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                  <text>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 .

.,

'

�'
% - ~Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,

3- The DailySentlnei.Middieport·Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Apr111 3, 1977

U, Wednesday,Aprlll3, 19n

r-~~®f.~.&amp;::;@.&amp;®Jk~W'!f.MN&amp;:::-:m~niff~

How come 1.4 billion c.f. extra gas?
ByJ.R. JtiMMINS
COLUMBUS (UPI) - At
the cloae of the winter heating
sealiOII March 31 , the Dayton
Power and Ught Co. ended up
with a surplus of 1.4 billion
cuble feet of natural gas.
Today, tlle OhiO Senate

Ene rgy Conunittee Will begin
trymg to fmd out why tllat
happened, smce the utility's
energy supply deficit dur ing
January and February was
the worst m Oh10.
But of more unportance to
members of ~e senate

conurut!A!e, chaired by Sen.
Nea l Zimmers, D-Dayton,
DP&amp;L execu ti ves Wlll he
quest1ooed about why tlley
failed to anticipate the gas
shortages that other utilities
in other states were able to
overcome last winter

L1.ddy s sentence com muted
'

By
LA U REN CE
McQun.LAN
WASHINGTON (UP! ) PreSldent Carter, while commuting the sentence of
Watergate burglar G Gordon
Uddy "in the mterest of
equity and fairness," has no
plans to act on other

Watergate convtctions
federal Judge John J . S1rica
" As far as the White House at from six years and eight

coocerned, th1s rulmg has months to 20 years.
Liddy , his sentence
deputy Wh1te House Press reduced to eight years, will
Secretary Rex Granum sa1d he eligible for parole July 9
Tuesd ay after a nnouncm g from the federal priSOn 111
Carter's deciSion to reduce Allenwood, Pa He has been
Liddy's sente nce, set by liilprlsoned four years oo
charges stemming from the
June 17, 1972, burglary of
Demo c ratiC Nat10nal
Corrurut!A!e headquarters.
Sirica, referring to tlle
PreSident, told UP!, "He did,
apparently, what he thought
was right and I did what I
thought was right when I
imposed the original senten·
Congress"
. ."
Yet, the new sh1pment ceGrlinum
the PreSident
represented a sharp 10crease " took lh1ssa1d
act10n 10 the
10 the aid the Umted Stales interest of eqUity and fall'lless
has rushed to Zaire smce the based oo a comparison of Mr.
f1ghtmg erupted
Two Liddy's sen!A!nce with those
prev1ous s~ipments were of all others convicted in
valued at about $2 million
The U.S. announcement Watergaoo • rela!A!d prosfollowed reports from ecutions "
Former Attorney General
Kinshasa, Zaire's capital, Jolm
and former
that French aircraft were Wh1te Mitchell
House
a1des
H.R.
flyrng Moroccan troops to the
Haldeman
and
John
combat zone in Shaba Ehrlichman received eight·
provrnce. There was also year
sen!A!nces for their parts
speculation tlle Sudan and in the Watergate scandal tllat
Egypt nught send troops to forced President Nixon from
fight on Zaue's s1de
France says its planes and office.
Under the caroor action,
air crews were carryrng only
$441,000 fme remains in
a
military equipment - not
effect
for Uddy He ''would
troops - to tile front.
still be required to pay the
f10e or a portion of it,"
Granum sa1d.
Liddy has served more
time in jail tllan any other
Watergate figure.
Tbe only ooe of the seven
4·2,
Toronto
Buffalo,
surprised Philadelphia, 3-2, original Warergare burglarand Boston mauled Los conspirators still behind
bars, Liddy also was given a
Angeles, 8-3.
tllree-rear
sentence for
lslaoders 4, Sabres 2:
leadmg
the
Wh100 House
CaJ~Iam Clark G1llles
"plumbers"
into
the office of
scored a be-breaking goal
Dr.
LewiS
Fielding,
Dame!
midway through the second
Ellsherg's
psychiatrist.
pepod and goaltender Billy ·
He also received 18 months
Smith made 37 saves to earn
for
con!A!mpt when he refused
his lbud consecutive playoff
to
tesllfy before the
victory as New York took a 1·
Watergaoo
grand jury.
0 lead 10 the series.
Sirica
was
angered by
Maple Leafs 3, Flyers 2:
Uddy's
refusal
to talk about
Darryl Sittler, Dave
the
affau
during
the early
and
Errol
Williams
to
unravel
it, and
attempts
Th&lt;mj)llOn scored first-period
handed
him
a
more
severe
goals 10 a 4:42 span as
sentence
than
others
who
Toronto wtlhstood powerplay
partic1ps!A!d
in
tlle
break
m.
goals b~ RIC( MacLeish and
During
the
Senate
Bob Dailey t! aasume a I~
lead in the series and take Watergaoo hearings, there
away Philadelpbia's home· was !A!stimony that Liddy, ,a
Ice advantage. Toronto goalie mustachloed former FBI
Wayne Thomas replaced flu· agent, went to Mitchell with a
ndden Mike P~reer and $1 million plan for "dirty
repulsed a third-per1od Flyer trtcks" against N1xon's
"enemies "
comeback bid.
The plan was trunmed to
Bruins 8, Kings 3:
$250,000,
and, according to a
Bobby Schmaut:z earned a
jury,
approved
by Mitchell. It
hat trick 111 the lust period
included
wiretapping,
and Boston easily went on to
grab a 1~ lead In the series. surveillance and
Brad Park, Gregg Sheppard, photographing documents Terry
O'Reilly,
Stan all crimes uncovered in tlle
Jonathan and Matti Hagman Wa!A!rgate probe. His more
scored Boston gOals, whlle bizarre proposa~bducting
Om Kazak, Vic Venasky and rad1cal demonstrators who
Dave Hutchison tallied for. might disrupt the 1972 GOP
convention and tlle call girls
Los Angeles.
for Democrats apparently
were never carried out.
E-RCALLED
Carter sig11ed the order oo
Tbe Pomeroy Emergency
the
recommendation of
Squad answered , a call to
Harrtaonvllle at 12:21 a.m. Attorney General Griffin
Wednesday lor Eva Gilkey Bell. Liddy had petitioned for
who was having difficulty commutation on Sept 6, 1976,
breathing. She was taken to but President Ford did not
Veterans Memorial Hospital. act.
IS

no bearmg on other cases ,"

Supplies to Zaire are
of non -lethal variety
WASIUNGTON (UPI ) IS sending
Zaire $13 million worth of
"non..ethal" supplies, but no
ammunition to a1d the
embattled African nation m
its fight against Kantangan

The United States

rebels.
The StatAl Department announced Tuesday it had
rejected Zaue's request for
ammunition to repel the
rebels
invading
from
·lllnlnlbolda In neighboring
Angola.
"We have decided not to
request emergency
e•"etance f£1' Zaire from

Congress,''

spokesman

Hodding Carter Ill said. ''Our

a•aiotance will he limlted to
'non-lethal ' equipment
bv
already
approved

Lafleur unstoppable
By MIKE TUlLY
UPI SpGI'II Writer
St. Louis Coach Em1le
Francia needed no cmvincing
about tile ability of Montreal
forward Guy Lafleur. But he
got It anyway.
"If we can't stop Lafleur,
we wm't be able to go very
far," moaned Francis after
Laflllur I!C&lt;It'ed a record-tying
llix polnlllln the Canadiens' 7•
2 vlctlll')' over tlle Blues
Monday light, to take a J.Cl
lldvutage In the best-&lt;Jf·
IeVen Stanley CUp playoff
quarter.&amp;al aeries.
"'lbere's no doubt about it,
be's the belt player In the
NHL," said Francis.
Lafleur's three goals and
three U11ists gave him a
llblre - along will! Dick:ie
Moen, Phil Esposito and
o.nyJ Sittler - of the NHL
record for most points in a
playoff game.
"I thought theY'd check us
a lot cloaer than that," said
Jaflelr, lbe regular season
NHLacortng champ. "But we
pracllced lwd all ll'eek 00
drGpplnl!lbe puck ahead and
I s- It worked."
The smooth 25-year.old
rtc~~t wing IIC&lt;l'ed two soals 1n
tbe fint period and added one
In the oecond. He assisted
"..J4~ues Lemaire, Guy
LaPointe and Bill Nyrop and
uld he wasn't even
interelted in breaking the
reccrd In his late shifts.
The Biu01 managed only 20
IIJOtl on goal wllb goals by
Bernie Federko and Bryan
IMUer.
In olhl!l' games, tlle New
York Islanders topped

HEALTH

The surplus occurred when
Columb1k Gas Transmiss1oo
Cor p , DP&amp;L's supplier,
made available about 1.2'
billion cubic feel to the
Dayton-area utility 011 March
I and March 10.
uAl the same time/' ex·

asked for a delay m their

appearance because of a
conflict · the company's top
executives would he hostmg
. the
utility 's
annu al
stockholders meeting today
and Thursday.
The Dayton utility is not the
first to appear before
Zimmers' conurut!A!e Dudley
Taw, preSident of the East
Oh1o Gas Co oostif1ed two
weeks ago about his
company's success With
coping w1tll Ohio:S worst-ever
wmter
Before Taw, the corrumt!A!e
heard from off1cals of the
Federal Power CommissiOn,
the
Publtc
Utiliti es
CommissiOn of Ohio and u .s.
Sens John GleM and Howard
Met:zenbaum.
Af!A!r the DP&amp;L execubves
have been
dismissed,
Zimmers has sa1d he would
call witnesses fr om the
Cincinnati Gas and Electric
Co., West Ohio Gas Co. and
Colurnbl8 Gas of Oh10
A committee report •s
expected by tlle end of May

Law••-

E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB -I am a
17·yeaNJid male, 5 feet 7 and
weigh 137 pounda. My problem Ia that I am constantly
Ured. During l!Willller I sleep
an average of 10 to II how-s
per day, but durlnt! the school
)'0111' l sleep only six to seven.
I work two nights a week
until midnight or larer, I stay
away from all jllnk food and
ut only fresh fru1ts,
vetet&amp;blesandleanmeats.
My bevt rate 18 98.to 1118 a
iDinuU! 8lld I have started
Joa1n1 to lower 1t. My
'•••'llobln Is above average.
Pleue tell me what Is wrong
.IIIII boir I Clil feel less tired
DEAR READER
FatlpJ Is • IJI1IPiom of
Jlllll)' tbinp. It can be a Slg11
Ill ""*work, lack Ill sleep,
J117ciiDIQIIicalp oblems, or IlIn
IIICb u anemia, low
tii7J'Oid func:tlon, poor nutri·
Uan, tuberculolls, cancer or
any niiiPber Ill

Fatigue can be symptom

di--

Jllnc:e you are,Jiot complain-

mg of losing weight, have no
other C&lt;llllplalnts and don't
have aneiD18 I doubt you have
a senous illness. Never·
theless, the fll'St requirement
to solv10g the cause Of fatigue
IS a careful medical examrna·
tion. You could have diabetes
and there IS no way you would
know this Without tests of
your blood sugar.
The second step, if you pass
your medical examination
Wlth no abnormal fmdings, IS
to look to your lifestyle.lf you
smoke, stop. A flbtess prosram IS a good idea. Perhaps
a full eight hours of sleep a
night IS ~ful and necessary
for you to feel your best .
Look at your social life and
goals. Everyone needs
something to look forward to.
It is amazing how much
energy a person w1ll have if
he suddenly findll out he IS going on a tnp he wanted to
make or to dO something else
that really Interests him.
Psycl'!llog•cal factors art

closely related to your sense
of energy and well being.
Goals are part of this. Lack of
mterest in social aspects of
life, Jack of interest 10 olbets
and non-involvement are
commonly symptoms of
psychologiCal problems - all
of which can make you
fatigued and Wlthdrawn from
normal activities
I am sending you The
Health Letter number 9-6,
Fatigue, to g1ve you a better
understanding about 1ts
causes and how to handle 11.
Others who want more ur
formation can send 50 cents
with a long, stamped, self·
addressed envelope for it.
Just write to me in care of
this newspaper, P.O. Box 326,
San Antonio, TX 78292.
DE:AR DR. LAMB - Is
com oil margarine better
since safflower marganne
also contarns coconut oil?
DEAR READER - All of
the margarines have some
saturated fats 1[1 them. II Liley

BAND SENIORS - These seniors of Eas!A!m High School will be making their final ~
formal appearance as members ofthe high school hand during tomorrow evening's concert, ..
They are, front, I tor, Teresa carr, Janet Ambrose, Rachel Hunter, Jayne Smith, back, 1to •
r, Teresa Buckley, Teresa Smith, Julle Whitehead , Kathy Follrod, Cindy Ritchie, Suzy "
Goebel, Paula Hawk. AbseQl was Belinda Deeter.

didn't they would he liquid.
Both
safflower
o1l
margarines and corn oil
margarines have had some of
the fat converted to
hydrogenated (saturated)
fats. Yollr question suggests
lhst you want a marganne
low in saturated fat (coconut
oil IS over 80 per cent
saturated fat) and high m
polyunsaturated fat. The
label of most margarines will
leU you how much of each
kind of fat it conta!OS.
I looked at a package of
margarine when I was
wntlng you and it says 11
grams of fat and below that,
polyunsaturated, 5 grams;
saturated, 2 gr81118. That
means the other 4 grams are
monoWISBturated fats. Afl fat
in margarines will be one of
these three fats. The brand I
just looked at would he 18 per
cent satura!A!d fat (divide 2
by 11) and 45 pe~ cent polyun·
saturated fa! (divide 5 by II) .

million worth of bas1c a1d to
educabont more than half

These cuts were proposed
public aSSistance and a1d to
depeo1dent children , $27
million; auxiliary services
for nonpublic schools, $28 8
million ; mdustrlal incentive
funds, $10 milhon ; pre·
serVlce teacher education,
$12.6 million;
mental
institution appropriallons

shifted to commumly menUIL
health programs, $5. 5
million, and medical school
subsidies, $4 6 million
These add1t10ns were
recommended. mass trans1t,
$5.4 m11lion ; oochmcal
eolleges,
$5
mllhon ,
abandoned fre1ght lme
purchases for routes to coal
fields, 14 mllhon ; Pubhc
Utilities CommisSion for rare
redesign, regulation and
energy management, $2 2
million; family prachce post·
graduare reSidencies, $1 25
million; merit scholarships,
$1.5 million; and cooperative
extension, $530,900

THE DAI.Y SENTINE l.
DEVOTED TO THE
INTERF.STIIF
MEIGS.MASON AR EA
CHESTERL TANNEHn .t
Ella Ed

' '

ROBERT HOEF'I.ICH

CUy Editor
Publisht.'f.l iliu ty t:lH:~p l Sa tu rday

Uy TI~e Oluo Valley PubfJshlllH Cumall) Ill Cow t St , Pumeruy Otuu
4S769 BU.!$Lilt!Sii Offu~e Ph on~ 99221$ EdJiuna l Phuuto 99'.!·2 157
&amp;"t.:uml da~ pu.st!l~e pa1 d at
Pomeroy, Ol•u
Natwnal atlve1 tlsn~g 1eprc~n
tlitiVt: Wll rd • Grilftlh Cump&lt;iny, In
c '... Buttlt~l l! a nd (hd iGgllcr D1 v.,
1Si Th1rd Av e, Nev. Yurk NY
10017
SUII'S! nf)twn 111tes Dehvered hy

c1:1rncr where avatht!Jie iS ct.'tl\8 per
wet--It B) Mutm Roulc wlk!rt! carn ez
!ICI"VIl:C llVl IWIIII&lt;IIJic Of\e !UUilt/J
$:11:5 By ll'llnl Ul Oluu cwd W Vn
Ottt Yt'il r , $2200 Stx ltwllllu;'
f ! l SO, Thtc·c uumths, S7 ao:
F.lst•Wht'll' $21• Otl ' C&lt;H su mcmlh.'l
SJ I 50
Jhrc•t IIIUil l h ~ $750
~11 ~ 1 ·1pl uou Jll ~ ~· liH Jw lt s Sumla}
1 uues-&amp;•.. ttncl

'

Houston Astr os beat the
Cincinnati Reds, 4-3, the San

Padr.S 4, Giants 3:
Doug Rader's three-run

:;::~~

front with a homer off Eric
Rasmussen in the f1rst inning
and the plkher delivered a
two-run single with the bases
filled m the second innmg ID
give the Mets a ~ lead A
solo homer by John Stearns
added the f108l run for tlle
Meta, who have won three of
four games and who dealt the
Cardinals their first lo9S of
tlle year.
In other NL games, the
Pittsburgh Pirates defeated
tlle Montreal Expos, 2-1, tlle

outslugged the Atlan ta
Braves, 14-10
Pirates %, Expos 1:
Dave Parker led off the
runth and scored on a double
by Renme Stennett as
Pittsburgh won Its first game
of the season and dealt
Mootreai its first lo9S Rich
Gossage pitched one shutout
inn10g and received cred1t for
his first NL wm whlle Will
he 1
McEnaney was I oser. Tun
Fob s10gled 10 the tying run
for Montreal in the seventh

with the n10th-inning relief
help of Rollie Fingers. Jones
had a 4-1 lead gomg mto the
ninth when W11lie McCovey
hit a two...un homer, the 466th
of his career.
Dodgers 14, Braves 10:
Steve Garvey drove 111 four
runs With a single and a
homer and Steve Yeager
knocked m f1ve Wlth a triple
and a three-run homer In the
f
th he
Dodgers' slug est wi
I
Braves. Jeff Burroughs hit a
grand slam homer for the
Braves, who ba ttled ba ck
from a six...un deficit.

didn't last very long as Smith
came up in the butto10 of that
rnning and lofted a Bill Heft
pitch over the left field fence
to g1ve Me1gs a 2·1 lead that
lasted until that disastrous
sixth.
Through the five complete
innings tllat Ebers bach went,
he allowed just two hits, but
gave up nine free passes,
many of them commg to the
lead-off batters. In the s1xth,
Logan loaded the bsses Wlth
no one out, at;ad scored two
unearned runs. Ehershach
uncorked a w1ld pitch,
allow1ng Logan catcher
Tucker who was on third to
score the tymg run. Metgs'
catcher Mark Mitch tossed

the ball to Ebersbach
covering the plate, but too
late.
Ebersbach walked back to
the mound, but M1tch was
still at tlle backstop, leaving
home plate open. Logan's
Myers took advantage of the
Situation and raced home
with the winning run.
Dale Brown10g then came
on m rehef and retired the
!ide on two strike outs and a
pop up Ebersbach had
allowed just tllose two hits,
rine walks, while striking out
tlve, ' and Browning finished
by fatuling three, walking
mne, and allowmg just two
harmless singles In the

By Greg Bailey
There are f1shing stories everywhere, and the bass,
blueg11is, and crappies seem to all he on a feeding spree My
nephew caught some mce bass and crappies from a farm pond
Easter Sunday and the serious bass man 18 latch10g onto Mr .
B•gmouth wherever he goes, and the trout in Dow Lake and
Forked Run are bigger and hardier than ever , and they surely
seem to be hungry.
There are four species of !Ish being caught m the area lhst
most fishermen can't differentiate. These are musky,
NorUlern pike,sauger ,and walleye . For the past few summer.
many sauger have been taken from tlle Ohio River, and
seventh
anglers spread stor1es that they've caught walleye, jack
Meigs'slast threat came 10 salmon, pike, musky, sanger, etc. M051 of lh05e caught are
the fourth , but after tllat Heft sauger, and Ohio has to give credit for that fish to some of the
shut the door and allowed Southern states as they introduced the fish into the MISSissippi
only one more Marauder to River and they've rrugrated up the Ohio.
·reach base, that helng via a
A myth - walleye and sauger are not the same. True, they
free pass Altogether he are from the same family, but there are two big differences.
faMed seven and walked four Sauger usually grow to no more than two pounds, but walleye
as he handed Meigs their fifth sometunes go well over ten pounds. Tbe difference that is
Joss of the year. The always evident, however, IS found on the dorsal fm (thai's the
Marauders entertain the one on the back.) Snread tl!JS fin , and the sauger will have
Athens Bulldogs tonight.
black spots all over the 1111 The walleye just has black streaks
Bes1des those two blasts by between each sp10e. Bolli f1sh have t'l(!th.
Smith, Meigs only other hits
The musky and tlle Northern can he readily identified by
were a single each by Ehers- tlleir gill flaps and cheeks Northems have a half-ecaled gill
bach and Tim Hood. Hawk flap and a fullyi!Caled cheek. Muskles have a gill flap that is
led Logan with two singles scaled only on top with the rest sk111 while theu cheeks are
while Gasser and Myers each covered the same way . Simple, huh~
had one h1t, netther for extra
How about crappies? Know the difference between a black
bases
and a white' Once again the d1ggerence Is in the dorsal fin, and
001 002 0-3 4 I seldom in the color. A black crappie has seven to eight spmes
L
M
101 000 0--2 4 0 10 the dorsal f10 while a whioo has only f1ve to SIX
Heft and Tucker Ebers·
The musky is making a comeback in the Ohio. Tbe fish used
bach (lp ), Browning (6) and to be a much sought af!A!r prize , but because of pollution and
Mitch.
other factors, it nearly disappeared. But 10 recent years, more
and more muskies are appearing in test nets and on the ends of
anglers' lines. A few years back, Shade River was known aU
over the statAl as a musky hot spot, and, not surprlsmgly, that's
one of the places they seem to be coming back to - the mouth
of Shade.
Ralph Wigal of Reedsville on April 2 caught a six pound
Northern at the Reedsville Locks and Dam. He was fishing
hits over 7 2-3 mnrngs to gain With a cane pole and mmnow for crappies when the 30l,2 inch
the VICtory.
struck . That's the seventh Northern Rslph has caught tllat way
Twins 3, Mariners 2:
10 the past three years.
Craig Kus10k and Lyman
Yes, the mushrooms are here, and tlle last few days have
Bostock h1t run-scormg seen them spring up. But we need some rain before we have a
doubles 10 the eighth inrung, bumper crop.
to spark Minnesota . Ron
Schueler, acqutred from the
Philadelphia Ph1Uies, pitched
two shutout mnings or
mlddle-mn~ng rehef to pick
up hiS lust AL triumph. Sk1p
Jutze homered for the
Marmers.

Finley's marvels win another

furnish an addillonal $76 I

milhon.

UPI Sports Writer

happytohave thesh utout and
llje win but you can't pitch

Logan edges Meigs .3-2

secret shuffle
again
the
increase
recommended by Rhodes and
bringmg
the
to ta l
appropriation to $1 S billion
for 1978-79
Rose said th1s amoun t
would enable the state to
support at least 60 per cent of
tlle school subs1dy formul a by
June, 1979. Rhodes' budget
would support 11 by only 50
per cent.
Special education would receive another $31 2 milliOn
under the House Republican
plan, fund10g an eldra 2,000
special education un~ts
durmg the next two years and
meetmg federal and state
requirements.
Rhodes' budget boosted
spend10g
for
special
education by $45 6 null1on, but
would fund only 800 new
un•ts
The House Republicans
caUed for shifting anotller $60
million for other prunary and
secondary
educatiOn
programs, giv10g a net
mcrease of $346 million over
current spendmg Rhodes
caUed for a $297 million
mcrease.
To finance the rest of the
mcreases, the House GOP
called for a 2 per cent across·
the-board cut 10 Rhodes'
proposed agency budge ts ,
saving $22 million, and selec·
tiv' net cuts worth $26.8

By FRED DOwN

pitching a five-hit shutout
Tuesday that gave tlle Met.. a
By MILTON RICHMAN
:}:; ~victory over tlle St LoUIS
,;r;:
UPI Sporll Editor
:/;~ cardinals, who had S(OI'ed a
.NEWY
total of 28 runs in their first
ORK (UP! )- Phil Wrigley had a habit of answering three games.
"e phone himleJf because he always wanted to hear flrSL-hand
'111181 the so-called man in the street had to say about hiS
The v1ctory was Seaver's
00ew1ng gum or his ball club, and 011 this particular day the second straight win this '
guy on lbe other end was demanding action, not tomorrow or season. He struck out f1ve
the day after, but right no".
while walking none in
He waa wa'""'•w one of the Cubs' pitchers ta'-'nn his lumps recording his 40th career
-~...
_..,
shutout.
over TV in a Chicago bar and from the sound of his voice, it
was obvious he had drunk his lunch. It was immediately clear · But, he said, "I didn't pitch
to PhU
very well. My control wasn 't
Wrigley, also watching the game 00 TV in his own good. 1 went to 3 and 2 on
downtown
office, that the guy had more than ,merely two or practically evervbotlv I'm
tllr
· ee.
"For crisaakes, Wrigley, when are you goma get that
bamburger outta there"' the caller started right ln. "He's no
pitcher. He's gettin' bombed out there, can't you see that for
yourself?,,
Wrigley, wllb his eyes on the tube, was about to answer,
when Leo Durocher, then lbe Cubs' manager, came bouncing
out of lbe dugout. Seconda la!A!r, he motioned to the bullpen for
Meigs High baseballers
a change of pitchers.
played errorless ball Tuesday
1be guy in the bar couldn't believe what be was seeing on the night, but lost the contest to
screen.
~
league-leading Logan J..l m a
''Thanks, Mr. Wrigley," he said, suddenly sobermg. "That's game played on the MHS
what I call action."
diamond. Young Tim EhersPhU Wrigle~, who owned tile Chicago CUbs for so many bach held the Chieftains 10
years and died Tuesday at tlle age of 82, operated his club check until the sixth iMJng
completely dilfer111tiy than any other man in baseball.
when the visitors took the
He never went to the baD pari! to see his ream play, lead for the f1rst time with the
preferring to watch it on TV. That didn't mean he wasn't WlJU1lng run.
Interested in lbe Cubs because he was, and vitally so. He
Meigs opened the scoring m
finnly believed baseball W!l8 a day game and llhould he played 1ts half of the f1rst when
In tlle sunlight, so he was lbe only owner never to Install Ughts f1rstsacker Brian Hamilton
In his baU park. He seldom spoke personally with any of his reached on a fielder's choice
ball players, but he had a aoft spot 10 his heart for all of tllem. and scored on a long double to
"Essentially, I think he was a shy man and that he alway.s right field by Greg Sm1th.
wanted to keep a low profile," says Don Kessinger, who played Logan tied it in the third when
sl!ortstop wilb lbe Cubs 11 years and now is wilb the cardinals. Peppers walked, advanced on
•Speaking of his former employer before Tuesdoy's game a passed ball, and scored on a
wilh the Mets, Kessinger had IIIla to say about Phil Wrigley:
Single by Hawk That he
' "I've never met a fairer man than he was. I remember
Uking John Holland, lbe general manager, whether I could
sjleak wilb Mr. Wrigley at lbe end of 1975 when I knew I was
going to be traded. He said, 'Sure, go ahead.' I spoke with him
and thanked him for all his kindness to me through the years
He said he considered me a gentleman, which I took as a
tremendous compliment, and then he told me I didn't have to
he traded If I didn't want to he. But I told hun it was porhably By BILL MADDEN
time -for the prganization and for me. Fellows who had been UP! Sports Writer
will! him a long time, players like Ernie Banks, Billy Williams
Afrer all the talk about
and Ron Santon, tole me if you were fair with him, he'd be the Charley Finley's Oakland A's
same way with you, and that was how I found him. A good, fa1r helllg torn asunder by the
free agent sweepstakes, that
man."
Blake Cullen, assistant to National League President Chub same rebuilt team boasta a 4Feeney now, also was with lbe Cubs II years, first as road 1 record, one-half game out of
secretary and la!A!r aa assistant general manager to John f1rst place m the American
Holland. He shares Don Kessinger's feelings for Phil Wrigley. League West.
Finley, who Tuesday
"I lll&lt;ed him," says Cullen. "You never felt uncomfortable
he111g around him. For aU hiS accomplishments and his gleefully watched hiS team's
wealth, he waan't one of those bJg God presences. Each year, a 4).2 VICtory over the california
week or so af!A!r the season was over, he always made it a point Angels from hiS seat near the
to get together with his manager, his coaches, Jolm Holland press box, has good reason to
gloat over tlle performance
and myself, and he loved to !A!U baseball stories.
so
far of his 11 new" A's.
"His favorite one was about Hack Wllson when he played for
D1ck Allen belted a two-run
tlle cubs. Mr. Wrigley liked to ooU about how Wilson, scraping
homer
to key a five ... un fJrst
the grass with his spikes in rlghtf1eld one day, suddenly looked
by the A's and
mning
up and began chasing what he thought was a line drive going
unproven
Wayne Gross, who
over his head.
has
replaced
Sal Bando at
"Only It wasn't a ball he was chasing, 1t was a pigeon, and 1t
tllud
base,
hit
a solo homer
flew right out of the ballpark. Charlie Grinun, playing first
Rob
Picc10lo,
meanwhile,
base that day, came charging out toward Wilson, wonder10g
tllree
defensive
gems
made
what in the world he was doing.
has
yet
to
at
shortstop
and
"'1bat was the longest ball! ever seen hit!' Wilson sa1d to
giVe Oakland fans cause to
Grimm, the way Mr. Wrigley told the story.
lament
the loss of Campy
, , '"Why, you foollshso-and-60, the pitcher hasn't even thrown
campanens
,tlle ball yet. Tbatwasno linedr1ve, that was a p1geon you were
Mitchell Page, who has
chaslng.'Mr. Wrigley said lhstwas a true story.''
been installed m Joe Rudl's
old left f1eld slot, doubled
home a pau of runs and 37·
'year old Dave Giusll hurled
three shutout inmngs to gam
his lust Amer1can League
save
"I wasn't that exc1red when
I came over to this tea~·

S;x
l';l

•
Budget receives

By LEE LEONARD
UP! Statehouse Rep&lt;Jrter
COLUMBUS (UP!)
House Democratic leaders
and fiscal experts met
secretly Tuesday, preparing
to reshuffle Gov. James A.
Rhodes' $14.5 billion two-year
budget for a floor vote in two
weeks.
The daylong meeting m the
office of Speaker Vernal G.
IUffe Jr., D-New Boston, was
expec!A!d to he one 10 a ser1es
leading to adoption next week
in the Finance Conmuttee of
the majority Democrats' revised spending plan for fiscal
1973-711.
Finance subsection
chairmen were called upon to
assesa appropnaf.lon levels m
view of testimony at budget
hearings in past weeks.
The
entire
House
Democratic leadership
participated in tlle talks.
Most were reluctant to even
admit lbe meeting was in
progress.
"I am being briefed on the
budget," said Rifle. "Any
decisions will he made in the
open in the Finance Commit·
tee."
Meanwhile, minority
Republicans on the F10ance
Commlt!A!e submitted their
own recommendations for
changing Rhodes' execut1ve
budget.
They proposed addmg
1107.4 million for prunary,
secondary and spec1al
education programs, and
making selective cuts In non·
essential educatloo programs
and other agency budgets.
"In a time of fiscal crisis,
we must defer good, but Jess
essential projects to concentraoo on the basic education
and special needs of students
111 kindergarten through
grade 12," said Rep. W.
Bennett Rose, R-Lima,
ranking minor1ty member of
the Finance Commit!A!e.
Rose said tlle stare should

~. . .

den talk

Fishing
tales
I[j Sport Parade ~;..·;;xi.:.~.!: ~~:.~~~i~~:i ~~:::~~::e:ve:: E~~;~~~o;~; fi~!~=:2~r£~
from all sides

DP&amp;L e~ecullves to U!sl1fy
But a day afoor tllat rarely.
used legislative threat was
autllorized, DP&amp;L off1c1als
told Zimmers tlley would
appear voluntarily.
The utility officials had

plalned
one
DP.,!.L
spokesman, " the weather
turned warm so the gas was
put into storage to augment
the sununer allocation."
Scheduled to testify today
are DP&amp;L president Robert
Frazer, vice-president in
charge of service gas and
division operations Dwight
Garber, vice president in
charge of rates and
regulatory affairs Robert
McCormick, manager of
rates and regulatory affairs
LoUis Cobb and several other
"support" witnesses.
"It is my intention to find
outwhathappened10 Ohio; to
make findings in tllat regard;
and to rely oo those findings
to provide tlle unpetns to
develop legislatiOn wh1ch
will, hopefully, help Ohio
prevent a recurrence of this
w10ter's devastatmg gas
shortage," said Zimmers.
On March 31, comrruttee
members
authoriz ed
Zimmers to ISSue a subpoena
to force Frazer and other

l.a\yrence E. Lamb, M.D.
B)'

t~
Thday S
i~

Seaver frets over 5-0 shutout

CHORUS SENIORS - These seniors of the Eastern High School Chorus wUJ appear lor
the last time inf formal concert at 7·30tomorrow night. They are, front, I tor, Paula Hawk,
Steve Hauber , Bruce R1ffle, Jayne Smith; back, I tor, Teresa Buckley, teresa Smitll, Julie
Whitehead and Teresa Carr.

Vocal, instrumental units
of EHS schedule concert
EAST ME IGS . - The
Eastern H1gh School Vocal
Chorus and the concert hand
w1ll be presented in concert
at 7. 30 p.m Thursday in the
Eastern gymnasium
Tbe concert will mark the
f10al formal appearance of
both
groups
before
gradu atiOn next month .
DueclUig the vocal chorus
w1JI be Mrs. Jennifer Machir.
w1th Teresa Buckley and
MaxUie Whitehead serving as
accomparusts. The concert
bond will be directed by
James Wilhelm.
Teresa Buckley will be
featured solmst With the high
school chorus and also
featured will he a soprano
solo group mcluding Miss
Buckley, Lori Young and
Paula Hawk.,
Featured soloists of the
concert band will be Paula
Hawk, flute and piccolo ;
Rachel Hunter, trumpet, and
Laur1 Matthews, alto
saxophone.
SelectiOns by the hand will
Include ~~Here' s Chicago",
"J a como
March , ''

Hauber, Paula Hawk, Angle Jayne Smith, Karen Probert,
Hensley, Connie Jones, Diana Teresa Reed, Bruce Riffle,
Jones, Roberta Larkins, ~ RUfle, Joan Roseberry,
Paula Life, Diana Massar, C o n n i e
Sm Ith ,
Kaleen Millhone, Janet Mora, Teresa Sn'lilh, Becky Windon,
Jim Osborne, Barbara Jull Whitehead, Lila Young
Persons, Donna Persons, and Lor1 Young .

Women scholarship
auditions planned
RIO GRANDE - Auditions
for women's basketball and
volleyball scholarships will
be held Sunday, Aprll17, 1-4
p.m., at Lyne Center on th~
Rio
Grande
College·
Community College campus.
Any high school seniors
interested In auditioning lor
athletic scholarships are
mvlted to attend. Diane
Lewis, women's athletic
director, said women 's

" Feelings "

Band memb ers Include
Paula Hawk, Cmdy Ritchie,
Becky Edwards, Lori Young,
Susan HaMum, L1ta Young,
Ka leen M11lhone, Diana
Massa r , Kathy Follrod,
Teresa Carr, Laurl Mat·
thews, Janet Mora, Becky
Windon , Jayne Smith, Suzy
Goebel, Teresa Smith, Janet
Ambrose, Dave Brown,
Teresa
Hannum,
Jull
Whitehead, Rachel Hunter,
Jim Steele, Sherne Starcher,
Belinda Deeter, Alberta
Schultz, Ed Holter, Teresa
Buckley, Dave Hedr~ck,
Paula Hysell a nd Kathy
Pullins.
Selections by the chorus
will mclude "What Will the
World

Be

Tomorrow?"•

"Today", " Rslny Days and
Mondays" , "Ease on Down
the Road," "The One's For
You" and "Times of Your
Life."

Chorus members are E:ddle
Adams, Kay Balderson,
Kathy Barringer, Donna.
Bennett, Pam Bowers,
Brenda Boyles, Teresa
Buckley, Teresa Carr, Arlene
Connolly, Treasa Dalley,
Debb1e Dav1s, Diana Evans,
Brenda Frecker, Steve

·'
•'

athletic scholarships a re
available for the 1977-78
academic year.
Lewis said open auditions
are scheduled to give seniors
an opportunity to demon·
strate the•r abilities in
basketball and volleyball.
Students who need ad·
dltional Information are
encouraged to contact M•
Lewis at 614-245-5353

HOSPITAL NEWS

''Beethoven's Ftfth " , ' 'Bread

- A Portrait 111 Sound" and

""'

&gt;

Vetera01 Memorial H01pltal
ADMITTED - Sherman
Tlllls, Rutland; Elmer Van
Meter, Pomeroy; James
Taylor, Saginaw, Mich. ;
UU!an Walker, Middleport;
Roger Starcher, Minersville.
DISCHARGED - Linda
Bostick, Betty McKnight,
Karen Hood, Myrtle Durst.
Vlrgmia Newton, Tammy
Ferguson, Cynthia Holland,
Thurman Martin, Jr., George
Foss, Donald Vaughan, Lois
Small, Roy Proffit.

FOUR PAY COURT
Two defendanta were lined
and two others forfeited
bonds In the court of Mid·
dleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night. Fined were
Lonnie K. Taylor, 19, Mid·
dleport, UO and costs,
spinning tires, and Harold
Darst, 36, Rutland, f'X)O and
coats and three days In JaU on
a charge of driVing while
Intoxicated. Forfeiting bonds
were Basil Barton, 61,
Spornvllle, ~. and Lash
Douglao, 59, no address
lilted, ~ each on disorderly
maMer charges.
~

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, April I%)
Lottie Bartlett, Leona
Beck, Cecil Bennett, Mrs.
Charles Carpenter and
daughter, OIUe Conley, Sadie
Cooper, Dorothy Mae Davis,
Glenna Davis, Della Ditty,
Henry Esch, Charlene Fry,
John Fry, Jeffrey Gardner,
Gladys Goulding, Mrs.
Jeffrey Gray and daughter,
Mable HaUey, Robert Hixson,
Earl Holbrook, Peggy
Johnson, Mrs. Michael Jones
and daughter, Angela Ken:
nedy, John C. Lewis, WWilllft
Long, Helen Lyons, Freda
Mathews, Walter McAllister,
Gladys McLung, Margaret
McLung, James McQuaid,
Ancll
Mlller,
Daniel
Mlsklnen, Marcus Moore,
Robert Nibert, James Norman, J ames
Rhodes ,
Margaret Rhodes, Towan
·Smith, Robert. Snedenr.
Geneva Sorrell, Barbara
Taylor, Ernest Van Inwagen,
Hewett Wella, Sr., RebeOCa
Winebrenner, Charlea WIJe.
(Birlbll, AprQ IZ)
Mr . and Mrs. Edward
Ke.slar, aon, South Webllter;
Mr. and Mrs. James
Fridenmaker, da~ghter ,
Wellston; Mr. and Mrs.
Stephen Ha k!y, aon, Jackson.
(

MaiOr League Standings
.... Bv Un1ted Press lntern•t•onal
NatiOflal
East
W L Pet
GB
St LOUIS
3 1 750
c'New York
3 1 750
1/ 2
: Montreal
2 I 667
Chicago
2 2 500 1
Pittsburgh
1 3 250 2
r philadelphla
0 3 000 21f2
west
W L Pet
GB
Houston
4 1 800
San Otego
3 2 600 1
Los Angeles
3 2 600 1
Atlanta
2 3 400 2
Cincinnati
2 4 331 '2 lf~
San Franc1sco 1 3 250 2112
Tuesday's Results
Pittsburgh 2 Montreal 1
New York 4 St Louis 0
Houston 4 C1nclnnatt 2
Los Angeles 14 Atlanta 10
San Oiego .4 San Francisco 3
Todal's Probable Pitchers
All Times EST)
St Louis (Denny 1-0J at New
~ York (Swan 0·0) , 2 05 p m
~ Montreal
(Rogers 0-0J at
P•ttsburgh (Klson 0 1l. 12 35

'

11 p m

Chicago
(Burr is
0 1)
at
1 Philadelphia
(Lerch 0 0), 7 35
pm
c1nclnnat1 (Bill i ngham 1 0) at
Houston CAndular 1 0) , B 35
pm
Atlanta (Niekro 0 1) at Los
Angeles (Sutton 1 0), 10 30 p m
·
San Francisco (Montefusco 0
1) at San 01ego (Strom 0 ll, 10

':p.m

•
Thursdn's Games
Sf LOUtS at NeW Yor.k
san Francisco at San D1ego
American Lu,gue
East
W L
Pet
GB
2 1 667
Cleveland
3 2 .600
" Toronto
112
22500
-, Milwaukee
1 3 250 llh
New York
1 3 250 Jlh
Baltimore
1.42002
:., oetro lt
030002
1... Boston
west
.o.~
W L
Pel
GB
4 0 1 000
1 Kansas Cl ty
Texas
.4 0 1 000
. &lt;e~ Qektand
A 1 BOO
'h
,-;ift\,lnnesota
3 2 600 Jlh
Chicago
2 2 500 2
'"" California
3 .4 A29 21h
~~:- seattle
•
2 s 286 3 A
Tuesday's Results
11
Detroit 6 Toronto 1
qo-Chlcago 5 Boston 2
~ltlmore 1 Milwaukee 0
oakland 6 California 2
Minnesota 3 Seattle 2
n., Todar's Probable Pitchers
All Times EST)
California (Simpson 0 Ol lilt
; .. oakland (Langford 0 0), &lt;t . 30
·'"' 9 ·';oston
(Jenkins
oo&gt;
at
~~o Chicago (Johnson 0-0L 2 15
•1 Pm

..

Detroit (Sykes[).[)) at Toronro
fLemanc zyk 0 1) 1 1 30 p m
Minnesota (Goltz oOl at
Seattle &lt;Thoma s o 01 , 10 35

the sprmg deal," said

a·

i,

·acquued from the Pittsb gh
Pirates 11 • The way l saw 1t,
pm
collllOg here was just gettmg
Cleveland (Eckersely 0 0) at
my career over with." But ...
Texas ( Boggs o 0) . B 35 p m
New York (F1gueroa 0 1) at "I've been around baseball
Kansas C•tv (Hassler 1 OL 8 JO
long enough to know you can't
pm
Thursday's Games
pick a wmner 1n the spr10g.
Mmnesota at Seattle
This
could be one lnrerestin~
California at Oakland
1

year."

Elsewhere in the American
League, Baltimore blanked
Milwaukee, 1-0, Detroit
downed Toronto, &amp;-1, Ch1cago
topped Boston , 5-2, and
Mmnesota edged SeatUe, 3-2
Over m the Nahonal
League 11 was the New York
Mets 4 St. LouiS 0, Pittsburgh
2 Montreal I, Houston 4
C10c10nati 3, San Diego 4 San
Francisco 3 and Los Angeles
14 AUanta 10.
Orioles I, Brewers 0:
Jim Palmer hurled a two·
hitter but had to walt until
Rick Dempsey smgled home
Eddie Murray m the ninth to
record hiS fust 1977 tr1umph
before a record Brewers'
crowd of 55,120. Palmer
struck out SIX and walked one
for h1s 43rd career shutout as
the Ormles won theu first
game of the season .
Tigers 6, Blue Jays I:
Rookie Steve Kemp belted
his fll'st major league home
run, a three-run shot, and Ben
OgilVIe drove home two other
runs as the T1gers picked up
their fJrSt victory of the
season. Kemp's homer, off
loser B1ll S111ger, followed a
double by Ogilvie and a walk
to Jason Thompson to pad the
Tigers' lead to 5-0 Dave
Roberts, 1·1, hurled a four·
trer for the v1clory.
te Sox 5, Red Sox 2:
Jorge
Orta smgled,
doubled, tr1pli!d and drove
!\orne a pau of runs as the
White Sox prevented tlle Red
Sox (0·3) from again
breaking 111to the w10 column
for 1977 Orta doubled home

Cleveland at Texas, night

Major League Results
By United Press lnternaltonal
National League
Montreal
000 000 10D- 1 8 0
PittSburgh
000 010 001- 2 7 0
Hannahs, Kerngan ( 8) , McE
naney (9) and Carter. Reuss ,
Tekulve (7) , Gossage (9 ) and
Dyer WP - Gossage Cl 0) LPMcEnanev (0. 1)
St Louis
000 000 ooo- 0 5 l
New York
120 001 oox- 4 7 1
Rasmussen, Sutton (7) and
Simmons. Seaver (2 0) and
Stearns LP ~ Rasmussen (0 1)
HRs- New York , Mi l ner Cll ,
Stearns (1)
Ctnctnnah
100 000 002- 3 B 0
Houston
301 000 OOx- 4 8 1
Zachry, Eastw•ck (7) and
Bench , RIChard , Forsch ( 8)
and Ferguson , Herrmann (8)
WP- R ichard (1 OJ LP- Zachry
10 1)
Atlanta
005 003 11o- 10 14 2
Los Angeles 600 062 oox- u u 2
Messersm i th, Capra (5),
Easterly (6) , Beard (B) and
Pocoroba , Rhoden, Hough (6 }
and Yeager WP - Rhoden (1 0)
LP- Messersr.nilh (0 1l HRsAtlanta , Montanez (1) , Bur
roughs
(2)
Los
Angetes.
Garvey (1) , Yeager { 1)

' --

San Fran
000 010 002- 3 9 1
San 0 1eg0
100 JOO OOx- 4 5 1
McGlothen.
Williams
(5) ,
Coroult (8) and Sadek, Jones,
F1ngers {9 ) and Tenace WPJones (11) LP- McGiothen (0
1)
HRs San Francisco,
McCovey (1) san Diego, Rader
(II
~

American League
Detro11
100 013 loo- 6 6 0
Toronto
000 000 01o- 1 &lt;t 3
Robert!
(1 1)
and
May ,
Singer, John!on (?), Harten
stein (8 ) and Cerone, Ashby
(2) LP- Singer {0 1l HRsDetrott, Kemp (1 ), Toronto
Ashby ( 1)
Boston
Chicago

OlOOOlD00-2111
1.40 000 OOx- 5 11 0
Wise, Murphy (2), Willoughby
(II) and Mont"omerr,. Brett .
Ham1tton (8) and Essar1 WP8rett 11 l) LP- Wiu (0 1l

'

TornadQes go
4-l over H-T
The Southern Tornados
raised their record to 4-1
Tuesday night by handily
defeating visiting Hannan
Trace I~ as jumor Mike
Huddleston got h1s first
varsity starting nod and
came away with an Jm.
pres~lve victory, allowing
just four hits in going the
distance, faMmg mne and
lSSurng seven walks.
Huddleston, a right-hander,
didn't allow a hit unt'il the top
of the fifth when he began
tiring.
Greg Cunl\lff led off the
scoring in the bottom of the
first drawing a base on balls.
After a fielder's choice,
Huddleston singled, Steve
Hendricks walked, and Scott
Wolfe singled 10 two. Steve
Hill singled, and then jumor
Richard Teaford socked a
single that drove m two more
Southern picked up what
proved to be the winning run
m the second on a base on
balls, a fielder's choice, a
single by Huddleston, and a
Wildcat error. They got four
more to take a ~ lead in the
bottom of the third on four

singles, a walk and another
error.
Tbe Wildcats got three runs
m the fifth. Pack singled, got
erased on a fielder's choice
on S. Beaver's grounder, and
losing pl\cher R1ck Whitt
doubled to score the first run.
A,lter Mooney reached on an
error, Shaeffer singled to
score both Tbey picked up
another in the s1xth, but then
Huddleston shut the door.
Huddleston also led the
hitting attack with three
singles, Teaford had two
smgles, and Cund1ff, Doug
Warden, Wolfe, Steve Hill,
and Eric DuMlng each had a
stn~le. AU eighteen Tomad!"'
got into the hall game
Pack led the losers with two
singles, Whitt had his double
and Shaeffer his single
HaMan hurlers struck out six
and walked e1ght.
Southern
travels
to
Alexander tomght.
H
0000310--444
S
414 100 x- 10 10 2
Whitt (lp), S. Beaver (3), T.
Beaver (4) and Swain,
Dennison (3) Huddleston and
Cundiff, Forbes (4) .

Kaiph Garr, who had singled,
m the f1rst and lhen doubled
home Garr again in the
second to cap a four ... un
mnmg Ken Brett spaced 10

r-----------.,
:I
Pro
:I
IC
..]•
I
1.:"tannm~s '
NBA Playoffs
By un.ted Press 1nternat1ona1
Eastern Conference
Prellm1nary Round
{Best of Three)
, Boston vl. San Anton•o
(Boston leads, 1 0)

:r

12- soston •o• san Anton

Apr IS- Boston at San Anton
x Apr 17 ~ San Anton at Boston
Winner plays Philadelphia
Washmgton vs Cleveland
Apr 13-Ci eveland at wash
Apr 15- Wash at Cleveland
x Apr 11- C!eveland at wash
Winner plays Houston
Western conference
Prelimmary Round
(Best of Three)
Golden St vs Oetro•t
(Detroit leads, 1·01
Apr 12- Detrotl 95 Golden St 90
Apr 14- Golden Sf at Detrott
K Ap r 17- Detrott at Golden St
W1nner plays Los Angeles
Portland vs Ch1cago
(Portland leads, 1 0)
Apr 12- Portland 96 Ch t 83
Apr 15- Portland at Ch 1
x Apr 17 - Chi at Por t land
Winner plays Denver
x 1f necessary
NHL Playoffs
By Un1ftd Press lnternatlomtl
Quarter Ftnals
All Senes Best of Seven
Montreal VS St LOUIS
f Montreal leads( 1·0)
Apr 11- Montr eal 7 St LOUIS 2
Apr 13- St LOUtS at Montrea l
Apr 16-'-Mon l r eal at Sf LOUI S
Apr 17- Montr eal at St L:ou ts
x Apr 19 ~ S t L at Montreal
x Apr 21 - Montreal at St L
x Apr 23 or 24- St L at Mil
Ph1ladelptua vs. Toronto
(Toronto leads, 1-01
Apr 11- Toronto 3 Ph il a 2
Apr 13- Toronto at Ph1la
Apr 15- Ph da at Toronto
Apr 17- Phlla at Toronto
x Apr 19- Toront o at Ph il a
x Apr 21 - Phlla at Toronto
x Apr :14 ~ Toronto at Ph1la
Boston vs . Los Angeles
(Boston leads, 1 0)
Apr 11- Boston a Los Ang 3
Apr 13- Los Ang 1:11 Boston
Apr IS- Boston at Los Ang
Apr 17 - Boslon at Los Ang
x Apr 19- Los Ang a t Boston
x Apr 21 - Boston at Los Ang
x Apr 24- Los Ang at Boston
NY Islanders vs Buffalo
(NY Islanders lead, l ·Ol
Apr 11 - NY lslndrs 4 Bflo 2
Apr 13 ~ Buffato at NY tslndr s
Apr 15- NY tslndr s at Buffalo
Apr 17- NY Jslndr s at Buffalo
x Apr 19- Bflo at NY Islanders
x Apr '21 - NY Islanders llt Bflo
x Apr 23- Bflo at NV Isla nde rs
I 1f necessary
WHA Playoffs
By United Press International
Eastern D•v•ston
Semlftnats
(Best of Seven)
Quebec vs. New England
(Quebec leads, l ·OI
Apr 9- Quebec 5 New Eng 2
Apr 12- Quebec 7 New Eng 3
Apr U - Quebec at New Eng
Apr 16-Quebec at New Eng
x Apr 19- New Eng llt Quebec
x Apr 22- Quebec at New En g
x Apr 23- New Eng llt Quebec
Clncmnatt vs lndtanapohs
( lndllnapolts leads, l·O)
Apr 9 ~ 1 n dpl s .11 Clncl 3. lots
Apr 1'2- lr1dpls 7 Ctn cl 2
Apr 14- Ci nCt at lndpls
Apr 16-C mcl at lndpls
x Apr 11- lndpls at C1ncl
x Apr 20- Cin c1 at lndpls
x Apr '2 3- lndpls at Clnc l
Western D•vislon
Semlft"IIS
(Best of Seven&gt;
Houston vl . Edmonton
Aj:~r 13- Edmonton at Houston
Apr 15- Edmon ton at Houston
Apr 17- Houston a t Edmonton
Apr 20- Houston at Edmonton
x Apr '22 - Edmonton at Houston
x Apr 24- Houston at Edmonton
x Apr 26- Edmonton at Houston
Wmmpeg vs San Otego
CWmmpeg leads, l ·O)

!~;:~=~:~~~~~~~~:~g::~~ 1

Apr 16- Winnlpeg at San Otego
Apr 17 - Wmnlpeg at San Otego
x Apr 20- San Diego at Wlnntpg
x Apr 22- Wmnlpg al Son Doego
x Apr 24- San O!ego at W!nn lpg
11 tf necessary

S,EO standings

with us!

SEOAL BASEBALL
TEAM

W L R OR
4 0 33 8

Logan

Athens
Waverly

Gallipol is

2 0
2 1
1 1

Wellstor
trontor

2 2 14 23
2 3 27 23

12
16
B 7

Meigs

o 3

9 t7

Jackson

0 3

8 27

TOTALS

PLANNING A PillA PARTY

17
17

PHONE
THE ALL NEW

13 13 133 133

MEIGS INN PIZZA SHAC•\

Monday's results·
Loga11"""3 wlronton 1 (makeup)
Tuesday's results.
GallipoliS 4 Ironton 2
Athens B Waverly 5
Wellston 5 Jackson 2
Logan 3 Meigs 2
Frrday's games :
Athens al Wellston

-Enjoy three sizes of your favorite
pizzas .
-Try our delicious subs while you
sip your favonte suds.
Eat In Or Carry Out
Phone
992-6304

Gallipolis at Logan

Waverly at Ironton
Jackson at Meigs

1974 Buick Appalo
2 door hatchback , auto ex tr a!, low

4door sedan This 98 has all the good 1es

mileaqe , local owner

priced r IQht

'3995
--·---.4
1975 Olds Cutlass

•2895

b--------------·----~
~-----·
---------~
1973 Pontiac
Bonneville
A door . hard top, local owner, gr een
w 1th wh i te v 1nyl top, nice c ar ,

Supreme 2 door, hard top, v 1nyl top, air,
tape. power seats, externaL clean .

'4495

'2495

1----~,--

1

I

1973 Buick Elec:. 225

1972 G.M.C. lA Ton

&lt;door. hard top. white, white vinyl top,
atr, power steering,
brakes, pnced right

wmdows

and

1

P• ckup, aulomat 1c power steenng and
brakes, c amper s pecial. loc al owner.

priced roght

b-~~-195_,__..1 L_

I1

L . . 1 095

1972 Chev. Imp. Cust.

1972 Ford Torino 4 Dr.

V8

automatic,

power

nlc~c

steering

'2495

2 door , hard top, gr a y w 1th vin y l top.
automat1 c, pow~ r steer i ng and br akes ,
ai r, loc a l owner

and

ck sale

'1695

Don ' t forget we are st11! mak.ng great deals on new Bu1ck and Pontiac , don' t ,
forget you owe It to yourself to check w1th us before you buy any car new or
used We are your Friendly Dealer we have the sharpest pencil in town . When
you buy your new car or truck from Sm1th Nelson we will grease it free for IS
long as you own the car, call or come in and talk to one of these friendly
salesmen, Ceward CaiYert, J 0 Story, or Bill Nelson :

G500SMITH
E. MAIN
•

NELSON MOTORS
992·2174

POMEROY• 0,

·- - -·- - - - - - - -

ll

it

..

�t -The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Apnl13, 1977

·Boston winner
in first game
By MIKETUUV
UPl Sports Writer
With one key player setting
: records for recuperation and
: another fast becoming a
movie buff, Boston's green

' brigade is looming ever
· la-rger in the

wide~open

Detroit Pistons player
finished with 14 point.. and 12
rebounds.
San Antonifl, which musl
win at home Friday or exit
from the playoffs, trailed by
only six polnt.s early in the
fourth period, only to he
. stopped by Scott's wizardry.
Dave Cowens added 13
rebounds, Sidney Wicks 11
.and Tom Boswell seven while
Billy Paultz led the Spurs

· scramble for the National
- Basketball Association title .
. "!thought we played pretty
good defense lhroughou t and
: we just waited for an
· explosion," said Charlie
with
·
•·
In 10.
other opening playoff
Scott, who with Curtis Rowe
helped Boston lop San games, Detroit clipped
. Antonio, 104-94, Tuesday Golden Stale, 95-90, and
• night in the opener of a best- Portland defeated Chicago,
' of-three, preliminary-round 96-83.
Pistons 95, Warriors 90:
· playoff series.
Bob Lanier, Kevin Porter
The game was preceded by
and
Howard Pm:ter all scored
. the picket parade of striking
' NBA referees Manny Sokol, four points in the last six
· Ed Rush, Lee Jones and Walt minutes as Detroit overtook
Rooney , who flew to Boston Golden State with a 12-ll
: Tuesday at their own expense burst. Lanier led Detroit with
. to c.arry signs in front of 28 points and Eric Money had
: Boston Garden . Veteran 19. Rick Barry was high for
: Richie Powers, one of the J:wo Golden Slate with 31 poin!B,
. NBA referees resisting the despite missing five minutes
: strike, ran the game with in the second period due to a
· Eastern League off.icial Joe slight injury . The series
moves to Detroit Thursday .
; Crawford.
Sco tt, playing his best Trail Blazers 96, Bulls 83:
Maurice Lucas ignored a
game since returning April 3
from a broken forearm which gimpy left leg and scored 29
cau.sed him to miss 38 games, points on 14 of 17 shooting as
scored 19 points, seven of Portland defeated Chic.ago
them . at a crucial junctw-e ior the rifth straight time .
Chicago earned an early !!!'· early in the fourth period.
Rowe, who studied movies point lead on the shooting of
of past Celtics teams this Dave Twardzik but Lucas
week to get a better connected on 10 straight shots
. understanding of his job, had from late in the second period
eight points and five to early in the fourth.
rebounds in the first 8:29 to Portland can wrap up the
soften an early San Antonio series Friday in Chicago.
surge. The former UCLA and

5- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, April 13, 1977

K-signup

Police make
53 arrests
..

Fiftv.(hree arrests were made by the Middleport
Police Department in March, according to the monthly
report of Police Chief J . J . Cremeans filed with village
council Monday night. ·
Of the total arres!B 12 were on disorderly manner
charges: eight for squealing tires; five each for unsafe
vehicle and three each for assault, driving while

intoxicated and sphming and squealing tires. There were
J:wo each for reckless operation, following too closely,
running a slop sign, failing to yield the right of way and
one each for blocking a driveway; no signalligh!B; wrong
way on a one way .:;treet; running a.stop sign ; concealing a
loaded weapon and destruction of property. Charges were
dropped in five cases.
The department investigated 14 accidents and the police
cruiser was driven 5,404 miles . Parking meter collections
for the month totaled $947.50.

is Friday

with a yawn, neither
HOUSTON (UP!)
concerned
nor worried a bout
Cincinnati manager .Sparky
RACINE - Kingarten Anderson is handling his its 2-4 record or its cellar .
registration lor the Southern team's season opening slump position in the NL West.
And _while the the Houston
Loca I School District will be
held Friday from 9 to 12 noon
and from I to 3 p.m.
The registration will be
held in the kindergslten room
next to the junior high
building . Parents should take
a record of immunization,
proof of a skin test within the
laSt six months and the
cliild's birth certificate .
Richard C. Hartman,
The council meeling, which
A child must be.,fi;;e by Executive Director, National Is open to the general pubUc,
Sept. 30 to enter kindergarten Association of Regional will convene at 8 p.m.
and six by Sept. 30 'for the Councils, will be the guest
Hartman has served as
first grade. As required by speaker at the Buckeye Hills- F;xecutive Secreetary,
the
Compulsory
Im- Hocking Valley Regional Conunittee of One Hundred,·
munization Law, a child DFelopment District's Metropolitan Fund, Inc.,
entering public schools in general policy council Detroit, Michigan; Assistant
Ohio must have the DPT meeting, according to Executive Secretary,
series, and booster; the polio District President, Floyd Metropolitan Washington
series and boosters, measles Henderson April 19 at the Council of Governments,
and Rebella immunization Athens Country Club. A social Washington , D. C.; Adand a recent skin teSt.
hour will be held from 6 p.m. ministrative Assistant to
There will be no regular to 7 p.m., followed by a dinner County
Manager,
kindergarten classes on for all policy council mem- Sacramento,. California and
Friday in the district.
bers.
Assistant to City Manager
First Executive Secretary,
'
Mid-Wlllamette Valley
Council of Governments,
Salem, Oregon.

Hartman to speak on .·
development April 19th

Astros haven't started
p-inting playoff. tickets yet,
they are thankful they are at
the top of the NL West ,
thankful they've beaten last
year's world champs twice in
two games, and .~1
Joaquin Andujar wtll pttch
the third one.
11 We're not concerned over
our slow start," Anderson
said TuesdaY after the Reds
second 4-3 loss to the Astros.
''The Astros have a good
ballclub; but they bad the
breaks in both of these baU

SW outruns Eastem
on bases by 12-8 score

..

[Collier 3-hits Big Reds for 6-4 win
~~:r~::~~~~~~a;'~e~~~~ :'min~ar~~n n:;rt~~~r t~)~

washmgton

n

R ep0rt

GAHS trips lrontor,, 4-2

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BROUGHTONS
DAIRYLANE

APPLE-APPLEGRAPE
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WIENERS

JELLY

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--

The 31-year•old Athens
native wa. selected by the
Newark School Board from a
field of over 70 condldates to
suCCHII Paul Starr, wbo Is
stepping down alter nine
blghly~ucceaaful years u
WUdcat grid boa •
"We feel he (Biggers) c.an
continue the file football
at
Newark
tradition
developed under Coach Starr
and many other fine coaches
over the year.," Assistant
Superintendent Bill Ma!IOn
said today.
"Bill comes v~ry highly

.

lc.E CREAM
.

v,

Gallon

By Mn/ W. 0. Barallz
LETAR'J FALl.'&gt;- Many
Meigs County residents and
others ....., come here to
purchase vegetables from the
growers, or to visit the
beautiful Letart Cemetery,
seeing Ole town with an
empty store building In -bad
repair on each side of the
ltlghwa~ at the tum in . the
road may conclude Is
deserted. ·
But to us old timers (and
there &amp;re a few of us left) It
wu oace a prosperous, sell
sufficient town with about 300
· inhabltanta In the village and
on nearby fanns. Most of
these owned their homes and
took great pride in keeping
neat lawns and well-kept and
painted hoWies.
To me It was one of the
beauty spots of !IOutheastem
Ohio.
To begin I will tell about the
stores.
There were three of them;
each stocking a good line of
staple groceries, as well as
faun seeds and small tools,
kerosene and some dry goods
and a small line of footwear.
.. They occupied the two
buildingi! wlllch still stand
and another which was
looated in the triangle hetween the State Rt. and
Cemetezy Road. This space is
now the site ol mobile homes
since the store burned many
years ago.
Completing the circle of the
two stores and opposite them
.was a mill. This ground
wheat Into three brands of
. ,. · .
flour and com into meal. It
',',;:.:;•. also made feed for livestock.
lt was a great 'benefit to the
fanners, many of whom at
· that time still ralaed wheat
and com.
There was a post office
looated In one of the stores, to
which the mall was brought
twice per day from the.
raUroad in Letart, W. Va. The
mall was brought across the

•·

~···········

CELERY
Head

WE WELCOME
FOOD STAMP

GRAPEFRUIT

394

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Lb
Bag

ORANGE
DRINK
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OPEN

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SHOPPERS

10 til 5
·'

S~nday

thru Sunday

CLOROX BLEACH
'

Gallon

59~

•

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9 til7

,' Mon.-Sat. ·

•

.
••

'•
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Arts.

'

"She regards the Kennedy
Center as one of the wonders
of the world," said Mary
Hoyt, Mrs. Carter's press
secretary, "lind certainly one
of the most delightful aspects
of moving to Washington."

BODY IDENTIFIED
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Police have identified a body
pulled from the Olentangy
River on the Ohio State
University campus as Joseph
61,
of
Fontanarosa,
Columbus.
Police, who have ordered
an autopsy, said Tuesday
Fontanarosa
was
not
aflliated with the university.
His body was found floaling
near the student union
Tuesday by a dentistry
·
student and his 'wife.

last three years to put us

where we're right up there In
all athletic programs. The
attitude is real good at this
time.
''I have mixed emotloos
shout leaving this year since
there are great expectations
for nn:t fall with 13lettennen
back.
" I think you have to make
this type ol move when the
opportunity presents Itself,"
Biggers said.
He expressed his appreciation to the conununlty
lor Its fine support of the LIIS
football program, with a
.special thanks to the booster
organi:r.ations

and

Course.
Following his graduation
from high school, Biggers
attended
Wittenberg .
University. In 1961 , lje left
Wittenberg to enter Jhe Air
Force. He returned to Wittenberg in 1966, but finished
his degree work at Capital
University in 1972.
While at Wittenberg ,
Biggers earned three varsity
football letters and was the
team's leading rusher and
scorer in 1961. He also earned
second team All-Ohio Con- ,
ference honors that year.
While at ColumbWI West •

coached football for two
years at Willard High School
prior to coming to Logan. His
squads there had an 6-9-3
mark.
Biggers' coaching experience
Includes
an
assistant roaching job under
Gene Slaughter at Capital
University in 1971. During his
tenure.in the U. S. Air Force,
Biggers was a pill)'er-coach
for three sea!IOns, compiling
a 34-6 record.
He also was employed by
the city of Columbus from
1968-71 as assistant llll\llager
of . the Stoney Creek Golf

news

media.
The 1980 Colwnbus w~
lllgh School graduate, who
lives at 474 Poplar St.,

By JOAN HANAUER
. UPITelevillon Writer
NEW YORK ( UPI) - John ChanceUor almost became the
first visitor to fall asleep in the Oval Office of the White House.
HeWs:' tired after following President carter around, being
allowed 111 and then kicked out of presidential meelings aU dsy,
from 6:30a.m. to 11:30 p.m.
"The President looked just the same when he said good night
as he had when he said good morning," Chancellor said in an
interview. "But l was waiting for him at II: 30 in one of the
wing chairs in ibe Oval Office - he was in a small office nell!
door in which he prefers to work -and 1 almost dbzed off."
Chancellor and an NBC crew of about 20 spent a day in the
recall one Arbor Day when
White_ House, . trailing the President - who incidentally
after a program In . the
allowed himself to be wired for sound - so the network could
forenoon and a basket lunch,
present "A Day with President Carter" on Aprll\4, 8-9 p.m.,
we aU went to Cedar Hill and
Eastern time. Chancellor, the reporter on the show, also will
brought in several maple
interview Corter the morning of April 14.
trees. We planted these on the
"I get the feeling he. Is a man very much in control of
grounds surrounding the
himself," Chancellor said. "My guess is that he's probably a
school building and a few of p-etty demanding guy to work lor, terribly weU organized.
them are still there in the
"He appears to have learned the language of the bureacracy
Community Hall grounds.
pretty well in a short time. The White House Is far more
Besides the activity cen- relaxed than under Ford. In terms of stages of tension, this is
tering around the church and the least tense. The Nb:oo White House was the most tense,
school, there were several even before Watergate. We did a show on Nixon in '71 - a day
private parties for the in the life of- and the contrast is marked.''
younger group as well as
Whll&lt;i'Nb:on had aUowed the network free run of the family
picnics and com roasts in quarter~ and had been more restrictive on the working level,
sununer. Letart Island at Carter firmly refused to let the cameras into the family area
that time had huge sand but ·allowed them into a Cabinet meeting, a meeting with
beaches and was a favorite Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and anything else that was
place for com roasts and on his schedule that day.
When sensitive matters came up, the newsmen were kicked
chicken fries under the luU
moon . The hay rides out. The President's microphone citme equipped with a large
frequently brought us to oo-off switch, so he could bleep out conversations of a delic.ate
Racine where we took the nature.
trolley to Hobson and back. · The show marks the first time that television cameras have
·
After stopping in Racine for recorded a working Cabinet meeling.
"We were told it was one of the best Cabinet meetings
refreslunent we went home ..
Young folks of today they've had. They rather forgot we were there after a while.
probably think It was a dull But we were told that there ·are a couple of windbags, that
life but that was before the SQllletlmes the President has to swing a baseball bat to move
days of good roads and things along. Because we were there, they were prepared and
·
·
automobiles. Then we had six . concise."
Chancellor, fascinated by Carter, sununed up his impresinch sand in the swruner and
six inch mud in the winter, so sions of the President by saying: .
"There is something elusive about his character that I have
we stayed home and found
never been able to pin down. Gerry Ford's mind is like a big
our own pleasures .
With the coming of the hard handsome national park with forest rangers stationed here and
road, autos and electricity, there. Carter has some little secret garden in there you can't
our lives began to change. It reaUy find."
was so easy to go elsewhere
The 10 top network television progrimts for the week ending
to -trade that the stores soon
AprlllO,
according tO the A.C. Nielsen Co., were : ·
found business unprofitable
1:
"Something
for Joey" (CBS Wednesday movie); 2:
and closed. The niill burned,
"Jesus
of
Nazareth"
(conclusion); 3: "Laverne &amp; Shirley ;" 4:
and post office was put on a
mail route, and the ferry was ''Happ~ Days;'' S.: 'Three's Company;'' 6: uBugs Bum)';'' 7:
abandoned. The old SChool (tie) "Uttle House on the Prairie" and "Easter Beagle;" 9:
building was vacated and "Barney Miller;" 10: "People's Command Perfonnance.''
later l&gt;ecame the Community
Hall. "There was a new
elementary school built and· many of the new ones).
pupils were hauled in by bus
But many of the old homes ·
for many miles. The high were sold to a development
school was discontinued and company and are now
those pupils taken to Racine. neglected and ready to faU
Things were never the down, and ~orne already
same again.
have.
Many of the Ianners are
There are many persons
newcomers. A very few of the scattered around the country
older residents remain. who stlll remember Letart
Those who do still love and Falls as it once wa.s:
care for their homes (as do
A beautiful place in Ohio.

Alexander, and when it
burned was owned by
Wllllam Wilson.
A1J In most country towns of
that day the church and
school were the center of
almost all social activity.
There was only one church
then, tlie Methodist, which Is
still active, which had Its own
minister who also served the
Apple Grove, Plants and
Fairview Churches. The
parsonage was at Letart.
nte Sunday School was
very active with an attendance of 100 or more.
There were two plays
presented by them each year
which filled the church to
c.apacity. The most popular
was the Christmas program.
Even the littlest one who
could talk was Included in
this. The church was
decorated with two huge
evergreen trees cut from
Cedar Hill, whlch were in
tum decorated with popcorn
strings and red paper
strands.
The other program was the
Children's Day program
presented in June. At this
time the church., full of lovely
blossoms and chlldreri in
their gay summer · clothes
were beauliful to behold. ·
The school In the early
1900s had only ihree rooms,
two on the lower floor and one
upstairs. The first two con·
.tained the eight grades, four
in each. The other was for
those who desired to study
further or wished to prepare
to teach.
The late C. N. Wagner was
teacher .\here for many. years
and was responsible for
preparing many of Meigs'
best old time teachers. .
Late~ the school was in·
creased to four rooms and the
upper two houses a third
grade two year high school,
with two teachers.
The school also presented
one or two plays lor the public
each year. Occasionally there
was an all day picnic. I can

WAIO CROSS SONS STORE
EXP1RES4-17-77

Open-Air Show
The best rated picture in town ·
smart leather straps
·
pe~che? high on a wedge.
Crty tatlored fashions for
gals on the go.
(With lots of pretty feet
showing through .)
Camel and Rust

0-

MlDDLEOF UPPER BLOCK
POMEROY, OHIO
OPEN :
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mon. thru Thurs;
9 a.m. to 8 p.m . Friday
Saturday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

At home in the tightest quarters, this
ligh tweight sews like a heavyweight
with a front drop-in bobbin , adjuslable
stretch stitch and a self-contained
carrying case. Model 354.

NOW
ONLY

58" and 60"

Klapmon's

POLYESTER GABARDINE

20% OFF

GR

COTION &amp; POLYESTER KNITS

THE .FABRIC SHOP
McCall's, Kwick-Sew; Simplicity PatTtrns

I1S W. Second

992-2284

Pomeroy, 0.

High·
heating bills
this winter?
Coln•nbia
has a plan
to help you!
.

Record - break ing co ld wea ther and higher rates
have forced hea ting bil l:, to all-t ime highs . To help
its customers thrd ugh th is critical time, Columbia Gas
offers a special payment p bn for people who received
a turn -off notice.
This program is set up for each cus tomer's
s peci.1l needs. With it , you can spread a particu larly
hig h bill over several months and pay the monthly
balance along with your regular monthly bill .
If you received ·a turn-off notice, contact Columbia
Gas now. We wi ll arrange a plan to help you .
The plan costs you nothing extra-you pdy only
for the gas you use.

Hartley 's Shoes

$7.50

Purchase

"

baseball.
His football honors include
being named to the All-City
League and honorable
mention AU-Central District
ln 1959.

1

ANY SIZE

'l'

High School, Biggers was
named "Best Athlete" In his
graduating class, earning a
total of eight varsity letters three in football, two in
basketball and three in

TV•••in Review

REGULAR PASSENGER
TREAD RECAPS

W-C

And

'

of the Year" honors in the
SEOAL.
Newa.rk h111 2,100 students
in the upper three grades and
four junior highs in its school
system. The Wildcats belong
to the powerful Central Ohio
League.
Biggers, who will be
teaching on the high school
level in the area of health and
physical education, plans to
move to Newsrk as soon as
pouible following the 1976-77
school term.
He said he will begin
organizing his program at
Newark as time penni!B this
spring, and foresees few
changes In the current
Wildcat program.
"I've enjoyed by stay
here," Biggers commented.
"I think we've ma'de some
significant progress in the

Multiflora rose sharing invited

PATRON OF ARTS
WASHINGTON (UPI)
The White House says First
Lady Rosalynn Carter will
serve as hooorary chainnan
of the board of trustees for
the John Fitzgerald Kennedy
Center for the Performing

PRODUCE SPECIALS
WHIT·E

Ohlo River by a mall carrier
in a skiff rowed by hand.
We also had a ferry hetween the two Letarts before
the Pomeroy-Mason bridge
was · built. lt consisted of a
large skiff and a flat large
enough to 'carry a wagon and
team of borses or two. In the
ea rl'y days these were
propelled by oars but later
bad gasoline motors.
We also Jtad a barber shop,
and in the summer time, an
ice cream parlor.
I ·rec.all ooe winter when
the river was fuU of ice, one
enterprising citizen built a~
i~e house. It consisted of
double walls with sawdust between. He filled It with
chunks of ice from the river.
This he !IOld the nell! summer
to folks to make Ice cream. Of
course It couldn't be used in drinks, but it froze delicious
Ice eream. Perhaps his son,
one of Letart's older .
residents, ritay remember
those days.
Believe It or not, there )Vas
a medlc.al doctor for several
years and I am told once lor a
short· time a_ dentist. This
dentist later became one of
Pomeroy's well-known
dentists and prominent
citizens. His name would be
famlllar to many should l use
lt. .
The third of these stores
stooked mainly a line of drugs
or patent medicines so it was
called the drug store,
although they also sold a lew
groceries
and
some
drygoods. The owner whom I
am 81111! was ·not a licepsed
phannsclst was called.
"Uncle Hugh" by one and ill!.
One of the others was
owned by Richard Allen,
otherwise known as "Dick.'~
He was everyone's friend and
was much admired in the
community. The other was
owned in the early years by
the Hender!IOn Sayre family,
later by · Hayman and

Clarence Price, chairman traltling from the Extension
of the Meigs County . Service as to appllcation
Agricultural Stabilization rates and care needed in Ulle
and Conservation Service, of tordon !OK.
Alter the training the
said todaY applications $re
being accepted for cost- producer can apply at the
sharing for the control of ASCS on the second floor of
·multiflora
rose
on the .Fanners Bank Building
in Pomeroy. Cost-sharing is
pastureland.
To be considered lor help based on 50 percent of the
the producer must have cost of chemical used in
received the
required controlling multiflora rose in
pasturelands.

2% .
MILK •••••••••••• ::a.l~o.".!.129

89~

reconunended from Logan
both as a coach and teacher.''
Mason continued.
"nte screening committee
was impressed with his
organizational ability. He
projects the youthful and
businesslike image that we
want our kids to emulate,"
Mason aaid.
Biggers' three-year loot'
baU coaching reeord at Logan
stands at 15-14-1, with
marked Improvement shown
each season.
His 197t Chlefa posted a 2-71 mark, and the '73 Purple &amp;
White squad went 6-4.
The '76 UIS ~rldders swept
their last five contests to
finish with a fine 7-3 slate and
Logan's first SEO League
football title since 1964. That
feat earned Biggers "Coach

Letart Falls, busy and thriving,
a beauty spot in southeastern Ohio

BROUGHTONS

WAGNER

32 oz.

..

High Schopl.

ADED WITH

FRENCH CITY

20 cr.

LOGAN
Bill Biggers
whose LoJan Chleftalft~
captured
the
1976
Southeaatem Ohio League
grid crovn, was hired
Monday nl&amp;ht as tbe new lead
football fOach at Newark

games.

· "It's too early in the season
to worry about pitching or
lack of hitting. l wouldn't
want to worry after six
·
games. I've trailed by 10 &lt;r II
games and woo it, so l can't
be worried at this stage of the
season.''
Astra first baseman, clean
up hitter and team captain
Bob Watson, said he felt
The total of all of the $12,063. 24.
for the Reds were
things
Middleport Village Council
Village council's obligated
going
to
get worse before they
expendable moneys as of funds stood at $29,133.38 with
got
better.
March 31 totaled $45,209 .68, no receipts and no disbur"We beat them at their own
according to the monthly sements during the month .
game,.''
Watson said. ~~w~
report of Clerk-Treasurer
The balance of all obligated
snuffed
out
those late rallies
Gene Grate. ·
funds of the board of public
(in
the
eighth
and ninth
Receipts,
disbursements affairs totaled $190,588.95 at
innings
)
and
bung
on to win
and the balance of each fund the end of March. Receipts,
as of March 31, respectively, disbursements, respectively,
both times.
''They've got to be thinking
include : genera l, $4,533.40, and the balance of each fund
ahead to tomorrow also.
$7,748 .71, $23 , 373.73 ; making up the moneys inThe Eastern Eagles lost
But the visitors came back
Andujar is going against
cemetery, $1,005, $1,004.84, clude: sa nitary sewer ,
them. And he beat \hem three
$821.62; fire equipment, $75, $4,101.97, $3,780.95, $37,152.36; another cloSe contest in extra with four in their third inning
times laSt year. He has it in
$637.15, $111.24; swimming sani tary sewer escrow, innings Tuesday by falling to 9n two walkll, an Eagle,error,
for the Reds and lie's always .
pool, no recelpts, $9 .10, $1,125, no disbursements , visiting Southwestern 12-8 in and singles by Potter and
tough against them."
$3 ,747 .30 ; planning com- $135,760.09; water, $7,308.30, eight Innings . Eastern Bush. The big blow was · a NOT TALKING
SACRAMENTO, Calif.
To accomplish their second
mission, no receipts, $4 .50, $8,010.50, $10,383.40; water jumped off to an early. 3-Q bases-clearing triple by
(UPJ) - Gov. Edmund G. win over the Reds the Astros
$62.40; street maintenance, meter trusts, $275, $75, lead in the bottom of the 'first Jackson . .
Eastern took a 6-4 lead in Brown Jr. of California says a scored three runs in the first
$3,513 .76, $2,545, $250.59 ; $7 ,293.10. Receipts lor March when Bruce Riffle led off with
"Baskin-Robbins ice cream inning and another in the
federal revenue sharing, no totaled $12,810.27 while a double. Joe Kuhn followed the bottom of the fourth by
receipts, no disbursements, disbursements totaled with a walk, and Steve Little plating three runs of their cone" was the only thing he third to give pit~her .J .R.
singled in Riffle. Dan Spencer own. Brian Bissell singled, purchased durin~ his self- Richard the victory.
$12,318.57; anti recession $11,866.45 .
a·ssistance, no receipts,
Total indebtedness of the drove Kuhn home with a David Carpenter walked, paid $1,500 three-day visit to
The Reds managed to put
$70.86, $524 .23. Receipts for community is $1,356,233.75 or single, and Rusty Wigal followed by a Riffle single. Japan where he lobbied for runners on base in the eighth,
knoc.k,ed in Little with a Kuhn cracked another single auto assembly plants in his but it was Watson's
the month totaled $8,127.16 $487.15 per capita.
to score another, and Riffle state.
double.
compared to expenditure1&gt; of
unassisted double play at
· raced home on an error. But
''I'll teU you one thing," first that put the Reds away.
the Highlanders got one back' Brown told reporters on his Watson stabbed a Joe
in the fifth, took the lead with return Tuesday, ''when you Morgan line drive lor the first
three in the -sixth, and the pay your own way, you are out and c.aught the runner off
hosts tied it ·with one of their very careful about costs."
first for the second. ·
own in the bottom of the sixth,
Did he meet any ladies in
"I knew that Morgan was
'
and the game w~nt into elltra Japan?
BVGARVCLARK
2-llead but the inning wasn't - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . ; . . ._ _ __
going to hit it to me in the
innings as n~ither team could
"I met a number of people eighth," Watson said. 41 I
th;e~o~~~:::-a:::t b::;ri~~: ~~ -~~e~t~~~~r ~~11~~: ~~~~::~~~ r=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:;:-:·:::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::x~:::::~:::~::;~Ww . 1¥
over there," the bachelor thought it would be a
population trends in Ap- .score in the seventh.
In the eighth the visitors chief executive replied. "One grounder for a possible
palachia, it ts interesting to
:\\l note two additional indicators wrapped it up with lour big of the reasons why I paid lor double play, but it was a
evening was no exceptiQn as make it 4-1.
~~~
·:·: which give us a sharper ones. Those came on three my trip is that way I wouldn 't smash. Call it a premonition,
of the region today, It Eagle errors: a base on baUs, have to answer so many but I knew he was going to hit
the junior righthander pitWahsma quickly retaliated ;::
By Clarence f~ picture
is understandable that a and a two-run triple by questions."
it to me."
ched a three-hitter and a 6-4 withfourtalliesoftheirownto t
-Miller
f.~. growth in wpulatlon is tied to Layton. Eastern committed
win over the visiting regain the lead. Mike Gold- ::;:
Qetter economic conditions. seven costly errors on · the
Parkersburg Big Reds.
sberry singled to begin the
The population of Ohio's 28- night.
'
An interesting
turn of the 13o&lt;Jounty region of the county Appalachian area in
Collier, in recording his outburst. Tltn · Litchfield
Jackson -led the winners by
has
occurred . lOth Congressional District 1960 was just over one going three for five while
third victory of the season walked and Jerry Tucker went events
against no defeats, is fast down swinging for the first .throughout the Appalachian . show that the area is growing million. Of that number, 26 · Bush went a perfect three for
Gallip(,lis defeated visiting over the left field 1fence With
region
over
the
past
five
at
a
pace
faster
than
the
state
becoming the ace of the White out. Tim Sayre returning to
per cent were living heloW the · three. Bush picked up the win Ironton 4-2 on Memorial Field Mark Dobson aboard in the
Falcon mound corp. The 5'10" the_ lineup as the designated years: people have stopped as a whole, and certa!"~Y poverty level. In one decade, in relief as he and Layton Tuesday evening.
fourth inning proved to be the
Oht~ s the population of the same wajj&lt;ed six and fanned juSt
flame thrower already has a hitter for Collier, then singled leaving and more important, laster . than
It was the Blue Devils first game's winning blow. Swain
Southeastern Ohio League led off with the thlrd with a .
ntrhitter to his credit this year home Goldsberry to make it 4- people . have moved into the metropolitan centers. While area has increased by 100,000 three.
13-state
region.
Ohio
experienced
a
,1
per
cent
triple, but failed to score.
with a 13-3 victory over 2. After Rick Buzzard's hit
Riffle led Eastern's hitting basebaU win in two starts.
,persons and the number of
Consider .this : there are increase in popuilltion durmg persons below the poverty with a double and two singles,
The lads ol Coach Jim Cannan drove in the first
, Spencer in his last outing'.
loaded the bases another run
• With
the
triumph, scored on a fielders' cho.ice by now more people residing in the period 197!!-73, no l~ss level dropped by more than 10 while Jim Davis had a double . Osborae, now 2-1 on tbe year, GAllS run with a double in
the vast Appalachian chain than 12 . of the 13 count~es per cent. The decrease for the and single. Kuhn had two wUI hool Oak HIU In a ooo- the initial rung.
Wahama's record soared .to 8- Riggs to make it 4-3. Tim
than ever before in history. compnsmg the lOth Distrtct
GAllS left seven runners
3 on the year with a 7 p.m. Davis then put the White The Appalachian Regional . recorded population ln- entire region during the same singles, Wigal and Johnnie . coafereace game at 5 Ibis
.
stranded.
Ironton left six men
eveDlllg
on
Memorial
Field.
even
more
·
Evans
each
got
a
double,
and
period
was
contest slated for this evening Falcons back out in frpnt with Conunission and the Census creases. More significant ts ·
base running in
on'jtase.
Poor
Coach
Mike
Burcham's
dramatic
:
·from
31.2
per
cent
Bissell,
I.Jttle
and
Spencer
in Point PleaS8nant. Ripley the second of his game high Bureau report that there are the fact that nine of the :12
the'
fifth
and
sixth innings
to
6-4
overall
Tigers
dropped
of
the
population
with
subeach
got
one
single.
Evans
invades Mason City tomorrow three hils scoring both Lit- nineteen million people in registered population tn·
hurt
the
2-3
inside
the
conference.
Tigers
chances for a
and
for a 4:30 game.
chfield and Sayre to niake it 5- Appalachia - a growth of creases of greater than 6 per standard incomes to 18 per was tagged with the loss as he
Junior
hurler
Terry
WaU
comeb8ck.
cent. Compared to the and Riffle walked seven and
After blanking the Big Reds 4.
more than thr~-quarters of a cent during the same five- balance of this Nation, these struck out seven. Eastern went the distance for GAllS.
Tigers i:oUecting •hits were
in the initial frame the local
The bend area nine added ar. million people in the last five year pertod. At the same
figures are less acceptable. travels tn North Gallia WaU gave up. seven hlts. He Juan Thomas, single; Mike
nine pushed across a run in insurance run in the fourth years. Compare this to the time, two of the three major But compared to the state of tonight.
fanned. three and walked Brown, single, Ed· Lawless,
their half ol the inning to take wheri Tim Thompson singled fact that 2.2 million people metropolitan
count.ies affairs in Appalachia in 1!160, S
OM 013 04-12 12 3 four. The Blue Devils backed double; Bob Williams, a
the
combined (Hamilton and Cuyabo~a) the figures are encouraging. E
an early lead.
home Davis who had walked. (twice
300 311 00- 8 12 7 WaU ·up with line defensive double and single; Dean
Rick Buzzard walked in the · Collier blank~d the Big Reds population of Cleveland and lost
populahon
while
We can examine anoth.er . Layton, Bush (7, wp) and plays, including two double Royal, · double and Rick
lead off spot and was the rest of the way to preserve Columbus) left the Ap- Franklin County had only a barometer of the Ap- Carter. Riffle, Evans (3, lp) plays, one each in the fifth How~rd, single.
palachian region during the 3.9 per cent increase.
sacrificed to second by Ken the 6-4 victory ,
and sixth innings . GAHS
Williams' second ianiag
palschlan Area: indu~rial and Bissell.
decade
1~!!-1960 . Over one
The Census . Bureau has employment. According to
Riggs. Buzzard 5'9" junior
A look at the White Falcon
coilimltted two errors.
double, which scored Falrthen scored when Tim Davis individual statistics show million .people oubnigrated also messuretl population the Appalachian !\eglonal
Bobby WUUams went the cblld, appeared to have ,goae
and Duke Smith delivered Duke Smith still leading the between 1960. and 1970. With increases in tenns of "tur- Commission, major ifl·
distance
for
Ironton. over the centerfield feace oa
back to back singles.
team in runs scored (11), hits the seventies · however the naround counties." That is, dustrial employment in the
Wllllams, who suffered his lite fly, but lite umpire ruled
tow~rd
le~vlng those counties which lost 28 -county Appalachian Appalachian Ohio out paced first loss in thr&lt;!tl starts, gave .It boan~ over for a ground
Parkersburg stormed right (13), stolen bases (11) and trend
changed.
Outmigrstion
population in the sixties ~ut regions of Ohio increased
back In their second chance average .500 (13 for 26).
the overall !ncr~ for the up eight hits. Williams fanned · rule double.
stopped
and
inmigration
a
are
gaming
111 the seventies.
Ironton will play Portswith the bats by plating all
Wshama has five other
dramatically during the 13-state region by almost 2 five and walked lour. Ironton
tenn rarely used before by Ohio has a total of 15 "tur- period from 1965 through
played errorless baU.
mouth in a non-league game
four of their runs to take a players hitting over .400 in Appalachian sociologists - naround counties" (all
per cent.
Brent Jobuoa and Terry this evening.
It is heartening to see
commanding 4-1 lead.
Tim Davis .140, Mark Smith set in. Net irunigration has located in Southern Ohio) . 1973:""1n 1965, three were
Score by innings:
With on&lt; out Reeves and Cox .416, Ken Riggs .407, Tim continued at the rate of ap- Has a total of 15 "turnaround 182,525 workers in the Ohio statistics which show that wau bad two blls apiece for
tbe
GalU•n•.,,
Gary
.Swam,
Ironton
010 010 0--2 7 0
Appalachian
area
emP,k&gt;Yet!
--.9'111\ of th~, economic
received free passes and Sayre .400 and Jack Smith proximately 59,000 persons counties" are in \he loth
Carma11,
Mark
Dobson
Tim
GAHS
2011
200 X-4 8 2
in
major
.industry.
By
1~3,
··potential
of.
Southeastern
moved up a base on an .error. .400. Tim Thompson is close to arumally since 1970.
Congressional D1strlct.
and
Bill
Barr
also
hlt
I!Bfely
that
figure
jumped
to
232,866
GAllS
: WaU
Batteries
Mike Corkendall, Big Red the top with a .387 average.
Population changes within
Along With observations of employees - a 27.3 per cent Ohio Is beginning to be for GaUipoUa.
(WP)
&amp;
Barr.
Ironton:
harnessed lor the benefit of
pitcher then belted a two run
Johnson's two--run homer Wllllams (LP) &amp; Lowe.
increase
experienced
in
the
region.
double to give Parkersburg a

·E xpen dahle funds
stand at $45,210

Biggers gets Newark job, Logan searching for new grid coach

Sparky saying ho; hum

'

~--~--~~----~~~~--------~-- · ·

�•

m~et

Chester women

•

Those Mo!h ers-In-L.aw Again
Jear Helen :
.
•
Here are examples of my mother-in-law and her candid

/

I '

~

. ..... ,.

~

I

,,~-

vays:
1. She opens her door to her son after we've argued, which
lelays making up, sometimes till the next day .

\

...

..J....,J

""' '

)~
1\. ...

...

r

CHESTER - The Ladles
Auxiliary of the Chester Fire
Dept. met Wednesday
evening at the firehouse.
President Opal Hollon
opened the meeting with the
Lord's Prayer followed by
roll call
The ..;cretary's report w~a
read by Ethel Orr and the
treasurer's report by Opa 1
Wickham. Reports of com·

_,.1

New officers IUU be elected
at the ';;~~ ";.~J;;, were
Mem . II 0 I Hollon .
Betty Newe ' npa Karl~
In•Y
Ne";.,;,lla ToyChevall::-, aret
Chrislor, E · :r~leland Ethel
ty ' rm
'
Orr, Opal Wickham, Cleo
DeTray and Clartce Allen .

8

5. She's ,:sensitive" and I must avoid upsetting her (says

nyhusband, who gets mad when I'm rude to her)._
This list could stretch miles, all over trivial thmgs .
I'm a good wife and mother and I think her actions are
nsults to my position . In all fairness, I must say she has mce
tualities and is good to the children.
My husband feels I should ignore "trifles," but what do
'OU do when they build up until you feel like a - DAUGHTERJUTLAW

night. They are pictured left to right, Beth Wolfe, Kim
Fraley, Joelle McLaughlin, Audra Houdashelt, Jill Nease
md Terri Starcher.

TAP ROUTINE - These youngsters tapped to "Don't
Wait for the Sunshine" at the Mid-Porn recital Monday

Jear Daughter :
·
·
Tell your husband you'll ignore "trifles" if he'll help keep
hem small.
I get the feelin g that you two women mostly clash over
10ssession of a man: Mama's soil, your mate. She won't let go;
IOU refuse to share. He, caught in the middle, may champion

VISIT SCHE;OULED
Monday is bloodmobile day
in Meigs County. The blood·
mobile will be at the
Pomeroy Elementary School
from I to 6 p.m. •nd residents
are urged to donate a unit of
blood.

POLLY'S POINTERS
Ice loosens bubbk gum
By Polly Cnmer
DEAR POLLY - I have a
new pair of dark brown corduroy. slacks and somehow I
got bubble gum on them. I
tried freezing the gum with
ice blrt nothing happened. Do
you have another suggestion
lor removing this gum1 MISSM.R.
DEAR MISS M.R. - You
stopped too soon - the ice
needs a bit of help. It should
loosen the gum enough so that
the excess can be sCraped off
with a dull knife. Next, use
cleaning nuid on the Spots,
then rinse slacks and launder
as usual. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - One of
the readers wanted to know
, what abe could do with a lot of
pretty handkerchiefs. Tbey
are attractive IIOWil in a diamond shape on the front of a
t-shlrt. - RUTH R.
DEAR POLLY- I made a
long skirt out pf a lot of pretty '
printed and lacey bandkerchiefs that r do not use in
these days · of disposable
tissues. I made a placket at
the side, gathered the skirt at
the waist and sewed it to a
grosgrain ribbon band that
made the belt. - MRS.
P.M.C.
DEAR POLLY- I have used unneected pretty handkerchiefs as appliques on colorcoordinated throw pillows
!llld have received many
compliments on these

Degrees given

mittees we're given : Cleo

·DeTray reporting serving
ooffee to the firemen after the
Foster fire and Erma Cleland
that new greeting ~ards have
arrived.
Serving food at the
Museum on Heritage Sunday
disc.ussed and members
not to serve this year.

2. I'get lectured on every illness that someone else's kids
lliVe, ;;,plying that if I don't "learn from this," our children
vill get them too. (Ours are healthy, normal, and have a good
loctor. though, of course, she doesn't approve of him. )
J. She does oothing but clean while visiting us, even if my
JOuse is clean. All efforts to politely stop her go ignored.
4. No matter what her son does, it's okay- I shouldn't get•
nad because 'jHe'sa man -you expect 'these things.''

7- The D8lly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday,

Both Edwin Y. Cross and
his wife, the fonner Nancy L.
Mcintyre, graduaWd March
17 irom Ohio State Universi·
ty.
Cross graduated with a
bachelor of science degree in
agriculture with a major in
agronomy. Mrs . Cross
graduated with a bachelor of
science degree in home
economics.
Parents of the couple are
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Cross,
Racine, and ldr. and Mrs.
Robert Mclntyre ofNorthfield.
~
Mr. and Mrs. Cross reside
at Racine.

Then .••

All good things must come
!lle mother who " is only offering suggestions" - after all, he's
to
an end and last night's
)ccustomed to her ways : your rudeness seems unwarranted.
recital
of the Mid·Pom School
5o ... after a fight , he runs to her "open door" for sympathy.
of
Dance
ended a chapter in
And if he would change in this one area, I'll wager those other
the
tap
and
ballet instruction
irritations might become laughable.
of
Mrs.
Judy
Fraser.
Ask him to rectify yo ur No. I complaint, smile with you
Tills
weekend
the Fraser
over 2, 3, 4, etc., and I think you 'll fine a cure for in~awitis . family
will
move
to
Montana.
H.
For
them,
the
dance
school
+++
has
been
a
family
affair.
Dear Helen :
.
,
Here's another whyohwhyohwhy. About the high chair set : Mrs. Fraser has · been
How come your 1-year-&lt;&gt;ld turns up her nose at food you assisted by her daughter,
offer her - or Bronx cheers it all over your blouse - but will April, in the dance instruceat everything from dog food to lint to garden mud, if you put lion and choreography; her
son, Scott, has helped her
her on the floor 1 - FEEDING-TIME BLUES
father, Dale Jacobs, in
creating stage properties for
De~r FTB :
.
recitals, and her husband,
Because she'd "rather·do it herself, Mom." - H.
Ernie,
has had charge of
+++
music.
Dear Helen :
Last night a large recer&gt;· About " agism," th e (until recently) overlooked
live
crowd was on hand for
discrimination : Every time I see an older person betng
the
final recital of Mrs.
condescended to or done out of a. job because of his or her
Fraser's
students. The "Fanyears, I think of deTocqueville's words: "The evil which was
tasia''
theme
was carried Out
suffered patiently as inevitable seems unendurable as soon as
.
with
a
modernistic
garden
Ule idea of escaping from it crosses man's mind.''
scene
and
novel
lighting
on
Up with Gray Power! We'll soon be the largest group in the
the
stage
of
the
Meigs
Junior
country, and we can make ourselves heard! - PROUD OF MY
High School auditorium .
LAUGH LINES
Tap , toe and ballet.
numbers, several using
blacklight, were included in
the program along with
several speciality dances.
Dan Schultz and April Fraser
presented the jitterbug, Terri
Johnson and Melanie Sisson,

You Nee.d ed ·
Elbow Grease
Now - Let Hoover ·
.,
be your
housekeeper
' .
They beat as they

d

Social
Calendar

Sweep As They
Clean.

Plates for shutins

planned as project

a

comedy

pantomime

"Fiapperette"; and Paula
Horton , Tracy McGraw,
Plans for preparing plates Mrs. French as asked each Amber Warner, Jean Horton ,
for shutins on May 2 were an- member to consider their Terri Johnson , Melanie
nowlCed by Mrs. Nan Moore growth in Christ during the Sisson, Tammie Starcher,
at the Monday night meeting past year. She gave an inte;· . and Lynne Oliver, a
·
of the United Methodist pretation of the Lord s hoedown.
Prayer.
Miss
Laura
Hoover
Soloists;
all
long-time
Women of the Heath United
Methodist . Church, Mid- accompanied her mother, dance students of Mrs.
Mrs. Wendell Hoover who Fraser, were June Wamsley
dleport.
.
sang
uHow Great Thou Art.'' ' a toe nwnber to ~~ Nadia's
Tbe project of rememberAn
Easter motif was car· Theme ''; Si!-ZY Samuels, .a
ing shutins usually takes
ried
out
on the refreshment tap routine, and Sandi
place in February, but was
table.
Hostesses
were Mrs. Hamilton who performed an
postponed due to the
Emma
Wayland,
Mrs. acrobatic
numb er.
weather. Aletter was read by
Frances
Wilson,
Mrs.
Hayes
choreographed by Miss
Mrs. James Criswell announFraser.
cing the retreat for Methodist and Mrs. Freda Milch. ·
Dan Schultz who took dane·
·women and it was noted thai
ing lessons many years from
Mrs. Robert Bumgarner has
Mrs. Fraser joined the girls
the registration forms. Also
for a tap production number
annoilnced was a School of
which opened the second 'act.
Missions to be held in July at .
In
the lineup were Mrs.
Ada, and a lay workers
Fraser and ' her daughter,
meeting to take ,place at the
church Sunday at 2:30p.m.
A piano prelude by Mrs.
Emerson Jones opened the
meeting . Mr.s. John
Krawsczyn, vice president, • A bridal shower for Miss
gave an Easter meditation Debbie Fife, bride-elect of
and Mrs. Beulah Hayes was Mark Steven Lawson, was
the devotional leader. She held recently at the home of
took her scripture from Cor· Mrs. Eleanor Lawson and coWeekly yard sales to raise
inthians, 15th chapter, and hosted by Carolyn Bisse.ll and money for the church were
read an article on the resur- Glenda Lawson.
planned when the Ladies
rection. She read from NorThe bride-elect's table was Auxiliary of the United
man Vincent Peale, and a
decorated with bells and Pentecostal Church met
poem from Helen Steiner while streamers suspended recently at the church.
Rice.
from an umbrella . The
A covered dish luncheon
Mrs. Grace French, pro- refreshment table was preceded the meeting. It was
gram leader, look _h er centered with a bride replica, decided that the sales will be
.material from Response us- yellow tapers in cut glass held every Friday and Satur·
ing the title, "Joy of Living." holders, and covered wiih a
day at the home of Mrs. Bon·
She read scripture from damask cloth.
nie Shaffer located on Old
Mark and commented on
Games were played with Route 1 off Chester Road .at
various opinions of the resur- prizes going to Mrs. !Jelbert . the Pomeroy corporation
rection of Christ. She said Lawson, Mrs. Henrietta limits. Anyone with clean
that .the lily is a symbol of Bailey, andMrs. Nancy rummage to donate is asked
human life and talked about Lawson. Mrs. Sybil ~ussell to call992-2502 for pickup.
the difference in plant and won the door prize. A cake
Mrs. Nottingham won a
animal life through the power decora ted with yellow bells prize for a game of Honesty.
of Christ. Jesus walk with the and pink hearts, nut cups, Mrs. Mae Mason gave a talk
disciples following his resur- and punch were served. At- entitled "Walking with the
rection and his m~ge of tending besides those named Lord." Pr•yer closed the
peace and instruction for were Eva Dessauer, Henriet- meeting .
them to take over his work ta Russell ,' Evelyn Romine,
was discussed by the pro- Mina Swisher , Ruth
gram leader.
McGrath, Olive Lawson,
To CO""!Iuc!e her program, Tammy Fitch , Linda
Damewood, !Jebbie Milhone
and Chasity, Ruby Congo,
ROCK SPRINGS - BerVirgene Elberfeld, Dorothy
MEETING CHANGED
nice
Arter, past Ohio S~te
Due tO the Ohio hospital Brown, Gertrude Bass, Tim- Lecturer, Will be speaker at
convention in Columbus, the my and Elizabeth Lawson, the annual Meigs County
Women 's Auxiliary of Sherri and Jeffrey Bissell, Grange banquet to be held at
Veterans Memorial Hospital · and Pam Lawson.
Sending Kilts were Patty 7p.m. Friday at the Salisbury ·
will meet Ori April 26, the
School.
fourth Tuesday instead of the Chadwell, Margaret An·
Dinner will be served by
third Tuesday' in the hospital drews, Susie Karr, Mr. and the Salisbury PTA and music
Mrs. Richard Gaul, Joan
cafeteria.
Carnahan, Gay Gaul, l"ran- for the program will be by
cis Hunt, Betty Hawk , Mr. Keith Ashley and Randall
A 11&gt;01111ht for the day : and Mrs. Raymond Evans Wolfe who placed third in the
Prelldent 'IbGmas Jeffe1'3011 !llld Marlin, Mr. and Mrs. National Grange talent
llllid, "When ancry, count ID Tom McGraU1, Wilmer Tillis. competition la st year.
Tickets may be purchased
10 befwe you &amp;peak ; if very I.illie Barber •nd Mr.
from
grange masttrs.
....,., 1110."
Mrs. Harolil Johnson .

Miss Fife
entertained
at shower

Weekry yard
saks slated
by auxiliary

April, Marda Sisson, Paula
Horton, Marjorie Miller,
Ruth Ann Fry, Kay·Hart, An·
drea Batey, Sharon Griffin,
Barbara Grueser, Jennifer
Meadows, Miriam Sisso.n,
Tracy . McGra~, Amber
Warner, Jean Horton, Sandi
Hamilton, June
Johnson,

The third act consisted of ·
acrobatic anlics by all of the
students.
Mrs. FraSer presented · a

well-received toe dance to
··clair De Lune" and follow·
ing that was given a bouquet
of red roses by her students.

Melanie

Terri

Tamara

Thur., April 14th thru Sat., April 16th

April Fraser.

Sisson,

Vance,

Erica Kessinger, Cindy Rif·
fie, Terri Roush, Jodi Har·
rison , Laura McCullough,
F:rin Anderson, and Judi

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GIRLS
CLOGS

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Roses were also presented to

s~~~~~~-doing tap and ballet ~-----------,

Cullunis,

0. ·

Phone 742-2100

Lynne · Oliver, and Tarnmi
in the recital were Tcaci
Bartels, _Shannon Coates,
Leah Doidge, !Jena Manley,
TinaMurray, CharlolteHart,
Michelle Gruess, Sue Ellen
Fry, Angela Bostick, Darcie
Hysell, Beth Wolfe, Te rri
Starcher, Kimberly Fraley,
Jill
Nease,
Joelle
McLa u ghl in ,
Audra
Houdashell, Lowry Ann
Adams, Melanic Mossman,
Sherri Sisson, Jodi Thomas,
Mary Alice Sisson, He•ther

Middleport,

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT STORE

Mees.

Wams ley,

Suzy . Sam ue ls,

Speaker ruJ.med

""II

BAKER FURNITURE ,

ROSES PRESENTED - Arm bouquets of red roses were presented to Mrs. Judy
Fraser, instructor, and her daughter, April, by the students of the Mid-Porn School of D~nce
at the 13th annual recital present&lt;)(! last night at the_ Meigs Jumor High School aud itoriUm.
Making the presentation to April, left, is Jodi Hamson, while Judi Mecs, nght, presented
the roses to Mrs. Fraser.

to

''earelers . 1I
el...._._

I
I
1---llo--------1

Booths

HEAD
LETIUCE
16 oz. Pkg .

CARROTS

.

39e
2/49e
Head

.

BREADED FISH PORTIONS

····%e. :e. ::.:. ::...::snn:

32 oz .

$1,79

box

40 .oz. Joan of Arc Red Kidney Beans ...65•
14% oz. Lucks Chicken
n' Dumpllns .••••• 69•
.
.

32 oz. Ragu

Spaghetti Sauce plain or with meat ••••1.19

16 oz. MuUers Thin Spaghetti ••••••••••.•• 49•
l5 % oz. Chef Cheese Pizza •••••••••••••••• ,79•

_

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
R.m. Wednesday at the
lmerlcan Legion hall in
Middleport.
- I;'OME~OY
Mid;
d!eport
Lions
Club,
'Wednesday noon at the Meigs
Inn. All Ljpns urged to attend.
POMEROY Chapter 80,
Royal Arch Masons, Wedneaday '!Vening 7:30 p.m. at
the Pomeroy ·Masonic
Temple,
followed
by
BoswortbCouncil 46, R.S.M.
at B: 3q p.m. at the Temple. •
THURSDAY
LAUREL Cliff Better
Health Glub, Thursday night
7i30 (l.m! at the home of Mrs.
Ann M!~·
TUPPERS PLAINS
Commwlity Club meeting,
· 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at
firehouse.
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners, 7:30 Wednesday
night at the home 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.
RACINE American Legion
Pool IIOZ lnllpection meeting 8
p.m. Thursday, Elmer
Pickens, commander, an·
munced.
MEIGS County Hurn1111e
&amp;lclety meeting, 7:30 p.m.';
Thursday at Tirift !ilop,
across from Pom..-oy Post
'OOice. Members urged to
ettend and publlc welcome.
PRECEPTOR Chapter,
·Beta stgma Phi meeting, 7:30
p.m. Thursday at home of
Norma Amsj)ary.
. POMEROY Lodge 164,
FAM, special meeting,
ThursdaY, 7:30 p.m. with all
maater ~ lnv.lted.
FRIDAY
·
• RETIIRN Jonathan Meigs
Chapter, Daughter of the
).merlcan
Revolution,
Friday, 1:30 p.m. at !he borne
pr Mrs. Vernon Weber with
)Irs. Lawrence Milhoan and
Mrs. J . Edward Foster, cohostesaea. Mrs. Richard
Henderson wUl tallr: on the
.Ohio Room of Coll.ltitution

Hall.
.
BLA&lt;X LUNG Assodation

U~Mtlng, 1 m4 p.m.

12 oz. Dinty Moore Corn Beef............. " '
'

~

6 oz. Nescafe Instant CoHee •• .'2.59 limit 2
32 oz. Palmolive Liquid ..................,•1.ot

Friday at
Senior Citizen• Center dining

~m. SATURDAY
SPECIAL Meeting,
~vtlle Mamnlc Lodge
FI&amp;AM, Saturday, 7:30 p.m.
lor annual inapectlon; Muter
Mason• degroie; AD Master
~slnvifed-

pillows. I bave usect some
that my grandmother had
made with beautiful handwork.- YOLANDA,
DEAR POLLY - Many of
us wear lockets on chains but
do not have pictures in them.
Inside a locket ill a great
place to put two dimes that
you may need for a phone
call. If you are in a jam and
need to make a can in a hurry
you have the chanKe ready
and do not have to dig
through a purse or worry
about where you can get
change. - KRIST A.
DEAR POLLY- With the
high, high cost of coffee I
bave found a way to save.
Make a pot of coffee using
your usual amount of coffee
grounds. When only two or
three cups are left in the pol
add some more COLD water,
use the same grounds and let
the coffee perk again. After
trying this a few times you
will know how much cold
water to add so as to bave the
coffee as strong as you like.
-OOROTHYJ.
DEAR POLLY - I keep a
large-mouth, pint-size pickle
jar in my kitchen sink and fill
it to the top with hot water to
which I add a little soap. All ·
during the day I drop in any
silverware with tines and
blades down. When evening comes I pick aU this silverware up and put it in my dish
water and there is no need for
furthe..soaking. Just swish a
few times in the water, rinse
with hot water and have clean
silverware. No messy single
items scattered about the
sink all day either. - ELLA.
DEAR POLLY - When
eggs stick to a carton do not
struggle with them and
periJaps break one or two. Set
the carton in the sink, pour
water in it and Jet it set for a
while. The eggs will come out
easily,- MRS. D.A.W.
Polly will send you one of
her signed thank -you
newspaper-eoupon clippers if
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her column. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS. in care of this
newspaper.

Layette
shower
.
hosted

0~

OiJN

3rd
RS EASTER SUNDAY
./

~
/
./

~~
_....

~

Store Hours:
MQn.-Sal
Sunday

_.A:"

8 am-10 pm
10 am-10 pm

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

Prices Effective Thru
April 16, 1977

BUCKET

Several out-&lt;&gt;f-lown friends
and relatives were here for
the funeral services of Mrs.
Thelma M. Orr on March 24.
Among those attending
were her sister and brotherin-law, Mr. and Mrs. Darrell
Darroh, her nephew, John
Ash, his wife and family,
Mrs. Wayn~ Orr and Mrs.
Guy Swadley, Parkersburg,
W. Va.; Marie Morehead,
Paul Morehead, and Pauline
Tucker, Cimterburg; Mr. and
Mrs. Denzil White, St.
Albans, W.Va.; Mrs. Marion
Orr, Columbus; Clint Orr,
Grove City; Mrs. Ed
Newman and Kathy, Mrs.
Dan Zimmennan, Galion;
Dr. and Mrs. Roger Grueser
and Jertnifer, Logan; Hoy
Bookman, Buchtel; Mrs. W.
Parks, Grove City. pther
relatives and friends from
Ravenswood, W. Va. als~at·
tended .

$ 49

CUBE STEAK ••••••••• :~ •••
FRENCH CITY
12

oz.

WIENERS ••• ~············
1A PORK

USDA CHOICE

LOIN •••.•.. ~~.

•

CHUCK ROAST••••••••L!~
USDA CHOICE BONELESS

CHU ·R.......

LB.

••••••••••

Cheche Lee was· honored
·with a layette shower Satur·
day anhe home of Mr. !llld
Mra. Ezra · J . Sheets,
Pomeroy.
Garnes were played and
refreshments served. Attending were Mrs. Daphne
Meiners, Cincinnati; Mrs.
Frances Sheets, Reedavllle;
Mrs. Dina Gryszka,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Jean Sheets
!llld Cassie, Chesler; Mrs.
Mary Sheets and Mandi,
Pomeroy; Barbara Lee,
Athens; Betty Lee, Cincin- ·
nati; Mrs. Doris Grueser,
Minersville; Ellen Tucker,
Pomeroy; Mrs, Luisa Casto,
David and Arlos, Marietta,
and Vicki Sheets, Pomeroy.
Sending gifts were Mrs.
Pat O'Connor, Miamisburg;
Sandra Sheets, Reedsville;
!llld Mrs. Eleanor Logan,
Pomeroy
Hostesses for the shower
were Linda Sheets and Luisa
Casto. Mr. and Mrs. Fr.,ct
.( Cheche) Lee reside in
Athens.

Several attend
Orr seroices

. ..

HEAD

LETTUCE ••••••••••••••
KRAFT

12

oz.

CHEESE SINGLES •• :~G~.
BORDEN'S

FLAVORITE

20

DAN DEE
COUPON

-. -

DOMINO

CHIPS.s;~~:E.
"'-: -~ """;" -:-- :1

: ·1

&lt;I,
. ·I

SUGAR
5 LB.

69¢

coyPoNr

~ ~- "· . ·I

&gt;I
. "I

. :1
W!C : ·I

Limit 1 Per Cuslom.e r
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires April16 , 1977

.•

COUPON

MARTHA'WHITE

DIAL SOAP

FLOUR
5 LB.

$ 19

2% MILK •••.••.... :~L!~N•••
BORDEN'S JUMBO TREAT GAL $·. 49
ICE CREAM ••••••••••••••••

oz.

BREAD••••••.•••• ~o:!E! ••
POTATO

PLASTIC

59¢

BATH SIZE BARS

W!C

Limit I Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires April16, 1977

4/89~/C

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Po we ll's
Offer Expires April16, 1977

COUPON

CLOROX
GALLON 59~/C
Limil1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires April16, 1977

..

�8 _ The DallY Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Aprilt3, t977

tiir--v"A-LuA"inicou"PoN" -

i

, ...... oat

.709-816 EXCLUDED

I~

3

• OO~llMBUS,Ohio ( UPI) _
' An mmale at the Ohio
Penitentiary Treatment and
Reception ""nter here has
claimed he can identify one of
~o CIA agents he met with .
rune years ago to discuss with
• the mafia the assassination of
Martin Luther King Jr., it
was reported today.
Scripps-Howard
· Newspapers, in a copyrighted
• story by William Pillar said
Myron Billett, 52, alias' Paul

~OPURCHASE

NECESSARY

Good Only 4-14 lhru 4-2J

--------------------....1-

(A)..mstrong

PRE.-FINISHE.D PANELING

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PAINT

cushioned vinyl fioor covering you con install yourself

For Over 220 Years

15% OFF
REGULAR
PRICE

•

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oil alkyd base paint
• good hiding • easy brushing •
good color retention • excel:enl
resistance to weather and moistrue

a popu lar sat in finish paint:

• resisls mil dew, cha lking and
blistering • excellent co lor reten·
t~on • smooth and easy application • easy clean up with water

White &amp; Most Colors
ANN. SPEC.
White Only

SP .ECIAL

$} O~al.

GREA7

Reg . ANN.
Price SPECIA

MINT
BLACKBERRY
CONGRESS
ARDSLEY ASH

FLOOR

7.49
7.14
6.96

FROM ARMSTRONG

foro 12 )( 15' room

Mo re d rornat rc, more colorful , more
versolrle tnon you -d e)(pect fo r on econ omy fl oo1.. GloH)I, toug h vrn yl surface f or

Porch &amp; Floor Alkyd Gloss
Enamel- is super suitable

Flat Exterior Masonry Paint
- a latex paiht for use on
new or prev io usly pain,ed
concre te·, ung lazed brick,
stucco, open·textured bloc~
and weathered Or painted
asbestos-ce ment sh ingles
• exce lleri t durabi lity and
colo r re tention • good resistance to mildew • easy
application • easy c lea n up

for use in heavy traffic areas

like slaps, halls , breezeways, basements , pa tios,

porches, garage ltoors, etc .
• applies smoo th and easy

with brush, roller or spray
•. high hide • Iough durable
f1lm • good resistan ce to
abrasions, oils and wash ing

White &amp; Colors

SPECIAL

4'x8'x5/.8" DEE DARK
1

REG. 4.49

.
SPEC.

$366

PANEL ADHESIVE.. ••.•..••.•..•. ••• •••. 1 !.?.~-..~~~! ·

Per Gal.

riBJJ!!J.i
. .

DUCTLESS

ARMSTRONG TILE
FOR ALL CEILINGS

18FT.

.ALUMINUM

.•

· EXTENSION LADDER

RANGE HOOD

•

PRE-FINISHED HARDBOARD PANEL

PANEL NAILS ................. _._ .• ..•.•.••••. ~.~~ . ~~~•.. 69c

All Colors

•

· lorry lastrng bea uty .. cushlO ned vrnyl
layer f or underfoot : omfo r t. Comes rn
12/oOt wrd th for wa ll -towcrll ~eomless
rll':;toll o rr on , . no cernenl need ed I A huly
versatile fl oor coverrny tflOI co n be rol led
up orrd moved whenever o r where~er
you wr~h.

Tru-Vy -Kote" Vinyl-Acrylic

.

\

30" KITCHEN-AIRE

',

\ Aluminum alloy
const ru ction,
can 1t twist flat
rungs. Swivel saf ety feet spring
loaded
safety
locks.

.·

•.

Limited Offer

Free Ernie Banks
Louisville Slugger
Hall Of Fame Bat

·.

•
•
''

••

'•

..

POLYFILM

BEliED END
4"Xl0 FT.
SOLID
OR
PERFORATED
NOW!
One Snra ...~~~
arab

lliA\1~ 0~~00~

Controls lnsect Pests.of

4 MIL

16'Xl00'

panel .

198

$~

SELECTION OF CEILINGS

8 COM NAIL

.'

••
~

~ on

SPECIAL

*1199

Wi::lc:I\MJOd'
PANBJNG
Building.Products

50 LB. CARTON
16 COM NAIL
SPECIAL

'1199

WHITE ALUM. . .
GUTTER

; Ra ci ne.

,.

• Shirley J . Barber. Par cel ,
Olive.
.
•
Bartelma Pauline Barber
: to Danny M . Barber , Vickie
• L. Barber, Parcel , Otive.
:
J. Dillon Cross, deed.. to
,. Mary F. Roush , cerl. trans .,

t

ANNJVERSAR Y SPECUL

10 % DISCOUNT

~
~

ON ANY CEILING TILE
· SALE.

ROOF'

PINT CANS

Sod Webworms

'

VENT

$5.75
.~

MOOR LPV20
.12 ONLY m SELL

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

Archie McK inney . Eva

1
.'

of money ."

Eva ns told Scripps-Howard
said Billett's stature as a
witness was heightened by
the fa ct Billett, in l~tters to
the newspaper•§ Columbus
Bureau, told of meetings ·
between Lee Harvey Oswald
with Jack Ruby two weeks
before President Kennedy
was assassinated.
A rormer stripteaser now
married to a Texas
evangelist told House
Assassination Committee
investigators earlier this

Sam

Giancana,

REG. 149.95

OATRICIAN

Candy's
Classic
Collections

Billett said his role as a gobetween for the Mafia and the
goverrunent enabled him to
gain knowledge of what both
sides were planning. He said
with the deaths o! Roselli and
Giancana, 11tbere is only one
of us left who can cQnnect the
CIA and the Mafia ."

Chi cago

mafia don, and John lloselli,
another mafia figure, who
lold
government
investigators of an alleged
CIAmafi a scheme to kill
Cuban Prime Minister Fidel
Castro.
"Because of the death of
John RoseUi last week in
Miami, I feel it would be a lot
more safe it we didn 't have

APRIL
14-15-16
SAVE THIS THURSDAY.fRIDAY·SATURDAY
POMEROY AND MIDDLEPORT

- Stiffler's Week- End Special-

-WEEKEND s·PECIAL-

.- STIFFLER'S WEEKEND SPECIAL-

SPECIAL SALE GROUP
LADIES' NAME BRAND

SPECIAL SALE GROUP
LADIES' POL VESTER

SPORTSWEAR

KNIT SLACKS

Save one -third on this special group
of ear ly sp ring name brand sport swear consisting of slacks, blouses,
vests, skids and blazers .

MILL ASSORTMENT
60" POL VESTER

..

OOUBLIKNITS
Special mrll length assortment of 60
inch wide polyester doublek,nif ·
fa bri cs . Your choi ce of clolrs and
patterns . Shop ear ly and save!

Regular $5.00 va lues! Special " sale
group of misses better new spring
doubleknit pol yester slacks in both
solids and fancies .

OFF

00

$

REGULAR

PAIR
Bl SELECTION
Ladies' New Spring

KNIT TOPS .

Big se lection ! Ladies' new
spr ing and summer knit tops
of

all

·

kln~s.

Ladies' Reg . $2 .99
Polyester Ooubleknit

SHORTS

Special group of lad les ' solid
color polyester doubleknH
shorts . Save now! ·

$ 99

$
EACH
Special Group Laides'
Fancy Sleeveless

SHIFTS

Specia l sa le group of ladies'
fancy sleeveless shifts . Asst .
colors.

$
EACH
-Weekend SpecialAssorted 12"xl2"
COTTON TERRY

WASH CLOTHS
One sale lot of 12x-12 inCh solid
color cotton lerrv wash clothS .

PAIR
- Weekend SpecialLadies' First Quality
SlRETCH NYLON

PANTY HOSE

One size fits all! LadieS' fir st
qua lily panty ho~e in the best
shades .

33~AIR
- Weekend
One
Pieces
ASST. SPORTSWEAR

FABRICS

One sa le lol of sportswear
fabrics of all kinds, color s and
patterns.

Ladies' Maverick
Popular Blue Denim

JEANS

You will find the jean you like
at the pr ice you like. Good
sel ection .

YARD .
MEN'S
G. 79c
Bulky' Knit Stretch

SOCKS

Regu lar 79c va lues. Men's
bvlk y knit stretch dres s sock$ .
Save now!

Men~s -

Boys'-Yo•utlis'
TENNIRor GYM

OXFORDS .

Lace to the toe gym or tennis
oxfords w! th mou lded soles.
All sl zes .

99
PAIR
- Weekend SpecialCoats and Clark
WINTUK KNITTING ·

YARN ·

Famous Coats and Clark
Winluk knitli ng yam . Your
'
choice Of co lors.

- Weekend SpecialMen's and Boys'
SCREEN PRINT

TEE SHIRTS

Special purchase! Group of
men 's screen print tee Shirts .
Your choice.

8

99!KEIN
Mountain Mist
81 "x96" COTTON

Stg~~~!! !~~I~96

cotton quilt batts.. Pat1e[sn
included .

$1 E~CH

- Weekend SpecialSped a I Sale Group
LADIES' SPORT

SNEAKERS

Ladies' American made
moulded sole sport sneakers.

'"'";·s29~

- Weekend SpecialMen's Short Sleeve
DRESSan'd SPORT

SHIRTS

Spr ing ana summer sty les
short sleeve dress and sport
shirts . All sizes.

B.

• Hlad, parcel~~lem .
WORN WITH
;
William A. Young, Ida
• Young to Pearl D. Estep, Lot
; Z9, Rutland, Merrill's Add.
:
Robert E. Grueser, Nonna
; Jean Grueser to Kenneth
: Lawson, Dorothy Lawsop ,
• 1.001 acre, Chester.
:
James A. Taylor to Arthur
: A. Taylor, Irene Taylor, .52
: acre,· Salisbury.
•
Helen .Louise Argabrite,
; Clarence K. Argabrite, 7¥•
acres, 6\0 acres, Olive.
•
Alfred Farley, Affidavit,
by Plainville ·
: Middleport.
•
Alfred Farley to James
Ruby Inlaid Masonic
: Farley, Judith Farley, Lot 4
Rings , , Solid lOK Gold
: Webb-Earnehaut, Middleport
Smooth Back - Masonic
:
Frances hnboden to Robert
Rings in varied des igns.
• Lawtence Imboden Jr., .76
Come in and see the one for
you. can order if not in
% acre, Rutland. .
·stocfc, . Prices $89.95 . Don 't
:
Phyllis Chase Russell,
: Extn:., Nelle J . Bing, dec., to . forget- that specia l man in
your life .
: . Robert B. Morris, Joan R.
• Morris, Lot, Pomeroy.
:
Richard Owen Friend Jr.,
·" Unda Lou Friend to Richard
: M. Friend, Shirley J . Friend,
: ·.75 acre, Lot 6, Chester .
:
Mary A. Wolfe, Affidavif,
" Syracuse.
: Fanners Home Adm. to · 106 N. Sec . Ave .Middleport.
0.
: Robert E. Freed, Ima June
The New Addition
: Freed, Lot 23, Middleport,
To l_ngel&lt; FurniturP.
RI.Jerview Acres.

?"

fruit Trees• Shade Trees•

•

non .
. Since Tuesday, both Sides
have shelled each other's
positions in a half a dozen
villages
along
the
southeastern border, using
mortars, small missiles and
heavy artillery,local officials
reported.
Beirut newspapers, under
strict censorship, made no
mention of the anniversary of
,the he ginning o.f the war .

Billett said htJ was accompanied to the motel by a close
associate. Gambino was
there with his bodyguard .
Two CIA men and only one
FBI agent attended the hour.long meeting that ended he
said, when the federal
operators said, "we'll have to
make other arrangerr.ents .
Billett quoted Gambino as
saying, "We wouldn't touch
the King deal for any amount

any more publicity over the
book·," he said in his letter to
ScrippsHoward.
Billett said he accepted the
death of Sam Giancana at his
Chicago home " as just
another gangland killing, but
now, with the rubout of John
Roselli, I have my doubts ."

...

Men's Polyester
Ooubleknit Dress

SLACKS

Spr i ng selec t ion of men's
name
brand
polyester
doub leknit sl ack s.

$}299
.

PRIDE

REG. 14.35

REG. 16.75

Sutton .

-... McK inney to Edward

Slltubbery•Lawns

'""

Barte/ma Pauline Barber

.• to Howard Barber, Barbara
!: J. Ba1ber, Leonard Bar ber ,

Yt~etables • Flowers•

Including Chinch Bugs _,~..rJ

Property
:• Transfers

Walker , deed. to
,.. Fr ed Shain, cerf . for trans.,

PURCHASED DURING OUR
"h PT. CANS
$335

a

corroborate his story .

mooth that Ruby introduced
her to Oswald at Ruby's
Dallas, Tex . nightclub.
Billett told of the RubyOswald meeting in a letter to
the newspapers on Aug. II,
t976.
"But up to now I dido't
think anyone would believe
me," Billett said.
Billett said he had been
reserving the information for
a book he intended to write
after getting out of prison,
alleging he had information
concerning both the Kennedy
and King murders.
Billett's August t976 letter
told of his fears for his life
after the killings in t975 of

•o

anniversary

guerrillas --1 . ambushed a
By DOYLE McMANUS
::-;, BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) busful of Palestinians
:;- Savage . artillery duels returning to the Tal Zaatar
'-between Palestinian refugee camp from another
...
·•iiUerrilla s and Israeli-backed part of town where they had
:."au-istians today marked the been celebrating a successful
commando operation inside
~nd anniversary of the
:1Jeginning of the Lebanese Israel.
All 26 passengers inside thti
' .civil war.
:~ On
April
13,
1975, bus were shot and killed,
nldentified gunmen shot . starting round of mortar
and machine-gun battles that
~ our right·wing Phalangist
was
eventually to claim an
militiamen at the entrance to
estimated
40,000 lives in one
• a Maronite Catholic church in
of
the
bitterest
civit wars of
::; the Christian suburb of Ain
the
century.
:_Rwnmaneh .
·
Although
a
Syrian!'- Later that day , Phalangist
dominated
Arab
League
• ·militiamen ~ convinced the
peace-keeping
force
ended
. ~ assassllis were Palestinian
the fighting in much of the '
••
country last November,
••
Israel's objections to the
presence of Arab troops near
••
its northern setUements has
••
caused the bloody conflict to
••
continue in southern Leba- ·

Apalachin, N.Y. Billett said
the
woman
would

There used to be, and may devise a similar scale far
still be, a rock group ·called summer bathing.
"Three Dog Night" that took
An evening with a high
its name from the old custom degree of balmineSs would be
of using canine body heat to designed as a "Two Ring
warm the bed in winter .
Night" - meaning it was hot
Nights .that required enough to make sharing the
sleeping with a trio of hoWlds bath water envir!)llmentally
were deemed about the prudent.
ultimate in severity.
Or you could just forget the
In that tradition, the Carter whole thing and take a cold
administration might wiah to shower.

•

7 Mv·rtle

8 FT. LENGTH

A BIG

country,

'
:·

50 LB. CARTON

We carry the complete line of Arm strong tile and
suspended ce ilings. You ca n choose de co rator·.
type ceilings, ceil in gs Ia soak Up noise, cei lings
that accommoda te lightin g fixture s. cei ling fo r fi re
retardation . We also have th e train ed cou nterme n
who ca n s how you how easy Armstrong ceilin gs
are to install .

entire

,~

-BIGGEST
24 PATTERNS TO CHOOSE FROM

the

•

••

Genume ash veneer plywood

089-35912116

010-060/2220

revealed Billett's intention to
testify despite his fears that
by doing so he would place his
life in jeopardy.
Billett said he wa• willing

~_:Savage shelling

Cooperstown Ash

4' x 8'

EXTENSION
LADDER

to come out of hiding after
recent published stories told
of alleged conspiracies in
both the assassinations of
President John F. Kennedy
and King.
Billett said he and a woman
frirnd with mafia ties set up
the meeting ""'1)' in .January,
t968 between the CIA and lo'HI
agents with the late Carlo
Gambino, who headed one or
New York's mafia families . It"
was at a hideaway motel in

Scripps-Howard newspapers

~

Your Bonus when you buy
8 or more panels of

20FT.

White
Avocado
Hi Gold

Ed
Evans,
chief
investigator
for
the
Assassinations Committee,
told Scripps-Howard Newspapers he .was ordered to
interview
Billett
by
Committee Chiairman Rer&gt;.
Louis Stokes, D.()hio .
The order came after

-·

Buy 8 or more panels of Cooperstown Ash panel ing from Weldwood- and we'll give yo u a Louisvi ll e
Slugger. lhe Ernie Banks Hall o1 Fame· Bat . as a
free gift' It 's sol id ash wood . . naturally. For
yourself or your favorite little leaguer. Hurry in· for ·
yours - supply is li mited.

AFTER SALE
\ PRICE $29.95

conservation has relevance
for

including areas that are
waterlogged.
Even now President Carter
: dormant.
is
making the final decisions
, When adversity strikes, the
: traits of perseveran"" and on the energy program he
·a~rlfice
that carried will set forth later this m~Dth .
:.:. American frontiersmen over It has not been revealed
~ rocks and rills and an whether he will make double~ occasional templed hill still dipping an instrument of
national policy. But with
: come to the surface.
• Evidence of. the way our surruner coming ·on,. that
: hardy heritage lives on may would be one sure' way to get
results.
~ be seen now in the Pacific
In the swrunertime, second
:;)'lorlhwest where a severe
hand
bath water saves
: drought in testing the metUe
two ways.
energy
• of the citizenry.
First
you •ave the energy
: It was reported the other
that
would
be used heating
: day that Oregon Gov. Bob
fresh
water.
Then you save
'Straub and his wife Pat were
the
energy
that
would be
: selling an example ·of
• bxJomitability by using the needed to cool off the house as
a consequence of the second
~ IIBIIle bath water. ·
: That's the -sort of coping bath.
According
to
an
: with hardship that has made
envirorunenlal magazine, a
• this country great.
• "Double-dipping," as the tub of good hot bath water
sharing of bath water is produces 10,000 BTUs of heat,
' called,
requires
real which is enough to keep a
• fortitude. Particularly if· one well-insulated three bedroom
; person bathes in the morning house warm for one hour
when the outside tempera• and the other at night.
ture
is 10 degrees above zero.
•: Or if one bathes on Tuesday
In
the winter, that's good,
! and the other on Thursday.
for
it
takes some of the load
: ' Bear in mind that the.
• Straubs are saving not only off the furnace. But in
• the water it takes to fill the surruner, it's bad, for it adds
: tub a second time but also the to the drain on the air
;:energy it takes to heat the conditioner.
::water. Thus their exercise in

fttE
WELDWOOD

Buccilli, said he would
divulge the names of CIA and
FBI agents who offered the
mafia $1 million to kill King
only to the House Select
Committee
on
Assasslnatioos:
The ailing convict, who
claims he was an undercover
agent for the FBI while
working for the mafia, says
he has information linking
the CIA and FBI with a
conspiracy to kill King.

iAn energy plan that won't wash
By DICK WF3l'
, WASHINGTON (UP! ) • 'Die pioneering spirit in this
• country is not dead, just

VInyl Acrylic Latex House Paint-

~

;• Inmate says he can finger CIA agent. in King assassination

VALUABLE
PRIZES

THIS COUPON IS WORTH
110.00 TOWARD THE PURCHASE
OF ANY BATHROOM VANITY
DURING OUR ANNIVERSARY SALE.
-

~

g_ The Daily ~ntlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , April t3, 1977

-Weekend SpecialPerfect Posture
Solid Foam Filled

BED PILLOWS
Perfect posture solid . foam
filled bed pillows wi th muslin
covers.

Special Sale GFoup
ASST: TOP WEIGHT

· FABRICS
If on full bolts, values to S2.98
a yard . Shop ear ly and save!

Limitted Quantity!
Asst. Piece Goods

One Group Men ' s
Stripe Top White

REMNANTs ·

TUBE SOCKS

Out t hey go ! A:;sorted piece
goods remnan iS at al l kinds
and colors.

One sale gr oup of men 's sl rlpe
top whi te cotton tube socks .
Save!

- Weekend SpecialRemnant Pieces
Quality Unbleached

One Lot Boys'
Stripe Top White

PAIR

Maverick Brand
MEN;SBLUE DENIM

JEANS
Tough , able to take- it!
Ma verick Jeans are now
Automat ick! Save!

$288

EACH

CLOSE-OUT LOT
Wide Hand Made

BAMBOO RAKES
48 _inch handle, wide rak ing
path . Hand made bamboo
rakes .

$} 4~ACH

- Weekend SpecialWhite and Pastel
CANNON SHEET

BLANKETS
Choose from white and pastel
colors . Cannon fu ll size sheet
blanket.

4
$3 ~CH

Stock up! Remnant pieces of
good quality unbleached
musl in. Save!

g~ARD

TUBE SOCKS
One sale lot of boys ' str ipe top
white tube socks . Stock up
now!

- Weekend SpecialFruit-of-the- Loom
White Perm Press

HANDKERCH

Regu lar .29c value ! Fruit · of
lhe Loom white perm press
handerch lels .

19~ACH

�10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Apri113, 19n

covers

For Thurldly, April 141 1977

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol
ARIES (March 21 - Aprll 19) In
fma nc1al matters today th1nk m
ter ms of dollars and cents It's
tme to cons1der aesthetiC val ues.
bu t you can't bank on them
TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) Unfortunately, you c an I co nftde tn
all of your fnends today Be
close- mou thed with one you
know to be a b1t of a gossi p
GEMINI (Moy 21-June 20) II
LI!GAL NOTICE
N,TICE TO
V NDORS

''

~

AGGREGATE

ealed bids will be received
by the Board of County
Comm lssionen of Meigs
County , Ohio at the office of

the county commissioners.

located In the Court House, In
tt.e Village Of Pomeroy, Oh io
45769, unlll 6 : 30 PM . on the
28th day of Apr il 1977, for the
furnishing of Bll k i nd s and
sins of aggregates t hnt may
be reQu ired by the Me tgs
county H tghwa v oe.,art

ment .

Estimated Quantities of all

aggregates required , ap
pro•lmatety 30, 00(1 ton s

,

BID SPECIFICATIONS
BE
SU BM ITT ED
FOLLOWS :

TO
AS

Bid price per ton , fob

toade&lt;t at vendor's plant tor

'

I
I

·-

the various kind and stze or
aggregates that m av be
required, whlct'l w ill conform
to the pertinent State of Oh io,
Oep•rtment of Highway s
Construction and Matlerals
Specific ations, excepti ng pea
or Shot gravel , w1't 1ch is an
ungraded materia l.
Wltl'l
respect
to
tMe
aforesa i d estimated quan
titles, t"eo vendors shall un ·
dentand that no guarantee Is
given to the actua l quanti ti es
of aggregates to be furni sh ed ,
but eacl't vendor shall be
' required to furnish an y part
of the actual requirements es
ordered during the year 1977
Prfceson thlsbldshailbe In
effectfrom April 1977 to April
1978.
On the envelope conteln lng
each bid, the name and ad ·
dress of the vendor must be
shown and plainly marked
" Aggregate &amp;ids."
Proposals
are
to
be
returned on bid forms suP.
plied bY the Ytndor , a,d will
be opened on the date and
place specified above
Tht Meigs County Com ·
mlsslontrs rHerve rhe r i ght
to accept or reject any or all
bldl, or any part thereof

yo u're mto somethmg th at requires a ro tn l effort today be
su re yo u re teamed up wtth
doers A slacker co uld rea lly
hamstn ng th e p roJeCt

CANCER (June 21 - July 22)
Yo u re c lever an d tmagmat1ve today, bu t Just a shbd e too ttml d to
pu t your thought s to th e tes t Try
11 It could work
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) To be on
the sate stde today, ass1gn yo ur
work to re liab le f:&gt;a rltes If there s
anyone yo u ,;e not su re of 11 s
best to bypass them
VIRGO (Aug . 23·Sep1. 22)
SoluiFOn s may come so easily to
y9u today that You'll" d qubt thei r
·flc te ncy Th ts co uld ca~se you ,
co reJect a good thmg
\
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0c1. 23) You re
clever and resourcef ul In gammg
th1ng s tod ay Be Gare ful your
meth ods are suc h that yo u won't
be ashamed to at r them

fanners, such as Wlldm, own
their land and possibly can
ride out a loss this year
"But the young f.rmors,
the fellows who are paflng
91&gt; per cent interest on loans
they took out to pay for their
land. The youngsters can't
afford it. They'll go under,"
Wildin s&amp;d.
. H1s son John nodded h1s
head . " I'd like to farm
That •swhatl was raised up to
do. But I can't. I can't afford
1t/' he said.
John, 23, earns $19,000 a
year workmg on the railroad.
"It's JUst too risky to farm,"
be said.
HIS father pounded a b•g
fist. "Yo u know how much
the farmer gets out of a loaf
of bread? Three cents, three

don 'I talk with your mouth
full. "
"Yoti'd think they'd understand in Washington,"
Epperson said.
"Yes. I'm getting tired."

SILENT COPY
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
Comedian
and
movie
producer Mel Brooks 'was
sued for $2million in Superior
Court Tuesday by Nathan
Cohen, who alleged Brooks
popular film "Silent Movie"
was plagiarized from a script
Cohen wrote in 1974, "Jack
and the Lean Talk," and
submitted to Brooks.
DIVORCE FINAL
NASHVILLE, Term. (UPI)
-Country music star Hank
Wllliams Jr.'s divorce from
his wife of six years ;
Gwe ndo lyn
Yearg8ln
W11liams, has been finalized .
Mrs, Williams, a 29-yearold former model, cited
"c ruel
and
inhuman
treatment" as grounds for
the divorce .
She filed a petition , for
divorce May 22, 1975. The
petition was granted Tuesday
in Circmt Court.
Williams, 27, is the. son of

GIFTS

40%
AND

50%
OFF
OPEN :
Thursday, Friday
&amp;Saturday
12 til s p .m.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. 1i)
F1rs t make sure the home tires
are burnrng brightl y today before
yo u lavt s h any surplus time.'
funds or atlect ton on tnends
PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20) Try
not to let th ings you enjoy tak e
you away from your duties today,
You 'll profit littl e rf you don 't do
tha t whrch demands top priority
(Are you an Anes? Bermce
Osol has wntten a spec.1al AstroGrf)ph Leltdr lor you For your
copy send 50 cents Brtd a selfaddres setJ, stamped envelope to

Astra -Graph, P 0 . Box 489.
Rad1o C1ty Stat1on New York,
NY 10019 Be su re ro ask ror
Afles Volume 6 )

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

KROGER THE COST CUTTER

HELPS TAl
YOURc FDDD
I sT

12

60'

c

1trr-t~f

OPEN 24 HRS. A DAY

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

•• " ' " " ' " ... . , 10 .....

t)U AN fiTIU

NO NI

SOlO

10

OUUIS

~-===--

Empt Closed S•turd•y M idn~g ht Til 9 AM Sund•y
hcept H1nton And Wh1tt Sulphur Spnngs
~0 ·

Smithfield

Save

CO FTitoU AND , IICI$tttOG
GOOD
co,VIIOHt
U
SUNO" Y Al'llll 10 ttn I HlU
Uo TUIDA Y APIIll. tt 71 1N

ALL KROGER STORES

Save
11•

OFF LABEL

Tide
Detergent

10-lb
I

~~0:

$1 09
69 C
pr;~;;rc:;~;~s $119 ·
59c
3 99
4~;.~: $1
CHUNK LIGHT

~:!:~n~e·~~:

Kroger 20-oz
White Bread

$

Dawn ..,,~~~~u:,o"
beterQent !·,7··
or
• R.1te.. .... 8
D1et
2

P•k

REGULAR OR UNSALTED SUNSHINE

Krispy
Crackers

~:k;·

Del Monte
Sweet Peas

C

~~::

HOLLY FARMS , U.S D A INSPECTED

\lAC PAK Wf1 0lf KERNEl

~el Monte
Corn .
Embassy Salad
Dressing
J~;
1

Mixed Fryer49c
Parts . . ."
HOLLY FARM S U S 0 A INSPECTED
GRADE A

Pick '0'
Chix.

cl
0-·

CA )

yoor

••

ld~

no sa

9U,OOOOO
1. ,976
Tota 8onded Dtbt Redeem l!!'d During
Year 1916
108 ,000 00
Total Bonded Oebt Balance OutstandJng
Dec 3l , 1976
875,000 00
{4 ) ll, t tc

Tbe Almanac
Ualted
Prell
By
U Dlted Press lntornatloual
Today is Wednesday, April
13, the 103rd day of 1977 with
262 to follow .
The moon is between its
last quarter and new phase.
The morning stars are
Venus and Mars.
The evening stars are Mercury, Jupiter and Saturn.
Those born on this date are
tmder the sign of Aries.
Frank Woolworth, founder
of the five-and-dime stores,
was born AprillJ, 1852.
Ou this day in history:
In 1865, Union Gen. William
Sherman took Raleigh, N.C.,
ending his Civil War "March
to the Sea."
In 1934, in the depths of the
Depression, 4.7 million
American families were
reported to be receiving
welfare payments.

PRICES IN
EFFECT
WEDNESDAY 3 p.m.

WITM BULK GARDEN SEED

Full Cut
Round Steak

U .S. GOV 'T GRADED CHOICE
7" CUT LARGE END

""'" 69c

Ground
Chuck

lb
U S GOV 1 GRADED CHOICE
BONELESS FULL CUT

Round
Steak. ..

lb

YOUR CHOICE

Pork
Sausage

$1
lb.

~

I

/

~~~~mbers ........3 59 C
For

PKG

VALLEYDALE

lb
US GOV T. GRAOED CHOICE BEEF CHUCK
SHOULDER POT ROAST

Boneless $}3 9
Boston Roll
Fresh Green Beans3
or Pole Beans . .. .. . .

WITH COUPON
LIMIT I BTl PER COUPON

ANY
SIZE

IN BAGS FOR 89 '

GIT ONE
J 01 ,.G

12
•••

Iceberg
Head lettuce

$
Heads

COLlY

longhorn
Cheese
5 79
lb.

Sub or Ham
Sandwiches

·:. ..

--::,·:··
.

2

'"

l

•

Mrs. Thelma Henry visited her daughter, Mrs. Martha
Ward in Columbus. Mrs. Henry granddaughter, Brenda
Coleman, underwent major surgery in Doctors' Hospital,
Columbus.
Mrs. Thelma Henry visited Bill Howard, a patient at
University Hospital. Mr . Howard resides m New Haven.
Mrs. Carl Bennett and daughters, Christy and Gail of
Indianapolis, spent the weekend with Mr and Mrs. Chester
Oliver. Other Easter guests were Mr . and Mrs. Luther Tucker
and sons, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Ohver and family.
Visiting Mrs. Betty Call on Easter were Mr. and Mrs. John
Call and family of Hurricane, W. Va.; Mr . and Mrs. Dale
Rollins and family of Chesapeake, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. John
Miller and family , Long Bottom, 0 .
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Spears of Clifton have returned from a
F1orida vacation.
Miss Ethel Riddle, formerly of New Haven , and now of
Harrisburg, Pa. visited oo Friday with Mrs. Helen Barker at
Clifton. Accompanying Miss Riddle was Mrs. Ruth Pnbble.
Mrs. Stanley Saunders and three children, Cameron,
Melanie and Amber Mr. and Mrs . Calvin McDan1el, C. R. ,
Olristlne and Denise' Yis1ted during the holidays with Mr. and
Mrs Curtis McDaniel, Sr. and Chalky. Mr. and Mrs.
McDaniel's ether son, Curtis McDaniel, left for Saudia Arabia
where he is a Field Advisor for Alcoa. He and his family res1de
at JenkinStown, Pa.
. Miriam Melanie, Marcia and Mary Alice Sisson, Melanie
Mossman ~II of Mason, wdl participate In a Dance Recital on
Tuesday ~vening at the Meigs Junior High School.
Melanie Barker, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Barker
of Mannet, W. Va. also visited recently w1th her greatgrandmother, Mrs. Helen Barker.
Mr. and Mrs. Claude Fisher have returned to their home In
&lt;(llflori after vacationing in F1orida.

'

.
%"Xl35/8"X96~'- .. -.-.------......... ~1.10
Great for insulating basement walls or
any type insulating that requires '¥•"
f
strips .

0 1 0 I

0 I

oo o ooo o o

I

0 • I • 0

After Easter Clearance

°

0 0 0 0

$2.15

This IS a multi-purpose insulation used
for crawl sp~ces. outer wa lis and
ceilings.

CHILDRENS
SHOES

MAGNETIC PLASTIC
OR BRUSHED

32 Ounce

WINDEX
GLASS
CLEANER

BOYS OR
GIRLS STYLES

HAIR
ROLLERS

lf2

'1" Value

PRICE

79e

2 BELL ALARM CLOCK

88¢

LOUO ALARM
W ILE
fmS3 JS,- r;m
&lt;oppf"
(Oior
Save
each

one
8j LUI •

$344 (:1~
~~

, ' ~ ,,

{ 1~

Reg. 6.69

-:-........_• )

').._,.:;,

1

TERRY

BATH
TOWELS
SOLID COLORS
OR
BOLD STRIPES

MASON, W. VA.

PLASTIC
BORDER
FENCE

TOILET
BOWL

BLOCK

&lt;ill\lt'

10c

Wrrf.'

h&lt;~nger Ill~ O'&lt;&lt;'f ~1 de

Qf toilet bowl

36" LENGTH

H gh

u•nptt~;l

&lt;. tyrei'\1!

Wro&lt;Jqh t •rOn '&gt;lyllf1Q
Snl'lp~ toge thrr 10 for m

$100

~('c t oono,

OPEN
EVERY
NIGHT
PLENTY
{D)@ t-:P
OF
~
FREE PARKING

HOGG &amp;ZUSPAN MATERIALS CO.
7?3-5554

LARGE
ltl:FILL
SIZE

~t#GS

STYROFOAM INSULATION BOARD

l"X2rX8'

YOU'LL SAVE PIEITY

Siz~ 66~KG.

'PICKENS HARDWARE CO.

Rib
Roast

~ •. :?' .

..

OHIO SEED COMPANY

Yellow or
Zucchini Squash
Th1s year you may come up witt
a umque wey to add to your In·
come If you do, go tothose w~o
can show you how to 1mplement

oec.

~~~"~£

lb

69C

YOUR CHOICE , FRESH

April 14, 1971

Balan ce Outstan(l•nQ
Dec 31. 19 16
5,000 CO
Aate of tnt
3
.Matur~ty Year
1971
M tddleport E !em &amp;
High School Add tt 1on
OUtstand ing J .,n 1,
1976
8] ,000 00
Aedeemtd Ounng
Year 1 ~76
16,000 00
Balance Outsta1'1d 1ng
OK '31 . 1976
67 .000 00
lnt Rate
" 1' 3
MatUr'lly Ye.u
1980
Pomeroy E l rm ,
School Cons
OUtstand ing Jan I.
1976
175 ,000.00
Redeemed During Year
976
21 ,000 00
Balance Outstanding
Dec . 31, 1976
15A ,000 00
Int. Rate
4' '
Maturity Veer
1983
Northwest Improvement
Outstanding Jan 1,
197ft
27 ,OOQ 00
Redeemed Durtng Year
1976
lB .OOO .OO
Balance Outstand1n9
Dec 31 , 1976
9,000.00
tnt Rate
31'•
Matur~ty Year
1977
Northwest t mprovem~nt
OUtstandmg Jan 1,
1976
13 ,000 00
Redeemed Durmg Year
1ljl] 6
) ,000 00
Balance Outstanding
Oec 31 , 1976
10,000 00
In! Ra te
3
Maturily Year
1978
Metgs High School
Construction
Outstandmg J&lt;~n L
1976
675,000 00
Red ee med Dur ing Year
197 6
.45,000 00
Balance Outstand i ng
Dec 31, 1~76
630.000 00
lnt Rate
4 375
Matur 1tY Year
199n
T o ta l Bonded Deb t Outstanding Jan .

36.SOI 90

.. .·~·. .'*.·.·. *. .

SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23·Doc.
21} Take ca re of Im portant
matters ea rly, when you're at
your bnghtest Toward even1ng
you 'tl ru n out of 1nsp1ratton
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
You feel gregarious today and
wtll love to rap soct ally with
fnends In do1 ng so. don t pass
chotce goss1p about a pal

Total Eatp e.
Total Rece-ipts
30 0(1
Teacher Corps
11 ,910 32
Tr.ansh~rs
ll6 ."308 18
Total
Beqinnmg
Blll&amp;f'!ce
Tttle
I
11
,785
99
Total A e&lt;eipts
Bat , Dec ll. 1976
6,Stl6 OJ
FINANCIAL REPORT
Plus
Rece1pts
130
58
OWE
1,119 76
Total Rec• •PtS &amp;
Total
E:.cp
&amp;
OF THE 80ARDOF
aa1
•
31
,
1976
Balances
.41 ,641 OS
T0111l l ransters
!16 ,949 •7
Transter.s Plus Ba t.
N ,O .E . A . T1tl t Ill
EDUCATION
Total General Fund
Expend1tures
30,601 37
Dec 31. 1976
12:1,85.4 8 1
For F 1sc .at Vear End l nv
8ai , J~ . 1,1 97.5
11.97135
Sal , Dec 31. 1976
17 ,039 68
EKP and Transters
lnter-F und
Rue-iph.
December 31, lfU
2.8•9 .356 2S
OWE Furfct
Tr~:nste r Reconciliation
Meigs Lanl
Federal Sub$1dy
3.064 25
)A 41
Genef'al Fund Sal ,
Sal , JM 1, 1976
CE T A
13 .571 96
School District
Total
R ecet r~ts
3,06A
25
7,129
26
Dec
31.
1976
770.SS5
74
Total Receipts
OPPF
2. 264 96
Mel g s County
Total
Beginning
Balance
Total Exp and
Total Rece ipts &amp;
Teacher Corps
9,660 50
Middle-port, Oh tO
Plus
Rece1pts
15
,035
60
Salanct&gt;S
7.163 73
Transfers Plus Sal ,
FOR SALE
Tille I
53 ,829 12
E Kpendltures
April 1, 1 '77
Dec 31, 1976
3.119 .911.99
Expenditures
U.611 AS
197&lt; KAWASAKI 250; 1972
General
1A, 123 90
t ce rt1fy the following
Capital Outlay
Dis•dvantolged
Pupils
BaJ
..
Dec
31,1976
t7,.447?2J
Honda 125 Pl'\one 992 -1181 or
General
\7 ,910 31
1, 769 3S
report to be c orrect .
New Equ 1pmen t
Progr~m Fund
Bond
Rtllrement
9'11 7639 .
General
17 . 785 99
1,?69.35
Jane w aoner
Total E Kp .
Bal . Jan 1, 1976
198,5 10.'.l6
Bai.Jan . 1, 197S
l1 , 1391S
7. 129 26
13 ,266 25 General
Clerk. Treasurer
Sal • Dec 31, 1976
Revenue Receipts
Total R ece 1pls
225 ,698 ii!O
Total
Exp
Transfer~
of the Board of
Total
EKp.
Plu'
State Subsidy
36,50 1 90
Total Rece ipts &amp;
HELP WANTED
146,277 01
Education
Bal , Pee 31, 1976 15.03S 60
!Uiances
n~ .209 , 16
Total Revenue
SOMEONE IO mow grass and
To Fund
614 992 -S6SO
e
.s.e
A
.
Titlet
R ece1pts
36,501 90
E•rendttures
156,163 21
do yard work
Preferably
13 .572 96
Cuh Recanciltalian
Sal , Jan 1, 1975
91.868 00 General
Sa , Dec . J 1. 1976 168,045 95
Total R ecetpts
36,501 90
Satur'days , Pomeroy area
2,264 96
Total Fund Bal.,nces
General
Receipts
Lunch
Room
Fund
Toti!il
8eg
tnnlng
Balance
Phone 992 3A89 after 5 p m · Oec 31, 1976
~ . 660 50
683,1 98 lA
General
Federal Subsidy
109.444 29
Bel, Jan . I , JlH6
12,712 88
Plus Rece i pts
A7,64l OS
53 .829 ,12
General
Oepos l tory Balances
Actiustments &amp;
Total Rece-ipts
213,612 Al
Expenditures
JA , 123.90
Fa r mers Bank and
CETA
R
etunds
•
10
26
General Adm
Total Re ceipts &amp;
17 .91037
YARD SALE
Teacher
Corps
Savings
129,059 14
Total
Rece1pts
1
09,454
55
354
72
Balances .
226 .325 29
Sa lanes and Wages
17 ,78599
PORCH SALE, 338 Wtlllams
Title I
Pomeroy Nattonar
Transfers From
e)(ptndltvres
203 .603 06
Instruct io n
7,129 .26
St, Middleport , Oh!O Thurs .
131 ,915 S6
General
Ft,md
17
.785
99
OWE
Bank
Bal , Dec 31, 1976
22 r722 23
Salar 1es and Wages 18.705 U
dl!I Y and Friday , April 14 and
Total Rec Transfers
Citizens Nat 1onal
Tot at Transfers
17,785 99
Uniform
Supplies
Other
Exp
588
,
19
146,277 01
15th .
Bank
278 .36A 68
Total Receipts end
Bal .. Jan , 1, 1976
11 ,266 73
Health
A ssets and Liab1tittes
SUb Total Depository
Trzmsfers
127 , 2A0 . 5~
Salar l es&amp;nd Wages 8, 11 2.36
To1a 1 Receipts
17 ,0,.3 93
Dec . 31 , 1976
Balances
539,339 38
Total Beginning B_-lsnce
01her Exp
576 00
Total Rece 1pts &amp;
Assets
Investments ·
Plus
Rece1pts.
&amp;
Balances
28 ,310 66
To ta iE XP
28,336.41
Depository Balances
Certificates of
Transf ers
219,108 54
Transfer'S To
PUBLIC NOTICE
Exrendllures
17 ,932 12
53 9 ,339 00
Deposit
150,000 00
EKpenditures
General F unCI
2,264 96
Ba , Oec . 31 , 19 76
10 ,3785.4
The se persons are notif1ed
Investments
1SA ,177 00
Other
Investments
4,171
73
General
Administration
Total Transfers
2,264 96
Permanent I mpronments
that
Ohio
driving
and
Inventory
111, 540 00
Sub - Toto~~ I Investments
Sitl aru!!S and Wages
6,317 16
Bal , Jan 1, 1976
2A,.47A .AJ
re g istration pr ivileges w ill be
Total
Exp
&amp;
Land
746, A2A 0(1
154 ,111 73
Other Exp
'2,25.4 80
Transfers
30,601 37
Total Rece i pts
8,250.00
s11spend ed . Suspensions w1l l
8u 1ld1n9S
4, 180,880 00
Outstand
tn
g
war
rants
Instruct
ton
Bal
,
Dec
31,
1976
17,039
68
Total Receipts &amp;
rematn m effect two years
Equipment
530 ,775 00
sa1ar1es and Wag.es 98 ,919 52
Oec 31, 1976
Balances
32,124 .43
Total Exp &amp;
after date o t at;ctdent for
Total Assets
6,263,135 00
other
Exp
4,1113.4
(Ded
uct}
10.318
77
Transfer $ Plus Bal ..
Bal .. Dec 31, 1976
32,724 43
failure to depOSit secur1ty to
Liabilities
To t al E I&lt; P
11 L602 82
Total Clerk Treasurer's
Dec 31 , 1976 •
47 ,64 t.OS
Trust-Wa1klns.
co ve r
acCiden t • damage
Accounts Payable 147,000 00
Bal,
Dec
31,
1976
683.198.3-4
Tran1ten To
Other S.tah
Bal , Jan . 1, 1976
2,062 46
liability (Section 4509 17 OhtO
Bond IndebtedneSs 87S,000 00
General Fund
53,829 .12
SUMMA RY OF CASH
Funded Programs
Total Receipts
1,649 35
Revised Code)
These per
Total Liab ilities
1,022.000 00
BALANCES , RECEIPTS
Total Transfers
53,829 1'2
Bai
,
Jan
1,1975
3447
Total
Rece
tpts
&amp;
sons have 30 days to comply
ExcessofAssets 5,241 ,13500
AND EXPENDITURES
Total Exp &amp;
Trtnsfers
From
Balances
3,711
81
w tth tl'l e law or request a
To tal
6,2 63 , 135 00
Transfers
165 ,-t3 1 94
General Fund
Genera l Fund
7,129 26
Expenditures
~3 91
hear ing Requests must be
Indebted nes s- Bonds
Sal
,
Dec
31,
1976
53.676.60
Bal , J an 1, 1976
95 ,140 8A
Total Transfers
7,129 26
Bal , Dec 3 1, 1976
3,067 90
fo rwarded in writ jng to the
Purpose Fo r Which D ebt
Total Receipts
3,024,771 IS
Total Exp ~
Total Beg1nnin g Ba lance
Scholarship Fund
Burea u of Motor Vehic l es, P
was
Created
Trans
f
ers
Plu
s
Bat
,
Total Rece tpts &amp;
Plus Recetpts
7,163 73
sal , Jan 1, 1976
200 sa
0 Bo x 11 99, Columbus, Oh10
SaliSbury School Con s
D e&lt;:. 31. 19?6
219 ,108 54
Balances
3, 119 ,911 99
E
xpend1tures
Total
R
ecelpts
30
00
432 16
OutstandtnQ Jan 1,
E .S.E A T1tle II
Exfendltures
2, 849 ,356 25
Tota l Rece ipts &amp;
lnstructioo
M ark Lauderm lit
1976
10,000 00
Ba l , Jan 1, 1975
3,600 51
sa • Dec 31.1 976
270,55574
sa
tarl
es
and
Wages
14,611
45
230
.58
Bal ances
Rt N o A
Redeemed Dur ing Year
Receipts
Dlladvantlged
230
58
To
ta
l
Exp
14,611.45
Bal , Dec 31, 1976
Pomeroy , Ohi o
1916
s.ooo 00
Federa l Subsi dy
3,680 10
Pupils Prog .
Bal. , Dec 3 1, 1976 !7.447 721
NDEATitle Ill
To
tal
Recel
pts
3,680
10
Bai. ,Jan 1.1976
11. 139.15
Ba l, Jan . J, 1976
11 ,971 35
Tota l Exp Plu s
(4 ) 6, 13, 20, Jtc
Total Begmn ing Balance
eat , Dec 31 ,1 976 7,1 63 73
To t al R ece1pts
3,064 25
Plus Rece1pts
7,280 .61
Bond Relirement Fund
To tal Receipts &amp;
E xpendltures
Sal , J an 1, 1976
198.510 26
Balances
15,035 60
Instru cti on
Rece1pts
Ex pendi tu res
1,7 69 35
5.751 07
Other E)tp
Pr- opert y Tax (G ross)
Bal , Dec 31, 1976
13 ,266 25
5,751 07
Tot
a
t
E
xp
General - Real Estate
ESEATttle I
.
1,529 54
Bal
.,
Dec
31,1
976
189,111 53
Bal , Jan 1, 1976
91.868 00
Tota
l
Ex
p
P
l
us
Tan gible Pe rs onal
36,587 37
Total Receipts
127 ,240 54
'
B al, Dec 31, 1976
7,280 61
Total Recei pt s
225.698 90
Total Receipt s &amp;
M
.D
.T
A
&amp;
A
.R
,A
Fund
To tal Beginnmg Balance
Bal ances
219 ,108 5.4
Ba t , Jan 1. 1975
19 ,985 97
PluS Rece1pts
424.209 16
Expendi tur es
165,431 94
Rec:e1ph
E
x
penditures
Sal, oec . 31, 1976
53 ,6?6 60
Federal Substdy
36,07 8 03
Fees &amp; Cha rg es
ESES Title 11
Total Receipts
36,078 03
The Mason City Histoncal Soc1ety meeting Thursday , Bal , Jan 1, 1976
W11hheld - Tax
3,600 51
Tr iillnsfers From
Sett
l
ement
21,510
71
Tota
i
'Rec
e1pts
3,680
10
AprU 7 discussed colored picture post cards tile society hopes Total Rece 1pts &amp;
Genera l Fund
1.4 .1 23 90
Interest On Bonds
35 ,652 50
Tot al Transfers
1.4. 123 .90
to sell of the historic home located on Brown st. next to
Bon d Redemp t iOn
99,000 00
Ba lances
7.280 .61
Total Re ce1pts and
Total
EKP
156
,163
21
E)(pendllures
5.?51
07
Mason's new library The society decided to wa1t unUI May
Transfers
50,201 93
Bat , Dec 31, 1976 268 ,045 95
Ba l., D e-c 31 , 1976
1,529 54
Total Begmn 1n g Ba la n ce
when the rhododendrons are m bloom to take a more heautiful
MDTA - AAAFund
To t al E1&lt;p P lus
Plus Rece tpls &amp;
Bal , D ec 31, 1976 4211 .209 16
19,985 97
picture for the card. Many places of busmess have already Ba l., Jan . L 1976
Tran sfers
70 , 187 90
Lunchroom Fund
Total R ece1pts
50,201.93
EKpenditures
requested the picture post cards.
Sal . Jan 1, 1976
12,712 88
Total RecetpiS &amp;
General AdminiStrat i on
Recei pts
Another project of the society is to assist Mrs. Lee (Mildred )
Balances
70 , 187 90
Salar1esaf1d Wages
1,17725
92 ,572 .48
Expenditures
80
,639
71
Sale
of
Lunches
Gibbs of Hartford, in writing her hook on the history of Mason. Bal , Oec 31 , 1976 (10 ,451 81) Federal SubS idY
Other Ex p
143 41
100,376 ~2
ln structiof1
20,663 51
Family histories are needed for the final chapter. Contact any
Edult Educ, Title Ill
Ot her Revenue
satartes and Wages 27 ,960 00
Sal , Jan 1, 1976
728 84
Total Rece nue
member of the society on this matter.
01her E)(p
17,168 66
R ece1p ts
213,6 12 41
To t al Re ceipts &amp;
Names in ''memoriam" are still being accepted for the
FiKed Ch arges
728 84
Tota l Begmning Ba lance
Balan ces
Oth er EKp
10 ,611 4]
728 84
Plus R ecei pt s
22 6.325 29
Memorial Book. Names as well as the date of his or her death Bat • D ec 31, 1976
Tot al Exp
57 ,066 75
EKpenditures
ESEA Title IV B
~
Transfers To
are needed.
Sa lanes and Wages 73 .848 10
Total Recetp ts
2,826 00
Ger1eral Fund
23,572 96
Food &amp; Food Handlmg
Mrs. Landon Smith, pres1dent, pres1ded; Mrs. Earl Ingels, Total Re ce tpts &amp;
Total T rans f ers
23.572 96
2,826 00
Suppl
ieS
11?
,
198
85
Balances
Sr. presented devotionals, and Mrs. Del won Roberts,
Tota l Exp &amp;
Other Exp
12 ,5 56 11
2,240 44
E•rendi tures
80.6397 1
Transfers
treasurer, reported. The next meeting will be Thursday, April Ba , Oec31,1976
Total Exp
203 ,603 06
585 56
Ba l • Dec 31,
Sal
,
Dec
31.
1976
22
,72
2
23
Teacher
Corps
21 at 10 a.m. It will be potluck .
( 10, 451 81)
1976
Total Exp Plus
Ba l., Jan 1, 1976
3,975 41
Tota
l
Exp
&amp;
A special thanks has been extended to Mrs . ChriStine Total R ece1pts
Sal
Oec
.
31,
1976
226,325
29
118 ,878 40
1
Transfers P l us Bal ,
Uniform SuppttesFund
Gulhne for her taking orders for postal cards in the Pt. Total Recetpts &amp;
Oec 31 , 1976
70 ,187 90
Bat , Jan . 1, 1976
11 , 26673
122 ,8 54 81
Balances
Adult Educat ion
Pleasant area.
Receipts
116,308
78
Exfendltures
Title 111 Fund
6.546 03
sales of Workbo oks
Attendilig were Mrs. Landon Snuth, Mrs. Delwon Ba , Dec 31. 1976
Sal
,J
an
1, 1975
728 8.4
&amp;
Supplies
17,QA3
93
t- Bal , Jan L
Roberts, Mrs. Earl Ingels, Sr., Mrs. Fred Taylor, Mrs. Cecil Tota
Total
728 84
Tota l R ece1pts
17 ,043 93
19 76
487 ,671 88
sal , Dec 31, 1976
728 8-4
Total Seglnnlf19 Balan ce
Smith, Mrs. William Zerkle, Mrs. Ray Proffitt and Mrs. Total - Total Receipts
E. S E .A Title IVB
P l us R ece 1pts
28,3 10 66
3,
8.40.579
12
Christine Guthrie.
Receipts
Expenditures
To ta l - Total Rece1pts
Other Federa l
Purchase of Workboo ks
&amp; Balan ces
4,328,251 oo
Subs ld 1es
2 826 00
&amp; Supplies
17 ,932 12
TilE BUSY BEES 4-H Clpb will sponsor a Spaghetti Total - Expenditures
Total Recet pt s
2,826 00
Total Exp
17 ,932 12
3,645 ,052 66
Expenditu r es
Supper on Friday, April 15, lrf the Mason United Methodist Total - Balance
Bal. , Dec 31, 1976
10 .378 54
Cap 1tal Outlay
Total E x p Plu s
Social Room. Serving will he from 4:30 until6 :30 p.m . The cost
Oec 31 , 1976
683 ,198 34
New Equipment
2,240 4.4
Bal, Dec 31 , 1976 28,310 66
CASH
BALANCE.
is $1.75 for adults and $1.25 for children. Dessert will be extra.
Total E x p
2,2 40 4-4
Permanent Improve ment
R ECE lPTS, AND
Bal , De&lt;: ll. 197 6
585 56
F Ul1d
EXPENDITURES
Total qxp Plus
2.4,.474
43
Bal
1 Jan
1.
1975
BY
FUND
SENIOR CITIZENS enjoyed an Easter dinner Thursday .at
Bai .. Oec . 31, 19 76
2,82600
Rect1pts
I Fund
Other Federal
their trailer home meeting place. Guests were Mrs. James sal , JanGenera
Int er est- In acttve
1, 1976
95,1 40 8A
Funded Progr.ams
. Funds
9,25000
Recetpts-Revenue
Loyd and Joey Roush . Lunches were delivered to Mr. and Mrs.
Sa l , Jan 1, 1975
3,975 41
Total R ece i pts
9, 250t OO
Prope
r
ty
Tax
(Gross
)
' John Bond and Mrs. Gay Livingston. Attending were Mrs. General - Rea l Estate
Rece1pts
Total Beg~nnin 9 Balan c e I
MtSC R eve nue
100,9 69 08
Plus Rece1pts
32 ,n '4 43
99~,471 22
Clara Staats, Mrs. Helen Elias, Mrs. Wilda Coleman, Frank
Total
R
ecetpts
100,969 .08
Bat
,
Dec
31,
1976
32.7,Q4
-43
Tang1bl e Perso nal 22 5,906 .77
Hendrickson, Mrs. Bertha Hall, Joey Roush, Mrs. Mildred State
Transfers From
Trust Funds
I
Subs id tes
Gen er al Fund
17,910 32
Tripp; Mrs. Lucy Johnson, Mrs. Blanche Jones, Mrs. Goldie
Bat , Jan 1.1975
2,062 46
Sc hool ~ou ndatton (Grossl
Tot al Transfers
17,910 32
Rece1pts
Smith, Mrs. Ella Ford, Cora Roush, Mrs. James Loyd, Joann Bast cA IIowance 1.663,994 08 Other Rev enue
Tota l Recetpts and
1,649 35
Vo ca fFonal Educ
13,5 17 25
Tran sfers
11 8,879 40
Hendrickson and Barbara McDaniel.
Total Recei p ts
1,6.49 35
Other State SubSidtes
Tot al 8 e ginnmg Balance
Total Beg tn n tng Balan ce
19 ,185 07
Plus Receipts &amp;
Plus Rece 1pts
3,711 81
Tui tion - Par ents
Tran sfer s
122.854 81
Mason and Area Personals
e xpendttures
~ . 527 10
&amp; Patrons
Expendlfur"s
Plant Ma tntenance
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Troy and sons, Johrmy and Timmy of TU i tion - Other
Saanesan d Wag es
9,476 16
643 91
2,5 19 56
Other E xp
D istn c ts
Lexington, Ky . were holiday guests of her parents, Mr. and
Other Exp
31 8 87
643 91
Total E xp
Rental School
Instruct
i
On
3,067
90
Mrs. Russell Capehart and Mrs. Troy's grandfather, Christy
Bal,
Oec
31
,
1976
Prope r ty
601 00
Sala r tes and Wages 67,037 66
To ta l Exp P l us
Other Revenue
2,0 30 36
Bletner .
'
Other E)Cp
15.27 1 97
Sal , Dec 31. 1976
3,71 18 1
Total Rev Rec e1prs
FIX ed Charges
Other visitors at the Capehart home on Easter were ChriS
2.927,752 41
Sch ola rsh1p Funds
Other E x p
14,543 62
Receipts- Non ·R evenue
and Todd Sell of Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cohen of
Ba t , Jan 1, 1975
200 58
Total E I&lt; P
106,648 28
Adjustments &amp;
Rece1pts
Transfers To
Pomeroy; Mrs. Lee Richardson, Mr. "!ld Mrs. John Sisso~ ,
R etunds
2, 625 19
Int erest On tna ctt ve
Gener a l Fund
9,660 50
Miriam Melanie•Marcl8 and Mary Allee. Chr1sty Bletner s Other Non -Revenue 5 ,066 01
30 00
Fu nds
Total Transfers
9,6~0 SO
Tota l Non Revenur
89th birthday was observed on Sunday.
Receipts
7,691 20
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Ryan visited their son and wife, Mr.
Transfers From
2,26496
and Mrs. Patrick Joseph Ryan and grandsons, Patrick Joseph DPPF
CE T A
23,57'2 96
and Mark at Roanoke, Va. while on vacat10n .
Teacher Corps
9,660 .50
53,829.12
Easter guests of Mrs. Evelyn Nicholson at Clifton were Ttlle 1
Transfers
89 ,327 54
Master Sgt. and Mrs. Nick Nicholson and daughter, Amber, of Total
Total Rece tpts ( Revenue ,
McQuire Air Force Base, New Jersey; Mr . and Mrs. Curtis
Non - Revenue &amp;
Transfers }
3.024,771 15
Roush and Ryan of West Columbus; Mr . and Mrs. John Curtis Total
Begmntng Balance
'1.29 Value
Roush Carolyn and Cinda, Chester Roush of West Columbia
PIUS Rece 1pts
3.119 ,911 99
E JCpendttures
and B;igett Parks, Pt. Pleasant; Mr. and Mrs. Earl Robinson
Total Adm l n1strat 10n
FROM
and David of Gallipolis; Mrs. Elaine Grogan and Chris, Mr
E xp
103,3 69 92
and Mrs. Mike Roush, Mrs. Mary Roush, all of Mason; Mike Total Instru ctio n
E xp
1,686, 461 77
Roush, Rutland; Mrs. Marcella Chapman and Mrs. Rober! Total Co Ord 1nete
'152 00
Ad1v 1tFes E 1&lt;p
Rempe, both of Middleport.
Tota
l
Libra
r
y
NOW AVAILABLE AT
Easter guests of Mr . and Mrs. John Marshall were Mr. and
Exp
, 27.502.84
Mrs. Phillip Smith and daughters, Stephanie and Patti Jo of Total Puptl Tran sp
Exp .
20 2,048 73
Lexington, Ky., Mrs. Judy Persinger, Johrmy and Carlene of
STAYS IN PLACE
:rotal School Plant
Columbus and Mrs. Helen Fell, Pomeroy.
Operation EI&lt;P
285 ,110 94
FITS OVER
Holiday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Roush, Ted Riley, To tal SchoQI Plent
Mason, W.Va .
THE HUMP
Malnt Exp
55,097 00
Sr., Guyla and Thomas were Vernon Roush, Jr . of Parkers- Total Other AUXtlliHY
Open: "Mon.-Thurs. &amp; Sat. B-5:30
Reg.
'1.29
burg; Mrs. MOdred S1sson, Middleport; Mr . and Mrs. Ted
expense
426,958.15
FridayB-8
1tal Outlay 5,605 43
Riley, Jr. and son, John, Kenneth Byer, Middleport and M1ss Total C apTransfers
To
14,12390
Judy Needs, New Haven.
CETA

11- The Qflily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday, Aprilll, 19n

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

•

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22) Of
course you're enttlled to rela)(
and en1oy yourse ll tod ay but try
to d Q II as mex p ens1vely as
poss1ble Don t break th e bank

Mary Hobltetter
Acting Clerk
Board of Meigs
county Commissioners
1], 20, 21CI

going to make the payffients
on my combine ... "
Epperson's dogs,
Strawberry and Funny Face,
ran barking past 'the chicken
house and into the wheal
fields where, a century ago,
iocal farmers monitored a
buffalo herd a mile wide; the
herd took 30 hours to move
past.
He smiles at the thought of
his $1.90 a bushel wheat.
"You know, one day last
summer,
during
the
harvesting, the price went up
to $3.55 ·a bushel. Good price.
But that price lasted only 10
minutes. I was out in the
fields, harvesting, and didn't
know ahout it.
"That's farming ." ,
Epperson walked slowly,
proudly through his neat
farmyard . Five
geese
followed, single file. A rusting
Sears and Roebuck swmg
teshfied to the four chlldren
and seven grandchildren who
no longer live on a farm that
fetches below1)rice wheat.
" I'm getting tired,"
Epperson sa1d.
A s1gn on a wall said, " If
you don 't like wheat farmers,

p11iful cents. Pcnod. Middlemen get the rest ."
Wildin marched from h1s
house and mto the wheat
f1elds. The wheat was green
and ankle h1gh . The earth
was damp from a rain that
lroke a drought.
" Jimmy Carter IS worse
than the drought!" he said.
He looked out across the
land. 11 Il'san unhappy land," live on loans" - are coming
he said "That's what $2.25 a due in the SUI~ll~Wr and "I
bushel does ."
confess, I am mighty worried
Reno County has hwas what wlll happen "
kn own
as
"Dro ughty
He is a family man. His
Kansas." And that was the wife
was inside
the
year grasshoppers blackened farmhouse babysitting a
the sky. commg so thick they grandchild. HIS son Denn1s,
drove horses mad.
Tl, has to live away because
Out beyond Wildin 's 1,200 the economics of 1977 wheat
acres lay the 800 acres farmmg won 'I support t..a
farmed by Don Epperson. famil•es on the 800 acres.
He's !i6, lanky, sun-'hrowned
Epperson keeps track of
below the forehead and would the profits of wheat buyers, of
have made a model for one of whea.t companies and flour
Norman Rockwell's Saturday and bread manufacturers.
Everung Post harvest time

have needed a bodyguard,"
Dole SOld.
Reno County farmers say
they need a price of at least
$3.25 to break even. The older

down But

I'm wondering now how 1'm

Wildin but unhappy
He pomts to a seed
company s1gn at roadside.
· It's his sign. "! have to sell
seed on the side. Couldn't
make a livmg without that as
a secoutl job
&lt;"
"The cost ol fu•l.
machinery, repairs and aU
keeps gomg up. But not what
we get for wheat," Epperson
said.
Epperson's 1976 wheat harvest is sllU in storage. Selling
1t now would mean a loss lor
tile year. He is holding it,
hoping
the
Carter
AdminlstraUon will provide _
higher supports. But his loans
- "90 per cent of us farmers

Farmers say wheat growing
is no longer a paying deal
By RICHARD H. GROWALD expenses. Wheat growing
UPI NaUoual !Uporter
now ain't a paying deal.
HUTCHINSON,
K~n .
''It tsn'tso bad for the older
(UPI) - Out here the sod is (armers who own their land ."
black and Earl D. Butz is fond
Wildin IS a man of Amish
of bending over and grabbing stock and the inheritor of
a handful.
black earth that once
"This black earth, this belooged to his grandfather.
black gold. It covers His lather did well enough to
Amenca 's hea~and from treat Doug to the white, onethe Appalachian Mountains room schoolliouse where be
to the Rockies, from the had spent eight years .
Canadian border to the high
"My dad bought it for me
plains of Texas, and it grows on aucUon . Cost $700. Had it
the aops that make us rich." moved a mile and a quarter
says the former agriculture out here," he sa1d. The
secretary. He talks in the steepled schoolliouse now is a
come-UHneeting style of the Wildln barn . ·It holds a
older generatioo of American combine.
husbandmen.
"That combihe. FIVe years
Butz lets the soil dribble ago I could have bought one
through his fingers , a Croesus lor $15,000. Today it costs
busy in the counting house. $40,000. And where's a farmer
He is gone now mto going to get $4(1,000 at today's
business. But Doug Wildm wheat prices?" he said.
and Don Epperson, wheat
They ain't what they used
farmers of Reno County, to be. Early in this decade
Kansas, remain. And these good harvests and a better
two keepers of the treasure foreign market - Russian
voice the woe of the tillers of harvests were poor - raised
the black gold.
wheat prices to giddy heighta
Five miles out of town, of over $5 a bushel.
But RUssian harvests iro·
behind the cypress trees and
the while farm house are proved. Last year Moscow
parked Wildin's red El bought less U.S. grain . The
Dorado Cadillac and his blue skyscraper silos rising above
and white Continental. the fruited plains of America
Wearing Big Smith blue "are fljled and farmers fret
overalls and a smile, the 52- where they are going to put
year-()Jd fanner waggles a this swruner's harvest.
thumb at tile autos and says,
And, ugh, the market price
"Don't get the wrong idea." is about $2.25 a bushel.
" Those cars didn't come Government support prices
from farming . No, sir. will mean a Iarmer this year
Someone might get the idea may get no more than $2.60
larming is rich. No, sir.
abushel.
"There is two of me. One is
"There's just no profit
Wlldin the land dealer. I sell there. There's just Joss," said
land from Canada to Texas. Wildin.
"Jinuny Carter promised
That paid for those cars. The
other me is the fanner and farmers a reasonable profit.
that Is the unprofitable That was in the campaign.
Wildln," be said.
But look what he 's doing,"
He is an energetic man and the fanner said.
finds it hard to sit still in an
In Washington, Agriculture
overstuffed chair in his living Secretary Bergland has gone
room. In Hutchinson, his to Congress with no request to
fellow wheat men smile and raise the $2.25 a bushel the
say ol' Doug, well, he is the government will lend a wheat
feUer who wants to charter a fanner on his harvest. And be
plane and fly a Jot of us to asked to raise the guaranteed
Washington to tell President bushel price to no more than
Carter and Agriculture $2.60 a bushel. This is the
Secretary Bob Bergland that reason WUdln and his fellows
they ain't doing right.
are talking about chartering
"Land dealing's okay. It planes for Washington and
makes money. But when the · writing their congressmen.
~ressure's on, there's nothing
In WaShington, when Berglike g~tlng away from It all land told a Senate hearing the
by gmng out into the fields. administration farm plans
There's peace out there," Sen. Bob Dole of Kansas t~
·wudin said.
Republican Yice preside~tlal
"Farming is the fun part. candidate last year, made a
Of course, we do Intend the lace and recalled Butz. "If
fun part to show a profit. But Earl Butz had brought these
proposals up here he would
it don 'I.
"We can 'I grow wheat for
'
$2.25 a bushel and pay our

"Theirprohtsain~

He as quaeter than

tile late country music star
Hank
Sr,

!J.\

PT. PLEASANT - SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA - MASON

,,

"

•

�•

•

11-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday. Aprill3, 1977

.

'Let The .Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items- Into
Cash
- --

;

WANT AD
CHARGES
15 WurW ur U1Hkr
Ccosh
I &lt;loy
2day!l
3 days
6da~

Chargl!'

l 00

l.~

t,:iO

1.90

1.80
3.00

2.2:'»
3.7$

Eat'h word O\'t'r the muumum 151

wonL!.l

lli ,. l' ~nb: ~r w~rtl ~r

Wty.

Ads rwuung other UI.IHI l'UIIIleCUlll'~

dltys will be char;.:i'd al tht&gt; I day
ntlt!.

In memory, Card ol Thouiks and
Obll~&amp;ary .

6 c.:nts ~r wunl, $J.OO
minunwu . Cash in mJvan••t
Moln~

tlumt: a it~ lllld Ynd S&lt;il~ts
Hfl' aCCl'plt!t.l only Wllh cas/1 WLth
order. 2S cent clllttJ;ll' tor ads i'Hrryu•g Bull Nwnllcr In C..n: of Tl~~;: St•u·
wwl.

Tlw Pui&gt;IL¥1~r rc:rervcs the nJ!:hl ..
tu t'd.IL or rc.Jt't'l &lt;Any Hd~ u~·med ubjedll.lllal. Tht• Pubhsl~r w1l\ not l:otresfxmslblc for murc than unc illcurf i't't LJISCI110JL

Phone 99'bZJ56

~:~eli!;_WJIIlte&lt;l
MERRI-MAC has o~ning for Porty 1972 VECA. $800. Also, 1972
Plan
Sup•rvisors
ond
Plymoulh , $1200.
Phone
Demonstrotort in your area .
'949·2307 .
H1ghe11
commlssiOFl.
no
deH"'"Y
or
collecting . 1975 RAllY SPORT Comoro . P.S..
outomotic. disc brkes. mint
Demonstrate top quality to~s
condition
, 53695 . Call 992-7770
ond gifts . Call collect to Ann
alter b p.m.
Baxter (319) 556-8881 or w ri te
MERRI ·MAC , 801 Jocluon , 1969 DELTA Olds hardtop . Yellow
Dubuque. Iowa 52001 . ·
with black vinyl top. Air,
power, loW mileage. Two ex fro
WAITRESS , oppl~ in person .
studded snow tires included.
Cro~ 's Steak House. Pomeroy ,
$650. Bob Hoeflich, 992-5292 .
Oh_io_ o_rc_ol_l m
- ~~4_!;. "-'~-::
·-~-FUll AND PARTTIME . Con use 2 1965 fORO '!, ton pickup truck ,
$250. 1968 Mercury . good for
fultime and 3 portlima persons .
work cor. SlSO. Con see of
Con tact Fuller Brush Co. 3 to b
lesley Whittington 's ot Sil,er
p.m. Monday thriJ Friday .
Run. Phone
Phone 992-3410. Cor and Phone
....._
ne&lt;:essory .
1952 FORD Tractor and equipment. Coil oftur 5 p.m .
SOMEONE to li"'e in or work from
949-2428.
'
7 o.m. till4 p.m . to toke core of
elderly l ady . Not i nvalid but 1970 CHEVY IMPALA , 4 dr .. foe·
needs strict supervis ion over
tory air condi tioning . Wi~l sell
medicat ion . Experience not
wholesale. $700. (o11992-7 B43.
necessary but good personality
1s o must . Racine orao . Call

-

m .3088.
-.. ---

-----

NOTICE

or (304)773·5777 ,
SOMEONE NEEDED to mOw gross .
9~9-2185

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Munday

Noon un Saturd1:1y

1'uc.sdOJy

thru f'r•d&lt;~Y
4P.M.
th e duy llefurt' pulJlil'atiun

:-iwnlay
iP.M.
Friday aflemwn

WOULD like to e~&lt;tend my
sincere thanks to thO$&amp; whom
remembered me in cords and
prayer while during my recent
stay In the hospital. Sincere
thanks , Bill Howard .

Phone 992· 5798.
SERVICE STA.TION Mono'ger.
Some eKper ience preferr~ .
Must be able to handle money
and book work . Must be bondable . :to hour work week . For
information call I 800 624 ·6557
from Ohio or I 600 642·8526
from W.Va . Ask for Mr. Adams .
An
Equo f
Opportun i t~
Employer.
SAlES EXECUTIVE . HiQhly regard·
ed Company hos o career posi" tion open for on eKperienced
soles person . Requ ires selfstarter who con manage
himself and o terri tory . High
commissions . No layoffs . b ;pense paid training . No Inves tment. for lifetime connection ,

coli!

(800)241·2~&lt;6 "

Phone 949-2089.
SPRING GARDEN.. Supplies , Cob·
boge . ca uliflower , broccol i.
and head leuuoe
plonts ,
yellow, white , and red onion
sets, onion plants, Kennebe c,
cobbler, Kotahdin , Red Pontiac
and Red Losodo seed potatoes .
Bulk garden seeds , potting soli ,
peat moss. fru it trees and rose
bushes . Midway Market ,
Pomeroy , Oh io , 992-2502,
Bob : s Markel . Moson , W.Va .

2 WINDOW FANS, infra red het
k1mps , three- fou rth metal bed
ond springs , table fan. Bulovo
wrist wa tch . 356 North Fourth
St ., Middleport . William Smith,

SPECIAL:

FOUND IN Middleport oreo. small
reddish brown · female dog,
docked foil. One block mole
part Siamese kitten. Meigs
County Humane Society .
843-3009 or 992-5427 .

LEGAL NOTICE

NOTICE TO BITUMINOUS

VENDORS :

Sealed bids w ill be received
t;y the Board of Com m lssloners of Meigs Cdunty,
~ ·Ohio , at the office of theCommissioners
,...county
located In the Court House, In
,.the VIllage of Pomeroy , Ohio
,...,., ~5769 ; untU 7 :00 P .M . on the
: ~28th day of April, 1977, for the
• ' ~ furnishing of bilum lnous
f
t materl&amp;ls for the Meigs
lcounty H i ghway Oepert ~,-ment .
·
~ J Estimated quantities of
-1 · n~uid asphalt required,
4
'
appro"lmately
SOO , OOO
• gallons .
~ BID SPECIFICATIONS

t

... SUBMITTED AS FOLLOWS :
•.'
Bid price per gallon. f .o .b .
~ ; vendor's plant. and the price

per gallon delivered to
vendor's portable tank to B.n Y
toc.atlon
In ttle
county
· designated by the county
·
engineer, for the various
grades
of
bllum inous
'
materials which m ey be
:
required by the Meigs Cou.nty
Highwey Oepertment, wh ich
shall conform to tPle perti nent
\
State of Ohio, Department of
Highway Construction and
Material Specifications .
"' ~
Wolth
respect
to
the
-~ .aforenld estimated quan tities, the vendors shell un derstand that no guarantee is
t c .· given 11 to the actual
1' quantities
or bllum Incus
't materials to be furn ished, but
•.r.each successful vtndor shall
· be required to furnish all or
ahy pert of tht Meigs County
Highway
Department's
actual requlrtments as or dered during the 1977 season.
Prlc.fl on this bid shall be In
effect from Aprll1977 to April
4,
r
r

J

"

On thi envelope containing
each blc:J, the name and ld ·
dress of the vendor must -be
shown and plainly marked
"Bituminous Bids . •
Proposals
are
to
be
rtturned on bid forms sup .
'plied by the vendor, and will
be opened on the date and
ptact specltted-lbove .
the Meigs County Com ·
missioners reserve the right
to accept or refect any or all
bids, or any part thereof.
Mary Hobstetter.
Acting Clerk
Meigs County Board
of Commissioners

i4l

If' 20, 2!c

'.1'

VAROSALE , Friday , April IS, lOtil
5:00 at Five Points . Clothing ,
bed sPrings , bed , man~ misc .
Items. Rain dote , April 22 .
Watch for signs .
FOUR FAMilY Yard Sale, .Tue1 ..
Weds ., Thursday, 9 till 4:30.
Gloria Johnson , 2nd house on
right post Wolf Pen Rood on Rt.

1
3F:.:1LYYordSolo. Wedo, Thurs:

-

I

-

~

SEWING - ALTERATIONS :
Upholster in g ,
drapes
reasonable. 572 South Third
Ave ., Middleport.
Phone

APPLES, FITZPATRICK ORCHARD,

STATE ROUTE 689 " PHONE
WILKESVILLE , (614)
- -61&gt;9"3785"
-

- --

..
PROFESSIONAL

PIANO TUNING, Lane Daniels. 12
years of service. Phone

,
-Will992"2082
MOW cemetery ,lots ot anv

---

location. Phone 742-2174 .

---.-

Will 00 buildi ng and remodel·
ing , roofing, plumbing, ele&lt;·
tricot work and general r•po ~r .
Free estimates and reosonoble
rates . Phone Charles Sincloli' ,

of your NIL
your awn home

bY Von Schnder
dry-foam method.
No-.Noluu.
"NO odor. Ute the
Simi dl)'.
guar~nteed

"Now Onl)
Let us
Free .

1279 ,95

test

your

7&lt;2-2577.

Pomeroy Landmark

....

HOUSE SOlD, couple with o4
daughters in need immediately
of home, 3 or 4 bedroom jn or
around Middleport oreo . Phone

Phone 992-2181

9'12 -629• "

ONION SETS
lb. 45~

lll".~oJ~cek~ ~~~~~~r
...:614==:::.."_::P.;;h~o;:n::.•.:.'.:c9':.·.:.":.:':_1_.J

TEAFORD
Virgil

HOUSE FOR Sole in M inersville, 5 ..
rooms ond bath . forced air
heat. natural gas . 3 porchH
and basement. Phone 992-5833.

B. Sr ., Rea!tor

216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769

DELIGHTFUL

3

bedroom , nat. gas central

healed , lully

acre , all elec. finished garage .
Fully carpeted, Five Points
area. $30,0C10 . Phone 992 - ~28
after 5 p .m.

carpeted

home with a nice kltch&amp;n .
Out

of

town

In

nice

--·
---FOR SAlE by owner , 5 rms. and

neighborhood " S22 ,00(T.
SOMETHING NEW LIHie upkeep on this fairly
new all elec. home . Has
nice kitchen fully carpeted
·and J bedrooms . Nice
lenced yard " 522,000.
BRICK - Large 4 bedroom
home on a corner lot . l'h
baths, fireplace and full
basemenl " Just 524,000,
Meigs School District.
CONVENIENT - Large 3
bedroom older home on
good street In Middleport.

-~-

both, 3 1h acres , close to town
on blacktop rood . Also, city
water . Phone 949-2973.

families, less heat, ti!!Xes,
and cleaning . Over an acre
with large garden .

MINERS

SPECIAL
Look at this new J bedroom
home with 2 baths. 2 car
garage with workshop.
Over an acre of ground .

milk house, other · bldgs,
$32,500.00.
JUST LISTED Near

electric, 3 bedroom hOme

with 1 acre. Fully carpeted . ,
All electric, 3 bedroom
home with 1 car garage

at $32,000.

COUNTRY- 5 room block
bath, nice
a cellar and

good

ONLY $12,500.00.
4.3 ACRES - Level land
near Mulberry Hgts, ready
for

on

day. J '/1 mile on County Rood .
32. Turn at Meigs Memory WISE PEOPLE INVEST
Gardens.
MINOLTA SRT-100 35mm camera , IN THEIR FUTURE , WHY
SOmm, 28mm, 135mm, ond 60- PAY RENT?
5 FAMilY YARD Sole of lorry
210mm Zoom lens plus camera
O'Briens re~idenca . letart
G. Bruce Toaford
and accessories cases. Call
FoJis, Ohio. April 14 , IS , ond
Helen L. Teaford
992-6298 days only.
t6. 9:00 till b:OO. lots of good
Associates
children 's clothing .
REG . ARABIAN Horse , 3 yr. old ' - - - - - - - - - - - - Tennessee Walker geldln9 , pin·
to geldi ng , 2 horse horse
trail•r, pony ca'rJ ond harness .
Ruth Reeves, (614) 698-3290,
3 AND 4 RM. furnished and un·Hoof Hol low ,
furnished apts . Phone 9'125434 ,
18 FT . Correct Craft Mohogony
boot. New motor, C.nd trailer.
COUNTRY Mobile Home Park. Rt.
Very reasonable'. Con Be see
33, ten miles north of Pomeroy.
incorporated
on lousio Ave. Albonv . Ohio or
Lorge lots with concrete patios,
c611696-3821.
No. · 200 - 9 tenths of an
sidewalks, runnars and off
acre, level ground, roads
street parking. Phone 992-7"79. B. Model ALLIS Cholmer tractor,
on three sides, 12x60 mobile
plows and cultivator included .
2 BEDROOM mobile hom&amp; on
home
plus
an
older
Runs good , $800. Phone
Brdodwoy in · Roclne . Sea
dwelling with 2 garages,
11&lt;13"2834"
Hdrvev leomond by Wagner 's
downstairs carpeted , this Is
Hardware:
1969 DODGE CHARGER , power a 9ood investment, close to
steering, v•llow block viny!
mtnes. Price
roof, bucket s•ots . Coli

a

story home with basement.

large lot 100" only 516,500 ,
SO~ETING "NEW Old
church and bloc.k building
Plains

in

homesite

or

development .
Only
$8,250,00,
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITIES - Do
you want to strike out on
tour own? We have several
good businesses for sale

a right price, For lnlo,
CALL TODAY "
OUT OF TOWN - 1 acre,
new home, 3 bedrms ••

Strout

carpeting, utility room.
carport, dinette, modern,

Realty

1

priced to sell at $30,000.00.
WE NEED LISTINGS,
NEW HOMES, GIVE US A
TRY, CALL TODAY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
Hank Cl•lend
Associ.te
992-225~-992· 2561

915-4112

COONER's CAMPERS . See quality

AND Sewi ng Machines
ol SWISS COLONY: BARTH : SWEEPER
Repair, Ports , and Supplies .
CRICKET truck campers ; MAPLE

LEAF ~pacemaker , PLY MOR ;
CAP KIT cops . NEW-USED Soles.
rental , service , supplies. Toke
Meigs 28 or 32 to Boshon .
located on Rainbow Ridge.
long Bottom , Ohio. RoMrt
Codner, owner.
CHEVROlET VAN Camper . Ptlone

9'12.:1900 '
1963 DELTA Travel troiler 1 13',
siHps siK in good condition.

Davis Vocullm Cleoner, '11 mi le
vp George's Creek Rood aft
State Rt . 7.

YAMAHA:

HARLEY-DAVIDSON :

ond
Can-Am , Motorcycles.
Complete soles and fantastic
service! Hours , M-T-T9·6; W-F,
9-7; Sot. 9-5. "The Motorcycle
People of Southeastern Ohio ."
Athens Sport Cycles, Inc. 20 W.
Stimson Ave., Athens, OHio

592-1692"

Col) 378-62&lt;7,
1971 ARISTOCRAT travel troller ,
sleeps 6. Self-contained . Ex·
cellent condition . $1200. Phone

9'12-~7§6§~~§§§§§~
1975 JEEP CHEROKEE, p.b". ps"
Quadrotrack . . Good

tires .

Phone (304)877-2340.
1976 CAMARO. 305 2 barrel!
automatic, sliver with red
pinstrirlng. Still under worron ly, Col 9/f.i-2208 "
289ENGINE and heod8rs for $100.
4 speed Mercury tron•mission,
$65; 1967 3 speed outomotlc
Ford transmission, $30. Phone

m-3611 ,
1970 CUDA in good condition.
Ntw paint, ond factor~ mags.
Phone 742-2659.
Plymouth .

---..-'

"-~ '

$1200 .

1.3 acres with

24x60 double wide 4 BR and

farm house containing "

FOR SALE
New Co-Op w•ter Uf teners, model VC -SVI .
OnlY s:zn .u
S•ve UO . OO on " new
Hotpolnt Rtfrlg~rator.
1 Good Used McCullough
Chafn Saw
sts
1 Good used 40" Hotpoint
Range
SlOO
Now in •tock, cornplttellne
of bulk urden tetdt •nd
onion sets.
I Good used Unlco
Free1er
sus
1 good McCullough Chain
S.w
S6S
1 Good Used PouiJn Chlln
S.w
uo
Onion Sets
lb . o45c
Survivor Safes. only 129.95

'

Pomeroy Landmark

"barn, and a 1971 Skyline

No , 202 - 3 acres with
12x50
mobile
Aome,

vacation spot " Price SUOO.
No, 203 town,

House ond lot In

alum .

siding

windows, short walk

lo

stores . Price $7,500.

804 W, Main
Pomeroy
992-22'8
After Hours Ca II

992-7133
CONTACT:
!!ranch Manager

,,

and

1

1:"

,:-..~..

"TUfWRTPIOP\.I

BUT 1 OONT

._

"LAST 'lEAR EL.f.CTRICIAIJS weRE
E:~bt\'*D llJ P, R!SI&lt;'1 .JOB AT THE'

4-13·1 mo. pd.

F lT li. -- -

All~b

NUCLEAR €£/JER-

SI"A110!-J,,

u·

r;;~; t-15VfR *IT5 UP AROIJI.l;

v... f.OJJ· HS
READS IT

IHI:' HOJSE, SO I
!dAVE: HIM P, Sl!BSCRIP1KllJ
10 'REm'*-' ~b&amp;sT'' '"

BRADFORD, AUctioneer, ComR S-O~.s-"
I N T.V. Repair. Service_
Plate Ser ... lce. Phone 949-2487 . HAR
Calls. 276 Sycamore, St., Midor 949-2000. Racine. Ohio , Critt
dleport. Phone992-2S22.
Bradford.
FREE INSPECTION, free estimates
ELWOOD ~OWE~S REPAIR for termites. Fast quality ,work.
Sweepers , toasters , Irons, all
Call 9--49-2803, Southern Pesr
small appliances . Lawn mower,
Control.
next to Slate Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (614) 985·

is

another

A Connecticut reader wants

eXample

of

finesse . The king failed to
drop and another notr ump
game had wound up one trick

to

know

if

honors

were ever

scored in duplicate "
They were scored in the
first tournaments, dropped
for match point play , but
ret.ained for tot.al points until
quite recently . They were
never counted in IMP scoring .
(Do you ha-ve a question
for the experts? Write "Ask ·

the Jacobys " care ol this
newspaper. The Jacobys wW
answer in divtdual questions
II sramped, sell·addressed
envelopes are enc losed The
mos t interes ting questionS' ~
wifl be used tn this co lumn
and will receive 'co()ies of
JACOBY MOD ERN}

2:011-lnflnlly Factory 3J,
2:3o-Doctors 3,4, 15; One l..lle to Live" 6,13; Guiding
Light a,10; Consumer Survival Kit
3 : ~Another World 3,4, 15; All In The Family"a, 10;
Antiques 20 ,
·•
3 : 1~General Hospital 6,13.
3:30-Malch Game 8,10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
4:011-Mister Cartoon 3; LIHie Rascals 4; Gong Show
15; New Mickey · Mouse Club ·6; Lucy Show a;
Sesame St. 20.33; Movie "The Great American
Pastime" 10; Dinah 13.
4 : 1~LIItle Rascals 4,
4:3o-My Three Sons J; Partridge Family 4;
Emergency One 6; Partridge Family 8; Fllntstones
15"
5:011-Big Valley 3; My Three Sons 4; Brady Bunch a:
Mlsler Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Emergency
One 13; Star Trek 15.
5: 36--Adam-IZ 4: News 6; Family Alfalr 8: Elec; Ca.
20,33.
6:011-News 3,4,8, 10;t3, IS; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:36--NBC News3,4,15' ABC News 13; Andy Gr1Hitl16;
CBS News 8,10; Once Upon A Classic 20,33,
·
7:011-Trulh or Cons , 3: To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling lor
Dollars 6; Muppel Show a; News 10; To Tell the
Truth 13; My Three Sons 15; Almanac 20; Con·
sumer Survival Kit 33.
•
7:3o-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Ohio Slate LoHery 6;
Price is Righi 8; MacNell-l,.ehrer Report 20,33;
Wild Kingdom 10: Nashville on the Road 13; Dolly
15"
8:011-NBC Reporls 3,4,15; Welcome Back. KaHer 6.13;
Wallons 8,10; Classic Theatre 20 ; Masterpiece

n

THOMAS JOSEPH

40 Hununing
ACROSS
sound
I Herring's
41 "- she
relatiVe
blQws! 11
5 Candied
DOWN
Tinware
IJmpassive
11 Send back
2 1954 John
U ·Unique
Wayne "
14 Punish
movie
15 June phrase
3
The last
16 Slapstick
straw
( 4 wds,)
4 Ottoman
official
" 5 Like some .

to

poor
photos
6 Embank·
ment

===--------

7 Soul (Fr.)

Yesterday's Answer.
8 Unable to
tolerate
( 4 wds ,1
9 Overeat
12 Abase
16 Nuisance
19 Futile
22 Tabula 23 Kettledrum
24 Flew a plane

25 Hungarian
dog
27 Tranquil '
29 Ascended
30 Medicinal
herb
31 - Lee
Masters
36 Conunotion
37 Wager

3825.

RISING STAR Kennel Boarding,
Indoor-Outdoor runs, grooming
all breeds, clean sanitary

HOOF HOlLOW. Buy, sell, trode
or train horses. RUTH REEVES,
trainer. Phone (614) 698·3290.

SAVI ON

mofteY

AND

MARTIN

Ex·

501

12or

NUON
1s

Y "K

.. -·- lll.,..ncf

'•

&amp;HE HAD A
DO &gt;OJ HAVE ANY . IO\N
STROKE! 6HE:'5 !OEA WHAT THAT
IMA61NE,.
IN A NURSING " COSTS OLIT
HOME I
HEI&lt;'E ?

·

"'I I '.

-4

a

:

a"

•

'

10MOI&lt;ROW! 8EL/EVE

TELLING 'n-IE

MEr I'M Nor PRCUD OF
WHAT I'VE BEEN
DOING TO MAKE
END&amp; MEET!

KWDWU

ll G C

HWUAUGV

SWQPH

TRUll4?

-"

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8 •. .

Close

t'..&amp;

At 5 p·u

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·.

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RUTLAND

"
742·2211

I'V

_ ",..;,.uo.D GlllATE - "
~

.

••

1e

.'"iurt~D,e

HESAF

I I I I I tJ

Featur~s

) !ARNEY

GUESS WHAT I
IF '{011 DIOI'iT KNOW HOW
IF I{OIJ DON'T f&lt;EAO
TO READ. HOW COULD
''WA~ AND ~f," LEO
1{00 iEAO'W NID PEACE."? TOL5T01( WILL HATE 1(0(}!

DO "'OU WANT TO

8e HATED 841

LEO TOLSTQI(?

BGC

GEJLUG

V WG K H

Z E R

PA

VE UW

Q p

ss

IVOONCYt

T

I

Vest&lt;r day"s t;ryptoquotr : AND TH~; BEST MOTTO FOR A
I.ONG MAHCH IS: "DON 'T GRUMBlE. PLUG ON !" - SIH
FREDEHI(;K TR~:VES
.b

tJ 1911 Kinl

~~
;:

;·•i •

ATGK

ATW

VEUW

•
e
e

'

ATW

WE CAN VIBIT HER

BUTHOWCO.I

i'W'

FRIDAY TIL "5

~
e·

, ee
e le

8

'

WH H

KNOW ){)LJ'I(E

,: ..

.

Mon., Tues. , Wed.
a OOt"l5 00
I :
Thursday 8 til Noon

.•

'·:
, • 4,

•
'• ·
.•.

...,...._'-

s

BOUGHT M'ISELF
"'ESTIDDYr ELVINEY

Syndkalt,lnr.

I

II 0 I

AXVIli.BAAXR
I. 0 , N G F E 1. I , 0 W

( "RYI'TOQlJOTES

:

,.
•
1e

NOBAT

One lett er simply stn nd s for anot he r. In th is sample A is
three I.'s, X for lh c tw o O'.s, PIC', Singh:• lette rs,
the l ength :md formn lion of lhc words a re all
hints. E:'l('h day the rmle h; ttcrs.arc different.

• WINNIE

•

.RUTLAND
FURNn'URI

, • • ..-.•
~

-::;;-+-+--1--1

byHenriAmoldandBobl.ft

Unscrarnb«t these four Jum01es,
one letter to each square, to form
four ordlnarywords.
'

u ~ejl ror the
apostrophes,

•'

Caii742-Z211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

_ P£,intm.:;enc:lc:..---~--

' ';•.

38 Weighty
39 Sicilian
volcano

I•

U.n

padding Installed

742-2211

name

Ft.

sqiNIIre Ylrd.

,DUGAN's FRONT End Alignment,
formerly Odell's , Allnement
behind Rutland Grade School.
Alignment. 'wheel .balancing.
tune-up, brakes and minor
repair. Phone 742·2005 or

~ ~ ~~ ~

Night"

J)AJLY CRYI'TOQliOTE- Here's how to work It:

GrHn, gold, reel, bl.,., rust.~
Da It yourseH, with pad.
dint. $7 ·" sq. yd, With

paving, Rl, 143, Phone 1 (614)
698-7331.

747·2004. Evening work by Op·

SIVer;

Good choice colon.

CARPENTER, llooring, ceiling,
paneling. Phone 992-2759 .

cavatlng,
septic '"stems,
dozer, backhoe. dump truck,
limestone, gravel, blacktop

Or-JCEE CNE Bv'GN
0' DAISY MAE r.r

$1Q.95 sq, Yd.
Everyaay

-+-+-1 ltlfll~ ID'il '.~ THATSCRAIIBLEDWoROOAIIE

the

INSTALLED
Regulor $14.95

742-2348"

HOWERY

You real Ill
think Score
plans to
=~~ meet C.lovia
here and
bump her
· off?

HI-LO SHAG

Will do roofing, construction.

.

•

CARPOING

8:3o-What's Happening 6,n
9:oo-Besl Sllers 3,4, 15; Barn&amp;y Miller 6,13; Movie
"The Amazing Howard Hughes"' a,!O; Classic
Theatre 33"
9:36--Three"s Comoanv 6, 13.
lO:oo-Weslside Medical 6,13 : News 20"
10 :3o-Woman 20.
11 :DO-News 3,. ,6,8,10,13,15; MacNeil-Lehrer Report
33"
11 :3o-Johnny Carson, 3,4, 15; (;abrlel Kaplan Presents
lhe Future Slars6,13; Ko(ak8 ; Mary Hartman 10;
ABC News 33.
'
12 :00-Movle " Sons &amp; Lovers" 10; Janakl 33.
12 :4o-Movle ""The Heist" 8"
1:oo- Tomorrtlw 3,&lt;1; News 13.

dolphin
23 Time period b--1--+-('abbr.)
29 Fall back
32 Babism's
founder
33 Son of Bela
34 Like
Steve
and Eydie
35 Contented
(2 wds.)
:n "Blue of

locllllles. Ch11hlre, Phone (61&lt;)
367-0292,

Sanitation , 992-395.4.
plumbing and hea!ing. , No job
too large or too small. Phone

.

Theatre 33.

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned, Modern

m -5858.

WE
ARELIST
SELLING
ANDBUYERS
NEED. YOUR.
HELP,
WITH PROPERTY
US, WE HAVE
FOR
VACANT LAND, fARM AND RESIDENTIAL
PROPERTY.
JIMMY DEEM REALTOR

Pass

by

.

ONE A'tRE , 3 bedrooms , 2 story
home, dining room, Iorge both,
natural gas, Iorge porch, nice
block garage, $20,000 . Phone

COOLVILLEmodern
brickliving
home room
containing
1ttr11
bedrooms,Nice
dining
room,
with
flreplace,fullbasementwllh gerr"o'argefrontporch,
natural gas furnace. city l#"f#..O\ «1nd welt water, a
beaullful home wllh """" f~,otely 5'12 acres of land,
fruit trees and sho&lt;~&lt;- ..\o~.s surrounding II, plenty of
garden space, gool~'Onlng area close by, located In
"Coolville. Ohio, priced at only $32,000. C.ll now"

3 N. T. Pass

6: oo-Sunrlse Semester 10.

6: 1~Farm Report IJ.
6:20-Not For Women Only 13,
6:» - Travel Film ,. ; News 6; Sunrise Semester 8;
Urban League 10"
6:45--'Mornlng Reporl J"
6 :50-Good Morning, West VIrginia 13.
6 :5s-Good Morning, Trl Stole 13,
7 :011-Today 3,4,15; Good MOO"nlng America 6,13; CBS
News a: Chuck While Reports 10.
·
7:05-Porky Pig 10.
7: 30-Schoolles 10"
a :oo-Howdy Doody 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame
Sl" 33,
a :JO-Big Valley 6.
9:011-A.M, 3; Phil Donohue 4,15,13; Andy Griffith a;
Mike Douglas 10; MacNeil -Lehrer Report 33,
9:30-&lt;:ross.Wits 3: Edge of Nlghl6; Concenlrall'on 8;
Studio See 33.
10 :011-Sanlortl &amp; Son 3,4.15; Dinah 6; Double Dare
8•10: Mike Douglas 13; Tennis Is tor Everyone 3:1,
10 : ~o-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15: Price Is Right 8, 10;
Mulligan Stew 33.
11 :oo-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15; Morning Show 13;
E lee. Co. 20; Zoom 33,
11 :3o-Shoot for lhe Slars 3.4.15; Happy Day&amp; 6,1 3;
Love of Life a.10; Sesame St . 20,33"
11 : 55-CBS News a; Ms. Flxlt 10.
12:oo-News 3,4,6, 10; Second Chance 1J; Name That
Tune 15; DIVorce Court a',
12:3o-Lovers &amp; Frl/!nds 3,15: Ryan's Hope 6,13; Bob
Braun 4; Search lor Tomorrow 8,1 0; About Safely
33.
12 : 4~Eiec , Co, 33.
1:1)()-{;ong Show J; News a; Young &amp; tl&gt;e Restless 10;
Not lor Women Only 15"
1: 1~Safe &amp; Sound 33.
1:30-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; Rona BarreH 6,13; As
The World Turns 8, 10; Rebop 33.

~

BROW~S F~~

4 UNDEVELOPED acres In Meigs
County. Vinton moll route. Call
742·2867 or see Dick lambert.

CHESTER- H3acre larm, 80 acres tillable land1 nice
2 story farm house, 7 rooms and beth, all harawood
floors and basement. Barna and other outbuildings, 2
pOnds, a nice laying farm priced to go, lo.caled near
Chester, call fOO" appointment.

Pass

short

Phone 992-3339

REMODELING, Plumbing.. heating
6'/1 acres, garden spot, some
and .all types of general repair.
posture, firewood' with woodWork guaranteed 20 yean ex·
burning stove, fuel oil heat,
perience. Phone 992-2409.
outbuilding! 2 bedroom house,•
near hospital and town. SEWING MACHINE Repairs, service. · all makes. 992-2264 . The
$19,500, Phone&lt;m-5941"
Fabric Shop. Pomeroy.
COMMERCIAL BRICK BUILDING in
Authorized Singer Soles and
downtown Pomeroy , Ohio.
Service. We sharpen Seiners.
Presently rented with income
over $5000 per year. Two ren - EXCAVATING, doze:r , loader and
tals downstairs ond one . backhoe work ; dump trucks
and lo-boys for hir~; will haul
upstairs . Hos unfinslh&amp;d apart liU dir't , to soil , limestone and
ment upstairs . Entire upstairs
gro)lel. Call Bob or Roger Jefoon easily be mode into 3
le~s.
day phone 992-7089,
apartments. W·oir condition
night phone 992-3525 or 992·
upstairs. 3 separate water , gas
5232.
ond electric ' meters. Can be
financed IOOpercent to reliable EXCAVATING, dozer, backhoe
party . Contact Paul Simon or
and dl.tcher. Charles R. HotGuido Girolami to secure on
field , Back Hoe Service,
appointment. Priced upon in·
Rutland, Ohio, Phone 742-2008.
spection of property only.

dining room, low

~'TH'~

HARLEY HANING

• ~"' 112-2174

142-253L

~Good 3 b&lt;;,. n_\ ,n

toa"«lW··N'C~

NEW HOMES
&amp; REMODELING

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

2 STORY 4 Bedrm. brick home in
Middleport. Phone 992-3457 .

t.drooms, dining room,

~~'«&lt;U

BUILDERS

filM"'" ....

7, Phone (614)667-6304 . ,
NEW 3 bedroom house, built-in

a .. 1111

:.W.~

CARPENTER &amp;

TE~NESSEE V/&gt;.LLcl{ AUTHORITifS

utilities, even a gardens 3'V""-~ .. atonly$8,500.

12x.60 mobile home. Price

Lois P•uley

· Pane

RACINE

$45,000,

,beautiful view of the river.
20 miles from town, would
make
nice
summer

.......,,.

0 LD F

NOI ¥M~Tf

4-10.1 m)l;

property opprox. 17
acres . level land, located ot
Tuppers Plains on Ohio , Route

kitchen wllh built In appllan~s, basement, cllv "and .
·well .waler, 2 barns, work shop and other bulldlnJlS•
large pond stocked with fish, approximately 23 ocr..
tillable• and 46 acres lanced, Good location. call for
appointment, price $80,000 ,

less , has 3 bedrooms, fully ·
carpeted, modern kitchen,
partial basement,
gas
well , fruit trees , large
garden spot; a Iso 22x34

AN N I E- T H A T

~~~

Co~mer.ciol

NEW LISTING- FREE GAS- Nice modern 1'12 story

28 a Cres rrior"e ·or

0 RPH AN

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

"3102 o• (304)7n3227 .

This house Is worm and ready · for Immediate
occupancy, come lak~ a look lust $18.900.

2 baths, close to nilne area
Price $20,000.
·
No. 201 -

,h, !m·3tU

Service

COUNTRY farmland with secluded woods , water and good access in Monroe County , W. Vo.
$1 ,000 down . call (304) n2-

• refrigerator to match, new porches and all new
aluminum siding and storm windows, forced air
natural gas furnace and drilled well, 91trden space.

Price $24,000. ·

L ITT L E

lAHR~,i!~~DER _

Radiator,.....~

BASHAN- Nice 2 story country home,. conlalnlng 7
rooms and 1'12 baths, mostly carpeted. Kitchen has all
new bulll-lh cabinets wllh bronze stove and

possible ol addlllonal lots ,
No. 199 -

$1015$0ffi!T

Complete
Sales
and
' Service and Supplies.

3102 o• (304)1n3227.

CENTRAL REALTY-· - CO.

an acre with lovely 2 BR
home , carpeted, large
util i ty room and shop ,
large garden site, entrance
to back make property

South
2 N" T "

the value of thought at trick
one " South didn' t bother to do
his thmking. He dropped his
four of hearts under East 's
ace " East continued the suit
South played his 10"
West won with the queen
and cleared the suit
South entered dummy with
the king of spades arid won a
EE L I N'
club finesse " Then he laid
r-::=:r:==::::?~=;;;::~:O" down his ace of clubs since
!
there was no way to get back
• .::~
to dummy for a second

UTILEORPHANANNIE

QITltiiUWIIIKS

Home Repair, El.c. ,,
plumbing and heoting . Phone

1.21 hundreds of

Norlh Easl

Here

~ ·-·

9'12-5732 ,

Well

Pass
Opening lead - 3 •

AWIIIIIUII

MOB4LE

own

1972 VEGA , $800. Also, 1972
949-2307,

No, 197 -

North-SQuth vulnerable

-·!lOIIlS
.,_

Nobll Summit
Rt. 1
Middleport, 0 ,
992-5724

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

sso.ooo.

742-2253 beloro 2 p,m,

+ AKIO

4 A Q J 10

I!~

CHESHIRE
ASHlAND

FOR SALE . All elec. nearly new
home in Rutland oreo . Bose·
menf. 3 bedrooms, oltochecl
garage ,
$29 ,900
Phone

neighborhood, for ONLY
$8,000,00,
.
OUR BEST BUY - In
Pomeroy , a 3 bdrin., 2

• K 10 4

smw

ONLY $15,750.00,
WOULD YOU BELIEVE?
A 1969 12x60 trailer on an
8ax200 Ito, plus an 8x16

,

• A93

FilalidqAIIIolro iiltHWo &amp; Atlia

AT

Harrisonville. 63 acres
land, barn &amp; other bldgs.

building

attached, Out of town In
good location . A good buy

SOl! Til ID I

lnsalatiall Slnites

AND FILTER

kitchen , both ond · V1, Phpne
742-2306 or contact MilO B. Hut chison, Rutlond ,' Ohio .
·

• J 865
• A9
• Q 8 53
, 4 K 82

,p s

S

llllwn

SMALL form for sole , 10,. down ,
owner financed . Monroe Coun ty , W. Va . Ph;,ne {304) 772 -

acres farm, house, barn.

Nice kitchen, too. Only
$29,500,
.
SOMETHING NEW - Nice
newer home On 1 acre.
Fully
carpeted,
All

In Tuppers
corner lot.

FREE Tl

7481.

JUST LISTED - Appx . 2
acres, 2 story frame, 7
room
hous~
with
4
bedrooms, 1y, baths, 2 car
garage. some paneling &amp;.
carpeting, porch &amp; good
concr~le
bldg , ONLY
$10,500,00,
JUST LISTED- Appx , )30.

EAST

By Oswald II. James Jacoby

NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 baths ,
oil elec ., 1 acre, Middleport ,
dose to Rutland . Phone 992-

flood danger, Only 516,500.
SOMETHING NEW · Small homes delight, small

WEST
• Q 10 7
• Q8732
• J96

. _3-27·1 mo:

2-23-1 mo.

HOMESITES fOr sole , I acre and
up . Middleport , neor Rutland .
Coll9ti2-7481 .

MAIN
POMEROY, O.

'

RHdaville, 0 . Ph. 371-4250

EXPERIENCED

Bath,
large
dining,
fireplace In living out of

home with
garage with

"Tht Orlg ln•tors

WllH OIL CHANGE

3 BEDROOM Ranch , 1 1/2 both, 1

• 74 2

• 96. 3

RATES

FREE WBE JOB

VA-Ft-lA. 30 yr. financing . Ireland
Mortgage, 17 E. Slot&amp; , Athens,
phone {614) 592 -3051..

Phone 992-3325

• K 42

REASONABlE

Nat Thelmitatonu

Let's see what some real
thought at trick one would
have been.
The first thought would be
that West sure ly would hold
the queen of hea rts" Hence,
South was only going to get
one heart trick .
The second thought would
be that lour club tricks would
be needed lor game and that it
would be nice "to be able to
lead twice riom dummy just
in case East held exactly
three clubs to the king "
Alter \his thought, South
would drop his king of hearts ,
not the four spot Dummy's
jack would be a s ure entry and
South would have his four club
tricks "

13

• J65

PARTS
• LABOR
--- .
GUARANTEED

992 -2206 0~ 992-7630

Rutland , Ohio o4S77S
PP1 . 11114) 74:Z -24D9
We Dellnr
q .n 4mos .

NORTH

Automatic
Transmission Service

Carpet &amp; Upholstery
Phone Mike Young
At

Located in Langsville
Box 28-A

/lOTH OF U;&gt;! I'IRST SHE
TUII:NS ON THe CHAII:M FOR
M!·· TH~N 'fOU!

2·23-1 mo.

Route 3, Pomeroy, O.

Southeastern Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.

water

Y.~ Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.

ANY PI"JICif
ANY SIZE

One down at trick one

!&gt;0 SME&gt; MAK~ S A PLAY FOR.

SWAIN'S

Young's Carpeting

MOBILE HOME . Ux70.
Dishwasher . elec . stove, 3
piece bedroom suite. Phone

'

C.rpot. Uno.-TI'PhoM Mlk• Yo..,g at
992-2206 or 992-7130

Superior ·
Steam Extraction

1977

Po"'I!OYc (1.

Route 3,

'
'

Ch,.t•r, Ohio
10-17-1 mo(Pd)

Will WASH. Remove tar. and
hand wox co rs . Small, $1 5:
Medium , $18; Lorge . S21.
Pickup avai lable. Coli m ·2081.

SHOWUP.

.

Installation, samples
brought to your home
with no charge.

" f61C) 915-415.5

(Jonnine) P•trel, Rocin•, Ohio .

Pomeroy landmark
so ften &amp; condition your
waler and a Co-op water
so ften er, Madel UC-XVI .

THE Sj;)()TUGHT AT

Free Estimates

KEN-GROVERPHOTOGRAPHY

All work

Game PM 6; 525,000 Pyramid 8; MacNeii· LIIIrll"
Report 33: The Judge 10; Bretk tl&gt;e Bank 13; Wild
Kingdom 15.
/
8:011-Wonderful Kangaroo J,•. 15; Blonle Woman 6, 13;
Gunsmoke 8; Nova 20.33; Good Times 10,
6:30-Loves Me, Loves Me Not 10.
9:oo-&lt;:PO Sharkey i,4,1Si Movie " The Amo1lng
Howard Hughes" a. 10; Dance In America 33;
Soundstage 20 .
9&lt;30-We Think You Should Know J; Slrota"s Court
4.15,
lO :DO-K ingslon : Conlldenllal 3,4, 15;.Charlle's Angelt
6,13: News 20; Scenes lrom a Marriage 33,
10: 3;0-Monloge 20.
11 :DO-News 3,4,6.8.10, 13, 15; MacNeil-Lehrer Report
3J; Monly Python's Flying Circus 20,
11 :30-Johnny Corson 3,4, 15; Rookies 6, 13; Columbo 8;
Mary Hartman 10; ABC News 33,
12:011-Movle " Pironha.Pironha" 10; Jonakl 33,
12 :&lt;o-Myslery of the Week 6, 13.
1 :oo-Tomorrow l ,...
·
2: 1o-News 13 "
THURSDAV,APRIL 14,1977

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13, 1977
6:30-NBC News 3.4.15; ABC News 13; Andy Grlllllh 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Vegetable Soup 20; Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 33.
7:DO-Truth 00" Cons, 3: America : The Young Experience 4; Bowling fQr Dollars 6; " Pop Gois !he
Country a; News 10; To Tell the Truth 13; My Three
Sons 15; Ohloans Ask 20 ; Big Green Magazine 33.
7:30-Dolly 3; $100,000 Nam~ " That Tune 4; Match

TIL.L. HE REACHES

Young's Carpeting

'

Aerial
Commercial
Schools
Weddings

(614)985-&lt;121.
m -742,.-5'--,- - ' - - - - - AREA BEE LINE Stylist. Mrs . Bev

NlED A
WATER SOFTENER 1

'

PHOTOGRAPHY

Television log for easy viewing

[;IIIRt&lt;ER AND DARKER

THE

.

9'12"1&gt;306.

CAMPER, $600 . Also. horse
troHer . $450. Phone {614) 69931'JO "
STEREO. NEW AM-FM stereo
radio combination. $129 .95 ctr
easy terms, C~l ~ · _
FISHER WOOD Burning stoves and
form lumber. PHONE Focemyer
and Salmons lumber Co., Inc .
Rt , 1 , M iddleport, Ohio, {614)

1973 JEEP CJ~ , good condition ,
Plus eKtros. $2900 . Bunker Hill
~ood across from cumBterv .

--

LOST- SMAlL brown dog lost i0
Middleport area , South Second
Ave. and G'rovel Hill. Answers
to "Jimson."· Reward. Phone
992-2661 or 992-2353 .

7-409.

SHADOWS CiET

YOU SEE, AFTER THE
FIRST OFFENSE,
~ CRIMINAL. WALKS
IN THE SMAOOWS.

.....

·-

Business Services

Wili do odd jobs , roofing. painting . gutter work . Phone 992-

(304)773-5721 .

~

Coll9'12-2156"

COAl. limestone , and calcium
chloride and calcium brine for
dust con trol and sp&amp;eiol mixing
sail lm formers . Main Street .
Pomeroy , Ohio or phone 9923891 .

Let

3 TRAILER Axles off house trailer .

CASH paid for all makes and HOOVER UPRIGHT Sweepers ,
1977 Models on so le lor ius! o
models of mobile homes.
frqction of the original cos t.
Pho'ne area code 614-423·ti531 .
Cosh Qr terms only, $32. Coli
TIMBER . Pomeroy Forest Pro·
992-5146"
ducts. Top price for standing
RACINE GUN Club, We hove
sawtimber. Call Kent Hanby , FREIGHT DAMAGED Zig Zag Sew·
changed our gun st-laot to FRI·
ing Machines . Buttonholer , etc.
1-446·8570,
DAY, nights , starting at7 p.m .
only 5 left originally $149 .95.
SHIRLEY "Jeff8rs" Wolfe is now COINS, CURRENCY , tokens, old
Will sell $39.95 cosh or terms.
pocket watches and chains ,
th new owner of lola's Beauty
Phone992-5 1.46.
sliver cind gold . We need 1,9b.4
Salon in Syracuse, Ot-lio·. John
and older silver cains . Buy, sell , USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT.
St. Shirley was formerly
Timberjock 209D Skidder: John
or trade' Coli Roger Warns ley ,
employed at Lindo's Lady Fair,
Oa.re 201()Whee1Looder: Mor·
742-2331.
Racine, Ohio . Any ol my former
bark 636 Deborker . Contoct
patrons wishing appointments , . CASH!!! for . junk cars . Frye's
Dennis . Smllrr . PhonJt {614)
may call m-25.49. Phone now
Truck and Auto. WRECKER SER·
838 - 53~5 "
listed under lola's Beauty Shop
VICE! Phone 7-42-2081 .
until new dire-ctories are issued
FARMAll MODEL 8 in good Condi at which time the nome will be OlD FURNITURE , ice baKes, brass
tion . Has new tires and WoOd 's
beds,
etc. ,
complete
Shirley's Beauty Nook .
bel!y mower , $850. Phone
households. Write M . D. Miller,
142-2228"
MEIGS CO. Fish and Game
Rt . 4, Pomeroy , Ohio or co li
meeting, Fri. , April 15th at the
10 PERCENT OFF . All rubber
9'12-7760:
Coon Hunter's Club Building,
boots. One week only . Sole
Snow Boll Hill at 7:30 p .m. WANT-ED . CHIPWOOD Poles..
ends April 16th. Baileys , Mid·
Max . diameter, fO indies on
Membert only .
dleport.
·
largest end , $8 per ton; bundl SHOOTING MATCH at Rutland
ed slobs, $6 per ton. Delivered MAVTAG DRYER , new elec.
~egion Hall , every Friday evenskillet, never been used . Phone
to Ohio Pollet Company, Rt , 2
ing, 7 p:m.
8~3-2645 "
Pomeroy , Ohio .
Phone
NO FURTHER Shoots by the Racine
9'12-2689"
1974 X8 125 Hondo and 3 wheel
Fire Dept. ot the building until CEMENT MIXER , coli offer 6 p.m.
explorers. Excellent condition.
further notice , The Dept. would
Both for $700. or will sell
8d-22n
like to thank ·anyone who
separate. Phone 992-2595.
helped to make the shoots sucSELMER
SERIES 9. Clarinet. used
cessfuL
1/~ "eors . eKcellent condition .
3
Signed , Rodne Fire Df!.pt .
Coli (304)773 ·5303"
IF YOU hove o service to offer,
wont to buy or sell so mething,
ae looking for&lt;...work . . . or
whotev.'er . , . you 'll get results
taster with o Sentinel Wont Ad .

1971,

-

- .

KJ

J

Prlntanawerhere:
,

·

Yuslerday s
'

THE

SO.., IS

"REFOR"MED"-AND
HA~

HI6HMORAL

PRINCIPLE&amp;•
Now arrange the circled lefters to
fOfTT1 the surprise answer, u aug.

gesle&lt;l by lhe above cartoon,

"(X XI XD""

I

(Answers t&lt;&gt;momJw)
Jumbles: THYME SCOUR IMPUGN BETAK~
Answer: The soldie&lt; got rep!lmatided purely out
ollhls-STEP
"

..
UH ·· LET'S SEE· ·
A MAIL· ORDER
CORSET?

HOW IN

THUNDER
1/E
GUESS?

DID

'·

�•

•
H - The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Apnl13, 1977

Mechanic's night
(

Every effort will be Jllade
to insure there are no bicycle
breakdowns during the April
3oth llike-Bike for tl1e benefit
of tile local mental healtll
retardation program.
To that end organizations
sponsoring the even t have

arranged a " mechanics
night" for bicycles April29 at
7 behind the Senior Citizens
Ce nter
in
Pomeroy.
Hopefully, participants in the
April 3oth Hike-Bike will
nttcnd the mechanic-s night to
inspect the safety' and
working conditions of their
bikes.
Guy Hysell and Boy ~cout
Troop 249 Pomeroy wiil be in
charge .with knowledgeable
bicycle repairmen on hand to
perform the inspection and
make minor repairs. Riders

may leave their bicycles over
night and have them ready
for the Hike-Bike. A building

Ohioans paying
more income tax
State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson said today that his
offtce has already eclipsed
dollar totals of the past two
years in Personal Income
Tax refunds to Ohioans by
nearly $6,000,000, with just
two days remaining before
filing deadline.
Already
this
year,
Ferguson said , .40,514,533.51
has been funded to 1,554,454
early filing Ohioans. On April
15, 1976, he sa id, $34,629,504.94
had been retu rned to
1,457,795.

pl~ned

has been provided to lock up
the bikes over night . This will
keep riders from having to
bring their bikes to tfie center
on both days, and hopefully
will elimina te conf usion
during registration .
Riders are reminded they
must have a sponsor sheet

which ca n be obtained at the
Community Mental Health
Center in Pomeroy, Cleland
Realty, East Main Street,
Pomeroy, or the high schools.
After obtaining the sponsor
sheets riders then must ot&gt;tain a sponsor.
Pledges can be either a per
mile pledge or a flat amount .
Riders will have two weeks

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Friday through Sunday,
fair Friday, a chance of
after !he ride to tum in the ohowero Saturday and
money to qualify for the clearing Sunday. Highs will
prizes. Four weeks is the total be In the 60s north and the
70s soutb Friday and In the
time to tum in the money.
Sponsors are reminded that mld 70s or the low 80s
thei r donations are tax Saturday and Sunday.
deductible, but they should Lows will be In the 40s
not give their money unless · Friday and the 50s
they are sure the rider has a Saturday and Sunday.
sponsor sheet. For more
information call 992-3232, 742- :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:=::;.;:;.
3089 or 985·4112.

Weather

NOW YOU KNOW
The spoon as we know it
today,· with its spatulate
handle, dates from only the
18th century .

Cloudy tonight, lows to the
mid 50s. Cloudy, not quite as
warm Thursday, highs to
upper 70s. Prob~bility of rain
near zero per cent today, 10
per cent tonight, 20 per cent
Thursday.

Court assesses
8 defendants
Five defendants forfeited
bonds and three others were
fined in the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews
Tuesday night.
Forfeiting bonds were
· Thomas Dorst, Pomeroy, $35
posted on speeding charges;
Calvin Engle, Jr., Letart, W.
Va ., $50, squealing tires ;
Jerry Keith Petrie, Middleport, $30, speeding; Sarah
Ingels, Middleport , $30,
speeding . Fined were Alan
U&gt;wery. Pomeroy, $30 and
costs, speeding; John Ash,
Pomeroy, $30 and costs, left
of center ; Mary Harris,
Mason,. W. Va., $50 and costs,
intoxication .

A

subs f&lt;~nfi&lt;tl

p e nalt'l'

is

i n voked o n all ce r1 ilicat e
accou nts wl thdrtiJ wn p r ior

t o the

~Cl t e

ot m a turit y ..

Meigs Co. Branch

'- @.
Th e A then s County

Sav ing s &amp; Loan Co .
296 Scco ncf St.
Pom e roy , O h'io

Southwest," said Frazer. "In heating season with a surplus
By J . R. KIMMINS
COLUMBUS (UP!) , - An 'l'exas and Oklahoma, it's of 1.4 billion cubic feet of
natural · gas, and the
officer of the Dayton Power &amp; closer to $2."
Frazer said Columbia pre- committee is trying to
Light Co. told a legislative
panel today tllat geological dicts that by 1986, gas determine the reason.
Members
also
are
formations in western Ohio supplies will return to their
have kept the utility from 1972 levels but this still will interested in why DP&amp;L
developing and storing its not furnish enough for new failed to anticipate the gas
shortages that other utilities
own supplies of natural gas.· industries .
He said he favors Gov. in other states were able to
Moreover, testified Dwight
L. Garber, DP&amp;L vice James A. Rhodes' proposal to overcome last winter .
The surplus occurred when
president for services, the use the stale's credit to help
. Columbia 111ade available
company spent $270,000 finance ene rgy facilities.
DP&amp;L ended the winter about 1. 2 billion cubic feet to
drilling two wells in eastern
tlle D&amp;vton-area ltfilit y on
Logan County · in 1973 and
came up dry.
"There are no gas reserves
to be developed anywhere ·
within our service area," said
Garber, and there is a lack of
any storage areas in western
Ohio."
Garber testified before the
Senate Energy and Public
·
•
•
Utilities Committee, whict
subpoenaed · four DP&amp;l
_1:'
executives to find out why thE ~---,~~....,....,....,....,...,......
company's supply was the •~
lowest in Ohio during
January and February.
" Due to the geological
formations in our service
area, the company is unable
to develop any wells or
disposal.
"The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists,
storage within our area,"
One of the obstacles that frustrated the
which
since
1945
has
kept
time
on
the
arms
said Garber.
Carter administration's first attempt to
race,
has
just
moved
its
famous
clock
Garber said the . utility is
reach an accord with the Soviets was the
·
now able to purchase gas ominously closer to midnight
cruise missile, a new element that has ap"The
familiar
reasoning
is
that
the
from eastern Ohio at~ higher ·
peared on the chessboard since 1974. We
failure or American.and Soviet negotiators
price Ulan normal.
have it and they don't- yet. And until they
to
reach
agreement
on
limiting
at
Geneva
"The days of cheap energy
do have it, they are not going to accept any
are Over," agreed DP&amp;L strategic arms means that the race co n~
agreement which permits us an advantage .
tinues.
The
superj:&gt;owers
are
stili
engaged
president Robert ·Frazer, who
ill the deployment of this missile.
.
in a deadly contest, each provoking the
also testified at the meeting .
although
there
For
that
reason
alone,
other into piling up arms endlessly,
"We have been driving the
·were others, Secretary . of State Cyrus
Cadillac of energy and payiag wasting scarce resources, increasing the
Vance's recent mission to Moscow Was
indiscriminate destructiveness of
Chevrolet prices·.''
doomed
before it started.
Frazer said DP&amp;L' s weapons, and moving the world closer to
Four
years
from now, or two, or one,
supplier, the Columbia Gas nuclear holocaust.''
what
sophisticated
new weapons will have
The. above was not written· yesterday,
System, must' drill new wells
·entered
into
and
complicated
the picture?
although if Geneva were changed to
Ill keep up with the natural
Yet as Wohlstetter argued in 1974, rather
gas demand , and that the Moscow, it could have been. Itwas written
than locking us into an ever-tighter arms
nearly
four
years
ago
by
University
of
incentive is now there with a
spiral leading to a holocaust, the constant
price of $1.44 per thousand Chicago professor and government
improvement in the ·accuracy and verdefense
consultant
Albert
Wohlstetter,
in
cubic feet.
satility of nuclear weapons increases the
an article in the journal Foreign Policy.
"But tllat's nowhere near
range of choice of both sides to include
Since then the famous clock has conwhat they're getting in the
more discrimirate, less brutal, less
tinued to hover between 11 o'clock and
suicidal responses to attack - responses
midnigpt. The names of .the negotiators
that are more believable. And only a
11re different; the mathematics of the
believable response will deter a potential
"mutually assured destruction" they must
aggressor.
deal with remains essentially the same.
That is one way of looking at it, and the
Again in 1974, the independent Center for
avoidance
of nuclear war for three
Defense Infonnation estimated that we
decades
offers
at leas! negative proof that
had in our arsenal 2,404 "World War )Is"
the
continual
refinement of nuclear
(the equivalent destructive power of all
weaponry
need
not
inevitably increase the
the bombs dropped on Germany and Japan
likelihood of that kind of war.
·
in that war) and 363,769 "Hiroshimas"
Still, at inunense cost, each side con(the equivalent force of the atomic bomb
tinues to seek an advantage over the otber,
that leveled that city). The RI!SSians had
or to counter a supposed advantage
4,671 " World War lis" and 718,539
achieved by the other- As a result of the
"Hiroshimas."
failure in Moscow and the dim outlook for
Whatever the figures are today, they are
success in the next round of talks in
as incomprehensible as they were back
Gen~va in May, and because of recent
then.
·
'Soviet surges in conventional war-making
But if tbe strategic anns limitation
capability, the United States faces the pronegotiators wander in the same sur.
spec!
of another leap in defense spending.
realistic never-neverland in terms of the
The
only comfort is that the cost of mainquantity of destructive power possessed by
_
taining
the arms race, great as it is, is ineacl) side, one thing about the arms race
finitely
less than the cost of ending it
that has changed, and continues to change,
abruptlyin war.
is the quality of the weapons at their

·Editorial comment,
0 n zn lO_n," fi_
ea t ures

And V!e have a complete
line of dependable

Cobras . .. for immediate
mstallation in anyt hing
from a compact car to
an

NO MONEY
DUNKffiK, Ohio (UPI) The state Environmental
Protection Agency has
warned this Hardin County
community of 1,000 that its
refusal to build a $2 million
waste water trealment plant
had been turned over to the
Ohio Attorney General's
office.
The village says it does not
have enough money Ill meet
the
requirements
for
obtaining federal matching
funds to construct the plant.
Alan Franks, a media
spokesman for the Ohio EPA;
said the EPA would abide by
whatever legal action tbe
attqrney general's office
decides to pursue. •

18- wh~eler .

COBRA 19 M MOBILE
WITH METER
Super- compact. Weighs

only 2-l /4lbs. All23-

channels. Maximum legal
pow er .

~9.95

THE INN PLACE
Thursday Night Special

COBRA

COBRA 29 MOBILE
"The trucker's 2-way." All
23-c hannels. Dynamike and
adjustable squelc h. Maximum legal

•
Value
• Dynam ike Gain
Control
• Switch able ANL
• Adjustable &amp;juelch
power·.
• Lighted Cttannei
Selector and Meter
Com ~ in and shop our
• PA Output
complete line of Cobra CB • External Speaker
.2- Way radios.
Jack

$159.95

~
~

b

_.r.

ra •

71, •

Pu nches through
loud .!r. d dvc~r

~9.95

LEVY PASSES
MT. GILEAD, Ohio (UP!)
- A 6.5 miD tax levy for the
Mt, Gilead Village School
District was approved
Tuesday by a 79-vote margin.
The final vote was 693 for and
614 against. The levy Is expecled to generate a_bout
$270,000 a year for the
system.

REHEARsAL SET
Rehearsal for the Spring
Fling of the Big Bend Minstrel Association will be held
7 p.m. Thursday at the
vocal music rOOJil of Meigs
High Sehool as. originally
scheduled.

at

SENIOR DAY
COLUMBUS (UP[)
Parades, · spelling bees and
nursing home visits are being
planned in celebration of
Ohio'S first Senior Citizens
Day May 17.
Members of a statewide
planning commi~ met here
IJ!is week to discuss the plans
for honoring the state's 1.S
million elderly residents.

resld~ce .

She was preceded In death driver, he was born July l2,

by her parents. two sisters. 1898 at Deyton to the late •

and one brother . She was a

Frederick

having
worked
In
Wash ington, 0 . C.
She Is survived by one
sister, leila Hefferman,
Vtlcla, Pa., and several

Plus Tax

THE MEIGS INN
Pomeroy,

VACATION
.

o.

WATCH FOR

OPENING DATf

•----~

Margaret

nieces

and

nephews . ·

.

He Is survived by his wife,
Hazel Elliott Trelea-.n ;
olsler. Edltb Treleaven,
Gallipolis ; brother, Arthur,
Los Angeles. Calif.

Funeral services will be 2

Property Tues and
Community Services Is the
topic of a public meeting
April 21 amounced by John
. Rice of the Meigs County
Cooperative Extension
Service.
Property taxes produce the
major revenues needed to
operate schools and local
government bodies. Meigs
_Cowrty collected $1,492,265.58

Gra\ltslde services will be p.m . Friday at the Waughheld Friday at J p.m. at Halley-Wood Funeral Home
Browning Cemetery In Port- with the Rev. Tim Heaton
land. The Rev . Freeland olflclatlng . Burial will be In

Norr is will officiate. Friends Mound

may call at the Ewing
Funeral Home after 7 p.m.
Thursday ,

Hill

cemetery .

Friends may call at the
ful"'eral home from 7 to 9 p.m. ~
Thursday .

Teachers

Sheriff
shot In the chest. What
precipitated the shot, If
known to police, has not bee
dlwlged.
Entrance was gained by
two persons, a man and a
woman, Into the house by
pretending to want to make a
telephone call to get help
after having "run out of gas."
Mrs. Musser was certain a .
third person joined the group
to ransack the house. Approximately $400 in cash was
stolen as were valuable
antique guns and possibly
other objects In the home. .

•

r-

SHORT SLEEVE KNIT ',SHI-RT
..

Style25011 - Interlock knit
golf and tennis shirt .with
exclusl\t'e Dynaflex action

free construction -

Solid

colors and white . ,\\en's
sizes small.' medium, large
and extra large. SO per cent
polyester, 50 per cent
cot1on .

r
\

\

"

\\

\~

/

I

i

'

&gt;\ -

J

(
o'y na.flex
is
an
engineered
underarm
panel that guarantees
ease of motion and
comfort.

I

/

I

.·I

..

year: il was damaged by a storm.
..
Williams said he was "keeping a close
watch on it," explaining the tree has become
"weak". and susceptible "to just about
anything, including Dutch elm disease."
As he stood on tbe South Lawn, his eyes
scanned the grounds, stopping at tbe two
Japanese maples planted by Mrs. Grover
Cleveland.
One showed off the pink coloring that
comes in spring. The other was barren.
"That one is just about dead ," he conceded.
They don't know for sure if tbe winter
weather alone was responsible for the
empty branches, Williams said. "We can't
be sure what happened." The two trees
stand in the open on opposite sides of tbe
water fountain in tbe middle of tbe South
Lawn.
There are 18 trees that officially have a
historical significance. There are others,
however, with a sentimental value.
They were not spared.
The Jacqueline Kennedy Garden, along
(Continued on page 12)

I
TICKETS ON SALE - Advance tickets for the "Spring Fling" of the Big Bend Minstrel
Associaiion, to be staged at 8:10p.m. on Saturday, Apr1123, at the Meigs High School under
the sponsorship of the Meigs Local Athletic Boosters, went on sale Wednesday . Distributing
IJ!e tickets at Swisher-Lohse Drug Store in Pomeroy to Mary Andrews Wayland, an
employe, is Jim Soulsby~ president of the )joosters . Advance tickets are $1.25 with
admission at the door to be $1.50. There are no specially priced children 's tickets. Besides
Swisher-Lohse the tickets may be purchased at tile New York Clothing House, Pomeroy;
Village Pharmacy and Dutton Drugs in Middleport, and the Rutland Department Store.
Advance tickets will be removed from the locations at noon on the day of the musical .

en tine

TANGIBLE
PERSONAL

,,,

VOL XXVII NO. 255

PUBLIC
UTILITY

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

THURSDAY, APRIL 14, 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

&gt;lO%

!real Property taxes were personal property of public
levied on land and permanent utilities.
buildings (real estate);
After collection, the
Tangible Personal Property property
taxes
were
taxes
on
machinery, distributed to schools,
equipment, and Inventories municipalities (cities and
used In business; and Public villages), townships, and the
Utility Property Taxes on county ·as follows :
real estate and tangible

COUNTY
18"

! ... -· ~

.....

SCHOOLS
74Y.

''

The.meeting will be held at
IJ!e Salisbury School on 'the
21st at 7:30 p.m.to give Meigs
County residents an opportunlty to learn about their
local govel'IU1lent. Speakers
will include Frank; George

·=··

GoldenVee

WASHINGTON (UPII - It's been a
"trying spring" for White House gardeners.
John ~lncy Adams' elm tree is in bed
shape and a maple planted by Grover
Cleveland's wife is "just about dead." ,.
The best efforts to mlnlmize the effecls of
the rugged winter of 'TI have not been
enough to spare a good nwnber of trees and
shrubs dotting the mansion's 19-acre
grounds.
" It has been a trying spring for us," said
Irwin Williams, the chief horticulturist wbo
first came to tbe White House in 1949.
He listed holly, rhododendron, ivy and
"many, many other shrubs" that were
either killed by tbe cold or were not
expected to survive.
"We've not had a real problem with
winter damage in years," Williams said.
He pointed toward a large elm planted on
a knoll in 1826 by Adams. "We're worried
about that tree," he said.
The trouble began last summer, when its
limbs were hit by lightning. Later in tbe

ree~ntlal
20%

Collins, County Treasurer,
and John Stitzlein, Area
Extension Agent. They will
be joined on a "question and
answer" panel by other
county, city, and school of,
ficials.

r;v;;;;;;:::::::::::::,,,,,,,,:,:i;:,:,:,n;i;!;~~t

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

(

In property taxes In 1976
according to Howard Frank,
County Auditor. These taxes
were based on assessed
property'
values
of
$103,381,9i6.
The chart below shows
what percentages of the
collection came from Real
Property taxes, Tangible
Personal Property taxes, and
Public Utility Property taxes.

...

j

School
u el'intendent
James Jacobs warned
parents that instruction In :
many schools was likely to be .
· "extremely limited" because
of the strike.
·•
"Parents are advised to use
judgment in deciding
DOGLAWNOTED
whether to send their '
RACINE - Dogs in Racine
children to school,'! he said in
Village must be tied or
a
special message to parents.
contained to the owners'
"You may wish to contact the '
property at all times. Owners
principal to detennlne the
of dogs with or without tags
degree
of teacher absence
will be fined if their animals ·
and
other
circumstances ·
are in violation, Mae Cleland,
related to the operation of the
clerk, said.
school."
Although Jacobs said it was
the "intention" of the school .
$12,500 RECEIVED
board to "keep schools open
. State Auditor Thomas E.
and provide the best serviC!!s
Fer~uson reported the April
distribution of $6,3$6,0S2.21 in possible," he added that
local government money to should the school board "be
forced to close schools, one
Ohio's 88 counties and 388
, cities and villages levying day will be added to the close
or schools in June for each
local income taxes. Meigs
day schools are closed (by the
County's share was $12,500.
strike)."
The strike left the school
BOARD TO MEET
·board
wiih several options,
RACINE - The Southern ·
including doing nothing,
Local School District Board
seeking a court injunction or
of Education will meet on
Monday evening., April 18, for invoking the Ferguson Act,
Ohiol(i controversial and
the purpose . of hiring
sometunes
disregarded law
teachers. The board met
forbidding public employes to
Monday night to discuss
strike.
aspects of a (ega! ·suit.
"There are those (school ·
%6RUNS MADE
board members) who would
RACINE _ The Racine · like to see us go very rapidly
E)mergency Squad made %6 · (invoking the Ferguilon Act)
runs during March traveling on the theory that IJ!e strike is '
11SJ.4 miles and putting In illegal,'' said School BOBrd :
1321'• hours. Townships President Henry Kasson. "No .
traveled were Lebanon, board member is anxious to ~
sutton, Leta_rt, Chester and take that kind of action, but
Olive In addition to calls all recognize It may come to
that."·
answered In Racine Village.

~~

By LAURENCE McQUU.LAN

.."'

in a special June 14 election .
Stephens complained the •
school board didn't even show
up for a scheduled final.lJour
bergalnlng session before the ·
strike deadline imposed by •
the CFT.
''They ·dc.J't think we can
have an effective strike,"
said Stephens, who vowed to
close as ~l,llii11Y schools as
possible. "1e~ are testing ·

us. "

John Quincy Adams' elm

pROPERTy

(Continued from page I)

(Continued from page 1)

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR

and

retired government employe, Adrian Treleaven.

·.

Visit Our Salad Bar
Fish
French Fries
Coffee, Tea or Milk

Real -story of
local taxes to
be explairi.ed

CARL TRELEAVEN

11 ,

.

Breaker!Breaker! ·

for safety,
convenience or just plain
fun, you need a 2- way
radio if you drive today.

NETTIE SMITH

Eastern Ohio rock formations
hinders natural gas storage

Ever.:changing arms race

yea.r certi f ica te of
deposit.
$1,000.00
minimum
depos it. interes t paid
quarterly .
·

Racine man!
Area Deaths !
'
. J"ured m· '
m
SYRACUSE
Noll ie
Carl A. Treloaven,
(Taggart!
Smith ,
Detroll, Mien., died Tuesday
•on
Syracuse, died Tuesday at morning at hi&amp;
Collisl
the Arcadia Nursing Home. A retired Detroit cab :

One person was injured In a
collision at4 :15 p.m. Tuesday
on SR 7 at CR S (Bradbury) In
Meigs Cowrty.
The Gallla-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said an
auto driven by Dwight Haley,
S9, Middleport, pulled Into the
path of a car operated by
Richard C. Young, 39,
Racine. John R. Fisher, 44,
Racine, a passenger in the
Young car, suffered minor
injuries. Haley was cited to
Meigs County Court for
failure to yield right of way.
There
was
moderate
damage .
Gary McKeever, 34,
Ronceverte, W. Va. driving a
tractor-trailer rig was cited
to GaUipolls Municipal Court
for failure to stop within the
assured clear distance
following an accident at 6:SO
p.m. Tuesday on Rt. 35.
March I and March 10.
The patrol said McKeever's
" At the same time /' ex·
vepicle struck the rear end of
plained
one·
DP&amp;L a car operated by Deward E.
spokesman, "the weather Clagg, 60, Vinton. '!')Jere was
turned warm so the gas was nninor damage.
·
put into storage to augment
the summer allocation."
Also testifying at tbe
hearing
were
Robert
McCormick, vice president in
FIREMEN CALLED
charge of rates and
The
Middleport Fire
regulatory affairs and Louis.
Department
was called to
Cobb, manager of rates and
near Route S54, the Old Kyger
regulatory affairs.
Church area near Cheshire,
to extinguish a brush fire at
9:54 a.m. Tuesday, At 2:45
'
p.m. the squad was called to
College St., Rutland, for Eva
Kauff who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.

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7 Pet . per year on.a 4

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·:·~

By United Press luternadonal
TAlLAHASSEE, FLA. - THE EQUAL RIGHTS
Amendment looked like an easy wimer when it was unleashed
five years ago, but it now is gasping toward a photo finish with
even the White House pressure unable Ill improve its odds.
Florida's'rejection of the embattled 27th amendment in a
21-19 vote Wednesday made it unlikely the three states still
needed for ratification will be (OUnded up until at least 1979.
The seven. years the Constitution provides for ratifying ,
amendments ruM out March 22, 1979 and some legislatures
that have not yet ratified ERA will not even be convened by
that date. ERA has now been approved by 35 states but has
won only one - Indiana - this year, despite personal phone
· calls and letters to legislators from President Carter and his
wife, Rosalyn.
CX&gt;LUMBUS- STATE AUDITOR THOMAS FERGUSON
said today his office had refunded over $40.5 million . in
personal income tax refunds to 1,554,454 Ohioans with one day
remaining before the filing deadline or April 15.
Ferguson said the total compared with the $34.6 million
refunded to 1,457,795 Ohioans through April IS last year.
Ferguson said the average amount of the refund cbeck had
also ·increased. He said refund checks IJ!is year averaged
$26.06compared with $23.75 atthis _lime last year.
WASHINGTON - THE IDEA OF MAKING saccharin
legal in a limited manner for overweight and diabetic persons
appears unlikely to quiet the storm of conswner protest
building since tbe ben was proposed more than a month ago.
Even as the Food and Drug Administration· was prepare~ tO
reveal the details of its ban today, opponents of the action lined
up to air their protests.
A spoke$Woman represent4Jg the American Society of
Bar Iatric Physicians; the American Diabetes Association; the
Juvenile Diabetes Association ; and the Washington
Metropolitan Diet Workshop said It was likely nothing short of
coniplete legalization of saccharin would be satisfactory. The
FDA was expected to go ahead will! its ban, but to allow the
continued sale of loose saccharin for use as a table top
sweetener or in home cooking. The major use, .in diet soft
drinks, would be outlawed as would other food uses.

ax .re ate c

e

own

Improving economy «XJuld
be dangeroWJly inflated by
$50 refund, Carter decides
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - President Carter will drop his
proposal for a $50-per-person tax rebate because he fears it
might . be . inflationarY.. in an , improving economy,
admuustrallon sources sa1d. Carter, convinced the economy is
o~ the rebound, arranged to· announce his plans for
· WJthdrawmg the rebate proposal late today_
The President decided to drop the rebate Wednesday after
"everybody agreed that the second quarter economic outlook"
would be as healthy as the first quarter, sources said. Tho"'ih
the House approved the rebate proposal, there was strong
opposition to it in the Senate, especially among some members
angry that Carter plans to eliminate water projects in their
states.
Aides said they think they
could have won Senate decided to withdraw the
passage of the rebate; but It rebate proposal after a trio of
would have been a "tough" t.op economic advisers
convinced him the economy
fight.
There also liad been was improving, sources sB.id.
Carter was convinced the
suggestions Carter might
rebate
"could be inhave to back down on some or
flationary,"
the sources said.
·his proposals to eliminate
Treasury Secretary
water projects in return for
votes on the rebate, though Michael Blumenthal, Budget
the President said he was not Director Bert Lance and
inclined to b8rgain in that Charles Schultze, chainnan
of the Council of Economic
maMer.
.
In pushing for the rebate, Advisers, argued · for withCarter had cited a U. S. drawal of the plan, sour~es
·
treasury windfall of $11 said.
Carter repeatedly had said
billion in revenues and a
shortfall in spending. Aides he would stick With the rebate
said he is expected to an- proposal and a majority of his
nounce what use will be made economic advisers including
of the $11 billion, perhaps Vice President Walter
reserving the funds to cut into Mondale -endorsed continued
support for it.
the deficit.
The rebate proposal was
.The rebate plan was a key
ingredient of the President's outlined by Carter before his
original economic recovery inauguration as part of a
package, but he became multibiUion dollar economic
convinced It was un- stimulus package that
blended
job
creating
necessary.
, Carter Wednesday night programs and tax breaks.

Saccharin now
by prescription
By MICHAEL J . CONLON

WASHINGTON (UPi) The Food and Drug
Administration said today it
will ban saccharin In foods,
drugs and cosme\ics- 90 per
cent of all current uses -but
will allow .it to be sold as a
nonprescription drug for
home use . .
"With i,OOO Americans a
day already dying from
cancer, with another 1,600
new cases being detected
daily, and with the knowledge
that we don't know what
causes most of these cancers,
then I think that we as a
nation cannot ignore the kind
of evidence that we now have
against saCcharin," said
FDA Commisloner Donald

Kennedy .
He said sacchrin sold as an
over-the-counter drug will
have to .be labeled :
"For use as a non-ealoric
sweetener when sugar
restricted diets are medically
indicated as in patients with
diabetes/' and : 11 Warriing:
saccharin causes bladder
cancers in animals. Use .of
saccharin may increase your
risk of cancer."
Sacc!larin will be balined
not only in food, primarily
diet soft drinks, but alSo in
lipsticks,
toothpastes,
mouthwashes and other
cosmetics likely to be
ingested.
Kennedy accompanied the
(Continued on page 12)

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Oe8n-Up week announced

The Middleport Mayor's office today announced that
NEW YORK- LONGSHOREMEN TODAY struck seven
Spring
Clean-up Week will be conducted In the village the
major shipping lines which ilervlce Atlantic and Gulf Coast
week
of
AprU 111-22.
ports in a dispute over the loss of job guarantees in tbe
Residents
are asked to clean up their yards and lots
handling of containerized cargo. "Thirty-thousand men will be
and
place
the
rubbish
at the curb. It will be picked up by
going out," Larry Malloy, a spokesman for the International
the
street
department
at no charge.
. Longshoremen's Association said today. "Those seven lines
The
pickup
schedule
Is Monday, first ward; Tuesday,
will be struck in any port from Maine to Texas."
second
ward
;
Wednesday,
third ward, and Thursday,
The.first indication of IJ!e strike came at 12:01 a.m. in the
U
one
is
mlssed
on his scheduled day, notify
lourth
ward.
Port of New York. A security guard at the Howland Hook
the
maintenance
office
or
Mayor's
office and the trash
Marine Terminal in Staten Island said longshoremen stopped
will be picked up later.
W«Jk at midnight on IJ!e United States l.Jnes' ship,_Am~ican
.
:
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Astronaut.

j

·•

ATTENTION CATCHERS--, Court St. in Pomeroy
.wasn't Scioto Downs but it did resemble somewhat the
way the street may have looked 100 years ago before the
age of' the automobile. The sleek animals were there as
necessary stage props in a show being taped for TV

Brainard
sentenced

-.

presentation (ch. 3) telling ali about the Meigs County
Mounted Posse being formed . The mounted officer is
sheriff's deputy Jim Miller and the officer on foot is
deputy Randy_Carpenter. The white shirted men are
directing the performance.

119.3 acres ·was~ed by fire

Thirteen forest and grass Olive Township, .I acres; eight percent each being
March 10, Bedford, .8 acres; caused by machine use, in!i_r~s in Meigs County during
Marc)\ wasted 119.3 acres or Olive, .3 'acresi Olive, .2 cendiary' railroads, smoking.
Burning permits are
Afive to 18 year sentence in which 79 acres were acres; March 15, Lebanon, 30
required
acres;
Letart,
5
acres;
for the remainder of
the state penitentiary was woodland according to
Salisbury,
.I
acres;
March
16;
the
spring
fire season and
handed out to one of two Donald R. Baun, ranger of
Olive,
.2
acres;
Orange,
2
may
be
obtained
from local
persons for his part in the · the Shade River State Forest.
forest
fire
wa(dens.
·
aCres;
Salem,
65
acres;
Dec. 1, 1976 knife slaying of a
The fires were checked
March
25,
Rutland,
.1
acres.
the
warm
sumy
"With
58. yea r - o 1d
M a s 0 n through the cooperation of
The major cause of forest days many people will begin
businesswoman.
local volunteer fire departfires
was debris and · trash spring cleanup. Please be
Terry Lee Brainard, 16, ments and the Ohio Division
barrel
burning . This caused sure all fires you start do not
Mason, was sentenced by of Forestry.
68
percent
of the fires with escape," Baun warned.
Mason County Circuit Court
The dates, locations and
Judge James Holliday acreage destroyed in the fires
shortly after 9:30a.m. today. were: March 8, Salisbury
After an indictment was Township, 15 acres; March 9,
handed
down
against
Brainard by .the January
term of the Mason County
grand jury, he entered a plea
of guilty to second degree
murder. Brainard was
arrested hours after the body
The Meigs · Soil and Water Conservation District today
At least 50 forest ' fires
of Mary Berry was found in
announced
its an nual conservation poster contest for ali fourth .
burned out about 400 acres of '
· her bedroom.
grade students in the county.
Arrested also was John woodland in southern Ohio
Under the usual rules one poster may be entered by eacli
Lewis Young, 32, Mason. during the first part or the participant. It must say or portray something about
Young was indicted fo'r first week, the Department of conservation and must be submitted this year by April22, 1977.
degree murder and currently Natural Resources told UP!
Judging will be done by District supervisors Rex Shenefield,
today.
·
awaits trial.
·
Thereon
Johnson , David Gloeckner, Roy. Miller and Joe
"We had at least 17 fires
Bailey,
and
District personnel Boyd Ruth, district
yesterday that burned a
conservationist,
and Reid Yollng, technician.
couple of hundred acres,"
E~TENDEO OUTLOOK
and third place winner will be selected from
A
first
,
second
Saturday through said Robert Pedett, as.sistant each elementary school. These winners will receive silver
chief of the Department's
Monday, a chance of
dollars and ribbons . County competition will include ail blue
showers Saturday . and Forestry Division. "We had ribbon winners and a champion and to-ehampion will he
Suoday and fair Monday. that many or more the day awarded trophies. Winning posters will be displayed at the
before and fair activity on
Highs mostly will be In the
Meigs County Fair.
'
70s during the weekend and· Monday. " The fires were
In preparation for the contest, a conservation film was
In the upper IIGs or low 70s mail)ly in Scioto, Adams and shown in the elementary schoois and conservation booklets
Mooday. Lows wiU be In Lawrence counties and we were distributed to all fourth graders. ,
the mid 40s.or the low 50s. have also had some in
Hocking, Vinton, Athens and
A "Big Tree Contest" is also in progress until April 29. All
Washington counties," he
trees
located in Meigs County are eligible for entry,
said.
Information needed for entry are, name, address, and
telephone number of owner ; tree species and exact location;
Cloudy today, tonight and
of the tree measured at 41'. feet above base in
circumference
Friday . Highs today and
feet
and
inches
; height and crown spread of the tree in feet.
Friday in the mid 70s, lows
A
point
system
Of the American Forestry Association will be
tonight in the low · 50s .
used.
A
representative
of the Soil Conservation Service or
Probability of rain 2() per cent
FOR ABANDOMENT
Division of Forestry will measure and detennine the winner ,
today, tonight and Friday.
Hugh Leifheit Wednesday Send entries to Meigs SWCD, 221 W. Second St., PO Box 432,
asked the boarH or county Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .
commissioners
to consider
Now you Know
affinnatively
.
a
; '"l{\e ::~1 to
John F. Kennedy was the
A o&lt;Kill corn planting demonstration is planned April 30 at
abandon
TR
205
,;,
Sa11suu&gt;,
youngest man as well as the
tile Dale Kautz farm on Route 7 near Chester beginning about
10 a.m.
first Roman Catholic elected .Twp. He did not, and does not '
to the presidency and was the oppose abandonment of TR
first American president 20S as was reported WedPlace and lllh• or a pond clinic to be held May 5 will be
nesday. IJ
born in the 20th century,
announced latell;io
.r
:.·

Schools begin
Fire hits 400
woodland acres poster. contest

Weather

.

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