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                  <text>1G-The Daily Sentinel, Midd leport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Monday, Apnlll, 1!177

Work parties
annoWtced

at baJifields
The Pomeroy Youth
Baseball
League
ha s
scheduled work parties
Monday and Tuesday evening
at 5:30 p.m. at the ballfields
on the hill behind Meigs High
School.
All parents of youths
participating in the sununer
baseball program are asked
to belp prepare the fields .
Practices for teams in Little
League. Pee w.., League.
and T-Ball wlll start after
Aprill8. Coaches will contact
players as to which team and
exact time of practice.

4,700 on strike
DAYTON, Ohio (UPI )
Local 696 of the United Auto
Workers Union struck the
Delco-Moraine Division of
General Motors Corp. here
today in a dispute over local
lssu... The local represents
4,700 workers at the plant.
De lc o-Moraine, whi ch
produces auto brakes,
bearings and transmission
components, is one of 14 UAW
bargaining units which stili
do not have local non·
~nomic contracts.

MEIGS lHEATRE .
CLOSED FOR
VACATION
WATCH FOR
OPENING DATE

90:~rd St&gt;utnik up ~------------ - - ----~-------Moscow

(UPJ ) -

Area Deaths

l

The

Sov~et Umon today launched I

in to . orbit a new . earth
sateihte, the 903rd tn the
Cosmos sertes.
The official . Soviet news
agency :~ss said Cosmos 903
was orbtttng the earth once
every 1.2 hours and 6 mtnute•
at a dt:"adce rangtng from
39! .4 miles to 24,960.5 mtles.
Tasssatdlnstrumentsaboard
the new sateli1le were rune·
tlonally normally.

1

l::ekk~f~h ~act~~~ ptrln~¥g;f ~~~~i.v::·h:~~~ ~~h d~ueght;;
Robert L. Lanning, a resident
ol Middleport. dled.at 10 p.m.
~.!.':lc~IY~;n:~~. Ross County
Mr. Lanning suffered a
heart attack a week ago. He
was born Apr il 20. 1895 In
Meigs County, son of the late

and one •on preceded him In
death . An adopted son, Teddy

A. Hosk inson on Sept. 15, 1936

Mr . Dillard helped build the
Free Will Baptist Church In
Middleport and he also
served as pastor of that
church.

~l':esDl\:,";~ist:~ . ~r~eGo~~r~
Washington, Big Mountain,
W. Va . survives .
·
He was a member of the
UNWA In West Virgin ia .

~~~?ng~~e ~:~~~ed ~~~;~ ~~~h!l ~r;,.~~th~lrd:~dc~~~;~~~

and she survi ves along with
the son.
Mr . Lann ing was a retired
employee of the Chillicothe

troop advance

Veterans Hospltal, a Navy

vetera n of World War I and a
BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) member of the Frankfort
Methodist Church.
- Palestinian leader Yasser . United
Mr. Lannlnga lsoworkedas
Arafat ordered a halt to a safety supervisor for the .
guerrilla
advances
in Akron Transit Co., and as a
southern Lebanon as Syria ~7~~ ~n;geR~bb;;'~~oodyear
exercised pressure on
He was a life member of th e
Lebanese rightists to freeze Disabled Amer ican Veterans.
the conflict along the border
Funeral services will be
with Israel, reports from the held 10 , JO a.m. Wednesday in
the Fawcett-OIIver · Glass
area said today.
Funeral Home, Chillicothe
Although no ground was with Rev . E. J. Eddy otgained in the past 24 hours by fidating . Buria l will be In
either side in the bitter Grandview
Friends ma y Ceme
call attery
the.
southern frontier confli ct , tu neral home trom 6 unti l 9
guerillas in the hilltop town of p.m. on Tuesday . Military
Khiam exchanged artillery, gravesides will be conducted
mortar and machine gun fire Y the VFW.
with rightists in Marjayoun
MARGARET TOPE
and Kleia. All of the towns
Ma rga ret M. Tope , 86 ,
are within sight of the Israeli Bidwell Route 2, Rodney
border.
community , died Sunda y a t 9
a .m. at her residence.
She was born Sept. 9, 1868 in
Green
Twp .. l&gt;allla &lt;.ounTy,
In 1947, Jackie Robinson
one
ol
nine
chi ldren born to
became the first black in
the lafe John Isaa c and
major league baseball when Chr ist ina Ja cox O'dell.
be played for the Brooklyn
She married Claude Tope
Dodgers against the New · Oct . 22. 1910 who preceded
York Yankees in an her in ·death In 1973.
Svrvi vors include two sons
exhibition game .
and one daughter. Wendell, at
· lngton, and
home ; Lowell , Ew

Mrs. Mary Pitsfor d. Bidwe II .
A thought for the day :
A member ol the Bethesda
General of the Army Douglas Me thodist Church, Mrs. Tope
school
In
MacArthur said, 11 There is no attended
Cenetenary and the Old
substitute for victory."
Academy In Gallipolis . She
lived her entire life In Gallia
CLUB TO MEET
County with 55 years spent in
RACINE _ A regular the Rodney community .
Other survivors are nine
meeting of ·the Twin City · grandchildren and
14
Shrine Club will be held at grandchildren.
7:30 this evening at the clubFuneral services will be 1
p.m. Tuesday at Mlller's
house.
Home for 'F•,nerals
with the
~
.

. ·;===============

Funeral

serv-ice s

are

tentatively set lor A p.m.
Wednesday at the Free Will
Bapt ist Church In Middleport
with Rev. Noel Herrmann
officiat ing . He will be
assisted by Rev . Rice
Browning .
Burial will toll ow In Maddy
Cemetery
on Georges Cr..,k.
Frien ds may call at
M i ller 's Home for Funerals .
after 3 p.m. Tuesday.
Th b
the Zhu~~ 1~ 11~it;:'dt'."p~~7 :~
tie In slate one hour prior to
services.
PEARL SHEPHARD
former resident of Crown
City , d ied Sunday at 10 a.m.
in the Elms Nursi ng Home,
Wilm ington, Ohio. She had
Pearl T. Shephafd, 99, a

bez;&gt;r; 11s~~~~:r'~ ~:s ~~:rl~sl

of her Immediate family . She
was born in Howe l l, Mo .,
Ma h 26· 1878 • daug ht er of
the rctale Mr.
and Mrs. John
Woodr idge.
She was twice marr ied,
first to Wilson A . Hill in 1896.

Th ey h• d no ch'ld
1 ren . Her
Shepha rd , who preceded her
in death . One adopted son .

second marriage was to Mr .
Cha rles Fridley , Huntington,

sur"l·ves
n1'eces sur"i"e
• l n~· Two
• .. ·,
i nclud
Mrs. Helen Kemp
Crown ily .
She was a minister in the
·Stella .. Ful le r , Sett lement ,
Hun tlng ton for 25 years.
She was a member of the
Free Will Baptist Church In
Huntington .
Funeral services will be
held 10 a .m. Wednesday at
M iller 'S Home for Funerals
with Rev . J. D. Penn ington
officiating . Burial will be in
Vinton Memor ial Park·.
F · d
11 t · th
nen s may ca a
e
funeral home Tuesday af-

vetmasMemortaiHospttal
Saturday Admissions _
Karen Hood, Mason, w. Va.;
Ina Kautz, Pomeroy; Tammy
Ferguson, Middleport; Lois
Schmoll, Pomeroy.
Saturday Discharges Sara! Congo, Maxine Hobbs,
MiUard Ball, Fred Shain ,
Gilbert Baker.
SUnday Admissions Donald Eynon, Rutland ;
Scott Frazier, Middleport;
Martha Bailey, Reedsville ;
Stephen Shields, Sr., Minersville ; Margretta Wise,
Pomeroy·, Roy Proffitt,
Ra cI ne ·
C Ia r en c e
Longstreth , Middleport ;
Jimm y Lee , Minersville ;
Cynthia Holland, Pomeroy ;
Dale King, New Haven;
Donald Vaughan, Pomeroy .
Sunday Dischar ges _
Francis Benedum, Asa
Hoskins Jacob Holman
Alice Cape' ha.rt.
,

Eastern events
are announced

Cheua Deal, (.1yde Eblin,
Harold Edward, Dorothy
Frazier, Linda Green, Irene
Hansen, Hilda Harris, Robert
EAST MEIGS - The School Gymnasium. AdHersman, George Hill,
monthly
meeting of the misaion ill free.
Homer Hill, Sr., Scotty
Ea.otem
Local
Band Boooters
Justus, Edith Keaton, Bertha
will
be
beld
Tuesday,
Apr. 12
Martin , Mrs . James MeJUDGMENT FD.ED
at
7:30
p.m.
in
the
Eastern
Corkieand son,Berrie Miller,
A judgment In favor of the
Velma Oshel, Dannie Ratliff, Hll!h School hand room. The Capital Savings and Loan Co. ,
Mrs. WIUlam Reynold! and main topic of the meeting has been filed in the Meigs
son , Ethel Sayre, James will be the banquet.
Spencer, Claude Swisher,
The Eastern High School County Clerk of Courts office
for R568.89 with interell at 6
Kenneth Thomas, Regina Spring Concert will be held percent against Harold D.
Webb, Mrs. Michael Work- Thursday, April 14 at 7:30 and Virginia Davill, Minersp.m. in ·the High School
man and son.
ville.
Gynutasium. There will be no
(Births, Aprll9)
. Mr . and . Mrs . Michael admission charge.
DAVTOMEET
The Eastern Junior High
Jones, daughter, Wellston ;
Meigs County Chapter 53,
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Gray, and Elementary Spring D.A.V. will meet at 7:30p.m.
da ght W Jist
Concert will be held Tuesday, Tuesday at the chapter home
u er, e on.
May 10 at 8 p.m. in the High oo Butternut Ave.
(Discharges,A prlllD)
Jaspar Coen, John Dailey,
Arlie Davis, Leta Hall,
Elberta Hayes, Clarence
K i n g, Chrlstina McGuire,
Tamara Plants, James
(Continued from page 1)
Hob:erMedlcalCenter
Roush, Betty Russell, Doran
Last year, it gave up the top gpot to the mid.&amp;zed Olds(Discbargea, AprilS )
Sayre, Jeannette Yerian.
. mobile Cutlass. There were only 7,5110 sales separating Ute two
so far this year and the Cutlass could resume its premier spot
Petro Alderigi, Mrs. David
Blrths, Aprl110)
Beedy and daughter, Jam..
Mr. and Mrs. Charles once the restyled, smaller 1978 models are introduced this !aU.
Bevins, Garland Boston 11, Chambers, daughter, Vinton; The "Top 10" sales list so far this year bas seven mid.alzed or
Mr . a ndM rs. DaIton Grove!•. larger automobiles on it and just three compacts, the Ford
Clara
Brown,
Bry~ e
C
da
Browning , Hattie
an·
ughter, p omeroy
;d Mr. and Granada sixth, the Plymouth Volare eighth and the Chevrolet
D
terbury, Choile Carder , · Mrs. Herbert uhl, aughter, , Nova ninth. There's not a single U.S.-bulli subcompact model
Marie Delano, Stephanie Jackson ; Mr. and Mrs. Gary on the list.
Dyer , Dorothy Fields, Landrum, son, Jackson; Mr.
Charlotte Griffith, Pamela and Mrs. Marvin Ours, son,
DAR ES SALAAM, TANZANIA- Briilsh Foreign
David Owen arrived in Africa today with a series of
Secretary
Hatfield, Marilyn Hayth, Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs.
Linda Hoover, Sanford Donald
Walters,
son, American-becked proposals to achieve majority rule in
Kinsel, Lucille Lambert, Wellston .
Rhodesia through""the ballot rather than the gun."
Joseph Lish , Nona Massie,
Speaking to reporters at the start of his seven.(!ay swing
PLEASANT VALLEY
throu.gh southern Africa, Owen said aU parties in the confltct,
William Mitchell, Jr., Mary
Jane Neal, Roy Newobutz,
DISCHARGES - Clarence including Rhodesian Prim~ Minister Ian Smith, should be
Sophie Rahmann , Marjorie Thomas,
Leon ;
Clyde included in any talks, despite demands that Owen negotiate
· 1ett • Syracus e ' 0 .,· only with black leaders. This was expected to be a major topic
Rawlins, Lance Reese, Molly Trtpp
.
Ottie · Bumgarner, Le .. during Owens' talks later today with Robert Mugabe, a leader
Saunders, Mrs. Virgil Skaggs
and daughter, Doris Smith, tart ;
Mrs.
Thoma s of the nationalist Patriotic Front, and Tanzanian President
Dorothy Walters, Celces Whittington. Vinton ; Mrs . Julius Nyerere.
Riffle,
Leon ·,
White, Levi Wickline, Earl Edgar
,.
Frank Rutherford, Po.tnt
COLUMBUS -FRANKLIN COUNTY COMMON Pleas
Wl'lfong, UIJ'tan W'..e.
(Births, AprilS)
Pleasant; Mrs. Lewis Taylor, Court Judge William Gillie says the state of Ohio must stay in
Mr . and Mrs . Charles Gallipolis; Mrs. Alfred themeatinspectionbuoiness,atleastfortbetimebelng.
·
Gill'te ISSued
·
Carpenter, daughter, Crown Sprouse, daughter , Potnt
a preliminary injunction Friday to stop the
City; Mr. and Mrs. David Pleasant; Sabrina Carpenter, state from turning over its meat and poultry Inspection
McCarty, son, Wellston ; Mr. Vinton ; Amy Grimm, Mason; program to the federal government. He had granted a
and Mrs. Joseph Skaggs, Mrs. Charles Mounts, Pliny; temporary restraining order in the case iltSt month. Ohio
da ght · J k
Earl Mattox, West Columbia; Department of Ag.riculture Director John Stackhouse, who
u
er, ac son.
1Discharges,Aprll9)
Jacqueline Van Meter, wants to turn the program over to the federal governrnent
Harold Arthur, Freda Bing, Mason ; Mrs. James Wilson. · said he is not sure what stepa the state will now take.
'
~---...;;,;,;;;,;....;,;...;;.;;;;;;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___

News •• in Briefs

the funeral home from S to 9
this evening .

.

NETTIE JOHNSON
Mrs . .Nettle Tarlor

1, Gall ipol is, died Sunday

afternoon In Holzer Medica

Center .
She was preceded In death
by her husband , Dolly

Johnso n. Two
children
survive, Mrs . Steve (Vivian}
Gall, legonler, Ind .. and Mrs.

,Daniel !Arvilla ) Bales, Rl. 1,
Ga llipol is.

$295·
Plus Tax

75.

(Continued from page I)
Robert A. Taft, R-Ohio, and
continued his political career
in working for Rhodes in his
first two gubernatorial
campaigns.
"I have held the job longer
than l Intended to," McGough
told a news conference. "I
felt this was the logical time
to resign , It will give my
successor ample time to pre·
pare for the 1978 election. ·
"Everything considered,
the party organization is in
IJ!!tter ohape than at any time

a resi dent of

Rt.

1,

Galllpoll$, !Addison com - ted."
munity) died 2 p.m. Sunday
McGough has been viewed
in Holzer Medical Center. He as Instrumental in alloWing
had been hospltai ized the Rhodes to keep a tight reign
past four days .
the
Republican
He was born Dec. s. 1901, in on
Kanawha County, W. Va .. son organization. ·
of late Mr. ~nd Mrs . William
Rhodes
engineered
Dillard.
McGough's
re-e le ~tion as
He married the former
party chairnum in June, 1976
after he had been, beaten for
his state committee seat by
Miami County Prosecutor
Robert J . Huffman, a
member of the conservative
wing of the party in Ohio.

Pomeroy, 6.

·"In the spring,-a
youngrnarrs ~.~.~
fancy
to thoughts
of. .. driving a
new car."
. '?iff

ASK TOWED .
Brady Martin Huffman,
Jr ., 18, Racine,. and Teresa
Renee Wildermuth, 18, Route
3, Pomeroy.

000

o

VOL. XXVII NO. 253

~23 00

$30 COATS.; ............
s40 COATS ............. '31 00

~A15~~-- - ~-- · · · · - ·~3 9°

SCHOLARSHIP RECEIVED - Denise Marshall,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Marshall, Hemlock
Grove, received a $100 ochoiarship awarded annually by
the ·Ladi.. Auxiliary of Drew Webster Pool 39, American
Legion. Making the presentation . to Miss Marshall, a
· senior at Meigs High ScHoo1, is Mrs. Grace Pratt,
president of the auxiliary. Mrs. Isabelle Couch is
scholarship chairman of the local Wlit.

0

fOlTr... . . . . . . . . .~43
~rTr. . . ... . . . . . . ~49 00
to sn
. •

00

SS8

COATS...........................5 5

t&amp;Ar\~~-----· ·-· · ·: . . ~.6 2

·

::::

00

Includes our entire slack of women's
spring coats and all weather coats Good selection of styles and colors regular sizes and half sizes.

Elberfelds In Pom

So, .for a little spring tonic in the form of lhat new car loan, visit the Farmers Bank today.·

yellow pages
'

$&gt;40,000.00 Maximum Insurance For Each O.DOsitor
' Member Federal Oeposillnsurance Corpor~tion

.'

l

•,

r

reduction in sales tax
income ; $6 million is a
decrease in the estate tax and
$5.5 million is a loss in public
utility tax...
Wilkins said he was unable
to say how much of the
revenue Jo~s were a direct
result of Ohio's energy
ohortage the past winter.
"It appears now that in
spite of all the inconveniences
and the real hardships that
some of our people are having
in getting their gas blllit paid,
the overall impact of the
energy crisis on salaries,
wages, business activities
and even industrial production was less than we had
anticipated," said Wilkins .
He pointed out, however,
that long-term effects on the
economy and industrial
growth in Ohio could be more
severe.
The
director
also
announced that the general
fund showed a positive cash
balance April 6 for the first
time in five months - $32.4
million.

.,., · year ends June 30 will bring
the general fund down to zero
B)' United Press International
because the state's working
CLEVELAND - NATURAL GAS SERVICE to 31 capital has been used.
Cleveland hom.. was shut off for nonpayment Monday, the
He said the Office of Budget
East Ohio Gas CO. announced.
and Management can·
Shut.&lt;Jffs have mly been aUowed since April 1 under an compensate · for
the
order by the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio i&amp;sued to eas.e decreased revenues with
the cost of the bitter winter upon homeowners. Owners of 209 bookkeeping changes,.
other residences averted the lOllS of service by either paying avoiding an acroos-the-board
back bills or by arranging for extended payment plans, an spending cut which has .
East Ohio gpokesman said.
already reached 3 per cent
and saved $65 million this
WASHINGTON -A FEDERAL POWER Commission Jaw year.
judge bas rejected requests for quick action and scheduled a
The director said $11.4
summer hearing date to determine if a gas supplier serving million of the downward
eight stal.e$ Improperly sold reserve natural gas. Columbia adjustment in revenues
Gas Transmission Corp . faces a hearing Aug . 23, results from miscenaneous
admlntstrative Jaw judge Samuel KaneU said Monday .
transfers between funds.
A ruling against Columbia could mean the pipeline would Another $15 million is a
be forbidden to charge Its customers -natural gas utilities for some $50 million to $55 million in high priced emergency
gas purchased to bolster falling reserves as bitter winter CQld
drove up gas consumption to record levels. Sen. Howard
Metzenbaum, D-Obio, accused Columbla of selling an extra
CHICAGO (UP!) - Philip the chairman of the board
20.7 billion ~bic feet of gss to Industrial users who had acce.. -K. Wrigley, chewing gum and the chief operating
to alternate fuel sources. He said that gas had to be replaced magnate and owner of the officer.
later with emergency gas purchased at between two and four Chicago Cubs baseball team,
Wdgley's personal fortune
times the normal price.
died today In the Ellthorn, was estimated at more than
Wis., hospital.
$100 million and at one time
MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. - GENERAL MILLS HAS
He waa 82.
he reportedly received
completed the purchase of York S~ak House Symems, Inc., a
A spokesman for the dividends of more than
(X'ivately held Columbus, Ohio-based chain of family steak William Wrigley Co. Jr., said $50,000 a week from his gum
restaurants.
.
Wrigley became ill Monday company holdings.
Cbalnnan E. Robert Kinney said Mondsy the terms call night at his Lake Geneva, · He ruled from a distance.
Cor General MlUo to exchange S511,362 of its common shares for Wis., home and was taken to He preferred to remain at his
all of the shares of York. Additional shar.. are payable in the the Lakeland Hospital. He Lake Geneva home or in his
future depen!lbig upon the growth of the company. York was died early today.
aparbnent on Lake Shore
founded in 1969 by Ed Grayson, who will continue as chief
The cause of death was Drive in Chicago, tinkering
exem'tlve officer with no changes in management or policies. given as gastro-intestinal with cars and machinery, or .
York operateS 47 restaurants In 18 stales, primarily in the hemorrhaging.
doing handicraft of many
Northeast, South and Midwest. Ten addili6nal steak houses are
Spokesman David Sloane types.
to be added this. year.
said members of tbe family .
"It's not true that I never
were with Wrigley when he go to a game," he said once.
WILj..IAMSTOWN, MASS. - TOM JORUNG, ~ed to an died.
"Sometimes I go and sit in
envtroruhental post by Prelldent Carter, aays Americans are
Wrigley rarely attended a the crowd."
going to have to overctme their "enonnous psychological Cubs game and only
But he wasn't seen in the
repulsion" of human waste and begin recycling water.
occasionally watched the Cubs' front office or locker
Jorling, director of WiUlams College's Center for team he owned on television. room.
Environmental Stud!.., said Monday water shortag.. in tbe He seldom interfered in the
Wrigley , who regarded
Western United Stales may force a change in attitudes. operation of the team. Yet . himself and was regarded by
"Americans have dlaaB8ociated themselves with their own when a contract, or a trade, others as a sportsman, never
waste," he said. "We have an enormous paychologlcal involved a star or six figure installed lights in Wrigley
repulalon with our waste that other CUltures don't share. Some payments, he insisted on his Field for night baseball
di'II'Bie hesitatloos are valid, but It all can and must be veto power.
because he didn't think "it
overcome.
Wrigley yielded the would be a fair thing to do to
presidency of the .club to his the people who live around
PITI'$GH - CLABIR CORP., a Greenwich, Conn .. son, William, in 1961. But the park."
(Continued on page 10)
Philip K. Wrigley remained

·Gum giant dies

car) 'w~h a Farmer's Bank auto loan.

POMEROY, OHIO

COLUMBUS (UP!) - State
Finance Director Wllliam W.
Wilkins oaid today his office
is reducing state revenue
estimates for this fiscal year
by $37.5 million and is
directing paper reductions in
spending to keep the budget

lliN;;;;,,,:, , ,,:,,,, : ,:i·; ,.,,, 8 ;i;/;\\ ;~l;~::?o:~~~~~

00

That's the lime to con1e to FarmetS Batik. We can help JOu finance that new car (or used

Bank

Projections in
revenues down

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, APRIL 12, 1977

POM EROY,M IDDLEP.ORT, OHIO
-:=:-;:;.;:;:;.;::::-:-~-:::=:-::; :;.;:;: ; :;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::

hits you to get out on the open road with a brand new automobile.

~Farmers

ent111e

at

Need a church to kneel a pray in?
Let your fingers show the way·

vv

•

•

ll's a special kind of spring Ieaver, and it affects men and women alike. Sudden~ tfte urge

f .

\

McGough

Funeral services wi ll be
held 1 p.m. Tuesday at the
Waugh -Halley-Wood Funeral
Home with Rev . Herman
Skaggs officia ting . Burial
will be In Mound Hill
Cemetery .
,
Friends mar call at the since I've been chainnan,"
funeral home rom 7 until 9 said McGough. "Our finances
p.m . this evening .
are in relatively good shape."
McGough said he informed
Rhodes by telephone that lte
BENJAMIN DILLARD
waa going to resigu and the
·Rev . Benjamin .5. Dillard. governor "seemed disappoin-

THE MEIGS INN

9

a passing motori$1 and asked for help. Rutland Pollee Chief
By Bob Hodllch
RIITLAND - Bizarre, senseless crime Is not an exclusive Bruce Davis was notified and he notified the sheriff's
of the 14 city. It CAN hawen in Meigs County. In fact, it did department. Membero of the Rutland unit of the Southeastern
Ohio Emergency Medical Service were on tbe scene and stood
happen in Meigs County Monday night.
•
by
Mrs. Musser as obe underwent extensive queationing by
Dead as the result of a crtme which will undoubtedly hurl
officials.
·
many l4elp Co\Ultlans from their seats of secure, personal
A, member·of the Musser family at the scene Monday night
safe feeling Is Dale Musser, 81 , New Lima Road, near Forest
said &gt;he felt that Mr. Musser must have known the couplewho
Acres Park.
According to the facts pieced together by Meigs Sheriff entered the home on the pretense of using the telephone
James Proffitt and other officials on the scene, a man and a because Mr. Musser never permitted anyone to enter the home
woman came to the front door of the Musser home about7 p.m. thathe didn't know. However, Mrs. Musser said site did not
Monday night and asked to use the telephone. The couple used know the couple. It was also reported that sometimes Mr.
Musser did carry large sumo of money on his person.
the pretext that their vehicle was out of gasoline.
Mr. Musser's body was chest down near a couch in the
The man and woman entered the front door of the home.
The phone line was busy and the two subjects were seated on living room. A mixed breed dog (one of a number owned by
the couch. Mrs. Musser got up and started to go towards Mr. Musser) during the long period that the home was
another room when she heard her husband yell and heard one occupied by the officials, did not bark or acknowledge any
gunshot sound. When she looked around, the man had a gun strangers in the home as it Jay on a couch above the body.
pointed at her . She was ordered to lle pn the floor. She was tied Officials noted that it was almost as though the pet was quite
up with a cord friJID a lamp, also some television lead-in wire, aware of what had happened and was in mourning. The animal
never stirred.
and was blindfolded.
The hody was taken from the Musser home early Tuesday
She told officials that ohe heard the woman go onto the
porch apparently to signal another person to enter and a third morning to the Ewing Funeral Home and was to be taken today
to University Hospital in Coh.unbus for an autopsy. Mr. Musser
person, believed to have been a man, entered the home.
The Musser home was in shambles after the trio appare~tly died from a wound in the chest.
On the ocene were Dr. John Ridgway and Dr. R. R.
ransacked 1he residence looking for money . The trio
Pickens
from the coroner's department ; Meigs County
threatened to cut off Mrs. Musser's fingers if she did not tell
Prosecutor
Rick Crow, Sheriff Proffitt and his deputies,
them where money was bidden.
Robert
Beegle
and David Woolard, Herman Henry, Bureau of
Mrs. Musser, after the threats, did give the trio
Criminal
Investigation
; Ohio State Patrolman James Sheets,
information which resulted in Mr. Musser's billfold and the
Police
Chief
Bruce
Davis, and the Rutland SEOEMS
Rutland
couple's checkbook being stolen.
The Mussers also had old coins which were reported unit.
Sheriff Proffitt said the crime is under intensive
mil!Sing as were several handguns from the extensive Musser
He is asking anyone traveling the New Lima
investigation.
gun collection.
Road
near
the
Musser residence any time between 7 and 9:30
Officials said that it is one of tbe most extensive gun
collections they have ever seen. In a rooin just off the living p.m. Monday to please call his office if they observed any
room were other collector items Including a number of relics persons or vehicles in the vicinity.
from Ute first World War.
Left bound and blindfolded, Mrs. Musser worked herself
free. It waa estimated that it took her some two hours to free
THIS IS ONE OF THE ROOMS of the Dale Musser
herself. The telephone had been torn from the wall so she went ,
home on the New Lima Road left in shambl.. Monday
from her home down to the rural road where she fluged down
night as were other rooms of the .home as three subjects
committed robbery and murdered Mr. Musser. This room
housed the extensive gun collection of Mr. Musser.

Cal vary cemetery , Rio
Grande . Friends may call at

Johnson, 83, a resi dent o Rt .

t •••

mur ere
'
orn-e ro e

usser,
up,

flclatlng
. Burial Lu
will
Rev . Charles
s herbe ofIn- ternoon and evening . .

THE INN PLACE
Tuesday Night Special

992 -3629

:

HERBERT LANNING
Pear\ McG raw , In Hun ·
Herbert .L . Lann ing, 6t, lington. W. Va . in 1920. She

Arafal halts

Visit Our Salad Bar
B-B-Q Short Ribs
Mashed. Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Vegetable
Hot Rolls
Coffee. Tea or Milk

l HOSPITAL N·EWS

. MERCY SHOWN
The 18-montb-to-18-year
sentence of Bruce Beach on
conviction of tampering
with evidence has been
suspended by Judge John
C. Bacon, ac~ordb)g to an
entry filed in the Meigs
County Clerk ol Courts
office
Monday .
Beach waa placed on
probation lor · a periOd of
two years: He ~ad been
sentenced lo the Ohio Stale
Reformatory at Mansfield
and began bls sentence
Feb. 24. • His release Is
aulborlzed lor Friday.
_:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;

BLM cars
said faulty

Sunny and wann tnday and
Clear and mild
tonight, lows in the mid 50s.
Highs Wednesday will be
near 80. Probabillty of rain is.
near zero per cent today and
tonight and 10 per cent
Wednesday.
W~dnesd ay.

'

S~mmer

electricity
may be costing more
Middleport and other areas
.served by Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.,
may get another hike in their
electric bills.
This was the gist of a letter
from the public utility read
by Clerk-Treasurer Gene
Grate to Middleport Village
Council Monday evening in
regular session.
According to Grate, the
company will . file an application for the increase
about July 1 thi• year with the
Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio. The company will
ask for summer rate and a
winter rate.
Cai'i Horky, a member of
council and an employe of the
company, explained that the
idea is to reduce the amount
ofelectric consumption in the
summer. Horky said that the
summer.rate would not affect
customers using Je"" than 700
kilowatt• in a month.

WASHINGTON (UP!) - a
consumer group is asking the
government to investigate
more than two dozen alleged
defects in cars imported from
Great , Britain .
The
organization said the defects
warrant recalling the cars.
The Center for Auto Safety
said it had reached the
" inescapable conclusion"
Britioh Leyland Motors has
"In addition to its callous
disregard of owner com·
plaints and warranty com·
plaints, consistently exported
to the United States
passenge~ vehicl .." which
present an unreasonable risk
of acCidents because of
design. construction or
performance.
The Center, founded by .
Ralph Nader and Consume(S
Union but now operating
Independently, said it had
obtained internal documents
and commentary from
persons who work ·ror BLM
who found faulty fuel pumps
and tanks on some 1974-75
Jaguars, uncontrolled accelerations on 1975-76 MGB's,
gas pedal cable failures on
some 1975 Triumph TR-7's
and Austin Marinas, a week "
front end on all late model
Austin Marinas so bad that' SO
per ce nt of the owners
complained.

Weather

.

However, those using over
700 would have a higher rate
to pay. Horky said that the
average family in this area
used about 6011 kilowatts a
month.
.
Several. members agreed
that council Sho uld protest
but decided to wait upon the
advice of Mayor Fred Hoff.
man until a he~ring on the
matter is set by the PUCO. It .
was indicated that the rate
for aU customers would be
th e same in the winter
months.
Council passed using
emergency procedures an
ordinance providing that the
community park will be
closed at 11 p.m. daily . Ex·
ceptlons to this rllle must be
obtained through the office of
Mayor Hoffman.
The mayor reported that
the public hearing on the
construction of a coal loading
tipple at nearby Clifton, W.

a

Va., by Wtlliam Zuspan will
be at 7 p.m. on April 28. He
urged council members to
attend the hearing and express tJteir displeasure. The
hearing will be held by the U.
S. Corps of Engi 0eers at the
Wahama High SchOol.
Co uncil earlier wen t on
record as opposing the tipple.
Co uncil renewed the
mutual aid fire protection
contract with Gallipolis for a
period of three years and
approved the report of Mayor
Hoffman for March. The
report showed a total of
$4,193.90 for the month In·
eluding $4;071.90 in fines and
l ~s and $122 In merchant
police collection s.
Attending the meeting were
Mayor Hoffman , Clerk·
Treasu rer Grate,
and
Councilmen Horky , Allen Le¢
King , Marvlo Kelly, Dewey
Horton and William Walte rs.

Hijackers won't go to Cuba
tolerate airplane hijacke:s,
Sen. George McGovern said
today.
"He will arrest them. He
made it clear · he ,will not
cooperate with hijackers,"

By JUAN J. WALTE

WASHINGTON (UP!)
Despite
this
week's
expiration of the U.S.-Cuban
anti-llijacking treaty, Fidel
Casiro has warned he will not

Brt.dge

•

said the South Dakotan, who
visited Cuba and talked with
the Corrununist leader last
week :
The hi ja cking treaty
rConiinued on page 10)

•

wms m court

RICHMOND, Va. (UPI ) The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals today upheld a lower
court ruling aUowing the
construction oi a bridge over ,
the Ohio and Guyandottee
rivers from Huntington ,
W.Va., to Proctorville, Ohio.
The court rejected a
citizens' group's argument
tliat the federal government
failed to adequately consider
environmental factors and an
alternate site before issuing a
construction permit. . '
Although it had earlier
been able to receive a
preliminary injunction
against the project, the
Coalition for Respon sible
Regional Development failed
in its attempt to make the
Injunction permanent.
The appeal court held that
the U.S. Transportation
Department made a sound
environmental Impact study
and that U.S. District Court

Judge Dennis R. Knapp of
Huntington , W.Va ., · wa s
corr ect in approvi ng its
permit.
Issuance of the perrnit was
challenged on the gro\Ulds
that then Transportation
Secretary
William T.
Coleman had failed to
adequately consider another
site, at Lewis Hollow .
It also suggested that the
Maddie Carroll House
qualified as a historic site
under the National Historic
Preservation Act and that
construction of the bridge
would endanger it.
The appeals · court said
there was no basis to the
citizens' group's argument
that the Lewis Hollow
location was dismissed
because it could not have
received bond authorization.
Rejection of the Lewis
Hollow site, the appeals court
said, was clearly based Of) the

fact§ that it would " lie
outside of the general traffic
corridor encompa ..ed by this
particula r project" and
would "not atcotl1plish the
objections of lhe project."
It also noted that the
District Court agreed the
Lewis Hollow site would
r..ult in the taking of either a
public~fairground, a public
school playgrow&gt;d or a golf

course.
Coleman fo und
that
construction of the bridge
would have no adverse
impact on lhe Maddie Cru:oli ·
House . The District Court
confirmed the determination
and the appeals ('(lurt said it
found no error in the
judgement .
"The decree of the District
Court which denied the plaintiffs injunctive relieve and
dismissed the action is
accordingly affinned," the
court said.
I

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2- The Dally SentuJel. M!ddl~pori·Pomeroy , 0 , Tuesday, Apr!ll 2, 1977

•
Senltineli._Middle•porlt-PClmeroy, 0 .. Tuesdav.Aoril ~~~~----------,

Reported $1 million contract on King's life will be probed
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI ) Federal authorllles plan to
mvest1gate
an
Oh1o
Perutentiary inmate's claim
that FBI and CIA agents
offered a New York Mal1a
don a $1 million contract in
1968 to kill Martin Luther
King Jr, 11 was reported
today

Scripps-Howard
Newspapers, 111 a copyrighted
article by Will1am Pillar, said
Ed Evans, chief mvestlgator

for the House Select
Committee on Assasmat10ns
m Washmgton will question
Myron Billett, 52, m
connectiOn
with
his
allegations
Billett, alias Paul Buccilli,
to ld
Scnpps · Howard
Newspapers he set up a
secret meet111g m January
1968 at a hideaway motel m
Appalachln, N Y , between
the agents and the late Carlos
Gambmo, who headed of one

Energy decision
due.in two weeks
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Slatebouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) -Gov
James A. Rhodes' energy
experts plan to put thelt
heads together 111 an&lt;llher two
weeks and dec1de whether to
llnally end Oh10' s f~tsl energy
cris1s alter 21'.! months. It
could go e1ther way
"We could have lifted the
crisis declaration a couple of
weeks ago w1thout !no much
sweat," sa1d C Luther Heck·
man, cha~tman of the Public
Utilities Comrruss10n
"I thmk the criSIS may be
kept on temporarily for the
time beutgt" sa1d James A.

Duerk, state development
director-:
Despite the sprmg heat
wave m Oh1o, the Rhodes
administration lS reluctant to
remove
the
"cr1s1s''
declarahon because
- It is keepmg abve the
suspension of clean air standards pernutting the burrung
of hlgh.,.ullur Ohio coal
- It
allows
the
administration to put
pressure
on
ulllihes,
speci11cally Columbia Gas
System, !o upgrade transporting, storage and drilling of
nahll'al gas
-It enables Rhodes to keep
the fuel shortage Sltua,hon,
which appears no better for
next wmter, 111 the public eye
" From a natural gas
perspective, the uruned1acy
of the crlSls that we saw
during the wmter 1s past,"
assessed Heckman " The
long-tenn crlBls 15 not past n
"We will probably look on
May 1 to see where we are, "

said Thomas J Moyer ,
Rhodes' executive aSSistant
and the governor's signalcaller on policy matters "We
want to see what they
(Columbia) do w1th the
interstate p1peline "
Columb1a Gas has pledged
lA! jom Rhodes in battling the
Federal Power Commission,
if necessary, !o transport
Ohio gas Within the state
usmg Columbia's mterstate
pipeline
"It (Columbia's assurance)
'is encouragmg, but we want
!o see it transformed mto
action," said Moyer, adding
the governOI''s ofl1ce wants
Columb!B to do more drillmg
and secure more storage
space 111 Oh1o
Alter at least a week of
dehberallon, Rhodes
declared a "crisiS" last Jan.
27, Citing potential residential
gas cu!offs the upcommg
weekend
"What we are talkmg about
tomght "' the survival of
Oh1o.'' the governor S81d
State law allows the
governor to declar~ an

energy "crlSls" when he finds
that a fuel shortage threatens
the health, safety or welfare
of the Cltlzens and that "such
crlS!s reqwes the urunediate
action of state government to
a!lev1ate the cnsis and
protect such cihzens "
Under the ••crisis' ' declaral!on, Rhodes mob1hzed
rescue forces to help
stranded and frozen c11lzens
the followmg wee)&lt;end and
suspended
state
a1r
standards !o pernut mdustrles to burn Ohio coal
But those were the only
''1mmed1ate" steps taken
under the cmis declaratiOn
Rhodes declured !o rahon
fuels and d~tect the operating
hours of busmesses and
schools under h1s emergency
powers
If the governor were to

declare an end to the cnsis,
the sulfur d1oxide rules would
set standards hack to normal
and Ohio coal could not be
burned
The Oh10 Envll'Onmenlal
Protection
Agency
IS
preparing for hearmgs m.
June on 1ts own relaxed sulfur
d!ox1de standards, st1ll
hopmg
the
federal
government
wsll
be
sympathetic and allow the
burnmg of Ohio coal Without
''cns1s'' conditions
Rhodes ss trymg to
encourage mdustries to drill
lor gas on thelt own. He lS
hopmg for 5,000 new welis m
Otuo through the "self-llelp"
drilling program And the
governor 1s pushing a pilot
project to remove sulfur from
Oh10 through the mfant
"flu1dized bed" method.
Although
th.e
admmsstration "' encouraged
that Columbia Gas of Ohio
will store more adequate
amounts of gas for next
wmter, tl ts wary.
"They're a long way from
domg what we 'd like to see
them do," satd Moyer.
"I don't think we're out of

of live New York Maf1a
famil1es
Billett, who also clauns !o
be a former undercover agent
lor the FBI, sa1d he was told
the offer to kill Kmg came
from Washington and was
approved by the late FBI
D~tector J Edgar Hoover
Billett sa1d Gambmo,

Dairymen
just aren't
keeping up
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Mllk production last month
rose 2 5 per cent above levels
of a year ago, but an
Agriculture Department
mdex recorded a declme m
the comparative prof1tabil1ty
of d8ll'Y fammg .
ProductiOn lor March was
es mated at 10.6 b1lhon
pounds, 2 5per cent above the
same month a year ago and
5 9 per cent above two years
earlier
For the enhre JanuaryMarch quarter, productiOn
was estunated at 29 8 billion
pounds, up 2 1per cent from a.
year earlier
Agriculture Department
economists have pred1cted
mslk output for ail ol 1977 wsll
be about 2 to 3 per cent above
last year's 120 4 b1lhon
pounds
Officials added m a report a
government mslk-feed ratio
measurmg farme rs'
returns from milk agamst the
priCes they pay for feed dropped !o 1.47 m March
Th1s was only fractionally
below the 1 48 est1mate for
February but was 10 4 per
cent below the 1 64 ratio of
March, 1976
The ratio f1gure md1cates
the number of pounds of da1ry
cattle rations a farmer can
buy with the returns from one
pound of milk
Farm returns from milk
are expected to riSe thiS week
because a 9 per cent mcrease
111 government pr1ce supports
took effect April 1 But the
gam from hsgher pnces will
be d1Iuted for farmers
because the cost of one of
thelt major leeds - soybean
meal - has riSen sharply 111
recent weeks
Prices for meal, wh1ch
makes up about a filth of
many da1ry raUons, have
nsen about 21 per cent smce
March 24 - from $222 50 a ton
on that date - !o $270 late last
week, experts noted

however, rejected the Thomas O'Neill, stallng he Cleveland, chalmllln of the
contract and later passed the wanted to tesllfy before the House Assass1natsons
word from New York C1ty Comm1ttee
on Comnuttee wd he ordered
that no Mafsa family would Assassmatsons O'Nesll's Evans to mvesllgate the
accept the offer !o k1ll King office S3ld they have not allegations raiSed by BU!ett
after Scripps -Howard
B1llett said he sent a letter, located the letter.
Newspapers
asked S!okes if
March 27 to House Speaker
Rep. Louis Stokes, Dthe letter had been turned
over !o hll'fl,
Evans said he Is. personally
checking the mountain of
ma1l rece1ved daily by
O'Neill, and that "we will be
111 touch With Billett to check
out his story."
BU!ett, m an earlier letter
to Scnpps-Howard
newspapers, sasd he wanted
tell his story to congressional
!X'Obers now that others are
allegmg conspiracies existed
m the assassination of King 111
1968 and Pres1dent Jolm J.
KennedY m 1963.
"I think we better lay 11 on
)

'
•
I

SCHOLARSIDP AWARDED - Pomeroy Volture 776,
40 et 8, awarded sts siXth nursmg scholarship from the
Charlie Marcinko Nursmg Fund !o Regina Kimes of
Reedsville, a nursmg student at the Hockmg Teclmology
School, Nelsonv1ile Regina is the daughter of a deceased
veteran and of Mrs Wanda K1mes Above, Grant Snuth,
cha~tma n of the scholarship committee, presents a check
to Regina

Oerk's fees reported
Receipts for auto title COPieS
There were 147 auto inactivities lil the off1ce of
Meigs County Clerk of Courts spections during the month
Larry Spencer for March 2343 Wllh $441 bemg collected
$2,943, the county's share mcluding $404 25 for the state
being $2,374.50 and the state's and $36 75 for the county
Fees for salvage mspect10ns
$568 50
totaled
$15, all of which goes
There were 1,089 ce rtificates of title issued; 395 to the state
There were 25 certificates
notations of lien, 211
memorandums, 10 salvage of title 1ssued for boats, three
tstles, 1,133 applications, notations of hen, three
affidavits and assignments, memorandum, and 32 ap86 penalties and 14 certlfled plicatiOns, affldav1ts and
assignments Fees totaled
$48 50 w1th $40 being the
county's share and $6.50 the
state's share.
WORKSHOP SET
The fourth m a serses of
Health Workshops lor Semor
Citizens and staff members of
ageneses in Me~gs county w1ll
be Apr1l 15 on the top1c,
On thiS day m hiStory
ucrtsis Intervention" conIn 1861, the Civil War began
ducted by Roger Sm1th, a when Confederate troops
staff member of the Parkers- opened fll'e on Ft. Sumter,
burg Community Colll!ge S.C.
.
The
mormng
sess1on
In 1945, President Franklin
especially"lor semor c1tizens D Roosevelt died at Wann
lS from 10 to 11.30, the afSprmgs, Ga. About three
ternoon sesswn from 12.30 to hours later, Vice Pres1dent
4 lor staff members of Harry Truman was sworn 111
commuruty agencies
as chief executive

the gas 'woods' yet/' agreed

GRAND OPENING IS bemg held through Wednesday at the "Royal Flush," a
refreshment busmess wh1ch has opened on Middleport's North Second Ave. Coke and
favors will be g~ven vi~1tors through Wednesd.!iy and "happy hour" will be from 3 !o 5 p m.
Tuesday and Wednesday. The business housed m a fomer standard Oil Co. serVIce station,
15 open from 10 a m 10 midnight, Monday through Sahll'day. Owners are Frank Hoffman
and Tom Goett w1th Hoffman the manager

I

•

~' .

'

(

)

resemble an acute surgical
cond1bon but the pain IS
usually not made worse by
pressmg on the abdomen The
pressure may even give some
rehef.
Anem1a may occur The
nerv10us system may be
mvolved and can cause

an emergency, otherwise the
treatment 1s gradual and
usually blghly successful.
Your husband should recover
completely. Removal from
exposure to the source of lead
lS 1mportant. Medicmes can
be used to help wash out the
lead from the body If some

convulsions, paralysis and

muscles are weak, then

nerve damage
phys1cal therapy to mamtam
Involvement of the muscles muscle luncuon and strength
caus1ng the kind of pain your helps speed recov«V;Y
husband experiences does
A common source ol
occur Interlerence with the mgestmg lead 1s from dishes,
normal elltflmat1on of uric pottery and ceramsc utensils
acsd by the kidneys may that have been lead glazed m
cause high uric acid levels prepo ration
and a condltlon we call
(For mformat1on on
"saturnine gout" so I am not developmg good bowel habits
surpnsed your doctor en- send 50 cents for The Health
tertamed a diagnosis of gout Letter number 2-1, lmtable
Tile gray or blmsh line you or SpastiC Colon and Connoted on the gums is from a st!pallon Send a longdeposition of lead sulf1de and stemped, self-addressed
we call this a lead hne.
envelope for mallmg AdThe dsagnos1s 1s made by dress your letter to Dr. Lamb
laboratory stud1es identifymg U1 care of this newspaper, P.
the mcreased amounts of lead 0 Box 1551, Rad1o C1ty
and lead ellmmat10n in the Station, New York , NY
unne
10019 )
Involvement of the bram lS
I

PRINCESS TO WED
AMMAN, Jordan (UP!) Kmg Hussein's eldest
da ughler, 21-year-old
Pnncess Alia , wlll be
formally engaged today !o
the son of a desert tr1bal
leader, the .-oyal palace announced Monday
Princess Alia - after
whom her father named 'the
Jordian state airline Alia will marry Nasser Wasil
M~tza, 27, secretary !o Crown
Prmce Hassan, the palace
SBld
, _ _ _ __ _ _.;_.;.:TilE DAI V SENTINEL
DEVOTEOTOTHE
INTERFSI'OF

MEIGS.MASON /\REA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
Exec Ed
ROBERT HO EFLICH
City Ed1tor
Pubh.sh~d dai ly ti'ltl't!p~ Satuniay
ll} Tht: Ohw Viillcy PuUHshmM Com·
au), lll Court St, Pnmeroy Ohio
4S769 BU.'ii!ICSS Offit c PhOIIt! 992
2156 Ed• tonal Phone992 2157
&amp;'t:ond d&lt;~ss po~il.al;lt: pa11J at
Po lilt! I oy, Ohio
Notional ou.lvcrlt'lmg rt&gt;presenlilti\'C W.u d Grtfflth Company , In
t
Bott mclh and GallaghcJ Dn' ,
7:a7 Tlnrd Ave New Yo rk NY
10011

SubM:11pl1on ra tes ~IJverl'd b)
&lt;: &lt;u r 1cr where il\allablc 75 ~'t'ILts per
week Ry M&lt;Jtor Routt: wlt!!re ct~ I'IICI
sen •ict' uol &lt;~Vallalllc One momh
$:I 25 By 1mul 111 Otuu t~w.l W Va
Om Yl'&lt;~l S22 00 Sue rncmths
$11 ao Thr cc munlh:i $7 oo,
11.: ; ,\\hl' l c S2fi00 Yl'il l S1x 1nontllll
fl ! !iO
Tluce muuth s $7 an
!iub."' npl1o11 vm:~ 111d u1k s Sunday
luncs S ~ll tiJid

'

purposes.''

Billett claimed he ran a
Malia gambling 8}'1ldicate In

Sport Parade

Philadelphia and had cloae
association• With the late
California mobster Benny
(Bugsy) Segal and the late
Chicago Malta don, Sam
Glancana
Giancana himself wu a
key figure in a plot to
assassinate Fidel Castro. In
June 1975 a Senate committee
mvestigatlng the CIA's
mvolvement in foreign
assassination plots was about
to summon Glancana as a
witness But the Mafia don
was murdered before he
could tell his story.
Billett, blind in one eye and
suffering from a heart condition, said he Is, "tired of
running with my back against
the wall"

LOS ANGELES (UP!) "Roots," 0 Eleanor and
Franklm" and the swan-song
season of "The Mary Tyler
Moore Show" domlll8ted the
Telev1s1on Cnt1cs C~tcle
Awards show Monday night.
''Roots'' won the ''Program
of the Year" honor and four
other awards, a flv&lt;Krophy
he . Wlth " Eleanor and
Frankhn," based on the
marriage of President
Franklin D. Roosevelt.·
"The Mary Tyler Moore
Show" tnok four Ed Asner
scored a double tr1umph,
willllmg comedY and drama
awards for h1s performances

took the supporting dramatic
actor honors for h1s
performance m "Roots "
Other "Roots" perfonners

honored were Ben Vereen,
best leading ac!or for hiS
portrayal of "Chicken
George," and Leslle Uggams,
named best supportmg
actress
11
MTM" was named the
best comedy - sharing the
honor with "MASH" - and
the best series - sharmg that
trophy with " Upstairs
DownstairS " Mary Tyler
Moore was named top
comedienne.
"Eleanor and Franklin"
m "Roots" and "Mary Tyler shared the best drama award
Moore."
With "Roots." The tale of the
Some 200 Cl itics 11\ 100 Cities Roosevelt marriage also took
were elig1ble to cast ballots the top writing and directing
lor the awards presented awards and its costars, Ed
durmg
a
two-hour Herrmann
and
Jane
entertamment show . The Alexander,
won
best
cnhcs noted they were dramatic acting honors.
,respons1ble only lor the , The crihcs even had a
awards,
not
the booby priZe - the "nonentertiUillllent - reservmg
the right !o pan the show if
they didn't like 11.
The awards drew more
than the usual attention
because they may be the only
b1g pnzes for telev1s10n
performers this year. The
Emmys
chosen by Hy HELEN THOMAS
performers and others in the UPI White Hous Reporter
Television Academy - are
WASIDNGTON (UP!) tangled in the breakup of the The Wb1te House, although
academy in a power struggle mvolved m disputes over
between New York and arms reductions and fishing
Hollywood and may not be · limits with the Soviet Uruon,
presented at all
lS not seekmg a confrontation
An unusual feature of the With any nat10n, Premdent
cr1tics awards is that mote Carter's ch1ef spokesman
than one winner can be says.
declared in one category
And White House Press
Ed
Asner's
crusty Secretary Jody Powell said
teleVIsion news editor on Monday there was no connec"MTM" won hun the best tion between the fisher~es
male comedy award, and he dispute th1s week and the
stalled arms talks.
Carter, reassessmg the nuclear arms limitation
proposals m light of Soviet
objections, expected a
further explanation today
from Soviet Ambassador
Anatoh Dobrymn - a
meetmg Powell Said was
scheduled by "mutual

''
'

"

..
,
·

n

•

Male Comedy- Alan Aida,
'MASH''

Supporting Female Angela Baddeley, "Upstairs,
Downstairs"
Supporting male
Burgess Mered1th, "Tall
Gunner Joe"; Ted Ross ,
"Minstrel Man"

;,

Patience ran out

By
United
Press
International
A Za1t1an cabmet mihister
SBld today French military
planes a1rilfted Moroccan
troops !o Zaire, contradicting
official statements from
Paris that the trBr!Sports
camed only war materiel.
In a Paris radio mterview,
Mbunzze Nsom1 Lebwanab1,
minister
of
national
orienta bon, said French ·
military aircraft carried "the
first contingent of Moroccan
troopa" !o the war front in
southern Zaire,
He !Did Europe No. 1 radio
network that the Moroccan
soldiers ''went directly in!o
the operahonal zone" m
Shaba province to help
Zainan units combat an
insurgency allegedly backed
by Angola.
·
Lebwanabi's statement
contradicted official Elysee
Palace statementS that the
French planes a1rlifted only
Moroccan m1iltary
equipment.
Lebwanabt sa1d Zaire did
not seek any big power
mvolvernent 111 the conflict .
He sa1d h1s government
merely wanted France and
BelgiUm to speed up
deliveries of anns aiready
ordered by Zaire before the
rebellion began March 7.
He said there were no
French troops fighting in
Zaire.
In another mtervlew, Gen.
Natanlel M'Bumba, the
leader of the forces invading
Shaba province, wd he alma
at "liquidating" Zaire
President Mobutu Sese Seko
and setting up a new
government of national unity.

agreement."
White House a1des said
there was a possibility the
quest10n of Soviet trawlers
Vlolatmg u S fishing ltmits
will be addressed, but they
md1cated that subject was not
the mam reason for the
meeting.
Dobrynin saw Secretary of
State Cyrus Vance Thursday
and later Carter announced

he'd rece1ved "encouragmg"
messages from SoVIet leader
Leorud Brezhnev Slllce the
breakdown of the arms talks

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporll Edlwr
NEW-YORK (UPI) - Sal Bando says, sure, he'il talk about
baseball salar1es, why not, and he'll g1ve you the s1de he knows
best, the ballplayers' side.
Bando was one of the 25 who became free agent. at the end of
last season He had been w1th the A's 10 years, bad done well
W1th them, contributing substantially to their f1ve divls10n
titles and three world championships, and then signed a
mulbple-year contract with the Brewers last November lor a
sum m excess of $1 million
'
He lS aware many people now feel ballplayers are overpaid,
111 some cases outrag~ously so
"What makes 11 look outrageous "' that we went from
!X'actically nothing to something," says Bando "Had the
mcrea8e!l been given gradually, there wouldn't bave been all
thls feeling we're so overpa1d. I sometltfles wonder what yard·
stick is bemg used by those who claim player salanes are too
high. Who's to say wbat lS high or low ? The market value
dictates what a person ls worth lt's that way In ail mdustrles.
'Ibat's America, lSI'l't it?"
When Bando s1gned Wlth the Brewers slX months ago, he
didn 't run r~ght out and buy himself a new SIX-figure home, a
fancy new automobile or even a new TV set. The first thing he
did was go !o church.
"My wile, Sandra, and I went there !o thank God for the
rewards and for the good health we were blessed With," says
the 33-year-old slugger-th~td baseman. "We bad no feeling of
celebration. We felt very humble."
'
Two clubs offered Bando more money than Milwaukee did,
but he prelered !o sign with the Brewers anyway.
"The people m the Milwaukee orgaruzation were the mam
reason I ssgned w•th them,'' Bando says. "! don 't believe you
can be bappy with money alone. It certainly wasn't the big
reason lor my dec1s10n to s1gn w1th the Brewers As a
ballplayer, naturally you look to be rewarded for your efforts
llnanc1aily, but haVIllg a good relatiOnship w1th the owner,
someone who recogmzes that ballplayers are human beings,
too lB more 1.mportant than money "
In that regard, the Brewers' owners, Ed Fitzgerald and Bud
Selig, as well as General Manager Jll'O Baumer and held
manager Alex Grammas, are as happy w1th Sal Bando as he is
w1th them
"We couldn't possibly ask for a hner individual,'' says SeUg
"We cons1der ourselves fortunate to have a person like htm "
BandQ's concern about the people he'd be playing for goes
back to hiS baseball begmnmg when Charlie Finley s1gned him
commg out of Arizona State
"The f~tst few years, Charlie Fmley was outstanding," says
Bando. "Then he changed. I don't know what the reason was,
but he didn't respect the players. He always held what you
would say was a hammer over the players' heads and would
never g~ve an mch. He felt he owned you, lock, stock and
l.&gt;arrel. He was the illst word at all times. I honestly can't feel
..orry for him over loSillg all the players he d1d m the free agent
draft He made his own bed."
Sal Bando has one of those easy.gomg nahltes. He 1s slow !o
anger and doesn't nurse grudges When he fll'st jomed the
Brewers, he was asked whether 1t was an emotional wrench lor
him to leave a winnmg club he had been with so long, and he
said, "was it dilf1cult leavmg the Titanic'"
He and Charlie Finley had a number of disagreements but
time has a way of healing many things, and Bando now speaks
about his former boss Without any noticeable resentment. By
the same lOken, Fmley shows no ill will toward Bando
Maybe you remember how Finley was so upset with Bando
over some remarks he made before an arb1trallon proceeding
two years ago, he !ook away his captamcy of the A's. Shortly
thereafter, Finley had a change of heart and reappomted hll'fl.
1

Specials"

m Moscow.
If a second look at U.S.
arms reduction proposals
shows them to be unflllr !o the
Russians, he would be ''very
eager to change" t)lem,
Carter says.
Carter's personal order to
seiZe a SoVIet trawler off
Massachusetts 'Saturday
rught was done because he'd
sunply run out of patience
over repeated VIOlations of
U.S. fisheries limits, hls
spokesman explamed.
"We're not
seekmg
confrontallon with any
nation, but we have a
responSibility !o protect our
fisheries," Powell sa1if.
Carter, Powell added,
"feels the Umted states has
shown a maximum degree of
restraint."
There were three previous
inc1dents of Soviet violations,
Powell sald, and a "direct
expreSSion of concern" by the
State Department to the
SoVIet Embassy before the
Sahll'day's seizure of the 275foot Russian trawler, Taras
Shevchenko.
"The PreSident felt that
given the chain of events, he
had no alternative but to seize
the ship," Powell said.
"The President ls a very
patient, reasonable person,
but no person's patience Is
unlimited," he said.

KC wins 6-3
A two-run aouble by Jltfl
Westfall was the b1g blow
during a three run rally that
carried the Kyger Creek
Bobcats to a s.3 victory
Monday night over the
defending SV AC champwn
North Gallia Pirates
Tied 2-2 going into the
bottom of the fourth mning,
the Bobcats snapped the tie
on a Pirate error, a walk,

'

single by Tim N1bert and
Westfall's double.
Kyger Creek jumped into a
H lead in the first inning on
an error, stolen base and
, double steal. In the second
inning, Nibert walked, moved
to second on a wlld pitch, took
third on a single and scored
on a balk.
North Gallia plated two
runs to tie the score at 2-2 in
" the fourth on a single by
losing hurler Calvin Minnis,
o
an error, fielder 's cho1ce and
"' another error. Mike Casey
paced the Pirate attack with

Letters of opinion are welcomed. They should be
less than 300 words loog (or be sobject !o reduction by
the editor) sad must be signed ~ the signee's ad·
dress. Names may be withheld upon pubUcatlon.
However, on request, names wUI be disclosed. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing Iuues, not PI'•·
sonalltles.

two singles, Logan and
Minnis had the other safeties
off wlnnmg pitcher Steve
Baird.
Von Taylor, Westfall and
catcher Ralph Baylor had
two hits each to pace the
Bobcats. One of Baylor's was
a triple.
Baird, m going the route,
fanned 14 and ISSUed four free
passes Minnis recorded nine
strikeouts and 1ssued four
walks.
Kyger Creek, 4,1-1, will
host Southwestern Wednesday; travel to Southern
Thursday and will play a
doubleheader Saturday at
Glouster.
North Gallla's record
dipped to 1-1. The Pirates are
at Hannan Trace Friday.
Linescore:
NG
000 210 0-3 4 3
KC
110 310 X-i 8 4
Logan, Minnis (2) (L) and
Tackett . Baird (W) and
Baylor.

"The sim ..............
your return,
the less
we charge."

~---------------------------1

1

By United Press lnternatlanll
E•1tern Conlerence
Prtllmln•rr Round

achievement award" - and
reJected "The B1g Party"
and "The Gong Show" among
other nominees to select
" Evil Knievel's Death
Defiers."
other winners were:
News - "60 Minutes"
Sports - "ABC's Summer
OlympiCS"
Documentary - "National
Geographic Specials"
Music - "PBS Great
Performances Live from
Lincoln Center"
Vanety - "Th!l Carol Burnett Show"
Child - "ABC Alterschool
1

NIA PllyOffl

Alt Strill Best ot Thrtt

Roots critics' choice

lift loads

Lead poisoning dangers

poisoning
are
rather
Widespread m our modern
society. Most of the news
1tems have emphasized the
lead po1sonmg that occurs m
children from picking off bits
of old lead-based paints
Lead can be absorbed from
fumes In the a1r, through the
skm or swallowed Lead IS
used commercially m many
mdustr~es Most industnes
that use lead have a safety
routme that helps prevent
lead pOisoning . A heavy
emphasis 1s placed on
washmg and changmg
clothes after exposure, before
eatmg or before going home.
Smeltmg, printing, parts of
the petroleum mdu s lt.)',
mln1ng, storage battery
manufacture, ceranuc and
glass work and plumbing are
all examples of some of the
mdustnes usmg lead.
Lead can affect the
d1gest1ve system causmg
severe abdominal paint from
cramps of the dlgest1ve
system. The pa1n may

Billett said he didn't come
forward with the information
before "because I d1dn't think
anyone would belleve me "
Siokes sa1d the comnuttee
has had !o "move cautiously.
We want to be careful that
people commg forward now
won't be usmg us for publicity

about itir

exists.
RhodeS IS still miffed at the
federal government for not
helpmg Oh10 more He complalllS that oranges freezmg
111 Flor1da and oyster beds
endangered m Chesapeake
Bay constitute a crlSls, but
not 1 2 milhon Ohioans out of
work and "three-fourths of
our schools closed."
"We're gomg to have !o
defme what a criSIS IS," the
governor said

meeting," be sa1d

French lie

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

.'

••

Heckman
"Just because we get '76
out of the way doesn't mean
we don't think about '77 ,"
SBld the governor when asked
recently 11 a "criSIS" sllll

HEALTH
DEAR DR. LAMB - We
just learned that my husband
has lead pot.oning What is
the prognosis and treatment
lor this disease'
At first It wps thought to be
gout. There was pam m the
wrist and ankles Then pam
in the shoulder started and
the doctor suspected bursl!is
Next rheumatoid arthntls
was suspected but a blood
test was negative
The pam kept gettmg worse
and mvolving more parts of
the body, shoulders, wrist,
hand&amp;, fmgers, elbows, knees
and lower back. A general
feeling of no strength, bemg
tired all the time, gray gums
accompanied by a w01ght
lou.
Finally another blood test
and urlile analys1s led to the
present diagnoslll.
Perhaps you can alert
people that It Is very posoible
for adults to get lead
polaontng from occuoatioll-QP
whatever.
DEAR
READER
Opportunities for lead

I

the line before someme blo.,..
the lid on the whole deal,"
B1llett wrote
"Carlo
Gambino was the top man
who said no to the CIA and
FBI. I do know that the order
came r~ght down from
Washington and it was
approved by Hoover himself.
•'I can g~ve you the meeting
place we had in New York,
the name of the motel, the
woman who called ahead and
lllfde the arrangements for
us and those woo were at the

:I
Pro
:I
:Standings I

~

WUhinQIOR VI. CltVtltnCI
Apr 13-Clev&amp;lanct at Wllh
Apr 15- Wast! Jngton at Cleve
x Apr 17- Cirveland at Wash
8oston vs San Antonio
Apr 12-Sen Antonio at Boston
Apr Is- Boston at Sen Antonio
x Apr 11- San Anton at Boston

West•rn Conference

Prellmln.ry Round
All Series le.st of Three
Portltnd Yl Ch iUIO
Apr 12- Chlcago at Portland
Apr ls-Port htnd at Chicago
x Apr 17- Ch i at Portland
Golden Stat• vs Detroit
Apr 12-0etroi t at Golden St
Apr 1-4- Golden St at Detroit
x Apr 17- De-troit at Golden St
• -II

necesury

National Basketball
AssoclaHon Playotls
United Preutntentlonal
FII\St Round
Best-of- three
All Times EST
Eastern Conference
April 12 - San AntoniQ at
Bos ton , 7 30 p m
April 15 - Boston at San
Anton to, 8 30 p m
April 11 (I I necessa ry) San
Antonio at Boston , 1 30 p m
( W i nner
plays
Philadelphia )
Apr il 13 Clevelanl:l at
Washing ton , 8 p m
Apri l 16 - Wash ington at
Cleveland, 9 p m
Apr il 11 Cleveland at
wash ing ton , 1 30 p m
{ winner plays Houston)
(Westtrn Conference)
April 12 Detro i t at
Golclen State. 10 30 p m
April u - Golden State at
Detroit, 8 p rr\
Apr II 17 Detroit at
Golden State, 3 AS p m
Cwrnner plays L.os Anoetes)

Astros look like champions
By Clfim TURKEL
UPI Sporll Writer
So far this season the so·
called super teams such as
the CinCillnati Reds and the
New York Yankees have been
struggling
to
look
respectable, while the
unheralded Houston Astros
has been looking hke a
champion - even without
injured Cesar Cedeno, who
has yet to play this year
The latest episode in the
season-openmg slump of the
World Champion Reds, now 23, came Monday rught as the
Astros beat them, 4-3 for
Houston's third victory m
lour games, good lor lU'st
place m the National League
West.
Houston pounced on Cincinnati starter and loser Woodle
Fryman,l-1, for all it.s runs in
the first inning, highlighted
by Cliff Jolmson 's first home

Littell
evens up
score

-By FRED DOWN
UP! Sporll Writer
It didn't take Mark Uttell
April 12- Chicago at Port
long to demonstrate !bat he
land , 11 p m
carries no mental scars from
A-pril 15 · Port land at
Chicago, 8 30 p m
the home-run ball he threw to
x April 17- Ch lcaoo at Port
Chris
Chamblisa that enabled
IMd, 3 •5 p m
the New York Yankees !o
(winner plays Oern•er)
x 1f necessarv
defeat the Kansas City
Royals and wm the 1978
IH L Playoffs
U nlted Preu 1nternaHonal
American League pennant
Qu1rter finals - All
The hard-throwmg 24-year
Series Best-of-Seven
old rehever faced the
Flintvs Katam11oo
Kalamazoo wIns, -4 · I
Yankees for the first time
Apr~l
1 Kalamazoo 8
since
the !mal game of last
Flint 5
April 2 Kalamazoo 3 season's playoffs Monday
Flint 2 (3 ots )
rught and pitched hitless ball
Aprtl 3 - Kalamazoo 10
Flint 2
for four innings. He was
April 6 Kalamazoo 10
rewarded with the v1ctory
Flint 2
John Mayberry's
Flint
3 when
Apr•l
6
Kalamazoo 2
double
off
the right field wall
Apnl 9 Kalamazoo 7
With two out In the 13th inning
Fhnt 2
knocked In Fred Patek and
Fort W1yne vs Dayton
gave the Royals a S-4
Fort wayne wins, 4-0
April 2 Fort Wayne 5
trlumpll
Dayton 3
"This game didn 't mean
April 3 Fort Weyne 7
anything to me," said L1ttell
Cayton 1
Aprtl 6 Fort Weyne 4
alter the game. "I just said,
Dayton 1
'Here's another ball club and
April 9 Fort Wayne 7
Dayton 2
we've got to beat them "'
Fred Patek opened the
Toledo vs Columbus
Series tied, 3-3
Royals' 13th with a walk and
March 29 Columbus 2 was sacrificed to second by
Toledo 1 (3 ots l
Frank White. George Brett
Aprtl
5 Toledo
4
Columbus 1
was
walked intentionally and
April 6 Colum~us
7
Hal
McRae flied out before
To ledo 6 (2 ots l
April 8 ColumbUS 2, Mayberry dellvere,!l the
To ledo 1
game-wlnnmg hit
Toledo
April
9
Regg~e Jackson hit hls first
Co lumbus 3
April 10 Toledo 8
homer
as a Yankee off Paul
Columbus 2
Splittorlf
when the Yankees
)( Aprd 12 Columbus at
To ledo
lOok a +.a lead in the fifth. The
Royals lied the score in thelt
Saginaw vs . Muskegon
Series 11ed, 3-3
balf of the inning on a single
Apri l 1 Sag1naw 3
by
Mayberry and Darrell
Muskegon 1
April 2 Muskegon s Porter's second run...coring
Sag lnaw 2
double of the game.
April 3 Muskegon 3
It WliS the th1td loss in four
Sao lnaw 2
Aprtl 6 - · Saginaw 5
games for the Yankees.
Muskegon 3
In other AL games, the
Apnl 9 Saginaw 4
Texas Rangers defeated the
Muskegon 3 ( ot l
April 9 __, Muskegon 3
Cleveland Indians, 3-2, in 10
Saginaw 1
innmgs, the Oakland A's beat
Apr11 13 Muskegon at
Saginaw
the California Angels, 3-2, the
JC If necessary
Minnesota Twins routed the
Seattle Mariners, 12-3, and
the Toronto Blue Jays topped
WHA Playoffs
the Detroit Tigers, 5-3.
By United Press International
Rla!gen
3, Indians Z:
Eutern Division
Semlltn•l Round
Toby Harrah's first homer
All Series Best ol Seven
of the season w1th one out m
Quebec vs New England
the loth gave the Rangers
(QUt"-C ltads, 1·0)
Apr 9--Quebec .5 New Eng 2
!hell' home-openmg victory
Apr 12- New Eng at Quebec
and tagged Cleveland with 1t.s
Apr lA.-....Quebec at New Eng
Apr 16-Quebec et New Eng
first loss of the year . Adrian
x Apr 19- New Eng at Quebec
Devine, acqulted from
x Apr 22--Quebec at New Eng
x Apr 23- New Eng at Quebec
Atlanta during the wmter,
Cincinnati vs. lndian•polls
pitched one shu!out innmg to
&lt;Indianapolis leads, 1·01
earn his fll'st wm while
Apr 9-lndpls 4 Clnc l 3, Jots
Apr 12- lndpis at Cincinnati
Claude LaRoche was the
Apr U - Cincinnetl at lndpls
loser.
Apr 16-Cinclnnatl at lndJ)IS
x Apr 17-lndpls at Cinc innat i
A's 3, Angels Z:
x Apr 20--Cinclnnatl at lndpls
Rookie Mitchell Page drew
x Apr 23- lndpls at Clnc lnnall
Western Dlvl1lon
a walk off Nolan Ryan with
semifinal Rolfnd
the bases -filled rn the ninth
All Series Belt ol Seven
mnmg, giving the A's thell'
Houston vs. Edmonton
Apr 13- Edmonton at Houston
wmrung run. A walk to Tony
Apr 15-Edmonton at Houston
Armas, a stolen base by
Apr 17- Houston at Edmonton
Apr 20-Houston at Edmonton
p1nch-runner Matt
x Apr 22- Edmonton at Houston Alexander, a sacrifice and
x Apr 2~- Houston at Edmonton
intentional walks
Apr 2~Edmonton at Houston two
Winnipeg vs San otego
preceded
Ryan's decisive
(Winnipeg leads, 1·0)
Apr lG-Wlnnlpeg 5 San Diego 1 base on balls to Page Pablo
Apr 12- San Dl&amp;;o at Wlnnipeo Torrealba was the winner.
Apr 16-Winnipe9 at San Otego
Apr 17- Winnlpeg at San Dl~o TwiiUl 1Z, Mariners 3:
x Apr 20-S 0 at W innipeg
Larry Hisle and Dan Ford
x Apr 22- W1nn1peg at S D
bad
three hits each and Rod
x Apr 24- S c at W innipeg
Carew hit a two-run triple in a
• - 11 necessary
louHun filth inning which
gave the Twins a :;.l lead.
NHL Playoffs
They added five more runs In
Br United Press lnternatlon81 the eighth inrung to hll'n the
Quarter Finals
game in!o a romp. Hlsle hlt a
All Sirles Best of Seven
Montr111 vs St Louis
two-run bomer for Minnesota
( Montrea I ltlds, 1-0)
and
Juan Bernhardt and
Apr 11- Montreai 7 Sf L 2

'

run of the season, a two-run checked the Reds on e1ght
In the only other NL games, Braves 7, llod&amp;era 1:
hits. Korueczny won his first Chicago lOpped PhUadelplua,
blast
Wlllie Montanez smgled
"I keep telling the kid deciSion of the season and S.2, and Atlanta edged Los With the bases loaded in the
(SOCI)nd baseman Julio Gon- N1ekro got his first save thiS _!'-"geles, 7.6
fourth mning to climax a
wez) thatwhenwe get Cesar year.
four"'un
rally and pitcher
Bemdes his homer, Johnson Cubo I, PbUUOI Z:
Cedeno back in the lineup
Mike
Marshall
keyed a two.Manny Trillo's double high-

we're going to run amuck ,''
SBld third baseman Enos
Cabell, who was nursing a
bruised elbow inflicted by a
Fryman pitch 111 the first
Cabell's free pass With one
out started Houston rolling
and starter Doug Konieczny
and reliever Joe Nsekro,

crashed mto the left field wall
111 the fifth while making a
spectacular catch off a drive
by Pete Rose
Cincmnati got a solo homer
from Ken Griffey and two hits
from Dan Driessen - his f1tst
thiS year alter going ().for-15
- but thev were not enough.

lighted a two-run third inning
and Bobby Murcer connected
for his second home run of the
season as Chicago downed
Philadelphia behmd the
sevenh1t pitchmg of B1ll
Bonham, who held the
Phillies scoreless until the
nmth.

run ninth inning that carried

Atlanta over Los Angeles
Marshall singled in a run
before Pat Rockett hit Into a
double play to score Gary
Matthews With the winning'
run m the ninth Atlanta held
off a nmth;Ming Dodgers
rally to clinch the victory

Tornadoes measure Eastern 7-3
A f!ve-run first Inning by a pitch, Cundiff walked
enabled
the
Southern alter Hill was picked off, and
Tornados to raise the1r then Sayre lashed a two run
record to 3-1 Mnday night, smgle.
defeating visiting Eastern 7Winebrenner led the
2. Once agam Southern's wmners w1th two singles.
Jolm Sayre tossed a nifty while Cundiff, Sayre, Hill,
game as he allowed only two and Forbes each had one
hits in going the distance.
single Sayre farmed SIX and
Eastern plated the first run walked live, and was rescued
in the top of the first when Joe
Kulul singled and came home
on two successive Southern
errors on the next two
batters. But then came that
disllStrous bottom of the first.
Greg Cundiff singled and
advanced to second on an
By MIKE TULLY
error. Kelly Winebrenner
UP! Sporll Writer
singled him home, and three
Even with Bill Walton's
straight walks to Richard assurance tha he will not
Teaford, Scott Wolfe and boycott Tuesday's opening
Steve Hill forced in another round of tbe National BasketIally Mark Forbes lashed a ball Aasocsallon playoffs, the
shot that got through the Portland Trail Blazers are
outfield lA! clean the bases. casting a wary eye !oward
Eastern got one back 111 the the Chicago Bulls.
!op of the thltd when Kulm
"The Bulls are going to be
walked, advanced on a wild lOugh, much !ougher than
p!tch, and scored when the during the regular season,"
catcher threw wildly mto SBld Portland Coach Jack
center field.
Ramsay . "We'll have to keep
But Southern got two more our pollle and patience "
!o get some breathing room m
Portland defeated Chicago
the last of that inning. Hill all four limes durmg the
and Forbes both got free regular season, a statistic
passes, Eric DUnning was hit which makes Ramsay's plea

from trouble in the suth
when with the bases loaded,
Eastern's Bruce Riffle poked
a Uner !o center field that was
nabbed by Teaford to end the
tl)reat
Kulm and Steve Uttle got
the only Eastern hits, both
singles, and Riffle was
tagged with the loss He

teamed with Dan Spencer to
strike out Sl.J: and walk eight
Southern entertalllS Hannan
Trace tonigbt while Eastern
hosts Southwestern
E
101000~222
S
502 000 x-7 6 3
Riffle (LP), Spencer (3)
and 81ssell. Sayre and
Forbes, Cundiff (3).

Walton will play

Mator League Standings
Boston
020002
ey United Press International
0 3 OO(I 21f7
Balt i more
National League
Detr6tt
040003
East
West
W L Pet
GB
W L
Pet
GB
St Louis
3 01000
Kansas Clty
A
(I 1 000
2 01000
lf~ Te xas
Mon1real
4 0 1 000
216671
New York
Oak land
3 1 ?50 1
Chicago
2 1 500
llf2 California
3 3 500 2
Ph iladelphia
030003
2 2 500 2
M1nnesota
Plthburgh
030003
Ch icago
1 2 333 2112
West
Seattle
2 A 333 3
GB
W L Pet
Monday' s Results
Houston
3 1 750
Toronto 5 Detroit 3
Los Angeles
2 2 500 1
Kansas C1ty 5 New York 4
Atlanta
2 2 500 1
Texas 3 Cleveland 2
San Diego
2 2 500 1
Oakland 3 Californ ia 2
Cincinnati
2 3 400
1111 Minnesota 12 SeaUie 3
Sen Francisco 1 2 333
llh
Todly 's Prob•ble Pitchers
Monday's Results
CA11 T1mes EST)
Chicago 6 Philadelphia 2
Detroit
(Roberts 0 1l
at
Houston 4 Cincinnati 3
Toronto (Singer 0 0) , 1 30 p m
At lanta 7 Los Angeles 6
Boston (Wise o OJ at Ch icago
Today ' s Probable Pitchers
&lt;Brett 0 1), 2 1.5 p m
(All Times EST}
Baltimore (Palmer 0 I J i!l t
Montreal (Hannahs 0 Ol at Milwaukee (Travers (I 1), 2 30
Pittsburgh ( ReusS; 0 1), 12 35 pm
pm
Cal!torme
(Ry an 1 0)
at
St LOU IS; ( RasmuS;sen 0 0) at Oakland (Norns 0 OJ. 4 30 p m
New York (Seaver 1 0) 2 05
M inn esota (Paz•k 0 0) at
pm
Seattle CRomo 0 1) 10 35 p m
Cincinnati (Zachry 0 0) at
(Only games scheduled )
Houston (Richerd 0 0) , 8 3.5
Wednefday's Games
pm
MinneSota at Seattle, night
Atlanta (Messersmith 0 OJ at California at Oakland
LOS; AngeleS; (Rhoden 0 0) , 10 JO Cleveland at Texas 1 night
pm
New York at Ken C1 t y n ght
San Franc isco (McGlothen 0 Boston at Ch 1cago
Ol at san Otego (Jonts o 1l. 10
Detroit at Toronto

pm

Wednesday's Games
St LouiS; at New York
Montreal at Plttsburali
Chicago at Ph il a. night
Cinci at Houston , n ight
Atlantll at Los Ang , n1ght
San Fran at San Diego night
American League

Eut

W L
Pet. GB
Toronto
3 1 750
112
Cleveland
2 1 667
Milwaukee
2 I 667
'12
New York
13250 2
----------

Ruppert Jones homered for
the Mariners.
Blue Jays 5, Tigers 3:
Rook~e Dave
Rozema
balked home a run tr1gger111g
a lourrun seventh mrung as
the Blue Jays banded the
Tigers their fourth straight
loss. Steve Hargan was the
winner in relief while Jolm
Hiller was the loser

Major Le.gue Results
By United Press lnternnltlonal
N atlona I League
Chicag o
002 001 03o-- 6 8 1
Phlla
000 000 002- 2 7 1
Bonham ( I Ol and Mitter
wald , Tw1tche ll , Underwood (7)
and BOOne LP- Tw 1t chell {0 1)
HR -Ch•cago, Murcer (2)
000 002 00\- 3 8 0
Clnc1nnatl
Houston
400 000 OOx - 4 5 0
Fryman, Borbon {7) and
Bench . Kon ieczny N lekro ( 61
end Ferguson WP - Komeczny
(1 -0l LP- Fryman ( 1 lJ HRsC•nc tnnat l, Griffey (2), Hous
ton Johnson ( 1l

seem like typical prei&gt;layoff

lS scheduled Friday rught 111
hype. But Chicago's 20.4 Ch1cago
record down the stretch
Elsewhere, Boston faces
makes precautions seem San Antonio armed with the
homecftrt advantage, a gift
WISe
" Arhs Gilmore, Wilbur from Milwaukee , wh1ch
Holland and Scott May were defeated the Spurs m
relatively new In the Chicago Sunday's season finale .
W1th Dave Cowens nearly
system when we played them
before," insisted Ramsay . rehll'ned to par alter his early
11
sabbatiCal and
But UJ.ey 've come along." season
Reports that Walton IIUght Charlie Scott recovered from
honor p1cket Unes set up by a broken arm, the Celtlcs
striking NBA referees had may bave peaked at the right
the Blazers and the league in time 111 their b1d to repeat as
a state of jstters lor awhile champions
In a battle of dark-horses,
But the star center cleared
that up at Monday's practice Detro1t will suffer from the
seSSton, saymg as a member absence of tempestuous forof the NBA Players ward Marvin Barnes, but
Association be would not play center Bob Lamer Ill back
if, as a body, the players alter a lateo~~eason hand
State,
associatiOn boycotted the 1njury. Golden
champion
two
years
ago
and
games
a
disappomtment
blSt
season,
"I wouldn't act as an
individual,'' Walton sa1d, may be sending Jamaal
"only as a member of the Wilkes on the floor lor the last
lime. Wilkes Ill playing out his
players assocsation "
Portland has the home- option and 1s reportedly
court advantage. II a thltd headed lor the Los Angeles
game lS necessary, 1t will be !..akers
Cleveland and Washington
m
Portland
Sunday
afternoon Tbe second game open thelt ser1es Wednesday
111 Landover, Md.

en

JefferM&gt;n , Harga n
.!lind
AShby WP- Hargan ( 1 (I) L P
Hiller (0 1)
HR Detroit
Thompson ( 1)
(13 lnnlngsl
New York

100 120 000 01&gt;0

Kan sas City

o-- 4

72

21 0 010 000 000 1- 5 12 0
Eil ts, Lyle (7J, T1drow (12J
and Munson , Splltlorff , Li ttel l
(10 ) and Porter WP- L ittell ( I
OJ LP- T idrow (0 I ) HR-N ew
York J ackson {1)
( 10 innings)
Cle'Yeland 000 000 011
2 52
Texas
000 100 001 1- 3 12 1
Dobson , Kern {81, LaRoche
(91 anct
Fosse ,
Blyleven,
Oevme {10) and Sundberg WP
- Dev ine (l OJ LP- L.aRoche
co 1) HRs- Texu. Grieve 12).
Harrah (11

o-

Cali forn ia
20(1 000 ODO- 2 8 0
Oakland
000 101 001- 3 1 2
Ryan ( I 1) ancl Humphrey.
Bchebarren
Norris, Glust•
(91. Torr ealba (9) and Sangul l
len . "Newman WP - Torrealba
I 1 O)
Mmnesota
001 040 052- 12 13 o
Seattle
010 001 Olo- 3 8 l
Zahn
Johnson
(9)
an d
Wyneoar . Segu1 , Kek lch (51.
M ontague (8). Lax ton (8) an d
Stinson WP- Zahn (1 0} LPSegul (0 2)
HRs- Mlnnesota,
H isle (2 ), Seattl e, Bernhardt
(2 ), Jones (2)

THI_S__WEEK'S Sr'Et.

· ·~:~~·
USED

CARS

1973 OLDS
CUTLASS
4 Dr Sedan , red w 1th red
vtnyl roof. b eige cl oth
rnter1or , factor y a1r. power 1
s t eert ng , power brakes.
radio and good t ires

'2495
Karr &amp;VanZandt
You'll Like Our Quality
Way &gt;I Dolhg BuSiness
GMAC FINANCING
992 5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenmgs 't1I6·00

T!ISpmSal

Atlantll
010 400 002-7 12 0
Los Angel es 100 \00 022- 6 l4 2
LaCorte, Marshall (7) , John
son (9l , easterly (9), Camp (9)
and Correll. Pocoroba , John ,
Garman (4). Sosa (5 ), Down ing
(6 ), Wo!ll (8), Hough (9 ) and
Yeager WP- LaCorte (1 0) LP
- John {0 1 J
American L.eague
Detro it
010 000 2oo- 3' 7 1
Toronto
000 001 .40x - 5 9 1
Rozemo!l. Hiller (7) and May

)C

Reason No.2 why H&amp;R Block
should do your·taxes.
Dear Sir:
I have a few words to say about the strikes the miners are
baving 111 the western part of Meigs County.
I have always worked around the coal mines and I never
caused any trouble. I went through p1cket lines for the coal
comparues
But now I would like to speak about when a boss in a mine
has trouble with a safety man, the man whO Is supposed !o
!X'Otect a miner's We. If I was a superintendent of a mine, I
sure would do a Uttle Investigating ol the boss alleged lA! have
caused all the trouble. Sometimes a BoSI doean't care whether
they run coal or not. He Is drawing his easy money. The people
talk so much about dlscrtmlnation. I belleve a lot of that
happens around the11e coal mines. What I am trying !o say Is
this : maybe a man Is working under a mine bola and the miner
!mows more about a mine than the boSI. A miner who has
worked IOor 15 years may know more about a coal mine than a
man woo maybe has been aent to ~ool by the company and
bas been Ina mine two years or leoa.
I think if thia strike was caused by a boSI igntring a safety
man, I think the minera should be paid every day they are out.
- Ben Batey, Middleport, Oblo .

•

Block didn't become Amenca's largest
mco11'1e tax preparer by charging high
pnces For example, 1f you qualify for the
short form , we charge a very low price.
And our price alwaysJ1Ciudes your
res1dent state return.

v

•.
0

,
"
"

..
'

...•

H&amp;R BLOCit
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

618 EAST MAIN
Open 9 a m

lip m Wee kdays, 9 5 Sat
Phone 992· 379S

NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY

Apr 13- St L at Montreal
Apr 16-Montrealet Sf L.
Apr 17- Montreal at St L
x Apr 19- St L. at Montreal
x Apr 21 - Montreal at Sf L
JC Apr il 23 or 24
Sl L.ouls 11 Montreal
Philldtlphle v1. Toronto
(Toronto leads, 1-0)
Apr 11 - Toronto 3 Ph lie 2
Apr 13- Toronto at Ph lie
Apr 15- Phlla at Toronto
Apr 17- Phlla 11 Toronto
x Apr 19- Toronto et Ph l ie
x Apr 21- Phlla at Toronto
x Apr 2-4 - Toronto at Phlla
Boston vs. Los Angtlts
CBoston ltads, 1·0)
Apr 11- Boston 8 Los Ang 3

Apr 13- Los Ang at Boston
Apr 15- Boston at Los Ang
Apr 17- Boston at Los Ang
x Apr 19- Los Ang at Boston
K Apr 21 - Boston at Los Ang
x Apr 2A- Los Ang at Boston
NY Islanders vt Buffalo
CNY lslandtrs ltad, 1-0J
Apr 11- NY ISiand~s A Bflo 2
Apr 13- Bflo at NY Islanders
Apr 15- NY Islanders at Bflo
Apr 17- NY ISlanders et Bllo
x Apr 19- BIIo af NY lslaoders
x Apr 21 - NY Islanders at Bflo
x .Apr 23- Bflo at NY Islanders
x-U nec11sary ~

.Relax with us!
PlANNING APillA PARTY
PHONE
THE ALL NEW

MEIGS INN PillA SHACK
-cnloy three sizes of your favonte
pizzas.
-Try our delicious subs while you
sip your favorite suds.
Eat In Or Carry Out
Phone
992·6304

Gfp

DOWNING CHILDS
INSURANCE AGENCY INC.
Middleport, 0 .

'

•

992 -2342

�ie:;:;~;,~.h~e~/;;e'";;i/i"b;· Aprn;,f;, ~:,,, , , , , , , , ,,,,,, , , , ,;,, , ;,:;,:, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , .,.,.,,.,.,.,~~;

in Athens, April 15

ATHENS - Residents of
southeastern Ohio are Invited
to hear the lecture 1 14 WhY
Spiritual Healing'," next
Saturday at 3 p.m. In the ballroom of the Ohio University
Inn , 331 Richland Ave .
sponsored by First Church of
Christ, Scientist In Athens,
delivered by Thomas A.
McClain.
A member of the Christian
Science Board of Lectureship
currently touring the midwest, McClain Is a former
advertising
and
sales
executive with 'the Louisville
Courier-Journal. He now is in
the full-time healing ministry
of the Christian Science
Chu rch as an authorized
practitioner and teacher.
During his hour speech
McClain will discuss how an
Individual can profit through
"spiritual awakening" as tl!e
key to uplifting the entire
quality of human life .
" Healing is achieved through
our worship of God and our
worship of God is luHilled
through healing. Each
requires the other," is a chief
thesis.

~:&gt;:;=:M~:&lt;&gt;p~~~;~~~;,
~~~:

Personal Notes

[[

Generation Rap
•
I

::::

By Iiden and StH.' dnttf•

::1:;::

Thoughts on Easter expressed by children

[:::::l: ,
o;\

:·:·
What Happened to Sympathy? ·

Dear Rap:
I'm In eighth grade and a boy in my class ts retarded but
he can do most of the work.
Some of the teaChers treat him special. He gets to spend
twice as long on tests as we do. When he's late without a pass,
he doesn't get a detention, and if there 's a fight, he's never
blamed. He's spoiled!
Most of the kids hate him and think he shouldn't be treated
better just because he·~ slow. If he needs all that protection,
!houldn'the be In a special school? -FED UP

7
'

THOMAS McCLAIN

He also emphasizes healing
as practiced In Christian
Science Is not a miracle or
blind faith but the natural
result of involklng divine law,
the result of prayer in the
way - Jesus taught; a
discipline, a kind of control,
that spiritual healing brings
into our lives." ,
The lecture is open to the
public with fr~ admission .
-Loc
- ha
-ry-sp-en_t _ S
_u_nd_a_y_m

~

Amesville visiting her
brother and slster~n-law,Mr.
Meg Lochary, daughter of and Mrs. Harry Henry.
Mr. and Mr.s. Charles
Mr. and Mrs, Melvin Cjrcle
Lochary of near Chicago, Ill., and children, Marianne and
is here for a visit with her -Mark and Mrs . Jennifer
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Butcherandson,Jeff,Raclne
Leo Soory and Mr. and Mrs. area, were &amp;mday visitors of
Patrick Lochary.
Mr.and Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee,
Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Mr. and Mrs. VIc Hannahs,
Hammer of Columbus were thelr son, Chuck and Rhonda
Easter weekend visitors of Hudson, spent Easter SUnday
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich In Wheeling, W.Va. with their
and Jayne.
daughter and son~n~aw, .Mr,
Mr. and Mrs. CUrnutt and and Mrs. Don Thorne.
children, Paige, Parrish, and
Mr. and Mrs . Eugene
Jill of Irvine, Ky. spent the Hester, Jill. and Heidi,
· Easter weekend with Mrs. HWltington, W. Va. VISited
CUrnutt's parents, Mr. and over the w,eekend with Mr.
Mrs. Melvin Bonecutter,
and Mrs. Ray Riggs and
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Brown other relatives. They were
andchildren,MandyandBill, SUnday dinner guests of Mr.
Columbus, and Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. Ben Neutzllng.
Tom Brown, ~ and Mike,
Olin and Mabel Bailey and
Port Clinton, were weekend their son, Robert and his
guests of their parents, Mr. fiancee of Cleveland, and
and Mrs. Virgil Brown.
their grandson, Dr. Bruce
Mr. and Mrs. George Bailey, his wile and
Dallas, Steve, Mike and daughter, Tacoma, Wash.
Mellssa of St. Paris were were recent visitors of Mrs.
weekend guests of their . Ada Holter and Mr. and Mrs.
parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Batley, Flatwoods.
William Matlack, Rt. 3 . Arvilla Frecker, Tuppers
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Juanita •Plains, also visited with the
Bachtel. Middleport . On family during their time
Saturday evening the DaUas here.
·
family and Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. John Young,
Matlack were dinner guests Phillip,
Robin,
Lisa,
of Mr. and Mrs. Ch.ester . Lancaster, were Easter
Knight.
guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. 0.
Easter guests of Mr.. and Bamitz. They were joined for
Mrs. James Soulsby and dinner by Mr. and Mrs. Jim
family were his sisters, Mrs. . Carpenter and Jay, ReedsBlanche Gibbs and Miss ville:
Glenna Soulsby of Syracuse,
Visiting several days here
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Abbott, with Mrs. W. 0. Barnitz were
Denise MarshaU and Becky ber daughter and son~~aw,
Fry.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence W.
Mr, and Mrs . Patrick Nelson, Kalamazoo . Mich.

TRY OUT DELICIOUS
TWIST

+++

0"~
~~
DAllY ~0

ADOLPH'S

&gt; FOODS

-~

DAIRY VALlEY

Pomeroy, Ohio
HRS., 10 , 00 A.M. tilll :00 P.M. Sun .. Thurs. 10 : 00 A.M.
til 12 :00 P .M. Friday and Saturday .

See Us A11he Pomerov Be~ · 'Jrid

fomilj dinner
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Reibel
entertained Sunday with an
Easter family dinner party.
Special guests were two
sisters from Germany, the
penpals of the Relbels'
granddaughter ,
Diane '
Strong, Wilkesville.
Miss
Strong
has
corresponded with Ingrid and
Claudia, for the past siz
years. They arrivtd a week
ago and will be here for
another week. other guests
for the dinner were Mr. and
Mrs. Donley Reibel and Fae,
Mrs. Althea Strong and
Diane Billy and Donley
Strong: Barney Wycoff, Mr.
and Mrs. Jimmy Shato and
daughter Kristin . VIsiting In
the afteritoon were Mr. and

;::k:::r:::~:::~::::~~:oungest~d"who :~bi~bert

feared "unplanned'' meant "unwanted!' How parents feel
about a "surprise" conceptlondoesn'tholdoverwhen the baby
is here to love and cherish. ·
Several studies have been done on wantedness and child
' abuse. By far the greatest proportion of abused children were
planned by their parents. One study showed that 91 percent of
battered children were wanted at conception.
I'm sure that every one of us has been "unwanted" at
.Orne stage of our lives. If rl()t at conception, then when we as
newborns cried most of the night; or when we couldn't get
potty trained; or broke the neighbor's window with our
baseball; or were rebellious tears; or married someone Mom
·didn't like · or when we were U1 and old and a burden on the
young folk : But those fleeting "unwanted" times have nothing
to do with our personal worth.
Y. K. has probably had moments when she didn't
especiaUywan,therpsrentseither. But on balance, she knows
how lucky she is- just as they know how lucky they are to
have had their "caboose." - M. N.
·

Garment has its own color

You might try rinsing the
garments in a whi!e vinegarwater solution but test first to
see its effects on the fabric. A
strong solution of baking soda
and water might also solve
the problem. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY- My Pet
Peeve is with those unsolicited catalogs that come
In the mall with a notice thai
due to the high cost of postage
· they cannot sen.d any more

unless you order something
immediately. Who needs
them? - MRS . J. F.
DEAR POLLY- A reader

LERS PLEASE I
OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M.
OPEN SUNDAY 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M.
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED ·

TIME TO STOCK
YOUR FREEZER?

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I

1

PORK
LOIN .......~~.

Punche!'i thrmigh lol!d and clear

B5

J

B5
·

15

That's what an education at
MOUNTAIN STATE COLLEGE
is a II about.

Polly Cramer

•

WE ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STANIPS

CUT TliROUGH THE SOUNP JUNGLE
WITH COBRA

J

J

POLLY'S POINTERS
complained about her
mattress slipping around and
I want to teD her and the
others how I solved this
problem. I streatched a fitted
sheet (an old one will do)
across the top of · the box
springs and fii'en '( Stretched
another fitted sheet over the
bottom side of the mattress:
No more slipping.
To remove stubborn water
spots
from
windows,
· especiaUy outside ones, I use
one tablespoon boric acid In a
quart of wann water to wash
them.
Cut flowers seem to last
longer when I put a teaspoon
of salt In the water. - MRS.
E.A.R.
DEAR POLLY- I have a
few decorative curtain rods
on small windows where the
center supports are unnecessary. T)Jese supports
make great hangers for small
planters. They are adjustable, they extend up to
five inches from the wall and
sometimes more depending
on how they are made. I find
them very attractive and
handy In those places where
just a little greenery is
needed . - MRS. J.M.Z.

:;::ty~~.:cg:;:~~'!:,n;:

was glad that Jes\111 was
alive. He went to the temple
God ,
and prayed and £hat was a heavenwlthhisfather,
·
special day for everybody. He
went to heaven to see God.
Tllat'• what Easter is about."
MEETING SET
Erin Ander liOn wrote:
"We have Easter because
A county-wide prayer
Easter Sunday was the day
meeting
lrill be held at 2 p.m.
Jesus arose from death. He
Sunday
at Morgan Center
was nailed upon a cross. The
with
Glen
Biaaell as claaa
peoplewhodiditd.idnotknow
leader.
he waa the son of God. They

Hawk and son,

·

.
Thanks for pointing out that temporary
•iunwarttedness'' is a human condition, and the "on balance''js
what counts! -HELEN AND SUE

BY POLLY CRAMER
DEAR POLLY -Do you
have , any suggestions for
getting perspiration odor! out
of clothing - especially some
types of synthetics? They
smell clean when washed but
after weanng even for an
hour the body warmth seems
to bring out the perspiration
odor again. - A.B.
DEARA.B. - The odor you ·
speak of may be In the fabric
itself rather than perspiration. We have had many
letters from readers complaining about the odor In
some synthetics even when

Parker Long wrote:
"We have Easter because
JesuswasnaUedtothecroas
and he died to take away our
"Sins. On the next SWJday Jesus arose from the deal and
came out of the tomb. The
light blinded some. The first
place he went was to see his
friends . Tiley were very glad
to see him. He went to see his
disciples. Everybody was
glad to see Jesus. Everybody

LEAN

r----·-------'--------·----------·----~,
MORNING
OR
EVENING

Dear M.:
Right !

new.

,_~Es...,.

Reibels give

Dear Fed Up:
Perhaps this retarded boy wouldn't need "all that
protection" if you kids accepted him. Instead of hating him
because he's different, try 'helping him conquer some of those
differences.
Empathy doesn't come easily lo eighth-graders, especiallY'
if they can hide their unknidness by yelling, " Favoritism! "
But if you'd put yourselves In his place for a while, try lo feel
what he's feeling, how he hurts when he's not Included and
others put him down, maybe you'd understand why teachers
"spoil" him . They're making up for your rejection . ·
Givehimachance. Remember,itmighthavebeenyou! - ··
·
HELEN
NOTE FROM SUE : On tbe other hand, adults who overprotect slightly retarded children aren't helping them grow. If
teachers spoil this kid out of sympathy, make things too easy
for him, he may not reach his full capabilities. And when they
let him get away with lateness, fights, etc., they're Increasing
his unpopularity.
It's too bee all of you can't accept him as "unspecial" -

Edast~r

_rhoughts about
·wtre expressed by chi! ren m
theclassofMrs. MaeVoung,
second · grade teacher at the
Pomeroy Elementary School.
She shares two papers.

CURRENTLY 87 per cent of our
graduates are employed in jobs in
their chosen fields. (Compiled
• from September and December,
1976 graduate
employment
figures .) This figure says· a lot
about both the quality of ou.r
courses, and the quality of our .
graduates. Since MSC is highly
respected in - the business
community, it receives numerous
job requests for both part-time
and full-time employment. In
addition, MSC's placement office ·
seeks out positions in business,
invites
industrial
and
representatives to the school for
employment presentations and
opportunities ;
The
MSC
Placement Service is available on
a lifetime basis at no charge to
employer or graduate.
NO LIBERAL ARTS. At MSC, you
get right down to business. No
_- history, . science, langu.age, or
basket weaving, just an intensive
study program in your chosen·
field,
taught
by
skilled
professionals.

CENTER CUT

CLASSES. This means, that no
m after what your present
t
situation is: housewife, studen'
full or part time employee, you
can s t iII attend
the
fu II
t
complement of classes ' a · your
convenience.

PORK ~"
. s
CHOPS .....m~·
•••

COURSES: At Mountain State
College every cours.e has been
developed to provide the graduate
with · employable
skills:
Accounting,
, Business
Management,
Secretarial,
Clerical and Medical Assisting .

THIN CUT

PORK CHOPS ........!!':.~..

I

LEAN BOILED

.

'

·-----------------------~
'
.I

I
1

Please send me Information on the courses I
have checked . I am interested in : ·

·-Mornings
-Accounting ·
-BusinesS Management
-Secretarial
-Clerical

Evenings

I

-Medical Assisting

'

'

NAME .•• •••••••• •••• ••••••• ••• ~ ·· ••••••••••••

ADDRESS •••••••••••••••• ,, ,,-

00 ,

TEMPTING FRESH

ooo•••• ....... I., __
I
I

.

CiTY ••••• o•••••••STATE' •••••••• o••ZIP•·····ol

ALWAYS LOWER PRICES

I
I
TELEPHONE ·, o••••••·, ••••••o•••·•··· · ·······

FOR SLICING
OR SALADS

Mountai'n State College is approved for
veterans. Free lifetime placement .
service . Free I ifetime refresher
privileges .

U.S. NO. 1

IDAHO

LARGE GREEN
CUCUMBERS

MOUNTAIN STATE COLLEGE

'

POTATOES

.,,

•.

Telephone: 485-5487

Racin_e, 0.

PHEBE' STORE'

April 12 - April ISth
Right Reserved To Limit Quantities
We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Stomps
Monday thru Friday
9:00107 :00
SoturdaY' to 1

.

2290L89¢
CANS
·
COUPON

CLOSED

Argo Peas ...... o·······················~·················o·······:~~-~:.~41'1.00
DAIRY SPECIAL

2% MILK ..................................~~~~ ...~ ..1 3 ~

DR. PEPPER
8-16

oz.

BOttles

99~
Plus lax &amp; deposil
I

•

PRODUCE SPECIALS

IDAHO
POTATOES
10

ni: Bag

•1"

CARROTS

2

1 lb.
Pkg.

MAINE
POTATOES

49~

10 lb. Bag

(

'1"

HEINZ
KEG-0-KETCHUP

'

CUBE

NO. 105

32 oz. Btl.

STEAK
LB.

VALLEY BELL

79~

Coupon Exp. April16, 1977 ·
Twin City Galeway

$139

COUPON

PAR KAY

·HAWAIIAN
..

'

'

...

'

-~:. -.

''

PUNCH

.

MARGARINE

•

LB. PKG.

NO. 255
10 CT: PKG.

Coupon Exp. April16, 1977
Twin City Galewav

2&amp;

..

COUPON
-

COUPON

HEINZ

BARBECUE SAUCE
ONIONS OR MUSHROOMS

39~

N0.155
16 oz. Btl

Coupon Exp. April16, 1977
Twin City Gateway
COUPON

COUPON

oz. Box

· 79~ ·

NO. 155

38 oz. Box

$129

Coupon Exp. April16, 1977
Twin Cily Gale way

NO. 275

9

JARS

MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE
ALL GRINDS
NO. 305
1 LB. CAN

$289

W/C. AND
'10.00.PURCHASE

Coupon Exp. April16, 1977
Twin City Galeway
COUPON

BABY FOOD

NO. 325

45¢

-

· MASHED POTATOES
Coupon Exp. April16, 1977
· Twin City GalewaY

'

2460L99¢
CANS

HEINZ STRAINED

~·

BOLOGNA
CHUNK i.e. 690

$129

2~N~L99¢

BIG TATE
•

•

-~-----

HEFTY
LAWN _BAGS·

COUPON

PORK
STEAK
LB. 99~

.

I

D. S. I
~-----------------------J
Founded 1888

1

5th &amp; Pearl

BEANS

BEANS

(Corner 16th oncUpringl
Parkersburg, WV-26101

0 • • • • • • • • • • • • • 0 • • • • • • • • 0 ••• 0 •••• 0.

Pak

'

"

AND

10 LB. BAG

REO ONLY

KIDNEY .

PORK

1588 Spring Street

Whole
Kernel
Com
..........
~~~. ~~~j. 4/51.00
9-LIVES
Assorted Cat Food .......................................... ~.~~~.~~~~ 3/'1.00

LIVER
Double Mint or Spearmint Gum .................... ,......... tO 694 PUDDING
Del Moote Catsup .......·........ o··········o················o· •1•4.?~~-~~!!'~..3f.
lB. '1 09

JOAN OF ARC

JOAN OF ARC

STOKELY

All Purpose, Self-Rising FIOur ....................................lO,b.$1.59

1

29

STORE SLICED

·------------~--------·---------·------------------------------------------J

MARTHA WHITE

1~77

PRICES GOOD lHROOOH.SAT., APRIL 16,

99~

Coupon Exp. April16, 1977
Twin City Gateway

\

•

GOLDEN ISLE
ORANGE JUICE
12 oz. CAN

4g~

Coupon Exp. April16, 1977
Twin Cily Gale way

�.

6- The Dally Sentinel. ~lddleport·Porneroy, 0., Tuesday, April 12, 1977
t.e : . .,. PtA.::: "C .::r:::Ra~O.'

7- The Dally Sentinel, Middlet?Ort-Pomeroy, 0., Tul*lay. April 12, 1977

Social
Calendar ·
TIJESDAY
BIG BEND Citizens Band
Radio Club, Tuesday night,
7:30p.m. at the Rock Springs
Grange HalL Anyone In·
terested invited to attend.
RACINE Lodge 461 F&amp;AM
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. All
master masons invited .
TOPS OH 570 which has
been meeting in Middleport
at the American Legion Hall
will move to the Pomeroy
Village Hall for meetings
beginning Tuesday at 6:30
P·ll!·
RUTLAND Baseball
League will meet at 7 p.m.
Tuesdliy at the Gene Wise
borne. Anyone Interested in
coaching this season please
attend.
WINDING Trail Garden
Club, 6 p.m. Tuesday to meet
behind Fulton Thompson
Sales for a ride to Syracuse
where members will ·tour
Hubbard 's Greenhouse.
Meeting will follow at the
borne of Mrs. Cora Beegle,
Racine.
Legion
AMERICAN
Auxlllary of Lewis Manley
Post 263, 2 p.m. Tuesday at
the home of Mrs. Allen
Hampton. ·
MEIGS CoWlty Chapter 53,
OAV, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at
home on Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy. .
WEDNESDAY
· MIDDLEPORT Uterary
Club, 7:30p.m. Wednesday at
the home of Mrs. Carl Horky.
Mrs. Harold Sauer to review
"Lenin in Zurich." Members
to respond to roll call with a
well known Russian.
WHITE Rose Lodge, 1:30
p.m. Wednesday at the
American Legion hall In
Jtfiddleport. .
POMEROY
Mid·,
dleport
Lions
Club
'Wednesdiiy noon at the Meig~ .
Inn. All Uons urged to attend ..
. POMEROY Chapter 80,
Royal Arch Masons, Wed·
nesday evening 7:30 p.m. at
the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple,
followed
by ·
Bosworth CoWlcll 48, R.S.M.
at 8:30 p.m. at the Temple. ·
TIRJRSDAY ·
LAUREL Cltff Better
Health Club, Thursday night
7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Ann Mash.
.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Community Club meeting, ·
7:30 'p.m. Wednesday at
flrehouae.
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners, 7:30 Wednesday
night at the borne of Mrs.
Harry Davis, Spring Ave .. .
Pomeroy. Mrs. Roy Holter
of the Chester Garden Club
will give a demonstration.
THURSDAY
ROCK Springs Grange,
7:30 Thursday at the · ·hall.

•

DINNER ENJOY ED

Mrs. Ada Holter en·
tertained Sunday with a
dinner in celebration of the
birthday anniversary of her
daughter·in·law, Mrs. Pat
Holter. Attending were Roy
Holter, sons, Alan and Eddie,
tnd Mr. and · Mrs. Greg

Davis.
YARD SALE'SET
A yard sale will be held
beginning at 9 a.m. Thur·
lday, one mile past Southern
High School on Route 124. The
sale 18 sponsored by the
eighth grade class for their
trip to Washington, D.C. this
!!Pring. Anyone needing any
lnfonnatlon may call 9492384.

POST TO MEET
RACINE
Racine
American Legion Post 802
wlll hold an Inspection
meeting at 8 p.m. Thursday,
Commander Elmer Pickens

announces.

AN INTERESTING
HOBBY. ••

The Bradbuey f~th and
Sxth graders enjoyed an
Easter party and "1!8 hunt
Friday with prizes going to
winners.
Candy eggs, Kool·Ald,
wpcakes and Ice cream were
served and then the children
....,re taken outside for the
egg hunt. First 'arid second
pizes were given to each
dass, and the winners were
Martin McCloud, first, and
1\mmy Mlller, second in
Robert Meier's room;
Sammy Pl,ants, first and
Anita Aelker, second In Don
Hanning's room; Jeff Baugh·
man, first, and ADen King,
second in Mrs. Corder's
room ; Sandy Smith, first , and
Jenny Meadows, second In ·
Teresa Casci's room; and
Ernest Cross , first, and ·
Melvin Mullen, second, in
Betsy Horky's room.
Mothers assisting with the
party were Mrs, Ruby Rife,
Mrs. Nancy Cale, Mrs .
Lucretia Stobart, Mrs. Judy
n-ooks, Mrs. Mary Wise,
Mrs. Sobby Rupe, Mrs. Ruth
Riffle and Mrs. Cherole
Burdette.

]ered Hill
dedicated

FACT: Government officials warn that by early in the
next century o/1 and gas will be gone or going.
Yet, we are using them for 7j•;. of·our energy
demand.
·
·
·

The time has come for the American people-the man
on the sidewalk-to face bruta l facts:

1. The energy peril is not some mysterious manip·
ulation by greedy corporations a nd desert roy·
a lty; it is real, it is here , a nd it'is a peril.

REALITY: We h ave reached a critical transition ·
period in our hi story. Once again we must change our
primary energy source-as we did from wood to coal,
coal to oil-and rely on oiJ ·and gas for only those ta sks
where t here is no substitute.

2. What solutions exist are not simple, nor do they
allow for hazardous dilly-dallying. They'll re·
quire sacrifices from everyone, and a consequent adjustment ,i n life sty le for us all,
3. Unless we cut waste and conserve energy in
every conceivable way, life is going to be a lot
harder than most of us have ever experi ~q nced .

FACT: Coal is our most abundant energy source. We
have enough to sustain a greater use of coal for
hundreds.of years, yet we now use it for only 20% .
of our needs. Another under-used source is nu·
clear energy, which we use for less than 4% of
our needs.

4. Even with massive conservation, unl ess we
sta rt building right now to supply the energy
we'll need il) a few more yea rs, the opportunities to.earn a living will shrink ; the underprivileged will have little chance to escape last·
i ng poverty.

REALITY: Coal must be allowed to assume the load
long ca rried by oil and gas. However, despite its
abu nda nce, a reliable eva luation of our ability to
increase coal production a nd transportation fast
enough makes obvious the need for increased nuciear
energy to share part of the load.

5. If we do what must be done- without delay-we
can ensure a better, brigh te r America.

We must start by looking facts in the face , a nd recog·
nizing realities.

.

FACT: For some 30 years after World War II we, as a
· people, gave little thought to our country's
energy svpply. We took for granted It would al·
ways be available at a reasonable price. We used ·
it fully to attain new heights In our standard of
living.
REALITY: Never again must we use energy
thoughtlessly It is not endless . It is not cheap. It must
be conserved.

FACT: At our present rate of consumption and
gr()wth, over the next 24 years we will use as
much energy as we consumed in our first 200
· years.

FACT: The substitution of coal and uranium for gas
and oil can be accomplished with maximum flexibility, minimum time, and the least disruption
to our total economy by their conversion to
electricity.
REALITY: It took 50 years for this nation to shift
from wood to coa l. It took 50 years to shift from coal to
oil. Now we do not have 50 years to shift from oil to
· anything else. We have 10-or 15 at the most. Elec·
tricity is our most convenient and efficient vehicle for
conversion , transportation a nd utilization of availabLe.resources.

REALITY: We cannot go on at t hi s pace. Without
massive conservation, more eflicient energy use , and
a carefully planned increase in energy supply, we will
not be able to sustain a healthy economy

FACT: We now import more than 40% of the oil
we consume-more than when the embargo hit
us-and 13% of the gas. Together these imports
make.up 21% of our total energy consumption.
REALITY: Our linite amounts of these r esources
make it impossible to eliminate all imports-but they
can , and must , be reduced for security and financi al
reasons .

.TERRARIUMS
.

. REQUIRES MINIMUM

·CARE. ••
EIUOY WATCHING

•

FACT: Conservation of energy and elimination of
waste are absolute necessities. They are, In
themselves, a source of energy.
REALITY: If we continue to squander and waste, any
effort to increase the supply to meet growing demands will resultin wheel spinning.

FACT: The more we conserve and eliminate energy
waste the less building of expensive energy·
producing plants will be necessary. But even the
ultimate in conservation cannot eliminate the
need to build power generation for the future.

Appa.lachian Powtr Co .j Indiana &amp; Mithig•n

~ltctric

•

FACT: Power supply facilities cannot be built over·
night. Ten to twelve years are needed for a nu·
clear plant, five to six for a coal-fired plant, and
four to five years for a major transmission line. If
everyone along the way is reasonable and
cooperative.
REALITY: Time is a problem, a basic element of the
energy peril. Americans respond heroically to immediate needs, but not well to situations that will be·
come critical in five to ten years: Unfortunately, once
energy supply becomes critical it will remain critical
for a long time because of construction lead times.
The longer the delay the greater the da nger.

FACT: There is a clear connection between the
availability of applied energy and jobs, standard
of living, general economic strength.
REALITY: If we are to live in a better America, we
must recognize that the carefully planned construction of environmentally sound power units which
will insure an adequate supply of energy in the years
ahead is crucial to the solution of our energy periL

We await eagerly President Carter's comprehen·
·sive energy policy. We are encouraged by indications
of the direction it will take ..
It is our sincere hope that reasonable men will accept
with reasonableness the adjustments and sacrifices
that will be necessary. And that all will recognize
th(lt time is the el)emy which forces an attack upon
both halves of the energy problem simultaneously:
demand , by conservation-supply, by construction.
With unswerving faith in the American people, and
in the bright future of our nation, we pledge to dedi·
cate our ~now ledge and depth' of experience in electric power needs, generation and transmission to a
land of greater opportunity for all men .
And for their children.

Co., Ktntucky Power Co., Kin1sport Power Co., Michi&amp;U Power Co., Ohio Power Co., Wheelin&amp; Electric Co.

'ltJ'tf/)~
:z:...J

St ft Second
Sl
•

REALITY: A growing population, and increasing
labor force, and more opportunity for our disadvan·
taged call for a healthy economy-which will require
the application of more energy than can be obtained
from vital conservation. ln the last analysis, conservation does not generate additional energy any more
than saving increases your take-home pay.

American Electric Power System

PLANTS GROW
'·

SUPER
MARKET

Egg hunt
enjoyed

I,
.

(

Jered Thompson Hfil, twomonth'&lt;lid son of Mr. and
Mrs. Pat Hll~ P(ltleroy, was
oodlcated during the Easter
worship service at the
Middleport First Baptist
Church. The dedication
oeremony was conducted by
the Rev . Peter Grandal,
pastor.
__
Present were Jered's
grandparents, 1\ir. and Mrs.
Robert Hill of Racine, and
Mrs . Danny Thompson,
Middleport; his great·
grandparentS, Mrs. Isabelle
Winebrenner, Middleport,
m1d Mr. and Mrs. Babe Hill,
Racine; and Mr. and Mrs.
Pat Kinney, Dan and Duke,
Ollumbus, and Jay and Phil
H11 and Brenda Taylor.
A
certification
of
dedication and ·. a New
'testament were presented to
Mr. and Mrs. HilL Following
the morning service, Mrs,
'lhompson entertained with a
&lt;Inner. Joining the family
was Mrs. P&lt;&gt;n Gosney.

"

Gem show
is slated
The
second
annual
Columbus, Ohio Gem and
Mineral show "Wonderful
World of Gems 77" will be
held on April 23 and 2• in the
:Arts and Crafts building on
the Ohio State fairgroUnds at
Columbus.
·
Sponsored by the various
gem, mineral and earth
science clubs of the area, the
show will feature competitive
and non..,ompelilive exhibitS
of minerals, fossils, gem·
stones, artifacts, and
jewelry. Also included will be
special displays by univer·
sities, museums, jewelers,
and other hobby related
groups.
There will be demon·
strations given on gemstone
cutting (cabblng, faceting,
lapping, tumbling), silver·
smithing, jewelry making
and carving. Swapping,
acutioris, door prizes, and
guest speakers will be en·
joyed during the complete
show period.
A mineral-fossil iden·
tification booth will be on
hand for those who have that
special "what·is-it" that they
may want to bring along.
Also, a well rounded group of
dealers representing all
phases of the hobby will be
there for those desiring to
make purchases. Show hours
will be from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.
on Saturday, april 23, and
from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on
Sunday, Aprll 24. Parking,
food and camping Is rea'!llY
available. Donations are
adults, $1; ages &amp;-16, 50 cents
and under 6, free .
Show chalirnan is Carlton
Davis, 2452 Buckley Road,
Columbus.

. NOW A MEMBER
· Stephanie
Houchins,
daugllter of Mr. and Mrs.
lleve Houchins, was received
U.o membership at the Heath
United Methodist Church
Easter Sunday. Here for the
occasion were her grand·
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Victor
Casto, Vinton .

CORNER MILL &amp; SECOND ST.

·

OPEN DAILY
9 TO 10
SUNDAY
10 TO 10

MIDDLEI'O.RT, 0.

we Accept Federal Food Stamps - We ReseNe the RrRht

NO ytASTE

BUCKET
STEAKS
GRANDE CHORALE members from Rio Grande College-Community College who will
perform "Showboat '"n" April 13, are : (top row, I~) Jim Hlusko, George Thompson,
Howard McDaniel Tim McGhee; (2nd row) Rick Keyler, Kala Sue Bush, Jamtsue
Mcilwain, Debbie Swank, Rita Colley, Greg Bane; (third row) Vinton Rankin, Paul Brown,
David Moore, Jobn Mitchell; (bottom row ) Karol Carpenter, Janette Crabtree, Barbara
Wallen, Debbie Linn.

NO WASTE

~B. $139

MINUTE
STEAKS

Grande Chorale names officers
RIO GRANDE - Greg
Bane, Rio Grande College •
Community
College
sophomore from Gallipolis,
has been elected president of
the Grande Chorale.
Bane will serve a one year
term as an officer of the
singing group whic~ has
performed extensively in
Ohio, Kentucky, West
Virginia and Florida .
The Grande Chorale, under
the direction of Merlyn Ross.

includes 16 singers, four
accompanists and a light and
sound technician. Members
are selected by audition and
awarded grants by the
college for their work.
In addition to six hours of
rehearsal time each week,
Chorale members also design
and build their own scenery,
plan their own choreography
and design their own
costumes.
The group's annual dinner

theatre, "Showboat '77" will
be presented Wednesday,
April 13, 7:30 p.m. , on the
RGUC campus.
Other olficers elected inelude
Debbie Swank,
Chesterhill, vice president;
Janette Crabtree, Minford,
secretary ; Rita Colley,
Piekton, treasurer .
Bane Is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Gary T. Bane who live
at Rt. 2, Gallipolis.

govenunent as a consultant
since being sworn in April t until the proper papers are
as the 23rd commissioner in cleared on his appointment.
the nO-year history of the · The appointment of Ellli! by
U.S. Office of Education .
Hea!th, : Education and
A federal judge ruled Welfare Secretary ·Joseph A.
recently that the Columbus Califano Jr. triggered
school board and the Ohio complaints to the White
education Department had House from prominent Ohio
blocked desegregation of that . DemocratS.
city's schools . before and
Boyer also announced a
during Ellis' term as reorganization . of HEW's
superintendent. Ellis had Office of Educati~n .
been superintendent since
He SBld &gt;t was '!'teooed to
1971.
.
provide more eff&gt;c&gt;ent and
"It's true the Columbus simplified management of
school district was cited as federal aid for schools.not having a.fully acceptable Reorganization was. not
DANCE SLATED
school desegregation plan," Intended to block creation of
·The Belleo and Beaus
Boyer said, but the Status of a .sep~rate "department of
Western Square Dance
desegregation in Columbus educat&gt;on, an option that
Club will sponsor a daace
should not be confused with remains open," Boyer sa&gt;d.
for all club dancers oa
Ellis' commitment to
Califano, who an~unced a
Saturday from 8 to II p.m.
desegregation or his efforts to sweeping reorgaruzation of
at the Royal Oak · bring it about.
. HEW rece~~y, c~ended
recreation building. Caller
Ellis, a Republican, will be Boyer for sweepmg away
for tbe eve.Ding will · be
Boyer's second-in..,ommand the dutter that h~s confused
Cbad Johnson of South
at the Office of Education as pohcy
d1rect10n
and
Point. Members are aoked
de p ut y manage~ent in the Office ~
e x e c u tl v e
to take pie for refreob·
commissioner. Both Boyer's Educatlon for too long.
and Ellls' jobs pay $47,500 a Califano said Boyer had
menta.
reduced the number ·of stafl
:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::=::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:: year.
Boyer said Ellis has been members reprn;tlng d&gt;recUy
formally · chosen for the job to the conuruss&gt;oner from 28
TO MEET FRIDAY
and · is working for the to seven .
The Meigs Black Lung
Association will meet at the
senior citizens center dining
room from Ito 4 p.m: Friday.
The Alampnpc

By
United
Pre••
United Press International
Today ts Tuesday, April 12,
the 102nd day of 1977 with 263
to follow.
The moon Is between Its
last quarter and new phase.
The morning stars are
Venus and Mars.
The evening stars are Mer·
cury, Jupiter and Saturn.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Aries.
American statesman
Henry Clay was born April 12,
1777.

GROUND
BEEF

GROUND

5 LB. OR MORE

CHUCK

·

Choice .of Ellis defended
By CRAIG A. PALMER
WASHINGTON (UP!)
The Carter administration's
choice of Jobn Ellis, fQrmer
Columbus, Ohio, schools
superintendent, for the No. 2
job in the federal Office of
Education was defended
Monday by U.S. Education
Commissioner Ernest
Boyer.
"I'm fully convinced Dr.
John Ellis Is fully comlllitted
to the principle of access (to
educatiol) )," Boyer said at

LB.

his first oews conference

pamperMOM with
a special gift

FRESH &amp; LEAN

GROUND ROUND..... ..L~:.
SUPERIORS

99

LB.

t

SUPERIORS

POLISH . 7· 9~ ALLMEAT
.
SAGE .. ~~;
WIENERS .....L~;

79¢
.

BROUGHTON'S

BUTTER
MILK •••••••••• :!.g~!~ ..
..

.

1fz gallon

ILK •.•.••••••••••••••
BROUGHTON'S

Plastic $
2%
MILK ••••·••••••• ~.a!~~ ....

PEPSI
COLA

VALLEY BELL
Plastic$
2%
MILK ••••••••••• ~.a!~....

8ls_oz.gg¢
BTLS.

SCOT LAD

. lfz gallon
ONION SETS ICE
MILK •.••••••••••••••••

49~B.

BANQUET

WHOLE FRIED ·

CHICKEN .....~x ••.

Personal!
·By combining your Auto
and
Homeowners
insuranCe' into ONE policy

GIVE HER ABEAUTIFUL

... You may be able to

.MOTHERS RING

Save 10% to 25%

99

2 LB. $

.

On your yearly insurance
prem iums .

We wiJ.I review your
insurance program
with you free of
charge any day of the
week .

Available In HlK white or

RING No . 90

CALL OR STOP
AND SEE US

Reuter-Brogan
"The
Insurance
Store"
Phone 992-SlJO
214 E. Main
Pomeroy

Available in lOK white or
yellow gold. Ring will hold

from 2 to 7 synthetic birth stones.

yellow gold. Rihg will hold
vp to 9, synthetic birth·
stones.

$2895

$3.00 for each stone

WITih STONES

GOESSLER'S
JEWELRY STORE
COURT ST..

.

'

;~:: ................... 3oozEN'1 00

POMEROY, 0.

RC

DIET RITE
COlA

6-16 0~
somEs

8-16 0~
BOTTLES

$}09

$}09
l

Regular or Diet
Sugar Free
8-16 oz.
BOlTLES

79¢

�1- Tbe Daily Sentinei,MlddlePOrt-Pomeroy, 0., 1\tesday, Aprill2, 1977

3dM)'!i

6day:t

1SW!irdii or UnU~r
c..h Cha rgt:
1.00
l"l
100
1.80
3.00
315

"'
..,,

E.11ch word ovt!r lb: mtrutuwn 15

words l.S 4 ce n~ pt!r wurt.l pt!r till)' .
Ads rwuunl( uthl&gt;r t.ivln t •Jnse('UtJVI!
Way~

will bot: charged

till

IN MEMORY or lh! pass ing of
our
per~nts ,
Howard
Wilson . Apri l 12th , 1935 and
Ketle W ilson , Apr il 22, 1971.
Mrs . Nore Jord an , Mrs . Ada
Easterday, Mrs . Vines Le~ .

-----------

tht l d&amp;y

In memory, Ca rd of T1111nk.s aud
i

6 Ct!lllli pt"r wun.l, SJ.OO

'nmUnwu Cttsh mtidVI:Inl'l'
Mub1le Home sales ~:~rK.I YaJ'd Sot l4!5

are HC'-'t'Jlll.'&lt;l ·only w•th t•ash wt lh
urder 2S l'tll Lcharl(t: rQr ilds carry·
ing llox Num bt!r In Care uf The Scutu"l
Tilt! PutJ IL'lher re~1-ve~; lhc n~ht
\u l!dit or re/'ect Hny Jlili. dl·cmtod ul.o)eellunal . T ~e Publisher will no\. Oe
reSJ Mtrl.~ti.J!c

J~o..t

LOST- SMAll brown dog lost in
Middleport area . South S~ond
A'&lt;le. and Grovel Hill. Answers
to "Jimson ." Reword. Phone
991-2661 or992-2353 . .
FOUND IN Middleport area. small
redd ish brown fe male dog ,
docked to il . One block mole
port Siamese ki tten. Meigs
County Humane Socie ty ,
8.C3·3009 or 992-5417.

For m un.' UJat l ullt! uu:ur-

utserwm.
Phune992·2156
.

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Monday

Noon on Sa tllrduy
Tucstluv
thru F'rnio•y
4P.M.

the U11y ~fort• ~u Ui tcat lvlt
Swuilty
4 1~

M.

fo' riduy ilftl' n~t~un

SHOOTING MATCH at R~tland
legion Hall , every Friday evening, 7 p.m.

MERRI -MAC ha s open ing for Party
Plan
Superviso rs
and
Demonstrato rs in your area .
High es t commission , no
delivery or col lecti ng .
Demonstrate lop quality toy s
and gilts . Coli collect to Ann
Bowter {3 19) 556-8881 or write
MERRI ·MAC. 801 Jackson ,
Dubuque , lo_~o 5~~-CAT LOADER Operator , must be
e~~:penenced .
Col i 742-2806
after 7 p.m.
WAITRESS , app ly 1n person.
Craw's Steak House. Pomeroy .
Ohio or'coii992-2..C4 1. ·

NOTICE , Pratt's Meat Mkt. COONER'r. CAMPERS. See qualily
(Pieosonton Meat Processing.
of SWISS COlONY ; BARTH;
Inc. I Custom slaughtering, and
CRICKET truck campers ; MAPLE
processing. Reta il. wt'lolesole.
LEAF spocemoker, PlY MOR:
No appolnmant nece5sary. Call
CAP KIT cops. NEW·USED Soles,
(61 4) 593-865.5 , houn. 9:00 till
renta l. terv ic:e. supplies. Toke
6 :00 7 Pomeroy Road. Atl'lens,
Meigs 28 or 32 to Bost'lon.
~h~·--~----~~-- Located on Ra inbow Ridge ,
Long Bottom . Ohio. Robert
iiACINE FIRE Dept . Wilf hove a
Codner, owner.
Gun Shoot eYery Saturday night
6 p . m . of thei r building m CHEVROLET VAN Camper. Phone
Bo!.hon , Ohio.
9'12-2900.
.
RA CINE GUN Club, We have
changed our gun shoot to F-RIDAY , nights, starting a t7 p.m.
SHIRLEY "Jeffers" Wolfe is now
the new owner of lola's B&amp;auty 3 AND 4 RM . furnished and unSalon in Syracuse, Ol'lla , John
furn ished opfl . Pt'lone 992.St.
Shirley was for merly
5&lt;3-1.
employed at Linda's lady F·a lr,
COU
NTRY Mabile Home Park , Rt.
Racine, Ohio. Any of my former
33,
ten mrles nortt-1 of Pomeroy.
patrons wishing appointments,
large loft with concrete patios,
may coli 992-25-49 . Phone now
sidewalks , runnert and off
listed under lola's Be a uty Shop
street pa rki ng . Phone m-7479.
until new dire-ctor-ies ore in ued
of which time the nome will be 2 BEDROOM mobile home a·n
Shirley's Beouty Nook .
Broodwov in Racine . See
Harvey leamond by Wagner's ·
MEIGS CO. Fish and Game
Hardware.
.
mt;tefing , Fri. , Ap ril 15th ot tt'le
Coon Hun ter's Club Bu ildi ng,
Snow Boll Hill at 7:30 p.m.
Member s only .
Special

An i mal

Health

Meeting of Dairy Beef
. Hogs , Tuesday night at I
p.m ., April 11. 1977 . At the
Vo·Ai Room at Southern
High School, Racine 1 Ohio.
Everyone Is Invited . In·
formation on meeting is
how to buy, store and treat
your"" animals .

Pomeroy Landmark

ACAREER JOB IN
CONSUMER FINANCE
'

Gain recognition and p•estlge through a career In
consumer finance. ConsUmer finance is an Integral and
Important Ioree In our country1s economic growth and
progress.
A position here wUI give you economic security. The
consumer finance business is steady - even during

recessions.

You can win promotion rapidly . You will be paid a
gopd starting salary and receive exceptional employee
benefits,
.
There are Branch Representative positions open now
for high school graduates. Must have auto.
Phone Mr . Mills today for a confidential,
personallntervlew. Call 992-2111.
·
CAPITAL FINANCE SERVICES
300 West Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

liMBER , Pomeroy Forest Produels. Top price for stand ing
sawtimber . Coli Kent Hanby ,
1-446-8570.
COINS , CURRENCY . tokens , old
pocket watche5 and chains,
sl l'&lt;ler and gold. We need 1964
and older sil..-ercoins . Buy ,.sel l,
or trade' Call Roger Wamsley,
742-2331.
CASH !II for junk cars . Frye's
Tru ck and Auto. WRECKER SER·
. VICE! Phone742-2081 .
OLD FURNITURE, ice boxet , brass
beds , elc .,
c omplete
households. Wrtfe M. 0 . Miller .
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio or call

m ,n60.

WANTED
'
CHIPWOOD
Pates, Max.
diameter , 10
In c hes on largest end. Sl per
ton ; bundled slabs, 156 per
ton . Dt 11 v ertd to 0 h lo P a 11 et
Company, R t. 2, Pomtroy . .
_o_~· _P h_on_ e_99 2 ~68
_9_. _ _

AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

"·~------------------------__;

IF YOU hove o service to offer ,
want to buy or sell something ,
oe looking for work ... or
whatever .. ·. you'll get results
fqster with o Sentinel Want Ad .
Col19'12·2156 .
YARD SALE , Friday, April IS, 10 til
5 :00 at Five Points. Clothing ,
bed springs, bed , many misc .
items. Ra in dote , April 22 .
Wotcl'l for signs.

LEGAL NOTICE
sUbmit either written or ore!
PUBLICMEETINGS
testimony to the Agency at
SCHEDULED FOR
the
meetings _ Written
NEW HEALTH
testimony also may be
PLANNING AGENCY
Submlttdd at any time prior
R:epre~entatives of nealth
to April 30, 1977 In person or
cere profess ions and In - by mall to :
stltutlons a nd consumers of
AREA
SIX
HEALTH
health services are - en - SYSTEMS AGENCY , INC .
Coureged to atterfu . public
c -o :ll(t Putnam Street
mntlngs
scneduled
to
.o110 St . Cla ir Building
provide public re.,iew or the
Marietta, Ohio -45750
application ol the Area Six
Complete copies Of the FOUR FAMILY Yord Sole, Tues.,
Weds ., Thursday, 9 lill 4:30 .
Health Systems Agency, Inc . draft application w ill be
Gloria Johnson. 2nd house on
(ASHSA). The Ar~a Six a vailable lor inspection and
right post Wolf Pen Rood on Rt .
Heattn Systems Agency , lnc . 1 copying at cost during
Is
seeking
conditional regular bus i ness
hours
143.
designation and funding by Monday through Fr iday
the Department of Health , beginning Aprll12 . 1977 at the
Education , and Welfare to following locations :
become the H~alth Systems . 1.
Oh io
Mid -Eastern
Agtncy for southern and Go'lernments
Anoc tation ,
$0uth~astern Ohio .
326
Highland
Avenue , RISING STAR Kennel Boarding,
lndoor·Outdoor runt , grooming
The
meetings
are Cambridge ,. on1o
scheduled as (ollows :
2. St . Clairsville Public
all breeds, clean sanitary
7 :00 . 9 : 00 p .m . April 26 Library, 108 West Main
facilities . Cheshire. Phone (61-4}
Holiday Inn. Gallipolis, Ohio Street. St . Clarlsvllle, Oh io
367-0292,
7 :00 . 9 : 00 p . m . April 27
3.
Coshocton
Public
Betnesde Hosp ital , Zanes - Library, &lt;lth and Chestnut , · HOOF HOllOW. Buy , sell , trade
ville, Ohio
Coshocton , Oh io
or train horses . RUTH REEVES,
7:00 . 9 : 00 p . m . April
4. Cadiz Public Library ,
tre~iner. P11one (614) 698-3290.
Thomas
Hall.
Mar ietla Cadiz, Ot'IIO
AKC REGISTERED Female Cocker
College, Marietta , Oh io
5 . Monroe County Clini c,
7:00 . 9:00 p.m. Apr11 29 Route J,. Woodsfield , Ohio
Spaniel Puppy , 7 weeks old,
6. Kate Love SimpSon
Buff color . Mel'lin Crass , phone
J efferson co un t y Te c h n 1ca 1 Library
, 358 East Main
742·3176
,
~~;~bt~n-t:(ue ,s0~ 1~e t Blvd ., Street, McConnelsvil le, Oh io
Under Publi c Law 93 -6.oll ,
7. Mcintire Library , North UNDER 481n . Walk -trot pony. Sorthe National Health Plann ing Sth Street , Zanesville , Oh to
rel with white . Good conformaand Resources Oeveopment
8. Noble County Health
tion. Will halte:r. Excellent
Act of 1974, and the act ion of Department , Courthouse , .
beg inner's pony . Very gentle .
Govel'nor James Rhodes , Calctwell , Ohio
Child outgrown. Phone (614)
9. Perry County Dist rict
Ot'lio hilS been d ivided Into ten
742-31()4 ,
health ser¥i c e areas . Tne Library, 113 So uth Main
Area Six Health Systems Street. New Lex ington, Oh io
Agency Is e x pected ta for ·
10. Brooke · Hancock .
mally replace the e)(IStlng Jefferson
Metropolitan
c omprehens ive
heallh Plann ing Comm ission, 811
plann ing agencies as of Adam s Street , Steubenvlll!, 1975 JEEP CHEROKEE , p.b., P'· .
Au~ust 1, 1977.
Ohio
Ouodratrack. Good tires .
l.ln~der~ the- new lew , t he
11 . Buckeye Hilts · Hock ing
Phone (304) 877·23-40 .
Arta SIX Health Systems Valley Regional Develop .
Agency, Inc . will be required ment District , 216 Putnam 1976 CAMARO, 305 2 ' barrel'
to :
St reet , Marlette , Oh io
,
outomalic , silver · with dtid
, Gather
and
analyze
12 . Ohio Valley Health
pinslrjFing. Still 'l'•~arran­
suitable dete ;
Services
Foundation,
1
ly. Col 992.5709..:_,_~-Establish health systems Blueline Avenue . Athens ,
plans (goals ) and annua l Ohio
289 ENGINE o¢heoders lor$100.
Im plementation Plans (ob 13 . Veterans Memorial
4 spe-.cl M1trcury transm ission .
I •~.!Ji ncj priorities )
HospiTal. Mu lberry Ht s .,
$65: 1967 3 speed automatic
Prov ide e ither techn ical FJomeroy, Ohio .
Ford transmission, $30. Pnone
ana .or 11m ltf'd f ln en c lat ' I.e. Holrer Mtdlcal Center ,
992-3611 :
assistance to people seeking Route 35, Galtlpol ts , Oh io.
to implem ent prov ision s of
1.5.
Herbert
Westcoat
th·e plana ; .
Memor ial Library, 122 M .. 1970 CUDA in good condition.
New point , and factory mags.
Coordinate activit ies w tt h M&amp;in Street , McArtnur, Oh io
Phone 742-2659.
Professional Standards
16. Log en -Hock tn g County
Review Organizat ions and District Library / 120 E . Ma in
1977 FORD • wheel drive. $6700.
otner eppropr latf' r,lann lng Stree t , Logan , Ot'lio
Phone 949-W 7.
and regulator y enl lt es ;
17.
Lawrence
County
Review and approve or Genera l Hospital , 2228 South 1972 VEGA, $800. Also , 1972
dlaapprovt eppllcat ion for 9th Street , Ironton , Ohio
$1200 .
Pone
Plymouth .
federal funds for ,_he'allh
18. Jackson Coun ty Mental
949-2307.
programs w ith the area ;
Hea lth CIJn lc . 200 Main
A•slst statts in mak ing · Str eet . Ja ckson , Oh io
1972 VEGA. $800 . Also, 1972
findings es to the need tor
For furtner Information
Plymouth , S 1200.
Phone
new institut ional health con tact :
949·2307 .
serYICes proposed to be ofArea Six Health Systems
fer..:! In the area ;
Agf'ncy, Inc.
1975 RALLY SPORT Cornaro, P.S.,
Aaslst states In rev iew ing
o--o 216 Putnam Slreet
automatic, dl1c brkes , mint
e~lstlng lnstllutlonat health
410 Sf. Clair Bui lding
condition , $3695. Coli 99'l-7nO
services aff,red wllh resPect
Marlette , Ohio .C5750
__ ofter6p .m.
to the appropriateness ot
C614) 374-9436
such services ;
1969 DELTA Old• hardtop. Yellow
(.C) 12. ltc
Annu•lly recommend to
with black ¥inyl top . Air,
states prolects for the
power . low mlleoge . Two extra
mOdernization . construc;t lon
studd-.cl
tnow tires included .
and conYtrslon of m~d tcal
$650.
Bob
H0&lt;1fllch, 992-5292.
faclmles In the area.
By federal regulations . the
In IMI, Ru.sia lawicbed a 1965 FORD 1/t ton pickup truck,
publfc m eetlngs are being
$250. 1968 M.,.cury . good for
held wltt-1111 the,.. etgttte en man Into space. He became
work (Or. $150. Con see at
county httiJ.h serv ice area the first illman to orbit tbe
lesley Whittington's at Sliver
are to .uow public comment
Run . Phone '992-3088.
.. " COncerning
(1)
the earth and return safely.
quellrlcetlons of the Area Six
1952 FORD Troctor and equip·
Health Systems Agency to
A thoUght f&lt;r the day :
ment . Call after 5 p. m.
assume t"e .c tutln Imposed by
9&lt;9-2428.
P .L , 93-641 ;
12) mo com· American writer George
tpOilltlon of the proposed CW1II said, "Imagination Ia 1970 CHEvY IMPALA. &lt; dr., fac governing body; and (3) the
tory oir conditioning. Will tell
eeency•a proposed work • 11ood u many wyages -..
wholesale, 1700. Call 992-7S.3 .
prognm .
IDI 00. much cbeaper!"
, A,!I_Y cltllln gr group may

-

"

MI NOLTA SRT -100 35 mm
camera, SO mm , 28mm,
13Smm, end 80-210mm Zoom
lens plus camera end ac cessories casts . Call 992 ·
6298 da ys on ly .

Business Services

COAL , limeatone, and calcium
cl'l lorlde ond calcium bnn• lor
dust control and spedol mhdng ·
salt lor farmers . Ma in StrHt ,
Pomeroy , Ohio or phon•

992· L-----------------------------------J

~·~·--------------

APPLES , FITZPATRICK ORCHARD,
STATE ROUTE 689. PHONE
WILKESVILLE , (61&lt;) 111&gt;9·3785,

EXPERIENCED_
Radiator
Service

CAMPER, $600. Al5o , l'lorse
tra iler, $450. Phone (61&lt;1) 6983290.
STEREO , NEW AM· FM ster.a
radio c=ombinotion . $129 .95 or
easy terms . Coll992-3%5.
FISHER WOOD Burning staves and
form lumber. PHONE Focemyer
and Salmons lumber Co., Inc.
Rl. 7 Middleport, Ohio. (61&lt;)
992-7425 ,
3 TRAILER A.les off haute trailer.
Phone 9-49-2089.

-

--

45'

9
...
tJiil:"
- - --

WHICH TUR&gt;lfl
OUT TO
YOU
OR ~f!

e-e

'
'I'

•

•'
•

(6141 fiS-41"
Chllltr, Olllo
- ~ 17,1J!'!)_lPd)

.

Young's Carpeting

'

'•

Free Estimates
Route 3,.

Installation, samples
brought to your home
with no charge .

·N ow 0nl)•279.95

Free.

C"'pei-Lino,- Tilt
PhorHJ Mike Young et
992-22116 or 992-7630

_
Porn~roy Landmark
~Jack W. Carsey ; Mgr.

Rutland, Ot'l lo 4571$Ph. (614) 741 -2409
We Delivf'r
12·22 -4mos .

2-23- t mo.

Phone 992-218)

SWAIN'S

I

Automatic
Tra.,~mission Service

HOMESITES for sale . 1 a Cre and
up . Middleport, near Rutland .
Call992-7481 .

PARTS - lABOR
GUARANTEED

NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 baths,
all elec .. I acre. Middleport.
close to Rutland . Phone 992-

REASONABLE

RATES

Reeds vi lie, 0.

Ph, 378-4250
3-27-_1 ~o :

&lt;

Pomeroy, 0 .

HEMTY

UNDEVELOPED a cres in Meigs
County. Vinton mail route. Call
7.C2"-2867 or see Dick lambert .

ONE ACRE , 3 bedrooms, 2 story
nome, dinit"tg room , large bath,
natural gos. Iorge porch , nice
block goroge, $20,000. Phone
992-5732 .
HOUSE FOR Sole m Minersville, 5
rooms and both , forced air
heal , noturol gas, 3 porches
and basement. Phone992-5833.
GEORGE HOBSJETTER, Jr. Real
Estate Broker Pomeroy , Ohio .
RACINE · 2.46 acres , 3
bedrooms , living room, kit·
chen . both , carpeting.
draper ies . fuel oil l'leot , central
air
conditioning,
stove.
refrigerator, hookup for
washer and dryer , front porch,
en Tuppers Ploins·Ch~tter
water sy5fem . Approximately
V1 m ile from Racine, Phone
9..C9-2589 . Priced $15,900. Hilton
Wolfe Salesman.

n

I I I

•

I CORUS

"The Orlglneton
Not The lmlt1tors"
__ _f23-1 mo.

(J I

FREE WBE JOB

NUGMIP

1

I KJ

WITH OIL CHANGE
AND FILTER

THI: 50LDIER 60T
REPRIMANDED PURELY
OLIT OF IHI:S.

AT

CHESHIRE
ASHLAND
Cheshire, Ohio
Phone 614-367-0626
3·16-1 mo.

HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
covating , septic systems,
dozer, backhoe, dump truck,
limestone, grovel, block lop
paving , At . 143. Phone 1 (614)

-~98·7331.

EXCAVATING. Backhoes, Dozer,
trencher, Low Boy, dump truck ,
trucks. septic systems . Bill
Pullins . Phone 992-2478 day or

_."ish,::'·:-::==-=-~::---~

Now arrange lhe circled let1ers lo
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the above car1oon.

,UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE
Noblt Summit Rood

---

Rl.l
Middleport, 0 .
992-5724
'Complete
Sales

~~

Cltt"l!lt •-veii ··

1.. 1 GUIH 1

and

~•

I

·Senice 1nd Supplies.

''

.~•

l!!!!!lrCI ...- Yesterday's

"""l.l.·"

.....,,,...,..,..-./

Prlntthesurprlseanswerhere:

~-~

'TH...:Otii ,._ ..

Oltl 0001'&lt;

I

MOBilE Home Repair. Elec ..
plumbing ·and heating. Phone
992·5858 ,

&lt;I

byHenriAmoldandBoblee

Unscramble 1hese four Jumbles,
one laner 10 each square, 10 form
toor ordlnOI)' words.

Carpet &amp; Upholstery
Phone Mike Young
At
992-2206 0~ 992-7630

let us test your water

6:1)()-Sunrlse Semester 10.

'ftj 01'f~ f) ~)11 ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORO GAME

~ ~ ~~ ~~

Route 3, Pomeroy! 0 .

let Pomeroy Landmark
\ 'S often &amp; condition your
Nater and a Co-op water
softener, Model UC -XVI

TEAFORD

TO FIND OUT WHO
M.~EE HAD PICKED
TO ~CCI't;l&gt; HIM·

~

WATER SOFTENER 1

SMAll far_m for sale , 10•/e: down,
o wner financed . Monroe County , W. Va. Phone (lOA) 772,
3102 or (30&lt;) 772·3227 .
SPRING GARIJ:EN .Supplies , Cob · COUNTRY farmland wilh seclud bage, cauliflower, broccoli ,
ed woods. water and good a cand head lettuce plan ts,
cess in. Monroe County, W. Va .
yellow, white, and red on ion
$1 ,000 down , call (304) 772s-~ts , onion plants , Kenn ebec ,
3102 or (30&lt;) 772-3227 .
cobbler , Katahdin, Red Pontiac
and Red losoda seed potatoes . Commercial property appro)( . 17
Bulk garden s&amp;eds, polling soli.
a cres , le'lel land , located at
p.eot moss , trutl trees and rose
Tuppers Pla ins on Ohio, Route
bushes. Midway Ma rk et ,
7. Phone (61&lt;) 6/&gt;7 ·6304 ,
~omeroy . Ohio, 992 -2582 .
Bob:s Ma rket , Moson, W.Va . NEW 3 bedroom house, buill-in
kitchen. bath and V..., Phone
(304)773-5721.
742:2306 or contact MilO 8. Hut SEA-STAR AlUM. Boot. 14 ft .
chison , Ru tland, Ohio ,
long , extra deep sides . Foam
flotation under seofs , 9 Yt horse FOR SALE. All alec. nearly new
home in Rut land area. Base E ·
'&lt;lmru d e motor . Montgomery
ment , 3 bedrooms , attached
Word trailer, life jockets, podgarage ,
$29 ,900
Phone
die and fi re extinguisher, $.450.
7&lt;2-2531.
,.,:P,.:h:::o:;n::-:
•~2::
&lt;7:.,·::2:::
868
~._ __
1973 JEEP CJ5, "good condition, 2 STORY &lt;I Bedrm . bri(:k t-,ome in
Middleport . Phone 992-3457 .
Plus e xtras. $2«X&gt;&gt;. Bunker Hill
Rood across from cemetery.
6 % acres, garden spOt, some
&lt; ALUM . A5TRO whoolo, &lt; G«).. posture. firewood with wood·
burning stove, fuel oil heal .
' tires foro Chevy truck· or Cor.
outbuildings 2 bedroom house ,
S.SO. Phone 843-2711 .
near hospital and town .
2 WINDOW FANS, ;'nfra red hel
$19,500. Phone 992-5947,
lamps, three -fourth metcll bed
and springs, table fan , Bulovo COMMERCIAL BRICK BUILDING in
downtown Pomeroy , Ohio .
wrist watch. 356 North Fourth
Presently rented with income
St ., Middleport, William Smith.
over $50)() per year. Two ren HOOVER UPRIGHT Sweepers,
tals downstairs and pne
19n Models on sale lor just o
upstairs . Has unfinsihed apOrtfraction of the original cos,t.
men! upstairs . Entire upstairs
Cosh or terms only, $32. Call
can eosi ly be made into 3
992-51..C6.
apartmen ts. W-oir condition
upstairs . 3 separate water. gas
FREIGHT PAIMGEP Zig Zog Sewand
electric .meters. Con be
ing Machines. Buttonholer, etc.
financed IOOpercent to reliable
onlr 5 left originally $149.95.
party . Contact Paul Simon or
Wil sell $39.95 cosh or terms.
Guido Girolaml to secure on
Phone 992-51-46.
appointmenl. Priced upon inUSED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT.
spection ·of property only.
Timberjack 2090 Skidder; John
Deere 2010Wheellooder; Mor·
bark 636 Debarker. Contact
Dennis Smurr . Phone (614)
838·53-15 .
Virgil B. Sr., .Relltor ·
FA,RMALL MODEL Bin good candi·
t ion. Ha$ new tires and Wood's
216 E. Second Street
belly mower, $850. Phone
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
7&lt;2·2228,
Phone m-332S
1958 CHEVY 6 cyl ., standard . Will
sell or trade for aUtomatic .
DELIGHTFUL
3
Magnus chord organ , 2 trock
bedroom, na-t. gas central
tape player, radio , flower pots .
healed , , tully carpeted
Call742··2078.
home with a nice kitchen,
Out of town In nice
10 PERC:ENT OFF. All rubber
neighborhood. $22,000:
boots. One week only. Sole
SOMETHING NEW ends Apnl 16th. Bailey's, Mid ·
Little upkeep on this fairly
dlep.o~r:.:l:..,------~new
all elec. home. Has
1969 FORD FALCON, 67 ,000 acnice kitchen fully carpeted
tual miles. $325. Also , Pioneer
and 3 bedrooms . Nice
chain saw . $75. Call 949-2115.
fenced yard : $22.000 .
KAWASAKI ,
phone
750CC
BRICK- Large 4 bedroom
992·75&lt;8.
home on a corner lot. 1112
baths, fireplace and full
2 GIRLS' Bicycles, $15 each.
basement. Just $24,000.
Lawnmower , $25; b&amp;w T.V..
$50. Living room aulte, $50.
Meigs School District,
Gold carpet, $25 . P'hone
CONVENIENT ~ Large 3
985·&lt;2&lt;5.
bedroom bider home on
gQOd street In MiddlePOrt.
MAYTAG DRYER, new alec.
Bath ,
large
dining,
skillet, never been used. Phone
fireplace In living out of
~-c8:.:~~·=
2~
=5=·------~--~- flood danger. Only $16.500.
1974 X8 125 Hondo and 3 wheel
SOMETHING NEW explorers. Excellent condition.
Small homes delight, small
Both for $700. or will sell
families, less heat~ taxes,
separate. Phone992-2595,
and cleaning. Otter an acre
SELMER SERIES 9. Clarinet , used
with large garden,
3 111 years , excellent condition.
MINERS SPECIAL Coil (30&lt;) 773 -~ .
Look at this new 3 bedroom
home with 2 baths. 2 car
REDUCE SAFE &amp; fasl with GoBese
Tobleh, &amp; E-Vop "water pills" garage with workshop .
Nelson Drug.
Over an acre of ground .
Nice kitchen, too. · Only
$29,500.
SOMETHING NEW - Nice '
newer home on 1 acre.
Fully . carpeted.
All
New Co-Op Wlttr SOf·
teners, model VC-IVt .
electric, 3 bedroom home
Only 1219.95
with I acre, Fully tfrpeted .
Save uo.oo on 1 new
All
electric, 3 bedroom
Hatpolnl Refrigerator .
home with 1 car ·garage
1 Good Used McCullough
attached. Out of town In
Chain Saw
sn
1 Goad used 40" Hotpolnt
good location. A good buy
Range
1100
., $32,000, .
Now an stock, c.ompltte lin•
COUNTRY- 5 room block
ol bulk 11rden neds and
home
with bath, nice
onion uts .
garage with • ·c ellar and
1 Oood used u nlco
largo lot lor only $16.500.
Frnrer
1175
1 tODd McCullough Ch•ln
SOMETING NEW - Old
Saw
SU
church and block building
1 Good Used Poulan Ch•in
In Tuppers Plains on
Saw
ISO
corner lot .
Onion Sets
lb. oc
WISE PEOPLE INVEST
SurviYor Sites only sn.u
IN THEIR FUTURE . WHY
PAY RENT?
G. Bruce TN!anl
~Jon L. TNionl
.:...lack W. Ci'rsey, Mlr
AIIOcliiiH
Phone tt2·2111

Pomeroy landmark

KEN GROVER
PHOIOGWHY

Pl Hl-2174

7&lt;8~1~,----------------

FOR SALE

Weddings

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

CAPTAIN F.ASY

•

••

Schools

lllllo ·-tllool

SPECIAL:
lb.

.'

Aetlial
Comm•r.dal

,,. tflliqlll

~HDA

·

ONION SETS

PROFESSIONAL

PHOJOGRAPHY

WEDNESDAY. APRIL 13. 1t77

TUESDAY, AF!'RIL 12 1977
7:0G-1 ruth or Cons . 3; To Tell the truth4 ;· Sowrrng tor
Oollars6: Country CarnivalS; News 10; To Tell the
Truth 13.- My Three Sons 15: Anyone for Tennyson?
20: American Issues Forum 3J
•
7,3()-HQIIywood Squares 3.&lt; : Let;s Deal With 11 6;
Match Game PM 8; MacNeil -Lehrer RePOrt 20,33'
In The Know 10: Wild Kingdom 13; TV Honor
Societv IS .
8:ocr-Baa Baa Black S_!!eep 3,&lt;; Happy Days 6 , 13 , We
Will FreezelntheDark 10.15; Who' sWhoB
8 :3()-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6, 13
9'1Mr-Pollce Woman 3,4, IS; Eight Is Enough 6, 13;
Mash 8,10; Mark Russell 20,33.
·
9, 30-()ne Day of a Time 8,1 0; Best of Ernie Kovacs
20.33 ,
IO:oo-Pollce Story. 3.4.15; Alan King 6, 13; We Will
Freeze In the Dark 12; KoJak B.IO; News 20: The
Wa y II Was 33,
10:30--Biack Journal 20 ; Americana 33.
l1 :00-News 3,4,618, 10, 13115; MacNeil-Lehrer Report
33 ,
lUG-Johnny Carson 3,.,15; Movie " The First 36
Hours of Dr. Duran-t" 6, 13; Movie "Pueblo" ·a:
Mary Hartman 10.
.
1? ·00-Movle
,, 10
12 :0G-Movle "Tne t-Ile on Thetma Joruan
.
, .vv-- tomorrow 3,4.
1: 1&lt;&gt;-- News 13.

'

~--Jack w. Carsev . Mgr.
....
Phone tU-2111
SOMEONE to live in or work I rom FULL AND PARTIIME . Con use 2
fultime
and
3
parttime
person
s.
7 a .m. till .C p.m . to toke care of
elderly lady. Not invalid but _ Con tact.Fuller Bru sh Co. 3 to 6
p.m. Monday thru Fridoy .
needs slnc t supervis ion over
Phone 992-3410. Ca r and Phone
medication . Experience not
necessa ry.
necessary but good personality
CASH paid for aU makes and
is o must . Raci ne oreo . Coli SOMEONE NEEDED to mow gra;s.
models of mobile homes.
9.C9-2185 or {30-4) 773·5777 .
Phone 992-5798.
Phone area code 61..C ·423 -9531 .

'

Television log for easy viewing

'

·'

rah~

OUit UH rr

I

Buy, Sell or Trade Through The Sentinel Want Ads

WANT AD
CHARGES
I day
2dl!lys

~

.

''1'-r--'--.,,--- Y'--,r----rf

by THOMAS JOSEPH

F'
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..... i....,..l Attics
S10III

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cuntiS-115S

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lARRI,,WFNRER_

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17 Add water

to
19 "! - You
Babe"

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cottonwood
3 Musical
12 Branch
paces
13 Paradis' 4 Lambkin's
·lacal
mater
14 Fuse
5 Kind or
abbreviation
chair
15 st. Tropez
6 Hail!
is one
(Lat.)
li Fa lima's
7 Maneuver;

OOWN TO 1Hf; HAI&lt;CWAA!'
PIC-K UP scm~~

=

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DOWN
I Beat it! .

yam
II Bring

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what we
Speak for
want to do is
4ourself' What
find the Tunnel I want to do
of Love!~·is
e!

Well,

here's
the

park!

.........
'

inv.
Forearm

cheat
8 Satan
(2 wds.).
9 Horowitz
program
II Keep away

I

15 Britis h

27 Entrance

carbine

hall
29 Barber's

18 Type of
party ·

ilem

21 Exhort

30 Red

22 Eternal
23 N .Y.
lake
Sluggishness
25 " Seven eleven !"

10 :00-Kingston : Confiden-tial 3,4,15; Ch arlie's Angels
6, 13; News 20; Scenes from a Marriage 33.
10,3()-Monlage 20.
11 :oo-News 3,4,6,!3, 10,13, 15; Ma c Neil-Lehrer R epQrt
33; Monfy Python's Flying Ci r cus 20.
11 ,3()-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Rookies 6,1 3; Columbo B;
Mary Hartman 10; ABC News 33,
12 :1)().-..Movle " P iranha,Pira.nha" 10; Janakl 33 .
1·2 ,4G-Mystery of the Week 6,13 ,
1 :QO-Tomorrow 3,4. ·
2' 1()-News 13.

seaweed

31 Winged
32 Arab

24

country

37 Below

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bone

lege try flunks

native

25 Nimrod's
basket
2S Underworld
group
%7 London

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AH COUL-DN'r
SLEEP, BUT NO OENSE:
1ELLIN' lr\AMMY- .

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A JI09 82
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38 Bang

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Punta del - •-'--.!...;.!_......I.-

DAILY CRYPTOC}UOTE-

~

MASON FURNITURE

-•

•
•

•

CEH

WINNIE

J. USEO TO BE ONE OF111E BEST...
• BILLY, \1/HEN I lOLD YOU J. WA&amp;
AN INDEPENDENT FILMMAKER,

I WASN'T LYING.'

=.--....--

YOU CAN AGK AN\ONE IN
BUeiNEGB .. .

FINANCIN0 ...10 SAVE
HAD lO 00 50METH/NG
M0111ER\9 MEDICAL f'XI?Bi'4SE-5
AND SAVE 111E: HOUGE
FroM R:li?ECLQ7URE I

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Pass

io work

Orening lead - J •
it :
By Oswald

Jacob y

VXB

FBAV

YMVVM

Q MI

di?monds and t he other two
aces He didn ' t s top' to s ee ex -

actly how to be s ure of these
nine a nd s1 mply led out the
RMEP
Y C I WX
NA:
" HM E' V ace and jack of diamonds .
Wes t t oo k hi s k in g a nd
PIDYFRB.
ME I II
LRDP
AN I s hilled to the jack of hea rts .
Trouble had reared its ugl y
QIBHBINWG
VJBTBA
head . S&lt;&gt;uih held oil with dummy's ace. but th e s ui t wa s conYester-!"y's Cryptoquote : MANY GOOD QUALI'J'I~~S AHI&lt;: tinued a nd dumm y had to win
NOT SUF FICJI&lt;:NT TO BALANCE A SINGLI:; WA NT - THI&lt;: t he third lead.
South 's nine tricks ha d been
WANT OF MONEY, - ZIMMERMANN
r ed uced to e ight si nce the re
C) 117'7 KJ.aa Fea&amp;\lfts Srndlcatt, IDe-:
was no way to score three

spades and f our diamo nds, but
So uth d id give it the ol d
college try He cashed hi s
qu ee n s of diam o nd s and
s pades a nd le d a c lub loward
dummy ' s q ueen . Unfortunately lo r South , East he ld the
king and the defe nse actuall y
made six tri ck s .
A liltle ea r ly thought wou ld
have saved Sou th 's contract.
All he had to do wa s to cash
hi s queen of spad es before
leading the second diamond.
The defense w oul d s till be
ab le to s h1lt to hearts but
South would be able to disca rd
hi s queen of diam0!1ds ·an the
ace of s pades and un block the
s uit

~~~~
A Hawall reader wants to
know if a hu sband and w1 fe
eve r won the \!anderbil t Cup .
The answer · is a decided
" Ye s." In 1930 the team ul
i;iy a nd J o&lt;ephine C ulbertson.
Ted Lightn e r a nd Wa ldemar
von Zedtwitz won . An in·
te r esti ng fea ture is that Ely
and Jo d1d not play as partners
on that team .
(Do you have a Question
for the eKperts? Wnte "Ask
the Jacobys " care of thtS
newspaper, The Jacob ys wi ll
answer 1nd1v1dua t questions
if stamped, sefl·addressed
envelopes are enclosed. Thf
most inrerestmg question s
Will be used m th1s column
and w tlf rece1ve cop1es of
JACOBY M ODERN.)

BARNEY

'!!

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c

l'llJT NON I. O'IN'T GET A

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CRYPTOQUOTES

''

: BUY, sm.·OR TRJIJ£! : .••
• ••LISTEN TO THE
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:
SWAP SHOP
:
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South
IN T

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FRIDAY UNnL 8 PM

Nflrth East

One teller simply s land s ror another. In this sam p le A is
South won th e s pade lead
used for the three L's, X fo r the tw o O's, etc . Single letters with t he k ing and qUi c kly
a~strophes, the length .and formati on of the word s are ali counted nme sure tr ic ks m ade
1nts. Each day the code ]('ttcrs are different.
up of t h re e s pade s, l o ur

.&amp;

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P&lt;:~ ss

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

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later
Malay
gibbon
Nautical

35 Mexican

HE:LLO,

12

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chain

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ZZ Far Eaat

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par

38 Coterie
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Yesterday's Answer,

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42 Adolescen t

ID Ball of

BORN LOSER

Mliii•UI
SIOIIIQ:.SGffm

Mescal.,o's

war pri1c

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MASON FURNITURE

(Answers lomorrow)
THEORY BENIGN

~IN'6td

· · llllllln ·

illllliltioll Snices

VA -FHA, 30 yr . financing. Ireland
Mortgage, n E. State, Athens,
phone (61&lt;) 592-3051 .
REMODELING, Plumbing . heating
Wi II do odd jobs, roofing, poin·
1
and all types of gen•rol repair .
3 BEDROOM Ranch , ! /1 bath, 1
tlng , gutter work . Phone 992Work guaranteed 20 yeara exacre , all elec. finished garage.
7409.
.
perience . Phone 992-2409.
· Fully carpeted, five Points
area . $30,000. Phone 992-2928 S&amp;.WING - ALTERATIONS , SEWING MACHINE Repairs, serUpholstering ,
drapes
after 5 p.m.
vice , oil makes, 992-22&amp;1. The
reasonable. 572 South Third
Fabric Shop ,
Pomeroy .
FOR SALE by owner , 5 rms . and
Ave ., Middleport. Phon e "
1
Authorized
Singer
Sales and
bath. 3 h acres. close to town
992-6306.
Ser¥ice . We sharpen' Sci non.
an blacktop rood , Also, city
PIANO TUNING, lone Daniels . 12 EXCAVATING, dozer. loader ond
water. PI-lone 949·2873.
years of service . Phone
backhoe work; dump truck•
992 ·2082.
and lo-boys for hire; will haul
lill dirt, to soil , limestone and
WILL MOW cemetery lots ot any
grovel. Coli Bob or Roger J.t·
location . Phone 742-217&lt;1.
'
fen, day phone 992·1089.
Will DO building and remodel - ,
night phone 992-3525 or 992·
ing, roofing, plumbing, elec·
5232 .
tricol work and general repair .
Free estimates and reasonable EXCAVATING, dozer , backhoe
and ditcher. Charles R. Hat·
rates . Phone Charles Sinclair ,
field . Bock Hoe Service;
(61&lt;) 985·&lt;121 .
Rutland , Ot1io. Phone 7~2-2008.
MAIN
SEPTIC TANKS cleaned . Mod.m
POMEROY, O.
Sanitation, 992-3954.
JUST LISTED - Aj&gt;px. 'i
WILL do roofing, construction,
acres, 2 s-tory frame, 1
plumbing and heating. No iob
room
house
with
4
1cn: MOBILE HOME, 1.. x70.
too Iorge or too small. Phone
bedrooms. llh baths, 2 car
o_.shwosher, elec. stove, 3
742-23-18 .
garage, some paneling &amp;.
piece bedroom suite , Phone
, flooring, ceiling,
carpeting, porch &amp; good
- 7~:'!.· '1'57c':.:·_ _ _ _ _ _ __ CARPENTER
paneling. Phone 992-2759.
concrete bldg . ONLY
$10,500.00 ,
JUST LISTED - Appx , 130
acres farm . house, barn 1
milk house, other bldgs .
$32,500 .00.
JUST LISTED Near
Harrisonville, 63 acres
land, barn &amp; other bldgs.
Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat.-8:30til5:00
ONLY $15,750.00.
WOULD YOU BELIEVE?
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON
A 1969 12x60 troller on an
B8x200 Ito. plus an 8x16
building
In
a
good
neighborhood, · ror ONLY
$8,000.00.
OUR BEST BUY In
Pomeroy, • 3 bdrm :, 2
story home with basement.
ONLY $12 ,500.00.
4.3 ACRES - Level land
Mason,
Het:man Grate
near Mulbarry Hgts. ready
773-5592
for
homesite
or
development.
Only
$8,250,00.
BUSINESS
, . . . . . .. . I ( T I. . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . . .
OPPORTUNITIES Do
you want to strike out on
your own? We have several
good businesses tor sale at
• rlghf price. For Info,
,CALL TODAY.
OUT OF TOWN - 1 acre,
•
new home, 3 bedrms .,
carpeting, utility room,
carport, dinette, modern.
priced to sell at $30,000.00.
WE NEED LISTINGS,
NEW HOMES, GIVE US A
TRY, CALL TODAY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
Honk Cleloncl
Associate

APRON

Answer: GIYe her this kind of ring and save
monevl-TELEPHONE

1

FREE TIM ES

DUGAN's FRONT End Alignment,
..
formerly Odell's Alinement
.-behind Rutlo~d Grode School .
Ph. t!2·3ft3 4-10:1
Alignment , wt'lael balancing,· 1...--_;,~::::;=:......:::::;:;~U
tune·up1 brakes and 'minor
repair. Phone 742-2005 or
742-2C)()4 . Evening work by ap·
pointment.
HARRISON'S T. V. Repoir .. Service
Colis . 276 Sycamore , St. , Mid - BRADFORD. Auctioneer , Complete Service. Phone ~9-2487
dloporl , P.hone992·2522.
or 9-49-2000. Raci ne , Ohio , Critt
FREE INSPECTION, free estimates
Bradford .
lor termites. Fast quality work .
Call 949-2903. Southern Pest ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweep'!n , toasters . Irons, all
ControL
small appliances . Lawn mower ,
next to State Highway Garage
an Route 7. Phone (61-4) 985·
3825.

I Jumbleo. REBEL

(I I XJ

6 : 15--Farm RePOrt 13,
6 : 20--Not tor Women Only 13.
6 :30-AG·USA &lt;: News 6; Sunrise Semester 8;
Chrlsoplter Clo&gt;eup 10,
6 ' 45--Molnlng Report 3.
6 : 50--Good Mornl'ng . West Virgin ia ll ,
6 ' 5s-Good Morning , Trl Slate 13.
7 :00-Today 3.4.15 ; Good Morning Amer ica 6.13: CBS
New$ 8; Chuck White Reports 10.
7: 05--Porky Pig 10.
7: 30--Schoolles 10.
B' OO-Howdy Doody 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame
St. 33.
8 , 30-Big Valley 6.
9:00-A .M . 3: Phil Dona~ue 4.13.15; Andy Griffith 8:
M ike Douglas 10.
9:30--Cross Wits 3; Edge ol Night 6; Concentration B:
Studio See 33.
10,00-Santord &amp; Son 3,. ,15; Dinah 6; Double Dare
8.10 ; Mike Douglas 13; Tennis Is tor Everyone Jl .
10,3()-Hotlywood Squares 3,&lt;,15; Price Is Right 8,10;
Mull igan Slew 33,
11 :QO-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15; Morning Show 13;
Elec. Co , 20; Zoom 33.
11 ,3()-Shoot for the Stars 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13:
Love of Life 8,10; Sesame St . 20,33,.
11 ,ss--c BS News 8: Ms. Fix it 10.
12 :00-News 3,4,6,1 0; Second Chance 13; Name That
Tune 15; Olvorce Court B.
12 ,30--Lovers &amp; Friends 3, 15; Ryan' s Hope 6, 13; Bob
Braun 4; Search for Tomorrow 8,10; Abou t Salety
33 .
lb15-Eiec. Co. 33.
1 :00-Gong Show 3: All My Children 6,13: News B;
Name -that Tune 7; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not
For Women Only 15.
1: 15,- Sale and Soun~ 33,
1 : 30--0ays of Our Lives 3.4.15: Fam ily Feud 6.13 : As
The World Turns 8.10 ; Rebop 33 .
2' 1Mr-S20,000 Pyramid 6,13; Infinity Factory 33.
2: 3G-Doctors 3,4,1 5; One Ute to Live 6,13; Guiding
Light 8,10 ; Consumer Surv ival Kit 33.
3 :ocr-Another World 3,4,15; All In , e Family 8,1 0; On
Aging 20.
·
·
3: Is-Genera l HoSpital 4,6,13.
3 ' 3G-Match Game 8,1 0; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20 .
4 ' 1Mr-M ister Cartoon 3; Lillie Rascals 4; Gong Show
15; New M ickey Mouse Club 6; Lucy Show B;
Sesame St . 20.33; Movie " Girls of Pleasure island"
10; Olnah 13,
4: 15--Litlle Rascals 4,
4 ,3()-My Three Sons 3; Partridge Family 4,8;
Emetgency Or"~e 6; Fllntstones 15.
5:00-Big Valley 3; My Three Sons 4; Brady Bunch B;
Mis ter Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Emergency
One 13; Star Trek 15.
,
5' 3()-Adam -12 4; News 6; Fanlly Affair B; Elec . Co.
20,33 .
6'00-News 3,4,6.8.10.13.15; ABC News 6: Zoom 20.33 .
6 ,3()-NBC News3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Vegetable Soup 20; Lilias Yoga &amp;
'i'ou 33 .
7 :00-Truth or Cons . 3; America : Ttle Youn9 Experience 4; Bowling for Dollars 6: Pop Goes the
Country B; Ne ws 10; To Tell the Truth 13; My Three
Sons 15; Oh ioans Ask 20; Big Green Magazine 33 ,
7 ,3()-Dolly 3; $100.000 Name That Tune 4; Match
Game PM 6 ; 525,000 Pyramid 8; Mac Neii · Lehrer
Report 33; The Judge 10; Break th e Bank 13; Wild
Kingdom. 15,
8 : oo-wonderful Kangaroo 3,4, 15; BJon lc Wonian 6, 13;
Gunsmoke 8; Nova 20,33; Good Times 10.
8: 30-Loves Me, Loves Me Not 10.
9 ,oo-c·po Sharkey 3,4,15; Movie " The Amazing
Howard Hughes"
10; Darice In America 33;
Sou nds tage 20 .
,
9 ,3o-:we Think You Should Know 3; Sirota ' s Court

-15 KNOWING HOW

TO READ IMI'OtrrANT?

--NOW I NEED
A NEW 8ED -ST ID

WAAL-- I fiNALLY
GOT A N!;:W

fER TH ' QUILT

FER TH'
BEDSTID

•

"'2-2259&gt;-m-:~SA
915-4112

•

'

••

�10-The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday, April12, 1977
NOTICE OF
APOINTME'N T

Cue No . 22091
E.st•te ot Ruth E . S' •• l.
Oecuse d .
NOIIce Is hereby Ol ven t hat
R ebe cce J 8Toderl c k ot R t
1. Pomeroy . Oh 10 • S769 , Oh i o
has been d ul r ap_po ln te d
Attm l n l srratr i :~C ot the Esr ar e
of Ruth E . Steele , decea sed .
late ot Chester Townsh i p,
Melgs Count y , Oh io .
Creditors are requ ired to
f ile ttle lr cla im s w i th sa id
f ~ duciary
w i th i n
t h r ee
months .
Dated lh l$ 81h- day of Apr il
1977

( ~)

Mann.i ng D . We bster
·
Judge
Courf ot Co mm on Pleas.
Probat e Di v isi on
12 . 19 , 26. Jt c

ORDINANCE NO . 10!14-17

~THOUSAND
RO~R~ ;.\t'E' .TWO
e'teHUN
v'e,PN
0

OREO

DOL LAR S

AND

($11 ,203.00\

FED~RA L

SHAR i NG

THREE

OF

RE VEN U F

FU ND S TO

U SED IN THE 1977
PROPRIAT IO N ,

BE

AP
A S

PROPO S ED
IN
THE
FEBRUARY 28 MEETIN G
OF VI~LAGE CO UN CI L
Be il orda i ned tlv
t he
Councll of the V ll l&amp;ge of
M iddleport as fOIIOINS :
Se c . L Thai the fol low ing Is

a list of improvemen ts fo r the
VIl lage of M iddleport tor fh e
calendar year of n 7 7 :

1. 55 . 000 . 00 tor Tenn i s
Courts
1. l l, OOO .OO f o r th e Wa ter
Oepllrfment
3. $1 ,000.00 Fire Dep.oirl
ment Hose Dryer
A. $500. 00 For Sw imm ing
Pool Ma intenance
5. SJ,70J .OO lor Resurfa ci ng

--- - - --- - - - ------ -- --- ---- - I Hospital News

l
j

Area De"aths

lI

I

I

NETTIE JOHNSON
Nett ie Ta ylor John son , 83.
Rt. 1, Ga lli pol is, d fed Sunday
afternoon at Hol zer Med ical
Center .
Born May 2. 1893 at Russell
County , Va ., she marr ied
Dolly Johnson who prece"ed
her In death In 1930.
She is surv i ved by two
daucahters ,
Mrs .
Steve

(VIviani Gall. Ligonier, Ind.;

Mrs. Dan I Arvilla) Bales. Rt.
1. Gallipolis ; grandchildren ,
Dennis Bales. Washington,
Ga . : Larry Ba les . Rt. I ,
Gallipolis ; Mrs . Carmaleda
Fender . Laurel , Md. ; Eddie

Gillespie. Ligonier . Ind .. and
Danny Ra y
nessee.

Johnson ,

Ten .

Paul ' s Food Sho ppe 1.n
Columbus, he was born Dec.
12, 1893 In Gallla County to
the tate John L. and N.oriah
Evans Stevers.
He marr ied Weallha A .
Burnett who prec_@ded him In

death Sept. 14, 1973.
Svrvlvors include one son ,
Alden
Blain
St@vers .
Columbus and one !lst@r,
Rev . Oma Williams , Crown
Ci ty .
Three
brothers
preceded him in ·death.
He resided ln Columbus
several year s and was a
member of We st Ga te Lodge

Military

playing

new role

ASTRO·GRAPH

N. Y. 10019. Be sure to ask for
,.- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . , ,l\r1es Volum e 6 .)

for the Scotch in You

MORE
FOR
YOUR
MONEY

®

' IJU UWL!Jl!JU

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR

DISCHARGED :
Marion
HaU, Floyd Rhodes, Vepita
Knight and Jimmy Lee.

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Aprllll)
Raymond Bays, Geraldine
Blain, Freda Burnett, Jake
Helton, Julia Henderson ,
Mrs. William Kuhn and
daughter, Virgil Malone ,
Pansy Mayes, Mrs. David
McCarty and · son, Froud
Mercer, Mandie Persinger,
Margaret Potter, Janet
Skaggs, Ida Sullivan, Billy
Ward, Jr., Dewey White, Jr.,
Wilbur, . Sylvia
Bobby
Williamson.
(Births, Aprlllll
Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Canter,
daughter, Oak Hill; Mr, and
Mrs. Lowell Flowers, son,
Mason, W. Va .; Mr. and Mrs.
David Graham, daught er,
Point Pleasant, w. Va .; Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest Hawkins,
son, Poffieroy ; Mr. and Mrs.
John Carmichael, daughter,
Bidwell.

Balloon find ,
may net prize

PORCH DAMAGED
The porch on the Spring
Ave. residence of the Fife
family had minor damage
from fire early Monday
evening. The Pomeroy Fire
Department received the
alarm at 7::!0 p.m. Fire Chief
Charles Leger said the fire
presumably started from
matches which children were
playing with near the porch
area .

FUNDS TRANSFERRED

An entry filed in the Meigs
County Clerk of Courts office
Monday approved the transNOW YOU KNOW
fer of $19,492.75 from the.
Confederate Gen. 114bert
general fund to the motor
. E. Lee was married to the
great-granddaughter of vehicle fund on a petition
filed by Olive Township.
Martha Washington, Mary
Custis.
OPENII'iGS REMAIN
A few openings remain
available for a free cervical
cancer clinic for Meigs area
.women from 12 noon to 3 p.m.
Wednesday. Anyone wishing
to fille one of the appointments should call 992-3382 at
once.

VACATION
WATCH FOR

We've got something to sotisfy the
wee bit of Scotch in you ... high
interest paying sovings accounts
and certificates. Come, be a port
of our savings don .

1\b

O)Aoofl.rJl(jl\TJ

SWAN IN GERMANY
Army Private William E.
Swan,.l9, son of Mrs. Freda
April 13, 1977
M. Swan, 114ute 1, Mid·
Till s yea r , opport unJties may
dleport
,
recently
was
come to y6u fr om people ~ou ' d
least expect, Be care:l ul not to let assigned to the 3rd Annored
the source cause you to pass up Division in Butzbach, Gera valuable oper)lng .
many . A missile gunner in
Headquarters Battery, 2nd
Battalion of the division's 3rd
Field Artillery, he entered
the Anny In September, 1976. ·
Hls fattier, Ralph ~1"an, lives
in Dexter, Ohio.

I

90n, ~Guysville.

J9hn Connolly, 12, son of
Mr, and Mrs. Dale Connolly,
Long Bottom, found an interesting balloon in Long
Bottom Saturday. He may
even win a priie.
A message attached to the
helium filled balloon said:
'1This card was atta'ched to
a baUoon and released from
Laukhuff Elementary School
in Louisville, Ky., on March
17, 1977 as part of a St.
Patrick's Day activity. Would
you be so kind as to return it
to : Princi(lal, Laukhuf
Elementary School, 5100
Capawood Drive~ LouisviUe,
Ky.
"A prize will be given to
both the sender and finder of
the balloon traveling the
gr-.test distance. Deadline
for returning is May 14.
trust us to sustain our ThankS ror your assi$tance."
profession," he · said. 11Now

l(}[fJ!JJ · wemustliveupiothattrus~."

OPENING DATE

LODGE TO MEET
Pomeroy Lodge 1~ . F. and
special
A.M. wUI have
meeting Thursday at 7:30
p.m. at the Pmeroy Masonic
Temple. All master masons
are invited.

a

MIDDLEPORT; OHIO

Visit Our Salad Bar
Pork and Dressing
Scalloped Potatoes
·
Vegetable

Our NEW Telephone Nul'l\ber Is

992-6661

Hot

Rolls

Plus Tax

Coffee, Tea or Milk

Installment Loan Department Number Will
Remain the Same 992-j077.

THE MEIGS INN

Member Federal Deposit Insurance
·
Corporation

992 -3629

Pomeroy, 0 .
Phone 992 -6304

PIZZA SHACK Phone 992-6304

.

'

Negotiating to
continue on
Eastern issues
Mrs. R. M. Jonas, president
of Eastern Local Teachers'
Association, safd today the
Eastern Local Teachers'
Association negotiating team
and the Eastern Local School
Board will meet Monday,
April 18, at 4:30 p.m. at
Eastern High School to
c o n t 1n u e c o n t r a c t
negotiations.
A preliminary meeting
April 7 between the Eastern
Local Teachers' Associati.on
Uniserv Representative, Ted
Blbbler, the Ohio School
Boa rd
Associ a ti on
Representative, John Brent,
and the Eastern Local
Superintendent, John Riebel,
showed " lid equate ,.,
progress, she · said. She . expressed "hope" that tentative
·agreement can be reached on
all items on the bargaining
table Mnday evening.

-·

•
l

·-

--

HAYMAN PROMOTED
RACINE - Marine Private
First Clasa Kelly Hayman,
son of Jean Burrslde .of
Racine,
has
been
meritoriously promoted to his
present rank upon graduation
from recruit training at the
Marine Corps Recruit Depot,
Pan-Is laland, S. C. He joined
the Marine Corps in
December 1976.
MEET TONIGHT
Middleport Youth League
will meet tonight at 7 p.m. at
the American Legion Hall,
Middleport.

..

News .• in Briefs

.

Proffitt is heading an intensive investigation.

l

.
.
. rhglua,,e

VOL. XXVII . NO. 254

~-~

'

8farof

(Continued from page 1)

'

Look for our Stars for big savings

Uke This
17 cu. ft.
Frost-Proof

REFRIGERATOR
• FREEZER

S900 TO

--"'~e

Lovely ideas for day
and night, casual
polyester-cotton
dresses in prints,
solids checks
{
J and stripes.

t

1
·By United Press International
WASHINGTON- THE. CONDITION OF THE WINTER
wheat crop Improved in many areas last week, but there was
no significant Improvement in the severe drought conditions
grippil!g parts of the Pacific Coast, the Agriculture
Deparfi"ent says.
.
Th~ agency's weekly crop weather report Tuesday said in
Kansa4, which leads the nation in winter wheat production,
growing conditions remained "semi-dry" last week but the
overaU condition of the crop Improved. Other wheat producing
areas also noted an upturn in the condition of llle growing grain
except for California, some mountain states including
Colj!railo, and dry parts of Oklahoma and Texas.

Hugh Leifheit, meeting with
the Meigs County Board of
Commissioners Tuesd·a y
evening, opposed ' abandonment of Township 114ad
205 in Salisbury Township.
He was advised to contact
the Salisbury Township
Trustees and the commissioners will contaCt the
prosecutor if the trustees
make a request to abandon
the road .
WASHINGTON. - JUDY CARTER, THE WIFE of
Leifheit also asked that T·President Carter's son J~ck , suffered a miscarriage TueSday 2115 (Burdette Road ) not be
night, but White House officials said she was in good condition. included in the proposed road
uShe's fine and there are no cOmplications," said Mary named. He gave no reasons
Hoyt, press secretary to First Lady Rosalynn Carter. Judy, 28, for his requests.
was taken from Camp David, Md., by amliulance to Belllesda
Ted Warner, highway
Naval Hospital outside Washington. The drive takes Superintendent, and Dan
· Spencer met with the board
approximately one hour .
and requested thai the
WAS!nNGTON- PRESIDENT CARTER has taken a
smail but direct swipe atllle bureaucratic jungle he promised
to defoliate . Tuesday he sent Congress the annual report of the
Radiation Control for He8Ith and Safety Act.
In his message, Carter said, " The report's ~nly legislative
recommendation is that the requirement for llle report itself
be repealed. All of the information found in the report · is
available to Congress on an immediate basis through
congressional committee oversight and budget hearings."

COLUMBUS- STATE AUDITOR THOMAS FERGUSON
says Gov. James A. Rhodes is apparently " taking some wild
shots at someone he might encounter as an opponent" in next
year's election with his announcement he would begin a pre audit of all vouchers from Ferguson's office.
"Contrary to recent statements of some state officials, the
auditor of stale's office is audited, has been audited and will be
audited again," Ferguson said Tuesday. "Ohio law and not the
whims of some dictate how lllis office is governed. " Records of
my office are open to inspection as provided for by law," sa id
Ferguson.

WOMEN'S DAYTIME DRESSES.
'11

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MIAMI BEACH, FLA. - THREE MEDICAL researchers
who investigateed claims that Vitamin E restored flagging
sexual performance in men say any beneficial results are only
in the mind of the users. "All Vitamin E does is make egg
!!hells harder," Dr. William C. Andrews said Tuesday at the
Ninth Win-ld Congress ol Fertility and Sterility .
'.' I'd take it myself, if it worked," said Dr . Robert Kistner,
a birth ctmtrol researcher . " But there is no sigiliricant
scientific data to prove the vitamins do .any good at aU ."
Andrews said everyone gets an adequate amount of Vitamin E
from normal food iiltake , and that "someone has to be
absolutely starving to be lacking in Vitamin E."

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
00

.

'••,

be§tbu,YcG

expires
Friday
and
McGovern told a news
eonference Monday Castro
indicated he would not
negotiate a new treaty unless
the United States lifts . its
economic embargo against
the Caribbean Island .
He was interviewed today
on the NBC Today program.
The anti-hijacking pact,
under which each country
agreed to arrest hijackers
and return them lor
prosecution, has virtually
stopped .a spate of such
crimes with planes winding
up in Havana in tbe 1960s and
early 1970s. .
McGovern said Monday he
hopes to meet soon with
President Carter to tell him
Castro wants better relations
with the United States. The
senator talked at length with
Fie! and his brother, Raul,
who Is chief of Cuba's armed
forced.

CINCINNATI - "CLEAN ENERGY FROM COAL" will
be discussed by C. Mel Adams, lonner dean of _the University
of Cincinnati College of Engineering and internationally
known engineering researcher, in a speech Friday at the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agencb here .
Adams will discuss ways "dirty" coai can be used to
produce energy without air pollution, without producing
"dirty" water, applications for coal use in smaller local
md11Btries and using the coal as sn energy source without
destroying the power-producing machine.

MISSES SIZES

12• to 20

AHTENS, OHIO - HUSTLER MAGAZINE gublisher
Larry Flynt said Tuesday night he does not consider himself a
"martyr or revolutionary" and says he wants to be
remembered ' 1or protecting the First Amendment. "
F1ynt was convicted in Cincinnati earlier this year of
pandering obscenity and engaging in organized crime in
coonectioo with the publication . and distribution of his
magazine. "I don't consider mY"eif · a martyr or
revolutionary, " F1yntsaid in an address at Ohio University. "l
feel 1 am a part of an evolutionary process that is making
society better" by helping people to better deal with their

HALF SIZES
141h to 261h

EXTRA SIZES
42 to 52

sexuality.u

·

Middleport E-R answers 50 calls
WOMEN'S

READY TO WEAR
2ND FLOOR

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

-•
•

.

~~'];;"Brief~ Road

Act now during our .. ,

Hijackers

DETROIT (UP!) ,- Labor manent tax cut. ·
Secretary Ray Marshall,
" A rebate is not as effective
once cool to President Car- in lowering unemployment as
ter's proposed ~ tax rebate, public service employment,"
said Tuesday the rebate is the Marsl!aU said. " But it can be
best way to stimulate the done quickly, and the effects
economy while avoiding are temporary, so you avoid
inflation and buying time for inflationary pressure.
pennanent solutions.
.
" Also, it doesn't interfere
Marshall strongly defended with the abllity to have other
the rebate plan, accusing tax reforms and we don't lose
critics of distorting economic the revenue permanently."
statistics to promote a per-

besides his wife, is a
daughter, Mar y King of
Ari2ona.
The Musser home, located
acrosa the New Lima 1!4ad
from Forest Acres Park,
easily could have been under
casual view of anyone Wling
facilities of the park. If
anyone saw anything in
connection with the Musser
home from the area of the
park near the time noted he
or she is urged to convey it to
the sheriff's department,
even though it may not appear
to
have
any
significance.
According to Mrs. Musser,
80, who survived, though tied
gagged
and
up
and
threatened with torture if she
refused to tell where
valuables were hidden, she
walked from the living room
above when her husband was
killed instantly by a pistol
Continued on page 14

entine

·TEL AVlV, ISRAEL - PRIME MINISTER Yitzhak
Rabin , who said he wants to resign over a bank account
scandal, is legaUy responsible for the leadership of Israel and
must remain in office until after nert month's elections, his
spokesman said today.
Rabin, who resigned as head of the ruling Labor party last
week, was fined $1,600 Monday for keeping an illegal account
in a Washington, D. C. bank. Hill wife, Leah, will face criminal
charges in comection with the $18,000 bank account, the
Finance Ministry said. Israeli law prohibits citizens from
holding foreign currency a !road.

~

DEATH ROOM - This is the living room in the rural home of the late Dale Musser, 81 ,

mwhich Mil. Musser was slain Monday about 7 p.m. by an intruder. Mr. Musser's body was
found face )'down on the floor irrunediately to llle front of the area shown. Sheriff James J .

(Continued from page 11
,.. , ..
concern, Monday announced the purcbaae of the Plttaburghbasetl Isaly restaurant and dairy store cbain for $7.3million in
cash, notes and warrants . Operating In southwestern
Pemsylvania, eastern Ohio and northern West Virginia, llaly
has 29 Sweet William restalU'ants and 60 dairy-deli stores. An
additional 601salydelisarerun byfrancbiaeholders.
.
Clabir has an industrial division and a food service
operation with fast-food outlets ln New York, Connecticut and
California, along with a chain of full-&lt;lerVice restaurants.

.

asked to contact the shertff's
office with whatever information they may have .
The body of Mr. Musser has
been returned to the Ewing
Funeral Home in Pomeroy
from Columbus where an
autopsy was performed
Tuesday. Funeral services
will be aMounced. Among
the survivors of Mr. Musser,

Marshall, cool to warm

. HSTOMEET
MEETING CANCELLED ,
The
Meiga
County Humane
RIO GRANDE - The April
Soeiety
will
meet
at the Thrift
13 meeting of the Rio Grande
Sl)9p
at
7:30
p.m.
Thursday.
Coinmunity College Board of
Members
are
urged
to attend.
Trustee$ has been cancelled.
The public Is Invited.

1

FRIENDLY BANK"

Several leads are being
checked today by the
department of Sheriff James
Proffitt in the murder of Dale
Musser, 81, during a robbery
at his home oil the New Uma
Road Monday about 7 p.m.
Meantime, any motorist
who observed vehicles or any
persons around the Musser
home on Monday evening are

LENA SAMPSON, 12, daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Jimmy Bailey, Route I, ReedsvWe,
receives a $10 cash prize from Mrs. Betty Ohlinger, owner of Marguerite 's Shoe Store as
second place winner in The Daily Sentinel's Easter coloring contest. Lena Is a seventh
grader at llle Eastern Junior High High School and won second place out of over 400entries
in the coolest. First place winner was Barbara Will, Harrisonville, dau~ter d Mr. and Mrs.
Leo Johnson, $15 - and Shamon Hindy , Middleport, daughter of Mrs. Pat Hlndy,
Middleport, and David Hindy, Point Pleasant, won third $5. Lena colored tne p1cwre
sponsored by Marguerite 's.

.THE INN PLACE
Wednesday Night Special

."THE

DEPOSITS INSURED TO $40,1100

Sheriff Proffitt says leads to
murder being checked out

Vetenllll Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED : Clarence
McDaniel. Middleport ;
Myrtle Durst, Syracuse:
Olive Erdman, Long Bottom,
Nonnan Evans, Portland;
Kenneth Keesee, Pomeroy;
Carol L. Loucks, Mineral
Wells, Texas; Linda Bostic,
Racine; and Brian Thomp-

PLEASANT VALLEY _
DISCHARGES
Mrs.
623.
Funeral serv ices wi ll b_e 2 John Baker, Galllpolis;
p.m . Thursday at th e Waugh - George
Payne,
West
Halley-Wood Funeral Home
Columbia;
James
Belcher,
with the Rev. Ch1:1rles Lusher
Gallipolis; Mary Lyvere ,
officia ting . Burial will be In
Mo'und
Hill
cemetery .. Pomer oy; Mrs . Howard
Friends ma y call at ttle
VanMeter, Mason: Mary Lou
funer al home from 2toAand 7
Jones,
Mason; Mrs. A. W.
t o 9 p .m .
Wednesday .
McKinney,
Point Pleasant,
Ma sonic services will be
conducted by M ornIng Dawn
and Carol Blakeman, Point
Lodge at 7: 30 p.m . Wed · Pleasant.

LEGAL NOTICE
Streets
Noti ce is hereby g i Yen that
Sec . •II. Th is Ord inan ce
She attended the White O;!k
a hearing on the ~ l rector y shall take effec t and be In
ass istance charging plan of for ce fro m and after March Baptist Church .
Funeral serv ices were held
The Oh i o Bell Telephone 28, 1'~77 ..
Compa ny will be held on May
Passed the 28th day of today a t th e Waugh-Ha lley 9, 1977, at 9: 30 A .M ., E .D .· March 19 77 .
Wood Funeral Home with
S.T ., at the off ices of the
bu rial
In
M ound
H ill
Public Utilities Comm iss ion
Attest : cemetery . Pallbearer s were
of Otl !o , 180 East Broad Gene Grate
Gene
Skaggs,
Marvin
Str eet. Columbus . Oh io. At Clerk
the hearing all interested
M . L . Kelly Skaggs , Francis Shaver ,
nesday .
·
Elkins ,
Dickie
parties will be afforded the
Presiden t of Counci l Tony
opportunity
to
present ,141 12, 19. 2tc
Mollohan, Elmer Spauldin9 .
evidence relev ant to the
specific
issues
in
the
proceed ing . Further
In ·
NOTICE OF
LILLIAN H. STEIFF
formation regarding this
APPOINTMENT
Mrs . Lillian Helen Ste iff.
ma.tter may be obtained by
1
Case No . 22081
addressi ng an inqu i ry to the
87 , Middleport, died Tuesday
DAN I E'l
E . eveninQ at the Angel of Mercy
P.U .C.O ., 180 East Broad Esfate ' of
THOMPSON
Deceased
.
SfreeL Co lu mbus . Oh i o,
Nursing Hpme in A lbany
Notice Is hereby given tha t
~ 3 215.
ending a l ingering illness .
Louise
Thomp
son
,
of
547
The
Public
Ut i lities
Born Nov . 9, 1889 in Mid Main Street, Middl eport ,
Comm ission of Ollio
dleport, she wa s th e daughter
By : Randall G . App legate, Ohio, has been duly appointed
Administratrix of the Estate of the late Professor James
Secretary
of Daniel E . Th ompson
T . and Flora Gardner Lewis .
deceased , late of Meigs
( ~) 12, He
She was preceded in death by
oliJ}unty , Oh io.
a brother. James G. Le wis,
For Wedneaday, April '13, 1977
Credlfors are requ ired to
and her husband . William
file t he ir ci Biims with said
NEW ORLEANS , La.
Stelff . SLn-vlvor!:i i nclude a
f iduciary
with in
three
months .
siste r, Mrs. Virg ini a Sheets,
(UP! ) - Gen. F . Michael
Dated this 29th day of
Cape Canaveral. Fla .• a Rogers, commander of the
March 1977.
niece, and two nephews.
Manning D Webster
Air
Force ·
Logistics
Bernice Bede Osol
Mrs . Stelff was a member
Judge ·
Command
at
Wrightof the Middleport United
AFtiES (March 21-April 19) It's (4 ) 5, 12, 19 . Jtc
Pre·sbyterlan
Church
of
Patterson
AFB,
Ohio,
said
possible you co uld creale some
wh ic h she was organist f or
Monday
night
the
military
is
problems to day . either thro ug h
NOTICE OF
many years . She was also · a
wishful thm lo; ing or 1mpracttc ality
"moving
away
from
a
profesAPPOINTMENT
member of l he Ameri can
Keep thai sharp 1og1c work ing
Case No . 220J9 Leg ion Au~elliary , the DAV
sion and toward an occupaEstate ot Nelle J . Bing ,
Au xi liary ,
Evangeline tion ."
TAURUS (April 20 ·May 20) If Deceased .
Ch'apter 172, Order of the
you want to stay 1n the black . you
N ot ice is hereby given that
Rogers
addressed
a·
Eastern Star, M idd leport,
must f1g ht your extravag anl Phyll is Chase RtJssetl of Box
national
meeting
of
the
and a charter member of
tendencies . It's diffiCult for you to 204 , Everglade City , Flor ida,
has been duly appo inted
Arnold Air Society here and
~ry Shr ine 37 , Order of the
grasp the value ot money today
E:~~ecutrix of t fie Estaf e of
White Shr ine of Jerusalem •. ot
said the end of the draft and
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) Nelle J . Bing , dece ased , late
which she was organi st;
llle public's misconception of
Of Meigs County, OhiO .
Rather than use your splendid
Pythian Sisters, and of the
Creditors ar e requiT ed to
the
military's role in society
Intellect. you'll rely on forlune file their claims with said
Hemlock Grove Grange .
and circum stan ce to brmg you fiduciary
w i t Mill
thr ee
Mr s. Ste l ff gave piano were contributing factors in ·
lessons for several years and this move .
through today . They won 't sui· months .
Dated tills 29th day of
played In many local mus ica l
lice .
·
Part of llle chaUenge facing
Mar ch 1977 .
groups .
Manning 0 . Webster
·
llle
military is to redefine the
CANCER (June 21-Julv 22) Be
Funeral services will be
Judge
modest today , even though
military
profession in the
held
Thursday
at
2
p.m
.
at
the
Cou r t of Common Pleas ,
there ' s something you ' r,e
face of a rapidly changing·
Probate Divis ion
Rawllngs : coats
Fune ral
burst i ng t o b oas t about. (d) S, 12, 19, Jtc
Home . The Rev. Dwight
world concept ·of that
Appl a;use will be more sinoere il
ZavUz will officiate and
someone else speaks oU t.
bur ial wil l be in the Mid· profession, said Rogers.
HGiven the nature· of ·
dleport
Hil i
Cemetery .
LEO (July 23:.Aug. 22) It's un· r1g ht away ta ke care ol 11
humankind,
only the naive
F rlends may call at the
wise today for either you or your yourself When the contro l
funera l home Wednesday
would
contend
that the threat
ma l e to sp lurge . Ana l yze leaves yo.ur hands . sp do your
from 2 to 4 and from 7 to 9
of
war
does
not
constantly
everythin g before ydu buy to see chances l or success,
p .m . The White .Shrine will
1
if you can get _along without it.
exist,''
he
said.
'
AS
long as it
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan . 19) have serv ices at the funeral
does
we
must
be
professional
home
Wednesday
eveni
ng
at
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22) Don't To hustle br iski y tod ay . you
experts at defending against
let others makt=i the dec1s1ons to - sho'uldn't lay' it on too heavy . 7: 3C p.m . .
day. Even though they're eager They'll be disappointed il you 're
it.
to help. it's probable they'll g~.:~m not s1 ncere .
·
" Inherent
in
that
th ings up fo r you .
.
FRANK
STEVERS
responsibility
is
the
need
for
AQUARIUS .(Jan. 20 - Fel). 19}
Frank E . Stever:s, 83, 2773
LIBRA (Sept. '2 3-0cl. 23) Be Stay oul ol stor es Wilh deSirable
intelligence
,
education,
Columbus Ave., Bexley , died
care ful In your work to day not to merchandise and high pr ice ta_
gs
reason, and humanism, " he
Monday at the Norwood
· become so obsesse d with d etail today . Your whims will get the
Convalescent
Center ,
said. "With lllose qualities we
that you overlook objective s. Try better of your budget.
•
Columbus . He had been in
might . better
become
to see tile big p1cture.
PISCES (Feb. 20· March 20) You failing health several years .
'practicalidealists'
hopeful
of
A refired meat cutter for
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov . 2:ii tend today to be complacent an d
what
lies
ahead
and
better
Don't bank on another's lavish to heat serious matters a little
able to shape it .
promises today . You may never too lightly This IS NOT a. w1 Se
receive the gift or service he has course!
copy send 50 cen ts and a sefl.
"'lbat the American people
glibly mentloned .
addressed, stamped envelope to place more trust in us than in
(Are you an Aries? Bernice
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec . Os0;1 has wr;tten a special Asrro· As tra-Graph . P.O. BOK 489. any other segment o( society
211 If you want somethmg done Graph Letter for you .. for yom Radio_ City Sta tion. New York , indicates to me that they

•

The Middleport Fire
Department answered a total
of 50 caUs during Milrch
Including 10 for firea or fire
incidents and 40 emergency medical or ambulance runs.
Of the 40 emergency runs 24
were in toWifand 15 were out
of ~town according to the

month report of C, 114bert
Fisher, fire chief. Total
manhours on emergency runs
amounted to 186.2 while total
manhours for fire only
totaled 1115.6. Total mileage
for emergency caUs rota led
876.5 and the average number
of men per fire call w) 11 .

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13, 1977

.

proposal OppoSed
commissioners advertise for
bids to be received Thursday,
April 28. The aggregate bids
must be in by 6:30p.m. on the
above
date
and
the
bituminous by 7 p.m. .
The commlsaioners passed
·a resolution endorsing the
Meigs County . Council on
Aging as the official local
Planning
Service
Organization of Aging in
Meiga County .
The
commissioners
received cost estimates from
Foreman .&amp; Abbott and Karl
Grueser and Son for work
required on the heating and
cooling system at the Welfare
Department. The commissioners will meet with
Abbott and. Grueser at the
next meeting to discuss the
estimates before making a
decision.

Th~
commissioners
adopted proposed , road
names
submitte&lt;,l
by ·
Fleming, Page and Stolte,
Inc. for Sallsbur)', .Sutton,
Rutland, Salem and Orange
Townships with the exceptions of T-24 and T 363 in
Salem Township and T-2115 in
Salisbury Township which
require additional study.
The
commissioner s
reported that they had met
with Sam Calebretta of
Maratel Enterprises on
Monday evening concerning
the proposed nursing home.
Calebretta stated that his
organization is interested in
leasing a home for operation
rather than building one. No
action was taken on the
matter.
An animal claim subinltted
by Olin Boothe, Pomeroy, for

the loss. of a calf in the
amount of $50 was approved.
The animal was killed by
doga .
The commissioners agreed
to appoint seven perS()ns
rather than five to a committee to judge and select an
official Meigs County Flag.
Attending were Henry, WeUs,
Richard Jones, and· Jim
1!4ush, commissioners, imd
Mary · Hobstetter, acting
clerk.

Teachers
Hedden visiting
stress
demands in Meigs homes
CINCINNATI (UP!) Te;jchers struck the 65,000student Ci\\dnnati public·
school system today to
demonstrate their demands
for a 16 per cent pay raise .
Although not all 3,100
teachers participated in the
strike, pickets were placed at
ail 104 city public schools by
the Cincinnati Federation of
Teachers, llle 1,30&lt;knember
union caUing llle strike.
Police said there were no
incidents when the union
posted pickets at 5:30 a.m .
today.
CFT President Roger Stephens said 1,200 teachers
already had signed up to
wQrk three-hour picketing
shifts and he expected the
number to climb to 2,1100.
However, the CFT failed to
win support from a rival
union , the 850-member
Cincinnati Teachers
Association, which voted
down strike support by a 2-1
margin .
The school board, which
says lhere is not enough
money in the budget to boost
teachers' salaries 16 per cent
above the current $8,973
beginning base, vowed to
keep as many schools open as
possible with management
perS()nnel joining nonstriking
teachers in c'lassrooms.
It was the third teachers '
strike here in the past 10
years.
Today 's strike came as no
surprise because the CIT has
been warning of a walkout for
llle past two weeks bec11use of
lack of progress in three
moollls of contract talks.
School board officials claim
there isn't much to negotiate
about, contending money for
pay raises simply isn't in the
current budget. The school
board offered a 6 per cent
hike, but only if more money
is forthcoming, such as from
a school levy vote scheduled
Continued on page 14

By RICK VANSANT
SHELBY, Ohio (UP!) - It
started out " No we can't."
But . it became " Yes we
can."
.
And now it has turned out
"Yes we did."
In an astonishing display of
dedication and sacrifice, the
residents of lllis northern
Ohio rommunity of 10,000
have raised $1.6 million in
less than a year to build a
dreamed-about community ·

Area corporations also
kicked in big amounts, but in
llle long run, it was the
residents themselves who
made the difference.
"ThiS may sound amazing,
but I'U bet that 90 per cent of
llle families in this town got
into the act," said Phillips.
The goal last spring was set
at $1.6 million and in just 11
weeks $1.2 million had been
pledged.
·
As Shelbyites began
center.
proving "Yes we can,' '
The dream starts becoming persons in other towns began
reaUty at 3 p.m. Sunday in sending in donations and
groWidbreaking ceremonies newspapers in other cities
for an elaborate YMCA began writing editorials
showplace complete with praising the community
swimming pool, gym and spirit here.
In less than a year,
recreation lacililties lor both
young and old.
$1,647,000 had been pledged .
"It's the begiming of the
That was more than enough
hour of triumph," beams to sign a contractor and get
Dick PhiUips, president of the construct ion underway in
Shelby Mutual Insurance Co., earnest after Sunday :s
one of many prime-movers in ground breaking.
llle " Yes we can" project.
But by the time the building
As in a lot of communities, is expected to be completed in
lllere had been talk here the December, inflation will have ·
past 20 years ol the need for a added another $1116,000 to the ·
good, modern community cost of llle project.
center.
" Bellev.eme,wearenotthe
Meetings were held every least bit intimidated by lllat,"
once in a while, but when it declared Phillips. "After
came around to figuring up what we've done, we know we
how much money needed to can putllle finishing touches
be ra1sed, llle answer was, on it;'
"No we can't."
Is the community center
But at one such meeting, · going to be worth ail the
Phillips snapped back, " Yes effort and giving'
11
we can," and tlle batUe cry
Absolutely," . answers
was sounded.
Phillips. "I lllink we'd aU do
It was decided at other it over again . Many towns our
meetings not to put a tax levy size don't have anything like
oo the ballot and not to run to what we're going to have. It'.s
llle federal government for going to serve every segment
handouts--and red tape .
of our population . It'll
The townspeople decided to provide recreation and
do it · themselves. They exercise for everybody."
mounted a fund-raising effort
The community center
so suecessful it astounded aside, Phillips also figures
even
the
staunchest Shelby is a better place to live
supporters.
j ust because of the fundAll of a sudden, residents raising drive.
were pledging severai
" We're like a family that
hundred dollars a year . The went through hard-times
sting was taken out of the together," he said. "The
total amoWlt when people critical time has drawn us
learned to think of their closer together. It was a
donation in terms of giving up unifying experience. It's a
a bottle of beer or a pack of high-\Vater mark for our
cigarettes a day .
town . There's more pride .
here than ever berore.''

Diplomacy may
.

RGC.CC. He is assigned to
work priniarily in Meigs and
Vinton counties.
Hedden has participated in
several community college
BRIAN HEDDEN
day programs at area high
schools since he began work a
month ago. He has also
started visiting in the homes
of students interested in the
college.
"Reception has been great
from families," Hedden said.
"91)-95 percent of our home
visits have resulted in
students wanting to attend ·
Rio Grande."
Meigs County needs a
Hedden indicated that one nuisance inspector and
of his responsibilities is to be another - total of three available to meet perS()naUy sanitarian according to Joan
with anyone interested in Culp.
RGC.CC.
County sanitarian Culp told
Before coming to the the board of the Meigs County
college, Hedden was a Department of Health
gradijate student at John Tuesday in a regular meeting
?.felgs County is not under Carro 11
Un i ve r s it y, three fourths of sanitation
threat of losing some $70,000 ·Cleveland . He graduated problems are nuisan ce
in federal revenue sharing from Piketon High School. complaints regarding
funds, Meigs County Auditor While at Rio Grande he sewage, trash , garbage,
Howatd Frank said today. majored in the social dogs, dead animals, falling
Last week Meigs County sciences with an emphasis in down · buUdings, and water
was listed in the State American history and and related matters, Miss
Culp reported .
·
Auditor's office as one of 232 American Indian Culture.
Sanitarian
Gary
Aspin
Ohio cities, villages, townpointed out the E;nviron ships and counties standing to
mental
Protection Agency
lose federal revenue sharing
requires certified persomel
funds because necessary
to CQre for water plants in the
forms had not been comcounty. He said that Tuppers
pleted. The listing by State .
Plains at the present time has
Auditor Tom Ferguson stated
a
certified person . The health
lhat the
governmental
department
is attempting· to
subdivisions had not filed
The Fanners Home Ad-: obtain a workshop for cereither the statement of
assurances or the actual use ministration and loth District tification of such persons.
Congressman Clarence
Other problems discussed
report of both.
MiUer
today
aMounced
the
by
health departnient perBoth of the fonns were
completed according to approveal of a $488,000 loan sonnel will be taken up later.
.Frank, and apparently and a $464,500 grant to the The meetings of the health
passed in the mails causing Tuppers Plains-Chester board have 1 been changed to
Meigs County to be listed water district for extension of the second Tpesday of each
erroneously in the report of its water distribution system. month at 4130 p.m. at
to
The loan will be used to Veterans Memorial Hospital.subdivisions failing
comply.- At any rate the extend water lines to serve The public is invited.
The health department wiU
Department of the Treasury new families irl the system
has ilcknowledged receipt of
bringing the total number of be closed April 28 and 29 for
both forms and Meigs County
customers to over 1700. The moving. The new office will
will be eligible for the $72,974&gt; loan will be repaid at five per be located on Mechanic St.,
involved.
cent interest over 40 years. Pomeroy, beginning May 2.
RIO GRANDE - Brian
Hedden, 23, who expects to
visit the homes of. virtually
every high school senior in
Meigs and Vinton counties,
recently joined the staff of
Rio Grande College - Community College (RGC-CC) as
an ildmisaions counselor.
The 1976 Rio graduate, who
worked in the admissions
oflice
while attending
college, will be responsible
for acquainting high school
students and their parents
with the oroerams offered by

Shelby community proved
the impossible possible

Need cited
for another
•
•
santtanan
•

Fonns passed
in the mails
says auditor

water.service

M

in east eigS
to he extended

~

.
ease strams
.

Carter plamed to address
By HELEN THOMAS
more
foreign matters today
UP! White House Reporter
an
~fternoon
meeting willl
.in
WASHINGTON (UP! ) AFL-CJO
President
George
President Carter and Soviet
Meany.
Meany
is
expected
to
l.Mder Leonid Brezhnev aie
enunciate
Wlion
displeasure
engaging in some longdistance diplo ma cy which with Carter's free trade
seems designed to ease the policy.
Dobrynin emerged in a
strain caused· by the stalled
cheerful mood from his White
Moscow arms talks.
The White House says a House visit which he caUed
" mutually arranged" 40- "a good · meeting.'' There
minute meeting between were few details.
Yet the overtures indicated
Carter
and
Soviet
Ambassador
Anatoly both llle Soviets and the
Dobrynin in the Oval Office United States are determined
Tuesday was " constructive oo get their diplomatic
relations - strained by
and useful."
They discussed the stalled humim rights questions, the
strategi c arms limitation anhs talks and fishing
negotiations and " touched disputes - ba ck in order.
On Thursday, Carter Is
on" the question of Soviet
fishing violations inside the expected to stress his world~~h uman
rights "
2110-mile U.S. limit, a While wide
campaig_n in an address to
House spokesman said.
Dobrynin, who apparently Latin American envoY" of the
conveyed a message from · Organization of America n
Brezhnev to Carter during his States.
The White House also .anmeeting la st week with
Secretary ·of State Cyrus nounced Jordan 's King
reporters Hussein will be visiting the
Vance,
told
April
25-26 .
Tuesday he bore no new President
Hussein,
the
third
Middle
messages from llle Kremlin.
But he was expected to East leader to see Ca~r ,
apprise Moscow of Carter's was preceded to Washingtoo
response to Brezhnev 's by Israeli Prime Minister
earlier communication ~ Yitzhak Rabin and Egyptian
called "e ncour ag inf by President Anwar Sadat.
Carter.

Raccoon mine hit
WILKESVILL E, Ohio has idled 500 miners.
The mine was struck
(UP! I - The Southern Ohio
Coa l Company's Ra ccoon earlier this month in a
mine in vinton County was dispute · between a · safety
shut down early today by a committeeman
and
a
wildcat strike.
foreman .
Richard Wheatley ,
Roving bands of pickets
president of Locall957 of the earlier this month also shut
United Mine Workers union, down two other Southern Ohio
said he did not know the Coal Co. mines in Meigs
reason for the strike which County .

.,

'

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