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·

SUnday Times-Sentinel, SUnday, Aprill7, 1977

i~m~~:;&gt;;:-,~&lt;*,'i:'X.Y,~&lt;·:-&lt;&lt;:v.·&gt;:&lt;·~:·:&lt;:~&lt;::::::;:;:;.:-:&lt;·::::;:;;:;:;:;::&lt;·"'&gt;:·&gt;:·:·:·~:-:-~~:::
Beat...
.
,j'..
~
:~;
I
~~~~

,1
,
0£ th

i*

e Ben

,

~any

with two legs

'
'

I

,.:;..

By Bub lloellich

wallace better than

,

1

~· •

l ;:;:

:~:~
"

His evaluation was In·
correct.
A deputy !!herUf applied a
tourniquet and Walla ce
survived.
By the end of April be wu
back on duty in Gallipoli.5,
working as a dispatcher.
The dispatcher stint,. which
lasted until late July, taught
him a great deal about the
paperwork coMected with
administration of the patrol
and the reactions ·of the
public.
"It was really worthwhile. I
learned a lot of things you
don't know about when you're
in a cruiser on the highway,"
Wallac~. said.
Last July, outfitted with a
15·pound artificial leg,
Wallace was transferred to
the academy. There he · understudied U. C. W. Robison,
the patrol's rauge master and

POMEROY - Sometimes,
it isn '!the problems of life but
how one faces them that
counts.
Facing up to his problem
well is Bruce WaUace, son of
Mr . and Mrs. Dwight
Wallace, Middleport, Bruce,
who wa·s severely injured in
an explosion . at the Point
Pleasant, W.Va., jail,was the
subject of a feature story -in
the Columbus Dispatch. The
writer, Ned Stout, had thi s to
say :

POMEROY - Many Meigs Countians are pretty edgy
right now as a result of the Monday night death of Dale Musser
at his home on the New Lima Road . And who can blame them ?
The Musser murder is notlhe only incident that is taking
place these days. There is a considerable amount of breaking
and entering, or attempts at it right now. Some of these
in,cidents, particularly in towns , are not reported to the newspaper apparently because officials feel that such reports will
hamper their investigations.
Far be it from us to hamper any investigations that will
"Guys with two legs don 't
lead to the conviction of offenders. However, we feel that you
have
near what he has."
the people should be warned that these things are happening
That's
the way State Highand we want to urge you to use a lot of precaution. You can 't he
way
Patrol
Col. Adam G.
too careful.
Meigs County has always been a great place to live and we Reiss sums up the attitude
hope to see it continue to be. You can help officials by reporting and abilities of one-legged
anything you see or hear that seem.s out of line . It's the only Trooper Bruce Wallace.
Wallace, 29, puts in a full
way that we can hope for any improvement - and heaven
day's
work and then some as
knows that something should be done. I feel sure that any
an
instructor
and firearms
official will welcome any information which you can give to
specialist
in
the patrol's
any situation which might be criminal.
training
academy
at 740 E.
Frankly, I've had "rights" up to my eyebrows. I think it's
17th
Ave.
time that the country gets some law and order back into it.
He also Is an active parBARBARA PIERCE, WHO HAS to be the best injun the
ticipant
in the staff's lunchRacine Alumni Association ever had, is attempting to locate
time
basketball
games, a
addresses on some 12 alwnni members and asked us to help.
fisherman
and
a
deepwoods
If you have an address on any of them would you please
phone Barbara at 949-2374 or write her at Box 44, Route 2, archery hunter.
Little more than a year
Racine . The list includes Fred Crenshaw, 1927; Mary Richard
ago,
Walla ce wa s nearly
Hamilton,l929; Donald Cox, 1935; Henry Linscott, 1937; Billie
blown
away when a young
Elkins, 1938; Floyd Clark, 1940; Randal.l Tablotl, 1945; Betty
father,
distraught that his
Lou Salser Kee, 1946; Gene Wells, 1952; Betty Sellers Tirman,
wife
had
been arrested on a
1957; Rhonda Braden Tennant, 1969, and Marica Jean Hughes,
charge
of
murdering their
1970.
baby
daughter,
fired a shotWE'RE GETTING SOME conunents on the Golden Age
gun
into
a
suitcase
cranuned
Buckeye Cards.
with
dynamite.
Seem.s that senior citi~ens with such cards are given
The explosion shattered the
special discounts and there are a number of stores and
Mason
County Jail at Point
businesses listed.
Pleasant,
W. Va.
. We checked with the senior citizens center on the matter
Walla
ce,
his ri ght leg
and personnel there advise that they are not kept too much up
sheared
by
a
steel
door which
to date on listings, etc. The listings comeout of Athens.
was
ripped
from
its hinges
One complaint is that personnel at some businesses have
arid
thrown
through
the air,
told customers holding the cards that the cards are not
was
the
most
seriously
inhonored at the respective business which is on the "official
jured
of
II
survivors.
list. " This is an easy matter tO correct. All the management
A search fo~ a suspected
has to do is advise clerical help that the cards are being
motorcycle
thief had taken
honored - if they are. The second complaint revolves around
the
Gallipolis-besed
trooper
the report that some stores allow the discount only on certain
across
the
Ohio
River
into
days. The list of merchants does not designate which ones
West
Virginia
that
evening.
function in this manner and remembering the right day on
In the aftermath of the
· which to make a purchase could be a problem .
blast
, a rescue work er
I .think the gesture by merchants is wonderful and
conunenled,
"We waded in
certainly senior citizens living on tight incomes can really
blOQd
all
night
." Much of the
benefit from such a program. However, I think some of the
blood was Wallace's.
bugs ought to be removed .
He remembers little of the .
THE JUNIOR CLASS OF MEIGS High School is working
horror.
on an old fashioned candy sale to be held during intermission
" I looked down and saw
at the "Spring Fling" of the Big Bend Minstrel Assn. at the
what
was happening and I
high school audirorium on April 23.
no
doubt I was going to
had
The sale works like this - junior cl.ass members will sell
die
nobody
could get to me
bags of candy - not much candy - but in many sacks there
quick
enough,"
Wallace said.
will be slips of paper with numbers on them. Those.getting the
numbers will go to a certain area and claim a prize with the
corresponding numbers. · Understand the juniors have
. collected quite a number of nice gifts to be given away during
the sale.' Audiences as proven by the Silver Slipper crowds
over the last couple of years love the candy sales which were .
held during those shows.
WELCOME HOME, Christina Smith.
GalllpoUs City Schools
Christina was seriously burned. on Feb, 6 at the home of
Menu
her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Roush, and ha s been
Monday, Aprll18- Hot dog
confined ro Children's Hospital in Columbus ever since.
However, Wednesday Christina was discharged from the with meat sauce, green
Columbus hospital and after staying overnight with ~elatives beans, buttered carrots,
in Columbus returned home on Thursday . Enroute. home she roasted peanuts, sliced pears,
stopped by her school 7 the Pomeroy Elementary - where and one-half pint mill&lt;.
Tuesday, AprO 19- Sloppy
she Is a fifth grader.
joe
on bun, cole slaw, Fr~nch
. Chris will now have therapy two days a week at the Holzer
fries,
sliced p.eaches, and oneMedical Center and lour hours a day at home ~ that's every
half
pint
milk.
day for the next three years. On May 2 Chris will relurn to
Wednesday, AprU 20 Columbus for examination and to be fitted for a new body suit
and gloves which she wears to keep down infection and help the Ham with beans, tossed
regrowth of skin. She wlll probably return to school a week salad, corn .bread and buller,
from Monday. ·
Ice cream and one-half pint
mill&lt;.
Thursday, April 21- Oven .
CHESTER KING, RUTLAND, an employee of the Citizens
National Bank in Middleport the past five years, will join the fried chicken, mashed
slate of Ohio Division of Banking in a new job on April 25. potaroes with gravy, buttered
peas, bread, butter, apple
Chester will wrap up his duties at the local bank Monday.
sauce, and one-half pint milk.
Friday, April 2~ - Blue
Dev~ burger with pickles,
Act now during our .. . ·
buttered spinach, buttered
corn, fruit salad, and one-half
pint milk.
Monday, Aprtl 25 - Hot
roast beef sandwich, mashed
potatoes with gravy, buttered
peas, sliced peaches, and onehalf pint milk.
Tuesday, · April 28 - Beef
and bean bake, cole sla.w,
look lor our Stars lor big savings
bread, butter, ice cream, and
one-half pint milk.
Wednesday, Aprtl 27 - .
Uke This
Chill with crackers, tossed
salad, bread, butter, cookie,
17 cu. ft.
and one-half pint mille
Thursday, AprU 28 - Blue
Frost-Proof
Devil burger with pickles,
high school; grilled cheese,
elementary; buttered ·corn,
green beans, pudding and
one-half pint milk.
Friday, Aprtl 211 - Hot dog
SALE PRICE
with meat sauce, French
fries , buttered carrots, jello
salad, and one-half pint milk.
Choice of whit e or
chocolate milk.

armorer.

Bruce Wallace's armpower takes him to the top

When RObison retired in
January, Wallace filled the
slot.
He refurbishes the patrol's
weapons, loads its am·
munition, runs its firing
range and conducts claase.s
on various phases of
ball.lstics.
It does not trouble him
that his duties require
working almost dally with
large quantities of gunpowder and explosive
chemicals he must handle
under high temperatures.
A Middleport High School
graduate, Wallace went on to
Marshall (Huntington, W.
Va.) University where he
majored in .education and
was a member of the football
and wrestling teams for four
years.
"Physical fitness has
always been a big part of my
life," the 5-foot 10-inch, 185pciund Wallace said. After he
graduated from college in
1969, Wallace taught and
coached football at Southern
Local High School in Racine,
Ohio, for four years.
He graduated No. 13, 1973,

from the patrol's 40th annivel'llry claas.
Wallace easily handlet the
driving as he commutes 28
miles
daily
between
Columbua and hla runil home
sil miles northwest of
Lancaster, not far from
Uthopoll.5.
He lives there with hla wife,
Gloria, who II a Pomeroy
native, and fheir children,
Buck, 4, given Mrs. Wallace's
malden name for hla first ,
and two-year-illd Natalie.
Wallace admlta thlt he felt
"pretty discouraged" the
first time he attempted to
wade into a stream and fish
not long after he got hla a~­
tiflcialleg. "I kept sllpping on
the ston .., I couldn't keep my
balance."
Hill agility has Improved.
Several months ago he
waded a stream, flsliing near
Richwood, W. Va. And last
November he hiked nearly
two miles to a pre-&lt;lawn
hunting stand in the woods,
Cjlrrying a bow and arrows he
crafted himself, and bagged a
deer.

"I got a lot of things going
for me," Wallace saya as he
thinks about not of the Joss of
his right leg but the wounds
and Wectlon which nearly 1
cost him hla left.
"Wallace is doing a full job.
He compensates Ip 110 many
ways. Just being around him
ruba off a little blt and, if
you're feeling sorry for
yourself he sure takes the
sting away,'' Reiss said.

24 State Street
Phone 446-4290
1. . . . . . ._ _ __

M(;ountonme for

prompt, persoaalservio
\l&amp;ll . . . . .

S1111 f arm lnlllfUCt Cump1ni

Ho1111 Ol llttl . Blll!lm m;lon.llhr

.

CALIFORNIA
REDWOOD
Pic nic tables with benches
- c haise . love seat - chairs.

Nylon webbing or plastic tubing chairs and rockers .

WAREHOUSE OPEN

ROLL-UP PORCH BLINDS
VINYL WITH NYLON STITCHI NG - 6 FOOT DROP
WIDTHS 4, 5, 6 and I 0 FEET

vigorous
efforts
.and
· innovative app-oaches. The
task Is not for timid aouls or
those who propose a
conUnuation of past policies
with their dlaaatrous results.
We need a new fresh
approach
wllh
new
aggressive candldat.es and
the dedicated and untiring
leadership."
One of the top candidates ro
succeed
McGough " is
Hamilton CoWlty Republican
Chalnnan Earl T. Barnes, a
longtime ally of Gov. James
A. Rhodes.
Huffman is part of the state .
organization's wing which
would prefer a younger and
more conservative candidate
for governor in 1978.
"It Is my opinion tha~ It is
now more important than
ever that the chalnnan be the
!'hairman of the state Central
· Committee rather than a
chairman for a single
(Continued on page 8)

$1 59

under investiga\lon.
Sherlll Proffitt

also

\

95

Pomeroy, that prowlers were
at her residence Friday
evening Is also being in- ·
vestlgated.
Saturday evening the
department received a report
from Mn. Lawrence Wilson,
Great Bend (Rt. I, Portland)
that around 9 p.m. a young
white male wearing overalla
and a grey, shortsleeve shirt,
attempted to get m her
trailer. · The Intruder was
frightened off.

'
I

/

I

1

Mr. and Mrs. .George Horak of Pomeroy,

pictured here with their son, Donald E . Horak, named a Monsignor by Pope' Paul VI earUer
this month. Monsignor Horak conducted his first Mass since becoming a Monsignor at the
Sacred Heart Church in Pomeroy Sunday. Afterwa.rd a dinner was served in lbe cburch
audlrorlum to ahnost 300 peraons including a number of friends of the new Monsignor who
carne from the Steubenville area for the occasion. Lighted red tapers on gold mats were
used on the tables, and red and gold crosses in the auditorium windows. Serving tables were
decorated with red and white carnations. Monsignor Horak was born Feb. 13, 1938 in
Pomeroy. He attended Sacred Heart School in Pomeroy and his high school, college and
theology work was completed at St. John Vlanney Seminary at Bloomingdale. After
studying at Catholic University, he received a master of arts in classical languages . He was
'OI'dalned in Pom~roy May 23,1963. He is currently spiritual director at St. John Vlanney and
diocese director of vocations. See picture of Horak family ori Page 2.

-

•

•

VOL. XXVIII . NO. 2

en tine

at y

e
POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MONDAY, APRIL 18, 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Explosion .rips downtownChattanooga
·:::::::::::::::::::::::::~~::::;;;:;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:.:·:•:·:-!·!·!·!·!·!:!:!·!~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

INews. • ~i~ Brief~1

~

chaises.

War veteran dies at 97,

~

.

enlisted in teenage yea.rS
DENVER (UP!) - Funeral services were held today
for Roy Byron Hall, a 97-ytlllr-old veteran of the Spanish·
American War who enUsted in 1898'because be wanted to
"go somewhere and do something.:.'
Hall, who enlisted In the Army as a teenaged farm boy
from Salina, Kan., died Thursday of heart failure at the
Lutheran Medical Center:
"I enlisted because I wbnted to go somewhere and do
something," Hall e~lained of his decision to enter the
war. Hewaspald $!3amonth as an enlisted soldier, $15.60
for combat in the Philippine Islands and $22.10 a month
when he became a corporal. Of the 112 men in hla outfit
which S.t sail for the Philippines in a cal\le boat from
Oregon, only 57 returned. ·
"We were out in the jungle all the time ;" Hall said.
"We had to rout those guys out. There was no road and no
automobiles."
•
When he left the Army, be returned to Kansas, then
moved to Ogden, Utah, before setUing in Grand Junction,
where he worked for the government as a railway postal
clerk. He moved to Denver in· 1930 after his retirement.

Cyclist
injured

Tanya Lightfoot, 16,
Middleport, was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
for treatment of Injuries
suffered in a bicycle a~cident
WASHINGTON - THE CENSUS BUREAU SAYS the at 5:30 p.m. Saturday on CR
purchasing power of U. S. houaeholds dropped 3 per cent in 5, one and four tenths miles
1975. The median income of U. S. households in 1975 was aouth of SR 7 in Meigs
$11,800, up 5.2 per cent from the year before, it said in a report County.
The Gallla-Meigs Post
publlahed Sunday . But this increase was offset by a 9 per cent
state
Highway Patrol .said
ri.le in prices, resulting iD a net loss.of about 3 per cent in real
Miss
Ughtfoot
lost control of
purchasingpo~.
.
her
bicycle
which
traveled off
The report also said about 8.5 mllllon, or II percent, or the
the
roadway
and
over an
73 mllllon U. S. households had incomes over $25,000 tn 197~ ana
accounted for nearly one-third of the aggregate income over embankment.
In another Saturday
the nation.
Another one-third of the tot,al income went to 19 milllon mishap, damages to the
households with incomes from $15,000and $25,000. On the lower Iinder camage resulted from
end of the icale, 14 million households had incomes under an accident at 3 p.m. on SR
$5,000 and receive about 4 per cent of the total aggregate 124 in Meigs County east of
Wilkesville, where an auto
Income.
driven by Bobby J. Pope, 32,
MOSa&gt;W - SYRIAN PRESIDENT HAFEZ Assad has Newark, struck a large
arrived on a state vlsit marking the return of the Soviet Union section of defective roadway.
The first of two accidents
to an active role in Middle East diplomacy.
,
The official Soviet news agency has said Assad was early Sunday morning oc·
greeted at planeside by Soviet Communist party General curred at 1:50 a.m. on SR 5M
where Michael Lee Tate, 19,
Secretary LeOnid Brezhnev, President Nikolai Podgorny and
Foreign Miniater Andrei Gromyko. Western diplomats said the Rt.l, Cheshire, lost control of
his car w!Jich ran off the
~d vial! was part of the Soviet Union's program of touching
.base with Arab leaders before next month's American-&amp;lviet roadway, !ltrlking a tree. He
meeting in Geneva, which IS expected to discuss Middle East was taken to the Holzer
Medical Center for treatment
peace efforts.
ot minor injuries.
The other, a!Be,. a single car
TEL AVIV, ISRAEL - A DisrruCT COURT SUNDAY
accident,
occurred at 2 a.m. ·
fined the. wife of Illl'~l's prime tninister $27,000 for
on
SR &amp;54, five tenths
Sunday
maintaining WePI American bank accounts. Hours later her
maband, Yltzhalt Rabin, announc,ed he would lake a leave of of mile west of milepost 18
where John L. Payne·, 22,
absence beginning Friday.
Ar. expected, Rabin told hla cabinet at its weekly SUnday Vinton, leU asleep at his
meeting in Jerusalem that Defense Minbler Shimon Peres, steering wheel and lost
now the Labor party's choice for prime lninister, would take control of hla car. The vehicle
charge at cabinet meetlnga WlW a new government !a formed . struck a fence and tree.
was
moderate
after !he May 17 elections. Tbe diaciOIIW'es about $21,000 in two There
u. s. bank accolDita led to Rabin's downfall as Labor party damage. No citation was
leader~ to the sentencing of hla wife, Leah.
issued.

iliUOII'i iiiiB TO MEET
A nplar meeting ol the •
Melga Band llooltera will be-

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
I

reported his department ii
checking out a report
received .from Geraldine
Webb, Rt. 2, Racine (Letart
Falla).
Mrs. Webb told officers
someone Saturday night
attempted to steal her
lawnmower and had left the
hood railed on her car. .U far
as could be determined,
nothing was missing .
A complaint rued by 'Mrs.
Juanita Kruskamp, Rt. 4,

IT WAS A PROUD MOMENT Sunday for

a

.LAWN-BOY SPECIAL
19 INCH · 2 CYCLE ENGINE ADJUSTABLE CUTTING HEIGHT.

·

OOLUMBUS- J. T. EU..INGTON, SENIOR assistant
postmaater general, foresees a higher postage rate next year
and the abolition of Saturday mall delivery some time soon.
Tbe POll! Office official says the C9nunisslon on Postal Service
Is expected to recommend Monday that Saturday mail
delivery be abolished as an economy measure.
If Congress would app-ove the move, Ell!ngton estimllted
"it would save $350 million a year." Ellington said there would
be no postage increase this year, adding that he is "quite
certain" there will be one next year, if revenue is not foWld
lrom another aource.

FOLDING FURNITURE·

Sc399

"'

WEST MILTON, Ohio
(UPI) - Fonner Miami
C&lt;lunty pl"*CCIIIlr Robert J.
Huffman today announced
hla candidacy for Republican
state chairman, to be cho9ell
at a May 3 .meeUng of the
party'a 46-member state
cxmmittee.
Huffman, 4th Dimlct commltteeman, was legal counsel
for
Ronald
Reagan's
presl'dential ' primary
campaign C(llllln!ttee in Ohio
last year. He won hla seat on
the state committee by
defeating Kent B. McGough,
the party chairman w!Jo is
retiring as of May 15.
"The task of the new
chainnan must be to lmpleDll!llt new programs for the
central ccmmlttee and build
candidates for the 1978
election while projecting a
new Rep!bllcan image for
the future," said Huffinan in
announcing his candldacy.
"It will require long hours,

~~un::!:r::on:d ~
missing. The incident is

·TOLEDO, OHIO-THE NATIONAL ENERGY plan being
Wlvelled by· President Carter this week will have a major
Impact on the nation's auto industry, Douglas Fraser, a Unit!'~
Auto Workers union vice president who is ell}lected to become
\be union's next president, said Saturday.
Speaking to delegates to th~ 43rd UAW Region Conference,
Fraser said he fears the plan couljl force the pubUc into buying
lllll81leicars, which woukl boost sales of Imported cars at tbe
~nse of American models.

REFRIGERATOR
FREEZER

{

to lead GOP

~

FREE PARKING

only the office and kitchen
were ran.sacked. A basket·

.

oor

Sale Prices on Porch, Lawn and Patio Furniture
PLENTY OF ·

Entrance was gained by
breaking out five panes of
l!laa in a door. It Is believed

- :.:~.'! ~':!; ~:
~eatiRalion Indicated

By Unlted Press Inlemall01181
OOLUMBUS- EARL T. BARNES, HAMILTON Coonty
Republican Party chairman since 1968, saya he wll1 seek tbe
chalnnanship of the state
organization. .Barnes'
announcement Saturday ,came after a _week of speculation
about his seeking the post after the resignation of Kent
McGough. Barnes was vacationing in the Southwest and had
been unavailable for comment.
But SatUrday the 5S-year'&lt;lld lawyer said he had discussed
hla running with Cuyahoga CoWlty GOP bead Robert Hughes,
who Ia bacldng him, but has not talked yet with McGough.
!Ia.- -without pay u the Hamlltoo Qlunty ~n
and he said he may forego the $40,000 salary of the . state
chalnnan If elected. Me said he would work to build up the
Republican organization from the -J]l'ecinct level.

WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC STREET

Frigidaire
·8tarof
becBtbuxs

FIFE ENLISTS
GALLIPOUS - Gregory
L. Fife, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Fife of U52 Second
Avenue , Gallipolis, has
enlisted in the U.S. Alr Force
today. T-Sgt . Ron Rife,
recruiter, . said
upon
graduation from the Air
.Force's six weeks basic
military training, Greg will
receive training In the
Aircraft Pneudraulic
Mechanic Systems. Greg is a
1976 graduate of Gallla
Academy High School.

Like a good neiglllK
Stllte Fann is there.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Lunch Menus

Meise County Sheriff breaking and entering nf the
J . - J. Prolllit's depart- SaUabury Elemontary School
ment II inveatlpting the at Rock Sprlnp Friday night.

C. K. SNOWDEN

p 7577

.

c 00 ran sac e
=
H u ffm8.11 wan.t s

held at 7:30 p.m. In the band
room at the high llchool.
Plana will be made for
aperating 1 food booth at the
CB Roundup on May 8.
Parwtl of band members
~~n~ ·Jaed to attend.

an

Weather

. Cloudy todly and tonight,
chance of ahowe!'J Tuesday.
· Hl&amp;b Tuesday 7li to 80. low
tonight 56 to 60. Chance of
rain 20 ,per cent tOday and
tonight, and 50 per eent
Tuesday.
·I-

CORRECTION
A headline in the Sunday
Times-8entinel . on page I
reading "Gas bill rebates
promlled" should have read
instead, ''Electric bill
rebates promised."

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Wednesday through
Friday, a chance of
sbowen dally through the
perf.sl. Highs In the 70.
Wedl\eaday aDd Thursday,
aad Ia the lOa Friday. Lowa
In ibe 40a aDd low lOt.

Racine will
host fire,

E-R units
RACINE - .The Racine
Fire Department and E-R
squad will host the Area
Volunteer
Fire
and
Emergency Assn . in a
regular meeting Tuesday at
7:30p.m.
Over $200 has been donated
or pledged toward the New
Straitsville fire fund. It is
hoped more .departments will ·
be able to donate at the April
19 meeting, so the money can
be presented to New Straitsville in the near future .
Tuesday's meeting also will
have an update ·on the forthcoming radio changes in
Meigs County and the school
on chemical fires and
emergencies to be held soon.
Don Baun, district ranger,
Shade River District of the
Forestry Division, will explain all changes made since
the retirement of Vic Bahr.
At the present time the May
meeting of the association is
scheduled for Mason, W.Va.

CONCERT SET
The Meigs High School jazz
bend directed by Randy Hunt
will present a concert at 7:30
p.m. Tuesday in the junior
high auditorium, Middleport.
Admission will be 25 cents for
students and 50 cents for
adults. This will probably be
the fins I pubUc performance
by this group this ;v,ear.

CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. (UP!) -A "tremendous" eXplosion 1 beca~ of the blast.
.
today destroyed a five..story building housing a bank, causing · A mall truck was found near the building covered wtth
millions of dollars in damage and leaving a two-block area rubble but .a wliness said the d:'iver escaped.
looking like an atom bomb went off. ·
Ebernart saia 11 was not immedistely known what caused
PoJice said a woman seen near the area at the time of the the explosion and the area was cordoned to safeguard
explosion was unaccounted for, but there were no official numerous stores left unp-otected by' the blast.
reportS of injuries. Cause of the blast was unknown . .
"At about 4:30 a.m. there was a tremendous explo8ion that
"In all my 56 years of experience, I have never seen caused damage of over a milllon dollars;• EIKlrhart said. ''One
anything like this. It looks like an atom bomb went off,'' said of the primary areas was the old Sisken building which houses
Fire Marshal Mike Quinn.
a b.-anchofficeoftheFirsiTennesseeNationalBank."
"No one had to turn in an alarm on this one. I believe · Eberhart said firefighters had controlled the fire but were
everybody in Chattanooga heard it when it went off,'' said Fire still una!)le to get inside the building because of fear it would
Department Capt. Harold Wooten.
collapse.
.
The explosion ocurred in the five-atory Slsken Building,
Atleast 50 officers were on the Scene and because a bank was
which houses a branch 9f the First Tennessee National Bank. destroyed the FBI was called in to aid in the investigation.
"This is a disaster. The Sisken Building looks like a skeleton
Jake Gray, owrier of a cafe acroos the street, said, "!thought
the world was ending when it went off. It remiqded me of tbe of brick and steel. The street Is covered with brick and metal,"
Eberhart said.
Pacific in World War U."
Gray said he had just aold an elderly woman a newspaper
He said police were Issuing Passes to building owners to
·and she was wa!klng toward the Slsken Building.
inspect the damage.
"She had robe kllled because she only had time to get across
There also was heavy damage to a bank branch across the
the street when it went off. I hope the poor soul is all right."
street from the Sisken Building.
HWldreds of pOllee and firefighters came to the scene of the
Eberhart said he talked to Leroy King, an employe of nearby
4:30a.m. EST explosion and a four-block area was cordoned St. George Hotel.
ofi to prevent looting.
"He said he was working arid heard a loud explosion and the
Store windows were sha\tered, power Unes were knocked lights went out, the building shook and the clocks stopped at
down and the street in front of the building wu covered with 4:30a .m.," Eberhart said.
rubble. Police said ''huge chunks of sidewalk were thrown
Eberhart said he found numerous documents in the street.
through store windows."
He said when officers arrived on the scene there was ''fire
Pofice spokesman Ron Eberhart. said the department's coming from every conceivable augle , from the Sisken
night shift was held over and the day shift called in early Building ."

Carter expected to forecast
easy living all in the past
WASHINGTON (UP!) - be presented to a ]oint session
President Carter tonight of Congress - also on·
begins a critical week with television - Wednesday
the presentation of a gloomy night.
forecast of oil and gas
Another controver-sY deals
supplies to prepare tile nation 19ith the federal study of
for his plans 011 how to existing federal water
grapple with the energy projects. At least 30 of them ,
crisis.
initially were deemed
Some aides were arguing unnecessary and that stirred
strongly against the .higher bitter reaction from many
gasoline taxes which were members of Congress.
believed to be a cornerstone
The administration has
of his program.
been forced to back off from
Carter
delivers
a its early stand . It now
nationwide address on radio appears that at least half of
and television at 8 p.m. EST the projects will be
to lay a foundation for his continued.
Sources said Sunday that
energy proposals, which will
4

lrey advisers are urging
Carter to drop the proposal
for higher federal taxes on
gasoUne. It was feared such
an approach would bog down
the package in Congress.
"This is going right down ro
the wire," one aide said of the
decision on whether or
impose higher gas taxe~.
"It looks like it could go
either way," he said of the
p-oposal, which eventually
could add as much as 50 cents
onto the price. of a gailon of
gasoUne.
Those opposed to the high
levy argued it would he
difficult to convince Congress
.

The Postal Service is losing
business mail revenue
because the government and
banks are transferring funds
elect~:onically. The · service
sees setting up its own
electronic transmission of
mallljS a good way to make
up the•loss.
The commission p-oposed
that the government decide
by April 1979 whether the
Postal Service should enter
the
e I e c Iron i·c
communication field.
The commission said doing
so "would most likely
succeed In achieving the
major eoonomies of a scale_
necessary to support a
system to manage both hard
copy
and
electronic

conununlcations.''
The commissl.on also
recommended that Congress
amend the current law which
prohibits private companies
from delivering first class
mall.

Full cast

called for
rehearsals

Full cast rehearsals for
the aMual Spring Fling of the
. ·Big
Bend
Minstrel
Association
just
five
days
The
co mmi ssion
awlfy
will
get
underway
at 7 .
recommended that CongresS
Tuesday
in
the
Meigs
p.m.
abandon the idea that the
Postal Service must be self- High School Auditorium.
Cast members in the first
supporting. It said rates
half
of the show only or in
should be made " more
both
halves of the production
sensitive
to
market
to report to the
are
conditions" rather than being
assigned 011 a cos\ basis, as at auditorium at 7 p.m. with
members in only the second
present.''
To help the Postal Service half of the show to report at 8
out of its present crisis and p.m. on Tuesday, Wednesday
stabilize Its long-term finan- and Friday nights.
Advance tickets for the
cing, the commission recomshow
now on sale may be
mendedthatCongre s s
purehased
at$1.:$ each at the
immediately appropriate·
New
York
Clothing House,
$625 million ro eliminate the
Swisher·L&lt;&gt;hse
Drug Store,
present operating deficit and
Village
Pharmacy
and
Increase regular
Dutton
Drug
Store
in
Midappropriations by 10 per cent,
dleport and the ·Rutland
at least until 1985.
At p-esent, Congress subsi- Department Store in Rutland.
dl2es the Postal Service only This year's show will begin at
ror
so-called
" public 8:10p.m. Saturday in the high
services" that cannot be school auditorium under the
operated on a paying basis. sponsorship of the Meigs
Another current subsidy is Athletic Boosters. A clown
rates .
for
carrying theme minstrel show will
newspapers, magazines and make up one-half of the
presentati~.
.,
other Jower-dass tlJ,ail.

Mails may go electronic
WASHrnGTON (UP!)- A
congressional commission
today
proposed
that
President
Carter
and
Congress consider moving
the U.S. mail service into the
electronic a·ge by providing
instant satellite and wire
transmission of letters.
The Commisaion on Postal
Service said it found growing
rival
electronic
conununications to "portend
disastrous cor. Jquences for
the Postal Sernce" unless
the government agency gets
a share of that business.
The seven-member
commission, created last
year to con8lder possible
solullons to growing financial
p-oblems of the nation's mail
service, also recommended
increased congressional
appro.priations
and
eliminating Saturday
deliveries.
The report followed six
months of public hearings
and a public telephone poll .

to go along. At the same time,
they claimed the size of the
p-oposed increase would not
be large enough to curtail car
use effectively.
Generally, it is one of the
more critical weeks the new
CGontmued on page 8)

�3-'lbe o.ily Sentinel, Middleport.pomeroy, 0., Monday, April 18, 1977

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0; , Monday, AprillB, 1m

Democrats may evade Rhodes' vetoes ·
By LEE LEONARD
.
UPI Stoteb0111e Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI) Majority Democrats in tbe
Ohio House are discussing the
possibility of blunting Gov.
James A. Rhodes' item-veto
power on the proposed $14.5
billion state budget by
plaCing spending mandates In
a separate bill which would
have to be accepted or vetoed
In its entirety.
The Democrats have been
chafing for two years as
Rhodes has singled out and
stricken legislative spending
requirements he said were
unfair intrusions on his ad·
ministration.
But now, they may have
II!ICOvered a way to make him
takethosehedoesn'tlikewith
those he favors. .
Although talks on the
budget were conducted under
top secret conditions last
week by House Democratic
leaders
and financial
personnel, it was learned
they may try to enforce their
programs for fiscal1978-79 by
passing two bills . - one
containing the money and the
other .. requirements for
spending it.
It could work this way :
The governor is able to
make line.ttem vetoes iii
appropriatioos bills - those
containing dollar money. He
can cancel whole sections and
sign the rest into law.
In fact, Rhodes exercised
his power 72 times on the
current budget, cutting out a
number of sections of

"legislative Intent" for
programs and agencies.
But 00 a bill containing no
dollar figures, the governor·
must sign or veto the entire
measure, or allow It to
become law without his
signature.
Last year, the Ohio
Supreme Court invalidated
seven of Rhodes' item vetoes
in the new school foundatioo
formula. The high court held
that the biU was not an
appropriation since it
contained no dollar amounts
but only spending directives,
such as minimum class sizes
and teachers' salaries.
Although the Democrats in
the House now have 62 votes,
enough to override vetoes,
they could avoid line.ttem
vetoes oo policy by splitting
the budget.
One bill would contain the
money placed in various
categories, which Rhodes
could item veto if he chose.
But the other bill would
coritain language on spending
requirements, and the
governor would either have to
accept the entire spending
plan or challenge it as a
whole .
"We are trying to figure out
ranwyor Mr. and Mrs. George Horak
Heart c.;;;,roh
how
to get around 'the fox,"'
' in Pomeroy Sunday where son Dooald E. Horak conducted his first Mass since being named
said
ooe
highly1&gt;laced Demo·
a Monsignor by Pope Paul VI. Monsignor Horak was one of six priests in the Diocese of
erst
in
on
last week's budget
Steubenville to be so honored. The inVestiture of Monsi~nor Horak, who has been named
talks,
referring
to Rhodes .
Chaplain of His Holiness, was held April 11 at St. John 's Arena in Steubenville. Front row,!
"With
62
members,
it's not
tor, are, Kelly Denison, Jody Renee Smith, Anne Marie Lewis, Lisa Dawn LewiS; second
easy
to
agree
on
how
to get
row , Scott Lewis, Todd Smith, Eric Denison, Chris Lewis, all grandchildren ; back row,
around
him."
Splitting
the
Robert Smith, Barbara Horak Smith, Mr. Horak, Monsignor Horak, Mrs. Horak, Ruth
budget
may
be
one
way.
Horak Lewis an&lt;tRooe Horak Denison. The Denisons reside in Puerto Rico; the Lewis
Although a tight cloak of
family in ~ellefontaine, and the Smiths in Pomeroy.
secrecy_has been clamped oo
the Democrats' plans for the
two-year budget, a substitute
blll or bills may emerge this
week.
The
House
Finance
Committee . has scheduled
public hearings on the budget
Polly Cramer
for Tuesday and Wednesday:
Avote by the fu:ll House is not
expected until next w~k at
PASADENA, Calif. (UPI) of the red Martian soil.
Farther south and half way the earliest and probably the
- Viking 2, one of two space
week in May.
around the planet, the· sister first
Majority
are
l!OLLY'S PROBLEM
another 30 minutes and then robots searching for life on ship
Viking I continued its attempting toDemocrats
DEAR POLLY .:.. We have wash as usual. If this should Mars, is hibernating oo the inorganic
deal
with
what
experiments on the
a new glass fiber tub and be. used for whitening nylon red planet to save energy soli. And the two orbiters that they believe is a $140 million
shower ahd even though the things such as uniforms do during the long, se.vere
deficit in the measure
carried the landers to Mars submitted by the governor.
shower curtain has magnets not use hot water as it will set Martian winter.
. It will not awake again until still circled the planet, taking
on the bottom it will not cling ariy ·wrinkles. Let mixture
They are wrestling with
spring
comes to the northern pictures, but they were flying possible reductions in certain
to the fiberglass. What can I cool · before putting any
than before.
areas, but are reported ·to be
do to keep the curtain from nyioos in. I have fouhd this to hemisphere of the planet in closer
Orbiter
I was coming as
October.
attempting to add money 'for
blowing into one who is be fantastic and moot helpful
All but a few of the three· close as 185 miles and primary and Secondary
showering?
when removing stains from
legged
lander's systems were scientists were hoping for education, Medicaid and
In order to help conserve baby clothes. - JAN.
shut
off
Suhday by hundreds high resolution photographs other human services.
water I now turn off the
DEAR POLLY - Now is
of
computer
conunands that to aid them in mapping Mats.
The House· is to vote
!Bucet while brushing my, the time b&gt; get out that
were
fired
across
space last Orbiter 2 was circling as Tuesday on a b!Udesigned to
teeth. I know this does ·not seldom used vacuum botUe.
close as 495 miles on its encourage
future
sound like much but ·I find it Wash it thoroughly and have week.
.doses! approach and was development of solar and
A
spokesman
at
the
Jet
saves at least a gallon per ready for the next time you
looking at severe dust storms
day and we must conserve all have even just one cup of· Propulsion Laboratory here in the southern hemispehre wind energy systems for
said
the
hibernation
will
save
home use. The measure
we can (Polly's note - If coffee left over. Pour coffee
and the polar caps.
contains guidelines and
everyone did the same the in bottle, cap and it will keep enough energy to l)eat the
sensitive
electronic
gear,
stsndards
for the systems, as
tot!ll would be impressive.)- hot all day. It will not be
helping
it
withstand
the
well
as
tax
. incentives for
SHARON.
bitter and not a drop of the
freezing
Martian
winter
that
On
this
day
in
history:
their
purchase
and
DEAR . SHARON - I precious stuff will be wasted.
begins
May
31.
In
1775,
American
patilot
installation.
suggest that you put drapery - MARY.
Temperatures were Paul Revere began his famed
The
House
Energy
weights inside the h~ of
DEAR POLLY -I do a lot
through
the Conunittee will hold fullyour shpwer curtain. The of crocheting so naturally measured· at minus 185 ride
corners could have the quite have lots of different colors of degrees Fahrenheit - near Massachusetts countryside scale hearings Tuesday on a
heavy roun\1 ones and then yarns and sizes of needles. I the limit for which the craft calling out " ...the British are · fou!'.biU package of energy
coming!"
conservation bills formulated
the chain~ike tape could be got so tired of hunting was designed.
Readings in the northern
by the Democrats.
put all · across the hem if through bags to find what I
The proposals provide tax
necessary. - POLLY.
. wanted that I bought a big regions of the Plain of Utopia,
credits and loans for fuel
DEAR POLLY - I am shoe bag such as one that where Viking 2 is sitting,
THE DALY SENTINEL
conservation methods and in·
answering Mrs. L.W.C. who hangs fiat on a closet door or were approaching· the minus
DEVOTED TO THE
190
mark
,'
the
freezing
point
vestments,
public
is unable to remove formula , wall. Mine is on the back of a
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
information
and
educatioo
on
stains from her baby's bedroom door and needles of- carbon dioxide, the major
CHF.STER L. TANNEHILL
component
of
the
Martian
conservation,
and
.efficiency
clothes. I have a solution that are in one pocket, patterns in
Exec. Ed.
R08ERTHOEFLICH
measures for state.financed
has worked with great another and the yarn atmosphere.
·
City Edltur
JPL
spokesman
Don
Bane
bulldlngs.
success not only on my distributed among the others.
PuiJiishetl daily pwept Saiurdlly
said
the
lander
will
continue
IJy
The
Ohio
VM.Ilt!y'Publishin~t
Co
rnRep. Thomas J. Carney,[).
children's clothes but ori All I have to do now is look
any, Ill C?Url St., Pomeroy , Ohio
to
make
occasional
seismic
clothes given to me that were behind the door and I can find
#17&amp;9. ~usmess Otrke Phone 99'2·
stsined and then stored for anything at a glance. My very readings, monitor the · 2156. Etlilurial Phone 992-2157.
Second class posU.ge paid 11!
over three years.
small crochet needles are weather and take an
Pomeroy, Ohio.
occasional
picture
during
the
•
To one gallon of hot water first put in a flat zippered
N11tional m.lvertising represen·
in an enamel or stainless l&lt;lbacco pouch. This works winter. Two biological Mive Wc~rd .· Griffith Cumpany, In·
l;lottmdiJ .1:111d G.allo.igher Div.,
steel container (I like a great and is so handy. - experiments ...; a gas c.,
757 Tim·tl Ave ., New York, N.Y.
exchange
test
and
a
labeled
10017.
plastic waste basket) add one HAZEL E.
A $S contribution to the
Su~~Cnptiun rates : DeliveJ'td Uy
cup of electric dishwasher
Polly will send you one of release experiment - will be
Chrlotln.a
Smilh Fund was.
carrier
where
availl:1ble
75
cent~ Jll;!r
compound aild one-fourth cup ~r signed thank-you news- made later this month, he ~ week. By Mulur Route where C&lt;~rrier
made
at
a
recent meeting of
SC!rvice not &lt;IYIIilalll.e. One month,
bleach. DO. NOT USE an paper-coupon clippers if she said.
the
Walk·ln
Garden Club at
$3 .~ . By ma.U In Ohio and W. Ve~ . ,
But Bane said scientists are
aluminum container. Stir this uses your favorite pointer,
One Year $22.00; Six months
lhe
home
of
Mrs. Mildred
well and then put in any 100 Peeve or Problem in her no longer looking for life on $11.50; Three months, f7.0o ;'
Zeigler
.
Ell:iewhere $26.00 year ; Six month~
per cent cotton garments and column. Write POLLY'S Mars. Instead, experiments $13.50;
Three rno'nths. $7.50
For roll call members
will
concentrate
on
the
SuiJs(.:ription price includes Sw1diy
let soak 30 minutes. If they POINTERS in care of this
recited
March poems. Mrs.
strange chemical formation Times-Sentinel. ·
are not white enough soak newspaper.
Belva Willard had devotions
on the theme !hat God brings
good out of all llltuatlons.
Mrs. Etta Cu:llums read "By
His Hand." The program was
oil potting with membel'!l
giving tips on knowing when
to
pot and how to do It.
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
Membel'!l were a.sked to take
hose help prevent clots?
Support hose also prevents muscles. This may help cookies to the next meeting.
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
Should
I
ignore
his
advice?
·
pooling
of blood in an emptysomeofthesuperficiai
Mrs. Cullwns will have the
DEAR DR. LAMB - Mv
DEAR
READER
Since
overstretched
vein.
Stagnant
.
veins
in
your
leg
if
they
are
next
meeting with plants to
physician notices the ver}·
you
are
a
teacher
I'll
have
to
pooled
blond
bas
a
greater
not
too
damaged
already.
be
exchanged
at that time.
pronounced varicose veins .I
comment
that
the
two
things
opportunity
to
clot.
The
clot
Standing
without
shy
The
hostess
served
a dessert
have in ooe leg. He pays litUe
people
pay
for
then
try
to
can
then
be
released
to
flow
.
support
is
the
worst
thing
you
OOUI'!e.
attention to my current
ailment and lectures me that avoid getting their mooey's with the blood to the lungs. can do ao it increases the
I should wear support · worth are education and the Preventing ·the pooling of . pooling and stagnation and
SEARUI PROMOTED
blood in the veins also helps stretching. The other no&lt;&gt;o is
stockings to protect this leg. 1 dOctor's advice.
RUTLAND
- Wayne L.
Braces,. supports and prevent swelling of the feet sitting with the backs of the
think he believes I am lying
Searls,
son
of
Mr. and Mrs.
when I repori that I have no similar devices will cause and ankles in patients who legs compressed against the Ray G. Searls, Rutland, baB
pain, no tiredness, etc:. ftom muscles to he used less and have this complication of edge of the seat. The pressure been promoted to senior
weaker. This varicOse veins.
oo the veins may prevent
this condition. The leg does become
The cramps in your leg proper emptying and may airman in the U.S. Air Force.
cramp after about a half hour · principle doesn't apply to
Searla, a teleconununicatlons
of ~ in cool water. varicose veins. They .are from swimming in cool water increase pooling of blood in systems equipment main·
The cmdltion gives me no caused by overstretching the are probably not related to· the veins. Anyone who sits tenance
specialist,
Is
problem I know ill. It seems elastic fibers in the walls of your varicose veins. In the should gel up and · move assigned at Seymour Johnson
to me thai H I start wearing the veins. It is like swimming position your legs ' around regularly.
To give you a better AFB, N.C., with a unit of the
support hosiery what overstretching a balloon too are nearly horizontal with
understanding of varicose Atr Force Communications
strength is left in the veins often until eventually It hangs your body and there is no
Service. He Is a 1974 lll'aduate
would diminish. I would !hen like an enlarged sac, even tendency for pooling in the veins and what you should do of Melga High School. His
need to wear hoee all the when it is not inflated, and veins. Also lhe pressure of about them I am sending you · wife, Debbie, II the daughter
will not return to its original the surrounding water hn The Health Letter ~. others
time. I am not on my feet in
some of the same effects you who want this informatiOII of Mr. •nd Mrs. Thomas
standing position much theoe form.
Support hose helps prevent get from the support hose or can send 50 cents with a loog, Schoonover of Rutland.
days after giving up teaching.
I am quite active and walk a overstretching of your veins an elastic gannent. It is one stamped, self.addressed
Famed
symphony
lot. Is my doctor cori'ect in when you are standing. This of the best exercises for envelope for it. JUS\ write tn conductor Leopold StokoW!ki
saying . that the )ack of helps prevent further stretch· people with varicose veins. me in care ol thiB newspaper, was born April 18, 1182.
ing
o~
an
already - Walking belA~ empty the P. 0. Box 1551, Radio City ActreSfo Mary Pickford was
IIJIPOM may f"Bull in a overstretChed
vein
.
deep veins inilde the leg Statioo, New York, N. Y. born '-' this date in 1893.
thrombosis• Would support

P-0-LL-J-.5-PO_;_IN-T-ER-5 Viking 2 slowed
for long winter

Curl4in blows into shower

.•-

-...
•

~

••
•

..•
~

•.,.
•

.

..•

-•
•
•

•

Club makes
donation

HEALTH

•
•

•
•

.

.

a

Varicose vein advice

Boardman, committee chair·
man, said he plans to send the
bills to two subcon:unJitees,
?ne ~o deal w1th tax
mcentives and the other with .

Cavs erased by Bullets. 2~:ltE

Today's

methods of conservation ahd single bUI ..mtd&gt; wiD pin
efficiency ·
~ from both putles.
Carney said he hopes to
'lbe Senate ~vtNI at
c o m b i n e
t h e 7:30 p.m. tonight and the
recommendations into a Houae at 11 a.m. Tueaday .

·

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sport~ Editor

Special Offer During

International Want Ad Week
Monday, April 18th
Through

,

Saturday, April 23rd
,
MYSTERY 'TIME

1

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persons calling or stopping
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To celebrate International Want Ad Week The
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FREE WANT ADS tD voluntary (non.(QITlmercial) advertisers.
1. A mystery time period of 15 minutes each morning and afternoon
during Want Ad Week will be set aside ...
2. Everyone calling or stopping in at The Daily Sentinel during the
mystery time will be given free want ads ...

'

NEW YORK (UPI) -This was back in the good old days
when a dollar was still a dollar and ballplayers didn't have any
agent. to help them negotiate their salaries
. They had to do it all by themselves, and fa~ing some of the
lron.ftsted, unCOitlpnmising general managero of that day,
OlCII playel'!l felt as If they were going to war with a popgun .
The year was 1928, and Waite Hoyt not ooly bad a good year
for the Yankees, he bad a great one. He won 23 games that
seaaon,losing only seven, then beat the Cardinals twice in the
World Series, and now, naturally, he wanted to talk about more
mmey for 1929.
He tallled and talked with Ed Barrow, then business
manager with the Yankees, but got absolutely nowhere.
FinaUy, Hoyt was given an appointment with the big boss,
Col. Jacob Ruppert, the Yankees' owner.
Ruppert was one of the richest men in the country. In
additloo to the Yankees, he owned the second largest lrewery
in the nation, valuable mining property in the South a r4cing
· stable and real estate throughout New York City. '
Hoyt gave Ruppert the figure be wanted.
·
The Yankee owner was aghlist.No, no, no, no,no. Abeolutely
out of the questioo.
They kept talking some more but Ruppert was like a brick '
wall. He wouldn't budge an inch.
Again and again, Hoyt went over what he had done the past
season and all Ruppert kept doing was shaking his head.
Unable to refute any of Hoyt's argwnents the exasperated
Yankee owner finally snapped at him:
'
"First, Ruth, then, Gehrig, and now you. What in the world
do you people think I am ... a millionaire!"
Waite Hoyt still tells that siory.
I'm reminded of the whole thing by some of the reaction I've
been getting since making known the National and American
League player salaries last week.
Whatever complaints I've had came chiefly from the
management side of baseball, which makes me wohder what It
feels it has to hide?
Some club officials hopped on my "inaccuracies," never
bothering to talk about all the deferred payments, cash loans
and other side arrangements which make so many salaries so
difficult to pinpoint. I invited them to provide their own
figures, and they said no. Other club ol!icials said the figures
were right on the button, but they were annoyed also that they
were published. Then there were thooe who were happy the
figures came out but didn't wish to say so publicly .
Not a single player voiced his objection, not to me, anyway,
ahdin thatcontext,anunlberof them voluntarily told me their
salaries themselves.
,
Th06e who showed the greatest interest in the figures,
acconling to my mall and the people I spoke with, were the
newspaper readers or the fans, and I have to believe my first
obligation is to them and not to management or the pl8yers.
One American Leaguer's wife was critical of me because she
felt I had invaded her husband's ''privacy" by listing his
salary when ballplayers bad so little privacy already.
To that, I can only say a ballplayer automatically gives up
his privacy when he chooses professional baseball as his
occupation. He gives it lip voluntarily and happily because like
everyone else, in or out of baseball, he's striving for
recognition. Some. players would like to turn the glare of
recognition off wben It suits them, but that can't always be
done. Youcan'teatyourcakeandhave it, too.
·
Salary figures of ballplayers have intrigued fans since
before Babe Rutll's day a!l(l they wlU go on doing so, primarUy
because. of the curiosity of the fans. They always like to know
what so-llll&lt;ko is making and tlieir inquisitiveness is 88' much
,a part ofbaseban ·as are second base and the pitcher's mound.
The players themselves claim baseball no longer is a sport,
it's a business. Well, the salaries of such businessmen as the
·board chairmen of General Motors and Ford are a matter of
.pu)Jllc record. So is the salary of the President of the United

'states.

5. The Mystery Time will be changed daily and all mystery times
and winners of free ads will be announced the following day.

To be eligible for a Free Want Ad, you
must place your ad during Inter·
national Want Ad Week ... beginning 8
a.m., April 18th and endin~ 12:00 no&lt;in,
April 23rd.

The Daily .Sentinel
Want Ad J)ept.

on San ·Diego
, SAN DIEGO, Calif. (UP!)
·- Cincinnati's Pat Zachry,
wboee pitching clinched the
Reds' 4-1 victory over the
.Padres Sunday. thinks his
lltyle may cut an evil spell
over the Padres.
"I seem to have a Jonah
sign on the Padres !Ike the
Ast!'OII have on me," said
Zachry. It was Zachry's fifth
career win over the Padres
. wlthoot a lou in the past two
ye81'11.
"Walt 'til I call my dad
tonight. Hell, I got two hits,"
he said.
''When I stai1ed to press
oui there I stopped and told
myulf to take it easy and
stay In rhythm. The last three
!nnlnga I didn't have enough
llluff to break a window. It
;Wllll one of tho"" things."
• Zachry, the first Cincinnati
pitcher to hurl a c&lt;mplete
game thiB season, struck out

1

felt real loose out there and
things were really clicking,
plus those three runs in the
first inning. That helps too."
Sparky Anderson, manager
of the Reds, accepted victory
with lll'aciousness.
"Zach pitched a real fine
game. Your guy (Shirley of
the Padrea) is a fine looking
pitcher. If he didn't have that
bad support in the first
inning, we'd probably still be
out there," he said.
"Shirley pitched much
better today than he dld last
Sunday. He'a a good one. He
must have dooe a hell of a job
in college and wait till be
leilrns the hitters in thiB
league. He's going to get a
hell of a lot better."
George Footer's two run
single keyed the Reds' three·
run firlll inning. Pete Rose
started the Cincinnati first

•

ST. WUIS (UPI) -New. Grant Jackson, wbo walked

St. Louis manager Vern .Rapp
; bali said be will use his entire
• I'OIIter to win ball games this
; - · ahd be proved it by
,, moving men with the
: predslon of a chess player
' Sunday.
: With the Cardinals tralllng
~ Pittsburgh, a-1, in the fifth
~ Inning, ijapp pulled starting
: pitcher John Denny In favor
"' of a pinch hitter with one out
: and Ken Reitz and MIJre
TyiiOII on base with singles.
Racer Freed, making his
first appearance •• a
Cardinal, stroked a single to
• lefttleld to score Reitz. Rapp
• promptlY pulled Freed Off
first. base in favor of
. plnchruDnel' Jerry Davanon.
• The Pirates did •·some
• aubblns of their own,
':: replacing starter and loeer
Je't9. ReuJ8 with reliever

Lou Brock to load the bases.

Tyson scored on Garry
Templeton 'a sacrifice fiy and
Davanon moved to third.
Bake McBride then laid
down a petfect squeeze bunt
as Davanon sprinted home
with the go-ahead run for ~ 43 St. Louis win.
"Freed would never had
scored on that play," Rapp
said.
Ra[lli also was two-lor-two
In using his bullpn.
Reliever Buddy Schultz
started the slalh, held the
Pirates scoreless and had
only ooe out to go to gain a
save. However, rookie John
Urrea took over for the final
out and made short work of
pinchhltter Bill Robinlon to
pick up the save hlmse!f.
· "I'm happy . we goC the
win,:· Scbultz said. "The

said Elvin Hayes, who game.
contributed 23 points and 15
But Henderson came
rebounds. "When a guy goes through with two consecutive
out and does something like driving Jayupa _ the second
that, it spreads to the rest of ooe after Hayes, playlnjj with
the team."
five fouls, rejected a Campy
"He set the tempo and RUS8ell shot in the middle of
forced us out of our game," the lane- to put the Bu:llets
said Cleveland coach Bill backincoottol. Key ol!ensive
Fitch.
reboutlds by Hayes, Kevin
The Bulleis streaked to a Grevey and Phil Chenier
21~ lead with eight of the helped them nm out the
points by, Henderson and clock.
seven by Hayes. Cleveland
"When they tied It up we
was forced to play catch-up, seemed to reach down and
and finaUy did !ate in the grab something opecial. That
game.
showed me a lot," said Motta.
AHayes basket gave Wash· "When they called the fifth
ington a 94-ll1lead with 8:30 foul on. Elvin (with 9:11
remaining. But over the next remaining) it seemed to turn
five minutes, the Cavaliers him on. He played like a man
scored 13 points _ nine by possessed and he was 8
reserve center Elmore dominating force close to the
Smith, who led Cleveland basket."
with 20 points _ io tie the . The early lead never led

with 1a single and Ken
Griffey followed with a roller
to third baseman Doug Rader
Who booted it for an error.
Joe Morgan bounced to
first, but the Padres' Gene
Richards let the ball squirt
through his legs for another
error as Rose scored and
Griffey moved to third .
Foster then singled to center
· for the last two runs of the
inning

inning.

The Reds scored their other
.run In the seventh on ·a double
by BtU Plwnmer, an infield
single by Zachry and R~'s
sacrifice fly.
The Padres scored their
looe run off Zachry in the first
when Bill Almoo tripled prior
to a single by Jerry Thrner.
Bob Shirley, a 22-year-old
rookie who defeated the Reds
in his major league debut a
week ago, was the loser.

saves will come. It's for the
manager to decide and as
long as we win, who can say
he's wrong."

Malor League ResUifS
By Unlt•d Press International

National Luuue
Chicago
000 000 ooo- 0 1 A
N.Y .
10200030x - 6 80
Bonham ,
Todd
(6)
and
Mitterwald ; Se!lver Cl-0) and
Stearns. LP- Bonham (1 .1) . HR

-New York, Kingman (3).

·~hila .
000 000 011)- 1 3 0
Montreal
001 000 Olx- 2 7 l
Twitchell , Garber ((8) 11nd
Boone ; Rogers, McEn11ney (81
and Carter. WFI-'-McEnaney (1 .
11 . LP- Giuber {0·2l. HR. Montreal, Ve.le'n tlne (3).

Plltsbur9h

Reuss,

(11 end

(6), Urrelt
WP-Dennv
(0-2} . H R- St .
(21.

Dodgers scored their fifth
straight victory before a
r'ecord San Francisco· crowd
of 48,771. Darrell Evans '
three-run pinch-hit homer
highlighted a four·run
seventh that put the 'Giants
allead, but Ron Cey tied the
score with a leadoff homer in
the eighth to trigger the
Dodgers' winning rally.
..Cardinals t, Pirates 3:
Bake McBride's suicide
squeeze bunt drove in the
final run of a three-run flfth
inning that enabled the
Cardinals to defeat Pirates.
John Denny pitched five
innings and gained credit for
his third win while Ted
Simmons hit his second
homer for St. Louis:
Expoll 2, Plllllles 1:

A

STATE FARM

Ellis Valentine hit a two-out
homer in the eighth inning to
give the Expos their fourth
straight
victory
over
Philadelphia. Steve Rogers
and
Wlll
McEnaney
combined on a three-bitter
.for the Expos.
Reds 4, Padres 1:
Pat Zachry became the
first Cincinnati pitcher to.
hurl a complete game this
season when he stopped the
Padres on seven hits. A pair
of San Diego errors and
George Foster's tworun
single highlighted a threerun
first inning that gave Zachry
all the cushion he needed.
Bob Shirley, who beat the
Reds in his major league
lie but on Easter Sunday, was
the loser.

Record 3,016 entered
in Blst Boston event

Yepsi • You can still get eartoon glasses

with Pepsi - They're a real ''steal" at
only 49' filled with a
16 oz. sparkling Pepsi!

NEW G.I GANTIC 25 FLAVOR
MILKSHAKE MENU

BOSTON (UPI) - Arecord Melrose and the Greater marathon. Drayton, who bas
field of 3,016 entrants awoke · Boston Track Club, was run marathons in 2:10, was
this morning, hoping 111 their favored to be first runner to leading the Boston race two
CHOOSE FROM THESE FLAVORS:
hearts that a sudden burst of the stew. Rodgers, 29, set the years ago until dropping out
Root Beer
Purple Cow
energy would carry them to Boston record of two hours two miles ftom the finlsh.
Raspberry
Orange Creme
Lemo.n
Another prime cbaUenger
BuUerscotch
victory in the 81st Boston nine minutes, 55 seconds
Maple · ·
Cherry Almond
Pineapple
·was
lean
and
hungry
1975 but passed up last April's
Marathon.
Grlsshopper
BliCk berry
Strawberry
American
Tom
Fleming,
who
Egg
Nog
Blueberry
Pe~eh
And as they gathered at Boston race to train for the
Candy Splce
Cherry
Punut Butter
finished secood in 1973 and
Boston's Prudential Center Olympic Marathon.
Black W1lnut
Vanilla
Marshmallow
Burgundy ·
The chief threat to 1974 and third" behind
Banana
for the .long ride to the
Hopkinton stsrtiQg line, they !lodgers, . as in 1975, was Rodgers and American Steve
were greeted by cool expected to be Canada's Hoag in 1975.
Also in the field is 1974
temperatures and clear skies Jerome Drayton, winner of
winner
Neal Cusack of Lime·
last
December's
Fukuoka
which would make th~ 26rick,
Ireland,
and defending
mile, 385-yard run back to
champion
Jack
Fultz, a
Boston that much more
Georgetown Unlve~si ty
bearable.
f;l
Middlon•'"t O.
Locust&amp;. Fourth
graduate, who negotiated the
All but a handfl!l reai~ed
1976 race in 2:211:19.
that even temperatures in the
•
low 60!1 and a light breeze
would make little difference
in their time of finish. A
select group of world class
runners, headed by the .
champions of the last three
·
Boston Marathons, would vie
Glouster's Tomcats
for the traditional laurel
defeated
the SV AC Kyger
wreath·and the smaU medal
Creek
Bobcats
twice
that goes to the winner. But
Saturday
in
two
non·league
every finisher would be
offered a free bowl of beef games play Ill Glouster.
The Tomcats took the
stew.
opening
game, fl.l and the
Bill Rodgers of nearby
five inning nightcap, 4~.
Kyger Creek's Von Taylor led
off the first inning of the
United Press lnternationa I
opening game with a home
-.
Eastern Conference
run,
but that t~rned out to be
Semifinal Round
the only Bobcat scoring of the
Best of Seven
.
day. In the first tilt, Jamie
Philadelphia vs. Boston
Boston leads, 1-0
Westfall had two hits and
Apr. 17- Boston Ill Phi Ia Todd Taylor added a hit.
111
Pacing the Glouster attack
Apr. '20 ........,. Boston at
were
Greg Holbert with two
Philadelphia
Apr. 22 - Philadelphia at hits, Mark Hunter had two
Boston
hits Including a home run.
Apr. 24 - Philadelphia at
Steve Baird was the losing
Boston
5th, 6th &amp; 7th game dates as hurler. Glouster managed
yet unavailable
just two. hits in the nightcap
but they were enough for a ~
Eastern Conference
victory.
Preliminary Round
The Tomcats took ad·
Best of Three
Washington vs. Cleveland
vantage of seven walks
Record-breaking cold weat her and higher rates
Washington wins12· 1
by
starting
and
losing
issued
Apr. 13 - Wash 109 Cleve
have forced heating bills to all-time highs. To help
pitcher Westfall and V.
·100
Taylor. Gelling Bobcat hits
Apr. 15 Cleve 91 Wash 83
its customers through thi s critical time, Colu mbia Gas
Apr. 17 - Wash 104 Cleve 98 were Claude Cornelius,
offers a special payment plan for people who received
Wlr)nter plays Houston
Taylor, Baird, Ron Fraley
a turn-off notice.
and Brian Sutphin. . Meade
Western Conference
Preliminary Round
and Jones had · Glouster
This program is set up for each custom er's
Best of Three
safeties.
Golden State vs. Detroit
Kyger Creek :&gt;+1 hosts
speci3l needs. With it, you can spre&lt;1d a p~rticularl y
Golden Slate wins, 2-1
Eastern
this
evening.
Apr. 12- Det. 95 Golden St.
high bill over seve ral months and pay the monthly
9{)
Unescore:
Apr . 14 - Golden St. 138
balance alongwith your regular monthly bill.
FlniGame
Det. 108 ·
KC
100
000
0'-1
4
2
.
Apri ( 17 - Golden St . 109
If you received a tum-off notice; contact Columbia
G1ous.
C ·1 040 IH! 6 0
Det. 101
.
Gas now. We will a{range a plan to help you.
· Winner plays Los Angeles
Baird (1:.) and Baylor.
Hunter (W) and Jones.
The plan costs you nothing extra-you pay only
Portland vs. Chicago
Second game
Portland wins, ·2-1
for the gas you use.
000 oo-o 6 2
Apr. 12- Portland96 Chl83 KC
Apr . 15- Chi 107 Portland Glous.
020 2 X-&lt;1 2 0
104
Westfall (L) Taylor (2) and
Apr. 17- Portland 106 .Ch(
Baylor. Hunter (W) and
98
Jones.
Winner plays Denver

u;

WlRS tUJO

again

St . lOtJIS

Angeles
edged
San
Francisco, 7·6, St . Louis
nipped Pittsburgh, 4·3,
Montreal squeezed by
Philadelphia, H. and Cincin·
nati trimmed San Diego, 41.
·
Braves 5, Altroa t:
Rod Gilbreath 'a run.
scoring double in the eighth
inning enabled the Braves to
defeat the Astros. For thi.
second straight game the
umpires walked off the field
to protest the use of instant
replays of controverl'ial calls
being flashed to the fans on a
giant screen.
Dodgers 7, Gianto 8:
Steve Garvey hit a threerun homer and scored the
winning run on Lee Lacy's
eighth-inning double as the

me.
BILL Fl£10tER

G'ouste·r

Moves work foJ" Rapp 's Cardinals

located At:

lftTERftATIOftAt

By FRED McMANE
UPI Sportl Writer
Tom Seaver, the n.yearold right-hander of lhe New
York Mets came close again
to achieving that elusive nohitter Sunday when he
stopped the Chicago Cubs on
just one bloop single in
pitching the Mets to a s..o
victory.
But, Steve Ontiveros, a
journeyman infielder who
owns a .615 lifetime batting
average against Seaver
blooped a single to right field
in . front of a diving Ed
Kranepool fn the fifth inning
for the Cubs • only hit.
Although he missed
pitching a n~ltter, Seaver,
often very critical of himself,
was pleased with his
performance. It was his
second straight shutout and
he raised his record to 3-0.
"I'm very satisfied today, '
said Seaver, who was not
happy with his pitching when
he blanked the Cardinals in
his last stsrt. " ... In my last
game, my control not very
good. To&lt;!ay it was better.
I'm ecstatic the way things
are going. They've scored 15
runs for me in three games."
Dave Kingman and Bruce
Boisclair were mostly
responsible for providing
Seaver with a cushion.
Kingman hit a two-run
. homer, his third of the
season, in the third inning
and Boisclair contributed a
run-ilcoring double and a two·
run single.
In other NL games, Atlanta
def\!Bled Houston, . 5--4, Los

Padr~s

six ahd walked only one. "I

Walker as the Bullet! beat the
Cavaliers, 104·98, in the
deciding game of !he best-of·
three set and earned a best·
of-aeven shot at Central
Division champion Houstoo.
"I knew Tom was going to
have a good game," said
Motta. "He was serious as
hell'Saturday. usuaUy he's
jovial and gets on his
teammates a lot. But he was
serious."
Walker, who scored 20
points each in the firlll two
games, was the reason for
concern . With Henderson
dogging him at three-quarter
court instead of laying back,
Walker scored just seven
points Sunday and shot two·
for·12 ftom the floor.
"Tom . just dedicated
himself to taking Footsy out
of the game, and he did it,"

Bloop single stops no-hitter

:Zachry works his magic

•

111 Court Street, P001eroy, Ohio

.

LANDOVER, Md. (UPI )Tom Henderson, at hill boss'
insistence, opent Saturday
afternoon watching a horror
movie.
Hill boss is Dick Motta, and
the film was of the
Washington Bullets '
stumbling, bumbling 91-83
NBAplayolflouatCJeveiand
the night before. .
•
"I really didn't want to
watch those movies . I wanted
to see the ones from the flist
game (a 10&amp;-100 win) to
inspire me more," said
Henderson . "But I guess they
did some good. I didn 't want
to make the same mistakes
twice."
With that in mind
Henderson scored a season:
high 31 points Sunday and
contributed a topnotch
defensive job on Foots

"

3. Mystery ti.mes will not be announced in advance and persons
calling ·during the mystery time will be published in the next day's
issue of the Sentinel...
4. But, regardless of the size of the ad or ~he number of times it is to
run, there will be no charge for the ad...
·

woefu) shooting alump with a
three-tor·11 day:
Olenler added 11 point. for
'Waahtngtm, while Grevey
had 14. Wes Unaeld bad 14
and Paul Campbell, a young reboundll and the Bu:llets shot
standindrafted when 24 of the 48 per cent from the field.
26 NBA offlclaill went oo
strike.
"You can't relax out there,
but it' sa terrible situation for
that young man to be ln. I'm
Just glad it turned out our
· way."
As for the Houston aeries,
whl~h hegins at Houaton
Tuesday night, Motta added :
"I think we have something
to prove there alao. We had a
chance to win the division
chaptplooship and didn't win
it."
The Cavaliers shot 40 per vet::
cent from the. floor - five
points under their se&amp;liOn
1., South Third SlrHI
average- but Fitch wouldn't
Mlddi9port, 01110
ft2.7155
,buY that excuse.
"Look at the shooting per·
centage of any team in the
ITATI . . . .
p!ayol!o and it's going to be
down," he ·sald. "You don't
fool anybody and the defense
INIUIANC~J
is tough."
Jim !llones contributed 19
points for the Cava, while
RUS8ell bad 15 and Jim
Insurance Companies
. Brewer 13, plus 13 rebounds. IWmoOffl~.lllhAustin Carr continued in his
~to~the~

310
' 9

fro m KC

NBA playoffs

. . High
.heating bills
this wi•tter?·
ColtJ•nbia
has a plan

tohetpyou!

�t

l&gt;-TheDailYSentinel,Middleport-Pomeroy, o.. Monday, April 18,1!177

t-TheOally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Mooday, Aprill8. 1!177
. '

Falcons split Saturday with Buffalo, winning 1-0, losing 4-5
BY GARY CLARK

to score the ~ames first run.
Wahama chAlked up four of
The
Wahama
White · their runs in the bottom half or
Falcons, weary after playing the second 011 four hits. Mike
five games in succession, Goldsberry got things started
returned to the diamond for with a single followed by Tim
the slzth straight day and spilt Thompson second home run of
a twin bill with visiting the year.Jack Smith kept the
Buffalo or Wayne.
rally alive with a single and a
Buffalo carne up with three stolen base. Rick Buzzard,
rwlll in the top half of the who collected three hits in the
seventh to capture the opener game then brought Smith
S--4. The White Falcons came home with a double and later
back in the nightcap to gain a scored the Falcons final run
split with a five inning I~ on an error.
victory.
Buffalo scored another
Jeff Collier started on the unearned run in the fifth to
mound for the local nine in the cut the lead to two at 4-2 before
flnt game and was holding a erupting for three more in the
4-2 lead before exiting after final frame to win out by a S--4
six innings of work. Tim Davis margin.
came on to work the seventh In the second game the
and was pinned with the loss. White Falcons scored a run in
Davis faced only three batters the first inning to give Jerry
giving up two safeties and a Tucker all the offense he
base on balls before giving needed as he blanked the
way to Mike Goldsberry who visitors through five frames
was 'tagged with a game to claim his third pitching
winning two run double by victory of the year against one
Eddie Blankenship which defeat.
spelled defeat for Wahama . Duke Smith started things
Buffalo drew first blood with off with a two bagger followed
a single tally in the second by Jack Smith's one out
without the aid of a hit. Angle single. Duke scored when
drew a lead off walk and Hensley un corked a wild
advanced to second·on a wild pitcher for the only run of the
pitch. Ali error on the next game.
batter allowed the rightfielder Tucker worked the full five

(lest of Seven)
Quebec n . Ntw England

Apr
Apr

TwlnllO, A's %:
extra hard this spring," said Royllll, Tl&amp;ent 5i
John Mayberry led off the
Rod Carew cracked a
Palmer .
Thanks to the merits of an
In Sunday's game, Palmer eighth inning with his second bases-lpaded second inning to
overlooked free agent named
outdueled Bert Blyleven, who homer this year - both off seven~ second Inning to
Billy Smith, the Baltimore
bested him Z-1 oo opening Detroit's Dave Roberts -in highlight the Twlno' victory.
Orioles' batters
have
beiJing the Royals snap a Mike Pazik spaced seven hits
day .
managed to keep their
Smith hit his first major three-game losing streak. over eight innings for
combined average higher
league homer for the Oriole•' Buck Martinez also doubled · Minnesota to gain his first
than Jim Palmer's earned
final run and went 3-for-4 in home !&amp; pair a( runs for the major league triumph.
run average.
the opener and then went 3- Royals during a four-run first Wblte Sox 4, Blue Jay1 %:
Palmer, the Orioles' three.
Ken Brett and Bruce Dal
for-4 again in the nightcap as inning.
Canton combined QD a fourBaltimore unloaded a 13Jilt Mariners 11, ADgtll 7: ·
Danny Meyer clouted a hitter tri pitching the White
attack off high-{lriced Texas
pitchers Gaylord Perry and thretl'un homer in first inning Sox to their fifth straight
and ex-Angel Leroy StantOil, victory. Sacrifice rues by
Paul Llqdblad.
Elsewhere in the American who had just one hit in his Royle Stillman, Jorge Orta
League Sunday, Cleveland previous 21 at-bats. iced it and Richie Zisk accooUI'te..•
downed Boston, 10-5, after with a tw&lt;H'\111 blast in th~ for three of Chicago's runs
Boston won the opener of sixth. Mlt'e Kekich, who while Toronto's rookie .
their doubleheader, 4-1; hurled two pe.-fect innings slugger Doug Ault unloaded a
Kansas
City shaded Detroit, before leaving with a stiff two-run homer off Dal Cantoo
Jo Jo White, limited by foul Phhiladelphia 76ers in the
6-5;
Seattle
outslugged shoulder, was credited with in the ninth· to take the AL
troubles in the first half, nationally t cl~ vised first
California,.
11-7;
Minnesota his first big league win since lead in that department with
came back strong down the game of their ~ ' BA Eastern
MANSFIBLD,
Ohio
(UPJ
)
lour.
routed
Oakland,
10..2; 1973.
stretch and hit a !&gt;-foot Conference semifinal series. - Gary (Ind. ) Roosevelt ·
basellne jumper at the final
White hit a jumpe:· with 31 High School edged defending Milwaukee blanked New
York, Ul, and Chicago put
buzzer to give Boston a 113- seconds to play that ~:ave the
champion
Dayton
Roth
to
win
away
Toronto, 4-2.
111
win
over
the Ceitics a lll-109 lead but,
top teams honors in the 48th
after the Sixers missed two Mansfield • Mehock Relays Bre"l!'ers !, Yallkeeo 0:
shots at their end, Johr. during
Southpaw Bill Travers
the weekend.
Havllcek, playing in a record
hurled
a seven-bitter and
Below are the four final
166th NliA playoff game , events,
Robin
.
Yount
belted a solo
the others being
threw away an inbound pass
homer
as
the
Brewers won
Sunday:
and Julius Erving scored on a published
their
fifth
game
in six with
811()-yard Run - I, Don
dunk with eight seconds left.
the Yankees this season and
Erving was fouled by Sidney Heugan, Toronto Rexford. 2. swept the New Yorkers into
Rider, Hilliard. 3, Mark
Wicks on the play but missed Scott
l'ruenta,
Pontiac (Mich .) the AL East cellar.
both free throws of a Uor-1
Indians 10, 1, Red Sox 5, t:
Central. Time- I :S3.S.
PHONE
penalty situation .
Rookie Paul Dade drove
860-Yard RelayI,
After a time out, the CeltiC$
home three runs and Fred
.I
'THE ALL NEW
LA COSTA, Calif . (UP!) - inbounded to Jo Jo White Clevela~d Glenville. 2, Gary Kendall belted a solo homer
Even after his 62nd career from mldcourt with six (Ind.) Roosevelt. 3, Detroit as the Indians gained a
win that moved.him into a tie seconds to play, and he st. Martin Deporres. Tlfne - doubleheader split at the
IN~
SHACK~
only the seventh four-game with the immortal Ben Hogan missed a hurried shot. Wicks' i :28.8 (breaks record of expense of Rick Wise (who, in
=- Enjoy three sizes of your favorite
sweep in league history for second place in the all- followup was blocked by 1:28.9set by Detroit Northern 1-3 of an inning, had his
in
1971
).
pizzas.
with a 3-1 triumph before time victory standings, Jack Erving. But the ball went to
!SO-Yard Low Hurdles - I, earned run average sOar to
Try our delicious subs while you ,
more than 16,000 Market Nicklaus complained about White in the corner, and he
54.02) and million-dollar
Square Arena fans Saturday the way he got it.
made no mistake al!out it, Mike Austin, Columbus West. reliever BW Campbell, who
; ip your favorite suds .
.
night and they now can relax
Pro golf's Golden Bear - touching off wild dances from 2, Marshall Parks, Dayton now has.an ERA of 12.00. Tbe
Eat In Or Carry Out
•
until their next likely closing In oo $3 million in Charlie Scott and Dave Roth. 3, Dan Debevc, Buclld. Red Sox ·won .the opener
Phon.e
Time - 19.4.
opponent, Quebec, disposes or lifetime earnings - beat 25- Cowens.
·
992 -6304
Mile Relay - I, Cleveland behind the four-bit pitching of
.
·•
New England.
year-old Bruce Lietske on the
Erving, who paced PhilliReggie
Cleveland
when
Reg Thonias, Brian McDo· third hole of a sudden-death delphia with 36 points, Glenville. 2. Cleveland John Denny Doyle banged out a
nald and AI Karlander drilled playoff for his fifth shrugged off the missed free F. Kennedy. 3, Gary (Ind.) triple and pair of singles.
the puck past Norm LaPointe Tournament of Champions throws as a key factor, Roosevelt. Time - 3:19.7.
and Michel Dlon came up triumph.
saying, "If I bad made one , , - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - with brilliant saves to stymie
"1 don't like sudden-death we would have lost by one
all but one Cincy assault playoffs, period," Nicldaus instead or two."
Scott led the balanced
-that .one by Gregg Carroll in declared. "I don't feel you
should play 72 holes and then Celtlcs' attack with 22 points.
the middle period.
"I thought the whole team decide a whole tournament on Wicks and Cowens joined
White in a group at 21, and
gave a big effort," iiald one hole."
Demers, who led the Racers, Lietzke, who won a sudden- Havlicek contributed 19.
to the Eastern Division title death playoff of his own · In other action Sunday,
last year only to see them Jose against Gene Littler at Golden State defeated
to New England in the first Tucson in January,lost when Detroit, 109-101, to win that
Nicklaus, 37, knocked in a IZ- Western Conference ·quarterround or the playoffs. .
foot
putt for a birdle on the final series two games to one
Following Thursday night's
par-five,
586-yard 17th hole at and move on to a semifinal
!&gt;.1 victory, Demers let it be
La
Costa.
Lietzke missed his meeting with Los Angeles;
known that the Racers were
25-foot
birdle
try moments ·Portland ended its best-of"on the verge of the greatest
earlier.
three Western Conference
upset in the history of the
to
Tom
Watson
'quarter-final
series with
Runnerup
WHA," and they completed
at
the
Masters
by
two
strokes
Chicago
with
a
1~
victory
the chore two nights later.
Cincinnati was favored in the previous weekend, and now takes on Denvef;
the series, because its Nicklaus earned $t5,000 first· and Washington captured Its
powerhoUBe offense · scored prize money at La Costa that Eastern Conference quarter•erles
against
nearly 100 goals more than pushed his career earnings to final
Indianapolis during the $2,959,273 and earnings for Cleveland, · 104-98, to move
into the semis against
season. But Demers' strategy the year to $151,061.
of tight checking, coupled
Nicklaus said he'd like to Houston.
'
with the goaltending of Dion see the tour substitute Warriors 109, Plst0111 101:
and Paul Hoganson, resulted sudden-death playoffs with
Detroit was leading by
in the sweep that included an three-bole playoffs. The three points midway through
unprecedented triple - tour's Tournament Policy the third period when a fight
overtime in the series opener Board a)lowed Nicklaus to broke out between Detroit's
use that method at hlS own Eric Money and Golden
at Cincinnati.
" We played 11 veteran .tournament, the Memorial, in State's Charles Dudley. The
club," conceded Stingers • Ohio last year and Roger fight lasted several minutes
Coach Terry Slater. "We just Maltbie beat Hale Irwin on and spread into the stands as
didn't have the -experience. the fourth atra playoff hole. spectators and burly Pistons
However,
a · tour center Bob Lanier alia got
We learned something and it
will help us in the future ." spokesman said Nicklaus • involved..
Memorial event would be
When play resumed, the
decided oo ·a suddendeath Warriors went on a I~ tear,
basis this year. In addition, lnc)uding eight points by Rick
the PGA championship wW Barry, in the next 4:23 and
be decided by sudden death moved into an elght1&gt;0int"
for the first time this ae&amp;IOII. lead that the Pistons could
Nicklaus said, "A three· nev,er overcome. Howard
Aineriun League
hole playoff gives a. fellow Porter's 16 points in the
East
W. L Pet . GB more of a chance to breathe. fourth quarter drew Detroit
Milwaukee
6 2 .750
Il's more or a test of golf. I aa close as three.
Cleveland
4 3 .571 11h know there are pros and cons
Barry finish ed with 35
Toronto
5 s .500 2
Baltimore
3 A .429 21t2 on this, but that's my points to lead all scorers.
Detroit
3 7 .300 -4
opinion."
Lanier finlahed with 33 and
Boston
2 s .286 l 1f2
The
only
events
left
with
an
Howard Porter had 30 for
New York
2 6 .250 -4
West
Ill-bole playoff are the U.S. Detroit.
W. L
Pet . GB
Open and British Open.
Blazers 108, Bulla 98:
Chicago
6 ·2 .750
Oakland
7 3 .700
Nicklaus carded a final-day
Bob Gross came up with 26 ·
Kansas City
5 3 .625 1
71
while
Lietzke
carne
in
with
points
for Portland but the
Texas
"' 3 .571 Ph
six-under-par
66,
needing
proud,
young Bulls, who
Minnesota
5 5 .500 2
California
5 1 .•11 3
only 26 putts, to force the , . overcame early season
·seattle
s 1 ... 11 J
playoff. They wound up with ailments and unfamiliarity
· S.turd•v.' s Results
Boston 8 Clevefand 4
72-hole totals of 281, seven with each other to sweep Into
Minneso ta 3 Oakland 1
11llder,
for the Mutual of New the playoff in the final six
Chica~o 3 Toron to 2
Yorkaponsored event.
weeks, did not die easily.
Milwaukee A New York 3

By BILL MADDEN

time Cy Young Award eight atbats and two runs
winner, hurled his ~d balled in . .
At day's end, Palmer bad
straight shutout Sunday in
the first game of a :'MI, &amp;-1 lowered his earned run
sweep by Baltimore over the average to 0.64 and the
Texas Rangers. But in both Orioles' hitters had raised
games it was Smith, the 23rd their collective batting
of 24free agents to get signed average from .162 to .204.
"fknew I was going tc have
this past winter, who was the
hitting hero with six hits in to pitch awfully well this year
in order to win , so I worked

UP! Sports Writer

White's jumperin~anans
at buzzer wins edge
Dayton

Apr
Apr

Apr 19-New Eng at Quebec
x.Apr 22--Que at New Eng
&gt;C -1'\pr 23-New Eng ar Que

Clnclnn•tl vs. lndl•napolls

( tncll•n•polls wins, 4·0)
,.,_lndpls 4 Cfncf 3, )Ots
12-lndpls 7 Cine I 2
14- lndpls 5 Cioc 1 3
14---lndpls 3 Cincl l

Apr

Apr
Apr
Apr

-: ··~:
- -·

'

Western Division
Semifinals .
(Best ol Seven)
Houston vs. Edmonton
( Houstctn le1ds, 2-1)
Apr 13-Hou -4 Edmntn 3, ~t
AJ'r 15-Haus 6 Edmonton 2
Apr 17-Edmontqn 7 Hous 2
Apr 20-Hous at 'Edmonton
x-Apr 22- -Edmontn at Hous
x-Apr 2A- Hous at Edmontn
x.Apr 26-Edmontn at Hous
Wlnniplt

vs ~

Sin Djego

(Gimes Tied, 2-2)
Apr .1()-Winnlpg 5 San Dgo 1

Apr '12- WinniPII &lt;San Ogo.1
Apr 16-San Ogo 5 Wlnnlpg 4

Apr 17- San [)go 6 Winn lpg ~
x -Apr 20-San Ogo at Wlnnlpg .
X·APr 22-Winnlpg et San Ogo
)( -Apr 24-San DgO
at Wlnnlpu
K-It neeessary ,

M•lor .Le•gue St1ndlngs
By United Presslnternatlonll
Nltlonll LtiiUI
Eut

w.

Pet.
3 .667
3 .571
-4 .556
-4 .500
-4 .500
6 .1A3

~a

Pet.
Los Angeles
7 2 .778
Houston
s A .556
Atlanta
5 A .556
San Dleoo
-4 · 6 ..tOO
Cincinnati
"' 6 •.tOO
san Francisco 3 6 .333
llturday's Retults
New York A Chicago 1
Montreal"' Philadelph ia 3
PlttsbUI"Qh 3 St. LOU IS 1
LOI Angeles 5 San Fran 0
Atlanta 4 Houston 3
San Oiego .5 Cincinnati A
Sundey's Rnults
Montreal 2 Philadelph ia l
New York 6 Chicago D
St. ~ouls 4 Pltts~rgh 3
Atla'nta 5 Houston •
Los Anotlft 7 San Fran 6

GB

St. Louts
Montreal
Ntw York
Chicago
Pittsburgh
Philadelphia

L

6
4
5
A

A
1
West
w. l

·
1
1
l lh
11h
A

2

1

J1f2
31f2

"'

Batt at Tex., 2, ppd .1 r a in
Detroit 1 Kansas City s
California 6 Seattle A
Sunday's Results
, Chicago "' Toronto 2
·
Mllwaukee 2 New York 0
Boston -4 Cleve 1. 1st
Cleve 10 Bost on 5, 7nd
Cincinnati A San Diego 1
Minnesota 10 Oakland 2
T«MMIay•s Probable Pitchers
Baltimore 5 Te K. 0. 1st
fAll Times EST)
Baltimore 6 Tex . 1. 2nd
Pittsburgh O&lt;lson 1-1) at Kansas Cify 6.Detrolt S
Montreal (Brown 1·0) , 2:15f.m . Seattle 11 Callfornla7
Philadelphia (Lerch .Q.l at
Todar'·' PrOb•ble Pitchers
Chicago (Burris 1-1), 2:15p.m'.
All Tlmfl EST)
·
New York (Swan O-Il at St.
Toronto (Lemanczyk 1-1) at
LOult CForsctl 2-0) 1 8 :30p.m .
New York (Figueroa 0-ll. 2:05
1:.01 Angelet (Sutton 1-01 at p.m .
.,
ClnciMatl {Billingham 1-0l. 8
Oetrort (Sy kes 0-0) at Boston
p,m . .
.(Jenkins o.1), 12 noon .
san DltGO (Sawyer 0,2J at
TeKas (Al exander 1-01 at
At11nt1 (LaCorte 1-0), 7:35p.m . Seatfle (Thomas 0-0J , 10: 35
Tunclar' s oam11
p.m .
Plttlburgtl It Montreal
Minnesota (Goltz 0-0J at
New York at St. Louis
Kanus City (Leonard 0-0J. 8: 30
Phll-lphll at ChiCIGO
p,m . ,
s.n DJergo at Atlanta , night
Cleveland (Dobson D-Ol at
San F!"!n a~ Houston , nlglit
Baltimore (May 0-1J, 7:30 p.m .
Tu•sdar s G1mes
Toronto at New York
Detroit et Boston
A lhoaBht for the day : MilwaukH
at Oakland
Brllillh atalemln John Selden Te1111S at Seattle,
night
Chicago at CalifOrnia, nlgnt
Aid,
llult loverD the M
rnnesota et Ken City, night
fbalt mate tllle leut nolle." I Cleveland Itt Baltimore, nfght

'"!beY

with·us!

PLANNING A_PIZZA PARTY

-MEIQS

PIZZA

~- ~ ;

t'?r

f'W
(:_

(

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•

DENTURES- DENTISTRY
DR . RONALD. F. RIVIERE

DR. A. J. STAEHLI - DR. IC. H. CHUNG OA. VICTOR V. LIANG - Oft 0 . J . STOMBAUGH

One or two day
full denture servi·c e,
partial dentures

,

FOR PRICES
OHIO TOLL FREE

1"·800·282·6411

DR . RIIJI£RE

RIVIERE CENTER 949 E. Llvings1on Ave., Columbus
Weekday s8·~1J A M . to6 :30P.M.
'h~ u 'tl Smile Tomorr;,; •If

• ••..

· 'I• I '· · 1 ~ · 1·t l1 f .,ifu;·

price of fuel used to generate electricity has
Years ago, most ene~ needs were met
by what you had in your nght arm. Or by
skyrocketed since 1973.
·
something you kept in a stall, in your barn.
But, while we continue to make every
Thday, meeting energy needs is a gigantic effort to hold down our costs in meet~ your
undertaking. And a complex problem. Because future energy needs, there are some tilinl[s you
·
the need is still growing.
can do to help conserve that energy and l&lt;eep
Even conservative estimates tell us the
your costs in line at the same time.
·
demand for electricity alone will double in the
· By using your electricity wisely. Insulating
next 15 years. ·
your home properly. Checking into more .
Just keeping up with this increase is
. energy efficient appliances and systems, like
the heat pump:
go~ to be tough. It's going to take new
facilities. But major facilities take fro m five to
And by understanding that the generation
ten years to build.
of electricity is a costlier and more complicated
process than it used to be.
And a lot of money.
·
Building a power plant today, for instance;
When you get right down to it, the
costs five times what it did 15 years ago. And
best way we know to harness the energy we
.it was costly even then.
all need for the future is by working together
Besides that, everyone knows how the
today.

~.l:
lS

ij

'

~*

I

l1_
~

~

&lt;

"ShaMll
k- R NANCY REED. left. was chairman for the
espeare on Women" presentation Sunday at the

Meigs Museum. The dramatic portrayals were by actress
Bronwynn Hopton, center, with commentaries by Kezia
Vanmeter Sproat.

A Conlrovenial Letter
Dear Helen:
I've been reading these teary letters from unwed pregnant
teenagers- some on their second baby at age 15.
After working as a maintenance man in a home for unwed
pregnants last year, I doo't feel much sympathy. The bums
lroke Windows to skip out on dates; sprung doors so they could
come and go aa they please; damaged property and teachers,
and most showed no appreciation for the best possible
.treatment (that was usually paid for by Welfare).
I don't think these people should be turned loose to be
repeaters. After the first baby ,.they should be kept in reform
school until 18.
Also, regular schools should have security guards (armed
with truncheons) around the clock, to keep down vandalism, .
and attacks. Signa shoUld be posted : "Anyone assaulting a
teacher or student wW be taken to the principal's office and
worked over with sticks." ... "Anyone committing sabotage
wWgetabove cure-plus payingaU~stsofrepair If it takes a
lifetime." ... "Anyone repeating the above acts automatically
·gets a ticket to reform ·school."
·
Believe me, I don't hate kids: I've raised a good and
beautiful daughter who has giYI!n me four fine grandchildren.
But we've got to get these toughies straightened out. WRENZO

BRONWYNN .HOPTON in her portrayal of "A
Midsummer Night's Dream."

Dear M.:
.
Who 's condemning? Many eiders have been forced into
nonmarriages these days, and if that's "living in sin," blame
pension boards.
.
Whars so wrong about seeking companionship in a way
which allows you to live above the extreme poverty level? - H.

+++

Dear Helen :
Heaven forbid I shouldn't answer "A Brother," who thinks
which sock you put on first is more impgrtant than "women
worrying about keeping their given names after marriage."
The important thing is that all women become aware of their
legal rights to retain their surnames and add that of their
spouses after marriage, Joan Quinlan Brown.
That a· divorced woman would retain her husband's
surname (and the title "Mrs.") is a mystery to me. After
break, she is, ill reality, Joan Quinlan. Her children may retain
the "Brown."- TO EACHffiSORHEROWN

Boosters name · officers
RACINE - New officers of niade up of Becky Crow,
the Southern Band Boosters Peggy Nelgler, Steve Coff·
recenUy elected were Mary man and Heidi Ashley.
Gullither, president ; Kay
Following the business
Warden, vice president ; Joan · session wiU be a rap session
Browning , secretary, and and refreshments wW be
LeaMa Beegle, treasurer. served. All parents and
The hostess will meet friends are weleome to attend
Tuesday, Aprli 19 at 7:30 p.m. the next meeting.
in the economics room at the MEHTA FElED
high school to dlscuss final
WS ANGELES (UP!)
plans for the band concerts Los Angeles Pbllharmoqic
May 14 and I~ at the State music director Zubin Mehta
Capitol and Cedar Point ; t)le was called the "man of the
May 18 awards banquet; yard era" Sunday at a testimonial
Slile to be held in May and the banquet for the departing
.purchase of a trailer to bt cooducter, who. goes to the
used as a conceSSloo stand at New York Philharmonic.
the Meigs County Fair and at
Mehta will be replaced by
football games.
Carlo Maria Guillni, former
On the program wiU be the conductor of the Israel
high school trwnpet quartet Philharmonic

•

I
II

DEXTER - Miss H._.el
Henson and Mrs. C. E. Stout
hosted a .recent meeting of
the Star Garden Club at the
home of Mrs. Stout with
members of the Good Luck
Garden Club of the Athens
Mental Health Center as
guests.
The Good Luck Club held a
business meeting with
members giving the creed
and collect. For roll call they
named a vegetable. Minutes
of a previous meeting hosted
by th~ Richland Garden Club
were read. They had an
SON IS BORN
Easter program with pgems
Mr
.
and
Mrs. Joe Derowin
including "Easter Bouquet,"
of
Millvale,
Pa. are an·
"It's Spring, " 11 Resurrectlon
nouncing
the
birth
of thei r
Message," "Tulip Bulbs,"
first
child,
Joseph
Edward
"Little Things" and "Finding
Derowin
,
Jr.
at
Saint
Easter Eggs." There was
Margaret's
Hospilai,
Pittsatso group singing.
For the Star Club, Mrs. burgh, March 28 weighing 6
Robert Jewell, therapy lb.; 12 oz . Grandparents are
chairman, had each member Mr. and Mrs. Robert Smith,
plant a blooming petunia in a Sr., Rt. 2, Racine. and Mr.
pot to take ·with them . and Mrs. William Kopar,
Refreshments of a chicken Millvall e; and a gre at·
casserole, hot ·rolls, cakes, grandparent is Martin
dessert, salads, candy; punch Cunningham, Racine.

ontlnuous 1I
.,..__, .
....._.,...., pouting !1
I
I
I
I
I

II

-~--------------------·--J

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT Business
and Professional Women's
Club, 7:30 p.m. Monday at
Columbia Gas Co. office in
Middleport. Membership
committee In charge pi
meeting. Ail new members
urged to attend .
CANDYSTR£PERS annuli!
tea, Veterans Memorial
Hospital, Monday. 7 p.m. in
the East-West dining room.
Candystripers to report in full
uniform by6:30 p.m. Parents
and friends invited. Refresh·
ments will be served.
BLOODMOBII.E , Monday,
Pomeroy Elementary School,
I to 6 p.m.
TUESDAY
DREW Webster Post 39,.
American Legion, meeting
and annual fish fry, 8 p.m.
Tuesday at post home.
MEIGS
Muzzleioaders
Shoot at the club range,
Laurel Cliff, beginning 5 p.m.
Tuesday . Prizes lor each
match; cook out to follow
Public welcome .
SALISBURY PTO 7:30
p.m. Toesday with program
by Rio Grande College
Grande Chorale. Public in'
vited . Members of PTO ask ed
to report between 7 and 7:30
p.m. for voting. Business
meeting to follow program ;
refreshments .
GOSPEL MEETING underway at Reedsville Church
of Christ through Wednesday
evening wlth ministers from
Ohio
Valley
College,
Parkersburg, speaking ; 7:30
each evening except Sunday;
6:30 on Sunday. Public in·
vited.
Ga rden Club for holiday
expenses.

Read at tijt meeting was an
invitation to an open meeting
of the Friendly Gardeners of
and coifee were served . . Rutland at the Rutland
Popcorn was given to each United Methodist Church at
7:30p.m. on April 27.
one to take with them.
During a short meeting of
the Star Club, Mrs. Norman
Will read the verse of the .
month. No action was taken
on a request for the club to
sponsor a rider in the bike-athon for the retarded. Plans
were made to purchase
evergreen's for the Dexter
Church lawn . A $5 donation
wsa made to the Good Luck

THE INN PLACE
Tuesday Night Special

~-----GUlnrE-R~ERVtC-E----~~

Phone 949-2814
9 a.m. to ·s p.m_,

Ohio Power'--"'"""

Working together,is the only way.

Star Garden Club
entertains guests

•AIIminum liutters &amp; Downspouts
•Ro0f1111 •Aluminum Sld11111 :soffits

Soc .I aI
Ca Iend ar·.

&lt;:::&gt;:::::&lt;=~w;o;::~A-»:':::0:'.:'

/-I

simple.

I Qutbet titads, 3· 11
9-Quebec 5 New Eng 2
12-:.c:!uebec 7 New Eng J
14-QU«l' ,. New Eng 3, ot
16-New Eng 6 Quebec A

"Shakespeare on Women,"
·a performance • lecture
program relating the plays of
Shakespeare to the Uves of
women today was presented
Sunda y · at th e Me igs
Museum.
Actress BronwyM Hopton
portrayed segments of eight
of Shakespeare's plays using
two versions, such as comic
and serious followin g a
commentary on the situation
by Kezia Vanmeter Sproat.
-

Some nobody n~med Smith key to sweep by Orioles

.. Ha1·ness~
energy used tO be

WHA Playoffs

IY UnUed Prtss International
Eutern Division
Semifinals

Shakespeare related to women today

innings giving up three har· two and striking out two.
record into Mondays game at open dale with a trip to Poca. Parkersburg South and journey to Eastern closing out
miess !ingles while walking
Wahama will now take a 10-6 Parkersburg. Tuesday is an on tap for Wednesday. Eastern visit Mason on the week on Saturday.
Tbursdsy and Friday with a

Nicklaus
•
wmner
History made in
ofT-C
four·game ~weep

INDIANAPOLIS (UP!) Coach Jacques Demers
called it "the greatest upset
in the hlatory of the World
Hockey Association."
Veteran .defenseman Pat
Stapleton called it, "just a
tromendous effort from the
whole bunch of guy$."
It all added up to an
astounding four.game sweep
over powerful Cincinnati by
the underdog Indianapolis
Racers in the first roWJd of
the WHA playoffs.
The Racers cllnched it -

••

Visit Our Salad Bar

Ham
Sweet Pot a1oes

Vegetable
Hot Rolls
Coffee. Tea or Milk

Plus Tax

THE MEIGS INN

Pom eroy , o.

Phone 992-6304

=

PIZZA SHACK Phone 992-6304

Mrs. Hopton who teaches
theatre in the Worthington
public schools and each year
leads two student tours Ill the
Shakespeare Festival at
Stratford, Ontario, and Mrs.
Sproat, on the English staff at
Ohio Dominican College, are
sponsored in the program by
the Women's Resource and
Policy Development Center.
Mrs. Sproat explained their
goal as being to show how
numanities study can be
brought to bear on con·
temporary Issues of public
policy. She spoke of women's
changing role in society and
said that Shakespeare's
writings serve as an area for
understanding this change.
Shak'e speare's writing
included in the presentations
were "The Taming of the
Shew ," " The Comedy of
Errors, " " Love's Labor's
Lost ,' ' ~" Mac'beth , ' '
11
0thellot'' .,The Merchant of
Venice •n " Romeo and Juliet' 1
and " A Midsummer Night's
Dream."
The program was. spon·
sored by Alpha Epsilon
Chapter of Alpha Delta
Kappa, the Meigs Retired
Teachers Association, and
the American Association of
University Women.
Mrs. Lucille Swackbam·

er and Mrs. J enifer Museum trustees, greeted the
Butcher were chairmen for guests
Alpha Epsilon Chapter which ..--.....o:-H~U:-::B:-::B:-:A;:::R:-::D'"'S~-"'"'!
handled most of the
arrangements for the
GREEN HOUSE
presentation. ·Mrs. Nancy
• Open Dally
Reed extended the welcome, .
• 91o 6
and for .the social hour which
Sunda y
followed . Mrs. Swa ckha 1 1o 6
mer pgured the punch and
Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee presided
Vep:etable Plants,
at the coffee service.
Potted Plants,
Preparation of the museum
was by the trustees of the
Hanging Baskets
Museum, assisted by the
Senior Citizens. Mrs. Patrick
992-5776 Syracuse , 0 .
Loch a ry repr esenting the
r----------------:-----~-,

SAVE
EUREKA

Prevention is
the bes1 policy .. .

FOR YOUNG

DRIVERS
Yo u ng men and women
oft en ask. why they ha11e t o
pay
m or e
tor
the ir
a uto m ob ile insurance.
Dr' iver s In their teens and
earlier twentl es cause far
m or' e than their share of
t ; aff ic accidents . Reports
th e
Nat ional
Sa f ety
Council : 21.8 perce nt of all
m ot a~ lsts are 24 years of
age or under', yet these
yo u t hf ul ope r ator s are
involv ed a S dr ivers in 38.6
per ce nt of all a!:cidents
and 37 .3 per c.ent of al l fata l
mishaps.
·
A great many young people
a r e s~ i ll e d , responsible
dri ve rs . Obv iously, though,
quite a few are not.
There's no S\Jb stitu te for
developm ent competence
and th e right i:lttitudes,
in c lud i ng
a
positive
approa ch to defensive
dri ving .
Ou r
agency
provides
fin ancia l protection and
ser 11ice in case of a ccidents
irivol11 ing young· di'lvers .. ,
but
m a ny
of
these
a cc id en ts
can
be
pre vent~d . That's why we
say """':' pr everitlon is the
best pol icy .

INCLUDED: 6 PIECE ATTACHMENT SET
0

~)
""''

I

GREAT CLEANING FEATURES!
• Exclusive 6-way Dial- A- Na p~ rug he1ght
adjustment cleans any c;:arp el from the
lowesl nap ·1o th e thickost shag

• Top-filling dispqsable !Just bag prevents
clogs, keeps suction strong
·
Edge Kleener cleans 1ha11as11ough
inch along the ba9eboards
·

ReQ . Uprigh1 S19 .0h Tool
~eg . S1USITo1al Reg. s99.90

FOR ONLY
lnge~s

INCLUDE,S 6 PC. . ·
ATTACHMENT SET

Furniture

DALE C. WARNER
992-2143

102

----

w.Main

Pom eroy

106 N. 2nd AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

�w.ant Ads T urn

'·

e-Tbe Dlll:1 Sentinel, Ml~·Pomeroy, 0., Mcnlay, April18, 1977
A~~OINTMENT

~:·:.N1.~~:::.

NOTICED'
•·t·t· •• v1 ••
Docauo&lt;l.

L et rt'h e

Unwanted Items Into Cash

'

.

Television log for easy viewing

Notlct 11 htr"tbY given that

M1rvrn Morris. of

Dexter ~

Ohlo.n" bHn dulY appointed
Executotl of lht Estate of
VIvian E : Johnaon. dtctastd ,

WANT AD
CHARGES

late of Box 1·"· Raclnt. Mtlas

County, Ohio .
Creditors art required to
file their claims with said
f i duc i ary
w ithin
thr.e t
months.
Dllo&lt;l lhll 13th doy of April
1971
Menning Wtbsfer..

Judae

commOI'I Pltll Court ,
Probate Olvlslon
Meigs county , Oh1o

W 11, 25 (51 2, 3tc
NOTICE TO

CONTRACTORS

STATE OF OHIO
OE~ARTMENT

01' TRANSPORTATION
Columbul, Ohio .
April I, 1t77

· Contrect Sties Lege I
copy No. 77·4"
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT

WANTED I

15 Wordl orUnder
I day
' ldayt
Sdlys
ld&lt;)'1

Cuh
1.00
1.00
1.10
3.00

Cllarc•

us

1.110
2.25

,,.,.

Each word over the minimwn 15
WOl'ds Ia 4 centa per wurd,per dolly.

Ads running othl!r than COfliJeCUtive
d.lye will be charged at Ute I d11y
note.

In memory, Card or Thank! and
Obituary :. &amp; centa per word, S3.00
minimwn. Cuh ln advance.

Mobtlt Home sales and Yard sale!
are acctpted only

w!th, cash with

&lt;tder. 2:5 cent charge for ads carry. ·
.lng Box Nwnber In Care of The Stntlnel.

Experienced electrician. good pay, year
around work, must be capable of building
electrical control panel for industrial
machinery from engineering drawings.
Must be familiar with J IC Specifications for
General Purpose Machine Tools. Duties will
include installation of control panel on
machinery and complete wiring of
machinery including installation of conduit
and cable. Please send resume or contact
Dennis McCune c-o Clark Tool and Design,
Inc. 886 Strafford Road, P.O. Box 418
Delaware, Ohio 43015, (614) 363-1961.

The Publlaher reservea the riglt"

ATTENTION MANAGERS &amp; LADY TO PVE irl and care for 90
Seal~ proposal! will bt
to edit or reject any ads deemed CJb.
Demonttrators! S.ll Toys and
y.or old Jody In Rutland, Ohio.
receive-d at the office ot the ·jectlonal. The Publlahet will not be
Gifts the party plan way ,
Not ~fan. light cooking, and
Director ' of
the
Ohio
respun.!!lble for more lhlln one incorFrlendty Home Toy Parties ha1
housework, no laundry. Roam,
Department
of
Trans rect iMertllm .
openings for monog.rs and
board , and small wogM . For In·
portat ion~ Columbus, Ohio,
Phooe992-2156
dealers In your area . Party pion
formation , roll7•2 -2078.
unlll 10 :00 A.M ., Ohio ·
Standard Time, Thursday,
experience helpful. No co11\ in· WANTED . MAN or woman , ov.e r
May 5. 1971 , for lm.
vestment, no collecting of
3Sior Century Bar.
provemtnts In:
dellv•rlng . Cor and telephone
Parts 1 to 3 lnclullv' a_re
rltCessary. Call coll.ct to Carol
olfereil •s one contract and
Doy , 518 489·8395be-n8:30
will bt conslderltd on the
and 5:00 or wr.lte Friendly Hme
bu l !" ol the total amount bid
Home Parties, 20 Rollraod
Puts 1 to l
RISING STAR Kennel Boarding,
Inclusive
AYO., Albany. N.Y. 12205
Melos County, Ohio, on
Indoor-Outdoor runs, grooming
BriOGt Nos . MEG ·7·1 SIO
on
brHds, clean sanitary
(length 251.5 lttt - wiOth 21
facilities . ChHhlre . Phone {614)
f" "' t), MEG -7-1539 Otngth
Monday
367·0292,
2.•2 .5 fHI- Width 28 fttf) and
Will do odd jobs , roofing , painNoon oo S.tllrd;!y
Mt:!:G -7-1141 (length U.5 .5fett
ting, gutter work. Phorte 992- HOOF HOlLOW. Buy , sell, trade
width 42.2 teet), Stale
7A09 .
Tuesday
or train hortes. RUTH REEVES.
Routt 7, Sections (1.5.10)
thru Friday ,
tr~lner . .Phone (61 .. ) 698-3290.
(15. 391
(18 .AI), Chutor
SEWING - ALTERATIONS :
fP.M .
Township, by removing the
Uph
.
o
hterlng
,
drapes
All
BREED Dog grooming,
the day .before publication
wearing course., patcHing ,
ntosonoble. 572 South Third
reasonable rat.. . Call far ap·
waterproofing, resurfacing
Sunday
Ave,, Middleport . Phone
polntment, J &amp; 8 Kennels,
the concrete decks wlttl
4P.M. ',
992-6306.
7A2·3162.
•asphalt concrett and relattd
F~y afternom
wOrk .
PIANO TUNING , Lone Daniels . 12
Work Length - 636 teet or
years of service. Phone
0.12 mile.
9'12-208:1 .
"The date set for com pletlon of this work stlall be
~WILL DO building arid remodel· 14i75 JEEP CHEROKEE ,
ps.
as set forth In the bldctln)
ing, roofing , Jlumblng , elec:·
Quadratrock , Goo
llrea .
proposal .''
WE WOULD Llkt to thank lht
trlcol work an general repair. · Phone (304) en-2340.
each bidder shall be
surlgcal word at Vetercins
Fr- esllmotes and reasonable l'976 CAMARO. 305 2 barrel!
required to flit with his bid 1
Memorial Ho&amp;pital, Dr. Telle,
certified check or cashier's
rates. Phone Charles Sinclair ,
automatic , silver with red
Rev. Walker and eoteryoM who
ch&amp;e k tor an amount equal to
(614)985-4121.
plnstrlplng. Still under worronhelped In any way during my
five per cent of his bid, but In
ty. Call 992·22011 .
no ev11nt more than fifty
1tay In_thtt hospital. Thanks to AREA BEE LINE Stylist. Mrt . Bev
thousand dollars, or a bond
(Jannlne) Petrel, Racine, Ohio. 1969 IMPALA 2 Or. vinyl top. 396
vlslton. cards. flowert, and
for -..n per cent of his bid,
p~rs .
Will WASH, Remove tor. and
engine automatic, good condipayable to the Director.
Marlon and · Mary Sloter and
hand wax cars . .Small, $1$;
tion, $400. Leaving for servke,
81ddtn must a'pply, on the
claught•rs.
Medium. S18 ; Large, $21.
reason for selling. Phone
proptr
forms.
for
qualification at least ten days
Pickup ovolloblt. Coli 992·2087. ~992
~·=631:'5':-:-'--:-:=--:-:---::--;­
prior to the date ut tor
PAINTING , INTERIOR and ex· 1968 DODGE, 1973 Vega. Take
opening bids In accordance
terlor. Roofing and general
over payments. Call 992-7332
with Chapter 5525 . Ohio
repair. Phone 8-t3·27Dl after •
after S p.m. ··
Revlstc:l .code .
· Plans and specifications
RACINE GUN Club, W• hovo
p.m.
1967 MERCURY, all pow•r·n•w
are on flit In the Department
changed our gun shoot to FRI- --"='------'--- - disc, brakes . Good condition ,
ot rr.nsportatlow ' and ttle
DAY, nights , stortlngot 7 p.m. ·
·• 5325 . sa. at 2•7C Mulberry ,
office or lht Olst(lct Deputy
SHIRLEY "J.Hers" Wqlfe Is now
Pomeroy.
Director.
J
The Dltector rl!serves the
tho now ownor of lola's houty
~,97
::'-C:2:::v::EG?A-'-.:-$800=-.::
, m=-::PI-;-y_m_o-ut:h,
;right to reject any and an
SOlon Jn SyracuM, Ohio , John CASH paid for all makes and
&lt;!WW
9
2
bids .
St. ·shirley was formerly
models of mobile homes.
$1100. Phon, 9.4 · &lt;JI.I' .
DAVID L. WEIR
..-nployed at Lindo's Locfv Fair,
Phone area code 614-,.23-9531. 1970 FORO Von . Phone 742·27.46.
DIRECTOR
Rocln•. Ohio. Any of my former TIMBER, Pomeroy Forest ProRtv. 1· 17·73
'polrons wishing appOintments,
ducta. Top price for standing
CAl 11 ..2.5..._.2tc
may call 992-2S.9. Phone now
sawtimber. Call kent Hanby,
HA6·8570.
llttod under lola'• Beauty Shop
CODNER't CAMPERS. Soo quality
until new dlr~rl" arel11uttd
at ~lch time tn. nome will be COINS, CURRENCY, ·tokens, old
of SWISS COLONY ; BARTH :
Shirley's Beauty Nook. .
pocket watches and chains,
CRICKET truck campers; MAPLE
sllvei' and gold . We need 1964
LEAF spocemaker, PLY MOR;
SHOOTING MATCH~t off Rl. 7
ondolder•llver coins, Buy, .. n,
CAP KIT caps. NEW-USED Soles,
AlliES (M•rch 21•Aprll 11)
by-pol• every Su
or noon. ·
or rrode' Call Roger Won,. ley,
rental , service, supplies. Toke
You're prone to take risks wh~re SOMETHING TO Crow About:
Meigs 28 or 32 to Bas han .
742-2331.
your resources are concerned
Located on Rainbow Ridge ,
Chlck•n _ dlnne.-. feoturing CASH 1! 1 for junk cara. Fry8's
today. Because they're ImLong Bottom, Ohio. Robert
HOMEM.t.DE gravy, homtodt
Truck and Auto. WRECKER SERpulsive. those risks could be
Codner , owner.
tlow by Sonny't roclpal Dairy
VICEI Phont742·2081 .
losers .
lalt, Mlddloport.
OLD FURNITURE, let ba•tt . b•o11
TAURUS !April 20·M•r 201 FOR RENT 01 LeaN. Moo Moo
beds , etc. , complet-.
Independence !s a ' lw:ury you
Dairy Bam located ot ~ed
'hous.holds. Write M. D. ~Iller,
may not be able to afford today
Run State Pork .,franc., Long
Rt . .4, Pomeroy, Ohio or call HOUSE SOLD , co11ple with 4
lattorr!. Ohio. For Information,
992-7760,
because of heavy demands · by
doughttrs In need lmm~lotely
others. You must decide how
colll6 l 4)3JB-6209, olt.,. 5 p.m. WANTED · CHIPWOOD Poltt, · of home, 3 or 4 bed.-oom In or
much .tlme you can sacrifice.
around Middleport area. Ph9ne
Max. diameter, 10 Inches on
992-629A.
'
larg..t •nd , $8 per lon; bundlGEMINI (M•r 21-Juna 20) Don't
ed slobs, S6 per ton. Delivered
take on more responsibilities
10 Ohio Pollet Company. Rl. 2
than you c~n handle todey . lf you FOUNQ IN Middleport or-a, •mall
Pomeroy, Ohio . Ph'one
assume too heavy ~ load, you'll
reddish brown f.,-nole doa.
992·2689.
be In o bind.
dacko&lt;l toll. Ono block moft
SR.T-100 35,.;m camera ,
part Slam... kitten. Melg1 CEMENT MIXER, call after 6 p.m . MINOLTA
50mm , 28mcn , 135mFQ.,.tmd 8().
CANCER (Juno 21-July22) Wllh
County Humane Socltly,
210mm Zoom lens plus camera
1143·22'12. '
·some friends you'll be a trifle . 843-3009 or 992-5.427.
ond arcetaorles ca.... Call
stingy today, while wllh olners -~LO;;';;ST;-·-=-pu=-=:::,..~wl;:t~h"'":i
,::.
. -:-'--r-:-,,-:Ph::-101
--.,. WANTED Ol.O Pianos, any condl·
992-6298days anly.
you'll · be too generous. 'l(now
,..........
tlon. _Paying $10 and $25 eoch ,
7635
992
,lrst floor only. Experl moving. B. MOdel ALLIS Chalmer tractor ,
where to draw the line.
·
·
Fully lniUred Company. Write
plows and cuJtivato~ Included .
LEO !July 23-Aug. 221 You like
giving directions . . Witten
Runs good , $900. Phone
-·
.
.. .
to follow your routine, but you . . . ... . ; :. . . ::
PianoS, Bo• 188, Sardis Ohio
1143·283A ,
may get a few surprises today.
43946. Phone (614) 483·1605.
1974 KAWASAKI 250: 1972 Hondo
Unless you keep calm, you won't 1977 MOBILE HOME, 1Ax70.
SHORT
BED lo fll 1966 Chevy
125. Phone 992-3181 or
Dlshwosh«. elec. stoVe, 3
be able to cope .
pickup. No Sunday calla. Phone
992·7639.
piece b.droom 1ulte. Phone
VIIIGO (Aug. 23·8IPI• '22) Your
742-2460.
.
742·2577.
TOMATO, PLANTS, Cobbago ,
preconcetved notl9ns todav are
broccall, cauliflower , brussel
.a bit on the negative side. Try not
'
sprouts,
egg plants, hanging
to judge anything wllhout sufbaskets, pots , geraniums ,
ficient evidence.
begon.las, flots, petunraa ,
IF YOU have a service to after,
marigolds , pansl... soltlo, ·
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) P
NOTICE
want to buy or .. u aomilthlng.
, balsam, dianthus, sliapat
looking
for
work
.
.
.
or
good rule today: Keep out Ol
will
offer
.
for
sate,
at
1
drogons , olyuum , VInca, colwhatever .. . you'll get results
als' financial affairs and don't private sale, at the office of
eus, Cleland's Greenhoust,
tenter with o Mntlnel Want Ad.
et them butt Into yours. Either 'T'he Racine Home Nationa l
Racine. Geraldine Cleland .
wav spells trouble.
eank, Racine, Ohio, on April
Coli 992·2156.
zz. 1977, at ttn o'clock A.M.,
USED
FORESTRY EQUIPMENT ,
ICOIIPIO (Ocl. 24-NDY. 22) ftle real estate of Emory CARPORT SALE, Mony ilom1.
Taylor
Skiddor Modol 5·112:
"prll 18, 19 and 20 01 695 Oll••r
Usually you meet problems Creed Janes, of Portland,
Tlmborjock Gropplt Skiddor
Str. .t , Middleport, Ohio, 9:30
head-on, but today you might Ohio . Bids may be submitted
Modol 360 GPG: Pl'4tntlct G·BC
!1114:30. .
dodge a difficult decision by do~ In advance of the date otsale,
w-3-f2 Bypcns grapple . Pllone
tor the purchase of the
lng something erratic and out-of~ property, and com petltlve YARD SALE, Monday' Tuoadoy,
(61•) 838-~5 . contact Dennis
character.
bldl will be entertained at
and Wedt . 18, 19, ond 20. "ntl·
Smurr.
ol ule. The underolgned
ques,
depreulon · glou,
S ..o'TTA"IUB ( No•. 23 .oec. llmt
rewrves the right to reJect
clottM&gt;s, linen1 , and misc. St. Rt. CANISTER, TYPE Vacuum cleaner
:11) Mistakes are likely ' In your -'Y and •II bids. The real
with all attachments (new) .
1&lt;43 behind Wttltyon Church.
work today If you experiment Mfate conalatt ot 100 Acres.
New INfra-Red heat lamp; 39
Not r"ponslble for occlct.nts.
with new procedures. Grit your au In \..Ot 169, Section 17,
Inch metal bed and aprings; usIf
w.ather
permits
.
. teeth and follow accepted prae~ Town2, Range. H, In Lebanon
ed
~ringer type: washer, 356
Township, Meigs County,
t·l·os.
North Fourth St. Middleport ,
...
Ohio, and the property lARGE 4 FAMILY Yard Salt, 19th,
William Smith.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-JMI. 11) ~llill of opproxlmatoly AS • ·20th, oH Rl . 7 by·poll on 124
toward Rutland. Furniture,
Acrtl of river bottom crop
The feeling that people are trying ..,d with ttle balance In l
dhh.. , clothing, curtains. Misc. 1971 TRUCK Compor for ahorl bad
truck. 7 piece br.akfost set ,
to use you may occur to you to· Pasture 1nd woodland , and .
Items. Wakh for signs.
Cobra 19 CB and one holt size
day . You could reapond hit • .s..raom dwelling, not
bed complete. Call evenings ,
negatively
modern. · The re•l estate Is '
·
"'.. tuated on State Ro"tt 124 In '
949·2636.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Ftb. II) Eestern ·M•Iv• Cou ~ly, end Is
There could be some disruptions IPPtOJCim atetv one .:half m lie ,
·
T ·
from the Ohio A lver. In - 1 3 AND 4 RM . furnished ond un·
m your household today. hey II ttretttd partln may cell the '
furnlahed opta. Phone 992·
be a.mpllfled becauae your mete Lrlderslgned at 61,.-949-2210.
543-1.
Is a little grumpy as well.
JOHN T . WOL.FE
Executor of Estate of ~ COUNTRY Mobllt Home Pork, Rt.
PIICII (Ftb. 20-Morch 20)
Emory Cr"d Janos I
33, ten miles north of Pomeroy.
Fallure1ogo1people10do1hlngs (AI A, 11, 11, 19, 21 . 5tc
•iel Pvmoroy Landmark
Large lots with concrete patk)s,
today lt8'1"11 from two causes:
soften, ~ COflditlon your '
sidewalk• . runntn and oH
Cloudy Instructions and making
rNater and a Co-op water .
"'"'parking. Phont 992-7479.
them feel obllgaled lo you . .
softener, Model UC-XVI .
2 BEDftOOM Troller. Brown's
,
Now Onl~~
(Are you sn Aries? Bernice
Troller Park. Phone 992-332•.
Osol hll Mlf/ffflfl I o,_cla/ AstraNOTICI 01'
SYRACUSE MISSION and equlplet. us fe$1 your water
IJr•ph Loffor tor 10u. For your
APOINTM.NT .
.ment for rent. &lt;;all992·5:249.
Free.
copy oond 50 Cflflll ond a sellCaoe No. II071
oddfllued,ot&amp;m,_dflflvel6,_ta 11111t Of Guy Mldklll
·
..
Astrb-Graph; P.O. BoJt 489, D~;::d,i tlertbY given thlt
..:· .:.: - · -,:;· .::.
Jack W. tarsey, Mgr.
Radio City Sta"on. Now York , ll.trlle "· Midkiff of 01 3.
Phone 992·2181
N.Y. 10010. 811 lUre
tor Pomiroy, Ohio ..5769, hll FOR SALE 01 TRADE · 197A Mer·
Arltl Volume B.) .
bttn
duly
oppolnted
cury Comet, like ntw condition.
Executor of the Eat1t1 of Guy
1959 Chevroltt 1 ton truck with SPRING GARDEN Supplies, t...aDMldkltt, dactllod, lolt of
van body and power; tailgate,
boge, cauliflOWer, broccoli,
Btatord Townsh op, Mtlgl
1
and head lettuo. plants,
County, OhiO.
· 'lfood condition. New Holland
-.uro tprtoder 163 buohal,
yellow, whit., and red onion
Crtdltora art requ Irid to
good condition. 3 point , hitch
· fill th1lr claim a with ••ld
""· onion planta, Ktnnttbec,
mower, 7 ft. cut, good Conc:U·
fiduciary -within
thret
cobbl•r, KaiOhdln, Red Pontloc
monlho .
tlon . Tandem trailer ty~ fer·
and Red Losada seed potato..
•-" 1t, 1t77
Oelad thll Slh dly Dl April
till&amp;er spreocler, good condl·
Bulk gordon ...dt, polling ooil,
..,...
1m.
··
lion . Modol 6A lnl-lonal
ptiOt most, fruit trMI and rOH
Manning D. Wtbster
Over-111 oondltlono look promllComblno, good condition. T D
bushes. Midway Morltet,
Judge
lng thlo yo1r, bul - • o n of
24
In
lor
notional
Bulldozer,
PomerOy,
Ohio, 992-2582,
. Court of Common Pleas.
good mochlna. Will tok•
lob:• Market, Moson, W.Va.
pannaro llld · lo extremely
Probett Dlvlllon
lmportent TIMI wrong c h - lA) n, 11, 25. 3tc
(304) 773-5721 '
lrodao. Phona9l2770.
10u&lt;,auoe.
t

NOTICE

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
· DEADUNES

COAL, lim.. tOM , ond calcium
chloride and calcium brine for
dust control ar)d special mhdnQ
s.alt tor farmers. Main Slr. .t,
Pomeroy. Ohio or phone 992·
3891.
APPLES, FITZPATRICK ORCHARD, ,
STATE ROUTE 611'1 . PHONE
WI~KE5VILLE. (61A) 669·3785.
CAMPER, $600 . "lao, hort•
IO'Qiler, $450. Phont (61A) 698·
3290.
STEREO, NEW AM-FM stereo
rodlo combination . S129 .9S or
eaay terms . Call992-3965.
1973 JEEP CJ5, acrod condition';'
Plus extras. snoo. Bunker Hill
Rood across from cem•tery.
1974 X8 125 Hondo ond 3 wh-1
explorert , Excellent condition .
Both far $700. or will ••II
separate. Phone 992-2595.
SELMER SERIES 9. Clorlntl , uaod,
3 1h yean , excellenr condition .
~(304) 773·5303.

r.

iiiii~ .

79 95

.:-: ;.~.

to""

®'{jj]JJl
.w!IWfl-

-

·

Pomeroy Landnfllrk

,l;i

ARRIVE.

CARPENTER &amp;
BUILDERS

_....,,,_
""""""'I

'

NEW HOMES

&amp; REMODELING

!llwSclll

-··-IIPIIII'IJII

HARLEY HANING

Y7"T1rn V

RIMit. 3. Pvrr.,..v. 0 .

PARTS - LABOlt

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

GtJMMTW)_;

..

PRO"FE~SIDNAL

.

Shirley's Beaub Nool
John St .

sYracuse

Formerly

Weddings

lola's Beauty Salon
1For appointment call
1992-2549 . Tuesday thru
Saturday 8:00 a.m. to
5:00p.m. Open nights

KEN GROVER

PHOTOGRA_PHY
(614) '15-41$5

Chesfor, Ohio
.
J..;.---....~'JI:;.-1.:,:7_;,·1;;:J:!10'i
- ij
- _.
_l:.,Pd;.l:.:'..

e ··

-

Takes finesse to know one
NORTH
... A J 2
• 7 32
t A Q 10 6
"'J 9 4

1 ,

•'

JOB

• J97

Free Estimates
West

Installation. · samples
· brought to your home
· with no charge.

u...:.'flte

LITJ'LEORPijAN ANNIE

Pllono Mike Yo... 11
H2-22M or H2·7631

T~AY-· .

.,

by THOMAS JOSEPH

rooms and bath,· lorcod oir
heat, natural gas, 3 porches
and basement. Phone m-S833.
VA-FHA, 30 yr. flnancinliJ. Ireland
Mort;oge, n E. Stat•. Athena .
. phono(61A)592.30$1.
. 3 BEDROOM Ranch, 1 '1, bath, 1
ocr•. oil elec . finished garage .
Fully coipoted, .Five Points
orto . $30,000. Phone m.m8
olter5p.m.
HOUSE FOR Solo, A roomt, one
balh, pannelled and ca.-petttd ,
living room. Reduced for quick
sale . 10 Lynn StrHt, just off
Grant and VIne, Middleport .
May'" after S p.m .
10. ACRE FARM, 25 acrM bottom ,
,.11 In pottut• and woodt. 3
bedroom home, double garage
and new born. Located on Eod
branch ol Shod• Rlvti, $42 ,000.
Phon•I61A)667-6227 .
15 ACRESoHNowllmoRoodntor
. Forr..t Acres Park . Phone
7.42-7.136.
118 ACRES, 2story house at Rt. 1
Rutland. Ohio. $39,500. Call AI
jlorgon (614) 927·9081 or
837-5215.
--"
COUNTRY formlond wll h _,ijd.
ed woods, water and good 'oc·
cell In Monr-=- County , W. Va.
$1 ,000 down, coil 1304) 7723102or(304)772·3277 .

B'l HI$

I'Jifl \l tiLIW'I':&gt; i:li.D ME 10

WI~!';

B&lt;odfor~ .

MAIN
POMEROY,

O.

m;~
l.A~I~b

5 Exiort

fa ire

•

Jacob

12 Beatie

coming

14 Bob

name

Cousy's
alma mater
for Tarzan
12 wds.)
12 wds.)
16 Toady .
15 Precarious 17 Cry of
16 Metal ring
revelry
L---_;:::;__ _ _ __;;;__.:.;...o 20 Birdhouse 18 Frost
21 Tommy
!9 South
..--~--.:,....""-.,
Hitchcock's
African
sport
assembly
25 Philanderer 21 Machine
seven!
12 wds. l
pa~t
27 Poverty

GASOIJNE ALLEY

What a qreai

Don't just stand
there. Clovia'

endinq for chapter

Help
us!

1

Close Sat. At 5 p.M.

'

Yesterday's Answer
_
%2 Douay
30 Phonograph
name for
record
Hosea
31 Division
23 Unaspirated
word
consonant
32 Reach across
24 Algerian
33 Unpolluted
city
35 Nettle
26 Hide out
36 Kick
( 2 wds.)
37 Unified
29 Nuclei
38 Marsh

211 "Ivanhoe"
heroine
~ Irish lass

30 Eliminate,

11 :00-Wheel of Fortu1110 3,4,15; Morning Show 13.
11 :30-Shoot for the Slars 3,4,15: Happy Days 6,13:
Love of Life 8, 10; Sesame St. 20 .
11 :55-CBS News 8; Ms. Flxll 10.
12 :00-News 3,4,6,10; Second Chance 13; Name That
Tune 15; Divorce Court B.
12 : 3~Lo•ers &amp; Friends 3,15; Ryan's Ho~ 6,13 ; Bob
Braun 4; Search for Tomorrow 8.10.
l :00-Gong Show 3: All My Children 6,13; News B;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only IS .
1 : 3~Daysof0ur Lives 3,4,15; Family Feud 6,13; As
The World Turns 8.10.
2:00-$20,000 Pyramid 6,13.
2 : 3~Doctors 3,4,15; One Lite lo Live 6,13; Guiding
Llqhl B, 10.
~ : 00-Anolher World 3,4,15; All In The Family B,10;
Consumer Survival Kit 20.
·3 : 15-Genera! l-losplral 6,13.
J : 3~Malch Game 8,10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
4 :00-Misler Cartoon 3; Little Rascals 4; Gong Show
15; New Mickey Mouse Club 6; Lucy Show 9;
Sesame 'st. 20,33 ; Movie "Wilderness Journey" 10; '
Dinah 13 . .
4 : 15-Little Rascals 4.
A:3~My Three Sons 3: Parlrldg,e Family. 4,8;
Emergency One 6; Fllnlstones IS .
5:00-Big Valley 3; My Three Sons 4; Brady Bunch 8;
Mister Rogers' NeighbOrhood 20,33; Emergency
One 13; Star Trek 15.
.
5 :30-Adam -12 4; News 6; Family Affair 8; Elec . Co.
' 20,33. .
6:00-News 3,4,8, 10, 13, iS; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6:30-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Grlflllh 6;
.CBS News 8,10; Vegetable Soup 20 ; Sludlo See 33.
7:00-Truth or Cons . .3: To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling lor
Dollars 6: Counlry Carnlval8; News10; To Tell the
Truth 13; My Three Sons 15; Anyone lor Tennyson?
20; American Issues Forum 33.
7: 3~Hollywood Squares 3,4; Lei's Deal With If 6;
Match Game PM 8; lp The Know 10; Wild Kingdom
13; TV Honor Society 15.
B:oo-Baa Baa ' Black Sheep 3.,4; Happy Days 6, 13;
Who's Who 8, 10; American Shorl Slory 20,33; Jack
Van lmpre Crusade IS .
·
8 : 3~Laverne &amp; Shlrt·e y 6.13. ·
.
9:()().;...Pollce . Wom3n 3,4,1.$; Eight l's Enough 6,13;
MASH 8, 10; Americana 20; In Search of I he Real
America 33.
·
·
.
9:3o-One Day ot a Time 8,10: Besl. of Ernie Kovacs
20,33.
10 :00-Pollce Story 3,4,15; Family 6, 13; Kalak 8; News
Documentary 10; News 20; The Way 11 Was 33.
10 : 3~Prlce ol Peace and Freedom 10; Black Journal
20; Americana 33.
11 :(}()-News 3,4,6,B,H&gt;, 13, 15; MacNeil -Lehrer Report
33.
li : JQ-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Movie "The Sterile
Cuckoo" 6, 13; Mov re " The Longest Nigh!" 8; Mary
Hartman 10.
12 :oo-Movle ' 1Wu1herlng Heights" 10.
12 :3Q-Janak l 33.
1:oo-Tomorrow 3,4 ,
1:Js-;-News 13.

with "of"
34 On the
scent
(3 wds.)
39 Gape

40 Recumbent
41 Ice-cream

t::..-+-1--t--t-T--

~:Jbo~l~d~ern~harpt::t:J::I::
e~::===:::i~BUT3UT~t~NTl~FI§.RR~foJitAilu:l:vY-:-'fi:j8t:::OESNTXi~~f&lt;~6M~EM:;wi3£RE~W~HSERRiE:0~---ll Playing
-S/61-ir- TI-JATS A

FROM- a&lt; WHO HE' IS

DIFF5RGNT" 5Ti'"'R'I~t-----r MARRIED 1'0-

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

2

'flft\}1.\..ft ~'\l

~~~ii
;:-;;-1-t-t-t-;

how to
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFE,OW

work

It:

One letter simply slands for ~oother. In this sample A Is

used for the three L's, X for the two 0 ':.;, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are aU

e&gt;E A HANDYMAN AROUND
HERF. I HAD NO ULTERiOR
MOJ1VES1

BEUEVE ME ! ·

MYSELF ... ·

CRYPTOQUOTES .

... 131JT MY MQT14ER WAS HA\IIM:l.

A BAD DAY AT THE NU I&lt; B I I\JG'~
HOME AND I WANTED 1D
STlCK ClOSE TO THE ~-­
PHONE ... JUST IN
CASE' .

DSXHCXHR
JQ · DSK

NJZE

DSK
A X DS

DYECXHR
XDNKEQ .

,CHAPIL ~ . ·

(SNIF-SNIF)

NO, BUT

The
.Broken

Heart

IT HAS

VE~SAD ·

KNEES!

'10U LIKE TATER
GOODE~N ME,
AUNT LOWEE2V

l..fE SAY SICH

. A THING?

I

(J

FROM POVER'TY COULD
~ECOME 'THI5.

ZERBAN~
Now arrange the cirded letters to
the surprise answer, as sug·
( ) I J I ,form
L...~~~:-.L.-1"-~;:::~~ge:•~ted~by~llie~Jabove cartoon.

Yetterday'l Cryp1oquote: WE CANNOT HOW A TORCH TO
iJGHT ANOTHER'S PATII WITIIOUT BRIGHTENING OUR
Saturday's
OWN. - BEN SWEETLAND

JUGHA\D~!
WHAT MAKES

t

I VABOE
·I I r TI

~

FEYDJ

at the bottom-

TOSOY

I. I I

hiols. Each day. the code letters ue c.lift'erent.

0 !liLLY \'MEN L HIRED YOU ID

Un8Cfamble these four Jumbies .
one letter lo each square , to form
lour ordinary words.

I I I

Ia

I WAS SUPPOSED
10 ESCORT HER

byHenr!AmoldandBoblee

marble

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Herels'

.,WINNIE

~ THAT SCRAMB~ED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ®

3 Windy
City's other
nickname
4 Vietnamese
holiday

FRIDAY TJL 5

•

7 ·Being I Sp. l

13 Protagonist

JUST LISHD - Exactly
SEWING M.t.CHINE ' Ropolio, 1tr·
what you have bee11 looking
vke, all mok ..; 992-ZlSA, The
.f or! Split . Entry,· 3·4
F·a brlc Shop, Pomeroy.
BDRMS .• l'h baths. 2 car
Authorized Singer Solei ond
garage,. .on 1 acre
to
Service. Weaharpen Scl~tors .
!own . Air cond. , allleiErc .. J
EXCAVATING, doztr, looclor ond
app•. 1 yr . old. $39,500.00.
backhoe woril ; dump trucks
COUNTRY Close to
and
lo-boy1 for hire; will haul
!own ,
beautifully
fill dirt, to soil, limestone and
remodeled older home. 3
grovel. Call 8ob or Roger Jef. _ .
BDRMS., nice kitchen.
fers , day phone 992·7089, ·
carpeting, · garage and
night phone 99'2·3525 or 992olher bldgs. $37,234.00.
S232.
FARM LAND - 103 A., 2
EXCAVATING. dozer, bock'story farm house~ large
and dltcher. Charles R. Hot·barn, 60 acres In timber. 25
field, Bock Hae Service ,
tillable, fencing, reduced to·
Rutland, Ohio. Phone 742-2008:
$29,000.00.
BEAUTIFUL - VIew and
SEPTIC TANKS cltoned. Modorn
home, this 2 BDRM home Is
Sonltatlon, 992-3954 :
priced to sell, 1 acre, part
WILL do roofing, construction,
basement, 1 floor plan, nice
plumbing and htotlng. No job
kitchen . ONLY $16,500.00.·
loa Iorge or tao small. Phone
GOOD HOUSE - This 2 .
742·2348.
story home will sell at a low
CARPENTER, flooring, calhng,
$10 ,500 .00 . 3 BDRMS .•
ponollng. Phont 992·2759.
basement, range, ref .•
carpeting, elc . Call today .
MOBILE Horn• Rapolr, Eltc. ,
FINANCING AVAILABLE
plumbing and heating , Phon•·
992-5858.
If you're qualified, 3
BDRMS., 'h A. NICE FOR
HoWERY AND M.t.RTIN ExTHE PRICE. S9,000.00 .
cavating, septic systel'nll ,'
A STEAL - S Acres, close
dozer. back'-. dump truck,
to Pomeroy, 3 BDRMS.,
llmet:tone, grovel. bkK:ktop ,
older
home .
ONLY
pDYing, Rl. 1&lt;43. Phont 1 (614)f
$7,900 .00.
698·7331.
3'1• ACRES Building
:OU::::;G";A~N;''a";F;;R::;ON:::;T-;E:-n-;d-:1':-;~""
·1-,m
- ..,
-:t, '
slles In Pomeroy. ONLY
formerly o,:leU't ;,,tiltment
55,800.00.
bthlnd Rullond Grado ~1 . .
OLDER .HOMES - ·
Alignment, whNI balancing, .
have several
AVAILABLE .
tune-up, brak" and minor ·
priced homes .
IF YOU'RE THINKING
repair. Phone 7"2·2005 o(r
WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
OF SELLING, TO BY·
7A2·2004. Evllfllng work by apYOUR
HOMES, . LIST
PASS PROBLEMS, CALL
pointment .•
,
TEAFORD.
,
WITH US TODAY .
HAIIRISON'S
T.V.
Ropolr.
So&lt;vlco
.
HENRY E. CLELAND
G. 8_.-uce Telford
Collt.
276
Sycamore,
St.,
Mid·
BROKER
Htle~ L. Tetlonl
dlopor! . Phono 992·2522. .
. Hank Cltltnd
AsiOCIIIIJ
. FIIEE INSPECTION, frM Oltlmatot
'-----------"
AstoClllt
lor lenni .... Foal quality work.
COUNTRY STORE. olwoyt o
992-2259·H2-2S68
Call 949·280:1, Southern · P111
money maker . Up1talrs could •----'-1-S-4_11_2-----'
Control .
be&gt; made Into an opt. Owner
will help finance, If n.:..sary.
Phont 949-2770.
EXCEllENT BUILDING locotlono
an gaod road, T.P. wattr In
&lt;OIInlry. Phont 9A9·2770.
REDUCED $2000. 3 badroom, 2;;
boths,
double garage
Mon •• Tu•s:. Wl!d • .
fireplace, olr (londlflonlng, I
8:00til'5:00
ocrelot. Phone 992-2.192.
Thursday 8 til Noon
HoUSE ON 2 Ia.. In Mlddloport.
Corner of Locust and Plum.
Reduced prlc•. Coli 1614)
446·97A7.
,
NFI( 3 b:droom house , 2 baths,
oil tltc., 1 aero, Mlddltport,
,.
ciON to Rutland. Phono 9927481.
SMALL farm for sale, 10% down,
'o wner financed. Monroe Coun·
ty, w. Vo. Phont 1304) m .
3102or (304) m.3277 .

NEW 3 badroom houat; built-In
kitchen, bath and %, Phone
742-2306 or contact MilO II . Hutchison, Rutland, Ohlo.
FOR SALE . All elec. n.arty new
home In Rutland area. Base- ·
ment, 3 bedrooms, oHoched
garage , $29,900
Phone
742·253t .
- 6% ocr.., garden spot, some
patturt, firewood with wood·
burning atove, fuel all heat .
outbuildings 2 b.droom houll ,
neor holllpltol and town .
$19,500. Phont 992·~9A7 .
COMMERCIAlllltiCK BUILDING In
downtown Pomeroy, Ohio.
P.-...ntly rented with Income
over S5000 pw year. Two r«~·
tols downatolrs and one
·upstairs. Ha1 unflnslhed apartment upUalrs. Entire upstairs
can easily be mode Into 3
apartments. W-alr condition
upatolrs. 3 separate wat•r, gas
and elKtrlc meters. Can be
flnonced l(l(lparcant to r•lloblt
porty. Contoct Paul Simon or
Guido Glroloml to sec:ur• on 4 UNDEVELOPED ocr01 In Malgt
County. VInton moll route. Call
appointment . Prlctd upon ln742-2867 or'" Dick Lambert.
tpeellon of proporty only .

5 Savage
6 Fun '

8 Czech river
money from 9 Rowboat
'- '10 Son of
II Home-

TIIAT 'iiWf

aWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
.
Sweepers, ·toasters, Irons, all
small appllancM. Lawn mower,
next lo State Highway Garage
on Rout• 7. Pho_n• 1614) 985·
3825.
REMODELING, Plumbing, heating
and all typao of - r o l rapolr.
Work guarontMCI ~ y.ars experience. Phone 992-2409.

ACROSS

I Savolr

1

Commercial property oppro)C , 17
ocr• , level land, located at
Tuppers Plain• on Ohio , ROute
7. Phont(614)667·6304 .

to

~tilwd'
00'.11~/&gt;.100

Virgil B. Sr., Realtor
2161i. Second Slreel
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 992-3325
LARGER OLDER HOME
- 9 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2
blilhs, equipped kitchen,
.full basement, and coal
furnace. Large corner lot
wllh double garage.
A REAL SHOWPLACE Antique briCk 3 bedroom
home with central heating
and air conditioning •. Has·
gas burning fireplace end
nice woodwork·. Brick patio
and 3·car garage. Just
$25,000.
·
•
S12,00G- 4 bedroom home
with IV• acres, Its own
water supply, utility
bu II ding with cel)ar and 1
car garage .
BUILDING- Good for flell
market, churet'l, trading
post, ifc. at Dexter . Will
consider Land Contract .
$5,500,
PLAYGROUND-45acres
of woods. Site for trailer,
double wide, or A-frame
with leading Creek water,
elecjrlc,
septic lank .
Peaceful setting. Better
see today . W~:~nt 112,500.
BUILDING LOTS .:.: 2
large lots In an Improving
subdivision. Nice location
lust out of town. $5,000 for
bOth.
·
WE NOW HAVE NEARLY
A MILLION DOLLARS
W
. ORTH OF PROPERTY

KNEW·-

'

&lt;;heshire, Ohio
Phone 614-367-0626
3-16-1 mC'.

TEAFORD

HOUS~ FOR Salt in Mlnertvlllo, 5

POOR
BUT
I PRfSUM!=D, OF
COJRSE, YOU

N\R . WARSUCKS~

VfRY CHA~M IHG

~~u~~

A Minnesota reader wants
know if it is ever correct to
open
the bidding with one club
suits it is sometimes of prime
when
you bold only two clubs.
importance that be decide
It
is
not correct in standard
which one he should take
American
or any system bas·
first. "
.
.
ed
on
it.
Jim : "Sometimes be should
(For a copy of JACOBY
refuse one entirely. " .
Oswald': " If South takes and MODERN, send $T to: "Win
wins all lour finesses be will at Bridge, " c/o this
make all thirteen tricks. In newspaper,· P. 0 . Bo&lt; 489,
lact he can still make all tbir· Radio City Station, New York,
teen tricks without the spade N. Y. 10019)
Oswald : " When declarer is
looking at finesses in several

WH"f. ABOUT

GRf!TiHGS, MISS

u.-c~D·
'

South

finesse ."
Jim : " The carefu l declarer
will refuse the spade finesse
at trick one . He will win with
his king and lose the diamond
finesse . East won't be able to
lead a spade back and will
play a heart. It is up to South
to refuse the heart finesse
also. Then be can go to dum·
my, take the club finesse and
be sure of-nine tricks ln spite
ol all finesses being wrong ."
Qswald : "You readers can
have a lot of extra fun with
this hand. The line of play we
suggested is sure to succeed
against any and all combinations of cards . Agains t the
. actual. combination you can
find other ways to bring in
nine tricks . "

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

ASHLAND

HOMESITES for sale , 1 acre and
up . Middleport, near Rutland ..
Call 992·7ABI .

ack W. Carsey , Mgr.
Phone 99'l-':z181

· L

LITTLE ORPHAII AIIIIII-POIIOII TONGVI

2-31 ""·

'

North East

t N. T.
Pa ss 3 N. T. Pass Pass_
Pass
Opening lead - 4 4

Lt ·IB

QfESHIRE

Located in Langsville
Box 28-A
Rutland, Ohio 4517~
Ph . (,14} 142·2409
We Detlvtr
12 -22 -4

tK 53
o!o87 5
SOUTH (D)
... K6 5
o1o A Q 10 2
Both vulnerable

AT

Southelsfelnllhio
Truss Rafter Co.

t84 2
AK 63

~-- 2. Pvm.,..y! 0 .,

WITH OIL CHANGE
AND FILTER

ANY PI'Jelf
ANY SIZE

EAST
oloQ9 3
¥1096 5

¥AQJ

ANNIE- YOO LOOt&lt;

FREE

18

WEST
• 10874
¥K84

Younts C.petiii ·

tarpot-

TUESDAY, APRIL 19,1977
6:00-Sunrlse Semester 10.
6: 15-Farm Report 13.
6 :2&lt;f-Not For Women Only 13.
6: 3D-Focus on Columbus 4; News 6; Sunr ise Semester
8; Concerns &amp; Comments 10.
6:A5-Mornlng Report 3.
6:50-Good Morning, West VIrginia 13.
6 : 5~ood Morning, Tr.l Stale 13.
• 7:00-Today 3,J,15; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Chuck White Reports 10.
7:05-Porky Pig 10.
7: 3~Schoolles 10.
B:OO-Howdy Doody 6 ; Cap! . Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame
51. 33.
. 8:3~Big Valley 6.
,
9 :00-A .M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,13,15; Andy Grllfllh B;
Mike Douglas 10.
9:3()-Cross-WIIs 3; Edge of Nlght6; Concentration 8.
10 :00-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4.1S: Dinah 6; Double Dare
8, 10; Mike Douglas 13.
10 :30-Hollywood Squares 3 ,~.15 ; Price Is Right 8,10 .

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

· 3·27·1 mo.

by appointment.
l - - - - - -..;:;.:;'&gt;-::;..:..l.:.;m.:.;O:;.._..,
·

SPECIAL:

Pomeroy Landmarlt ·•

GOtN£;
TO MAPP.EN
TO Mci&lt;EI'~

I

BRADFORD, A.uctlon . .r, Complete Service. Phone 9~9-247
or IU9-2000. Racine, Ohio, Crltt

I

WA~

Eyre" 4; Palllsers 20,33.
10:00-Jack Van lmpre CrusadeS; Andros Torgels 10;
News 20; Soundstage ~3 .
10:»-Farm Digest 20.
11 :00-News 3,4,6,8,10.1l.1S; Monly Python' s Flying
Circus 20; Block Journal 33.
11 : Jt-Johnny Carsorr 3,,.,15; Streets of ·San Fanclsco ·
6,13; Kojak8; Mary Hartman 10; ABC News33 .
12 :00-Movle " Welcome to Hard Times" 10; Janakl33.
12 : A~Don August 6, 13; Movie " The Clones" B.
I :OG-Tomorrow 3,4.
1: 50-News 13.

BRIDGE

Reodtvlllt, 0. I'll. _ , ., i

.

Shirley (Jeffers) Wolfe

Schools

GOOD SUPPLY OF
GARDEN SEEDS.

TO HEAD THE
FII'I:M··

RAlES

Owner

Aerjial
Commercial

454

PICK~D

RE.AINBI.£

~obil Summit'Rooi

Rt. I
~o
Middleport, o.
992-5724
mplete
Sales
ilnd
' Service 1nd Supplies.

PHOTOGRAPHY

lb.

ONE OF US. '

~OMHHI~S

Automatic
Transmission Service .

c.peting

2-23·1 mo.

ONION SETS

~NEW

WOUlD BE

4·13-1 mo. pd.

S.WAIN'S

THEN !9-r'l:

MllfT'V£ KNOWN

ME BECAUS.E SHE

NOW!

Nof Tlie lmltalon"

TRUNKS, whllt oak vornlthod kif·
chon coblnor, good condmon
ond vorlout other plecet.
4
Phone 9 9· 227 1.
ONE GRAVELY tractor with
mow•r , 1 cc:tmpleta bedroom
aultt, I brtoklott •••· I con10lt
8 &amp; W raltvitlon, 2 en&lt; tobltt.
All Items In good conditiOn.
Phone 9•9·2M1. Henry Salser,
A.D. I. Minersville ; Ohio.
1966 RAMBLER Clo~tic, 4 Dr. 287
V-8, stondo.rd . 1972 Hor1da troll
70, •
speed, refrigerator,
trum~t . girl'l size 6 roller
skates. Phone 992-n86.
PIGS FOR aolt. Call949-2857.
1973 YAMAHA 500 CC . M• . blkt ,
good condition. $375, Phone
985·3597.
GENERAL ELECTRIC ttovt, like
new . S.lfcleon lng O¥'tn, white.
Phqno 949·2768 .

IF S.Hf MADE f',

PLAY FOR YOU AOJO

EIELIEVS IT

"The Oritln•ton

ck·w . Carsey, Mgr
Phon• 992-2111
1

I'M NOT
EVEN SUI!:E

!:N'1 R:EADY TO

Phone 992-3339

Yc;N~nl's

New Co-Op water sof·
tenera. modtl VC-SVI .
Only IZ79 .PJ
Save uo.oo on 1 new
Hotpolnt Refrlgeralar .
1 Good Used McCulloulh
Chi In S•W
SfS
Now In stock, compltttllnt
of bulk garden aetda and
onl•n sets.
1 Good usea unlco
Freenr
S175
1 good McCullough Chain
Saw
US
1 Good Used Poulan Chain
saw
uo
Onion Sets
lb . 45c
Survivor Sates only $29.95

ASTRO•GRAPH

--

AND
GROOVY

Superior •
Steam Extraction

!.b.,

Bernice Bede Osol

Business Services

MONDAY, APRIL 11, 1t77
5:00-Big Valley 3; My Three Sons A; Brady Bunch 8;
Mister Rogen' Neighborhood 20,33; Emergency
One 13; Slar Trek IS.
5 :30-Adam ·12 4; News 6; Family Affair 8.
6 :00-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6 :30-NBC News3,A,15; ABC News13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Vogel able Soup 20 .
7:00-TrulhorCons. 3; To Ttlllht Truth4: Bowling for
Dollars 6; News 10; To Tell the Truth 13; My Three
Sons 15; Characteristics of Learning Disabilities
20; Know our Schools 33.
7: 30-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3; In Search of 4;
Mup~l Show 6; Gong Show 8; Price Is Right 10:
Candid Camera 13 ; Nashville on the Road 13;
MacNeii -Lehrere Report 20,33.
8 :00-llttle House on the Prairie 3.A.15; Happy Days
6,13 ; Busting Loose 8, 10; Six American Families
20.33.
8 :30-Baseblill 6,13; Plnocchlo B, 10.
9_:__00;-Movle " Machan Cou!I)Y. Line" 3,15: Movie "J_an_e

IS IN
ORDER
TILL SAM

THE

urI I I J KI I)"

(Answers tomorrow~

I

Jumbles: TARRY ABIDE Vi'NITY BISECT
Answer: They'r~ usually expected to go doWn to
sea-RIVERS

NOBODY •.
FEEDS ME
BREAKfUST
IN BED

0

�•

•

'
11-'!'he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Aprill8, 1977

Middleport E·R unit called out

--------------------------, HOSPITAL NEWS
'
· A
D h

rea

!.

eat s

1

injured in a bicycle accident,
11
•
took her to Veterans
1
Services will be held 1 p.m.
Memorial Hospital. Then at
THEODORE CUSTER
Wednesday from Provldet'Ct
6:38 p.m., the squad transTheodore Custer, 67, Olio Churcl'l wllh ~ev . ChArles
ferred her to Holzer Medical Hotel. Middleport , died Lusher officiating . Burial will
Sunday at his residence .
Center. At 5:59 p.m. SaturMr. Custer was born April be in Providence Cemetery .
Friends may call a1 the
day, the squad went to near 23, 1909 to the late Theodore Waugh
-Halley-Wood Funeral
the Riverside Apartments for Par~er and El la Custer Home from
6-9 p.m . Tu~dey .
Buddy McKinney, who was HaS~rav~!·lng
are
three
ill, and taken to Veterans daughters. Mrs. Dale (Jane)
DELLA BAYS
Memorial Hospital.
Sayre. Hilliard; Jean Custer.
Della Rose Bays, 73, Rt. 2.
At2 :47 p.m., tlie squad was Middleport, ond Mrs. Larry
Neighborhood Rd .. Gallipolis,
called to the Ohio Hotel for (Jane t ) Smllh , Pomeroy ; died
Saturday evening In
three sons. James, Colum ·
Theo Custer who· was dead bus: Joseph, Mltldleport, and Holter Medlcar Center. She
UPQn the unit's arrival. At Jerry. Miners vi lle ; 13 had been In tolling health
8:31 p.m . Sunday the squad arandch lldren and one oreai- several years.
She was born March 8, 1904,
gra nd child , and a sister ;
was called to 361 Grant SI. f or Clara Custer . Minersv ille.
In Guyon Twp., doughier of
Renee Stone, removed to
Funeral services will be 2 the late Will iam and :Lucy
Veterans Memorial Hospital. p.m. Tuesday at the Ewing Williams Barry .
She married Andrew Bays
on Feb . 23, 1923, In Gallipolis.
with the Rev . Har vey
r-===~====~~----------, Chapel
Koch officiating.
Burial will be In Gilmore He preceded her In death on
Act now during our ...
Apri l 22, m~ .cemetery . Fr iends may cal l
The
M i d .d I e p o r t
Emergency Squad, called to
CR $ at 5:30. p.m. Saturday
for Tanya Ughtfoot who was

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION
.WAlOi FOR
OPENING DATE

n .

.

~.-~

rhgltialJ-e~

8farof ·

· be§tbu:m
Look lor our Stars lor big savings

Uke This
17 cu. ft
Frast.Proof

REFRIGERATOR
FREEZER
SALE PRICE

at the funeral home today
from 2 to .4 and 7 to9 p ,m .

Survlvors

Include

the

RUTH BLOSSER

following children: Mrs .
Kathleen Strait, Mu. ·Clara
Shaver. and Mrs. Veri Dean

Garnet Might Blosser will be
held at 1 p.m. Tuesday otthe

Gallipolis; Mrs . Almt
(Maggalene)
Randolph ,

Home.

Gallipolis. Two Infant sons
!'_receded her In death.

Funeral servi ces for Ruth

Rawling s -Coats

Funere~l

St.~rvlvors not nam ed in an
earlier report Include a
brother, Clarence, Rutland i
21 grandchildren. 10 greatgrandchildren ahd two great.
grandchi ldr en .

EARL FRENCH

(MarQeret) Revnolds . All nf

Brentwood, Md .; Charles,
Homer, and James, all of

Twelve grandchildren and
one great -grandchild survive .

One sister , Mrs . Ben

!Grace) Belville, Stevenvllle,
Mont., survives along with
one brother. Donald Barry.
Chesapeake. Four brothers

Earl French : formerly of

and two sisters preceded her

Meigs County,dled April 12 1n

In death.

a Columbus hospital . Funeral
services were held April 15 at

Hope Baptist Church.

the Woodyard East Chapel.
East

Livingston

VETERANll MEMORIAL
· saturday Admissions Clifford Hall, Racine : Mary
Pickens, CUlton, W. Va.;
Floyd BUlb, New Haven ;
Paul Bums, Pomeroy ; Mary
Derenberger, Pomeroy :
Mabel Tracy , Pomeroy ;
Margie Hunt, Racine:
Burwell McKinney , Mid·
dleport :
Audrey
Mc·
Farland, Athens.
Saturday Discharges Marda CApehart, Shennl!n
Tillls, Frank Smith, Charles
Kelley, Lucille Bailey, Brian
ThompttOn, Gladys Morgan.
Sunday Admissions Della Price, Point Pleasant:
Donald Brown, New Haven;
RodneY Cremeans, Coolville;
Clarence Trlbett,
Hockingport; Renee Stone,
Middleport: Peggy Smlth,
Reedsville.
Sunday Discharges Burwell McKinney , Dale
King, Carol Lo~ks, Ava
Gilkey, Donald Brown.

Ave .•

Columbus with the Rev .
Andrew Lamey officiating.

She was a member of Good
Funeral services will

be

held 2 p.m. Tuesday at the
Waugh-Halley-Woad Funeral Home with Rev . Alfred
Holley oftlclatlng. Burial will
be In Mlno Chapel Cemetery.
f·rlends may call at the

local relatives attending
the services were Mr . and .
W\rs . Elwyn YOs.t . Mrs. Grace
funeral home from 1-l .and 7-9
French and Mr . and Mrs. .Don

Stivers and son , Donald, all of
Middleport ; Mr. and Mrs.
VIrgil

p.m. Monday.

Hamm , Minersville,

and Mrs. J. A. Smith, Rt. 1,
Raci ne.

Sargent Leon; Emogene
Moore 'HendeNIOni Melvin
Halst;ad, Point Pleasant:
Mrs. William Reltmire ,
Pomeroy; Mro. Jack Bo!ltic,
Racine : and Mrs. E!lther
Patterson, Polnt Pleasant.
Holzer Medleal Cealer
(DIKblrln, AprO 11.
Wesley
Allen , Cora
Brenner, Emestlne Brafford,
Mn. John Cannlchael and
daughter, Patricia Chrlatian,
John Cooper, Brenda Cundiff,
Ame Esch, Carolyn EvaM,
. Claudia Fisher, Mrs. Lowell
Flowers and son, Mrs. James
Frlederunaker and daughter,
Dotlald Funk, Betty Gay,
Mary Greene, ~ lladdoz,
Mn: Stephen Haley and liOn,
Mrs. Ernest Hawkina and
son, Sarah Hoffman, Brent
James, Ralph Jeffers,
Barbara Jones, Usa Jones,
Marie Leach, Stella Uvely,

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES- Mrs. Tom
Hoffman, Hobertsburg ; CecU
Baler, Cottageville; Douglas
Eades, Letart: Geraldine
Ennis, Rodney, 0. : Dora
Lewls, Muon ; Emmcino
Selby, Point Pleasant;
Ronald Plumley, Point
Pleasant ; Mrs: Warren
Sydenstrlcker, Southside;
Robert Hall, Point Pleasant;
Mro. Charles Buck, Robertsburg ; Mrs. Charles Me·
Comas, Point Pleasant: Mrs . .
Paul Hammack, Cheshire;
Dewey Roten, Gallipolis
Fet-Ty; Mrs. Alvin Morrison,
Ravenswood ; Jennifer
Winters, Robertsburg ;
William Richardson, Leon;
Guyla Rolllh, Mason; Helen
Wheeler, West Columbia ;
Mis. James Kimberling,
Leon: Bertha Diehl, Raclne :
Mrs. Clarence Adkins,
Letart: Kenna Powers,
Proctorville, 0.: Robert

Polished Brass Aoor Lamps
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursday tbrougb
Saturday, a ebanre of
showero daBy. Hlgbs wW
be between 75 and 80 .
Thunday and Frtciay and
la lbe 80s Saturday. Lows
wUI be In lbe SO. Tbanday
aad Friday and In the tOs
Saturday.

three days l&amp;ter,
almost500persons were dead
and more than a quarter of·a
mllllon left homele~,

FLOORS
EVERYBODY BURNED Amortgage on the National
Grange Building, above, in Washington, D. C.

..-

6403
Slx·way. Ht. 59".

6512 -Swing Arm.
6513-Downbiidge,.
3·way lighting. Ht. 54":

All with
fabtlc on vinyl
shades.

REG. '49.95

Open Monday through Thursdayl 9:30 to 5 P.M. Friday 9: 30 to a P.M.
- Saturday 9:30 to 5 P.M. ·

Elberfelds ,In ·_ Pomeroy

Farmers ·Bank

540,000.00 ~ximum tnsur•nct For Elch. Deoositor
Member Fedtflll DllpoJit lnsur~nce Corporlllion

•

'

~1!News. • .zn Brzef~~ .~: ~oe~~ngressional
...,

there

Another car makes more sense than another repair bill . It doesn't
have to be a frightening experience. Your friends at the Farmers
Bank can arrange to finance your new or used car and avoid another
repair bill. Come in today and talk to us at Farmers Bank.

pages

Grange _b uilding
·
.
e
s
ume
d
mortgag h

•
By Untied Press fnternaUonal
.
LOS ANGELES- THERE WAS NO " DEAL" involved ln
Patricia Hearst's sudden plea of no contest to robbery and
assault charges and no promise she would get ott with a light
·sentence, prosecutors and defense lawyers say.
The SUI'Jll'lse action at what was expected to be a routine
bearing Monday was, in effect, the first admission of guilt by
the ~year,old heiress who threw hereself on the mercy of the
eourt for a Symbionese Liberation Army crime spree, She was
scheduled to be sentenced May 9 and could receive a lengthy
state prison term in addition to the seven-year federal bank
robbery sentence she is fighting to reverse.
.
·
Prosecutor Samuel Mayerson and Miss Hearst's attorneys
said
W88 00 up_eal. II
.
NEW YORK - THE LUFKIN (TEX.) NEWS'
Investigation of the death of a Marine recruit, which led to
fundamental refonns in Marine Corps recruiting and training
Jll'actices won a 1977 Pulltier Prize for the "litUe country
dally." The Advisory Board on the Pulitzer Prizes also
announced Monday that "Roots" author Alex Haley had been
glvfll a Special Award ''to recognize an important contribution
to thet!iterature of alavery that the board feld did not fit
euctly any other ca~egory."
For the first time in the 81-year history of the prestigious
awarda no PulitZer Prize was presented for international
r~g and for the lOth time, no award wa• given for fiction .
Walter Mears, 42, of the_Associated Press won the award for
Natiooal RePQrting for his cov..age Wider deadline of last
year's 32 presidential primaries and the presidential
campaign.

The Time Always Comes

POMEROY, OHIO

President Carter launched
1his energy Jli'Ogram with a
somber
warning
to
Americans
that
the
fuel
--···--~--· .~r. - ,
supply crisis really e:lists,
that it poses a threat as .
serious as . war, that painful
sacrifices and "changes ·ln
.
·every life" must be made.
The alternative to a course
The National Grange nine floors of office space iS
of stringent conservation,
building ln Washington, D. C. leased to tenants.
Numerous lund-raising Carter said, is to risk within a
is paid for and the Rock
projects
were carried out lor decade losing "our jobs, out
Springs Grange members,
the
building
debt with the environment, our standard of
!Ike thousands of other
grangers across the nation, final boost comlng during the living and our future" in a
beld a mortgage burning bicentennial year with sales world devoid offoreign oil "at
•
of a National Grange any acceptable· price ."
ceremony March 25.
It was an unsmiling
Ground for the ,366,252 Bicentennial Year Cookbook.
building was broken on Jan. Th\8. project brought In President who , facing a
.
television camera from
8, !99. The 11-story structure $300,000.
Participating ln the local behind his Oval Office desk,
was completed in 1980. It Is
. located at !616 H. St., North- mortgage burning cere!I!ony tried to convince Americans
. west, just a bloc\~ and a half were Rock Springs Grange Monday night that the energy ·
from the White House. It is Master Fred Goegleln, crisis wes real rather than
the only 'plece of privatelY Lucille Leifheit, Buena created by oil Industry
owned property ln Executive Grueaer, Franceli Goeglein, intrigues.
It was, he said, "an
Square - an area that" and Amos Leonard. Mrs.
Wlpleasant
talk."
reacbes from 15th to 17th Leona Lieving donated
Members
of the House and
streets on the liOUth side of H money for the purchase of a
st. to the Potomac Rlver. · picture of the National Senate generally praised the
The 25 people on the Grange building whlch will main thrust of Carter's ISNational Grange-staff oecupy hang in the Rock Springs minute address. The vice
the 16 offices on the top two Grange hall on the ,chairman of U.S. Steel, He~!th
Larry, representing the
noors whlle the remaining fairgrounds.
Natlonal As•ociatlon of
:~:~-:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;~:::::::;:::::::::;~i=:::::::~::::::::~=~=::~=::::~::;::::::::::::::::::::.:~::::::::~::::::::::::::=::::::::;~~ .:.~:=:,~ :~::tit

,,,,

i

.....,

-

By EDWARD K. DeLONG
WASHINGTON ( UPI) -

'I

3-way lighting . HI. 54".

If tire stores are
you're head·._
Let your fingers do the treading.

fB

Energy
• •
cns1s
is .real

ANTIQUE

BRONZ

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, APRil 19, 1977

I

SIX-WAY - CLUB - SWING ARM - DOWNBRIDGE

-·-""'t!l"

was oVer

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL. XXVIII NO. 3

hour. The board adopted a :sclwol calendar for 1977·78 as
recommended by the county hoard ol education .
Donna Cobb was hired for the remainder of the present
school year as an aide at Bradbury and subl!titutes hired were
James Martin, Charles Diehl, substitute custodians, and
Warren Black and Lois Wyant, subl!tiblle bus driven. The
resignation of Unda Jell as kindergarten and mining route bus
driver was accepted due to health reasons and Mrs. Jell was
given a leave of abaince effective April I to·the end of the
current school year from her regular bus driving dutielt .
Resignations from Dwight Goina as band director and
Greg McCall as Title I Coordinator were accepted. Bobby R.
Hunt was authorized to attend the National Band Contest ln
Colwnbus on May 3, and Ron Logan , a meeting . at the
Muskingum Area Joint Vocational School today . Richard
Roseberry, Meigs VICA advisor was given permlllslon to
acwmpany Bruce Coterill to state skill olymplcs to be held ln
Colwnbus on April 22.
.
It was agreed to secure bids on refinishing the high school
gym floor and on resurfacing the high school parking lot. The
hoard agreed to notify several employes that their cohtracts
are not renewed. These are mostly aides and it was PQinted out
that the failure to renew the employment Is not due to
dissatisfaction with any of the employes. If enrollment and
(Continued on page I~)

en tine

at y

Huffman

.In 1906, the ·San ·F'ranclsco
earthquake )legan, When· .it.

•

WITH FABRIC ON PARCHMENT SHADES

Carter

· · E-R CALLED .
.. The POmeroy Emergency
· Sc!UIId was called to the
.Flatwoods '!load at 4:57 a.m.
MQnday for Mrs : John
Redovlan; a maternity
patient, who w&amp;a taken to
Ho~r .M~cal Center.

.

•.

FURNITURE DEPARTMENT - 2RD FLOOR

SAYS INNOCENT .
ATHENS, Oblo iUPI) Wllllam Plamb, H, Ametvllle, pluded lanoceat
today to a ebarce of
falling health several years
anravated homicide Ia ·
and In serious condition ftle
eo~~~~eetlon with tile death
paot olx months.
She was born June 17, 1893,
of bll wife· F1'811elne, Sl.
In Clay Twp., Gallla County,
The woman's body was
daughter of the late Alonzo
fouad
Saturday In nearby
and Rhoda Halley Wise, ·
Federal Creek. Atbeas
She marr ied Clyde M.
(Continued froin page 1l
Smith on Aug . 6, 192~. at
COIIDiy sbeliff Gary Efaw
Ky .
He . 11iid tile callle of deallt bad admlntst:ral!on has faced.
Ca!lehsburg ,
preceded her In death on May
nol yet beeD detel'llllned
For the first time since he
27, H~ .
aDd be was awaltlag the &amp;as bee.n ln Washlngt~n •.
Survivors Include one son ,
William E. I Bill) Smith ,
resalta of an autopsy.
Carter went to church Sunday
Columbus , and three grand without
his family. Tbey were
children . She was preceded lo
at
Camp
David, the
death by one son , three
brothers and one sloter . She
Jll'esldential retreat.
was a member of Providence
He also talked with his son,
t&gt;a~llsl Church .
Chip, who returned from a
trip . to . China wlth a
(Contlnued.lrom page I)
congreoslon.aldelegatlon.
candldate or offiee hOlct&lt;ir to · Most ~f the llay, ho!'ever, ·
the detriment of the party was devoted to the energy .
and other candidates," said package and · · tonight's
Huffman.
. address.
.
..
"Rejuvenation of the patty ' · A cornerstone Of the speech
from the precinct up must tae is eXpected to be a :CIA study
precedence ·over the interest wlllch found that world oil use
of any candidate or any other will . surpass. production
Individual person or Interest within 10 year~. While not yet
within the party."
disclosing details of . the
study, Carter calls the
TRUCK STRUCK
findings "disturbing."
Two
vehicles
were
Conswner advocate Ralph
damaged and one driver cited Nader, however, !llready ls
ln an accident on ·west Main questjoning the report,
St. at2 p.m. Sunday Pom•l'l!Y claiming . it Is distorted
· ~olice report. Pollee said a becalilte it renes heavily on
westbound car driven by figures from the 'oil Industry.
·Aaron Hysell, ·"Pomeroy;
The package .that will be
struck the slde of a tnick presented Wednesday ia
owned by Charles Logar, expected to include a tax on
PomeroY, which was being "gas ,._,. cars 8nd a
Unloaded at a . warehouse. rebate far those . with good
· There were mlnor damages mileage, higher priCes for oil
to the tr:uck and heavy to the · ·and natural gas to t\!SCOW'age
car: Hysell was Charged with ~on arid tax credlts
driving while lntoxlcated, for billie&amp; and businesses
PQilce aald.
··
.tnstSwng solar e!lergy. .
WYNEMA SMITH
Wynema Smith , 83 , a
res ident of Columbus, died at
5 p.m. Sunday at MI. Carmel
Hospital . She had been In

education and the teacbers association. Under Impasse for kitcben equipment and chairs from the present cenier to be
Jll'ocedures, the board and the teachen each choose a transfe!'Ted to the new center when it is completed. Goins salO
representative and the two agree upon a third party. These mucholtheequipmentwaspurchasedelghtyearsagoand coot
three indivlduais then attempt to· work out an agreement about $4,130 when new. The board was advised to inspect the
satisfactory to both the board and the association.
requested equipment before making any decision on the
Following last night's meeting, the board met in executive matter .
session to hear Dowler update the latest in the negotiations
Permission was granted for the Middleport Youth
that have taken place recenUy.
Baseball League to use the field behlnd the Pearl St. building
During the regular meeting the board set a special slncesomeoftheballplaylngspaceatthecooununitypoolhas
meeting for nen Monday night to hear an ellpulsion appeal of a been lost this year due to the p~ned tennis court construction.
student who was allegedly caught smoking marijuana on , Ed Kitchen sPQke oo behalf of the league.
school Jli'Operty and to heaf the grievance of a former
Don H11Mel spoke on behaU of the Pomeroy Baseball
klndergarten bus driver.
League outlining work that was done by the league to the
The board voted to have ·the Colwnblta Heating and athletic complex at the Meigs High School last year and plans
Ventilating Co., Colwnbus, work on the heating system at the for Improvements this year . The board voted to build four
Rutland Elemenlal'y School. Dwight Goins, an admlnistratlve dugouts at the site and the league will construct a concession
assistant, reported that during the past winter, some of the and equipment storage building. Cost of the dugouts Is not to
rooms at the Rutland School were 90 degrees while other exceed $782 and labor will be donated.
rooms bad temperatures as low as 50. The work by tbe
The board adopted a procedure to be followed by any
Columbus firm Ia expected to provide a better temperature person feeling discrimination ln the district UPQn the basis of
regulation throughout the school as well as reduce healing sex . The procedure was drawn up by Goins. It was agreed to
costs.Costoftheworkwillbe$3,990.Thegaabillforonemonth advertise for bids on a new school bus with 53 percent
at the school ran $1,1171.
reimbursement to come from the state .
The board also discllssed with Goins, a request from Mrs.
A comJll'ehensive special education plan was adopted and
Eleanor Thomas of the Meigs Senior Citizens Center, asking the mining route bus driving route was adjusted to $4.58 per

Negotlatlono between the Meigs Local School District
Teachers Assl. and the Meigs Local Board of Education are at
.
the point of impasse.
1bia status in negotiations was declared- upon Monday
night when the board took no action ln anawer to a letter from
the teachers asaociatlon asldng that negotiations be turned
· over to federal mediatioo in order to get the differences
rmolved.
Board member Mn . Jennif.. Sheets.conunented that the
Jmpuae status Is costly, baaed on the experience of last fall in
which Impasse was a long draim out procedure.
Clvlrles Downie, representing the asaociatlon, also spoke
on the COIIIIy aspects of an Impasse and sald that the teachers
did not want the negotiations to go to Impasse. He stated that
federal mediation would keep the negotiating more on a local
.
.
basis.
SUpt. Charles L. Dowler said he Is oppooed to federal
mediation on the ground that he objects to the federal government coming lntotheloealsitustlon. He commented that itha•
been hia ·obaetvance that federal mediators are labor
orientated and are not well versed in talcatlonal problems.
The board took no action on the llliSOCiatlon 's letter asking
that the matter be llimed over to federal mediation. The letter
also stated that unless the board agreed to take such action
that the state of Impasse would e:list between the board of

·Eiberfelds In Pomeroy
. ~\.l

•Impasse

Meigs Local declares talks

Allee Mayea, WWlam Me- Helton, Clarence Law10n.
Calllster, Mary McNul, Net- Lee, Clyde Mara, Blll7
Elfie Meadows, Cuolyn McLauahlln, TammY Me·
Meal, Victor Niday, Thelma Peek, Robert Mulllnl, Jr ·•
Nowlin, Amy Orender, Doftald PotU, Florence
Jessica Pennington, Ezr1 Ratner, Bente Sa under a,
Phillips, Chorlea Pltntl, Ma1gle Schrader, Em eat
Gregory Ratner, Irene s-on, Jr., Wandl Tbomll!
Reynolda, Dianna Swartl, Jelfny Traey, BettY Vlal'l,
Rhonda Simmons, Mark Dllvtd Ward, Edward Wauch.
Smlth, Ruth Spira, lnne St. Evelyn Wbtor.
(lllrllll, April It)
Clair, Dallas Stanb1u1b,
Mr. and Mr1. Norbert
Bernice Thelia, Elln Wadden,
Gltrell, daacbt.,, Jacbon:
'MeUnda Whittington.
.Mr. and Mn. DUe Stewart.
(Birth, AprO 11)
Mr . and Mrs. Jamea daqbter. ,.ellllon.
&lt;DIIelluJea, Apr0 17)
O'Brien, son, GaUlpoll.s.
Mn.
Davey Adklna and
&lt;DIIellllrl... AprD tel
daughter,
Keith Bat.,, Mn.
Dlana Adams, Eva Alllaon, .
Mrs. John Bacon and W1yne carter IIIII daalbW';
daughter, Doris Bailey; Jerry ColE. Eul Ouluey, Jr.,
Wilma Barlow, Richard Loula Hochberg, Roy Howell,
Barrett, Carolyn Bartels, Mn. Paul Keell and ttan,
Mrs. Dave BishoP and WWlam Mapa, Mn. Robert
daughter, Woodrow can, Sr., Martin IIIII daqbter, Mn.
John Dalley, Hubert Davia, Jack Perry and 1011, Mn.
Mn. David Downing tllld ~anw Pettit and ..,, PblliJp
daughter, Della Dyke, Smltb. Juon StaDley, Wanda
Gordon Fannln, Gladya_ Ward.

-.

WASIUNGTON - PERSONAL INCOME ROSE 1.7 per
cent In Marcil, the second largest monthly Increase ever, the
Commerce Department said today. . It was another
encouraging sign of escalating economic recovery.
The 1nc0111e report was the third positive government
' ec:Dnomlc noPQrt made publlc since President Carter
IIIIIIOIIIICed ba wu scrapping -the ~ lax rebate because of
lltbltantial imJli'O-t in llle econ0111y. The CoriUDerce
Illtoartmellt aald ~onday cotlllructlon began on new hOjDes
· "'I
(Contin~ed on page 12)
'""

d:

rell'esentatives of oil states Sen. Russell Long, 0-La., and
House Democratic Leader
Jim Wright of Texas expressed concern that too
little stress was placed on
increasing U.S. production.
Their comments hinted at
the opposition likely to
surface Wednesday when the
President, in the second salvo
of a weeklong energy blitz,
outlines the admittedly
WlPQpular meastlres he has
devised to cope with the
situation .
carter
listed
I0
"fundamental principles"
that guided him ln shaping
the proposals he will unveil
Wednesday. He said the sixth
- conservation - was the
cornerstone bui the fifth fairness - also is vital.
No special Interest group
will be exempt from
sacrifiCe, he said, and "we
WUI not let the oU companies
profiteer ."
· "I am sure each of you will
find something you don'I like
about the opecifics of our
proposal (Wednesday),"
Carter told the nation.
"It will demand that we
make sacrifices aitd changes
in every We. To liOme degree
the sacrifices and changes
will be painful - but 10 Is
every meaningful sacrifice.
It will lead to higher costs,
and to some greater
Inconveniences for everyone,

Step 2 (of 3) taken on $5 license tax
.

The second reading qf three
requited of an ordinance
calllng for a $5 permissive
auto license tax was passed
on a 3 to I vote by Pomeroy
Village Council ln a regular
session Monday night. Voting
no on the llaue was Phil·
Globokar.
There was a long discWJsion
before the second reading
was approved.
Councilman Lou Osborne
indicated he had been approached by "several
'citizens" in regard to the
ordinance, The objection was
to the cleaning of streets. The

citizens wanted the back
streets as well as the main
streets cleaned. Osborne
commented that th'e or·
dinance as written is too
broad a scope for the revenue
the village will receive.
Councilman Dr. Harold
Brown sald the ordinance
should spell out "the cleaning
of streets" ln addition to
maintaining them. Brown
said he was for the tax 100
percent but wanted the clerk,
Jane Walton, to check with
Fred Crow, v~ge solicitor
to see If the ordinance could
be changed and Insert

"cleaillng of streets" ln the
ordinance.
Globokar
agreed he
wanted the cleaning of streets
spelled out more specifically.
He added that there are
stree\ll in the village that
have never been touched.
Brown suggested that
vacant lots be cleaned up and
something done with old
buildings that PQst a hazard
to chlldren. He stated that
there are lots that need
cleaning and buildings
needed to be tom down. He
also observed that a fence is
to be placed around a mlne

Schools hog local

ta~

that Is located in the' area of
Osborne St. by Prime
Builders and this as yet has
not been done. It was pointed
out that the work on the
apartment buildings Is not
completed and the fence will
be put up before the work ts
completed.
Mayor Clarence Andrews
said there are only "" many
hours in a day and there are
only two street employes
(poaalble three some days •
and there is just so much
work can be. done ln one day,
Meeting w:ith councU. was
Paul Simon, vice president of

dollar

Seventy-four percent of property tues paid by Meigs
County ·residents and public utllltlos go directly ·to local

schools. But this is only a small partlon of the total amount
needed.
·
For example, the Melgs Local School District bad receipts
of m~e than $3.8 milllon ln 1976, but only 38 percent of this
came from local property taxes. In the other Meigs .COunty
school districts even a smaller share Is Jli'Ovlded locaUy.
The bulk comes from state and federal sources as shown
below. ''Other" funds come from lunch and book sales,
interest, transfers, and miscellaneous sources :

the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce
and
local
hullli1esaman.
Simon asked council's
permission to place elbibtts
during Regatta on the streets
beginning at Sycamore to his
market on West Maln Street.
Simon PQlnted out that thl!
will leave the parking lots
clear and the merchants
would probably get more
business with exhibits along
the streets rather than on the
parking. lots,
.
Council approved the
request and also gave Simon
the g&lt;Hihead to bum the river
bank beginning at the Salt
WorkB upriver to the traffic

..

Tipple hearing
is official now

HUNTINGTON - A public prior to the meeting. All
hearing at 7 p.m, on April 28 statements, both wrtiten and
at the Wahama High School oral, will be recorded verMEIGS LOCAL SCHOOL DISTAICT-1978
(dymnasiwn in Mason, W. batim and will become a part
., to consider a request for of the official record of t)le
permit to buUd a coal application.
Wrrltten statements may
oadlng facility near CUlton,
be
addressed to the Hun. W. Va. was officially antington
District at P. 0. Box
nounced today by the Hun2127,
Huntington,
W. Va.
STATE
tington District of the U. S.
25721.
46 %
Army Corps of Engineers,
The decision to Issue or
An application has been
deny
the pennlt wiil be made
submitted by Wllllam F.
Zuapan of Mason for a permit by the Corps of Engineers
to construct a coal loading bilaed on how the proPQsed
facility o the left side of the facility will affect the overall
Ohio River immediately public interest.
downstream from Clifton and
PROPERTY
TAX
directly across the river from
Middleport, Ohio.
38%
. All illterested parties are
Invited to aU,nd the pabUc
llearlng and ellpreaa tbelr
vlewa concerning lbe ·
proposed f•elllty. Oral
alalements supporting or
With veteran master ot
Tbis and other school funding information will be opposillg the coal loading ceremonies and minstrel
discussed at a Property Taxes and Community Services facUlty will be beard. interlocutor Joe Struble at
meeting April 21 at 7:30 p.m. at the Salisbury Elementary However, for accuracy of !be . the helm, the curtain will go
School.
record all lmPQrtaDt !ada up at 8:10 p.m. Saturday on
Speakers at the meeting being sponsored by the Meigs and argumenta sbould be the
annual "Spring Fling" of
County Eztension Service will be Howard Frank, Cou~ty submitted In writing.
the Big Bend Minstrel
Auditor; George Collins, County Treasurer and John SUtzlem,
Written statements may be AssociaUon.
Area Extension Agent. They will be jolned on a "question and presented at the meeting or
SPQnsored by the Meigs
answer" panel by other county, city and school officials.
mailed to the District office High
School
Athletlc
Boosters, the show will be
given ln the Meigs High
School Auditoriwn · and the
junior class of the school wru ·
hold a candy sale during
Forty eight persons visited Story, Lenora Leifheit ; Helen Pickens, Mrs. Robert intermllalon with a number
tbe Meigs County Blood- doctors attending were Dr. L. · Hill , Allee Wolfe, Mace! of prizes to be awarded
mobile Monday at ·the D. Telle, Mr. E. S. Barton, Pat Ingles, Paul during the sale.
Opening with a PQny line,
Pomeroy Elementary School. Villanueva, Dr. Sellm Smart, Bernadine Myers,
Jayne
Hoefllch, Shari Mitch,
Forty five units of blood were Blazewlcz and Dr. Raymond Clarence Struble, Beulah
Paige
Smith,
Velvet Smither,
received
and
elght Boice.
Strauss, Reeva Slmms ,
CAthy
Blaettnar, Lori Wood,
The canteen li'aS served by Grace Drake and Vernon
replacements . .
Jane
Sisson,
SUMn
Wright,
American Legion Nease and Jeame Braun.
A gallon donor waa Freda the
Gllmore: two gallon donor, Auzillary No. 39 and loading
Donations were by Quality June Wamsley, Becky
Mary E. Davidson: and a and unloading was by Scout Print Shop, Melgs -Local Thomas and cathy Price
Ioiii' gaDon donor was Ed- Troop. No. 249.
School, The Dalley Sentinel, dan.cing to "Breezing Along
Clerical work was per- ·Tbe Athens Messenger, with the Bree?:e," the first
ward W. Durst.
Nurses were Mrs. Vern formed by ·Mary Nease, Jean Pomeroy Emergency Squad, half of Ute spring show will
Nease, Juanita Sayre, Jean .Veterans Memorial Hospital. lea\ure two appearances by a
girls' vocal quintet from
Sayre, Martha Lou Beei!le,
Pomeroy ~ h err1
l.
Meigs High School and
Clark, Mary l. Starcher,
PIANO STOLEN
trained
Rolland
E.
Neultllng.
Patty
by Mrs. Paige Hunt.
Mrs. Margaret Ferlet,
J . Barton . Joseph Jeff Making up the quintet which
Monroe, Ohio has rePQrted to
MarJorie E . Reuter ,
LAST CONCERT
. Hilleary,
Barbara L. Fields, Debbie w!Jlsing "The Boogie Woogle
Melgs County Sherifrs Dept.
The Meigs High School jazz
, David M . King , Bugle Boys from Company
that sometime In the past band will make its final Grueser
Billy Spencer, Homer Baxter, B" and a second novelty
four weeki! someone kicked in appearance of the school year ·Dennis Gilmore. Debra L.
number are Paula Elchlnger,
the door of an unoccupied
Windon , Ola St. Clair, Laura Hoover, Beverly
in
a
concert
at
7:30
this
William Radford, John Rice,
dwelling she owns on Beech
VIrgil Windon , leo Vaughan, Wilcox, Jeni Grate and Jo
Grove Road and removed an evening at tbe Meiga Junior Shlrla
J . Taylor , Marvin E. McKinney.
High
School.
Admission
Is
50
antique upright plano valued
cents for adults and 25 cenl5 Taylor _
Sherry King, daughter of
at $500. The inclden~ is under for students.
('Continuiilon
page
12)Mr. and Mrs: WUJlam King of
investigation.
·

SOURCES OF FUNDS

light.

A public hearing was to be
held on the spending of the
revenue sharing money
Monday nlght hut no·one was
preaent at lbe meeting d~t
council members , · Rev. ,
William Mlddleswarth, and
the pres8.
Council therefore voted to
spend its revenue sharing
money In the following
manner: building, $10,000:
cruiser, $4,500 ; recreation, ·
$500, $200 of the $500 for the
baoeball program, the
balance possibly for the
tennis courts ): ce metery,
$200 and $800, miscellaneous.
The mayor's report for
March showed r'!Ceipts of
$3,897.80, accepted by
rouncll.
The meeting was opened by
prayer by the Rev. WJ]llam
Middleswarth . · Attending
were Mayor Andrews; Ralph
Werry, Osborne, Harry
Davis, Brown and Glohokar,
co uncilmen, Jane Walton,
clerk, Phyllls Hennessy,
treasurer, Jack Krautter and
Henry Werry.

Dances, songs to

mark 1977 'Fling'

Blood received M0 n d ay

Bradbury and an instructor ·
at Marshall Uniwrslty, will
return home to sing in the
show and her number will be
"! Honestly Love You." She
will be accompanied by her
sister, Kathy King. Klm
Batey with her guitar will
appear In the first half of the
show along with a teeny
booper- dance line , Cindy
Souls by, Kelll Whitlatch, Kim
Eblin, Usa Bazter, Julie
Sisson and . Jeanna Pauley, .
dancing to "Baby Face."
Beverly WQcox will appear
for the first time as a liOiotst
with the Big Bend group
doing, " People" and the.PQny
chorus, Cathy Whitlatch,
Velvet Swisher, Cathy
Blaettnar, Becky Thomas,
Beck! Fry, Shari Mitch,
Jayne Hoefllch, Paige Smith,
Kelll Rought , Ann Fitch,
Cathy Price, Unda WU!lams,
SUMn Wright, Jane Sisson
and Lori Wood doing a
comedy routln~ to "Yakety

Sax."

61

Vocal soloist, Unda Mayer,
will present, "The Way We
Were," and Fumiko Iwasaki,
Japanese 01change student
here through the sponsorship
of the Middleport • Pomeroy
Rotary Club, will slng "My
World lo Blue" accompanied
by Mrs. Jennifer Sheets.
June Wamsley, a veteran of
the cast and a Junior MIBa.
(Conllnted on page ~)

•

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