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                  <text>12 _The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., TUesaday, April _5:_1977 .-.·.·.-.-.· .·.·.·.-.·.·-·.·.·.-................... ·.·

Nelsonville HOSPITAL ~ork~~~~~~~
in Eastern's
left dry
NEWS

by filters
.NELSONVILLE, Ohio
(UPI ) -This Athens county
community of about 5,000 is
"nice and dry" today after
the reservoir was emptied
overnight bllcause of a faulty
filtering
system,
a
spokesman for the fire
department said.
"We have very little water
pressure,"
said
fire
department dispatcher Harry
Barber. "We are down 60
pounda right now and as far
as drinking water is
concerned we have none
except what one National
Guard truck brought in here.
"It has- about 600 gallons of
drinking water.and as far as I
know that's the only steps
taken for drinking water In
'Nelsonville," Barber said.
~ Barber said the problem
started when engineers
began working on filters in
the water plant.
"They ran into some problems on the filtering and had
to lot-the--rqervoir r:qn.down
until It was enip!J;•,- he said.
"They had to shut it down to
work on it. We don't
anticipate having any water
for another day or two.
4
' 1t's a
real mess," said
Barber.
The town has been plagued
by water shortages for the
past several months.
Barber said there were
several places in town where
the sewer systems could be
backed up with Hood water
for use by the fire department
in case of a fire.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Herbert
Seth, Pomeroy; Mary Slater,
Ra ci ne ; Kelly Humphrey,
Guysville; Norman Joseph,
Pomeroy ; Gilbert Wilson.
Tuppers Plains: Francis
Reedsville ;
Benedum,
Gladys Morgan, Pomeroy;
Phyllis Gilkey, Clifton, W.
Va.
DISCHARGED - Lula
Toban, Effie Watson.

Holzer Medical Center
I Discharges, April4)
Maggie Barr, Nellie
Campbell, Timothy Canter,
Horace Clark, Irene Delaney,
Mrs. Roy Easter and
daughter, Shade Franklin,
William Grueser, Robert
Lewis, Sr., Richard Martin,
Esther Nibert, Mrs. Merrill
O'Dell and daughter, Daisy
Osborn, Paul Phillips, Lowie
Rice, Mrs. John Shriver and
son.
(Birth, Aprll4)
Mr. and Mrs. David Beedy,
daughter, Jackson.

'
PLEASANT VALLEY
Discharges - Mrs. Walter
Ross and daughter, Gallipolis
Ferry; Mrs. Ashable DeVault
and son, Point Pleasant;
Denver
LeMaster,
Hurricane;
Mrs . Lida
Christy, Pliny; Teresa Lamp,
!'oint Pleasant; Mrs.· Fred
Harmon, Point Pleasant ;
Charles Siders, Galliwlis;
Mrs.
Dewey
Wroten,
Gallipolis Ferry; 'Thelma
Theviner, Gallipolis; and
Carl Williams, Patriot, 0.
Birth - A daughter to Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas Kiskis,
Gallipolis.

,Carter
-·
(Continued from page 1)
proposals- to spur the
economy through $50 rebates
to most Americans, and to
create a Department of
Energy, , were
losing
momentum and there was no
chance action on them would
be completed before the Illday recess, which begins late
this week.

Weather
Highs today lower 40s, lows
tonight in upper 2Qs. Cloudy
and continued cold Wednesday, highs in the lower
40s.
Probability
of
precipitation is 50 per cent
today., 40 per cent tonight , 20
per cent Wednesday.

.. ..

---------------------------1
Wheat, ricet Area Deaths
!

(Continued from page I)
(Continued from page I)
I
1
commercial
application
for at leaJt four more years. Ita
share of world reserves.
ARNOL:D
KINGERY
CHARLES
E.
CARROLL
combuslon efficiency Is about :jO per cent shGt1 at. the dellred
Bergland said supports on
Arnold A. Kin9ery, 68 , Rt.
NEW HAVEN. W. Va . level committee members were told, and the IIJllOWit at.
the
1977
corn
crop,
~;et by the
l,
Gallipolis.
d1ed
Monday
Charles E . Carroll, 72. of New
.
'
schools possible
Ford administration at $1.50 Haven , died Monday moining around 10 a .m . in the Medical limestone "lused must be reduced.
a bushel, would be raised to in the Holzer MedJcal Cen ter . Plaza .
He wa!i bor-n Nov. 2'6, 1908.
Born April 1, 190.5, in
EAST .MEIGS - The
SAN FRANCISCO - SOME 50 ANGRY owners of.
$1.75 with similar increases Middlebourne,
W. Va ., he was In Lawrence County , son of
Eastern Local Teachers
for sorghum, barley, oats and the son of the lale Ab and the late William Henry and Chevroleta made between 1973 and 1977 held a rwrty car rally
A.,n., Informed Monday
rye. No increase in the $2.25 a Armatha Thomas Carro ll. He Nancy Catherine Callicoat Mooday on the Marina Green next to San Franclaco Bay.
night no progress was
Diana Fischer a1. the San Franclaco Consumer Actioo said the
bushel wheat support will be · was preceded in death by a Kingery .
He married the former
Nell Chamberlain , and
being made · at the
owners
Monday were protesting "premature rusting" whlcb
made because of fear s asister,
Murl Angel in McCar leyvlile
brother , Tom Carroll .
In
bargaining
table
has
"irTeparable damage." ·
Ca nada would undersell
in
i938.
Two
(Clipper
Mills)
Mr. Carroll was a member
negotiations for a new
. She said her organlution and several other groupe have
American exporters.
of the Mason Church of children survive : Mar lin,
contract, authorized Its
Soybean suppo.rts , Christ , a pclst employee of the Gallipolis and Robert, al filed con\plainta with the Federal Trade Coounilsion, seekln8
heme . Two grandchildren
Windsor Plant where he
negotiating committee to
payment of repair c-osts or the repurchase of affected cara by
previously set at $2.50 a worked
survive
.
for
23
years,
and
he
call a work stoppage "tf
Chevrolet.
A Chevrolet spcikeoman denied the clalms al.
bushel for 1977, were raised to retired as a shift engineer at
Three brothers survjv~ :
Bdequate progress Is not
excessive rusting but said his company would meet with
John, New Vienna, Ohio ;
J3.50. Bergland said he was lhe Phillip Sporn Plant .
seen. ••
Survivors include his wife, Gerald, S~ottown and Floyd,
c-onsumer groups later this mooth to discuss the problem.
ordering the largest incr;ease
Gallipolis . ··· Three sisters
Helen L. (Conley)
Mrs . R . . M. Jones ,
for the valuable oilseed crop Mrs.
Carroll , at home ; ~daughter , su rvive : Mrs . Darlene
president, told The Dally
because it is currently in Mrs . Don (Joan) Cornell , • McKinney, Cheshire; Mrs.
Sentinel alter a meeting of
short supply and he wants to Randallstown, Md .: a son, G. Edith Balrs of Gallipolis and
Janey
Comer,
the association at the fire
enc-ourage bigger production E. (Jerry) Carroll, Malta , Mrs .
Gallipolis.
·
Ohio ; . three grandchi ldren,
house In Tuppers Plains
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
this year.
Mr. Kingery was a crew
Usa
and
Lana
Carroll
and
that •a doadlock ·had been
Thursday through
In other action :
Donnie Cornell ; a brother , chief lineman with Buckeye
reached wltb the board of
Saturday, cold with a
Bergland announced he is Ray Carroll, Fairmont, W. Rural Electric Co .. for 30
education. She said "every
extending for two months, Va ., and a sister, Mrs. Una years before his retirement In
chance of onow Hurries
effort has been made to
through May 31, the period in Win land. Beech Bottom , W. i972.
Fair and
Thursday.
Funeral services will be
.
reach an agreement" by . which wheat and riee VaFuneral
warmer
Friday
and .
held 1 p.m . Thursday at
Magazine and newspaper
services will be
the teachers. Teacher
growers can apply for held at the Foglesong Miller's Home for Funerals
Saturday. Highs wUI be In
articles can give a reader
demands" were
not
support loans on their 1976 Funeral Home at 1: 30 p .m . with Rev . Melv in Holley
tbe 40s Thursday _and
more up-t&lt;&gt;&lt;late information
officiating. Burial will be In
revealed.
crops; he is reducing interest Wednesday, with ministers Centenary
wannlng
to
the
Ills
by
!han a book usually does.
Cemetery,
Paul Jarrett and Steve Davis
rates on crop support loans officiating.
· Saturday. Lows will be In
Friends may call at the
Burial will follow
This yea·r the llbraries in
from the former 7.5 per cent in the Kirkland Memorial funeral home after 4 p.m .
the 20s early Tburt1day and
Pomeroy and Middleport
Wednesday.
- rate to 6 per cent; and he Is Gardens.
In tbe 30s early Saturday.
their
have
increased
Friends may call af the
liberalizing a government
periodical subscriptions to
.:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:
funeral home on Wednesday
program of loans to finance from 2 to 4 p.m . and 7 to 9
make news and current ideas
construction of grain bins on p.m.
in many fields available to
farms .
the public. Magazine racks at
. In operating the reserve
the llbrartes now include lhe
plan for 1976 wheat and rice
magazines Christian Life,
placed under support loans,
Creative
Crafts, Outdoor
Bergland said farmers who TONTO NO. I
Life,
U.
·
s
:
News and World
ANADARKO, Okla. (UP!)
apply for the three-year
Report,
Weight
Watchers,
extensions of support loans - Mohawk Indian actor Jay
Vogue,
Glamour,
Seventeen,
Silverheels, wtio was Tonto
On Saturday , April 30 would get government on the Lone Ranger television
Business Week, People,
beginning at 10 a.m., riders payments to cover the cost of series, will be honored during
Rolling Stone, Teacher,
will leave on an approximate storing their crops during the the annual American Indian
Motorcycli.st, Home and
Garden, Ms. and Sports
28-mile course to raise mc;mey extension period.
If .farmers repay the loans Exposition Aug . 15-20 as the
for the retarded in Meigs
Afield.
•
Outstanding .Indian of the
County. All Meigs County and sell the crops before Year.
In the newspaper section
residents are asked to par- market prices reach 140 per
the ·libraries offer the New
Silverheels,
a
native
of
the
ticipate in this year's ride, as cent of support, they would be Six
York Times Sunday edition,
Nations
Indian
a sponsor or as a rider. The penalized by being required Reservation in Brantford,
the
Wall Street Journal with
rally point will be the Senior to return the storage Ontario, now lives in Canoga
its
daily
reports on the stock
Citizens Center in Pomeroy . payments with interest. Park, Calif. He is executive
market,
and the Nation.
market prices reach
Riders are reminded that When
These
are
in addition to the
director
of
the
Indian
ACtors
they must "have sponsor the 140 per cent level, storage Workshop, which helps
Daily
Sentinel
and the Athens
payments would cease but
sheets to ride, and they must
All
of these
Messenger.
farmers would be free W sell Indians study acting and tbe
register between 9 and 10
magazines
and
newspapers
th e grain without repaying theater arts.
Saturday morning. Sponsor
can ·either be read at the
the storage money.
sheets can be picked up at the
library or borrowed and
If markets top 175 per cent
NOW YOU KNOW
High Schools, Community of the support, ·the price
taken home if they are not the
Mental Health Center, or support · loans would be · Between dawn and dusk, an .
most recent Issue.
Cleland Realty, 608 East cancelled. This would acre of peas 4;an increase in
weight by 50 per cent, owing
Main St., Pomeroy.
encourage, but not compel,
CARTER DECuNEs
Pickup-vehicles will be farmers w send the grain w to the vegetable's Ngh rate of
CINCINNATI (tiP!)- The
absorption.
behind the riders to pick up market.
ceremooial
first ball for the
those who have fallen behind.
National League baseball
Riders are reminded that
season opener Wednesday
ST . LOUIS (UP!) they are riding at their own
will
be tossed out by local
St
.
Louis
Blues
'
Veteran
risk. ·· Every effort is being
MEETING CALLED
Willis Gradison, R-Ohio,
Rep.
defenseman
Barclay
Plager
made to insure a safe ride.
CHESTE R
The returned to the club's Kansas
the
Cincinnati
Reds
Guy Hysell is in charge of the Southeastern Ohio Garden
Monday.
announced
late
City
farm
team
for
the
route selection and safety. Tractor Assn. will meet at 8
Reds
officials· said
There will be a change in the · p.m. Wednesday at the Dale Central Hockey League
President
Jinuny
Carter was
playoffs M.onday.
. . PRESIDENT CARTER has no intenti,on of modifying
route this year to help with Kautz home near Chester.
to
do
the
honors,
b)lt
asked
Plager
was
called
up
for
: his public comments on human rights despite negative
safety factors and to avoid
the Blues' final two games
turned down the offer.
Soviet reactions. Noting that the Sovieta had never
potential hazards ,as much as
leading
the
Kansas
City
The Reds, traditional hosts
after
from
criticizing
the
free
world,
he
believes
that
refrained
possible.
'
of the National League
team
to
the
CHI..
.
"we
have
a
right-to
speak
out·
openly
when
we
have
a
The route will be as level as
E-RCALLED
championship as playeropener, entertain the San
concern about human rights wherever those abuses
possible so older' riders will
The Pomeroy Emergency coach. He returned to Kansas
Diego Padres at 2:30. p.m.
occur.''
have less difficuity. Riders Squad answered a call to 122
City for that club's playoffs
Wednesday to start the
are also reminded that good Butternut Ave., at 5:21 p.m.
and also was expected to see
season .
behavior is a must to··help Monday for Mamie Buchanan
action when tbe Blues open
insure a safe event. Any who was taken to Veterans
Stanley Cup play.
disciplinary problems will Memorial Hospital.
-,
result in the rider involved
Nmiues~
-~:-':'being asked to drop out of the
event.
NOTICE . Pratt's Meat Mkt .
SERVICES SET
'
The ride will occur rain or
(Pleasanton Meat Processing ,
SYRACUSE
The
Inc.) Custom sloughfering, and
toea·!
shine.
Several
processin g, Retail, wholesale.
celebrities are expected to Syracuse First Church of God
No oppoinment ne-cessary. Call
ride,
including
State will ha·ve ordination a~d
{614) 593-8655, hours , q.oo till
communion
services
(with
'
Representative, Ronald
6:00 7 Pomeroy Rood Athen s.
feet
washing)
Thursday,
Oh.
James and !'rosecuting
April7. The public is invited.
Attorney, Rick Crow.
RACINE - FIRE Dept. will hQve o

"I don't like rainy days."
"I like nice days and whee~ I'm big I want to go to
c:ollege, drive a car and wear pretty dresses. Mommy
opened a savings aCcount for me and I put some of my
allowance in it every week. It makes .more money with
stuff called, " interest" and will help me do the things i
want when I'm big. If you're a mommy or dayy,·help
your kids sa~.~etor a nice day at Citizens National Bank .

"THE

Riders
take off
at 10 am

~lberfelds .

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION
WATCH FOR
OPENING DATE

BOOSTERS TO MEET
RACINE - The Southern
·Athletic Boosters will meet
Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at the
junior high school.

BICYCLES BOUGHT
·Prizes of bicycles for the
April 30 annual Hike-Bike
were purchased by Powell's
Super Valu and the Meigs
Association for Retarded
Citizens.

·===== ==:::;·
THE INN PLACE
Wednesday Night Special

Gun Shoot every Saturday night
6 p.m. ot the1r bvilding in
Boshon . Ohio .

..

RACINE GUN Club . We have
changed our gun shoot to HH·
DAV , night s, !!.!orting ot 7 P ·~.:....

---

2 GARDEN SPOTS to rent out on
Wolfe Pen Road, Con p lan t
anyth ing. Coli Moe Howk,

992-6i72.

SHOOTING MATCH AT Rutland
legion Hall, every Friday ,

e~~~.:. :._p. m .

---

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No 22081
Estate
of
DANIE L
E.
THOMPSON Decea sed. ·
Nof lce is hereby given that
Louise ThomPson, ol , 547

DEPOSITS INSURED TO $40,000

•

In Pomeroy.

HANES
TOP SHAPE
POCKET-T

A great shirt for action or just
relaxing. The " Pocket T's" extra body
length, large reinforced pocket ·and
special double-ply bound crew neck,
make it the active man's sport-leisure
shirt with the ,comfort and strength you
demand! The "Pocket T" is made
from soil, comfortable, absorbent,
shrinkage, controlled, 100 per cent
cotton in br.lght colors that won't run.
or fade. Sizes small, medium, large
and extra large. .

NC MORE rock throw ing or
trespassing on Floyd Wise's
property on Bailey Run .
Paul Wise , Owner.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy ·-

Street, Middleport,
Ohio, has been duly appointed
Admin lstratrlx of the !:state
of Deniel
E . Thompson
de cease d, late of Meigs
Main

Ohio .

Creditors are reQu ired to
f1le the ir claims with sa id
fiduciary
w ithin
three
months .
Dated th is ~9th day of
March 1977.
Mann ing 0 . Webster
Judge
(4) S, 112, 19 · 3fc

Installment Loan Department Number
Will Remain The !;ame 992-3077
Member Federal Deposit Insurance COrporation

The
Action-Shirt
for the
Active Man!

J0NES MEAT Proces!!.ing. County
Rood 2&lt;48, l•lfle Hock mg · off
Wash ington Co. Rds . 26 or 555.
Phone (6U) 667-6133 .
·

~nty,

992-6661

l)irec1or David I.. Wetr of
the Ohio Department of
Transportatipn has informed
1he Meigs County com·
mission extension of the
Pomeroy bypass to Route 7 at
nve Points is programmed
for 1981.
Weir, in answering a query
by the commission about
road design ln the Great Bend
area, so as ilot to interfere
wlth plans the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
has to build an atomic power
plant there (presently au
alternate site) said further
eastern extension generally
paraUeling existing SR 124 Is
a longer range facility "for

Periodicals at
libraries have
been increased ·

FRIENDLY BANK "

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Our NEW Telephone Number is

US 33 bypass extension due in '81

eaused

~

"Save it for a
rainy day?"

News •• in Briefs

Visit Our Salad Bar
Roast Beef
Little Brown Potatoes
Vegetable
Hot Rol,!s
U:&gt;ffee, Tea pr Milk

NOTICE OF
AP PO !NTME NT
case No . 22&lt;139
Estate Of Nelle J. Bing,

Plus Tax

THE MEIGS INN
. Phone 992-6304

Pomeroy, o.

PIZZA SHACK Phone 992-6304

Deceased . ·
Notice is hereby given that
Phyllis Chase Russell of Box
20A, Everglade City , Flor ida ,
ha s been duly appointed
Executrix of tl"le Estate of
Nelle J . B ing , deceased, late
of Meigs County, Oh io.
Creditor~ .~ .. requ1r:ed to ·
file th=., claims with said
fiduc i ary
wlt,.,in
tl"l r~e

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WITH COBRA

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$15995

m&lt;"~nths.

Oat~
lti is 29th day of
Mar ch 1977.
Manning D Webster
Judge
Cour t of Common Pleas,
ProbateD lvislon
(4) 5, 12, 19, 3tc

(9bra.
Punches through loud and clear.

Get the CB 2·Ways
the truckers use.
Whether you want a Citizen's
Band Radio lor safety, business,
convenience or just plain fun,
you 'II !ike the Cobras. Dependable. Fully-warranted.
They're the pioneer name in
CBradio

New ranger at Shad~rest

VOL XXVII NO. 249

handicapped and poor. He in Parkersburg relative to an
further stated that the policy animal shelter and animal
of the program was to try lo control.
prevent institutionalization of • They offered suggesttons
senior citizens.
on behalf of the loeal society
Also meeting with C&lt;&gt;m- as to what might be done in
Qlissioners were members or Meigs County in C&lt;&gt;nstruction
the Meigs County Humane of an animal shelter, if
Society, Mrs. Dorothy Fisher, funding could be made
Joyce
Miller, Marion avaHable.
Crawford, Joan Browning,
Mrs. Fisher stated that she
Rita Lewis and Carolyn had architectural plans for
Smith.
such a shelter but no location.
They discussed activities of
The commissioners agreed
the Humane Society in Meigs to set up an early meeting to
County. Aceampanying the study the possibilities.
local members were BiU
Rex Shenefield met with
Sommer and Larry Wheatley the commissioners to discuss
of Parkersburg. They prop,osed Salem Township
reported what has been done road names. He suggested

several changes.

He was told by the com:
missioners to cqmplle a list of
aU names objected to ' and
exceptiOns will be made.
The Weir letter :
This will acknowledge'
rece ipt of a copy of yoUf"
resolution. adopted January
25, 1977, concern1ng the above
bridg~ and its approaches in
the Meigs County area .
Your concern with the
bridge loc at i on and l is
possible adverse affect on the
de1.1elopment of the indu stri al
property now owned by the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Elecfrlc Company i n the
br i dge approa ch area Is
deeply appreciated . Please
be
assured
that
this

Cootigued on

14

enttne

at y

..

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 6, 1977

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

pa~e

•

•

e

DONBAUN

Don Baun ~... been named ranger of the Sha~ver State
Forest, replacing Vlcwr Bahr, who has retired.
Baun came to Meigs County fror.1 Fernwood where he was
assistant ranger from November, 1974, until March, 1977.
A native of Boardman, Ohio (near. Youngstown) Baun
received his bachelor of science degree in forestry from the
Stephen F. Austin State University at Nacogdoches, Tex., in
December, 1973. He was employed as a quality control
supervisor with the Texas Southern lnsl&gt;""tion Bureau in
Texas before returning to Ohio.
He Is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Homer C. Baun, Boardman.
Bauncan be reached at 37&amp;-6116 and will be glad wanswer
questions on foresiry rules and regulations. He is residing in
the official-ranger home in the Shade River Forest District at
Reedsville.

'
l)CvcloplnCnl ,
v..·hich prese nt fundmg Cmnlrmrill~
restri c tion s pre Clude Offace or Human Servaces 1
significanl advance planning discussed a. Meigs-&lt;iallia
until the effects of the bridge Communi!~ Action Agency
itself on road patterns can be program.
&gt;1udied."
He informed the comIn effeet. the Jetter fi~ed missioners that there was a
department policy as one of possibility of a pilot project
waiting until after con- with · the senior citizens in
struction and use of the Meigs County whereby the
bridge lor a considerable county may possibly receive
time before any serious additional funding for the
thought is gtven to extension senior citazeris. The sponof US 33 bypass.
soring agent is the Ohio
In other . action at the Commission on Aging,
Commissioners Tuesday
•Goddard said the program
evening meeting Sam God- would not affect other
dard, field representative for programs. It would entail
Gallia - Meigs CAA from the such projects as windepartment or Economic and terization for the elderly,

Mine closed in
Perry County

Power firm
will appeal
'•

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The Ohio Po\'er Co. and Ohio
Attorney General William J. Brown say they will appeal 11
decision by the PUblic Utilities Commission o( Ohio 'that
ordered the utility to refund $9.5 million wits customers.
Ohio Power said today in Canton it felt the refund was too
high and "we will definitely file for a rehearing" before the
PUCO.

. Brown said the refund was too small and that PUCO should
have ordered the utility to refund $45 million to its customers.
Brown said that if
necessary' ne wtll ask the Commission' -and it should
Ohio Supreme Court to serve in the best interests of
review the decision in an tl\f' entire Ohio· public," said
effort to force Ohio Power to Brown:
" The..PUCO says we failed
refund an additional $35
million to its residential to how that using expensive,
outof-state
coal -was
customers.
Brown was also critical of unreasonable," he said.
the PUCO for its decision "Ohio Power has a coal mine
concerning the Ohio Power a few miles from its Gavin
company's use of oul-&lt;Jf..state generating plant. But it still
buys out-of-stat.e . coal at
coaL
;_
excessive
costs and moves it
"The PuOO was quick to
thousands
of miles to Ohio. If
point out that it ordered Ohio
that's
not
unreasonable, I ·
Power wrefund $9.5 million
in excessive charges,'' sllid don't know what is."
Brown. "But they overlooked
the fact that the excessive
price tag is $45 million and
the residential consumers
deserve every penny of it."
Brown has charged Ohio
Power Co. with over charging
itS consumers $11.9million, in
addition to cbargil)g them
$7.S million for equipment
repairs, $18.5-·mlllion in
0
excessive costs for Imported
c-oal and $3 million in several
other areas.
The suit of John Triplett,
Brown was most critical of
former
clerk-treasurer or the
the PUOO for missing what
Meigs
Local Board of
he said was an opporunity w
Education,
against the Meigs
assert itself on the issue of
Ulcal
Board
of Education in
. using out-&lt;Jf-atate coal instead
the
amount
of $120,000 has
of Ohio coaL
"The PUed even compli, been denied in Meigs County
· mented Ohio Power for an· Common Pleas Court by
ticipating EPA regulations Judge John C. Bacon.
Triplett asked for $25,000
and burning low -sulphur
for
. breach of co ntract;
coal,, said Brown. "When
$5,000
for reimbursement of
are they going wrealize that
relocation
expenses and other
there are no EPA sulfur
ex penses ,inincidental
regulations in effect, and
curred;
$15,000
for emotiOnal
when they are imposed, Ohio
distress
and
damage to
Power will have over two
rep~tation
and
professional
years in which to c-omply?
$75,000
for
punitive
damages.
"Oblo Power has simply
In the same court David B.
jumped the gun at the
Pomeroy, filed
Herdman,
expense of residential
consumers and Is trying w suit for divorce against Linda
comply with nonexistent and Herdman, Wayne, Missouri.
Hughie Lawrence Ogdin,
unknown standards," said
Middleport,
and Patsy Ann
Brown.
Ogdin,
Middleport,
filed for
"The PUCO has forgotten
that It is a 'Public Utilities
dissolutionofmar:lage.

tsy
United
Press
International
Roving pickets shut dOWII a
Peabody Coal Co. Mine near
New Lexington, in Perry
County, early today, idling
640 miners and bringing w
2,100 the number of miners
out of work at four mines in
SOutheastern Ohio.
The pic~el5 were believed
to be from three Southern
Ohio Coal Co. mines that have
been struck in Meigs and
Vinton Coun ty, putting 1,500
miners out of work.
The United Mine Workers
Union struck the Southern
Ohio Coal Company's No. 3
mine in Vinton Courity two
weeks ago over a dispute

Smith named

to county hoard
'

of education

LawsUit ·for

8120,000 is
t urned d wn

Ons Smith, Long Bottom,
was named to serve on the
Meigs Count y Board or
Education to fill the unexpired term of the late Gordon
Colllns when the county
board met in regular session
Tuesday night.
Smith is currently serving
on the Eastern Local Board of
Education. The late Mr.
Collins served for 25 years on
the county board.
The board adopted a school
calendar for the next school
year and this will be submitted 'to the three local
boards of education for approval. Upon . the recom·
mendation of a committee of
teachers from the three local
districts; the board adopted
the reading series of the
Economy Co. and the
Houghton-Miffli n Co. for
grades one through six.
Attending the meeting were
Supt. Robert Bowen and
members Harold Roush,
George Perry, Harold Lohse
and Robert Burdette.

COURT PROMISED
RUTLAND - Residents of
Rutland are warned to keep
dogs and cats confined to
owner's property or . else be
taken into court Police Chief
Bruce Davis announced
today. The village has an
ordin~nce in
regard to
keeping animals confined and
it will be enforced, Davis
warned . .

between a mine foreman and
a UMW safety conunitteman .
UMW members then struck
the firm's No. 1 and No. 2
mines in Meigs County in a
sympathy walkout earlier
this week.
All three mines are in
District 6 of the UMW and
District President John
Guzek told Ray Howard,
president of Local 1340 at the
Peabody mine, to send his
men back to work when the
pickets leave.
"! wish those people would
keep their problems at their
own mines so we could work
here," said Howard.

BLOODMOBILE SOON
April 18, is the next
Bloodmobile Day for Meigs
County. The Bloodmobile
will be at the Pomeroy
Elementary School from I
to 6 p.m. Whatever. your
blood type Is, that type Is
needed.
Stop and give a unit. ·

Easter
egg hunt
readied

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HOW IT LOOKED TUESDAY - Pomeroy's Main St.
businessmen kept alert eyes on the rapidly rising Ohio '
River Tuesday . Predictions were for Pomeroy to have 46
feet at crest, one-half foot under .Oood stage. Mayor
Clarence Andrews' office said however, the river crested

....,.

,,

or

in Pomeroy at 7 a.m. wday at 43._5. Roads in the county
reported closed were SR 338 at Antiquity, SR 124 at Rocl&lt;
Run and SR 681 in the Darwin area between U.S. 33 and
TR 882. Snow was falling Wednesday morning and the cold
SDaf? was expected to help against further flooding.

Meigs High athletic banquet
to honor school boys, girls
e

Close to 200· boy and girl
student s participating in
organized interscholastic
athletic competition at Me1gs
High School will be honored
the evening of April 14 by
parents, friends , school officials and the Middleport Pomeroy Rotary Club.
The event is the annual

The annual Easter egg hunt
Tickets for the banquet
of the Middleport-Pomeroy
(steak ~Inner ) at $3 each
Rotary Club will be held at 2
are on sale In Pomeroy at
p.m. Sunday at the Municipal
Swlsher-Lohse
Drugs and
Park in Middleport, ChairNew
York
Clothing
House ;
rna n Gene Riggs reports.
in
Middleport
at
the
Some 500 plastic eggs, ·each
Print
Shop,
Dutton
Quality
containing a slip redeemable
Drug Store, and Western
for a prize of approximately
Auto Store; ·In Rutland at
50 cents in value, will be
the
Rutland Dept. Store,
hidden at the park and again
and at Meigs High School.
tbere will be the golden egg
Tickets will be sold through
which carries a $10 prize with
Friday, April 8, and not
a silver egg with a $5 prize.
alter
that date.
The hunt 1s open to only
children through II years of
' age and there will be a roped
off area especially for pre- Rotary Football Banquet
schoolers although there will that, ijke other human afbe some Rotary members on · fairs, h~s undergone change.
hand to assist the -smaller
The Rotary Club, then the
children, Riggs said.
Middlep ort Rotary Club ,
Middleport Mayor Fred undertook to honor the old
Hoffman will give a brief Middleport Yellow Jackets m
message to welcome the November at the end of their
public and Riggs will serve as grid seasons 1n the 1930s.
master of ceremon ies. Those were the years when
Business houses have con· the Yellow Jackets usually
tributed the- prizes to be roughed up the strong
awarded during the annual Southeastern Ohio AthletiC
event.
League by winning cham-

pionship after championship. operates.
Later, Rotary became the He is president or the Meigs
Middleport- Pomeroy Rotary Development Co. which
Cl ub; still later, Middleport, operates the Meigs fnn and
Pomeroy and Rutland con- other Bend area businesses.
Achieving mature physical
solidated their
school
systems, their varsity growth late - aft er a Navy
athletic teams becoming the hitch - Childs led the old .
Ohio
Valley
Meigs Marauders (in 1967 ). sem i-pro
This year, for the first time, Baseball Assn. in hitting and
the event will include high played shortstop in that'
sc hool women 's teams . league's heyday following
Economic factors thus dic- ww 2.
tated a revised format for the
banquet. Thus, next April 14 ·.. ····· ...·.·:-: :-:-:-:-:-:·:-:-: .·:·:·: · :·:·:::::-:-:·:::::·.-:·:
there will be no "name
spea ker,'' but rather a
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
master of ceremonies or
Friday through Sun·
, proven caliber who will in- day, fair with a slight
sure the program moving.
warming trend. Highs will
Rotary banquet chairman be In the upper 40s and 50s
Vern Weber said the club is Friday and In the 50s or the
fortunate to have obtained low 60s Sunday. Lows will
Middleport insurance agency be In the mid 20s or the mid
ow ner William B. (Bill) 30s Friday and In the 30s
Childs to perform 1n that role.
Friday. and Saturday.
Southeastern Ohio knows
Childs as a skilled salesman, .... :-·· .. .-:-: .;:-: ......·.·.-.·. ·.·:·:·.-:::· .·.·.·.-.
not only or his business
product, but also of
progressive programs in his
communi ty. A · former
Middleport Councilman,
COFC TO MEET
Childs worked for several
The Middleport Chamber of
years as director of sales for Commerce-wili meet at 12:15
the Karr and VanZandt p.m. Thursday at the meeting
Cadillac and Oldsmobile room of the Columbus and
Agency in Pomeroy. He went So uthern Oh10 Electric Co.
into the ins urance business m Anyone wishing lunch
the 1960s when he purchased brought · in should . contact
the Downing Agency in , Mrs. Edna Wilson prior to the
Middleport which he still meeting .

~

BILL CHILDS
COUNCIL TO MEET
SYRACUSE - Syracu. e
Council will discuss the aJr
propriations for 1977 revenue
sharing money at its regular
meeting Thursday, April 7 at
7:30 p.m.
NOW YOU KNOW
There are more people per
square mile -living in Great
Britalll than India .

:::Debate
heated
in
deciding
atomic
plant's
fate
llfN;;;;;:: : : : -:·:·: :-:·:::·i·;:·:·::B:;;:;j;~;
By RICK VAN SANT

::::

::::· CINCINNATI (UP! ) - The gigantic uranium enrichment
By United Press International'
plant at Portsmouth, Ohio, which provides (uel for nuclear
WASI:DNGTON - F1JLFILLING II MAJOR campaign power plants, is also prov iding fuel for plenty of hot debate
promise, President Carter today signed his governmevt over the fate of the facility.
reorganization authorization bill and said he would start "a
At a public hearing Tuesday, environmentalists and nuclear
searching examination" of the bureaucracy with an overhaul power proponents collided over the coniroversial plant and its
of his own office.
impact on society.
The White House Oval Office ceremony was a climax to
Leading the attack against the plant was a group called
outsider Carter's two-year presidential campaign In which he "Save The Valley," which earliehhis year forced the federal
· repeatedly assailed the overgrown, Inefficient federal government to prepare an environm~ntal Impact statement
bureaucracy.
about continued operation of the facility , which enriches
"We have no master llst or . hidden agenda" for uranium to fuel nuclear. power plants.
In the wake of that court order, the U.S. Energy Research
reorganization targets, the White House said in a statement.
But, It said, Carter "has identified several areas for early and Development Administration came up with a draft of an
action including energy, oil spill pollution control, consumer environmental impact statement, but "Save The Valley"
llffalr~,- civil right$, advisory committees and the President's · President Shirley Clark condemned that draft Tuesday as
Executive Office."
inaccurate and incomplete.
"The draft does not satisfy the court's order,"' said Mrs.
GEORGIA REJECTED A BLACK CIVIL RIGHTS Clark, who complained specifically about studies of the Clifty
Creek and Kyger Creek power statiorus, which provide much of
Continued ori page 14
' r

the electricity for the uranium plant and are closely tied to its
'
future.
"The conclusion in the impact statement (draft ) that there
will be no adverse health effects on the general populatwn
from the continued operation or Clifty Creek is simply wrong,"
she said . "These power plants pose a severe health hazard for
many of our residents .
·
. . ·.
" I have a 14-year-&lt;Jld son who suffers from just livmg m the
Ohio River Valley," added Mrs. Clark, of IIBnover, Ind .- .
Mrs. Clark also com plained that the draft depicts a
· "misrepresentation of the plume (smoke trail) that Clifty
Creek' emits," saying a picture in the .report "looks like the
smoke.. in the photo has been erased."
.
.
"Those who live in the vicinity of the plant know the plume 1s
a heavy stream of smoke visible for miles/' said Mrs. Clark.
producing a large photograph for the hearmg board showmg
the smoke . "This plume is there 24 hours a day.''
"We will continue to monitor the situation and look forward
to a much improved final environmental impact statement,"
she concluded. " If that is not forthcommg, we will consider
further court action to enjoin ERDA's purchase of power from
~

Clifty Creek and Kyger Creek after October, 1977."
ERDA official Charles A. Keller agreed that the
"predominantly environmentally related facet (of Ihe
Portsmouth uranium enrichment plant) is the requirement for
large quantities of electrical power."
" We have attempted to make an honest evaluation of
reasonable alternatives to our present modes of operation,"
contended Keller, who added, however, · "alternatives for
existing fa cilities are rarely reasonable."
He said one alternative would be to change the technological
process at the plant "but that would be very costly."
"The other .alternative is to shut the plant down, which is not
viable because commitments could not be met for either power
reacwr;:; military needs," insisted Keller. "In addition, it
would
n the loss of jobs to some 2,900 persons dtrectly
employed at the Portsmouth site in operations plus at least
twice that many indirectly involved.
"Cessation of current operations would definitely rule ·out
any expansion of the facilities such as is currently contemContluued on page 14

"

- "'' .

�,,

(

2- llle Daily Sentinel. MaddlepoM Pmne1 oy 0 W&lt;'&lt;lm•sdal April G 1977

Cuban fans 'go wild' 1!-fter win Winter
strikes
•
aga1n

•

- HAVANA, Cuba (UPI )
The Cllban.s won 91·12
Some 15,000 Cubans cheered,
Rob Hayner, 21, of South
lbollted a.nd "went wald" Dakota State, saad he was
Tuesday night as thear team moved by the solemn
easily defeated a squad of introduction of teams before
South Dakota basketball the game, as the Ameracans
players 111 a game that may marched mto the crowded
help thaw relations between collsewn behind a large,
Cuba and the Uruted States fiappmg Ameracan flag

I thought the mtroductaon
was super /' satd Hayner. a
student from Omaha, Neb
'We came out smgle file and
the front guy was carrymg an
Ameracan nag and we walked
around m a Circle an an arena
The crowd stood up and
clapped until until we started

Cold weather greets baseball fans
in Cincinnati; Pete Rose signs
2-year contract with Reds
CINCINNATI (UPI ) - The baseball
• season opens today tn football weather but
with the world champion Cincmnati Reds
and thear fans "warmed" by the stgnmg of
Pete Rose
A chilly, if not downnght cold,
temperature m the low 4&lt;8 was the best the
weatherman could do for todsy's 1977
National League season opener between
the w&lt;rld champton Cmcumati Reds and
San Diego Padres
"It's qwte a btl colder than normal for
April 6," SBld a National Westher Sernce
forecaster ''Our normal htgh for the date
Is 61 degrees, but today's high won't get
above the mtd-408 We expect 43 degrees at
game tune (2 30 p m. EST) and a htgh of
45 a UtUe later m the afternoon "
"II'• breezy too, with wmds from 10 to 15
miles per hour, but there seems to be ltttle
chance of precipttation - only a 20 per
cent probability," the weatherman added
But the weard sprtng weather - a week
ago today it was a babny 80 degrees and
Tuesday It snowed - didn't seem to
matter to dle.ftard Reds fans, who had
purchased all Operung Day tickets at
50,tJOO.i)lus seat Rtverlront Stadium by
February
Their spartts were lifted further late
Tueaday when Rose, thear hard-htttmg
!lpllrkplug, ended his holdout and agreed to
a two-year cootract believed to call for
about $350,000 a year
"lam as happy as I can be," said Rose,
who will be 36 April 14 "I'm glad I'll be
able to get my 3,000th hit in Cincinnati
(He's 2311 short of that mark going Into the
season , ! ll&lt;'ver got mad at anybody
"SUre, I was disappointed, but not rnad
If I hadn't signed I was not about to gtve
only 80 per cent, I would of given 120 per
cent It's been hell the last part of spring
training, but there's been no name calling
on my part 111' the Reds' part It was just a
matter of me trymg to sell myself and the
ballclub tryq!g to 114!11 itself "
Rooe then lldd he told Reds president
!lob Howsam "The people of Cmcmnati
should take their hats off to you because
you have put the playero on the field that
won two wcrld champiOnships and I feel
we have the team to win It again
"When I got off the atrplane it struck me
funny that the reporters were not anxious
to talk to (Joe) Morgan, (JohMy) Bench

or (Woody) Fryman They didn't want to
talk about baseball, they just wanted to
talk about my negotaatlons "
Rose's attorney, Reuven Katz, called
that incadent (with reporters) "The straw
that broke the camel's back He was ready
to come to terms "
Rose , Kall and Dack Wagner, the Reds'
general manager, according to Katz,
"hammered il (the contract) out m about
two hours It's less than $400,000 but at's
more than the Reds last offer (Jl20,000), so
1t's a compromiSe "
Howsam called the contract "a fall'
agreement" and, asked if the bttter
negobations would caUBe problems with
fans , replied, "I doo 'tlook for anything but
good will and cheering" from the fans
The Reds had hwed that Prestdent
Juruny Carter, who likes to play softball,
would accept an mVItattoo to throw out the
ceremootal farst ball today, but Carter
barned down the offer and mstead Rep
WilliS Gradison, R.Qino, was lmed up for
the honor
'
Domg the real pttchmg todsy were a
couple of lef~anders - veteran Woodte
Fryman for the Reds and ace Randy Jones
for the Padres
Openmg Day IS almost a holiday here
and hometown hero Rose even remembers
back m his childhood when showmg your
teacher an Opening Day ticket stub was a
legitimate excuse for mtSStng school
Just as other ctties celebrate the start of
the Christmas season with a psrade, the
same treatment is reserved for Opening
Day m Cincinnati, where professional
baseball started 108 years ago with the
original Cincinnati Red Stockings
Today's parade just before game time
was to feature 50 units and the grand
marshal, appropr18tely enough, was to be
recently retired City Councilman Charles
P Taft, son of Prestdent Wilham Howard
Taft
Taft, 79, Is an enlhusiasttc Reds
supporter who used to listen to Reds
games on a transistor radio at council
meetmgsand used hts poSition to do lhlll.ga
like get Crackerjacks sold at the ballpark
When Taft ended his 36-year counctl
reign earlier thts year, fellow counctl
members voted to rename Rtverfrool
Stadium the "Charles P Taft Riverfront
Stad1wn" begmning next yesr

was
quate
an
It
experience "
The basketball trip to
Havana was the ftrst
stgntftcant cttizen contact
between Cuba and the Uruted
States since President Carter
!;lsi month lifted restnctions
on Amencans traveling to the
Communist tsland 90 nules
off the coast of Florida
In pregame ceremorues,
the players also exchanged
gifts, wtth each Amertcan
recetVIng a small Cuban flag
He S8ld the Cuban crowd at
the Coliseum of the Plaut de
Revoluclon was "really
friendly" and applauded
heartily when both sides
SC&lt;ll'ed
South Dakota's two Demo·
cratic senators, James Abou..
rezk and George McGovern,
who was accompanied by h1S
wife, Eleanor, watched from
a special section wtth the dtplomatic corps of Cuba
The Amertcan team was
made up of players from
South Dakota Universtty and
South Dakota State Each
U S squad member played at
five&lt;11mute mtervals
The two teams meet agam
tonight A third game,
origtnally scheduled for
Thursday, was canceled to
allow the Amertcans to visit
the University of Havana and
other sites
The Amertcans leave
Fnday mornmg

Ben.edlct

Arnold

was

o

trattor
Rio
Grande's
students wtll argue in the
affirmative
Drummond, born m the
South West of Scotland m
1950, graduated from the
Untversity of Edinburgh,
with honors, In politics, 1973,
and law, 1978 While at the

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HEALTH

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second
dtsciphne
A mem hers will be mvolved in
philosophy professor. for the lnttlftl stage of the
Instance, will be retrained to program durmg the 1977-78
teach English and speech academtc year others wtll
whtle a btology professor be Involved In summer
could be tramed to teach programs and durtng the
geology or chemtstry
1978-79 year The Ully grant,
"Any school whtch expect• along with an addtltonal
excellence in teachtng ts $55,600 to be proVIded by the
fortunate when It recetves a college, wtll pay tultton and
grant to expend on staff expenses for psrtlclpatmg
development," Dr Hayes faculty Followmg the grant
noted "We are deeply period the college will con·
grateful to Lilly for providmg tlnue to strtve for excellence
us wtth a grant enabltng us to In teachmg through t19
more toward excellence m faculty
development
teachmg "
program
Ten R1o Grande faculty

between the fibers and want this mformabon can
become tougher and harder
send 50 cents with a long,
, The sequence seems to be stamped,
self·addressed
that when a muscle ts con· envelope forti Wrtte to me m
tracted agatnst reststance tl care of thts newspaper, P 0
sttmulates the productton of Box ls:il, Radto Ctty Stallon,
crealme, a protein manufac- New York, NY 111019
tured by the muscle cells The
If your total calorae tnlake
creatme then stunulates the from carbohydrates, fats and
muscle ftbers to grow, enabl· protems 1s enough for your
mg them to contract wtth energy reqmrements then
greater force and release you need less than 1110 grams
more creatine The muscle of protem a day m your diet to
grows and changes unltl tl ts grow a pound of muscle a
large and strong enough to week A pound of lean muscle
manage the wetght tl ts contams only 1110 grams or
challenged wtth
protem That IS a fact
The best tratmng effect ror regardless of what you have
strength ts not achieved by been told by trainers and pe&lt;r
exhausltng the muscle The pie selling protem supbest results are obtatned by plements
tramtng, not straarung It only
Eatmg excess proletn IS not
takes a few rmnutes for a helpful The eXCeSil IS JUS!
group of muscles to recover if calortes and IS not used to
you don't exhaust them You butld muscles Of course, tf
also gel better results by let- you need the calones he&lt;: a use
ting the muscles rest a day your dtet doesn't supply them
before a setond tramm~ ses- then they \l'tll help yout
ston Foa more details on th.- muscles grow If you don 't
1 am sendtng you The Health lake m enou~h calurtC!i the
l.etter number :i-4 , Weaght pr ot• ms you do cal wtll be usTuumn,., frn ff:nergy and l'(l fm ener 1-!V The pmnt IS
Wetght ~nll ol Othea:, wl1u that yuu can ~t you1 :otal

.:alorte reqUirement frulll
good food , tnclud1ng car·
bohydrates More protem
than your body reqmres for
bualding and IIUitntenance ts
converted to energy and used
as fats and carbohydrates for
energy needs or stored as fat
energy
Excess calorte Intake can
lead to formation of fat bel·
wee11the muscle ftbers which
makes the muscle look larger
but may even decrease its
strength fhe fat acts as a
fraclton break Marbled beef
IS a good example of fat
depostts between muscle
ftber Excess ealtng of any
and all foods while on a
muscle·butldmg program
really leads to "marbled
muscles " Health data sug·
gests thai persiStent mcrease
of fat depostts leads to heart
and vascular dtsease and ts
not healthy Good wetght
lrannng wtlh senstble daets,
avmdmg the fatlcnmg fads of
sume body butldc1 s, ts
heifiJthy

perI~

WhCII

II

IS "done

prcr

Sport Parade
"'

The crown in question
Rep Charles A Varuk, [).()hto, has
dropped a well·baked but sttll fatrly wann
potato an the la p of the Carter ad·
mlrustrallon wtth hts suggestiOn that tl's
high tune we return the crown of St Stephen
to Hungary
Saad crown was presented to Kmg
Stephen, founder of modern Hungary, an the
year 1001 by Pope Sylvester II an gratttude
for hts having brought Chrasuamty to the
land At the end of World War 11, the saintly
kmg's crown, along wath an orb, sceptor,
sword and robe , were recovered from the
Nats by troops of Gen George Patton, and
stnce then have been tn U s Custody,
reportedly tn ~'ort Knox, although the State
Department asn'l saymg
Thts ts not the ftrst ltme the subJect of
the crown has come up, and each ltme
Hungarian Amertcans have Circulated
petattons and sent resolutions to the
prestdent urgmg that the national rehc not
be deltvered anto the hands of Hungary's
present rulers To them lhts would be tan
tamounl to "legitunazmg' th e Commumst
reg1me
ln Vamk's vaew, however 1 makmg
return of the crown contmgent upon
Hungary becomrng a democracy 1~ "rea11v

National · Weather Service
offtctals in Cleveland,
Columbus and Cmcumati all
tssued •pectal weather '
statement• early today,
predicting hazardous drtvmg
condlttons due to the
snowfall Bridges were
~epllrted tcy and numeroi!S
acctdents were reported
Temperatures m Ohio early
todsy were In the 2n'&lt; or lower
3119, wtth westerly winds of 15
to 20 miles per hour and gusts
over 30 miles per hour
Temperatures ranged from
26 degrees at Mansfield to 34
degrees m Cincmnalt
Snow flurries will cootinue
over Ohlo much of today wtth
the heaVIest snow activity
occurrmg 10 northeastern
counties
Overnight lows wtll be tn
the m1d 2fE or the rmd 3lls
Telephone callers who couldn't get
Frtday and tn the 30s through to Jtmmy Carter a few weeks ago
Saturday and Sunday
wall have another chance to talk to someone
m Washmgton on Apnl 20 and 21 The oc·
easton wtll be the fourth National Food Day
"Daal·ogue. dunng whach some 37
agncultural scaenltsts and experts tn
related fields wall answer questtons about
nutrtlton and food safety from the pubhc
Sponsor of the event ts the Council for
Agncultural Sctence and Technology
(CAST), a non·proflt assoc1ataon of 21
scaenttflc soctetaes assasted by a gra nt from
the Nataonal Agncultural Chemacals
Universtly he was acttve m ASSOCiatiOn
student and unaversaty
Last year, 28 umverstt} and govern·
poltcats
ment scaenttsts were kept busy on 12 lanes
Hayes ts a graduate m answermg more than 1,800 calls from
philosophy from Edmburgh around the country All phones were m
Untverstty He has served as constant use from 9 a m to 4 p m EST each
prestdent of both the day of the program •
Dtagnostic Soctety of Edin'We're undertaktng thas fourth nataonal
burgh and the Edmburgh 'Dtal-ogue.' says CAST executtve v1ce·
UntverSIIY Unton Debates
Rio Grande ts one of32 U S
utstltutions bemg vtsated by
the two students
Both Price and WaUen .are
from Gallipolis, Prtce as a
junior and commumcaltons

creatmf!: an 1mposs1ble condition because
at •s not g0ing to happen
The Untied States, he thinks could do a
lot to mnuence llungar) to become andependent or the Sovaet Unton by gavmg
back the crown, and also by granltng
Hungary most favored natiOn tradang
status, as we have Poland, Romama and
Yugoslavaa Vamk 1s chairman of a House
Ways and Means trade subcommtttee
" I don't thmk tl •s up to the Amencan
people to dtctate what kin d of government
other nataons have, so long as the government treats people decently and humanely
and pursues a course of peace, ' he says,
addmg that llungary has made more of an
effort to observe the human raghts aspect of
the 1975 Hels1nka agreement than any other
Sovtet bloc nation
So far, the goHrnment ol Hungary has
not made what can be called st renuous
representations lo Washmgton lor return of
the crown Thus untallhal happens, and fo r
the sake of peace wtth Hung auan
Amera ca ns, the Carter admamstrataon may
well decade to let the treasure conttn ue to
molder an Fort Knox. along with all those
other reli cs of a bygone era - gold bars

A 'dial-logue' on food

major who was mvolved tn

debate ne•t year Wallen ts a
senior at RGC..CC
Faculty member Earl
Thomas wtll moderate t~e
debate whtch ts open to the
public

New club will
sponsor sale
on April 30th
The newly formed Tr1·
County Lamb and Ptg
Breeders Club will have a
sale of market pigs and
lambs Aprll 30 at the Athens
County fall'grounds
The sale will give 4-H and
FFA members an opportunity to buy animals for
their summer projects
Animals may be mspected
begiMtng at 11 a m and
"lunch wtll be served at noon
by the Ames-Bern Wonders 4H Club The sale will start at I
p m., wtth Patrtck Shertdan
as auctioneer
•
There will be about 40 or 50
Suffolk and cross bred lambs
and between 20 and 30 cross
bred ptgs For further mformatlon contact Da vtd
Starlm, 448-4461

To build a muscle

lawrence E. lamb, M.D.

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D
DEAR DR LAMB - I have
If
been a senous wetght lifter
for several years and have a
few questions concermng
muscle development What
effects on muscle ttssue does
wetghtlifting have? How does
• a muscle grow tn strength
and stu due to wetghtlifttng?
How long does an exhausted
muscle take to rejuvenate
tlaelf, that ts , how much tune
should be put in between com·
pleted exerctses of a par·
..I ·
ticular muscle group? On a
datly basts, how much protem
~: Is necessary to complement
heavy weight liftmg?
DEAR READER
Resistance type exerctses
• BUCII 111 welghl·lifting cause
the IDUICle ftl!ers to enlarge
It does not tncrease the
nwnber ol muscle ftbers The
larser fiber Is stronger The
muscle made up of larger
fibers Is then able to contna&lt;1
lrith lll't!81er force ( mcreased
lltrenlllh) and ltft larger
weights. Dependmg upon
•
your dJetary program, the
m~~~eles wtll ..tmmate fat

.f
•

areas other than lhetr major
fields
In tts aMouncement of the
grant, Lilly Endowment,
Inc , tndicated the program
will provtde "released ltme
for course work and apprenticeships under faculty
at other mstttuttons destgned
to produce a dramatic tn·
crease in the (Rto Grande)
faculty's subject matter
versatility "
By the end of the program,
many of Rto's faculty
members will be avatlable to
teach baste course• tn a

colder than normal for April
By MIKE nJLL Y
6, " satd a Nabonal Weather
UPI Sports Writer
Servtce
fore caster We
Today, when Ule Cincmnat1
expect
43
degrees at game
Reds host the San Diego
time
(
2
30
p m EST) "
Padres and the Seattle
'
Marmers play !hear farst-ever
Cy Young Award wmner
By MILTON RICHMAN
Randy Jones will ptlch for the
game
against
the
Caltforma
UP! Sports Edat&lt;ir
Angels baseball can begm Padres, who wall be ftelding
the strongest team tn thetr
NEW YORK (UPI) - Another baseball season opens todsy dectdmg where tl stands alter
etghtyear
history wtth the
and Ellis Clary already ts far out m front of tl, whtch tsn't that a winter of free agent addition of free agents Rollie
unusual because he 's the kind who can gtve anybod) a head signmgs. legal antics and F
tngers and Gene Tenace
start and still be wrutmg there at the hrush line to shake hts expansion
Free agents like Joe Rudt ,
The openmg day matchups
band for !truShlng second
Bobby Grach and Don Baylor
could
scarcely
be
more
em.
It's not that Clary ts so fast on has feet anymore, tt's only that
make Califorma a strong
he 's qutck upstairs, and tn hts JOb as scout for the Mumesota blemattc of the strange force
m the AL Frank
wmter
Twins that never hurts hun at all
• •
In the Nattonal League, the Tanana gets the opening day
For the past ftve weeks, he has been lookmg over all the
twtce-champton
Reds must pitching assignment, While
major leaguers m Flortda for the Twms and now he's gmng
Otego Segut, a member of the
home to Valdosta, Ga , for a tittle breslhtng spell before hitting learn to live wtlh less stars on
1969 Seattle Pilot team, will
the road agrun The player who arnpressed hun most this the held and an mcreasmg be
the Marmer hurler
din
tn
the
clubhouse
Thear
sprang was Pittsburgh's Dave Parker
Around the tratntng
"He's In the top fiVe nght now and fixtn' to be m the top- ~pponent? A team which camps Ken Griffey, George
hopes
a
fat
pocketbook
can
three," says Clary, barely able to contam hts enthustasm
Foster and Dan Driessen
"Hits, runs, ftelda, does everythmg, and wben you cons1der pave the road to October wtth
clouted homers as the Reds
he's so btg, siX-seven, s1x-e1ght, or whatever he ts, he could base htts and shutouts
beat the Detrotl Tigers, 1().3
And
the
Amertcan
League
become the new Man Mountam Dean I"
The Brewers htt four
spectrwn
ranges
from
haves
Dave Parker 1S only SIX·ftve, but that's neither here nor
homers tn defeatmg the
hke
the
Angels,
ncher
m
there Clary advtses you to keep any eye on hun because he's
players tf leaner m the Mmnesota Twms, 18-6, to
due for a great year
pocketbook, to expanstotUsts gam the Cactus League
Ellis Clary lSil't fooling on that score.
champto~ap
The New
On a couple of others, though, you're free to draw your own Uke the Mariners and Toronto York Met.S outslugged thear
Blue
Jays,
rich
m
nothing
cooclustons because nobody m the game has Ellis Clary's
ctly'l'tvals, the Yankees, 8-7,
dowrHiome sense of hwnor, and tf they guarantee nothing else, except enthustasm
The Yankees don't enter to take thear sprmg sertes,
some of the stones he tells provtde ample reassurance that
two games to ooe
baseball, far from dymg, has never been m healthier condilton the chase until Thursday
Steve Swisher's two.run
when
they
host
the
" Hear about the new policy I'm sellin the mijnagers• • he
homer
and Bobby Murcer's
says "It pays double mdemruty tf one of hts own guys ktlls Milwaukee Brewers as the two-run single helped the
him Whitey Herzog liked it so much, he got the ftrst one Ralph free.for-all begms tn earnest
Chtcago Cubs down the DodHouk says he wants one nght away Roy Hartsfteld and D1ck Kansas Ctly opens defense of gers, !J.4
Jun Sundberg
Its Amertcan League Western
Williams are tnlerested also
and
Mike
Hargrove
had three
" If you take the policy," Clary laughs, "you gotta buy thts title at Delrott, Toronto hosts hits each to lead the Texas
spec1al managers' helmet that goes wtth tl I'm selltn' them, Chtcago, Texas vtstts Rangers to an 8-3 vtctory over
Baltamore and Cleveland
too.
the llouston Astros
Jim
Journeys
to Boston
"Say, do you think CalVIn Griffath ts tryang to tell me
Rtce
smgled
and
Carl
In the National League,
something?," Clary asks, gomg off on another tack "He wants
Yastrzemskt doubled m the
Ptttsburgh
entertams St
me to go down and take a lookatthis kid anftelder m the maddle
etghth mnmg to help the
Louts,
New
York
v1stts
of the Bermuda Tr18ngle "
Boston Red Sox snap a Z.2 tie
On a more senous note, Eilts Clary's eyes went up,like those Chtcago, and L!&gt;s Angeles and defeat the St Louts
hosts
San
Franctsco
of most others m baseball, at the beating Texas Rangers'
The Reds face a different
Msmager Frank Lucchesi took from one of has players, Len
NL
West thts season Los
Randle Somehow tl remtnded him of the player he always
Angeles
and San Daego seem
conSidered the hardest puncher in baseball
1
espectally
unproved, and the 1
"His name was Gus Bnttrun and he came from Wilmington,
1
1
Reds
are
wtlhout
pttcher
Doo
N C ,"says Clary "He died a year or so ago, but during hts
I
1
lifetunehe was the toughest monkey I ever ran into, and I saw Gullett, lost to the Yankees m
0'8 :
the free agent draft, and Tony
some tough ones in my time
-.
Perez,
traded
to
Montreal
for
1
" One day (when he was the Cincmnalt Reds bullpen
openmg
day
pttcher
Woody
coach), hun and Paul Derringer, the Reds ' 2().game wmner ,
got mto it on the bench, and Derrmger ptcked,up the catcher's Fryman Ther&lt;) ts also the
NBA Standrngs
By Umted P..-ess International
mask and hit him right between the eyes Gus dtdn't even specter of the salary war
Eastern Conference
blink He got Derrmger down on the fioor of the dugout, under waged by Pete Rose that
AtlanftC OIVItion
ended late Tuesday when the
W LPPct GB
the bench, and tl took the whole team to get hun off
x Ph-i Ia
49 29 628
star
!hard
baseman
stgned
hts
"I roomed wtth GliB when we were both wtth the GreenVIlle
Boston
41 37 526 8
NY KniCk s
38 41 41!1 11 ,,
Spmners m the Sally League and he was a wonderful guy, the contract
None
of
this
will
bother
an
Buffalo
29 so 367 20 !&gt;
greatest guy tn the world - provulln' he was on your stde He
NY Nets
22 57 278 27 '
esttmated
50,000
fans
at
was managin' W!tmington, I believe 11 was, and Van Mungo
Cent..-al D1vrsron
Rtverlront Stadium The the
W L Pet
was managm• Rocky Mount one ttme when Bnttam got mto a
A8 31 608 GB
most unpleasant note wtll be Houston
runo~n wtlh the umpire Mungo lrted to get hun off the umpare
washrngton
A6 33 582 2
San Antonro
43 36 544 5
and Gus turned on hun and beat the ltvm' curd outta hun Beat mJected by the weatherman
42 37 532 6
"It 's gomg to be qutte a b1t Clevela nd
him so bad, Mungo wound up tn the hospital
N ew Or leans 3.4 45 4.30 [ 4

.

to debate .at Rio
RIO GRANDE - Two
Unaversity of l;;dtnburgh
students, who are currently
tourtng
Untted States
colleges a• part of a spring
debate tour, will encounter
two Rao Grande College ·
Commuruty College (RGC·
CC) student• in a publtc
debate Monday, Aprtl II, 7
p m , on the Rio campus
The two Scottish students,
Robert Drummond and
Jeremy Hayes, wtll jotn Gtl
Prtce and Barb Wallen tn a
debate a bout whether or not

It's time to see just where baseball stands

Editorial comment,
• •
opznzon, features

Scottish students

Rio receives Lilly grant
RIO GRANDE - Rto
Grande College will be the
recipient of an $83,400 grant
for facuhy development from
Ully Endowment, Inc , In·
dlanapoi1S, accordmg to Dr
Paul C Hayes, prestdent of
Rio
Grande
College·
Commuruty College
Rio Grande is one of only 11
colleges and uruverstties m
the Uruted States to receive
sud! a grant from Ully's
faculty
development
program The two year effort
will help provide funds for 39
facuhy members to mcrease
thetr teachtng abililtes m

Unlted Presslnternallonal
Ohtoans woke up to more
wmter weather today
As much as three mches of
snow fell overnight tn
northeastern Ohio counties,
wath traces of snow on the
, ~~ over the rest of the

3- The Dally Sentmel, Mlddleport·Pomeroy, 0, Wednesday, Apn16,1977

SERVICE FRIDAY
The
Metgs
County
Minlslenal Assoctalton wtll
have a spectal Good Frtday
afternoon servtce at Grace
Epi9copal
Church
in
Pomeroy from 12 30 to I 30
p m. Frtday with the Rev
Davtd Str~ng as guest
speaker The public ts m·
vited
r
THE D,U Y SENTINEl

Df.VOTED1lJTHE
INTERF.sTOF'
MEir.aS·MASON ARt:A
(;HF..STER I TANNEHIU
EXt! Ed

ROBERT HOU LICH

CUyF..dilnr

I

, I
--....;.:..:

DEAN NULLS
The Pomero~ Church of
Christ wUI hold a revival
this evening through
Sunday with Dean Mills the
evangelist Mr Mills
served the Church of Christ
at
B~verly
before
assuming his present
duties as president of the
Ohio Bible Institute In
Beverly. The services will
be held at 7 30 each
evening at the Pomeroy
church, 212 W Malo St ,
and there will be an Easter
Sunday service beginning
at 10 · iJO a.m Richard A
Evanson, the host minister,
blvl es the public

MECHANIC'S LIEN
COLUMBUS (UP! )- Sen
Mangene Valiquette, D·
Toledo, satd she would set
astde Apnl 19 to take
testtmony tn her Senate
Judictary Corruruttee on the
House.passed mechamc's
lien law
Valtquette
satd
the
commtltee would cons1der
amendments to the bill April
26
The legtslat10n would
J)rohlbtt home-buyers from
paymg twice for constructton
serVIces Similar legtslahon
passed the lllth General
Assembly but was vetoed by
Gov James Rhodes

Pubh:du:d dally l!XI.'cpl SutunJay

lJ} Ilk! Oh111 V&lt;~llf) Pubhshmg Coman) Ill CtmH St P111~1uy Olnu

157ti9 Ous11w~ Offtl t Phm~ 9l1l
2156 Et.hiHIItil Ph Ul W
.l'.!tl57
&amp;umtJ t:lil ~'l pt..-;1J:Igt pc~ltl at

P•nttrH)' Ohm

Nc.!l••IHI udvct tJ~IUII 1cJW~n
Laine Wa rd Gnff&amp;th C.c•mJa:mv 111
l Hnl\mcll / &lt;11l&lt;J lollblghu Olv
i~i llunl t'vc Nt~ Vur k NY'
ltkl17
Sulr.;1 rtplhlll l.ii \~ s l&gt;t:lne~L'll b}

t:m 1111 ~o~:hcrc I!V,,tlahlc 75 l't'nt.il per
wu.,.'k H) Mut 1 Jlnuh ~lk rL t:CirnCI
!.ll... lt 1111

IV111]:t1Ji t

$:1 1&lt;.~ ll ) IIlii I Ill I tl
Om \r,u
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CALLED HOME
CHESTER - Mrs Dorts
Betz of St Joseph, Mtch
amved Saturday to vtstl her
mather, Mrs B A Dodson
and brother and stster·tn-law,
Mr and Mrs Erroll Conroy
She was here about an hour
when she recetved a
telephone call advtstng that
he· father·m·law, Clarence
Betz, had dted She returned
home Sunday Mr Betz has
been m a nursmg home for
over three years

presadent Dr Charles Black, "because
we 're convmced that the Amencan publtc ts
very concerned about food safety and
nutritiOn
' There are stall • lot of sca re stones
WhiCh have no baSIS In SCientifiC f'act C t r~
culatmg m thts country Our scientists are
anxious to see to It that Americans have
found mformat10n on whtch to base lhear
dJetaJ) deCISIOn S 1

Pro

:s. tandm"

IN WASHINGTON
Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

WASHINGTON - Whtle
the Carter admmt strataon
searches for some way to gel
a handle on the federal
bureaucracy, the Presadent's
chtef rtval m last year's
pnmartes ts busaly prepanng
legtslatton
that cou ld
Slgnthcantly
strengthen
Carter's hand
It came as somethmg of a
shock to the new bo)s at the
Whtte House to dtscover ho w
little Impact a change of
admmtstrattons actually has
on the sprawling government
establishment
But It'S no surprtse to Rep
Morras K Udall, D·Am , vtce
chatnnan of th e House Post
Clfface and Clvtl ServiCe
Commattee and an ardent
crttlc of the ctvll servlce
system as 11 presently lunc·
Irons
Udall, who IS far more
fam1har wath the weaknesses
of the extsttng set·up tha n
Carter, doesn't mtend to wa1t
for suggestiOns from the new
admtmstratton
Some of hts key staff atdes
are currently draftmg a btll
that would aboh sh the
prevtousiy sacrosanct Cavil
Servtce Commlsston enhrely
and redtstrtbute tis functton s
The legaslatton, although
certam to be controversaal,
tsn't qutte as drastic as tt
sounds at first blush Udall as
not seeking to dismantle the
ment system whach as the
underptnhing of the 'career ·
government servtce toda v
But hts btU, sltll m the
earliest drafttng sta ges,
would
separate
the
recrultmg exammmg and
personnel managem ent
functtons of the government
from the mvesttgatton and
adJudtcatton of compiamts of
alleged mertt system abuses
At present, the Ctvli ~er
vtce
Comm1Ss1on
ts
responstble not only for
recrutttng, sc reening and
processing applicants for
government JObs but also for
revtewmg and de ctdin g
alleged vtolattons of merat
system rules
Udall behoves these func·
ttons are Inherently con·
tradtctory, and that past
htslory shows the Ctvtl
Servtce Commtsston tlself ts
often gutlty of poltltcal
mampulatton of the ment
system
In fact , hts Manpower
subcommtttee last year
concluded a detailed two-

v

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

No doubt mqutrtes about the proposed
ban on saccharm wtll be high on the ltst of
questtons this year
Toll·free telephone numbers for the
" Dtal-ogue • are 800-424·9510 from anywhere
outsade Washmgton D C , and 347-0009 111
Washm gton Callers who keep getltng a
busy sagnal (the sctenttsts tend to be longwmded) can matl thetr questtons to the
Counca l for Agrtcultural Sctence and
Technology, Agronomy Bu1ldmg, Iowa State
Umverstty, Ames, Iowa 500 11

year
study indicating
massive abuses of the mertt
system were ca rr~ed out by
the Nixon adminastratton
w1th th e comphclty of the
t'1vtl Service Commissi on
ttself
Repubhcans on the sut&gt;comm attee compla med the
report was unfair because It
d1d not deal 1\'lth the sans of
prevwus Dernoc rattc, ad·
mtmstratJOns - and of
eourse, they wer e nght But
the GOP members dtd not
d1spute th e essenttal fmdmgs
of the study, which led
dJrecUy to the drafttng of this
new Udall btll
In essence, the Anzona
congressman wou ld like to
see each federal agency
gaven resp onsabaltty for
es tablt shmg ats own JOb
descraptaon and conductmg
ats own exammatton to fill

"

'
avoraliii'S n 1960
too• 1 , hou sot yollr raoor

6~ sed ot

.

I

BAYER

to ply tor a prncr pi t&gt;r1 l ilsl

rt onlyr()()l.; A] mnutes
You 00 ~v e &lt;II you1 A D
~M

l

2 67

Phan~acy

lof

CHILDREN S

C ASPIRIN
~~~ Lost st

ORA·JEL

fo fOillhKhti )116.
u rg lsr99

57c
ROSE MILK
SKIN CARE CREAM

Certam gove rn~
ment·w ade standards would
apply across-the·board, but
d~rtments would have far
greater nextblltty ln deter·
mtnmg their tndtvtdua l
personnel needs
At the top of the hterarchy
would be an office of ctvtl
servtde m the Whtte House,
stmtlar to the extstmg Offtce
of Management and Budget
m status and unportance The
Prestdent , th rough this new
office , would have much
ltghter control of government
personnel mana gement than
vacancies

now the case
To Insure that non·pohcy
jobs were filled by mertt
h1rmg and Insulated from
pollttcal mterference, th e
Udall btll would establish an
mdependent, quasa-judicaal
ctvll service rev1ew board to
mvesttgate alleged vtolaltons
of the mertt system and rule
upon employee appeals
The chan ces ar e that
Udall's btll wtll provo~e
howls from the ClVIl Servtee
Commtsston and qutt c
possibly charges of parttsa n
grab
from
power
congresstonal Republicans
But at's worth taking a look
at, when It ts fmally m·
troduced , because
the
present
system
ts
unqueshonably a shambles
that neather msures a true
merit system for government
employees who deserve such
protectton nor provides acl'O Untablllty of top policy
makers to the administration
in power

A t lanta
31 49 388 17 1 1
Western conference
Mrdwe sl DIVISIOn
W L Pet GB
K Denve r
48 30 615
Oetrort
A1 :.1 ~ !IJ:.l 6' 1'
Chjcago
42 J7 532 6'1'
Kansas Crty
40 39 506 8'0
lndr ana
35 46 432 14 1 1
Mr lwaukee
28 52 350
Pac1f1c Orvrs1-on
W L Pet GB
x LOS Ang
51 28 61\6
Portland
47 33 588
Go lden State 4J 36 55 0
Se~t tle
39 41 A88
Ptloenr x
32 47 405
x Clrnched dtvrsron title
Tuesday 's Results
NY Kntcks 121 Boston 113
wash 119 Cle veland 113 ot
Phtla 119 New Or leans 109
Ch cago 91 Buffalo 89
lndtan a 87 Kansas Crty 82
PhoenrK 108 At ant a 102
Goldf!on 5 1 132 LOS Ang 103
Portland 110 Detr o1t 105
NY Nets 88 Sea ttl e 86
...,
Wednesdav s Games
Houston at Boston
New Orleans at Buffa lo
Ch ~ ago at Was h r11gton
Phrld delp1'1ra at San An ton o
Atlanta at Denver
Thundav 's Games
ln d ana at NY Knrcks
D enver at Clevela11d
Kansas Crty at PhOellrl&lt;:
NY Nets at Golden Sta te

Sc!nltd
il Cit

3 P.te~ oll25
RtQI.II~ o Spelfm nt

~ '$~fog·~

M q lSI69' ptt•

~
•

Rr1Jula o Wth 8D!ly

'"

81Ml't Powder
l~S

(NY Islanders lead Chr I OJ
Apr 5- NY lslndrs 5 Ch .cago 2
Apr 7- Ch at NY lsla nde..-s
x Apr 9- Ct1 t at NY I slanders

TAME
I CREME RINSE
MIJ

Regu at o Me bar a o1
M!g

Serres "A '

3,""'" 87c

SHOWER TO
SHOWER
I

NHL Playoffs
By Umted P..-ess tnternat1Mal
C Preilmtnary Round )
All Senes Best of Three)
NY Islanders vs Chrcago

RDLAIDS

or UnJ.Cr ntrd

BOuch

l! SISl~~tac:~

ggc,. .

•

Buffalo vs Mrnnesota
Senes 'B'
( Buftalo leads Mmn 1 Ol
Apr 5- Bvffa lo 4 Mrnn 2
Apr 7- Buf lalo at Mtnn
K Apr 9- M rnn at Buffalo

Los Angeles vs 4tlanta
Senes C
(Los Ang leads Attanla , 1 O)
Apr 5- Lo s Ang 5 Aflanta 2
Apr 7- Los Ang at Atlanta
x Apr 9 - AIIar~ta at Los Ang

ts

PERMANENT
RtQIIfar or Crnlle
M! ~ l Sl S1 85 eiCII

.~.1.58

•I

••

EYE DROPS

pjn tt Bo It O~o.!

Ptltsburgh \IS To..-onto
senes 'D"
(T oronto leads Pittsbgh 1 0)
Apr 5- Toronto 4 P tt sbgh 2
Apr 7- Prtlsbgh at To ronto
x Ap..- 9- Toronto at P ttsbgh
.: tf necessa ..-y
(Ph a , Stl
Mtl
and Bos
draw 1st ..-ound byes)

WHA Standrng s
BY Untted Press International
East
W l T Pts GF GA

Mtql~tS I $9

x Qu eb ec

SUPER CRICKET
BUTANE ,, 0

LAVORIS
MOUTHWASH

1 !1 ~

LIG HTER Mllj\~!S I9S.

li'Ot
!ltQ t~tS 1

84c

age

j

VILLAGE PHARMACY

"

"

271 N. 2nd Ave.
601 5th Street

n

''

Mtddleport, 0
New Haven, W. Va

992· 5759
882-2005

,

I

47 31 2 96

351

793

Ctncmnat r 39 37 4 87 352 3q1
lnd ranap ls 36 36 8 eo 273 798
New Eng!nd 35 40 6 76 27 5 790
B•r m nghm 31 .45 4 66 265 303
y Mrnn
19 ltl 5 43 136 l29
West
W L T Pts GF GA
x Hous ton
49 24 6 104 315 238
Wtnnrpeg
45 32 2 92 360 187
Sa n O rego 4'0 36 4 84 281 278
Edmonton 33 .4 3 4 70 237 300
Calgary
31 42 7 69 Jdij ?'i'O
Phoenrx
27 .48 4 58 :iiJ d 380
x Clinched dr'o'rsron trtl e
y Team diSbande d
Tuesday' s Re su lts
Queh ec 7 Nf)W Eng lane! 7
Housto11 3 SiH1 D 1ego 1
Brnnnqh n o1 CAigi'I I'" Y 4 ot
Wednesdi'y 's Gam es
Ouehec-

~~

Cfrdinals, 4-2
Dave Nelson, AI Cowens,
Jolm May berry and Buck
Marttne z ca rraed the Kansas

Ctty Royals to an 11-6 vtctory
over the Chtcago Whtte Sox
The Philadelphia Phillies reduced thear roster to the ~

I Probable pitchers
By Unrted Press truern atrona l
(All T1mel ESTJ
(last years won lost record rn
parentttesesJ
Wednes day
Nalrona l Leagu e
Sa11 o f.'90 (Jones
14) at
Crn c m11~ti

CFrym~n

n

13 13 )

:il JO p m
Amerrcan L ea gue
Ca!rfornra (Tana na 19 IO J
Seattl e (Segu r 0 OJ 10 35 p rn
Thursday

St

Lours (Denny 11 91 a t
Prt tshurgh (Reuss 14 9) I 35
p m
New York (Seaver 14 111 at
Ch tC ago (Bv..-rrs 15 131
2 30

pm

Franc sco

baseman Rtchie Hebner and
pitcher Jun Looborg on the
21-&lt;lay disabled list Hebner

I

16 14 )

at Los Anqeles (Sutton
71 IOJ 4 g m
Am errun L eague
Callfornra {Ryan 17 18 ) at
Seattle ( Ma cco ,. mac~ 0 51
10 3i p m
Kansas Ctfy ISphttol'"f t 11 8)
at Oetro ll ( Rob('l'"ts 16 11) I 30

IMontf'fusco

Chrcago
Toronto

pm

( Brett
(S~n g er

13

Te)las ( Biyle vetl
Ba ll more (Pa l mer

pm

at

10 12)

10 1

30

1

13 16)

at

17 13)

1

Mrtwaukee !Sl aton 14 151 at
New York ( Hunter 17 151
2

pm
at

Cl eveland { E cke..-sley 13
Boston (Jenkrns 12 1l)

121

2

pm

Randall West gains
assessed

97-95 win

over East

$23,400

mfured his left rtb cage
March 27m a collisloo at first
base Lonborg has be~n
suffermg from a sore pitching
shoulder

Masters' veteran
offering advice

By DAVID MOFFIT
UPI Sports Writer
AUGUSTA, Ga (UPI)
Bob Goalby has a bit of free
advtce for the flood of
newcomers playmg In lhla
week 's
Masters
golf
tournament
To the 17 golfers m the 77·
man lteld, who never before
played the Augusta National,
the former Masters champ
says " Play your game
Doo 'I go up there bemg afratd
to hit a shot because you'~~e
heard that the Augusta
Naltonal favor• a particular
type of hitter "
It's been nme yearo since
Goalby, who clauns to have
wrtlten the book on hook
shots, won here and now, at
48, he admtls that he Is no
looger a title cootender
But this ts Goalby's 18th
Masters and while he doe!lll'l
score here like he used to, he
knows the course and what tl
takes to play tt
Andy Bean, who by wmnmg
at Dora! became one of seven
who earned thetr ftrst
Masters tnvttat1ons by
wmnmg a PGA tour event,
doesn't
believe
the
newcomers are gomg to be
playmg scared
'I'm not say111g they're
gomg to take over," sa1d
Bean ';But, the older players
are gomg to know they are
here''
Jack Ntcklau•. who won h1S
ftrst Masters title ftve yesrs
before Goalby and hts ftfth
seven yean after Goalby,
continues, at age 37, to he one
of the favorttes here
Jerry Pate, who has played
very little •mce winning the
Phoenix Open m January,
says his right wrist and right
shoulder are both still giving
him trouble
"It hurts, but I don't notice
tl as much when I'm playmg
well," sa1d Pate "If I d1dn't
think I had a chance to wm

pm

&lt;!I

Naloonal League

San

man lurut by placmg farst

m that group
Two of the 14 foreignero
playing tn the Masters are
here for the first time Severaano ,Ballesteros of
Spatn, co-runnerup with
Nicklaus tn last year's British
Open
The only Ioretgner to wtn
the Master~,. South Afrtca•s
Gary Player who dia tl tn 1961
and agam in 1974 He's back
for the 20th time but the
foreigner expected to have )
the best shot at wmnlng th..week IS Australian Graham
Marsh , 33, who joined the
U S tour for the farst time
thts yesr, after bavmg woo 26
foretgn tournaments He woo
the Heritage Classtc and Is
thardoo thlsyear'• mooey list
with nearly $84,0110
Lee Elder, who two years
ago became the farst black
ever to play m the Masters, ts
back this year Elder lost hiS
ellgibiltty when he falled to
make the cut in the 1975
Masters but regamed it by
wmnmg the 1976 Houstoo
Open

LAS VEGAS, Nev (UPI)Eddte Owens of Nevada-Las
Vegas scored 26 potnts
By STEVEN R. REED
Tuesday rught to lead the
ARLINGTON, Tex. (UPI) West to a 97-95 VICtory over
- Frank Lucchesi walked the East tn the Sixth annual
sltffly, coughed lightly and Pizza Hut Basketball Classtc
grunaced, holdmg his breslh
The life time sertes IS now
Finally he let 11 out as the tied 3 games each between
pam passed Sunglasses htd squads representing college
his brmsed nght eye Yes he basketball all.,stars
admitted, he was hurtmg
The West won the game
An hour earher his Texas
w1th 23 seconds to play when
Rangers'
bosses
had Jess Jonas of Utah sank two
announced
a
30-day free throws to g1ve the West a
suspenston and $23,400 tn fourpomt lead
penalttes agatnst mfteider
Rtckte Green of Mtchagan
Lenny Randle, whose March hit a jump shot 'wtth 18
28 assault on Lucchest durmg
seconds left to brmg the East
sprmg trammg broke the wtthm two The East got the
manager ' s cheekbone, ba II agam with si• seconds to
requtnng surgery and a play, but could not get off a a
week'&amp; hospttahzatton tn good shot
Orlando, Fla
- Green led the East wtth 18
"I don't want to talk abOut pomts and Wesley Cox of
thts Randle thmg," Lucchest LouiSville added IS Marques
saad ' I JUSt want to get With Johnson of UCLA got 13
my ballclub and get the pomts for the West
season open and then we 'll
Gene Bartow of UCLA
handle the Randle Sttuahon " coached the West squad while
Wtth Or Wtthout
But Randle's suspensaon NCAA champton Coach AI
FIBER
meant Texas must open the McGuare of Marquette ended
5 Gallon Can
season Thursday agatnSt Bal· his college coachmg career
kmore wlth . 24 players, one
wtth the East team
Owens was named the here, l wouldn't be playUtg "
less than allowed Didn't the
Tom Wetskopf, who has
game 's Most Valuable
manager want a full roster?
'Sure, that's what I'm here player, and Johnson beat ftve been runnerup tn the Masters
to talk to them about now ," other players m a spectal four times, but never a
Lucchesa saad as he moved slam dunk" contest durmg wmner, ts rated a contender
thts week
toward the Arlmgton Stadtum halftune
MASON, W VA
"There are about a half
elevator
dozen who have to ftgure to
HOURS
Desptte hts dtscomforl,
have
a
good
shot
at
wtnnmg,"
Mon
•
Thurs &amp; Sal
Lucchesi obviOusly wanted
aooSJO
S8ld
defending
champton
Ray
control of hts team He has
Fnday,e oo a oo
TAMPA, Fla (UPI)- The Floyd, who mcluded himself
not managed stnce March 27
and has oi;&gt;served only a few world champton Cincmnalt
mnmgs of one game smce he Reds closed out thetr
exhibllton season wtlh an II·
was tnJured
Randle was working out m 15 record Tuesday by beating
Anzona when hts suspenston the Detrotl Tigers 10.3 thanks
and !me were announced by Ill the home run power of Ken
Texas General Manager Dan Grtffey, George Foster and
Danny Dnessen
O'Bnen
Lenny has repeJtedly satd
Grtffey htt a three·run
all he wants r.o do 1s play homer, while Foster and
ball, " sa td hts attorn ey, Drtessen had back·lo-back
Rtchard Neuhetsel, m blasts, Foster1s a two-run
homer
Phoerux
r This ts a uruque case.''
Neuhetsel satd " If Randle ts
dissatisfied wtth the dectsaon
PHONE
of the Rangers he has a ra ghi
BUCYRUS, Ohto (UPI) to appeal before an arbttrator
THE ALL NEW
Jerry
Everhart, head basket·
tn Baltunore on Frtday "
Unless and unltl the Amert· ball coach at Bucyrus High
can League acts, Randle as School the past ftve years,
ellgtble to play for Texas has restgned,
- En10Y three stzes of your favunte
Everhart, who came to
again effecltve Aprtl 27,
ptzzas
which IS unlikely, or be Bucyrus from MonroeVIlle
- Try our dehc1ous subs whtle you
traded to another club whach High School, posted a 12-lll
s1p your favonte suds.
could
acttvate
ham record at Bucyrus after
Eat In Or Carry Out
brmgmg a 121.8() career IIUirk
unmedtately
Phone
U Randle ts dtsqualtfted by to the school when he took the
992 6304
the league h~ can be replaced JOb Applications for the post
on the Texas roster wtthout are betng accepted by
bemg traded and ~t tl! will Athlellc Dtrector Jack
beloog to the Rangers after Bmmx
the disquallftcation
Neuhetsel told the Dallas
Times Herald " there ts
nothmg to be gamed by try:mg
to permanently InJure Lenny
Randle Lenny knows he
erred and there must be
pumshment But if we don't
%"Xl35/8"X96~'
~1.10
think that pumshmenlas fatr ,
Great for msulatmg basement walls or
we intend to faght 1t "
any type tnsulating that requtres 3/4'
Randle lost his second base
furnng stnps
job to rookae Bump Wtlls thts
sprmg and complamed about
his treatment by Lucchest
The manager, m turn, sa1d he
1
was "sick and tli'ed of some
Th1s ts a mulil · purpose tnsulatJon used
punks
maktng $80,000
moarung about their jobs •
for crawl spaces, outer walls and
A (ew days later Randle
cetltngs
and Lucchest were talking
before an exhtbllton game
when Randle suddenly begm
punchtng hts 48·year·old
manager
Randle,
28,
clauned Lucchesa called hun
a punk Lucchest derued the
accusalton and srud he would
take a polygraph test

BELKNAP
ROOF
COATING

'750

Pickens Hardware

Big bats hot

with us!

PLANNING., APIZZA PARTY

Everhart quits

MEIGS INN PIZZA SHACK

STYROFOAM INSULATION BOARD

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

1"X2'X2'X8'......................... 2.15

'

HOGG &amp;ZUSPAN MATERIALS CO.

Cl f'lcrntli'll r

lndtan f!polr!'. a t Ptr oc'' v
A rrntnql l&lt;llll ill F.dl'n0t,Wt1
Hous tr.1• ~~~ (,,m OtPCill
1 hur ~ cfay' s G&lt;~m t'
Nn•n I&gt;N t
t 'lu&lt;rrv

"l

In 1975, Nationalist Chinese
leader Chiang Kat-shek dted
at the age of 87

77J.5554

MASON, W. VA.

�•

'
4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Wednesday, April6, 1977
•

FISHING FEE UP?
COLUMBUS IUPI) The Oh lo Senate will he
asked to ronslder House-pas sed lt•g lslatinn In·
crraoing from $10 to $14 the
lee lor nonrtsidenl fishing
licenses.
The House cleared the
me&lt;!,s ure Tuesday on 76-1
vote. Sponsored by Itep.

Bulls move into tie
:for second .after win
By MIKE TULLY
UPI Sports Writer
For a nigh t on which
Chicago Bulls' Coach Ed
Badger
didn't
feel
particularly hopeful, he
ce rtainly accompli shed a
great deal
When a last-second shot by
Buffalo's Randy Smith went
m and out Tuesoay mght, t ~e
Bulls emerged w1th a 91-ll9
VICtory. That, coupled with
Kansas City's 87-ll2 loss to
Indiana , brought the Bulls
into a tie with the Kings for
second place m the Midwest

Dtvision.
" I didn 't have , a good
feeling about this game ,"

commented the coach. i 'I was
worried for the whole ,48

minutes."
The Bulls came from a 48;
43 halftune defiCit to score 13
straight pomts at the outset of
the third period and take a 5&amp;48 lead .
Wilbur Holland scored 15 of ·
his 23 pomls in the period, II
in succession. He sparked the
Bulls a 71-53 lead with I :25
left and Chicago led, 71.00, at
the end of the period. ~
Badger suffered through a
final 50 seconds, which saw
Smith bring the Braves
w1thm two with a 25-foot
jumper. After the Bulls tried

w

unsuccessfully w milk the 24second clock, Bird Aver-itt
found Smith in the corner, but
Smith's jumper went around
the run and out of the basket
" We went with the best
scorer we had ," said Buffalo
• Coach Joe Mullaney . " We got
the shot we wanted . It just
didn't fall ."
Chicago's magic number to
clinch a playoff berth is now
two.
·
In other games, the New
York Kmcks downed Boston,
121-113, Philadelphia handled
New Orleans, 119-109,1ndiana
held off Kansas City, 87-ll2,
Wa s hing to n nipped
Cleveland,
119-113,
in
overtune, the New York Nels
squeaked by Seattle, 88-36,
Portland rallied past Detroit ,
110-105, Phoenix defeated
Atlanta, 1~102, and Golden
State
pummelled
Los
Angeles, 132-103.
Knlcks 121, Ceftlcs 113 :
Bob McAdoo's 31 poinls and
Walt Frazier's 24 helped the
Knicks defeat the team which
eliminated them from playoff
contention Sunday. Jo Jo
White scored 22 points for
Boston and John Havlicek
scored 16.
76ers 119, Jazz 109 :
Darryl Dawkins scored a

Ronald

James,

D-

Proctorville, the bill · also
raises lrom $4 to $7 the fee

season-high 20 pomts and five losing
streak,
while
other Phlladelph1a players eliminating Seattle · from
for the seven~ay visitor's
hit double figures in an easy playoff possibilities. Mik e
fishing
licenses.
triumph. George McGinnis Bantom scored 21 points w
scored 20, Henry Bibby 19, lead the Nels ' upset of his
·.· ..· .;•.: ·:. :· :-···· ':-:·:
Caldwell Jones 15, and !Joyd former team. Dennis Johnson
Free and Steve Mix had 14 paced Seattle wilh 19
apiece.
Trail Blazers 110, Pistons
Pacers 87, Kings 82 :
lOS :
Don Buse's steal late in the
Dave Twardzik and Uoyd
fourth period helped Indiana Neal tnggered a fourthhold off Kansas City, quarter rally that helped
dimming the Kings' playoff Portland clinch home-eourt
hopes . John Williamson led advantage for the playoffs
Indiana with a game-high 26 and drop Detroit mto a
points , while Ron Boone secondi&gt;lace tie w1th Chicago
paced the Kings with 19.
WELLSTON - The Jenkms
in the Midwest Division .
Bullets 119, Cavaliers 113:
Suns 108, Hawks 102 :
Memorial Health Clinic here
Elvm Hayes scored six of - Ricky Sobers came off the
has been recognized by the
his 32 points in overtune to bench wscore 25 pomls, 11 m Appalachian
Reg wnal
thwart Cleveland, which had the last six nunutes, w decide Commission as an outrallied from a 17-point this battle of diVISion cellar- standmg example of a small
halftime defiCit with a 34- dwelle rs John Drew or rural climc fac1hty of funcpoint third period . bick Atlanta converted 21 of 28 tional and efficient design .
Soyder's pair of foul shots for free throws en rou~ to a 41The building was featured
the Cavs sent the game inro point performance
on the front cover of a glossy,
overtime, but Hayes' jumper Warriors 132, Lakers 103:
28-page bookie! entitled
with 34 seconds left m the
Rick Barry scored 40 pomts " Pnmary Care Centers ,
ex tra session and Mike as Golden State clinched a Destgn and ConstructiOn' '
Riordan's foul shot put the playoff berth m the Western which the Commission·
game away . Cleveland 's Dtvlsion . Barry connected on released for distributiOn
Bobby Smith topped all 20 of 26 field goal attempts, throughout the nation .
scorers wtth 36 points.
scormg 20 points m each half. · As noted in the booklet's
Nets 88, SuperSonics 86:
Kareem Abdul.Jabbar scored Introduction sechon, lhe
Tim Bassett's 15-foot jump 28 points for the Lakers objective of the publication 1s
shct from the top of the Cll'cle despite sitting out most of the to share mformatwn gained
with 21 seconds to play helped second quarter with foul from the development of
New York break a 12-l!ame trouble.
primary care centers such as
Jenkms with other rural
areas with the hope of helpmg
control the mcreasing cost of
health care The booklet is
wntten in the form or
guid elines and suggeSts

Jenkins
Clinic
finest

Dent goes to Yanks as programmed

s pace requirements, costs
NEW YORK (UP!) George Steinbrennef, owner
and chief wheeler-dealer of
the New York Yankees, ha s
pulled off another trade that
may well have clinched . a
first-place finlllh for h1s club
It was announced Tuesday
that ChiCago White Sox short·
stop Bucky Dent had been
acquired m 'exchange for
outfielder Oscar Gamble,
mmor league pitchers Bob
Polinsky and Dewey Hoyt
and approximately $250,000.
After landing players like
Reg~ie Jackson and Don

Gullett, Stembrenner often
indisted that the Yankees
would not be winners until
they got themselves a proven
shortstop.
After an unsuccessful attempt to obtain Texas Ranger
short·stop Toby Harrah, the
Yankee owner managed to
p1ck up Marty Perez from the
San Francisco Giants. Perez
hit .257 last season, but most

consider him a vetter hltter
than that. Stembrenner
didn't.
An inability to negotiate a
contract w1th Sox owner Bill

Veeck left Dent unSigned.
After offering the shortstop a
three-year, $500 ,000 contract,
triple what Dent received m
1976, Veeck placed out feelers
around the league . Dent was
available for the right price
Stembrenner and Veeck
had discussed that price for
four months, but the owners
were never able to agree

of $600,000
To get the shck·fieldmg
shortstop, the Yankees were
forced to part with Gamble,
an mstrumental figure rn the

team's success last season.
Polinsky , the Yankees '
number one draft choice tn
1973, com piled an ummpressive H record to go With
a 3.30 earned run average for
Syracuse in the International
League Hoyt had a 15-ll
record [or West Haven in the
Eastern League while postmg
a 2.50 earned run average .

However, w1th the season JUst
one day away, Dent was
finally traded to New York
where he was quic~ly signed
to
a three-year pacl
estimated to be m the VICinity

Trojans favored in tank meet
approaches w the sport. We
had better be ready "

CANTON, Ohio (UP!) the NCAA meet at Cleveland said. " They'll be ready and
State
University,
and engaged in more scientific
John Naber is expected
lead The University of mdiv1dual medley star Rod
Southern California Trojans Strachan.
The USC swimmers set
toaanr.ther title m the
Nat: , .,, \ AAU Swimmmg their
records
without
Cho .. ,. tonships opening "shaving down" - removing
for
extra
Wday at the C. T . Branin body hair
streamlining,
a
common
Natatorium.
Naber, winner of four gold practice · in top rated
medals at the Montreal swimming competition .
Olympics, took the IOO.yard Team traditwn prohibits
By JACK SAUNDERS
and 200-yard backstroke ' shavmg.
UP! Sports Writer
UCLA
coach George
events
at
the
NCAA
Glenn Goldup doesn't have
championships in Cleveland Haines said USC "must be an awful lot of playoff
rated the team to beat here experience but he's a good
two weeks ago .
His vicrories made him the this week."
listener.
ftrst NCAA swimmer eV.r to
But he said "there could be
That fact became evident
win 10 mdiv1dual titles and he some strong challengeS."
Tuesday night when the Los
also set an NCAA record by
Five times coach of the U. A,ngeles rookie right wing
becoming the first man in S. Olympic team, Hames scored two goals in a 5-2
history to ever dominate both noted all 16 swimming event triumph over the Atlanta
events all four years of his records were brokeb at the Flames that gave the Kings a
eligibility.
Cleveland NCAA meet and ooei:ame .e(jge in their bestNaber has more poinls in predicted most of the ofthree
Stanley
Cup
NCAA championship AA Umeet records will also Preliminary Round series.
competition
than
any go.
The Kings are frequently
However be cautioned that regarded as a two-man team
swimmer in history and
observers predict he will he domination of OlympiC swim- of forward Marcel Dioone
at top form for this final meet ming evenls by the United and goalie Rog1e Vachon,
States could be seriously with an occasional mention
of his career.
Fellow Trojans mclude threatened by the Russians at for the line of Mike Murphy ,
team captain Joe Bottom and Moscow in 1980.
Tom Williams and B.utch
Bruce Furniss, both of whom
"The
Russians
are Goring. But Tuesday night
set records and won titles at
expected to .fJe fantastic," he Goldup, though he didn't have

w

and destgn considerations for

the inclusion of servtces more
comprehensive than those
usually provided by a solo
practtce physician.
The Ohio Valley Health
Services Foundation, of
Athens, collaborated w1th
FEDCO Systems, Inc., of
Washington, D. C.,m the final
design of the Jenkms building
after takmg bids from a

Kings take one-game edge
•
m Stanley Cup Playoffs

It's Dot Easter

footer with 2:07 remaining.
The Oionne~ed trio, whtch
also includes veteran left
wmg Bob Berry, held the
Flames' rop line of Tom
Lysiak, Eric Vall and rookieof-the-year candidate Willi
Plett - all 3().goal scorers just ooe goal, by Plett.
In addition Dionne, the
league's second leading
pomtscorer, picked up three
asSists - on Goldup's goals
and on the power play score
by Murphy at 10:33 of the
opening period that put Los
Angeles ahead to stay, at 2-1.
Elsewhere in the NHL
playoffs, the New York Islanders defeated Chicago, 5-2,
Buffalo downed Minnesota, 42, and Toronto upset
Pittsburgh, 4-2.
In the World Hockey

a good season, showed he,
roo, could not be ignored.
" I rold him before the game
he didn't have a great year,
so let's have a good playoff, " .

said Dionne, who scored a
clubrecord 53 goals for the

Kings : "He must

NBA referees
threaten strike
them have been on standby
waiting to come in as full time
offieals - are in place and
will he available to o!ticiate
all games for the remainder
of the season through SUnday ,
and the playoffs, if they're
needed," O'Bnen said.
.
O'Brien, who was m tDwn W
adddress the San Antonio
Spurs Tipoff Club, said his
reserve referees could take

By K. MACK SlSK
SAN ANTONIO , Tex.
(UP! ) - Referees, the everunpopular parti c1panls m
sporting events, may become
even more unpopular in the
National Basketball
Association if they carry out
a threatened strike.
NBA
Commissioner

Lawrence

O' Brien

said

Tuesday some refs had hinted
they would not honor their
existing contract, which does
oot expire until the end of
regular season play SUnday,
but would go out this week
and also boycott the playoffs .

O'Brien said, however ,
even if the strike occurs the
final season games and
playoffs would be played and
officiated by a group of
standby officials.
" I've been advised by the
supervisor of officials that his
fine young (referee) talent
that we have - sPveral of

over at a moment's notice .

"I'm concerned about the
current threat, that is at the
drop or a hat they'll strike,"
he satd. " We 'll decide (any
penalties
against
the
referees) at the drop of a hat
between now and SUnday ."
O'Brien said if the strike
were to occur, "it 's~ breach
of contract and they could be
held legally for any damages
that would occur. I would
· hope they would recogruze
·that I would expect at a

have

w

listened w what I had to say.
He has a lot of potential."
" The
playoffs
are

something special/' said

Goldup. ' 1It's a new season
and it's a last chance. I heard
that (Kmgs ' Coach) Bob
Pulford doesn't play rookies
but he even started me
ronight. That gave me a lot of

confidence.''
Goldup's first goal came 23
seconds inro the game , the
fastest goal in (&lt;ings' playoff
history. He also tallied Los

Angeles' last score on a 3Q..

thetr existing contracts.''
O'Brien . said that through
Monday night the NBA
referees had not been
ce rtified by the National
Labor Relations Board w act
as
bargaining
agent,
although
thei,r
representative, attorney
Richard Philips, had med an
unfair labor practices charge
agamst the NBA with tbe
NLRB .
.
" He (Phillips) has brought
chagell with the NLRB that
we have failed to collectively

Engineer tmmedtately, or
attend the Commissioners
meetmg .

Jtm Page, house num bermg project engineer, said
the road names will be used
owner, the Jackson County
Health Facilities, Inc ., by
using this approach rather
than the conventional conARC, which • for over 10
years has awarded millions
of dollars for the construction
of health facilities throughout
Its 13-state regiOn, obviously
is delighted with the results
at Jenkins . Not only has •t
featured the building on its
booklet , but contracted
FRDCO to
wrtte and
Illustrate the publication.
Association, Quebec routed·
New England, 7-2, Houston
dumped San Diego, 3-1, and
Birmingham and Calgary
'played to a 4-4 overtime tie.
Islanders s, Black Hawks 2:
Dems Potvin and Bill MacMillan scored goals I :35
apart early in the third period
lead a four'f:oal rally.
Potvin evened the score at 2-2
at 3:18, beating Chicago
goalie Tony ·Esposito from
the glove side. MacMillan
deflected Garry Howatt's
point shot 4:53 for the game·
winner . J.P. Parise scored
two goals for New York.
Sabres 4, North Stars 2:
Jim Lorentz and Jerry
Korab scored goals early in
the second period and Buffalo
nursed the 3-1 lead. Lorentz
batted home his own rebound
and Korab whipped in a 4().
foot slapshot 'in the first five
minutes of the middle period.
Tim Young pulled lhe North
Stars w within one goal at
7:35 of that period but Rene
Robert scored his second goal
mto an empty net with five
seconds left.

w

as part or the new rural ad· Road T-29, Vanzant Road Tdress in place of the rural 32, Crouser Road T -44, Jacks
Road T·-16, Jr Ward Road T·
route number so problems ~7 , NicholSon Hill Road T 48,
should be resolved prior to Nicholson &amp; Will Road T -A9,
the name being used. The Corn Holl ow Road T -56,
names are bemg pubhshed so Cremeans Road T-57, Wh1tes
Hill Road T·5B, Burney
that residents can v1ew them Hollow Road T·68, Jividen
prtor to use.
Hollow Road T·70, Zion Road
Accordmg to Page, the first T 171, Price Hollow Road T172, Peterson Road T-173,
pres ~ntat10n of County Road
Shotgun Hallow Road T·174,
names Will be made m a week Dav1dson Road T· 176
or so.
Also, Higley Road T.176,
Following are the proposed part, Nic hols Road T·176,
Hutton Road T·1 79,
names for numbered town- part,
part, Page Road T·1B1, Sw1ck
ship roads:
Road T·342, Likens Road T.
349,
Hatl ie ld Road T·350,
Keller Road T·352, Jesse
SALISBURY TOWNSHIP
Ball Run Road T·20A , Loog Creek Road T -353, Wi lc:ox
Road T·354, Kennedy Road T·
Hollow Road, T -27A, Zuspan
Hollow Road T -50, " Nayl or's 3SS, Fursl Road T·356, Wells
Run Road T -77, Willow Creek
Road T-78, Grueser Hollow

Road T-360, Musser Road 365, Bachner Road T-369,
McMurrary Road ;r-369, Hlte
Road T 445 , Buck Wilcox

Road T 87. Bail ey Run Road
T 165, Lee Road T· l68 ,
Shotgun Hollow Road T· l74 .. Road T 621
SALEM TOWNSHIP
Blake Hill Road T· 186,
Buckwheat
Road T-16,
Brodrick Hollow Road T-187,
Yeauger Road T-1 88, Silver Montgom ery Road T-2 1,
Run Road T-189, Hobson Wnght .Road T 22, LegiOn
Road T·l91. Saw M1ll Road T· Road T-23, Marion Long Road
192. Shadr cae Road T·193, T·24, Folden Road T·26, Old
Bone Ho low Road T -19.41 Dexter -Road T 27, Pr iceNeece Road T-195, McGu 1re Sirangs Road T.3J, Ed ·
Road T·196. Karr Lane T·197, mundson Road T -34, Metheny
. Fairplay Road T-37N,
Enterpnse Road T-198.
Also, Rose Hill Road T -199, Molehan Road T -38, Goff
Rose Alley Road T·200 and Road T.4SN , Coy Hill Road T·
201. Rock Hause Road T·203, 45S, Marton Road T·63 ,
Will Hill Road T 204. Burdette Hollman Road T·182, Will
Road T·205, Howell Hill Road Vance Road T-190E, Sanford
Davis Road T·I90W, Hamp·
T 207, Starcher Road T·208. len
Hollow Road T·321,
McElh inney Hill Road T·361.
Pilgnm
Ridge Road T·326.
Infirmary Road T-365, Lower
Also, Dunbar Road T- "'1:7 N,
Route 7 T·375, Upper Route 7
T 376, Depot Road T·377, Shee ts Road T -3275, 1 son
Abbott Road T·378, Dark T 328, R1fe Road , 30,
DenisQn Road T -332, Wlllt _ms
Hollow Road T-390. Penn
Run Road T·333, Hale Road
Road T -452, Murray Hill
T-335,
Dairy Lane, T-337,
Road T·631 , Avenue Bndge
Road T 635, Wagner Lane T-

636,

Collins

Road T·637.

Eichinger
Road
Lagoon Road T-1002

T -650,

SUTTON TOWNSHIP

Salser Road T-19, Mitche ll

Road T-28, Ctrcle Road T·
28A, Carmel Road T·109,
Pleasant View Road T -110,
Wel sh Town Road T 116, Yost

Road T 117, Amberger Road
T· 118,VinegarSI RaadT· 119,
Road
T -121 ,
Maplewood Lak e Road T -612,
Dall ey.
Road
T 629 ,
T~ ckervll le
Road T -649 ,
Nease

Monkey

Isle Road

T·1031 ,

Oak Grove Cemetery Road T

1061

Also, Snowball Hill Road T

123, Court St

Road T· 125,
Horse Cave Road T-126, Van
Meter Hill Road T·127, Elige
Hill Road T-129. Tanners Run
Road T· 131 , Wessel Road T·
137, Relfer Road T-210, Karr
Road T-'211, Gainer Road T-

213, Vine Sf

Road T·216,

Greenwood Cemetery Road

T·217, Sutton Church Road T·
379. Dutch Town Road T·403 ,
Rose Valley Road T·60S .
Legion Hall Road T·606

-

RUTLAND TOWNSHIP

,. ~amine

Road T -9,

Ward

Piper Cemefery Road T-340,
Joe Bor:ing Road T 341,
Church Road T-343, Wright
Trailer' Park Road T-344,
Frank Strong Road T-363,

Cab in Road T·364, Persole
Cemelery Road T·395, R.
Halliday Road T·624, Saxlon
Road T·625 .
ORANGE ·TOWNSHIP
Old Seven Road T·22A,
Stearns Road T ·60, ArbaughRoad '1'·73. Carr Road T·231 ,
Henderson Road T·239,
Woods Road T·240, Cherry
R1dge Road T·250, Bar 30
Road T·280, Watson Road T·
280, Owl Hallow Road T·281.
Vanderhof Road T·286,
Marcinko Road T-287, Kaylor

Road T·288, Hickory Lake
Road T ·289, Hickory Hills
Road
T·290,
Tillany
Cemetery Road T -291.
Also, Mercer Road T 292,

Silver Ridge Road T·293, Old
Seven• Road T 294, Betzing
Road T·29'1, Myers Road T300, Elberfeld Road T·302,
Callaway

Road

POTATO CHIPS............................ ~:.~.~:~~ 79~
CHEF BOY-AR-DEE

PIUA WITH CHEESE .................... ~~.':~.~~:.69~
.
4 1 6 OZ·•1
PORK &amp;BEANS..........................
eans

HEAD

LUTIUCE
3 for s1

Mudsock Road T ·304, Tucker
Road T·306. Parllaw Road T·
307, Miller Road T·308. Ski
Run Road T·388, Boolhe Road
T·441,
Keebaugh · Fallrad
Road T·«4 . Boba Road r.w,
Ball Field Road T· 10S2.

IDAHO

BAKING
POTATOES
10 Lb.
Bag

$119
•

CAMPBELLS

.
7
·1·
DOG FOOD ....................................... .

SEMI-BONELESS

16 oz.
Cans

HA·M

NUMAID

(WHOLE OR HALF)
•

HOT DOG

FLOUR

SAUCE

~~~

I

.

GOLDEN
. ISLE
king size BREAD

20 oz. loaf

J 2 for 7'1

enrtched flour

r
• •

t~

;,.,;.....~~;..,,: _:

5 Lb. Bag

59~

MARGARINE
W- C
:
·
·

:~

~~
·~
• • • • • • • • • • • • • ' • ·11
. .:_·_.:......:. __:_ .;,._. . . . ;:}.\

39~

ceilings for stamp applicants
and would sharply reduce
benehls for those near the top
of the current eligibility ceilings.
Experts estimate the pro-

Mon.-Sat.
10 til 5

Prices Effective ThuiSday thru Sunday

Cou.nty Common

!Court Judge Ron&amp;d R. Calhoun and his wife, E . Merlaine
!Calhoun, Tuesday signed papers completing the purchase
of the
Holzer Hospital Building , First and Second
Avenues and Cedar St. from the St. Peter's EpiScopal
Church Vestry . Parti~ipating in the"deal were Marlin G .
Kerns, First Nallo~al Bank; Judge and Mrs. Calhoun;
Suzanne Moullon, Amy Moulton, Atty. Richard C.
Roderick, Jr. and Russell Wood, local realtor.

Old hospital .
sold to judge

The sale of the old Holzer
Medical Center, First and
Second Avenues and Cedar
St. , Gallipolis, was completed
Tuesday at the First NatiOnal
·Bank 1n Gallipolis.
The structure was pur·
chased origmally from the
Holzer Hospital Foundation
for $150,000 by St Peter's
Episcopal Church . The
church vestry sold all except
72XI73 foot portiOn lo Gallla
County Common Pleas Court
Judge and Mrs. Ronald R.
Ca lhoun
for
$155,000
Financing was made through
The First National Bank.
The church wtll keep 1ts
portion, which will he torn
down within SIX months by
Judge Calhoun,· for church
.1
porposes.
Tentative pl•ns call for the

WOOSTER - Bids for
wnstructioo of a new dairy
researdi facility at the Ohio
Agricultural Research and
Developm,ent Center,
Wooster, we-e awarded last
Friday by the Center's Board
ri Control Contracts for the
new
facili t y
total
$1,827,880 53. The funds were
)J'Ovided by the Ill th Ohio
General
Assembl y
m
Amended Substitute House
Bill 687.
The general contract was
awarded t o Oakes Construction Co., Massillon, for
$1 ,295,266.

·'

contracts

Two

were

awarded to Carl's P lumbmg
ll)d Heatmg, Marmn . They
were $297,610 for the plum·
bmg and waste handhng
system and . $58,378 for
heatmg, ventilating, and a ir
rnndit11111n g. Other contracts
awarde:l were $47 ,021&gt; .53 to
Babson 'Brct~ers Co., Oak
Brook.Jlll.. for the milking
systerr and $129,000 to
Wharton Electric Co., North
IndustrY, for electncal work .
The new datry research
facility will mclude a modem
milkmg
parlor
with
auto milled milk weighmg and
recordin g, holding pens,, milk

room, and barn off tee A tiestall cow 1 bam will have
automated feedmg and
weighing from silos and grain
!torage, as well as a bedding
maker permittmg recyclin g
of manure for beddm g.
Other · fea tu res of the
facihty will mclude a free!tall cow barn, an intensive
care barn with s urgi ca l
facilities ,
hay stor age
buildm g, fr ee·s lall heifer

l:Brn 1 calf bam wtth nursery,
aid a manure storage pond.
In oljler actiOns, the Board
'warded a contract for
related equipment for feed
$&gt;rage al the OARDC Beef
Research Urut. The contract
fnr $23 150 was awarded to
Ono Hirvestor e, Marysville.
The Jloa.~d approved plans
'-ld specifications for con·
!tructlon of a new feed
!torage building and roof
'¥pair , work at the OAH ilC

'

Western Branch , South
Charleston. Funds for the
above projects were proVIded
in Amended Substitute House
7
8
research
aid one industnal
ntract
were approved by th Board
Totalfunds amou
$65,793.
A $31 ,293 co ract wtth .the
BUreau of M' s, U S Dept.

~.: ~

But costs would remain at
about the $5.4 billion
1

~~~~:'\.:d:;s:"~~~~~~~

:
•
•
:
•
•
•
•

Open Daily 9.5, This Week Only
Open Evenings 6- 9

Hubbards Green House

•
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!

992-5776

Syracuse. Ohio

~-,"

'

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GreaT sele(! lon ol new spnlliJ
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Permanent preu Hap py

~ hr l nklfiQ

Ea~l e r

national award ts the
Foundation's
ann ual
recognttiOn of the research
oorker - educator who has
made the most outstandin g
wntnbutwn to the rose mdu stry during th&lt;' prcv1ous

,,

ye;lr

•

'

.

:
•

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added people would be offset \ • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

$}99

1,·~

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•
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••
•·
•·
• ·
••
•.
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&gt;: '"'' to• '"' "'""M """ ......,

~tracts

support of a study of the
hydrology and water quality
ri watersheds subjected to
surface minin g. It IS being
wnducted by the Departments of Agronomy and
Agricu ltural Economics and
Rural Sociology .
Two contracts are Wllh the
Otu o Dept. o f Natural
Re sources . One provides
514 ,600 for a study on the
potential har vest of Lake
En e White Crappie from an
adjommg borrow pit . A $9 ,900
wntract Will support a pilot
!tudy n waterfowl use of
Moxley Marsh . Both studies
are hemg made by the Dept.
ri Fisheries, Wildllfe, and
Outdoor Recreation .
The Blue Bird Bakmg Co.,
Dayton, IS Jl'OVIdmg $10,000
ii:&gt;r a study to determme the
baking processes and s urlace
contanunation for the shelf
life of pie product s. It 1s bemg
oonducted by the Dept. of
Horticulture
Dr. Kottman reported that
gifts totalmg $25 ,620 have
been received durmg the past
month Gifts of$1 ,000or more
were received from Penwalt
Corp , Fremo , Ca lif· ; E h
l;lly and Co., Indian apolis ;
l!Od Mead Corp., Dayton
The Board · was mfonned
that special recog nition has
heen granted recently to Dr .
D. C. Kiplinger, professor of
OOrticulture . He was awarded
the Henry E. He1ner award
by the Joseph H. Hill
Memorial Foundation . Th1s

•
•
•
•
•
.•

Good seled•on of SQII ( Uddly plusy toys fo
delight eve r~ daild ill Euler time Shop

0~\·.·, I ';"'i

Contracts atparded for
dairy research center

requirements.
Bergland said the program,
currently scheduled to expire
Sept. 30, should be revived
and extended for just two
years
because
th e
administration is considermg
proposals for a general
reform of all welfare
programs.
Officia ls estimated. that
under Bergland 's plan, net
enrollment m the stamp
program would rise by
belween one million and 1.5
million persons .

EAST'ER S'P.'ECJALS
Ul1"es
• s2 50 to 50
Murns.................. sl.50 to SS•OO
Azaleas .. ,............... ,........ 'l•50
s2
Tulips .............................. .50
Hyacinths ................. :.......s3.00
Hanaing
Baskets ....s2.00 to '6.00
0'

~, .

1

" professional" on Cedar St.

by lower benefits w &lt;Jthers. participants, some 1.~ millioo
While 2.5 million to 3 present participants would be
million new people would dropped from. the program
enter the stamp program and and benefits would be
henehls would rise for about reduced for about 5 .~ millioo .
four
milhon
c urrent
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
•
:
•
•
•
.
•
•
SC:
•
'· • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • '
. ;,,
•
•
•

,, :t'd........ ASSORTED CUDDLY STUFFED
PLUSH EASTER
'f6.
~
. ., y ~
;;'"lj'L~,
ANIM ALS

\\hl9
. ,

the real poor

gram will cost $5 .4 billion in
the year beginning Oct 1
Bergland warned the
committee
that
the
admmistration's liberalizing
and tost-tightening proposals
,IJIU.'&gt;t be taken as a package
because President Carter
personally said he would
oppose any final package that
either raises the net cost or
the program or reduces
benefits without the offsetting
ell mmati on of purchase

HAVE A HAPPY EAST·ER

~-•fi' ~*'

J udge Galhoun Said his
plans are to make the
hospital's newest addition on
Cedar St Into an office
building. The new part IS a
four-story structure, 190x46
feet.
If costs are not prohibitive,
the Cathouns plan to renovate
the hospital 's fronl lportion
facin g First Ave . into a
family reSidence which will
be "56x27" feet RenovatiOn
is expected to begm w1thm 90
day s
It will be (he first add itiOn
to St. Peter 's Episcopal
Church smce 1955.
Participa ting in the closing
of the sa le Tuesday were
Judge and Mrs. Calhoun,
Atty . Richard C. Rodenck,
representing
the First
NatiOnal
Bank
;
Marlin G.
new owners, (Ron and
Kerns,
First
National
Bank;
Merlaine Calboun) to apply to_
Russell
Wood
,
realtor,
and
the Gallipolis Zoning Bo~rd
Mrs
.
Suzy
Moulton
,
for permission to rezone the
buildmg to ' " res1dentwl " on representin g St . Peter's
EpiScopal Church Vetry.
First Ave . and

amstruction of a new silo and
I Lb. Quarters

And $7 .so Purchase
Waid Cross Sons Store
Expires 4-9· 77
~ ,-..., ;.,:.-:

9 til 7

Sunday

COUPON r

CASTLEBERRY'S

OPEN
WE WELCOME
FOOD STAMP
SHOPPERS

T-303,

current

plan would lower income

We've received no formal

NLRB.''

a

requirement tha t participants pay cash for part of
their stamp allotments.
Currently, about 17.3
millioo Amencans get food
stamps to help pay their
grocery bills Bergland aides
estimated the new plan would
allow between 2.5 million and
three million more persons to
qualify for stamps.
But Bergland also said h1s

said.
· "It's an irresponsible act,
and that's where we are.

More road names proposed
Meigs County Engineer
Wesley A. Buehl has an·
nounced additional road
names for use in conjunction
with the county house
numbering project.
The listed names will be
submitted to the County
Commissioners for adoplion
at the next regular meetmg
Aprill2. Persons not satisfied
With the names se lected
should
contact
their
respective
Township
Trustees
and
County

e,limanating

bargarn with him," O'Brien

MR. BEE

SUPERIORS

By BERNARD BRENNER
WASHJNCTON ( UPI I Agriculture Secretary Bob
Bergland today called for a
sweeping overhaul of the
Food Stamp program,
proVIding stamps to more
poor people and cutting back
benefits for about seven
million &lt;urrent participants.
Bergland told a House
Agriculture Committee "the
plan for fiscal 1978 would
allow more needy people w ·
qualify for stamps by

minimum they would fulfill

notice of certification at least
through last night - and I
think I would koow upoo
arrtval here - from the

hene~t

Food stamp·plan would

...

•

number of destgn..construct, structiOn procedure
or "turnkey," flrms . Under
this constructiOn approach, a
s ingle
contractor
both
designs and constructs a
faciJlty , and may provide
other serv 1ces Such as
planmng, programming ,
financmg and equ1ppmg. In
the Jenkms project, It is
estimated
that
ap·
proxunately $35 to $40 per
square foot was saved the

5 ~ The Daily Sentinei,Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday,Aprii6, 1977 _

�I

6- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .• Wednesda ~. April 6, 1977

La_rge crowd attends cantata
of senior citizens c~orus

Club plans. more plantings---RUTLAND - Add1t10naJ
plantings at the Jean Parker·
Memorial at Forest Acres
Park were planned when the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners
met recently at the home of
Mrs. Joe Bolin.
Other features of the
meeting included the election
of delegates to the Region 11,
Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs, spring meeting, and
planning for an open meeting
to be held April 27 -at which
time there will be a
demonstration on modern
arranging by Mrs. Joan
Stewart .
The delegates elected for
the regional meeting whi ch
will be held at Logan on Aprl
30 were Mrs. Joe Bolin, Mrs.
Howard l!lrchfield and Mrs.
Sames Carpenter. The
morning program will
feature demonstrations on
flower arranging by the
judges of Region 11 with both
Mrs. Carpenter and Mrs.
Bolin participating. The
afternoon program will be on
horticulture by Mrs: Fred
Schuster, Dayton.
At the April 21 open
meeting, aU Meigs County
garden clubs will be invited
along with any other in·
terested individuals. In ad·
dition to Mrs. Stewart 's
program on modern design,
!here ·will be an eco logy
presentation.
Tbe therapy program with
the special education classes
at Rutland will be held this
week by club members. The
children will make Easter
corsages for their mothers.
For roll call members
named a type of Japanese
arrangement or a school of
Japanese design. Mrs. Larry
Barr presided at the meeting
with Mrs. Dick Fetty and
Mrs. Jlill Willford giving the
secretary and treasurer 's
reports.
Devotions
on
"Giving" were ~y . Bolin.
For the pr ram, Mrs.
Bolin present
Japanese
floral design featuring forces
branches. She noted that all
traditional
and
basic
Japanese arrangements are
built on an assymmetrical
triangle with considerable

dep th. She sa1d the
framework is made up of
three principle stems
representing

heaven , man

and
earth .
Different
Japanese schools have dif-

old traditional designs are
governed by rigid rules, the
J apanese also ha ve modern
nora I classes which allow for

these lines, but the ,most

creativity and distinction In
arrangement.
Mrs . Bolin explained that
most or American .modern

predominate. one, is heaven,

arranging

and for this the-best stem is
used . Man is secondary in
innportance, and the material
of Jesser weight and

Japanese design. She said
that in Japan people study for
years to become a master
teacher and
that in
metropolitan areas hefe
there are instructors in
Japanese design. Mrs. Bolin
demonstrated classical and

ferent names. she said, tor

prominence is earth .

is

based

Approxinnateiy 200 persons
attended the Easter cantata ,
"The Last Days of Christ"
presented by the Senior
Citizens Chorus Sunday at
Trinity Church.
Mrs. Ca rrie Neutzling not
only compiled and narrated
the program, but directed the
Senior Citizens Chorus and

bn

Mrs. Bolin suggested a
combination of both perfect
and imperfect material to
simulate nature with the use moribana design, naturalistic
of the life cycle of the plant - · and Japanese free style. She
full bloom, half bloom, buds, also showed a . variety of
and J)ast blooms. She said no containers suitable for
two stems should be of the Japanese designs. Flowering
same height and that in the crab, willows, forsythia and
traditional
classical quince, along with daffodils
arrangement, an uneven and pink carnations were
number of stems must be used in the demonstration .
used while in the nageire and
Mrs. Larry Edwards had
moribana
style
of an educational exhibit · on
arrangements, an even spring flowers in bloom. She
numbe'r of stems is per~ showed several different
mitted.
varieties of daffodils inMrs. Bolin spoke of the cluding Mount Hood, King
traditional rikka which is the Alfred, Cheerfulness, Old
oldest and most complex of Gold, and Pinkie. along with
Japanese
arrangements Dutch iris and Easter Lilies,
since these were originally and discussed the culture and
used as temple decorations. care or the plants.
She defined the composition
She reminded members ·
of rikka and noted that this that alter the daffodils have
division is re.llerved for those bloomed , the foliage should .
who are highly trained in remain until it turns bfown so
Japanese design. Tbe flower that the bulb can gain
holder for . ·traditional strength for another year.
classical design Is usually a
Mrs, Ray Lambert gave
forked twig, she said, with aU gardening tips for April, Tbe
stems being placed w.ithin the hostess prize was won lry
triangular area with another Mrs. Bob Bishop, and Mrs.
piece of wood. She said that Marjorie Davis provided the
the length of the heaven line traveling prize · whicn was
determines the over aU siz&lt; of won by Mrs. Bill Willford .
the arrangement. Whilr thP

Helen Help
Us ... By Helen Uolld
Gives 'Cake' and Eats It Too
Dear Helen:
•
.
Will! t do you think of a guy who brings you candy, then
opens it and eats the whole thing?
.
When we go out lor pizza, I'm lucky to get one piece before
he scarfs down the rest. What's in store for me in this
relationship? -STARVING
Dear Starving:
A fat gentlemlln friend. - H.

'+++

-Women go
to spring
meeting

townspeople and boy scouts
who joined the group for
Biblical
of
portrayal
characters.
Lighting which added to the
effectiveness or the scenes
was handled by Pat Holter.
Giving general assistance to
Mrs. Neutzling were Mrs.
Ellen Couch, Mrs. Georgia
Watson and Miss Frances
Roush who also portrayed the
three women at the tomb on
the morning
of the
resurrection.
Mickey Williams portrayed
Christ, Treli Schoenleb,
Peter; Jewell Curtis, James;
Virgil McElroy, John and
Danny Thomas, Judas. Tbe
other disciples were portrayed by Kermit, Dayton,
and Eugene McElroy, Rick
Blaettnar, John Morris,
· Charles Wayland, John Byer,
Larry Byer and Early Roush.
Trudy Andrews and Mrs.
Eva Dessauer rece1ved the
offering at the door, and Cecil
Bradbury distributed the
programs. Boy Scouts of
Troop 249 under the ~1rectlon
of Robert Arms assisted with
props as well as In the
presentation. Accompanist
was Mrs_. Hazel Thomson.
A soc1al hour was held
following the program with
Mrs. Irene Busch and Mrs.
Byer pounng the punch
prepared by Mrs. Walson,
Mrs. Couch, Mrs. Holter and
ca rried by Danny and Greg
Thomas. Mrs. Holter made
the refreshment table floral
arrangement of yellow
Jonquils which was flanked
by yellow tapers on the green

Mrs. James Carpenter and
Mrs. Janet Bolin were ·in
Lancaster at the Holiday Inn
last week to attend the spring
Board'of Directors meeting of
the Ohio Association of
Garden Clubs.
Mrs . Bolin is ass istant
secretary and had charge of
publication sales at the
meeting. Mrs. carpenter is
the state news media
TO WED- The wedding of Debbie Marie Campbell,
chairman.
Both gave reports
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David D. Campbell, 106 Brick
at
the
meeting
and discussed
St ., Pomeroy, and Jimmy Lee Derenberger, son of Mr.
with
members
plans for the
and Mrs. Robert Derenberger, Rt. I, Albany, will be an
Gardeners
Day
Out to be
event of June 18. It had originally been set for April .16, but
held
Sept.
29
at
Marietta .
unforeseen circumstances necessitated the change. The
Mrs.
Bolin
·and
Mrs.
Caropen church wedding will be held at 5:30p.m. at the First
pen ter asked that area clubs
Southern Baptist Church, Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy . A
who. would like sa les tables at
reception honoring the couple will follow at the home of
the Gardeners Day Out
Mr. and Mrs. Da:&gt;ny King, '205 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy .
contact either one of them
for a table reservation.
The board members enjoyed a tour of the Wahkeena
Nature Preserve near
Lancaster. It is owned by the
Ohio Historical Society and
A world missions servi~e Africa , China, India, Japan supported by contributions of
was held last Wednesday and the Antarctic regions, OAGC Clubs. Tbe group took
evening at the Middleport and were dressed in similar a nature tour to view the
United Pentecostal Church, attire.
spring wild flowers and the
under the direction of Mrs.
natural formations . The
A song entitled "Kneel at curator, Tom · Wood, con·
Louise London , Syracuse,
director of the Foreign the Cross" was sung by. Tom ducted the tour and also had a
Kelly; and a song entitled slide
Missions Department.
presentation.
The service opened with "Lovest Thou Me," was a Educational programs are
devollonal singing and duet by Paulette Northup and offered there for school
prayer followed by a skit Linda Acree. .
childr~n.
with specia l
performed by selected
The role of pastor in the skit seminars for adults.
members
of
the wsa portrayed by Roy
congregation . The purpose of · Northup with ~enell Kelly
it takes grief, hard work, and
the skit was to emphasize th~. portraying the role of a young
a
true calling from God to be
lady just out of college, who
import~nce of reaching
a
Missionary;
but when and.if
people throughout the world had receive~ a calfing from
that
call
is
received,
people
with the word of God · God to go irtto the missionary
must
do
as
the
song
suggests
regardless of race, color or: ~ield .
creed.
The program ended with a and surrender all to Hinn.
The evening's se rvice _
Several children of the song entitled "I Surrender
ended
with scriptures from I
J;Ongregation wer~ chosen to All" with the thought imSam
..
3:1-10
and prayer.
represent the countries of pressed upon the church that

Debbie Marie Campbell

World missions seroice
conducted last week

Dear Helen:
Thank you!
.
.
A year ago, your words - to another reader .:_ caughi me
up short and turned me in a direction.
You said, about the man who had a $300-plus per month
cigarette and booze habit : "Since he's bent on suicide, a $5
bottle of sleep!ng pUla would be laster, cheaper; less painful,
and-more efficient."
'
. At the time I smoked live packs a day while tiJI!ng to
Ignore my cough - or I should say drown lt with martini
lunches, three or lour before-dinner drb\IIS, llld a few during ·
the evening "to make me sleep."
·
I kept saying I could quit anytime I wanted,
Yourcolwnn shocked me into an accounting. I found I was
laying out at least $10 a day on liquor and over $2 a day on
Several more Meigs County
cigarettes. Mlnlmum : ~per mooth to kill myself! More chUrches have announced
than the f~y spent on food; equal to our house payments; H6iy week schedules. They
about one-fifth my paycheck.
'
include :
Tbat week I went to my doctor. He agreed I was
Racine - Portland Branch
committing slow death,
..
•
of the Reorganized Church of
It wasn't easy, but I'm now off cigarettes and have only Jesus Christ of Latter Day
passing regrets lis I order tomato juice instead or cocktails. . Saints, 7 a.m. Easter morTbose regrets dissipate when I count up the changes in my llfe. ning service followed · by
I'm more alert, healthier, am doing better at work and in bed breakfast. William Roush is
(my wife approves!),; plus the kids are getting to know their pastor.
dad again.
Tbe Hope Baptist Chapel at
How did l manage It? Each month l kept s\l'lct books on 570 Grant St., Middleport,
what I spent for "poison." l subtracted that from !360 (my with Bobby Elkins as pastor
former tab ),and put the remainder ln our savings account.
will have an Easter sunrise
My reform took us on a ski vacatioo in February, And I felt service on the lawn of the
like skiing ! .
chapel at 6 a.m. Breakfast
· Here's lifting a_..taU ooe to you, Helen. Tomato juice, or will be seryed in the kitchen
courlie.- RICH MAN, MORE MAN
.
following the early morning
service. After the regular
Dear Rich Man, More Man:
worship service at 11 a.m.,
Letters like yours make a columnist feel ten feet tall. May there will be an Easter egg
your life be all tomato juice and skittles (whatever skittles
are). - H.
P.S. Winalewlosealew. Read on;

1- The o.ailySentinei,Middleport-Pomeroy, o .• Wednesday,

•

Polly Cramer

[umps inside a porcelain teapot
.
By PoUy Cramer
DEAR POLLY - I have a
porcelain teapot that is loaded with tiny Jumps inside. I
have tried chipping them off,
bOiling vinegar and baking
soda but to no avail. Any sug·
gestions?- DIANE.
DEAR DIANE - You fail·
ed to say whether or not these ·
lumps have recently appeared or if they have always
been in the pot. Perhaps they
are slight innperfections in
the porcelain. Check to see if
they are covered with the
S.me glaze as the rest of the
china. If so, give up as they
were made into it. If recent
additions they may be caused
by a build-up o! something in
the water where you live.
Perhaps other · readers in
Iowa may have had a similar
experience and will share
anything they have leamed
withyliu. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - When

I

45 PIECE

IRONSTONE
DISH SET
Reg. $59.00

NOW

',$2495
FLOWER POTS

98*

TO

.$1295

MANY
PRETTY GIFTS
FOR EASTER

Social
Calendar

Open 12-to s p.-m.
Thursda'y, Friday
&amp; Saturday

Simon's

Gift

WEDNESDAY
AUXILIARY of the Middeport Firemen to meet at
the firehOuse at 6 p.m.
Wednesday to go from there
to a location for their anniversary dimer.
SOUTHEASTERN Ohio
Garden Tra tor Ass~.
meeting, Wednesday, 8 p.m.
at Dale Kautz residence near
Chester.
SOUTHERN Junior High
t\thlettc Boosters Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. at junior
high buUdlng.
POMEROY Masonic Lodge
164, F&amp;AM, regular meeting,
7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the
iemple.
SIGN UP for boys and girls
.~ Syracuse • Minersville
interested in playing
blseblill have until Wednesday. Contact Barry
•.• McCoy lit 992-li082.
ORGANIZATIONAL meet. ing Syracuse-Minersvllle
Baseball · Association Wednesday 1:30 p.m. at
twnicipal · bullding. Teams
will be organized and
equipment Jand unjlorms
ocdered. AD coaches, helpers
111d interested pers&lt;JlS urged
to attend.
' .
CITZENS Action Group
Wedne:J~ay 7 p.m. at Meigs
County Museum. '
THURSDAY
MEIGS County Council of
PTA's Thursday, 7:30p.m , at
Sill em Center S ~boo!.
SOUTHERN Local Board
rl. Education Thursday 7:30
p.m, at the high scbool.

C~&gt;nfer

0.

Pomeroy,

RACINE DEPARTMENT STORE
RACINE, OHIQ

Lori-Lynn Sportswear
New colors, new styles, mix and mate~ .
Shorts, slack-s. skirts. lops and . blouses .
Sizes 8 through 48 .

\
Turtle Box Shorts. &amp; J'e ans
I

..-ea

Cotton Knit Tops ;\ .
Sizes 3 " 18 ·
Jrd Street

•

'

'•
Raci~~ •.Ohio'

"

Holy Week schedule'

given by churches

•ELIZABETH LYONS

Celebrates
.
birthday

RACINE - Elizabeth Mae
Lyoos, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Lyons, Racirie,
celebrated her f(fth blrthdsy
Saturdl)y.
A Panda Bear Cake
decorated by Rita Boggess of
Letart was presented to
Elizabeth. Cake, jce cream,
chips and punch were served.
Guests were Jennie Johnson ,
Alana Lyons, Jason Smith,
Kenda and Kelly Rizer ,
Tammy Boggess,
Scott
Brinker, Melanie Lyons,
Donald Boggess, Buddy
+++
Triplett, Debbie and Harry
Lyons, her grandparents, . Mrs. B.:
Your column is mostly trash and only certain stupid types
Judge and Mrs. John c.
write
to you. For shame, publishing uncensored, deprived
Bacon, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred
letters,
when you should be preachiilg against sex. A second
Lyons, Mrs. Agnes Boggess,
.
S
oc\Om
and
Gomorrallril upon us. Tbis way lies a Communistic
Mrs .•Gene Lyons, Mr. and
take-over
...
etc., etc., etc. - CLARENCE
Mrs. Henry Lyons, Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Brinker, and
Dear Clarence:
Mrs. Carol Triplett.
Your first sentence Sald it - 1 didn't.
Thanks for writing. - H.

Rehearsal party
held on Friday

ENVELOPES NEEDED
Meigs County school
students are .asked to return
their "send a mouse to
college" envelopel, an aspect
of the American Cancer
Society fund drive, to · their
respective schoola at once. A
representative of the local
cancer unit will ~ick up the
.
envelopes. ·

Greg Gaterell, manager of
the Country Cousins Cook
Shoppe, Pomeroy, was host to
Miss Melanie Waldnig and
Wesley Barnett 's wedding
party after rehearsal Friday
evening.
Dinners, soft drinks and
dessert were served . At·
tending besides the bridal
couple were Mr. and Mrs.
Robert
Waldnig, ·Bob
Waldnig, Jr., Joe Holman,
Rev. steve Wilson, Racine;
Mr. and Mrs. Alan Petzo,
SALE PLANNED
daughters, Shelley and
RACINE - Tbe Southern
_ Kerrie Petzo, Mrs. Karen Junlor High PTO will sponsor
- Nickols, Tammy-corney, _ a ru!Tiffiage sale · Aprit 9
West Jefferson: Mr. and Mro. Saturday, aT the juiilor high
James Monroe, Grove City, buildin~ beginning at 9 a.m.
and , Richard
Fridley, Proceeds will be used for the
Pomtroy.
'
eighth gractf trip.
·,

.

Donations

hunt for the children. Tbe
publi'c is invited.
At the St. Paul Lutheran
Church in Pomeroy a Good
F~iday service will be held at
1:45 p.. Fridax il)ciuding the
reading of passion history
and hymns. Easter · sunrise
service at· the church will be
at 7 a .m. Two movies will be
shown at Sunday school at
9:45a.m.
The Middleport United
Pentecostal Church will have
its sunrise service on Easter
at 6:30 a.m . with the Rev.
William Knittel, pastor,
speaking. Slides of the
Knittels' recent trip to the
Holy Land will. be shown.
Breakfast will be served
following the service. At 10
a.m. the regular Sunday
morning worship and Sun\lay
school will be held. 'Ole public
is invited to all services.

are listed

RACINE - Tbe family of
the late Virgil Roush of
Racine has received the
following acknowledgments
of donations made in his
memory.
Tbe Southern Tier Heart
i\,sgociation . serving
Chemung, Schuyler, Steuben,
SERVICES ATrENDED
Tioga
and
Tompkins
Mrs. Helen AUen, state (Counties in New York given
WMU Director of Southern by Mrs. Verne Ackerson, Mr.
Baptists, attended evening and Mrs. John Ackerson and
set11ices of tlje church . on Mr. and Mrs. Don Ackerson.
March 27 and spoke briefly on · The Greensboro. North
the importance of WMU 'YOrk Carolina Heart Association,
on the local level as well as Inc. given by Mr. and Mrs.
studies about missionary John l.inz.
activities in other areas. Mrs.
Tbe Kennersville, North
Allen visited the Pomeroy Carolina lleart ~ssociation,
Church in order to gather given by Mr. and Mrs. Joe
information needed for the Radisch and Mr. and Mrs.
study on state missions John Lennon .
during the Week of Prayer
Tbe Meigs County Heart
which is to be held in Sep- Associ;1Uon by Mr. Hnd Mrs.
tember.
Charles Bartels.
FILM COMING
The Children's Home
. Adocumentary film on how Society of North Carolina,
energy is produced by coal Inc. at c;reensboro, N. C.
will be shown over cable TV given by_ Mr, and Mrs. Ro~er
channel 9 ano-11 Frl'day-an~oey,- Go\umbus:- and
p.m. Tbe program, shown books to the Pom~roy P~bllc·
~oast to coast, was shown
I.~brary hy Mrs. (,race Crow
earlier on local &lt;ible TV.
Elch.

GIRLS
ME~'S

&amp;
BOYS
SUEDE
JOGGING

SHOES
BLUE &amp; GOLD
AND GREEN

ENCH CITY

SMOKED
CALLIE ·HAMS ..............................
6 _to 8 lb. Average
Lb
.
.-. 69C
!

. ·'

ARMOUR STAR

'·'

..ORDINATION, COM·
MUNION and foot wasl\ing
services Thursday
at
Syracuse First Church of
God. Public invited.
SATURDAY
BAKE SALE SaturdaY at
Racine Junior High heginnlng at 9 a.m. sponsored by
Southe!11 Junior High PTO.

..

VACUUM SLICED
SUPER.IOR PACKAGE

I

WIENERS ....................................... ~--~~:.:.~~~~?.~ .. 98c

$
Lb.
139
CHEESl WHIZ.~~.': .....
KRAFT

IDAHO

1

IOBag-Lb.

BAKING POTATOES

KR.O,FT Quarters, 1 Lb.

$129

FIVE POINT Star Stitchers
4-H Club wUI hold a bake sale
Saturday, at Gaul's Market in
Chester, starting at 9 a.m.

79·~

MONDAY
INSPECTION OF Bethel
62, International Order of
Job's Daughters, 7:30p.m. at
the Pomeroy Masonic
temple, Monday. All master
masons, Eastern Star
m·embers, and members of
the DeMolay are invited.

~

.I

PARKAY , TWo 89~ WHITE .
GRAPEFRUIT...~.~~:.
MARGARINE ....~.C?.~.

9 OL KOOL WHIP. ......................................:....69~
32 oz. Kraft
.
1
Miracle Whip Salad Dresslng ••• ~ •••••••• •1M
10 oz. Cast~ry. Hotdo' Sauce •••••• 2 for 49•
1i% oz. reg.
··:·
' . .
Duncan Hines Cake Mlxes •• ~ •••••••••••••••69•
'
5 lb.
all purpose Robin Hood Flour.. ~ ·.... 79• bcig
29 oz.
.
Teen Queen Peaches,"halves, sllces ••••• S9'
10. ct. large Be•pack Trash Bags ........~1.D9
46 oz. Clarion Tomato Juice ••••••••••••••.59•
12 oz. Skinner's Egg Noodles: ••••••••••• 49;
6 oz. Maxwell
.
.
.
.
'~1stant coffee .....•2.89 with far, limit of ·2·
.

t

' OflJt ..
\1'5

POLLY·s

covered table. Tbe puneh.Jias
served with assorted cookies.
Decorating the altar for the
program were palms ·and
lilies placed there by Mrs.
llenry Ewing in memory of
her husband.
Mrs. Neutzllng extends
tlianks to all those who took
part and assisted in the
program.

FROM1

Aprr·.J·~9n~::::::::::~------------------------~---------------------

...

TUESDAY
BIG BEND Citlzims Band
Radio Club, Tuesctay night,
7:30p.m. at the Rock Springs
Grange , Hall. Anyone interested invited to attend.

I

~

•

Services set at
Alfred Church
ALFRED - Tbere will be
services on Wednesday
evening, April 6, at the Alfred
Church at 8 o'clock Holy
Week on the theme,

"Gethsemane."

An Easter egg hunt for the
children will he held between
Sunday School and worship
~Ices on Easter Sunday at
10:30 a.m.

CUBS ON TV
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Cub Scout Pack 242 will be
guests on Mr. Cartoon's show
ove~ Channel 2 on . cable
Tbursd~y. April 7 a.t 4 p.m.

making candy or cooking any
foods that might scorch easily I place my cooking pan inside a large iron skiUet so the
heat will be more even and
the food is less likely to
pcorch.- E.I.E.
DEAR POLLY - Please
lind attached a short release
dealing with a rather interesting angle lo our
·'energy crunch" - rinsing
our clothes in cold water.
Many Americans are now
"dialing down" their. thermostats to 65 degrfi'S in the
day and 55 degrees at night
but how many of us have
,thought about "dialing down"
ou( washing machines for a
cold water rinse ? At a tinne
when pinching every energy
penny counts, we can all cut
down either gas or electricity
· consumption by rinsing our
clothes in cold water, according to the head l)ome
economist for a well-known
washing machine company.
Ms. 0. reports that a cold
\Yater rinse uses approximately one-third the energy
of a warm water rinse. In
fact, a rinse in cold water is.
actually recommended lor
most of the modern pernianeni press fabrics found !&lt;&gt;day in everything from
dresses to dress shirts'. In a
normal wash cycle, settin~
your dial on hot wash with a
f cold rinse as opposed to a hot
wash with a warm rinse
saves you up to 33 per cent in
energy. Or to save even more
energy dollars, you can wash
your clothes in warm water
with a cold rinse as opposed
to -hot water with a warm
rinse to save as much ·as 50
per cent in energy consumed.
-L.P.
Thanks, L.P., for this tinnely infonnation, We are all in·
terested in saving energy
wherever possible. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - My new
telephone book has just come
and this reminded me or a
Pointer l would like to share.
I always remove the map of
. our city and community and
when a ,friend from out of
town is coming to visit l send
them the map with the route
to our hoQSe marked on it.
Tbis also works well for a
club or organization when
they have a speaker or guest
coming from out of town. GLENNA.
Polly will send you one of
her 11 peachy" thank-you
cards, ideal for framing or
placing in your family scrapbook, if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her column. Write Polly's
Pointers -in care o( this
newspaper.

3rd

Store Hours:
Mon.-Sat. 8 am·IO pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SECOND ST.

POMEROY, 0.
NO SALES TO DEALERS
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

Prices Effective Thru

April 9, 1977

CRISPY SERVE
·•

BACON~ ••••..••.••••••• ~B~.
SMOKED

CALLA HAMS •••••••••••
LB.

4 PORK ·lOIN •••••••~~

1

USDA CHOICE

ARM ROAST•••••• ~ ... ~B~.
USDA BONELESS

CHUCK ROAST•••••••.L~-.
GROUND CHUCK••••.L~
.•

.

Bridal
shower
-enjoyed
Connie Patterson and
Cindy King entertained
recently with a bridal shower
for Debbie Marie Campbell,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
David D. Campbell, 106 Brick
St., Pomeroy. Miss Campbell
is the bride-&lt;llect of Jimmy
Lee Derenherger.
A cake made by Mrs.
Donna Pullins was served
along with other refreshments. Guests were Robin .
Campbell, Ruby King and
Debbie, Mrs. Susie Bailey
and Kristin, Mrs. Elva
Powell, Ann Colburn, Mrs ~
Ruth Campbell, Dordy Call,
Ann, Nan and Chris .Jiitz,
Mrs. Kinn Dowell, Kim and
Ricky Patterson, Mrs. Kathy
Jacks.
Games were played with
prizes going to Susie Bailey
and Debbie King. Tbe door
prize was · won by Miss
Bailey: Sending gifts were
Mrs. Linda Patterson, Mickie
Schoonover, Mrs . Teresa
Collins, Mrs. Rhonda Dailey,
Dessie Boring, Bonnie Boring
and the staff of. Veterans
Memori~l Hospital.

CAR WASH SET
RACINE - The pony
league and the junior girls'
team of the Racine Baseball
Assn. will hold a car wash
from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m.
Saturday at the Vista liervice
Station in Racine. Members
are to bring their own sponge
and bucket. Tbe rain date .\Viii
be April 16.
'

$ 09

U.S. N0.1 IDAHO

POTATOES•••.••••• !~.~~; ..
FLAVORITE

BREAD•••.••••.••• :s.o:~.
FRESH .BAKERY
BORDEN'S

.

DONUTS
••••••••••••••
~:E~.
19

PLASTIC

2% MILK •••••••.• ~~~?~...

g PMKM

$ 4
MARGARINE ••••• ~ ••••• ~B~
ICE CREAM
••••••••••
G.A~·
'

JUMBO -TREAT

.

••••

COUPON

~-:

"

-;- :- 1 •

. . . . .I •

NESTE A
3 oz.

'

$'}19 '
W!C

Limit! Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires April9, 1.977

'

'io~lilllil~

COYPON

~-

EDON

TOILET TISSUE
4P:~~L g~ ·w;c

4

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only AI Powell's
Offer E•pires April9. 1977

-:---:- ;1

COUPON

'. 1.

WAGNER'S

ORANGE DRINK

2/$1
'

540Z.

. ·I

.·' .I
'I

W/C

:1

. ·I

. 'I

Good Only At Powe ll's

.. I

Offer

I

·

9,

1977

DOMINO

.. I

Per Customer

Li mit

COUPON

. ,I

. .I

SUGAR

·"'

5 LB.

69¢·w;c

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires April9, 1977

�9- T"!' Daily Sentint"l. Middleporl-Pomero)', U.. Wednesday. April6, 1977

8 - The Daily Sentin&lt;'l, Mtdrlleport·Pomer&lt;•&gt;. () . W&lt;'&lt;lncsday. ~ p1 11ti. 1!1 :7

pre ss ure, Including
Fit•simmoos. His resignation
was expected by April 30
under an agreement with the
Labor Department.
The department also filed
suit earlier this week against
the Teamsters' Ohio Highway
Drivers Welfare Fund ,
accusing the trustees of
illegally paying hundreds of

Teamsters honing up .tarnished image
By SARA FRITZ
WASHINGTON tUPil
The Teamsters union is
trying to improve its public
image to counter a cloud of
govenune~t investigations.

internal dissent and media
reports linking its leaders to
organized crime.
In addition to a new public
relatinns ~ampaign including

billboards . and advertising,
the union today called its
lora! leaders to Washingtoo
for a meeting some memhers
described as a "oep ra 11 v."

·. Top union officials refused
to discUSl&gt; Ute purpos;o of I"!'
mloeling, which apparently
was intended to be secret.
Some members speculated

UNTIL POWER CORRUPTED
•

Crawford's Hoover: an ·honest man
By DICK KLEINER
HOLLYWOOD
Broderick Crawford won the
Oscar for Best Actor in 1949.
p l~ying Hu ey Long in "AII lltl'
King's Men." Now, for tbe
£irst time si nce then , he 's

playing another rt·unl-page
Hgure, and maybe lhal luvely
·li ghtning will strike again.

Crawford is playing J .
Edgar Hoove1· , the late head
, of the F .B.I. , in " The private
• Fifes of J . Edgar Hoover."

• Because the film, written ,
directed and produced · l&gt;y
l ~rry

Cohe n, s hows Hoovc1·'s
flav.'S as well as his virtu l's, it
is certain to be a contruver-

·THREE MEN ON A HORSE was minor league compared with this performance. Six
(count 'em, 6) young visitors try out the large economy ride at a Tampa, F1a., amusement
park, Busch Gardens' The Dark Continent.

sialrelease.
'· t 'p layed

Hoover , "

CrC~ wfu rd

sl:lys, .. as C:ll l honest
man - up to the point where

power corrupts.''

to go out of buSiness ."
Some insurance industry
leaders feel the solution is for
laws to be written limiting tbe
amounts that can be
collected, or the profits that
lawyers can make from
" contingency" suits . BUt
Ryan thinks it would be
better to accept the changed
expectations of · the people
and go about adjusting prices
gradually to cover the in·
creased expectations.
"Instead of. saying that as

Crawford says the F.B.I.
gave them what ht&gt; cedis

·pmfect cooperati on - they
left us alone." In fad , there
was never ahy ~'. B.!. ap-

•'

•
'

~

'

~

...

•
'•

. ~

••

NalaliiliOIO a •• _.._.,_. . . . .

az . • ·- e.n!IU''
••~
•· •
lo·

: ._.;

..J..:

T

'•

If you owri a miCrow&lt;:Mt &lt;Wen. ·or~re ,
thinking abOuf b\Mng a r'niCfOwave oven' .•.

\

..-•
•

•

'
~

•"

I

''•
•
•

'

••'

..•••

The new
.revolutionary

,.,,,,..,

Touchmatic

'RJ:.&amp;-&lt;4
· ~~V7·'· UI

•

••

•

·~
I

•

•

'•'

'

••
•v

.ON

AN AMANA

EXPERT WILL
DEMONSTRATE
THE RANGE AND
ANSWER YOUR
QUESTIONS

THURSDAY, APRIL 7, AT 7 P.M.
FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 992·2635

INGELS FURNITUR

Littler stars
in film about .
cancer fight

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

l

•••,
•
•

-.••••

G P'le

•

••
~·

,.;

Symbol of hope

I '

•

••

.••=·:

..
:.:
•

...
•
•

,•
•

,,;

...

.....
~

LILIES - MUMS - AZALEAS CORSAGES- CUT FLOWER
ARRANGEMENTS
PERMANENT MEMORIAL FLOWERS

~

.

'

Pomeroy Flower Shop
Mrs . Millard VanMeter
Phone 992-2039
106 Butte rnut Ave.
992-5721
Pom eroy , 0.

:. List
''

'.

I

'
$20 to $100 OFF REG.
ICES ON ANY
FLOOR SAMPLE OR DEMONSTRATOR
MACijiN ES.
.
OFF REG . PRit..'t. ·,

SAVE SSO ON THIS
STYLl_ST;_ ~ACHINE
·'

one

· with

··

McCall's, Kwick -Sew, Simplicity Patterns
W. Second
992-2284
Pomerov, 0 .

t;IH'l 'kUp i-lnd C1 r 1 hPI ' ~ '1

'

First - David Beegle, Bill
Brothers, Tamm i Eb lin ,
Michele Folm er , Sue Fry,
Cha rlott e Hart, Audra
Houdashelt , Ar ti e Hun nel,
Erica Johnston , Alison Jones,
Kev in Donald King, Kevin
Victor
King,
G r eg
Massingale, Angela Sloan,

•'

•

WHITE PATENT. ALSO
NAVY ,
BLACK
AND
ANTIQUE GOLD KID SK IN .

'

~

',

' Shawn

J ohn son ,

Charlotte Lyon s, Teresa
Pratt. Denise Stegall, Jackie
Welker .
·
Fifth . - Rhonda Jeffers,
Mi cha el Kennedy , An gela
Pratt, Paula SwindelL
·sixth - Scott Harrison,
Ange la Hatfield, Brill King.
Natalie Lambert, Jo hn
Srnfth, Greg Taylor.

.,
•.,
.' .,.
.' .
•
'
•"

.
&lt;

•

•

,,
~

..' .
••

~

.,

•
..
.. .
~

that. They'll ~allium Manny J:O il t l'i !Jut lUll .
Scott. So I don't know if I'll du • " Uff ~: anlcra , from tunc to

desk. The t'. B.I. said that if
Justice sa1d okay. it was okay

1t or not. "
work too murh &lt;my more . He

"The way I feel is, if they
tlon'l bother you, that's the
best kind of approva l. If they
leave you alotae, that's all you

se:.ys he does n't have to. He'll
do &lt;t ·dinn~r theater play onrc

in a while, a movie u1·1V IJ"rl
if It appeals lu him. that's
G ill a.s k for. "
about alL
" I work just a bout enough
Cra\,..furd didu't try to im pe rsonate or imi ta te Hoover. to sa tisfy myself," he says. " I
Cohen had rese::tl"t.:hed the guess it .average.s out to .about
project for three yeats, and six months a year. ! work five
kept fcc-ding Crawfoi'd l&gt;ooks or six weeks, then take a
lu read. That. and • brief bit month off. I got grand·
of fihl.l, . was illl tht: p reparC:~ · children now and like to
lion tlw actor had fur the rule. spe nd so1ne time with them .''
The main reason he doesn ;t
"It's impossible to imper·
son&lt;:~. t e him ,' ' Cra wford says.
have to overextend himself is
"But Ute resemblahee bel· because of his huge hit TV
ween us. once I was in my ser ies of 20 years ago,
make·up and in my c.:ustwne, Hi ghway PatroL
wa~

remarkable .
" I .saw ~1 lot of fuota g~ on
Hoover - C:tll Jf C:t m inute and

a half. Adually, the1·c's very
little fi lm on Hoove r
available. So I really had no
cha ns:e to study his man·
nerisms. I played it by guess
Wid by God ..
" It was a lot tlifferent when
I played Huey L&lt;mg. Long
had a lot of footage available,
and I rea lly could study him.

The : rleans

invi ted.
Union

the

Hoover

picture

time, l' ve Occu an S.O. B., lJut
I've p.aid fur it."

union 's image .

CLIN ICS SET
F ree ce rVi cal cancer

" The name of th e
Teamsters has been dragged
th rough the mud and I must
admit, much of it has been
done by our own officers in

rthiics by the Mei gs Unit of
the American Cancer Society
have been set for Apri113 and
April 27 at Veterans

~r:~;;~~~t~:r~~~~i~~~
. ...--R·E-G-ULAR PASSENGER
both clinics and ap·
pointments can be made, by
calling 9,92·3382 and 992-7531

TREAD RECAPS

SELLING EGGS

ANY SIZE
~3 " -

in movies. And, of course,

bad things which have been
lately puhlicized. ·
·' J (hink his problem was,"
Crawford says, "that he got
drW1k on power.n

' he 's particularly high on the
Hoover picture, reeling it's a
first-rate film and a fi rst-rate
part to play .
"l met J. Edgar Hoover
just once, '' t1e s.ays. "1 was
just a young punk kid then ,
and I was in awe of the great
man . As I got older, that awe
changed to doubt. The thing·
about people like Hoover is

rn~y be another coming up,

14 11 a nd IS ..

' $}}95

Plus
Reca ppabl•
Ca sing and
SOc Fed . Ex . Tax

•

Meigs Tire Center, Inc.
992-2101

Pomeroy , 0.

John FIJI!z , Mqr .

~~~~rt.- -~~~--.1£: to NELSON'S

in-

a bou t Hoover , as well as the

Long and Hoover ha ve been

dissid~nts

"-"~s er

au

Holy Bible

Wreaths

'
Perfect
Gift for Easter

Pedestal CrO$!t ·
Pi llow Wrea th
Spr ay

King Jame5 Ver51on
Red Letter Edition

Ju'l r l9hl lo
put ell your

From :

!'lew

A good item
to put in the k ids
Easter Baske t s

~;ES
for llAl!TER

ONEIDA
FMhiOI\Il!bie &amp; differen t ]eweiry yov' ll en - I
joy wear ing . Adj uHllble .

Silver Spoon
Ring &amp; Bracelet

·I\V
I!\

'

Luden's

.

$2.19

Ne lson ' s Reg . , 2.99

Nel son's Reg . 51.99

2 Ptec.£' Set Only

$3.49

\

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

~
AUTHENTIC ROTARY
~ MOWER STYLING
\I

\''

..

'1\

Proudy Announce The .

Nelson''

APPOINTMENT Of
'

R-s~.

'

Ohio Ar! Company

Mete I Ga rde, Se; t
G1eut ..,0 1 Ia goet ' 11 1unior green
rhu mb go•ng in ih~ gu•.defl l ~~

OPERATING STARTER

ho•

PUll CORD

2•'.. " long

br~,.h1

autdao&lt; wlar11

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u.n

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•

Egg De co rat ing
Mli Chil'le
6 Do·I I· Your5elf P ens
&amp; Ca rtr idges .

AM/FM .P ocket Radio
Bau~ny.

Powered Pocket Pori·

final net

able Ft.11AM Radio. Buill-I n FM
and AM antennas . Batlerv op -

!III VI51ble

HAIR NET )

eratiOn

I

$7.99

Ed ha s ha d many years of experience in the automotive field and
come's to us from Huntington , W.Va. So we ~a·re inviting all of our
fri ends an'd customers to come in and meet Ed. He is very friendly
and wants to make all of our friends and customers happy . Don't
forget we giv e 10 per cent discount to senior citizens with the Gold
Card . Ca II Ed for an appointment to have your car serviced by one of
. our certified men, have it done right.

E1u 1e r

plctur B in

$3.39

althoug h it's dovblful.
Crawford has been approach· yuu c.:&lt;tn 't ever be sure wh~r~
ed lu play Harry Cohn, the the myth ends and the man
l&gt;umbastic Culwnbia . stud io begins."
At this poinUn his life, he 's
head, in lhdihn biography of
cOntent. ·
Howard Hughes.
" God's been good t o m~ ,"
" I like the script,' ' he says.
"B ut, of course; they won't he says, "and I \ry to be good
ca ll him Harry Cohn in the to Hun, too. You get out.of life
movie. Harry's widow , what you put into it, and I try
Joa nie, IS still around and she to put goodness into' mine. I
. wouldn 't g ive permission fur think entertaining people is a

Edwh} Flprence
As Service Manager

president from Ohio who was
succeeded last year by his
son, Jackie. Union members
credited
Jackie
with
arranging the meeting o.f
local olficlals.

T~· •mas Fagan, president .
of 1 eamsters Local 249,
reportedly told a gathering of
sliop stewards in Pittsburgh
Mondsy that the Washington
meeting was intended to plot
strategy for cleaning up the

Wa shington, kids would come
But not HOover . There was up to me and say how they
nothing.·•
loved my show, but they
They shot at Hoover's wunde•·ed why we .used those
home, and there Crawford old cars. Hell, we haven't
learned something positive madethal show since '57."
He says they shut them su
about the late F.B.i. head.
Tile front lawn of the Hoover fast then, averaging 20 pages
hol'ne wa .'5 n't g rass, it \Vas the' of script a day (luday, they'll
do 10 on a gond day ) that they
artificial kiru.l.
"Dan Dailey . and I were tur·ned out an episode in two
talking to some of the day s.
He says, despite the hard
neighbors,'' Crawford sctys,
"and I asked one uflhem why wurk, doing television was
·he had put in the Astroturf in· fun in the early '50s.
" It' was a 'lot or fun ," h~
stead of grass. He told me
says,
' ·but no more. Today,
that Huuver had had a
TV
is
a business. They don 't
g~n.l~n er fur many years un·
til the man got too oltl to mow want it good, they want il
the lawn. So Hoover put in Tuesday ."
Today, Crawford is s~lcc·
Astroturf - he kept the
gardener but gut rid of the live. He can alford to be. He
likes going out on the dinner
lawn."
So Crawford learned that theater circuit, likes picking
thet e were many good things and choosi ng parts on 1V and

the only genuin ely famous
people Crawford has pla yed
in his lengthy career. There

been

immediately assumed they
were to be the target or the
meeting. One dissident group
planned to picket, and
. anothe r was promising to
level serious charges against
Teamsters President Frank

Members of Ohio Eta Phi
Chaptt!r of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will hold their an·
nual Easler egg and bake
on Saturday. 9 a.m. to 3
sale
··J had a pie&lt;:e of the ac~
at the New York
p.m.
tion, '' he sC:tys, .and the in~
Clothing
House, The group
timaliun .is that the piece ·
will
take
orders for colored
amounted to a lot of money .
"In those days," he says, eggs and orders may be
"we really worked. We did 39 placed with Sheila Reeves,
episodes a year, and I shot 992·2449 or Maurisha Nelson;
five years of Highway PatroL 992·7313 .
And it's still being re-run
arow1d the country.
"When we were shooting

RC9 ul llr
Un!c-tnted

8 OZ .

Ul t ra Ho ld

~~!: $1. 29

&lt;...._...r·-;;:
•.', .. , .• •

H~lson ' •

Reg . Sl:49

Ntlson'S Rq . U .99

Kodok Film
M&amp; ~ e

sure

~ ou

ple1'11y o t l olm

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tor

vour tamere so you
co)n l8 ke plcnor es of

Two C. ilt 1
In one . Fill !hHf
ovc~en wltn E11"e'
u ndy Whe n the ~ I ds

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every one ·!n IMe il

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thrQU~h ·~l!h the condy

Ea~tl!!r

do thu

IIIey U ltl II D~ t T!le ~ II

a n!;! sh&lt;l•el lo enlerht in

fne.mse1ve1 .
,100-12

TIEY'S
SHOES
OPEN

9 il &lt;m.

to 5 p.m . Mon. thru Thurs.

9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Friday ·
Sat. 9 a ,m . to·5 p.m.

,

•

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Cl76- 12

...

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Colorfvl, r&amp;d, whitt and blue
plo1tic wheelba rroW help1 yo~ng­
llen corry thei r mind1 and lm·
agina tion1 In to play in1id&amp; and
outtfde rhe hou1e, O..eroll lenglh
il 261-f'.

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-

CALL' US FOR ALL YOUR SERVICE NEEDS.

I

WE APPRECIATE YOUR BUSINESS
,_,
'

Fonda

Po ly' Wheelbarrow

...•

MIDDLE OF UPPER BLOCK
POMEROY, OHIO

\·

Brown
100

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Coffee Filters

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troubl e see me; it m;.1y

a

si x weeks grading period :

Second - Sa ll y Radford,
Mela nie Arnold, Lin Chase,
April
Clark ,
Heat her
Co llums, Todd Collums,
Harley Eblin, Darla King,
Mi chl King, Phillip King,
Lisa pullins, Brenda Sinclair,
Cathy Stotts.
Third - Jodi Harrison,
Scott Pullins, Cindy Sauters ,
Tim Sloan, Anita Smith ,
David
Warth , Rodney
Harri son.
Fourth - Kim Eblin, Ruth

THE FABRIC SHOP

of

Na rrated py Chris Schenkel,
it also features ..hi~ Wife,
Shirley , anrt gol! grea ts Lee
Trevino. Gary Player. and.
Arnold Pain&gt;er.
Of his bout with ~a ncer
Littler says, ''I don't mind
talking about it. I figure if I'm
uutthere playing pretty good,
and people who ha ve the

· Salisbu ry
E lementary
honor roll for fourt h

~choo l

Fry ,

11~

announ~ed

Tamra Vance.

And get our
exci)Jsive Flip &amp; .
, Sew
2 - way
.sewing surface.
Model
774-231.

APPAOVEO 51HGE'l D["Uil

cancer.

:Won 't yo u hrlp witll

'

'

~

lu.:lp Hh'lll j ust .:1 little• Jr )o; &lt;l
mn· 01rruM,hl . I'd lik r 1o help a
littl r 11 1 t·tt n."

'

"!' broke the law .
" If you convict Mr. Leach,
it's not that you agree with
the Chessie railroad."
Leach said he became fru·
stated when the only answers
he got to hundreds of letters
he wrote lo · Congressmen,
veterans groups and others
told him nothing could be
done about Chessie'sdenial of ..
benefits.
·
He said he decided to take
over Chessie 's main offices
because railroad officials frequently indicated Chessie
was afraid of bad publicity.

professional -·golflng:s . great
stars continued ' his great
career aft er recovery from
th·e melano ma that ,very
nearly ended his ca reer five
years ago.
One of the million dollar
pill s ea rner s, during his
spectac ular career, Littler is
also the star Of "The Gene
Littler Story" an American
Cancer Society film of his

~(:!me

WE ACCEPT ALL MAJOR (~EDIT CA RDS
AND WE WIRE FLOWERS EVERYWHERE.
(

Littler,

expe ri~n ce ·

~

I'

CLEVELAND (UP!) - hunger strike he began at
Vietnam veteran Ashby midnight Sunday.
Leach remained free on bond
J.J..ach , a former Chessie
today Pl'nding appeal of his employe who served in
conviction on- charges of Vietnam as a combat medic,
exto rtion, assault and told the jury to find him guilty
possession of criminal tools of extortion, but said he was .
for his Aug . 26 takeover of innocent of the other charges.
Chess i e
System
Participating in his trial as
Headquarters.
his own: co..counsel, Leach
A jury of seven women and startled the jury during his
five men in Cuyahoga County closing argument Monday
Common Pleas Court found when he announced he had
him innocent Tuesday of 13 '!la~ted a hunger strike and
counts of kidnaping but guilty would not eat until Chessie
of one count each of extortion, extended G·l Bill benefits to
assault and possession of its Vietnam veterans .
criminal tools - a shotgun
"Today I swear to you
and a pistoL
before .Gnd in heaven not to
· Leach, 31, Huntington, W. eat another bite of food until
Va., held 13 persons hostage · the railroad lets the veterans
at gunpoint for nine hours, have the Gl Bill," he said .
giving up only when he got " You're going to see a man
national broadcast or his starve and die because
demands for GI Bill of Rights corporate executives don 't
benefits . for
Vietnam care about people."
ve terans employed by
Assistant .prosecutor Ray
ciiessie.
Cricar asked the jury to
Leach was sentenced to a concentrate oli the charges .
total of 3 to 15 years in prison
"You're are not here as
by Judge Eugene Sawicki, God, or as moral theologians,
who con tinued Leach's to interpret his (Leach's)
$100,000 bond. The judge gave -moral purpose,'' Gr~car said.
him 2 to 10 years on extortion "You are here only to judge if
and 1 to 5 years on possession
of criminal tools, with the
sentenceS
to
run
consecutiv ely , and , six
months for assault, to run
concurrently with one of the
other terms.
As he left the courtroom,
Leach pledged to continue a

wasn't o~cessary, ~cause
the Justice Department, the

Salisbury honor

Leach free ·on bond

I

I

lion.
"Justice had okayed us ,"
Crawford says. "So the F .B. L
said nothing. W11at could they

said Ryan. He says insurance
companies also need more
capital to cover the greater
liabilities, and that tax incen·
tives could help .generate it.
"We had.a conuniltee study
product liability and the
conclusion was that it is no
great crisis, berause this
insurance is available at a
price.

ANNOUNCING

c.:oop~ratiun . -

F.B.I.'s superior, had given

over an extended period,' '

~.

or

• its approval lu the produc·

of tomorrow , your premium
Is going up iiOO , 600 or 700 per
cent, we would like to be able
to tell the small businessman
\bat the change will be made

. ·,..
''
'

proval

w.c .shot .al the F'.B. I.
- we even shot at ll uovc1·'s
Wit h tJtL'lll .

union leaders had

Presser , former union vice

F'ilzo.;i mmons.

S&lt;:t)' ·~ So

l:rawfurd, al li6, doesn 't

U1at "" many as 2,1100 local

thousands of dollars to the
administrator.
One of the defendants in
that case was William

,

~-~------------------~
\

Whrt• Paper

. T1T 'I'

'\

~FOND~
PAPER
PLATES

Plat•s
1001

In 11 pec lo.ege

�10 - The _Dally Scntuwl. Mid1Ucporl-Pome-ro). 0 .. Wednesd;J) ..~pnl t; . 1977

Senate·.approves generic drug hill
..

prescnptwns wntten o~
Statehouse Reporter
physicians, dentists and
COLUMBUS (UP! )
I"glslation aimed at allowing veterinarians.
The substituted drug woold
(.oosumers to bypass name
have
to contain the "Identical
br-and drugs in favor of less
active
ingredientslt in
e•pensive remedies with the
amount,
quality
and purity .
same chemical makeup has
In
no
case
could
the
cleared the Ohio Senate and
consumer
be
charged
more
is on its way to the House.
The so-called "generic than the regular retail price .
Sen. Robert · D. Freeman,
drug" bill , hacked by
!}-Canton,
sponsor of the bill
grganized labor as an
which
was
two years in the
/adVantage for consumers,
making,
said
it would spur
was sent to the House
competition
within
the drug
Tuesday on a vote of 31 to 2,
market,
saving
consumers
despite warnings it would
save no money and might be money while assuring quality
~~ dangerous"
for some drugs and complying with
federal and state ·health
patients.
As passed, the bill would regulations.
The bill also contains a
enable pharmacists to offer
consumers the option of pur- requirement that the name
chasing the chemical and address of the drug
equivalent of a name brand manufacturer appear in
drug at a lower price unless a legible writing on the drug
practitioner, in his own container and on advertising.
One of the opponenta, Sen.
handwriting, directed an
M. Ben Gaeth, R-Defiance,
exact prescription .
The measure applies oo said the proposal could be
tJJ&gt;I

c:. ...

I

"The instructions end here."

Cattlemen·won't be all in black
By BERNARD BRENNER
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Beef

cattl e

pri ces

are

heading up tills spring, but
Agri culture Department
economists sa y prospects

indicate many cattlemen will
~ ontinue to lose money
through September.
At the same time, experts
said in a Livestock and Meat
Situation report, both cattle
and hog prices are likely to
rise in the second half of the
year and consumers will fee l
the impact in tile form of
higher retail prices for beef
and pork .
The department report said
prices for Choice grade

grain_-fed steers at Omaha,
which averaged an estimated
$37.88 per hundred pounds
from January through
March, are expected oo rise to
a $39 oo $41 dollar average
from April through June and
a $42--$44 range from July
through September.
The predicted increases
point the way 00 improved
returns for ,cattle producers
who have been losing money
tilrough much of the past
three-and-a-half "years. But
the latest forecast doe s
nothing · to change earlier
predictions that for many
farmers there will be ·no
profit in cattle until at least

the last quarter of this year.
Eldon Ball, a department
livestock specialist, said in an
interview the predicted cattle
prices for the April-June
quarter are stlll slightly
below
predicted total
production costs for that
period.
For the July-Sepiember
quarter , predicted ca ttle
prices are up - but so are

quarter and 19 per cent in the
second .
For 'the last half of the year,
however, beef prod~tion will
slip below the record set
duing the last six months of
1976 and the pace of the
cyclical . expansion in hog
production
will
slow
dramatically.

cost forecasts. cattlemen's

returns may be up to the $42$44 per hundredweight range',
SON BORN
but estimates of costs in the
COLUMBUS - Mr. and
Corn Belt In July run slightly Mrs.
Thomas
Evans,
over $44, Ball said.
Columbus, are announcing
The
expert
noted the birth of their second child,
government cost estimates an eight pound, nine ounce
include some overhead Items son, Christopher Michael,
which farmers may not count March I at the Riverside
as direct out-of-pocket costs. Methodist Hospital
in
And in some eases, efficient Columbus. Maternal grandproducers probably have mother is' Mrs. Irene Lowe,
costs below the government El Paso, Tex., and paternal
estimates and can break even grandparents are Mr. and
or make slight profits at the Mrs. Glenn Evans of Middleport. Eulah Evans of
MASON - The Slllishine Class of Mason .United Methodist predicted cattle prices.
"The
~ood producer may
Church met recently at the home of Mrs. Russell Capehart beat our costs . But in- Pomeroy is the paternal
with Rev. Evelyn MariJ!g as co-hostess. Rev. Maring gave the dustry-wide, we 're not out of grea t-grandmother. Mr. and
devotionals ahd Mrs. Landon Smith presided during a brief the woods. Alot of people will Mrs: Evans also have a son,
Todd Edwin.
business meeting.
still
be puttln~ dowil red ink
Refreshments were served by Mrs. Capehart and Rev. (in the July-Spetember
HOSPITALIZED
Maring to Mrs. William Zerkle, Mrs. Clarence Baier, Mrs . quarter)," Ball said.
Mrs.
Joe Turner is a patient
Mildred Riley, Mrs. Ebet Roush, Mrs. Murl Megee , Miss Mary
The situabon report, reaf- at Veterans Memorial
Dudding, Mrs. Ray Proffitt, Mrs. George Carson, Mrs. Landon' firming earlier predictions,
Smith, Mrs. Russell Barton, Mts. Matilda Noble, Mrs. Frances said combined production of Hospital, Room ]39. Mr. and
Mrs . .Turner, former MidStewart and Mrs. Maxine Arnold.
beefr pork and lamb in the dleport residents, now
MASON - The Rev. Robert M. Maring of Mason United ' first half of 1977 .would exceed residing in Bucyrus, ha.d'
last year's level. Total beef corm! to Meigs County to visit
Methodist Church has extended an invitation to attend services output
is expected to he relatives over Easter. Mrs.
at the church starting tl(s week with a combined Holy Week slightly below
a year earlier, Turner suffered a light
·Bible StUdY at 7:3U p.m. ou Wednesday, April6.
but
pork
production
is coron·ary Saturday morning
A1communion covered dish dinner will be held Thursday, exceeding year-ago figures
while at the home ·or Mrs.
April 7 at 6 p.m.
by 13 per cent ill 1!!f first Caralee Bailey .
The Good Friday worship services will be AprilS at 7:30
p.m. and on Easter Sunday Sunrise service will be at 6 a.m .
with ~··eakfast to follow . Worship on "Good News Today" will
be &gt; • :. : -IS_a.m., and church s&lt;;hool classes will commence at
10:... •. m.
The following Sunday, April 17, the topic of the morning
worship service at 9:4S is "What is a Christian?" On Sunday
morning, April24, the worship services will be on "The Letters
of Christ."
CHOCOLATES

Bucyrus, with Freeman's
consent , exemprs

pharmacists serving
hospitals and nursing homes
from the requirement that
the patient he iniOI'IIllid ollbe
drug substitution. It also
forbids them to charge more
than the · regular retail
price.
Both the Senate and House
were to reconvene tnday at
1:3U p.m.

,. ..;;:

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(():\ ,J~\~
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cook shot,~
n

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OLD ·FASHIONED

'f F/XINS lO ~

Wanted to Buy .

FU RNISHED APT for r en t Phone
99'13975 or 99 '1·257 1.

CASH paid for oil makes ond
models of mob ile ho me s.
Phone ar ea code b1•· •23·9S31 .

2 BEOf!OOM rno bll~ home on
Broadway in Raci ne . See
Her vey Leom ond b y Wagner's
Ha rdware .

Fore:s l Products . Top price far st anding
sawt imber. Call Kent Hanby ,
1·.. 46·8570.

GET Ot.E FREE
With This Coupon
.You get two delicious. Triple
Treats, but you only pa y for
on e! You Save BSc .
Expires 4-Jl -77

HAMS

CHICKENS
,,
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111 ;

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TURN YOUR
UNWANTED
ITEMS
INTO
CASH!

I
I
I

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I
I
I
I
I
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I
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One third lb. chopped beef
stea k w ith golden Frenc h fries
or baked Idaho potato, onion
rings , hot buttered .b read and·
sala d . Save 3Sc

_;__,__...,---

1

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

Exl)ires 4-31-77

(

1

'

'

!
'I

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$1
4
C~t'Green4 $1
Young ·
Turkeys

-

... '

COME AND GET YOUR PICTURE TAKEN
WITH -THE EASTER BUNNY
SUNDAY THE lOth BETWEEN 1.,l:M atuo
"' 6:00

FREE

'

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'

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(Age Limit 12)
FREE CHOCOLA fE EGGS
RTHEKIOS

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SLICEOINTOPORKCHOPS

Daily Sentine·I
Pomeroy, Ohio
- r ------~---·

Serve

80

INI

Save .
l-Ib.

5 Top
k

1

U S. GOV'TGRADED CHOICE,

IEEFC IHU(:M , !'HC&gt;ULOER POT ftOAST

•" 14wlrtl o..t ope-~: 111 1,

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fruit
Baskets
•

WITH COUPON
JMD TMII'III&lt;MAH Of

Gold Crest
Easter Candy

wl!~ l n

i!

50' OFF

:

Folger s
Coffee

99,.
99 C

•hll

Jtr ....t

5
~

$179 §:=

wnH couPON

"'"';!',~~"':

lb .

J""'

Item

wlll ,..,1•&lt;•

01

Spotlight

Bean Coffee

AltO tNt "'101M( 01&lt;1€

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Aerowox
Floor Wax

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WOIPAflU U.QUIH~I'IIII. ItH

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30' OFF

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Heinz Strained
Baby Food

Ytlflfliii.IIHtltll'tllf. tiH

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'OtUft(l $AT111AI.rfllt 1111

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WITH COUPON

~IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIUIIIIIIIIillld rruiiiiiiiHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIII

olll'f

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20• OFF

;; ;;

IO!IlmUATJIIA1ll'llll. llll
li'PUWU ITATI &amp;LOW TUU -

oetl. If yeor tr t enr
tlluot l•ll.-1

IOIIIm.liruil.r ln~tt.ttn

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atf,_,ltH I,.CIII r•r
MPM

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1PIMOI

I IM IItr ltlw lnt II t l•• D
lAIN CHlCl lor the
the ,,_lei pr k l

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fruit Bowls &amp;

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Flour

§

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Sirloin Stea ..... .lb.

Hyoncl 0111
c11ntr.. . wt r ~ n out of

i

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~:.-~n:oe·~l~e~s;~,

can~ltll"'

Gold _Medal

S

Ill~ OJ

o.ll 10-lt . ....

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51 1ce
aeon ....P.kg .

rttl
,.ultllt, If. IIU. to

g~

AliD rill Pill(

$119 ·. ! ::~.r~~:f;~~.

. Chuck ' .... ' .. ': '. lb.

.......rll .., " ..

PUBLIC NOTICE
Tllese persons are no ti l ied
that
Ohio
dr'iving
i'ln 'd
registrat ion pri vileges w i l l be
suspended . Suspens ions wi tt
rem air in effecl two ·year s
afler date of acC ident lor
fa ilure to deposit se c ur ity to
c over
ac ci dent
damage
l iebility ( Sec tion .4509 . 17 Oh iO ·
Rev i sed Code )
These per
sons have Jo· d&lt;IYS lo compl\1
w ith llle law or reqv es t a
hear ing . Request s mu st b e
forwarded in writ ing To lh e
Bureau of Motor Velli c i PS , P
0 80)1 1199 , Co lurnhus . Ohoo
4321 6 .
Mark t ;wd er m d L
R I. No 4
Pomer o y , Ohi o

p ""'·
n

Qu~rter

One
Pork Lo1n .. . .. .. .. lb.
•u"

7J,~
~ Ground
.,.-. , f--..U

TOTAL IA 1lSfACTI9 N
GUAIANTU
h11.e whar ••

WITH COUPON

=-

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WITH COUPON

20' OFF

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·=

Cred itors are reQl! i red to
f ile · th e ir claims w ith said
f i duc iary within l our months .·
Dated thiS 18th day Of
Mar ch 1977 .
Menn ing 0 Webste r
.. JI.Jdge
Court of Common Pleas,
Probate Di vi sion
Meig s County , Dl1i0
13 ) 23, 30 ( 41 6. J t c

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Joy Detergent
·,-o,,·_
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(]l}llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllld illlllfiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHUHI. . .
1 0 '~
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liMITONE COU PONPEIIFAMI LY

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Ca se No . 22Df9
Estate of Effie Davis Star cher Dece a se d .
Not ice is hereby given lhaf
Steven T . Sloa n o l At hens.

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(EXClUDING THIS ITEMJ

=
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LIMIT 2 PKGS. WITH COUPON AND $1 .51 ADDITIONAl PURCHASE

, .. . .

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

28--------"'--l

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con•.

Beans......

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Pkg,

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0Ahdimo•. h~ssobrae1eonrdouflylahpepoEisnltaelde

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deceased , fa t e "O f Rt. 1, Port land , Ohio , Me igs Coun t y,

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Name

Expires 4-31 -77

NO COUPON REQUIRED

Pork

VOIO.AnEit SATUitOAY ,,.ll ' · un
SU11EC! 10 lmiCJILIIIAIIIIOCIIllliS

Save

ltMtT t DOZ. WITH EACH $5 .00 PU_RCHASE

l&gt;.v lurxo• 1111 rAilf~ r"m·

tiro· fl ..\ ·.

UMIT ONE COUPON PER FAM1t V

r--OF I

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IEICtUDtKG THIS ITIM)

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HEY KIDS!

·

I . UMIII PKG. WIIH CllUPON AND $1.50 ADDITIONAl PII'CiiAs'i

PARKERSBURG
422-4080

26. -- - - - - - - -

--------------------------------.--------------~-·-·--··

-·-·--·-··----..- ·-· -·-··- '- . . . :::::.::=:..l

'I ""'~J

Roll
Pkg.

I
I

Rig." We are a Prival e Training
School and if you r'neet otH
qualif ications, you will be train ed by Professional lnstruc ·
tors on modern equipment.
Train on a Part Time basis (Sat.
&amp; Sun .l and Keep youf job, or
at1end our 3 W eek Full Time
Re sident Training.
X•·• ·o·u ( '"'" ., ,,- h11do•r i '""""~ I no·

31.-------

Save 15c on Cl Triple Treat , Double .
Cheese burger, or Fish Sandwich. Not
to be used wi th any other coupon.

I
I

fessional car&lt;eer Driving a "Big

I

I

Charm
Bathroom Tissue

I

JOB - Plan· NOW fo r a Pro -

30 · - - - - - - - - - - ·

Your Choice

With This Coupon

A

DOil't jusl be satisfie,s::t with a

29.

Save 15'

ONLY '1.10

OPEN REGULAR SUNDAY HOURS
EASTER SUNDAy I APRIL 10I 1977

,..,,.,.M v / Lu """ .,,.1,,.,.,., b&gt;tllo·r i.. • nrl'i

I
1 23.---,..----1
I 2•.- - - - - - - - - ·
I ' 25 . -----..,-....,.-1

Expires 4-31-71

TRIPLE MEAL

lOI.D

122. _ _ _ _ __

Delicious. chili prepared fresh
each da y.
·

9-·-·-------------------'!"'"--~T----------

NONf

"'··· $18,300 ,.,;:

1 2 1 . - - - - --=

With This Coupon
~

~•lfPim•o ·J

,...,.,,., n..J

II 20. -- - - - - -

E:~epires 4-31 -77

l&lt;enr&gt;effl McCullough, R Ph. Chorles R1flle, RPh . '
Ronald Honnlng, R. Pit .
,
Mon. lhrus.•. a:oo • .m.to9p.m.
SundaylO:lofol2 :lOandSto9p.m.
~·
tPRESCRIPTIONS
PH.t92-29SS
1
Fricnoooy S.r.ore
·
! dlE.MA!N OoenNiqhtstol9 POMERu·r . o.!

"' flm..-rJ

I 19. _ _ _ _ _.._
1

ONLY 50•

~

WI IHIIVI IHI liGHT TO LIMIT
QUAHTinU .
DIAUIS.

1 ....\ ./"NIJC I"I i lN

111 - --~---

FRESH, HOT CHILl

ONLY '1.20

tTIMI AND PRICIS GOOD lUNDII.Y
A"'l 3 , lt1'7 THIU S4TUIIOAY .....l
• . lr171N

Brown &amp;
Se.rve Rolls

1 17.- - - : - - - -

.

You·ll be successful today as a
t enm player Its when vou try to
do cvc;r ylhmg on your own that
the proble m s start

SHOP KROGER

COI'YitGHT lf1'7-rHI ICIIOOI• CO.

VANCAMP
1

.15.--------

Idaho potato. hot buttered

''

FOR ALL YOUR

AI&lt;C REG ISTER ED Femole Co ck er
sPoriief Puppy' , 7 weeks did :
Buff colo r . M e l\lin Cross, phone
742 ·3176 .

II 16.----..,.....-:---

bread and cole slaw . Sa ve 35c
Expires 4-31 ~ 77

,CAPRICORN 1Dtc. 22-Jon. 1i)

II

AQUARIUS IJon. 20-Feb. 19)
Those born on this date are
Some ol ')lour pals may b on an
under the sign of Aries.
CANCER (Juno 21 -July 22) Be econ~my k1Ck today Th 1,s IS f t n~ .
American magician Harry real iStiC abou t the value of w.hat but no reason lor you to ptck up
Houdini was born April 6, yov do for others t oday Expect the wh ole tab
more than you should and you 'll
1874.
.PlSCU (Feb. 2o-Morch 20)
ceyla1nly be d1suppoanted
On this day in history :
Don 1 tr.,- to ta~e cre&lt;h t today l o r ·
In 1830, Joseph Smith LEO ( July 23 ~ Aug . 22) II you $O methtnQ you d1Qn't do on .,-Our
organized the Church of the w&lt;~nt to be generous w1th your own An honest , ;;~ppratsal w 11t
assets tod ay, that's all wetl and show ot~ers contnbuted. too
Latter Day Saints , more good
Don't gtve away a lnend 's
familiarly known as the resources
ot he It ba Yf!ry angry .
Mormon Church, in Fayette,
VIRGO (Aug . 23 -Sepl. 22)
N.Y.
Someth1ng you w ant to do today
In 1968, federal troops ana· to r the tamily is pract1Cal b ut not
National Guardsmen were nece ss anty attractlv~ B e
ordered out lor riot duty In prepared fo r OPPOSition
April 7. 1977
Chicago, Washington and De- LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) You 're
troit. Negroes continued a good Idea man today and you Someone older IS gomg \0 take a
rioting and looting in protest delegate authOr!IY well But 11you genutne mteresl •n you th1s yea r.
person will prove to be a
over the assassination of want the JOb done be ready to Th1S
oJiJ ii,.table a lly who w•ll help make
Martin Luther King.
your lite rnore mean1nqful

CHIHUAHUA MALE .Dog , I yr . old,
housebroken, shots, good wi t h
chil dren . $25 , Phone 992 ·2265 .

1•----------

Two pieces of deep fried filet
with French fries or baked

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23· 0ec.
21) M ost people w•ll be m a.cc:ord
.wath yov but nQt eve ryone Don't
let the dassemers d ts suade you
!rom your course

you ·re pauent t oelay wellconcetved plans w 11t work out
Don 1 try to push thr ough last
m 1nute changes They' ll ri.Jin
everythtn g

POODLE GROOMING , reasonable
rot~~ - (~I I for ap_pl. 742-3 162.

13..- - - - - - -

With This Coupon

GEMIN I (May 21 -Juno 20)

HOOf HOLLOW . Buy , sell , t rode
or t rain har;.es . RUTH REE VES .
trainer. Phone [6 14) 698-3290 .

12.- - - - - - -

ONLY '1AO ·

19) Ad·

TAURUS (~pril 20 -M•r 20) It
y0~1 re planomq sometllmg soctal
today too much of a crowd
could spo11 Th whole ti'Mg

367 -0292 . •

11J

FISH FILLET PLAnER

21 -Aprll

( More~

2• -Nov. 221

" ' ONE $7.50 PURCHASE ENTITLES TOil
TO ALL COST CUnER COUPONS

RISINC. $TAR Kenne l Boarding ,
Indoor -Outdoor runs , groom ing
all breeds,. ciJon sanitary
fad lilles. Cheshire . Phone (61 4)

10. _ . . - - - - -

11 . _ _

Saturn, Mercury and Jupiter.

ARIES

JUSt your oace to acc:ommoda te
your ossoc1a 1es IOCI.:ty Tr ymg to
puo;h others C01l!d toul l hn'lQS up

l

9.- -----

E. Kpire~ 4-31 -71

Bernice Bede Osol
The Almanac
By
United
Preas
United Press International
Today is Wednesday, April
6, the 96th day of 1977 with 269
to follow.
The moon is between its full
phase and last quarter.
The morning Stars are
Venus and Mars.
The evening stars are

lOci.

F111ancliJI conc11110ns ore r1pe for ·
)'Ou and you shoul d come out
OK Your gatns w9uld be even
greater 11 you wer e less a•·
tr avaqan t

\li lle . Phone 742-2407 .

7.-----8.- -----

i
I
I
I

t.4l 6 , II C

PilCh ' " ion

'
ASTRO·GRAPH· SCORPIO

'•

6.- -----

With This Coupon

3S 4 00
354 00

Tel tal Rete• pi s
nat OPe 31 , 1976

YARD SAlE , Fi rst Sat. at Ha rr ison·

2------3.-----•-------s_____..__ __

•

ONLY '1.40
"

LARGE BASEMENT So le . Weds .. 9
o .m . Saturday , A p, m . All size
clothing. f urn itu re , appl iances,
miscellaneous. Eagle Ridge , S
miles off Rt . 7 (Co . Rd. 32) Bel·
ween Meigs Memory G or den !&gt;
and Bas hon ePhone 949 ·2358 .

1. _ _ __ ! . _ - -

BIG BEEF PLAnER

I
I

2 FAMI LY Porch Sa le , Howard
Phillips r es idence , Rutland .
(Orne r of Union ond lang .
Some old avon bottles. dresses
and shoes, etc.

Write your own ad on
this coupon. Place
one word on each line .
l Each group of ligures
1or letters counts as
I one word.
Rate Per Word
.05
1 Day
.12
3 Days
.:iO
6 Days
Minimum 15 words.

.,

\6
00
16

For F as cal Ye.v E ndang
O.ec e mb pr 31, 1916
Oli v e Towns_hap
Meags County
01
L ong Boflom . Oh1 0
March l l. 1971
E )IP E NOITUR~ S .
I
( C'rldy
ft111!!-" I OilOWIIl&lt;J
M a tl~ t ... ,, it n c e'
BY FUND
r rpor I to bl' co r n•c I
Grllnd To'lnt Exp
G ener a l F1.1nd
Acta Ba sscll
Molor Veh,cle l tte n s t·
RAI , J"'" I. 1976
/7, 91ill 58
Jownship C:len.
T ru .: F una
13,641 98
R e ce ip U
T el N o 9853544
Sal , D ec :JI, 1976
9 . ~53 OJ
General Properly Ta ..
SUMMARY OF CASt1
To l at E xp Plus Bal ,
RMI Fslale and
BALANCES , RECEIPT S
Dec . Jl . 1976
13 . 195 01
Tr&lt;;~ iiN {G ro SSI
4,8'23 17
AND E)( PENOITUR ES
G asoli ne Ta x Fund
l anqible Personal Properly
Balanc e Jan. 1. 1976
Sal , Jan 1. "76
4'27 93
Tall { GrQssJ ·
74 .?7
GenerrH Fund
$21,99158
R ecei ph
Eslttte
Tax
(C
ross
)
413
.03
Mo tor Vehiclr License
Gasolin e Tax
14,200 00
Local Government and
T ax Fund
3. 549 85
Other
J .J9S 9Q
State I n come Tax
3. 323 . 16 To l al R ~c,..1 pt s
Gasoline Tax Fund
427 93
17 ,695 90
Ci qar c ne Li c ense
91 .81 To l al B eqinning B.:~lan ce
Feder a l R even ue Sharing
G itls and Oona! lon s
75 00
Fund
1,26997
Plus R eceipl s
17 ,167 97
Interest
1,078 . 14
T ot a l s
:i'-4 .843 53
E ~; p e ndit u re s
lntanQibles
7.9 4 1.-4 9 To t a l .E xp
Total Acceipts
Olher
195. 10
Gene ral Fun d
13,016 27
M iscellan eo us
15 .377 OJ
Tala I Re ce1 pts
13 ,026 .27
Motor V ehic l e L 1cense
Cra n d To ta l Exp
Tota l Beqlnn 1ng Ba lance
Ta x F u n d
19 ,645 16
Gaso1 1ne .Tax Fvnd
Plvs Rece1pls
36,011 85
G a so line Tax Fvnd 17 ,695 .90 ·
15 ,377 OJ
E xpenditure s
Federa l R even ue
Ba:l. . D ec . jJ. 1976
1.890 94
ro 1a t El&lt;p .
Shar in g FUnd
4,918 .00
To t a l Exp , Plus B al ,
Adminislrative 26,U•4 .63
A nTi r ec ess,o n
354 .00
Dec 31. 1976
17 ,167 .97
Tota l Exp
Town
Tofi"!I S
55 ,639 .33
F ederal R e venue
Ha
lls
.
Memor
1
a
l
Total Receipts &amp; Bal&lt;~ncc s
S haring Fund
Build ings and
Genera l F u n d
36.017 .85
B al .• Jan I , 1916
. . . 1,269. 97
Crovnds
175.55
Motor V e h ic l e License
Rec
eipts
Toh11 El(p
Tax Fund
23,1 95.01
Grants
Ft&gt;de r al
4,91 8.00
F i r e P r oe cti on
408 .0() T o l a l Rec ei p ts
Gasol in e T ax F und
17,267 .97
4, 918 .00
To t a l El(p
F ed era l R e v en ue Sharing
T o t al Beginning Balance
CemeTeri~s
:1 ,839 ,88
F und
31648 .03
PI VS .Receip ts
3,648.03
Tota l E'Xp
An ti r ecession
354 .00
E x penditures
Light
ing
1.1
90.61
Total s
80 , 48 / 86
M ai n I an e1 Opera t ion
TQ T.A L txp . E xpend i lures
Su p p lt es
3,50 6.94
San i tary Dum p
353.00 T ot al Exp
General Fund
31. 831 . 67
3,506.94
Grand T otal E x p . Mot or Veh icle Lice n se
B a l. , D ec . JL 1976
Gene r a! Fun d
31 ,831.67 Tol al E xp P lus Bal. , 141 09
T ax F vnd
13, 641.98
Bal ., Dec . Jl , 19 76
4, 186 , 18
Ga soline ·Tal( F v nd
15,377 .03
D ec J 1, 1976
3,648 .03
Tot al E xp . P IUS Bal ..
Fed era l Rev en ue
An l i-reces sion
Dec. 31. 1976
36,0 17.85
Sha ri n g F und
3,506.94
Ass istance
Motor Vehicle License
Total s
•
64,357 62
Reu ipts
Tax
Fund
Balance D ec . 31, 1976
· o l tie r
354 00
Ba
l.,
Jan
.
1,
1
~
7
6
3,549.8.5
Genera l F u.n d
4 . 186 .18
Motor Veh ic le Li ce n se

CARPORT SALE . Ap ri l b , 7, ond
81h . Time : 9 a .m . ti l l 5 p .m
lawn table and cho ir s, electr ic:
dril l and bi t s. 1 grill , drapes
and c;urtains , dishes, pons ,
so me a ntiques , c lothing .
Je,wlery . pole l ight , lot s of
ather i tems . Second hovse on
Scou t rood . On left in' Che ster ,
Ohio. Eva Hollon ~

SMALL SIZE English riding habit .
Phone 985-4227 fo r further in ·
- for:::
m:::ol:::io:::,nc,.--~-

....

fl PCetp i S
Motor \n·tltd~ I !O·I•'ilt'
liUt
11)64!1
Other
9 000
Tatat'RN.f' ip ts
19,645
Tol"l B!?Qtnnmq Bali'lnc P
/3. 19'1
Plu!'. Re CP.rp t ~
Ex pen datures
I Otill E l&lt;p

lax f UNJ
9 O,S) 0)
Gasot me I .- "- F uud
I 81il0 94
Federal Pt .,..POUt'
Sharmq Fund
14109
AnT1 rf'rec,c,ion
JH 00
Tot&lt;tl '
10, 115 74
CA SH BAL A N CE,
RE C EIPT S A ND

FAMILY Garage Sole ,
Thursday and Friday. lots of
children and adult summe r
clo th ing, ex cellent cond 1t 10n.
Misc. items . Fir st street post
Pomeroy Elem entary . Watch
for signs.

WANTED OLD pianos , any condi ,
lion . Paying $10 and $25 eoch .
First floor only . E)lpert moving .
Fu lly insu re Company. Write
g iving direct ions . Witten Piano ,
Box 188 Sordil
OH 43946 .
Phone (614) 483- 1605

FRYING &amp; BAKING

TWO DOUBLE
CHEESEBURGERS

I
j

THREE

Co!_l_9key Sc ho rti~er , ~2 · 7355 .

1

Triple Treat , reg . French fry ,
reg . soft drink . Save JSc

Coll9'12-2156. ·
PORCH SAlE , April 8 , 9:00 ot the
John Tea l ord home an Ches ter .
Cl othing , iewe lry , mony misc.
item s. Spons or ed by
the
Chester Grode Scho ol Safe ty
Pat roL Wal ch fo r signs.

l ion . Paying $10 and 525 ea ch.
First floor -only. Expert mov ing .
Fully i nsure Company . W ri le
giving directiOflS . Willen Pian o ,
Box 188 Sa rdis , OH 43946 .
PhoneJ~4) •B3 · 1bOS.

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

WE WILL BE CLOSED
EASTER SUNDAY

IF YOU ha ve a service to offe r .
wont ·to bur or iell som.e.th ing ,
oe looking for w ork . . . or
whatever . , . ., au·ll get resul1s
foster wifh o Sent inel Wont Ad .

WANT SMALL Business l or lease .

at our sa lad bar.
Expires 4-Jl -77 .

A nice
thing to do

Yard Sale

Co~ I Okey Schartiger , 992·7355 .

""

Come i n arid fix your crisp,
f r esh sa lad the way you like it

You get two . delicious double

·beh ind Ro cine Prefer o lder
co up le
refe rences , Phone
9•9· 241-4 .

WANT SMALL Business for lease .

SEMI-BONELESS HAMS

With This Coupon

cheeseburgers , plus the fixens
and save J6c .

2 BEDROOM All elec. ful l basemen t . poliO, carport , male

WANTED OLD pion·os , any condi·

ONLY 39•

With This Coupon

ment , pat io, car port , mde
behind Rodne . Prefer o lde r
co uple , references . Phone
9-49 -2•1•.

beds ,
el c .,
c:; omplete
households. Write M . D. M iller,
RL • . Pomeroy , Ohio or col i
992 -7760.

1---·-·------------------------,.----------------------;...I
BUY ONE TRIPLE TREAT,

2 BEDROOM All elec. full bose-

COINS , CURRENCY , t olcens. old ·
pock·e l wol ches and cha ins .
si lver and gold . We need 196A
and older silver coi ns, Bv"'' . sell ,
or trade ' Coi l Roge r Wamsley .
7•2 -2331 .

' .,

TREAT YO~RSELF TO AMEAL
~T COUNTRY COUSINS AND SAVE

~

COUNtR Y Mob1le Home f101 k Nt
33 ten rn1 leit\Ot 'h ol t' Otllt!'tcy
Lo rge lo t' w 1th coM • ete polio!&gt;
sade walks , t utmets o nd off
stree t porkang , Phone 992 ·7479

OLD FURNITURE. ice boxes. brass

COUPON SAVINGS
AT
COUNTR.f COUSINS'

'!"A
v~

';o.'k ._; ·_ ,

... ~ - f

._.,

543• .

TIMBER. Pomer oy

.'V .:

Mr. and Mrs. Luther Tucker and sons, Troy, Terry , Tim

'

muimum fine of $100.
An amendment insel'le\l by
Sen. Paul E. _ffeifer, R-

J AN D 4 NM h.ltnu,ht'd and ur1
l uuushed &lt;lj.)h f'h, lrl(.' r.t'91

' CASH! ! ! for junk car s. Frye·s
Truck and Auto . WRECKER SER V ICE I Phone 742 ·2091.

ALL THE SALAD ·YOU
CAN EATI

Mr. and Mrs. Russell Capehart visited at Belmont, W.Va.
with Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Simonton, Mrs. 0. M. Powell and
with Leota Ingram of Detroit, a guest at the Simonoon home.
Russell Capehart . is recuperating at his home after
undergoing surgery at Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. Russell Barton has retwned home after visiting In
Pittsburgh last week.
Guests of Mrs. !Jelen Barker on Sunday were her
grandsons and twin great-grandchildren and daughter-in-law,
and included Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Barker and sons, James
Brian and Robert Alexander of Marmet, W. Va ., and Robert
Barker of Charleston, W. Va.
Mrs. Clara Williams and Mrs. Marie Smith attended the ·
reception of the latter's grandson and wife , David and Mary
(Jones) Smith at the Mason United Methodist Church_ on
Sunday . Mr. and Mrs. Smith were married March 16.
Mark Barton, son of Mrs. Delwon Roberts, underwent
surgery on his leg on M6nday at St. Mary's Hospital,
Huntingoon and returned home Wednesday .
Lester Foreman was taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital by
the Mason Emergency Squad on Tuesday after a fall in Mason.
He remains a patient there .
·
Mrs. Francis Scarberry returned _home on Monday after
being hospitalized for over a week at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
· Mr. and Mrs. James Loyd and family have moved to Point
Pleasant after residing at Nashport, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Stan
Saunders and family of Columbus visited with the. Loyds and
with Mrs. Loyd's and Mrs. Saunders' parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Curtis McDaniel.
· Jeff Berkley was bitten by a snake near the Wahama
Junior High School on Monday alternoon. He was taken to
Holzer Medical Center by the Mason Emergency Squad .

I

WANTED TO ren t w ath po~~tble
option to buy ; 5o t o 100 ocre!o
, ecluded land, so me t 1ltoble
w tlh Inhab itable house. Colum
bto . Sci pio , Bedf ord or Rutlond
To wnsh ip s.
Wnte
Tony
Russega , 1331 Meadow Rood
Colvmbv s, Ohio 432 12.

"dangerous" because

~~~~y.
i
~~~~
~ t );._.,~ ~

II - The Dally Sentinel, Mnldleport-Ponwruy, 0 ., Wt'&lt;lnt:sd&lt;t) , Apo1l "· 1"7,
\\antedtoHent
t 'or-;-_-oot.
.
FINAf'ICIA L AEPOR T
thOF TOWNSHIPS

---------------...,---------t---~--------:'"------------·--4

MASON AND AREA PERSONALS

and Tndd, Mason; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Oliver, Lance and
Lynn of Pomeroy, Cathy Curry of New Haven called on Mr.
and Mrs. Chester Oliver recently at Clifton to celebrate the
birthday of Mr. Oliver. He received several gifts. Ice cream,
cake and punch were served.
· Mr. and Mrs. Chester Oliver, Clifton, visited several days
recently with Mr. and Mrs. Louis Harms at 'l'oledo, Ohio. Mrs,
Villa Lee of Mason, accompanied them to Toledo, where she
visi ted Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Saunders. They returned home
on Sunday.
-~- ( _ Six.grandchildren of Mrs. Betty Call spent the w e.;_~end at
!fer home in Clifton . They included Melissa and John ooichael.
Miller of Long Bottom, Ohio; Tlnuny and Regina Rollins,
.Chesa~ake, Ohio; John J . and Kimberly Ca ll of Hurrica ne, W,
Va.
Mrs. Larry (Wanda ) King , formerly of New Haven and
now of Milton, W. Va. is a patient at St . Mary's Hoi•pital ,
Huntington where sloe uuderwent surgery . Her room ~&lt; 5020.
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Roush of Charles visiteri on SUnrl"Y
wT his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie Housh, New Haven.

the pharmacist to keep
records on the drug
dispensed ,
the manufacturers and the brand and
lot numbers.
Prior to passage, Freeman
inserted 'In amendment
requiring pharmacists to
prepare a master lis! of
interchangeable drUgs to be
available to practitioners and
the publie atlarge.
The penalty lor diSpensing
a chemically equivalent drug
for higher than the regular
retail price would . be a

different drugs could affect
patients in different ways.
SERVICES PLANNED
"And there is no proof
Good Friday services will
positive
that this Is going oo
be held at the Hysell Run
Free Methodist Church on result in savings to anyone/'
Hysell Run Road (CR IS ) at said Gaeth.
Sen. Harry Meshel, D.7:30 p.m. on April 8. Rev_,
Youngstown,
said the state
Amos Tillis, pastor ol the
would
save
money
on reim~
llutland Community Chu1;0h,
bursernents
for
large
will be the speaker. Special
quantities
of
drugs
which
music will be providl!&lt;l by
·Mrs. Mary Meyers and Mrs. physicians have been
Nancy Byrd of the Rutland prescribing "for years at 1110
t.llurch, and the quartet of the per cent over the re.tail price' '
Hysell Run Chu rch . The in workmen 's compensation
public is invited . Host pastor claims.
Freeltllln said the bill conis Rev . Herbert Ailing.
tains safeguards, placing
liability with the pharmacist
SERVICE HELD
for
faulty drug selection and
A baptismal service for the
with
lor
Pomeroy FJrst Southern faultythe ormanufacturer
contaminated
Baptist Church was held at
the French Cit y Baptist drugs.
The bill requires a pharmaChurch, Gallipolis, on Sunday cist
to ·lnlorm the purch113er
afternoon. Pastor Paul White of any substitution and the
baptised Mrs. Janet Mat- savings under the name
thews into the fellowship of . br-and
price..Jt also requires
the Pomeroy Church.

for EASTER

NEW HAVEN - Mrs. Blain Gilland and Mrs . Kate Stone
surprised Mrs. Wrenna Laudermilt on her 81st birthday,
M..-ch 30, at the Stone home. Ice cream and cake were enjoyed
by the honoree and her daughter, Miss Ruth Laudermilt and
the hostesses. Mrs. Soone baked the cake for the occasion.
Besides gifts, Mrs. Lauderrnilt received several cards.

''

.,

::' ' :

Chocolate Drtnk ;;

s11 '

i

wiTH couPoN

i=

~~~

uMil1 cAL . Pu couPON
fi!UmUATIItiUitiL I, lt11

-

0:;::.:.=,':;:.:;;::..';;.1

�12 - The DaUy Sentinel, Midlileport-t'omeroy, Q., •·

~·Buy,

WANT AD

CHARGES
I daly
tdays
J-days

15 W\lnls or Ulldl·r
C;u;h
1.00

l.:ZS
1.!10
Z.2S
J.7S.

'

Sell or Trade Through The Sentinel Want ~ds

Services Offer..d

(1Mir~,.

\."'
1.80

·~oiesday, April6,1971

®·

r..--------:------

p omeroy

~~;;~roy

Television log for· easy viewing

YES. HE HAD A
BLACKSMITH AND
l HAVE TH..\T NAME
ANO ADDRESS IN

S:OO-Big Valley 3; My Three Sons 4; Brady Bunch 8;
· Mister Rogers' Ne ighborhood 20,33 ; Star Trek IS.
5:30-Adam -12 • •13; Family Allalr 8; News 6; Elec .
Co . 20,33.
·
6 ;00-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13,1S; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.33.
6 : 31)---NBC News 3,., 15; ABC News 13; Andy Gr iffith 6;
CBS News 8.10 ; Vegetable Soup 20; Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 33.
7:00-Trulh or Cons . 3; To Tell the rulh • : Bowling for
Dollars6 ; Pop Goes t he Country 8 ; NewSIO ; To Tell
the Truth 13; My Three Sons 15; Consumer Sur vival
Kit 20; Big Green Magazine 33.
7; 30-Dolly 3: S100,000 Name That Tune 4; Match
Game PM 6; S2S.OOO Pyramid 8 ; MacNeil -Lehrer
Reporl 20,33; The Judge 10; Break the Bank 13;
W ild Kingdom 15 .
8 ;00-Grlzzly Adams 3,4,15; 'Easier Bunny 1s Comln '
To Town 6,13; Gunsmoke 8: Nova 20,33.
a: 30-loves Me, Loves Me Not 10.
9 :00-CPO Sharkey 3,4, 15; Bar etta 6,13 ; ,Mov ie
" Something for Joey" 8. 10; Gre.at Performances
33; Soundstage 20.
9 ~ 30-Sirota's Court ~ .A , l5 .
10:00-Kinaston : Confldentlai3,A,l5; Barbara Walters
6,13; News 20; Scenes from a Marriage 33 .
10 :31)---Mo ntage 20.
11 :00-News 3,4,6,8, tO, 13, 1$; MacNeil -Lehrer Report
33; Monty Python' s Flying Circus 20.
11 ' 31)---J ohnny Carson 3,•, 15; Rookies 6,13; Movie " The
Thousand Plane Ra id " 8 : Mary Hartman 10; ABC
News 33.
12 :00-Movle " EI Greco" 10; Janakl 33 .
12 :4D--Mystery ol the Week 6,13.
1 :oo-Toinorrow 3,4 ,
2 : 10-News 13.

Motor Co.

"'-'-

........

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC. ·,

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

NOTICE

•

WANT-AD

~
~

- --

ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

=~ ~

=

FREE WBE JOB
WITH OIL CHANGE
AND FILTER

DAVID BRICKLES

CHESHIRE
ASHLAND

'

WEDNESDAY , APRIL 6,1 977

THE7~~~~~"

Business Services

Wi ll do odd jobs , rool ihg, pa in - COAL , limestone , and calcium
ting , gutter work . Phone · 997:1.(10
6 da)'S
chloride and ca lciu m brine far
7409 .
dusl control ond •P•"ol mixing '
sol i lor formers . Main Street,
Ea;,:h word Wt'l' II~ muun!WII 15
SEW IN G - ALT ERA T ION S ,
words IS 4 (.'~fll.!i !)t'l wur U lJt.'l' tloly ,
Uphols t futng ,
drapes
Ohio or phone 992 ·
Ads rwnuu~ vtllt'r thltn L"Utll!t-..·ul!\' t'
reasonable. 572 South Third
dtt)ls wLII ~ l'IUtr~l'\.1 &lt;il tht' I day
Ave ., Middleport . Phone APPLES, FITZPATR IC K ORCHARD ,
rate.
99'1 -6306.
STATE ROUTE 689. Pt+QNE
RevI,.
• bl memory . Ccr.nl of Tllllnks mill
WILKESVILLE , (614 ) 069-3785.
PIA
NO
TU
NING
,
lone
Daniels
.
12
of your rup. l;lOIIIIe&lt;
OlHiwu')' ; 6 l't!l' lll&gt; ptor wunJ , $:100
I11Sfllliotl SlAkes
years of serv 1c e . Phone FULLER Bru'sh Products fo r sole .
m munum . C&lt;:ish m mlvam.• c.
your own home
1973 CHEVROLET C&amp;C2 TON
53695
992-2081.
F'-... ~­
Phone 992-3410.
by Von SChrader
Big six 292 cu . ln.; 4 speed. 1S.OOO, 2 s peed, Dem axle .
Mobile Home JWtlcs 81H.i VH!'tl ~ ll-s
- · 11114 Wall Ultics
WILL
TRIM
or
c;ut
trees
or
shrub
dry-loam
method.
CAMPER
,
S600.
Also.
horse
Ready to work .
&lt;ll't" atl&lt;eptcd unly wah t.'ash WLI I!
STIIIM
bery . Phone 949 -2545.
No muu. No fuss.
troller . $-450. Phone (61-i) 698 unkr. 25 cent dwrgt&gt; fur ~~ods L'ar-r)·
No odor. Use the
ULI\ Box Numl.IC!• In Can• vf The So:•n·
32%.
RELIABLE MOTHER wants steady
\, 1971 FORD :V,T(lNCREWCAB
51448
l£1'\ACEIIIEIT
tlnel.
same
day.
babysitting job i, her home, STEREO, NEW AM -FM . stereo
Body good, runs good.
WINOOIIS
All work
Weekdays . Phone 992-2265 .
rad io combinolioo . $1~ . 95 or
The PiJijhshl'r IC:ioti"Vt'S II ~ l'i~ht
AIJIMIIUM
guaranteed
easy terms. Call992-3965.
1969 BUICK 4 DR.
to t.'&lt;iit or l't'Jt'l't iW)' a~ dcciUcd u ~
S69S
SIDI&amp;SOF!m
j~liunot l . T11e ~bh sh t•!' Will nvl Uc
Local
1
owner,
good
tires,
automat
ic.
radio.
SHAKESPEARE BASS Boot 14',
l't'Sp!JI~ i blc fur IIWI'I' tli&lt;ill Vllt' IIllO!"·
Husine.. ~ties
1976 Mercury 20 h.p. with elec,
ra1 Ul ~t1nm.
tric start . 1976 ti lt trai ler , plu s
Phunc!l'll-2 156
WICK HOMES 1s expanding to oil
other extras . $1695. Phone
areas of Ohio . NO FRANCHISE
PL H2-2174
992·3126, C. P. Riflte .
FEE . Big rnoney opportunity ,
Homes merchon10tised from FISHER WOOD Burni ng stoves and
your model h'ome. For informaform lumber. PHONE Facemyer
tion con tact Roland Tord1ff m
Kitchen Cabinets, Roofing,
and Salmons lumber Co ., Inc.
Ma rie Ho, Ohio, Tues., April 5
Rt 7 Midc;Heport, Qhio , (614)
Concrete
Patios ,
OPEN EVES. B: OO P . M .
through Thursday , Apr il 7 a t
992-7425.
Sidewalks,
New
(614 ) 374·9660 o r send for free
- POMEROY, OHIO
Conslructlon
&amp;
dealer pacKe t to Wick Homes SIN GER GOLDEN Touch N ' Sew
Remodeling
.
does
it
all.
Zig
-Zags
.
sews
on
, Plo ri t , 125 S. Michigan A ~e .,
lo. mt, aut omatic buttonholer ,
Coldwater , Michigan 49036.
makes designs and many other
AU!ti.Sfae&amp;c"" :
0
AT
Monday
fe atur es . Ju st ' li ke new .
Noon 011 S&lt;:~t un.lH y
197S
JEEP
CHEROKEE
.
p.b
..
ps
.
1968
DODGE
.
maroon
with
block
Orig inal pme, $5-19 .95. Must
Quadrotrock . Good tires .
bucke1 seats . Mechon i(oll y
sell , on ly $12q .95 . Cosh Or
Nobil Summit Road
Tuesday
Phone (304) B77 -2340 .
A-1,
$400.
Cai
i992-J342.
.
Lhru f'mlay
ter ms . Call 992-5146 .
' Rt. t
4PM .
Middleport, 0 .
1973 ROAD RUNNER , 4 speed . 1976 CAMARO, 305 2 borrell
Route
2
TOPPE
R
FOR
Datsun
Pic
kup
.
$140.
the tlay IJeful'l' publu:ll1 1un
automatic, silver With red
mags , lots of extras . $1695.
1956 INTER NA TIONAL Mob ile
992·5724
•
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone (jl92· 345J .
pins trip ing . Still under warran" Cheshire. Ohio
197 1 Pontiac Bonnievi lle, e:~~ ·
home , 8 x 43 , good co nd itio n,
Comple1e
Safes
and
Sun day
Free
Estim~tes Ph. 992~711P
RUGER SINGLE Six conver tible
cefl ertf shape , $625. )971 AM(
$1500. Phone992-36ll ,
ty . Col i_!92~7~: ~
'Service 1nd Supplies.
4P M .
Phone 614-367-0626
22lR , and 22VMR lawrence
3-11 · 1 mo. pd .
Hornet Spo,rtobout Wagon , 6 ~q71 CHE VROLET 4 whee l dnve
F'I'Hl&lt;ly aft~lllWil
3-16·
1
mo.
1971 12 x 65 KING Mobile home,
Hol ster and cartridge be lt, OBI·
cylin der automatic t ronsm1s·
Pickup tr uck. Big tires, e)ICunfur. Phone q92 ·5496.
.
BBl 410 Fo:~~ Mod B. Phone
sion, $500. Phone after 5 p.m.
cell ent cond ition. Call 992 -37 t 4.
985-4227 .
992-601 4.
~-Vinyl and aluminum
Superior
USED DISHWA SHER , end wringer 1912 MERCURV MONTEGO , new 1971 VEGA . $800; 1971 Plymouth ,
Sl-400.
Ph~~e
949
-~
J~Of.
_
_
sidi·n
g. storm witiSteam Extraction
type wa s her . See Har vey leo·
brakes , new s ho c ~s . inte nor
WE WOULD like to express our
dows · and insulatioti.
_ mond by Wogner'~H~~'!ore .
excell ent cond1 tion . Exter1or 1972 VEGA, $800; 1972 Plymouth ,
Automatic
deep appreciation to friends ,
$J-i00. Phone- 9-i9-2307
.
good
.
Call
ofl
er
5
p.m.
Call Professionals •
_,FO
UR
MONTHS
old
hog
female
,
ne ighbors , 011d re latives for aU
Transmission Service
9&lt;9·2S40 .
Canad ian York 8ocon type hog .
1q75 MUSTANG II , V-8. 302 ,
the1r prayers, help and ki ndRoute 3, Pomeroy, 0 .
C aii9B5 - ~952 .
outomotic , p .s., p.b. luxur ious
neu dur ing the illneu and
~
-o
interior
,
excellent
condition
.
deat h of our mother, wife , and
.
-·~
FOUR MONTHS ol d hog femal e ,
Carpet &amp; Upholstery
grandmother, Ruth E. Steele .
Phone 992-2426.:..
. ~~~
Co nad 1on York Bacon type hog . GEORGE HOBSTETTER. Jr . Real
A loca I contractor
Phone Mike Young
Tha11ks to the staff of the
Co11985 -3952.
·
Es tot~ Broker Pomeroy, Oflio .
HeR!
Estat~Sille
"...
:Holr:er Medical Center and to
At
Phone 949-2801
RAC INE
2,46 acres. 3
SET 01- f"ASE drag plo ws ,
Dr , James Kemp for the ir care
bedrooms
,
li
ving
room
,
kit·
or 949-2860
992
:2206
or
992
-7630
hydrau lic l1ft . ,ll.lso ... ~"'"
and kindness , the Ewing
c hen , both , carpetin g ,·
tractor . Phone 985-3B41'1 .
Funeral Horne , Rev . James Cor·
''The OriginatOrs
draperies , fuel oil heaf, cent ral
Free Estimates
_
bill and especially to John
Reedsville, 0. Ph. 37S·62SO
o ir
condi ti oni ng ,
stove,
Not The lmilators" ·
No Sunday Calls Please ..
Ba iley , Mrs. Roger Buckley ,
Virgil
B.
Sr
.,
R.ealfor
refrigerat o r , hookup for
3$11$1 mo. ·
Barbaro Offutt and Belva Sloan ,
2-23•1 mo.
3-27 -1 mo.
216 E. Second Street
washer and dryer , front po rcfl.
Your kindness w ill never be
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
on Tuppers Plains -Chester
forgotten .
'Phone 992-3325
HOMESITES for sole, 1 acre ond
water system . App roximately
The Robert Steele Fomily .
up : Midd leport, near Rulland .
'h mi le from Ro c1ne, Phone
PROFESSIONAL ,
949-2589 . Priced $15 ,900. H1hon
DUGAN's FRONT End Al ign'TI•nt ,
- c_all_99_2_·7_&lt;8.:.:1._,..~~~
OPPORTUN I TY
Wolfe Sa lesman.
fo rme rly Odell's Alinement
Restau ra nt with good go ing
NEW 3 bedroom hovse . 2 baths ,
Route 3, Pomeroy ,, 0.
behind Rutland Grode Schobl.
bus ines s .
Centrally
3 TRAILER Axles ott hou se trailer.
all e!ec ., 1 acre , Middleport ,
Aerial • ·Alignment , wheel bolonciog .
· Phone 949-20B9 .
lo ca ted . All equipment,
dose to Rutland. Phone 992 tune -up, brt:~kes end minor
commercial
. dishes, etc. Just $13,500.
1973 450 HONDA .. Also . loc us t -·7481 . --~~~~-repai r. Phone 742 -2005 :or
toda
y.
SChools
I nst a I! a lion. ·sam pies
'f e nce posts . Pho_n.!,?4 2 -23~ 2.
SMALL form for sole , 10% down ,
742-2004 . EYening work by opNOTICE , Pratt 's Meat Mkt .
I V, ACRES Building
Weddings
owner
finan
ced.
Mon'roe
Coun
·
paintmenf.
'
brought
to your home ·
(Pleasanton Meat Processing , TOMATO STAKES, 600. Also , 225
location in Ol ive Township.
ty , W. Va . P11one (304 ) 772 bear)
pos
ts.
Joe
Bissell
,
long
Inc .) Custom slaughtering. and
with no charge.
HARRISQN 'S T.V. RepCir . Serv(ce
Ul ilit ies available .
3102 or (304 l 772·3'r27.
Bottom , Ohio .
processing. Retail, who lesale. '
Calls . 276 Sycamore. St .. MidS BEDROOMS·- SS,OOO lor
No oppoinment necessary. Call LOCUST FENC£ Posts , Phone COUNTRY farmland with sedud ·
6 8 E.
dleport. Phone 99:2·2522.
this older home In Tuppers
Co rpef.Lino .. Tile
(61•l 593-8655,· hours, 9:00 1111
ed woods, wa te r and good DC·
742-2312.
P
lains.
Frontage
on
Rt.
7.
Phone
Mike
YoiH1g
at·
MAIN
6:00 7 Pomeroy Rood. Athens ,
cess in Mo nroe County , W . Vo.
RIVER FRONTAGE 992-2206 or 992-7630
1614) 985-415S
BROWNING EAGLE · Mark Il l 23
$1 ,000 down. call {304) 772Oh.
POMEROY, 0.
Like new 3 bedroom brick
Chester, Ohio
channe l AM Bose Station C.B
3
102
or
(304)772-3227.
RACINE FIRE Dept . will hove a
ve neer home with 2 car
.
2·23- 1 mo.
10-17 -1 mo ( Pdl
$.450 firm. Also BLA CK CAT 50
JUST LISTED - 18 acre~
Gun Shoot every Sotu~:doy niQh't
garage. 4 lots and all
Waft · Bose Linear, $75. Calf Comm&amp;rcia l pro perty opprox. 17
In
Pomeroy,
sectioned
off
6 p.m. at their building in
a cres, ie\le l land , loca ted at
electric on Ohio Power .
949-2322
In lots for home sites . For
Boshan , phio.
· Tuppers Pla ins on Ohio , ~cute
-'-::::~·~ ·
Only $37,SOO .
Information
call
us.
,
' 2 MILK COWS , one 3 yr . old
7, Phone {614) 667 -6304 .
MEIGS-GALLIA LINE - 3
RACINE GUN Club, We ho'le
JUST LISTED- Cottage, 3
Guernsey 4 yr. old Hols te in ,:
INSTALLED
BRADFORD, •Auclioneer. Combedrooms.
bath, nat. gas
changed our gun shoot to FRI ·
NEW
3
be
droom
hous
e,
built-in
bedrooms
,
bath.
Alum
.
$250 each. Phone Carl find l1ng ,
plete
Service
.
Pho
ne
949·2487
Regular
514 .95
DAY, nighh , starting at 7 p .m.
kitchen
,
bath
a
nd
'lr
,
Phone
furna
ce,
rura
j
water,
siding , ga~ heat. over 1,000
985 -4137 .
or 949-2000. Ra cine, Ohio, Crill
742-2306
or
contact
MilO
B.
Hut
·
garage
~nd
t
ra
iler
space.
ft. living area , '12 acre.
NO MORE rock throwing or 1976 C B. 750 Hondo , e;xcell ent
ANY PIX"'
Bradford.
chison . Rutland , Oh io,
$22 ,000.
Yd .
JUST LISTED Ranch
trespassing on Floyd Wise's
condi tiOn . 1760 m1les. 1970 BSA ANY SIZE
~APARTMENT
BUILDING
ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
~
property on Bailey Run .
type, 4 bedrooms, bath,
250, good condition . Call FOR SALE . All alec. nearly new
~~~:jY:~~~,ic~money
saver.
- 2 story br ick building
's weepers, toasters , irons, all
ftgul Wise, Owner .
home in Rut land area . BaseNat . gas heat, Alum .
colors.
_
. :--:~.
965-3q l9 after 6"p~.m
sma
Bvy
this
ll
opp
lian
ces.l9wn
rnower,
with
3
apartments
.
me nt , 3 bed rooms , attached ' siding, About 6 yrs. old .
n e:~~ t to Stole Highway GOroge
and let the ,.enters pay for
GARDEN Supplies ,. Cabgarage ,
$29 ,900
Phone
$16,000. 00.
2 GARDEN SPOTS to rent out on SPRING
on Route 7. Phone (614 ) 985bage , caul iflower, b roccoli,
it for you. $17 ,500.
742-253
1.
Located in Langs,ville
ROUTE
124
Love
ly
br
ick
Wolfe Pel' Rood . Con plant
381S.
and head leflvoe pla nts ,
COUNTRY 7 rooms,
~ frame
('ran ch lypel
Box 28-A
anything. Coli Moe Hawk ,
11 or 15 Ft.
2
STORY
4
Bedrm.
brick
ho
me
irJ
·
yellow, white , and red onion
bath, basement, garage &amp;
REMOD ELING , Plumbing, h~ ot i ng
home. 4 bedrooms, bath,
992 -6172.
_
Middleport.
~
~e
9923~57_
.
_
R
utlancL
Ohio
45775
Green,
gold,
red, blue, rust.
sets , on ion plants, Kennebec,
carport on 2 acres . $25,000.
and all types of gene ra l repair .
Ph , ( 614) 742-2409
uti li ty R .. large kitchen,
cobbler, Katahdin , Red Pontiac 6 1/ 1 a cres, garden spot, some
Do
it
yourself,
with padSHOOTING MATCH AT Rutland
INVESTMENT
Wo r~ guaranteed 20 years ex W&gt;! Deliver
and Red lo sodo seed potatoes.
Legion Hall, every Friday.
ding,
57.9S
sq.
yd . Wit.h
posture, firewood w ith wood- nat. gas heat, air cond. 111
Apartment bui lding and
12 22 -4 mos .
perience . Phone 992·2409 .·
Bul~ garden seeds, potting soil ,
evening , 7 p. m.
burning slave , fue l oil heat , acre . About ' yrs. old .
padding installed $8,95
hilll
with
all
pool
SEWING MACHINE Repoin, ser·
peat moss , fru1t trees and rose
oufbu ildi ngs 2 bedroom house , S2B,SOO.OO .
square yard.
equipment.
Need s
RUTLAND - About 1 acre,
vice, a ll ma kes , 992 -2284 . The
bu shes . Midway Market ,
near ho spital and tow n.
Calf 742-2211
ambitious
person
that
nice 3 bedroom home, nat.
Fabri c ., Shop,
Pom e roy .
Po me roy , Ohio , 992 -2582,
$19,500. Phone992-5947.
TALK TO
wants
to
make
money.
·
Bob:s Marke l, Mason , W.Va.
Authorized Singer Sales and
gas furnace and cent ral air
c o vat ing, septic systems ,
WENDELL
GRATE
COMMERCIAL
BRICK
BUILDING
in
SHELL HOME - Fins lh
FOUND SOME Money in front of
Service. We sharpen Scissors .
(304l 773-5721 .
cond .. bath . nice kitchen,
d ozer, backhoe , dump . truck ,
downtown Pomeroy , Oh 1o.
CARPET
CONSULTANT
this
3
bedroom
home
Gibb's Grocery . Identify •and
side
po rc h,
limestone, grovel , b lack top
POl VESTER SPORT Coot , size 40,
Presently rente d with income enclosed
yourself and save. Has all . EXC AVATING , dozer , loader and
dain. Call m -3&lt;492.
fenced . JUST $13.000,00.
paving, Rl . 143. Phone I (614)
backhoe work : dump trucks
neYer been worn . Priced fo
ove r $5000 pe r yeor , Two ren·
2
studs
up
and
under
roof.
698
-7331.
EVERYTHING
IN
REAL
sell , C011 992-7252 ,
end lo·boys fo r hrre : will haul
tols downsto ~rs and one
lots for $12,000.
ESTATE, 4S LfSTINGS ON
f1ll dirt , to soil , li mesto ne and EXCAVATING , Backhoes . Dozer ,
upstairs
.
Hos
unfinsi
hed
apartFELT APPliQUES , Sunbpnnet Sue ,
OUTSKIRTS OF TOWN OUR ·BOARD FOR YOUR
grove l. Call Bob or Roger Jef·
ment upstairs, Enti re upsta irs
trencher , low Boy, durT"Jp truck ,
Owls , Butterflies, cows , dogs ,
A 3 bedroom home that sits
APPROVAL
.
DROP
IN
fers
. day pha:ne 992-7089 ,
t
on
eos1ly
be
made
int!?
3
trucks, septic systems . Bill
MERRI -MAC hot opening for Party
chickens. Phone 992 -5655'
back by Itself on 8.68 acres.
night. phone 992-3525 or 992;.;_;_-::apartments . W-air cond ition AND SEE.
Ii
Phone 992-2478 dey or
Pion
Supervi so r s
and
Natural
gas
central
HAY
for
sol
e
.
Phone
Aron
Wolfe,
upstoi
r.s
.
3
separate
water,
ga
s
HENJ!Y
E
.
CLELAND
Demonstrators in your area.
5~3.cc
1·
-=---=---~~-­
heati 'ng . Cellar house and
247-2278.
and e lectric meters. Con be
BROKER
Highe&amp;t commiss ion ,
no
EXCAVATING, dozer , backhoe
nice
sidewalks . Only
l1nonced 100percent to rel iable
992-2259, 992-2S68
delive r y or co lle c ting . SEA -STAR ALUM . Boot , 14 h .
and ditche r. Charles R. Hot$20.000 .
party . Contact PaUl Simon or
915-4112
Demonstrate top quality toys
fiel d , Ba ck Hoe Service ,
long . ex tra deep sides. Foam
JUST LISTED - Modern 4
Gu ido G1rolami to secure on L-.,..--------~
and gifts . Call collect to Ann
flotation und er seats' , 9'h horse
Rutland , Ohio. Phone 742-2000 .
bedroom home, nat. gas
appointment . .Priced upon in·
Baxter (319) 556-8881 or write
E..,.inrude mo tor. Montgomery
SEPT
IC TANKS cleaned. Modern
spectlon of property only .
F.A. furnace, eat-in birch
MERRI -MAC , BOI Jackson ,
Word trailer, hfe jackets , pad••
99.C2,_·3
: .9:.:S:::..·
4 - - - , - - 'e
Sanitation,
kitchen with disposal and
Dubuque, Iowa 52001 ,
dle and fire extinguisher , $450. NICE OLDER home in Minersville,
nice
level
lot
:
$16
,000
.
Phone 247-2868.
WI LL do roofing, construction , •
Ohio. Priced for quick sole at
·•
Mon .; Tues-. Wed .
·
•
HOUSEKEEPER
(OMPANION
JUST LISTED - Modern 3
pfumbin9 and heatin g. No job I• .
$5500. l. 7 ocreswithsomefruit
needed for elderly lady in Mid- YAMAHA, HARLEY-DAVIDSON,
8:00til5:00
.• •
•
too larg e or too small. Phone
bedroom frame home.
trees . Good rental property
dleport, not bedfast. Write P.
CAN-AM Molorc ydes, ComThursday
8
til
Noon
•• :
742 -2348.
bath , b irch kitchen, large
spaCe for tra ilers . For more in·
0 . Box 196, Che&amp;hire, Ol'11o
plete soles ond fan tastic ser·
utility room and large level
lormotion , col i (61-4) 1149·2563 .
•5620 .
incorporated
vicel Hou rs Mon. Tuesday ,
CARPENTER , floor ing . ceiling.
lot Tn Racine. Only $9 ,000.
Thurs.
9-6
,
W-F,
9-7,
Sat.
9-5.
paneling . Phone 992·2759 .
3
BEDROOM
HOME
and
both
for
PER SO N
tor
-CAPABLE
-- ---'--'-:-c-No. 200 - 9 tenths of an
GET MORE OUT OF LIFE
"The Motorcycle People of
1
sole . Cook's Gop Hill. 7 ft .
house c leaning .
Phone
MOBilE Home Repai r, Elec.,
acre, level ground, roads
THAN JUST A LIVING,
Southeastern
Ohio"
Athen
s
boserTaen
t,
fvll
basement
,
all
992-26&lt;2.
plumbin9 o11d healing . Phone
on three sides . 12x60 mobile
!NV EST!
Spo;t Cycles , Inc. 20 W. Stimson
utilities . Pcnnelling inside.
992
-5858.
' SellTOYS . Ployhauu th e world's
hom
e
plus
an
older
•
G. Bruce Teaford
Ave, Athem, Ohio. 592- 1692.
On .66 of an acre. Phone
dwelling
with
2
gar
ages
'
largest toy disfribu tor is look·
Helen
L.
Teaford
+-992-7225 .
downstairs carpEie,d, this 1S
lng for a person to open ond EASTER FLOWERS, Lillies , tul 1ps ,
Associates
hyacinths
.
hydrangeas
,
mums,
3
BEDROOM house lor ole near
superv ise MEIGS Ct. Work from
a good Investment, close to
roses,
or:aleos
,
geraniums
,
and
Eas tern High School. 2 cor
mines . Price $50,000.
home , earn top money , ex·
hanging baskets, Prices from
garage ,
ful l
basement ,
r pense account given . Free in$1.~5 to $8.98 Best selections.
fireplace in liYing room . Phone
centive trips. Coli Collect 1
No. 197 - 1.21 hundreds of
Midway
Market, Pomeroy ,
98S-3B67.
an acre with lovely 2 BR
(513l 667·213B.
Ohio, 992 -2582, Bobs Market ,
home, ca rpet ed ,. la rge
-~
.
.
.
'1
4 UNDEVELOPED acres in Meigs
SHL TOYS. Playho use the world's
Moson , W. Va . 773 . 57
BAS HAN- Nice 2 story country home, containing 7
utility room and shop .
-,.Coun ty. V1nton moi I route . Co II
e 742-2211
.
ARNOLD GRATE
RUT-t.AND_,!
. • -''---:----:-largest toy distributor is look·
rooms and Ph baths, mostly carpeted. Kitchen has all
large garden site, entrance
742-2867 or see Dick lambert .
ing for o sharp person to open 23 IN . Lownmower ; boards for
new
bullt.in cabinets with bronze stove and
to
back
ma
ke
property
beds ,
3 - 41
plywood , - - - - aod supervise MEIGS Cty , Work
refrigerator to match. new porches and au new
dehumidifier, b &amp; w r .v . 24 ln . TUPf»ERS PLAINS, 3 bedroom ; li vposs
ible
of
additional
lots.
· from home, ea rn top money,
aluminum sid ing and storm windows, forced air
Price $24,000.
color T,V, , 24 in , Brand new pif·
1ng room , dmette , 2 bolhs , fully
expense a ccount given . Free
natural gas furnace and drilled well, garden space.
cher pump . Phone 992-779.4
carpeted , full basement, cen·
inc•ntivll' trips . ,Call Collec t 1
No. 199 - 1.3 acres with
Th is house Is warm and ready for immediate
after 4:30pm.
tral' air condi tioning , .83 acre.
(513l 667·213B.
Phone992-3731,
24x60.double wide 4 BRand
occupancy, c9me take a look just $18,900.
JEEP ~J5 , good .--condi ! io~n , . ·--; ~.--·---- - .
2 baths, close to m ine ifrea .
NEED BABYSITTER 5 days per 1973
Plus ~txtros . $29().). Bunker Aill ·.. --o~::,~~E , _3 bedrooms , 2 story
Pr ice...i'20;000,... ,,. ',. '
'N!i,llt LIHI'NG- FREE; GAS ,.. Nl~e modern' 1'12 story
week lor 5 -R"onth old child.
·Rood across from ce etery .
htlme·, dinmg·room . lorge•both;
farm hoiJse containing 4 lfe'i:lrooms, &lt;lilting . room,
+-' ··•Mu st come to, my home. Will
,
.~
· ,1,.
·
natural ga s, large porch , n1 ce
No. 201 - 28 acres more or
pay $25 ...per · ··· -weeK: '-~Phbn• SWEEPER AND Sewing Mocn 1nes
kitchen with buill ln appliances, ba'seli'lel'fl, dlv' 'and
Two miles N. of Pomeroy,, near ·Pomeroy
block garage, $20,000. Phone
less , has 3 bedroom s, fully
·well water, 2 barns. work shop and other buildln_gs ,
9•9-2772.
.
Repair , Ports, and Suppl ies .
992 ·5732 .
Golf
Course (follow auction signs from St.
carpeted, modern ki tchen,
large pond stocked with !Ish, approKimotely 23 acres
Oavrs Vacuum Cleaner , '12 mile
----:,:OC::::'--::-----;-;-""-;- partial
CAT LOADER Operator, must be
basement , own gas
Route 7) wil.l sell the following :
tillable and ~ acres fenced . Good ' locatlon , call for
up George's Creek Rood oft BY OWNER , 9 rooms and both.
~txparienc.ed .
Call 7412-2806
well. ~fruit trees , large
.appointment, price $80,000.
State Rt' 7. Phone (614 )
basement , carpeting , fireplace,
ofter7 p.m.
garden spot , also 22x34
4-46·029-4 .
·
load s of sto rage : Two porches,
Whirlpool frost·free refrigerator , gas
steel siding , storm windows,' barn , and a 1971 Skyline
RACINE - Good 3 ' be(. nJ, n din ing room, low
Double carport and workshop.
range , 7-piece dinette set. Warm Morning
12x60 mobile home. Price
utilities. even a garden • ;)'VI-"\\I. at only $8,500.
.. --~Other buildings. Rr..,.erview tn
$4S.OOO.
SALES EXECVT1Yf. Hlfhly r.gord" Compan ~ 4 AliJM ASTRO' wt.Hii, • GOO Ins tor o
gas heater. wood-burning heater, kerosene
Syra,cuse . By oppointmenf,
CHESTER -113acrefarm, 80 acres tllla~leland. nice
ho1 D ~ or . . r posll lon open lo r o~ ••pe..1•ox·
:::
Ch:.::•:..:
••:.::"::
"'c.
' '::.'.;;
' •::;•'-",..~~~"-·••_
3-_
'i, 11..:....
heater, 3 complete beds. dresser . night
· m -121o.
2 story farm house, 7 rooms and bolh, all hardwood
lid 1alon ~flon R.-qvir•• self·ltofUif who
No. 202 - 3 acres with
floors
and
basement.
Barna
and
other
oulbulldlngs,
2
001'1 manag• l'llmself and a '••dlory . H•gh '·
stand.
old stands, chairs, living room suite.
12
x50
mobile
home.
BY OWNER , 9 rooms and both .
ponds, a nlce laying form priced to go, located near
«~mmlnionl. No loyofh . hp•n•• pold h(lin- '
bosernent , carpeting, fireplace,
beautiful v iew of the r iver,
drop;
leaf
table, wardrobe, Maytag wringer
• Chmer. call lor appo1ntment.
ing. N o ln.,..l!m•m . For Iii, lim• tof1ner:llon.
load s of storage . Two porches ,
20 miles from town, would
washer, antique cupboard. apple peeler,
toll I (800) 2A7·1U6
steel siding, &amp;form windows.
1
make
nice
sum mer
COOLVILLE - Nice modern brick home containing
metal
cupboard, dishes and cooking
Double c.o rport ond workshop.
vacation spot . Price $7,.500 :
three bedrooms, dining room, Jiving room w ilh
Other buildings. Riverview in
utensils,
2 electric fans. antique arm chair.
fireplace , lull basement with gar":',t.Cll' arge front porch,
let Pomeroy Landmarl-'
-.a cuse. By opporn tment ,
No, 203 - Ho use and Jot In
school locker, Lawn Fllte lawn mower,
natural gas furnace, city • ·,_o~ •nd well waler, a
soften &amp; condition your
,Cf'l . ""10_.
town, alum . siding and
beautiful home with ap"i. l'~·•lely 5'1&gt; acres of land.
water
and
a
Co-op
water
Simplicity roto lill!!r , garden push plow,
CpoNER'a CAMPERS . Se1t qua lity
windows , short walk to
4 BEORV-. J.. , Sf·LEVEL , I yr. old .
fruit trees and sha~"\.. .• s surrounding It, plenty of
softener'.
Model
UC-XVI
.
large iron kettle, Industrial wheel barrow.
of SWISS COLONY; BARTH ;
stores. Price S7 .500 .
Full y carpeted , 2 cor garage on
garderf space, good . •~nlng area close by , located in
CRICKET truck campers ; MAPlE
1 acre in Wildwood Esfates on
Coolville, Ohio, priced at!tnly $32,000. Cllll now.
Now 0n~)•279.95
2-wheel trailer, hoes. forks. carpenter and
804 W. Main
LEAF spacemoker, PlY MOR;
Flatwoods
Rood .
Phone Pomeroy
992-2291
hand tools.
WE ARE SELLING PROPE~TY AND NEED YOUR.
Let us test your water
CAP KIT cops. NEW-USED Sa los ,
992-2012 alter oi :30 p.m .
After
Hours
Call
HELP,
LIST
WITH
US.
WE
HAVE
BUYERS
FOR
Free.
rentol. service, JUpplies. Toke
HOUSE FOR Sole rn Minersv ille , 5
992-7133
VACANT LAND, FARM AND RESIDENTIAL
Meiga 28 or 32 to Bashan.
Owners: Mr. and Mrs..Walter Walker
rooms and both , forced o ir
CONTACT:
· PROPERTY.
.
• locoted on Rainbow Ridge,
Porn~
he,.
l,
natural
gbs
,
3
porche
s
Auctiqneer: 1. 0. "Mac" McCoy
Lois
Pauley
Long Bottom, Ohio . Robert
JIMMY DEEM REALTOR
Jack W. &lt;.arsey.Mgr.
an d basement. Phone ~1 · 563:1
~ranch Manag er
Codner. owner .
Iii, Phone 992-2181

2- SIGNS
OF QUALITY

-'~'""Daily Sentinel , Middleport-P~y, 0., Wednuday, April 6, 11177

..

.Au loSales

Aulo Sale!i

For Sale

•

General Contracting

-

THURSDAY, APRIL 7, 1977
6: 00--Sunrlse Semester 10 .
6 : 15-Farm Report 13.
6 ' 2D-- Nol lor Women Only 13.
6: 30--CSU Overview A; News 6 ; Sunrise Semester 8;
Urban league 10.
6: 45-Mornlng Report 3.
6 ; so-Good Morning, West VIrginia 13.
6 ;S5-Good Morhlng, Trl State 13 .
7:00-Today 3,4, 15; Good Morning America 6, 13; CBS
News 8 ; Chuck White Reports 10.
7;05-Porky Pig 10.
7: 3D--Schoo lies 10.
8 :00-H owdy Doody 6 ; Capt. Kangaroo B,lO; Sesame
St . 33':
8 ; 3Q-- Blg Valley 6.
9 ;00-Phll Donahue 4,13,15; Andy Grllllth B; Mike
Douglal 10.
9. 3D--Cross-Wits 3; Edge of Night 6; Concentration 8 .
10 :()()...,.-Sanlord &amp; Son 3,4,15; Dinah 6 ; Double Dare
8, 10; Mike Douglas 13.

.

SWAIN'S

~

Young's Carpeting

PARTS · LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES

SPECIAL:

ONION SETS
lb.

TEAFORD

45'

.

------...

-

I

..
•

•••
•
"•
..:..

Hl-lO SHAG

Southeastern Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.

~-

---

l

•
•••
:

501 NYLON

•
~

~

.

4&lt;

•

.••
~

. ..

Strout
Realty

•

• a

:.

:;
: FRIDAY TIL 5
••

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

•

Close Sal At 5 P.M. .

RUTLAND FURNITURE

~~

·· APRIL

---

f;r,H

AT 6 P.M.

·

tribesman

. Yesterday's Answer

ism's

dance

estate
25 Garbed

(F r . )
39 Meadow

.

.... ·'
'!'i

•

~

OWl&gt;- WARN'! HCDTJN 1-

·~
••
_., !

/'lOAN IN' .'

Both vu lnerable
West

North East

South

2 N. T.
Pass

3 N, T, Pass

Pass

Pas~

Opt.ning lead - 6 •

Tre zel-Reese ha nd . Simpl e ,
but one th a t many .p layers
miss because they aren 't going to waste jln ace when th e y
can win a tric k with a 10 .
South follows with dummy's
fiv e of diamonds a t trick o ne .
East plays the nine and if
South wms the trick with Lhe
10, he m ay play th e hand for a
!QJ1g Lime . But h e won't make
nine tricks unless the defense
really s lips.

You see that Sou\h will go
after clubs and East will hold
back his ace until the third
lead . South will wind up with
seven or maybe eight trick&amp;.
If South is a generous type
and wins the lirst diamond
with his ace, the sun will
shine . the birds will sing and
the rubber will be over.
There will be no way for
East a nd West to keep South
from getting to dummy with
th"' queen of di a monds and he
will score four clubs, two
d iamo nds and at least' three
other t ncks .

~~~-~
A Nebraska reader wants to
know what we open with :
• A K Kx \f Kx x +Jl•AJIOX.
We open one notrump . We
have 16 high-card points and
notrump distribution . Today a
doubleton jack is almost universally allowed as part of a
notr ump opening bid .

'itjfjlN}~~ ~THATSCRAMBLEDWORDOAME

moun ta in

~~~~ !WI

byHenriArooldandBoblH

Uns cramble lhese four Jumbles,
one letter to each square. to form
tour ordlnar; words.

Carew ·
35 Quarrel
3&amp; C la n

ITW~RE

... K J 3

Here is a rather sim ple

range
34 Baseball 's

AH SEED A OWL UP
A TREE&gt; 13llT THE:T

+ 93
.. A 7 2
SOUTH lOt
... A Q7 2
• A K LQ
+ A 10 4

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

:::-+-11-+ - +----t
,.+--t--i
;;;-+---t--i
- ---t- +---t
-+-+----+--i

emperor

•"_,

26 "~ Woman"
28 Bill's
partner
30 Greek
island
31 - voce
32 ' twixt
'¥'/ Formal

12 Unit of
s ilk' s
fineness
17 Tennis point
20 Composer
&amp; hifrin
23 Cafe au 24 Journal-

2,8 Arrange
hair
29 Coloraou
· India n
30 Dispute
1 33 Morocca n

38 Upper

class
40 Afgha nistan city
UAILY

CltYPTOQ UOTE ~ Here's

how Lo work it:

is

1. 0 N (; F E I . L 0 W

Unu let ter ·sin1p ly s ta11ds for :mother. In thi s sample A ia
use d f( •f th t• thrt.'(' I. 's, X fnr t he two O"s, l'lc. Single l etter s,
apostropli&lt;•S, thC' k n,t.:lh and form al ion of t he wc,1rds , are a11
hint s . E:tch clay ih t• rod e k it er!' arc ~dtffen: nt

::

IREBOOLj
rx

" WINNIE

•'

• HOAI COULD IW~~ELL MILLER

'TH:JUGHT HE Wf!,S

a4RN GOOO ONE. ..

I

8,TOOP50 IDW A5 '1lJ RUN
A

AN ''INDEPE NDENT
F ILMMAKER ''/

BUT HE$ FALLEN
ON HARD TlMEB !

~

[j

1

I 'RVI'TilQ UilTES

••

GIHLT

I KJ

.\ X V D 'L B A A X R

flAil' AND HERE I

HE WA&amp; ...ANOA

AND ONE HA5 11) CD
WHAT ONE C'AN ID

.SMVIVE1 DOE&amp;N'r
ONE.???

PX

.I'D RATiiEQ.

STARVE/GOOD
NIGHT.f MISS
DAI&lt;f&lt;DIAII II .

.

lt' \jl)
?· ~,

I

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••
•••

\

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N

H 0 .J J
FXTNA

p 0 J J

N

HXT OPG WAD

WP
· TN A

H

N

p 0 J J

ENKD NWA ;

WB ' H

LOLCY'P-

W EJU .
ONKJ
f W JHX A
. Yesterday 's Cry ptoquote : EARLY TO BED AND E ARLY TO
RISE MAKES A MAN HEALTHY, WEALTHY . . BUT A
TERKIALE BORE - TRITIOUS
® 1~77 Kin&amp; Feature&amp; Sy ndlctfe. lnc;.

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, u suggested by the !llbcwe ~ rtoon .

J I
Anawe~ here: (

'I

Yeslerday's

GOOD GRIEF, DON'T

60 OUl" OF ~OUND5 !

HIT A HOUSEWIFE !

G'LUB-SLOFFBLOP·BlOOP

PAW'S TALKIN' IN
HIS SLEEP AN' I
CAN'T MAKE OUT

A WORD HE'S
SAVIN'

•••

Landmark

'

f

J I
XIIJ ro(IXXJ
(Answers "'""'"""I

Jumbles: GOOSE FLOUR SKEWER APIECE
Answer: What ll1e llllls1's model me be !liked to do
Kshe wants a

BARNEY

NEED A
WATER SOfTENER

F.~

.. 6 4

'l7 Roman

~

~

····~····················-

EVENING AUCTION

[

•
••

. ..
... .
.: ·•••••••••• 1:
: . ...

I

l

••
••••

. ..

,.

Score wants
to qet Cloviel's
. reactions~

M

~

Expectant
Brand-ne w
14 wds.l
Nige rian

.Q 9 8 2

+K J862

comics
2
3
'
4

comic

••
•
••

"'• KJ 7635

One of

15 G.l . a ddress 5 Abbey
16 The Way ,
s uperior
in China
6 Spook talk
18 -· compos
7 Oblation
m e ntis
( 2 wds .)
19 Mirror
8 Devour
21 Prefix for
10 Highway
angle
branch
22 Make out
23 Theater
box
24 Ri chly
26 Crisp
cookie

~

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

--

IIJ UTill!

••

'10.95'sq.

markc tplC:Jctt
Il Leap
13 Flul'ida 's
- Bowl
14 Famous
pi anist-

AHCtDVP tJOTf;

EAST
... J 9 8 5

WEST

1 o~ Horrible''

9 Greek

l()liR ~E'?CR\P'Tl()J ~

' M

-~

---

OO,'THAT ~-~TT!

• QI0985

annuity
42 Cross oui
43 G r eek
co ntest
DOWN

la ug hte r
5 French
pries tly
titl e

BORN LOSER

.6 43
• Q7 5

41 t 'rench

ACROSS

I Sound of

•w

SAVE ON
CARPETING

-

jr.'l.".,'l

6

... 10 4

by THOMAS J.OSEPH

"PHOTOGRAPHY

-

Cheap trick proves costly
NORTH

KEN GROVER

-

·.

NR, HYDE

LITTLE ORPHAH

Free Estimates

----

..

LIITLEORPHAN ANNIE

Young's Carpeting

PHOTOGRAPHY

-

Ball
. Siding Coi.

10 :3()-HollywOOd Squares 3.•.15; Price Is Right 1.10.
11 :DO-Wheel of Fortune 3.•• 15; Morning Show 13;
- Elec . Co . 20.
11;30-Shoot lor the Stars 3,4,15; HHappy Days 6,13 ;
Love of Life 8, 10; Sesame St . 20.
.
11 : 55-CBSNews 8; Ms. F l•lt 10,
12 :00-News 3,. ,6,10; ' second Chance 13; Name That
Tune U ; Divorce Court a.
12;3()-Lovers &amp; Friends 3, 15; Rya" ' s Hope 6.1 3; Bob
• Braun A; Search for Tomorrow 8.10.
1:00--Gong Show 3; All My Children 6,13; News I ;
Young &amp; lhe Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1:3()-Dayso!Our Gives 3 ,4, 15; Family Feud 76. 13; As
The Wor ld Turns B, 10.
2:00-$20:000 Pyramid 6.13.
2:3()-Doclors 3•• , 15; One Li te to Live 6,13; Gu iding
Light 8,10.
3; 00-Another World 3,4, 15; All In The Family 8,10;
Antiques 20.
3: 15-General Hospita l 6, 13.
3:30-Mat~h Game 8,10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
4:00-Mister Cartoon 3; Edge of Night . , Gong Show
15; New Mickey Mouse Club 6; Lucy Show 8 ;
Sesame Sa . 20.33; Movie " The Cavern" lO; Dinah
13.
4: 15-Little Rascals • ·
4 ;3()-My Three Sons 3; Partridge Family 4,8;
Emergency One 6; Flintstone$ 15.
5:00-Big Valley 3; My Three Sans 4; Brady Bunch B;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33 ; Star Trek 15..
S;JO-Adam -12 4, 13 ; -News 6; Family All air 8 : Elec.
Co . 20,33.
6:00-News 3•••6. B, 10,13, 1S; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
Who Knows One 33.
6 :3()-NBC News 3,.,6, 15; ABC News 13; CBS News
8,10; Once Upon a Classic 20,33.
7: 00-Trulh or Cons. 3;'To Tell the Truth~ ~ Bowtlnq lor
Dollars 6'; Muppet Show B; News 10; To Teil the
Truth 13; My Three Sons 1S; Almanac 20; Consumer Survival Kit 33 .
•
7 ; 3()-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Ohio State Lottery 6; ·
Pr ice Is Right 8; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33;
Wlld Kingdom 10; Dolly 1S.
B: OO-Fantullc Journey 3.~.1S : Future Cop 6. !3;
Bugs Bunny .8,10; Classic Theatre :20i m Masterpiece Theatre 33.
9 :00-Best Sellers 3. ~ . 1S;
Bar ney Mlller 6, 13;
Breakthrough '77 8; Classic Theatre 33 ; People's
&lt;;:ommand Performance : 1977 10.
9 :3()-Three' s Company 6, 13 .
10 :()()-Westslde Medical 6 , 13; News 20; Nancy Wilson
Special 8,
!0 :3()-Woman 10.
11 :00-News 3, 4,6,8, 10, 13, lS1 MacNeii-Lehre Report
33.
11 ; 3()-Johnny Carson 3,.,15; Geraldo Rivera 6, 13;
Mary Hartman 10; AB'C News 33.
12 :00-Movle " Nothing but lhe Best " 10: Janakl 33.
12 :4()-Movle " Cry Panic" B.
1:DO--Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.

NO
WONDER!!

rest-"RE-~E"

�14- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , April6, 1977

:- -- - --- ---~ -- -- ------------ : Hospital

~here's ways

1
l

to fight
.obscene phone calls
Sheriff James J _ Proffitt
said today there are ways to
combat obscene telephone

ca lls wh1 c h ri tize ns arr

r eporting to h1m being
received.
•
Contained in the handbook.
" Operation Crim e Alert
Citizen's Handbook ," are
these seven steps to take in
combatting obscene and
t Continued from page 1)
Department will not fake any abusive phone calls : actiQn
t hat
would Always set your own ru!~s for
del iberately de-stroy an in- using the phone. Talk on your
dus tri al s i te of the job
potent ial as th ts one . In fact . terms, not the caller's. Don't
on
February 24 , 1977 . talk to any one unless you
members of my sta f-f· and I want to. HANG UP.
met with repr esen tati ves of
- Ask all callers to identify
C&amp;SOE as well as individua ls
themselves.
If someone calls
fr om
Meigs
County ,
you
and
asks
" who is this?"
Pomeroy , and Racine. at
whii:h. time we reviewed the - don't answer. Ask "what

US33 ·

C&amp;SOE plans for developing

number were you calling?"
or ' 1who do you want?"

the Great Bend area. As a
result of this mee ting i f· was
agreed by al l concerned that

- Never answer questions
about your phone number,
address, home, family, or

both the C&amp;SOE generating

plant and adequate hi ghway
fa ci l i ties can be provided in
this area . We wfll continue to
work wi th C&amp;SOE to assure
compa tabi lity of all plans for
highways and ind us tr i al
development in the ar ea .
Cons truction of the ex ·
tension of th e Pomeroy
" bypa ss" easterly from US ..
Route 33 to a connection w ith
State Route 7 is presentl y
programmed fo r F isca l Year

any persona] matter unless

you know exactly to whom
you are speaking and why.
- II you get a call from a
"breather" - one who calls
repeatedly and says nothing
- beat hlm at his own game

- say NOTHING , and h11ng
up.
- Don't worry about oflending salespeople on the
phone. Say goodbye to unwanted sales calls and don't
give out information .

- Report threatening or
abusive phone calls to the
telephone company and to the
police immediately. _ lf the
calls persist. your lines can
be tapped in-·order to trace
•
the calls.
- Explain these tips to
your children.
Sheriff Proffitt said the
Ohio Revised Code provides
fines of not more than $500 or
imprisoned not more than six:

months, or both for persons
guilty or-making threatening
or harassing phone calls. In
his daily report the sheriff
said Davey Miller, Rutland ,
had some concrete blocks and
trailer under-pinning stolen
!rom the site where he is
setting up a trailer. The in·
. cident is under investigation.

Ohio hit by
wint~·like storms

1981. Further eastwar.d ex tension generally paralleling
ex isting S. R . 124 is a longer
range facility for wh i ch
present funding restr ictions
preclude sign i·f icant advance
planning unti l the effects of
the l;lr idge itself on ro ad
pa tter11s in the area can be
stu died .
Af1end1ng the meet ing were

Henry Wells , Richard Jones
anO Jame s Rous h , COrri·
missioners and Mary Hobstetter, act ing clerk .

Our Interest Is
Greater For You

5.75%
On 90-Day
Certificates
5.75 per cent paid on
90 day Certificates of
Deposi t .
$1.000.00
Minimum.
Interest
Pay_able
Quarterly .

Press
By .
United
International
Winter weather swept back
into Ohio early today
covering much of the state
with snow with depths
ranging from live inches in
the Cincinnati area to 12
inches along Lake Erie.
"We ~oke up this morning
and there it was," said Lake
County sheriff's dispatcher
in
Anthony
Vitale
Painesville. " It all came at
once. The roads are starting
to clear now but they were
pretty bad early this
morning.''
"!can't remember when it
came down this bad this late
in the year," said Ashtabula
County sheriff's detective
Ray Arndt in Ashtabula.
"The roads are open but they
are real, real slippery"! think this just i.Jok
everybody by surprise and
they had put their sno)l! plows
away," said Arndt.
The live inches of snow in
the
Cincinnati
area
apparently wasn't going tostop the Cincinnati Reds !rom
opening the National League
baseball season against San
Diego.
·
"The game is on," s8id
Reds officials.
Gov. James A. · Rhodes
~osted a prayer breakfast lil
Columbus to thank God for an'
end to the bitter cold winter of

1976-77.
The spring snowfall made
driving hazardous in nwny
major metropolitan areas including Cleveland, Colwnbus
and Cincinnati.
The National Wea ther
Service said thl!t during the
approximately 100 years
weather records have been
kep t
in
Cincinnati ,
measurable snow has fallen
in April only about ·five or six
times.
Temperatures in Ohio early
today were in the 20s or lower
30s, with westerly winds of Ia
to 20 miles per hour and gusts
over 30 mnes per hour.
Temperatures ranged !rom
26 degrees at Mansfield to 34
degrees in Cincinnati.
The National Weather Service's Ohio extended outlook
for Friday through SUnday
calls for fair weather during
the period, with a slight
warming
trend.
High
temperati!res will be in the
upper 40s or the 50s early
Friday warming to the 50s or
lower 60s by Sunday .
Overnight lows will be in
the -mid 20s or the mid 30s
Friday and in the 30s
Saturday and Sunday.

Franklin B Hudson. 57.
d' d T
d
t
R acme
,
•e
ues av a
Herzer Medical Center .
Mr . Hudson was j:Sreceded
in de1;1lh by his father . Da v1d

Hvdson ; one sis ter. Gr ace

Landers and one brother.
Alonzo
Hudson ,
A member
of Jhe Pomer oy

Mil sonic Lodge and the DAV
in Pom eroy . he was a former

chief ·of Pom eroy police .
He is survi ved by his wife.
Blondena Taylor Hudson ; one
son , Gene~ Racine ; two
daughters, Shirley Ste ven ·
son, Pittsburg , Calif. , and
Toni Hudson, Racine ; hi s
mother ,
Anna
Hudson ,
Coolvi lle ; one grandson, Don
Andrew Stevenson ; two
sisters, Freda Elkins . lan
caster, and Rosella Secoy ,
Syracuse,. and four brothers.
Paul and Fred, Pomeroy and
James and lewis .
Funeral services wi ll be 1

p.m. Friday at Ew ing Chapel

w i th the Re v . Don Walker
off ici ating . Bur ial will be in
Greenwood
Cemetery ,
Racine . Fr iends may call at
1he funeral home anyti me.

EDITH A. ABBOTT
Mrs . Edith A. Abbott ,

80,
di ed Tuesday at her home on

Ash St.. Mi ddleport.

Mrs . Abbott ~as born April
13, 1896 in Chesh i re , a
daughter of the tate George
ahd M i nn ie Ripley Herr mann . Besides her pa rents
she was preceded in death by
two sons , ~rt i n and lester,
a brother and a si ster .
Surv i ving
are
two
daugh ters, Mr s. Wa lter
( Virginia) Wears, Pomeroy ,
and Mrs . Harold {Gertrude-

Trvdle) Swartz, Middleport ;

two sons, l arry of Casa
Grande, Ari z., and Harol d of
Coolvi ll e; two sister s, Mrs.

Ai'ny Rovsh of · Pendleton,

Oregon, and Mrs. George
{Ma rgare t} Sta rk of Phoenix .
Ariz .; two brot he r s, Roy
Herrmann of Cheshire and
Horace
H~rrmann
of
Reynoldsburg '; a daughter -in·
law , Mrs . M ar tin (Midgiel
Abbott , Midd lepor t ; 16
grandchildren, 31 great grandchi ldren , a greaf.great.
grandson and severa l nieces
and nephews.
Mr s. Abbott was a member

I
ADMITTED - Jame~
ol lhe Silver Memorial Free ·Wells, Long Bottom; Mabel

W•ll Baptist Chu_rch at
Kanauoa where .$frv•ces will
be held at, p.m. Friday wl lh
~
The Rev . Andrew Parsons
and the Rev . Noel Herrmann

Pickens, Syracuse; Iva
Reedsv1l- I e; Ma r1 on

Wh'
1.te,

H~ll. Reedsville ; Maxine
Hobbs. Dezter; William

olflcia ting . Bvrlal will be In Stephenson Pomeroy.
the Gravel Hi ll Ceme ter y at
DISCHAR,GED
"""
Cheshire . Friends ma~callat 1 b d
- Sv~ar
M
b
1
the Rawlings -Coats uneral m o en,
a e
wan,
Home from 2 to 4 and 1 to 9 Wanda Floyd, Carol Jett,
p.m. "!"hursday and until

: · ~ark,deanyt:~~

"D4?"

Helen Blankmann. Rhonda
Kern . .

~~~~~.Y w•ll

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Billy
Bowman, Betty Leonard,
Esther Pearson, Mrs. Her·
bert Wallis, Eli2abeth Irvin,
Mrs . Donald Gabritsch,
James . Rose and Charles
Saird, all of Point Pleasant ;
Mrs. Christopher Davidson
and -daughter, Patriot; Mrs.
James Logan and son,
Henderson ; Frank Casto,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Harry
Datson, Red House; Willard
Laudermilt, Mason; Mrs.
Harry Benedict, Gallipolis
Ferry; Mrs. Donald Gibert,
New Haven; Clifford Murry,
Pomeroy ; Michelle Cox,
Gallipolis; Mrs. Roy Smith,
Apple Grove and Danny
Knapp, Leon.
Birth - A daughter to Mr.
and Mrs. John Logan, Middleport .

BILLY OWENS
Fu neral services will be
he ld at 11 a.m. Friday at
Millers Home for Fvnerats
for Billy Ron Owens. 23. who
was found dead wHh a self inf l icted
b ul let
wound
Monday evening at his
fam ily's graveside in Cen ·
tenary cemeterr-

The Rev. Bll Beegle will

of ficiate at t he serv ice with
burial to follow In Centenary
ceme tery. He had resided
with Mr . and Mrs. Clarence
Alonzo lawson .
Born Jvly 23 , 1953 In
Deland , Fla ,, Qv.Jens was

pre&lt;:eded In death by his wife,

.Phy l lis Lawson Owens and
children , Ronnie Thomas and
Vala r ie Lynn who died in a
fire at the home of her father,
Clarence Alonzo lawson, Sr .
in Ma rc h.
In addition to his parents,
he is survived by t wo
b r other s,
Go rdon
and
Thomas ; tour sis ters, Mrs .

Charlene Bell . Mrs. Melody ·

Oade, M rs. E&gt;elice Klinger
and Mrs. "fina Thomas, all of
De l and , Fla . and grand parents, _M-r. and Mrs .

Thomas I Owens. ·sr .. Deland

Fla . One sis ter , Mrs. Trina
Rodrigerez, preceded him in

death.
A graduate of Deland
Se nior High School, he

worked with the police and
sheriff'd department in
Deland before movi ng to
Gallia County . He was a
comm issioned officer of the

Gall ia

Covnty

Sher iff 's

Department and worked at
the Sunoco service station at
the corner of Grape and

Second In Gallipolis.

Governor hosts
prayer breakfast

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

:=::!
•

,

BowUng Green;
Sen. Paul RE.
Charles
F . Kurfess,
Gillmor, R-Port Clinton; and
William Willis, director of the
Ohio Youth CommissiQn.
State Treasurer Gertrude
W. Donahey read from a book
of prayers by Rev. Frederick
Brown Harril;, a chaplain o(
the U.S. Senate.
"When honest and sincere
men differ , may we never
forfeit our own sell respect or
the confidence of those who
trust us as we dedicate our
highest 11nd best to the state
of Ohio,'' she prayed.
The ceremonies were concluded with the "Battle
Hymn of the Republic," SWlg
by the cboir and the entire
audience.
"I know in this hour' of
brotherhood we are all
greater individuals," said
Rhodes .

MONEY ORDERS
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Senate Tuesday passed
and sent to the governor a bill
giving the attorney general
powey to recover funds lost
w ~ioans because of the
bankruf)l&lt;·v earlier this year
nr U1e Universal M&lt;111ey Order

(Oinlinued from page 1)
plaWd, and which I might add, have been aggressively sought
by tile general public in the area."
AplaMed f4.4 billion expanaion would make the Portlmoulh
plant the largest uranium enrichment facility In the world.
A hearing board official promised to consider Tuelday's
statements in a final Impact statement, which will help
detennlne the fate of the plant.
Outside the Netherland Hilton hotel, where the helrlng was
held, a dozen persons demon:~trated against ~clear power.
Despite rain and snow, they carried signs reading "Demlnd a
Moratorium on Nuclell' Energy" and "Sign up the Sun,"
referring to solar energy.
"Nuclear power Is an economic disaster," said demonstrator Polly Brokaw of Cincinnati. "Paying f4.4 bUUon to
expand the Portsmouth plant is like pouring it down a rathole.
We need to invest in solar heating ."
Added demonstrator Sheila Curran d Oxford, Ohio, "We're
concerned about the safety of nuclear power. We want a
. moratorium on any nucilear power expansion."

~

·-

I

,

~,\\11111111~~~
CURITY

I•

(Continued from page 1)
ACTIVIST AND SENT a white Atlanta official to Coogress to
succeed U. N. Ambassador Andrew Y~g, In one of several
elections across the nation Tuesday. In Los Angeles, Tom
Bradley, son of a black shareaopper and a policeman befoce
entering politics, woo a second term as mayor of nation's third
largest city.
"We've dooe It again," exclaimed the_ 59-year-old
Democrat, considered a possible 1982 challenger to Sen. S. I.
Hayakawa, R-Calif. Bradley appeared to have the margin
needed to avoid a rWloff. The Georgia runoff between two
Democrats drew most of the attention Tuesday among
contestsfocCongressor mayor In at lellstflvestates.

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F R A N .K L

I

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Weeldy
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1_OOth Arwiversarv
Spec.ial · . ~
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P~

horruJ: u!u H;

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ATHENS, OffiO -OffiO UNIVERSITY MADE A BID to a
legislative subcommittee Tuesday night for a coal reaearch ;
center by stressing the university'~ location in coal country ~
and Its present research related to coal.
OU's bid followed a similar one made by Ohio Slate ,
University to tile 8ame legislative subcommittee last week. •
Howev.er, the subcommittee chairman studying the proposal
was noncommittal about which Wliverslty would get the nod
· for the research facility.

Weather

THREE FINED
Fined in the court of
Middleport Mayor Hoffman
Tuesday night were Jerry
Merica!, 30, Mason, W. Va.,
$25 and costs, making a "U"
turn; Robert R. McDaniel, 47,
Pomeroy, '20 and costs,
failure to have vehicle under
control; Jefferson D. Boylen,
37, Pennsboro, W. Va., $200
and costs and three days in
jall, driving while _ intoxicated. Forfeiting $50
bonds- were Russell D.
Morris, 20, Pomeroy, posted
on a disorderly manner
charge and Lawrence Fields,
61, Middleport, pn the same
charge.

,

News .. in Briefs :

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Aprtl5)
Michael Bailey, Michael
Bumgarner, Roy C)lam·
berlain, Roderick Click,
Jewell Cotterill, Christina
Drennen, Muriel Foley,
Glenna Green , Benjamin
Hollberg, Julia Hysell,
Connie Jagers, Mary Lucas,
Clyde Marks, Jack Mills,
Thelma
Nibert,
Gary
Perkins, Mrs. Paul Reynolds
and son, Mary Roush,
Cloudy and cold tonight,
Virginia Russell, William lows between 25 and 30.
· Saunders, Ann Sinclair, Cloudy Thursday, highs to 55.
Eliza beth Springer, Inez Proba billty of precipitation Is
Stumbo, Minnie Van Sickle, 50 per cent today, 10 per cent
James Vaughn, Eva Walker, tonight and 20 per cent ThursBilly Ward, Kathleen Wears, day.
Marlene Whitman, Melvin
Williams, Susan - Williams.
Births, AprOS
ASK TOWED
Mr. and Mrs . Michael
Marriage llcenses were
Workman, son, Kerr; Mr. issued to Archie Ray Booth,
and Mrs. Virgil Skaggs, 20, Vienna, W. Va., and
daughter, Jackson; Mr. and Elizabeth Marie Edwards, 19,
Mrs. . William
Kuhn, Vienna, W.Va.; Mark' Steven·
daughter, Northup.
Lliwson, 18, Minersville ·and
Debra Elaine Fife, 18,
. Cheshire; John Thomas
Patterson, 33, Mason, and
Linda Kay Lemley, 29,
Middleport.

By LEE LEONARD
as the seasons cbange, our
UPI Statehouse Reporter " faith is once again renewed.
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Gov .
"The scriptures give us our
A sub stantia l p!! n alty is
James
A. Rhodes today direction,' said Rhodes. "The
invoked on all ccr t i f ic&lt;~ t c
thanked God lor an end to the day is at nand: ·Let us
accounts wit hd rt~wn prior
,to t hl! d ate of mil1udtv .
bitter cold winter of 1976-77 . therefore 'cast off the works of
and urged his fellow state darkness, and let us put on
officials to "cast off .the the armour of light."
works of darkness and put on
The guests, who pai&lt;;l $3 to
the armour of light."
partidpate,
dined
on ·
Rhodes ~osted .a prayer scrambled eggs and ham,
breakfast attended by about sweet rolls and coffee
140
persons,
mostly furnished by a catering
Th e Athens 'Caunty
government
officials
and service. They heard the 65Savi ngs &amp; Loan Co .
employes, in the Statebouse voice Ohio Youth Choir offer
296 Secon d St.
Pom e rOy , Oh i o
rotunda.
a variety of selections ,
The governor had prayed in ipclucting "Amazing Grace"
·r
the rotunda last January lor and HJ Believe."
......., __ _
an end to what be termed the
on
Rhodes
called
coldest weather in Ohio legislators ·from both parties
NOT AT PARTY
';.tory, accompanied by the and various state officials to
RUTLAND - Lonnie
state's most severe fuel give prayers and relldings.
Black was not at home to shortage.
· "We pray for the mighty
attend the birthday of his
"The poet once wrote that utilities that they might
brother, Jason Rodney Black, you pray in your distress and
son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. in your need, but that you demonstrate compassion for
Black, Route I, Rutland, as might also pray in your joys · those who cannot pay their
bills," prayed state Rep.
was repo.rted in an earlier and
your
days
of Harry J . Lehman, D-Shaker
account of the party.
abundance," Rhodes told Heights.
those assembled.
· "We pray for the scientists
" We have sought His inter- and researchers that they
vention and He has sustained might develop new sources of
guided and energy. We pray for the
us. He
~EIGS
strengthened us during the consumers, that they might
harshness and severity of the learn to conserve fuel. Help
winter months. Just as surely us to harvest and conserve
our resources this swruner so
we will not experience
another winter Bl '76."
For sa fety
E·RCALL.ED
Senate President Pro Temconvenience o r just plain
The
Middlep or t
pore
OUver Ocasek, !).Akron,
fun , yo u need a 2 ~way
Emergency Squad answered
radio if you drive today,
offered
an anonymous
a call to 278 Ash St., at 11:16
And we have a complete
"The
reading
called
a.m. Tuesday lor Edith
line of dependable
Incomparable
Christ,"
while
Abbott who was dead upon
Cobras ... fn~ immedi ate ~~===~~~~;,.:......_,_,.,;,~
other
prayers
were
given
by
installa tion m anything
the unit's arrival:
House
Minority
Leader
fr om -a compact car to

Meigs·Co. Branch

Ne~s

: veterauMemari~lHoopit.l Debate heated

Area Deaths

FRANKLIN B. HUDSON

•
•

BONDS FORFEITED
Seven delendanta forfeited
bonds Tuesday. night in lhe
court of Pomeroy Mayor :
Clarence Andrews. They' ;
were. Michael Middleswart,'
Route 1, Portland, $30,
running a red light ; Darmy
Grlf!lth, Pomeroy, '36, .
speeding; Joe ·'Welker, '
Pomeroy, $354), drtving while1 '
intoxicated; Everett Huff. , .
man, Jr., no address listed,
$50, intoxication; Lyle •
Lusher, Columbus; $350, ~
driving while intoxicated;
William Reeves, Pomeroy,
$50, intoxlfBtiOn, and Willlain ,
R. Hayes, 27 Syracuse, f41. 70,
speeding . Fined $450 and costs in the court on charges •.
of leaving the scene of an
accident and
reckless '
operation was Jerry· S. !
Merlcal, Mason, W. Va.

••••

,,,,,.~

·

Etch-A-Sketch .
Cr eat!ve

~n l ~J'.fllr1t'1~ 1

Or iiW llUndrcds c l d t~
Stg ns Jl'tq ho turlil!lg ~ 111!

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APRIL SALE DAYS
CONTINUES THURSDAY~
FRIDAY-SATURDAY

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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="48198">
              <text>April 6, 1977</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="295">
      <name>abbott</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2671">
      <name>herrmann</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="735">
      <name>hudson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="357">
      <name>owens</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
