Circuit Court of
EXTEND. ED OUTLOOK
Appeals in Cincinnati.
Thursday through
" If
surfur
dioxide
Saturday,
a chance of
regulations do stand, we will
showers
Thursday
and fair
be able to utilize more local
Friday
and
Saturday,
high-sulfur coals and look
towaFd phasing out western Highs Thursday and
low-sulfur coal over a period Saturday will be between
55 and tiS but In the 50s
of years," said Stultz.
Ohio Power buys more coal Friday. Lows will be in the
in Ohio than any other utility; lOs or upper 30s Thursday
some 20 million tons a year. and In the 30s Friday and
Its purchases are handled by Saturday.
the AEP system, which ,:,:,:::,:,:::::::::::·:-:·:::::::::::::::::::::::-:::::::::::·:-:-:::-:-:-:
recently moved its coal
NOW YOU KNOW
procurement offices \ rrom The Academy Award
New York to Lancaster.
reportedly· got its nickname
AEP has co.ntracts with HQscar" when an academy
several western Uniled member, on first seeing the
States fuel suppliers to golden statuette, exlaimed,
provide about 250,000 tons of "It looks just like my Uncle
low-sulfur coal a year to Ohio Oscar!"

r?r4it T 111 a
1' •ll
:1~~;~~1&gt;~~~~
OF THE MEIGS COUNTY
Retired Senior Volunteer Program (at
1

Sunday afternoon served refreshments to guests at the open house hosted by the Meigs
_ · of the Ame_rican Cancer Society at the Meigs Inn. Purpose of the open house was to
inform the pubhc of the programa of the local unit. Free deasert and coffee were served
from I to 4 p.m. by Mrs. Dorothy Will, Mrs. Eva Dessauer and Mrs. Bernadine Meier (1--r).

EASTER LAMBS DECQRATEO the registration table (above) for Sunday 's open house
staged by the Meigs Unit of the American Cancer Society. At the registration table is
Edward King, a member of the local unit's hoard.

~l!News •· •.•zn Brzefs(~

.....

By United Press lntel'llational
WASHINGTON - TWO FEDERAL AGENCIES will
award $10 mjllion dur~.thl1 pext year ID help homeowners
anlfootel.fJio!el operators Irislall'solar hot water helitef's and
cut ~el bills. Officials OJ:pect the new program to give tbe
fledgling solar manufacturing and installation industry a boost
and encourage private purchase of the quipment,
The government wlU pay ahollt ball the cost of sunpowered water heating equipment for some 10,000 homes in 10
Atlantic states wbere fuel costs are high, and half the total
installation costs for an unknown number of hotels and motels
nationwide.
DETROIT - PRESIDENT CARTER WU.L have a tongh
time selling energy conservation measures unless he can
convince Americans that the shortage is .real, United Auto
Workers Vice President Douglas A. Fraser says. Fraser, who
will become the nCJttpresident of the 1.4 rnillion-membe1&gt; UAW
in May, also said it will be hard to get Americans to give up
large cars, which have been in the greatest demand since the
1977-model year began.
"OUr members are so suspicious of the oil companies and
· anyone involved in the energy business that they do not believe
there Is an energy shortage," Fraser aaid in an interview
Monday . "I suspect what is true among oor members is true
among the American people in general."
Fraser, who said be was "apprehensive" of the Carter
energy plan to be announced April 20, said the President ''has ·
to assure the American people that he knows of his own
knowledge where the gas and oil are.and how muCh there is.':
CINCINNATI - THE HEALTH of Cincinnatlans was not
jeopardized by recent spllls of carbon tetrachloride into the
Kanawha and Ohio Rivers, the FMC Corp. maintained in
another full;&gt;age advertlaernent in city newspapers.
...FMC Corp., after securing the best medical evidence
ayallable from experts on this subject, can teU you that the
various ·amouniB of carbon tel found in the r!VI!rs were not
dangerous to your health," the ads in Monday's Cincinnati
Enquirer and Cincinnati Post stated, The FMC plant in .
Charlestoo, W. Va., has come under fire from various
Cincinnati officials for discharges of carbon let into tbe
Kanawha River, a tributary of the Ohio River, the source of
Cincinnati's pulillc watlll'.
WASHINGTON - THE HOUSE ASSASSINATION
Conunlttee today prepared Its case for survival, procbllming
new-found unity among its members and fresh but
uncorroborated lnfonnation on tbe ldlllngs of John F, KeMedy
and Martin Luther King Jr,
The House Rule&amp; Committee approved a resolution 9 to 4
Monday to continue the panel for the rest of this .Congress
beyond Its scheduled Mar¢! 31 tennlnation date. 'lbe House iB
expected to take It up Wednesday, Earlier Monday; the
committee issued Its first report of the year, claiming "new
leads" in the King ldlllng and indications the Warren
Commlaslon waa wrong in at least one aspect of its inquiry into
the Kennedy murdtll'.

TUESDAY, MARCH 29, 1977

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

~paniar

'iif::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::·:::·::::~·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;::;~;~~~~

enttne

at y

e
VOL. XXVII NO. 243

•

•

By ARTHUR HERMAN
SANTA CRUZ DE TENERIFE, Spain (UP! )- A U.S. Air
Force plane arrived here today to begin evacuation of scores of
Americans injured in the ground crash of jumbo jets that killed
nearly 600 persons but U.S. officials said Spanish authorities
did ·not want to let the patients leave.
"The injured are eager to go home, but Spanish medical
authorities refuse to release them," said James Slaton, a
member of a team from the U.S. Embaasy in Madrid that flew
hereto assist in the evacuation ofthe injured.
A Spanish doctor at the general hospital said he S.w no
reason why the patients--11 of them in critical conditionshould be taken away.
"We can glvetbemas goode are as anyone else," he said.
At Los Rodeos airport, where 576 persons died and 68 were
injured Sunday in history's worst air disaster, a U.S. Air Force
C!30 cargo plane aTrived to ferry the injured to tbe nearby
airport of Las Palmas where a Cl41 fitted out as a flying
hospital is standing by to fly the injured to the Brook Army
Medical Center in San Antonio, Texas.
The U.S. plane was the first fixed-wing aircraft to land at Los
Rodeos airport since the collision between a Pan American 747
and a KLM 747which destroyed a large stretch of the runway.

s

••

The C130 landed on a taxiway at 12::i0 p.m. (7::i0a.m. EST).
One of the hospitalized survivers, Mario Tyzbin, of Laguna
Hill, Calif., said : "I would like to leave right now . I cannot wait
to go home."
Tyzbin, who lost his wife Irene in the crash, was blasted from
the plane and injured his back as he landed on the runway.
Many of the survivors suffered severe burns.
-There was a!Bo mounting. ill feeling among Pan American
and U.S. officials over Spanish announcements abiolving airport control officials of any blame in the disaster.
The air ministry said early tOOay that "failure · of the
communications of the control tower or its personnel can be
discounted" in the accident. It made the statemenl as the
investigation was just about to get underway.
Los Rodeos airport has had five crashes with a total of 251
dead since 1965! not counting Sunday's disaster. Early exp!Jlnations by offiCials appear to indicate that the Jumbo collisiOn
might have been caused by a IDISunderstanding in communications between the pllots and the control tower.
A senior Pan_ American official helping in the investigation
sa1d the Spanish statement waa "entirely prematll!'e and
uncalled for."
'
"It normally takes 60 to 90 days to fiX the blame " he said
'

e

...

3:15 p.m. on April 25.
missioners on April 11. ·
Several clearing house .. Blakeslee was authorized
review items were approved to make a preliminary apincluding an application for piication for 701 planning
$58,000 by the Youngstown funds if he decides upon a
Community Action Agency suitable project which would
for the purpose of collecting be advantageous to carry out.'
input from other community A request wsa presented
action groups; $371 ,000 · of from an Ohio firm on the
which Meigs would receive availability of land possibly
about $27,000 in bimefits in an for a shopping center in
area plan for aging filed by Meigs County- and after a
Buckeye Hills-Hocking discussion it was agreed to
Valley Regional Planning advise the firm that land is
Commission, and $952,000, a available.
State of Ohio application, for
A public finance meeting
funds to be used in working was announced for April21 at
out an energy conservation
program.
A report was given to the ·
Capital Improvements
Project by James M. Jennings, Columbus ·consultant,
who said that information on
a survey published in the
Daily Sentinel last week is
Middleport Village Council
being collected. He urged
Monday
night added its
persons to send in the survey
support
to
a proposal to
form which will help deter·
establish
a
State Highway
mine the priority for over 60
Patrol
Post
in
Meigs County.
projects. He said that an
Meeting
in
regular
session,
outline of the firial
council
president
Marvin
capabilities report may be
Kelly
said
he
had
received
a
available for the next
from
Don
Mullen,
letter
meeting .
, It was reported that a firm Middleport , Democrat
has applied for a new cer- political ieader, stating that
tificate of need to construct a possibilities exist for the
nursing h,ome in Pomeroy establishment of such a post.
and that representatives of Council felt th•t the post
the firm are expected lo meet would strengthen community
with the county com· law enforcement. Mayor
f .•

William R. Haley, a presidential appointee and a leading
member of the National Transportation Safety Board said be
"would not want to pass judgment" on the Spanish statement.
"Their rules and procedures are not the same as ours,"
Haley added.
Privately , other U.S. officials were critical of the Spanish
statement.
Haley said his team of investigators has been interviewing
the surviving members of tpe Pan American plane, among .
them its captain.
The team bas a!Bo taken a close look at tbe runway ,and has
access to control tower tapes of recorded communications and
the recovered cockpit tape of the KLM jet, he sa\d.
Haley said the Pan American 747s flight data recorder has
been found , but its cockpit voice recorder was still missing.
At the Social Security hospital, Isobel Monda of La Mesa,
Calli. said she had a broken foot and hand "and something is
wrong with my chest and back.'' Her husband Anthony Monda
said they were getting "the best care but of course we would
prefer to go home."
_.
. .
... The smoking wreckage of the two Boe1pg 747s still httered
the scarred runway tOOay"as Spanish air officials and Pan
American airlines denied responsibility for the fiery crash and
· KLM said it would await official findings before commenting.
The scorched tail of the KLM plane was the only part left
standing. Two sheared 1\ings and a pile of ashes marked the
remains of the Pan Am airliner. Clothes, tennis shoes and
magazines littered the runway.
Dozens of investigators descended on the small holiday
island 200 miles off the coast of Morocco to try to determine
(Continued on page 121

the Salisbury Elementary
School at 7:30 p.m. and an
industrial development
seminar was announced for
March 31 at the Ohio
University Inn at Athens. The
seminar will be from 9:15
a.m. to 4 p.m. C. E. Blakeslee
will aI!end.
Boyd Ruth exhibited maps
on proposed road projects
and explained studies that the
soil and water district makes
on land involved such as
'slopes, soil types, land use,
types of farms, etc. His
(Continued on page 12)

- -

Juvenile taken
·in stolen car
'

-

One of the juvenile
Meigs County Sheriff
escapees from the Fairfield James J. Proffitt reported
School for Boys has been the car and one of the
apprehended and a car stolen escapees was found Monday
from the front yard of John at 8:15p.m. on Jacksonville
Tillis Sunday morning has Road in Clark County, Ohio_.
!Een recovered, the Meigs The auto, occupied by the
Qmnty Sheriffs Department youth , was out of gasoline but
said today.
otherwise' operable. The
' escapee was released to FSB.
Sheriff Prorntt said charges
will be filed ag ain&amp; the 17
year old youth in Meigs
'County Juvenile Court. The
!Econd escapee, apparently
from Lawrence County, has
not been apprehended.
Sheriff Proffitt also
pool, $500, and streets, $3,703. reported that his department
Clerk-Treasurer Gene is investigating the theft of a
Grate read a letter from 10 speed Huffy bicycle, red in
Ashland Oil giving prices for color, taken within the last
gasoline, e~cluding taxes. two days from the residence
The new prices per gallon are (/. Mrs. Jean Nicinsky, Rt. I
regular 42.7 cents; 46.2 Rutland. Anyone h~ving any
premium and 44.7 unleaded. information or seeing the
Grate also reported that Ray licycle is asked to call the
Frazier, living in the !ileriff's office.
Columbus are~, has been Joe Bolin, Rt . I, Rutland
granted a workman's com· who reported earlier last
pensation claim of $56 a week that he had a Civil War
week. Frasier received a muzzle loader rifle stolen
back injury w11ile working for from his residence, has inthe village some years ago. lbnned the S\erirrs office
At the request of Coun· that he found the .gun, un·
cilman Dewey Horton, damaged, on his front porch
council approved the filming BBrly Sunday morning.
of a council meeting by
Buckeye Hills Career Center
in the near future. Ho~on
also inquired as to labor
which might be available for
The Public Utilities
sidewalk repair if the
homeowners provided Commission of Ohio will
conduct a public hearing at
materials.
SuchJ~hor is not available 9:30 a.m. Wednesday in the
at the present time, Mayor Pomeroy Council Cb$mbers
Hoffman said. The group also · at the request of Portland
discussed a slip in the Page subscribers of The General
Telephone Co. of Ohio for
St. area near Grant St.
extended
area serfice beAttending the meeting were
tween
843
numbers and the
Mayor Hoffman, Clerk
98S
numbers
of the west•rn
Grate; Councilmen Kelly.
Iteserve
Telephone
Co.
Horton, George Meinhart,
Some
163
subicribers
are
William Walters, Allen Lee
involved,
it
is
reported.
King and Carl Horky.

Patrol post in Middleport
possible council informed
Fred Hofftilan said that he
had written a letter in support
of the post and council agreed
to send a letter to Mullen in
support of the project.
Council approved the three
readings of an ordinance
outlining a• plan_for the expenditure of federal revenue
· sharing funds. The break·
down of the total of $11,203
includes: tennis court, $5,000;
water conditioning materials,
$1,000; fire department ,
equipment, $1,000; swimming
'

Co.al companies go out of state for engineers
COLUMBUS (UP!)- OHio Houae Speaker Ve~ G. Riffe
Jr,, 0-New Bos\On, hu accused the .Ohio Board of Regents for
faWng to help solve the state's energy criala and said coal
companies have to go out of llate to find mining enclneers.
Rllfe said Ohio lllould rely 011 more coal and leu on oU and
natunl pa and believes Ollio'a colli!Kfl llJl!l universities can
provide the soluUona to the state's fuel energy ahorlages in
their reeearch laboratories.
Rllfe, in a recent letter to Regenta Chairman Marvin L.
Warner, which wila revealed today, said Ohio hu the bralh
power and research faclllties to help alleviate the stale's
energy problema.
"Yet we don't have enough, We don't have· a program ln
mlniDII' engineering, and we have a shorillge ol trained
uliltanll," Rille said.
Ohio's Energy and Resource Development Agency admitted

•

InJure

0

··I. . £. or ·r ural sewag
· e u. n-•1t s
RU- e S
f
•
d
•
.
b
I
W ill e C ari Ie ill- COunty
Confusion on acreage
required for installing septic
tanks at new homes outside of
villages was aired when the
Meigs County Regional
Planning Commission met
Monday afternoon at - the
Farmers Bank Building.
It was reported that several
years ago the county com·
missioners had passed subdivision regulations which
cover the installation of
septic tanks and the amount
of ground required upon the
recommendations of the
planning commission.
However, yesterday
questions were raised as to
whether one acre should be
the required land· for one
d;welling using a steptic tank,
and if variances were allowed
in some instances. It was
pointed out that the
requirement was not In effect
when new homes were built in
Tuppers Plains which has
created a problem in that
area.
It was agreed that C. E.
Blakeslee, executive director
of the commission, and Boyd
Ruth of the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District,
will work out some specific
· answers. They will contact
the county health depart·
ment, the prosecuting at·
torney, and other sources to
prepare a report for the next
meeting which was set for

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Riffe waa correct when he complained Ohio's coal companies
must turn to othefstates to hire mining engineering graduates.
"It is _my ~nderstanding that to increase coal production,
Ohio will need about 100 mining engineers a year. Today they
have to be found from West \flrginla, Pennsylvania or
Colorado," Riffe said.
Aspokesman for the energy agency said, however, the state
more urgently needs mining· technicians and that tw~year
college programs in St. Clairsville, Rio Grande and J':lelsonville
caMot meet the demands:
'
Riffe criticized the Regents for failq to hoed his remarks in
early January when he addressed the Ohio House calling for
Ohio to have its own energy policy,
..
·
"It seems to me that the Board of Regents sholild examine
what Ohio's institutions of higher learing !p'e dofng to help us

.

•
•

••

develop an energy policy fgr Ohio," Riffe said.
"Under .the Regents' leadership, an inventory of existing
programs, people and facilities must take place. We must
harness our educational institutions' capabilities and steer
them into a sensible, useful and efficient energy policy role,"
he said.
·
'
Riffe urged Warner to "make this a mattlll' of priority, TeU
us wbat we need that we can't find on our campuses. Above all,
help us get the benefit of what we bave.''
Warner aald the Regents would "cooperate in building a
sensible energy policy for Ohio."
Warner said he would request Regents' Chancellor James A.
Norton to enlist the help of the Legislative Service Comml!llon
for researching what other states are doing to promote
scientific and_research development In energy fielda.

Hearing set

&gt;It ,.

�I

.•

•

2- The Daily Sentllll!l,Middleport·Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Ma~ch 29, 1977

Negotiat~rs
NICHOLAS DANILOFF
MOSCOW (UP!) - Sovtet
and American negotiators
put their differences over
human rights issues astde
today and tackled o_ther
bilateral and international
matters
'
Secretary of State Cyrus R.
Vance and Sov~et Foreign
MiniSter Andrei Gromyko
f
opened the second day 0
U.S.Sovtel talks wtth a
discussion of issues beheved
to hnve included restraint of
mternattonal al'lllS sales, and
military redu ctions in
Central Europe Ute Middle
'
East and the Indian Ocean.
A State Department
sp0 kesma n
t 0 1d
correspondents Ute morning
session did not take up the
ISSue of a Strategic Arms
Limitation Treaty.
"SALT was not discussed,"
the spokesman satd. "Other
issues were discussed."

'

· th first da of
Follow_mg e
y
U.S..SOvtet t&amp;J!'S on weapons
centro!, the Mtddle East and
·
v
told
oth er tssues, ance
~eporters Monday evening he
tsprepared to stay in MO!COw
as long as necessary to
achieve progress toward an
d
accor ·
.
U.S. ofhctals expressed
rehef at the apparent Soviet
decision not to allow thetr
an er over President
g
d
Carter's hwnan rights stan
. de the dlscussi•"s at
unpe
~· least at this. stage.
The two stdes scheduled a
second meehng m the
Kremlm today
Comm isl . rly General
un pa
Secretary Leomd Brezhnev

By

Mass shutoffs
punishable
says Spratley
COLUM BUS (UP! ) Legal action wtll be taken
agamst utihhes
that
discontinue service without
"extra effort on the part of
the company to inform its
customers about extended
paymenI P Ian s, " Oh'to con·
sumer's Counsel William
Spratley sat'd Monda Y.
Spratley urg ed the state •s
gas and electrtc utilities "to
take every possible action to
minimize the posstbtlity of
mass shut-&lt;1ffs tn Apnl
becausecustomershaveheen
unable to keep up with
record-high wmrer heating
bills.
"Thousands of Ohwans
have been unable to keep up
their gas and electric bills
this winter," satd Spratley.
"Now that the diSconnection
prohibttion ordered by the
Public Utilities Conunission
of Ohio ts ending, the
st tuatton may become
critical.
"Now that Ute worst winrer
m more than 100 years is
behind us, we have to msure
that
customers
who
legtltmately have been
unable to pay are given every
opportunity to pay durmg an
extended period or find ~al
service agencies that can
help," satd Spratley.
Spratley said each gas and
electric utility in Ohio should
make eden ded paymen t
plans available to all
·
customers, and make certa m
customers understand thetr
op ttons.
Spratley said he was aware
thatmostof thelargegasand
electrtc utilities have rna de
special payment plans
available to customers this
winter.
No legal action . is
contemplated at this time,
Spratley said.
· 1f 11
"But I wtll take actiOn
appears that mass turnoffs
are happenmg in any
company's servtce area
wtthout extra effort on the
part of the company to inform
tts customers about extended
payment plans and available
soctal servtces," he said.
He urged consumers with
legitimarepaymentproblems
to contact the PUCO if they
have not been helped by their
gas or electric utility .

issu~

will ignore 'rights
warned
Van~~
that
statements and ao:ttOns by the
U. S . admintstratton
portin Sovl t di 'de 1
s':'l'
g
e SSl ns
vtolated .accepted principles
of nomnterference and
equality.
"II dtd not take me by
surpriSe,'' .yance PI"d· "I
think the llll' ts clea;,ed and
we expect to get on.
Vance said he told the
Soviets the United States did
not wish to single them out,
but he sat'd he emphasl' zed
that . "our human rights
posillon sprmgs out of fundamental values we hold."
But ss if to underline his
1
cooperative spirit, "" ••irl h&lt;-

~~T~!:s
r!!~ht
uJr
to

for

Wblte House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UP!) _
President carter lB going to
bat for his proposed $50 a
person rehnte in the face of
zea lous Repu b 1i can
oppositton and lukewarm
Democratic support in the
Senate.
Press Secretary Jody
Powell said Monday Carter
feels the proposal is
"extremely unportant " to
economic recovery. PoweU
told reporters Monday "we
recogmze passage of the tax
rebate is not .. automatic,"
but msisted that 11 has the
maJ'onty support of the
American people.
"Although there . are
numerous bases on which one
could take exception to it,"
Powellsatd, "no one has been
able to come up with a plan to
&lt;rive an immediate boost to
o·
Ute economy ... "
"So it is the President's
belief this proposal ts
extremely important to
recovery," he added.
Senate Repubhcan leader
Howard Baker said he thinks
there is an "excellent
chance" that the Housepassed tax rebate wtU be
defeared in the Senate with
solid GOP opposition.
But Senate Democratic
Leader Robert Byrd said,
"As of now, the tax rebate
will carry,'' and sources close
to the Democratic leadership
said they cannot see more
than 40 votes against the
rebate.
The main opposition to the
rebate apparently comes
from a feeling that it wiD do
llttle good In stimulating the
economy . Many also are
upset that the Treasury must
borrow $10.5 billion to pay for
it.
The President has stepped
up his meetings with
economic adviser Charles
Schultze to several times a
week m hopes of getting a
closer reading of Ute
economic p1cture. He also lS
, preparmg an antl·inflalion
program, which is expecled
next week .
Carter told the Cabmet it
· •
faces "political difficu1ties'
in trying to hold down federal
spendmg, but repeated that
he IS dererlllllled to balance
theJiudget by the end of his
term in 1980.
On another front, PoweU
said Carter has not
ex Per' en c e d
the
"mflextbility"
in
~e
Pentagon that former
President Gerald Ford
complained of last Saturday
at a breakfast session with

Ford satd Pentagon resist·
ance to proposals on limiting
strategic weapons systems
stymied his attempts to reach
a n~w SALT agreement with
the Soviets before leaVIng

HEALTH

IRE

planned no meetings with
SoViet dtssidents and has not
ccmmented publicly on the
f J sh
. t'
ISSue o ewt enugra ton
from the Soviet Union.
Foreign Minister Andrei
Gromyko, m a luncheon toast
to vance
hailed the
• te
ti
that he
1
1
re axa on o nswns
said has come about because
"our countries reached the
f
d
t i
t I
u n amen a m u u a
understanding that i~ this
nuclear age there 1s no
bl
It
t
to
reasons e a erna tve
f1
"
51
pe~~u Utc:e~ S ena~ Soviet
'de 'goaled · illin
stt ststd
Ia wl gne~
o s u y ser ous y eac
other's suggestions for a
strategtc arms a•rtement
~

!?,0 rebat~OuP.!~w.~the Survey
will
h •£ }
PoweU said Monday the
SALT
proposals
that
Secretary of State Cyrus
Vance carried to Moscow had
the unanimous backing or
Pentagon bfftctals

says

u~tedPress
International
,.
In a 16th copyrighted
art'tc Ie pro b'111 g crt' me m
Anzona • Investigative
ito 1
Reporters and Ed rs nc.
said Tucson restdent and
ure
repuled underwor ld fig
Peter Joseph (Horseface )
Ucavoli, Sr., 74, ·hasAr.
ties to
organtzed crune m !ZOna.
Like hts Tucson neighbor
Joe Bonanno, Pete Ucavoh ts
one of the last of the breed
who organized the mob
durir)g probitlon and whose
criminal caREreer 'dspans 40
years, the 1 sat ·
According to the IRE,
Ucavoh's crime connecttons
are extenstve and have deep
historical roots, from his
days as the leader of the old
Detiott Purple Gang to his
present stewardship of an
Arizona hoodlum mob.
"Many crune watchers feel
Arizona was first infiltrated
by organized crime ~e day
Pete Licavoli purchased the
Grace Ranch in 1944,'' one
orgamzed crime observer
wrote recently referring to
the ll().acre spread outside
Tucson that remains the
L '. c a v o I •. f a m i l y
headquarters.
Ucavo li left Detroit for
AriZOna m the early 1940s,
sent for byinBugsy
Stege! wbod
Las V
ld
was bul g
egas an
Moe Dalitz of the Cleveland
mo b who recogmz ed the
porential of Ute region.
In 1951, Senator Estes Ke·
Iauver caUed Ucavoli: "One
of the most cold blooded and
contemptuous characters In
appear
before
our
comnu'!tee"
·
The IRE team said the
Ucavoli family has wide ,
diversifted interests in the
AriZOna business community
Ucavoli Is head of 8 fallllly
that owns large tracts of land
and ccmmerclal property •
substantial interests m
several botels on the Las
Vegas strip, plus holdings in
real estare along Tucson's
Tanque Verde strip, bars,
restaurants, even an art

li

L.

•
connections

Pentagon so far as I can te~
have been rod and
straightforward, . he sat .
" They ~ppr~c.tate the
Prestd~?i s wtihngness to
consult

tcavo

By Lawreoce E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
65 retired, strugghng along
w{~ others to make do in this
era of vicious inflallon. I'm 5
feet 10, weigh 130 pounds. I
mamtain a dally morning
routine of moderare exercise,
mcludmg about three
rrunutes of joggmg in place. I
budget a daily evening walk
ol some two miles.
This past year my feet have
gone bad on me. They are
conllnuously cold outdoors in
cooler weather to the point
where natls of the large toes
turned blue and red blotches
developed on the sides and
bottoms, reminiscent of the
nuld case of frost-bire I suf·
fered while in the servtce
over In sunny France in the
wtnter of '42. On certain days
the feeling of numbness in the
bulls of the feet perststs even
on wann days.
Also, I find that my sex life
has become a sometunes
thing. ""ms is not offered
becallSe of any ultttude of
re~ret or dlB8ppointment 1)0
i

j

e

.
•
are extensive

gallery.
The IRE said Licavoli ts

of 300 J'ournalists who
sponsored 8 team of 37
also hnked to narcottcs, vtce, J'ournalists from 25 news
stolen goods and consumer
organizations who invest!·
protection serviCes wh'tc h g8 ted crime in Arizona
ensure nothmg untoward
b
following the bombmg
happens
to
usmess murder last June of Amor.a
establishments or thetr
Repubhc reporter Don
owners
·
The IRE is an organization Bolles.

r;r&amp;D!A 'S sacchann
•
.L','
·ban holdz•ng firm
·

By MICHAEL J. CONLON
wASHfNGTON (UP!) The Food and Drug
Admintstraton is gomg ahead
with its controverstal ban on
saccharin despite continwng
protests that include 600 to
800letters a day pouring m on
HEW Secretary Joseph A.
Califano Jr.
Califano told a Cabmet
meeting Monday the FDA
wiU propose a ban wtthin the
next two weeks on the last
r e rna in in g art i It cia 1
sweetener. That J'ibes wtth
the
FDA's
onginal
pronouncement March 9 that
it would publish the proposal
wtthin 30 days.
There had been some
speculation that the storm of
protest generated by the
decision would force the FDA
to delay its timetable.
The matter, however., 1s
sttll far from being final.
When the p(oposal is
published the law requires
time for comment from the
public and other mrerested
parties for the official record ,
an additional time period for
reply to those comments and
then more time for the
agency to look the matter
over
The FDA S8ld on March 9it
did not expect the matter to
approach the !mal stages
unttl July :
White House press aides
quoted Califano as tellin~ the

He gets cold feet
chnnge in sexual capactty ,
though, may be related. You
may have obstruction to the
ctrculallon through the
artertes to your legs that
causes the changes m your
fee.t
Involvement of arteries m
the pelvic area not only af·
feels the ctrculation to the
legs but it may cause madequare circulation to the sex
organs causing impotence.
Doctors dignify ~e combina·
lion with the term Lerich syn·
drome. In some instances
when the obstruction is
locahzed a graft can be m·
serted uhove and below the
obstruction to return the ctrculation to normal. These are
called bypass operaltons and
htlve been done for trumy
years now wi~ a high degree
of sut'Cess.
Whether or not the im·
potence will be conccted
depends upon the extent of
the arterull disease and
whtch arteries are also Ut·
volved by bypass graft may
not correct Ute impotence

.

cnm

unless the small artenes are
also operated upon sometimes with mtcro·
surgery Ask your doctor
about tl.
To define the problem you
may need spectal X rays of
your arteries to show any
areas of obstruchon. If that ts
your problem, movmg to a
different clunate wtli not tm·
prove your condition.
Such artenai obstructiOns
are caused by the same type
of fatty-ehoie sterol deposit,
that cause heart attacks and
strokes. I am sending you The ·
1 Health Letter number 2-1,
Cholesterol, Triglycendes,
• Bl&lt;&gt;Qd Futs, Atherosderosts,
to give you more informatwn
on lhts condtlwn others who
want Ibis mfonnation can
send 50 cents with a long, selfaddressed envelope. Just
wnte to me m care of this
newspaper, P.O. Box 1551,
Radto Ctty Slallon, New
York, NY 10019. if you hal&gt;'
pen to smoke you should slop
al on~e.
t

cabmet Monday he is still
getting 600to 800 letters a day
at the Department of Health,
Education and WeUare, most
of them opposed to taking
saccharin off the market.
In another development,
the National . Canners
Assoctation called for a
"limtted amendment" of the
Delaney clause - that
section of Ute law which
allows no amount of a cancer
causing substance in Ute food
supply. The proposed ban on
saccharm is being taken
. of
largely under the authortly
that law.
The canners, in a statement
sublllltted to a House health
subcommittee which held
hearings on the matter a
weekago,saidthelawshould
be changed to give Ute FDA
commissioner "hmtted
discretwn to approve
extraordinary beneficial food
additives shown only to cause
cancer under certain circumstances."
Saccharin was found to
cause cancer in rats fed large
doses of it.

S OW l

t

00

aw

t •t
S nc

io Meigs churches

has an ll·month-()Jd child. Daughter Pam is
a registered nurse currently on leave from
The Christ Hospttal, Cincinnati, for the birth
of a child in February.
Issued a license to preach by hts church,
Clough United Methodist in Cincinnati, in
1974, Mr. Koch trained for the miniStry by
taking the Ministerial Course of Study at
Garrett·Evangelical Seminary in Evanston,
m.• finishing this past year.
In 16 years as a member of Clough Church
(his wife was a member of the same church
30 years) Mr. Koelt served as secretary,
treasurer, superintendent of the Sunday
School, on the Council of Ministries, the
Administrative Board and as a trustee when
he decided to give all of his time to the
church as a minister.
Mr. Koch is an example of people who are
making ministry a "second career." An
ever·increasing nw'nber are doing so according to the United Methodist West Ohio
Conference office.

A l.:inctnnatl community fireman and
grandfather turned minister will flU Ute
pulpit of three Unite&lt;l.Metbodist churches in
Meigs County beglrihing April I, Bishop
Dwight E. Loder has announced He is the
Rev. Hrvey Koch, appointed to·the Syracuse
(Asbury), Forest Run and Minersville
ccngregatlons.
Before preparing for the ministrY, Harvey
Koch, 43, was for sir years a lieutenant on
the Anderson Township Fire Department
east of Cincinnati. Before that he was a
volunteer fireman, worked at various trades
and was a factory laborer.
He will succeed the Rev. Richard Jarvis
who had been minister of the three churches
the past four years. Mr. Jarvis is the new
pastor of the Junction City United Methodist
Church.
Mr. Koch and his wife, Ute former Betty
Mae Jermer, have two mamed children.
One son, Fred, Is a lieutenant in the U. S. Air
Force stahoned at Mather AFB , Calif., and

lastmg unul 1985. But no
quick breakthrough in their
differences was expected.
The US
side has
. .
forwarded two proposals-to
reduce the agreed ceiling of
2,400 strategic weapons ,
possibly to about 2,000, and
·unpose restraints on the us
..
cruise missile and the SoVIet
Backfire bomber, or to stay
with the 2 400 figure for now
•
and work out the detatls from
there.
The Soviet diplomats coun
.
tered by urgmg both stdes
adopt strategic ceilinl! of
2 400 coupled with inunediate
r~traints on the US crutse
. .
rmSSlle.

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D. ·
the part of my lovmg wife but
merely because of a faint
gnawing at my own sense of
seU-sufficiency. My sense of
frustration IS salved
somewhat by the conviction
that a move to a warmer
climate ts m order. The
fmances for such are another
matter.
I am wondertng tf the above
could be a manifestation of
phlebttis which loomed large
as a factor in the death of my
mother? I would be grateful
for any remarks you might
have.
DEAR READER - You
probably
do
not
have.phlebttis. Thnl is mfiaiTliJllltion of the veins and
causes different symptoms.
You might have one of the
pe rtpheral
vascular
disordet .• ti111t are assoctated
with exposm·e to cold but ex·
aminatwn dunng the attacks
would be necessary to
estabhsh this
The combination of your
leg or fool problems ami your

New pastor assigned

-""..
•
.'

••

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency says it'ts
surveying industries
throughut Ute state to try and
determme if the federal
regulations governing sulfur
dioxide emtssions are too
stringent.
In the summer of 1976 the
federal EPA adopted the
sulfur dtoxide emission
standards and the Ohio EPA
sat'd Monday it wants to
determine if the regulations
may be too tough.
The Ohio EPA believes the
federal EPA may have had
mcorrectenussiondata when
it wrote the standards, Jack
Wunderle, chief of the Offtce
of Air Poilullon Control said.
"Now we're going back to
the sources to obtain correcl,
up-Iodate information,' he
satd.
The standards prevent
many industries from
burning much of Ohio's coal
due to its htgh sulfur content
unless Ute industries install
expenstve air pollution
control devices.

THEDALVSENTINEL
0 ~~~~~.;':'~:•
MEIGs-MASON AREA
CHE:Sr•;,';.,T~~NEmLL
ROBERTHOEFLICH
City Edit"'
Publish~ ilinly except Saluriliiy
by TI" Olno Va Uo!y Publi&gt;hu•• Couany, 111 Coor1 St. Ponc10y, Olnu
4:)7lJ9 Busmess Ofhn• Phone 992·
""
Eu11,. ~ 1 Pho,, 992•2111
S.conu '""' ""'"'"' l"'ld al
Pmneruy.OIUu
N11llunal kdVettlSutg r~Jt~SI!II·
"'''" w.. u. Gnff&gt;thCumpany, ln·
' · Bollmelh ' "" Gatwghcl 0 " ·
7S7 ThmJ Ave, Nt;&gt;w York N Y
100!7
SuiJsc.,ptwn rales Dchmcu by
~~;~c~;~~~;;,~r~~~~1! 1;!1~e~~~'::
" '"" '"' "'""'"I'· on, month,

~.~ ~;.~:"~~~~:~~"s~!111 1~00~1~:

suso, Th"' mm• Lhs, 11 oo.
EJ.,wl"" l2t;OO Y'"· 5" mrn&gt;11Js
$1 3 30, Thr·.;e months $7 50
Suil«r1ptwn 1,,.,. mduu" sw,u.y
Tim•s-&amp;ntn"J

h
c

,"JS; •

.,

"
"'
....
.,
"'
'"
""
·•
"
~
·'
"
v

"
"
"
.,

.

·"

,,

~~:i*

::?.:~

1 Sport Parade l\ ~1
fit

~~~~:~~~~

.. ·
:.

., ..
,,

'~
'"
,,,

Tomorrow the Hannan Trace - Riggs; HR - ~mtth; :sac. - ·Wtldcats are scheduled with a Riggs; SB- Hamilton, Sayre ·
return bout wtth 1976 regtonal 2, Buzzard, Rose, Lambert 2, •' .
foe Huntington Vinson on tap D. Smtih 5. WP - weaver; LP
for Thursday. Both Wed· - Smith; RBI - Browning, -:
nesday and Thursday's games Smith, Rose, Sayre 2, Rtggs.
are to be played on the locals
PITCHING
home field.
IPRHSOBB
123456RHE
21222 '
Wahama
0 4 o 0 I x 57 2 ~~~~(!~)
11102 •..:.
Meigs
I 0 I 0 I 0 34 I Collier rry
I 0 0 00
1.
Errors - Riggs 2, Weaver, Davis
2
I 2 20
Meigs
added another Goldsberry, Andrews , Smith (0-1)
24
4 23
unearned run in the third Ebersbach, DP, Wahama I, Browning
20320
folloWing a single to Brian Meigs I 2BH - Triplett, 3BH Ehersbach
I I 022
Hamilton The big first
baseman swiPed second and
scored on the third Wahama
error of the game to make the OUR BOARDING HOUSE
with Major Hoople
score 4-2. ,
r.:=,.,.7
. . . . .Ill
After a scoreless fourth
GLP..D ·
frame the Marauders Jim
P..PDED T~,._T
Smith made it a · one run
L!TT Lf P. S. f
Waha~a advantage with a
I'VE BEEN
towermg 350 foot drtve over
5QUEEZI N' MY
the left-eenterfteld fence for a
WALLET ~0 Ti6HT
T~E GREEN ON
home run.
MY DOLL""R
Wahama completed the
IS .5TAI&lt;TIN'
scoring In their half of Ute fifth
,.0, RUN! '
wtthout a hit. Duke Smith
reached base on a free pass
and promptly stole second,
third and came home when the
attempt to IUlil the sliding
Falcon at third base went into
left field for an error.
Darkness prevailed after
Meigs batted in Ute sixth
giving Wahama a ~ win.
The White Falcons now 2-1
on the young hard ball season
are alated to entertain
Parkersburg Catholic lodsy at
Dachtel Field in Mason.

:I
Pro :I
'S
.... tan d"1ngs

A s t r o s h o p e .t o

•

•

nnprove

m '77

Pro Standings

N

Toron to

33 31 13

mm

79 293 274

Cleve

24 &lt;0 12 60 229 274
x CJoMonday's
nched d•vos&gt;Dn
l•tlc
R esult
Mmnesota 5 St Louos 4
Today's Games

N Y Islanders a t Phd a

Detro•! at Wash mgton
Clevela nd at Mlnnesola
Los Angel es a t V an co uver
wednesday 's Games
Atlan la at NY Ranoers
Phola a! Cleveland
Toron to at Montr ea l
wa shmg ton al P•I ISburgh
Chtcago 1:11 St Lou1s
BoSion at Buff alo
.. -:-:·-:·-:· :·:·:·:-:·:·:.· ·..···:..-:-·:·:.·:.--:.· ·:·:.:::::.:::::.:·:.::::::;·:;:·
MEET THURSDAy
There will be a meeting
of the Middleport Youth
Baseball League Tbursday, March 31 al 7 p.m. In
the old council room.
11 the attendance Is large
. enough, election of officers
will be held. Persons,
especially women and
young adults, are urged to
attend in order lo buDd a
good hnseball program.

Smythe race remains tight
!!LOOMINGTON,
plays at Vancouver tonight.
Mtnn.(UP! j- The battle for
The Stars played what
a playoff spot Is going right , looked like three different
down to the wire in the games Monday nlgbt - hot
Smythe Division of the and heavy in the first period
National Hockey League.
to take a 3-llead, sluggiish in
The Minnesota North Stars, the s'ecood as ~e Blues got
Ued for third place with goals fr'¥1' Bo~ Hess, Brian
Vancouver with 60, points- Sutter arid Claude Larose to
apiece after Monday night's take tli lead. But the North
1&gt;-4 victory over St. LouiS, Stars showed a sudden surge
bost Clevelaitd tonight.
of power,. collecltng goals
Rookie forward 'l:om from Alex . Pints and Glen
Younghans of ~ta said Sharpley to · end the period
the Stars would b8ve to win 11'\.th a r.-4 lead. Neither team
three of their four remalnln~' could .find the mark in the
games to make the piay9,ffs. ·final period.
Chicago, in an uneasy
St. Louis Coach Emile
second place with 63 points, Francis, on easy street with

his team's bolding first place
m the Smythe Division, hnd
praise for Minnesota goalie
Pete LoPresti.
. "He came up with some
super saves tonight that I felt
won the game for the North
Stars,'' said Francis, himself
a former goalie.
.,
The North Stsrs' coach Ted
llaJ.ris was less at ease.
"We were fortunate to
come back but we have to
learn that hockey is 80
minutes," Harris said. "But
we never say die here.'.'
It was Ute only NHL or
WHA game of the night.

r

"

•

A tl anhc 01VI 5 10n

w I pet G B
Phd a
Boston
NY l&lt;n1ck.s
BuHalo
NY N ets
Central

Hou ston
Wa shmglon
San Anton10

Cl e vel and

1

DIVIS_Io_n

W' I pe t
46 29 613
43 51 581

mnings.
Youngblood, 25, hit .193 in
57 at-bats for the Reds last
season, his first year in the
major leagues.
The native of Houston,
Tex., the Reds' No. 2 draft
choice in 1970, spent six full
seasons in the minors before
making Cmcinnati's major
lt~g'Je roster a year ago.

gb
21 ?

42 33 560

.:1

61 '1
32 42 432 13' 1
29 46 387 17

MidWe st
Denv er
Det ro1t
Ch1cago
Kan (: 1t y
lnd1a na
M II wauke e

Dl lll SI On

wlpct. GB

45 29 608
42 33

560

39 35 527
39 36 520

31 1

6

61?
32 43 427 13"?
'17 49 355 19

PaCifi C DI VISIOn

w I pet
Los Angeles
48 27 640
Por tland
43 33 566
Gold en Slat e
41 34 547
Sea ttle
37 38 49 3
Phoen1 x
29 45 392
·
Monday 's Results
N o game~ ~chedulcd

GB
51, 7
7
11

181 1

Today •s Games
Boston at Clevela nd NY Net s
at New Or le ans
Wa sh 1ngton at San An ton1o
Philad elphia at Ch1cago
NY K nu::Ks at Kans as C1 ty
Phoen 1x a t Milwaukee
lnd •a na at Denv er
Hou ston at Golden Stat e
Seattle at Los An geles
Buffalo at Portland
W ednes da y's Ga m es
Ch 1cago vs Boston a t Har t
ford
Detroil at Ph ila dNPh •a
Phoen1x at New Orl eans
A tl anta al W ash1 ngton
Hou sgon at Se a ttlc

IHL Playo!t s
Un 1ted Press 1nt er nat1onal
Quarterl1nals · All S€mes Best
ol Se v en
Fl mt vs Kalama lao
A prd 1- F I 1n l al Kalamazoo
A pril / - Kal a m azoo at Fl1nl
April 3 - FI1 n t at Kal am azoo
Apnt 6- Kalamazoo a t Flmt
x April 8- FI1nt at Kalamaloo
x Ap r il 9- Kalamazoo &lt;1! F l1n t
l2 - F I 1n t
at
x Apr 11
Ka la mazoo
For t Wayn e vs Da y to n
Ap r 11 2- F ort Wayn e al
Dayton
April 3- 0ayt on at Fo r t
Wayne
Apr1l 6- Fort Wayne at
Day ton
April 9- Dayton at Fori
Wayne

THIS WEEK'S

Fri., April 1 - Meigs at
Ironton.
Tue., April 5 ~ Meigs at
Gallipolis.
Wed., Aprll 6 - North
Gallia at Meigs.
Thu ., April 7 - Athens at
Meigs.
Fri., Aprl 8 - Meigs at
Kyger Creek.
Sat., April 9 - Wahama at
Meigs.
Tue., April 12 - Logan at
Meigs.
Thu., April 14 - Alexander
at Meigs.
Fri., April 15 - Jackson at
Meigs.
Tue., Apnl 19 - Meigs at
Waverly
Fri., April 22 - Meigs at
Wellston.
Tue. Apr. 26 - Ironton at
Meigs.
Wed., April 27 - Meigs at
Trimble.
Frl , Apr. 29- Gallipolis at
Meigs.
.
Sat, Apr. 30- Caldwell at
Meigs.

~~Et.

USED CARS

Tues., April 19 - Meigs at
Soulhern .
Thu., April 21 - Meigs at

1973 BUICK
REGAL OOUPE

Alexander.

Tue., April 26 - Meigs at
Kyger Creek.
Thu .. April 28 - Meigs ot
Wahama (2)
Sat .. April 30 - Caldwell at
Meigs .

r-ull power,

factory

atr ,

sport wheels and m 1rrors,

power sea1 , rear

w1ndow

defogger , Cru1se Control ,
rad ial tires, stereo Sharp!

*3495 .

Mon., May 2 - Southern at
Meigs.
Tue., May 3 - Athens at
Meigs.
Wed., May 4 - Meigs at

Karr &amp; Van!andt
You'll Like Our Qua illy

Eastern.

Way of Do1ng Busmess
GMAC FINANCING
992·5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenings '11 16 :00
Ti\sp .m. Sat.

Wed., May II - Gallipolis
at Meigs.
Sat , May 14 - Mmford at
Me tgs.

If your insurance agent can't give you
" worry free" service, fire him and hire
Mick .

"Let Mick Do It!"

Tue. May 3 - Meigs at
Athens
Fri., May 6 - Meigs at
Logan.
Tue., May 10 - Meigs at
Jackson
Fri., May 13 - Waver!) at
Meigs.
Sat., May 14 - Minford at
Meigs.
Wed., May 18 - Metgs at
North Gallla.
Reserves

Thu .. Apr. 1 - Metgs at
Athens.
Sat., April 9 - Wahama at
Meigs.
Tue.. April 12 - Meigs at
Kyger Creek.
Wed. , Aprill3 - Eastern at
Meigs.
Mon., April 18 - Meigs at
Gallipolis.

You may never have to worry about
insurance again .

DOWNING CHILDS (iJ,.?;
INSURANCE AGENCY INC.
992 -2342

Middl e port, 0.

10 - ~o rt

Way ne at
11- Da y ton at Fort

Wayne
x Ap r 1l

13- Fort

Wayn e ·at

Dayton

April2·

RUTLAND - The Rutland
Base ball League WI 11 have
sign·UP day for a U boys
wantmg'lo play baseball Utts
summer Saturday, April 2
from 10 untill2 atthe Rutland
High School Gym. There is a
$5 fee which pays for In·
surance and a ball hat Every
person playmg ball must
have msurance through the
league. The ages:
Tee Ball, ages 5 through 7
Pee Wee, ages 8 through 9.
Ltttie League, ages 10
through 12.
Pony League, ages 13
through 15.
Anyone wishing to help
coach tee ball or any of the
other teams will he greatly
apprectated.
There wtll be a meeting at
the home of Gene Wise on
Salem St. on April I2 at 7 p.m
to finalize season plans.
The Rutland Baseball
League will not sponsor a
girls' softhall team this year.

Toledo v s Colu mbu s
M.;.rch
29 - Columbus
at
Toledo
April 5- Toled o a t Co lumbus
Ap ril 6- Co l umbus at Toledo
Apr11 8- Toled o at Colum bus
x April 9- Co l umbus a t Toledo
x Ap r1 1
10 ~ Toledo
"a t
Colu mbus
x April
12- Co lu mbus
at
Tol edo
Sag•naw vs. . Mus-kegon
Apr ii1 - Mu skegon at Sag maw
A pr11 2- Sagmaw at M us kegon
Apn l J- Muskegon at Sag1 naw
April 8Musk egon at
Sag lnaw
x Apt11 9 Sa g1naw a t
Muskegon
x Ap r il 13- M uskego n at
Sag1 naw
x •f necessary

YES
KROGER

~

HAS
FRESH FISH

with us!

-

61 1

3 4 40 459 1 11 7
?H 46 378 D 7
2 1 ~3 7A4 '.41 '?

Western Conf erence

x April

lS

6 16

39 35 527

New Orleans
Al lanla

Sign-up day
in Rutland o::,~~~
•

45 28

39 35 . 527

PLANNING APillA PARlY
PHONE

Youngblo0,d goes to Cardinals
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The prOspect.''
He had a t;.l5 record and a
Cincinnati Reds •acquired
4.
45
earned rm average last
rlghthanded relief pitcher
year
wllh Arkansas ol the
8111 caudlU from the St. Loula
Class
AA Texas League. He
Cardinals Monday
In
was
an
ell!hth round draft
ellchange for reserve
choice
by
the Cardinals In
outfielder Joel Youngblood.
1974.
Altboulb Caudill, 00, has
Throughout three minor
not pitched in the majors, a
league
seasons, Caudill has
~ official described him
recorded
328 strikeouts in 333
'u "a good major league

NBA Standin g s
U n•ted Pres s 1n ternat.onal
Eastern Con terenc e

Johnson , seniors, Jmuner Souls by, Tim Ebers bach, Ron
Casci, Kelly Hawk, Kenny Young, Tim Hood, Mark Mitch and
Mike Wdyland, Juniors, and Ray Andrews and Mike Triplett,
Sophomores. Manager is Homer Srmth.
Reserve - Jeff Grueser, Todd Srmth, ChriS Taylor, Chuck
Kennedy, Troy Gr~jth, Bill Elkins, Breg Becker, Rick
Hovatter, Dave Burl,'Kim Dewhurst, Tom Hawley and Dink
Kennedy, all Sophomores; Tom Owens, Cliff Kennedy, Chris
Woods, and Todd Snowen, all Freshmen

Varsity, reserve schedules

·SCHEDULES
Varsity
I1
Tue., April1 - Wellston at
Meigs.

\~ \

"That's when I put this suit back on again and I haven't
· " McGuir e IaUghed • ''N OW I'm gonna gtve the
chan ged Stnce,
suit to one of the TV stations in Milwaukee which turns over
'I "
I hln g to ell arty,
COt
Although none of his players made 8 btg thing of saying
goodbye to McGuire' wholsgoingintoprivatelndustryafter20
.
years of coaching, they made it obvious they were golllf! to
miss him tremendously. AI McGuire has been far more than a
,,.
th
ooach to them. He was like the hea d of the famlly, woe one ey
always looked to for guidance, for instruction and for
understandin g.
"I can't ever imagine him not being there ," said Gary
Rltsenberger, a junior guard. "!guess his leaving won't really
hit me until I go back to the gym In October. Tbere is no
possible way to explain how much he meant to aU of us."
SoP,omore forward Bernard Toone from Yonkers, N.Y.,
concurred.
"He gives you a Iotta hell, always yelling things at you, like
'defense' ...'rebound' ....'move'. But you know he's always
1 do
looking out for your weD-being, a nd howmany othe r peop e
you fmd like that?" said Toone.
Before the bus carrying his team to Ute airport pulled away
from Ute 'Omnl Monday night, someone asked Marquette 's
retiring ooach whether he ml ght change his mind and come
back to basketball some day.
"Noway,"laughedAIMcGuire. "lknownobodyshouldever
say 'never' about anything, but this Is one •~•·•
·-"' 1 can say
'never' about and be sure. I've had my time, it's over and it's
time for someone else. What more could I possibly ask for than
this?"

The other half of the battery will be Mark Mttch and Dave
Mtller, depending on who 's hurling
HarriSOn has scheduled a total of 37 games, varsity and
reserve, and he believes his tesm wtU get stronger as the year
progresses and their conftdence builds. That situation was the
same one that faced Harrison last season in his first year at the
helm, and tt turned out to be the best season ever for Meigs,
All us baseball nuts are anxiously awatling another trip to
Columbus
TilE ROSTERS
Varstty- Greg Smith, Bnan Hamilton, Dale Browning ,
Ray Wilford, Cl'enson Pratt, Dick Owen, Dave Miller, and Rtck
~-------- -----.

Cincinnati over a long season,
By FRED McMANE
but I don't concede anything
UPI Sports Writer
COCOA, F1a. (UP!) - The to them. As with everybody
Houston Astros were the mosi else, how far we go wUI
improved
team in the depend on our pitching. We
• ATLANTA (UPI) - S&lt;metlmes, It Isn't what you say, it's
National
League
last year, have a lot of good young arms
what you don't say whiCh ultimately bas far greater impact on
and
their
fortunes
should and I think they will benefit
those around you, and in the end, after Marquette had its first
NCAA basketbaU championship ever, and AI McGuire had his, continue to skyrocket this from the acquisihon of
(catcher) Joe Ferguson .
season .
that was eracUy the way it turned out.
In fact , Manager Bill Ferguson played many years
AI McGuire could have said a great many things to his
players before they went out on the floor to play favored North Virdon feels Ute club has tbe with the Dodgers and bandied
Carolina here Monday night, but he didn't. He didn't want abltity to finish as high as some outstanding pitchers
there."
second in the NL West.
them to play HIS game, he wanted them only to play theirs. ·
Houston 's greatest asset is
"The whole dt vision is
He had so many things on his mind, so many things he
speed,
and Vtrdon hopes to
could've told them and wanted to leU them, but he dida't. Why tougher, includtng
turn
that
into a major
put an extra burden on them? They had more than enough to ourselves 1" says Virdon, who
offensive
weaJlO!l
again this
last year gwded the team to
do handling the superbly coached Tar Heels on Ute floor.
year.
The
club
stole
150 bases
The Marquette players knew this was McGuire's last game. an 110-82 record and a third
last
year,
second
only to
They knew that long before they came here, so he didn't feel it place finish in the division. "I
Cincinnati's
210,
and
with
the
was at aD necessary to give them one of those corny Utile would like to thmk we have a
acquisition
of
Cesar
Gonzalez
dressing room talks winding up with something like win-thlB· chance to finish second.
"Realistically , I don't from the Chicago Cubs and
last-&lt;111e-for-rne. He never so much as mentioned that.
He didn't say anything to them either about North Carolina's believe we can beat the speed of rookte Art
Gardner, Vtrdon has even
'1our corners," an offensive maneuver the Tar Heels hnd been
more flexibility on the bases
employing so successfully and one which they hoped would
this
year.
carry them to the title. The less he hnd to say about that, the
STRENGTIIS
- All.Star
better, McGuire felt.
·
performers
in
first
baseman
Nor did he let them in on some of those other thb)gs he kept
Bob
Watson
and
center
thinking about, like how much he was going to miss them, or
fielder
Cesar
Cedeno;
one of
how Sunday's terrible plane crash In the Canary Islands was
league's
top
pitchers
in
J.R.
preying on his mind because he knew Ute team had to make a
Richard;
great
team
speed.
charter flight back to Milwaukee after the ball game.
WEAKNESSES - No
AI McGuire kept all that locked up Inside mtU alter his
Un&lt;te~~rLe~:~~~~;~!,,onal
pitching
depth; mediocre
players defeated the Tar Heels, 67-59, for the title, and when
campbell Conterence
defense
;
not
much power.
the final buzzer sounded he was emotionaUy spent, completely
Patnck P.v " 1on
w I t pts gf ga
NEW FACES - Joe Ferwashed out.
Phoia
46 16 14 t60 310 205 guson, acqutred from St.
His eyes were sosniciously moist and he headed for the NY ''la nd ers
Louis, gives club experienced
183
dressing room as Bo' Ellis, the Warriors' &amp;-9 forwardfr om Allan la 46191?104279
33 33 11 n 252 254 catcher who should provtde
Chicago, borne on the shoulders of some of his reammares, cut NY Ranoe"
the strin••
from one of the baskets m the traditional
" 35 14 70 265 298 some righthanded power;
~
Sm'{lhe DIVISIOn
Cesar Gonzalez could heat
triumphant ritual.
w 1 t pts gf ga
Upon reaching the dressing room, AI McGuire couldn 't hold x st Lou.s 30 38 9 69 m 266 out Ro ger Metzger at
Chtcago
26 40 11 63 233 284
back any longer and began weeping.
Monn esola 21 37 18 60 228 294 shortstop; rookies Art
Gardner and Joe Cannon,
"I wanted to go into Ute dressing room and compose va ncouver
.
So
24
4\
12
60
223
282
both adept base·stealers,
myseU,"hesaidlater. "I'm not emba rrassed about crymg.
co lora do 19" 14 52 211 291 should make club as reserve
many things hit meallatonce.l thought of how, when we were
Wales conference
outfielders
!6and 6 this year, !felt pretty sure we were out of it. I knew if
Norris D1vrslon
w I t ph gt ga
OUTI1lOK - LOok for
we lost another game, if we stubbed our toe once more, we'd be · , Moutreal
continued
improvement Will
out of it. That was alter we hatllost three in a row. I started to P, Its
328 1131 127 371 167 have to come up with a couple
wear this same suJtJ have On noW and wore ftfor the next fOUr LOS Ang 31 31 14 ;:
games."
washh
22 .to l!l 58 210 290 of real "finds" in the pitching
At that point, Marquette was invited to the NCAA regionals, Detro&gt;t Ad~:., ~ 10 ,:.,~1" 176 292 department, though ,. to chal·
lenge for second.
and McGuire, feeling the worst was over, changed his suit and
w 1 t pts gf ga
the Warriors lost to to""'anked
Michigan in their final game of easton
Buffalo "46 23
7 101 290 212
t- •
23 8 100 296 230

the regular season.

•.

to make it 1·1. Tim Sayre
followed with a line dnve
single to center to plate both
Lambert and _llu~rd and
give the Whtle Falcons a 3-1
lead, Ken Rtggs, after
delivering a loog ftrst inning
gnple, then crossed up the
Marauders by laymg down a
perfect sacrifice bmt to bring
Rose in to scqre and make it 4-

~

~

t

."!•.-•.• ...-••.: .-;

Hi

~l. Today's

Marauders lose opener::
BY GARY CLARK
A four run second inmng
enabled Coach Gordon
Spencer's Wahama White
Falcons to take a 5-3 win over
the Meigs Marauders in the
Falcons home diamond
opener Monday evening at
Mason
A total of seven pitchers
worked Ute contest with fresh·
man starter Vince Weaver
emergmg with ~e vtctory.
Smith was tagged with the loss
for Meigs
Wahama outhit the visiting
Marauders 7-4 but was thwarlmg numerous Meigs
ralties when Ute game was
caUed because of darkness
after six innings of play.
The Marauders scored once
in the ouenmg frame to take
an early lead. Kenny Young
reached hase on an error arur
subsequently moved to third
base on still another Falcon
bobble before ridmg home on
Dale Browning's run scoring
single to left.
Wahama retaliated to take
the lead in their half of the
second aided by two bases on
balls, three hits and a
sacnfice bunt.
Duke Smith started the four
run rally by grounding a
single back through the box.
Mtke Lambert and Rick
Buzzard followed with walks
to load Ute sacks with nobody
out. After Click went down on
strtkes. Buddy Rose beat out
an infield single •coring Smtth

there. Two soP,omores, Ray Andrews and Mike Triplett,
made the varsity roster.
Although the nucleus of last season's champioll!l is gone,
three senior leaders could do a lot for the others. Although
Coach Harrison hasn't decided on anyone yet, the three
returnfnll starters will deftnitely be taking Ute fteld m starting
roles and leading the younger, inexpertenced players.
Back from last year are infielders Greg Smtth and Brtan
Hamilton and pitcher Dale Browning Browning, noted for his
pinpoint control, teamed last year with Jeff McKinney to pitch
the Marauders into the state tournament.
Joining him on tbe mound will be smith, who saw some
action at Ute rubber last year, Tim Ebersbach and Tripleti

···rm'
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'•
arge reVIew
.

By ROBERT KAYLOR
or cruninal activity were exWASHINGTON (UPI)
eluded. About 4,500 deserters
The Pentagon, acling in what with charges stili pending
it called "a spirit of would have to return to the
forgiveness and military and be discharged
compassion ," wtll start before becoming eligible.
takmg apphcattons to
Among caregortes that will
upgrade discharges of recetve automatic upgrading
Vietnam..,ra deserters and tothegeneraldischargelevel
other offenders m Part II of are those who were wounded
President Carrer's campaign or decorated, those who
pledge.
served honorably in Vietnam,
The plan announced an d th ose who serve d
Monday involves undesirable satisfactorily for two )ears.
. . th at were to
and general discharges given
01he r crtterta
bel
k
d
durm
' g the war years to more
oo e at on a case- by-ease
than 432,000 servicemen, who basts for upgrading either to
will be allowed to apply for general or honorable level
ed
·
d
reviews that would mean include age, ucation an
automati~ upgrading in some whether the indlVIdual came
cases
and
further fromadeprivedbackgromd ;
constderation m others.
whether consctence, personal
The numbers Involved distress or alcohol or drug
raised the prospect of Ute abuse played a role in the
serVIces being swamped with discharge,
and
the
more applications than appllcant's record smce
present review hoards cculd discluirge.
handle wi~m the 6-to 7·
month time frame envisioned
by Pentagon officials.
But sources said many of
the 259,524 veterans with . SETS CHER STRAIGHT
general discharges covered
WASHINGTON (UP!)
m the program are not PreSident Carter doesn't like
expected to apply, since their to hear Washington referred
discharg es
are
not to as Ute "crime capttal of the
considered dishonorable and United Stales," and is
they already are eligible for enlisting the aid of singer
vererans' benefits
CherBonoAllmaninaneffort
Among tliat group is to stop it.
Carter's oldest son Jack, wbo
Deputy White Hou~e
received 8 general discharge spo,kesman Rex Granum satd
from Ute Navy in 1970 for Monday that members ofthe
smokmg marijuana.
Senate and House District
"This program is being cOIIUI)ittees told carter m a
implemented in the spirit of meetmg two weeks ago they
forgiveness and compassion were disturbed over Che r •s
in which the President has remarks referrmg
to
h
,
·
sought to bind up the Washmgton as t e crune
dtvisions of the Vtetnam capttal" on a relevision show.
era," the announcement said.
Carter told his Cabmet
"Any upgrading obtained in todey he telephoned Cher, an
theprogramwtllbeanactof old friend, and told her the
forgiveness, and prospective "perei)ption was erro~eous 11
in its effect" _ language, and that the descnptton no
Pentagon sources said, longerapphedtoWashington.
designed to rule out any
"A couple of days later she
attempts
to
receive called back and said ~
retroactive benefits. ,
would try to change Utts
Servicemen who deserted perception of D.C. in the
m a combat zone or whose entertainmen I wor id , ,.
infractions involved violence Granum said.

1977

Regional champions opening SEO;\L play
By Greg Bailey
The Meigs Marauder baseballers, defending 1976 regional
AA champions, hnve some big questions to answer this season.
As a matter of fact, about sir questions, as only three starters
are returning from last year's nine.
Last night the Marauders opened their 1977 campaign' at
Wahama, losing H , but it was an impressive loss as the
yomger Marauders looked promising. Tonight they start
SEOALaction by hosting Wellston at Meigs High School.
Coach Dale Harrison feels his untried crew has the potential
to meet last year's standards, but a main hurdle will be the
building of confidence among the players in themselves. With
eight seniors and eight jmiors on the roster, the material Is

Pentagon hegins

deIS

~ - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-P~eroy, 0., Tuesday, March 29,

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- Try our delicious subs while you
sip your favorite suds.
Eat In Or Carry Oul
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a new kitchen
at City Loan.
When you need money for a new kitchen, other home improvements,
or for any good reason, call us. We'll handl.e your loan qmckly and w1th
consideration. Amounts up to $15,000 avmlable.
We find ways to help.

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I H,,

•

•
7

�•

.
c u1re- ows out asc ampion

t - The Daily Sent~ I. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday, March 29, t9n

•

•lit

'"
'"'
'.

,.

...

,.,

said McGuire, "I sat Utere
and thought of all the locker
rooms, the dirty jocks, the
pals and the other things that
a New York street fighter
knows when growing up ."
But it didn't take McGuire
. long to snap . back to the
present. After all, this was
the ninth time In 10 years the
colorful coach had taken
Marquette wUte ('ICAA playoffs - but the first time the
Warriors had won the championship . And it happened.
AFTER he had announ&lt;'ed he·

'

was retiring from coaching.
" I am obviously very
pleased with my family (his
te,am)," saia McGuire. "But,
I am also very sad for (North
Carolina Coach ) Dean
Smith ...! admire .him for the
fantastic job that he did at the
Olympics in winning the gold
medal.
· "His team hit a drought
against our zone and Utat is
unfortunate for him."
Marquette, whose seven
regular-season losses were
the most ever for an NfAA

"

-·

''

.

•

·-''

Rozelle, Davis
By JOE SARGIS
· UP! Sports Writer
PHOENIX WPI) - It
won't be a confrontation, and
no one should see it that wayr.
but Commissioner PeUi
Rozelle and Al Davis, who
owns the Super Bowl
champion Oakland Raiders,
don't see eye to eye on a
proposal to change the
Natio nal Football League
schedule fonnat for 1978.
A number of owners want

.

to cut the exhibition season
from six to four games while
increasing the regular season
from 14 to 16 contests. Rozelle
has gone on record as being in
favor of the plan, al,though he
hedged a bit when pressed on
the matter Monday following
the opening session · of the
weeklong spring meeting of
the NFL club presidents.
"There are many things I

like .about the proposal,"
Rozelle said on Sunday. "I'd
like to hear a little more
discussion
it," he said on
Monday,
"l don't like the plan at
all," said Davis. "I don't see
anything wrong with the
schedules the way they have
been since the merger. I'd
like to see the league keep the
same format and I'll take my
chances on the luck of the
draw."
Since the merger of the
NFL with the American
Football League, which
Davis headed for a year as
commissioner, the format
has been for 14 regular
season games on a floating
basis. Under the !&amp;-game
proposal before Ute owners
now, the first and second
place teams in a division the
year before would play 12 of

on

champion, held a 12-point
halftime lead, 39-27, but the
Tar Heels quickly caught up
by outscoring the Warriors
14-2 in the first four minutes
of the second half.
"Once Ute a1Qllanche came
and we were tied, I tried to
stop the avalanche by
delays,"' said McGuire. "I
called timeouis. 'Usually we
try to do it by (fake) contact
lens timeouts or something
like that. You have to stop the
momentum, no matter

Cook is

disagree;:;':::;~
.

their games against thtHIBJlll' - 28 being cast to affect a
teams. The same would be chang·e.
true of the third and fourth
~·I don't know if that many
place clubs.
owners are in favor," said
"I think the plan would do Davis, "I hope no one
away with most inequities," .interprets this as a confrontssaid Rozelle. "Of course, it lion between Pete and me,
has some weaknesses, but on because it isn't anything like
the whole I like it."
that. It's a simple diHerence
Davis said the only reason of opinion. Look, if the 1&amp;to change the schedule game plan is approved I'll go
format would be if it didn't along with it and never say a
result in the be~t team word. Right now, no one has
eventually
being
the shown me that it's that good a
champion.
plan."
"Excluding my team,"
However, both Davis and
said Davis, "the best team ROZelle are on the same side
has· won the championship of a proposal to increase the
the last five years and no one playoff lineup from eigl\t to 10
can argue about that. The teams by adding two more
current systeq~ has given us a wild cards.
true champion every time
That's was the idea
and our television ratings originally proposed by Davis
never have been better. Wby two years ago and again last
year.
change Utat'"
II would take 21 votes of the

Player faces heavy penalty
,
,·

·'

Tralning Camp Roundup
By FRED DOWN
UP! Sports Writer
Infielder Len Randle of the
Texas Rangers faces a stiff
fine and possible lengthy
suspension today for a twofisted · attack on Manager
· Frank Lucchesi who said
from a ho$pital bed "it was
completely unprovoked."
Randle, upset during the
last four years because he
was switched from position to
· position and angered , this
spring when the Rangers said
rookie Bump Wills would be
their
regular
second
baseman, punched Lucchesi
in the face several times
Monday, according to Texas
teammates.
The 49-year old Lucchesi
was knocked to the ground,
suffered a broken right
cheekbone and was taken to
Mercy Hospital in Orlando,
Fla ., where he was placed
·under heavy sedation. Plastic
surgeons said after a series of
tests t~ey did not thinK
surgery would be required.
Randle,
28,
was
immediately suspended by
clubowner Brad Corbett, who
said, "I would like to suspend
him for a year ... I know of no
way he can remain a
.Ranger."
"Lenny
has
been
suspended pending the
outcome of an investigation,''
said General Manager 'Danny
O'Brien. "It is hard to say
what we will do ."
Ranger pitcher Bert
Blyleven said Randle had ·
hinted Monday morning there
migbt be .a showdown with
Lucchesi, who said last week
he was tired of the player's

gripes about his status. hits in a 9-8 win over the New
Blyleven said he warned York Mets ... Roger Freed's
Randle he could be suspended three-run homer was the big
for life for hitting a manager. blow of a lour..-un seventh
Bly Ieven also revealed that inning which enabled the St.
about a week ago he, Gaylord Louis Cardinals to rally for a
Perry and Mike Hargrove 7-5 victory over the
talked him out of leaving the Cincinnati Reds.
Rangers' camp.
Dave Parker drove in four
"It's just too damn bad runs with' a homer, double
somebody stopped him from and two singles in the
leaving," Lucchesi said when Pittsburgh Pirates' 6-4 1:!he learned of the incident.
"I'm . tired of these punks
saying play me or trade me.
Anyone who makes $80,000 a
year and gripes and moans
all spring is not going to get a
tear out of me."
Though shaken by the incident, the Rangers defeated
the Minnesota Twins s.:; on a
ninth-inning homer by Jim
Sundberg. Tommy Cruz and S~antilal Goradia, Rup a S.
Ken Henderson also homered GOradia to Jerry D. Eads,
for the Rangers while Glenn Wanda L. Eads , Parcel.
Adams collilected for the Rutland.
Clyde J. N&lt;lrlan . Ethel
Twins.
M:lne Morlan to Jane Lee
Elsewhere around the Brooks, Lot 18 , Hickory
camps:
Acres, Orange.
Russell L. Jackson to Olden
Bobby Valentine's threerun homer climaxed a six..run Thaxtoo . Roberta Thaxton,
acre, Racine.
eightinning rally which lifted ..e9Rodney
G. Chevalier, Kirk
the San Diego Padres to an D.
Cheval ier,
Karla
11-10 victory over the O.eval ier, Dor is 0. Eastman.
California Angels, who Roland Eastman ,. Helen M..
, Adrian Roberts,
pounded Cy Yilund Award Roberts
Ralph H. Chevalier, Betty
winner Randy Jones for Chevalier. to
Edward
seven runs and 14 hibl in six Olevalier. Lot. Reedsville .
Helen Chris t i ne Logan ,
innings ... Andy Hassler and
dec ., to Wilbur Fran ·
Greg Shanahan combined in cis
Logan ,
Carl
F.
an eight-bitter as the Kansas logan . · Howard P. Logan ,
City Royals downed. the Aff., Trans., Pomeroy.
Howard P. Logan. Comm :,
Atlanta Braves 2-&lt;1.
Wilbur
dec. to Carl F.
Two-run third-inning loQan, Logan,
Howard P . Logan ,
homers by Darrell Evans and Lofs, Pomeroy.
Willie McCovey led the San
Wayne R. Prince. Bernice
·Francisco Giant.s to a 9-5 D. Prince to Charles E.
Rhodes, Linda L. Rhodes,
triumph over the Seattle 2.52
acres, Olive.
Mariners ...The Los Angeles
William R. Capehart, Helen
Dodgers hammered out 16 M. Capehart to Philip John

1\J_eigs
Property
Transfers

inning decision over the
Chicago White Sox .. .Homers
by Rob Sperring, Leon
Roberts and Art Gardner led
the Houston Astros to a ~
win over the Montreal
Expos ... Jim Rice's three..-un
homer provided the Boston
Red So~ with their margin of
vicwry in a 4-2 triumph over
the Toronto blue Jays .
•
Weaver, Karen Weaver. 1.1

acre. Rutla~d .
Bd. o! Education, Meigs
Local School Dist. to VIllage

of Pomeroy, Lot. Pomeroy.

Ernest A. Wingett, MaKine

Spencer Wlngett1o Harold G.
Roush , Margery E. Roush , 1
acre, Suttont

Marlo N. · Roush, Comm .,
Nartha Emilia Jesse; dec. to

Flora Jesse Lucas. Hertha

Jesse Compton, Erna Jesse ,
Albert Jesse, James R. Jesse.
Edward Jesse , Gene A.
Jesse. Rosalee Jesse Walters.

Barbara Jesse Knepper.

Carole Jesse Council , Albert
Willie Jesse , Edward Young.
Michael
Young ,
Lots,

Pomeroy .

Floro Jesse Lucas. Albert
Jesse , James R. Jesse,
Edward Jesse , Dorothy
Barbara Jesse Knepper,

Racine; 0.

-PHEBE'-STORE
March 2t ~ Apn l 1
Right Ruervecl To Limit Quontltios
We Glldly Atcopt Foci. Food Stomps
Mondoy thru Frkloy
9: 00to7 :00

Erna E. Jesse , Hertha
.Jesse Compton , Norbert W.
C'nmpton to June Wicker·

June Wickersham to Erna

ton,

Albert Byer, dec. to Estello
Byer, Clara Byer Caldwell.
Elizabeth Byer Jackson , All.
for trans ., Middleport.
Estella Byer. dec . to Clara

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'

·

,D ulcimer makmg describe(

..

Mrs. Hysell's fifth grade
class of Pomeroy Elementory had the rare pleasure of
meeting a man last Friday
who not only makes his own
music, but also makes his
instruments.
Willi am Grueser, RD
Pomeroy (Rock Springs) was
the guest. Mrs. Jeanne Braun
of R.S.V.P. arranged his
visit.

Mr. Grueser gave a brief
history of the dulcimer, a
very ancient instrument of
unknown origin. A remote
ancestor of the modern piano,
It probab ly came with immigrants from Norway and
Cen tra l Europe to the
Southern and Appalachian
colonial l;l.reas.

head; joining the tail and
sides; applyilig glue, then
fastening with 15 clamps
tightened to the corr ect
tension . It must set about 24
hours before it ·is finished
· the top and fittings , The
- •th
top wood should not be too
hard; spruce i~a good choice.
The pattern Ior th e sett mgs
'
of the frets was worked ou t on
the computer at Ohio
University. Thev musi be
. acc urate to the smallest
fra ction of an inch. The frets
keys, and other findings ar~
~Urc h ased from a ban jo
factory near Athens.
When a student asked how
much machinery (equipment
to buil4. it) is required, the
answer ,was, uquite a bit"

The dulcimer which Mr.
Grueser
displayed was made
.
With walnut back and tuning
head , birch si des and
buckeye top. The ta il piece
was of osage orange, a wdod
whose hardn ess and strength
ranks with' ebony.
. There are four strings; the
first three being single ply
wires which are tuned to the
note "G." The fo urth is a
coiled wire which is tuned to
the next lower " d" note.
Steps in making the
dulcimer consist of choosing
a p1ece of rather hard wood
such as walnut or cherrv for
the back; saw ing it to shape,
and attaching the tuni ng

which includes among others
.. two
- kinds of sanders'
a Jig,
and a radia l ann saw. The
piece of equipment that he
uses most frequently is a very
small awl from the cabinet

sons and a dau ghter.

a

in answer to a question as to

whether he liked making' '
them he replied that he'd
make them "for free ," if he
couldn't sell them . However
there is an eager public
waiting to buy the hand·
crafted instruments .
Before he left, he played
several selections for the
cl ass :

" Aunt · Rhody ,"

" Farmer in tt.e Dell ,''
nswa nee River, "Red River
Valley," and "When the Roll
is Ca lled Up Yonder," and
then invited the pupils to try
out the instrument. To their
amazement, they were able
to produce som e very
musica l sounds.

r------..-------·-----..----~---.._._.....:...

1
1

Simple facts every on... who
owns a home. car or business should

!How to Get

kn~w

=.

!!":

mined in Ohio reouires
utilities to install expensive
pollutioncontrol equipment to
meet air pollution standaf!ls.
Rather than do that, some
utilities have canceled Ohio
coal contracbl and stepped up
purchases of low-sulfur coal
from out of state.
"Utilities have switched to
low-sulfur co81 from western
markets and taken a wait·
andsee attitude on sulfur
dlo~ide standards," said
Ciechomski.
Of Ohio's 45.4 million ton
production laS\ year, figures
show that 63.1 per cent of the
total came from strl~ining,
35.5 per cent from deep
mining and 1.4 per C.nt
mined by allj!er.
Belmont, Harrison and
Muskingum counties are s)ill
the lop three producing
counties of the 25 coal mining
counties in the state,
accounting in 1976 for 53.8 per
cenl of the·total.
Belmont County mines produced 12,272,017 tons In 1976,
or 26.9 per cent of the total
mined in Ohio. Harrison
County operators mined
7,195,569 tons and Musklngum
operators mioed 5,002,219.
~rterly 1976 production
figures compiled by the

state:
First quarter: deep mining,
4,465,906; strip m i n i n g,
7,511,615; auger, 117,065.
Total: 12,1194,786.
Second quarter: deep
mining, 4,497,044; strip mini
n g, 7,271,841; auger, 195,219.
Total: 11,964,16t.
Third quarter : deep
mining, 3,362,825; strip min l
n g, 6,675,896; auger, 167,048.
Total: 10,205,7119.
Fourth quarter : deep
mining, 3,847,861: strip mini
n g, 7,235,459, auger, 135,888.
Total: 11,219,208.
Totals for the year: deep
mining, 16,173,636; strip
mining, 28,695,011 ; auger,
615,280.
Grand
total:
45,483,9!7.
.
Another factor to account
lor the drop in coal
production has been · the
ilicreased number of wildcat
strikes in eaatern Ohici coal
fields, said Clechomsld,
In 1975, coal mined in Ohio
sold for an average of $15.79,
an average not likely to
change once 1976 sales
figures are gathered, but
almost sure to go up next
year as long-term coal ·
contracts expire, said
Ciechomskl.

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Many peo ple make th e
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Ohio coal production down

By J.R. KIMMINS
coLUMBus &lt;UPI)- ohio
'J
coal
production
has
.1 111
decreaseafourofthelastfive
TtuaJ
years, including a 1,188,884
_
ton drop last year, according
MASON, W. Va.- Mr. and to nearly complete figures
Mrs. Joseph. w. Jones , . compiled by the state.
Mason, are ~t;UI~uncing the · With only a few coal
'marriage of their daughter, companies yet to report their
Mary, to Davl~ w. Smith, 1976productiontotals, figures
also of Mason.
totaled by the Ohio
~- The couple was joined in Department of Industrial
·! marriage :on Wednesday, Relations Division of Mines
• March 16.
-.
show that. Ohio opera'tors
A ring ceremoliy in honor of mined 45,4811,927 tons in 1976.
the w:eddlng w.ill be held at
In 1975, Ohio's 25 coal; the ft!ason United Methodist, producing counties mined
• Church at 2:30 p.. m. on 46,672,111 tons, nearly a 3 per
Sunday, April 3. Friends and cent increase over 197~ and
::i• relatives of the couple ~f the first time since 1911 that
invited thttend.
• .,. ;,c9al
production
had
.. , _: t UlCreased \n Ohio.
'
The decrease from 1975 to
•.
1914 was a little over 2.i per
~
cent and attributable to a
management decision by
Ohio's electric utility
.... ..THREP) DISSOLVED
industry to import more low::" • Three marriages were Sulfur coal from the western
";."' dlsaolved in Meigs ·County United States, according to
: , Common Pleas Court. Henr ;- Ciechomski
';'. Dissolved
were
the superintendent of the sta~
:;i · maJTlages of Gary D. Wright Division of Mines.
": and Cheryl C. Wright; Ed"If you can't selJ. (high
' : ward Elton Sigler and Joyce sulfur) coal, you don't .
· M. Sigler, and Diana Ashley produce it," said Ciechomski.
and Iiavid Ashley .
The sulfur · content of coal

'1

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COY"·•·
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And il you ha ve a claim
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I
D.D.S. from Ohi o Sta te i
·
·
j
U mvcrs1ty
and a master's
degree from Massachusetts ·I
Institute of Technology.
I
1

n ·additi9n to his present
po sition at Ohio State, he has
taught a~ a nu mber of other
·
umversities, and coached at
Illin ois Wesleya n and
Youngstown State. He par. ·
t tcJ
pat ed in foo tba ll n·t
Youngst own Cha ney High
~ch_ ool and at Hiram College,
be
mg named captain of his
tea m at Hiram.
He is the author of many
publica tio ns relat ed to
athletics, denti stry, and
physical conditioning. He and
hi s wife, Jewell Smiley
Diorio, are the parents of two

shop or the late Clarence
Heaton .
It takes one week to construct dulcimer and he has
made 190 of them in the last
10 yea rs. Mr. Grueser
demonstrated the love of a
craftsma n for his work when

Thats the new Channiri feelin~.

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now it was all just a lie

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J.lll I

By Vernon Scoll
" The Omen 's" heavy "Network."
l.Jtlman.
UPI Hollywood Reporter
brooding theme won the
Actress - Faye Dunaway
Documentary feature HOLLYWOOD (UPI ) original score. Oscar for
·
" Harlan County, U.S .A. ,"
"Rocky," the late Peter composer Jerry Goldsmith. in " Network."
Supporting actor - Jason Barbara Kopple.
Finch and Faye Dunaway
The camerawork of Robards in "All The PresiAnimated short - Suzanne
were the three big Oscar "Bound for Glory," the tale of
dent's Men."
Baker,
!'Leisure."
winners at the 49th annual folk singer Woodie Guthrie
Supporting
actress
Beal.Jve
short
- Andre GuttAcademy Awards Monday won the cinem.atography
.
irice
Straight
in
"Network
."
freund~d
Peter
Werner, "In
· night, 1'ith Finch beComing Oscar for Haske! Wexler and
Director
John
G.
The
Regton
Of
Ice.''
the first ·performer w win a its music !wk the best ;core
.
Editing - Richard Halsey
posthumous Academy adaptation Oscar lor Leonard Avildsen, "Rocky."
Screenplay
written
directly
and
Scott Conrad, "Rocky."
· Award.
Rosenman.
for screen Paddy
Sound
Arthur
Finch's performance as the
Barbara Kopple's "Harlan ChayefskY, "Network."
.
Piantadosi,
Les
Fresholtz,
GREG DAVIS
crazed news anchorinan of County U.S.A., " about
Screenplay
based
on
other
Dick
Alexander
and
Jim
Pic.
Greg Davis, ·son of
"Network" won the award violenCI' in the Appalachian
material
William Webb, "All The President's
Mr.
and
Mrs. Harold
for best actor and his costar coal mine country, won the Gcldman,
"All
The
·
Men."
ha s
Davis,
Minersville,
Miss Dunaway, was voted · award for best feature-length
President's Men."
CinematographyHaskell
13
w•eks
of
completed
best actress for her portrayal documentary . The short
Foreign
language
film
Wexler,
"Bound
for
Glory."
basic
training
at
the
u.
s.
of a ruthless tel~vision documentary Oscar went to
Costume design - Danilo
Marine Corps base, Parris
exec;utive who ruins the lives Lynne l.Jtman for "Number "Black and White In Color,"
lvoirienne
De
Cinema
(Ivory
Donati,
"Fellini's
Island,
S. C. His platoon
of her associates.
Our Days" by Community Coast.)
Cassanova."
won
the
highest ratings of
"Network" and ,;Rocky" Television of Southern
Original
song
Ilarbara
Art
direction
George
all
platoons
training In
each captured three of the California.
Williams,
Streisand,
Paul
Jenkins
(set
decoration
,
eight
different
categories.
most glamorous awards
The costmne design Oscar "Evergreen " from "A Star Is G~rge Gaines) "All The
He
will
be
assigned
to
although "All the President'~ went to Danilo Donati for the Born."
President's
Men."
Memphis,
Tenn.,
for
19
Men" led all entries with lour lavish garb of the actors in
Adaptation score
Visual effects (special
weeks
training
In
Oscars.
"Fellini's Casanova."
Leonard Rosenman, "Bound achievement award) - Carlo
helicopt
er
mec
hanics
In addition to the two top
HOLLYWOOD (UPI ) . for Glory .''
Rambaldi, Glen Robinson
school. Davis, now spenacting awarda, "Network" Winners of Academy Awards
Original score - Jerry and Frank Van der Veer,
ding
alii-day leave with his
won the best original Monday night :
Goldsmith·, "The Omen."
"King Kong ;" L.B. Abbott,
family,
was one of 11 men
screenplay Oscar lor author
Picture - "Rocky."
Documentary short - Glen Robinson and Matthew
Ia
a
field
uf 50 promoted to
Paddy Chayefsky and
Actor - Peter Finch in "Number Our. Days," Lynne Yurlcich, "Logan's Run ."
private
first
class.
"Rocky,'' the saga of an
underdog club boxer who
fights for the heavyweight
championship, also took the
best direction Oscar for John
Avildsen and the best editing
honors.
ATHENS - Dr. Louis and varsity basketball Osborne was named as Coach
The Logan senior led the
Jason Robards won the best Diorio, a professor of den- championships
in the
supporting actor award for iistry at Ohio State SEOAL, and advanced to the of the Year this season. His league in scoring with an 18.5
Blue Devils finished third in ~verage (259 points in 14
his portrayal of Ben Bradlee, University and a former regional finals before being
the
league behind Ironton and games and had a 19.7 overall
the tough editor of the college coach, will be the eliminated by Columbus
Logan.
This marks the scoring average (393 points in
Washington Post, in "All the main speaker when the Mifflin. The Columbus team
seventh
season
as head coach 20 games). In league play,.he
President's Men."
Southeastern Ohio Athletic was then runner-up in the of the Blue Devils for hit 43 of 54 free throws (.796 )
Best s upporting actress League basketball banquet is Class AA state tournament
Osborne, who passed the 100 to capture that honor , and hit
winner
was
Beatrice held Thursday, Mar. 31, at this past weekend.
mark in career victories .505 from the field (108 of 214 )
Straight, William Holden 's Ironton High School.
Heading the list of honorees during the season.
along with an 8.4 rebound
spurned wife in "Network."
Tickets for the 6:3() p.m. · in addition to the league
McBroom will be honored . average (118 in 14 league
Finch's Jamaican widow, banquet, to be held at the high champion Tigers are Coach
Eletha, was called to the school cafeteria, are 14 each. Jim Osborne of Gallipolis and · as the Most Valuable Player games ).
Also to be honored are
stage by Cbayefsky to accept Ironton won both the reserve Mike McBroom of Logan. and also as the league's free
throw champion.
members of the first and
the award for her late
second ail-league teams plus
husband.
eight honorable mention
"I wish he were here
selectons.
tonight," Mrs. Finch said,
Dr. Diorio received his
weeping. "Since he isn't here,
bachelor's degree at . Hiram
I'll always cherish this for
College and his master 's
him.' '
from the University of
Barbra Streisand sang her
lllinois. He also received a
own -composition
"Evergreen," returning a
few minutes later to collect
Ute Oscar for best original
SAN DIEGO (UPI ) song it earned her and "Death row author" Edgar Buckley, who helped focus cold afternoon sitting on a
nationwide attention on his former British cannon at the
composer Paul Williams.
Smith, Jr. said Monday the case.
Stony
Point,
N.Y.,
Voted the best foreign fiim celebrated
14-year legal
He succeeded in getting a revolutionary war battlefield,
was "Black and White in struggle that freed him from
federal court judge to rule in thinking about his life. He ·
Color," by the Societe
execution for the ~illing of a 1971 that his ccmfession was decided to return to San
lvorleMe V.c. Ciliema of New Jersey teenager "was
coerced by poiice. Allowed to Diego and surrender, he said.
Africa's Ivory Coast.
all a lie."
plead
"no defense" at a
"I recognized Ute devil I'd
Ahigh point of the 2 hour 50
Smith, calling himself "a second trial, he was found been looking at in the mirror
minute ceremony from the devil,'' admitted killing 15Los Angeles Music Center yearold Victoria Zielinski in guilty and sentenced to 25 to for 43 years was me, and 1
was the surprise appearance Mahwah, N.J. , in 1957. He 30 years - but released admitted what I was,'' he
of heavyweight champ said his defense that police immediately after getting said. "I never admitted the
Muhammad
Ali,
who coerced him inw confessing credit for the 14 years he had truth to anyone, not even
already served.
myself. I didn't want to
interupted
best actor was false.
Smith is on trial em charges believe I am what I am."
nominee Sylvester Stallone of
He decided to return here to
His celebrated struggle to
"Rocky," crying "you stole fa ce trial for attempted of kidnaping, attempted robmy script, you stole my murder in an unrelate d bery, attempted murder and prove his innocence "was a
assault for an attack on lie," he said, calling his
script."
assault after visiting the dead U!fteriya Ozbun, 33, taken at insistence in books and on
Stallone
was
also girl's grave, he said.
knifepoint from a parking lot talk shows that he had been
nominated for writing
Smith, sentenced to death
wronged "judicial theatrics."
"Rocky,'' which featured a lor the bludgeon killing of last October.
He confessed he abducted
Superior Court Judge
flamboyant heavyweight Miss Zielinski, a high school
champ who reminded many cheerleader, won fame as an Mrs. Ozoon, intending to Gilbert Harelson, hearing the
viewers of AIL The actor and author and prison lawyer "tape her up and rape her" trial without a jury, asked
the champ sparred briefly, writing the best selling "Brief and alter a wild freeway Smith if he was speaking of
struggle in his moving car, his own free will and
giving the audience a rare
Against Death" and other stabbed her and fled.
reminded him of his rights.
opportunity to laugh.
books, including a murder
E~plaining
his
conduct
Yes , he replied, "I
The lengthy show was mystery . He attracted
after
that,
he
testified
he
discussed
all my testimony
hosted by Warren Beatty, support from ce lebrities,
visited
Miss
Zlelinaki's
grave
my
attorney before
with
Ellen Burstyn, Jane Fonda particularly conservative
and Richard Pryor.
· columnist William F. in St. John's Cemetery at coming on the stand."
Honesdale, Pa., and spent a
The Oscars were the first
for both Dunaway and Finch.
William Goldman's script
for ''All the President's Men''
was voted best screenplay
adapted from another
medium .

Ring ceremon11
.- set Su··

. WISHBONE

a oz.

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49~

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"'"'.....:IUUJ 1 ~ UCU \.11 ""''

Death row author admits

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Ex-college coach is banquet speaker Mar. 31 ,., i

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Marquette 13 . Technical

"The".........
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MASON FURNITURE

N.lnuel Cou ncil, Carole Jesse
Council. Michael Young,
Linda
Young ,
Edward

team," said Ellis. "We win
together . and we lose
together. When we wi,n,
everybody gebl the glory. But
I'm glad for coach. It's his
last time ...It's a syper way to
go, lor him and fbr us.
"If I .was finishing up my
profession,.I'd like to do it the
way he did it. ·1 think it was
meant to he that way. Alot of
people didn't even thb)k we
could ' make It to the
playoffs."
·. Smith, who also was the
losing~ in the 1968 NCAA
finals, took a philosophical ·
approach. ·
''Marquette hit all the foul
shots down the line, which is
what we did to gel here,'' he
•
said. "When we came back to
tie, I thought we were in
charge. I thought Marquette
National Football ·League's played an inaplred basketball ·
club pre~idents spring game. They did an excellent
meeting .
job alternating a !-3-1 zone,
Details of the triuisaction which kept us from scoring
will be completed at a later inside."
date and will be aMounced on
North Carolina's second·
April 6 during a news team All-America goard Phil
conference in San Francisco • Ford blamed himself for the
At 30, DeBartolo becomes loss.
the youngest owner in the
"I don't think I ccmtributed
NFL. His father heada the at aU to the team," said Ford,
DeBartolo Corp., which owns who has been bothered by an
thoroughbred racetracks, Injured right elbow and
motels , industrial and scored only six points
executive office parks and Monday nigbt.
various building businesses.
"It wasn't a zone defense
DeBartolo is believed to . that hurt. It was the fact tllat
have paid close to $20 million five Marquette players were
lor 90 per cent ownership in playing four North Carolina
the club. Five per cent each players. The last few games
went to Franklin Mleuli, who of the season, it just seemed
owns the NBA Golden State like I wasn 'I contributing w
Warriors, and Jane Morabito, the team."
widow of one of Ute original
NORTH CAAOLINS (S'PI founders of the club.
6 18 ·10) 20, O'Koren 6
It was learned that Joe .Davis
(2 -4) U , Yonakor 3 (0-0 l 6,
Thomas, former general Ford 3 10·01 6, Kuester 2 I 1·21
5, Krat ci sin · 1 IO ·Ol 2,
manager at Baltimore and la
liagir!s 2 (0-0l 4, Bradley 1
talent scout for Miami and (0-012. Buckley o (0-0l o. Wolf
Minnesota, has been given a 0 {0-0l o, Colesco tt ·0 (0.0) o,
0 (O.Ql 0. -C olescott 0 (Q .
six-year
contract
by OJWolf
0, Coley 0 IO·Ol 0, Daughton
DeBartolo to serve as San 0 (0-0l o, Virgil o l0-0) o.
Totals 24 111 · 14) 59 .
Francisco GM.
MARQUETTE 1671 - Ellis
DeBa.rtolo, Thomas and 5 (4 · 51 14. Neary 0 IO ·Ol 0 ,
49ers coach Monte Clark Whitehead 2- (4.4) 8, Lee 6 (J .
19 , Boylan S (4.4) 14 ,
were not im'mediately 7lRosenberger
1 (4 .4 ) 6, Toone
available for comment. Last J (0 -1) 6. Totals 22 (2J-2U 67 .
- Marquette 39,
year, Clark signed a multi- NorHalftime
th Caroli na 27 . Fouled ou t
year contract as coach and - Kuester , O'Kren . Total
fouls - North Carolins 24 ,
general manager.

Marquette, · Mike O'Koren
and Walt Davis of North
Carolina and Cedric Maxwell
of North Carolina-O!arlotte,
which lost a 106-94 shootout to
Nevada-Las Vegas in the
third-fllace consolation game
that preceded the finals.
Ellis, then a fri'Shman, was
·the only current Warrior who
played in Marquette's 1974
NCAA championship loss to
North Carolina State.
"We have a unity on this

Toon e , A -

I ..... .. .__... t'.,• ~

winners in Oscar parade

NFL approves·

Local Bowling

Jesse Walters, John Knepper,

DOG FOOD
MIRACLE
MARGARINE
"
6 Stick
49~
Whi'

points in the first half
Monday night and said he
wasn 'I surprised he had so
few in the second hall.
"When I'm scoring, I know
they'll put two men on me in
the second half," Lee explained. "I can't force it. I
have to look for the ~ther
guys and gel the shots to
them."
Lee was joined on the all·
tournament learn by Bo Ellis
and Jerome Whitehead of

INDIANAPOUS (UPI) .c..
Duke Cook, Sidney, Ohio,
!'HOENIX,, AriZ. (UPI) today became the sixth The saje of the San Francisco
rookie nominated,'to' drive in 49ers tO ll:dward J. DeBartolo
this year's Indianapolis "500" Jr. of Youngstown, Ohio, was
a·pproved Monday at the
auto race.
COok, experienced on the
midget and sprint car
circuibl, was assigned an
Eagle owned by Don
Mergard, Hamilton, Ohio.
Two other cars, both still
unassigned, were also anThursday Reject•
Weekof3;10-77
nounced to increase the field
Standings
lor the May 29 million-dollar
W. L.
race to 20. "nley were entered . Team
Team 4
62 26
by Bobby Hillin, Midland, Team 6
55 33
Tex. One was assigned w Team 5
41 47
36 52
veteran Lloyd Ruby last . Teams 1S. 2
Welker's Ashland
34 54
year.
High Ind . game
Chris
SpeedwaY
offici a 1s Bowers 160; Patti Williams
anticipated a field of 70 to 159 ; Jan Alexander 154.
Hign Ind. 3-games - Patti
compete for the 33 starting
positions. April15 is the entry INilliams 459 ; Charlene Ooczi
4J4 ; Chr is Bowers 393 .
deadline.
High team game- Team 2
289 ; Team 6 281; Team 5 275.
H ig h team J.games NORTHFIELD, Ohio Team
4 787 ; Team 5 768 ;
(UPI) - Manuscript scored Welker's Ash land 7'1'1 .
an upset victory over favorite
Worthy Trot in. the $1,900
Thursday Rejects
featured sixth race at
March 17,1977
Northfield Park Monday
Standings
Team
W. L.
night.
66 30
The winner, driven by Team 4
Team
No.6
63 33
Larry Ward, covered the mile Team No.5
49 47
in 2:09 3-5 and returned JandM
40 56
$15.20, $6.00 and $3.00. Scott G Team No. 1
36 60
Welker's Ashland
34 62
Darn was third.
High
ind
.
game
Patti
The big triple combination Wil iams 171; Charlene Ooczi
of 5-1-4 was worth $1,443,30. 154 ; Patti Wil lia ms 133.
A, crowd of 2,9011 wagered
High Ind. 3-games - Patti
Will iams 436; Charlene Doczi
$378,910.
418 ; Debbie Tillis 373.
High team game - -Team
NEW YORK (UPI) - Wing
Bill Flett of the Edmonton No. 5 283; Team No. 4 282 ;
No. 5 256.
Oilers has been named the Team
High · team 3·gai'nes World Hockey Association's Team No. 5 781 ; Team No . 4
745 ; Team No. 6 690.
player of the.week.
The 33-year old Flett scored
Tuesday Triplicate
five goals; including three in
March lS, 19n
one game, in four games
Standings
Team
Pis.
during the week.
Shamrock Motel
88
Royal O•k Park
69
Byer Caldwel l, Elizabeth Royal Crown Cola
46
39
Byer Jackson , AH. for trans .• Shirts, ltd.
Ruth 's Beautv Shoo
32
Middleport.
Clara Byer Caldwell , dec. New York Clothing
30
High indiv idual game
to James Nelson Caldwell.
Rita Caldwell Little, Lois J. Helen Phe lps 198; Betty
Johnson , Aft. for tran s., Smith 191 ;
Helen Series
- Helen
Middleport.
James Nelson Caldwell. Phelps 527; Betty Smith 465.
dec . to Rita Caldwell Little,
Team high game Lois J. Johnson, Aff . for Shamrock N&lt;ltel 502.
Team high series
trans .. Middleport.
Sha"\rock Motel 1400.

Jesse, Gene A. Jesse. Gene
Jesse. Jack Walters , Rosalee

ROSE

25~b.

what."
.
The Marquette stall turned
out to be more successful
than Carolina's renowned
· four-corners offense. The
Warriors took the lead for
keeps, at 49-47, on a pair of
free throws by guard Butch
Lee, named the oubltanding
player in the finals, and went '
on tO sink 14 of 15 foul shots in
the closing two minutes of
play.
Lee scored 15 of his 19

......J ...__. . ........

Ro~ky, Finch, Dunaway, big

I

..

By DAVID MOFFIT
UPI Sports Writer
ATLANTA (UPI) ~ AI '
McGuire wa$n 't thinking
about having just wcm _the
national championship when
his basketball career came to
an end. Instead, his past
flashed before his eyes.
McG uire 's Marquette
Warriors had jUst defeat~
North Carolina, 67.:;9, in the
NCAA finals Monday night
and he sat quietly, his face
· ooried in his bands.
"At the end of the game,"

....~ -

NewCham1i11.Now
its a bt\l\ler feelin\l.
A fluffier feel in\l. That's
because its almost a
whole inch nuffier
around' There's never
.been a nuffier.tissue than
new Charm in. And the ·
nuffier the ti ssue, the
(Jentler it feelsto your
sRin. New Channin. A
bi\l\ler feelinG' A nuffier
feelinG!
H3B59 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

TAKE THIS COUPON TO YOUR STORE

&gt;

1. 2

I~
I~

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:I !=

~I ...
"
PR OCTER &amp; GAMBLE
8S17CH I g,
-------------~---------------------- ·0
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'
8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., 1\lesday·=~~~

Crusade
slated

__,_...,_

~ERFECT

POLLY"$ POINTERS

-

Polly Cramer

WE ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS

N

:, ". '•(. Gift
SelecliOII

The cancer crusade. will he
carried out in Syracuse on
Aprill5 and 16 by the Asbury
United Methodist Church
change the hem in anything I
By Polly C..riner
Yoimg Adult Class.
usually have the.proper color
DEAR
POLLY
1
hve
just
Plans for collecting for
of
thread on hand due io this
.bought a
but ~xpensive,
cancer were made at a recent
$13.50
cherry dining room stt. How saving. It may take a bit to
meeting of the class at the
and what should I use on the find the proper spot but most
home of Mr. and Mrs. Kenny
table to clean and polish it' hems will ravel out and there
Buckley. Members of the
The lady from whom I bought is a surprising amount of
class donated dessert to the
it used a couple of commer- thread and in rather long
smorgasbord held Sunday at
· ·
cial products anU I have used lengths.
the Meigs Inn as a ki ~k-Qff for
With gilt wrapping paper so
another to try and get the dirt
the Cancer Crusade.
expensive these days I save
and
oil
off.
But
it
still
does
not
It was voted to contribute
look right and there are dull . all from gifts I receive and
$25 to the Christina Smith
and
shiny spots. Can I use iron with a cool iron so it
Fund drive, and to purchase
SOl!p
and water to clean the looks almost new and can be
•
two lilies for the Palm Sundrawers out and how do I used again.- MilS. W.O.
day church service.
•
[)EAR POLLY - When a
clean the velvet in one
The class decided to eonbig bag of potato chips is
·drawer''
-JUDY
P.
tact the Soul Seekers Quartet
DEAR JUDY - I would opened and all are not ea\en,
Mrs. John Sprow, Gallia County ; Mrs. Jolm Wolfe, Meigs
about a performance date in
SOLO THE MOST- Four persons who sold the most
first.try a furniture cleaner to I fold the top over four times,
County; Rachel Warner, who accepted William Dunn's
June and set the annual memberships during the last membership drive of the Tri·
try and remove any old build· attach a clothespin or two and
award
for
Jackson
County;
Mrs.
Nolan
Swackhanuner,
bazaar· for Oct. 14 and 15. .())unty Conununity Concert Association were recognized
up of wax or polish. The dull the . remaining · chips stay
. Mason County and Mrs. Donald Hippensteel, membership
Items for the bazaar are to be Monday evening at the assOciation's 30th anniversary
·
Water
spots may be places where fresh.- MRS. C.W.
drive cha1rman for the four county area. Mrs.
taken to the home of Mrs. dinner and 1977-78 memberships drive kickoff at Rio
DEAR
POLLY
My
water
the
wax
has
been
removed.
Pitcher
Swackhammer
sold-the
most
overall
memberships.
Mrs.
Hope Moore. Buckley and Grande College cafeteria. Honored were, from the left,
After using such a cleaner ac- saver is to fill one side of the
$34.50
llippensteel also thanked Mrs. Wolfe, Mrs. Sprow, Mrs.
Jack Williams were named to
sink with soapy water and the
cording
to
directions
you
will
Keith
Suiter
and
Mrs.
Betty
McGinness
for
their
work
in
handle getting a podium for
have a clearer picture of the other with clean hot water.
acquiring donors for the association.
the classroom.
condition of the wood. If all The washed dishes are dropPrayer to operi the meeting
the old wax and polish is ped into the clear hot water to
was given by Dennis Moore
removed the wood should all rinse rather than keeping the
and the officers' reports were
look the same. It may even hot water running as we used
given. Attending were Dennis
need refinishing, but, if not, to do.
and Cathy Moore, Judy Pape,
I use a bottle washer to
you can start using your
Jean Niday , capta in ; Mr. Lambert .
RIO GRANDE - Mrs. Pat Jackson County; Mrs. John
Janice Lisle, April Harmon,
Mason County Mrs . favorite wax or polish.
clean my coffee pot and a
and Mrs. BiH Menshouse.
Hope Moore, Don and Angie (Clara ) Locnary and Edwin Sprow, Gallia County; Mrs.
An ita Tope , captain ; Mr. Luci l le Swqckhamer . cap Unless the drawers are in a smaller one to clean the
Harden, Judy King, Jean and E. Higgins, original board John Wolfe, Meigs and Mrs. and Mrs, James Beverly , tain ;_Mrs . Sue Brady·, cap·
spout.
Nancy Levernler , Wilma fain ; Miss Hattie Jordan , Mr . deplorable conditionwiping
Kenny Buckley, Barry and mem hers of the Tri-County Swackhammer, Mason.
· Those plastic coniainers
Mrs. Fred Gaul , Mi ss out with a damp cloth should
Providing the program for Mullins, El sie Neal, Leslie and
Carolyn McCoy. Jack and Community Concert
that
strawberries col)le in
Irma
Barnett.
and Mick i Calhoun.
be all that is necessary. Use a
Judy Williams, Roy and Rose Association, were honored at the evening was David Trelevan
Mrs. Gwyn Bibbee, cap· bl'l\sh attachment on your make great holders for air
Jane Ann Denne y, captain ;
Ann Jenkins, and Faye Clif- the Monday night dinner of Ehrman, pianist. Chris Janet M iller and Shi rl ey fain ; Mrs. Jane Coles , Mrs.
Rardin ,
Mrs . vacuum to clean the velvet plants. -KAREN.
Jeanne
the association held at the Rio Epling was dinner chairman. Da iley
ford.
Polly will send you one of
Fern Evans , capta i n ; Elizabeth Matto x, . Mr s. ineddrawer.- POLLY. ·
and Ed Higgins gave the
Grande College cafeteria.
Diana
Cheng
.
her
"peachy" thank-you
i ne HaywarO, Barbara
DEAR POLY- I have to
other charter members of invocat ion . Rio Grande Cather
Bread Tray $17.50
Mrs . Christ i ne Guthrie , shorten every gannent I buy cards, ideal for framing or
Epling , Kathy Bennett, Jan
the board (which· was College prepared the dinner, Wetherh ol t, Joyce Thal er and ca ptain ; Mrs. Pear ley Sayre,
Mrs . Debbie Christian , so I wrap the thread l ravel placing in your family sera!&gt;"
organized in 1947) recognized and Elsie Burns baked Eun ice Niehm .
Dr . and Mrs. Louis Sch· M ichael Sellards , Mr s. out of such hems around a book, if she uses your favorite
by Mrs. Carolyn Roderick, special cakes in honor of the
midt. capta ins; Mrs. Keith Michael Lambert and Mr. small piece of carilboard Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
association president, in· association's birthday.
Suiter , Rod Tolliver , Jane and Mrs. Lowell C. Shinn . . (usually there is some sort of her column. Write Polly's
eluded: Mrs. Leo Bean, Miss
Count~chairmen for this
Circl e, Mr . and Mrs. Merl yn Meigs County - Fay Sauer , tag attached and I use that ) Pointers in care of this
JEWELRY STORE
Virginia Mayes, Mrs. Keith year's membership drive are Ross, Mr . and Mrs. H. 0 cap tain ; Joan Wolfe, cap·
newspaper.
fa in ; Mar ilyn Wolfe , Roberta and keep all these small
Court St., Pomeroy
Suiter, Clarence L. Head, Joe M-lou Morrison, Gallia; Mrs. Francis , Mrs. Red Sui ter
·Carolyn Roderic k. capta in; O'Brien. Nancy Reed and cards with different colors of
Miller, Clyde Mitchell, Mrs. Garnet Stanley, Mason; Mrs. Ga i l Douthitt . Darl yn Cla ra Lochary .
thread. When I have to
TUESDAY
Joe Moch, Mrs . Chart'es Bea Douglas. Mei gs and Hargrove , Chris Epling and
Lucille
Swackhamer,
captain; Bi ll Young , Rebecca
CUB SCOUT Pack 235 Holzer, Sr., Mrs. W. Lewis . Rachel Warner, Jackson . Greg Lesch schi r..
20,000 DEGI&lt;EES FAI-/RENI-IEIT
Gallia-Jackson Vocational Pa te1Mrs. Archie Lee . Willie
Chester-Tuppers Plains, Brown, Mrs. Marguerite There are 110 workers for the
Maude
Coats.
Martha
High
School,
Janet
Tuesday 7 p.m. at scout hall Meier, Miss Janet Bailey, drive. They are :
Wetherholt; Hannan Trace, Husted. Mieigs High· School;
in Chester .. Buffet style Mrs. Harris Doepping,
Gallia County, cap tain . Beverly Ge ttle s; Norlh ' Ter esa Van f.J\.eter ; Laura
·dinner.
Kenneth Davis, Rev. Scott Marion Ford : Bess Grace , Gal l ia, Sara Spur lock ; Gall ia Hoov er . Paula Eich i nger ,
CARPENTER - Mr. and
EVANGELIST Drummond Westerman, Mrs . Rodney Jon Halla s, Becky Noll. Academy , Rod Tol liver , Jon La urie Woods. Jenny Gra te.
Phyllis Rowan , Ida Tha ler ,
Kathy Davis, captain ; Judy
Ha llas and Jane Circl e.
Mrs.
Raymond Nelson, Mrs.
Thom, speaker at Chester Downing, Mrs. E. Bartow Dr . and Mrs. Don Thaler .
Jackson County Mrs. Ei chi ng er . -Sib ley Slack,
Seve
Booth and daughter,
Church of God, Tuesday 7:30 Jones.
cap
ta
in;
Dorot
hy
Morr
is.
Lee
Pat M i lls, (:aptain ; Mary
Mar y Kathry n Sma lley, Mr .
p.m. Public invited.·
Approximately 75 persons Etten Lingo, June Adams, Kim Martin, Mi ss Barbara Lee, captain ; Mr . and Mrs. and Mr. and Mrs. Rex
Philson .
Ma&gt;cine Cheadle, local, joined with
POMEROY Chamber of attended the 3oth anniversary Betty M c Kinn ess , Dene Wilson , Mrs . Sharon Jones, Ben
Wagner , Katie Sprow and
Whitehead , captai n.
Mrs.
Katie
Sadler
,
William
dher family members, Mr.
Commerce Tuesday, noon at celebration which was also a Marfa Dean.
Dun n and Mrs . Orpha
md Mrs. Robert Deihl and
the Meigs Inn.
recognition and membership
rons, Millbury, Ohio; Mr. and
THURSDAY
drive kickoff ·dinner. The
Mrs. Keith Nelson and
SOUTHERN Athletic association is conducting its
rni!dren and Mr. and Mrs ..
Boosters Thursday at the 1977-78 membership camJoe Paskievitch and children, ""'•"
high school at 7:30p.m. Final paign through April 2.
Pickerington, Ohio; Mr. and
Mrs. Carolyn Hippensteel,
plans for the basketball
Mrs. John Johrent, Me·
drive chairman, noted that
banquet will be made.
I Thnald, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs.
SUTTON Township workers will be canvassing
Owen . Bubo and children,
Trustees special meeting the four county atea served
Reynoldsburg and Mr. and
Thursday, 8 p.m. at the by the association until
Mrs. Jack Gilkey and
Syracuse Municipal Building. Saturday, Those persons who
dlildren, Albany, to help
Purpose to review truck bids. are not contacted and ate
E
their father, Earl Nelson,
interested
in
memberships
ANNUAL inspection,
celebrate
his
80th
birthday
at
may
visit
the
drive
Pomeroy Lodge I64, F&amp;AM,
HUNDREDS OF
lis me ll Albany on March 13.
7:30 p.m. Thursday at headquarters at 16 State St.,
temple; all Master Masons Gallipolis or call 446-2134 be·
tween 9 a.m. and 4 p.m.
invited.•
Tuesday through Friday and
LAFF . A . DAY .
MIDDLEPORT Youth 9 a.m. to noon on Saturday.
filmed
·Baseball League Thursday 7 Memberships are ~vailable
p.m . in old co!.i'ncil room. at a cost of $10, adults; $5,
Interested persons· urged to senior citizens and students
\DAPTED FOR THE SCREEN
attend.
and $30, family. She noted
\ND DIRECTED BY RON ORMOND
~IDAY .
, that this year's slogan is
DR. R. G. LEE
DR. JACK HYLES
EASTER"'bazaar, Meigs "Make It A Family Affair"
County Humane Society, and urged workers to acquire
Pastor Henry Cook invites everyone to see
Friday and Saturday at the many family memberships.
this
outstanding film.
Thrift Shop across from the
Community Concert
Pomeroy Post Office. Baked representatives from New
APRIL 3RD AT 7 P.M.
goods, candies, homemade York,
Betty
Miles ,
soup, flo'!'era and gift items congratulated the association
AT
to be sold.
on its 30th birthday and said
ORIGINAL MEMBERS- Mrs. Clara Lochary and Ed Higgins, original members of
that Co(Ilmunity Concerts is
the
board
of directors of the Tri-Co4nty Community Concert AssOciation, were recognized "Myrlle .. lelia oul here wants
'the only blirgain left today
COUPLE TO WED
Monday
evening
at an association dinner. Mrs. Lochary and Higgins are standing beside a my opi n_~?" on something! ''
Pomeroy , 0.
RACINE - The open in ihe world of enMain &amp; Court Street ·
cake
specially
prepared
in honor of the association's 30th anniversary. In the background
tertainment."
churc h wedding of Miss
are left to right, Carolyn Hippensteel, membership drive chairman and carolyn Roderick,
Mrs. Miles said Community
Melania Waldnig and Wesley
association president.
Barnett will be an event of Concerts "brings good live
Saturday, April 2, at 2:30 professional entertainment to
SHARE THE JOY
p.m. at the Wesleyan United your community."
was
married
to
Supreme
Those born on this date are
The Almanac
There is no other manner In
Methodist Church, 405 Fourth
Court Justice Thomas Dodd.
under- the sign of Aries.
OF EASTER
United
Press
International
In 1971, Army Lt. William
St., Racine, instead of at the which good family en·
Jolm
Tyler,
loth
president
Today
is
1\lesday,
March
Bethany Methodist Church as tertainment can be achieved
of the United States, was born Galley was found guilty in the
WITH FLOWERS
murder of 22 civilians in
wsa previously aMounced. at such reasonable cost, she 29, the 88th day of 1977 with March..29,_.l790.
59 N. 2nd St.
noted. The local associatin 'l/7 to follow.
Vietnam. .
992-5560
On thlS day in history:
The moon is between its
presented three concerts a
In 1973; the last U.S. troops
BARGAIN DAYS
In
1812,
the
first
wedding
first quarter and full phase.
left' South Vietnam and the
There will be a "bargain year and offers . the op·
The morning star is Mars. was performed in the White last American prisoners of
day" rummage and bake sale portunity for its members to
House.
Mrs.
Lucy
Payne
The evening stars are Merfrom 9 a.m . to 3 p.m. attend other area concerts. In cury, Venus, Jupiter and Washington, sister-in~aw of war were freed by North
•HYDRANGEAS
Saturday in the basement of adr1't ion, new members this Saturn.
President James Madison, VIetnam.
In 1975, President Ford
Sacred lleart Ch,urch, Y•hr will be allowed to attend
•ULIES
signed a $22.8 billlon tax
Pomeroy. Each piece of the April22 concert of pianos!
•AZALEAS
reduction bill enacted by
merchandise will he priced at Thomas Schumacher.
Scheduled on the 1977-78
Congress.
·
only 10 cents and baked goods
•MUMS
will be sold· at a reasonable season are Paul Lavalle and
the Olamber Music Society of
A thought for the ,day :
price.
Lower Basin Street; Hal
CARPENTER. - Pam (ianned for the fast week in Scottish novelist Robert
.,
Shane a 11rj The Orpheus Trio . : Holcomb, Laurel Grange ; April. Mmdi!l J.ordan, deputy · Loul.s . Stevenson· .sald :
SOUP SUPPER SET
•WITH
EASTER
TRIM
RUTLAND - A soup Mrs. Miles said it promises to Ray Midkiff and Larry Mont-· master, is urging all·a ·ranges "Everyman is his own docwr
~mery, StarGrange; Emma to participate .
of divinity, in the last resort."
supper will be held by the be an " exciting series."
Mrs.
Wiles
said
that
anyone
English
and Keith Ashley,
United Methodist Women of
the Rutland United Methodist is a prospect for an Racine Grange, and Mr. and
•ROSES
Your assurance of quality. From
Olurch Thursday beginning association member and Mrs: Ellrl starkey, Bertha
•CARNATIONS
inside, out - only the finest
at 3 p.m. In the church urged the workers to "sell out Crippen and Mr. and Mr..
basement. Soup by the bowl 'that auditorium.'' She con- Mendall Jordan , Columbia
materials are used.
•CYMBIDIUM ORCHIDS
or quart, sioppy joes and pie eluded with the following Grange, represented Meigs
quote,
"if
it
is
to
be,
it
is
up
to
County
at
Victory
Grange
in
will be available. Soup will be
Jackson County th e evening
delivered to ill and shut-ins me."
Mrs.
Hippensteel
reminded
ri
March 18 when State
within the town limits. Those
•FRESH CUT FLOWERS
workers
that
membership
Gra
nge Executive Coin- AlE lPHOLS IERED FURNITURE
wishing to take soup out are
cards
will
be
mailed
in
the
mittee
member,
Ralph
to take containers.
'
fall . All concerts are held at McConnell , conducted a
the, Ga:li• Academy High District meeting to discuss
SHRINE TO MEET
School
auditorium.
the Grange program for the
Mary Shrine 37, White
Honored 1or selling the new Grange year.
Shrine of Jerusalem, will hold
Topics reviewed were
a business meeting at 2 p.m. most memberships during
cash 'n carry orders
last
season's
drive
was
Mrs.
membership,
community
Saturday at the Pomer0y
'
Masonic Temple preceding Nolan Swackhammer, Mason Service and what the Grange
PlACE OUT-OF-TOWN ORDERS EARLY!
the installation of officers at 8 Coun.u-. Those selling the Ills to offer, including its
most
memberships
in
their
legislative
influence.
p.m. Potluck refreshments
A membership drive is
will follow the installation. counties were William Dunn.

Vacuum clean velvet drawers

PRICES GOOD niROUGH SAT., APRIL 2, 1977 ·

"Any Occasion"
SILVERPLATE ;

O.
.,.PEN MON. THRU SAT, 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M.
OPEN ~UNDA Y 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M.

II""'·

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

Membership drive underway

SUPERIORS

Association honors 30th birthday

Social
Calendar

FRANKIE
WIENERS
12 oz.
PKG. .

RIBS
OF BEEF

Goessler

80th birthday
is celebrated ·

CHUNK
BOLOGNA

LB.

a11d 11ot a drop of water

LH.

----------~----~ ~

·=

;"i

Fl.()llR

'!

...

,.,...~ ~·."
I I••"

5 LB. BAG

I

COUPON

GLAD
TRASH BAGS
No. 155
10 Ct. Pkg.

·s9~

Coupon Exp. April2, 1977
Twin City Gateway

MARGARINE
1

p~~- 49~

Marga rine

BANQUET WHOLE FRIED

CHICKEN
2 LB. BOX

PRICES

SWEET ROLLS
SrNE

No. 205
' 32 oz , Btl. .

99~

Coupon Exp. April2, 1977
·Twin City Gateway

1

·3 LB. BAG

CO UPON

No. 85
64 oz. Btl.

Coupon Exp. 2, 1971-·
Twin City Gateway

.
•'

"

$}99

!'

~

~~119_.

Coupon Exp. Apri12, 1977
Twin City Gateway

HUNGRY JACK
INSTANT POTA

89~

Coupon Exp. April2, 1977
Twin City Gateway

69.~

Coupon Exp. April2, 1977
Twin City Gateway
COU PON ·

COUPON

No . 455
32 oz. Box

Coupon Exp. April 2, 1977
Twin City Gateway

HUNGRY JACK
PANCAKE MIX
No . 125
2 lb. Box

CHEF BOY-AR-DEE'
SPAGHEnl SAUCE
No . 155
29 oz .. Jar

99~

No. 125
24 Ct. Pkg .

COUPON

..

---~ ~

CLING FREE
SHEETS

LB.

COLD .POWER
·SOAP POWDER
No. 235
.49 oz. Box

COUPON

CABBAGE

79¢

PKG.59~

~-

GREEN

APPLES

COUPON

.D YNAMO
LIQUID DETERGENT

FRESH
SOLID HEADS

FRESH CRISP
RED DELICIOUS
WINESAP OR
GOLDEN DELICIOUS

~

. PALMOLIVE ~
DISH LIQUID

$1

89

BETSY ROSS

COUI'-ON ·

VASE ARRANGEMENTs

I

BLUE BONNET

to~

CORSAGES

[

49e

6

SCOTT TOWELS

TERRARIUMS

BAKER FURNITURE

POLISH
SAUSAGE

BOXES

POTTED PLANTS

20~

87¢

LB.

4 $1

PEOPLES CHURCH OF POMEROY

the more you like it

STEAK
1

MACARONI &amp;
CHEESE DINNERS

in the Holyla11d

The longer you own n,

SUPERIORS SMOKED

CHUCK

KRAFT

WONDERS

. . . -X STEEL

59~

LEAN &amp; TENDER .

PILLSBURY
FLOUR

BIBliCAl

Grangers attend district event

DEALERS PLEASEI

79~

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TUNA

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�t- Tbe D&amp;Uy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0.,Tuesday •March 29 •1977

Stewarts entertain
past OES officers

..............«m·;s·;~~o;:;::o;:;.-;:_;:,-.;.:;o:::,o:.:-:-:·~=·:::·:::::-:·:·:::~~·~:::·:·::::;:::::::::;:::
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Generation
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. By Helen and Sue Bollt'l
llewlll'e:

Saytug

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II Belie\'lui!

Deer Helen and Sue :
·
I'm golngoutwithaguy !really love a lot. The problem is I
think he's too good for me. I'm·very insec:ure, and have had
1cCa of troubles. I can't understand why a wonderful, popular
feDa would love me and when he aald he did, I cried.
Now I cry evecy night because I'm afraid of being hurt
111atn, oi what wiU happen to me if (like last time) it ends. I
feel 80 Inferior.
'
.
!keep uklng him to reassure me. He doesn't understand
how much I worry. He's helped me a lot and made me feel like
a 110111ebody, but I need more convincing.
. .
P1.ease teach me to accept what he says as the truth, and
ool always .bave those "whatlfs." - WVING HIM
Dear L.H.:
.
You need a new view of yourself, and you'D never find 11 as
long as you give In to those "lnferi&lt;:r" feeUngs . In fact, you
may cause what you dread most - another break-up - by
teWng your guy over and over again that you aren't worthy of
blm. One of these days,he'Ustart believing you!
.
Doo 'I beg for re8118W'ances : that's not only embarrassmg
but boring-and useless. It drives people away. Instead, work
on building up self-esteem. Count your triumphs, not your.
fallures. Re~ive your good experiences, don't wallow in the
bad. If you must think of past hurts, consider them ''teacher/'
Remind yourself that you wouldn't have this great new guy, if
you hadn't lost th~ last one -and aren't you lucky to be rid of
blm!
"Accentuate the JIOBitive" isn't just a song - it should be a
way of life. Hit the best, kid ! -HELEN

+++

A Word From Sue:
You may never entirely outgrow fear of failure : most
senaltive people have it, especially If they've been knocked
down by family )roblems or lack of understanding somewhere
along the line.
But caving in to that fear only makes it worse. So pretend a
little. Practice being self-assured and - yes! - proud.
Remember you're "a somebody" or this terrific !ella wouldn't
have noticed you. Knock off the grateful beggeract and let him
know be's got a winner (even if you don't quite believe it yet) .
And repeat to yoiD'self at least 25 times a dsy, ':I'm a
fantastic person!," recalling au the ''wins" you've had, rather
than the losses.
I'm quite sure your new boyfriend will help you - he
already has -if you resolve to douse the worry and ltuly enJOY
the )resent.

linda Lemley
ENGAGED- Mr. and Mrs. WUliam Butcher, 961 S.
Second St., Middleport, are announcing the engagement
and approaching marriage of their dsughter, Linds
Lemley, to John Patterson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Patterson, Mason, W. Va. The ,wedding will be an event of
AprU 17 at 5:30 p.m. at the Addison Free Will Baptist
.Church. The custom of open church will be observed. The
bride-&lt;!lect is presently employed at Nelson's Pharmacy
in Pomeroy. Mr. Patterson is employed at the Ohio Valley
Publishing Co.

· Brewer, Eula Hensler, Hnd

Amy and Shelly Metzger.
Sending gifts were Marcia,
Dehhie and Kay Hager, Mrs.
Amy Metzger,'Mrs. Lee Mr.t-

SYRACUSE - Aclass party was held recently ai the
Syracuse First Church of God
for the Youth I Class of the
Sunday school.
Prayer was given by Norma Wilson and pizza, sandwiches, cookies, potato chips
and soft drinks w~re served
hy Terri Roush and Tina
Randolph.
Bible games were conducted. Two teams were
formed· and questions were
asked to challenge the
students' knowledge on Bible
subjects. Attending besides
those named were Dale Rifne, Becky Koehler, Jo Ann
Wears, Sherry Wears, Kim
COUPLE VISIT
Dr. and Mrs. E. A. Tracy,
Columbus, visited his
mother, Mrs. Nellie Tracy,
Pomeroy, over the weekend.

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FESTIVITY PLANNE;D
RACINE - Theo.&amp;uthem
Band BOolters will sponsor a
IIIIOI'galbord beginning at
11:30 a.m. Sunday at the
Southern High School
cafaerta. Tickets at the door
wiD be p lor adults and $1.25
for cblidren. Pnkeeds will go
to help pay for new uniforms
and IPCJIIIOI' concert trips to
thf Olllo Capitol, Columbus,
and Cedar Point, Sandusky.

.,

By ALINE MO!IBY
PARIS (UP!) - The mini
bu tiptoed back into the
Pula winter ready-to-wear
c:ollectlona.
Farfnmseizlngpower, the
18'17 alJove.the-llnee llldrt; Ia
just one of numerous length.!
from ankle to hi]lll that the
readymade faahion . ho.Uies
are showing to buyers and '
)reaa,
Dealgner Karl Lagerfeld of
the firm Chloe, one of the
11101t widely watched and
copied ready-to-wear
designers, confirmed at his
show today the lhort trend
that surfaced In smaller
collections last week.
Lagerfeld'a minla came out
of bls "Caaanova" look that
echoed tbe currently popular
Italian ftlm. The Lagerfeld
mannequina looked like fugllives fl'lllll a movje ~ lD
black satin buccaneer cuffed ·
Casanova boOla or gaiters,
black aatln knickers, -lacey
white blouses and balr tied at
the back with boww.
Wide-brimmed bats
trailing feathers were
Casanova touches lor full
midllklrta with aoft, loose
jacketa or Caaanova lhort
capes. Lagerfeld put bands of
•fur on bema and necklines of
full wool skirts or printed
chll!on evening dreua.
One
sporty-looking

.t

H Mason County

Casanova oul.flt '11'11 aladtted
laveodermlnllldrt and bulky
sweater over lavender tlgbtl
like arandpa •a winter
underwear
and
pink
bucc-r galterbootl.
But moat ol tbe above-lmee
dr- 11'«11 for evening.
Bearing UWe fell!llllblance to
the mini of the 1118tl1, the
Lagtrfeld venlon as In other
lbows looked 111«8 Wr.e a 101!, .
easy tunic.
Although aome st1rta were
aa abort aa pliyalcally
polllllble, not me leg showed.
Wltb every mini went black
aatin boots zipping to the top
of tbe tblgh.
Ankle boola wltb buccaneer
cuffed gaiters went with the
longer mld&lt;aU swirling
skirts even when they were
Jiemnied in fur.
The designer foiDid another
ll'OYOCative length In the
compfun!se dreu; mlckalf
m one Pte. hiked up on the
'*her to above the knee. Or
long In front and lbort in
back. Tbe manneqWn8 looked
aslf they forgot to poll down
their aklrta properly. Other
midi aklrta were apllt up the
sides or lront to show those
atra~ong bootll.
The Olloe line Included lots
r1 blllowinll evening aackchemlsa dreuea, another
runaway idea in the winter

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Committee.

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MASON - The Maaon Extension Homemakers met March
22at the former Lewis historic home in Mason with Mrs. Cecil
&amp;nithc !&gt;irs. Murl Megee and Mrs. Nancy VanMeter as
hostesses.
Mrs. Laurene Lewis, president, presided when the group
voted to have a )\!other and Daughter Banquet on May 6 at the
annex Clifton United Methodist Church at 6 p.m. The dinner
will b.i potluck. Mrs. Nancy VanMeter, Mrs. Carl Smith and
Mrs. WUliam Zerkle will be In charge of the program. Those to
plan the menu are Mrs. Alburtice Young, Mrs: George Carson
and Mrs. Evelyn Stewart.At the openine of the meeting followng the Pledge of
Allegiance to the Flag, Mrs. Nancy VanMeter presented the
devotionals Luke 19 :2S-J8 verses and a reading, "He Needs Me
Too."
. Reports were given by Mrs. Landon Smith on poisonous
plants; treasurer, Mrs. Alburtice Young and secretary, Mrs.
John Marshall.
For their community project, the g,roup voted to plant
shrubbery on each side of Clifton's Honor' Roll the second week
in A]ril.
·
.
The president acknoqledged thank you cards from Mrs.
Cecil Smith, family of Jerry Loper and the Lester Johnson
family. The club sent flowers to Mrs. Smith, a club member,
during her recent hospitalizaton.
Mrs. WUliam (Lilah) Zerkle presented an excellent lesson
oo "Death in the Family."
She said there are five stages people go through with a
terminal Illness, denial, anger, bargaining, d~!!&gt;reaaion and
acceptance. Some of the contents of the lesson were taken from
Dr. Elizabeth Kubler Ross' book. A book, Free Fall, ":as
donated to the Mason Ulrary by Mrs. Zuspan in memory of
her sister, Mrs. Vicki Gloeckner, Mrs. l.erkle reported.
The lesson leader closed with a reading, "I Was Sick and
You Visited Me." HosteSses,for April are Mrs. George Carson
and Mrs. WUliam l.erkle.
Refreshments were served by the three hostesses to Mrs.
Evelyn Stewart, Mrs. Landon Smith, Mrs. Fred Spencer, Mrs.
Laurene Lewis, Mrs. MaWds Noble, Mrs. John Marshall, Mrs.
William Zerkle, Mrs. Alburtice Young, Mrs. Lawrence Roush,
Mrs. ·George Caraon and Mrs. Clara Williams.

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It's time to turn to the
rea I estate section
of our classifleds. You'll find a
new 'ouse that can make
cramped living seem like something
out af a fairy tale.

. MASON PERSONALS
Mr. and Mrs. George Carl!Qn attended DHIA State
meeting on Frldsy !l'ld Silturdsy at tbe Ramads Inn at
Wheeling, W. Va.
Mr.' and Mrs. Harry Dahlstrom of Columbus visited ber
mother, Reverend and Mrs. Achsah Miller in New Haven
recently.
The Oak Grove United Methodist Church will have a
apecialservice at 7:30p.m. on Palm Sunday, "The Life of Our
Lord in Scripture and Solig." The Rev. Bohhy Woods, pastor of
the church, has extended an invitation to the public to attend.

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PICNIC
HAM

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. ' DAVID ACREE, SEATED, has been named director
for the youth ministry of the Midd]J!port United
Peniecostal ·Church. With him is Mark Sauters who w1ll
assist Acree.

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:.: : FUNNY BUSINESS
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for in the Oassified Section of the

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A' miw leadership staff has
been appointed by the Rev.
William Knittel, pastor, for
the youth department of the
Middleport United Pentecostal Church.
David Acree was appointed
youth directo&lt;)or the young
ministry and among his
duties is taking complete
charge of youth services, held
Friday evening, "rranging
for musicians, song leaders,
speaker and special, events.

Named to assist Acree was
·Mark Sauters who is youth
president.
Also appointed to the youth
department staff is Jeannine
Craft who will serve as
publicity director for that
department. Her duties will
consist of writing news articles on special youth services and activities. Miss
Craft sings with her family in
a quartet.

KUNTA'S KIN
KANSAS CITY, Kan. (UP!)
- Author Alex Haley paid a
brief visit to some distant
relatives of Kunia · Kinte
Monday night at the home
where he came for help in his
12-year search for the story of
"Roots".
Floyd Anderson, a retired
city employe, and his sister
Bea Neely, a retired school
teacher, are sixth generation
descendan!f of the African
Kinte and third cousins to
Haley.
.
It was to their mother,
Georgia Anderson, that
Haley came for help in
tra ci ng the story of hi s
ancestors. Mrs. Anderson,
who died several years ago,
was the last person alive who
knew many of the persons of
whom Haley wrote.

ROCKY, ASSAD HUDDLE
DAMASCUS, Syria I UP!)
- Former Vice President
Nelson Rockefeller met with
President Hafez Assad
Monday for talks described
officially as "private."
Rockefeller. arrived in
Syria Sunday on the last leg
of a Middle East tour which
included earlier vis its to
Egypt, Jordsn and IsraeL
The former New York
governor and his wife,
Happy, were scheduled to
depart for Washington
Tuesday.
Official spokesme n
revealed no details of his
talks with Assad.

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THE DAILY SENTINEt

NntJ.~t

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oz.

RATH

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ENDS

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PRODUCE

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$1 49 --..~~
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Carton

Beef Flavor

DOG

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15'h oz .
Cans

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"It's an invitation to a coffee to discuss the coffee boycott!"
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TRY OUR DELICIOUS
HAMBURGERS
' Meat Grou~d Fresh DailY

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FRESH &amp; LEAN

by Gill Fox ·

SIDE GLANCES

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SLICED
WHOLE

Youths' leaders .named

theleft
Newon M011
::.. !, represented
The ladles
_ 'da!
..
,
., •. afternoon. The theme was,

LB. sg~

WHOLE

NEW HAVEN -Several ladles attended tbe 47th annual
meeting of the West VIrginia Garden Club at the Greenbrier,
White Sulphur Springs, W. Va., recently.
Representatives of the Nehacllma Garden Club that
.attended·were Mrs. Michsel Merritt, Mrs. Mel Clark, Mrs.
Ortha Fields, Mrs. William Glbba, Mrs. David Simonton, Mrs.
Roy Jones, Mrs. Samuel Moxley, Mrs. Larry Wiley and Mrs.
John Thorne.
Mrs. Roy Eshenaur
Pleasant Garden

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CORNER MILL &amp; SECOND ST.
We Accept Federal Food Stamps -

MORMON LEADER 82
SALT LAKE CITY (UP!)
- Mormon Church President
Spencer
W.
Kimball
celebrated his 82nd birthdsy
ELUiBERG TO TALK
with his usual 12- ·
WILMINGTON , Ohio Mondsy
hour workdsy and a family
(UP!) - Wilmington College dinner party at his home.
officials announced Mondsy
Kimball, the "prophet, seer
that ·Daniel Ellsberg, who and revelator" of 3.5-million
disclosed the Pentagon Mormons, spent the dsy at
Papers several years ago, his desk iil the LDS Church
will speak at the school April Office Building, preparing for
MASON - Miss Mary Jones, dsnghter of Mr. and Mrs. 4.
the ,church's H7th annual
Joseph W. Jones, Maaon, and David W. Smith, son of Mr. and
Eilsberg., a
former General Conference this
Mrs. Cecil &amp;nith, Mason, were united in marriage on March strategic analyst for the weekend.
16 at the United Methodist Church in Virginia.
Rand Corp., is to deliver a · "I never slow down long
' Aring ceremony will be held here Sunday, April3 at 2:3~ free, public lecture at 8 p.m. eno ugh to die, " Kimball
p.m. at Mason United Methodist Church with the Rev. Robert at the Kelly Religious Center said.
Maring officiating. A reception wiU follow. Fmnds and on campus.
relatives of the couple are invited.

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OPEN DAILY
9 TO 10
SUNDAY
10 TO 10

(I

Mrs. Ollie Browning taught the lesson, "Death in tbe
Family." Her references were taken from the books, "Life
Alter Death" and "You Live After Death."
RefreShments were served by the hostess to Mrs. Charles
Stone, Mrs. Luther Smith, Mrs. Oscar Casto, Mrs. Gerald
Clark and Mrs, K. K. Scites.

collectlonl.

You'll find the horne you're looking

}

LETART "- The Cher'Olee Exte1191on'ltornemakers met at
the home of Mrs. OWe Browning' on 'J'Uelllay evening, March ·
22. The ~~· was called to ord81'·by the ]resident, Mrs.
Oscar Casto.IJlhe Pledge ofiWlleglilhdfto thf1Fiag was given.
Mrs. OWe lBrolfnlrig•lilas iri clulrge&lt;•clr the' devotionals.
First Corinthlans.J3)'1!1th v'etle. Her topic was "Give Us More
Vision." .
'• rJo . .(: ·-lA.u~
·
Mrs. Gerald Cl&amp;r11:1SerVM·as ~tetary'dilrlng the absence
of the secretary, Mrs. Vlo~ Stanton, whO at ·thst time was
hospitalited. ' ,.,
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The club ·"Is ,,invited : to "attend a candy making
demonstration 'andllJie ·dli'te will be amounced later. Mrs.
Luther (Sally) Smith gare:a ri!Poi't olr~celand, the country the
homemakefll ' ire•· studyingr-this .-1ellr. 'MrSi Gerald Clark
· reported on' hl!r' pl8111 for the Health Committas.
Mrs. K. K."' Scites reported ·•on ' Public Information

I

Birthday
celebrated

MARKET

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LAKIN- The foster grandparents at Lakin State Hospital
here honored Stella Krebs, secretary of the Foster
Grandparent Program, with a surprise party on March IS.
Aftendlng were Edna Doerfer; Rlda Morrison, Virgie
Stewart, Norma Craig, Sarah Mallory, Lorenzo Mall~,
Harry D&amp;vls, ·l!Alrene Goggins, . Jemy Arrington, Linda
Northup, Ma)'llrCJevenger, Enahelle·See, Rose Sebrell, Judy
Corbin, Vickie Sargent,· Etta HaU 1'Edith Rosl, IMh Knopp,
Mary Hoffmlill',1tlllda 'Bowles, War\da SandeU, Nora Wartenburg, Ethel BeckilerJ&lt;James!.:HU8ha( Virginla Black, Gusta
Baker at ~thei'ltie Beaver,;lllefreSIIrilents·were served to aD
and the hdnOI'~&amp; l'ecellied&lt;many nice gifts.

,

SERENA DAVIS

SUPER

News ·Notes \ \

·By Alma )VIarshatl

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zger, Mr. and Mrs. Ernie
WelLs, Mrs. Ora Moore, Mrs.
Merle Manley, Mrs. Ethel
Hossler, "'rs. Patsy Ogdin,
Mrs. Billie Jo Krawsczyn,
Marty and Mary, Craig
Darst, John Metzger, Jessie
Serena Renee Davis
Houchins, Vicki and Susan
Houchins, Ann and Penny celebrated her second birthRife, Agnes White, Alice day recently at the home of
her grandparents, Mr. and
Kuhn, and Jenevee Chesher.
Members of the Ladies Mrs. Harold Davis, MinersAuxiliary of the Middleport ville.
A Holly Hobbie theme was
Fire Department presenting
out
in the
gifts to Mrs. Darst were carri"ed
Bessie Darst, Carol Wolfe, decorations. Cake and ice
Sue Imboden, Graco Pratt, cream were served to Mr.
Bernice Durst, Manlyn Ep- and Mrs. Rudy Stewart,
ple, Ethel Lowery, Nene Shannon and Brett, MidStivers, DonnC:J Byers, Emma dleport ; Mrs. Fred Davis,
Wayland, Bron Thomas, Lin- ·and Ryan, Athens; Mrs.
da Lane, Janice Daniels, Roll,ie Stewart, Lori and
Jean Fisher, Kathryn Met- Dougie, Syracuse; Mr. and
zger, Charlotte Brown, Kathy Mrs. Don Shaffer, Donald
Chadwell, Petty Stein, Louise Wayne , Racine ; Mrs.
McElhinney, Patty Kloes, Jeanette Davis and Missy,
Euvetta Bechtle, Betty Ohl- Iva Stewart, Linda Grindley
inger, Phyllis Baker and and Chris, and Mrs.
Elizabeth Stewart, grea tHelen Byer.
grandmother, Minersville.
Sending gifts were Serena's
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
William R. Hayes, DaVl! and
Steve, Metropolis, IlL and
Elsie Decierher greatgrandmother.
Wilson, Ray Stewart, Keith
Serena is the daughter of
Scott, Kelly Rought , Jeff and Brenda Davis,
Stephanie Rought, Charley Syracuse.
Brown Hossler, Debbie
Hossler, Bobby Wears,
Carolyn Norman, Christy
FREE CLOTHING
Dawn Buzzard, Jenny
Free Clothing Day will be
WiLson, Marla Wilson and
Paul Voss.
held beginning at 10 a.m.
Thursdsy at th~ Salvation
Army Headquarters, 115
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy. All
residents of the area in need
DAUGHTER BORN
of clothing are welcome to
POINT PLEASANT- Mr. attend until12 noon.
and Mrs. Don Pullin announce the birth of a
daughter, Erika Dawn,
March 18 at Pleasant Valley
BAZAAR SET
Hospital. Grandparents are
The annual Easter bazaar
Mr.· and Mrs. Kenneth Cook; of the Senior Citizens Center
Middleport, and Mr. and Mrs. will be held April 5, 6 and 7.
Gilbert
Pullin,
Point On Tuesday and Thursday
Pleasant, and Cliff Cook, the hours will be from 9 a.m.
Mason , is
a great- to 3 p.m . and on Wednesday
grandfather.
from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. There
will be a public spaghetti
FIRST CHILD BORN
dinner on Wednesday, April
PORTLAND - Mr. and 6, from 4 to 7 p.m. and tickets
Mrs. Roland Sayre of 39 are now on aale. The adult
Savoy Ave., West Carrollton, tickets are $2 and the children
announce the birth of their under 12 are $1.25. Dessert is
first child, a son ·named extra.
Thoma~ Christopher, March
'!/, l"~_lgJ.in~ eight pounds and
VISITED HERE
seven ounces. Grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Robert
are Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Grimm, Columbus, spent the
Sayre, Portland and Mr. and weekend visiting Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Nease, West Mrs. Bert Grimm . On Sunday
Carrollton , and great- the two families were guests
grandmother, Mrs. Mary 'of Mr. and Mrs. DaytonFurhee, Racine.
Phillips for dinner.

Youth party held

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Rap:
Just a thought regarding her 16-yearo()ld who blamed
herself for making ber parents stay together (when they
should have divorced).
You said, rightfully, "Don't blame yourself for t~ir
mistakes." But you might hsve added she has nothing to
make up to them" for.
Her folks chose to have her; she didn't ask to be born. If
they were really so unhappy with each other, they shouldn't
have had children. This girl is carrying around a gwlt complex
that in nowaybeloDgson her shoulders.- Y. T.

Mrs. Kitty Darst was
honored Friday with a
layette shower at her Middleport home hosted by Mrs.
. Sue Metzger, Mrs. Texanna
Well, and Mrs. Charles
White.
Punch, mintS, potato chips
and cake were served from
tables decorated with a rattle
centerpiece and matching
plates and napkins. Games
were played with prizes going to Mrs. Lena McFann,
Miss Linda Lane, Mrs. Pearl
Hoffman, and Mrs. Gwinnie
White. Mrs. Elizabeth Well
won the door prize.
Attending besides those
named were Mrs. Mary Jane
.Scaggs, Mrs. Cheryl Lane,
Lisa Scaggs, Betty Gilkey,
Beulah White, Kathleen
Wildermuth, Kathryn Metzger, Mary and Mary Beth

'Mini ' tiptoes
back to fashion

-~~-~·

+++

Kitty
Darst
feted
.
.
at layette show~r

Mr. and Mrs. William 'It was decided to continue
Stewart of Athens entertain- meetings on the second
ed the Pa•t Officers' Club of Thursday of each month.
Racine Chapter, Order of the Finances were discussed and
Eastern Star, Thursday how the club might assist the
night.
chapter and Masons finanFor devotions , Mrs . cially.
The May meeting will be
Stewart gave excerpts from a
message given by the pastor held at the home of Mrs.
of the United Methodist Grella Simpson. Mrs. Cora
Church, on the topic "Pe()- Webb will have the program,
ple." Emphasis of the and Mrs. Ruth Barnitz, the
message was "Nothing is devotions. A social hour
uninterestiQg; ·there are ·only followed with refreshments
uninterested people." She being served from a white
concluded with a recording covered table centered with a
"How Great Thou Art" by white cake exemplifying the
George Beverly Shea.
chapter emblem and the star
Mrs. Laura Circle presided points.
Present were Mr. and Mrs.
at the meeting when the
amended by-laws were read. Ralph Webb, Ben Philson,
Mrs. Chlorus Grimm, Mrs.
Ruth Barnitz, Mrs. Bernice
Carpenter, Mrs. Noami
Brinker, Mrs. Circle and Jess
Brinker.
AmMAN REWARDED
MASON, W. Va.
Exemplary conduct and duty
performance in his unit at
Pea,., AFB, TSmouth, N. H.,
BAZAAR PLANNED
has earned outstanding
An Easter hszaar will be
Airman of the Month honors held Frldsy and Saturday by
for Airman First Class John the Meigs County Humane
M. Rottgen Jr., son of Mr. Society at the Thrift Shop
atd Mrs. John M. Rottgen, located across from the
Airman Rottgen is an ln- Pomeroy Post Office. Offered
ll.rument specialist. He is a for sale will he baked goods, ·
1974 graduate of Wahama candies, homemade soup
High School. His wife, Con- (containers to be provided by
nie, is the dsughter of Mr. the purchaser ), flowers, gift
and Mrs. James Lewis of items, and miscellaneous
Point ·Pleasant.
materials.

t- The DaUy Se'ntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, March 29, 1977
~:i:~'!~:!!~m;~::::::(.::::::::::::::~::::::::::::;:::::;:::~:::::::::~::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·=:~::

~~Es-,'1tfJW~Gl
\ riaii !
~

HRS.: 10 ,00 A.M. tii1UO PM. Sun · Thurs. 10 :00 A.M.
til n ,oo p .M. Friday and Soturdoy.
·

See Us At the Pomerov Be~ · ~rid

DIET RITE
COLA

R.C.

COLA

8-16 OZ. BOTTLES

8- 16 OZ. BOTTLES

.COCA-COLA

4QTS. $

00

�TiJ:Jl

,n_ '11v! llolllv Senllnel, Mlddleport.P&lt;meroy, 0., Tuesday ,March 29, 1m

Buy, Sell or Trade Through The Sentinel Want Ads

WANT AD
CHARGES

. .

15WordsorUnder'
1.50

Charge
. I.Z5
1:90
U:l

3.00

3.75

-Cash
J .OO

' I &lt;illy

2dMys
Jdays
Ida)" '

uo

Each word over lbt mini.mwn IS
wunla Ia 4 l'elli.s per wynJ per day.
Ads rwu~ other !.han COillleCU.tive
days will bt cl\lrtled 111 lhe I day

......

In memury, Card ul Ttw.nk.s and
OWhuu')': 6 t-ents per·word, $3.00
minbnwn. Cuh in advant·e.

Mobile H11me &amp;~lei and YIU'd Ales

are act'fll(ed onl)· wilh cash wllh
order. 25 t'tnl c.harge for ad.!l carry·
1ng Boll Nwnber In Care of The Stn-

Wwl.

·

The Publisher resen-es tbe riKhl
l.o l!dit or reject an)' ads deemed o1&gt;

j«:tiunal. Tbe PuD!isher will not Ut:

responsible for more than Olle im:ur·
ret.1. insertion.
Phune992-21S&amp;

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADI.JNES
Mond~ti
Noon WI Satunlay

-

.

~

=-.:,.;:;_

I WISH to e.~~preu my gratitude
ond thanks to our friends .

neighbors, and reiQtives lor the
many acts olldndness. flowers ,
and food ot the death of my
wife , Thelma Orr. Also. than ks
, to Rev. Fr"lond Norris , the
~ s i ngers, pollbe&lt;lrers, ond the
Ewing Funeral Home. and ones
who took core of the grove .
Pout Orr.

LOST; LEWELLYN BIRO dog. w~_ite .
witk brown spots over one eye
in Portland. Pkone 843·2S8l .
RED &amp; WH ITE B&amp;agle on Rose
valley Hill in Minersville.
Female red eyes , nome Whitie,
Child's pet. Phone Jerry
Grueser, 949-2805. Reword to
any one k now ing the
whentaboutJ of this dog.
FAWN &amp; WHITE Miniature miked
terrier FOUND. Male. Contact
Meigs Coun ty Humane Society
to claim, 992 •2639 ·
LOST IN Oarwln VIc in ity. Grey
Cairn terrier. Mole, phone
34.:.:8:;.7:.
37.:0.:::
2.:::
0
. -'m
= ':::
r'-'m
= -.:::
·-

Q\

2 SIGNS Pomeroy .·
.~OF quAUlY Motor Co.
1973 CHEVROLET C&amp;C 2 TON
$:1695
Big six m cu . ln., • speed, 15,000, 2 speed, Oem a xle.'
Ready to work ,
1971 FORD 'I'• TON CREW CAB
· Body good, runs good.

$1448

1"9 BUICK 4 DR.
Local 1 owner, good tires, aufomatlc, radio.

$695

Routt 3, PomtorOY,

AT

Installation. samples
brought to your home
with no charge.

OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

.

'i'
~

'1972

§~§§~. 1976 CAMARO 305, 2 borrell

.
DODGE
Dart. 318 engine
automatic. 1 owner , 50,000
miles, good condition, $1300.
Phone 742·2446.
1q74 GMC P i~: kup . ·Phone
992-3288 .
J97S JEEP (HEROKEE , p.b.. ps.
Quodratrack . Good tires.
Phone (304 ) 877-2340.
1972 VEG A. 1800. Phone
949-23,_,0:;.7:.
. - - -- - 1973 DART SWINGER, 318 ·
automa tic, 2 door. Phone
2•7-2755.
1974 PlYMOUTH OUSTER or w1l l
take an older car on trade of it .
_ Ph~n_e_~c:
· 7:_
79:.:_7.:.
. --~
1972 FORD ECONOLINE 100 Von .
Phone 992:,:·6::1::_37
:.:·- - - 1965 VOLKSWAGON , fair condi·
lion, $200. Phone 985-4256.
MALE ST. BERNARD . I year old ,
I ISO . Phone m -7068::_._ _
1974 OLOS CUTLASS Supreme,
ver'p' good condrtion . Phone
9115-3839:._
. -----

Service
filii llo .....

ASTROeGRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

Racine

-=

FORj.AIJ

~-

----

., -

Pomeroy Landma_rk

TEAFORD

----·-

Carpenter

Personals

· ~-

~79.95 - .

PomenJJ lalidmark

r

I

NORTH iDI

MRGEINA~D
l.-15-TEN~

t A9 7 3
.AQ95 3

TO McKEE'!7
411 PER CE'-JT
OF THE VOTIN G
5TOCK ALRSADY
PLEDGED TO
CAPTAIN EA5Y. I ~01'1 ADD MY
4- PE~ CENT!

WEST
.10876 3
• AJ762

.2

Both vu lnerable

•.'.J.JJ.'

West North East

General Contracting

A loci!l·contra ctor
Phone 9~9-2801
or 949-2860

PON"T WOR~. FOOzy! WE.
AIN'T GONNA PLAY HIS
GAME FO~ LONG ! I
GOT AN IDEA!

..

Roule2
Pomeroy, Ohlo45769
Free Estimates Ph. fH-7119

Free Estlmotts
No Sunday Colis Plene
3$11$1 mo.

WHATEVE~ rT IS ,
1T 15 l:l:IGHT ! ~IS

GOT ME ALL UP

3-11 -1 mo.

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

IJTI'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

Nobll Summit Road
Rf. 1
Middleport, 0.
992-5724
Complete
Sales
ond
·Service and Supplies.

"The Orlglnotors
Not The lmlt1ton"

..

LI T T LE 0 RPH AK

SWAIN'S ·

PROFESS roNAL

PHOTOGRAPJIY

LET ME
Coti6RAlU·
LATE YOU-WOO IS IT,
IF THAT'S
A FAIR
c;&gt;UESTION?

Soulheastem Ohio
Truss Rafter Co,
Located in Langsville
Box28·A .

RATES

. 3- 27 ·1_!"~:

--

:i:\~'iiFt NAC

tn ·
Is unilelleve,abl
formal dining, I
fh l s ybu
m
$20,000.00.
OLD HOME - Live In or
rent, this 2 bedroom house
m 1 large lot Is only
$4,100.00 .
.
ACERAGE We have
Everal parcels for home
lilts, catl today. :
·
NUDS REPAI~ - - We
have • few ..110uses thai
·need pojnf- and flxed up,
Investment potential, call

w•~OU

REALLY
TO
SELL
PROPERTY ·
lODAY. We hlvt
lor farms and

WANT
YOUR
CAL"'
buyori
ntwtr

lllme.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
Honk Clelllnd AU«iltt

M'1 LANDLADY
AT THE PLACE
WHE~E I ROOM ·
ER .. WOI.JDER IF
YOU'D MIND
r--~_,,-'
U)OKING AT
HER,

011, HE DID
t BE GLAD
LOOK AT HER..
GO WJ1H
51'40 NDT .A
YOU··
DiANCE FOR
Cf'ERATION
HER·· HE WASHED ~~'iiROfR . BE
HIS HAND$ OFF J I
EH?
'THE CASE -·

OFTFR SOME
YOU'RE TOO
OF HIS J086,
YOUNG 10
I WAS INCliNED BE SITTER,
TO AGREE wrrH
MY BOY··
HIM ·· IF HE
HELD THE
KNIFE ..

A Florida reader wants to
know the score for making one
s pade redoubled.
You gel 120 below the line,
plus 50 above the line for mak·
ing your contract plus the appropriate ga me or rubber
bonus.

the partnership would be past
(Oo . you have a question
the five·d iamond stopping lor rhe eKperts? Write "Ask
rhe Jacobys " care of this
point.
The Jecobys will
newspaper
Finally, South decided that
he could bail out at five answer individual questions
notrump if North held just two · if s iampad. sell-addressed
envelopes are enclosed. The
aces, that there wa s no way to mosr in ieres tin g questions
try for the s lam except by
Blackwood and t hat North will be used in this co lumn
was almost sure to have the and will receiVe copies of
JACOBY, MODERN I
three aces needed .

Reedsville, 0 . Ph. 371-6250

t:XCAVATING , Bocktw~s. Dozer,
trencher. low Boy , dump truck,
HOMESITES for sole , 1 ocre ond
trucks , septic systems . Bill
up. Middleport , neor Rutland .
Pullins. Phone 992 · 2~78 day or
Call ~ · 7481 .
night.
~--NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 baths,
JACK
'S BEE SUPPLIES. Reedsville ,
all alec., 1 pcre: Middlep!)rt,·
Ohlo
. Bee supplies and equipciQse to Rutland . Phone 992ment. Phone [614) 376·6357.
7&lt;BI.
SMAll form for ' sole, 10"1. down,
owner fina nced . Mon roe Coun·
ty. W. Vo. Phone (~4) 772·
3102 or {304) 772-3227 .
COUNTRY farmland with Seclud· Will do. odd jobs . roofing. pain·
ting. gutter work . Phone 992·
ed woods . water and good ac ·
7&lt;09.
cess in Monroe County , W. Vo .
$1, 000 down, coil (304) 772· SEW ING - AlTERATIONS ,
3102 or (304)772-3227 .
Uph o lsteri ng ,
d·rape s
reasonable . 572 South Third
Commertial Property apprOk . 17
Ave ., . MiddlepOr t. Phone
ocre5 , level land, located at
Tuppers Plains on Ohio , Route · m -b306.
_?_:.Phone (614) 667-630&lt; .
PIANO TUNING , l9n.e Do~ie-ls. 12
years of s~rviCe. Phone
NEW 3 bedroom house, built-in
992-2082.
lo.itchen, both and .•},. Phone
-+---~----------~~
742-2306 or contact MilO B. Hut· Will
TRIM or cut trees or shrub·
chison . Rutland, Ohio .
bery . Pnone 949-2545.
FOR SALE . All elec. nearly new
home in Rutland area. Bose·
me nt, 3 bedrooms, ollached
ga rage,.
$29 ,900
Phone
SERVICE STATION lor leose . Small
7.2.-2531.
investment required. Must be
aggressi ve and des ire to work
with people. Phone (lOA)
342·8161 for details.
OWN YOUR own businen. Work
for yourself . Se t your own
hours . Rewards ore tkere for
the taking. Call Mr. Adams ,
(304 ) 342-eJ6J .

NEW L 1511NG- Southern
style home , excellent
location In Pomeroy, very
nlce kitchen , living room,
dining room, 2baths, ullllly
~~&gt;d basemen!. Plus fwo
renfal
opts .
ONLY
$24,000.00 .
NEW LISTING
4
bedrooms. kitchen. bath,
ulll lly , yard . A GOOD
. ONLY $7,225 .00.
HOME - I acre, 3
s, utility ; nice
carpeting, car good location .

Pass 3 + Pass 4 N. T.
Pass 5 •
Pass 6.
Pass Pass Pass
Opening lead - 6 •

my 's aces of tru mps and
clubs, r uffed a club , drew
trumps and scored the slam .

·. ,
'
••
...•
.'
••
.1
•'

REASONABLE

(114) 985-4155
Clltsler, Ohio
10-17-1 mo(Pd)

IFI'D MIIRRI!:D

.

BRADFORD, Auctioneer, Com ·
plete Serv1ce. Phone 949-2487
or 949-2000. Racine, Ohio, Crill
&amp;radford .
ELWOOD IJOWERS REPA IR Sweepers, toasters. Irons. aU
small appliances . Law n mower,
next lo Stole High~oy Garage
on Route 7. Phone (614} 985·
3825.
REMOOELING, Pl umbing, heating
ond all types of general repa1r.
Work guaranteed 20 years ek·
patience . Phone 992-2409.
SEWING MACHINE Repo trs, service. all makes , 992-2284 . The
Fobric Shop, Pomer o y.
Authorized Singer Soles and
Ser\liql. We skorpen ~luors .
EXCAVATING , dozer. loader and·
bockho' work; dum"P . trucks
and lo"boys for hire; will haul
fill dirt, to soil, limestone o!"'d
grovel. Call Bob or Rog er Jef.
fers , day phone. 992-7089,
night phone 9:92 -3525 or 992· _
5232 .
EXCAVATING, dozer, backhoe A.,~
and ditcher. Charles R. Hot· ~
field , Bock Hoe Ser\IICe, ~
Rutland, Ohio. Phone 742-2008 . • ,"\
SEPllC TANKS cleaned. Modern : .}
Sanitation, 992-395-4 .

'"''
.,

SPE:AI(!Nb OF

Al..B!;I&lt;T BLOOMER, ALBf'RT, I -;,Aw
HE&gt;'D AA%
HIM ON TH!:BROL'6HT ME'
S1R~BT TODAl/,..
Fi.O.UJ::.f&lt;$.

..
~

: ~'
GASOLINE ALLEY
I 11 II I 11 11 1 I I\

H sa~s. "ThriJ lin{l
suspense! Pick this

book up

Clndl.jOU

worit be
able to
pl.li; it
down!"
I Learned
one
2 Red
Skelton
character
3 Aleut
island
4 Sea (Fr.) L......&amp;.....L..-1.~-

IJLABNER

Will do roofing, con~m.. c•ion,
plumbing and heating. No job
too Iorge or too small. Phone
742·2J.4e.

•I

'

.,

POMEROY, 0.

t

.••

GUARANTEED

PHOTOGRAPHY

M~N

I

sound diamond slam .
It wasn't a lay down, but
South made it. He won the
spade in dummy and led a
heart. His king fell to West's
ace . West led a second spade.
South won in his own hand ,
ruffed a heart in dummy , led a
diamond to his king, ruffed his
last low heart with dummy's
nine of trumps, cashed dulll·

.!

PARTS· lABOR

KEN GROVER

Rutland , Ohio •sns
. Ph . ( 6t.e) U2-2409
We Deliver
12 -22 ·4 mos .

-1

Automatic
Transmission Service

Aerial
Commercial
Schools
Weddings

A K K IE - C: H 0 P T A L K

1-~~;~;~;yrr;;='')lf(;~;;y;pl'~~:-;~)l r:;,...~--""-'====-:lr;;=====:;:-;;====&lt;;

2-23- 1 mo.

ANY Pl'KH
ANY SIZE

South

there would be no slam and

Route 3, Pomeroy, 0.

MUMINUI
SIDIN&amp;-SOFFm

Pass

South thought a long time
about whether or not lo use
Blackwood. He had no aces
a nd if his partner responded
fi ve hearts to s how two aces

Superior
Steam Extraction

foanci•l Anilab~
Blown iobf Wolh UHI&lt;s
STOIM
WlltiiiiWU I100IS
REPIACEIIIER1
WINDOWS

1~

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

r-===""
lnsulatioft Servicn

o~&gt; KJ874

SOUTH
• KJ 2
• K Q95
t K Q 10 8 6

.,....,.,-:

If North had only two aces
South would bid five spades
over Nort h ' s five he a r ts
whereupon North would bid
five notrump a nd South woutd
pass . Bul North did show
three aces and South was in a

• 108 3
• J52

•I.JO 6

DAVID BRICKLES

Bissell Sidin1 Co.

EAST
.. 9 5

tl

;

'

29

• AQA

_,

. Kitchin Coblntts, Rootlno,
Conerete · P1tlos,
Sldewolkl ,
New
Construction
&amp;
Rtmoclttlng.

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

.I

· ~-

OH. NEVE!?.
MIND 'T~ AT!
LH'S JUST

2-23- 1 mo.

...... lllo-

czs.ooo.

-·---

..

Carptf.Lino.-Tlto
Phono Mlkl Young ot
m .:i2oaorm-7630

Social

Events

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

iF I DON'T Fl)l. T~l$
DOG€;QNt= INTERCOM•
MISS TH ' JIJICIE!&gt;T
OF THE ~OARD
ME&amp;TING! •

-4-+--l

\1

~~~~~ )e}jl \'jl THAl SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ ®
byHenriArnoldandBoblee
Unscramble these tour Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to form
four ordinary words.

STUQE

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how

to

12x50 Mobile Home on 1 acre of
AND MARTIN
l~md with 26 sq. ft. block HOWERY
coveting, septic systems,
. bullding ot Deder. Drilied well,
close to mines. Phone 742-2509.
do1er. bockkoe, dump truck,
limestone. gravel. blacktop
paving, Rl . 143. Phone 1 (61~ } ·
698-7331.
RISING STAR Kennel Boarding,
Indoor-Outdoor runs, grooming
all breeds , clean sanitary
focllllles . Cheshire. Phone (614)
367·0292.
HOOF HOLLOW. Buy , sell , trade
or train hones. RUTH REEVES,
trainer. Phone (61-4} 698-3290.
POODLE GROOMING, reasonable
roJos. Coli. for oppl. 7•2-3162.
E~GlJSH ·sPRINGER Spon;ols
·Pups,· At(C liVer and White, 5
weeki old, f1eld trial bred,
Champion bloodlines. Call Jim
Butcher, 247·2206, or 992-Sol26.

Ia

One letl er simply stands for another. In this sample A 11

used for the three I.'s, X for the two O's, etc. Sin gle letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of t he words are all

'

CRYPTOQUOTES

.,

VUE H

~

V. l H

"'

...•••

In Syracuse

PDKPHKVUQVWDK :

QJW 'Z WVG

'

PIWZA'M

'.'

IH

., :

AD

lDXHNDUL

I·

WM

NQVPIWKC

'
''

•••..u.rr••················
·
,
.
.I:'
..
••
.
••
SHOP
••
.

''

. SW~P

••
::7 PM- WMPO •·. 92el Fl ••I!
•
•
•
:
92 ia-.tba
l ................ ........ .

I Kl

DON'T WORRl(, RUBI{ ...
IT'S VERI' COMFORTABLE

OH, I'vE

WHERE
BE
SPENDING
THEN16HT,
CHARLE51

GOOD...
FOUND A I WAS
WORRIED
LITTLE
PLACE ... ABOUT '1'0l!

WILL~OU

THAT HVINEY
SHORE IS A·
ROUGH
CUSTOMER,
AIN'T SHE,
MAW?

0
II

GDEU
NIWZH

ITRABEtY

VHZHSW·

II

· · ·~ ·

Yesterday's

VEP-· SHE

-- WITH A

RULES OC

HAND
IRON.

LUKEY
WITH A

IRON
HAND

tJ

Now arrange lhe clrded letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug.
gesled by the ebove cartoon .

"::r.rx xxJoN'E·s rr r J

() 197'7 Kinl Fflllltel Syndicate, Inc.

'

LISTIN TO THE

IDAMNETj

MWDK.· - VIIUUG
XP.
PD .UXWPL
Ye1terday'i Cryploquote: ~PEAK f;lEf!RLY IF . YOlJ
SPE~ AT ALL. CARVE EVERY WORD BEFORE YOU LET
IT FALL. - OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES

: SOY, SEll OR IRJUIJ
·
:
~
..
...
.
."

••

VD

• •

Dai~ .Sentinel
992;2156
Pomi!OJ, Ohio

I KI

hints. Each day lhe rode lellers are different.

••

WANTED

The

LONGFELLOW

\
\

Paper Carrier

I

KJ I I

work It:

AXYDLBAAXR

:

•

7:00-Trulh or Cons. 3; To Til the Trutn AI Howling tor
Dollars 6; News 10; To Tell the Truth 13; My Three
Sons IS ; Cooking with a Continental Flavor 20.;
American Issues Forum 33 .
7' 31&gt;-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Lei's Deal Wlfh II 6;
MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33: In The Know 10;
Wild Ki ngdom 13; TV Honor Society 15.
8' 00-Hall of Fame 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13; Who' s
Who 8,10; Nat ional Geographic 20.33 .
8: 31&gt;-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6, 13.
9'00-Eighlls Enough 6,1 3; MASH 8.1 0: In Search of
fhe Real America 33: Oasis In Space 20 .
UI&gt;-Movle " Dead of Nigh! " 3,4. 15; Anyone tor
· Tennyson ? 20 : Oasis In Space 33 .
10 ,01&gt;-Fam ily 6,13; Mlfzl Gaynor 8,10; News 20; Jn .
credible Bread Machine 33 .
10 :31&gt;-Biack Journal 20.
11 :01&gt;-News 3,4,6,8,10,13, 15; MacNeil -Lehrer Report
33.
. II : 31&gt;-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Movie " Outrage"• .6,13;
MacMil la n &amp; Wife 8; Mary Hartman 10; Practical
Dermatology 33 .
12 :01&gt;-Movie " The Bedford Incident" 10.
12 :31&gt;-Ja nakl 33 .
l :oo-Tomorrow 3,4 .
UI&gt;-News 13.
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 30,1977

Free Estimates

CHESHIRE
ASHlAND

EXPERiENCED

'

o.

WllH _OIL_CIWIGE
AND FILTER

Cheshire, Ohio
Phone 614-367·0626

.

~

•

log for easy VIeWing

BRIDGE

..

Young's Carpeti1g

3-16-1 mo.

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

I
J

r

FREE WBE JOB

I

TUESDAY, MARCH 29. 1977
S:OO-Big alley 3;, My hree Sons&lt; ;; Brady Bunch 8;
Mister Rogero ' Neigh borhood 20,33 ; Slar Trek IS.
5:31&gt;-Adam -12 4,13 ; News 6; Family Affair 8;.
6' 00-News 3,4,6,8,10,13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6: 31&gt;-NBC News3.4.15; ABC News 13; Andy Grlfflfh 6;
CBS News 8,10; Vegetabl~ Soup 20; Sudlo See 33.

''
J

Business·Services

~

(

THE HORSE SHOW.
CA~L.5 FOR A NEWS

.JUDOE'6

•

Televisio~

I HEAR THE .JUDGE'S
HOr:ISE WON I i!' PRIZE AT

.'

automatic, silver with red
pinstriping. Still under Y-'OrronCASH paid for all makes and
ty. Coll 992,_·5
::.7::_
r11::_·_____
rriodels of mobile homes.
Lhe d!ly_before publkation
Phone area code 6 1,.. ;23-9531 . 1964 'It TON pi(kup, new tires,
good condition. Coll992-3994 .
Sw1day
TIMBER . Pomeroy Forest Pro!P.M.
1974
MUSTANG II, Mach I. Ask for
ducts. Tpp price for standing
Friday afternoon
Rick at (3().1) 675-3375 before 6
sawtimber. Call Kent Ha nby ,
... p.m. Good condition :~' sell.
).446-8570.
MERRI -MAC has opening for Party
Plan
Supervisors
and COINS, CURRENCY , tokens, old 1972 DODGE DART , 318 englne,
For Wodnoodor, Morch 30, 1177
automatic, I owner, 50,000
Demons trators in your area.
pocket . watches and chains ,
miles , good condition . $1300,
Highest
r;:ommiuion ,
no
silver and gold . We need 19M
Phone 742 - 24.41~
and older si lver coi'!s. Buy . sell .
delivery or co llecting .
or tradd ' Call Roger Wamsley,
Demonslr&lt;Oie top quality toys
and gifts . Call cOllect to Ann
742-2331.
Bo&gt;eter (319) 556-8881 or write
WANTED. CHIPWOOD. Poles, COAL, limestone , and calcium
MERR I-MAC . 801 Jackson ,
ARIES (Morch 21 · Aprll 11)
mo;~~im um diameter · 10 inches
chloride and calcium brine for
Dubuque, Iowa 52001.
Don't be surprised If you're
on largest end , $9 . per ton;
dust control and speciol mixing
heavily In demand today. You're EXPERIENCED BODYMAN needed
bundles slobs $6 per ton .
salt for fo r.mers. Main Street,
good company and your friends
for Hysell 's Used Cars. Contact
Delivered to Ohio Pallet Com·
Pomeroy , Onio or phone 992want to be with you .
pony, Rt. 2, Pomeroy , Ohio.
Haro ld Hysell , after 5 p.m.
3891.
7•2-31~ .
.
Phone992-2689 .
TAURUS (Aprtl 20-Mor 20) In a
APPLES, FITZPATRICK ORCHARD,
situation where there were a lot
CASH! I I for junk cars . Frye's
STATE ROUTE 1&gt;89. PHONE
of loose ends, things could be
Truck and Auto. WRECKER SERVICE! Phone 1-f2·2081 .
coming together for you today.
- WILKESVIl
- ---lE. (61') 669-3785.
FULLER
Brush Products for sole.
Tie It up the way you want It!
OLD FURNITURE, ice boxes . brass
Phone 992 -3410.
beds, etc. , co mple t e ..
::':_-,-~
GEMINI (Moy 21.June 20) You
households. Wri te M. D. Miller, CAMPER . $600. Also . horse
have an abundance of bright
Rt . ~ . Pomeroy. Ohio or call · trailer, $-450. Phone [614) 698·
Ideas today ~nd a marvelous
3 BEDROOM ranch, 1'.11 baths , l
992-771i:J. ,
3290.
way of dealing with others. You .
acre, all elec. flnisl-.ed garage.
are both humorous and comSMALL HOUSE TRAILER, in good STEREO, NEW AM-FM stereo
Fully carpeled . Five Points
pl imentary.
·
rod1o &lt;;ombinotion. $129.95 or
condition. Call or s&amp;e Carl Morarea
. $30.000. Phone 992-2928
ris , Rutland, 742-1932 . ·
eosy'terms. Coll992·3.9:_:6::
5·: ___
CANCER (June 21.Julr 22) Your
-~!.tar
5 p.. m. o
By Mrs. Fraacls Morris
DISC ARDED CAR Batteries . SHAKESPEARE SASS Boot I''· APPROXIMATELY 7 or 8 acres
material aspects are very enA contribution to the
1q76 Mo~Jrcu"ry ·20 h.p. with ~~tlec ­
lownmowers , tille rs . etc .
couraging today. This might be
wooded· land in Rock Spring~ .
tric start . 197b Hit trailer, plus
Olristine
Smith
Fund
and
a
Phone
7~2
3074
.
the right time to ask the boss for
_Pho ~e
_99
_ 2:_27BJ:c· _ _ _ __
other
extras
.
$1695.
Phone
donation to the Gallia STATION WAGON , 1967 to 1972.
that raise.
m .3J26. c. P. Rillle . _ _ __ 2 STORY 4 Bedrm . brick home in
Either in good condition or
LEO (July 23-Aug •.. 22) Your Olristian School was made at
Midd le port. Phone?92 - ~57.
good body with bod engine . FISHER WOOD Burning !loves and
natural leadersh ip is enhanced the meeting ri the Booster
form lumber. PHONE Facemyer HOUSE . 6 ROOMS , ond both , 6
Phone99'l-629~ .
today. by the way you handle &amp;mday School class of the
and Salmons lumber Co .. Inc.
and three-fourth acres inside
~ou rself so as to be an InspiraFlrst BaJtist Church at the
Rt . 7 Midd leport, Ohio, (61-4) . citv limits. New siding and
tion to others. They find you rome of Mrs. Gretta Simpson
m -7425 .
storm windows , 3 ocres fe nced
worthy of emulation.
for small posture. $1 8,500.
Friday evening, March 18.
STRAWBERRIES in baskets and
Phone W'l-7352.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22) Let· The meeting opened with . IF YOU ha\le a service to offer.
flgts , now bEKJr ing, pansies ,
wont to buy or sell something,
tlng matters run their natural
broccoli
,
cobboge
,
lettuce
,
7
ROOM HOUSE . new carpel ,
course is the best path to devotions on the theme "The . oe looking for work ... or
caul iflower , Brusse ls Spra'uts .
roof,
insulation owner finonc·
whate-ver . . . you'll get results
ac hievement for you today. Play Lamb Is My Shepherd" taken
onions . Clefgnd Farms ond
ed . Co11992-7•s•.
from
Our
Daily
Bread,
by
foster
with
o
Sentinel
Wont
Ad
.
"G ree n nouse . Gera ldi ne 1
a qu iet backgroun_d role.
01 1992 21 56
6 / , acres . garden spot , some
Mrs.
Helen Slack, president -:-=c-=- ,.,::.
'::.c ::.·- - - - - ~nd . .~-~---·_ _
LIBRA (Sopt. 23·001. 23) If you
pastu re , firewood with wood·
rl.
the class. Her scriptiD'e GARAGE SALE. Reor IB8 Walnut REGENCY 1b ChaDnel Hi·Lo police
burning stove, fue l. oil heOt ,
have a new project you're trytng
Street , Middleport . Ohio .
scanner, 10 crystahj , $150.
outbuildings 2 bedroom house.
to recru it allies for , this Is a good was Revelation 7 : 17 ''Forthe
March 29th and 30th. 10 a.m.
Phone 992-77.416.
near hospital ·and town .
time to get on It Meet them face- Lam.•!I "'shall lead them" and
t1·11 4 p.m. Men's. women's,
Phone 992-5947 .
$19,500.
to~face .
Psalm 23:1 "The Lord Is my good clothing, other useful SINGER GOLDEN Touch N' Sew
does
it al l! Zig-Zags. ses on 3 BEDROOMS honie. all elec .. 1
Shepherd."
Thought:
The
;t•m
c•
::.
·
_
_
_
__
_
_
_
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22l
knit , automatic buttonholer,
both, uti litr. room by kitchen .
Challenges won't fa.ze you today. Lamb who died to save WI is YARD SALE, Morch 71 , 30, 31
makes designs and many other
115 x 115 ot, I cor garage in
You see them merely as things to the Shepherd who llves to
beh ind Jones boys . blue house.
features . Just like new .
Rutland. Phone 742-2869.
Baby
things
,
skates
.
formal
s.
be done and you'll successfully
Original prite $549 .95 . Mu5t
lEBd
us!
Prayer
by
Helen
all
types
of
clothes,
household
conquer them .
sell , only $129.95. Cosh or 3 BEDROOM HOUSE for sole neOr
9mpson closed the devotions.
misc. Inside if weather is bad.
Eastern High School. Full bose·
terms. Co11992-51.46.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·DIC. A
ment, 2 cor garage. fami ly
program
followed
21) Being In the company of
USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT.
room .
firep lace.
Phone
IJ'esented
by
Mrs.
Dorothy
those you admire could be InBarko Loader Mode! 6170
985-3867.
spirational to you today. You're a Badgley which opened with
Series 608C : Frankli n Model
fast learner, so study what they the hymn " In the :Garden" 1975 25ft. CAVELCAOE trailer. oir
1308. Morbark 636 Oeborker COMMERCIAl BRICK BUILDING ;n
downtown Pomeroy. Ohio.
s·n
627 ; Contact Dennis Smurr,
do.
conditioned and seven:tl other
sung by the group and Mrs .
Presentlv ' rented with income
extras
in
good
condition
.
Col
i
_
l'hone
(614)
1138-S3&lt;S
_
.
--~
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22.Jon. 11) &amp;ack sang "Christ Is alive in
over $5000 per year. Two renafter 6 p.m ~~ - 539~ .
~'
tals downstairs and. one
You have a sixth sense going for my heart." Scripture was
upstairs. Has unlins1hed aport·.
~
you today. Use that Intuition and Song ri Solomon 2:11-12 and STARCRAFT . Mini-motors, 20 and
22 h . Fold-downs, $1850 up , 23
New Co-Op water sofment upstairs . Entire upstairs
you'll win out.
Psalm 65 : 9-13 . Readings
teners, model VC -SVI .
ft . Travel Star S.C. , ~ 199. We
cqn easily be mode into 3
Only 5279.95
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-FIIJ. 1tl In included "The Easter Story
sell service and quality. New
apartments. W-oir condition
·1 Good Used Poul1n Chlin ·
any close associations today, - Up to Jerusalem," "Palm
and used. Camp Conley Star·
upstairs . 3 separate water . gas
bw.
$55
you seem to make a perfect
crott Soles , Rt. 62 N. Pt. Plea ·
and electric meters . Con be
Save 150.00 on a new
Sunday,
"
"
The
Upper
blend. Your alliances work out
'sant . '
financed 100percent to rel iable
Hotpolnt Refrigerator.
11
for the best interests of Room/' TIIe LaS Supper/'
party. Contact Paul Simon or
1 Good Used McCullougtl
" Resignation., " " The
Cl'laln Sew •I!•• ••••••••• $95
Guido Girolomi to secure on
everyone.
1 Good useCI 40" Hotpolnt
appointment. Prited upon in·
PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20l Betrayal,
Ringe••••••••••••••• $100
spection of properly only .
'
"Pilot
Washing
his
hands,"
There's something extra you can
Now in stock, complete line
WANTED TO rent wit h possible
5 ROOMS and both in Minersv ille.
of bulk glrden seeds and
do today to brighten the financial "The Crucifixion," "The
option to buy: 50 to 200 acres
onion sets.
Ptlone 992-5833 .
picture . Your aspects are good, Empty Tomb." The hymn
secluded fond . some tillable
with inhabitable house. Colum·
but you must work at it to realize ''He Uves" was sung and
ONE ACRE, .3 bedroom, 2 story
bio . Scipio, Bedford, or Rut la nd
lull potential.
home, dining room , larg&amp; bath,
.Jack
W.
Carsey,
Mgr
.
dosed with the Lord's Prayer
Townsh ips .
Write
Tony
natural gas, Iorge porch. nice
,
Phone
992:-2181
In unison. The neJ:t m"eeting
Russego, 1331 Meadow Rood ,
block garage. $~0 .000 . Phone
Columbus, Ohio 43212.
will be April22 at the home of
992-5732.
1976 2SOCC BULTACO Frontero,
Mrs. Marjorie Grimm with a CORN or Soyb&amp;an ground in
$800. Two bike motorcycle
potluck dinner at 6 pm. and a • Rutland or Middleport area. 5 · tro1ler, $75. Coli 992-374b.
acres and up. Phone 992-2703 .
!ilent auction wDl be held.
FO~ SALE . 1974 Hondo Elsinor 125
Morch 30, 1177
~ing a fellowship hour
Cr . like new , $350. Phone
VIrgil B. Sr., Realtor
98S-3597.
216 E. Second Street
More fun things than you've had Mrs. Simpson served refresbIn a long time a re In store this ~nts. A SL Patrick's Day 3 AND -4 RM. furn ished and un · MAY FOR sole . Phone 992-5266.
Pomeroy, Dhlo 45769
year . You 'l l m ake some theme was carried out In the ·
Phono 992-!325
furn ished opts . Phone 9'92· AnN, lADIE S. lONG Rille Shop
friends hips that will stand the table decorations. For a fun
now carrying a li ne of Red
543-4 .
test of time.
RUTLAND - Nice older
..d mootyillaking project COUNTR'f Mobile Home Park . Rt. Heart Wintuck Knitt ing and
home In good shape with 3
Crocheting
yarn
.
Free
lessens
members
brought
a
33, ten miles north of Pomeroy.
bedrooms, equipped kif·
with every $5.00 purchase. 248
Large lots with concrete poHos,
decorated hat in a sack which
dlen, lui ~ bosemenl, coal
River View Drive, Pomerov .
sidewalks,
runners
and
oH
.
were bought and. worn, with
furnace, double garage and
:::-:;:_::.
· --:-:--street parking. Phone 992-7~79 . · Phone 992::-3090
nice
lot. $36,0110.
pcttl'es being tak111. Al!o,
150 BALES of Alfgffo and Orchard
JUST
LISTED- Nice old
FARM
ON
river,
51
acres
.
7
rooms
Mr. · and Mrs. Roderick
Grass, $1.50 per bole; 150
trick 3 bedroom home with
and both. Phone 992·5908.
bolet of gran hoy, $1.00 bole.
Grimm llhowed slldee of a
modern kitchen , bath ,
APT.
for
rent.
Phone
·FURNISHED
Bockhpe
and end loader. Phone
!orlner clBII party and a
clnlng wlfh fireplace, 2
Mr. and Mrs. Dwaine
992-3975 or 992·2571 .
~3 - 2'100 ..
porches, patio . and 3 car
Florida trip.
Jordan, Bryan, Keith and
ONE BEDROOM unfur. opt. oil LOOK TRIM! Toke Alglness diet
garage wlfh storage. All for
alec. ,Phone 992 - 57~2 after 5
plan and Aquavap "water pills"
Sarah Faye, have returned
. Village P-harma~y , 271 .N. .2nd
JUST LISTED ~ 45 ocres
tmne after ~pending a week · .:.....:..:··~·_ _ __..._.,.... . p.m.
~-, Mid.dlepprt ., .
of· woo~s . good ,. qld 2
with telatlvea In Florida
bedroom trailer, rurai ·
NEW 1976 Hoover Upright
Mr. and · Mrs. BW Miller ''ibonlas were her. daughter,
septic tonk and
IMiter,
Sweepers. Factory demo., onl'p'
p-lvacy. $12,500.
were In Caledonia to see biB Marilyn Lelat and chlldren of
FOR SALE or Trade for other pro· (I; ovoiloble, $22.50. Cosh or
MIDDLEPORT
2
parllltl, Mr. and Mrs. Ted Gaithel'lbiD'g, Maryland.
party . Thr" river lots, Water _!_!'ms. Phone992·51ol6.
__
bedroom
frame
home,
2
ltlller. Mr. MWer is stW
Mr. and Mr1. Emzle Davis,
Street , Syracuse. $5500. Phone ELECTROLUX SWEEPERS, combofhs, garage on corner
llll!llned to the h08Jlltal where Parkenllnrg, W. Va. spent a
99'1 -581~ .
pletely rebuilt, all attachments.
level lot. Wanf $12,000.
Only $35 cash or terms. Call
2 BUILDING LOTS - At
he llllffered heart attacka. He day here wkh W. C. Pec:lt: and
m-5141&gt;.
Rock Springs, rtxal water
Ia reportedly Improving.
!bey aU wll'e at O'Bleness
available . $5,000.
Mrs. Herman Cordray, Memorial Holplta~ Athena,
JUST
LISTE.D .4
rltl ~J A
Athllll Route, vlalted Mrs. to .aee paul Peck wllo is 1972 KAWASAKI 175 Enduro. •
bedroom trick home, large
dining,
living · · with
Many extras.. In good' shQpe,
Beulah Cordray and Mr. and confined there lor ob·
WAll R \OfllN[R 1
$350, or , best oHei-. PhOne
fireplace . Ullllly room, Ml
Mrs. f\eed Jeflen recently. aervatlm and treatment.
992-3367.
basement and level corner
. .
.
· Katherine Lawson and
··- -+ -·-------~c..
Cdumbla Grange No. 2435
lot, 1'12 belhs for 124,000..
Let Pemoroy Llndmort&lt;
2
Y~.
OLD.
Regi1tereod
Tehneuee
Qiiry~ Mr. 111d Mn. Gene held their March seulon on
MIDDLEPORT ' .:_ Car·
Walking more. $250. Pnone soHtn &amp; condition your
. JeffII'lind 110111, and Mr. and Friday evening . Highlight of
poled 4 bedroom ranch
w•ter 1nd 1 . CO:-op w1tcr
742-3150'
type home, lois of clo•fl,
~ . Dwaine Jordan, local, !be evmirw was dtlling the
soHtntr, Moilol UC-XVI .
•SS CRAGAR wM.Is .$125. Phone
gas forced air furnace, .
wwe 1111001 thoae attending lecturer'&amp; program when the
01111
(614l 667 ·3653.
clspQSall and corner lot for
the annual banquet for Natlonlll Grange Mortgage - --·-·-..-------··mly 111,000.
185 SUZUK1197~ . 3000 total miles,
Let· us test your w1ter
SITE LOCATORS
Aleunder buketball turning ceremony was glvm.
recent overhou I. ,,. tras. Phone . Fr•P
·
OROP
IN WHERE · YDU
pia,_., cbeerleadn, and The Grange all county otter
- -Ill-p.m.. 992-7685.
CAN BUY WITH CON!III)W• at Alaander Hll!ll t.nquet wlll be held on April PIGS, TOP Qual ity, costroted, 1FIDENCE . G. BRUCE
Sc.ilool on Tullldar evenlnJ!. 15. Tickew wlll be avaUable
Jron shot. wormed . $30. Phone _Y.~ Jack W. l.lney,Mgr:
AND
HELEN
L.
(61&lt; ) 37e.l&gt;311.
Weelrend _RUtlbJ II. Lucy lrom Grange Masters.
'~ ~"2-2111 . ASSOCIATF~ .
Tuesilily

lhru Fridliy
4P,M.

I'M MFIS. OATS,

I

~eAi::~;.:.~: --i.?~·rt~J:

'·7 -·- .--= -- ·~
NOTICE ; Proif's Meat Mkt.
(Piecisonton . MeOt · Processing,
Inc.) CUstom slaughtering, and
procening. Reta il, whole~ale.
No oppo innient necessary. Coli
(b14} 593-8655, hours . 9:00 till
6:00 7 Pomeroy Rood . Athens,
Oh.
RACINE FIRE O.pt . will have o
Gun Shoot every Soturday night
6 p.m. at their-~' building in
Bashan , Ohio.
LOANS AVAILABLE . BuJin41n and
form, $20.000 up. Contact Mr.
Gray (216) 84S-6666.
EASTER BAZAAR, April 1 ani 2,
Tkrift Shop. crot t items , bake
sale and Vegetable soup.
MEIGS CO. HUMANE SOCIETY·
YES. WE Move sheets, $2.00 lb.
Also , Anniversary Sale, Mon ·
doy , March 28th fhru April41h .
0 &amp; J House of Fabrics, I mile
below Middleport on St. Rt. 7.
RACINE GUN Club. We hov.changed our gun shoot to FRI·
DAY , nights, starting at 7 p:m.
SHOOTING MATCH at Rutland
legion Holl, f riday ~vening , 7
p.m.
GOING OUT OF BusinesS Sale,
Turner's Grocery, langsville. 25
percent OFF, Priced marked
Groceries . hardwa re and
niiner's booh . Everything must
go. Phane 742-9576. Sole storts
March 31 thru April lOth . 7 a.m.
lii i7,JO P.M.

Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, Tuesday, March 29. 2W7

I

, (Answers tomorrOw)

Jumbles: GASSY LIMBO ORA TOR BOYISH
Answer: They don'l enjoy balls, presumablyMOTliS

THAT

IS

..

•..1.

I

)

)'

.

I

'

)

�'.
r ---------- - -- - ---~-~------

12- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, March 29. 1977

More gas assured
OOLUMBUS {UP! ) - Columbla Gas Systems Inc., the
main supplier of natural gas
to four of llui alate's largest
gaa di.stribtors, said Monday
there shoold be more gas
available for Ohioans next

Rules for
(Continued from page I)
department has beer\ asked to
do such studies on Route 33
between Darwin and Athens;
Route 124 to WUkesville; the
area between Five Points and
Rock Springs and the
Bouman's Run area . He
explained that none of the
projects may develop.
It was reported that the
rural house . numbering
project is progressing and at
the last meeting the county
commissioners approved the
names of 90 'percent of the
roads in five townships.
Attending the meeting were
Henry )Veils, Jeff Burt,
Harry Bumgarner, Arch
Steiger, Thereon Johnson
who presided ;· Blakeslee,
Charles Russell, Ruth, E. F.
Robinson, Naomi Brinker,
George Collins, Georgene
Childers, James Jennings
and Richard Jones.

winter. ·
B.J. Clarke, president of
Columbia Gas Systems Inc,,
oollined the systems present
situation in a letter to Gov.
James A. Rhodes.
Clark said Columbia has
purchased substantial
amounts of emergency gas
under Federal Power
Commission Regulations and
the Emergency Natural Gas
Act of 1977.
"Only about ten per cent of
the ,~1 volumes requite
paYDack," said Clarke.
" After due allowance for
such paybacks, Columbill'
Transmlaslon plans that its
storage facilities will be fully
packed on November I, 1977.
"This, plus our present
estimates of flowing gas
s'"ly, indicate. l!lat gas
avaUable to Columbia during
the winter of 1977~78 will be
somewhat greater than the
volumes available to it during
the winter of 197&amp;-77," said
Clark.
Columbia Gas Systems Inc.
supplies Columbia Gas ol
Ohio, Dayton Power &amp; Ught
Co., Cincinnati Gas &amp;
Electric Co. and West Ohio
Gas of Lima.
Clarke also outlined for
Rhodes
the
property

Spaniards

next"winter :
I

Columbia has in Ohio and the
stage of its development.
As of Dec . 31, 1976,
Columbia has 5&amp;4,000 acres of
gas leasehol&lt;b in the Buckeye
State, Clarke said.
He said 229,000 acres are
classified as being 'ilnder
development'' for natural
gas.
This class i fication
includes :
- 150,000 acres · in actual
operation with completted
wells and gas flowing to
market.
-79,000 acres are being
drilled or are covered by
drilling commitments which
provide for an orderly
exploration and development
program.
Clarke said 5,000 acres in
Coshocton County are being
drilled under a program
which will fuly develop the
acreage during 1977.
Another 54,000 acres
in
Morgan,
located
Muskingum and Athens
counties have been tested by

the drilling of seven
exploratory wells. Five of
these weDs were not
commercial and the other
two were ony marginally
commercial, Clarke said.
Clarke said during 1977,
three exploratory wells will
be drilled on 83,000 aaes in
Belmont, Harrison and
Jefferson counties. Plans for
further development activity
In this arrea cannot be made
untU the results from the
three exploratory wells are in
hand, said Clarke.
Clarke also noted that
during his meeting with
Rhodes on March 21 "we
mutually re.cognized that
Columbia could not take any
action that violates any of its
legal duties to the Federal
Power Commission.
•:With that constraint, Columbia will cooperate to the
fullest extent possible in
order to accomoda te the
tralll!portaiion of Ohio self·
help gas," said Clarke.

Stock options are
controversial
and popular
can't ignore the newcomer
any longer and will give
options a try itself or perhaps
get into the business through
a merger with the American
Stock Exchange.
And
the
National
Association .of Securities
Dealers announced it w·
start an options progr
is
sutnmer in 10 ov r-thecounter securili
·
I
still, to say ·e least.,· nOt
everyone Is co ortable wltil.
option mania.
.\
"I'm not .critics
the
industry trying to dt! lop
new products to supply
consumer," says Robert .
Colin
executive vice
president of the securities
firm of Faulkner Dawkins &amp;
Sullivan. "Th~ thing 1
question is the suitability of
options in the long-term
investm,ent process."
Options by their nature are
deteriorating assets as they
approach their expiration
date no more than nine
mooths away. To stay in the
game, the options player has
to buy or sell again.
Colin, notes ·professional
traders
anned
with
computers can profit from
the smallest change in an
option price, 'buying and
selling rapidly, all quite apart
from the idea that investing is
loaning money to a company
in hopes it will do well and
give a return on the money..
"I just question what this
has ill do with anything,"
Colin sayr of options.
Bunk,
say
option
supporters. Buying stock to
sell options is still buying
stock and option profits can
help reverse the flight of the
small investor who was hurt
In the bear stock market.
But in the rush to share in
the seeming bonanza, some
small investors have paid
dearly fiR" their options' experience, afterwards
realizing neither they nor
their brokers !mew the new
game. Brokerage flrins now
are trying to educate both
· employes and customers and
build a reputation for options,
. ._ _ _ _ _ _ __. properly used, as a

NEW YORK (UP!) -'' In
the four years since their ·
introduction to the investing
PJblic in listed trading on
exchanges, stock options
have been as controversial a
form of investing as they
have been popular.
Options are legalized gam·
bling -or a means of making
money while limiting risk;
they undermine the. purpose
of stock markets ~ or they
are a way to bring investors
back to the market. Each
characterization has camps
of supporters in Wall Street,
Washington, academia.
The fixed views have kept
.-----~---~'!!!"---!!!'---""'tl the controversy going since
call options - the rights to
buy shares of stock at a fixed
~
price within a specific time,_\ \
were first listed on · the
Chicago Board Options
~'\~\'
t!"(
Exchange in 1973. The dehate
'V
. ~~t) \
is likely 10 quicken .as the
N-'-' \,/'1\J~~ttlt!
Securities and Exchange
})''
~'(;)
Commission
now
has
t\
authorized
the
first
\ \"(~
,\e,~\)
exchange:liste~ put options~\
a u~
allowing the holder to sell
All ~\" · o.tl,V,~'\
stock at a specific price
a.\\'\ ,.
within a specific time .v
starting this summer.
C.'-\1.• • • 'tt.'\ , •
The five options exchanges
"'\ ~tl '
and many brokers herald
'\\IU
PJts as the natural adjunct to
N-'-'\
calls that will multiply
"'\\)'' •
investment strategies.
\'
Options have helped lrokers
fill the commission gap
caused by negotiated rates on
securities transactions since
1975.
The New York Stock
Exchange, the nation's
premiere securities
marketplace, has decided it

\,a

._.

£

RALPH HAYMAN
Ralph 1Pelel Ha yman,

C~ESTER BLANKENS~IP

" Ches ter -Blankenship, 87, a

Oaytol'\. former ly of Me igs

resident of 43 Lincoln St..
Gall ipolis , died at II : 30 a .m .
Monday in Holzer Med ic~l

Counly, died Monday al Sl.
Elizabeth Hospital, Dayton.

Funeri;tl services will be 1 ,
p.m . Thursday at the Ewing
Funeral Home where friends

Center . He had been a pa ti ent

the past five d~y s .
He was born April 23, 1890,
in Mercerville, son of th ~ late
Stephen and Hanna Blanken .

may call afler noon Wed·

nesday . B'-W' ial will be in
Beech Gro11e cemetery.

5hlp Blankensh ip.

He wa s t he las1 ot his Jm.
mediate fam il y.
He · married the former

Goldie Sm ith of Glen wood. W.
preceded him in

Va . She

death.

Three chi ldren were born to
. this union : Loren , Ga llipolis;

Mel vin and Miss Mildred

Blanken ship, both at home.
Mr . Bla nkenship was a
farm er and also worked wi th
the Ra ymond Hoy Furniture
Factory and Bob Houck's

Wood Novelty Shop. He

retired 22 years ago.
Mr . Blankenship wa s a

Wor!d Wilr I veteran . having
servi ce with the U. S. Army in

France . He was a member Of

the DAV.

Funeral services will be

held

1

Miller ··~

'

Worker suing
for $100,000

p.m. Wednesday at
Home for Funerals,

with Rev . Everett DelaJ!Oy

and Rev. Jack Finrilcum
officiating . Buri8( will be in
Ridgelawn Cemetery ,
Mercerville'.
Friends may call at the
funera l home from 2·.4 and 7.9
p.m. ~uesday .

•. !'OINT PLEASANT - A
Point Pleasant 11lBP flied
suit yesterday in . U. S.
District Court In Hun·
tlngton in connection wUh
injuries be uys he suffered
while working as a seaman
and deck hand aboard a tug
boat.
James F. Will is seeking
$100,000 damages from G.
and C: Towing Co., Inc., of
Henderson, W. Va.
The suit says Will slipped
and was injured near Win-.
field, w. Va., on the Kanawha
River Dec. 30, 1975 while
working aboard a boat .the
CQmpany owns, and alleges
company negligence.

-r\)

.~
~

"'t.''

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR

Our low-cost auto loans are the key to
financing your next car. We've got a variety
of loan "models" .. . one is just right for you
and the car you want.

."THE

VACATION

WATCH FOR
OPENING DATE

FRIENDLY BANK"

THE INN PLACE
.Wednesday N~ght SpeciJJl

, OHIO ·.
Our NEW Telephone Number lis

992-6661

VIsit Our
Bar
BBQ Pork Chops
Mashed Potatoes
and Gravy
D.F. Mush ·Rooms

Installment Lllan Department Number Will
..Relhain Jhe Same 992-3077
t.llember Federal Deposit Insurance CorporaOOn

Hot Rolls

Coffee. Tea or Milk

THE MEIGS INN

Pom'erov, o.

Phone 992-6304
SHACK Photle 9'12·630~

DIEI-OSITS INSURED TO $40,000
!

Plus Tax

I

Area pledges
$126,492

Levy for mentally retarded on primary ballot
A recCil\mendatlon by Meigs County Probate Judge "
''The program for the retarded not ooly Is a most desirable
Manning Webster to the Meigs County Com1nlssioners but alao a mandatory program becauseofthe recent pessing of

A total of $126,492 was calls on Sunday. Vernon
pledged by area residents to Weber, immediate past
the !911 Huntington area president of the Middleport·
Easter Seal Telethon last Pomeroy Rotary Club was
weekend, according to chairman of the project.
Them·e of the 1977 Telethon
Telethon Chairman Paul
Beckett.
was : "Money Walks." Local
The show was broadcast . hosts for the marathon 20locally
by
WSAZ·TV ' hour appeal were Jute Hoff·
(Channel3) lrom·tbeir stuios . rr\an, Dave Co!Uns and Bud
in Huntington. The national Dalley, · WSAZ,TV station
portion of the tele\hon personalities. Funds raised
· originated live from Holly· by the telethon will help
wood · starring Michael provide rehabilitation . ser·
Landon, National EasterS I vices for handicapped
· Chairman. Last
r, th children and adUlts in West
Huntington area Teletho Virginia and
,
'
signed off the air with pledges
The tel
is a
ect of
of $104,600.
irg!nia Soc
for
Over $1,300 was -pledged to. Crippled Children and Adu
the Easter Seaf telethon by Inc ., in cooperation with
Meigs Countians Saturday Easter Seal affiliates in the .
night and Sunday.
Ohio counties of Adams,
The office o! Gene Riggs, Gallla, Jackaon, Lawrence, ,
John Hancock Ins. Co. agent, Meigs, Pike, Scioto, Vinton ,
in the Fanrters Bank Bldg. and Washington.
was used ~s headquarters
Nationally, the telethop
with members of the Ohio Eta was broadcast in 611 markets .
Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma 'from coast to. coast and ·
Phi Sorority receiving the raised $5,016,759 in pledges.

Tuesday night that a ooe mUllevy for the mentally .retarded
program be placed on the ballo.t at the ne1t election was
approved unanbnously.
.
Judge Webaler a1ao recommended change$ in the court
rooms oo the ll)ird floor of the courthouse .and submitted a list
of additional equipment needed by the courts. Tbe commission ·
agreed to purchase equipment ~ requested.
'lbe cunmisslon, Henry ·wells, president, issued. the
fo llo. wing statement concerning the proposed levy for the
Mental Retardation PrQIIram:
·

But experts are cautiously
!ndicatingdevelopmeritsmay
WASHINGTON (UP!) Tbe Agriculture Department, be heading the crop toward
issuing the ftrst projections of
on the farm front
potential 1977 grain crops,
says this year's corn harvest
could virtually equal last the upper end of their
year'S--{)r it might fall more projection.
The forecast
issued
than a billion bushels below
Tuesday in a ~w formal
it.
dictated by Agriculture
Secretary Bob Bergland,
offered two separate sets of
potential harvest and crop
demand figures
The first 1s based on the
possibility the United States
drought will ease and
. Holzer Medical Center
weather abroad will continue
IDischarges, March 28)
good.
Landon Ball, Mary Boster,
The second is if the drought
Gladys Davis, Nellie Eblin, continues · in this country
Janice Hankla, Bruce through 1977 whUe weather
Jamison, Sr., Mrs. Roger abroad deteriorates.
e,rvis and daughter, Donna
Officials warned 1977 har·
Jofil&gt;son, Mrs. Thomas vestsaremonthsaway,many
Kibble and daughter, Lola Plains and western states are
Lafon, Rose Lee, Alva still dry despite recent rains,
McKenzie, Mrs. William and "uncertainties cloud the
McNeil and daughter, Mrs. outlook."
Gary Perkms and daughter,
"But
with
recent
Glenn Powell, Keith Spencer, widespread improvement in
Co!'"elia Tipton,-Ea:I Wilbur, miilsture conditions in the
Charles Wllson, Jr.
United States, prospective
!Births, March28)
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Shockey,
son, Ravenswood, W. Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Riffle,
daughter, Gallipolis Ferry,
W. Va.

HOSPITAL
NEWS

Monday on CR 20, one and
developments have moved nine tenths miles north of SR
closer to the relatively 7 in Meigs County.
favorable weather .The Gallia·Meigs Post
assumption," the report said. State Highway Patrol said
· Last year's record corn the animal ran into the path
aop was 6.216 billion bushels of 8 car operated by Donald
and good weather could mean R. Smith, 19, Rt. 3, Pomeroy.
this year's crop would be There was minor damage to
·virtually the same. Bad Smith's car.
weather could mean a drop to
as small an output as 5 billion
bushels, experts said.
.
.For wheat, experts satd
Clear early tonight but
wtthgoodweatherforthe rest becoming mostly cloudy by
of the season, the 1977 crop Wednesday morning. Lows
could reach 2 billion bushels will be between :ill and 55.
compared to last year's Mostly cloudy with showers
record 2.147 billion bushel or thunderstorms Wed·
crop. With poor weather, the· nesday, highs around 70.
harvest could he as low as 1.7 Probability of rain is near
~on bushels -the smallest zero per cent today, 10 per
smce 1972.
.
cent tonight and 70 per cent
Analysts satd about 1.1 Wednesday.
·
billion bushels of surplus
wheat, the largest carryover
DANCE PLANNED
since 1963, would he on hand
MASON, W.' Va. - ,·A
when the 1977 cr?p lS square dance wm · be held
harvested.!! this years crop · Saturday, Arril2 at the Reds
reaches the upper !OI'ecast, Club from 9 p.m. to I a.m.
analysts said the surplus sponsored by the VFW
could rise again to. 1.3?7 &amp;ewart.Johnson Post 9926.
billion bushels in nud·1978• Music will be provided by
close to the 1961 record of Bernard Coonley and the
.1.411 billion bushels.
Kanauga Valley Ramblers.

Weather

0

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
Jackson &amp; Perkins

Veterans Memorial Hosplla1
Admitted - William Ed·
wards, New Haven; Myrtle
Hayes, Columbus; Jacob
Holman, Jr., Racine; Bertha
Robinson, Racine; Ruby
Cooper, Portland; Ray Hall,
Vinton; Robert Bishop,.
Rutland; Carol Burnem,
Racine; Judy Ha~rison,
Rutland; Maude Ross,
Middleport: Lucy Markin,
Athens:
Discharged Emma
·Hayman, Thomas Sarver,
Myrta Schafer, Clifford Hall.

ROSE BUSHES
Everblooming!
Two year field grown
superooted roses. The
most popular and best
growing varieties.

,., Queen Elizabeth • Pink
,., Charlotte Armstrong • Cerise
,., Eclipse . Yellow
,., K· T. Marshall • Pink
,., New Yorker • Red

,., Peace · Yellow/Pink blend
,., Ste~ing Silver • Lavender
,., Tiffany · Pink
,., White Queen • White
, Blaze • Red

,., Golden ShoweiS • Yellclw
.. ,

,., White Dawn • White
~

.

,.,. Tropicana .• OrangHed
,.,. Kordes Perfecta

at y

e
VOL. XXVII NO. 244

..

TiiESE CHESTER ELEMENTARY SCHOOL sixth
graders will play leading roles In a minstrel show to be
staged S:t 8 p.m. Friday in the school auditorium to raise
funds for tile school safety patrol trip to Washington D. C.
They arefroot, I tor, Roger Bissell and Keith Brogan, who
iVi!l be clown end.men, and back, 1 to r, David Gaul and
Eddie Werry, who will be interlocutors. Seventh graders
who will join the minstrel cast as end clownil are Nick
Lllonard, Bryce Buckley, Ray Werry and Rodney Keller.

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

ea

0•

C H AR LE ST 0 N
well as a convenience factor
Governor Rockefeller late· for our residents," the
Mqnday gave the go-ahead q'n Governor said. :
construction of two bridges At present, the closest
aossing tbe Ohio River at bridge in the Moundsville
Moundsvilie and Ravens· area connecting West
wood.
,
· virginia and Ohio is at
. : In . conference
in Benwood (a toll faclllty four
Charleston, Rockefeller said miles from Moundsville). To
the estimated cost ofthe two the south, the closest bridge
spans Is $37.9 mllllon..
crossing the Ohio River is 34
The Governor SBid 1 he miles away in New Martinsbelieves the Ravenswood and · ville.
Moundsville bridges will do
Similar conditions e1ist in
much to spur economic Ravenswood where motorists
development in the counties must travel 40 miles to
of Jackson and Marshall, as Parkersburg or 32 mUes to
well as surrounding areas. Mason to cross the Ohio.
"Bridges connecting
Based upon agreement
Moundsville and Ravenswood reached between the states of
to Ohio have bee~ badly West Virginia and Ohio, and
needed. The potenUal th.ey the Federal Highway Ad·
can provide ror industrial ministration. the estimated
developm"!lt is unlimited, as

$
Jackson &amp; Perkins

REDI-PLANTED
PATENTED
ROSES ·
,., Arlene Francis
,., Chtysler' ' 1mpenal

.

.

•

enttne

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 30, 1977

•

given

cost of the Moundsville
bridge is $23,904,000.
A breakdown Shows that
West Virginia's total cost
share is $14,707,000. Of that
amount, federal·aid funds
wUI provide $10,295,000, and
the state will match ·
$4,412,000.
Ohio's total cost share is
$9,197,000. Of that amount,
federal-aid funds will pay
$6,438,000, and Ohio will pay
$2,759,000 In matching
money.
For the Ravenswood
bridge, the estimated total
cost is $11,004,000. West
Virgnia 'a total cost share is to
be $5,686,000 or $3,980,000 in
federal-aid and $1,706,000 in
state matching funds.
Ohio's total cost share is

PRICE Fl FTEEN CENTS

•

r1

$8,318,000 or $5,823,000 in facilities that will enhance
federal-aid and $2,495,000 in and further support the
matching funds.
town's planned develop·
The Governor said, ment."
"Moundsville warrants
In addition, Rockefelier
improved transportation pointed out that the future

growth of Jackson County
depends on the development
of an adequate tr~ nsporta tion
network for accessibility and
service to the Ohio River
Valley.

·w,,,,,m~,,~;,,;, ,~, , , , , , , , , , , , , ,;, , , , , , , , . ,. , ,., , , , , , , , , , , ;,:,:,: ,:,:,:,:, , , , , , , , , ;, , , : :'

.A irhone clown wants
!News . . .in Briefs\\\ to make June regatta
It could be that "Thunder vertised boat races, people
By. Uaited Press Inte1118tioual
CANAL WINCHESTER, OHIO - VOTERS IN the Canal Chicken" wiD be a feature of cnve quite a distsnce to see
Winchester school district in Fairfield County Tuesday this year's Big Bend Regatta them, and there are no races~
Crow explained that it Is
· approved an 8.9oll\W operating levy by an unofficial vote of 1!62 in June.
Thunder Chicken claims to difficult to get a racing group
to 501.
&amp;lperintendent Andrew Miller said the ilchool system be the world's first skydiving to come and also someone to
would have·had to close ·u the levy had not passed. Voters clown. He is DaDas Witt· oversee the project. He said
.genfeld of Cel!na, Ohio who · there is no doubt local
defended a simUar menaure several months ago .
'
in 1969 served w~h Company museboat races and other
WOOSTER, OWO - OWO'S SMAIL MEAT pack~rs D. 75th Airborne Rangers b1 local races would perfonn on
cinnot affor4 a federal lake-over of the stale's meat inspection Vielnam, and later decided to &amp;today.
Quickie suggested a shuttle
JI"Ogram says John Tucker, who along with other meat turn to being a clown.
His business representative service be offered during
proce&amp;80rs, Is suing, to try and prevent such a move.
Tucker, from nearby Marshallville, and the group flied a Is Jim Wasson, who met with ~alta to control the traffic
suit againlt the takeover and last Friday were granted a Regatta sponsor Pomeroy JI'Oblem, perhapa using golf
temporary restraining order, stopping the change, at least for Chamber of Commerce · carts to help with the parade
tile present. Tueker said the case Is based on a 1971 state law Tuesday at noon in the Meigs 111 Friday evening. He also
which requires the state to maintain a meat inspection Inn. Wasson showed ftlms of SJggested that members of
Thunder Chicken's act.
the Big Bend CB Club be
program.
There Is ooe small catch to mked to help direct traffic.
"Small packers doo 'I want federal inspection," said
Jim Frecker is in charge of
Tucker. "We don't think we can afford it. Before we can meet Thunder Chicken's act which
is gmred lor every member the parade and Tonya Davis
the regulations, we'd have to dose down."
d. the family. Three days at is chairman d. the queen
OOUJMBUS - SEN. CHARLES BUTI'S, !).Cleveland, the regatta by Thunder oontest, assisted by Ralph
said Tuesday cigarette bootlegging has reached "alarming" Chicken wUI cost $975, and to Werry. It IS planned to move
proportions in Ohio and that his bill to set a mandatlll')' one-to- add a hot air balloon to his act right ahead with commUtees
ltick In another
Wassoo for the Regatta. No general
ten-year prison sentence for the crime should be passed.
Bull$ was named chairman of a subcommittee of the Ohio SJggested spoosors ~ ob- dlairpwson has been named
Senate Ways and Means Committee to work on the bill he ta!ned to bring the balloon. yet.
Thunder Chicken would do
Also meeting with the
Introduced March 8to set the mandatory sentence for a person
cmvicled of possessing more than $60 worth of oot-of'State two jumpa, present a ping dlamber was Mrs. Phyllis
pong ball drop, give a magic Early, representing Town
clgarelt!!s.
show, bitlloon rides to Meeting Ohio (TM).
TM i~designed to Increase
OOLUMBUS ,;.. THE 01110 HOUSE HAS giv~n an children (100 pounds In
"expression of intent" to support an agricultural museum on weight or less) and sign citizen participation in
meetln s. Chamber mem·
the campus of the Ohio Agricultural Reseach and Devetop. autographs.
The hot air balloon Is elght bers felt that since there are
inent Center at Wooster.
But, according to the sponsor of the re$0lutlon wbich cleared 111d one half stories high. !ll many organizations in tbe
unanimously Tuesday, the ''real test"wUI rome later when the Youllllsters would be given oounty now that TM would
General Assembly may be asked for financial supp~rt of the free rides 50 to 60 feet up. not be a success.
They can accommodate 75 to
Mem hera were presented
musewn, being planned lor a 1~ opening.
·
100 youngners in two-hours with a list of previously
PORTLAND, ORE. - ABOU'r EIGHT MILlJON baby between the hours of 6 and 8 PJbllshed priorities, 62 in aU,
salmon will have a bumpy ride to the Pacific this year because p.m. 'Th111der Chicken has for capital Improvements in
of the drought. &amp;.oe of the fingerlings will be scooped up and appeared in Athens and Meigs County. Each was
asked to check the list and
put on a barge, but those that miss the barge will go down Nelsonville.
Fred
Crow,
C
of
C
SJbmitto)ames
M. Jennings
Interstate 80 In trucb.
Jl"esldent,
was
to
meet
with
Associates
Co.
The maiHil8de conveyances for the salmon are part of a
Richard Jones asked
plan by the Army Corpa of Engineers to save the Uves .of Wasson following the meeting
to
discuss
booking
the
act.
persons
to mark those lm·
millions of YOUIIII salmon that might die going over the dams
BDI
Grueser,
Bill
Quickie
JI'OVements
that should not
oo the Snake and Columbia Rivers. The rivers are rum!ng at
about half their normal volame and most of the flow is being and last year's Regatta be .funded by local monies.
Crow added that not on the
directed through massive water turbines to generate Queen, Mary Ault; who at·
tended the Ohio Festival list, but something he would
hydroelectricity
meeting in ColumbUs Sunday, · ID&lt;e to see here, was painting
\VASHiNGTON - SENATORS WORRIED about a lrought back a disturbing the courthouse and the Meigs
limitation oo outside inc0111e. In the proposed ll!lW ethics code report. Quickie sa.lll the Ohio Olurty jail.
Crow announced that Good
,woo a reprieve with a quick and surprising vote I() delay the Festival Asso'&amp;ation Is
restrl_ctioo a year untU the start of 1979, Npt a single member · afuceril.ed with theBJg Bend friday s.,.vlces will be held
RA!gaita in that it lias ad·
Ajx;l · 8, a! the Grace
'
Continued on page 6
·.
0

-·

0

'

The commission examined the Page Street project
submitted by Wesley Buehl, county engineer, and agreed til
study tile proposal before taking any action.
Commissioner James Roush last week told the board he
expects to arralllle a Federal program that may provide as
many as 25 employes who coold be used in road maintenance
and repair by tile county highway department.
Last night Roush said since talking with Buehl, he thinks a
separate agency should be set up to Administer such a
program and will discuss the matter with Buehl. Attending
were Wells, Richard Jones , and Roush , commissioners, and
Mary Hobstetter, acting clerk.
·

•

•

,400.

StruYly!
Hardy!

conservative investment:
Other
options
controversies:
..:. The listing of options In
the same stock on two or
more exchan!ies has resulted
in a heated war lor business
between the Amex and the
CBOE whUe a third options
marketplace, the
PbUadephla Stock Exchange,
bas pleaded to the SEC to halt
dusl listings. The war has
added to lroker operating
costs and the question now is
before the SEC for decision.
-The Impact of options oo
fluctuations in the price of the
underlying stock haa not been
demoostrated, according to
option supporters, but is very
real to critics. The ''tall
wagging the dog" debate
continues· without conclusive .
evidence on either side.
- A' CBOE~mmlssloned
study im whether options are ·
diverting funds away from
!lOW stock isaues coold help
answer this question. But the
study by two university
profeslors·ls running late and
tile CBOE doesn't know when
Ita findings will be releued.
- The CBOE and Amel
have had to clean up mini·
IC8ndala invo!Yi!JB tradlnL
infractions picked up by
~Ich~tnge
surveillance
~s. In the year&lt;~ld
Amex 'Investigation, the esc .
change has yet to make
PJblic any detaUs ot the
violations, saying some cases
are still open.
Through it all, stock optima
Ire a big bualneu,
lpparently destined hJ
remain so.

House BUI 455. There is no looger any doobt as to the
responsibility of tile cow!ty to furnish funds !OJ: this program.
An extra levy of .75 of a mill expired two years ago and this
year a speciallevy of ,lllof a mill will expire. Without a special
levy the money must come from the county general fund. If
this is done, then some other worthwhile county programs
must be drastically .cut or elimiriated. A levy of one mill iS
needed to operate a mental retardation program on a minimal
basis."
Art Sy)vester discussed repair work needed at the county

sanitary landfill for which the commis.sion agreed to contact
tile highway department.
Robert Wingett, president of Syracuse Cooncil, discussed
the new recreation area in Syracuse. He said additional
materials are needed on the project and asked for help by the
county. Wingett stressed that the recreation area will benefit
the entire county. The commission agreed to investigate to see
if it can help.
The board discussed the heating and cooUng problem at
tile Welfare Building and dgreed to check with several
companies as to repair or replacement of the system.

t

· ·• • 1ooks good st:uc~~~
Car kills deer
Corn proJeCtion
;a~a~i~~d9 ~~:.
By BERNARD BRENNER

(Continued from page I)
why the two planes were on the same runway when the KLM
plane roared fm: takeoff atll!6 miles an hour.
Spanish authorities said Monday a misunderstanding could
have catised the collision, but an air ministry statement issued
later denied that the control tower was responsible.
"Any type of sabotage or the failure in the communications
of the control tower or Its personnel can be discounted," the
miniBtry communique said.
In New York, Pan Am officials denied a report carried by the
Spanish news agency Clfra that the Pan Am pilot may have
misunderstood cootrol tower directions and instead of turning
into a parking area moved onto a runway in front of the KLM
plane.
.
The job of identifying the dead was handed over to 16
American forensic etperts and 10 from the Netherlands flown
onto the island by helicopter.
·
The news agency Europa Press said American and Dutch
officials were malting arrangements·to fly the dead home. It
said the Dutch passengers and crew killed aboard the KLM 747
were being embalmed at the personal request of Queen Juliana
of the Netherlands.

0

Area Deaths

m

Episcopal Church from 12:30
to 1:30 p.m. The Ministerial
Association has requested
that employes be allowed to
attend the services. At·
tending were Cfow, Barbara
ChaJI!lan, secretary, E. F.
Robinson, Mr. and Mrs.
Virgil Teaforo, Bm Quickie,
BU1 Grueser, Vernon Weber,
Joe Young, Dale Warner,
Richard Jones and N. W.
Compton.

PATTY FLETCHER, ·Meigs County Cancer Crusade Chainruin, looks as three Meigs
County mayo~sslgn a proclamation declaring April to be Cancer Crusade Month. From the
left are Mayor.Eugene Thompson, Rutland; Mayor Fred Hoffman, Middleport, and Mayor
Charles Pyles, Racine. Unable to be present were Mayor Clarence AMrews of Pomeroy and
Mayor Herman London of Syracuse.
(See story on page 6) .

Banquet
State
may
help
utilities
tickets
on sale
COLUMBUS (UP!) -Offi.
cials of seven electric utility
companies were told by Gov.
James Rhodes Tuesday the
state might help them come
Dinner tickets- at $3 each up the $7 billion the utilities
-went on ssle today in Meigs say they'll need to meet the
Local School district for the ·
demand for electricity
Meigs High School first an· through 1981.
nual AU.Sports hanquet to be
In reports flied by the
sponsored by the Middleport . utilities with the Public
Pomeroy Rotary Club at Utilities Commission of Ohio,
Meigs on April 14.
the seven utilities projected
Vernon Weber, chainnan, the $7 billion in capital
said the master of construction expenditures.
ceremonies remains to be
About $5.6 billion of that
named for the event. There total was for extra generating
wlU be no lonna! speaker, an capacity.
innovation. made this season
Rhodes suggested that per·
in an attempt to hold costs to haps the state might issue
the public down as guests of hundreds of millions of
the club will include all boys dollars worth of tax-free
and girls athletic teams, bonds to build new coal·fired
including their cheerlead!ng electric generatiog .stations,
corpa.
then lease the facilities to the
"Name" speakers can individual utilities.
come as high as $2004400 plus
"To save Ohio consUmers
expenses at today's inRated mooey and to guarantee conprices.
tinued electric service, . we
Tickets are on sale, and will must find new ways to
remain on .sale through AprU finance your generating
8 at the Quallty Print Shop in facilities," said Rhode$.
Middleport, New York
"We'll call it the Ohio Plan
Clothing House in Pomeroy, for Electricity. Take a week
Dutton Drug Store, Mid· and get your beacb together,"
dleport; Rutland Department he told the electric utility
Store, Rutland; the bigh executiv~.
school, and We~em Auto
Last week, Rhodes huddled
Store in Middleport.
with officials of · coal and

natural gas industries, askil\g
them to review .their energy
problems and give him
recommendations toward
forestalling an energy crisis
next year.
"I doo't want this state to
go down the drain because of
a lack of intestinal fortitude,"
Rhodes told electric utility
executives. "You give me a
plan. We'll lake it to (Presi·
dent) Carter personally."
Rhodes predicted the.
electric utility industry would
be unable to find the $7 billion
in the hood market, ~nd if
they did, the cost to would be
prohibitive, driving up
consumer utility prices
beyond the consumer's
abUlty to pay.
But Rhodes said some solu·
lion to the impending
flnancial problems with
electric utilities must be
found to make ~urea deficit
in the supply of electricity
doesn't appear just as a
deficit appeared in the
natural gas supply last

delays, both in the state and
federal bureaucracies, were
as much of a problem as the
increasing cost of capital.
Robert Frazer, president of
the Dayton Power and Light
Co. , complained that the
Internal Revenue Service
would not broaden its
definition of "pollution
control" equipment.
Frazer said cooling towers
and thick protect! ve domes
over nuclear power plants
ought to be defined as
"pollution control" devices,
and therefore be eligible for
6¥, per cent bonded
financing, rather than the
normal71'.t per cent to 811 per
cent bonded financing.
In addition to DP&amp;L, participating in the meeting
were officials of Toledo
Edison, Ohio Edison, the
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric
Co., Ohio Power, Cleveland
Electric IDum!nat!ng Co. and
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co..
Also
present
were
winter .
representatives of the North
"U Y'"l uy you can't do American Coal Co., the Ohio
anything - that'swrong. You Department. of Taxation,
can do anything If you try," PUCO,IheOhloAF'IrCIO,the
said Rhodes.
O.hlo Environmental
Sev e r.a I o If c 1a Is. PrO\ee~on Agency and the
complained . that ~lory · Oi)io General AsSembly... ·.,

, Double Delight
,., First Prize
.
,., New Day
0

,., Red Masterpiece
,., Snow Fire
,.,. First Edition

,., Prominent

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY'

Heller cites need for ·adequate energy program
PORTSMOUTH - Ohio
Power Company's chief
a:itcutlve officer Tuelday
nltibl here called on
Prelldatt J~y Carter to
jjve the nation an adequate
tlleriY procram that, every·
me cu qree on.
Charlet
A.
Heller,
•ec:11tlve vice president,
IPtUJIII at Harold's
Restaurant to newspaper,.
radio
1nd
television
npresentatlves of the
~I

company's Portsmouth
D.vislon, stressed that an
adequ•e energy IIUpply is so
bldamet11a~ so vital to us as
a peoplt! and as a natioo, "we
amply. mu• lind so!utlona
that people of good will can
agree m."
In this objective Heller
JI'Omised the l'relldent his
company's
fullest
moperatlon and support.
Mr. Heller's speech wall
followed by a period of
~

IJ!eltions al\(1 answers. AI·
ten ding. from the Meigs·
Gellla media were Richard
Owen, publiBher, and Chester
'l'lnnehlll, 11ecut!ve editor,
d. the Ohio Valley Publlslllng
Ol. newspapers, and news
clrector Barbara Thomson ol
Radio Station WMPO.
Company representatives
- e Bll Llzon, manager of
the Gavin Power Plant at
Oleshire, and Fred Morrow,
mtnager in the Pumeroy

area.
' HlghllghiS ·of Mr. Heller's
remarks: The main thrust of
nw remarks last rear had to
do wlfh flnancla problems
and the ·difficulties we were
encountering In coping. While
Olio Power has had some
relief, the financial re!lOurcts
of lhe company remain under
pressure.
This year I want to talk
about the very real l!lreal
Which exlsls thai the electric
lpauslry might not be able lo
provide the ample and

dependable electric service
lhal has been Its hallmark for
many decades. You and I
need to uk ourselves a
serious and distressing
question :
.
Will this area have an

ade&lt;luale SUP!&gt;IY of power In
1982~ lam concerned that our
nation may not have an
•doquate supj)ly - thai we
may exper Ionce shortages of
electricity In the early 80's,
and perhaps socner. .
You may well ask why Ohio
Power Cbmpan,y Is con ·

cerned. With lhe addition of

two l,lOO,OOO · kllowatt
generating units which went
Into service at our General
James M. Gavin power plant
at Cheshire, Ohio, midway
between Gallipolis and
Pomeroy, in 1974and 1975, we
have euellenl generating
reserves. In fact. we have
been accused of overbuilding
our
g e n e r a t 1 on
facilities . . . of having too
much rf!Serve capacity.
Why am 1 concerned about
future supplies of eloctrlclly?
To explain my concern, I
must discuss three subjects

·~

wllh you: Flrsl) How much through 1985.
electric arowlh can we an·
On the · other hand, the
. llclpalef Secondly) What growth ·rate for electr ic
kind of construction will be _ power demand ts· pegged at S
.required to meet this growth? per coni. It Is lnlerestlng that .
And lhlrdly) Will we be able the FEA gives no reason tor
to accomplish this con . lowering lis growth rate In
slrucllon?
electric demand from last
Hlslorlcally, overall energy rear's 5.4 per cent pro jection
demand has grown at a rate lO·year torecasl).
of 3.5 per cent annually. At
I have trouble accepting
the present time, however, the 5 per cent figure. First, I
lhe Federal Energy Ad · do nol - know why the
ministration Is projecting r.:ojecllon was lowered from
lhal U.S. tolal energy ast year '&amp;outlook for 5.4 oer
demand will grow al the role
( Continued on page" 2)of 2.5 per cent annua ll y

~

1

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