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                  <text>D-10-TheSWlday Times-Sentinel, Sundlly, May 8, 1977

Mental Health

County agent's corner

By JOHN C. RICE
Ext . Agent , Agriculture

Two Meigs Mines

drive coming

RACINE - May, officially
declared Mental Health
Thou Shalt never permit a gear to turn nor a wheel to roll Month in the state or Ohio.
POMEROY - You may have set various farming goals for
Wltil
all guards and safety devices are in place to shield thee will be hi ghlighed by a
yourseU this spring , such as completing the corn planting by
from
harm.
Mental Health Drive here
May 5, and completing the soybean planting by May 20. These
Thou Shalt hitch draw bar loads low and forsake wrapping according to Mrs. Elizabeth
are commendable goals, but don't forget that doing the job
or cable shout the axle, lest thy tractor wrap itself Coffm an, local chairperson.
chain
safely should be the major, overriding goal.
aroWJd
its own axle and smother thee beneath.
Volunteer workers will go
"Maintaining the health and weU being of you and your
TbouShalt
weight
thy
tractor's.lront
to
balance
it
if
the
house·to-house
to collect for
family is pa ramount to all future activities," is the way b . M.
drawbar
be
heavily
burdened
with
such
as
a
two-wheel
·
mental
health
and aH
Byg puts it. He is Extension agricultural engineer at The Ohio
spreader,
and
also
place
upon
the
rear
sufficient
weight
to
donations
from
the
Dnv_e
~111
State University, and he offers these commandments for safe
effect
balance
when
thy
tractor
is
encumbered
with
a
front-end
.
benefit
the
OhlO
AssoclatlOn
.
operation off arm tractors, the tool most often involved in farm
for
Mental
Health
.
loader.
:
accidents :
Thou Shalt faithfully cause thine eyes to remain open to
Thou Shalt contain thy temper, even though the day goes
discern
precisely where thee and thy tractor are going and,
foul and everything attempted conspireth against thee, as
furthermore
, to spy hidden obstacles and other hazards so thou
robust anger not only maketh thee look foolish and exclaim
unkind sentiments, but also multiplieth thy prospects of can avoid them.
Thou Shalt mind thy manners on the roadway, acting
ay
coming to grief by accident.
courteously
to
highway
travelers
by
not
enteri!lg
the
roadway
Thou Shalt diminish thy speed on rough ground and when
GALLIPOLIS - The an·
approaching ditches and turning corners, thereby smiting until after thou hath established that the way is clear, by nual Gallipolis Ki·Ro·Li
prospects of thee supporting thy tractor 's weight with thine always signalling wha.t thou art contriving to do, and by (Kiwanis, Rotary and Lions)
decoratin~ the rear of thy machinery with a SMV emblem. to
neck.
·
get-together will be held
proclaim' that thou art proceeding slowly.
Thou Shalt require thy small sons and daughters (and thy
Wednesday,
May 18, 6:30 lot.. Thou Shalt enlist protective cab or frame to assist thee in
neighbor's offspring) to keep themselves apart from farm
surviving should thy tractor tumble over despite thy good p.m. at the Bob Evans shelter
machinery.
HOLD PARTY- Job's Daughters of GallipoliS Bethel 73 and DeMolays recently held a
house in Rio Grande. The
Thou Shalt interrupt the now of power before exploring, intentions.
get-together. Pictured left to right are Lynn Gauze, Dallas Sayre, Treasa James, George ·
menu
wtll
incl
ude
beans,
Thou Shalt respect thy tractor, keep it well, and not
reaching or poking about in thy machinery, if thou treasure thy
Knighting, Patty Slayton . In the backgroWld is David Paine and Mrs. Bess Canterbury, ooe
demand
more than it can deliver, nor require that It labor ham, cornbread, onions, cake of the chaperones.
limbs.
and
soft
drinks.
Thou Shalt render thy trador out of gear and stoutly set under burdens better suited to a huskier steed lest it repay thy
All Gallipolis Kiwanians ,
maltreatment with low performance, mechanical troubles,
the brakes before dismounting.
Martin was counsel for tbe
.Rotarians,
Lions and Rio
mostly where Mitchell was
Thou Shalt Not require nor.permit thy offspring to perform and accidents.
now-abolished
Senate
are
invited
to
Grande
Lions
at.
The engineer suggests that you share these command·
tasks without first ascertaining if they are capable in body and
internal
affairs
.
Stroup
said
Mitchell
told
. There will also be a
temperament and are sufficiently trained to operate a tractor ments with all tractor operators on your farm and then post attend
featured speaker.
Continued from page A-5
the court he had sold subcommittee, which held
them
in
a
conspicuous
place
in
the
farm
shop
to
serve
as
a
without risk.
marijuana in the past but several days of hearings in
· daily reminder for safe tractor operation .
California and Colorado , only as an "accommodation 1974 on the purported dangers
differentiate between seller, not a commercial of marijuana.
"I don ;t believe in tbe
virus and root rot diseases .
''accommodation sales' ' · and trafficker."
You' I I
Plant successive plantings
"The guy who turned out to present law as it is structured
profit dealing .
of
beans.
·
Conditions
that
be
the informer came to ~is now nor do I believe in total
Stroup
defines
tract it down
result in h eavy disease
accommodation sales aS home, asked Jerry if he knew decriminalization, " Martin
much faster
·amage. one time may not
Clair F . Shenefie·ld, Lela B.
" minor sa les that are where he could get some pot, said. "f believe in a citati111
Shenfield fa Ever ett George,
occur
a
few
weeks
later.
basically
consumer related .and Jerry sold him some of diversion program., " where
with a
Sa ndy .Geor9e , · Ptlr ce ls,
Plant only commercially · Salem
offenses. If somebody makes his own pot (the II grams) for youthful offenders can be
.
WANT AD
grown, disease-.free Reed,
a buck or two profit, that $5 - hell, he had to lose referred to counseling.
Pau l E. Brooks , Elizabefh
"Having it covered by
;,void planting seed har· Brooks to Hobarf Vineyar d, do.e"sn 't make them serious money on tile deaL"
By Bryson ft. &lt;Bud) Carter
vested from last season's Mae Vineyard , 1.506 a., Ol i ve ~ criminals·.
At least one longtime oppo- criminal law,· retaining the
Farmer s Home Adm . to
Gallia County Extension Agent
crop.
" Almost all marijuana nent of marijuana, David possibility of some sanction,
George S. Cummins, Opal
smokers share with a friend. Martin, also decried the does have a distinctive
Cummins , Lot, M iddleport.
(deterrent) effect. At least It
Rotate beans with other
Farmers Home Adm . to
It's too expensive to give Mitchell case.
GALLIPOLIS - Feeder crops in the garden.
Raymond B. Sa lser , Esther
conveys
the message that
"
I
throw
up
my
hands
in
away/' Stroup said. "Many,
C. Salser, Lot , Orange .
pigs averaged $75.22 per cwt.
Plant beans when the soil is
society
considers
this a
horror,"
Martin
said
of
the
when buying an ounce
Clemente Menchini, Gina
at the May 3 Chillicothe Area
case.
"It
just
shouldn't
potentially
harmful,
themselves, will also buy
Menchinl to Donald Pierce ,
Feeder Pig Sale. A total of 226 w~';!'~tment of bean seeds or
dangerous drug."
Sally Pierce, Lot, Pomeroy .
some for friends - and that's happen.
head of pigs with an average treatment of furrow and
weight of 60.6lbs. sold for an covering soil with Caplan
average of $44.62 per head. fungicide may help. Although
Price per cwt. ranged other chemicals may be
s..
from
a low of $37 to a high or better, Captan is available in
bim
tor
$I~ESULTS OF THE Ohio small quantities.
aU
Performance Tested sale at
Avoid planting beans near
white clover or other
your
FURNITURE DEPARTMENT - 3RD FLOOR
Caldwell are in. Bulls sold lor legumes.
flmi/y
an average of $908 per head. . A barrier of sweet corn or
inlUrB"CI · _.J
Angus averaged $888; ·Polled other tall-growing crops on
nBBdS.
•
Hereford, $785; Charolais the windward side of the
Carol! K. Snowden
$886; Slmmental $1,179. beams may reduce disease.
24 State Str~t
Phone 446-4290
These bulls were all born in
Destroy legume weeds in
the
Spring
of
1976
and
had
fencerows
and other areas
.likl'
......
been
in
a
140.
day
test
near
the
garden
.
good n8ighbor,
program.
Plant
bush-type
beans if
Sfl~ F1rm
i's tllllt.
HERE
ARE
SO.ME possible. 11 appears that
suggestions that may reduce Kentucky Wonder Pole beans
·state Fa rm lnsuranc: e Co mpani es
amount of bean disease · and White-Half Runner beans
the
Home Offices: Bloom ing1on, llllno! s
damage in your garden this are more susceptible to. the
year.

WILKESVILLE - Two of the ·
three Meigs Mine!!' were producing
coal again today but Mine No. 3
continued Idle. its workers refusing
to come in because of a local issue.
A spokesman in the office of
David Baker, personnel manager of
the Southern Ohio Coal Co. near
here, said "the great majority of the
miners are back at work."

Ki•Ro•I.J will
be WedneSd

#

{

\
' "'
.......
.

a

Seven years

Property
Transfers

Agriculture and

our community

AGooo ·

NEIGHBOR
OF YOURS

£

...

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

~

SEE

POMEROY·LANDMARK

KING AND QUEEN - SUsanGoebel,daughterofMr. and Mrs. Fritz Goebel, Route I,
Reedsville, and Kevin Lee lll!rton. son of Mr . and. Mrs. Richard Barton, were crowned
queen and king of the aMual junior«nior prom of Eastern High School Saturday night. The
auditorium was extensively decorated for the affair and refreshments were served. Mrs.
Donna Chadwell was faculty advisor for tbe event.

VOL. . XXVIII

Cong. John Slack said today
the House Appropropriations
Subcommittee on Public
Works has approved $1.4
million in the · Fiscal Year
1978 Federal budget lor
continuation of project'
studies on the Gallipolis locks
and · dam replacement .
projed.
The money requested lor
thisphaseofthe projects will
be used to fund a series of
studies In the areas of
navigation systems,
economics and trans·
· jlortation rates.
The existing Gallipolis
locks and dam structure,
completed in 1937, continues
to cause delays in river
navigation because of the
llmJted dimensions of the
present lock chambers.
"The delays caused by the
Gallipolis locks have become
increasingly critical as other
older locks along this stretch
of the river have been
replaced. The new, larger
· locks create an easier flow of
traffic lor a distance, but
once the barge tows reach
Gallipolis that now be~omes ·
back&lt;&gt;d up," Slack said.

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SILVER QUEEN SEED.CORN

POMEROY LANDMARK
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.

Serving Meigs, Gallia and Mason Counties

Phqne 99Hl.8J
StiQ Hou~~: Open 8:30-5:30;
Mil Clam at 5

KINFOLK TROUBLES
PLAINS, Ga. (UPI) - Billy
Carter's 27-year-old nephew
says he'll sue the Plains City
Council, which he charges
thwarted his plans to build a
printshop just because he's
related to President Carter's
brother.
Rick Harrison, whose
father is Sybil Carter's
brother, said Friday he
withdrew his request to build
the shop on Carter land after
the council hinted it would not
be approved.
11
lt's
political
and
everybody knows it," said
Harrison. He said the COWlCil
had blocked his plans "just
because I'm Billy's nephew."
Council member Mill Sim·
mons
denied
the
discrimination charge. jie
said Harrison failed to
conform to the procedure of
giving the coWJcil 30 days to
consider the request.
TRUSTEE NAMED
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Lancaster executive John L.
Gushman was electe&lt;l
Chairman of the Ohio State
University Board of Trustees
Friday. An OStl alumnus and
a trustee since 1970, Gush·
man is chiPf executive officer of tl•&lt;' Anchor Hocking
porp. and holds directorships
tn

several other firms .

locks were completed, the
amount of river traffic and
the size of the barge tows
were compatible wtth the
dimensions of the locks.
However, at the size of the
tows increased along with the
volume of traffic due to in·
dustrial growth. the small
locks at Gallipolis became
less capable of efficiently
handling the amount of
traffic now on the river.
Compounding the trl\fllc
problema(ihe present locks
is the physicallocation of the
structure. The poor approach
conditions, which are made
worse by the increased river
nows, have resulted in higher
accident rates at the site and
pose considerable hazards to
the tows;
"The updated system, as
proposed by the CCifPS of
Engineers, calls for a new
1,200 .foot lock chamber to
augipent existing facilities.
Such a structure would
significantly reduce delays
thereby adding to the ef·
ficiency of the river tral;fic
system on the Ohio," Slack
said.

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ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
MAIN STORE AND MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE
OPEN FRIDAY 9 to 8 P.M. OTHER WEEK DAYS 9:30 to 5 P.M.

April 28 Young escaped
f~om the Putnam coWlty jail
and was recaptured t~at
night.
Judge James Holliday
Lee
sentenced
Terry
Brainard, 16, to the
penitentiary at Mollildaville
on his plea of guilty to a
second-degree murder
charge.
Court-appointed attorneys
for Young are Barry Casto

POINT PLEASANT
Seledion of a jury wsa on the
sChedule this afternoon in
Mason County Circuit court
for the first • pegree murder
tria.! of 32-year-old John
Lewis Young.
The Mason man was in·
dieted in the stabbing oi
Mary Berry, 61, at her home
in Mason last Dec. I. The
same day, Pomeroy Police
Chief Jed Webster arrested
Young at a home on Prospect
Hill, assisted by Middleport
· Police Chief J. J. Cremeans.

and John Anderson, while

Prosecuting Attorney W. Dan
Roll represents the state.

rN;,;;::::;:=:=:==
:=
:=:=: ::i:;:,:,::/i;i;/;lt
::~

'

~$

By United Press lntemaUonal
WASIDNGTON-ONE of the nation's most doctrinaire
political organlzatioos has come out in favor of abolishing the
corporate income tax. 'The American Conservative Union?
Young Americans lor Freedom? No. Americans for
Democratic Action, for 30years tbe refuge of the nation's most
convinced political liberals.
Although ADA ended its annual convention Sunday with
resolutions that backed away from a number of long-held
liberal policies, delegates said conditions required new
positions. Its resolution on tax reform said the corporate
income tax should be abolished and, so that everyone will pay
a fair share of tales, all corporation income, whether paid out
in dividends or· not, ;"allocated" among stockholders.
'Shareholders then would pay personal income taxes on their
pro..-ata share of corporation income.

SpanloCk top add

aupport and
durlblllly.

the finn's surface mines were

working buUhe underground mines
were not.

"They just didn'tcome back to our

GENEVA
(UP!)
President Carter arrived
today lor Middle East talks
with President Hafez Assad
of Syria and said he hoped the
United States could return
from a Geneva Middle East
conference later this year
with a peaceful solution.
Carter said he hopes that
his meeting with Ass'ad wUI
lead to a "better un·
derstanding of the problem
which we may deal with later
this year" and, referring to

the stalled Geneva con·
ference, said he hopes that
"this year we can come back
to find a peaceful solution."
Historically, he said,
Geneva and Switzerland have
been a place "to dispel dif·
ferences and eliminate
hatred."

The
President,
ac·
companied by Secfetary of
State Cyrus· Vance, drove
from the airport along a
tightly-guarded six-mile
route to the Hotel In·
tercontinental for the
meeting. with Assad who
arrived Sunday.
Carter originally invited

POM EROY·M IDDLEPORT, OHIO

Assad to Washington lor talks
as Israeli and other Arab
leaders have made but Assad
rejected the invitation and
Geneva was . chosen as a
neutral site.

Carter and Vance return to
London tonight to resume a
jammed London schedule
that began last Thursday.
High adininisiration of·
aboard
,the
licials
presidential aircraft said the
President is optimistic that
serious progress would be
made in the encounter with
·Assad and that people are
"getting ready for a big
step."
The officials said Carter
believes Syria has a key role
to play because of its
relations with the Soviet
Union and the " potential
influence" it has with the
Palestinians. ·
14
For the first time since

1953 we have Arab leadership
which · are
relatively
moderate and not. willing to
play off .the United· States
against the Soviet Union and
accept the fact that Israel is
here to stay," one top official

Jury .selection Four accidents,
begins today robbery probed

BACK
on
the
Washington political
scene, Esther Peterson,
President Carter's
' consumer adviser, Is ·
pushing fqr ~ctment of
legislation Including a
consumer
advocacy
agency which has been
staUed In Congress lor
eight years. She served as
President Lyndon
Johnson's eoosumer
adviser from 1964 to l!HI7.

of Belmont County's 6-foot, 27~
pound woman sheriff Kathy
Crumbley.
Mrs. Crumbley confron ted
several bands of striking coal
miners last week ahd pleaded
lor peace.
" I am a coal miner's grand·
daughter, a coal miner's daughter,
niece and wife and I ijnderstand
your problems and your situation,"
said Mrs. Crumbley who is married
to a coal miner.

underground operations," said 8
Consolidation spokesman.
Meanwhile, miners In southern
West VIrginia that had been out on
strike in sympathy with the District
6 miners, began returning to work
Sunday.
As many as 7,000 miners in
Boone and Kanawha counties in
West Virginia had stayed off the job.
Guzek had contended the coal
companies precipitated the strike
because they had large stockpiles of
high sulfur coal on hand which they
could not sell.
The . striking miners held a
series of meetings at Bellaire last
week, vowing to continue the work
stoppage and to shut down every
non-union coal facility in the region.
Several incidents of violence
were reported including the dum·
ping of coal ori busy Ohio 7 between
Bellaire and Bridgeport which
blocked traffic for several hours.
However, violence was kept to a
minimum, partly through the efforts

back but we don't know how many.
We are calling some of the mine
offices and haven't got any answer.
It will be late today before we know.
The series of wildcat strikes and
roving bands of pickets had shut·
down every mine in the area for the
past two weeks. UMW President
Arnold Mlller was to meet in
Morgantown, W. Va. today with the
UMW international board to discuss
the disputes.
The most serious dispute was at
two Peabody Coal Co. mines in
Coshocton County where the coal
firm has Instituted a stringent absentee policy which the miners
contend is not part of the ·contract.
The Coshocton County sheriff's
office said both Peabody mines in
that county were still closed today.
A spokesman for Consolidation
Coal Co. at Cadiz said early today

"I've been In the coal industry 31
years, all of my ilfe, and I went
through strikes and suffering and
everything anybody else had, and I
know probably as much as you know
and feel about what you feel," she
said.
I " But I am also the sheriff of
. Belmont County and f have a job to
do," she said. " I hope I don't have to
arrest one of my husband 's union
brothers. But 11 need be I will take
you in because it is my job."

•
•
Funds f~r
at y enttne
e
dam study
0
~l!f~ ~~..~ F- President sitting in on mini -summit

FIRST FOR ALL_YOUR POWER EQUIPMENT
DURING OUR

SPRING SPECIALS

\. r -

'

Mines 1 and 2 have· been closed
for two weeks following a dispute in
lour District 6 mines. Meigs Mine
No. 3 has been closed for more than
a month.
The UPI said some striking coal
miners in Eastern Ohio and the
Northern Panhandle of West
Virginia returned to work late
Sunday night but thousands more
refused to obey an order by United
Mine Workers District 6 President
John Guzek to return to their jobs.
11
I have no idea how many are
back," Guzek said today in his office
in Bellaire. "Some definitely went

opera~ing

LONDON- PRESIDENT CARTER AND the leaders of
Britain, France and West Gennany met today for a four-power
SWrunit to reaffirm the Western allies.' conunitment to defend
lsO!ated West Berlin.
They met shortly alter 10 a.m. for 2'k hours at British
Prime Minister James Callaghan's No. 10 DOwning Si. officiai
residence three hours before Carter was flying to lieneva lor
talks with Syrian President Hafez Assad. In addition to Carter
and Callaghan, the two others taking part were French
President Valery Giscard d'Estalng and West Germany
Olancellor Hebnut Schmidt.
This was the first time in recent years that the annual
meeting on Berlin was held by the summit leaders themselves.
.

.

WASHINGTON- SOCIAL SECURITY CHECKS for some
140,000 elderly disabled persons may have gooe to the wroog
addresses last week beck use of a computer "ror, according to
.J
(Continued on page 101
1

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

MONDAY, MAY 9, 1977

peace in which Israel will weekend economic sununit,
said.
said: "I feel quite satisfied"
"They realize they have to have lull security.
HI think we're mOving about the outcome of the
have an intermediary who
has the confidence of toward negotiations with seven-nation meding.
"We got acquainted with
everyone," he added.
somewhat more optimism
one
another for the first
than
in
the
past.'
He said that it is · a c&lt;in·
time,"
Carter told reporters
sensus in the west "that
meaningful progress for
Carter, who ·effortlessly Sunday night at the end of a
peace can be made and we captured the imagination of gruelling day.
'' I think there is no
can search lor a permanent Britain's people outside the

disappointment that I feel in
the final communique or

Seven wrecks: one hurt

ma·ke atOmic Weapons.

Only one person suffered
minor Injuries i_n seven ·
traffic accidents investigated
over the weekend by the
Gallia-Meigs Post State
Highway Patrol. It occurred
at 8 a.m. on SR H3, nine
tenths of a mile south of SR
55\.

•

The patrol said Karen A.
Mash, 19, Glouster, swerved
her car to avoid hittihg
several bumps in the roaa·
way.
She lost control of her
.vehicle which ran. off the
right side of the highway
striking a fence and tree . She
suffered minor injuries. Her
car was demolished.
A single car mishap oc·
curred at 12:25 a.m. Sunday
on SR 554 at the junction to ·
the Bidwell·Mt. Olive Rd.
whereGrego~y R. George,l9,
Bidwell, lost control of his car
which ran off the highway
striking a sign post. There

Investigation of four traffic
The third occurred ac· ·was minor damage.
accidents over the weekend cident occurred around
Faulty steering was
and beginning of the in· midnight Friday night. blamed for an accident at II
vestigation today of the Calyin Mayle, 24, Pomeroy,
forcible entry of a summer traveling south on SR 7, was
cottage were reported today struck in the rear by another
by the department of Sheriff vehicle driven by Everett D.
James J. Proffitt.
Gilmore, 18, of Frankfort.
Clear and cold tonight with
The first accident occurred Indiana. The auto was owned frost or freezing tern·
at 6 p.m. Friday on SR 7, two by · his aunt, Mrs. Larry peratures likely, with lows 3Q
tenths of a mile north of CR 3. Lavender, :;yracuse. Gilmore to 35. Sunny Tuesday with
The driver. Theodore C. was jailed for driving while highs in mid 60s. Probabilit~
Fisher, 20, Pomeroy, and a uncter the muuence ot of precipitation near zel;'o
German Shepherd dog ran alcohol. There was heavy today, tonight and Tuesday.
into the roadway and . he damage to both vehicles, but
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:
applied his brakes to avoid no personal injuries.
The fourth mishap oc·
hitting the dog. His vehicle
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
slid off the road on the left curred at 4:16a.m. Sunday in
Fair and du through
into a guardrail, then swung Syracuse where John A. Friday.
Highs moslly In the
around and the rear Jenkins, 21, Syracuse, was 60s Wednesday, but war·
of
the
car
jump· travelling at an apparent mlng to the 70s by Friday.
ed up on the ~uardrail. high rate of speed and lost Lows In upper 30s and lpw
There was moderate damage control of his auto in the
to the auto. Neither the driver curve · as he entered 40s Wednesday, rising to
the upper 40s and low 50s
nor passenger, Randy Syracuse.
Phillips, Pomeroy, was
His car went off the road on by Friday.
injured. He missed the dog. the left and heavily damaged ::::::::::;:;:;:::::·:::::::;:;:::::::::;:::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;::::::::::
There was no citation.
the f01iner Rizer Service
The second accident oc· Station-Grocery building.
curred in Racine at about Jenkins was jailed for
9·:40 p.m. Friday when reckless operation, driving
Donald E. Guinther, 46 , while Wlder the innuence.
MORGANTOWN, W. Va.
Pomeroy, said he was forced and no operator's license. He
off the road when an had no apparent inj~ries .
(UP! ) - United Mine
unidentified Ford Mustang
Sheriff's deputies are in· Workers President Arnold
traveling west cam~ left of vestigating today the forcible Miller called tnday for a
center alter running off the entry of the Wajme Swisher limited right to strike clause
pavement on the right. c&lt;ittage at Morning Star. in the next contract with coal
Guinther said he cut to the Swisher said the cottage had operators.
right and went over the been entered sometime be·
Miller said he believes a
embankment near the Harry tween Thursday evening and limited right
strike, in
Wllford residence. No contact noon Friday. Swisher which locals can legally walk
was made . between the reported two fishing tackle off their jobs alter a majority
vehicles. Guinther was not boxes missing. Prints were vote of the local members,
injured, and no citation was obtained from the premises. would help curb the extensive
wildcats that continue to
issued.
sweep the coalfields.

Weather

p.m. Saturday on Gravel Hill
Rd. State Tr.oopers said
James V. Hockman, l8, Rt. I,
Cheshire, lost control of his
car which ran . off the road
striking a cable. ·There was
moderate damage.
Joe A. Pacinoa, 50, Prin'ce·
ton, W. Va. was charged with
DWI following an accident at
~:37 p.m. on SR 160, two miles
south of S6 35 . Officers said
Pacinoa, traveling north, lost
control of hls car which ran
off the right side into an
embankment .
Loren Snyder, 76, Beaver,
was cited for failure to stop
within the assured clear
distance following an ae·
cident at 12:50 p.m. on US 35
at Leftfork Rd. The Snyder
car struck the rear end ·of li
vehicle operated by Gary D.
Noe, 28, Rodney.
Billy G. Spires, 40, Langs·
ville, was charged witp
failing to stop within the
assured clear distance
following a traffic accident at
II :25 a.m . Saturday on
Story's Run Rd. six tentha of
a mile west of SR 7. Spires'

decisions."

Carter expressed par·
ticular satisfaction with
summit decisions on "the
most divisive and the most
difficult question we ad·
dre$sed ... - that of the spread
of nuclear technology to
nations which could use it to
Nuclear proliferation "is
going to get worse instead of
better," Carter said. He said
there were 12 to 15 nations
"on the threshold of
developing
nuclear
technology, and that makes it
even more important to get a
comprehensive agreement.''
The. President described
his Geneva meeting with
Assad as part of his ad·

car slid in mud, striking the
rear end of a car oper~ted by
Joseph W. White, 41 ,
Cheshire.
There
was
moderate damage.
.
A rural mail carrier, Gilda
C. Shamblin, 48, Gallipolis,
was involved in a traffic
accident at II a.m . on
Williams Hollow Rd. east of' ministration's exploratory
SR 218. The Shamblin moves toward a U.S. position
vehicle, pulling from a on the Middle East dispute,
mailbox, ran over an em~ which has caused three wars
bankment into a small tree. in 30 years.

Soviets warned
keep hands off

LONDON (UP! ) - The
Western Big Four warn.ed the
Soviet Union today that any
move against West · Berlin
would seriously threaten
East·West detente.
Carter and the leaders of
Britain, France and West
Germany met shortly after 10
a .m. at British Prim e
Minister James Callaghan 's
No.IO Downing St. otfidal
residence three hours before
COFCTOMEET
The Pomeroy Chamber of Carter was flying to Geneva
Commerce
will
meet for talks with Syrian
Tuesday at noon at the Meigs President Halez Assad.
In ad&lt;)ition to Carter and
Inn.
Callaghan, the two others
taking part were French
President Valery Giscard
E·R CALLED
d'Estaing
and West Germany
The Syracuse E·R squad
was called at 8:05 this Chancellor Helmut Schmidt.
A four-power declaration
morning for Charles Canner,
issued
after the 21&gt; hour
Syracuse.canner, who was
meeting
sa id the four govern·
hunting, stepped across a
ments
pledged
their co·
creek and the gun he. was
operation
in
maintaining
a
ca rrying accidentally went
political
situation
"conducive
off and struck him in the
shoulder. He was taken to a to the vitality and prosperity
of the westerh sectors of
local hospital.
Berlin ."

Britain, France and the
United States noted that
"detente would be seriously
t.hreatened" if any one of the
four signatory powers in·
eluding the Soviet Union of
quadripartite agreements
were not " respected fully."

These agreements were
"based explicitly on the fact
that quadripartite .rights and
the corresponding wartime
and po§t·war lour power
agreements and decisions
were not affected," the
declaration said.
"The three western powers
will continue to rejed all
attempts to put in question
the rights and responsibilities
which France, the United
Siates, the United Kingdom
and the Soviet Union retain
relating to Germany as a
whole and to all four sedors
of Berlin/ ' it said. ·
Carter, smiling to reporters
before leaving for London's
\Jeathrow airport to ny to
Geneva, said the talks had
gone "very well."

Miller wants local right to strike

to

Concerned parents will meet

MASON, W. Va. - The
Bend Area Concerned
Parents organization will
meet Wednesday, May 11, 7
p.m. at Wahama High School
gymnasium.
·Topics to be discussed
include a questionnaire

answered ·by junior and
senior high school stud~nts
regarding the school's drug
and alcohol situation, needed
improvements. and other
school problems. All parents
and interested citizens are
invited to attend .
'l

" We've

established

majority rule everywhere
except at the local level,"
Miller said at a news con·
ference held prior to a
meeting of the union's In·
ternatonal Executive Board
ht&gt;rr .

The UMW president, who is
take puniUve measures for

seek ing reelection next
month: refused to criticize
the wildcat strike still un·
derway in portions of Ohio.
The strike began alter a local
dispute but quickly spread to
a wide area of Ohio and to the
Northern Panhandle of West
Virginia because of roving
pickets who shut down other
mines.
A walkout of about 7,000
miners in the Southern West
Virginia coalflelds in sym·
pathy of the Ohio strike ended
tnday.
.
Miller said the limited right
to strike was proposed during
the contract negotiations in
1974, but he thinks . coal
operators turned it down
because they didn't have
enough time to study it.
A right to strike clause
would also carry a means to
~

illegal walkouts, but Miller
said the type of punitive
measure "is something we'll
have to negotiate."
Mlller and other UMW
olliciais have said that a
limited right to strike will be
a major issue in the contract
negotiations this year and the
UMW president said he
believes a majority or the
rank and file favors the
proposal.
·
Miller said the executive
board meeting, a· regularly
scheduled session, has a IJ.
item agenda of general union
business. He predicted it
would last only one day.
The wildcat strike in
Southern West Virginia ended
after leaders of the UMW told
miners during the weekend
· that disputes in Ohio now
were being turned over to the

.

~

grieva nce procedure.

But a major factor in end· ·
ing the West Virginia part of
the stnke apparently was tne
upcom ing Tuesday election in
Districts 17 and 31.
With at least nine polling
places located at mines •. a
prolonged strike would deny
so me miners the opportunity
to cast ballots since .
Strikebound mines would be
closed.
Playing to tne mh.~rs' zeal
for voting power, the District
t7 election committee issued
a statement warning them
that the unauthorized strike
posed "a serious threat to
democracy in our union."
TI~e elections mark only the
second time in the UMW's 87·
year history that autonomy
has been used by the rankand-file at the district level.

...

-

�..

'

~The O.nv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, May 9, 1977

Plan to save Social Security coming
Sunday the White House is
likely to propose using
general tax lunda for the lirst
time to bolster the Social
Security fund, and hinted the
administration also will
propose taxing employers on
all the salary paid to a
worker.
Employers now pay taxes
only on the same salary
maximum as the workers.
Schultze, interviewed on
CBS-TV's Face the Naton,
said he would support using
general tax lunda· for the
Social Security fund if they
were applied "under proper

WASillNGTON (UPI ) Vice President Walle ~
Mondale was ready today to
reveal details of the Carter
administration's plans to
rescue the Social Security
System from deficits so
severe some experts fear it
will go bankrupt without new
sources of cash.
The Social Security fund ,
made up of the payroll taxes
from workers and their
employers, is expected to run
$6 billion in the red this year.
Charles Schultze, chairman
of the President's Council of
Ecof1omic Advisers, said

circumstances and carefully
controlled." He said such a
proposal "is likely to be" In
the outline announced by
Mondale.
Asked if the proposal would
include higher . Social
Security lazes on employers,
Schultze said: "Let me
simply say clearly that's one
of the things that the adminlltration is considering ...
it will spread it out - if it's
done - over several years ...
I think this would be, among
various difficult choices, one
that will spread it out and
reduce the impact."

Soldiers with arrows
return m a1re war

. z.

KINSHASA, Zaire (UP!)-

The Zairean government
As'Ro •GRAPH says
warriors armed with

-;B::-e-r-n-=i-e
c--;;B~e-d7e--;;0:-'s-o-=-l

poisoned arrow:' have been

...::.::..:..:..:;.::..:::..::==::..::=.=. remtroduced m the two·

"And what proof do you have of this alleged
overcharging?"

Western nations will
focus on prices, jobs

TAURUS (Aprii20·Mar 20) II the morith-old war against
opportunlty arises today to make Angola-based rebels in
a friend out of em acquaintance,
by all means take advantage of southern Shaba province,
it.
formerly known as Katanga.
GEMINI (May 21-Juno 20) It did not say whether the
Complete any important project new Wlits were made up of
you may be working on Con- Pygmies, who were said to

spread panic ammg the
irivaders three weeks ago, but

dltlons tomorrow m 1ght not be as have

conduc1ve to your success

CANCER (June 21-July22) Your were

never seen by
touring the war

imagination is your greatest ally reporters
today . let your thoughts take front.

precedence over those of others

invaders, mostly
form e r
Kat an g e s e
militiamen who fled to
Angola after Katanga's
secession bid collapsed in
1963, now also are said to
employ archers in the
The

poisoned arrows" has been
sent back into the fighting on
the loyalist Side made up of
government troops and 1,500
Moroccans.
Hard facts about frontline
developments were difficult
to obtain, although it
the
appeared clear
government troops were
advancing toward the
Angolan border, driving the
rebel forces ahead of them.
Confusion about the
military situation was rife
during the weekend when the
government~ontrolled press
said
the
village
of
Kawayongo had not been
recaptured from the rebels,
·as announced Friday.
Kawaymgo, which does not
show on standards maps, was
said to be situated 121 miles
from the Benguela railroad
town of Dilolo on the Angolan
border.
Zairean newspapers· and
the radio said Sunday there
had been a mixup and the
captured town was ·not
Kawayongo but Sanikosa.

Reds lose again--in late innings--to Pirates

Bluff with emvty shotgun
Today's

tumed out unsuccessful
lJNCOLN, Kan. (UP!) .- A fanner whose family was
being held hostage by a murder suspect may have tried a
desperate and unsuccessful bluff with an unloaded
shotgun, authorities In thls northcentral Kansas town say.
Authorities said an attempt by Leonard Wiebke to bluff
his captor into giving up may bave provoked the man into
killing Wiebke, his wife and son before turning the weBpo!l
on himself.
!ilerlff Don Panzer said he thought John Earl Stewart,
26, was about to leave the Wlebkes' farmhouse north of
Uncoln Saturday morning with an agreement tbat he be
allowed to drive away. Slw-pshooters were slandlng by to
fire at the man as 11000 as the family was safe, but they
never got a chance.
''I really fell the thing was going Jl"et\y smooth."
Panzer said. "He opened a side window. That's wher~ he
waa going to make his exit, But something sure triggered
him in there."
Panzer said authorities speculate Wiebke, 59, grabbed
an unloaded shotgun and tried to bluff Stewart Into
thinking it was loaded.
"But having oothing to lose, the guy probably fired,"
Panzer said. "I think it was a bluff and it did work."
Stewart was fleeing authorities in St. Loula, where he
was wanted for the shooting death of his former girlbiend;
Yvonne Robinaon, 33.

___________

.___

Home waters

good in races
at Marietta

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sport&amp; Editor

Hll

.....:
·~·

•

.,,

___. ,

PAPAL PLEA
VATICAN CITY (UP!) Pope Paul VI made an
emotional condemnation of
criminal violence, the arms ••
buildup, abortion and kid- ·~
napping Sunday during the ""
beatification of a 19th· ·~
centqry Spanish nun.

•

MARlETTA, Ohio (UP!) Four lilies were won by
Marietta College and two by
Marietta High School in the
13th annual Mid-America
Regatta on the Musklngum
River Saturday.
Competition was divided
Into college and high school
br~ckets, with women racing
1,000 meters and the men
2,000.
.
The boat collegians won the
college varsity race In
5:10.31. The Pioneers also
captured , four-man shell
(5:46.5), freshman novice
(5:58.8) and junior varsity
(5:13) crowns.
Marietta lfigh School took
home championships in boys
varsity roWing (4:23.42) and
girls varsity (2:58.8).
Mount Carmellfigh School
of Wyandotte, Mich., gained
the boys novice tiUe in 4:13.5
and the junior varsity crown
in 4:01.3.
The college women's
novice race was won by
Mercyhurst (Pa.) In 3:12.5,
the college four-woman shell
race by Michigan State In
3:34.34,
the
col·'
lege
women's
var·
sity race by Notre Dallle
in 3:00.5, and th~ high school
girls novice race by Parkersburg (W. Va.) in 3:13.55.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 Through
MAJOR LEAGUE
a confrdentlal source today you
LEADERS
might get some mside informs·
lion that can make or save your
United Press International
money If th e source Is good, It's
Baiting
·~
Unemployment1among the worth pursu1ng.
Prime Minister James
LONDON (UP!) - Getting
Based on 50 at bats
.•
National League
the jobless back to work and Callaghan was hol!l of the young was seen as the most VIRGO (Aug. 23 .sopl. 221 one
G AB R H Pel. O•
holding down prices are the conference which also was pressing problem and the way to gam cooperation 1s to put fighting.
Parker,
Pit
key features of a blueprint for attended by Ptesident Valery seven pledged to exchange yourself in others' shoes. Once A prisoner said to be a
24 102 23 43 .422
world economic progress Giscard d'Estalng of France, experience and ideas on ways you understand their viewpoint, Katanaga scout a'ppeared in a
Simms,
·
you can manage them easily. Kinshasa television studio
drawn up
a seven-nation Chancellor Helmut Schmidt to alleviate it.
St.L
24 83 17 33 .398 Trillo.
Chi
23 76 14 29 . 382 ~
Dozens
of
other
problems
of
West
Germany,
Premier
LIBRA (Sopl. 23-0cl. 23) This Saturday and said he had
summit during the weekend.
Malws,
Atl
19 68 13 26 .382
President Carter and the 'l'akeo Fukuda of Japan, , - ranging from energy to can be a verY productive day 1f been carrying bow and
75 12 28 .373 \~I
Yeager,
LA22
can work unhampered , at arrows when captured.
leaders of six of the Prime Minister Pierre Elliot International finance - were you
98
22 35 .357 .
Cey.
LA
27
your own speed. Get oft In your
Smith, LA 24 82 23 29 .354 "'
wealthiest Western nations Trudeau of Canada 'and devated In the oak-paneled own little corner and go to it.
On Sunday. the ~overnment
Rose, Cln 25 93 20 32 .344 :
radio said "a large ~nmet for two days to discuss Premier Giulio Andreotti of state dining room of No. 10
Murcer,
SCORPIO
(Oct.
24-Nov.
22)
A
Downing
Street,
the
historic
tlngent of men armed with
what progress the world , Italy.
23 84 17 28 .333 •
Chi
llttJe divers1on this e"'enlng can
"Our most urgent task is to home of Britain's prime , do you a world of good How
economy has 111Bde since the
Johnstne,
21 66 10 22 .333 '"
Ph
19'n-74 recession, which was create more jobs while ministers.
American League
-::.
Among the major economic ~r~eon~s?dlnner ou t with a lew
caused largely by the continuing to reduce in·
GAB
R
H
Pet. ~
quadrupling of oil prices in flation," the seven leaders agreements reached were: SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec:. .
Wshngtn.
- A promise the seven 211Thrngs you do with your famlThe Carleton Church will Memortal Hospital has
1974 by the Organization of said in a "declaration of
18 zo 7 27 .386
Tex
Page, Oak 28 105 23 40 .381 •
Petroleum P.xporting hope" at the end of the would work together to get ly will aflord you the greatest hold revival services May 25 returned home and is im·
•v
.
Hargrve,
International talks back on pleasure today. Make this a cozy thru June 5. Evangelist will proving.
summit.
Countries.
22
80
15
30
.375
Tex
night
at
home,
be
John
Lanier
of
Junction
Recent
visitors
of
Mr.
and
track toward the removal of
Velez. Tor 25 78 14 29 .372. •
tariffs and other barriers to CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan. 19) City. The pastor, Gary King, Mrs. Nev White were Danny
Smith, Bal 18 63 9 23 .365
Try lo find trm~ loday to clean up extends a wel~me to each . Holley, Tipp City, Mr. and
trade.
Lopez. Sea 22 61 8 22 .361 _
Mrs. Brady Knotts and sons,
Carew, Min 28 111 19 40 .360·•
- A pledge to increase the your correspondence, necessary and everyone.
,cooper, Mil 26 100 15 35 .35Q.•
paperwork or get your personal
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Carl local, Mr. and Mrs. Hershel
flow of ai~ and financial books
In order A lot can be ac·
Chalk, Cal 23 s 6 28 .346--.
resources to the poorer complished
visited recently with Clyde White and daughter, Albany,
A.Woods,
Harrison of Middleport.
Mr. and Mrs. David Glenn,
countries of the world,
23 81 10 28 .346·''
Tor
(Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Be
D ni ·f Ti
Home
Runs
,...._
"particularly to the 800 aAOUARIUS
comparison shopper today It's
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Young, Yvanda and a e o
PP
National League: Cey, LA .;
million people who now live in not .l rkely you·11 find the best Wesley and Yvete, and Mrs. City, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
11;
Burroughs,
At I.,- ·
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
absolute poverty.''
prrce at the first store. You·ll save Kirk Chevalier visited White of Langsville, Mr. and
Ferguson, Hou and Carter;·,.
recently with' Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Gary King and Matthew
- A call for "greater ex· it you look around a bit.
Mtl7; Garvey, LA, Kingman, ·
NY and Stargell, Pitt 6.
.,
changes ·of technology and PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20) You Wayne Beal.
of New Haven, Mrs. Myrtle
American
League:
Zlsk,
Mr. and Mrs. John Dean, White of Mason, Mr. and Mrs.
joint research and develop- have a way of. managing thmgs
Chi 10: Gross, Oak 8; Hisle, .;
ment aimed at more efficient today that rs best lor all concern- Mr. and Mrs. John Walter Roger Toney, Mrs. Josephine
Mlnn, Page, Oak and Velez.
ed , Don·t tet someone take over Dean and Jeremy visited Hill, all of Chester.
.
energy use."
Tor
7.
something
you
can
do
beHer
Your k1dneys normally
DEAR DR. LAMB - Of
Runs Baited In
._
The seven leaders noted the
Sunday afternoon with Mr.
Visitors of Mr. and Mrs,
National League·: Cey, LA•
late I have been hearing eliminate any excess general economic trend is up, ARIES (March 21-Aprll19) Slow and Mrs. Kenneth Markins, Olen Harrison were Mr, and
37: Parker, Pill 28; Winfield/
pace 1oday and you'll be
Sm ll
D H -'·· Jodi d
about potassium. Different potassium your body does not although some countries - your
much more efficient In addition. Racine, and Junior
a ~y, Mrs. ale amoun,
an
SO -27; Burroughs, All 26;
people are getting tests for need. That is why you can eat . like Britain and Italy - are greater joy wrll reward your ef- Hobie and Dale, who 'were Scott, Ottle Scholl, Mr. and
Garvey,
LA and Simmons, 51.
potassium in their systems so fonds rich in potassium and registering slower progress lorts.
L 24.
here from Wierton, W. V~. Mrs ." Phillip HarriSon,
American League: Rudl,
it cpmes from more than one never worry about it. If the than expected.
(Are jou a Taurus? Bernrce Sunday evening they all Rodney and Trevor, local.
kidneys
are
diseased
and
Cal
28; Zlsk, Chi 27: Hisle,.,
doctor's orders. My die·
The United States, Japan Osol has wntten a special Astro- visited Mr. and Mrs. Dick
Mr. and Mrs. John Dean
Minn
and Velez, Tor 25: ··
unable
to
eliminate
tionary lists 10 different
and West Germany, the Graph Letter lor you. For your Harris of Syracuse.
visited recently with Mr. and
Allen,
Oak
23.
'
kinds 1of potassium but not potassium it can build up in stronger nations among the copy send 50 cents and a seltMr. and Mrs. John Walter Mrs. Robert Reid and David
Stolen Bases
one pertaining to the body. the body and become seven, agreed to make sure addressed , stamped envelope to Dean entertained her Sunday. at Pataskala.
National League: Lopesfn
Astro·Graph , P.O. BoK 489.
LA 14; Moreno and Taveras,
One person is extremely tired dangerous.
they achieve the growth Radio C&lt;ty station. New York. School class with a cookout
Recent visitors of Mrs.
Pitt 11; Cabell, Hou 9;
No, potassium is not a new
and potassium is a help.
targets they have 6et N.Y 10019. Be sure to ask tor Saturday evening. Games Hazel Arnold were Mr. and
Royster, Atl 7.
~
theory.
We
have
known
about
W
ASillNG
TON
(UP!)
Another has bad headaches
American League: Remy,
Taurus Volume 7)
were enjoyed after the Mrs. Alpha Russell and
themselves.
and takes potassium by it for a long time, and it.s
cookout by those attending, Harold Russell and Mr. and The Food and Drug Ad· CallS; Patek, KC 11: Norris "
Expansion of the domestic
essential
role
in
normal
body
9; Bonds, Cal, Lintz,
eating bananas. What do we
economies of those three
Rodney Harrison, Sharlot Mrs. Patrick Wllliams and ministration wants the Clev
North and Page, Oak B.
nation's
doctors
to
warn
need potassium for? Where function. But we have learn· nations is expected to spark
Lyons, Audra Houdashelt, family of McArthur.
Pitching
women side effects ranging
do we find it in our foods? ed a lot more about it in re- ~nsumer demand that will
King,
·
Most
Victories
"'
Tina
Murray,
Philip
from blood poisoning to
How much do-we need? Is too cent years.
National League : Rhoden
be filled by imports from the
Jodi
Harrison,
John
Hess,
Your best food sources for
painful intercourse may LA and Denny, SI.L 5·0 f
much dangerous? Is this a
Kevin Mallory, James Hess
Mar 10, 1977
potassium are fruits and fruit weaker nations.
result
from the use of In· Forsch, St.L 5-1; Barr. Sf' 5·
new theory?
and
Jeremy
Dean.
Rau and Sulton, LA 4-0; R.
TO SPEND MORE
trauterine .birth control 2:
DEAR READER - There juices. That is why the one
You will be able to enlarge your
Reuschel, Chi, Seaver, NY
Mr;
and
Mrs.
Dana
American League: Ryan, circle of friends this year. You'll
CLEVELAND (UP!)
devices.
ls only one kind of potassium. person you mentioned was
and Lerch, Phil 4·1; Burris,.
63 ; Tanana , Cal 53: be Introduced to several new Murray, Tina and Greg, Mrs. Capital spending plans for
The agency said a dactor Chi 4-3.
It ls one of the basic chemical advised to eat bananas. Cal
Blyleven, Tex 50; Palmer, people w1th whom you'll form Elizabeth Murray visited
American League: Zahri,
elements, as are sodium, ox· Orange juice is an excellent Bait 39 ; Eckersley, Clev 34, close
bonds.
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. equipment show a substantial should give IUD patients a Mlnn 5·0; Palmer, Bait and
pickup
this
year,
Industry
detailed
information
sheet
ygen, hydrogen, iron and source but all the fruits and
Torrez, NY 5-1; Garvin, Tor
William Murray and son In
Week magazine reported before the devices are In· 4-0: Jenkins, Bos. Tanana ,
others. You have probably fruit juices are gond for
Columbus.
serted. An estimated 3 Cal and AleKander:, Tex .t-1:
looked at a list of potassiwn potassiwn. A diet rich in
Visiting recently with Mrs. based on i Is survey of
fruits
and
fruit
juices
will
manufacturers
of
industrial
million
American women use Colborn, KC and Blyleven.
sails. When an element such
Philip Harrison and Trevor
4-2; Ryan, Cal 4-3.
~
provide
an
abundance
of
machinery, traiiSportation IUDS.
as sodium combines wjth
• Tex Euned
Run Average
•
Mrs.
Anita
Dean
and
were
equipment, material band·
"Our goal ls to make sure
another element such as potassium without danger to
Based on 271nnlngs pitched ,
Jeremy.
ling hardware and metal· that each woman and her
National league: Rogers ...
chlorine- it forms a salt- in the individual.
Mrs. Jennie Holley who has
We see a lot more cases
Mil 1.33; Sulton. LA 1.53:'
working
machines.
enough
in·
physician
have
this case sodium chloride, or·
been a patient at Veterans
LA 1.97; Koosman;
dinary table salt. Potassium now of people having a low
formation to select the most Hough,
NY 2.30,; Shirley, SO 2.48. '
potassium
level
because
of
suitable method of con·
beloogs to the same family of
American League :
elements as sodium and it new medicines. Most of the
traception," FDA Com· B1y1even, TeK 1..45; Figueroa,
unites with chlorine to form medicine used to eliminate
missioner Donald Kennedy NY 1.50; Palmer. Ball 1.55:'
Tidrow, NY 1.67; Slaton, Mlt
body
water
the
so-called
potassium chloride - also a
said In a statement.
1.89.
••
water
pills
will
cause
the
salt. It may also combine
"We ~~l!!"'!Se women to
Strikeouts
with other elements to form kidneys to flush out sodium
National league: Rog~rs.
looks for ""u ··•quest
and also potassium. These
other potassium salts.
these
new
brochures Mtl, Seaver, NY and Mon-.
tefusco. SF 37; Nlekro, At(
Whereas sodium chloride is medicines are conunonly us·
capitalism, you will be on IUD's when they and Richerd, Hou 36.
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) abundant outside the cells, in ed for people who have high
Black militant Stokley against It too," he said. "The become available later
blood
pressure,
heart
disease
your blood in body fluids,
Carmichael says the fall of capitalistic system tries to this year," he said: "We will.
11IE DAILY SENTINEL
DEVortm T0111E
potassiwn salts are abundant or flwd retention for any
capltaliml In America is wevent people from knowing require manufacturers to
oomt!'BrOF
reason.
As
a
result
the
more
inside the cells. The
print patient brochures in
inevitable and everyone who· the truth."
MEIG&amp;MASON ARf:A
"water
pills"
prescribed
the
potassiwn phosphate ilalts
CHI!STER L. TANNEIIIU.
Carmichael, who lives In quantities larger than the
is being oppressed regardless
Exec.~.
are a vital part 'of the basic greater is the need to em·
of race will unite to over· Guinea, West Africa, now is number of IUDs produced, so
ROBERT HOEFLICH
phasize
the
importance
of
a
metabolic machinery inside
an organizer for the All· this information can be
throw the government.
Publi.shed dolly ..""' Sa"""-Y
your cella, Your cells cannot diet that provides an adePeople's readily available in clinics,
"The capltaliml system is African
by Tbe Ohio Valley PubU.ting Corn-function properly without quate amount of potassiwn.
Revolutionary
party.
physicians'
offices
and
health
vicious and it's powerful, but
IllY, Ill Cowt St~:""'"'. Ol1lo
For information on a
45181. auo~nao
Pbooe m
adequate amounts of
Carmichael uld capitaliml faclllties."
It Is no match for the people,"
21$8. Editorlll Phone M-2157.
•
potasaiwn saiLs. Decreased balanced diet and the
Is
responsible
for
American
New
rules
requiring
the
said the former student
Second ciaaa postage paid •t .
of
vitamins
and
amounts
amounts of potassium can
nonviolent coordinating people loalng their ability to brochures to be distributed l'oo&gt;eroy, Ohio.
, N1tional •dvertisinl lfilhitlir ·
lead to weakness. It is impor· minerals you need send 50
committee chairman, wll!! reason and come to valid for IUD patienta 1r.ere ~ "'llltive
Ward • (lrtflltli Ccimplny,
cents
ror
The
Health
Letter
tant inside the cella making
attacked capitalism conclusions to• political proposed •in· Jul7l 18'1~ and Inc., Bollln.tli and Gallqher Dlv.,
Tbjrd A... , New Yort, N.Y.
up he muscle fibers of the num!M;r f-6, Balanced Diet,
throughout hla ·lltudent lee- · arguments.
will take effect ln.November. ' 1$7
lotn!.
Recommended
Daily
Dietary
beart.Aloovlevelrnayleadto
He also said the American Last December tbe agency
ture series speech at Ohio
.stet: Dellvend by
Allowances (RDA). Send a
irregularities of the heart.
public is conditioned to be lsaued similar ftCulaUons for Clrrier whml•valllble 75 cedi per 1.
University Sunday night.
wetl.
By
Mokr
Roule where canier
Too much potassium af· long, stamped, self·
Carmichael
said
a anti Communist and moll birth control pllla.
IM!I'Vice
not
IVaillb&amp;e,
Orne month,
"... and so. gentlemen, the question is - how
fect8 the cells that control the addressed envelope for mail·
13.2$. By mail in Ohlo lnd W. Va.~
revolutionary he seeks the Americans "don't ltnow wbat
11 ,.
'1'1 ..,. '
'"
~ Year, $22.00; Sil montha,,.,
can we get in on the Farrah Fawcett-MaJors
heartbeat. Thi.s may cause lng. Address your letter to
"total destruction of the in the' hell Communism Ia."
In 1910 1 United Auto lii.IOj Thr.. month&gt;, 17,001 •
Dr,
Lamb
In
care
of
this
boom?"
the heart to slow: and even
American capitalistic This results from lnltlndive Workers President Walter Elle..........00 ,...., Sir UUO; Tbree monthl, fl .ll.
stop. Sui'Jecllll uae potassiwn newspaper, P.O. Box 1551,
conditioning
of
most Reuther ..... killed in •
government."
&amp;lbocrfollon price lndudes ~"
Radio
City
Station,
New
to stop the heart when doing
"If you ~me to know Americans, he said.
l\IIChlgan plane crlllh.
York, N'tl0019.
0)1111 heart Sllrllh'.

br

Kingsbury News Notes

HEALTH

Why potassium?

~

I

L&gt;

Womenwamed
of devices'

side effects

Berry's World

Cannichael condemns
capitalistic system .

City-

'
1

•

•

-

...

VERSAILLES, Ky. (UPij- At heart, he ls still a ~liege
freshman and probably always will be.
He comes to the door wearing a royal blue blazer with the
word KENTUCKY stitched across the chest. AU the alhletes at
the University flll&amp;rby wear the same one and it would look a
little ludicrous on some other men his age, but not on A. B.
"Happy" Chandler, who will be 79 In July.
Thewannsmileandfriendlymannerarestillthere. Sols the
irrepressible cheerfulness which helped him become governor
of this state twice but also provided critics with all the
anununition they needed to label him "a backslapper" when
they voted him out as baseball commissioner in 1951.
In the light of history, and certainly upon closer inspection of
th011e who led lha revolt against him, it turned out to Qe a
grossly unfair reason for unseating Olandler, a man who made
several enormous contributions to baseball. He shows little
resentment, though.
"I'm not mad at anybody," he says. "Eleven of the 16
owners still wanted me as their commissioner . I needed 12
votes but had only 11. There never was a time when I didn't
have the majority. It was the only election I ever lost in which I
got the most votes."
Chandler was only the second ~mmlssioner baseball ever
had, succeeding Judge Kenesaw M. Landis in 1945 after Landis
died.
' "I know the ones who got me out," says Chandler. "Del
Webb of the Yankees was the ringleader. He waa one of the
most refreshingly ignorant fellas f ever met in my life. He
knew Jess about more things than anybody I ever encountered.
"Fred Salgh of the Cardinals and Lou Perini of the Braves
also were in on it. Saigh was not a first~iaas !ella. I wouldn't
want to associate with him. He went to jail, you know. Perini
wasn't first~lass, either."
Chandler wasn't afraid to come down with both feet on
anyone In baseball when he felt he had to. He's probably best
remembered for suspending Leo Durocher a full year in 1947
for his aaaociation with known gamblers and for an
' 1accumulation of other sins.''
"! remember his wife at the time, I think her name was
Grace and she was just as pretty as she could he," says
Chandier. "She came to me at Yankee Stadium the year I
suspended him and wanted to argue the pobl. She was very
ladylike and made her protest as a lady would.! told her what I
bad done was not intended to he offensive to her and
complimented her on the defense of her husband.
"After Durocher divorced her and married Laraine Day, she
came to me again at almost the very same spot in Yankee
Stadium. Before I could say a word, she shook my hand and
said, 'Commissioner, you knew he was a sunuvabltch all the
time.' I told her 'I didn't say d!at, you did.' "
Chandler smiles talking of the episo&lt;le.
''I didn't make any mistakes on Durocher," he says. "If I
did, it was on the side of mercy.''
A few months ago, Chandler received a phone call from
Charlie Finley, seeking help in his case against Bowie K~;
"I told him under the circumstances I couldn't help hun,
Chandler says. ''That doesn't mean Finley didn't have some
ril!hts, though. I made an affidavit and a deposition in suppor!
or the commissioner in his case with Finley. I feel the
cqmmissioner has the authority to make the decision he did. I
also made the statement that the American people want to
have the feeling -must have the feeling - that the baseball
championship is not for sale. It must be won on the field. IT the
people ever lose that feeling, they will desert baseball 'in large
numbers and that will be a calamity."
Chandler misses baseball. He admits that. He doesn't miss
being commissioner though .

PITTSBURGH (U P! ) Rookie Pittsburgh Pirates
pitcher Odell Jones, a
starter in the minor leagues,
says he still isn't ' used to
relieving, but he didn't let It
show Sunday against the
Cincinnati Reds.
Cincinnati was leading 4-3
and had two men on with
nobody out when Jones came
In for starter Jerry Reuss in
the sixth. Jones got the team
out of that jam ~nd then
allowed only one hit In the
seventh.
The Pirates went on to
score three runs behind Dave
Parker's two-run double and
Fernando Gonzalez's RBI
pinchhit single in the bottom
of the seventh for a 6-4 win
and Jones first major league
victory.
" I was thinking about
getting a win." said Jones.
"But it was a different
situation for me because I'm
a starter. I'm not used to
coming in with two guys on
and nobody out.
"But I felt good after I got

them out because I knew I
had a chance for the win."
Rich Gossage pitched two
scoreless innings to earn his
fourth save. He also picked
up a save Friday night In the
first of the Pirates' three
straight victories over the
defending world champion
Reds.
" They're tough," Gossage
said of the Reds. "They've
got a better lineup than other
teams I've ever seen in the
league, although I haven't
seen them all yet.
"! concentrated a bit more ·
against them. I tried to make
better pitches . I made some
pitches in Atlanta (the
previous series) that I wasn't
real pleased with, so I con·
centrated more here."
'
Reuss and Jones combined
to end Pete R(}se's hitting
streak at20 j!Bmes as he went
0-for-4.
That left Parker, who also
had a single, with the longest
ongoing streak in the league,
19 games.
Parker, hitting above .400,

Dawkins
hero of
76er win
'

· PillLADELPiflA (UP!) Twenty-year-old
Darryl
Dawkins Is beginning to feel
comfortable In the first NBA
p(ayoff action of his career
even if he does like to imitate
King Kong now and then.
The 6-11 Dawkins came off
the bench Sunday for the
!M!Cond straight game a~d
lifted
the
lethargtc
Philadelphia 76ers to a 106-97
victory over the Houston
Rockets and a 2-0 lead In the
best-&lt;Jf-seven Eastern Con·
rference finals.
' "I'm feeling more and
:more comforts ble every

.300 hitter. "

Pirates Bill Robinson and
Phil Gamer hit solo homers
off loser Fred Norman (1·2),
while Johnny Bench slugged
a two-run homer for the Reds.
The Chicago Cubs defeated
the Atlanta Braves, 6-3, the
St. Louls Cardinals edged the ,
Houston Astros, 2·1 and the '
San Francisco Giants scored
f-2 and 10-0 victories over the
New York Mets. Philadelphia
at Los Angeles and Montreal
at San Diego were rained
out.
Cubs 6, Braves 3:
Bobby Murcer's two-run
triple was the big blow of a
four-run third inning, which
enabled the Cubs to hand the
Braves their 14th straight

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UP!)
- There's a shorter distance
and a smaller field awaiting
Seattle Slew at Pimlico for
the Preakness, but things are
not going to get any easier for
this year's Kentucky Derby
winner in his quest for
racing's Triple Crown.
Karen and Mickey Taylor's
Seattle
Slew
entered
Saturday's 103rd Kentucky
Derby with a perfect record
in slx races and never had
been challenged strongly.
Last year's 2-year-old
champion finally met some
tough competition in the IY&lt;·
mile Kentucky Derby at
Churchill Downs, but the
unbeaten record remained
intact.
Seattle Slew now has the
opportunity to become the
loth Triple Crown champwn
and the first with an undefe~ted record by winning
the 1 3-16th mile Preakness
and the l'h·mile Belmont
Stakes.
"I don't believe he't at his
peak by any means at all,"
Mickey Taylor said after the
Derby victory, confident of
Seattle Slew's Triple Crown
chances.
The 3-year-i!ld ~It. a son of
Bold-Reasoning"MY Char·

statistics can be deceiving
and thrust themselves in
position to sweep the Los
Angeles Lakers.
"The biggest worry I have
now," said a smiling Jack
Ramsay after his Trail
Blazers nipped the Lakers,
99-97, Sunday, "is getting
through the crowd at the
Portland airport.''
With a surprising 2-0 lead In
the best-of-seven Western
Conference
finals
ac~mpllshed on a ~urt where
the Lakers had lost only four
previous games this season,
the Trail Blazers host the
next two games of the series
Tuesday and Friday nights.
Since Los Angeles didn't
win a game on the road In its
quarter-final playoff series
with Golden State, Portland
~uld easily clinch the series
without having to return here
next Sunday.
Naturally, Walton did not
agree. After all, he has to
face Abdui-Jabbar, who has
70 points in the first two
games.
"This series is . far from
over," cautioned Walton.
"We have to play better the
next time.''
In the period, second to JuHus

;game," said Dawkins, who Erving's 10. But if the NBA
•came to the 76ers in 1975 fresh had style points for shooting a
:from Evans High School in basketball, Dawkins would
:Orlando, Fla., but didn't play have easily outpointed his
more famous teammate.
:in last year's playoffs.
Dawkins hit a ~nventional
• "This isn't a cakewalk
dunk
and an 18-loot jumper,
:where I run In, dunk som~
but
'.shots and then come out"
h
he
almost brought the
, e
Spectrum
roof down with a
:said. "This is a pressure
:situation. They're a good gargantuan stuff off a steal
by'" Stwe Mill with 7:26 to
:team."
..,.
~~
• Dawkins, who sparked a play., The Slxers had a 9().33
:third-41uarter raDy that gave' lead at that polpt but scored
:Phila&lt;lelphia a victory 10' of ·the next 12 points to
:Thursday night in the opening move out to a ISopolnt lead
'game of the series: wu a key, and ice the game.
'
.:. ra Uy' ..l\':lbat's ,.my DILaurentis
;man
in a fourth-qua.-..er
that enabled the 76ers to pull gorilla slammer," the
:away from the pesky grinning Dawkins said of the
shot that set off a tremendo\18
;Rockets.
· Thirbig man had six points roarfrom the crowd of 14,856 .

Instead of winning with
Walton and Maurice Lucas, ·
Portl~nd's 6-9 power forward,
the Trail Blazers relied
Sunday on the backcourt
combination of Lionel Hollins
and Herm Gllliam.
Hollins fired in 31 points; 22
, In the first half, and Gilliam
came off the bench to get 24,
14 in the final quarter when ·
Portland overcame a seven·
point deficit.
Gilliam's scoop shot with
1:03 remaining put Portland
ahead to stay at 98-97 and
Hollins added a free throw
with 11 second left. Abdul·
Jabbar missed a shot with
five seconds left that would
have tied the game.
A seven-year veteran who
is playing with his fourth
NBA club, Gilliam hit five
baskets in the final 5:39 at
Portland outscored the
Lakers, 15-6.
"The Lakers '"'re packing
in," said Gilliam, uso we
knew we had to shoot more
from outside ...
" But! had to take some of
those ont:-Qn-ilne shots In the
fourth quarter. They're not
the kind of shots Jack wants
me to take but they went in. If
I'd have missed, I would liave
wound up on the bench."

the Cardinals dealt Mark
Lemongello his fourth
straight loss. The Cardinals
also pulled off their first
triple play in 2t years. The
play started in the third inning when Willie Crawford
lined to second baseman
Mike Tyson. Tyson tossed to
shortstop Don Kessinger for
the se~nd out and Kessinger
threw to Hernandez for the
third out.

loss. Singles by Ivan
DeJesus, Jose Cardenal and
Larry Biittner a=unted for
the Cubs' first run and
Murcer followed with his
triple. Bill Bonham went 6 :1-3
innings for bis third victory
while Max Leon was the
loser.
Cards 2, Astros 1:
Bake McBride knocked in
the tying run and scored the
winner on Keith Hernandez'
single in the third inning

fS

mer, overcame a bad start to
take the lead at the head ol
the stretch 8/ld held off
second-place Run Dusty Run
by" a decisive 1'1'4 lengths.
Although the time of 2: 02 I·
5 for the I Y•·mile race was not
outstanding, Seattle Slew
convinced many of his
skeptics with the way he
surmounted his
early
problems in the race.
Run Dusty Run and third·
place finisher Sanhedrin
were the only two members
of the 15-horse field to give
strong indication of tangling
with Seattle Slew again in the
Preakness.
"He ain't no Secretariat,"
Run Dusty Run's trainer
Smiley Adams said of Seattle
Slew. But Adams would not
give a definite commitment
to go to the Preakness untU
talking the matter ove~ with
owner Mrs. Robert Lehmann
and her son, Roher!.
Darby
Dan
Farm's
Sanhedrin, who closed
strongly to finish third, was

By BUJ., MADDEN
UP! Sports Writer
It seems the Cleveland

BASEBALL

given a definite go-ahead for
the Preakness by trainer Lou
Rondinello, who won the 1974
Preakness with
Little
Current.
Also waiting for Seattle
Slew in Baltimore are last
year's 2-year·old English
champion, J . 0. Tobin, and
Charles Berry's Gotham
winner Cormorant.
Seattle Slew came out of
the Kentucky Derby in ex·
cellent shape, according to
owner Taylor, ·who sent his
valuable colt to New York
Sunday morning.
The $214,700 winner's purse
Saturday increased Seattle
Slew's earnings to $470,140 in
seven races, but his stud
value probably exceeds $10
million now.
Seattle Slew's investors
Saturday did not make out
nearly so well, but for every
$2 received $3.00, $2.80 and
$2.80. Run dusty Run paid
$3.40 and $3.20 and Sanhedrin
returned $4.60.

Hayes aide hurt
in sideline shot
COLUMBUS,Ohio(UPI )Ohio State football coach
Woody Hayes was more
~ncerned about a couple of
serious injuries than the 36-0
final score of Saturday's
annual intra-squad spring
i football game,
"It dulls the whole thing,"
Hayes said of the. injuries to
reserve defensive back Chip
~rtschi and a'ssistant coach
George Hill.
·
Hill, Hayes' defensive
coordinator, suffered a
dislocated left knee on the
first play of the afternoon
when he was flattened on the
sidelines. He also suffered
ligament damage and was to
undergo surgery on Sunday.
Durtschi, a junior from
Galion, suffered a compound
ftacture of his left leg mid·
way thr&lt;&gt;ugh the fourth
quarter and was taken to the
hospital also for surgery.
Otherwise, the day had to
be considered a success, with
Hayes' new backfield com·
blnation of speedsters Jeff
Logan and Ron Springs ac·
counting for 228 yards and
two touchdowns in leading
the Red, or No. 1 unit to
victory.
Springs, a 6-2, 1~5-pound
sophomore, picked up 135
yards in 13 carries, Including

Floyd hit well enough
DALLAS
(UP!)
Raymond Floyd is hitting the
to win it
golf ball quite well these days
and Ben Crenshaw is not.
Those were the reasons Floyd that if 1 did, I would be
won the Byron Nelson Golf rewarded."
Classic Sunday. But it cer· , Floyd kept hitting good
tainly. took a while for the shots through the final holes
and, as Crenshaw put it, "!
issue to he decided.
.
"Overall, , when you get just hit two bad shots too
right down and look at it," many."
The result was a two-shot
said Crenshaw, "I'm lucky to
victory
for Floyd over
finish secbnil. l think I played
.•
Crell.ihaw,
his first of the
better •golf when •·!• was 15
and
ninth
of his 14-year
year
yean old." ·
1··
tour
career.
It
was
a win that
And, ftom the winner:
qualified
.Floyd
for
the World
"I just kept telling myself
Series
of
Golf
to keep hitting gond shots and

,,

Glaall f-10, Meta 2-0:
· Jim Barr won his fifth
game with ninth-inning relief
help frQIIl Gary Lavelle and
Randy Moffitt in the opener
at San Francisco. John Curti:!
pitched a two-hitter In a
nightcap shortened to 6¥..
innings by rain. Tim Foil and
Rob Andrews had three hits
each in the second game as
the Giants handed Jori
Matlack his fourth setback In
five decisions.

Slumping Indians
lose. 8-3 battle

'

Seattle Slew's quest
will become difficUlt ·

Walton &amp; team beat.Jab bar
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - In
tHe battle of golialhs Kareem
Abdul.Jabbar outscored Bill
Walton, 40-14, but the Por·
Uand Trail Blazers proved

said he's sure he will cool off
eventually, but he would like
to break the club-record
hitting streak for a lefthander
of 25 games set by Charles
Grimm in 1923.
Even if he doesn't get the
record, he said, "l'm sure I'll
hit .300. I knew that before the
season. I ~nsider myself a

a 60-yard touchdown dash in
the opening quarter.
Logan, who gained 1,248
yards last year as a junior
tailback, netted 93 yards
Saturday. In 20 tries, most of
them coming from the
fullback spot, and scored the
game's first touchdown on a
12-yard burst.
Other Red touchdowns
came on a ,31-yard pass from
quarterback Rod Gerald to
wingback Jim Harrell; a oneyard plunge by fullback Mike
Schneider; a five-yard run by
q ua r t er ba c k G r e g
Castignola' and a 24-yard
field goal by soccer style
kicker Vlade Janakievski.
Gerald did most of the
quarterba cking for the Red
team, relieved perindlcally
by Castignola, and had a
productive day, hitting seven
of 11 passes for 99 yards and
running 17 times for 88 yards.
Hayes had the sides
stacked In the game, pitting
his first offensive and
defensive teams against the
rest of the squad, and the
final statistics showed it.
The Reds piled up 472 total
yards, including 373 on the
ground, to just 107 for the
Whites, whose only threat
came in the closing seconds
of the game when they got to
the Red five-yard line.
Freshman tailback Ricky
Johnson was the White's most
productive runner, getting 39
tough yards in 14 tries. He
also had 22 in a attempts
while running for the Reds.

Uni ted Press International
National League

East
W L Pet. GB
Pittsburgh i 17 7 .708
St. Louis
16 9 .640 l'h
Chicago
13 10 .565 J1f2
Montreal
12 10 .554 4
Ph ilade lph ia ll 12

New York

.478

51f:z

10 16 .385 8

West

W L Pel. GB

LosAng .
Si!n Fran.
H'OU3lo.JI I

Cmclnnati

San Diego

Allanla

22 r
815
12
:444 10
11 lO .407 11

16 '

10 15
11 19

.400 11
.367 12 112

8 19 .296 14

Saturday's Results

Chicago· 11, Atlanta 4
Pittsburgh 12, Cincinnati 10
New York 6, San Francisco 0
Houston 3, St . Louis 1
Montreal 7, San Diego 6

Phila 7 Los Ang

4,

13 Inns.

Sunday's Resu Its

Phila at Los Ang, ppd .. rain
Mil at San Diego. 2, ppd . rain
Pittsburgh 6, Cincinnati 4
Chicago 6, Atlanta 3
St. Louis 2, Houston 1
San Fran 4, New York
2, 1st
San Fran 10, N .Y . 0, 2nd 61f2
ins .
Today's Probable Pitchers
All Times EDT
Philadelphia Carlton 3-1 at
Los Angeles Hooton 3· 1, .4
p.m .
'Attanla Colilns o.o al Pittsburgh Rooker J.1, 7·35 p.m.
Cincinnati Fryman 2-3 at St.
Louis Forsch 5-1. 8:35 p m.
Chicago R. Reuschel 4-1 at
Houston Andu jar 2-1, 8· 35
p.m .
Tuesday's Games
Los Ang at Montreal, night
San Diego at New York, night
San Fran at Philadelphia,
n1ght
Atlanta at Pittsburg h, night
Cincinnati at St. Louis, night
Ch icago at Houston, night

Indians rrught have fared Munson was 4-for..S for the
better this season if they had Yankees with four runs
kept folks like Osc!lf Gamble, scored, while Olambliss was
Graig Nettles and Chris 3-for..S and has added «
Chambliss they traded away points to his average in the
last three games.
in recent years.
Twins 5, Blue Jays 4:
Gamble, hitting at a .045
Rod Carew was 4-for-5
clip in his last nine games,
belted a two-run homer including a pair of triples,
Butch Wynegar
Sunday to spark the Chicago while
White Sox to their fifth road doubled home a pair of _runs
victory in seven games, an 8-3
decision over the slumping
Indians - · last in the
American League East with
an S-16 record.
Meanwpile, Nettles, the
defending
AL
homer
champion, capped a fivMun
first inning with his fifth of
the season to help the New
York Yankees to their 13th
win in the last 15 games, a I115 decision over the Oakland
A's. Chambliss had three hits
in the game for the Yankees
to ljft his season's average to
.300, which also includes 20
I
149 South Third
RBI.
"I'm getting gond pitches
Middleport, 0.
to hit and everybody here is
Phone 992-71 ss
swinging the bat well," said
Gamble.
Gamble's fourth homer of
This is my Stale Fa1m office
the season, gave the White
Sox a 3-1 lead in the third
where I can serveyouwi th the
inning. Chet Lemon also had · best value tn car, home, life
five hits for the Chisox who
and health insurance. I invtle
have averaged nearly six
you to call or d1op tn any lime.
runs per garne on their
current road trip. Steve Stone
spaced nine hits over the
distance to gain the victory.
Elsewhere in the American
Leag11e, .Minnesota nipped
Toronto, 5-4, Milwaukee put
away Detroit, 7-4, Boston
shaded California, W, Texas
topped Kansas City, f&gt;-2, and
Baltimore downed Seattle, &amp;·BILL FlETCHER
4.
,..--"-"
L.... 110Qd nclohb«.
""'
Yankees 10, Athletics 5:
Sw&lt;Fumllohere.
Nettles stroked a three-run
homer in the first Inning to
climax a five-run rout of exYankee Dock Ellis. Thurman

American League
East
W L Pel. GB
New York 16 10 .615
1
Baltimore 1.4 9 .609
h
Milwaukee 15 It .577 1
Boston
14 l1 .560 11/ 2
Toronto
12 17 .414 51h
Detroit
10 15 .400 51/2
Cleveland
8 16 .333 7
West
W L Pel. GB
Minnesota 18 10 .643
Chicago 16 10 .615 1
Texas
13 10 .565 21h
Kansas
City
15 12 .556 21/2
Oakland 14 14 500 4
Californ ia 10

17

.370

71!'2

Seattle
9 22 .290 10117
Saturday's Results
Minnesota .41 Toronto 1
Boston 3, California 0
Chicago, 5, Oeveland 2
New York 11, Oakland 2
Oetroit 6, Milwaukee 2
Baltimore~ . Seattle 2
Kansas C1ty 6, Texas 5
Sunday's Results
Milwaukee 7, Detroit 4
Ch icago a, Cleveland 3
Minnesota 5, Toronto 4
New York 10, Oakland 5

.....

p 7190 1

When
YOU ·

want .
results ...

Boston 4, California 3

Baltimore 6, Seattle 4
Texas 5, Kansas City 2
Today's Probable Pitchers
All Times EDT
Milwaukee Sla ton l-2 and
Cort 1-0 at Clevelaf1d Dobson
0·3 and ·Bibby t.o, 2, 5:30p .m.
Seattle Thomas 1·3 at Toronto
Singer 1·4, 7:30p.m ·
California Simpson 1·2 at.
Kansas City Colborn 4·2, 8:30
p.m.
Chicago Brett 3-2 at Texas
Boggs 0·2, 8:35 p.m.
Bostof1 Cleveland 2-2 a t
Oakland Blue 2·2, 10.30 p.m.
Tuesday's Games
California at Kansas City,
night
-Chicago at Texas. night
M i nnesota at Detroit, night
Milwaukee at Cleveland ,
night
Seattle at Toronto, night

. gtve our classified departmenJ a
call! If you want to turn your unwanted
items into cash, we'll help you write an
ad that will get fast results! Whatever
you want to buy or sell, you'll get action
with a Want Ad!

THE DAILY SENTINEL
PHONE 992-2156

�THESE PUBLIC SPffil'I'ED Cl'I'IZENS, STORES AND ESTABLISHMENTS
SPONSOR THIS PAGE NOTING A SPECIAL HAPPENING IN TillS

LET'S
FACE
THE
FACTS
NO ONE EVER ENJOYS GOING TO THE
HOSPITAL, YET .IT'S SURE NICE TO KNOW
THAT IT'S THERE WHEN YOU NEED IT!

coMMuNITY.
Legar Monument Co.

Adolph's Dairy Valley

POMEROY

POMEROY .

K&amp;C Jewelers

Veterans Memorial Hospital
..

Downing-Childs Ins. Agency

· Karr &amp; VanZandt

MIDDLEPORT

Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy

-

POMEROY

Sugar Run Mill

·yl/

d ;

; .
;'

Today, hospitals offer t~e finest care with the most modern
'
equipment available to medical science. From intensive core
facilities to the maternity words, modern hospitals ore designed
to be efficient and effective for doctors, nurses and patients.
Visit your local community hos.pitol during Notional Hospit?l
Week Open House.

I

.r

.

I'

POMEROY

Meigs Auto Parts
POMt80Y

Moore's Auto Parts
POMEROY

Chapman Shoes ·
POMEROY

MIDDLEPORT

Valley Lumber &amp; Supply

Crow's Steak .House

MIDDLEPORT

POMEROY

Reuter-Bragan Ins. Services

Ewing Funeral Home

POMEROY

POMEROY

.

Ben Fran_klin Store

heritage house

.. POMEROY

_,~· ·

MIDDLEPORT .

MIDDLEPORT

POMEROY

l
f /

Dan Thompson Ford

POMEROY

Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home

Pomeroy Flower Shop

I

· POMEROY

MIDDLEPORT

Dutton Drugs

",

Modern Supply

Mark V Store

POMEROY

•••

POMEROY

POMEROY

POMEROY

Athens County Savings &amp; Loan
Meigs County .Branch

Racine Food Market

Landmark Store

· The Jones 8(115
' POMEROY

Pomercrj Cement Block Co. .
POMEROY

· Rutland Furniture
RUTLAND

RACINE

POMEROY

Citizens National Bank

Teaford Realty

Rutland Dept Store
RUTLAND

MIDDLEPORT

· POMEROY

New York Clothing House

Ebersbach Hardware

State Farm Ins.
MIDDLEPORT

POMEROY

POMEROY

G~lers

The Fabric Shop

Jewelry Store

Warner Ins.
POMEROY

POMEROY

POMEROY

Powell's Super Valu

Western Auto Store

POMEROY

MIDDLEPORT

Racine Home National Bank
RACINE

The Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co.
POMEROY

Sears

Ca~log

Store

MIDDLEPORT

Elberfelds
POMEROY

Pomeroy National Bank
"The'- Bank
of the Century".
- .
POMEROY-RUTLANI).TUPPERS PLAINS ,

Francis Florists
POMEROY

Kiddie Shop
POMEROY

Rcrjal Crown Bottling Co.
MIDDLEPORT

· TAKE A TOUR OF YOUR HOSPITAL
THIS WEEK

.
r !

.·LET'S CELEBRATE!

' ...J

0

I

'

I

MIDDLEPORT ·

MIDDLEPORT

POMEROY

.

Bahr Clothiers

POMEROY

Meigs Cardinal r

G&amp;J Auto Parts

Middleport Book Store

..

�6-The Daily SenUnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, May 9, 1m
7-The Dallv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, May 9, 1977
r~
H
,,&gt;;;:~~~.
v':'&gt;"K«'~:=:=:-:·:;:·::&gt;H
;:::::::::&lt;:::&gt;:::::l
::::&lt;:&gt;;:~::::,,,,,:,:~;.;,:::&lt;•X::::&lt;::11

e en

i

POINTEJtS l~ U S
;$

Polly Cramer

i~

• • •

ep
8y

H

e 1en 8 otte1

::~~

••
••
I

J1:;:: at OES inspection

••

~~~i

Do Courts Ignore ChUd Abuse?
Desr Helen:
This little boy (not yet old enough to "accuse") is beaten
by his stepfather while the mother looks on . .However,
badly
is always a spoon handy, so it
always an excuse when we, the family, turn them into
there's
eliminates the danger of sothe
authorities.
.
meone putting a wet spoon in
Proof
is
difficult,
and evidently our testimony is only
such jars. I also use such a
"hearsay."
Bruises?
The
blame goos to falls, other children,
spoon for removing portioru
of cottage cheese from a tall or even the natural father. (These inhllllllln people knocked the
carton. My .iced tea spoons child around when he visited his real Dad, then accused the
are now in constant use in- lather of mi~eatment. )
Another younger child shows results of neglect (severe
stead of being stored away
diaper rash - open sores, etc.)
most of the time. - VIV.
The lather has taken this to court, but he can't get custody
DEAR POLLY - My large
jar of onion salt was left back of his son. Must the toddler be maimed or killed to attract
on a shelf for a while. When 1 notice frOIII authorities?
My question: how can radio, TV and newspapers so avidly
wanted to use it the SHit was
as hard as a brick, I was advertise, "Report anything you might feel is chlld abuse,"
ready to throw it a way. Then when reports lead nowhere? Courts seem all to willing to
I thought, if apple peel protect a guilty adult ! - SICK AND BRO~NHEARTED .
softens brown sugar, why1not
try it on the onion salt. I did,
•
and the next day t he salt was DearS aud B:
The
father
needs
a
skillful
lawyer who will gather enough
softened - not dry enough lo
evidence
to
win
a
custody
suit.
All too often, unfortunately,
use the shaker top, but dry
mental
and
physical
child
abuse
is in a gray area where
enough to he removed with a
abusers
can
either
lay
the
blame
on
others or ''prove" reports
sp&lt;Jon. Keep up the good
are
exaggerated.
work, Polly.- MR .~. B. G.
Legal sleuthing will run high , but it's probably the only
DEAR POLLY - A quick
way
Ill win. -H.
and easy way to remove the
+++
excess oil from canned tuna
Dear
Helen:
fish is to leave the lid on the
About labeling "elders," thus shoving them over the hill. I
can alter opening it. Then
tell
everyone
I'm "liot old, I was just young a long time ago."
drain the oil out by pressing
the lid down with the fing ers. - FRANK, BORN IN JUNE, 1900.
P .S. I'm about to he married to a lovely young lady of 70.
This method can also be used
for draining other canned
Dear Frank :
foods .- MRS. L.G.G.
I'll dance at your wedding - long-distance! -H.
Polly will send you one of
+++
her sig ned thank-you
newspaper coupon clippers if Dear Helen :
How dare a tax-&lt;&gt;upported "help" organization furnish our
she uses yo ur favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in 16-year-&lt;&gt;ld daughter with birth control pills "without parents
her column. Write POLLY'S being notified?" Legally!
Authorities complain of the decadence of youth, yet turn
POINTERS in care of this
right
around and "approve" it by making the piU available to
newspaper.
all.
Young girls talk "liberation. " No wonder boys don't fight
it. "Equal rights" mean easy sex for them. My generation
would have called this mental Slavery: girls giving in because
they'd he " not with it" if they didn't. Our daughter isn't happy
- she's coerced!
·
When our politicians vote to allow birth control for
teenagers (withoUt parental consent) they're corrupting our
children's morals. - C. M.
~

Paint remover peels decals
,,
••

"

..
in · close conjunction with the hospital and the testing
facilities that it offers. Cars parked in front of the
building, which opened in December, are indicative of the
business heiilg handled at the office facility.

OPENING OF THE MEIGS MEDICAL BUILDING ,
adjacent to Veterans Memorial Hospital, in the past year
was a major step of progress. The medical building
houses office facilities for three physicians who can work

Veterans Memorial
Hospital is an 88bed non-profit acute
/ care institution with

~

( I 155 full &amp; pal"ltime
•
employes earnlng
. $937,530 annually
OR. LEWIS TELLE, left, coordinator of the on-going
educational program for doctors at Veterans Memorial
Hospital, and Scott Lucas, administrator of the local
hospital, discuss progress in the educational program.

Veterans Memorial
· Hospital is an BB·bed nonprofit acute care institution
owned by Meigs County and
leased to the Veterans
Memorial Hospital of Meigs
County Corporation through
the Meigs County Hospital
Commission which consists
of ten members.
These members, appointed
by the Meigs CountY
Commissioners, are Hugh
Custer , Russell Cullum s,
F-r e eland Norris , Thoma s
Crow, Jr ., Herbert Shields,
R. R. Pickens, D. 0., Leo
Vaughan, Gerald Thompson
and George Collins.
There are eight board
members who set the policy
of the hospital and serve
without pay. Members are
Andrew Cross, chairman;
Earl Clark, vice chairman ;
Russell Brown, secretary ;

':f'::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::,::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::·.·i

..

..

Shower fetes
Miss Knight
A layette show~r was held
at the .home of Mrs. Leland
Sisson and Mrs. Fred Sisson
for Suzanne Knight Thursday
night.
Games were played and
prizes awarded to Mrs. Ar·
chie Swartz, Mrs. Lois
Young, and Mrs. Thelma Ly·
tle. Others attending were
Vera Crow , Hester
B!~rlnarnno:J

·Besides its role as a facility for the treatment of illness and
disease, Veterans Memorial Hospital plays a cooperative, community
role in encouraging other health orientated programs.
The hospital sponsors a speech and hearing clinic which is
coordinated by Mrs, Carolyn S. Heines. Sponsored by the hospital, the .
program is funded by a grant from the Ohio Department of Health
with matching funds from the county commission . Quarters for the
clinic are busy on a regular basis as Mrs. Heines and her staff conduct
their program to aid people who have speech and hearing problems.
The hospital also provides space for a planned parepthood program.
' •dueled regularly - two times a month - are regular ceravic
cancer clinics at the hospital building.
·
•.:..: , fr These additional services beyond the treatment of illnesses are
.ee of charge to the public.

\t
l.:\.1

chief of surgery and director
of laboratory and physical
therapy departments; W. • ·
Peterson,
M.D .,
E.
Villanueva ,
M.D. ,
S.
Blazewicz, M.D., C. W.
. Thompson ,
M . D.,
radiologist ; R. A. Averion,
M.D., radiologist; Antonio
Sola, M.D., radiologist ; H. D.
Davidson, M.D ., pathologist ;
J . A. Kemp, M.D., G. H.
Abels, M.D., G. E. Vallee, "
M.D ., internists; M. Simon,
M.D ., urologist ; H. D.
Brown, D.D.S., C. J. Ingels,
D.D.S., K. Riggs, D.D.S, and
R. P. Daniels, M.D., with R.
E. Boice, M.D., and P.
Kinnard, M.D. on the
courtesy staff.

NATIONA'L

Other roles in health services

Bank visitations planned

George Hackett, Jr .. Hugh
Custer, Early Roush , Asa
Hoskins and Harold Sauer.
The hospital has 155 full
and part time employees, ·
with an annual payroll of
$937,530.30.
In 1976, 2,451 patients were
admitted to
Veterans
Memorial Hospital and there
were 5,103 patients seen
through the emergency room
department. These patients
were admitted or treated by
one of the members of our
medical or dental staff : J. H.
Ridgway, D. 0., chief of
staff; R. R. Pickens, D. 0.,
vice chief of · staff; T\ B.
McGowan, D.O.,
staff
secretary; L. D. Telle, M.D .,

DEAR POLLY - Recently
I was given a crib for my
son's room that I want to
paint to match his bedroom
decor, but the crib has decals
on it. I want to know if there
is a way to remove the decals
without scratching the crib.
- DEBBIE.
DEAR DEBBIE - Since
you are going to paint the
crib I do not see why you are
worried about scratching it a
bit. You can always sand it
smooth. Use a paint remover
to loosen the decals and then
scrape off with a putty knile,
!'Bnd lightly and repaint. POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is with those
"gentlemen" who do not of·
fer. their seats to older
women when the bus is lull. It
is bard for older adults to
keep their balance when the
bus is in motion. -ALICE.
DEAR ALICE - Perhaps
!he gentlemen feel the right
to stand is one of the benefits
&lt;i equal rights for both sexes.
-POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - Do tell
Mrs. L.R. that we solved the
problem with our bean bag
chair. We make a cover for it
out of an acrylic pile fabric,
but corduroy or any heavy
material could be used. Make
two circles about 45-inches in
diameter and one 15-inch
wide strip to ·go between
them. Sew together and put a
zipper in one of the seams, I
left the old cover on, put the
entire chair in the new cover
and fastened · the zipper,
When the cover needs
washing there Is no worry
about what to do with all
those beans.- UNDA.
DEAR POLLY - Iced tea
spoons are great to use in
jars of instant coffee , hot
chocolate powder, etc. There

'•'•

::;:::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::;::;;:::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::~;::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::!;!;

Poulins, Thora Blackwood,
Mazie Hannahs and Miss An·
drea Sisson.
Refreshn\ents were served
in keeping with the layette
theme. Sending gifts were
Mary Baird and Mrs. Robert
Buck.

·HOSPITAL
WEEK
f
:_·,''.=,•

Mari lyn and Lisa

NEW TERM

MAY 8~14

.\!l,: : : :;: : : : : : : : : :;: : : : ; :-:= ;: : : : : : : : : : : : : ;: : : .;,:,:;:,: ;:,:;:;: : : : :~: : : : : : : : : ;: : : : :=:=:=:;: : : : : : : : : :;: : : : : : : : '\i.

:~\t:::::::::::::::;:::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::: ::::;:;::::: ::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::~:~:~::::::::::::~::;:;:;:; :::::::::: :::::::::: :~:~;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::l:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:~;:~~

I

I

Hospital physicians in
educational program
New Ohio laws require that
doctors complete !50 hours ·of
additional training over the next
three years in order to renew their
licenses.
Doctors of Veterans Memorial
Hospital are doing ~ething about
the requirement through an on-going
educational program.
The medical staff Is involved in
the pnl8ram to update ita medical
knowledge through a mmthly staff
meeting at which all complications
Ire dllc:u&amp;sed in which surgical
eumJnaUona are also included and
preaented.
Speciftc disease processes are
evaluated from the standpoint of

i.J,.!
.,:.:_·

~~~~:!::Jr]=]
_Fo:.~er;~bt!:!~ =~:
United States.

!!!!

~m

w

pneumonia and surgical problems of

a special nature - are studied in
depth and the results of therapy are
presented. Each patient is studied
through a complete and objective,
evaluation. A pathologist discusses
matters of interest related to
laboratory procedures.
Once weekly, for one hour, the
steff has an audio-telephonic, visual
audio program presented by the
Department of COntinuing Medical
J&gt;ducation of Ohio State University.
Recognized experts present
pertinent details and then are
available for questions and answers.
S~ff members are given an
effective update on medicine for 1977
while getting 30 hours of credit on

~}~~:u~.:~~v=~~~~~ ~~!!
::;~~·fE~!ii:~;
In evaluating the treatment, the

the medical profession from aU over

the country.
Dr. Lewis Telle is medical
coordina!Dr for the hospital and
through his position is in charge of
the educational program.
Dr. Telie also serves as utilization
review chairman of the medical
staff.
This is sometimes not a pleasant
position to be in, Dr. Telle reports,
because he and his conunittee must
follow guidelines of various agencies
on the hospital stey projected for
various types of aliments. If hospital
confinement
exceeds
these
projected periods, then agencies wiU
question the situation. Dr. Telle and
his committee study individual

INQUIRE
NOW
AI GBC, we have a courH

ta 1ult your needs by doy or

ot night, beginning or

advanced. We are cotducationol accredited.
Offer
financial
ond
employment
assistance.
The dote lor making a start

is

~~~1!~=-tte~~fso:Ss~
Eie~~~~ ~ita!:~:~

:.•

1,!.,:,,

the physician in relocation of the

reduce ove_rall costs of medical care.

,:li

.

I..

~J}.w:l:::::::;:-;::::::::;:::::::~:t:::::::::=::::::::;:;:;:;:f,;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;:~:~:~;:;::.::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;·:::::;::~::::;:::::;:::;:;:::;:::::;:::::~;:;:::::::::::::::::::;;;:;:;:::~;:::;:;:;:::::::::;:;:~;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:~;:;:;:::·:·:·:;:.:·:·:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;.;::::·:;::::::::::~:::::::~:::::::~:::::::::::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;::~~~

now.

Our

career

repre$en1a tiYe , Mr.
Nlcewondor.
will
be
pleuoll to personolly
diKun your plans, simply
call him ot 446-4367, 444·
4373 or 444·4371. Terms
=~ on J uM 6th and Sept.

SALLY SAW AGE, is ai a computer data machine, one of the newest types of officeequipment, installed at Veterans Memorial Hospital. Through the hlachlne office employes •
see on a screen all of the infonnation necessary on a Blue Cross Insurance c;overed patient
on coverage provided. The machine is tied in!D the Central Ohio Blue Cross office in
Columbus. Long time lapses often were involved in correspondence on patients before
·
installation of the neW equipment.
~

{

.

Social

Calendar

MONDAY
FINAL regular meeting of
year for Eastern Band
Boosters , 7:30 p.m. at high
school band room. New of·
fleers will ·he elected and all
parents of students entering
the junior and senior high
b;lnds urged to attend .
UNITED
Methodist
Women, )Ieath Church,
Middleport, 7: 30 Monday
night at the church. Mrs.
Billy Jo Krawsczyu to have
devotions, Mrs. Ruth Euler,
the program. Hostesses will
be Mrs. Mae Lambert, Mrs. ,
Mae Ketchka, Mrs. Lettie
Youn2 and Mrs. Terry Eyer.
JANE Brown, TB nurse,
will give ski!) tests to eighth
grade students at Southern
Junior High Monday.
TWIN City Shrine Clob
Monday at club house in
Racine. Cornbread and beans
served at 6 p.m. All shriners
welcome.
TUESDAY
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary, Lewis Manley Post
21&gt;3, 2 p.m. Tuesday at the
home of Mrs. Campbell
Hamer.
· MEIGS County Chapter 53
DAVTuesday, atDAV home,
Butternut Ave. , Pomeroy,
7:30 p .m. District nine
commander, Arthur L. Leach
of Jac~son will attend and
install chapter officers lor
-1977 and 1978.
HARRISONVILLE Cha!&gt;ter, Order of the Eastern
Star, Tuesday, 8 p.m. at the
temple with practice to follow
regular meeting. All officers
urged to atiend.
MEIGS County Better
Livestock Dairy 4·H Club,
Tuesday, 8:15 at the home of
Davie Burt.
WEDNESDAY
WlllTE Rose Lodge, 1:30
p.m. Wednesday at the
American Legion HaU ,;n
Middleport.
_
POMEROY · Middleport
Lions Club, 12 noon, at the
Meigs Inn Wednesday. All
Lions urged to attend.
POMEROY Chapter 80,
Royal Arch Masons, stated
· convocation, Wednesday,
7:30 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple. All regular
companions urged to attend.
BOSWORTH Council 46,
Royal and Select Masters,
8:30 p.m., Pomeroy Masonic
Temple.
·

THURSDAY
HARRISONVILlE Cha!&gt;ter, OES, annual inspection,
7:30 p.m. Thursday . In·
specting officer will be Sylvia
Midkiff, deputy grand
matron. Members to take
potluck .
)t. No. 7S-~· 0412B
MEIGS County Humane
36 Locv1t St.
Goo Ill polls, OH 41631
Society, 7:30 Thursday at the
• Approved For Training
Thrift shop across from the
Veter~m
- - - - " &lt;............ Post Office in Pomeroy.

Gallpolis Business
College .

Dear C.:
Lawmakets are realistic: they 'd rather vote to make birth
control readily available thim risk an even greater rise in
teenage pregnancy .
Teaching the hazards of too-early sex is primarily the
parents' concern. It should also be stressed in school sex
education classes - and good teachers (at home and abroad)
can work in a great deal about responsibility, vuinerability,
'Jusing.'' vs. real caring, and moralitv during the course.- H.

Millions left in cash
by slain foods heiress
INDIANAPOLIS (UP! ) Investigators have found $5
miUion in cash and thousands
of "gifts to God" in the firecharred home of a slain
heiress.
Police said they had no
firm suspects but several
leads in the slaying of
Marjorie V. Jackson, 66,
widow of the former
president of Standard Food
Stores.
Firemen called to fight a
fire at the Jackson home
discovered the slaying
Saturday. They said the fire
was the work of an arsonist.
Mrs. Johnson was shot once
in the stomach. A coroner said the
shoot·
ing could hav e occurred
as early as Thursday .
Police found no gun in their
search of the house.
But they did find millions of
dollars in cash - mostly in
llirge, neatly stacked bundles
hidde~ in tool boxes, grocery
bags and even a trash con·
tainer - and thousands of
foil-wrapped gifts bearing

.
'DERBY' UNDERWAY
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Fifty-lour planes took off
from Don Scott Field Sunday
morning carrying 94 female
participants in the 27th an·
nual "Angel Derby," an
international air race lor
women only. The women
were tony their single-engine
planes· to Fort Lauderdale,
Fla., today and then on to the
Bahamas Tuesday.
I

JUDGE APPOINTED
NEWARI{, Ohio (UPI )
Licking County Prosecutor
Nell Laughlin has been
named to the county common
pleas court, replacing' Walter
U. Bolton, who died April 24.

Doris Smith.presitles

such labels as "To Jesus
Christ
from
Marjorie
Jackson " or uTa God from

Marjorie."

i
•

••
Mrs. Doris Smith, worthy Athens, Albany, Bartlett,
•
grand matron of the Grand Marietta, Mt. Olive, Har·
•
Chapter of Ohio, was inspe&lt;~ risonville, Eudora, Euthemia
ling officer for the annual in· and DanviUe Chapters.
spection of Chapter 186,
Other
chapters
•
Order of the Eastern Star, represented in addition to
•
Tuesday •night at the thosenamedwereUnionport,
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Valley, Kokosing, Gallipolis,
•
Presiding officers for the Clarington, Mason, New
•
grand inspection were Marshfield,
Racine,
Charlotte Dillard, worthy Cheshire, Glouster and Aero
matron; JamesSoulsby, wor· Chapters.
r
Pomeroy past matrons
thy patron ; Ruby Vaughan,
•
associate matron; Richard introduced were Thelma DiU,
••
Vaughan, associate patron; Sue· Souls by,
Edna
Marie Curd, secretary ; Schoenieb, Ella Smith, Mabel
••
Dorothy Woodard, treasurer; Goeglein, Florence Well,
'
Ann Hamsiey, conductress; · SylVia Midkiff, Marie Curd,
RECEPTION SET - Mr . and Mrs. Lee Henderson
celebrate
their
60th
wedding
anniversary
on
Sunday,
will
Pauline Hysell, associate DQrothy Woodard, Lucille
conductress;
Albert SwackhammerandPomeroy
May I~ with a reception from 2 to 4 p.m. in the social room
•
of the Alfred Methodist Church. Mr . Henderson and the
Woodard, chaplain ; Thomas past patrons, Albert
former Osie Carr were married on May 19, !917 at the
Edwards, marshall ; Nancy Woodard, Dale Smith and
home of her parents. They ·have five children, Mrs.
Greenless, Adah; Edna Thomas Edwai-ds, all knights
Richard (Margaret ) Follrod, Pomeroy ; Claren ce,
Triplett, Esther; Milisa of the York Cross of Honor
Sherman and Harold, Alfred ; and Ralph of Coolville. They
Rizer, Martha; Judy Morris, and James Soulsby; honored
· also have seven grandchildren and one great-grandchild.
Electa; Mabel Goeglein, Masons, Wilbur McClain,
Friends and neighbors of the couple are invited to call
warder; and pro tern of· James Clatworthy, and
••
during the reception hours. Mr. and Mrs. Henderson
!icers, Lucille Swackham· Richard Miller; and 50 year
•
request that gifts be omitted.
mer, organist; Florente members, Gretta Harris,
Well, Ruth, and Dale Smith, Ruby Diehl, Grace French,
•
Sentinel.
Margaret Douglas, Evelyn
Approximately 145 persons Lewis, Beulah Hayes, and
attended the inspection with Mary Liggett.
Thelma Dill and · Mabel
Also presented were
Moore registering the guests Gracie Wilson, grand page;
and providing them with di Lewis Schoenian, grand
daisy pinons.' Serving on the aide; Loella Hayes, District
relrestunent committee were president; Mary Wooley, · The Enterprise United gram concluded with the
Georgia Watson, Joann districl vice president; and Methodist Women and their song, "Count Your BlessKautz, :J'exanna and Louise Stewart, district farnili l!ll observed family ings" and Mrs. Bentz gave
Elizabeth Well, and Kathryn secreta ry; 13 grand appOint· night at the home of Mrs. Don the benediction.
Attending were Mrs. Bentz,
Windon .
ments and past' matrons and Hunnel Thursday night.
The inspecting officer was past patrons of other
Following the potluck sup- Tina JohnSOn, Mr. and Mrs.
presented with an honorary .chapters.
per, a program was held Dale Davis and Chris, . the
membership in Pomeroy
A 25-year pin was opening with group singing of Rev. and Mrs. James Corbitt,
Cha pter by Sylvia Midkiff, presented to Ella Smith -by " Draw Me Nearer," and a Shelly, Gail, Kay and Mark,
deputy grand matron.. Also deputy grand matron, Mrs. reading "A Smile is Love" by Mrs. Selim Blazewicz, Mrs.
presented an honorary Midkiff. Sunshine pages were . Mrs. Charles Warth. Mrs. Dixon, Mrs. Paul Frick, Mrs.
membership wa s Bruce Connie and Susan Lanning Phil Ohlinger presented "Lit· Della Curtis, Mrs. K&lt;IY
Hansford .' worthy grand with the amount being con· tie Boys In Church," and Pullins, Lisa and Scott, Mr.
patron.
tributed to Estari.
Mrs. Herbert Dixon read and Mrs. Dan Cotterill, Mr.
Others introduced and 1 · Candidate for the evening " Mothers are People." The ·and Mrs. Phil Ohlinger and
welcomed were Mrs. Midkiff, · was Susan Abbott, daughter group then sang a medley of Laura, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Pomeroy , chapter, .deputy of the worthy patron and the songs with "Jesus" in the ti- Wa rth, David, Darrin and
grand matron; Roberta K. pro-tem candidate was Irene tle. Mrs. Tom Bentz, Mrs. Amy, Mrs. Bill Pullins and
Mindlin g. past grand matron, Barnes . The altar was Bernice Evans and Mrs .. Tina Kevin, Mrs. Alice Arnold,
and Wrqena Dustheimer, draped lor Herman . Geist, Johnson presented "A Mrs. Don Hunnel and Artie
past grand matron arid grand past grand patron and the Modern Parable," Mrs. Dale and Mrs. Bernice Evan:;.
treasurer; Howard Shull. charter was draped for Davis read the poem, "Ha!&gt;past grand patron ; Gloria Shirley Custer with a mo. piness" and Mrs. Dan Cot·
Miller, grand Electa ; Pat ment of silent prayer being teriU led the group with a
Wilson grand representative held.
quiz on Genesis. The proof Kansas; Mary Shull , grand
The chapter room was
representative of ·o klahoma, decorated with daisies and
12 worthy matrons and six the daisy motif was also used
'·
worthy patrons representing on the tables lor potluck
~;
Lowell, ·Mt. Moriah , refreshments which followed
Matamoras, Evangeline, inspection.
Hobin
Humphrey ,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Humphrey ,
As
an
Ind epend ent
::r·==···==·=·=,.,•••,•.•.•••,,,,••••,,,•••,•••••••••••••••,•••,••,.,, ••,••,,,•••••••:==·· =· ····=········,=········=·····==·······=········=········::i' Char les
Insurance agen c y , o ur
Reedsville, was a member of
pr imary' fund \on is tc
the Ohio State University
provide polic ies w h ic h
medical technology student
aiford
finan cial
team which took first place in
protection !n ca se ot loss.
the state contest held recentBut, we also ha ve a Vit al
ly at Cincinnati.
Interest in loss prot ec ti on ,
Other members o!'the team
as should our cl ie nts . We
which competed against
encourage ca r e, caution ·
and safety ... pr eve nt ive
LETART FALLS - Thank host the next meeting at her teams fr om medical
measure s which can keep
offering ,containers were home in Middleport. Mrs. technology schools in Ohio
were
Kathy
Troph,
Lois
that
car acc ident fr om
made fodnemhers when the · Cross will have the program,
happen
ing , that bu ildin g
Smith and Sandy Mit·
Letart .Fails United. andMrs.Hillthe devotions.
fire
from
st art ing , that
Methodist Women met
Refreslunents were served tenbergs. Alternates were
home burg la r y frtHl'l
Sue Callahan and Bernadette
Wednesday night at the home by the hostess.
befng committed.
Murray .
of Mrs. Harold Roush.
The Ohio State team will
Pre v ention sa ves l if e,
Mrs. Bert Grinun ·presided
limb and proper ty .. . an d
now
travel
to
Indianapolis,
at the meeting during which
he lps control insu ran ce
Indiana to compete on June 4
time 30 shutin visits were
co~t s and prem iums.
in the regional contest. Six
reported during the past
champion teams from other
· month. A round-robin card
When losses do occur, our
will he in the contest.
states
pol icy hold er s ·can cou nt
was signed for Mrs. Gladys .
· ·
on prot ection and service
Shields, and a card will also
in tim e at need . Bu t we
A suiHlistrict meeting of
. be sent to Mrs. Vashti
sti l l say ·_...... pr even ti on is
Meigs County scout leaders
Grimm.
PROFESSOR FORD
the best po licy .
Members whoha ve used will be held Wednesday at
'.OS ANGELES (UP!)
thank offering containers for 7:30 p.m. at the Coiwnbus Fo rm er President Gerald
the past seve ral weeks turn· and Southern Ohio Electric Ford hegins a series of leced in the contents, The new Co.
tures this week to University
Mrs. Pat Thoma, service of Southern California history
containers will be used until
· the !all meeting.
unit director, has asked that and
political
science
Mfs. Grinun gave" an in· all troops he represented at students.
spirational reading and Mrs. the meeting since folders for ·
Andrew Cross read scripture day camp to be held at Camp
and then a Mother's Day Kiashuta next month will he
bust of Juliet Lowe, found er
reading enti tied "My distributed.
She also reporis that the of girl scouting in the United
Children are Coming To992·2143
day." The Lord's Prayer was Sc&lt;Jut se rvice center in States. The new Area 3 chair·
102 W. Main
Pomeroy
Athens is open every day ex' man is Dee Lawrence.
given in unison.
Mrs. Don Bell presented a cept Friday from 10 a.m. to
Mother's Day program with nooo th rough J un e 3.
•
Mrs. J ohn Hill reading "! Volunteers are on call at
other
hours
and
the
telephone
Love You, Mother," Mrs. Andrew Cross, " In Praise of number for service is
Mother," Mrs . Grimm, 592-4972.
Mrs. Thoma was in
"What is a Mother," Mrs.
Alice Balser, "A Lovely Parkersburg Thursday .for a
Mother/' and Mrs. Roush , recogni tion dinner honoring
"A Wonderful Mother." To Peg Murdock who lor the
close the program, Mrs. Bell pas! three years has been the
Area 3 chairman. She was
read "The Mother's Watch."
Mrs. Rose McDade will presented o/ith a portrait

Afinal tally Sunday showed
$5,015,489.93 in cash and
several thousand · dolla rs in
travelers' checks.
Authorities said Mrs .
J ackson lost more than
$600,000 a year ago in •
confidence game and had
nearly . $700,000 embezzled
from a trust account, into
which a banker had persuaded her to put part of her
husband's estate . Since then,
she said, she hadn't had much
confidence in banks.
The foil-wrapped packets
stacked from floor to ceiling
along one wall in the house
contained s uch items as
perfume, eafrings - even
washcloths.
There also were several
large cakes bearing religious
inscriptions.
"Apparently she was just
giving gifts to God," Marion
County Police Lt. Robert W.
Kirkman said.
No will was ever found ,
though observers estimated
Mrs. Jackson's estate to total
more than $20 million.
Police said one room of the
house appeared ransacked,
but that they could not he
sure because of the clutter.
Several empty jewelry
boxes were found near the
rear gate to the three-acre
estate and pollee said they
believed a purse was missing,
but the clutter made that
hard to tell.
"Who knows what all was
taken - only she knew what
she had there and she's
dead," Detective Sgt. James
Gelotf said.
Police said they have been
given a lot of leads in the .
slaying, but they declined to
elaborate. ·

,•

'••

!

..'

Family night enjoyed
by UMW on Thursday

PREVENTION

Student team
wins honor

f c;;:!:~P~~;::ed

DECORATING
SUPPUES

I

Leaders
to meet

DALE C. WARNER
INS.

nee u1

many other

s~ci a Is.

any roo111

DENTURES - DENTISTRY
DR . RONALD F. RIV IERE
OA . -'· J . STo\E~~~ -OR . K. H. CHUNG OA. VICTOR

v:

LIANG ..:_ DR . G. J. STOM BAUGH

On e or1wo day
full denture servi ce,
partial dentures

FLEXSTEEL

'.

FINS l1PHOU:n'EREJ) F'\JRNITt!H E

OR . RIVlE:RE

1·800·282·6411

Grand Opening
Take Rt . SO to Little
Hocking turn left at
Wilbers Plastic. fourth
house on right.
Hours? :00-8:00
Phone 989-2540
Paste Color~ 6ec each ,

BEST POUCY

II

PAUUNE'S CAKE
SEEK DELAY
LOS ANG ELEA (UP!)
An attorney for Roman
Polanski says he will ask for
postponement of the film
director 's trial on charges of
drugging and raping a 13year·old girl, pending a
number of pretrial motions
he wants heart by the court,
including an inquiry into the
girl's prior sexual conduct.

IS THE

f1 ')

RIVIERE CENTER 949 E. Livingston Ave ., C~lumbus
Weekdays B·3~ A.M. to6 : 30 P.M.
'You 'II Smdc T omorrm• /I j u «~ 7" ~ ~ ,. f , , _,. f/ 1"/' (W I 7 ('(' rh 1 n.t ...:·ll'

..

�''

'
9-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Monday, May 9, 19'n

----:r--60-,I&gt;IA--:-:rs-n&lt;~-ST-ORY-,TR-ACY...,,;;;:-L-~-,__,...---~Televis ion log +o1: easy viewing

8-The Dallv Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, May 9, 19'n

Unwanted Items Into Cash

Let The WantAds Turn

WANT AD
CHARGES

OICKrTRA_CY

......

J.

THE .JURY FOREMAN PIP NOT OlE 8V HIS OWN
OUN AS ZERO NOUGHT PLANNED IT-NOR 010 YOU.

5 :0&lt;&gt;- Blg Valley 3; My Three Sons 4; Brady Bunch 8 ·
M ister Rogers' Neigh borhood 20.33; Emergency'
One 13; Star Trek 15.
5 :3().-Adam· 12 4; ; News 6; Family Affa ir 8; Elee . Co.
21),33.
6 :0&lt;&gt;-News 3.4,6.8, 10.13.15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6: 3()-NBC N ~ws 3,4.15 ; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8.10; Vegetable Soup 20.
7 :0&lt;&gt;-Trulh or Cons. 3; To Telllhe Truth 4 ; Liar' s Club
6; Buck Owens B; NewsiO; To Tell fhe Truth 13; My
Three Sons 15; Americana 20; Know Your Schools
33.
7 :3()-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3; In Search of 4;
Muppel Show 6; Gong Show 8 ; MacNeii · Lehrer
Report 20.33; Pr ice Is RlghiiO; Candid Camera 13 {
Nashville on the Road 15.
8 :1»-PIIol ' "Inside Q . U .T." 3.4, 15; Happy Days 6, 13;
Jeffersons 8,10; Six Amer ican Families 20 33.
8 : 3()-l.',ovle " The E lger Sa nction '" 3,4, 15; B'a seball
1 6, 13; Pilot " Nurses" 8. 10.
9 :"00-Amer ica's Junior Miss Pageant 8, 10; Palllsers
20,33.
10:0&lt;&gt;-Andros Targets 8.10; News 20 ; Soundst age 33 .
10 :3()-Farrn Digest 20.
11 :IX&gt;- News 3,4,6,8 , 10, 13,15; Monty Python 's Flying
Circus 20; Black Journal 33.
11 : 3()-J ohnny Carson 3,4 , 15; Str..,ts of San Fran(lsco
6.13; Kojak 8; Mary .Hartman 10; ABC New s 33 .
12 :0&lt;&gt;-Movle " Evel Knlevel" 10; Janak l 33.
12 : 4()-Toma 6, 13 .

~--

I doll)
2dtt)'~

3 W!.)'b
6 dli)'S

15 Word!! or Und~r·
Ctc.h
1.00
1.50
1.80
J.OO

Cl~»r~~

I Z5
1.90

'l ~
J iS

E~n: h w onll.llll:'l the mmm•wn 15
W()rtls IS .f l'CIIU pt'l" wvni I)Cf li~£)' ,
Atb nuuun~ ollk'r U~an t'UIIS&lt;.'t'Ull\'e
daiys will bt' ch.au'l(e&lt;l &lt;Jt lht&gt; 1 dt~y

nite.
lu memory, Qml or Thank:i 1:11Kl
Ol.utua ry 6 nmts ptl' worU, $3.00
nwruuwn C.11sh mikl\'lillt'e
MoOll~ H{)mt' Sit let! • nd Yttrd sa.les
art' II.Ct't!plt'tl un!y wit h t:lish wllh
urder·. 25 c~:ul chllt)te fur ii(.hi ~:arry·
Ul~ Box Numtw•· In Cam• of The St!n·

tine!.

·

Tilt' Publtsllt'r rt'iiei'Yt!!i the rlghl
to

1

00..1 or n.•Jed bllY HWi d~ult'd 00.

During tt-.e illnen and deeth of
Moggie Smith, we wish to
thank our friends ond relative'
who sent cords and floo..vers ,
The Ewing Chapel, Or. Talle,
nurses o t Veterans Hosp ital
especially Sue Tillis. LPN , Rev.
P•rrln and AmOs Tillis . We also
wish ta thonlo: the ne•gnbors ot
Mulberry Ave and as~ciolty
OQn na and Ric h Jones l-Iar best
of friend Jol-In Elch. We can't
thank you enougn tor vour
kindness during tl\e ill ness and
deo th of our dear mother . Your
kindness wdl never be forgot.
ten. Moy Gods IOo.te shine upon
thee always .
Childre n, Sylvia Corman , Dale
Smith, Don Smit h, Guy
Smith and Georgie Scroggs

111\!fl!

WITH o4 daughters need a
3 or 4 bedroom home. Must be
nice . pnone 992·629-t

than unl' Ull' Ul'•

rcl't mserlrun

Phont' 992-2156

NOTICE

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
Munday

Noon on Saturday
TucsdHy
thr·u F'nda)'

4P.M.
the U1:1y lief ore pullhc&lt;~ l l!,oll

Sunda y
4PM ,
F•·id!ly 11ftemuon

A REWARD jn the amount of
$2 .000 is herby offered to any
person or person, who provides information which leads
to the detection. apprehension ,
and conviction of the penon or
persons. responsible for the
murder of Wesley Dole Musser .
Any Information pertaining to
some should be given to the
Meigs County Sheriff's Deport.
mentby calling 992-3371 . Sign·
ed , Frances Musser.
PIANO LESSONS , childrens ond
adults . Mrs . Harvey Von
Vronken , 992-2270.
WILL CARE tor elderly women In
our home. Phone 992-7314 .
ANY STRAY dogs runn ing loose
on my property will be snot.
Gene and Jerry Coleman , New
Lima ROad , Rutland.

...
..
'

.

..

.,.

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'

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus. Oh lo
Aprll22. 1977
Contract Sales Legal
.. Copy No. 77-532
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Sealed proposals will be
received at the office of the
Director
of
1he
Ohio
Department
of
Trans portBtlon , Columbus , Ohio,
until
10 : 00 A. .M , Ohio
SUnderd Time, Tuesday,
May 17 , 1977, to·r ini provem ents In :
Athens , Galllit , Meigs,
Mon.roe and wasb.lngton
Counties, Oh io, on Various
Sections of U.S . Route 50 and
State Route 7 and the village
of coolville In Athens County ;
U .S . Route :1.5 in Gallia
County ; u.s. Route 33 and
Slate Route 7 In Me igs
County ; State Route 7 and 78
and the village of Clarington
In Monroe count~ ; u .s.
Route SO and State Routes 618
and 339 In wash i ngton
C:ounty, by painting ex isting
guard red I.
"The date set ror com pletion of th iS work shall be
as set forth In the b ldd lng
proposBI."
Each b idder shall be
ret~ulred to file with his bid a
certified check or cashier'!
check tor an amount equal to
five per cent of his bid, but In
no event more than fifty
thousand dollars , or a bond
tor ten per cent of his bid,
payable to the Director .
Bidders must apply, on the
proper
forms,
for
qualificat ion at least ten days
prior to the date set for
opening bids In accordence
with Chl!llpter 5525 Oh iO
Revised Code .
Plans and spec ifications
are on file In the Department
of Transportation and the
office of the District Oeputv
Director.
The Director reserves the
right to relect any and all
bids .
DAVID L. WEIR
D IRECTOR

•
"'

..

•• &lt;

New York ace
signed by OSU
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) ~
Ken Page, one of the top high
school basketball players in
the New York city area, has
signed a national letter-of·
intent to attend ·Ohio State
University, it was aMounced

today.
,J '

.'

CASH paid for oil mokes and
models of mobi le homes.
Phone or eo code 61,. ·-423-9531 .
TIMBER , Pomeroy fO rttst Pro.
duels Top price for sta nding
sawtimber . Cal l Ke nt . Hanby,
1-4-46-8570 ,
.
COI NS , CURRENCY , tokens , old
pocket watches and ci'lai ns.
si lver and go ld. We need 196-4
and older silver coins . Buy , sell
or trade' Ca ll Roger Wamsley .
742·2331
CASH I ! I for junk cars . Frye's
Truck ond Auto. WRECKER SERVICE! Phone 742·2061.
OlD FURNITURE , ice baKes . b rass
beds , etc ..
complete
hOusei'lolds Wnte M . 0 . Miller ,
Rt, 4 , Pomeroy , Ohio or call
9'12·7760.
WANTED · CHIPWOOD poleo .
Mo~ . diameter, 10 inches on
largest end, sa per ton ; bundl·
ed slobs, $6 per ton . Oaliv'ered
to Ohio Polle t Company , Rl. 2
Pomeroy , Ohi Q.
Phone
9'12·2689 .
Standing timber. Phone 667·6214 .
GOOD USED baby stroller. Phone
q49·2265 .

CARRIERS WANTED
FOR MASON
AREA DAILY
SENTINEL

Page, a 6-1, 180 pound
forward, averaged 30 points
and 18 rebounds a game for
McKee Vocational High
School in Staten Island, N .Y .
The. signing of Page leaves
OSU coach Eldon Miller with WACK EN HUT t\JRP . It now oc·
one more grant In aid and it . copllng oppllcollon• lor full
apparently wl1l await the
limo ond porltlmo ..curlty
decision of 8·11 Herbie
poslllont. military background
WIDI•w of Marlon Franklin,
proforrod but not roqulrod. No
phone calls please. Apply In
Ohio higllschool.
.,.,.an ot Appolochlon Power
Proioi&lt;l 1301 . Now Hovon.
·M iller alraady bad signed
Carter Scott of Barberton, W.Vo. w• oro on Equal Op·
Todd Penn of Columbus
porlunlty Employor.
Unci en McKinley, M • ..,uJa FRIENDLY HOME Toy Port 1M has
,...."'~
Openings for monoget'1 ond
Miller of Columbus St .
doolo" In your aroo , Toy party
Chari• and Jim Smith of
plan oxperlonco helplul. Car
Cleveland Eut Tech, four of
ond tolophono nocouory. Coli
IIIOit IOU~-after bJsh
collocl to Coral Day (518)
e-•
..e9·8395 or write Friendly
I cagen the Buckeye
Homo 1'\ortlos. 20 Roll Rood
State.
Avo .. Albany . N. Y. t2205.

Contact 675-1333
1-614-992-2156

;"

''••
'.
,,
,,''
''''

'·
'•

,.'·'
'

I'

I;w

Business Services

Galn re.cogni1ion and prestlege through a career in
consumer f1nance . Consumer finance is an integral and
important force In our country ' s etonomlc security.
The consumer tlnance business is s teady - even
dur ing recessions.
:
You c~n win promotion rapid ly. You will be paid 1
good startmg sa la ry and receive e~eceptional employee
benellts.
There are Branch Representative positions open
now for high school grad uates. Must have auto.
Phone Mr . Snodgrass loda y for a confidential
personal Interview . Call 992-2111.
'

CAPITAL FINANCE SERVICES
300 West Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

J AND 4 RM . furn is hed a nd un·
fur nis hed · opts . Phone 992·
5434 .

COU NTRY Mobile Mome Pork , Rt.
33 , ten miles north of Pomeroy.
Lorge lots w1th concrete poti'os .
sidewalks , runners and off
street parking. Phone 992-7479.
ORCHID ROOM for rent for an niVersaries , wedd ing recep tions . brida l showers .or private
meet1ng room . Phone 992-3975
or 992-2571 .
TRAILER SPACE for ,...nt located
south of Midd leport on Rt. 7
a lo ng the river . Sewer ond
electric hooked up, $40 per
month . Call 992· 2561 afternoon
~r evenings

RESPONSIBLE
PERSON
Wanted

to

own

and

operated candy &amp; con fecTion vending route .
Pomeroy and surrounding
aru. Pleannt business .
High profit Items. Can start
part time . Age or ex ·
perience not important .
fhqUi,.es car and S1495 to
14995 nsh investment. For
details write and include
vour ptlane number :
Eagle Industries
J931Meadowbrook Rd .
Minneapolis, Minn . SS4 26

FURNISHED APT. Adults only , no
pets. Phone 992-3874 , Middle port.

FOR SALE or trade, Reg . Polled
Hereford bul, , Phone 8-43·3193.

1973 TRAILER 14 x 70 unfurnisi'led.
Call 992-6688 , 9 hll 5 or
985-3501 otter 6 p. m., or con.
tact Ton-yo Oo11is .

.

-~

-.~·-

NEED A WATER

m .sqn.

1973 VEGA, toke over payments.
1968 Dodge. $450 . Phone
'1'12·7332
I

Let Pomeroy "Landmtrlc
soften &amp; condition your
· water and a Co-op water
.softener, Model UC.XVI.

1967 NOVA. $300. 1967 Mercury . ·Now Onty ·'279,95
$300. Botn In good condition.
See at 2-47C Mulberry.
Let us test yo~r -waf~r
Pomeroy.
~:ree .
1968 International 5-2 Tractor ·
truck wit~ sleeper and 14 ft. log
bod. A·l condition. $3000.
W. Carsey, Mgr
Phono: (614) 592-2605 after 9
·
Phone PP2· 2181
p.m. e~ecept Saturday evenings .

· Pomeroy Landmark
~Jack

1-42 in. cast iron kikhensink 1
bosln and 1 drain board, ~ng
on wall type, whit•, 1·3 burner
gas, hot plate. phon•992·571 .. .

LOOKING FOR travel trall•r.
truck comper, camping trail•r, ECONOMY TRACTOR wllh oil atmlnlhome, truck cop? Travel
tachments. Like new, asking
trailer to rent? CODNER"S
$2250. Phone (6i4) 698.3290
CAMPERS on RainbOw Ridge .
open evenings . Take Meigs 28 FOR MEMORIAL DAY: Beoulllul
selection of flOwers . Baskets ,
Or 32 to Boshon. Robert
sprays. wreaths, vases. Foy's
COdner, Long Bottom, Owner.
Navelty Shop. N. Second St ..
CODNER"S CAMPERS on Roln. ~ddleport.
bO&gt;.Nrldge: Sales, Rental , Ser·
vice ,
Supplies ;
trollers , HOMEGROWN Tomato plants lm·
prev.d Me~ lean early Violent,
camperS., capt, alum. awnings
golden Jubil,.-s. Also, golden
and porchH by Durobllt. Open
Acre cabbage. Across from the
evenings . M•IIIJ 28 or 32 to
swimming pool.
Thomas
Bas han. Ownerl'obert Codner,
Hayman. Syracuse, Ohio,
Long Bottom.
·
·-~·

----

-~~

·-

COAL. limestone , and cal ci um
chloride a nd co lci vm brine tor
dust control ond s pecial miKing
salt for formers , Excelsior Salt
Works , Main Street. Pomeroy ,
Ohio or phone m_. 3891 .
APPLES. FITZPATRICK ORCHARD .
STATE ROUTE 689. PHONE
WILKESVILLE . .(614) 669·3785.
CAMPER . $600. Also, horse
trai ler. $450. Phone (614) 6qa.
3290.
b
STEREO, NEW AM -FM stereo
radio combination . $129.95 or
easv terms . Coli ~2 - 3965 .
1973 JEEP CJ5, good condition
Plus e~et ros , $2900. Bunker Hill
Rd . across from ceme tery .

APPAlOOSA
REGISTERED
Gelding , good conformation,
flashy , needs e xpertenced
If YOU have a service to offer , . RISING STAR Kennel Boarding,
rider . pnone 992-7735 .
Indoor-Outdoor runs , grooming
want to buy or sell aomtt thing ,
oe looking for work . . . or
all breeds , cl&amp;an 5-anitafy 1973 750 KAWASAKI, asking
whatever , .. you 'll get results
facilities . Cheshire. Phone (614)
$1 ,000. Phone 992·7548, 116
foster with a Sentinel Wont Ad .
Vole St., Pomeroy .
367·0292 .
Coll9'12·2i56.
HOOF HOLLOW. Buy , sell , trade GOOD RICH Top sod , Charles R.
HAVING PORCH sOle . Wed• ..
or tram horses . RUTH REEVES.
Hatfield Backhoe Servic~t .
Thurs. , Friday and Saturday
trainer. Phone (614) 698-3290.
Phone 742-2008 .
plus all ne x t week . 707 Oliver
ALL
BREED
Dog grooming , 1975 HONDA 750 , many extras .
Street , Middleport , Ohio.
reasonable rates. Call for ap On ly 3500 miles . Also, 1973
45760.
pointment, J &amp; 0 Kennels ,
Bu1ck Century, 4 dr. air, Both in
2 FAMILY Yard Sole. May 11 . 9 1111
742·3162.
e~ecellent
cond1 fion . Call
4. 1ustic Hills, Syracuse.
992·5516.
AKC SHETLAND sheep dogo .
3 fAMILY VARD Sale by the State
(Min.) Collies , 2 females , 7 1975 FORO 3000 tra ctor Model
Highway Garage, Rt . 7 Chester.
weeks old . Shots and wormed .
KA-114 -C in excellent condiMa'J 12, and 13. Whole sets of
tion . Used about 2 hours . for
Phone (614) 367 ·0292.
dishes; linens , screen doors,
more
information ,
co li
some furniture , [ewelry and
9'12·2878 .
uniforms . Misc.
1973 KAWASAKI 250. 2600 miles ,
5 FAMILY Yard Sole, lurn of 1975 JEEP CHEROKEE . p.b .. ps .
excellent condition , $500. 8 ft.
Memory Gardens , 3'/, miles on
long tapper, luggage rock on
Quocfratrack . Good tires .
Co. Rd , 32 . Coates residence .
tap, cabinets inside. $300.
Phone(304) 877-2340.
Monday and Tuesday , Mo'y 9
Phone 985·3880.
and 10. Cancelled In case of 1973 CHEVY NOVA V-8, air, nice
cor . $1795. Phone Harold TOMATO PLANTS : Seven dif·
rain .
ferent varieties , transplanted
Brewer, Long Bottom , Ohio,
50&lt;: dozen . Phone 992-2954
(614) 985·3554 after 6 p.m.
Ou•senberry , Syracuse , Oh1o.
1976 CHEVY 3 quarter ton , 4
wneel drive , automatic , 350 GOING OUT OF BUSINESS:
As,s orted variety of occasional
engine, only, 7,500 mi les. Also,
LOST MALE DARK red Irish Setter
to~les . Wood shelving with
in tl\e Five Pomts area . last
F~rewood
for sole. Call
plosf•c surface 10 in . wide by B
seen Wednesday.~ April 20th.
9'12·5947 .
ft. long $2 .00 eo . piece , also 8
Answers to the' name of ZACK .
1975 JEEP Cherokee, p.s., p.b.
in. wide by 6 ft . long , $1.75
Reword. Phone 992-6072.
air, 4 wheel dr ive. Pnone
each piece. Formica surface
LIST IN Middleport, one-year-old
742·2590.
shelving 1010. x 12 ft . x 5-8 in.
female toy collie. AnSwers to
$5 .00 each piece, 10 in. x 8 ft.
1970
FORO
VAN.
new
paint,
the nome of Chico, Phone
$4 .00 each piece. Flokeboard 4
radial tires. Also , 1972 Ford
9'12·5301.
fl . x 8 ft . K 1/ 1 in . $3.20 each
Torino. Phone 742-2746 .
sheet.
Hardboard ; Formica
lOST - MALE English Setter, block
Sheets . Assorted furnHure
oncf wi'lite in area of Wolf Pen 1976 CHEVROLET Chevette. phone
'1'12·7274 .
hardware : pulls , cabinet
Road , reword . phone 992-7678
hinges , etc. Screws , bolts and
or'l'/2.3 132.
1974 Grand P r i~e , auto. pOwer
nuts, $1.00 per pound . Permit
steering and power brakes ,
343 . MASON FURNITURE COM·
factory air , AM AND FM , tilt
PANY (TNT AREA) Polnl Pleo·
wheel , P.W., green witM white
sont, W.Va .
half top, 31 ,000 miles, $3700.00
APPLIANCE SERVICE man. ex·
firm . 992~3535 till 6 p. m., USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT.
perienced . No pi-lone calls .
985-3519 after 6 p.m.
Franklin Model 1308 Skidd~r.
Gollio Refrigeration Co., 611
Timberjock
208GS Skidder;
i975 CUSTOMIZED Ford Von .
Third Ave. , Gallipolis , Ohio ,
Prentice G -BC loader with by·
Completely carpeted with T v ,
pas~ grapple. Contact De nnis
OLDER RESPONSIBLE lady lo live
refrigerator , ond tape deck .
Smurr, pi-lone (61A) 838·5345.
in and care for aged w idow in
351 outomoti,, $6000. Phone
Rutland, Ohio. Not invalid nor
9'12·5183.
NEW HOLLAND hoy baler and
senile. Light ~ousework and
groin drill. Phone 992-708-1 .
1969
CHEVROlET
4
dr
.
good
work
cooking. No laundry. Call
car.
Phone
992·3141,
Zuspan
REGISTERED MORGAN gelding .
742·2018 for information. .
HollOw Rood , Jim Province.
very nice riding hor se . Phone
NEEDED an Operator. Contact
9'12·6072.
1973
CHEVROLET
IMPALA
4
doo,.
Janet's
Hair-Go - Round
low mileage One owner, $1299. 19000 BTU FEDDERS air condi ·
Mason .W.Va . (304) 773·5-40&lt;. ·
Phone 9'12.7530.
tionar, 1 1/2yrs . old , $200. Phone
NEED FEMALE to live in with
992·6165ofter5p
m.
elderlv lody and do cooking in TO WHOM IT may concern ; Notice
is
hereby
given
that
on
May
18,
400 FARMAll tractor , 300 Internaexchange for free room .
1977, 10 a .m. a public sale will
tional utility tractor. inferno·
Transportation
preferred :
be held at Citizens Notional
tional 3 pt, hayroke, 6ft. Interreferences required . Coli
Bonk , Middleport, OH to sell
national disc . International No.
9'12· 7311.
for cosh the following collateral
37 hay baler. lnterhotionol
LOOKING FOR some "Do-lt2 wit, 1- 1971 Chevrolet Impala
mowing mocntne, Internationa l
Yourself" Job security in these
-4 dr. sedon , Serial No.
brushhog. 10ft. Transport disc.
uncertain timeS? Unusual op164691 -D-201166. Citizens No·
P!lone 949·2680.
portunity for good earntngs,
tiona! Bank , Middleport, OH ,
port-time or full-time . For tnterreserves the right to bid at this TRAILER FOR sole . 10 x 55
Ponderosa , 2 b&amp;droom , manv
vlew . Phone (614) 742·2383.
sole .
extras. $2500. CB 350 Hondo
GUARANTEED JOB Training- 1974
OLDSMOBILE
Cutlou
$300. phone 9'12·7008.
Location . $374 . ~0 . single ;
Supreme, air, p.s.. disc .
$502 .80 married. Coli Army '
brakes, rally wheelS , e~ecellent BEEF CATTLE, complete herd for
one price . Phone (614)
Recruiting. \6U) 593·3022 or
condition,
$3500.
Pho ne
667·3668.
385·6318 (col oct) .
9'12 ·2'187 .
1972 PLY . GOLD Duster, 6 cyl.3
speed, good condition. $1200.
1966 Chevelle S.S. , needs
motor and transmission , $125.
SOFTENER"'
Body , good shope. Coli

or

I '

-------

ACAREER JOB IN
CONSUMER FINANCE

~OUPLE

Jt\:twnal Thf PuiJhshcr ~ •ll not ~

H.'S!XHISible for

Will do odd jobs, roofing , point,ng , gutter work . Phone 9927409.
SEWING · AL TERATIONS :
Upholsteri ·ng ,
drapes
reosonobl•, 572 South Third
Ave ., Middleport . Pi-lone
'1'12·6306 .
PIANO TUNING . Lane Ooniels, 1:2
years of service. Phone
9'12-2062 .
ROOFS ANO-:h-ou
,epo-1ot-ln-g~
. F;;e
estimates . Coii992 ·54B2.

FOR SALE
New Co-Op water sol·
teners, model VC-SVI.
Only S279.95
Save uo.oo an 1 new
Hotpoint Refrigerator .
1 ~ew 20 cubic ft.
Chest Freezer
SJJ9 . 9S
Now in SJOCK, comp1ere un~
of bulk garden seeds and
'?"ion sets.
1 good McCullough Chain
Saw
S6S
1 Goo~ Used Poulan Chain
_s,aw
S50
Surv1vor Safes only $29 . 95
Onion Sets 3 lbs .
SJ.OO

Pomeroy Landmark

GUTTER SERVICE
Continuous

ont

builders.

1973 JEEP CJ5, go~ condition
Plus e~etras. $2900. Bunker Hili
Rood acrOss I rom ceme tery .
TOMATO .

PLANTS .

Cabbage.
broccoli~er , brussel
sprouts, 8gg plo~ hanging
baskets, pots , geran iums
begonias 1 flats, petu nios :
marigolds , pansies , sab:io ,
balsam , dianthus , snap dragons , alyssum. Vinco , coleus , Cleland's Greenhouse
Racine . Geraldine Cleland.
'

HOUSE FOR SALE by owners. 4
rooms and both, panneled , living room and carpeted . vydl
sell for $6500. Call 992-6250
after 5 p. m. lO Lynn Sl., Middleport.
.
6 ROOM and bott1 , 7 yrs. old , full
bo5ement, 3 acres ground m
Che! ter. Pt1one 985-3950.
FOR SALE - NEW oil alec. home in
Syracuse , large lot, aluminum
siding , 3 bedrooms , kitchen ,
di ning a rea , fully corpeted
bath. utilifv room , 90rage.
Phone992-7.tl9.
BEAUTIFUL TWO &amp;tory home w•th
two cor garage , 5 bedrooms ,
d ining room. Iorge living room
modern kitchen , 2 V, baths :
Iorge recreation room , fullr, air
rom
conditioned, v, mile
school . One quarter mde off
Stole ROute , 30 'tear financing
available . Call 992-3863 between 9 o. m. and 3 p.m.
HOME tN Pomeroy, 2 s tory , central heating, soma carpeting
and ponnelling. Boll\ &amp; Y,.
Phone W2-7074. or 992 -3465.
56 ACRE Form , housti remodeled ,
plenty of Outbuildings , cattle
and equipment included. Phone
2,.7-22"1 for oppoi!"tment
anyt1me.
HOUSE FOR sole 1n Syracuse, 2
bedrooms , and ba th , lot 100 x
150. Garage, cemant drive. and
small storage bldg. Furnished
or unfurnished . Call 992-7U7.
13 ACRES, 3 bedrOom , all utilities,
Rt. 124 Cook's Gop Hill. Phone
992·5626 offer 5:30p.m.
LOT 150 x 200 in Syracuse. Phone
'1'12·3714 .
llt&lt;E NEW Shultz Mobile Home' on
. 2 Vt acres. level land, concrete
porci-1, 8 x 35 with owning ,
ostro-turf cevered , 20 x 38
block garage , cellar witl-1 utility
room overhead. Stlade ond
fruit trees in Langsvi lle. Phone
742·2'165.
HOUSE FOR Sale, 2 story, 6 room ,
bath, bos•ment, carport, large
lot on College Rood, Syracuse,
Ohio. Phone 9'12·7203 .
HOUSE WITH 5 lois. 279 Broad·
way. Phon• 992-5585.
HOUSE IN Tuppers Plains , 2
bedrooms, el~ . heat, double
garage, 2 lot,, pl\oneo (614}
667·3065 ., 667·3360.
'c-----

13 A. and 197A Mobil• home , one

CAPTAIN EASY
WHAT DID 'IOU MEA~
Af&gt;OUT "6ETTI'-le't
PARA'-! OlD" "!

Installation, samples
brought to your home
with no charge.

Phone 949-2814
9 a.m . to 5 p.m .
4·28· 1 mo.

THAT

AN ODD

COI~CIDENCE~

o.

2-23· 1 mo.

PROFESSIONAL

DUGAN'S

PHOTOGRAPHY

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

Ae~al

Commercial
Schools
Weddings

Alignment,
wheel
balancing,
tune-up.
brake work, minor
repair.
Behind Rutland Grade
School. Evening work by
appointment. Ph . 742·2005.
5·6· 1 mo. pd .

KEN GROVER

si d i " g ,

s t a r 11)·.
W i n d o w s
:&amp;;
Insulation.
Call Professionals

DIVWio

Insulation Senices
FinandnJ Anilabte
Blown iniOWIHI.I AHles

STOitlf
wnmows 1 11001s
WINDOWS

I ACTEHn
II_

SIOiltG-SOfflTT

GUTTEIIUII!IlNGS

m•

HOMESITES for sole, 1 acre and
up Middleport, near Rutland.
Coll'1'12·7481.
NEW J bed room house , 2 baths ,
, al l ·alec., 1 atre, Middleport ,
dose to Rutland. Phone 992·
7481 .

~RLEY

Free Estimates
No Sunday Calls Please
4·24·1 mo.

.Shirley's Beauty
John St.

0.

JUST LISTED 1 floor
plan. 3 bedrooms. bath.
nat. gas heat, ca rpeting.
L·evel lot 60 x 120.
$18,000.00.
JUST LISTED ~ Ex·
cellent fishing collage - .;;,
River .. 2 bedrooms, large
llvlng and kitchen, very
low upkeep. Buy thls and
get away from It all . Only
$4,200.00.
JUST LISTED- LOVELY
~ LOVELY frame and
brick .. 3 bedrooms, w,.
baths, formal
dining,
carpeting, lull basement
with large rec . rQom,
~arage, 1 level acre close
n . $37,000.00.
CORNER LOT- 2'12 story
frame with carport. 2
fireplaces , s bedrooms.
formal dining, bath, foyer,
garage, ln Middleport .
Look just $8, 500.00.
'

SMALL form far sole 10% down
owner financed . Monroe Cou n:
ty . W. Vo. Phone (304) 7723102 or (304) 772·3TI7.
COUNTRY lormland with seclud ed woods , wafer and good access in Monroe COunty, W. Va.
$1 .000 dawn. cofl (304) 772·
3102 or (304) 772·3227.

DRIVE·IN ~ All equip·
ment necessary for the
business , ample parking,
or can be made into a
home. This really Is a
wonderful buy at S)O,OQO.
NEW LISTING - · Nice 3
bedroom
home
with
natural gas, F .A. furnace,
city water and carpeting .
Insulated . For only $t8,000.
NEW LfSTING ~Good old
8 room frame home on a
corner lot. 3 bedrooms with
closets, T . P . water and
natural gas, F.A. lurnace.
A good buy at S14,000.

Commercial property approx. 17
acres, level land, located of
Tuppers Plains an Ohio, Rovte
7. Phono (614) 667·6304.
NEW 3 bedroom house, built-in
kitchen, bath and '11, Phone
742-2306 or contact MilO B. Hutchison, Rutiond , Ohio,
VA-FHA, 30 yr . financing . Ireland
Mortgage, 77 E. Stat•. At"-ns,
phone(614) 592·3051.
REDUCED $2000. 3 bedroom 2'1,
baths , double gor~ge ,
fireplace, air conditioning, 1
acre lot, Phone992·2rrt92 .

rorm the surprise answer, as suggosl~ by lhe above cartoon.

HIM BE FORE &gt;

E

Answer:[I]THE(

~••,.,.Q"'
by, THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
3 Play the
I F leet items
market
&gt;Compelied
dangerously
to go
4 Ship timber
10 Symbol or ful
curve

BORN LOSER

cOOL. I..'{ I Al-l Ct-0 ()f; SOTO

1-\LJSCAPt
·;...:..--

11 Actress , ~

, \ - - - - --1

6

1'-=~

~

"~

.'

.•1_..,...__!:::::::::=::::::~---_j ~~ L...::==::::::~-.!:.:2----_..J
GASOLINE ALLEY

SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ser·
vice , oil makes , 992-2284 . The
Fabric Shop , Pomeroy .
Authorized 'Singer Soles and
Ser:vice . We sharpen Scissors .

tr•

r ,,.

u·--Now.

there's

He's vio\ati
ever4
code

EXCAVATING , dozer, loader and
backhoe work , dump trv cks
ond lo-ba.,.s fo r hire: will 1-laul
fill d irt, to soil, limestone and
gravel. Call. Bob or Roger Jeffers , cloy phone 992·7089
night phone 992·352S or
5232 .

small
prob \em
about

a

Miss

~'==="-

SEPTIC TANKS clecnecf. Modern
Sanitotiori, 992-3954.
LILABNER

u

,,

A CONSTITUENT
To SEE YOU,

MOBILE Home · Repair, Elec ..
plumbing a nd heating. Phone
9'12·5858.
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
covating , septic systems .
dozer, backhoe, dump truck
limestone. grovel , blocktoP
paving, Rt. U3. Phone ,1 (6U)
698·7331.

$5,000.00 ~ 5 bedroom
home on lllce corner lot In
Orange Township.

, BROWN'S FIRE and Safety htin.
quishers . All sizes , business,
home, boat. Refilled, test&amp;d ,
Bill BrOwn, Rutland , Ohio ,
Phone742-'Zrn.
GOOD HOMES FOR YOU .
TO SEE AT OUR OFFICE
EXCAVATING. BACKHO~ . dozer .
NEAR POST OFFICE .
' trencher, lOw Boy , dump truck
PICTURES AND FREE
trucks, septic systems. B•ll
PARKING.
Pullins , phone 992· 2478 day .,r
G. Bruce Teaford
night.
Helen l. Teaford
Associates

t

: ........... ··~ ' :
•

Shopping Hours

BRIDGE

Oswald and Jim ~acoby

body
25 Recent .
26 Mascuhne
27 Art (Lat.)
28 Bankroll
31 ~ -jongg

u

"A942
+A 7 6
.A 5

· ·• •
.. .

Mon., Tues., Wed.
8: 00til5:00
Thursday8ti1Noon

• a

' •

e
••

~.•.

: ..
: ~ FRIDAY Tit 5
•t •...
Close Sat. At 5 P.M.
• ••

J
•
.
•
: ·········r :
···········•··· ......... .•
~

•

•

: _ .RU'f~ND FURNITURj_
t 742-~211

ARNO(D GRATE

:

RU~D e '

,_.-:-

EAST

•H 2
"10 86
+J 93

... Q 10 8 3
SOUTH ID l
• A Q 10 6 4
¥ KQ7 5

5 ,-,..""&lt;='

t t'Q
"'K 4
Neither vu lnerable

Antilles
Indian
2 In the least
(2 wds.)

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Her~'s

,,
&lt;

Is

West

North East

Pass
L......L.-.1.-...J"':"o'\ Pass
Pass
Pass
how to work It:

3•
Pass
54
Pass
6 "'
Pass
PasS Pass

AXYDLBAAXR
I.ONGFEI.I.OW

Opening lead -

South
I •
4 N T.
5N . T.

6.

64

.
By Oswald &amp; James Ja coby
One letter simply stands for a nother. In th1s sample A II
us ed fo r lhe lhrcc L"s. X for the lwo o· s. etc. Si ngle letters. Oswald : " Th e sta ndard
apos tro ph es. the le n g lh ond formali? n o f I he words are ail safety play is one o f th e
hm t s. Ea ch doy I h e code ie llers are dtfle re nt.
s imples t . It is illustrated by
CRYPTOQUOTES

li&lt;NOW HE
CAN! WHAT

DO YOU BAY,
e&gt;iLLY ?

''

I

WELL 1 IF YOU TM)
HAVE: 50 MUCH CONFlDE NCE: IN M~ _.HOW

CANIRER/&amp;?

~·

-•"•.

today's hand.""
Jim : " South is interested in
s J v seven when he finds that hi S·
NVFGCOCH
pa rtner ho ld three aces. H e
F Q S V G
L F C A· c hecks for kings and when he
S G F XV
SJV
find s lha t th e opponents hold
KQ
SGOMIR
the kin g of trumps he abanICKT
S J V dons seven and settles for six.· ·
TV
S
J
0
C
I
B
R
KQ 1
Oswald · " Since he misses
S G F X V . - T 0 N N 0 F L
QV F SJV G
the king , jack and two other
Saturday's Cryptoquote: IF I AM WISE I SHALL BEGIN TO trumps he ts n ' L s ure of six , but
BUILD MY OWN TRUER AND BEITER WORLD FROM has a very good play for it . He
WITHIN . ~ H.W. DRESSER
isn' t going to bring the con·

C&gt; 1977 KJna Features Syndleate, Inc.

tract home if West holds king·

j~ck-smali or all four trumps

Jim : "He w ins Lhe club in
hi s own hand and lays down
the ace of s pades. If an honor
fails to fall he will go over to
dummy and lead the second
round of spades from there ."
Os wald : " This time lhe king
drops from West. Now South
goes over to dummy. finesses
a g a ins t East' s jack and makes
seven.' '
Jim : " If South ha d won the
(trst c lub in dummy, led a
trump and !messed his quee n
he might s till be t he re. worry·
ing about wha t to do next. "

~~~~
A Delaware reader wants to
know if w e bid one spade
With :

•A Qxxx •Kx+ xxxx 6Qx
We a re v ulnerable and our
right-hand opponent has open·
ed the bidding with one dia -

mond .
The a nswer is that we would
definitely overca ll a club or
h~art opening bid, but prefer a
pass over one diamond since
our four diamonds are really
worthless cards .

(For a copy ol JACOBY
MODERN. sand ST ro: "' Win
at Bridge ,·· c!o rhis
newspaper, P. 0 . Box 489.
Radio City Station. Naw York.
N. Y. 10019)

BARNEY

;

e
•

WEST

Reward
( poet.) .
DOWN
1 Lesser

in back of him. but there is a
safety play at his disposal to
bring the s iam .home against
any other trump com ·

bination .' '

. K
•J 3
t10 8542
• J 9 76 2

r - - - r - - : - - - - - - ----:-&lt;;".-- 40

LIKr:? A vrDr:&gt;6ATH o'
CLE'AN MCUNTAIN ~b
AIR To

9

NORTil
• 9 8 73

Function
Palm leaf
swellhead
Bavarian
river
37 Jimmy or
Tommy
38 Parched
..l::=..e ·,lo Architectural piers

HARRISON'S T.V. Repa~t . s•rvice
Calls. 276 Sycamore, St., Middleport Phone 992-2522.

BUILDING LOTS ~ 1'12
acres near Tuppers Plains
for SS.OOO. Several lots at
Five Points , $2,000.00 UP.

5:0&lt;&gt;-Big Valley 3: My Three Sons 4; Brady Bunch 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Emergency
One 13; Star Trek 15.
5:3()-Adam. 12 4; News 6; Family Affair 8; Elec . Co.
20.33 .
6:0&lt;&gt;-News 3,4,6,8.10,13, 15; Zoom 20; Fire &amp; Ice 33 .
6:3()-NBC News3.4.15; ABC News13; Andy Griffith 6 ;
CBS News 8.10; Ve~etable Soup 20.
7:1»-Truth or Cons. 3;- To Tell the. Truth 4; Liar' s Club
· 6; Country Canlval 8; News 10; To Tell the Truth
13; My Three Sons 15; Anyone for Tenny•on 201
American Issues Forum 33.
7·3()-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Let' s Deal With If 6;
Match Game PM 8; MacNeil · Lehrer Reporl 20.33;
In The Know 10; Wild Kingdom 13; TV Honor
Society 15.
·
B:ro-Movle "Jeremiah Johnson" 3,15; Happy Days
6,13 : Who's Who 8, 10; Redscene '77 4; American
Shoort Story 20.33 .
·
8:3()-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; Baseball 4.
9 :0&lt;&gt;-Rich Man, Poor Man 6,13 MAS· H 8,10; World of
Franklin &amp; Jefferson 33; Opening Soon at a Theater
Near You 20.
9 :3o-Qne Day at A Time 8,10; Best of Ernie Kovacs
20,33 .
I0 :6o-Pollce Story 3, 15; Pilot "The Cabot Connection"
8,10: News 201 The Way It Was 33.
10:3()-Black Perspective on .the News 20; Americana
33.
11 :ro-News 3,4.6.8,10.13, 15; MacNeil . Lehrer Report
33.
II :3()-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Movie "Journey Into
Fear" 6, 13; Movie "Scream ol the Wolf" 8; Mary
Hartman 10; ABC News 33.
•
12:0&lt;&gt;-Movle "A Fine Madness" 10; Janakl 33.

Dorothy Viking of
12 Risque
comics
13 Proceedings 6 Ending for
. Yesterday's Answer
14 Stevedore' s
ration
union
7 Familiar
21 African tree 28 Friction
IS Give ~ try
greeting
match
22 California
(2 wds. )
(4 wds.)
29
Irish county
l : ~Tomorrow 3,4.
city
16 ~ biimey!
8 Support
I :3()-News 13.
30
Otate
23
Beau
ideal
17 Weep
9 Nearest to .
3S"What ~
24 Chaplin
Monda y. May 9
19 Three (lt.)
one's heart
Boy?"
prop
~0 Grating
. 11 Coupled
(2 wds. )
21 Osculate
I&gt; Wading bird 26 Erroli
36
Doctrine;
Garner
22 Plant pest
18 French
theOrY
song
24 Celestial
cheese

32
33
room 34
psta·lrS 36

EXCAVATING. dozer . backhoe
ond dilcher. Charles R. Hat.
field , Back Hoe Service,
Rutland, Ohio , phone 742-2008 .

WILL do roofing, cons truction,
plumbing ond heoting. No job
too large or too small . Phone
742·2348 .
CARPENTER, flooring, ceiling,
paneling. Phone 992-2759.

· 5 uHorrible"

TUESDAY, MAY 10, 1f77
6 :0&lt;&gt;-Publlc Affairs 10.
6 : Is-Farm Report 13.
6 :20-Not for Women Onlv 13.
6 :3()-Focus on Columbus 4; Concerns &amp; Commeh!s 10.
6 :4s-Morning Reporl 3.6 :50-Good Morn ing , Wesf
VIrginia 13.
6 :5s-Good Morning, Trl State 13.
7:0&lt;&gt;-Today 3,4, 15; Good Morning America 6, 13; CBS
News B; Chuck Wh ite Reports 10.
7:os- Porky Pig 10.
1: 3().-School les 10.
8:0&lt;&gt;-Howdy Doody 6; Capt . Kangaroo 8.10; Sesame
St . 33 .
8 :3().-Big Valley 6.
9 :0&lt;&gt;-A .M. 3; Phil Donahue 4, 13,1 5; Andy Grlfll!h 8;
Mike Douglas 10;
.
9 :30--&lt;:ross-W ifs 3; Edge of Night 6; Concenlrallon B.
10 :0&lt;&gt;-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15; Dinah 6 ; Here's Lucy 8, tO;
Mike Douglas 13.
10:3()-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; Price Is Righi 8, 10.
11 :0&lt;&gt;-Wheel of Fortune 3. ~. 15; Happy Days 6, 13.
11 :3()-S hoot far the Stars 3.4. 15; Famlly Feud 6, 13;
Love of Life B.10i Sesame St. 20.
11 :55-CBS News 8; Ms. Flxlt 10.
12 ·0&lt;&gt;-News 3,4,6,10.13; Name That Tune 15; Divorce
Court B.
12:3D-&lt;:hlco &amp; the Man 3,15 ; Ryan's Hope 6.13 ; Bob ·
Braun 4; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10.
1:0&lt;&gt;-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6,13; News 8;
Young &amp; the Reslless 10; Nol For Women Only 15.
1:3()-Days ol Our Lives 3,4, 15; As The World Turns
8, 10.
2· 0&lt;&gt;-$20,1100 Pyramid 6.13.
2:3()-Doctors 3,4,1 5; One Life lo L ive 6 ,1 3; Guiding ·
Light 8,10.
3:0&lt;&gt;-Anather World 3,4,15; All In The Family 8,1 0;
Consumer Survl val Klt 20.
3: 1s-General Hospllal 6, 13 .
3 :3()-Mafch Game 8, 10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
4 :1»-Mister Cartoon 3; Lillie Rascals 4; Gong Show
15; New Mickey Mouse Club 6; Lucy Show 8;
Sesame St. 20,33; Movie " The Voyager" 10; Dinah
13.
4 : Is-Little Rascals 4.
4·3()-My Thr.., Sons 3; Partridge Family 4, 13,15;
Fllntstones 15.

Wallet's

m:

NEW
LISTING
4
bedroom frame home, 11h
baths , carpeting, elec .
baseboard heat, nice kitchen, family room and nice
back vard . $16,000.

I I I I XJD

Jumbles: DAILY ENJOY ABDUCT CLOVEN
Answer: What the sausage maker's wife saidI I'
BALONEY!

REMODELING. Plumbing, heatmg
and all types of general repair.
Work guaranteed 20 years ex penance pnane 992-2.t09.

NEW LISTING ~ Good
older home on qu let street
near schools. 3 bedrooms,
dining, large living room
with fireplace, carpeting In
all rooms, and yard for the
children . 2 car garage .
Only $17,500.

•
Convet~ient

.Now arrange the circled letters to

EVER SEE

Syra.cuse

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR ~
Sweepers , toasters, irons , all
small appliances . Lawn mower ,
next to Stale Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (614) 985 3825.

NEW LISTING ~ 1'12 acres
· with a 3 bedroom home just
outside of town, 6 rcioms.
bath, partial basement and
l car garage. $25,000.

•••

TRAMP ~ 'iOU

(Answers tomorrow)

BRADFORD , Auctioneer, Complete Service, pnone 949·2487
' or 949-2000. Racine, Ohio, Critt
Bradford .

Virgil B. Sr., Realtor
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 4S769
Phone "2·3325

WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
YOUR FARM ~ CALL
TODAY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
Hank-C.Ih-Leona Cleland
Associates
,2. 22SP ~ P85·~J I~
9'12-2568

WHO 15 THIS

AT MY AG E.
A FEW YEARS
OF

Nook'

4·1!1o·l mo.

TEAFORD

JUST LISTED ~ Lovely
home with Income, ex ce llent neighborhood, 3.4
bedrooms, living, dining, 2
baths. 2 car garge wlth 3
BR
apt.
over .
Just
$27,000.00.

WELL, I WAS A
liTTLE UPSET
WHEN YOU
CALLED NIE AT
Z:30 THIS
A . M.···

Formerly
lola's Beauty Salon
For appointment call
992-2549 Tuesday thru
Saturday 8:00a.m. to
5:00p.m. Open nights
by appointmE'r .

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

2-23·1 mo.

JUST LISTED - About 7
acres in Pomeroy, J A.
fenced. 2 A. In woods ,
balance in yard and gar.
den. 3 B R home with
dining , living, bath. C. B.
room . Ideal for kids .
$19,200.00 .

WHE!re CHA~nY
ALWAYS E5E61NS.

IJwner
Shirley (JeffeiS) WoKe

"The Originators
Not The Imitators"

JUST LISTED- Beautiful
and secluded, over 3 acres,
1112 story frame home, 3 or
4 bedrooms, fireplace ,
quipped kitchen, perma.
pane windows, trailer
hookup. Jusf $20,000.00.

HANING

4·13-1 mo. pd .

Young's Carpeting

MAIN
POMEROY, O.

K

.' LIITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

Phone 992-3339 .

Superior ,
Steam Extraction

Route 3, Pomeroy,

I I

NEW HOMES
&amp; REMODELING

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860

AlUIIlNUII

4-10-1

tour ord1nary words.

CARPENTER &amp;
BUILDERS

.

·

BISSEll SIDING CO.

RErl/oCEliiENI

LARRX..~~~~DER

Unscramble the'se four Jumbles,

one lett~r to each S(luare, to form

(614) PBS·4155
(thesler, Ohio
10-17· 1 mo!Pdl

p -,

Ph. 992·2174

~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
byHenriArnotdandBobLee

~ ~ ~~ ®

ARE 'IOU SURE "THII.'T WAS
DINN'I WE HEA~?

PHOTOGRAPHY

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC • .

'itlt\if.\..ft ID'il

ALLEYOOP

~V-in-y'-1-&amp;-. ..,.A-Iu-m-i'""n_u_m..:..., ··, r·, --.---..--:-----.

FREE ESTIMA
ES
w.=- -

Ph. 9!2·3993

HMM~ , .. NOW.ISN'T

Nobll Summit Rold
Rl. 1
Middleport,
91'2-S724
'Compfele
Sales
and
·Service and Supplies.

Carpet. Llno .• Tile
Phone Mike Young at
9'12-2206 or P92·7630

other mobile home site. Orlllfi:l HOUSE IN Minersville, S rooms
well, on 681 near Tuppers
ond both. Forced olr heat
Plaint( $10.900. Phone·· (61,.}
natural gas, 3 porches and
667·3668.
basement. Phone 992-5833.

-··

0.

Free Estimates

piece

guners. Wt hlng II, or do II
yourself. Specitf prices to

Jack W . Carsey, ·Mgr
Phone 992~2181
SPRING GARDEN Suppl1es , Cabbage, cauliflOwe r, broccoli
and heod lettuce plants :
yellow , white,• and red onion
sets , onion plants , Kennebec ,
cobbler , Katahdin , Red Pontiac
and ~Jed Losodo seed potatoes .
Bulk garden seeds , potting soil,
peat moss , fruit trees and rose
bushes. Midway Market ,
Pomeroy , Ohio, 992-2582 ,
Bob :s Market, Mason, W. Va .
(304) 773·5721.

Young's Carpeting
Route 3, Pomeroy,

1:&lt;»-Tomorrow 3,A .
1:50-News 13.

MONOAY , MAYt, 1977

.• •
••
"

.....

9

TAKE ONE

UH ·· I THINK WE·UNS
I'VE 11EARD OF MIXED
DOUBLES, BUT THIS
15 RIDICULOUS!

I ONLV GOT
THREE: CENT,
SILAS·· CAN I

LEETLE NIBBLE--

CAN WORK SOMETHIN'
OUT,

RIGHT TO THRR

BUY ME A

'NANNER.~~w;~

FER

THAT?

--

..
..
•-

5·9
.j

l

�II}-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Monday, May 9, 1977
BABY DELIVERED
RACINE - The Racine
Emergency Squad delivered
VeteransMemorlal
Thomas Lipscomb, Mrs.
a baby to Mrs. Don Goode
Sa turday Admissions
Jeffrey Merry and daughter ,
Long Bottom early Sunday
Moore,
Cora
morning. At 5:30a.m. Sunday Charles Ellis, Pomeroy ; Esther
Mrs. Goode was taken to the Robert Manley, Middleport ; Morgan, Pamela Perkins,
emergency station . After the Harold Carson, Middleport . Luther Pittenger, Althea
Saturda y Discharges - Ridenour, Jeffrey Riley ,
arrival of the baby the squad
stopped
by
Veterans Terre Wood, Bruce Gheen, Norman Rose, Otchel Salyer,
Gheen. Lucille Velva Sloan, Lucretia Smith,
Memorial Hospital where Dy. Bryan
John Ridgway cheeked the Gilmore, Daniel Thomas, Carol Thom~on, Eric Vest,
new arrival and the mother. Rita McDaniel, Ca rri e Steven Wandling.
1Birtbs,May61
The mother and her baby Judson, Roscoe Hollon , (
Marvin &gt;Mr. and Mrs . John
were then taken on to Kermit Kilk ey
'
Williams, son, Syracuse; Mr.
Pleasant Valley Hospital by Darst.
Sunday Admissions _ and Mrs. Donald Hartley,
the squad.
Ca rrie neutzling, Pomeroy, son, Wellstoni Mr. and Mrs.
Constance Craig , Pomeroy. George Blanks, daughter,
CALL ANSWERED
Sunday Discharges _ Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.
The Pomeroy Emergency Clara Lavendar, Denzil Robert Priest, son, ,Jackson.
Squad answered a call to Boggess, Alma Frazier,
(Discharges, May 71
State St. at 4:57a.m. Sunday Lo well McNickle, Sharon
Maggie Barr, Henry
for Pauline Bing who was Ferrell, Blanch Gibbs.
Bluebaum,
Esther Brandeberry, Joellen Brown,
taken to Holzer Medica l
. William Buchanan, Birdie
Center.
Holzer Medical Center
Caplinger, Kindra De Lille,
(Discharges, May 6)
CALLED TWICE
John Adams, Earl Barney, Elijah Estep, Sr. , Crystal
'
The
Middl eport
Deborah Boatright, Alvin Harmon , George Keirn,
Emergency Squad answered Cordle, Amber Dayis, John Randall Kent, Janet Lam-.
two weekend ca lls, at 6:06 Davis, Mrs. James Gillen- bert, Steve Martin, Terry
Sunday to North Second Ave, water and son, Fred Hart- Oliver, Sr., Mrs. Charles
for Kathy Chadwell who was well, Golda Helm, James Rece and daughter, Jeffrey
taken to Pleasant Valley Jarrell, Pauline Johnson, Sigmon, Jessica Silvers, John
Hospital, and at I : 18 Monday Kathryn Jones, Justin Sievers, Saundra Tillis, Hilda
to the Lewis Smith residence Kearns, Mrs. Kenneth Williams, Evelyn Winter.
(Births, May 7)
Route 7-143 for William Kersey and daughter, Esther
Mr.
and
Mrs. David EdGrueser, who was taken to Kissel, Alice Lambert,
monds,
son,
Rutland; Mr.
Holzer Medical Center.
Charles Lester, Kerrie Lewis,
and .Mrs. William Foster,
daughter, Jackson ; Mr. and
Mrs. Dwight Bowling, son,
Wellston ; Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Bowling, daughter;
Jackson ; Mr. and Mrs. Fred
M•thcws, daughter, Coalton;
Mr. and Mrs. Dobby Robie,
daughter, BidwelL
(Discharges, May 81
James Amos, Uoyd Baker,
Carol Bush, Margaret
Camden, James Dishong,
Sarah Halley, Mrs. James
Harless and daughter, Mrs.
James Hill and son, Marilee
La they, Janet Morris, Anthony Taylor.
(Births, MayS)
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Lee,
daughter, Rutland; Mr. and
·Mrs. John Barry, son,
Thurman; Mr. and Mrs. Glen
McDaniel, daughter, Ashville.

HOSPITAL NEWS

'

FAMILY DINING

AT ITS BEST

THE INN PLACE

12 dead,
8 missing

Young's murder trial moved

AMSTERDAM , The
Netherlands IUPI) - Fire
roared through the Hotel
•
Polen at dawn today, killing
at least a dozen persons and
possibly trapping others
under flaming rubble when
the building collapsed, police .
said.
'
\
" At least 12 hotel guests
have died. Their remains are
I
t
'
in various hospitals," Chief
I
. Police Inspector Jan Veenstra said shortly after noon (6
a.m. EDT) .
"It is not out of the
_question" there were also
VOLLEYBALl, TEAM - Southern High Volleyball
bodies burned under the · team was honored, 1-r, Pam Brauer, Loretta Holsinger,
debris, he said.
Carla Teaford, Shelly Ward, Brenda Lawrence, Jean
Police and ambulance
sources said eight · persons,

j

\

;

missing.

LIGIITNING HIT
CHESTER- The Chester Fire
Department answered a call
to the Moon residence on the
New Hope Road in Chester
Township at 5:30 a.m.
Saturday. Lightning had
come in on the electrical
system. However, no fire
developed.
GRANDSON INJURED
Mildred · Tubbs, Pomeroy,
received word from her son
Bill, Phoenix, Ariz., that his
son, Billie Tubbs, Mrs .
Tubbs' grandson, had been in
an automobile accident and
was in serious condition, Bill
is formerly from Pomeroy,

Association, Chester Grange,
Farm Bureau and Soil
Conservation.
He Is survived by his wife,

Ewing Chapel with

th~

Rev.

Freel~nd Norris officiating .
Burial will -be in Pine Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call
at the Funeral Home at
anytime .
·

BRADLY ROSS KING

Ross King , infant son of
RicKy R. King and Joyce L.
Roush King of Letart, died
Sunday at the Pleasant
Valley Hospit.al. He Y"as five
·
hours Old .
Surviving bes ides his
parents, are a s.lster. Lisa A.
King. at home ; maternal
grandparents , Marion · and
Mada line Roush, Letart:
paternal grandparents, Ted
and Frances Swartz, Letatt;
maternal
great grandparents , Dorthy· and
Eliza Roush and Mrs. Letha
Llevlng, all of Letart i and
paternal great.grandparen.ts,

First National City~ Checks:

Big May Sale
Save up to 96% of the
uslialfee.
.

Herbert and Esther King ,
Letart.

lSaktnds~Jisd

Graveside services will be
held Tuesday at 10 a.m , at the
Broad Run Cemetery with the
Rev . George We1rick of ficiating . The Foglesong
Funeral Home is in charge of
arrang'=ments.

Big May~~
Buy up to $5,000 worth of First National City
Travelers C~ecks for only a $2 fee during
the Big May Sale.
·
..

·-

$5.000 -

2.$00
'

1000
. 500

!

u..... , ..

$50 00

2500

l

I ,ooo '
j

•• H

YOU S.W£

$2 .00

96~.

200

,.,..,
~

.

5 00

~oo

2.00

601, ""'

Ollt&lt;QW&lt;!""'l "'U~ --....~- •...r-"ll' ll ' 911

to wai t fnr a rdund . lle causc First Nat ionnl Ci ty
Travc!t::rs Clh.:ck s can give yo u an on-the·spot
refLmd HI ovL' r 4S.OOO locu tions ''-'Orldwidc .
Thnus.ands mnre th;m any other travelers chcC'k.
Buy First Nwi~mal City Tn.t velcrs Checks

now in May. and SU\'C.

Farmers Bank

540,000.00

~mbar

POMEROY, OHIO
~ximum

.-,

l
TRACK TEAM - Ten track squads at Southern High
honored were, 1-r, Tammy Davis, Cheryl Roseberry, ·
Kelly Shasteen, Cricket Cartlenter, Sheila Crouch,

I

r

JerrenaDill, Brenda Ash,Connee Andrews, coach; back,
Suzy Scarberry, Loretta. Holsinger, Brenda Lawrence,
Kim Taylor, Amy Fisher, Absent were Vickie Cundiff,
Becky McGraw, and Peggy Neigler.
,

!

LETART, W, Va, - Bradly

t . . .a a no
... s

·LOCAL WINNER- Cindy Parker, center, ll-year-&lt;5ld daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Parker, Middlepor_t, was t!Je local winner of the Dairy Isle coloring contest. She received an
eight foot down filled with toys, Her entry will be submitted in the National contest at
Uticia, Mich. and on May 21, the winner will be chosen. Shown with Cindy, are 1-r, Jack
Slaven, who judged t!Je contest, and Herschel McClure owner oflhe Dairy Isle in Middleport
who spoosored the local contest. There were 174 entries.

TAKENTOHMC
The New Haven E-R Squad
transported Shannon Barrett,
Letart, to Holzer Medical
Center with a fractured right
arm, and Mrs. Glenna Frey,
New Haven, to Holzer
Medical Center as a medical
patient

Martha ; two daughters. Anna I
.
Norman G. Rose, 64, Rt . 1, Jean Phipers, Denver, Colo .;
Bidwell, formerly of Meigs Rosemary Keller , Pomeroy,
County died Sunday morning two sons, Major Roger Rose.
Burgaberbach. Germany and
at Hofzer Medical Center .
Mr. Rose was born June 13, Don Rose . Racine ,· seven
1912 the son of the late Lew is grandchildren, ot'le sister,
and Abbie Moore. He was Mary Genhelmer, Chester ;
also · preceded in death by ,one brother , Lawrence Rose ,
Reedsville ; one auht, Laura
fou~ bro~hers, Ernest, Julius,
Eiselstein,
Pomeroy, and
Harry and Virgil.
Mr. Rose was a farmer'and several nieces and nephews .
Funeral services wil l be
breeder
of
reg is tered
Hol steins. He was a member held Wed-nesday at 1 p.m . at

of the Central Ohio Breeders

Fs

''

NORMAN G, ROSE

$.295 Plus tax.

on vacation.
And if they get lost or stolen you won't have

Ritchhart , Jerrena Dilland, Connee Andrews, coach.
Absent were Linda Fisher, Joy Neigler and Marie
Pickens.

including one fireman were

Area Deaths

!

Visit our Salad Bar, l:.asnagna,
Vegetable, Hot Rolls, Coffee, Tea or
Milk.

Big May Sale. Buy them 110\\ and :,aH: up to
96% of the fee. Use them wheneH:: r )I)U gn

--Jj· .

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

.1UESDAY NIGHT SPECIAL

H you hul e to wait ~tn d !me tn -;&lt;. 1\ t:'. )tw'll
lo\le First National Ci ty Tr~t\'Cicrs Checks'

.

tnsuranct For Each, DeiiDSitof
Federal O.pOsil tnsuranct Corporation

SVAC CHAMPS - Tbe girls' basketball team at
Southern' High School were SV AC champions, sectional
champions and class Adistrict runners up. L-r are Connee

Southen1 girl

Andrews, coach, Cheryl Roseberry, Jaye Ord, Carla
Teafo~d, Shelly Ward, Brenda Lawrence, Jean Hitchhart,
Amy Souder, and Lisa Allen,

News •. in Briefs

.
(Continued from pa6e I)
a Treasury Department official. · James Abbott, chief
disbursing officer, said there is no way to determine
immediately how many checks reached their intended
recipients - disabled persons 65 and over - despite tbe
RACINE - Saturday night years. The only two losses mistakes.
at Southern High School here came in lournament play.
Michael Naver said, uThe en-or has been corr~ed." In ·
Special awards in this sport instances where payments should have gone to the bank, they
girl athletes of 1976-77 were
honored at a banquet fur- went to.Brenda Lawrence for . went to a home address, and the reverse could have occurred
nished by the athletic best rebounder; Jaye Ord, in a few cases," he said, The errors were nationwide.
boosters . Coach Connee best floor player ; Lisa Allen,
Williams presented awards to best defensive player, Cheryl
LONDON - . PRESIDENT CARTER TOLD French
participants in volleyball, Roseberry , ~st offensive, President Valery Discard d'E.taing today the United States
and Jean Ritchhart, high totally approved of t!Je French decision to send military help to
basketball and track.
Volleyball awards were scorer.
Zaire, French sources said.
·
presented to Jean Ritchhart,
,Other basketball awards , Carter, in a one-llour breakfast meeting with Giscard,
Brenda Lawrence, Marie went to Amy Souder, Shelly reviewed the whole question of Africa figured largely in their
Pickens, Pam Brauer, Ward and Carla Teaford.
talks, t!Je sources said. Earlier, Glscard had said in.a U, S.
Loretta Holsinger,. Linda
Managers Sharon Roush , television interview that be thought "we must pay more
Fisher, Carla Teaford, Shelly Cindy Roush and statistician attention to Africa, to the development of Africa and tbe safety
Ward and Joy Neigler.
Cricket Crapenter were also of Africa.''
This season the Southern given awards.
girls' basketball team was
Also recognized was the
CIRCLEVILLE, OHIO - THE BODIES OF TWO
SV AC champion, Class A track team consisting of Colwnbus teenagers and a car belonging to one of them were
Sectional champ and District Cheryl Roseberry, Brenda rec&lt;ivered Sunday from Deer Creek Reservoir about 15 miles
runners-up. They had a Lawrence , Peggy Neigler, west of Circleville in Pickaway County, Sheriff · Dwight
perfect season of 13-ll .with a Cricket Carpenter, Kim Radcliff identified the two who apparently drowned
42-2 reeord over the last three Taylor, Brenda Ash, Suzy Wednesday night as stephen Minerd, 18, and Jobn Starr, 14.
Scarberry, Kelly Shasteen, Their bodies were sent to Cincinnati for autopsy by the
Sheila Croush, Tammy Hamilton County coroner. •
Davis, Vicki Cundiff, Carol
Radcliff said Minerd, not being familiar with the area,
Gibbs, Jerrena Dill, Amy apparently drove froin Crownover-Miil Road off the boat
Fisher and Becky McGraw. loading dock into 15 feet of water. The car was recovered about
Coach
Williams
was 50 feet from the dock. Minerd's body was recovered Sunday
presented a gi(t of jrewelry night by sheriff's divers, several hours after the younger boy's
from the girls on her three body was found by fishermen. Deputies said the two were
teams.
believed to have gone to the dam Wednesday night to either
fish
or swim. They were not reported missing as the older boy
Johnson, Brett Wilson and
had
indicated lo his parents they would go to F1orida.
Larry George made the 1977
All-Mid-Ohio Conference
"dream team."
Johnson is a pitcher,
Wilson an outfielder , Both are
from Gallipolis. George, a
catcher and designated
hitter, halls from South Point.

athletes honored

Rio baseballers
gain NAJA berth
Coach C. . L. (Johnny)
Ecker's Rio Grande College
Redmen havo received a bid
to participate in the 1977
District 22 NAJA Baseball
Tournament at Mount Vernon
•this week .
The Rednien, 14-9 on the ·
year, will tackle Malone, 15-9,
at12 noon on Thursday on the
Mt. Vernon High School
diamon(! . The tourney, is
double elimination,
In the other opening round
game Thursday, MI. Vernon
will take on Bluffton. The
finals are Friday and the
rainout date Saturday.
The District 22 winner will
advance to the Area 6
playoffs In Michigan. The
1977 NAIA World Series will
be held in St. Joseph, Mo., in
June.
•
It was also announced
toda~. that Rio's Skipper

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

ASK TOWED
Marriage licenses were
Issued to Chris Allen
Wolverton, 19, Pomeroy, and
.Eva Lynn Googins; 19,
Pomeroy; Francis Vern
Wade, 22, and Brenda Kay
Ross, 16, Pomeroy.
HALL CWSING
The Letart Community
Hall will not be open for
public use' until after the
Memorial Day dinner.

WINDOW SHADES
Complete selection of shades from
36 inches wide to 72 inches wide- 6 or 1
foot lengths. Special widths cut to your
measure free of chaJ"9e.
. Choose white, Ivory, light tan or
green in your preferred quality.
Just recieved. too. sea II oped
window .shades for that eleg'11nt look in
white or ivory.

SELECT WINDOW SHADES IN THE
HOME FURNISHINGS DEPT, ON
THE 1ST FLOOR.

N. W.OPTOMORIST
COMPTON. O.D.

OFFICE HOURS: ':30 to 12,2 to 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT
ST. POMEROY.

.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

BY NEIL FRIEDER
POINT PLEASANT - A
change of venue for John
Lewis Young, 32, Mason, who
is scheduled to stand trial for
the first degree murder of a
Mason businesswoman, was
granted this morning by
Mason County Circuit Court
Judge James 0 . Hallway.
The trial, scheduled to
begin Monday, will now be
held later this yeat in Wood
County.
It became evident that the
court might have a hard time
finding a jury to tty Young,
who is accused of murdering
58 year-old Mason resident
Mary Berry, when defense
attorney John Anderson
asked a group of potential
jurors:
" I would like to know from
the discussion of this case, or
where you heard it discussed
or from hearing or reading
the papers that have articles
in the newspaper; or from
hearing the news or radio,
AM or FM, the Charle.ton
station or CB,, or whatever,
did the things that you heard
or discussed, leave an im~
pression in your mind where

it would take evidence to
remove that impression in

order for you to give Mr.

Prosecutor W, Dan Roll ,
Assistant Prosecutor Bill
Sixteen of '!/ jurists raised Woodyard and defense at·
·their hands to the question torneys Anderson and Barry
apparentlY giving their nod Casto met behind closed
that they could not give doors to di scuss a cha nge of
Young a fair triaL
venue.
With that, Judge Holliday
Monday's proceedings was
ordered the juri.ts into a · the scene of one of the tightest
small room along with the security situations ever
prosecuting attorney and witnessed in the. county, As
defense attorneys, When they spectators filed into the
emerged, approximately 15 courtroom they were cheeked
minutes later, the judge thoroughly by a metal
dismissed the jury and ended detector
for
possible
the session of court.
weapons. Inside the courtApparently Judge Holliday, room , bes ides noticeable
Young a fair trial?"

• .zn Brzefs(\j

CHARLESTON, W.Va. FMC spokesman, who said
(UP! ) - Tbe FMC Corp., the firm had caused some
already under fire in a carbon leakage of asbestos but has
~trachlorlde
controversy, remedied the problem .
now has been accused of
Light said in a statement
dumping cancer-causing that discharge of the
absestos into the Kanawha chemical at the South
River outside Charleston:
Charleston plant " may
The charge was leveled by represent a possible long·
Ed Light, a research analyst term hazard similar to
for the West Virginia-Citizens carbon tetrachloride."
Action Group.
FMC is involved in a court
His cha rge drew an case with the Environmental
Immediate rebuttal from an Protection Agency over

By Unlted Press International
PITTSBURGH-THE WHITE HOUSE, encouraged that
U.S. Steel Corp.'s 6 per cent price increase undercut that was
announced by two other major producers, hoped the entire
industry would adopt the smaller boosts. "We're encouraged
by somet!Jing closer to 6 per cent than the 7 to 9 per cent we
were hearing about earlier," said Robert Crandall, acting
director of the Council on Wage and Price Stability, "We hope
that U. S. Steel's prices stick."
U.S. Steel delayed its increases on sheet and strip - used
extensively by auto and appliance manufacturers - bar, rod
and plate products until June 19, The increases announced last
week by Republic S.teel and Youngstown Sheet &amp; Tube- 8,8
per cent oo flat-rolled products and 6.8 per cent on bar steel are scheduled to begin May 15.
COLUMBUS- JULL\N BOND, BLACK MEMBER of tbe
Georgia legislature and civil rights activist, said Monday the
argument t!Jat school busing is harmful to children Is nothing
more than a myth. " It's an incredible myth," said Bond,
"Forty-four per cent of all school children in the United States
go to school on a bus. But only three per cent go to school on a
bus because of race."
''The plain fact is that white people in this country don't
want their children to go to school with black children," said
Bond . "Where people find thai busing is the easiest way for
their children to gefto school and back again, no one raises any
objection at all," said Bond ,
WASIDNGTON - THE KROGER CO., third Jargest
supermarkel chain in the country, and three other gr~r
groups have agreed to stock adequate supplies of. item~ offered
at sale prices, the Federal Trade Commission said Monday.
The stores, In a negotiated settlement of an ITC complaint,
also agreed to charge prices no higher than advertised, to
clearly mark sale prices on individual items, and to offer
"rainchecks" .when they run out of sp_ecials.
The order is similar to one signed several years ago by
A&amp;P, the country's No. 2 chain. The ITC also has a case
pending against · s.feway, the nation's largest seller of
grocery, covering the same points. Stores signing the order in
addition to the Cincinnati-lleadquartered Kroger Co. were
Fisher Foods Inc., Bedford Heights, Ohio; Food Fair Stores
Inc., Philadelphia, which operaies Food' Fair and' Pantry
Pride, and Shop-Rite Fooda. Inc ,, Grand Prairie, Tex.

VOL XXVIII

NO. 18

Sheriff James J. Proffitt
said today three juveniles
and one adult have been
arre.ted and charged In the
April 28 breaking and entering of the Lavonna Blak.e
cottage at Indian Run.
Tw 15-year-old and one 16year-old Rt 1, Reedsville
juveniles and 20-year old
Monte Ray Barringer,. Rt I,
Reedsville, have been
charged. The juveniles have
' been released in custody of
their parents
pending
hearings in the Meigs County
Juvenile Court.
Barringer is confined to the

He said some discharges
had resulted with the periodic
cleaning of cells in which
chloride in produced, Cells
are partially made or
asbestos. He said the plant,
on its own initiative, took
co rr ective measures and
leaks have stopped,
Currey disparaged Light's
claims as "an attempt to
create another unnecessary
controversy.''

•

at

enttne

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Meigs County jail on one
charge of receiving stolen
property and two of con·
tributing to the delinquency
of minors. Most of the stolen
property has been recovered.
In other department activity, deputies are checking
out a complaint by Charles
Alkire, Racine, that he had
several stereo tapes stolen
from his pickup truck parked
in front of his residence
sometime Sunday.
James M. Miller, 25 , Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, reported that
around 9:15 p.m. Monday

Three injured
in auto accidents

Shippers will
meet on lith
recently ordered the abandorunent of most of Chessie's
Logan to Pomeroy (via
McArthur and Gallipolis)
line.
ORTA representatives will
have information regarding
when Chessie service will be
terminated and will also
explain what steps can be
taken to arrange alternate
rail service from the Chessie
system, C:onRail or ahother
operator.

!

carbon Mra·dlloride spills
into the river.
Light said he had a
company docwnent from the
state Water Resources
Bureau tbat showing the firm
was discharging 100 pounds
of asbestos daily. He urged
"speedy action from sta.~
and federal agencies."
"FMC is no longer putting
asbestos into the Kanawha
River. " rejoined FMC
spo,kesman, William Currey,

TUESDAY, MAY 10, 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Robbery solved

Three persons were injured
and three .citations were
issued following separate
traffic
accidents investigated
WASIDNGTON -AN ANGRY HOUSE COMMITTEE
Monday
by the Gallia-Meigs
chairman threatens to subpoena Richard Nixon to produce a
Post
State
Highway PatroL
letter promising billions of dollars in U. S, reconstruction aid to
The
first
occurred
al 8:25
Vietnam. "If he can talk to a television guy, he can talk to the
a.m.
on
SR
681
at
TR
313 in
Congress," ~id Rep. Lester Wolff, D-N .Y., chairman of the
Meigs
County
where
vehicles
House Subcommittee on Asian and Pacific Affairs, referring to
driven by Florence Wyers, a7,
Nixon's televised interview 'with David Frost.
Wolff told reporters before a committee meeting Monday Rt. I, Reedsville, and Kenbe understands that Nixon, while President, wrote a letter neth Chaffee, 22, Rt. I, Zanesfield, sideswiped in a curve.
promising $4.75 billion in reconstruction aid to Vietnam.
Jer£e,y
Wyers, a passenger in
Nixon has not answered a letter on the subject, Wolff said,
the
Wyers
vehicle, comand If he does not respond he may be subpoenaed. Richard
plained
of
minor
injuries.
Hoi brooke, assistant secretary of state for eastern and Pacific
Chaffee
was
cited
to
Meigs
affairs, testified in the subcommittee that the Vietnam letter.
County
Court
for
driving
left
was among Nixon's presidential papers and 'not in the State
of
center,
There
was
Department files , He said he is trying to have it made public as
moderate damage.
an historic document
Tom Stump, 18, . Rt. · 1,
LOSANGELES - PATRICL\ HEARTS WAS GlVEN five Cheshire, was charged with
years' probation for robbery and assault with a deadly weapon failure to stop within the
because she is no longer a threat to society and probably never assured . clear distance
will be again, according to the judge and proseeutor, And a following a rear end collision
probation report says Miss Hearst, 23, wants to go to work for at4 :10 p.m. Monday on SR 7
Good Housekeeping magazine, a Hearst publication, if she is at the junction to the
freed from a sevel-year federal prison term for a San Bulaville-AddisQn Rd.
·Officers said Stump's truck
Francisco bank robbery.
struck
the rear end of a car
SUperior Court Judge E. Talbot Callister pronounced the
by Janice Sweesy,
operated
probation sentenee Monday, calling it the most difficult
35,
Rt.
I,
GallipOlis. Mrs.
decision of his seven years as a criminal court judge. Although
she coUld have received a life sentence, the judge said he was Sweesy claimed injury but
placing Miss Hearst on probation beeause she had suffered at was not immediately treated .
(Continued on page 8)

Representatives of the Ohio
Rail Transportation
Authority will conduct a
public meeting conc~rning
possible arrangements for
continuation of rail lreig~t
service over !he Chesapeake
and Ohio tracks in the MeigsGallia Area including from
Hobson to Pomeroy, at I D
a.m. Wednesday at the
Holiday Inn in Kanauga.
The
U.S.
Interstate
Comrerce Commission

•

e

·.•.·

It was a series of questions
from Anderson that eventually doomed the jury.
On one question over SO per
cent of the prospective jurist$
said that they had discussed
the case previously.
On lhene&lt;t question, all but
tw.o of the jurists said they
' either subscribed to or read
the Point Pleasant Register
regularly and on the
following question aU but one
said they had read articles in
the Register pertaining to the
Young case.
.
I Continued on p.1ge 8)

Asbestos dumping charged to FMC

il:::;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:::::~:::::::::·:·:::::·:::::::::~=::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::;:;:;:;:::::::::~~~~

~::News.

armed Sheriff's deputies ,
were also plain clothes police,
Sheriff Jim Hall said that
there had been no threats of
violence, but he did not want
to take any chances.
The original 21 potential
jurists were sworn in at '1:45
p.m. by Circuit Court Clerk
Howard Schultz. The first
jurist was dismissed at this
time when he refused to
swear to the oath, Four other
jurists were dismissed soon
after when they noted that
had formed prior opinions in
the case.

Persons and businesses
presently using Che~sie
System service or interested
in future rail service should
attend Wednesday's meeting.
Those having questions, but
unable to attend , should
contact the· Gallipolis Area
Chamber of Commerce, 16
State St, Gallipolis. Phone
614-446-0~96 or the Meigs
County Rail Service CQmmittee, 480 Broadway Street,
Middleport, !!92..?794.

while traveling north on CR 5
in his Buick he struck a deer
that ran into his path. The
deer kept on running. There
was moderate damage to the
auto.
Deputies are investigating
a traffic accident in Olive
Twp, around 3:30 p.m .
Monday at intersection of CR
50 and SR 124 near the Bertha ·
Randolph residence. An auto
registered to Karen S. Crites,
RL 1, Little Hocking, had
rolled over several times
after its unidentified driver
. lost control in an easy curve.
The vehicle apparently was
being driven north at a high
rate of speed when the
unidentified driver lost
co ntrol and the vehicle
skidded sideways off the road
and rolled over several times
in the field. The vehicle
landed on its top. The 1971
Chevy Nova was heavily
damaged. Deputies thus far
have been unable to contact

MRS. GRACE WEBER, PRINCIPAL of the Riverview Elementary School, Reedsville,
presented an "Award of Appreciation" to Charles Hauber, scoutmas~r of Reedsville Boy
Scout Troop.59. The troop, which meets at t!Je school (luring winter months, has performed
vaned services for the school such as planting, handling parking during school events
painting the playground equipment and making flagholders for the classrooms. The 1?
1 member troop has won numerous awards at camporees including the 1976 National
President's Unit Award with Hauber being named a "Leader of Distinction" in 1976 , The
troop is~ member of the Hock-Hocking District of the Kootaga Area CounciL

was minor damage. either the owner or driver.
A motorcyclist , Donald
Wright, Jr ., 21 , Rt. 1,
Gallipolis, suffered injuries
in an accident at 6:4D p.m . on
SR 160 at Evergreen. State
troopers said Wright's cycle
slammed into the rear of a
car operated by Freel
Tackett, 41, Rt. 1, Bidwell.
Wright had minor cuts and
bruises. There was moderate
damage.
Middleport Mayor Fred S. Corps of Engineers.
Before the Corps would
Hoffman was notified today
consider
spe nding iarge sums
.;:::;:;:;:::;.;:;:::;:::::;:;:::::;:;:;;;:::;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;: by the United States Environmental Protection Agency of money in preventing
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
·
that
a grant of $21,900 has further erosion in this area, it
Thursday through
been
awarded to the village is necessary to know if ail of
Saturday, fair Thursday
for
preparation
of a Step I this facility will bc in use and
and Friday and a chance of
for what length of time.
·
Sewage
Facilities
Plan.
showers Saturday. ' Highs
This
money
is
for
75
per
Village officials had inet
will be In the 7Ds or the low
with
the Corps and Ohio EPA
of
the
allowable
costs
in
cent
80s and lows will be In the
representatives
in the fall of
preparation
of
the
plan.
Total
40s Thursday and .In lhe low
1975
and
when
it
was agreed
project
cost
is
estimated
at
or mld 50s Friday and
$29,200.
that
a
Facilities
Plan
would
· Saturday.
The proposed project , have to be made before the
.;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: required
by EPA , is Corps could be involved · in
There

$21,900 grant approved for
Middleport sewage planning

Weather
Clear and cold tonight, with
freezing temperatures likely,
Lows will be between 30 and
35. Surmy Wednesday, with
highs in the mid 60s.
Probability of precipitation is
near zero per cent today,
tonight and Wednesday.

necessary

to

whether
the
existing
wastewater
treatment
facilities of the village will be
adequate to handle projected
increases in population in the
area.

This erosion is due, experts

NOW YOU KNOW
A baby born to Burma's
Orang Sakya tribe Is considered 60 at birth and loses a
year In official age on each
succeeding birthday'\&gt;

where. sanitary sewer s ar e

not available to residents and

how service there can best be
attained, A public meeting
will be held in the near future
when residents will be invited
to give o~inions of what is
needed to Improve the village
sewage system .
The engineerinl.'!: firm

nf

Floyd G. Browne and Asso.,
Ltd., of Canton and M:}riont
Ohio, will be doing the plan
ana has been very instrumental in assisting the

vi llage in obtaining this
grant

determine

A further need for this ·
project is the new EPA
requirements for seeondar~
wastewater treatme nt. It
must be determined what is
TRL\L CANCELLED
the most efficient and
A jury trial scheduled for economical ways the village
Wednesday in the Meigs can
meet
thse
new
County Court for Clifford requirements.
Icenhower has been canThe urgency of this need is
celled, Judge Robert Buck caused by the erosion of the
reports. Juror~ are not to south embankment or the
report for duty.
waste stabilization lagoons.

BOYS TO MEET
All boys who have signed
up to play pony league in
Middleport are to meet at the
bail park Wednesday, ~ :30
p.m.

any ·erosion control problems
in the lagoon area,
Many obstacles were encountered before this grant
was finally approved by the
USEPA . It was through the
excellent cooperation and
ass istance of Cong. Clarence
Miller and officials of the
Ohio EPA that all diffi culties
were finally resolved.
This plan will also include
studies of areas·of the village

agree, to the increase in
water level in the Ohio River
as.a result of the ,construction
of navigation dams by the U.
PLACE CHANGED
The Wednesday evening
meeting of the Bend Area
Concerned Parents will be
held at 7:30 at the Wahama
Senior fllgh School building
instead of the gym as
previously announced.

Old street closed off
The end of Rutland St. in
Middleport
will
be
barricaded off to any vehicles
- · including trail bikes ,
motorcycles and/ four-wheel
drive jeeps - under a
resolution approved Monday
night by Middleport counciL
Residents of the area had
complained of the use of the
street, which Is impassable to
cars, by the noisier variety of
vehicular traffic noted above :
In early days Rutland St.
apparently was a heavily
used wagon and automobile
road that encircled Middleport Hill on its north side ·
providing ,access to the
village from Bradbury.
Council informally agreed
to hold off the barricading "a
few days" pending public
reaction to the proposaL
Mayor Fred Hoffman
announced that Cheryl
· Burdette has been employed
to manage the Middleport

'

Commun ity Park
this
summer. The-mayor thanked
members of the CQuncil Carl Horky, Allen Lee ·King,
Marvin Kelly and Dewey
Horton - for attending with
him the recent meeting held
In reference to a coal loading
tipple at West Columbia.
Mayor Hoffman said he holt
the
t own
was
well
represented at the meeting
held at Wahama High School.
Co uncil approved the April
report of the mayor showing
receipts of $83 in merchant
police collecti ons and
$1,515.9!i in fines and fees, for
a total of $1,598.95,
Council also discussed the
lot in lower Middleport where
wrecked cars are located.
Mayor Hoffman said no more
cars are being placed on the
lot He said he had been in
touch with Solicitor Bernard
Fultz on t~e matter and that
Fultz will confer with the

county sheriff's department
on the disposition of the
vehicles now on the lot.
May or Hoffma n said that
three quotat ions have been
received on a hQse drler

which council will purchase
for .the (ire department The
quotations are all within a $50
ran ge and are all from
reputabl~ companies and
deal with the same identical
product Councliman Horky
recommended purchase of
the equipment fr om the
com pany with the lower
price. The price range is
$2,150 to $2,200. Clerk·
Trellsurer Gene Grate read a
letter from Ashland Oil announcing that all gasoline
raised one-half cent a gallon
as of April 2C.
Council also discussed a
parking problem on South ·
Third Ave., and a trash
problem in an alley area In
lower Middleport.
•

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