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8 _ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, May 10, )977
,
---------------------------I
VETERANS MEMORIA 1·
I
Admitted
Charles
1
I
1 Canter, Sy racuse: Deatra Jo
I
1 Simms. MinerS\•ille ; Mary Jo
I
' Peck .
Rutland:
Raj
FREDA FERN DEETER
CENA PARSONS
E
st

Area D eath s

LO NG BOTTOM - Fr eda
Fern Deeter . 75. Rt . 1. Long

Cena
Parsons. 82 . a
resident of Rt. 2. VInton . d ied

Malhotra, Pomeroy ; rne
Cullums, Pomeroy ; Edward

BoHom , died Sunday at M t.
Carmel
East
Hos pita l.
Columbus . She was born Nov.

in Holzer Med ical Center
Ntonday evening .
She was born in Carter

Bowen, Pomeroy .

Rare stamps
are stolen

Wahamahand
rated with
the finest

Regatta Queen wanted

The Wahama White Falcon
Band, under direction ol
Miller in 1925 and contains Charles Yeago and David
28, 1901. a daughfer o f the l ate
County. Ky .• daughter of the
By MOLLY CARRUTH
Chapman and M yrta Ker
late Christopher and Amanda
NEW YORK ( UPI ) - Au- U.S. postal stamps dating Waybright , received all
wood Hil l.
Litt leton Sloan . She wa s
thorities say whoever stole from 1845 to 1926.
superior ratings for the 13th
She was also pr eceded in
preceded i n death by her
The
collection
is
on
permapart
of
a
$t
mi!Uo~
rare
consecutive year Saturday,
death by lour . brother s.
husband , John G. Parsons, in
stamp collection from the nent display at New York at the Regional Band Festival
Floyd , Herman, and Charles, . 1959.
PLEASANT VALLEY
and an Infant ; four si ster s,
· Three
sons and two
New York Public Library had Ci ty's main library and is
DISCHARGES - Richtird "detailed information" which considered by experts to he in Huntington.
Laura Mart in, Ora Hill , Pearl
daughters surv ive : Frank ,
The band performed
Erv in and Addie Hill , and five
Columbus ; Gene , Hilliard ; Richmond, Charleston; Mrs.
one
of
the
greatest
of
its
kind.
may
have
been
supplied
liy
"Devertimento
for Band" by
grandchil dr en .
_
Jack . Rl. 2, Vinton : Mrs . Ithiel Harper, Gallipolis
"It's the history of the United Vin cen t Persechetti, and
insiders.
Surviving
are
t hese
Herb (Lucille) Thomas ,
Nmne'-----------------------------children . Violet Eddy , Dale
Westervi-lle ; and Mrs. Ted Ferry; Jerem y Franklin,
Police Lt. Harold Smith of states postage stamps," a " Festive Overture" by
and Elden , al l of Col umbus;
(Wilma) Evans , Dubl in. One Gallipolis ; Mrs. Archie
the Manhattan Burglary library spokeswoman said. Dmitri Shostakovich, for the
Glen and Ernest. both of Long
son preceded her in death. Logue, Bidwell; Mrs. Everett
AdM~--------------------------Police said a protective panel ol three judges Friday
Squad sa id the burglars
Bottom ; Argy le, Ra ci ne ;
Fourteen grandchil dren and Watterson, Point Pleasa nt;
"were not totally unfamiliar plastic cover over the morning, graded by the West
Pa t ric i a Hayes . Ashvil le ;
six
great -graridchildren
Mrs.
Glenn
No
rman
and
Jimmy, Johnstown : Marion,
survive .
with what they were doing." collection had been melted Virginia
Bandma·s ters
Centerburg ;
20
grand
One sister su r vives , Mrs. daughter, Bidwell; Clarence
The theft of an estimated away with a blow torch.
Association, Judges, Francis
&amp;~'--------------------------~
children ,
10
great Edna Jones , Graham , Ky .
Hoffman, Letart; Linda $100,000 to $250,000 worth of
Selected •tamps had heen Borkowski of
Perdue
grandchildren . and t wo
Mr s . Parsons was a Rodgers, Point Pleasant; Asa
PboM-------------rare stamps from the highly removed from 12 of the 100 University, Harry Clerk,
Age - - sisters -in -l aw, Mrs. Gl ady s member of the Little Pearl
Johnson,
Crown
City:
Carrie
Hills and Mrs . Mattie Hill,
Regular Bapti st Church, Rt .
praised Miller Collection was sliding panels, police said. University of Kentucky, and .
Ward, Lakin; Basil Deweese, discovered by a library
Among the missing stamps
bo th of Columbus , and
2, Vinton .
Campbell of Winseveral nieces and nephews .
Funeral servi ces will be Point Pleasant; Mrs. Charles
were
the 1909 Lincoln Charles
security guard about 5:30
chester, Ky., praised the
Mrs. Deeter , a member of
held a t the chur ch Thursda y, Nestor and son, Pittsburgh,
a.m. Monday when an alarm Memorial Collection, valued band for performing these
White Chapel Church at
2 p.m. with Brother Ivor y
Pa
.;
and
Mrs.
Roy
McClure,
Tuppers Plains , was a re t ired
Sowards officia ting. Burial
sounded. The guard last had at more than $2,000, and a · cballenging musical nomE-R, fire ~its are called out
school teacher
w i ll be i n Mt. Tabor Letart.
seen the display intact at 2 "very rare" 1918 Inverted 24- hers.
Funeral services wi ll be 2 Cemetery.
BIRTH - A daughter to a.m.
cent air mail stamp worth an
Wahama and a school from
p.m . Wednesday at the Whi te
Friends may call at the Mr. and Mrs. Dale Smith,
The PomerOY E-R Squad found that the truck apThe collection was donated estimated $75,000.
Chapel Church with the Rev . M cCoy -Moore Funeral Home
the
Wood County area were was called to Butternut Ave., parently had been serviced ·
Mason
.
"There
was
some
obvious
to the library by Minneapolis
Roy
Dee ter offi ciating . in Vinton on Wednesday frbm
the only hands rated superior at 9:38 Monday for Edw.ard over the weekend arid
Bur ial will be in the
7-9 p.m .
lawyer Benjamin Kurtz selectivity, I am not prepared by all three judges, playing Bowen who ·was taken to someone had left a rag lay on
Weatherbee cemetery In
oo say just how exacting they
Athens County . Friends may
Veterans Memorial Hospital the frame. In the movement
were. It's obvious they didn't grade VI music.
On
Saturday,
the
bands
call at the Ew ing Funeral
where he was admitted. At of the vehicle, the rag feU
\
just pick at random," Smith
Home any time .
paraded
through
Huntington
12:16 p.m. Monday the fire onto the exhaust system and
said.
(Continued from page I)
to
mark
the
end
of
the
threedepartment
went to the upper was smoking considerably.
Smith did not say library
ASK TOWED
On the next questions, most
day
festival.
'fhe
students
of
parking
lot
where a truck Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles
were
under
A rna rrlage license was employes
said they listened regularly to
all
bands
are
to
he
comowned
by
the
Lambert Co. of reported there was no fire
but
said
either WMPO or WJEH iss ued to Theodore Paxton suspicion,
mended
for
their
dedication
Belmont,
W.
Va.,
appeared to damage to the vehicle.
By combining your Auto
radio ; and on the follow-up Hayes, 22, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, "somebody intentionally or
and
hard
work
which
conbe
on
fire.
However,
it was
unintentionally may have
t~nd
HomeDwne rs
A clerical error is blamed question said theY had heard and Debra Ann Moog, 20, heen
tinually
makes
the
festival
a
insurance into ONE policy
feeding them details
for mistaken identity in a about the case over the radio. Athens.
success.
... You may be able to
that
they
put to good use."
Three potential jurists. on
report of names in connection
DEPUTY NAMED
with a conviction last Friday the fifth question, answered
According to an entry in
in Meigs County Court, affirmatively that they were
On your yearly insurance
reported in The Sunday personally acquainted with Meigs County Common Pleas
court Gary Joe Wolfe has
the late Mary Berry.
premiums .
Times Sentinel.
(Continued from page l)
It
was
only
last
week
that
been appointed deputy
The case was reported as
We will review your
the hands of her kldnaP.rs, would be in danger from other
the fining of "Herbert" DuM, Judge Holliday denied a sheriff.
insurance
program
prisoners because she has helped prosecutors, had already
motion
in
Young's
behalf
for
Vinton, $100 for possession of
with you free of
spent
13 months behind bars and is "neither a present nor
BOOSTERS
TO
MEET
a
change
of
venue
following
a
marijuana. This was not true.
charge any day of the
future
law enforcement risk." ·
hearing
in
which
his
atRACINE
Southern
The case involved, instead,
POINT PLEASANT - Mid transporting dangerous and
week .
Junior
High
Athletic
Boosters
torneys
attempted
to
show
Eugene Dunn, 32, Box 99E,
Ohio Valley Industrial toxic chemicals.
AHIDJAN, IVORY COASf - ANDREW YOUNG, U. S.
Pomeroy (Rock Springs) who there was too much un- will meet Wednesday, May ll Emergency Planning Council
Outlined in the seminar will Ambassador to the United Nations, arrived today from
·favorable
pre-trail
publicity
at
7:30
p.m.
atthe
junior
high
was fined $100 for possession
is plaMing a seminar May be the identification of Washington on tbe first stop on a 12-&lt;lay tour 9f Africa which be
in the Register.
in Racine.
·
of
marijuana.
CALL OR STOP
and
toxic said will include a controversial visit to South Africa.
Hlth and 11th at 7-10 p.m . eac)l hazardous
Herbert DuM of Rt. 2,
AND SEE US
evening at the Nationa l chemicals in transit, visual
· In Abidjan, Young will have a three-day meeting with 38 U.
Vinton is a special deputy
Guard Armory, north of here. t a n k - t r u c k s h ut o.H S. ambassadors to African countries at the liJXUl'IOus Hotel
sheriff of Gallia · County ·
According to a spokesman procedures, the handling of d'Ivoire. Asked about h~ trip to South Africa before leaving
presently studying police
for the organizaiion, the LP gas emergencies and Washington Young told reporters, "I'll be going. What I do ·
work at his own expense in a
seminar is fashioned for any others.
there depends on the people who Invited me." He said he was
310 hour course at Beverly,
All .area law enforcement confident he would be admitted to South Africa and says
emergency related group
Ohio.
singled to make it 1-0 that would be concerned with officers, emergency squads · President Carter wants him 'oo be controversial.
BY GARY CLARK
" The
accidents involving vehicles, and fire departments are
Wahama.
Insurance
cordially invited to attend.
DOOR OPEN ON 11TH
The Bend Area nine made. it
The Wahama White Falcons
HONOLULU-U.S. STEEL COMPANIES are at "war"
Store"
Registratiop will be during with developing countries whose output will likely grow fout
A representatl ve from edged out the Buffalo Bisons ~ with a lone tally in the third
the first session on May 10. times laster than industrialized nations, Industry leaders
Congressman Clarence E. of Putnam County by a slim 4- without the aid of a base hit.
Certificates will be awarded warned Monday. Robert Welch, president of the Steel Service
Miller's office will conduct an 3 margin in the opening round Jerry Tucker led off with a
Phone 992-5130
Athens
Livestock
Sales,
for
those completing the two · Institute told its 68th annual meeting that it is time for
open
door
session
from
10
of Region Four Section Four base on balls followed by
214 E. Main
Inc.
evening
sessions.
a.m.-12
noon
in
the
courtAmerica~ steel producers to contest trade practices that favor
Sectional Tourney play another free pass to Tim
Pomeroy
Saturday, May7, 1977
house
in
Pomeroy
on
May
ll.
their foreign counterparts . .
Sayre
a
sacrifice
bunt
by
Ken
.
Monday evening by corning up
Feeder Steers - Choice 39U. S. steel producers are "engaged in a devastating war ...
Riggs
moved
both
baseruri·
with two seventh inning runs.
43; Good 31-38.75. Feeder
a
violent
economic war ... one which is being waged from
ners
up
a
notch
where
Tucker
Rick Buuard delivered a
Heifers - Choice 29.75-34.50 ;
within
as
well as ,frorn without," Welch said. ''When foreign
two out single to bring home stole home for the . White Good 23·2ll.50.
steel
producers
ship metal Into key geographic markets In lull ,
Duke Smith with the winning Falcons second run of the
Slaughter Bulls (Over 1,000
knowledge
that
such shipments are going to sit in warehouses
lbs.) 31 .90-34,
tally to enable the White game.
or
on
the
docks,
that's the same as shooting U.S. troops in the
Mike
Goldsberry,
Feeder Bulls - Good 2ll.25Falcons to advance to the
trenches.
That's
war. Yet, that is precisely what is happening
Anria M . Ryther, Comm .•
sectional finals to be held at who started on the mound for 3!1.
today.
Slaughter Cows: Utility Arthur Elwood Koenig, dec.
Thurs~ay Wahama, was breezing along
Wahama on
"That's why it's getting tougher and tougher to make a
.Ruth Frances Koenig,
with a four hit shutout when 26.75·30.30; Canner-Cutter to
evening.
22.747 ' acres, 11.21 acres,
decent profit and develop capital for expansion, modernization
Orange - Chester .
Buzzard's game winning disaster struck in the 22. 75-26.SO.
and research. That's why American industry is bleeding."
Mir iam Suzanne Weaver
Veals
(Choice-Prime)
45Bisons
half
of
the
fifth.
Two
safety was his thircl base
.
Kuhl. to Billy Dean Kuhl.
knock of ·the game maklrig walks and a single plated one 57 . .
dec., Affida vi t, Orange.
Hogs (Barrows-Gilts, 200Hil da Olmstead to Odessa
him the big offensive weapon run and sent Goldsberry to the
230
lbs.) 39-:)9.35.
Pr"Offitt, 1 acre, Lebanon.
lor the victorious White showers , bringing on Jerr}'
·James E . Willis , Martha R.
Sows - 32-32.85.
Tucker In relief. Another base
Falcons.
Willis
to Claren.ce
D.
Pigs
(By
the
head)
19:41.
Buffalo's John Eich mat· on balls and the second hit of
Mcintyre,
Patricia
D.
Boars
23.lll-26.SO.
Mc intyre , .992 acre, Salem.
ched Buzzards' feats at ' the the innlrig prod.uced two more
George R. Young, dec . to
plate with three hits or' his own Bison runs to give Buffalo a
Richard M . Young, Edward
In four tries but unfortunately suprtsing 3-2 lead.
A. Young ,· Cert. of trans. ,
Salisbury.
lor the Bisons they were Buffalo's Mike Smith surADDITIONS MADE
defeated for the third time this vlved the Falcon sixth and It
Dr. Daniel H. Whiteley, M.
r
season by the bend area team. looked as U Wahama was ·D., ·Gallipolis, was elected to
BAD LUCK GROWS
In the two rivals first two going to bite the dust but a two serve on the board of .
CARSON
CITY, Nev .
encounters the White Falcons run seventh frame kept their directors, and Mrs. Charles
(UPI)
Gamblers
In
blanked Buffalo on con- tourney hopes alive.
Grant, Gallipolis, and Mrs.
Nevada
casinos
,lost
$347.7
. secutlve no-hitters by Mike A walk and a hit batsmen Charles Hayes , Pomeroy
' Goldsberry and Mark Smith spelled the difference for were added to the executive million during the first three
months of this year, an Inbut when "the do or die Smith as both rwmers came in committee when the South crease
of 19.4 per ·cent
situation arose ihe Biso~ Ul score .with the later racing East Ohio Lung Assn. held its compared to 1976, the state
gave Wahama all they could home with the winning run on annua l meeting. recently at Gaming Control Board
handle.
Buzzards' safe blow to give The Sportsman 10 Athens.
Put your prized possessions,
reported Monday.
The locals broke on top 1n Wahama the narrow victory.
your irreplaceable documents
the opening inning with a
Wahama now advances to
where you can get to them but
single tally on two hits. After the sectional finals against the
harm can't . .. a burglar-proof,
Tim Sayre had grounded out survivor of either H81Ul8n,
Ken Riggs singled and swiped Harts or Winfield on Thursday
fire-proof safe deposit box.
second. Puke Smith flew out to evening beginning at 5:00
Yearly Rentals
right field but Tim Thompson p.m.
We Offer You Quiet .and Privacy
As Well as Complete Protection
Disc harged Rober,t
w ll5
Manley, Timothy e ·

Rail subsidy would be
about $2,695 monthly

The Meigs County Olamber of Commerce is looking for
the 1m Big Bend Regatta Queen.
Rules have been chang~ this year and now any urunarried
girl from 16 through 19 years old is eligible. Previously, only
senior girls were permitted to enter. Even though the age
requirement has been relaied, contestants must be from
Meigs County. The new queen will be crowned during regatta
weekend on June 17.
Girls wishing to ent.,- may complete the accompanying
application blank and mailing it to Tanya Davis, Route 3,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769. Anyooe needing any more information
may call Mrs. Davis after 6 p.m. at 985-3501.

KANAUGA - A subsidy
payment of approximately
$2,695 per month would have
to be paid by local shippers if
rail service is to be restored
from Kerr in Gallia County to
Pomeroy .
That .was the statement of
Mark J. Randall, chief of
planning for the Ohio Rail
Transportation Authority
(ORTA ) during an information meeting at the

1---------------------'

Error blamed

Personal!

Market Report

.

.Property
Transfers

for ALL your banking needs .

CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK

'

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

·we Keep YourValuable11
Safe, Yet Ac·ceislble ...

FAMILY DINING'

legance in any roo1111

AT ITS BEST

,THE INN PlACE

WEDNESDAY NIGHT SPECIAL
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Our NEW Telephone Number Is

992-6661
Installment Loan Department Number Will
Remain the Same 992-3007.
·Member Federal Deposit Insurance
(Mporation

DEPOSITS INSURED TO $40,000

Visit OUr Salad Bar, Ground Sirloin,
Home Fries, Vegetable, Hot Rolls,
Coffee, Tea or Milk.

MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS
Perfect example is this knit jersey rugby stripe
sport shirt with Allen Solly placket and white
fashion co llar. Easy-care Kodel polye ster and
co tton in navy /red, navy/gold, navy/green.
Sizes 5-M-L-Xl .
Be sure to see all the fine styled mefis knit
shirts, solid colors, patterns - also tank
tops. Men's and boys sizes.
·

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY.

Traffic congestion in the
area of the proposed multipurpose building to be
erected on Mulberry Heights
near Veterans Memorial
Hospital may become a
problem it was learned
Tuesday night at a meeting of
Meigs County Board of
Commissioners.
The commissioners and the
hospital board discussed. the

MULTIPLE BffiTHS - Out of a total enrollment of 171 pupils, the Riverview
Elementary &amp;hool at Reedsville has four sets of twins and one. of triplets. The group
includes, front,! tor, Amy and Angie Young, children of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Young, Route
1, Reedsville, third grad~rs; Deena and Diana Connolly, children of M_r. and Mrs. Dale
Connolly, Long Bottom, ftrst graders; Caralyn and Maralyn Barton, chtldren of Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Barton, Route 1, Reedsville, first graders; hack row, Richard and Sally
Smith, chiiMim of Mr. and Mrs. Richard 5mith, Reedsville, third and fourth graders,
respectively, and last but not least, the triplets, Mike, Mark and Ann Jones, children of Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Jones, Reedsville, fifth graders.

•

News.; in Briefs

Falcons win 4-3

Reuter-Brogan

subsidy. Asked how much
this would he .in money,
Nielsen estimated the figure
to be $2,695 per month. He
said this is only 10 percent of
the expected deficit cost of
operating the line.
Nielsen also said the
percentage of subsidy to be
required from local sources
will increase in future years.
Next April first (1978 ) it will
rise to 20-80 per cent, the

following April first , to 30-70
pet., under present law.
Tom Tope, president of the
Gallipolis Area Chamber of
Commerce, welcomed those
present and introduced the
visitors. Assisting with maps
at the meeting was George
Amott ol Middleport, a Rio
Grande College student who
is chairman of the Meigs
County Railroad Committee.

Traffic may pose problem

for mistaken
Dunn identity

Emergency planners
will conduct seminar

Randall was one of three of
the rail authorities fielding
their questions. Assisting him
were William T. Nielsen,
plannerfor ORTA, and Miss
C. Whittaker, also with
ORTA .
The rail authorities explained that under federal
statute a railroad can be
required to continue service
if the shippers or local
agencies pay the rPOuired

l

Young's

Save 10% to 25%

Holiday Inn here Wednesday
morning . Randall was
meeting with interested
shippers who had indicated
an interest in returning
railroad service Ul the line
mentioned. The U. S. lntcnaate Commerce Com·
mission has authorized the
Chessie System to abandon
service on the line.
Twenty-one persons attended the meeting and

en tine

at

WEDNESDAY, MAY 11, 1977

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL. XXVIII NO. 19

~,:,-.,i;·n;;;J~carter to
By United Press International
WASHINGTON - IT TOOK SOME PERSONAL lobbying
by Vice President Walter Mondale before tbe consumer
By HELEN THOMAS
protection agency bill squeaked through the House Govern- . UPI White House Reporter
men\ Operations Committee by a single vote.
WASIDNGTON (UP! ) With some furious lobbying on both sides from business, President Carter, back from
labor and consumer.groups, as well as the administration, the a successful six-day London
measure was approved Tuesday, 22 to 21, surviving summit trip, tackled a desk
Republican attempts to knock out key provisions. A similar full of paper work today and
measure earlier won overwhelming approval In the Senate planned to ~eport to Itt•
Government Affairs Conunittee where only Sen. Sam Nunn, D- nation on his talks with
Ga., voted against it. .
European leaders at a news
conference Thursday.
DETROIT - PRICE TAGS ON 1978-:MODEL cars will
Carter arrived at Andrews
probably range $300 to $350 higher than on the current models Air Force Base outside
in dealer showrooms because of climbing steel prices and Washington at 10:2Q p.m.
inflationary pressures. Industry and financial analysts who EDT ·Tuesday in a "very
were auestloned Tuesday after only recently announced steel happy" mood and said he was
price hikes said increases in the auromobile struck by the "genuine exmarket are a certainty, though they probably won't come pression of friendship toward
hefore the new models are introduced this fall.
our people" in both London
Arvid Jouppi, Detroit-based analyst for the Wall Street and Geneva.
firm of Colin Hochstin Co., said the retail price of the averageFrom all reviews Carter
equipped car- $5,7SO on 1977 models -will _vrobably rise to scored personally, not only
tA: 1M urh~n thfll '71tc; .are introduced. &gt;~The prtces won't go up · with the British people but
before the new models are introduced," Jouppi said. "U the also with many of the
companies r~auy needed the price hikes now; they would take European statesmen whom
tpem."
he met for the first time while
attending the seven-nation
OKLAHOMA CITY - A FEDERAL JUDGE has ruled economic summit, the four·
cancer patients can import the banned drug laetrile if they power summit talks and the
have a doctor'S affidavit that they need it. U.S. District Judge NATO ministerial meeting.
I..nther Bohanon made the ruling and prepared a standard
Carter had scheduled a
form lor the affidavit Tuesday after meeting with atoorneys for news conference for 7:30 p,m.
the Food and Drug Administration and cancer patients.
EDT Thursday, but moved it
Kenneth Coe, an attorney representing cancer patients up to 2:30 p.m. EDT alter
who want to import the drug, hailed the order as a victory for learning the evening hour
pro-Laetrile forces. He said Bohanon's order overturns FDA clashed with the second in a
guidelines on who can import the MUg. The FDA had ruled that series of David Frost inpatients must have been examined within the past three terviews with Richard Nixon .
months and be expected to die of cancer within several
Carter was welcomed home
months.

--

.

WASHINGTON - PIPEIJNE CONSTRUCTION pushed
Alaska's individual income to $10,!781ast year for the highest
earnings In the nation, but Michigan made the biggest
perceniage gain because of rehired auto work~rs. Although
most other A!l1ericans fared less well than those 10 Alaska and
Michigan incomes in only five states - Hawaii, Montana,
Nebraska', and North and South Dakota- failed to keep pace
with Inflation.
These developments were revealed in the Commerce
Department's 19'16 report on per capita income for the SO states
and the District of Columbia, released Tuesday. Ohio ranked
well up among tlie SO states with an increase of 10.3 pet. to
$6.432 frcim $5,a:J2.
WASHINGTON-RESULTS OF A SURVEY by United
Mine Workers President Arnold Miller indicate nearly pne·
third of the union membership is undecided regarding the·
union election June 14. The poll, purportedly based on 311mlnute telephone interviews with 32Q union members, gave
Miller 33.3 per cent of the vote, but 28.3 per cent were
undecided and 9.1 per cent refused to Indicate which candidate
they support.
Challenger Lee Roy Patterson of Kentucky had 17.6 .per
cent and Harry Patrick, 11.3 per c,e nt. Campaign atdes
acknowledged that Miller's apparent advantage could eastly
dwindle during the final month of the campaign.
Miller also released Tuesday a list of his campaign
contributors, claiming that over 90 per cent of the rota! $28,748
contributions came from union members. Among the b1ggest
contributors was $1,000 donor Harry Huge, union pension fund
trustee.
'

COLUMBUS - STATE AUDITOR THOMAS FERGUSON
said Tuesday that the Licking Valley Local School District
faces a possible deficit of as much as $88,000 by the end of the
year which could mean the closing of sc~ls in the district.
Fer~n told school officials that his office could n.ot cer.tify a
definite school closing date because of tnsufftclent
information.
"Howev.,-, we can definitely attest that your school
district will have insufficient funds oo remain open for the
entlrecalenclaryear,Jan. 1,1977,through Dec. 31,1977," said
Fergullln . state examiners said the projected $88,000 deficit
did not include unemployment compensation which would
ha,le oo be paid teachers and nonteaching employes shoul~ the
~oo~cm~ .
.

loca tion of the proposed Ave. to the new building to be
building and the traffic followed by another meeting
problems that n\ight be between commissioners and
the hospital board to recaused at the hospital.
The architect's site examine the traffic problem.
ln other matters, Mrs.
recommendation for the
building Is south of the Gene Lyons of the health
existing old Children's Home. department met with the
Commission decided to board to discuss the departproceed with preliminary ment's budget . She was
design work on the proposed advised to request a meeting
access road off Mulberry with the budget commission.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

report to nation Thursday

by First Lady Rosalynn
Carter and by Vice President
Walter Mondale, who leaves
Thursday for an Euorpean
tour of his own.
The President's aides were
highly pleased at results of
the trip.
On the homeward flight,
presidential assistant
Hamilton Jordan said "this
was the first time any of us
· has really had a sense of the
international dimensions of
the American presidency.',' .
Carter has an invitation
from French President
Valery Giscard D"Estaing to
visit France in the fall. While
making no commitment,
Carter said he would try to
take up the invitation.
National Security Affairs
adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski,
summing. u·p results of the
economic summit, told
reporters that a mechanism
· for coordinating effective
cooperation among the advanced Western industrial
democracies had been
established for the first time.
He also said the summit
reflected a reaffirmation of
the close collaboration between the United States,
Western Europe and Japan.
Brzezinski said one important consequence of the

Republic cuts
'
its price hike

CLEVELAND ( 0PI) Republic Steel Corp. tOday
rolled back a previously announced 1·9 per cent price
hike on flat rolled and bar
Steel to stay competitive with
U.S. Steel Corp., which plans
Ul hike prices 6 per cent.
"Republic steel Corp. announced ooday that it will
. reduce
Its
previously
announced price increases to
a level competitive with those
of a major competitor,
effective June 19," Republic
said in a one sentence
statement.
Republic Steel . President
W. J. De Lancey said last
Friday, when the firm first
announced its intended price
·increases , that "rapidly
rising costs make an-increase
at this time imperative"
because " the cost-price
relationship of steel has
deteriorated steadily.''
Youngstown · Sheet and
Tulle Co. also backed down on
its announced 7-9 per cent
increase on flat rolled and
bar steel products Tuesday,
falling into Jine with a 6 per
cent hike initiated by No. I
producer U.S. steel.
Youngstown also said it
was pushing back the date the

Thompson Ford, Middleport;
Smith Nelson Motors,
Pomeroy and Pomeroy Motor
Co., Pomeroy; on the pickup,
Smith Nelson Motors and Dan
Thompson Ford ; on the
passenger car, Tom Rue
Motors, Pomeroy Motor,
Smith Nelson Motors and Dan
Thompson Ford.
·
An agreement between the
Meigs
County
Com·
missioners, the county
engineer, Meigs County
Agriculture Society and Drew
Webster Post 39, American
Legion was signed giving an
easement to use and maintain
TR 79 on American Legion
property.
Attending were Henry
Wells, Richard Jones and
James
Roush ,
ComNOW YOU KNOW
missioners, and Mary
The state bird of Penn- Hobstetter, acting clerk.
sylvania is the ruffed grouse.

A resolution was made by
the commissioners declaring
Tuesday, May 17, Senior
Citizens Day.
The commissioners opened
bids for a self-propelled
bituminous paver, dump
trucks, pickup truck and a
passenger car for the highway department. All bids
were tabled for further study.
Submitting bids on the
paver were Columbus
Equipment Co., Columbus :
King Euipment Co., Dublin,
and the McLean Co.
Columbus; on the dump
trucks were Meigs Equipment,
Pomeroy ;
Dan

increases become effective,
from May IS to June 19, the
same day U.S. Steel's hikes
take effect.
Republic Steel and Youngs·
town Sheet and Tube were the
first two major producers to .
trigger the current round of
price increases.

summit was that it indicated
a beginning of " the
restoration of confidence in
the West.''
The foreign policy adviser

said the long gallery where
the delegates gathered was
hushed when Carter spoke,
and every ·European leader
wanted a bilateral talk with

him about mutual problems.
''There was no doubt that
the
unknown
former ·
governor of Georgia simply
impressed these people by

two things: one, he knew his
facts, and two, his facts were
part of a larger picture which
he co uld articulate effectively, " Brzezinski said. '

W. Va.'s .Secretary ~f State
to kick-off Pomeroy cleanup
A. J . llianchin, West
Virginia Secretary of State,
will be guest speaker at a
dinner to kick off the cleanup
campaign in Pomeroy. Fred
Crow, president of the
Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce, announced
Tuesday at the regular noon
luncheon of the chamber at
the Meigs Inn.
The dinner will be May 19
at 6:30p.m. at the Meigs Inn.
Tickets to the dinner at $5
each may be purchased from
Barbara Chapman,
secretary; the office of Crow,
Crow and Porter, Paul
Simon, C of C vice 'president,
and the New York Clothing
House.
The dinner will be · cosponsored by the Pomeroy
Citizens Action Group. Jim
Winebrenner of the Graphic
Arts and Design Department
at Ohio University will offer
suggestions
on
the
beautification of Pomeroy.
Bill
Young
said
Winebrenner deals with
restoration of buildings and
can give sugge~lons and
show pictures 'of what
Pomeroy could look like.
There are 58 buildings on
Main and Court Streets
Young said.
Ii was pointed out that

Virgil Teaford and Lorenzo · but will be larger than last
Davis have already begun year. The programs will sell
restoration to properties they for 25 cents each.
own
and
11
other
In reporting on the Regatta
businessmen plan to restore parade Jim Frecker told the
their buildings , it was chamber it Is believed there
disclosed.
will he new additions this
President Crow suggested year and letters have been
some form of recognition be . mailed to organizations ingiven businessmen who viting them to participate ..
restore their buildings. The Everyone interested in enChamber agreed.
tering a float in the parade is
The cutting of weeds from to contact Mrs. Chapmarl.
Nye Ave. down river through
Simon said thus far there
Pomeroy
was
again are ll confirmed concessions
discussed as was the cleaning which will be stationed along
of weeds between the curb Main St. Mayor Clarence
and the railroad tracks and . Andrews said senior citizens
possibly placing limestone ~n will have · concessions this
the parking areas along Mam year and LyM St. will also be
St.
used for the Regatta, the
Since the cleanup will take parking lots being left open
money , (approximately for parking.
$3,000 for the summer) the
Bill Quickie said the
matter will be studied and ·a crowning of the Regatta
decision on what approach to Queen will be Friday night on
take will be given at the next Lynn st. 11 gospel sing will be
meeting. .
·
held on Lynn St. Saturday
Crow reported that he had night.
permission from the C&amp;O
Quickie also reported that
Railroad to clean up the
railroad tracks.
In regard to the Big Bend
Regatta, Mts . Chapman
reported that $2,955 in ads has
heen pledged. Ads are up $700
BOYS TO MEET
over last year. It was pointed
All boys who have sign~d
out that the programs this up to play pony league m
year will cost more money Middleport are to meet th is

Notices, local briefs

evening at the ball park at

5:30 p.m.

Festivals begin this week
Columbus, Sept., ro-22.
July 8-:10.
Onitcd Press International
Ohio Hills Folk Festival,
Apple Festival, Jackson,
Ohio kicks off its summer Quaker City, July 14-17.
Sept. 21-24.
.
of festivals this week with the
potter y F est i v a 1
Mining and Manufacturmg
town of Barberton hosting the Crooksville, July 11&gt;-17.
Festival, Cadiz, Sept. 22-25.
Cherry Blossom Festival.
Salt Fork Arts and Craft,
Grape Jamboree, Geneva,
The blossom festival runs Cambridge, Aug . 12-13.
Sept. 24-25.
from
today
through
Ohio State Fair, Cohunbus, · Ohio Swiss Festival, SugarSaturday.
Aug 16-28. .
creek, Sept. :JO:Oet. L
Other festival and dstes
PotaUJ Festtval, Mantua,
Canal Festival, Coshocton,
are:
Aug. 19-21.
Sept. 3Q.Oct. 2.
Moonshine Festival, New
ParadeoftheHUis,NelsonAntique
Festival
straitsville, May 27-30.
ville, Aug. 21-27.
Millersburg, Oct. 8-9. .
National Clay Festival, UhSweet Corn Festival,
Apple Butter Festlval,
richsville, June 12-18.
Millersport, Aug. 31-Sept. 1. Burton, Oct. 8-9.
. .
Festival
of
Fish,
Melon Festival , Milan·,
Sauerkraut Festtval,
Vermillion, June 16-19. Sept. 3-li.
· Waynesville, Oct. 8-9. _
Big
Bend
Regatta,
Tomato Fest iva I ,
Bob Evans Farm Festtval,
Pomeroy, June 17·19.
Reynoldsburg, Sept. 7-11.
Rio Grande, Oct. 14-16.
Swiss Chees.e Festival,
Honey Festival, Lebanon,
Fall Festival of Leaves,
Middlefield, June 18-:19.
Bainbridge, Oct. 14-16. .
Sept. 8-10.
Old Fashioned Fourth 'of
Johny Appleseed Festival,
Pumpkin Show, Circlevtlle,
July, Ashville, July 1-4.
Lisbon, Sept. 11&gt;-17.
Oct. · 1~22 .
Canal Days, Ca'tl Fulton,
Farm Science Review,
._,.

the Coun.try Cousins, in
conjunction with the Jaycees,
will sponsor a hamburger
eatiug contest on Saturday
and added that discs will be
given to the winners in the
boat races rather than
plaques.
Bill Mayer reported that he
has a Big Bend Regatta sign
to be placed across Main St.
He stated that the Sugar Run
FloUr Mill donated plastic
sacks for the sign.
It was announced that
tickets to the frog jump imd
derby are now on sale. Bill
Downie is this yea r's Grand
Croaker
and
Charles
Wayland is Grand Croaker in
charge of vice with Bill
Young in charge of the frog
events.
Attending were Crow,
Simon, Mrs. Chapman, N. W.
Compton, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
Tea ford, Frecker, Vernon
Weber, Young, Mayor Anmews, Mayer, Quickie, Joy
Young and C. E. Blakeslee.

at the Raci ne leg ion Post

home Saturday fro{Tl 8: 30 to
11 : 30 p .m. Mus ic lw"fill be
provided by Ohio Valley
Music Co.

A square dan ce will be held
at the senior citizens cen ter

The Sou thern Junior High
Friday, May 13, from 8:.30 to
Athletic · Boosters will meet . 11 :30 p.m. Music by the
this even ing at 7: lO p.m . at St ringdu sters. Adm issi on Is
the (\Jnlor high ~uild ing In Sl tor adults, children under
Racine .
12 will be admitted free if
accompanied
by
th eir
A va riely show wlll be parents .
presented Saturday evening
at Tuppers Plains ElemenThe Mei gs Band Boosters
tary School at 7:30 p.m. will meet for the last time th iS
Proceeds will be used to send school year Monday, May 16,
the safety patrol
lo at 7:30p.m. In the band room
Wa sh ington.
at the high school. . In Among the people lak ing stallat ion of officers for next
part in the show are the year wi ll be held .
Bauman
fam H~.
Betty
Osborne and Robert WHite.
A work pady at the
Rog er Balser , Floren ce bal lfi eld for the Pomeroy
Spencer . Boyles quartet. Youth Baseball League will
Batey children , Alex Stone. a be held Saturday, May 1&lt;,
m ale chorus line. and Todd beginning at &amp;a .m. Labor and
Logo e.
carpenter help is needed to

.-

Mary

McAngus. 846 E.

Main St.. Pomeroy , entered
Un i ters ity_ Hospital ,
Columbus Tuesday . Her
address is Means Hall r60m
25 1 for those who wish to send
cards . She will undergo eye
surgery Thursday .
A squa re da'h~ will be held

finish the project of building

dugouts and an equipment

building bef ore the start of

the season . All parents of
youth involved in the summer
ba!eball program are ask,ed
to attend and bring eqUipment suet) as hammers ,
saws, etc. ,· to help complete
the pro ject .

·~

•'

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Wednesday, May II, 1977

42 jailbirds want
to go at each other
CLAYTON, Calif (UP[) - They've got some rntghty
rough Jailbirds cooped up in solitary at the county )ail
here
"We have tn keep them separated or they 'll go at each
other," satd one deputy
He was talking about the 42 ftghbng roosters who are
part of the eVIdence agamst 117 county rest dents ctted1ast
week m a massive ratd on a cockfightmg party
The case 1s expected to run through July, so that the
deputies are learnmg how to be rooster keepers The
btrds' eventual fate 1s uncertam , however.
Adeputy sa td that no hens would be unported because
"we sunply don 't allow conj ugal VISits at this factlity ."

$6.6 billion in new jobs funding allocated
allocations were determined
under a complicated, legallymandated formula
The new legislation
promises $6 .503 btlhon will be
spent dtrectly w create or
mamtain an estimated
720,000 Jobs over the next one
and one-half ftscal years.
workers m Cahforma
Some 310,000 o! those JObs
Ohto IS slated to get $339 6 already extst under an earher
mtlion, the second largest $1 78 bilhon appropriation for
share
the current fiscal year.
The Labor Department will
Labor Secretary Ray Marsball smd the money wtll be not mnrnedtately dtsburse the
distnbuted just as soon as remammg $100 rntllion
Cangress completes action on proV)ded in the legiSlation.
the legislation and Prestdent Thai sum will he used later
r.arter stgns It
The for fmal adjustments In the
WASH!NGTON (UP! l The Labor ' Department
Tuesday announced plans lor
allocabng some ;6.6 btllion m
new public service jobs
money among state and local
recipients, promismg the
btggest sbare of more than
$785 mtlhon to JObless

allocations
The new money wtll be
(!istnbuted to some 445 state
and local agenc1es which
currently sponsor pubhc

service JObs. Although most
of the existing federally
funded jobs exist In regular
government

tnslttutwns ,

Marshall has encouraged
these sponsors to create new

employment tasks wtth the
additiOnal funds ,
A department spokesman
satd public service jobs
usually provtde annual
salaries averaging about
$8,000 a year The new jobs
thus were to be funded at an

Vote coming on Spanish speaking aid bill
By LEE LEONARD
tf a person IS unable to
UP! Statehouse Reporter
provtde for hts own support,
COLUMBUS (UP!)
the spouse must do sow the
Once-vetoed legislation · extent he or sbe ts able.
creabng three state agenctes
It also sets forth conditiOns
to help Spamsh·speakmg under whtch a person IS not
people m Ohio was scheduled liable for debts mcurred by
for a floor vote today m the his or her spouse. They
Ohlo House.
mclude If the spouse
Gov. James A. Rhodes expressly authorized the debt
veined the btll last year oo or allowed use of a credit
grounds that extsttng state card, 1f the debt was w a
agencies could do the same tradesman wtth whom both
job. ThiS year, maJority spouses dealt or tf the
Democrats added a $57,100 purchases were necessities
appropriation mto the for either spouse or mmor
proposed 1978-79 budget In children.
But Mrs. Pope complamed
cover start-up costs of the
program
Thompson slipped into
Tuesday , House lawmakers committee a substitute btll
defeated by two votes a b1ll contammg a provisiOn
which would have made hus- knocking out a requirement
band and wtfe Jointly 111 the law that a husba'\d
responstble for debts of the support his wtfe and chtldren.
other.
•
Instead, the new btl!
"Uyou'r egomgtoma nda.te requires a husband and wtfe
this, you'd better mandate to
be
"Jomtly
and
jobs with equal pay for md!Vldually responsible" for
women
or
perhaps chtld support from theu- labor
com pens at 1 o n f o r or property.
homemakers, " said Rep
Mrs. Pope satd that would
Donna Pope, R-Parma, wbo be a "maJor departure" from
helped lead oppoSition w the present law and would stick
bill.
wtves wtth htgher chtld
The final vote was 48 to 39, support levels if the husband
with 50 votes needed for did not want wpay hts share
Rep . Richard G. Fman, Rpassage
Rep. Ike Thompson, IJ. Cincinnati, satd the btU could
Cleveland, chtef sponsor of result in a husband making
the bill, said he meant for the $50,000 not being required w
bill to lilmt the amount of pay support w a Wlfe m a
credtt card purchases and divorce case.
other debts one spouse could

"This is a real sleeper,"

run up without knowledge of
the other.
Thompson
sa td
the
" measure would requires that

srud Fman. "Even where tbe
fathers have the abtltty to
support the children, It's
going to put th~ wtfe on the

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

Depression is common
DEAR DR. LAMB - I hope
you can help me, because the
way I feel now, 1t's not worth
livmg. Some years ago I had
headaches and crymg spells
It was called a depresswn. I
tnok ptlls for that and was all
nght until recently
I moved mto a new home
and ftxed everything the way
I wanted it but now I cry ~ll
the tune and I don't feel at
home. What causes a depression' Please tell me what I
can do about 1t I am 64 years
old.
DEAR READER - You
are far ahead of most people
Wlth similar disorders You
know what you have and
have some understanding of
11. Depression is a common
disorder and tl occurs wtth
varying degrees of seventy.
You should get some help.
Go see your doctor and let
him gwde you. People w1th a
depression are often unable
to really, help themselves s(}meone outside often needs to
take the tntltaltve.
Medicines, some of whtch
you have had before, are
very helpful m.such a Situation and you may proftl wtth
some professiOnal counseling
to help you cope wtth the
underlying factors that may
cause you to have a depressiOn.
What causes a depressiOn 1
Authonties have dtfferent
theones about tt. If I were to
Single out one factqr 11 would
tie the indiVIdual's own
dependent nature. All of us
have some degree of
dependency, and need SUJ&gt;port from family, fnends or
church.
The person prone to
depression tends to be more
dependent and is less able to
tolerate the stresses of llfe.
He may need a greater
amount of assurance. When
the assurance from his job
Situation or fam1ly disaJ&gt;pears, depressiOn may
follow
This may be
prectpitated by loss of an tmporillnt fanuly 1'8ember that

ftlled part of the dependency
needs
Depression ts often
associated wtth anger
directed toward one's self
The gmlt reaction and sense
of lack of worth may be made
worse by sympathetic
understa ndmg. That IS why
the "fnend in need"
neighborly act may not be
helpful at all m such a complicated s1tuatwn It takes a
professwnal to determine
whether stern realiSm or
sympathel!c understandmg
IS really needed m any gtven
case.
A change m environment,
mcludmg movmg mto a new

house or a change m JOb
sttuattons may precipitate a
depressron m a person who

has the dynarrucs to have
one. I am not too surpnsed
that you tdenl!fy this event
wtth your depressiOn.
Don't be secretive about
your problem. Ask your farruly to help you and let them
know you need some professiOnal help to recover as soon
as posstble. The sooner ydu
get competent Mlp the
quicker you wtll be back to
your pormal self. Some mdivlduals may feel tll and
thmk thev have some serious
disease of the body when in
fact they have a depressiOn.
The aches and pams of
digestiVe complaints may all
be mamlestatwns of depression A phystctan has to be
alert to th1s possibtllty to provide proper treatment.
Does your personallty type
mcrease your chances of hav·
mg a heart attack? For mformatwn on personality factors and heart disease send 50
cents for The Health Letter
number 4-1, Behavior Pattern, Psychologtcal Factors,
stress and Heart Dtsease. Indude a long, sta mped, selfaddressed envelope. Send
your request to Dr Lamb m
care of this newspaper, P.O.
Uox ISS!, Radw City Stal!on,
NewYork,NY10019
1,

The Daily Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0. Wednesday, May tl, 1977

welrare rolls "
Thompson sa1d he would
bring the btll up for another
try later, notmg that a dozen
House members were not on

the noor for the vote.
In other busmess, the

House passed a resolution
memorializi{lg Cangress to
support
recommendations
that natural gas from
Alaska's North Slope ftelds be
transported to the Mtdwest
through a trans-Canada
ptpellne.

average level of •12,000 over
the next one and one-half
years.
Marshall urged state and
local rectptents to begin
hirmg jobless workers us
raptdly as possible after
Carter Signs the legislahon,
wtth tl!e goo! of ftllmg all
ava1lable jobs by Jan. I, 1978.
He said funds will be shifted
away from areas not hiring
fast enough.
Statesrecetvmg the biggest

ollocallons were California,
$785.5 million; Ohio, $,'139.6;
Michigan, $347.7 million j Illinois, $270 mill1011; Florida,
$293.3 million; Pennsylvania,
$348.7 million; New York ,
$684million, and New Jersey,
$303 million. In each state,
the funds were d1vided
among a number of sponsors.
In Ohio, the money is
ollocated to Cmcinnati Ctty,
19,116,150; Butler County,
8,627, 449 ; Clark County,

Goiters, tumors
in fish increase

Southern boys, Eastern girls triumph.

5,025,r.ta; Hamilton Caunty,

•
Tbe Kyger Creek boys and
~rls track team played host
to Eastern, Southern and
Nlrth Gallia Tuesday.
In the boy• quadrangular
meet Southern placed first
With 771!. points, Kyger Creek
second with 58 points,
Eastern thii'd wtth 46 points
atd North Gallia scored 151',
!Dints.
Marc Geiger was the top
mdlvtdual scorer w1th 21
JDints as he placed first in the
100 yard dash, 120 high
IIII'dles, 180 low hurdles and
third in the long jump.
Eastern won the girls
triangular meet with 611!.
JDints, whUe Kyger Creek
Jiaced second with 36 pomts
atd Soult!ern scored 21 'k
!Dints.
Theresa Thompson and
Yield Stroud each scored 18
!Dints to share individual
~~:oring honors
Theresa placed first m the
mile run , 880 run and 440 yard
dash while Vtcki placed first
in the 80 yard hurdles, lOll
yard dmh and 220 yard dash .
The Kyger Creek boys will
participate in the Class A
sectionals · at Rio Grande
Thursday and the gu-ls will
travel to Fairland In take
part in their invitatiOnal.
BOYS
Field Events
Shot - 1. Abshtre (KC)
:11'6, 2. Myers (KC), 3. Henchckson (KC) , 4. L1vmgston
(NG ) and Smith (S)
DISCus - 1 Abshire (!{C),
106'7'k, 2. Taylor (8 ), 3.
Hendrickson (KC), 4 Myers
(!{C)
Long Jutnp - 1 Tboren
(S), 17' 'h, 2. Sm1th (NG), 3.
Geiger (!{C), 4 Patterson

10,392,652; Lorain County,
6,802,990'; Aleron Cansortium,
19,384,174; Canton
Consortium, 15,866,194;
Cleveland Consortium,
47,027,517 ; Columbus ~on­
sortium, Z4,646,292; Miami
Valley 'ConsortiUm,
17,278,879; Central Ohio
Rural Consortium; 6,413,220;
Toledo Consortium,
19,372,695; North East Ohio
Manpower, 25,229,222'; Allen
County, 4,143,513; Greene
Caunty, 2,668,990; Clermont
County Consorti um ,
8,972,600; Lake-Ashtabula
Consortium, 8,578,370;
Portage Caunty, 6,118, 791:
Richland-Morrow Consort!·
urn, 5,987,732; balance to
Ohw, 77,944,287.

ANN ARBOR, Mtch. (UP! l -etther the U.S. or Canada, but
- A Canadian researcher are eaten as sport ftsb.
Several vanties of Great
h1s studtes of the Great
says
The House also agreed Wlth
Lakes
fish were studied for
Senate changes and sent In La kes Have turned up
cancer,
he said. While eating
of
significant
increases
Rhodes a bill allowing left
cancero
us ftsh 15 not
turns on red, after stoppmg, go1ters and tumors among
necesfrllrUy
a health threat,
from one-way streets tnto fisb, particularly those found
Sonsf~gard
noted , the
one-way streets unless such near major Cities.
increased
cancer
rate could
turns are prohibited by local
Dr. !Wn Sonstegard of the
suggest
that
the
agents
ordlllance.
Uruversity of Guelph (Ont.)
causmg
cancer
111
fisb
could
presented hts ftndmgs
have
a
sunilar
unpact
on
Tuesday at the openmg of tbe
humans
who
drink
the
20th annual Canference on
WASHINGTON (UP!) water.
Great Lakes Research.
The
Energy Research and
In another area, a
He satd he took samples of
' Development Administration
coho saimon from Lakes Umversity of Wtsconsm
"But we don 't know what tl Erie , Ontario and Michigan btologlst wld the conference Tuesday announced that
would cost, or even if the and found that the occurrence that a red algae called Columbia Gas System
mutant could be removed of gotters - abnormal BangJ.a IS runnmg rampant Service Carp. and Calumbus
Technical Institute had
commerdally."
through the Great Lakes.
swelling of thyroid glands The Canadian govenunent more than doubled between
Although the algae ts app- received grants for demon·
has Imposed a ban on 1973 and 1976
rently harmless , stration solar heating and
saccharm m food and • Sonstegard also said he envirorunental sc1entists are coolmg projects.
Columbia will receive
cosmetics and as a sweetener found a maJor increase m the watchmg it closely, sa1d Dr.
$254,000 w install a heabng,
m drugs The ban will be mc1dence or cancer m vanous John Blum.
applied m stages between species of Great Lakes fish
Blum said sctenllsts fear coolmg and bot water system
July 1, 1977 and the end of
In the case of both goiters that such a rapid spread of a in a three story building it
1979. The Umted States also and cancer, he satd, the smgle species could case leases m Calumbus, Ohio.
en will receive $390,000 for
has banned the sweetener affected fisb were found most damage w the ecological
heatmg
and cooling its new
frequently m areas near balance of the lakes.
classroom
and
Normally found only in
large ctties, suggeSting a
relationsblp to mdustrtal or seawater, the algae !Omehow administration building oo
munlctpal waste dtscharges. worked its way mto Lake the campus.
The Columbia project is w
Sonstegard S3ld mcrease in Erie in the mid-19009, Blum
install
solar capability in the
gotters is apparently a recent said. It has now reached
building
which · hOuses the
development and suggests a Lakes Ontario, Michigan and
stationery
department for
metabolic problem caused by Huron.
Columbia
Transmisston
Blum said there is eVIdence
some fore1gn substances m
System.
the algae is fed by
the water .
~~we've had a research
His research on gotters phosphastes or chlor1des
program
interested in the use
bond awattmg a retrial in covered only Coho salmon. discharged by municipal of solar energy for three
another murder case when he Caho are not sold for food 111 sewage plants.
years, P satd William Potter.
was arrested.
Potter said the solar
Police said the suspects
system 1s expected to supply
mtght have gotten away wtth
30 per cent of the energy
Wednesday Early B1rds
tt tf it hadn't been for the
needed
for heating and ati
April27, 1977
purchase of the Uncoln
Pis cooditionmg.
Attnrney Duge Butler Jr.,
LtghthoUse Re st
72
representing Crossroads linBen Tom
60
Kmg Builders
55
coln-Mercury, contacted
Royal
Crown
51
police when he learned
Sh1rley Kay 's
50
!Wbmson paid cash for a new
Evelyn's Grocery
48
Pomeroy Bowling L.anes
Lincoln last Thursday. Butler
Team High Series - Ben
Mornrng Glories
Tom 2563; Royal Crown 2534;
called back In say Robmson
Mav 3, 1~77 •
Pts. Evelyn's Grocery 2477
had returned to the Tea m
Sunoco
IM
Team Htgh Game - Ben
dealership Monday trymg to GNewell
&amp; J Au t o Parts
148 Tom 908; Royal Crown 882:
111
trade the Cantinentalm on a Sears
Lighthouse Rest. 865.
Roach 'S Gun Shop
106
lnd High Sel'les - Betty
Mark V "because he got a few Karr
&amp; VanZand t
96
515 , Shjriey
scratches on it.' '
No 2
73 Wh•llalch
S1 mmon s
493 ,
lov 1se
H•gh rnd game
Betty
Pollee trailed Robmson and Whrtlatch
Total expendable funds of
Harrtson 492
183 , Myrtle Srsson
Williams for several hours
164
lnd Htgh Game - LoUi se
Middleport as of April 30
Hrgh rnd 3 games - Vrcky
Monday, then picked up WilHa r r 1son
200 ,
Betty
were $61,661.67, according to
Gi llrl an A67, Be tt y Whrtlatch Wh itla t ch
179 ,
Sh~rley
Police
said 461
liams.
the
monthly report of ClerliH rg h team game sea r s Sim mons 175
informahon William s
Treasurer
Gene Grate
provtded led In he arrests of 791High t eam 3 games
submitted to council Monday
!Wbmson and Miss Young . Newell sunoco 2185
night
Pohce found $652,000 in a
SMOKERS
• The receipts, disburbrown bnef case at
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
sements durmg April and t~e
Robmson 's
home
and the Standard Supermark~t Ohio Senate unammously
balance of each fund,
recovered more than $1 3 fortune, apparently had more passed and sent to the House
respectively, were: general
milhon from the home of Miss than $8 million at the Tuesday a bill clarifying the
$19,422.61; $8,889.90;
brownstone ranch home "nonsmokers' bill of rights,"
Young.
$35,906 44 ; eemtery, $515,
Mrs Jackson, heiress to where she was found which the legislature passed
$914 18, $822.44; fire equiJ&gt;murdered Saturday . Her last year.
ment, $275, $374, $11.40 ;
body was discovered by
The clarification reqmres
swimming pool, $100, $260.90,
f1remen called In the house w local fire ch1efs, who enforce
$3,586.35; plannm'g comextmguish a fire apparently the b1ll, to insure that mission, $300, $26.86, $335.54;
set In cover up the burglary hospitals and other health street maintenance, $8,235.73,
But asked if the FaziO- and murder Authorities satd care facilities have both $2,822.23, $5,764.09; federal
Kroger moves don't add up to sbe may have been dead smoking and nonsmoking
revenue sharing, $3,731,
a pnce war, G1aimo since Thursday.
rooms.
$1 ,406.09, $14,646.48; anl,lconceded, "All things are
recession assistance, $180,
posstble, I'll admit that."
$115.30, $5115.93. General fund
''What we want is In get
receipts totaled $33 ,162.3:4
more customers sbopping at
while dtsbutsements for II¥&gt;
our stores and the response so
month totaled $14,810.35.
far has been very enCouncil obligated funds
couraging," added Gtaimo
tctaled $50,9Sl.59 with
"We're saying that our
receipts for A~rll totaling
customers don 't have to
$1,842.78 and, disbursements
bother w1th spectals and
·
~
totaling $44.57.
coupons In get the lowest
The balance of all Board Of
EAST MEIGS - Awards Hayman, Don Putman, Jim
prtces."
Public
Affairs obligated
Caunters McCafferty, "In were presented by Alan Jackson, Blatr Windon, Bill funds as of Aprtl 30,
addttion to our everyday low Holter, chapter adviSor, at Kautz, Leonard Oatley, amounted to $189,233.04.
prtces, , we have even extra the annual Eastern High Rocky Van Meter - and
Receipts into the vanoU..
savings with spectpls and School Future Fanners of Dewayne Good. Given funds, disbursements and the
coupoos. We 're flattered that America banquet recently at recognition were members of balance, respectively, inthe soil judging team inFazto's recogruzed we're the the school.
Receiving awards w:ere including Rocky Van Meter, clude: sanitary sewe~ .
low price leaders."
$4,292 62, $4,959.80,-t36,485.!0;
Clifford
Wh1le McCafferty also Rock Van Meter, outstpnding Keith Wolfe,
sanitary
sewer escrow, $816,
refuses to label the price greenhand; Bryan Gibbs, Longenette and Brtan Windon no _ disbursement ~,
reductions a war, she does proftctency award for Ag- and others recognized were $136,570.09 ; water, ' $7,388.6§,
term 1t "a heating up of an mechanics; Theresa the parliamentary procedure $8,93S.35, ·~.834 . 75; water
already intense Benedum, beef production: team members who are Blair meter trusts, $200, $15~,
Howte Dorst, livestock Windon, Keith Wolfe, Ed
competition."
$7,343.10 . Receipts totaled
"But 11 may only be a sh~rt production ; Sonia Carr, Holter, Debbie Durst, Clif. $12,889.30 while disbu~­
term thing," ·she warned sheep production ; Ed Holter, ford Longenette, Roger sements totaled $14,045.21 .
sboppers who may enviswn dairy production ; Terry Life, Riebel, Theresa Benedum,
The total bonded lq!he two supermarket chains crop production ; Carl Parker Terry Lunsford, Jim Jackson debtedness of the town
whittling pnces down to and Btl! Kautz , swme and Bill Kautz.
amounts to ,1,351, 158.2);
Chapter farmer awards
Clifford
almost nothing. "You can't production ;
which Is $4115.33 per eapiti.
conbnue to operate like thts Longenette, home Im- were given to Theresa
I
provement; Debbte Durst, Benedum, Howie Dorst,
forever .
''
"It may be effective in the star chapter farmer and Bryan Gibbs, Carl Parker,
sbort run in order In win over agricultural processmg ; Debbie Durst, Terry Lunscustomers, but in the long Blair Windon, recreation ; ford, Jeff Root, Ron
••
run, supermarkets have to Don Putnam, placement McGrath,
Clifford
make a reasonable profit. To agricultural productiOn ; Longenette and Keith Wolfe. 1-71
l
keep
customers, Terry Lundsford, star
Speal&lt;er was Wes Untied,
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ttk
supermarkets have to do chapter fam1er Award
state FFA representative, Ohto House gave finallegi.sllj.
things that will attract
Grcenhand awards went to who stressed tl!e role of live approval Tuesday In
sboppers over the loog run Soma Carr, Cloist Teaford, today's students in supplying biU renaming Interstate 71
when this kmd of thing is not Ed Chaney, Roger Riebel, Ed the food needs of the world from Cleveland IIi Clnclnnali
happening."
Holter, Jack Parker, Terry tomorrow.
tl!e "Disabled American
Life, Kevm Buckley, Greg
f,
Veteran's Highway.'' .~
'll

GasCo to

heat with
sunshine

Saccharin causes mutations
-By ANDREW HIJ'ITON
know whether the impurity
OTTAWA (UP!) - Govern- was an essential component
ment scientists researchmg a in the manufacture of
link between cancer and saccharm, or "indeed was the
saccharm have found that a only unpurtty m saccharm "
" It wtll take much more
concentrated mtxture of
unpurtttes m the arllftctal extensive testmg, and then
sweete n er produces final testmg on ammals
mutations 1n microor- before we would even
constder lifting the ban," he
gamsms.
"The fmdmgs may be of satd "Why sbould the public
pa rtt c ul ar
Importance be subject In a product whtch
beca use
many
known may posstbly ha ve othe r
carcwogcns
ar e
also unpunttes in it
mutagemc/' sctentasts from
the Department of National
Health and Welfare's Health
ProtectiOn Branch said Tuesday.
"Although saccharm Itself
did not cause mutahons ,
concentrated mixtures of
unpunttes extracted from 11
were mu\ilgemc m the Ames'
test."
INDIANAPOLIS (UP!) Assistant Deputy Health A Lincoln Cantmen\Ial helped
Mmister Dr. Alec Mornson pollee crack a multi-million
explained that government dollar burgla ry and th e
researchers, using a method murder or gro cery store
developed by Califorman Dr heiress MarJorie V. Jackson .•
Bruce Ames, found the
Three suspects were in
tmpuntles in each test custody today and two others
sample of saccharm and rn were bemg sought.
commercial saccharm.
Nearly $2 m1lhon m casb
"We don't know what the and some Jewelry taken from
substance ts, but it is one of the Jackson home were
the lu-st clues we've had m reco ve red by pohce, but
trying to pmpomt a authorltles believed the tv:o
mutagenetic substance ,'' he suspects sttUat large may be
satd.
carrymg as much as $2
"Using the Ames' method million Federal fugitive
we found that an impurity , warrants were Issued for the
taken from the saccharin, pall', believed to have fled the
caused a mutation when tt sta te m a 1977 Lmcoln
was tested m an organism m Cantinental pulling a new
the laboratory . We don 't house trailer
know tf It causes cancer, but
Those arrested were tden\1that 's what we 're trymg to fled as Manuel Lee Robmson,
fmd out It may be 10 years 29, held without bond for
before we know what it is." ftrstdegree murd er, arson
said
the and burglary; John A.
Mornson
researc hers " don 't know Wtlhams , 38, held on $100,000
what the substance IS, and bond as an accessory to
they can't yet determine murder ; and Annie K. Young,
whether It can be removed 22, held on ~.000 bond for
commercially ''
possesSion of stolen property.
Mornson sa1d he did not Wtlliams had been free on

(S).

Ht!!h Jump - 1. Riffle (E)
5'8. 2. Coffman (S), J. Patrerson (S ), 4 Smitl! (S)
Pole Vault -!. Salem (KC)
9'2. Mulford (KC)
Running Events
100 yard dash - 1 Ge1ger

Burglary, murder in

Indianapolis solved

BOWLING

BELKNAP

ROOF
COATING

All funds ·
standing

'

BELKNAP

at $61,662 :

'I

With'Or Without

'

FIBER
5 Gallon Can

'750
Pickens Hardware
MASON, W. VA.
HOURS:

Mon .. Thurs .. &amp; Sal.
8:00·5:]0

Froday, 8:00-8 :DO

Super chains in price war
By RICK VAN SANT
United Press International
L1ke that old song,
"Anythmg you can do, I can
do can better," a couple of lng
supermarket chains are
taunting
each
other,
"Anythmg you can sell, I can
sell cheaper "
Sounds good for the

Cincmnati
Fazio's drew first blood last
month by closing 15 of its
stores in Calumbus, Youngstown and Mansfield for one
day to lower prices on more
than 5,000 of the 10 ,000
different Items earned m
each store
Trumpeting the news m
shopper, but warns one advertiSements, FaZio's desupermarket off1cial, clared it had done away with
"Something like this really gtmmtcky specials and
coupons and replaced them
can't last long."
Still, for the time bemg, It's with "everyday low prices."
"Some competitors had
a good old-fashioned pnce
claimmg they had
been
war .
lower prtces, but we
overall
· The supermarket battlean
tndependent
ground IS m central and had
northern Ohio and the marketing survey done and
warriors are Ftsher-Fazio's found out OlU' prices are now
which 1s headquartered in lower," proclaimed Sam
Cleveland and Ktoger 's, Giauno, director of pubbc
which ts headquartered 111 relations for Fazto's.
Kroger struck back.
"We tnok out ads saying
TilE DAILY SENTINEL
Kroger is determined to stay
DEVOTED TO THE
the low prtce leader," said
INTEREST OF
MEIGS.MASON AREA
Audrey McCafferty, dirytor
CHESTER l., TANNEHIU.
of
public relatioos for Kroger.
, Eu~~. F_.d
ROBERT HOEFLICH
"Our ads told customers that
City Editor
if you show us your groceries
Pullhshed rutlly er:t.-epl &amp;lturday
cost less at Fazio's, we will
by Th~ Ohw V&lt;~Uey Publishmg Comany, lll Cuurl Sl, Pmneruy, Olnu
double what the difference
45769 Business Off1ce Phone 99'2·
IS "

215o6 EdJlurial Phune99".!-2157
SetXIm.! class pusLIIKe

paid

11l

Pt!mcroy Ohw

Nalwnul a tlv~:rllsmg rt:IJtesenlalJVe W~trd - Griffith Company,
lnc liuttmelli and G~tllagh~r OJV.,
757 Thrtd 1\\e, New York, NY
10011
Sub.scnplwn rate::; Oelrv.!rt.-d by

&lt;.:ctrtter where ~v&lt;nlalll~ 75 cents J)t!t
wct!k Ry Motur Rtmle w/~re c&lt;~ttleJ
SCI"\'K."C nut &lt;IVMdttble, One myr~lh,
S3 25 By rmulur Ohio and W Va.
One Yc11r, $22 00 SIX mmrlh.'&gt;,
SJ 1 50 Three mollllls, $1 00
F.Lo;ewt!crl! f.l6 ()() y~;tt Sll( rnufiUL'&gt;
$11 flO
fhrce mo111hs $7 50
SuhM:nlllfun priCe 1m ludC"s :sum.la)
l'un1 ~c1rlrncl

~--..1.1---- J

So what did Fazto's do?
They ran ads re-stating their
prices are lower and offered
to tr1ple the difference if
Kroger is lower.
And so the volleying has
gone, but off1cials from both
stores don't bke In refer In the
jousting as 41 3 war."

"We're JUSt trying to serve
our customers better," sa1d
Gtatmo. uwe have not
dedared war "

Sports transactions

(KC) 10 .6, 2 Riffle t E l, 3

CUmmUIS (S ), ~ Livingston
(NG ).
220 yard dash - 1. Rtfne
(E) 22 3, 2 Cummms tS), J.
Palterson (S l440 yard dash - 1 Thoren
(S) 57.6, 2 &amp;&gt;lith (NG ), 3.
Halley IKC), 4. Wolfe cE)
880 yard run - 1 Thoren
(S) 2:ZI, 2 Carpenter lEI. J
&amp;ntth (S ), 4 Tackett I NG I
Mile run - I Tackett
(NG),5·:1l. 2. Carpenter (El,
3. Caffman (S ), 4 Salem
(KC).

•

Two mile run - 1. BISSell
(EJ 12 15 8, 2 S~n~th (SJ, 3.

McClure

(~;

), 4 Hamson

Tue'5day

Bv unrted Preu

1, J. Carr IE l
Mtle run - I. Thompson

( ~;

Gunther IE l, 4 Hawk IE).
120 h~gh hurdles - I
Getger (KC] 16.0, 2. Duddmg
(8) ,3. Allen (S), 4. Wolfe (E ).
180 low hurdles - t Geiger
(!{C) 21 4, 2. ABen (S), 3.
~dding (S), 4. Wolfe (E) .
Rela)'ll
880 yard relay - 1
Southern 1:47. 2 Eastern
Mlle relay - 1. Southern
4.28, 2. Eastern.

DISCus - 1. Batey cE)
00' 11, 2. Holsmger (SJ, 3.
Amtrose (E).
Lo.1g JliTlp - 1 Blake IE)
!3'8, 2 M~Clure (E), 3.
~asteen IS) .
Htgh Jump - 1. Batey (E)
4'1, 2. Edwards (E), 3.
1-illsmger (S) .
Running Events
lOll yard dash - 1 Stroug
(){C\ 124. 2. Batev IF.l. ~

Gtrl•
Field Events
Shot: I Harrison (KC)
Zl' ll, 2. Hannum (E), J.
&amp;I singer (S ), 4 Ftsher (S).

Walton terrific

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sporta Editor
COLUERVILLE, Tenn . (UP!) - One hot sununer mght
when he was driving home from work a few years ago, Marv
Throneberry noticed a dog lying motionlessly in the street,
apparently dead.
He was about to circle around the aruma! when tt suddenly
leaped up and , an across his path Throneberry hit his brakes
hard, so hard they locked on hun
Out of control, hts car slammed inw an embankment .
Throneberry's head went through the wmdshield and when
they got through W!pmg the blood off him, he was m the
intenSive care unit, h1s nose had In be sewn back on almost
completely and he ·had 385 stitches m him
The dog was killed m the accident . Had he not been, tHe
sberiff said he would've had to give the former Mets' fu-st
baseman a t1cket for reckless drivmg because there were no
wttnesses, the dog certainly would 've been long gone and it
would've stmply boiled down to a case of Marv's word against
the eVIdence on hand, what everyone could see for hunself .
In a sense, that's the story ofThroneberry'slife His baseball
life, anyway.
He has his own version of what happened when he played but
the evidence on the other side is so one..sided, It's completely
against him. Only m thiS case, there are plenty of witnesses.
When he played for the Mets, any tune he let a ball go
through his legs or dropped a throw, he'd never hear the end of
1t. He has good, strong hands, but as far as the fans were
concerned, he was Benny Butterfmgers, unable to hold
anything .. In recogrutioo of his defensive ability, or lack of it,
he became to be known as "Marvelous Marv "
"At ftrst, tt bothered me," Throneberry admits "Now it
doesn't so much any more. People had to have something In
read in the paper other than lose, lose, lose, wh1ch was pretty
much the same story every day when I was wtth the Mets. I
know I played as hard as I could and that after a while I was
gettmg charged w1th errors I didn't deserve for the sunple
reason the press was makmg a livmg off me. Not running the
press down , you understand, but they had In have somethmg In
write.
- "Looking back at my career, I don't feel I have anythmg to
be ashamed of. Lemme put It this way : When you're playing m
a nation which has millions of people at a tune when there were
only 430 or so maJor league ballplayers, that would make
anyooe proud.! couldn 't have been that bad a ballplayer."
Throneberry makes his hvtng now as plant foreman for the
Tayloe Glass Campany m Memphis . He has been out of
professional baseball 13 years but he still can't shake his
reputatton .
It even made some money for him not long ago when the Lite
Beer people asked him tfhe 'd do a national TV commercial for
them . Marv looked over the script and wasn't thrilled over it.
When he heard about the $5,000 he was gomg In be pald to do tt,
though, he said okay
He's seated at the bar with a glass of beer m his hand in the
comrnerctal. At the end of it, he looks straight into the camera,
laughs and says
"You know , I'm kmd of worrted. If I do for Ute Beer what I
did for baseball, l 'm afrmd theu- sales might go down. "
For all his defensive deftctencies, Throneberry always was
popular with players, the fans and the press The New York
Baseball Wnters gave him the Ben Epstein "Good Guy"
Award one year and he calls tl "the highlight of my career."
Accepting the award, he got laughs by saying "!hope I don't
drop 1t."

(){C )

(){ C 6 10 9, 2 Blake IE J.
80 yard hurdles - I Stroud
(){ C) 125, 2Crouch IS) and
Krider (E), 3. Durst (E ) and
(S)
440 yard dash - 1 Dailey (E)
Thompson i KC) 69.7. 2. Blake
Relays
440 yard relay - 1 Eastern
IE), 3. Edwards IE), 4
~asteen- IS).
&gt;9.9, 2. Southern.
880 yard relay - 1. Eastern
880 yard run - I ThompSJn IKCJ 3· 00. 2 Ambrose 2 10.6, 2. Southern
220 ya rd dash - I Stroud
(!{C ) 26.2, 2 McClure IE), 3
carpenter IS), 4 Shasteen

By BILL McFARLAND
PORTLAND, Ore. (U PI )His team trailing, 81-77,
Portland center Bill Walton
!J&gt;t "that look on his face,"
and staged a bnlllant 14point, fourth-quarter scoring
outburst to leed the Tratl
Blazers past the Los Angeles
!.akers, t02-97, Tuesday
mght .
The wm g.ves Portland a 30 lead 111 the best-of-seven
Western Conference title
series . Another Tratl Blazer
triumph Fnday mght here
will eliminate the Lakers and
put Portland intn the NBA
dlamptonship fmals
Philadelphia, leadtng
Houston, 2-0, plays the
RockEts In Houston tonight in
!tie third game of thetr best-

would ha"' to go to the basket
more. He just took tl. When
tE gets that look on his face,
te's there"
" I got hot ," said Walton
"Tbe tnck w our team ts
whoeve- gets hot takes the
to 11 to the hoop, ltk e Herm
Gdloam on Sunday He got
IDt, we gave him the ball and
let him do tt."
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar,
who Laker's Coach Jerry
West calls the most awesome
fOrce in the NBII, satd, ''We
tried to force Portland to
&lt;floot the ball htgh but then
Walton ttps 11 tn and there's
nothin g you can do about II.
rm not try tng to ram on
Portland's parade, 'but we
&lt;flould play better"
West satd, "Portland's

d~sevm

Eastern Con£erence

lrernendous qmckness has

title showdown
Game 3 was a tough one,
"the toughest 111 the series so
far ," sa1d Portland Caach
Jack Ramsay "Bill was JUSt
tremendous with his clut ch
play. At halfl!m e he said he

tEen the decidmg factor 111
the three games "
That qwckness by the Portland guards - Uonel Hollms,
rookie Johnny DaviS and
veteran Berm Gtlltam bewilders the Lakers.

SEO standings

Hollins, along With power
s::ored 22 points to sbare
game sconng honors with
Walton, got Portland m front
Jl-29 after one penod
But the Blazers went mto
slow gear suddenly as the
Lakers pulled to wtthm one
point, 54-53, at the half. The
Lakers had the lead at 75-73
&gt;iter three quarters, mamly
m the work of Ahdul.Jabbar
- who had but ftve pomts tn
the first half - Don Chaney
and Earl Tatum
Tre game had been tted 13
times and the lead changed 14
times before Walton got his 14
pomts UI a 16-pomt Blazer
surge whtle holding the
Lakers to three to put the
game out of reach.
.Jabbar had but 21 pomts,
his lowest game output m 10
Jiayoff games, to lead the
Lakers, who got some backcourt help from Luctus
Allen's 14 points after
m1ssmg the hrst two games
Los

Angeles

with

a

&lt;islocated toe

Meigs edges Jackson 3-2
_for fourth straight win
The Metgs Marauders won
the'" fourth baseball game 1n
a row Tuesday at Jackson by
playmg errorless ball for the
second straight mght enroute
to a 3-2 wtn over the Ironmen
T1m Elbersbach turned m a
!me pttchmg effort m ptckmg
up the wm, although he
needed help from Dale
Brownmg tn the seventh
when ' the first two Jackson
batters
drew
walks.
Brpwnmg came m and put out
the fire.
Metgs, now 6-11 , fell behtnd
in the bottom of the second by
a run when Harless poked a
home run over the left held
fence The next batter
smgled , but Ebersbac h
settled down to rellre the
stde.
Metgs got the lead m the top
of the thtrd when Tljll Hood
opened wtth a Single. Alter a
fi elder's choice, Bnan
Harrulton stroked a smgle
and both runners came home
on Crenson Pratt's two-out
smgle. The Marauders of
Coach Dale Hamson then
won tl in the fourth when Ray
Andrews doubled, advanced
on an mfield hit by Ebersbach, and raced home on
Mtke Wayland' s single

Jackson came w1thm one

when they got a run 1n the
bottom of the fourth on a
walk , a double, and a fielder's
choice.
Ha rl ess led the lronmon at
the plate wtth hts homer and
a smgle whtlc Mannertng had
a double and smgle Ktmbell
took the loss as he fanned 10
Marauders and walked oniy
three, but he ytelded a total of
10 hlts.
Ebersbach fanned ftve and
walked ftve, yieldmg JUS\ six
hits. Wayland, Hamilton and
Pratt led the Meigs hitters
w1th two smgles each whtle
Hood, Kenny Young and
Ebersbach each had a single
to go wtth Wayland's double
Metgs returns to the

tournament tratl Thursday to
play the winner of the
Warren ·New

Pro Foa1ball
Srgned lmebac.il.ers
Rudolph
Bryant
of
South
Carolrna Stale and V1ctor
Chbndler of Kansas State and
ctetens1ve tackle Charte!. Under
wood of Tcwaos. E t Pi'SO as free
aqents
New York J ets
S1Qned
Quarterback Cra ig Nagel and
w rde rece1ver Don Buckey as
free agents
Buffalo
Srqned f u llbac k.
Jrm Brat&lt;ton to a ser res ot one
year contract s
Wa shmqton
Stoned Clefen
S.1ve end Ron Wade of th e
Un rversrty of Calrfornra Oav1 S

Atlanta

Lexmgton

game
002 100 0- 3 19 0
010 100 Q-2 6 1
Ebersbach
(WP),
Brownmg (7) and Johnson
Ktmball (L PJ and Haller
M

SEOAL BASEBALL
Team

W l

Logan
Gallq:XllrS

ll 0 92
5 4 55

5

Ironton

s

Athens
Well s ton

5
3

Waverly
foh:l 9'

R OR

JO
50
4 54 35

5 49
6 55
b 40
7 43

75
62
58
58

J
3 8 49 69

Jacksro

TOTALS

40 40 4j7 4J7

May 10 results
Alhens 4 Wellston 0
logoYl 9 Gallipolis 4
fl/e Jgs 3 J ackson 2

DIESEL ELECTRIC PLANT

r unn rng

backs

and Chrr$ Hosk rns, M •!.sour r
Weo;tern, dl'!fens ,ve e nd Ed
Snurn , W rch 1ta Slate , and
runn r!'l!J ba ck Leonard Waner
&lt;&gt;ci"re•d , Southern Uldh, all free
agents
Los Angeles
Srgned de ten
srve back Osc ar Edwards,
UCLA , as tree agent
New
Orlean s
Srgned
sa fetres
Jerrv
Reese .
Ok.
tahoma , Don Rober1s. Texas
Tech and Rod Foster, Har
vard , de fensrve ba c k Donald
Marlrn ,
Vale ,
punter
B rll
F"ar ns M rss t sstppr, defensrve
end John Healy , Lenrgh , k i ck
return
s.pectal rst
Rtchard
Mautr , Penn State, center Joe

Boston

College

and wrde recerver Rrck Rrvas
Memph is State, all free agents
Mtnnesota 5rgned wrde
recerver
Ron
Kullas. M rn
nesota a free agent
Baseball
N ew York Yankees Op
I!Orted rel ret pttcher Ed Ricks
to Syr acuse of the lnternatrona t
League
Se at lie - Reactrvated p itcher
Enrrque Ramo and reassrgned
fi r st baseman Joe L 1s to T oledo
of the Internation al League
Detr ott ~ Oplroned rrg hl
l;'landed
Pit cher
Ray
Bare
Qulrrght
10
Evansvttfe
of
Amer1caon Assoc ,a t ton

Tc)(lay's game
Wa verly a t Logan (makeup)

%

Fnday•s games .
Athen s at L~an
Wellston at Gai!Jpo lts

Ja c kson at Ironton
Waverly at Metgs

7 Pet. per year on a 4

SCIOTO R~ULTS
COLUMBUS (UP!)
'1'! c1don r.oal ca me up from
second place in the stretch
Tuesday mght to wm the
featured etghth race at Scwto
L\Jwns by two lengths over
Hedgerow Will
'
The wmner, drtven by
Robert Todd to a 2:00 nule,
returned $6 40, $3 60 and
$!.00. Hedgerow Will patd
$5 a&gt; and $4.40 and the show
IDrses.. Ross Ga le, returned .
1380
The J-5 mghtly double
mmbutatton was worth $44.20
and the nmth race tnfecta of
5-7-1 patd $577.20
A crowd of 3,975 wagered
1252,0!17

year cerllflca1e of
depostl .
·
mommum
$1,000.00
deposit. interest pa1d
'luarterly .
M
suo!.t&lt;lnl•a! p enalty rs
Invoked on all c e rtrlrc.t~fc
account s Wt thdr awn prio r
lo the dale ot matuntv

Meigs Co. Branch

..@
The A th en!. County
Savrngs. &amp; L oa n Co
'296 Second Sf
Pomerov Ohr o

J

NEW YORK (UPI) - The
New York Yankees sent relief
pitcher Ed Rtcks back to
thetr Syracuse farm team tn
the Internatwnal League
Tuesday
Ricks, a 26-year-old righthander, was called up from
Syracuse by the Yankees
Apnl 26, but had not
appeared m any games.

Hurry, sale ends Monday, May 16!

HPO

Valvol1ne

All Climate

30W

~Orld'a

or

N.onDetergent

Awards made at

Norlhwe~t e rn .

Vm ce Sm.1lh . Northern !ll rno is,

Ironton Waverly, ppnd

Valvoline
Su~er 20W

- -· -~- --- -

as a tree aqent
(hrCc)90
5rgned
Wrde
rece 1ver Sc ol! Yel vr ngron .

Pendergras.t

£orward Maunce Lucas, who

m

lnlern~rronal

For the best
protec tion

Firat - World 's

..

year roun d'

'

30W 40W

10Wi 40

Eastern banquet

a

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STATIC
EXCITATION
----

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$11

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and Engine

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OIL,..

• RENTALS

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qt.

Buy a case•

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$14~ 6 Buy a case!

DEALER INQUIRIES INVITED

SALES REPRESENTAI'IVE • RAY REDMAN
PHONE 773-5495
OFFICE 614-446-7995
WATTS LINE 304·755-4313
• SALES

20WI50

OL
~~OTQR

54c

Racing 011

~!~:~A

Outboard or Motor·
Cycle

S11 76
Valvol1ne

.'

and
Type 0

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12 LEADS ARE RECONNECTABLE IN THE
FIELD TO OBTAIN DIFFERENT VOLTAGE
AND PHASE EQUIPMENT WILL NOT
BECOME OBSOLETE

Buy a easel

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Valvol1ne
Automatic Tr11nsmis:sioon[

Valvol1ne

On Alternator

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28

801 SECOND AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

�S- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, May 11, 1977

t:- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Muy 11. 1977
l~ tern.ational

Hockey Leagul!'

.Uni ted Press Intern a tiona t
Final Round
Besl of Seven

Saginaw ~s . Toledo

April

Senes t ied, 3-3
1'1
Sag maw 6.

Toledo

I
~r1t JO

Todedo5 , Saginaw

I
Vey 1
Sagrnaw 8. Toledo 2
Mav l - T~edo 4 . Saginaw 2
\i\.'1 y 6 Saginaw "12, T aledo 1

Kyger Creek, Symmes Valley
triumph; Southwestent loses

K)ller Creek advanced to im ing only to see Coach Ted
the
cha no (:ions hip game of Lehew 's Pirates boonce back
\'\'ly 10
Tol~o 4 Srtg rnaw 2
111~
Class
A Sectional Tour- Ill plate three nns in their
\o\1y 11 - Toledo at Sagina"' ,
r&lt;~mmt Tuesday night with a
hall of the innin g.
Kyger Creek's rally
7-6 ''ktor)' O\'er North Gallia.
Til&lt;' Bobcats will batUe Oak featured singles by Baird and
SPOKAiVE. Wash . l UPll _ Hill this enni~ at Cheshire Westfall, a balk , a walk,
Gonzaga University Baseball v.1th the winnet" advancing to triple by Todd Taylor and
Coach Larry Koentopp an- the Dlstrict Tournament at single from Ron Fraley's bat .
In the bottom of the inning,
nounord Tuesday he will tn ke 01illic~he .
.:1 une.y~ar lea\'e of absence
Coach Jim Sprague's No rth Gallia plated three
from his coaching duties to Bobcats, 13-6-1 , scored the runs Qn two infie)d errors1 a
de ,·ote more time to his v.innin g tal~v in the sixth wa lk and a double by Calvin
f:omil)'.
iming on a walk to Jim Minnis.
The Bobcats plated two
Koentopp has been at the Westfall. a stolen base and
llulldog helm the last eight d!uble by v.innin g hurler runs in th e fourtb after 'two
' ears. He said he would &amp;eve Baird.
w•re out. The rally started
·ema in at Gonzaga as
The winners had taken a 4-{1 &gt;&lt;ith Von Taylor's single. Two
llrlhliieiitiiii'c- du· ·ec·t·
or··---~--~lea
~d!in~the top" of the first errors and a double steal

produced both runs.
North Gallia cam• back
~&lt;ith two runs in the same
imlng on a wnlk, single by
Bill Lookadoo. stolen base
111d Mike Casey's single.
The Pirates tied the score
It 6-6 in the fifth on a walk to ·
Minnis, two stolen bases and
S:eve Mundell 's hit .
. Baird, in going the route,
fanned 12 while issuing three
free passes. Minnis and Bret
Thckett combined to walk
three and did not fan anyone.
VIKINGSWlN
The Symmes Valley
Vikings moved their season
record in the SV AC to 4-2

Smith-Nelson Motors
500 E. MAIN ST.

POMEROY, OHIO

992-2174

LOOKING FOR AGOOD USED CAR FOR YOUR SUMMER VACATION,
THEN LOOK NO MORE. WE HAVE SOLD SO MANY NEW PONTIACS
&amp; BUICKS WE NEED ROOM FOR MORE TRADE-INS. SO NaN IS
THE TIME TO TRADE FOR ONE OF OUR lATE MODI.ES WITH OUR
12,000 MILE OR 12 MONTH WARRANTY
BUY NOW &amp; SAVE
SALE
PRICE
1976 Chev . Malibu Classic, air , auto. , p.s., p:b ., only 11 ,821
$4366
. miles.
. 1975 Pontiac Ventura. 2 dr. , auto. , p.s .• p.b. , 260 VB, nice car ..
52766
1975 Chry sler Cordoba , air , cruise, AM-FM, vinyl top . extra
nice
54666
1975 Buick Lesabre, 4 dr ., h.t ., ai~, vinyl top. p.s., p.b., local one
owner.
$4266
1975 Olds Cutlass Supreme, 2 dr . h.t ., vi n y l top . air . extra clean and
sharp.
.
$4366
1974 Ford T-Bird, red and while . cruise, a'ir , AM-FM stereo , has
everything.
.
.
·s4266
1974 Olds 9Q Luxury, 4 dr. , gold with vinyl lop. air , local owner . 53866
1974 Nova , 2 dr .• red with black vinyl lop, air. auto., p .s., p.b. · 52966
1975 Pontiac Grand Prix. while and redtop. air , tape. mags , sold this
one new .
$4866
1974 Chev . MOnte Carlo, burg . and while , air . vinyl top. one owner
car .
53966
1_974 Chev . C203• Ton Fleetside, auto ., p.s., p .b .• radio , nice
$3266
pickup.
1973 Pontiac Bonneville, 4 \Jr ., h.t ., ilir , vinyl lop, local one
owner .
52366
1973 Buick Elec. 225. ~ dr ., h.t., air . vinyl top, p .s., p.b .• local
ow ner .
•
$3066
1973 Chev . lmp .,2 dr .. h.t. , air, body rough, runs real good.
51766
1973 AMC Gremlin, 2 d( .••auto ., p.s., p.b .• a real gas saver.
!11466
1
1973 GMC C1500 12 Ton Pickup. auto ., p .s., p .b ., local oneowner.S2666
1973 Pontiac Grand Prix, air. vinyl top. tape. local owner.
53566
19.72 Chrysler Newport,4dr . sed ., air,goodfi!milycar.
51866
1972 Chrysl_
er Newport, 2 dr .. h.t .. air , good transportat ion.
51466
1972 Chev . Imp .. 4 dr ., h.t .• gold and black, air , nice car , local
owner .
51866
51866
1972 Chev. Imp., 4 dr .. h .t ., vi nyl.top , air . one owner , sharp.
1971 Pontiac Lemans, 2 dr ., h .t ., auto ., p .s., p .b., body 1ittle
rough.
$1166
51366
1971 Buick Lesabre, 2 dr ., h.I ., gold , air , extra nice 71 model.
1970 Chev. CIO 1, , Ton Pickup with topper . good work truck .
51066

We have about 10 good older model cars priced from $195.00 to JS95.00.
Make you a Good Wen Car.
Look at These Prices and Then You Know, You Owe It To YouneH
To Check with Smith Nelson Before You. Buy Any Car, New or Used.
.We Are The Friendly Dealer. We Have the Sharpest Pencil In Town.
Come In and -See or Call One of These Friendly Salesmen, Ceward
J •.D.
or Bill Nelson.

WE WELCOME
fOOD STAMP

SHOPPERS

W. L

P iltsbrgh
St louis
Chic ltQO
Montr eal
Phit adlph
New York

19
17

15

7
10
10
10
12
16

13
12
10
West
W. L
22 6
12 16
II 16

Pet. GB

.731

.630
.• 00
.565
.500
.385

2,,
3,,.,
4,,
6

•

7: 35 p , m.
Atlanta (Cap ra 0-.21 at P i tts.

burgh
p. m .

(Candelaria

3-0l.

7 : 35

Cincinnat i (Alcala 1. 1) at St .
(Rasmussen. 2-3 ), 8:35
p.m .
Ch icago
(Burris 4 -J )
at
Houston (R ichard 1. )). 8 :35

Lou is

p. m.

Thursday 's Games
Atlanta at Pittsburgh
Cincin nat i at St. Lou is
os Ang at MontreaL night
San Diego at New YOrk . night
San Francisco at Ph il a, night

Sy. Valley

010 200 0-3 3 3
3!2 000 x..--4 3 1

S. Beaver (L) and Denrison; Christian (W ) and
Payne.

S. Web.
012 301 1- 11 10 3
S'western 103 000 ~ B 3
Moore, Messer (3) (W) and
Kallas; Bush (L ) and Carter.

Leaders
Major League Leaden
Bv United PresS lnternati011.a1
BiHing
&lt;Bastd on so at batso
Nationil Lng!Je
·
G AS. R. H. Ptt.

Pa rkr . Pt
Smmns, St
Mtthws, At

26 110 23 t7 , t27
26 91 19 35 .385
19 68 13 16 .381

Tr illo , Ch i ·

2S S.t 17 32 . 381

25 58 7 71 .362
79 12 28 . 3~

Scott, 51 L
Yegr, 'LA

n

Cey , LA

28 102 23 36 .353

Johnsn , H

22 SA

NewYOI'k
Baltimore
Boston
Milw~uke

Toronto
Detro tf
Clevelnd '

6

W. L Pet. GB
19 J(] .655

11 11 .607 w~
14 11 .560 3
Kanss Ctv
IS 14 .511 4
Oakland
15 14 .5 11 .4
Cali forn i
12 17 . ~14 7
Sea ttle
9 2-4 .273 12
Tuesday's Resulh
Cl eveland I , Milw 0. 1s t
Cl eveland 7, Milw 4, 2nd
Toronto 9, Seattle 3
M inneso ta 7, De troit 5
Californ ia 6, Kan City I

Texas

Tex as 3, Ch fcago 2

Today•s Probable Pitchers
(All Times EDT)
M il waukee ( Beare 1-1) at
Clevel and (Garland 0 -A), 7 : 30

p.m.

Chicago (K napp 3·1) at TeKaS
(Ai ennder 4-1) , 8 :35p .m .
M innesota
(Zahf'l 5-1) at
Detroit (Roberts 2-AL 8 p .m.
Boston
1 Jenki ns
.4 - 1)
at
Oakland !Medich 1-2 or Lang .
ford JelL 10 :30 p.m .
New York { Holtzman 2-11 at
Seatt l e !Abbott 0-·0. 10: 35 p.m .
Balt imore (Grimsley J. lJ at
California (Tanana 4-ll. 10: 30
p .m .
Thursday 's Games
New York at Seattle, nighl
Balt i more at Cal if ., n ight
Texas at Kansas Ci tv, n i~ht
Detro it at Mil waukee , night

(1st g11meJ

Atlanta

000 000 000 - 0 6 0

Pttsbrgh
001 001 Olx- 3 14 1
Capra , Camp ( 7) a11d Correll ;
Rooker, Tekulve (7) and Dyer .
WP - Rooker { .4- 1 J. LP - Capra
(0 -3 ),

(2 rid game)
Atlanta
• 000 001 OOQ- l 52
Pttsbrgh
00:2 000 Or:tx- 2 9 1
C o I I I n s. Ca'mp ( 7} and
Pocoroba ; Demery , Jackson
(7), Tekulve ( 8), Forster (81
Gossage (9 ) and O yer . wp..!..
Demery ( :2-H . LP - Collins {0Ls Ang ts
. 000 300 ooo- 3 9 o
MQntrel
110 001 lOx - 4 10 0
HO' .. n,
Hough
(7 )
and
Yeager ;
Rogers
( ~ . 1)
ar'ld
Carter. LP - Hough (J . J). HR Los Angeles, Sm ith ( 5).
San Fran
000 000 ooo- 0 4 0
Ph it a
200 001 oox- 3 8 1
Cornutt, Will iams (3 J. Hea verlo (6), Moffitt {8 ) and H ill;
Carlton (4 -1) ~nd McCarver.. LP
- Cornutt (0 -1). HRs- Philadel ph ia , Luz inski {6 ), ~hm i dt { 6) ,
Cin cnnt
010 100 DOO-- 2 12 1
St . Louis. . 0000001()0-1 61
Nolan , Borbon (~ ), Eastwick
(9 ) and Bench : F=alcone, Urrea
{9 ) and Simmons. WP- Nolan
11 -&lt;l ). LP- F=alcone 0 -4). ,
Ch icag
000 502 OCU- 11 10 2
Houston
001 000 103-5 10 2
KrukoW,
Sutter
(8).
R.
Hernandez (9 ) and M i rterwa ld ·
Bann ister,
McLavghl in
( 5 ),
Niekro (8J. Sambito (9J and
~erguson . WP-Krukow (2-2).
LP_- Banniste·r {1-Jl.
HRsCtu-cago. M itterwald ( A); Houston . .How·ard {1).

American League

(1st gamel
N.iiVi•Jk

000
Clevlnd
000
Slaton (1 -3)
Bibby 0 -0 ) and

000 000- 0 50
000 001 - 1 50

and

Moore ;

Kenda l l HR -

Cieveland, Blanks { 2) .
(2nd game)
Milwak
010 100 2oo- .4 6 2
Clevlnd
30002002x-7 91
Beare , McClure (6 ), Castro
(9) and Haney , Moore ; Ecker-

slev.

Kern

(~).

Wa its

{7) ,

Dobson (7L LaRoche (8) and

Fosse . WP- Kern

0 -2l. LP-

Beare [1 .2 ). HRs- M i lwaukee,
D . Thomas ('21. Lezcano (5J;
Cleveland, Carty (1).
Seattle
001 110 O()()- 3 10 1
Toronto
002 300 .tOX:- 9 13 0
Mol'\tague, Segui ( A), Rorno
(7) and Cox ; Garv in.. Vuckovich
(8 ) and AShby. WP - Garvin (5·
0}. LP - Mont ague { 3-3).

022 002 0 10- 7 9 0
M innest
DetrOit
000 130 001-5 10 1
Holly . Schueler tn, Burgmei-

(8) and Wynegar ; Sykes.

~

Arroyo (6) and May. WPHolly C2-0l. LP - Sykes {0-1).
HRs- Minnesota ,
Hisle
(8) ;
Detroit, LeFlore (2).
Cal i tom

001 001 310- 6 9 1
000 010 ooo., 1 2 1
Ryan (5-J ) and .Humphrey ;

KnSs

Braves
about
to sink

Logan, down 4--1 going into
the top of the sixth inning,
rallied for eight runs to defeat
host Gallipolis 9-4 in a
Southeastern Ohio League
baseball game on Memorial
Field Tuesday.
The victory gave the
Chieltains the 1977 un·
disputed SEOAL championship, l..llgan's first since
1971.
l..llgan upped its season
record to 24--4. Inside the
SEOAL, Logan remained
unbeaten with a lH record.
Gallipolis dropped to 9-&lt;i
overall and S-4 in the league.
GAHS scored once in the
first on a triple by Terry Wall
and single by Tim Carman.
Two GAHS errors gave
Logan an unearned run in the
third rung .
In the hottom of the fifth,

By FRED McMANE
UPI Sportll Writer
Not even a seasoned
yachwnan like Ted Turner
can keep the Atlanta Braves
afloat much longer.
A doubleheader sweep by
the sizzling Pittsburgh
Pirates Tuesday night sent
the injury-riddled Braves
reeling to their 16th loss in a
row and, although the season
is only 29 games old, Atlanta
is already 14'1: games behind
the first-place Los Angeles
Dodgers and close to being
declared legally dead in tbe
pennant race.
"We'd better get up and
start doing something now,"
a
depressed
Braves'
Manager Dave Bristol said
after watching his club lose
two heartbreakers, 1~ and 21, to the Pirates. "I'd do
anything to help us win."
Despite the twin loss,
Pirates' Manager Chuck
Tanner was complimentary
about Atlanta's play.
" It was hard to tell by the
way they played that they're
in a losing streak," he said.
"We had to work hard to win
the$!! games. We had to work

t tv .

Splittorff, Bird (7 ). M ingori (9 )
and Porter. LP - Splfttorff (l .JJ .
HR - Cal itorn ia . Rud l ~6).
Chicago
000 100 100- 2 7 0
Texas
000 000 021 - 3 7 1
Barrios, LaGrow
(8),
B.
Johnson ·(9 ) and Ess ian ; Br i les ,
Knowles (9 ), D evine- (9) and
Sundberg , Fahey (9). WP Oevine (2 -0l. LP- LaGrow (1 .
1) , HR-Ctdcago, S"encer (3 ).

By IRA MILLER
UP.! Sports Writer

While the Braves can't buy
a win, the Pirates can't seem
to klse. The two victories
stretched Pittsburgh's
winning streak to 10 games
and left thein atop the NL
East by 21&gt; games over st.
Louis.
Jim Rooker and Kent ,
Tekulve combined on a six- ,•
hitter in the first game and
five pitchers combined on a
fiv~-bitter m,the nightcap.
Dave Parker got four hits in
the doubleheader to stretch
his batting streak to 21
games.
· In other NL games,
Montreal edged l..lls Angeles,
4-3, Philadelphia blanked San
Francisc~ . 3~. Cincinnati
nipped st. Louis, 2-1, and
Chicago routed Houston, 11-6.
San Diego at New York was
postponed because of cold
weather.
ExpOs 4, Dodgers 3;

Montreal handed the
Dodgers only their sixth Joss
in 28 games when ,rookie
Warren Cromartie doubled
home the tie-breaking run in
the sev~nih inning. Steve
Rogers scattered iiine hits to
win his fourtb game in five ·
decisions. Reggie Smith hit
his fourth homer for the
Dodgers.
·

Runs Batted In
Nationiil Lngue ; Cey , LA 37 :Parker. Pff 30 ; W infield . S0 27 ;
Burroughs , All and
Simmons, St . L 26 .
Amertun. League: RUd.i. Cal
::1) ; Velu. Tor '2'9 ; HiSle. M inn
27 ; Zisk, Ch i 26 ; Page, Oak and
A'lllt . Tor 2.4.
Stolen Bases

Hilfional leilgue : Lopes, LA
14 ; Ta\leras , P'ilt 13 ; Moreno,

and Cedeno, Hou

•-American LeagUe : Remy, Cal

SEWER &amp; DRAIN PIPE
15 ; Pa t e~ . KC 12 ; Bonds, Cal
and Norr is: •. Ctev 10 : Lintz,
North and Page, Oak 8.
Pitching
Most Victories
National League : RtlOOen, LA
and Oenny, Sf .L S-0 ; R .Reus che/, Chi and Forsch. Si.L ~ - 1 ; '
Barr , SF S-2.
~mericiln
Le;ague- : Zahn ,
M tnn and Garv in , Tor S -O; .
Palmer , Ball and Torrez, NV s.
1; Ryan , C.a l S-3.
Earned Run Average
CNs.ed an 27 innings pitched)
National League : Sutton, LA

4" X 10 FT.

$280JOINT
SOLID OR PERFORATED

1.5:3 ; Rogen , Mtl 1.57; Hough,
L~ 2.12; Koosman, NV 2.30;

Sh tr l ey, SO 2.4-8.
American Lngue : Bly l even,
Tex l .A5 ; Figueroa , NY 1.50;
Palmer , Bait 1.55 ; T idrow, NY
1. 67 ; Slaton. M il 1.76.

HOGG &amp;' ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.

Strikeouts

National League : Rogef"S, Mil
'5 ( Seaver, NY and Montefus .

co. SF 37 ; N iekro , Atl and
.Richal"'d . Hou 36.
American League : Ryan, Cal
IIi ; Tanana, Cal SJ ; Blyieven,
Tex 50 ; Pa lmer . Bait 39 ;
Ecker.;ley, Ctev 37.

nl-5554.

..

r.tASON, W. VA.

~cL

,

29

WIENERS •••••••••••••••••••••••••1
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7
4
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PORK

Sunday

Prices Effective lbutSday thru Sunday

'

PRODUCE SPECIALS
MICHIGAN

POTATOES

10 lb. ~~ag$119
COCA-aU or SPRITE

00

.. .

CUCUMBERS

.10$each

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VELVEETA CHEESE
2 lb. bx. '1"
FROZEN
BANQUET

FRIED CHICKEN

PORK stDJlDER

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•

ARMOUR'S
'

10 Pieces .
2 lb. bal

'19!

24oz;79$

BEEF STEW•••.~ ..
GOOD BUY

WAGNER'S 28 OZ.

GAllS plated three runs on
singles bY" Terry Wall and
Mark Dobson and doubles by
Brent Johnso9 and Gary
Swain.
Wall, saliing along .on a
neat four-hitter, weakened in
the sixth.
It all started when leadoff
batter Jan Myers was safe on
a bunt single. It ended 12
batters and two GAllS pitchers later after Jan Myers
clouted a'tw()-run homer over
the left field fence.
Bill Heft was credited with
the win, his ninth of the
season against no setbacks.
Wall was charged with the
loss, his second in five
decisions.
Heft allowed four runs on
nine hits. l..llgan made one

error.

NBA playoffs

The Chieftains banged out
10 hits off three Blue Devil
Weste-rn Conference
hurlers. GAHS made two
Final Round
errors.
(Be-st of Seven)
Wall, Swain and Dobson
Los Angeles vs . Porttarad
lea(ls, J ·O)
each had two hits apiece for Mav (6-Portland
Portlad 121 , Los ~ng
GAHS. Johnson and Swain 109
May 8- Podland 99 , LOS Ang 91
had doubles, Wall a triple.
May I G-Portlnd 102, LOS Ang
For Lllgan, Chuck Lehman, •7
Myers and Ed Bush each had May lJ ~ Los Ang at Portland
~ May l5- Ponland at LOS Ang
two safeties. Bush and Brad X-May
18- LOS Ang at Porfl(ltncl
Tucker each had a double for x -May 20- Porttand at Los Ang
x- tf necessary
the WiMers. Heft helped his
own cause wlth a booming
triple in LogAn's big sixth
inning.
By United Press International
Linescore:
Finals
Logan
001 008 0--9 10 1
f Rest of Seven)
Montreal vs . Boston
GAHS
100030~ 9 2
CMontreal leads, 2·0)
Batteries: GAHS - Wall, May 7- Montrea l 7 Boston 3
(LP),
Johnson,
6th, May 10- Montreal 3 Boston o
May 12-,.....Montreat at Boston
Foglestrom, 6th &amp; Barr. · May
14- Montreel at Boston
Logan - Heft (WP) and x-May 17- Boston at Montreal
x -May 19-Montreal at Boston
Tucker.
x-Mav 21 - Boston at Montreal

NHL playoffs

x- if necessary

NEW YORK (UP!) - It's a
first chance lor Duane Bobick
;md it may be the last for Ken
Norton when they meet
tonight in a 12-round
heavyweight bout.
For Bobick,IJ!1deleated and
untested through a 38-bout
buildup against a succession
of nobodies, tonight's fight
represents his first real
challenge. He hopes to use a
victory over Norton as a

springboard to a tiUe light
with Muhammad Ali.
Norton already has fought
for the title twice, the last
time losing a highly debated
decision to Ali last Sept. 28. At
31, a defeat by Bobick would
cripple his hopes of another
chance at ihe championship.
Ali, who tunes up next week
against Alfredo Evangelista,
already has agrl!"d to meet
the ·winner in September.
Because of his greater
experie~ce, which includes

Churchman says priests
tortured in El Salvadar

one victory and two narrow
losses against Ali, Norton is
the ll-S betting favorite.
However, both men claim
they will win because of the
20-year-old Bobick's straight·
on style.
"I'm ready to work," said
Bobick, who weighed in Tuesday at 215'1:. "Norton has
trouble with guys like George
Foreman, guys that keep
coming at him. Norton does
better when he's moving in.
I'm going to be putting all the
pressure on him."
Foreman, the lormer
heavyweight champion, did
batter Norllln and knocked
him out inside of two rounds
when they met for the title in
1974. It remains to be seen,
however, if Bobick can be as
effective as Foreman at
boring in oil Norllln.
"l like Bobick's style,"
insists Norton who, at 222'1-4,
is nearly five pounds heavier
than he was against Ali. "By
coming .in, it will be to my
advantage. He comes
straight in and I won 't have to
look for him."
Norton, who 's being paid
$500,000 - to $300,000 for
Bobick - for the nationally
televised bout at Madison
Square Garden, claims to be
"insulted" that Bobick thinks
he can whip him.
"We didn't take this fight
for a payday or for prestige,"
answers Bobick. "We took it
because l 'mgoing to beat this
guy'"

Grapefruit Driqk •••••••• ~ 10.

·

By DONALD BERNS
.
Sf. I..OUJS (UP! ) -.Gary
Nolan. ~urdened with_ a
double Illness tn sprong
training, has pro~en h~s·
recovery to be as rap1d as hiS
fastball.
"!wasn't sur~ what I could
do, but 1t was n.1~ to be ba_ck
~ the mound, . Nolan sa1d.
1 !ound out 1 ~Ill can throw
strokes, and striking out Lou
Brock to start . th;, game
really got me g~ong .
.
Nolan had an rnfected rtghl
foot and . a case of
mononucleosis and had not
pitched since an exhibition
game March 29 .
He held the St. Louis
Cardinals to three hits in five
innings Tuesday night before
leaving with cram~ in his
thighs, and rellev,ers Pedro
Borbon and Rawly East wick
held the lead as the
Cincinnati Reds snapped a
five-game losing streak with
a 2-1 win.
"!had good velocity on my
pitches," Nolan said, "but I

guess lhal from all that 's
happened to me I didn't have
enough gas to linnish the
game. Alter all two weeks
ago I was sick; I felt
1J!rrible."
Nolan's teammates scored
a ~-ouple of runs over the first
four innings with Pete Rose
and Ed Armbrister driving
them in
and
Nolan
contributing a sacrilice .
Nolan
began
limping
noticably when he ran out a
single in the Reds ' sixth .
Cinicinnati pitching coach
Larry Shepard said the game
plan called for Borbon to be
the designated reliever if
Nolan had any difficulties.
Borbon breezed through the
sixth but allowed the
Cardinals to score their only
run in the seventh on a double
by Keith Hernandez and a
single by Ken Reitz.
Borbon
retired
the
Cardinals in order in the
eighth and would Ji.ked to
have finished the game to
earn his first save of the

season but tired in the ninth. Eastwick said . "It's easy to
Tony Scott singled to left and 11\n when you got the double
was thrown out while trying pay."
to stre!A:h the hit to a double.
Borbon walked Heity. Cruz,
and Eastwick came in to
LEGAL NOTICE
pitch to Ted Simmons, who
Th~ Publ iC Uttllties Com·
gave the Reds a doubleplay
miss10n of Oh10 has set for
on Eastwick's se&lt;;and pitch. · public hearing Case No .
"I think Ted might get a
76-535 -EL -FAC Subfile A,
little anixous up there,"
to review the operation of
East wick said. "The ball was
the Fuel Cost Adjus1ment
away from him ."
Clause and the fuel pro"!needed the ground ball,"
curement
pract ice s and
. MILAN (UP!) - Argentine
bght heavyweight Miguel
Angel Cuello predicted
Tuesday he will "demolish "
World Boxing Council
champion John Conleh of
England in the fifth or sixth
round of their title light May
21 at Monle Carlo.
"! doQ't have any doubts,"
said Cuello in his second day
of training here.
The 31-year-old CUello is
ranked second behind Conleh
in the WBC light heavyweight
listings.

po l1c1es of the Columbus

and Sou lhern Oh io Elec·
tric Company on Ma y 16,

1977 at 10 :00 A.M.,at lhe
Comm ission's offices, 180
East Broad Street, Columbu s, Ohio . All interested
persons will be g iven an
opportunity to be heard .
Furt h er in formation may
be obtained by con tac ting
the Publ ic Utilit i es

Com•

m 1~ston of Oh 10 .

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COM MISSION OF OHIO
by Randall G. Apple9a1e,
Secre1ary

particularly
in
the
countryside, where much of
lhe land belongs to a few
wealthy families.
This lear has intensified
since the government under intense pressure frotn
lhe private sector - backed
down on an agrarian reform
bill that would have divided
up some large landholdings
into coope rative farms.
There is also friction
between
the
nation's
conservative wealthy
families and the Jesuits, who
have
given
Ca\holic
education a more soci!il
orientation.
"It amounts to hysteria
againsl the Jesuits among the
rightist sectors," said one
father whose children attend
Jesuit schools.
Parents claim their 1\ids
are led to predetermined and leftist - conclusions . United States, Guillaume
about social problems, he Demaux of Belgium and
added.
Mario Bernal Londono of
For example, children are Colombia were accused ol
asked how much their father violating the law covering the
ea rns, how rnuch their activities of foreigners . They
· rnother spends on a party were all advocates of land
dress, and h9w· much the reform.
family · pays its servants Last March . 12, Father
and allowed to draw their Retulio Grande, a Jesuit
own conclusions.
priest, was shot to death in a
"This causes division in the bloody ambush on a road
.farnily, because the children near Aguilares, 25 miles
are getting critical of their north of San Salvador, along
parents," he added.
with two members of his
For supportipg agrarian parish - a youth and an old
reform, and for
its man.
innovations in education, the
The Church demanded a
church has coine . under government investigation
consistent attack from the and has appointed its own
government and from rightist lawyers to look into the case
groups, which have alleged - with no results so far,
that ·~communist priests'' are Msgr. Romero said.
to blame for social unrest.
Father Grande was killed,
Beginning last January, the Msgr. Romero said, because
government" seized and "he set out to defend the
deported three foreign priests rights or the&lt;:,. poor and to
and
arrested
two denounce the injustices of the
Salvadorean clergymen.
powerful."
Bernard Survil of the
His death came shortly
after Msgr. Romero was
appointed archbishop, . and
since then Romero has
spoken out strongly in
defense of the Church.
A recent church bulletin
charged the National Guard
with spreading "lalse and
slanderous accusations
against the priests" and
demanded an end to
"tortures and threats against
priests."
The same bulletin, in a
strong criticism or the
government's
antiCommunist line, pointed out
that "Marxism-Leninism
should not be confused with
the authentic evangelism of
the church."
"It is not fair to accuse as
Marxist or subversiv e a
priest who, in his deep
understanding or lhe social
implications of evangelism,
gives himself completely to
it.
Such priests, the bulletin
10% Discount To An SenioB
. said, "will have the firm and
total support or the
archbishop,
because in this
NEXT DOOR TO ELBEA:FELDS regard the Church cannot
POMEA:OY 'S QUALITY SHOE HOA:E
9tl -2115
POMEROY, 0 .
give in."

By CAROL COOK
SAN SALVADOR, El
Salvador (UP!) El
Salvador's leading cleric
says Roman Catholic priests
are subject to harassment and sometimes tortw-e - if
they speak out . for hwnan
rights in this Central
American republic.
·
The Archbishop of San
Salvador, Msgr. Oscar A.
Romero, said at least two
clergymen - a Belgian
citizen and a Salvadorean.have been beaten and
tortured while under arrest
by the National Guard.
"They're always accused
or the same thing
subversion
getting
involved in politics -turning
the people against the
government,'' he said.
"It's not politics to defend
hwnan rights. The Church in
El Salvador has never talked
about party politics, but
many times its defense of
hwnan rigljts and of the
peasants
has
been
interpreted in this way. The
church cannot renounce this
obligation, especially in a
country where there is so
much injustice."
Priests often receive vague
threats from the government
security services, he said.
The threats come in surprise
visits or telephone calls.
"They are told that if they
continue to speak out, they
wil.l be treated like the
others ; that their names are
on a list," Msgr. Romero
said.
Alist of priests suspected of
"subversi.ve" tendencies is
known to exist, he said.
Political observers say
harassmen\ of the clergy is
rooted -in the government's
fear of "radical young
priests" stirring unrest
among El Salvador's poor,

CHAPMAN SHOES

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Final Week!

Sale Items

FOLDING REDWOOD

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width. 12x12 wood sla.t s .

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$} 00

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Values To 12.99

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FOR

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·size 15x24
White . Red Stripe

3 $100
FOR

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NUMERAL
TUBE
SOCKS

tl

3 FOR

Nolan stOps Reds' skid

NB A Playotts
Bv United Preu International
Eastern Conferen&lt;:e
F inal Round
1 Best of 5e\'er11
Ph•ladtlphl a \ ' s . Houston
~Philadelphia leads. 2-0)
May 5- Ph ita 128. Hous 117
May 8- Ph ifa 106, Hous 97
May 11 - Phila al Houston
Mav 13..- Ph ila at Houston
w. -May 15 Houston at Ph ila
x May 17- Ph i\a at Houston
x-May 19-Houston at Ph ila

Bobick, Norton clash tonight

damn' har:d.''

Results, line scores
Malor l .eague Results
By United Press International
National Lea9ue
San Diego &amp;f N .Y .• ppd ., ra in

L_ate Logan rally gives
•
Chiefs wm, SEO title

7 19 .352

25 86 24 30 .3-49
21 65 10 22 .338
American l,..eiigue
GAB . R. ·H. Pel.
A.Wds, Tr
25 90 13 35 .389
Pa9 e,.Oak
29 109 23 .42 .3!5
Sm ith , 81
18 63 9 23 .365
Chalk , Cal
25 89 7 32 .360
Velez., Tor
27 86 16 31 .360
Wshngtn ,
20 78 8 28 .359
Hrgrv, Tx
U 87 16 31 .356
Carw , Mn
30 116 19 41 .353
Lopez, Se
24 68 8 '14 .353
Srlsn . Bs
24 103 lA 36 .350
Home Runs
National League : Cey. LA 11 ;
Burroughs. Atl . Ferguson. Hou
and Carter , Mfl 7 ; six players
t ied with 6.
American League: Zisk , Ch i
10 ; Hisle , Minn and Gross, Oak
8; Page, Oak and Velez. Tor 1.

Ca~ll

10 16 .385

Minnesot
Chicago

Sm ith , LA
Jhnstn , Ph

P iH 12;

W. L
Pet. GB
16 10 .6 15
lA
9
.1109
'"o!
,. 12 .538 2
15 13 .536 2
14 17 .452 AI,
10 16 ,385 6

west

Pet. GB
Los Angels
.786
Sn Frncsc
.429 10
Cindnnat
.A07 lOin
Houston
II 18 .379 ll'r,
San D iego
II 19 .367 I?
Atlanta
8 21 .276 14' 2
Tuesday ' s R ~suus
San Diego at N.Y .• ppd., r a in
Pittsburgh 3. Atlanta o. tsf
Pi ttsburgh :2 , At lanta I, ·2nd
Montreal .4 , Los Angeles 3
Philadelph ia 3. San Fran o
Cinc innafi 2, St . LOu is 1
Ch lcago 11 . Houston s
Todav's Ptobable P,itchers
I All Times EDT!
Los Angeles (John 2· 1J at
Montreal t'S tanhouse 3-31 . 7:35
p, m .
San Diego (Jones 2-.4 iJIId
Shi r l ey 2-A) al New York
(Seaver 4-1 and Swan 1 3). 2,
5: 35p .m .
San Franc isco (M c Glothen 1·
3) at Ph il adelphia (L-er c h 4 p ,

1) .

1-l Trace

Americ•n League
East

Natian.;al Lugue
East

FRENCH CITY

OPEN
9 m1

2/'1
.

Tuesday night by edging
Ulach Tom Belville's snakelitten Hannan Trace Wildcats, 4-3 .
It was the Wilkrats' third
!traight !Qss by ju!t one or
two runs . The Vikings
jwnped into a 2~ lead in the
opening Cr a m~ on singles by
Greg Estep and T.arry
Ou-istian and Mark Wilson's
grounder.
Hannan Trace's designated
litter , R101 McCoy, slarruned
tis second long ball in two
days to cut the count at 2-1.
Symmes Valley got two
more runs iio the third on an
wror, double by Wilson and
single by Woodall.
The final Wildcat 'runs
aune in the foorth on a ·walk,
single by Tim Teaver,
another walk and bases
loaded walks to Rick Whitt
111d r 'rank Mooney.
Christian famed seven and
walked eight . Steve Beaver,
the losing hurler, fanned one
md walked two.
Hannan Trace closes out its
regular sea!l&gt;n schedule this
evening against Eastern.
JEJ&gt;PS VIC'I:ORIOUS
In a non-league affair
Tuesday night, the South
Webster Jeeps defeated the
host Southwestern
Highlanders, 11-1.
Quem had four hits to pace
the Jeep attack against losing
hurler D101 Bush. PiiJll!t and
Boggs slammed two hits
wch.
Ron Jackson and Sherman
~Iter led Southwestern with
two hits apiece while Larry
Carter had a run scoring
d!ul:k
Line scores:
Kyg..-Ck. 400 201 0--7 7 2
. N. Galli a
llO 210 H 6 4
Baird (W) and Baylor;
Minnie (L), Tackett (7 and
Thckett, Minnis (7 ).

Maior League Stilndin!lls
Bv United Press lnterniltion~f

•

Reg.

99'

25 Ft. X lh

Fits
Size
8 To 11
And
9 To 15

GARDEN .
HOSE
Regular 12.29

$}59

• SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
• POINT PLEASANT • MASON

�6 _ Th&lt;J)aily Sentinel. Middleport -Pomeroy, 0 , Wednesday . Ma)' ll. 1977
7-TbeDaUySentlnei,Middleport-Pcmeroy,O.,

Despite some leg1slati\'t." actiOn m recent
years. much remains to be don.-. t-o reform
our mrthod or financing poht1cal campatgns.

The mosl commonly discusse-d approach

is to expand the federal incom• tax checkoff
for tht&gt; presidential campaign fund . It is now
betn~ suggested that we should provide "

checkorf on ou r state mrome tax. so taxpa~·e rs

could indtcate whether they want $1
of their income tax designa ted fo r a
go\·emor·s ca mpai~n fund or a political
pa n. ~· Then th('se monies so designated
would be dh·ided between the candidates or
parties.
Tius proposal does recognize thr in·
creasing costs of political campa igns and
seeks .to reduce the dependence of candida tes on pohttc:~\ {'Ontributions from

special intereSt groups .
1 would prefer. however , t hat we place
financing of pohtical campaigns tn the
hands of indi\1iduat citizens, not m thr hands
of government itself 1 have proposed a
dir ect tax cred1 i :~~ainst each Ohioan's state

income tax obligation for modest con·
tri butions to political ca ndida tes or polit ical
part ies.
It would pro\'ide for a ma ximum credit or
$10 on an individua l tax retu rn and S20 on a
joint return . And this is not a deduction from
ta ~&amp; b le income, but a direct credit against
the tax owed. So if a cou ple made $20 of
contribut ions to pa rties and ca ndidatt?s.
they could credit that $20 against thei r income tax obliga tion and pa y the state $20
less tha n the actua l ta x owed ,
This. is an alternati\•e approach to public

A11 important piece or
legislat ion before the House
of Representatives recently
was the Arms Control a nd
Di sa rmament Age n ty
Authorization Bil l. Thi s
measure authorizes runds for
the formulation of U.S. ann s
control policies and allows
go
U.S. participation in various
In l;u .... we suggest limiting the source or am1s control negotiations,
including the SAI~T talks.
&lt;~11 polit!ce:u ~ "l'l tri butions to ind ividual
.dtirrn!i. No longer •.. " 'ti specia l int erest
The nu celar annarnents
grou ps make modest collectwns from th en ra ce remain s the most
members and t·nd up with tho usan~o) of serious threat to world peace
dolla r"' to distn bute to ·'fri endly can· and strategic weapons still
didates.."
Cbnstitute a significant exThis would result in a greater awareness penditure of our publi c
on the pa rt of the citizen-contributor. treasure. As much as we
beca use the citizen would be deciding to desire to decscalate the anns
whit'h candidates he or she will contribute. build-up, we should not fall
It should be the contributor himself who prey to unilateral actions. In
decides if he w a nt s hi s contribution to go tq a recent years, unprecedented
cand idatC' in ~ close election in hopes of advances in Soviet weapOnty
affecting the r esult , or if he is int erested in technology and production
s upporting a .b ndidate who is relativei)' sh9uld make us mofe suspect
ass ured of re-election. just to show support. of Soviet motives . Should the
or maybe in hopes of "buying influence." nu clear balance shift in
Th e Oh io General Assembly passed favor of the Soviet Uni 0n,
leg islation in 1974 wh ich wa s labeled as · world peace will be less
election r eform . We said then that passing a secure and U.S. national
less-than-effecti ve bill would diminish the security more endangered
prospects of real campaign rinance re£orm than ever before. America
in the near future, because we would kid must have a deren se that is
ourselres into thinking we have retormed
the process. The truth of the matter is, there
remains much to be done , and I'm not sure I
cun-ently see !'i trong impetus for campaign
finance reform in your state legislature.

financin~

of campai~ns . It would be taking
money that would havr gone into the swte
treasury and placing 11 in th£&gt; politic.1 l
process. But there a r~ t wo basic differences.
In our proposal. citizens would deride
whelher they • ·anted to part ici pate. and
secondly. they would choose to wh ich pa rt y
or ca nd!da tf' th ei r div~rted !ax money would

1

less than 300~&lt; or ds long t or~ subj ect to reduction b)'·

I
I

the editor) and must be signed with the signee's ad·
dress . Names may be withheld upon publication.
Howev-. , oo request, names will be disclosed. Letters
should be in good tasie , addressing i'5ues, oot per·
sonalities.

I
1
1

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I
I

I
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... ~. rdl~Dt,:

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l
1
1

Concerned Parents alive &amp; well
DEAR SIR :
Some of you have been asking what has happened to the
Bend Area Concerned Parents and are wondering if we are
now defunct. The answer is that concerned parents is sllll
active and workillg in co-operation with the teachers,
administration and students at Wahama High School.
We recently compiled a questionaire on drugs and alcohol
on campus, improvements, .student complaints etc. This
questionaire wa s completed by the students with both the
administration and teachers' co-operation.
·
We have just finished tabulating the results of this
questionaire which will be discusseq at the Bend Area
Concerned Parents meeting on Wednesday, May 11, 1977 at 7
p.m . at Wahama Senior High . The location has been changed
due tq preparation for the Junior Prom in the gym ..
We cordially invite all parents of present stud ents and next
years' 7th graders Ill attend this meeting . We need parental
belp, support and co-operation to help improve our schools .
Show your child you care and want Ill help him-her
improve school conditions . Neither students, administration ,
teachers nor parents can do it alone. We must pull together or
sink alone . - Marilyn SIOOola , Secretary, . Bend .Area
Concerned Parents.

Twenty·five arrests were
made by the Middleport
Police Department during
April according t o the
monthly report of Police
Chief H.J. Cremeans.
Of the total seven arrests
were made on disorderly
marmer charges and five on
charges of driving while
intoxicated. There were two
arrests on reckless operation
cba11;es and two on charges
of destruction of property.
There was one arrest each on

charges of failing to have
vehicle under control ;
spinning tires ; failtl re to yield
the right of way ; speeding ;
running a stop sign ; no
operator's license ; rwming a
red light and trespassing.
Charges were dropped in on
il!cldent.
The
department
in·
vestigated four accident and
parking meter collections for
the month totaled $714.:i0. The
police cruiser was driven
5,159 miles·during the month.

achievement
in sales noted

I

..~a.-

Police make 25 April arrests

Area dealer's

1

..

.8~,

to non. Nucl ear
weapon reductions must be
mutua ll y negotiat ed a nd
a greed . Th is means both
Russia and America mu~1 cut
down on nuclear weapon s at
the same lime. This is the
only real r oad to world peace.
second

To moke sure that Russia
complies fully with multi·
lateral
arms
control
agreements, the U.S. must
ma intain an effecth;e study
bureau to monitor Soviet
compliance .
The
Ad·
min istration a llow ed the
abolition of this extremely
important monitoring bureau
called the Verification a nd
Analysis Bureau ,
However. the House of
Representatives recogniied
the irresponsibility of this
abolition and mandated that
the Arms Control and
Disannament Agency report
to both Houses of Congress on
Soviet compliance. I voted to
r~uire such monitoring. We
can not rely on words .and
Soviet goodwill for the en·
forcement
of
. treaty
provisions.

Otester News Notes

--------- - - - - - -----1
I-------Letters cf opinion are ..-elcomed. They should be 1

POINT PLEASANT Camp Conley Starcraft Sales
here ha s become one of the
highest volume dealers of
&amp;arcraft travel trailers and
mini~motor home dealers in
the country. In acknowledge·
ment of this, it has b&lt;en
aWarded membership m
Starcraft's "Top 5" Club.
511 Club.
Starcraft
markets
a
complet e line of marine
· aluminum and fiberglass
peasute ooats as well as fold·
down
campers , travel
trailers and motor homes.
1-kadquartered in Goshen ,
lndiana. Starcraft Company
is a division of Bangor Punta
Operations · lo cated
in
Greenwich, Connect.icut.
B·WFAVORED
BEREA, Ohio (UP!)
Defending champion and host
Baldwin-Wallace is expected
to comple te its second
tt'raight track· wand slam
this weekend by winning the
74th an nual running of the
Ohio C'&lt;&gt;nference track and
field championships.
The Yellow Jackets have
already won this year 's in,
door rela)'!, indeor cham·
ponships and outdoor relays
aJd should make the real
lEttie Friday and Saturday
for second place among Ohio
Wesleyan, Otte r bein and
Motult Union.
BROADWAY KUDOS
NEW YORK (UP!) .:._ Rose
Gregorio of the Pulitzer
Prize-winning Broadway
play "The Sha dow Box" and
Barry Preston of " Bubbling
Brown Sugar'' are the win·
ners of $1 ,000 Clarence
Derwe nt Awards as the
"most promising female and
male actors
on
the
metropolitan scene" in the
1976-n season.

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCE!SOF TH
TEN MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE Is hereby gi ven
that Jn pursuance of 4
Resolution of the Board of
Education of the Eastern
Loca l School Di strict , Me igs
County. Ohio , pusea on the
5th day Of Apr i l. 1977 . there
will be subm iffed to a vote of
thr people of sa id Schoo l
Oistrlcl
al
a
Spec i e!
ELECTION to be t'ttld in the
eastern
Loca l
School
District. Ohio at the regutn
piJces ot voting therein ~ on
Tuesady , the 7th day of June ,
1977, the Quest ion Of le'ly lng ,
11\ excess Of the ten m ill
limit.l!llion, for the benefit of
Entern Locel School Di str i ct
tor the purpose of
Current e•penses
Said tax being : an ad .
dltlonall.l!lx of S.O mills to run
for a continu ing period of

Mr. and Mrs . Curtis Wolfe DQrothy Smalley at a nursing
and Mr. and Mrs. Henry home in We Iiston .
Hartman, Marcella and
Mrs. Viola Moon recently
Karla. visited over the visited her sister , Mr s.
weekend with Mr. and Mrs . William
Damewood in
Gene VanMeter , Granville, Springfield .
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Clary,
Mr . and Mrs. George
Newark , and Mr. and Mrs. Genheimer visited her
Brad Thompson. Columlius. brother, Lawrence Rose in
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Belpre.
Eichinger and Suzannah,
Mr . and Mrs. Roger Keller
Columbus,
and
Don and sons spent a weekend
Eichinger , Rio Grande , spent with Mr . and M\'s . Don
the weekend with Mrs. Opal Williams and c hildren ,
Ei chinger and Laura .
. CQiumbus .
Dr. and Mrs.. Billy Robert
Mr . and Mrs . B. K.
Allen. Columbus, spent the Ridenour visited Sunday with
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Miss The lma Ridenour ,
Clayton Allen.
Columbus .
Mrs. Barbara Sargent and
Mr. and Mrs. Haas Betz, St .
Mrs. Lu cy Gaul have Joseph , Michigan , spent
returned home from a three severa l days with her
weeks visit in Florida .
mother, Mrs. Alice Dodson .
Mr. and Mrs. John Hayes
Mr . and Mrs.'Erroll Conroy
visited Sunday aft ernoon in visited in Columbus with Mr.
Piketon with Mrs . Hattie
Frederick.
Mrs . Eunice Hal sey,
Gallipolis, spent . a day with
Mr. a nd Mrs . John Hayes.
Other callers of the Hayes
have been Bill Quivey,
Darwin, Mr . and Mrs.
·Raymond
VanMe t er,
Youngstown, and Mr. and
Mrs . Carl Duckworth, Zanesville.
·
Miss J ennifer Grover was a
recent overnight guest. of
Miss Tamara Clark.
·
Mrs. Ross Cleland and Mrs .
Larry Cleland visited with
Mrs. Ella Kimes and Mrs.
992 -2101
Jo ~ • ~'ullz ,

tltne .

Legislative iss ues , in·
eluding marketin g, the bottle
bill, land use appropriati ons
and alternate means of
finan cin g scho ols wer e
discussed at a meeting of
Fann Bureau board merribers with State Rep . Ron
James and the Holiday Inn in
Gallia County on May 6. Also
at the luncheon meeting were
leaders from Athens and
Gallia Counties. Ci&gt;nrdinating
the m~'!tin g was Bruce
Benedic t , Soijthern Farm
Bureau F ield Represen ·
tati ve . The Meigs group
pictured from the left in·
· eludes Maida Mora . county
board
pres ident;
Rep .
James; Eula Wolfe , board
member , and Henry Frank.
l'ublic affairs chatnnan.

-~

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Racine; 0.

PHEBE' STOR~

Right Reserved To Limit Quantities
We Gladly Accept Fld. Food Slamps
Monday fhru Friday
9:ooto7:00
Salyrdoy 91o 1

SALE

CLOSED

f

Mgr .

5ws69~

-

(REDWING

1-FI

•

POMEROY, OHIO

Ernest A . Wingett
. Chairman

INGELS FURNITURE
4

106 N. 2nd Ave.

•

Dorot hy M . Johnston
Cler k
Dated April 29, 1977

•

(5 ) 4, 11 , 18, 2S, .4tc

•· Middleport, 0.

HINES WITH ONIONS

ASTRO•GRAPH

BAR-B QUE SAUCE ............... 59'

Bernice Bede Osol

SUNSHINE 25 LB.

SUNSHINE DOG FooD:....!3.M

$} 29

$
$

·'"' '
IDAHO SUPREME 24 OZ.,".,.'"~ ,,.
~

PORK
CHOPS

;

INSTANT PoTATOES .......,..~1.09
'

.

10 LB. SELf RISING OR All.,URPOSE

MARTHA WHITE fLOUR :..~.1.59

$

PRIDE 1-LB.

, H•, ''

SALTINE CRACKER$,...... :.,.... ~ .394

39

S}U

STOKLEY WHOLE KERNEL

STOKELY CORN ... 4 303 CANS'1.00

VAU.fY BELl

2% MILK

$1

39

AMERICAN BEAUTY

PORK ·•n BEANS416 OZ. CANS•1.00
CREAMY OR CRUNCHY 18 OZ.

,GALLON

E lien

Morgan.

Elitabeth M . Slough, J.ames.

Mort.an, Charte-s Morgan,

hra Jonn. Elinbeth Co.ates ,

Herbert

A . Cutn , Hiram
Ellub!th
Jones,
Thomas T. Jones anG Joseph
Jones, Address Unknown;

Jonu,

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.

ET AL ..
Defend•nts.
-

No . 16 ,442:
SERVICE BY

Prices Effective
Thru April ~Oth

NO SALES TO DEALERS
QUANTilY RIGHTS RESERVED

I

USD~

CHOICE BONELESS

CHUCK ·ROAST•••••••L~

.••

TONY'S PEPPERONI

$ 09
PIZZA ••••••••.••••••••••••••
FRENCH CITY .

12 oz.

WIENERS ••••••••••• .P.K~~.
USDA CHOICE

CHUCK STEAK •••••••• ~~
USDA CHOICE

ARM

ROAST~ •••••••••• ~~.

USDA CHOICE

· ENGLISH ROAST••••••L!-.

POPSICLES or
FUDGESICLES ..... ~ ••••••~~FRESH
STRAWBERRIES ••••• ~s~.

will remain so unless you raise
an Issue that caused a previous
donnybrook .

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Pu!l out the stops in ai d ing
those you 're responsible for and
wh o appreCiate it Let oppor~
tunists fend l or then:tselves .

JIF PEANUT IUmR.............. ...
'

~

If you're entertaining someone
important to your business or
career . just have a good time today . Leave shop talk for
tomorrow .

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 18)

TAURUS (April 20-May . 20) Considera tion for your famil y
Keep yourself above unpleaSant should be placed above all else
undercurrents rip pl!ng through today , even though others may
yoLir peer group today. If you . criticize you .
don 't partici pate , th.e y won 't PISCES (Fob . 20-March 20) You
touch you.
deal With integrity and noble purGEMINI (May 21 -June 20) The pose today. but t.h is doesn't
. secret for succes! today is to tru - necessarily mean !hat others wr!l
ly want something. lr your operate by the !;ame stan dards .
motivation Is strong enough ,
ARIES (M1rch 21-Aprll 19)
noth ing can hold you back .
You 're very resourcefu l today in
CANCER (June 21 -Julr 22) It's accumulating th ings . 1r you feel .
you're on the right tra ck. don't let
~ Important today that you
associate wltn people who can associates dera 11 your trai n.

'f

' ~road en your vistas . Avoid those
who are narrow of vision .

1-10 (Juir 23-Aug. 22) If you 're

~ open and easygoing ~oday,

11 OZ. JAR

COFFEE-MATE ......................... 89'

29

OA N l'S :

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

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22·Jon. 19)
For Tllvrlday, Moy 12, 1977

END CUT

THE UNKNOWN HEIRS.
DEVISEES , LEGATEES ,
ADMINISTRATORS.
EXECUTOR:$ AND ASSIGNS
OF
EACH
OF
THE
FOLLOWING
OEFEN ·

c

CoillemporRry 3~she'll solid
flbre--Yi ood plant stand ho lds
books &lt;1nd cunos, roo I Overall
3, -,., .. " ro . · x. 28 111 oh Shell 9\.4" deep.

Hartley
's
Shoes
MIDDLE OF UPPER BLOCK

SLICED JOWL ...............

'·

i

Large selection of sizes and wipths

PORK CHOPS ......... ~~; .. 1
2~

I

Pom eroy, 0 .

THE HEEL FIT
OF PECOS BOOTS

WIENERS ............'.........
CENTER CUT

11/ 15" th ick . Sateltlte
shel\les: 9112 .. diam .

Casing and
BOc Fed. Ex. Tax

Plain or Safety Steel ToeHardworking Feet Deserve .

BACON...•........ ~ ...... !·~B:.. l

SWEET CORN

Sate jlit e.st y!e , 5-she!l spiral
planter. Stu rdy fib-re-wood
construction . Overall :
14" x 32 ¥2 " high . Top and
bo1!om shel\les: 13" dlam. x

Meigs Tire Center, Inc.

BOLOGNA ......... ~.~-.~~! ..sl 39
FllENCH CITY

W1th 3 handsome shelves this
gratefu l round s ta nd
of sturdy llbre · wood
construc tion fils anywhere'
Overa ll 13 2' d1ameter K 32' ~" hig h.

ANY SIZE
13 11 - 14 11 and 15"

'?

20 COUNT

NO TOOLS
NECESSARY

-.$}}95 ~~~sapp&lt;~bl·

TASTEE

5th &amp; Pearl

Easy to Assemble • Super Sturdy
Elegant simulated Walnut Finish
Resistant to Alcohol &amp; Water

REGULAR PASSENGER
TREAD RECAPS

CHARLES MOAGAN ,
Addrus unknown ;

I

Put a Prett:r
Plant Stand
Together Yourself

and Mrs. Jack Conro\'.
·Boyer;
Mrs .
Eddie
Clcvela nd , spent a recent
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
F red Rice .
Mrs. Audrey Woode is
Slaying with her daughter
and son·in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Willard Hones, Pomeroy Rd.,
since her release from the
Veterans Memo"ial Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs . J . M. Gaul
visited in Michigan with Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Clay and new
baby. - Mrs. Allen.

vs .

JAMES MORGAN ,
Addreu un .. nDwn ;

PUBLICATION TO THE DEFENDANTS
ABOVE NAMED :
You are herebv notified
that a Complaint has been
filE-d in the Com mo,., Flleas
Court of Meigs County , Ohio.
Case No , 16 ,.442, demanding
partition of the following
described reel estate, to ·wH :
Parcel No . 1 : The follow ing
described real estate situate
Dorothy M . Johnston
in Sutton Township, in the
Clerk
County of Meigs. and State of
Dated Apri 29, 1977
Ohi o, to .wlt : And being in one
hundred a.cre lot numbered
(5) 4, 11 , 18, 25, Al e
two hundred and .ninety .
seven in the Ohio Company's
Flurchase , and being in the
NOTICE OF ELECTION
Township of Sutton and
OF TAX LEVY IN
Village of Syracus!l! in said
EXCESS OF THE
County
and
State
and
TEN MILL LIMITATION
beginning f ifteen feet South of
NOTICE Is hereby given
lot number one in Carleton 's
that in pu rsuance of a
Addition to said Village ;
Resolution of the Board of
t hence South one hundred
&lt;;ounty Commissioners of the
feet ; thence West ninety .
County of Meigs, Po meroy,
eight feet ; thence North one
Ohio , passe d on the 29th day
hundred feet : thence East
of Mar ch , 1977 , there will be . ninety -eight feet to the place
su,bm ltted to a vote of the
of beginning ,
people of said County at a
Parcel No. 2 : Also. the
Specia l ELECTION to be he ld
following real. estate situate
in the County of Meigs, Ohio .~ in the Counly of Meigs and
atthe reoul arplaces of vo t ing
Sta te of Ohio. and in one
therein , on Tuesday , the 7th
hundred acre lot No . 297 i11
day of June, 1977 , the
Town No.2 , and R:;;tnge No. l2
question of levying, in excess 1o f the Ohio Company's
of the ten mill limitation , for
Flur chase, and being a strip of
the benef it of M eigs County
land 25 feet by 100 feet and
for the purpose of the
bounded as follows : Begin .
m alnteria nee and operation or ning at the northwest corner
Sc hools , tra ini ng centers.
of a lot formerly belong i ng to
workshops and clini cs for
said E l iZabeth Jones at the
mentally retaq:led persons . all!y ; thence west along the
Said ta)( being : a renewal
IIIIey 25 teet to a stake;
of 0.'20 m lit anti an Inc rease or
the nce south 100 feet to a
0.80 mill to const itute a tax of
stake,· thence east 25 feet to a
one mill to run for a con · sta ke at the so uthw es t corner
tl nu ing period of time .
Of said lot formerly belonging
to Elizabeth Jones; thence
at 1!1 rate not exceedi ng 1.0 North 100 feet to place of
lfll ll for ellch one dollar o f beginning.
·'
valuation , which amounts to
Parcel N o . 3: Tl'le fo l l.o wing
t&amp;n cen t s for eech one hun . descr ibed real estate, to .wit;
dred dO llars of valuation, for
Be ing 1 acr! located in the
a cont inu ing period of t ime . South West corner of the
The Polls for said Election · No rt h Eas t 13'1• acre of
w ill be open at 6: 30 o'c lock Fraction No . 31, in BedfOr:d
A .M . and remain open unt il Townsh i p , Meigs Co u nty,
1;30 o'clOc k ~ . M . of said day . Ohio.
By order of the Board of
Parce l No . .4 : The following
Elections, of Meigs co unty, des cr ibed real es tal e, to .wit:
Ohio .
Being :If" acre located in tl'le
Ernest A , Wingett Nor th East corner of Fra c .
· Chairm an tion No . 31 in Bedford
Town s hip , Meigs County ,
Dorothy M . Johnston Ohio .
Cler k
Refree nce Deed : Vol . 150,
Dated Apr i l 29, 1977
Page 530 , Deed RecorQs
Meigs County, Ohio .
{,5) 4, 11 , 18 , 25, Ate
You are noti fied that you
are re.Quired to answer the
NOTICE OF ELECTION
Comp laint wit h in twenty .
ON TAX LEVY IN
ei~ ht
days after the last
EXCESS OF THE
publ icati on .
The
last
TEN MILL LIMITATION
publication will be made on
NOTICE is hereby given the 22nd day of June, 1977 .
tha t in pur su a·n c e of a
Re$.olut.i on of t he Board of
LARRY E . SPEN CE R ,
Education of the M eigs Loca l
C LERK O.F CO U RTS,
School
D i str i ct.
Mei .!iiS
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
County, Ohio , passed on the {5) 11 , 18, 25 (6 ) 1, 8, 1.5, 22 , 7tc
21st day of Februl!ry , 1977 ,
t t"~ere will be subm ltted to a
vote of the people of said
School Distr ic t at a Special
ELECTION to be held In the
NOTICE OF
Meigs Local School District ,
. APPOINTMENT·
Oh io , at the reQu iar places of
cue. No .221 o2
vot ing ther ein , on TUesda y,
Estate of Wesley
Dale
t he 7th day of June, 19'77 1 the
Musser~ Deceased .
question of levyln9, in excess
Notice is hereby given that
of the t en m i ll lim i tat ion, for
Frank w. Porter , Jr .. o f
the benefit' of Meigs Local
MeiQs County , Ohio , has been
Sthoo1 Dist ric t for th e pur dy ly appointed Administrator
pose of
of the Estate of Wesley Dal e
Current eKpenses o f the
Musser, deceased . late of
school district .
Meigs County , Oh io.
Said tax be ing : a renewal
Creditor s are required to
'o f an existing tax of 7. 5 mills . f ile their claims wi th said
lo run for a continuing period
f iduc i ary
witl'lin
three
of t ime .
months.
D ated this 21st day of Apri l
at a rate not exceeding 7.5
1971 .
m ills for each one dollar of
valUation , wh ich amounts t o
Manning 0 . Webs t er
se\len ty- t lve cents for each
Judge
one . hund re d dollars. o f
Cou r t of
valucitlon , for a con tin uing
Common P leas,
Period of t ime .
P robate Div is ion
The Polls for said Election
Al 27 (5J 4, 11. Jtc
will b e open at 6 :30 o'cl oc k
A .M . and rema i n open ~ntil
7:30 o 'clock P.M. of said day .
By order of the Board of
Electio n s, of Meigs County ,
Ohio .

Far111 Bureau discusses legislation

c:,'i •T0-..&lt;':
'&lt;t'i'
~

~ -~--

at a rate not exceeding s.o
mIlls for eadl one hundred
dollars of valuation , tor a
con t inuing period Of t im! .
The Polls for sa i d Election
will be open at 6 :30 o'clock
A .M . and reme ln open until
7: 30o 1clock P .M. of said day .
• By order of the Board of
E!!lectlons , of Me i gs Coun ty ,
Ohio .
Err~est A. W ingett
Chairman

l.EGISLATIVE ISSUES were discussed by Maida Mora , president of the Meigs County
Farm Bureau; Roh Jam es, representative, 27th House District ; Eula Wolfe , member, and
Henry Frank, publi c a ffairs chairman,

Wednellday,May~l~l~,l~977~----------•••••-------------------------------------.?

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COU~T
OF MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO
THOMAS J . SCOTT,
Pl.aintiff,

a,chle&gt;Jement comes qu ickly. The
' 1 moment
you
become
temperamental or Irritable. the
~ opposite 18 true.

' VIRGO (AUf. 21-....l 22) It will

{Are you a Taurus? Bernice
Osol has wrillen a special AstraGraph Letter tor you. For your
copy send 50 cents an.d a self·
addressed, stamped envelope to
Astro~Graph. P.O. Box 489.
Radio City Stat1on. New York .
NX 10019 . Be sure to ask lot
Taurus Volume 7 .)

~ be unwise and (J(ttentially eJ~pen·
• sive to go against your judgment
or previous experience hi m oney
matter• today .
' to lmpor1ant matters early today.
tr you delay too long and your
energy level drops, problems wi!l

•;dpg

~fforts

: ICdRPIO' (Ool. 24-Now. 22)
Your relationship with one you
is harmonious today and

:ldv7

JIFFY

Mor 12, 1977
In furthering your ambitions this
year . don 't hesitate to approach
people who can hel p you . You
m1ghl be surprised. at how
cooperative they are .
l

COUEGE INN .

BORDENS
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�_ 8- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Wednesday, May 11,1977

:~:~::::::::::".::::::.-::::::::::::~:;;;:;;:::;:;;;:::.:·:·:·:·::::::::=::::::::;:::;:::;:;:;:::::::::::::;::::::=:.:::::;:;:::;:::;::::=:::::;:::~

Mother-daughter banquet enjoyed ~,
The annual motherdaughter banquet of the
Pomeroy United Methodist
Women was heJd in the so&lt;.'ia l

rooms of the church Tuesday
night.
White bud vases holding
single roses were used on the
tables ·a16ng with colorful
mint cups, and booklets.
.. Living Proverbs" at each
place.
Mrs. Boney Mitchell had
grace preceding the dinner.
The program was presented
by Mrs. Everett Thomas.
·There was a short game
period with a nwnber of
prizes being awarded. Lori
Wood was at the piano forthe
program which opened with

1

mother-daughter banquet
the Doxology.
Prayer by Mrs. Robert was read by Mrs. Ted
Warner was followed by a Downie. It was entitled "Ad·
solo by June Ann Wamsley vit-e to All Daughters Whu
accompanied by her mother,· Still Have Their Mothers:·
Mrs. James Wamsley. Mrs. Mrs. Harvey Van Vr.anken
Allen Eichinger read aceompanied by Miss Wood,
"Something About Grand- sang --Serve the Lord". and
mothers", and an original Mrs. Lew is Telle gave
poem by her gra nddaughter, thoughts on the responsibility
Paul Eichinger. Another ,or motherhood. She said that
reading entitled "A Mother's mothers must act with care
Work is Never Done" was and thought since their acgiven by Mrs. Wamsley, tions influe nce the ir
Dol li e Rou sey r ead dau~hters . She said thai
"Mothers" and Mrs. V. D. mothers must pray every day
so that her life will be a mir·
Edwards, "What Is a Girl."
An original poem by Mrs. ror reflecting GOd's Love.
There were severa l
Grace Gloeckner written
numbers
from "The Treble
several years ago ror a
C..1eft"

nt P;mla

Gra te, with Teresa Ellis at
U1e piano. They sang " I
Believe ", .. There's Somthing
About that N•mc," and " The
Boogie Woogie Boy from
Company B."
Mrs. Gerald Wildennuth.
UMW chainnan, presented
hanging baskets of Oowers to
Mrs. Paul Eichinger, the
you ngest

mother;

Mr s.

William Barnitz, the oldest;
and Mrs. Eddie Smith, the
member with the largest
nwnber of guests.
Prayer by Mrs. Robert
Hayden concl uded the evening.

/f 1J
Social .D~votzons reflect Mother's D""J

l~:::::..-=~~'~W5c~::~r-~= ·

•

1

I Calendar

WEDNESDAY
WIDTE Rose Lodge , I : 30
p.m. Wednesday at th e
American Legion Hall in
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.
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at
the home of Mrs. Bert
Grimm, Letart Falls. Mrs,
Robert Fisher will review
Golda Meir's book, " My
Ufe." Roll call will be a
famous Jew.
ANNUAL
MotherDaughter banquet to be held
at St: Paul's Lutheran Church
for St. Paul and St. ,Toim's
Churches at 6:30/ p,m.
Wednesday.
MIDDLEPORT AmateW'
Gardeners, 8 p.m. Wednesday . at the home of Mrs.
Harold Lohse with Mrs.
James Sheets as C()-hostess.
G~est speaker will be Fwniko
Iwasaki, Japanese exchange
student at Meigs High school.
BEND AREA concerned
Parents, 7p.m. Wednesday at
the Wahama High School
Gymnasium. Topics to be
covered
include . · the
questionnaire answered · by
junior and senior high
students regarding the
school's drug and alchohol
situation;
needed
improvements and other school
problems. All parents · and
interested citizens Invited to
attend .
TIIURSDAY
HARRISONVILLE Chapter, OES, aMual inspection,
7: JO p.m. Thursday. Inspecting officer will be Sylvia
Mid~iff,
deputy grand
matron. Members to take
potluck.
MEIGS County Humane
Society, 7:30 Thursday at the
Thrift shop across from the
Post Office in Pomeroy.
REVIVAL services In
progress at the Syracuse
Church of the Nazarene now
through Sunday, May 15, 7:30
nightly. Evangelist is the
Rev. Gene Clark of Findlay.
There will be special music
and something extra special
for the children at each
service. The public is
welcome to attend. Pastor is
Rev. Dale T. Bass.
FRIDAY
YARD and bake sale, 9
a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday In
Racine United Methodist
parsonage garage sponsored
by United Methodlst Women .
RETURN _Jonathan Meigs
Chapter, OAR, ' 1:30 p.m.
Friday at Grace Episcopal
Parish House.
MARY SHRINE '.rl, Order
of the White Shrine of
Jerusalem, will meet at 8
p.m. Friday at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple. Officers are
to meet at 7 p.m. lor a practice session.
SATIJRDAY
CHICKEN
barbecue,
starting at 11 a.m. Saturday,
at New Haven City Building
by New Haven Volunteer Fire
Department Auxiliary.

The Mother's Day theme
!"as carried out in devotions
by Mrs. Billy Jo Krawsczyn
when the Heath United
Methodist Women met at lhe
Middleport church Monday
night.
A poem, "On Mother's
Day," was given tiy Mrs.
Krawsczyn who also read
scripture from Exodus and
talked about mothers of the
Bible . She stated that God
made Eve which wn• the

Forty-two mothers were
honored Sunday at Syracuse
Church ol the Nazarene.
Honored were Mrs. Hattie
Atrns, the oldest mother, age
82 ; Mrs. Ressie Shaffer ,
youngest mother, age 16; and
Mrs. Ruth Cundiff, the
mother with the most
children present. Other
mothers present were:
Margie CuMingham, Mrs.
Frank, Mrs. Hall, Rita Arnold, Artie Grindley, Jenny
Lou Davis, Jeanette Davis,
Mrs. Tyree, Mae Grueser,
Hazel Hayes, Betty Imboden,
Mrs. Spencer, Myrtle Imboden, Ora Bass, Lenora
Stewart, DoMa Bass, Mrs.
Watson, Sis Cundiff, Mary
Pickens, Mae Hubbard,
Emma Hayman, · Susan
Winebrenner, Corky Davis,
Mrs. Winebrenner, Bobby
Lou Rimdolf, Pam Roush,
Mary Jane Arms, Ruth
Riffle, Oma Hysell, Sharon
Cunningham, Claudia Owens,
Mary Janice Lavender,
Brenda David, Beverly
Dowell, Liz Rice, Sylvia
Cook, Marilyn Demmer, ·
Nancy Arnold and Sue
Lemley. Each was presented
a plant in her honor. A total of
130 persons attended.
Sunday evening the church
had a surprise program
entitled "This Is Your Life"
In honor of Mrs. Hazel Hayes.
A corsage was presented her
by tbe N.Y.I. along with a
bouquet of eight red roses and
two white roses presented by
her children, representing
her eight living children and
two deceased children. All
eight children were present
for the program plus her
sister-in-law, Mrs. Helen
Nease, with her husband and
son, several grandchildren
and one great-grandchild.
Children present.were her six

in June with all circles of the
church combining for the
·meeting.
Mrs. James Euler was pr()gram chainnan and gave a
review of the book, " In My
;Father's House" by Corey
Pen Boone. The book was the

story of her life from
childhood including the years
of her capture and her time in
prison lor hiding prisoners
during the war. She told of
the letters which she received and how she hid her Bible
while in prison. The author
once out of prison preached
in 36 different countries and

worked continuously for the
. Lord.
I
She lived in Holland and
sons, Raymond , Charles. was the daughter of a walchVirgil, Carson Jr., Bob, makcr. She told of her
William, and her two father's prayers before and
daughters, !Ia Mae Bowers after meals, of her sister,
and Helen Grace R,uschel . Betsy who was a Sunday
Some traveled from as far as school teacher, and her
Chicago, Ill. for the surprise brother, William who was in
program.
the ministry. Now 85, she has
appeared on television in this
country. She has written four
NOTARY PUBLIC
books. Pictures of Corey Pen
COI,UMBUS (UP! )
Boone
and her home were
Under a bill sent to the Ohio
passed
around following the
House Tuesday by the Senate,
review.
duly commissioned notaries
Refreshments were served
public would be authorized to
by
Mrs. Mae Lambert, Mrs.
operate throughout the stall! .
Mae
Ketchka, Mrs. Terry
The. bill, which the Senate ·
Byer
and
Mrs. Lettie Young.
passed 3(). I, also increases
the fee for the commission for Spring Oowers decorated the
attorneys from $5 to $10 and table. Fifteen sick visits were
the lee for nonattorneys from reported by the 19 members ·
attending,
$2 to $5.

)![
...

a

,j~

I....

Is Thls Story for Real?
Dear Helen:
I'm divorced and my wife is raising OW' daughter and son,
aged 16 and H.
My daughter told me she came home unexpecledly and
found her brother trying on her clothes. Mia thought It was a
bigjokeand told her mother, who got upset.
,
As punishment, she made Rich spend a whole day In his
sister's clothing. But that's not the end.
Rick did something wrong again and my ex forced him in
girls' things. Then she insisted Mai invite some friends over
"to meet the new girl in town." It was very traumatic for Rick.
Could this make the boy homosexual? - S. H.
DearS.:

"

More probably it would make Rick feel like running away
from home!
I'm not sure whether we have here a super-61upid mother
or a hilaxerwho hopes to crash an advice column. II the latter,
perhapsit'sYOUwt&gt;ohaslheproblem, S. H. - H.

+++

Dear Helen :
My wife's cousin Jim is coming to visit us, and she tells me
he needs a large sum of money, which he hopes Ill borrow from
me and my brother-In-law. We could only get it by running
ourselves in debt.
Here's the problem: Randy, my b-In-I and I have been best
friends since high school. About five years ago we went on a
fishing trip, borrowing this cousin's cabin. We'd both only been
married a short while.
We don 't consider ourselves homosexual, but somehow one
thing led to another. And then the ·cousin came by and walked
in unannounced. Turns out he is gay, and we all had a night I
can't forget.
NatW'ally our wives know nothing about this. Even yet,
Randy and I get together when we feel like it, but not often. We
are both happily married, with five children between us.
We are afraid if we don't lend money to this cousin he
might get talkative, though he's never threatened us. He.,•
desperately needs the cash. So do we! What should we do? -'
RICHARD AND RANDY
Richard and Randy :
Since the cousin has almost as much to lose as you two do
(after all, he was also a participant), I doubt he'll expose you.
Don't borrow trouble until it slaps you in the face . (But if it
does - choose confession ·over blackmail! )
More to the point, you face divorce unless you shut-~,ll&gt;e­
AC-DC current: Wives can forgive husbands' affaits·'ll!tll· '
women, but they aren't so lenient about other men - ·
especially relativ~s .
If you'd continue happily married, straighten up! -H.
NOTE TO READERS: I've a feeling this letter too might
be a fake. Not that the events are so unusual, but somehow
there's a whiff of hoaxery in the air.
Columnists have weeks like these. -H.

Miss Linda R. Rupe whose
wedding to Charles H. Faulk
will be an event ol June 18 at
the Pomeroy Unit ed
Methodist Church, was
honored with a bridal shower
recently at Uoe home of Mrs.
Charles Faulk with Mrs.
Gerald Hollon as hostess.
Wedd ing bells and
streamers in yellow and
white decorated the gift
table. Games were played
with prizes going to tbe winners. The refreshment table
featured a wedding bell cake
inscribed "Chuck and Linda"
which was served with mints;
nuts and punch.
Guests were Mrs. Sara
Collums, Mrs. Hazel Ball,
Mrs. Martha Myers, Mrs.
Opal Hollon, Mrs. Ann Rupe,
Mrs. Wanda Faulk, Mrs. Betty Faulk, Mrs. Janice Parker
and Kellie, Mrs. Mickie
Hollon, Mrs. Barbara Scites,
Mrs. Edna Faulk, Mrs. Eddie
Smith, Mirs. Helen Goeglein,
Mrs. Peggy Harris, Miss Lori
Rupe, Mrs. Bernice Hawk,
and Miss Tammy Hollon.
Others presenting gifts to
Miss Rupe were Mrs .
Carolyn Collums, Mrs. Nina
Cwnmings, Mrs. Elsie Hines,
Mrs: Anita Ball, Mrs. Ruby
Frick, Mrs. Paula Hall. Mr.

..

INJURED
Mrs. Arnold Richards,
Eighth District President,
America n Legion Auxiliary,
has received word that Mrs.
George Sallot (Nancy), a
past Department of Ohio
president, is confined to ParIna Community Hospital. '
Mrs. Sallot was injured in an:
aulmrtobile 'accident. Cards ;
may be sent to her at the
hospital, 7007 Powers Blvd. ;.
Panna, Room 503.

WILL LEAVES
Chief Warran t Officer ·
Robert Will has returned to
Fort Meade, Md. after spen- •
ding several days here w.ith
his parents, Mr. and Mrs.'
Harold Will, Pomeroy.

NEW YORK (UP!) There were few In the golden
age of · Hollywood to match
her in terms of glamor, fame
or sheer kard work, and there
'were few in the generation of
"starlets" that followed who
.rose a hove her contempt.
Joan Crawford, dead of a
Jieart attack at the age of 69,
once called them "takers, not
givers" ~ people who
"believe their own publicity
and feel they can do no

60"

·POLYESTER KNITS

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Yd.

QUILTED BEDSPREAD
FABRIC
85'' to 10" Wide
Yd.

POLLY'S POINTERS

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT STORE

HomeARMOUR
Ma_
deSTAR
Ham Salad
....................L.~ 9'
.
Sliced Ba®n~ ..............:•••••••••••••••~~:~.s1.29
_
Superiors Jumbo Franks •••••••••••••••••~~~- $1.25
Superiors
Dutch Loaf •••••••••••• !-~~.!1.39

~~~~ .....~~·-~149

29~

NEW
CABBAGE••••••

PARKAY QUARTERS59~ YELLOW
BAG69~
ONIONS •••••••••••
MARGARINE •••• ~~~·

6e cherished

••••••••••••

18 oz._Planters Peanut Buttec .......89•lar
••
4
o-SAGE
Whole Plmantoes In glau ................. 59•
5
Armour
.Vlennc1 Sausage (3• offl•.••••·•••••....... 2/69'"
16 oz. CoHee Mate ................... •1.291ar

-

17 oz. Stokley's Apple Sauce••••••••••• 2/69•

Mei• High Juniors and Seniors

permanently registered

Drop by The Photo Place. 109 High St.,
Pomeroy, Saturday night for full color prom ·
pictures of you and your date . Two 5x7
candids in fOlders plus 4 billfolds. $4.00
including sales lax ·and delivery , payable
when photos are taken. Phone 992-5292
today for your appointment. (Bob Hoeflich)

28 oz. Hunts Tomatoes. ..................... 69•

Keepsake® 16 oz. Van Camp Pork and Beans ..... S/59~
~islered Diamond

RintES

69"
~etteler.t
' " E . MAIN • POMEROY

·24 count Pl~lc .Knives.
Forks and Spoons ......................39• pkg.

10 oz.

Nesa~fe

IMtant Cofhee ..... '4.09 lar .
•

fourth wife - 23-year'Oid
Cathleen Douglas.
Miss Crawford astonished
other guests by harassing the
young bride · throughout
dinner -giving her wmeeded
and unasked advice on which
forks to use, which wine to
drink, and what to do with the
fingerbowt
Washington society had
bristled at the Douglas
marriage - his second to
women less than half his age
- but as word of the ·dinner
incident
spread
their
sympathies were with Mrs.
Douglas who was welcomed
into the capital's society from
that night on.
In recent years, Miss
Crawford left her film career
behind 10 become a public
relations symbol for Pepsi
Cola, of which her fourth
husband, Alfred N. Steele,
Who died in 1959, had been
president.
Before her marriage tQ
Steele, she had been married
to actors Douglas Fairbanks
Jr., Franchot Tone and Philip
Terry.

Wrong.''
,, Miss Crawford's body was

THE FABRIC SHOP

AnENTION ·

Hoffman, James Adams,
Olston Wri ght, James
Carpenter, Herbert Parker,
Cecilia Marsh, Elizabeth Mc·
Cready Buker, Katherine
Philson,
Elizabeth
Ebersbach
Stephenson,
Garnet Moore, Helen Wilson
Will, Mable Wilson Pickens,
Joseph Michelitch and
Konrad Scholl.
The fonner teachers have
been asked to arrive by o:30
p.m. and alumni are invited
to come at that time to visit
with the special guests. Alter
the meat there will be Ihree
social rooms away from the
band for visiting.
A steak dinner will be served. A band will be playing
from 9:30p.m. tola .m.
Reservations are to be
made with Betty Longstreth,
Box 147, Langsville 45741 by
May 18. Each alumnus is permitted orie guest and the
price is $6 per person. For
those unable to attend, the
Alumni Association requests
$1 for dues. Checks must ac·
company reserva,ions.

Three girls were initiated
into Bethel 62, International
Order of Job 's Daughters, at
the Monday night meeting at
the Masonic Temple,
Pomeroy.

Initiated were Robin and
Betsy Herald, da ughters of
Fra11k and Mary J ane
Herald, Rt, I, Middleport.

COMMITTEE NAMED
A nominating committee
composed or Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Kennedy and Mrs. Larry
Edwards was named when
the Meigs High Athletic
Boosters met recently at the
high school.
Another meeting was
scheduled for June 8 at which
time plans will be made for
the football season and the
fall sports program in
general. Officers or the unit
are asking for a better turnout of parents of players and
otljers Interested in Ihe school
sports program.

and Dollie Rousey, daughter
of Hugh Rousey, Pomeroy:
Plans for serving ~he
Pomeroy A!WlUli banquet
were made during the
meeting. II was noted that
new officers will be elected at
the May 2S meeting. A bake
sale and rummage sale has
been scheduled for June 4 at
the Colwnbia Gas (/o., lO a.m,
and orders are now being be
held on the Friday of Regatta
weekend, June 17-19. Several
members of the Bethel will
spend that weekend at Grand
Session. Members. were on
the streets of Pomeroy Saturday selling balloons for the
Heart Fund.
Miss Paula Eiphinger,
honored queen, presided at
the meeting.

:;:: The Junior Ameri ca n
Legion Auxitiary, Department of Ohio, c"Onvention will
be held Saturday at New
Washington with several
Meigs Countians traveling
there lor the day's activities.
Mrs. Arnold Richards ,
Eighth District president,
has announced the judging of
contests will begin at 10 a.m.
with the conference to hegin
at I p.m. Miss Robin Parker
will be presiding. Mrs. Vern
Ehresman is the Department
junior activities chainnan.
Pam Powers of Mid-

TEA IS SUNDAY
Buckeye Gi rls; State tea
and orientation will be held at
I p.m. Sunday at Grace
Uniled Methodist . Church,
Gallipolis with Lafayette
Unit 'll serving as host. Mrs.
Lester Merritt, director of
Girls' State will conduct the
orientation se.ssion. All
A thought for ihe day : delegates, parents, and AuxAmerican
statesman iliary members are invited to
Benjamin Franklin said attend. Reservations should
''Experience is a dear school' be made with Mrs. Sharon
but fools will learn in no othe; Hill, Americanism chairman.
way."

dleport, a member of th::
American Legion Junior
Auxiliary of Drew Webster
Post 39, Pomeroy, is a ca ndidate for department president. Mrs. Mary Martin of
Pomeroy, third member of
the Department committee,
will serve as one of _the
judges.

Auxiliary
holds meet

items to missionary
purpose of the UMW was
given by Mrs. Mary Lisle.
president. Mrs. Teaford gave

SYRACUSE - Plans were
made to send a box of needed
items to Doris Bartlett, a
missionary in Zaires at the
recent meeting of the United
Methodsit Women of the
Syracuse Asbury United
Methodist Church. Mrs.
Helen Teaford read a letter
from Miss Bartlett about her
work and the needs or the
people there.
Meeting at the home of
Mrs.. Bernice Winebrenner.
the call to worship with the

CHESTER - The Ladles
Auxiliary of the volunteer fire
department met Wednesday
evening at the firehouse with
president Opal Hoilon
presiding.
The meeting opened with
the _Lord's Prayer, followed
by roll call. Ethel Orr read
the minutes of the previous
meeting and Opal Wickham
gave the treasurer's report.
The ·Memorial Day bar·
becue was
disc ussed.
Committee reports were
given. New officers elected
were
Sheila
Taylor,
president; Karla Chevalier,

devotions on Mother's Day

entitled " I Couldn't Face II"
from Guideposts.
Officers' reports were
given and an offermg was
taken. A total ol 48 shutin
calls were reported. The birthdays o( Mrs. Linda Ferrell
and Mrs. Ann Sauvage were
observed.
" Wh en

You're
Misunderstood" was the pr()gram topic given by Mrs.
Irene Parker assisted by
Mrs . SaUvage,

Mrs.

Ann

Hilldore, Mrs . Helen
Teaford, Mrs. Bernice
Winebrenner, Linda Ferrell,
Mrs. Beulah Ward, Mrs. Oma
Winebrenner, Jllrs. Betty
Koch, Mrs. Opal Kloes, Mrs.
Margaret Eichinger. and
Mrs. Lisle. Mrs. Hilldore
reviewed the third section of
the study book. Mrs• Kloes
closed the meeting with two
readings , 41 What is a Grandmother?'' _and ' Mothers. ''
Refreshments were served
by the hostess assisted by
Mrs. Ward.

vice president; Ethel Orr,
secreta ry,
and
Opal
Wickham, treasurer. New
committees win · be an·
nounced at the meeting .
Members attending were
Opal Hollon, Sheila Taylor.
Opal Eichiuger, Cleo DeTray,
Karla Chevalier, Clarice
Allen, Inzy Newell, Margaret
Christy, Ethel Orr and Opal
Wickham. - Clarice Allen.

1

.1. •'.

,:discovered .in her Manhattan
'lipartment by one of ber
bOusehold maids at about 10
;a.m. Tuesday. She was the
:;victim of apparent cardiac
~lirrest, a!Uiough she bad no
:previous history of heart
.trouble.
·
~: Joan Crawford was born
Lucille Le SueW' on March 23,
1908, in San Antonio, Tex.
, She began her career as a
Chorus girl, in her teens,
i!arnirig $30 a week in a
tjleatrical company touring
lftlt of Springfield, Mo. The
. next step took her to
!;!roadway and a part in the
$bow "Innocent ~yes.' ' From
there it was the silent film era
of Hollywood and eventual
stardom in such film
~lockbusters as "Grand
~otel," "POssessed," and
'Mildred Pierce," for which
lihe won an Academy Award
in 1945.
· On and off the movie set,
~Joan_ Crawford worked at
,being a star, rising at 4:45
'8.m. and carrying her day far
iitto the night.
' In . a 1962 Interview with
,UPI
Hollywood
:COrrespondent Vernon Scott,
·•he summed up her
tlrofessional approach with
one sentence : "I try at all
times to look and behave like

a movie star."
In her eyes, the younger
'crop of actresses did not.
, "A lot of the new ones want
to be stars before they even
get here," she said in a 1960
interview with UP!. "They
read thetr name in the papers
!!bout how they've been
suggested for such and such a
•p&amp;rt and they think they've
got it. Then when they don't
:iet the role, they slash their
•wrists or tske sleeping pills.
... There's a humility that's
.missing . Actors don't have to
:cto anything for themselves
~ymore."

Miss Crawford was no

•lllranger to controversy - on

' Early in her career, she
~"'raged church groups and
•paved the way for film
&lt;ensorllhlp by dancing tbe
~Ieaton on a table top in
"ber slip for the silent ''flapper
Jlick" called "Dancing
Daughters." Years later, in
:the mid-195i)j, she starred in
· ' "Johnny Guitar" - a film
' bizarre for Its era In that
•jraditlonal male-female roles
'!l'l!l'e reversed, with Miss
~a-a wford playing a tough
: 1ema1e randier In a gun duel
..with salouo keepa" Mercedes
:fkCambridge over a male
-.Inger and "sex object"
: JlOrtrayed by St~rllng
:Hayden.
; Off
camera,
she
• scandalized official ·
: wllllhlngton at a 1968 White
"11ouse dinner attended by
Suflteme Court Justice
William 0. IlO~S and hill

TAFf HONORED
CINCINNATI, (UP!)
Charles P. Taft, a 30-year
veteran of the Cincinnati City
Council, has received Xavier
University's Political Science
Award for 1977.
Taft, 19, son of President
William Howard Taft, was
cited Monday for " his
outstanding career, his
contributions to the quality of
life in this region," according
to. Dr. Paul L. Simon,
Chairman of tbe political
science
and
history
department at Xavier.
Also the brother of the late
U.S. Sen. Robert A. Taft and
uncle of former U.S. Sen.
Robert Taft Jr., Olarles Taft
has served on the Cincinnati '
City Council 1!11' nearly ;!0
years. He will step down froo1
the post Sept. 20.

I
I

(~~liGHT

THE KROG.ER
TRIM MEANS
BEnERVALUE

!W i - THE KIOGEI CO . ITlMS AJ'to ,IICU 0000

5UN0AY MAY I . 1971 Tlti!U 5.t1TUIOAY MAY lol. lffl IN

I

$

I
I
I

I
I

12-oz.
Pkgs.

I

I
I

liMIT 21'11U IITM COIPOII m $1.50 ADDITIDMAL

I
1'-- .
II Of I

I'
I

mtNASI {EICLIOIM' !HIS ITEM)

LIMIT ONE COUP'ON ,.EIII FAMil V
-iVlUU~IIII U. ltl f
SMCI Tl tfiiUCIIll tnn l llal TUII

·--'-- ·--.;.;,··- -----------

~

Wf U5UVl "!Hf: liGHT 10 LIMIT OUANflnlS. NONE SOLO TO
DIALUt .

HOlLY fARMS . U.S.D. A.INSP'ECTED

Full Cut
Round Steak

Mixed Fryer
Parts .................. ..lb.
HOLLY FARMS, U.S.D.A. INSPf:CTED

$ 09

GRADlA

Pick '0'
Chix .................... :.lb.

HOLLY fARMS , U.S.D. A. INSPECTEO
GlADE A

Breast
Quarters ..... :........ .lb.

Cheer
Detergent
been fat , bone and wo1te
r~moved according to
Kroger standard• be· ·
each cut is weighe-d

'69C·

Clnd prlc.d. No wonder you

get more meat for your
money at Kroger.

U.S. GOV'TGRADED CHOICE . aiEl' CHUCK SHOULDER U.S.D.A, INSPECTED ,

Boneless,
.$ 149 ,_,..,_ ~vouG•••oz•N
Boston Roll ... .. lb.
.
....... .... .lb

POT ROAST

::~~~~-

8c,;;i:;;·F;It $149 ~~.~-.~.~HOICl
CUt Round Steak1b.

49 C
•

:
1

10W40ALLCLIMATE

Ole Carolina
• d Baeon. ....... ek
1-lb .
511ce
9.

Valvoline
Motor Oil ....... "'·

c~~~lilclub

Tylenol
Tablets .....

Canned Ham ... ~!~

100-Ct.
Pkg .

$139:

f-.;_ 1

·

·59c,
..

Vac

I,

Kroger Coffee

$119 ~~

$

I

I
1

'I1 ·CENTlR CUTS , '/,·FIRST CUTS
fRESH ASSORTED ·

Pork
Chops .............. ..

I
I

.

•

Lamb Shoulder
. Roast .... ..... ... lb .

3 $4

,

.$ 19 9:

FRESH

Whole
.
Leg '0' Lamb .. lb .

AMEIU(AN

'"' off camera.

.

I
I
I
I

U.S.D.A. CHOICE FlESH

The Alalll&amp;llac·
By
United
Preu
United Press International
Today Is Wednesday, May
11, the 13lst day of 1977 with
234 to follow .
The moon is between Ita
last quarter and new phase.
The morning stars are
Mercury, Venus and Mars.
The evening stars are
Jupiter and Saturn.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Taurus.
American song writer
Irving Berlin was born May
11, 1888. This Is comic-actor
Phil Silvers' 85th birthday.
On this day lrl history:
In 1858, Minnesota entl!red
the Union as the 3:1nd state.
In 1910, Glacier National
Park in Montana was created
by an Act of Congress.
In 1928, the first regularly
scheduled
television
programs were . begun by
station WGY in Schenectady,
N.Y.
In 1973, a federal judge in
Los Angeles . . dismissed
charges of espionage,
conspiracy and theft against
Daniel Ellsberg In the
stealing of secret Vietnam
war papers from the
· Pentagon.

12

Serve 'N' Save
Wieners
'

found dead at age 69

$2"

lo"e ... a perfect Keepsake
diamond, guaranteed and

RUTLAND- The annual
Rutland High School Alumni
banquet will be held at the
high school gymnasium in
Rutland on May 28, 6:30 p.m.
Guest speaker will be Mrs.
Elizabeth Hysell, teacher at
Rutland High School from
1952 to 1959.
All forme r high school
teachers which the Association has been able to locate
have been invited to attend
the banquet. Among t~
.who have accepted the invitation and plan to attend are
Mrs. Hysell, James VeMari
Martha VeMari, Carl · Den:
nison, Ethel Chapman, Mary
Bacon, Ira Wolfe, Orin
Smith, Don Quisenberry, T.
C. Porter, Naomi Chase
Howell, Lucille Smith,
Clarence Dickens, . Anna
Ogdin, Gladys .Anderson
Fisher.
· John Parsons, John Dudding. Sally Schaaf, Harold
Sauer, Faye Sailer, George
Dallas, Ellen Gibbs, Wayne
Bergdoll, Leda Kraeuter,
Everett Holcomb, Bernice

Conventzon slated }

Actress Joan Crawford

POLYESTER AND
COTTON KNITS

Dinner fetes
Stephenson

~;

and Mrs. Glen Faulk, Mrs.
Myrtle Cogar, Mr. and Mrs.
Don Pooler, Mrs. Shirley
Sisson, Mr. and Mrs. Opha
Offutt. Mrs. Ann Radford and
Stephanne, Mrs. Sharon
Johnston and Mrs. Leota ·
Smith.

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

$]&amp;9

Crocheted cloth needs help

Pla.ns made to send

~~t,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,: ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,\1

SPECIAL THANKS
BIRTH ANNOUNCED
The
Personal Advocacy
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford
Program
thanks the Apple
Manley of South Second St. ,
Grove
Plant
Company, Art
Middleport have received
Hill,
Apple
Grove,
for the
word of a new grandson born
donation
of
nowers
to the
Yd.
to Sp. 5 and Mrs. Harold T.
group
activity
·
therapy,
·
Elliott of Munich and GrafenWednesday, May 4, to be
woehr, Germany on April27.
The baby weighed seven given to their mother's for
McCall's, Kwl,ck-S.w, Slmplicory Patterns.
P9Unds, 10 ounces and has Mother's Day.
11$.W. Second
992-2284
been named Harold Franklin
II . Mrs. Elliott is the lonner
Cathy Manley. The couple
have a daughter, Mandy, age
Polly Cramer
four . Grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Manley and Mrs.
.Thelma Elliott of Point Pleasa nt, .W. Va . Greatgrandmothers are Mrs. Be~­
•
tha Manley and Zula Fry,
DEAR POLLY - I sewing with denim is the " in" both of Middleport.
crocheted a lace tableeloth, thing never throw away the
but when it is on the table it scraps. Trim them in various
Phone 742-2100
does not lay nice and flat, sizes, stay stitch around each
PARENTS VISITED
one
to
prevent
unraveling
There is notmuch body to it,
. Mr. and Mrs. Dick Knight
since·I used fine thread, What and have some patches ready ol Bellaire were weekend
Thur., May 12 thru Sat., May 14
can I do to make it look bet- for those worn jeans.- MRS. guests of Mr. and Mrs.
BETTYT.
ter.- AGNES.
DEAR POLLY - For a Chester Knight, Pomeroy,
DEAR AGNES - You
and Mrs. Dorothy Young, .
might dampen the cloth, long time I have wondered Middleport. On Saturday
.•
.stretch to the proper shape how to keep the remainder of evening, Mr . ·and Mrs.
1 .LB.
and then carefully pin flat to a canned drink fresb after Chester Knight entertained
a padded surface and leave opening, Only this week did I with a Mother's Day dinner.
until dry, Starch could be ad- notice that a rubber top from Attending besides their son
ded to the water to give the a well known maker of pint and his wife were Mrs.
cloth more •body when dry. and quart jars will fit the top Young, and Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Leave pinned until dry, Mter of a can. This helps to keep Matlack, Rt. 3, Pomeroy .
piece is pinned in shape the the leftover drink until
·
starch could be sprayed on, wanted. - KAE .
DEAR POLLY - To
· but do be sure not io put it on
remove the cloudy look from
too thick. - POLLY.
COLBY
DEAR POLLY - My Pet my glass coffee maker I fill it
with
ice
cubes
and
add
a
cup
Peeve is with those stores
that advertise big reductions of salt. I let this stand all
of 20 per cent or 30 per cent or night. By morning the fog has
L.~-.
even 50 per cent, but do not lifted and the glass has a
2 LB_. .NEW
1 LB.
A dinner was held recently say what the original prices crystal clear look.
If 'the handle in an old
honoring William R. Stephen-. were. - L.K.
toothbrush
has a hole in the
DEAR
POLLY
When
soo on his retirement from
end,
save
it
and cut it down to
you
put
hard
boiled
eggs
in
the Conrail Hailroad.
about
three
inches in length.
the
refrigerator
mark
an
X
Stephenson began work
Use
as
a
"
needle"
for rwmon
each
one
with
a
pencil
so
with the C. and 0. Railroad
Chosen to
ing
cord
through
freshly
ironthey
are
easy
to
distinguish
on Feb. 1, 1937 as a fire and
PKG.
ed
curtains,
etc.
-MARIE.
from
the
•
raw
ones.
ashpan cleaner doing extra
DEAR POLLY - One of
work at the Pomeroy and GAYNELLE.
my
pet economies is refilling
DEAR POLLY - If you
Logan, Ohio roundhouses.
powder 'box with
a
dusting
On June 29, 1941, he took a have bought some so-called
corn
starch.
It works
job as a fireman with the bargain thread and it does
beautifully
and
the scent
OL
New York Central Railroad not work well in your sewing
from
the
powder
goes
machine,
try
using
it
only
in
which later became part of
the Penn Central whi~h is the bobbin. Another Pointer through the cornstarch and
now Conrail. He retired April is when your children have lasts for months. - MRS.J,C.
Polly will send you one of
worn out the feet in their knee
29.
OL
her
signed thank-you
socks,
but
the
elastic
in
the
Attending the dinner
hesides Mr. and Mrs. top is still good, cut off the newspaper coupon clippers il
Stephenson were Mr. and feet just above the worn she uses your favorite
Mrs. Jerry Colmer and Shari, spots. Tum to the wrong side Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
Billy and Timmy, Paulette and make a very ~mall seam her co!WlUl. Write POLLY'S
Farley, Davy and Jamie across the end and have very POINTERS in care or this
,t, CCE N
Leach, Tammy .Johnson, nice tube socks. And now that newspaper.
Jimmy and Randy Snider.
The perfect symbol of you r

f.

•

beginning of mothers, and
noled that mothers always
forget the bad and remember
the good. She talked of the
privilege of being a mother.
Mrs. Emerson Jones had a
piano solo, .. My Mother's
Prayers Have Followed Me."
During the business
meeting, Mrs. James
Criswell reported on May
Fellowship Day. Plans were
made lor a picnic to be held

Mothers honored

HOUSEHOLD shower for
Mrs. Ruby Burke, Alfred, class at Eastern High School.
Saturday, 7:30 p.m . at Proceeds for class trip.
Elmwood
Rest
Home Admission U for persons over
. building, Alfred, by Paul and 12.
SUNDAY . '
Virgie Buckley. Everyone
Invited to attend. Mrs. Burke " PUBUC RECEPTION for
Jolt all her belongings in a Mary Kibble, fonner resiflre that destroyed her home. dent, to be held-Sunday from
SUNDAY
2 to ~ p.m. at the Recreation
HORSE llhow Sunday at Hall, Reedsville. All friends
· S.r 30 llhowgrounds located · and neighbors invited b
on SR 7 aoutll of Tuppers hosts, Mr. and Mrs. David
Plains sponsored by junior Smith.
I'

enmnn~rd

Eichinger , Ju McKinne y,
l.::lura • Hoover, and Jem

Helen Help
Us • • • By HeJen Bouel

Miss
Rupe
feted
II

TOTAL SATISFACTION
GUARANTEE

lb .

Clover Valley . $169
Ice Cream ...... ~~:
II

69

We have what we advertise,
if at all possible. If, due to
.conditions beyond our control, we run out of an advertised special. we substi- ·
lute a comporable brand ot
a similar saving or give you
a RAIN CHECK for the advertised special at the special
price any time within 30
days, We guarantee what we
sell. If you ore ever dissotis- .
lied with a Kroger purchase, .
we will replace your item or
refund your money.

Grade A
Medium Eggs ..

4$
$
4 1

Kroger1 1
Pork N Beans ...
KROGEI RUE LAKE

CutGreen
Beans... .... ........

16·oz.
cans

16·oz .
cans

KIOGEI

Hi Nu 2%

Lowfat Milk
Gal.
Paper
Ctn.

$119

Sliced Luncheon
Meats
-.oM Tltf IIUA I 011'1

15' OFF
WITH COUPON

Kroger
-Tomato Catsup.
Big K
Soft Drinks ...

'4 s
246···$1

Sandwich or
Wiener Buns

. _.. .... ....c&amp;u~DfDM
1·11. ' "

· Pillsbury Flour
. . lmii&amp;IJIMTIITII IIH

. .CTit.-.ucaJITiftllKN. TAJU

21-oz .

Oven Cleaner
WOIO Alnl IATVINIIIT U lfl l
alltl It U'f'Ut&amp;ll( SIITU tiCil lUIS

Domino
Sugar

2

;!~

39'

WIT H COUPON
r01t m u "'"*'~-'' 14 Jtll
WII(~ T TO IJ'ilUR.I mn &amp; UUI lliU

ltls .

Kroger
Tomato Juice ....
KltOGER

WITH COUPON
. . ... NKII4Il Of J " '' ·
f .tl . NG . IIOGt~

Cant

3 $119
:i.~~--

20' OFF

WITH COUPON
&amp;.- ••I'VICust Df O.t
1 ·01 . " '· Mnl (10[111

Ha111burger Helper
-ilfl'tiii,_,IMII41t71
*'11m rtlfi'UCIIUSTIU l ltut IIII I

=·15' OFF

WITH COUPON

. . . MCMMOf-

li ·CT· NC. IO•••n

Ovemight Diapers

1o• OfF

WITH COUPON

'ItO !JII ""I(JI'H 01 0.1
(.All.,.

1J ~ 01 IOIIM.IIIOJIIIIIIU -.oftT
,110 II.U
0t !I I I 0 1 1101

Pillsbvry Pius Cake Mix
tijtlmiiAJUII&amp;fW.f JI :111
M.IICI 11 itf\t.&amp;IU mn &amp; Lac.\1 ruu

Kroger
, Cottage Ch,ese

3 "'' $1
( lno

WITH COUPON

flllllmUA-IIItl I I 1m
IIIIJW "~nan &amp; lKAL I WJ

Dinner

*149

YOUICHOI(I

5 $1

Cucumbers or
Green Peppers.......
72UII

CaiHornia
Navel Oranges .... .o...

For

99 C

�DICKTRACY

10-The Dailv Sentmel, Middleport-PomeroY, 0., Wedne..U.v. May 11, 1977

15 Wt•rd'i ur Untl t&gt;t
C&lt;i.!ih
Zilit)l!l

150

~ days

I

"'

100

"s

~I

J OO

ii d H}.S

.I;~

FA!eh wurd UVt!r lht• u um u•wu 15

wpnb as 4 t't' nl!l JWr wm L!

JM.' t

tla y:

Atls I U/11111 ~ ut.h e r tJ~ Jl COIISt''l_. U\I Vt'

da}s o,n ll lw
ralt•.

d ~oar ~L'll

at lht• I Ll.t}

In mt:utur) , Cit \.I uf Thankb and
Ol.ntwuy 6 cent ~&gt; ).~er \jo unl , $;1 00

nun unum Ca11h Ul ad vall\'''

HelpWanled

HOME l oy Par tte5 has

FRIENDL V
open ings for monogers and
dealers. tn your qreo . 1oy porty
plan experience helpfu l. Co r
ond telephone necenory . Call
collect to Coral Ooy (518)
..sq.9395 or wnte Fnendly
Home Parties . 20 Ro tl Rood
Ave Albany . N V. 12205

HELP WANTED

MvUtlc tlumt&gt; l&gt;aiCS t~Ud Yard ~lc:.
are CAct cpttl\1 ulll\ ~ rt h (i!:sll 1111\h
unle t Z5 u.•n l dla• ~t! fv• ;~i.\:~ oH 1)'•
LIL)I Bux. Numbl·r lu t:.it1t' of T ht• ~II ·
tlllt'l.

The Pu Uh:il!et J't's.! t"Vt'~ tlw rtght.
lu LoW\ u1 rCJCI.'t any &lt;~lh dct•uwd ut,.
Jl;!\; ll ulll41, Tile Publtsht•l' ~ttl uut b;•
1l!li~n.s1 Ulc fut m••l l' tlli::ltl iii\C lJKt •l ·
I e\'l UlSCI \ lUII

l'hum• !l!:l'l·l l5ti

Executtv e type secretary

for professional at health
care facility.
Medica 1
terminology p referred but
not mandatory .
Typt ng and shorthand
sktlls
required .
Send
resu me of training and
experience to Box 729-C, co The Daily Sentinel,
Pomeroy, Ohto, 457 6~ .

NOTICE
'Yan.led to·Bny
--~-

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Mondav
Nuon tmS!ltUrdll}
r~Sd~ y

thru f r tdlly
;PM
Uw day bdor c pubht au on

Sundtty
; PM
F't 1dt1} aftcmoon

IN LOVING Memory of Arthur E
Koemg who passed oway May ,
11, 1976, one year ago today .
Fa mily and fr1ends may hove
forgotten ,
But he st1 ll lmgers m ou r hearts

yel
For the l1ttle and big th tngs he dtd
for us
We will ne'Jer forget
Tho he has left us and went to
heaven ,
We con stdl remember hts f ace ,
And someday when we meet
l hose l011ing arms ,
When God apens them Golden
gates
We con tell htm hew much ,
We loved end missed htm
litis God'1 will for our sake,
Couse he wtll be a woifln
When our time come,.
Then we .;en all be .together ,
As one happy family
In God's wonderful home.
Sadly mtssed by wtfe, Ruth,
Children , Delores lorry, Kay,
Arthur Dale and fomdtes .
Mother, Dorothy Smalley

CASH paid for all makes and
models of mobtle homes
__! hone ~n_:a code 614 ·423 · 9~.!._
TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Produels Top prtce for stond1ng
sawttmber Coli Kent Hanby,
J.,f.46-8570
COINS, CURRENCY , tokens old
pOcket watches and cho1ns
sliver and gold . We need 19611
and older stlver cotns. Buy , sell
or trade' Call Roger Wamsley
...2 ~2.:.233 ~
.
CASH I I! tor 1unk cars Fryes
Truck and A\JIO WRECKER SER
VICE! Phone 742-2061 ,
OLD FURNITU RE, 1Ce boxes, brass
beds ,
etc
co mpletn
households Wnte M D. M1ller
Rt 4, Pomeroy , Ohto or coli

9'12 77:00:
60:::.....~- ..,~--WANTED · CHIPWOOD Pole$ ,
Mox dtometer , 10 tnches on
largest end , $8 per ton , bundled slobs, $6 per ton, Deltvered
to Oh1o Pollet Company , Rt 2
Pome r oy,
Ohto
Phone

~~::::9c.,..,.~---­
Gooo USED baby strol ler Ph~ne
949·2265.
STANDING TIMBER WANTED
PHONE (b14) 1167-62"

IF YOU ha ... e o ser... ICe to offer ,
wont to buy or sell somethtng ,
oe look1ng for work . • . or
whate\ler
you'll get results
foster wt-lh a Sen ttnel Wont Ad

Coli 992·2156.
HAVING PORCH Sa le , Weds .
Tllur s , Fndoy and Saturday
plus oil nex t week . 707 Ol•ver
Stree t, Mtddlep ort , Oh1o

-~57 60:.c_,-::::--c-:--:--'-:--'--

.,.
.

PIANO LESSONS, childrens and
adults
Mn .. Harvey Von
Vranken 992 -2270.
WILL CARE for elderly women in
Our home. Phone m -7314.

~

ANY STRAY dogs running loose
on my property , due to the killi ng of sheep on my property ,
ek , will be shot Gene and
Jerry Coleman, New Limo
Road, Rutland

.

APPLIANCE SERVICE man , eJC·
. penenced. No phone t:alls .
Gollio Refngarotlon Co ., 611
Thtrd Ave., Golltpol1s, Ohto.

OLDER RESPONSIBLE lady to livo
tn and care lor aged widow tn
Rutland, Ohto. Not tn'Joltd nor
senile. ltght housework and
cooking. No laundry . Cell
742-2078 tor information.
NEED fEMALE to li~te m wtth
elderlr lady and do cooking In
eJCchonge for free room
Transportottol"\
preferred
reference s requi re d . Call

'192·7:3_1:..:1.:..
. ------GU!.RANTEED JOB Tra lnong.
location
$374 . .40 , single,
$502.80 married Call Army
Recruittng. \614) 593-3022 or
385-631B (cal eel)

·. '

WACKENHUT CORP . IS now accep ting oppllcattons for full
ti me and porttlme security
posiftons, military background
praferrltd but not requtred. No
phone calls please Apply in
person at Appolochton Power
Prolec:t 1301, New Hoven ,
W.Va. We ore on Equal OpporPunity Employer.
TEACHERS , RETIREES , Parents £K.
cellent earnings World Book .
Childcraft Salas represen tati ...es needed In Athens Coun.
ty. for .ntervtew call. (6 14)

592-59Bl .

,

J'ets

ror Sale

..
'

All

WILKESVILLE (b14 ) 669 3785

BREED

Dog grooming ,
re~sonob le rates Ca ll for ap CAMPER
S600 Also, horstt
potnfmen l , J &amp; 0 Kennel s
trotler $450 Phone (b14 ) 698·

742-3167

3290.

AKC SHETLAND sheep dogs SPRING GARDEN Suppl•e~. Cob·
boge. cauliflower , broccolt ,
(M•n ) Collies , 2 females , 7
weeks old Shots and wormed
and head lettuce plants
Phone (614 ) 367 0292 or
yellow wh,te , and red onion
367 -7112 .
sets, onion plants Kennebec,
cobbler , Katahdin , Red Pont toe
TO BE GIVEN owoy , etght port
and Red Losada seed potatoes
Collte and port Shepherd pup·
Bulk garden o;t?eds. pO IItng $Otl ,
ptes one port btrd dog , b mon
peat mO$S , frutl trees and rose
lht. old. Phone992-3289.
Mtdwoy Ma r ket ,
bu $hes
Pomeroy
,
Ohio, 992 -...:58? ,
FREE TO GOOD Home , tn the
Bob
·s
Markel
, Mason W.Vo
country a 3 year old , \lery gen
(304) 773 ·572 1.
tie , house broke border Colhe
Great wtlh k1ds . Phone 1973 JEEP CJ5, good condilton,
992-7762
Plus e~ttros $2900. Bunker H1il
..,.
Rood
across from ceme tery
REGI STERED FEMALE Boxer 2 yrs
old , with papers , $75 00. Phone TOMATO, PLANTS , Cabbage,
992 ·7675
broccbli. cauliflower , bru ssel
sprouts, egg plants , hongmg
baskets, pols , geran1ums .
begon1os , flat s, petunias .
mongold$
pansies
salzto
197S JEEP CHEROKEE . p.b.. ps .
bolt-om
d•onthus ,
snap·
Quodrotrack
Good tires
drQgons, alyssum , Vinca, col.
Phone (304 ) 877 ·7340.
eus , Cleland s Greenhouse ,
Ro&lt;:tne Gera ldine Cleland .
1976 CHEVY 3 quarter ton , -4
~
wheel drl11e oufomolic , 350
eng1ne . only , 7,500 m1 le$ , A lso,
Firewood tor so le
Co l i

--

-

-- ---

99M:.:9:::
47"-::-:---:--~
1975 JEEP Cherokee , p
air, 4 wheel drtve

-

CASE WT
CAN GOODS

s~ 7b.

Phone

742 2590
1973 VEGA, fake Over paymen ts.
19b8 Dodge, $450
Phone

992-7332
1968 lnternattonal 52 Trodor
tru ck wtth sleeper and 14 ft. log
bed
A-1 cond ition $3000.
Phone (61-4) 592-2605 after 9
_ p m_. excep~ Saturday e... antngs
1976 CHEVROLET Chevefte Phone

Strickly wholesale to all.
less than t;, case.

Not

Miller Produce

EQUIPMENT

Fronk ltn Model 1308 Slc.tdder
milnogn Con be seen at 103
Ttmber,ock 208GS Sktdder:
Beech St., Pomeroy. Ohto after
Prenttce G·BC Loader wt th by -~ pm
pass grapple Contact Dennts
1972 NOVA 2 OR hardtop w1th
Smurr Phone (61 -4 ) 838-5345 .
, ......
crog or mags
307 engtne , ..........
NEW
HOLLAND hay baler and
outomottc transmiSSIOn Phone
gram dnll Phone 992-708A
992-2257
REGI STERED MORGAN gelding ,
'Jety ntce rtd1ng horse Phone

__

~

EXPERIENCED meof, cutter
knowledge of quali ty control. c)
&amp; 0 Meats , 830 E. Main Sf.

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

CMRIERS WANTED
FOR MASON
AREA IMILY
SENTINB.
Of

• 1-'14-991-2156

~ · oo-Big

992-1&gt;072
lOOKING FOR tro..,el tro ller TRAILER FOR so le, 10 )( 55
Ponderosa , 2 bedroom , ma ny
truck camper, comp.ng trmler,
e)(lros . $2500 CB 350 Hondo
mint home , tru ck cop? . Tro ...el
$300 Phone 992 -7008 .
lrotler to rent? CODNER S
CAMPERS off Ro1 nbow Rtdge . BEEF CATTLE, complete herd for
open evenings Toke Meigs 28
one pu ce
Phon e {61 4)
Or 32 to Boshon
Robert
1167
3b68
_Codner, Long Bottom , Owner
I AND H Beams, 8 , 9 and 10 tnch.
CODNER'S CAMPER S on Rotn Call ~2 7034
bow ttdge. Soles Rental Service,
Suppl 1es,
tr a ders , WOODEN HOLLOW core co bmet
doors and drawer fronts from
carn~ rs, cops, alu m owntngs
75c up Coll992 7034
and porches by Ourob1h Op&amp;n
e'Jenings Meigs 28 or 32 to 1q5s CHEVY , 6 Cyl standard,
Bosh&lt;ln . Owner Robert Cod08r,
good motor, new battery , boys
_ ~n g_!~ t tom::"C"OC::---~-,..bike, 26 ln. recor d player and
records
Flower pof , Coli
1971 LEISURE TIME Camper , 18ft
742-207B
sleeps 6, selt-conta.ned , httch
and mirrors Included 8)(Cellent C 8 RADIO Demeo Sateltte (tube
condthon Phone c,q2 -2386 .
type) wtth 0 -104 power mike

.

----

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

-- --

33, ten miles l'lOrth of Pomeroy .
Lorge lots with concrete pottos .
sidewalks , runners ond off
_ !..!.reel parking. Phone 992-7479
ORCHID ROOM for rent for an·
ntversories, w.ddtng re.;ep·
ftons , brtdal showers or private
meeting room . Phone 992-3975
or992-2571 .
TRAILER SPACE tor rent located
south of Middleport on Rt. 7
along the ri... •r. Sewer and
electric. hooked up, $.tO per
month. Coli 992-256) afternoon
or av•nings
FURNISHED APl. Adults only, no
pett Phone 992-3874 , Mtd ·
dl•port
a£AiJTv ~SHoP -f;,. rent or lease .
Phone 992 -3333.

HOME IN Pomeroy , 2 story , cen lrol heottng , some carpe tmg
and ponnelling Both &amp; '/, .
PMone 9&lt;/2-7074 . or 992·3-465.
56 ACRE Form , house remodeled ,
plenty of outbuildings , co ttle
and equtpment included Phone
2..C7 -2241
f or appointment

PHOTOGRAPHY

·Insulation Setvices
Fin~acmtAnUW.

BJowniiltiWollt &amp; Attia
SIOIIM

Commercial
Schools
Weddings

WIJIIIOWS&amp;DOO~

2oo In S';rocuse. Phone

992 3714

WINDJIIIS

--------

-

HOUSE IN · Tuppers Plotns , 2
bedroom s, elec heat, double
garage, 2 lots . Phone (614)
bb7 -30b5 o'll67-3360::__~-

"The Originators
Not The Imitators"
2·23-1 mo.

Phone 992-3339

TEAFORD

MAIN
POMEROY, 0.

216 E. Secpnd Street

JUST LISTED - Beautiful

hookup Just $20,000.00.
About 7

acres tn Pomeroy, 3 A.
fenced , 2 A. in woods,
balance in yard and gar-

den ' 3 BR home with
dining , living , bath, C.B
room .

Ideal

for

klds .

$19,200.00.
Lovely

home with Income, ex cellent neighborhood, 3-4
bedrooms, li vi ng. dining, 2
baths, 2 car garge with 3
BR
apt
over .
Just

$27,000.00.
JUST LISTED - 1 floor
plan . J bedrooms , bath,
nat. gas heat, carpetlng

Level lot
SIB.OOO 00

bO

x

LISTED

120.
Ex-

cellent fishing cottage - on
River . 2 bedrooms, large

living and kitchen, very
low upkeep . Buy this and

get away from it all. Only
$4,200.00.
JUST LISTED- LOVELY
- LOVELY frame and
brick . 3 bedrooms,

baths ,

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Phone 992-3325
DRIVE -IN - All equip·

formal

111:1

dining.

Insulated. For only SIB,OOO.

8 room frame home on a
corner lot . 3 bedrOOIY!S with

natural

T.P . water and
gas . Heating

TWO lOTS together on State 124,

Furnace

A good buy at

clos~ts,

$14,000.

NEW LISTING -1'/2 acres
with a 3 bedroom home lust
outside of town, 6 rooms,

SfROVT

NEW LISTING - Good
older home on qulel street
with fireplace, carpeting In
tor the
children. 2 car garage.
Only $17,500.
all rooms, and yard

bedroom frame home, l'h

2AK60 double wide 4 BR and
2 baths, close to mine area .
• Price $16,000.

baths , carpeting, elec .
baseboard heat, nice kit-

12x50

NEW

LISTING

4

back yard. $16.000.
5 bedroom

home on n i ce corner lot In
Orange Townshi p.

BUILDING

~OTS

-

1'/2

acres near Tuppers Plains

for $5.000. Several lots at
Five Points , $2,000.00 UP.
GOOD HOMES FOR YOU
TO SEE AT OUR OFFICE
NEAR POST OFFICE.
PICTURES AND FREE
PARKING.

992-2259- 985-4112
992-2568

G. Bruce Teaford

Helen L. Teaford
Associates

-

.

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

--

Commerctol prop41rty apprOJC . 17
acres, le&lt;Jel land, located at
Tuppers Plotns on Ohto, Route

Onion Sets J lbs.

NEW 3 bedroom house. built-in
kItchen. bo lh ond 'h , Phone
742-2306 or contact MtiO B. Hut.
_:!1•son...:.~utlond , Ohio.

SI.OO

Pomeroy Landmarll
r.••-JackWf.aruy,Mg•
~ Pha ef92 ·2111 ,

__7. ':hone (b14) 1167-6304

-

VA -FHA. 30 yr-. finonctng . Ireland
Mortgage, 77 E. State, Athens ,

phone(bll) 592-3051

20 miles frcm town, would
make
nice
summer
vacation spot. Price $7,500.

BAS HAN -

Owner
Shirley (Jeffers) Wolfe
Formerly
lo Ia 's Beauty Sa Ion
For appointment call
992-2549 Tuesday thru
Saturday B:OO a.m. to
5:00 p.m. Open nights
by appointment.

LlTTL~

" HOW DO ZEE··

LET'S HOPE

·:

YOU HEARD
CORREClL'(,

KNew

4- 15-1 mo.

YouR

FA'THER ~ ·HfAR

'

ORPHAN ANNlE-BlJM
1HIS 19 /11 0

NICe 2 story country home, containing

7

rooms and 1'12 baths, mostly carpeted.· Kitchen has all
new built-I n cabinets with bronze stove and
refrigerator to match, new porches and all

new

aluminum siding and storm windows, forced air
natural gas furnace and drilled well, garden space.
This house Is warm and ready for Immediate

occupancy, come take a look lust $18,900,
'"
NEW LISTING- FREE GAS-Nice modern

p;, story

farm house containing ~ bedrooms, dining room,

·well water, 2 barns, work shop and other bulldln_gs,
large pond stocked wllh fish , approximately 2J acres

tillable and -46 acres fenced . Good location, call for
appointment, price $80,000.

walk

to

No. 204 - 11.93 acres In '
Rutland area, has old barn,
lays qood. Price $11,000
No. 198 - Middleport, 4
bedrooms, modern kitchen,
carpeled, alum . siding and
windows. has beauty shop
all

n

low

equipment

Free Estimates

garden

ponds, a nice laying farm priced to go, located near

Chester, call for appointment.
COOLVILLE- Nice modern b&lt;lck home a&gt;ntalnlng
three bedrooms, dining room, living room with
fireplace , full basement with ga~r.~o'arge front porch,
natural gas furnace, city 1':.~0~ •nd well weler, a
beautiful homo with app~ ~~ ••tely 5'12 acres of land,
fruit trees and st.a~p..\. . a surrounjllng It, plenty of
garden space, good .•.nlng area close bY· located In
Coolville, Ohio, priced at only $32,000. Call now.
WE ARE SELLING PROPERTY AND NEED YOUR
HELP, LIST WITH US. WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
VACANT LAND, FARM AND RESIDENTIAL
PROPERTY.
JIMMYDEEMREALTDR
7

bedrooms,

throughout.
' space,

also

possibility of additional lot,
off street parking . Price
$22.500.
B04W. Main
Pomeroy
992-2298
Alter Hours Ca II
992-7133
CONTACT:
Lois Pauley
Branch Man•ger

Installation, samples
brought to your home
with no charge .

: a
· ~·

IT'S JJST 111/&gt;.T Hi" IJ.&gt;I.G

2-23-1 mo.

KIDI-l/&gt;.PPE'D·r-~or::...;

!&gt;.S A
1':HIW,..

BRADFORD , Auctioneer, Com plete Service. Phone 949-2487
or q.t19-2000. Ractne , Ohio, Critt
Bradford

:

(VJD £;:Y£.t!ANI:£D
FOR
SOMWN8.
F.L.&lt;Se.

3B25.
REMODELING, Ph,.tmbtng , heottng
and all types of general repotr,
Work guaranteed 20 rears eiC·
perience Phone 992-24()q

GASOLINE ALLEY

In case

of fire,

people
come

throuqh
this
room

to the

5232

EXCA~V:-:A::T:::IN:::G:-.-d:-o-,e-r-.-,.boc.,-k7hae
-

fire

JUMPER FELLOW

Answer· What the c.,-penter turned minister

was-A ""JOINER""

.,

Ex·

Sons 15; Almanac 20; Consumer Sllrvlval K il 33

42 DISsuade
43 Whirl
DOWN
I Italian
staple food
2 P1gment
3 Lustrous
4 Cadence
call
5 For group
Yesterday's Answer,
smging
28 Terpsich()21 Cosmic
6 Violinist's
rean
truth, in
need
(.'luna
30 Hotel
7 Belgian
accommoda·
22 Space
commune
chimp
tion
8 Temporary
31 Composure
23 Was in a
expedient
32 Wakened
lather
9 Arranged in
33 Jury
24 Garbed
a series
25 Bar order
list
12 11 - unto
(2 wds.)
38 Speck
Caesar "
39 Before mite
26 Tibetan
14 Language
or minus
beas t
of Madras

:
••
•

~

RUTLAND FURNITURE
ARNO[.D GRATE

RU

•

el

~~

Mlller 13. Testimony of Two Men 6. Hawa ii F!ve-0
8; Classic Theatre 33; Movie " Tony Rome" 10;

9 JO-Pilot 13
10·00-Streels of San Fran cisco 13; Barn aby Jones B;
News 20.
10 JO-Woman 20.
11 . ()()--News 3,4,6,8, 10,1 3, 1~. MacNeil -Lehrer Report
33
11 3Q--Johnny Carson 3,4, 15, Playboy 's Playmate
Party 6; Koiak 8; M ar y Hartman 10, W.Va .
Championship Horse Shoe 13 ; ABC News 33.

12·00-Movle " Easy Rider" 10; Janak! JJ
12 40-McCioud B.
l . DO--Tomor row 3,4.

HITCHHII&lt;r::'
OH, THEY IS BLJTTHARS TH'
BOY- )b'I&lt;IN TAKI;'"'
A f&lt;IDt=: BAG( STARVIN~ WA6HIN6l(::)N
B/L.l..ION- DUMP IT IN THAT 10 l/OGPATCH
WAY O'DOIN'
Ft=:I&lt;TILIZER
-AN' HAND IT r---""' ,____.. . JP- HOW'D Yo'
SACKOUTbTHOx
LIKE THAT
STARVIN G
BUILDIN6?
RATS-

13

~J- OG--News

BRIDGE
Oswald and Jim Jacoby
n~t

first for points
11

NOR Til
4 A K 9843.
+ 65
"' 8 2
WEST

EAST

4Q 7
¥ 974

4 J 10
¥ 10 6 53
• J 94J

• Q 10

a2

"' J 109

"' Q6 o 3

SOLITH (Ill
... 6 52
¥ AKJ

• AK7
... A K 7 4
North-South vu lncr,tblc

West

Norlh Easl

Pass
Pass

6N T

Sou th
2N T

Pa ~s

Ope mn~ iet~d -

Is

EL

E XO

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

I A P VA

• WELL,
WE'RE

'

.
'

"

11 HOMf="l

NON

WHAT ?

FIRBT, WE DERJSIT KATIE
MC FEA1HER'5 CHECK AT
11-IE. e.ANK ... IN A
SPECIAL ACCOUNT..
THEN ...

WE HAVE A
CONFERENCE f
FIGURE OUT
WHAT POINT5
REMAIN 1D
BE: MADE IN
OUk: FILM ..

EXCUSE ME, e,uT
YOUR PHONE 15
RINGING .

SEVAPLOT

TI1ATS11-IE LINE I USE RJR MY

' ESClJRT 8ERVICE:"! I'LL ..
I 'LL HAVE IT TAKEN OUT
IMMEDIATELY

••
•

•

I

PT

overtr ick m

order

your co ntract
Playmg at

ace or

kmg

to msure

SI X notrump ,

A Nova Scot1a reader wants
to know whal we rebid w1Lh
A AKQxxx ¥ '\x • Ax ... xxx

We have opened one spade and
pa r tner has responded one

notrump
We ra1se ou r partner to
three notrump Three or f ou r

spade s are other poss1ble
reb1ds . but we Lhmk Lhe play
for a nme lnck game should
be the wmner

UAEU

Soulh needs just five s pade
DG
BYDR Z
tn cks but he needs those fiv e
He
won't get t hem 1[ East
T
R
T
B
P
V
P
D
R
T
E L Z
holds a ll four spades , but
when he leads a spade from
UD . UYPOT
SEL I AD
ELF
h1s hand at trick two and West
follows
w1th seven he has a
SRSGDYZ
QDLOT
perfect sa fely play at h1s diS
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: PRETTY MU CH ALL THE
posal He just plays the nme
HONEST TRUTH-TELLING IN TilE WORLD IS DONE BY from dummy
CHILDREN. - OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES
Th1 s Lime the safely play
() 1977 KJnl Futures Sy ndicate, Inc ,
costs h1m a trick The spa des

(00 yOu have a questiOn
lor th e experts? Wnte ' Ask
fhe Jacnbys ·· care ol thi s
newspaper The Jacobys wlfJ
answer md1v1dua l questiOns
~ ~ sramped
sell -addressed
envelopes are e1ncfosed The
most mteres tmg Questtons
w111 be used m lh ts column
and will receiVe cop1es of
JACOBY MODERN )

BARNEY

TI-lE FIRST TIME '{OU
DOUBlE FAULT, I'M 60NNA
HIT '{()U RIGHT OVER THE

HEAD WtTH M'f RACK!:.i!

OKA'I, GO AHEAD
AND SERVE! AND
DON'T BE NERVOUS.

I GOT TH' ELDERBERRY
ITCH , GRANNY··4E GOT
ENNY REMEDIES
FER THAT .....-,

he

make six spade tricks
Should the spades break 3· 1 all
plays work out the same. but
1f WesL held all four spades
the play of the ace or kmg
wou ld oosl South hiS contract.
The sa fely play 1s clearly
co rrect in rubber bridge . How
about at match pomts?
It is probab ly mcorrec t SIX
nolrump or six spades w 1ll
have been bid al nearly all
tables and the player who
doesn 't make an overtri ck will
probably get a poor scor e A 2·
2 break is far more like ly tha t
IS a 4-0 break a nd declarer
shou ld go alter all the tricks.

2 •

Safety plays are always fi ne
in rubber bndge when the co n·
apostrophes, th e l engt h and forma tio n of the \\Ords are atl Lracl 1s all impor tant . In
match pomt you must conhint s, Each da} th e rode l ~tters are chffcr e nt
Sider whether or nol 1t IS
CRYPTOQUOTES
worth yo ur wht l e to risk an
PT

r1ses w1th the

Pass

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work il:
AXYDLBAA)(R
LONGFELLOW

are go ing to break 2-2 and 1f he
w11l

¥ QB2

nobis''
17 Uprooting
40 Break in
rank
41 To be
(Lat.)

DRYT

.

Close Sal At 5 P.M./
· ~-~

B:JO-What's Happening 6,13
9 oo--Movle " Danger in Paradise" 3.4,15: Barney

One letter simply stands for anothe r In th is sample A is
used for the three L' s, X fm the tw o O' :s l' lC Smg le letters,

quishers All sizes , buSiness ,
home. boat . Reftlled, tested.
Bill Brown, Ru t land. Ohio.
Phone 7.42-2777 .

~..

6, 13; Waltons 8,1 0, Music Hall Amerlc:a 15; Classic
Theatre 20; Masterpiece Theatre 33

Safety

BROWN"S FIRE and Safely Ex!Jn.

Mon., Tues., Wed.
8:00til5:00.
Thursday 8 til Noon

7·Jif--Hollywood Squares 3; Ni xon &amp; the World 4 ; Ohio
Stale Lotlery 6; Price Is Right B; MacNe il-Lehrer
Report 20,33: Wild Kingdom 10, Nashville on Jhe
Road )3; Dolly 15.
Boo--Baa Baa Black Sheep 3, Welco me Back, Kotter

bad

HARRISON'S T.V. Repair. Servke
Calls. 276 Sycamore , Sl., Mid ·
dleport. Phone 992-:2522 .

EXCAVATING, BACKHOE. doz8r.
trencher, low Boy , dump truck
trucks , septic systems Bill
Pullins, phone 992-2478 day or
mght.

4:30-My Three Sons 3; Emergency One 6; Parlrldge
Family B; Fllntstones 15.
5:0G--Big Valley 3: Brady Bunch 8, Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood 20,33: Emergency One IJ : Slar Trek
15 .
~ 31f--Adam-12 4; News 6; Family Affair B; Elec. Co
20,33.
6·oo-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; Zoom 20,33.
6 30-NBC News 3,4,15, ABC News 13:; Andy Griffith
6: CBS News B.IO: Once Upon A Classic 20,33
7 00-Truth or Cons. J; To Tell tM Truth 4, Muppet
Show 8: News 10, To Tell the Truth 4, JJ; My Three

35 And (Ger .)
36 " - pro

•

• 742-2211

Jumbles· PEONY AGING

meaning

.,

742-234B.

.

•·

Now arrange the circled leners to
fonn the surpnso answer, as SUQ·
gested by the above cartoon.

th .

escape?

CARPENTER , tloonng, cethng
poneling Phone 992-27sq ,
'

MARTIN

15 Ending for
kit or bit
16 "The
Golden
Greek"
~
i! 17 Fraternity

I

EXCAVATING, dozer, loader and
backhoe work dump trucks
and lo-boys for h1re1 wtll haul
fdl dirt, to sot l, limestone and
gro ... el. Coli Bob or Roger Jef .
fers, dey phone 992-7089 ,
night phone 992-3525 or 992-

MOBILE Home Repo tr , Elec.,
• plumbtng and heatmg. Phone

.)

18 Ending for
&gt;
diction
1 19 Fortify
20 Ramble
21 Sesame
22 Abommate
23 Lethal
26 Hanger's
material
21 Roman
wan t
iS
emperor
room cleared 2s Roosevelt
in a ·week!
or Hoover,
e.g.
29 Ending for
passiOn
"';iii:;~~:-- 30 Juan or
Jose
31 Tasteless
fare
34 Prefix

Sweepers, toasters , irons , oil
smoll oppiiQnces. lown mower,
next to State Htghwoy Garage
on Route 7. Phone (61 .. ) 985·

ond dttcher Charles R. Hat.
field , Back Hoe Ser ... ice ,
Rutland , Qh1o. Phone 742 -2008.

(3

symbol

•

:

__:,_:_! L

13 Crui11ser's
radi

Convenient Shopping Hours

.• •
.. .

20,33, Movi e " The Bridge on the River Kwal" 10 ·
Dinah 13.
'

I I IIJ[III X]

I

. -E~~ ;·11~ Yearning
Less frigid

_

...... ... . ..
••
•••
..
:·
:
FRIDAY
TIL
5
;
••
•••
.: .....•••••,.... : .
.......................
•
•

Yesterday's

ACROSS
I Luxur1ous
5 Vulgar

69B-7331.

2

FOR "BTAE!I'J.E''
GOVE~MENT.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

an

acre.

WHAT 'IOU Nf.f.P

~

No. 197 - 1.21 hundreds ol

:•

F"OR HIS
S I&lt;ILL 1

3:0Q-Daytlme Emmys IS; All In The Family B,IO;
Know Your Antiques 20.
3: 15-General Hospital 6, 13 .
3:30-Match Game B,IO: Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
4:00-Misler Cartoon 3, Daytime Emmys 4: New
Mickey Mouse Club b ; Lucy Show 8: Sesame St

(Answers toiTIOfrOW)

OF MY UFE

Route 3, Pomeroy, 0 .

992-5858.
H6WERY AND

~er.K

I'D GNE
TWENt'f 't'E'ARS

Young's Carpeting

co~toflng
septic systems ,
dozer , backhoe, dump truck ,
ltmestone, gralr'el , blacktop
po..,ing , Rt. 143. Phone 1 (614)

•••

I 6~LIE Vf TOU

WERE OFFERED

FLOP HOUSE!
OProRTUNITY
B'f GAD!i
-BUT IT WAS
WISH I'D
BEEN HERE· · A BAD NIGHT-~

YOU'RE A
DR. OU86· ·
DOCTOR, NOW· · "---',,.-'

WILL do roottng, construction,
plumb1ng ond heottng. No 1ob
too Iorge or too small Phone

kitchen with built In appliances, basement. cllv II.Dd .

01' CONTENTION

[j

tXJ

INASHEK
() I

UTILE !"I PHAN ANNIE

windows.

short

8, 10.

ISEXOUDI

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned. Modern
Sanitation, 992·3954 .

stores. Price $7,500.

J·JO-Baseball 3,4; Days of our Lives 15; As The World
Turns B. 10.
2:0Q-S20,000 Pyramid 6, 13.
2.30-&lt;&gt;ne Life to Live b, 13; Doclors 15: Guiding Llgl&gt;l

K] I

"Syracuse·

3.

6 5Cl--Good Morning, West VIrginia 13.
6· 55-Good Morning , Trl Slate 13.
7 OG--Today J,o,IS; Good Morning America 6,13: CBS
News B: Chuck Wh ile Reports 10.
7·05-Porky Pig 10.
7:30-Schoolles 10.
B·QO--Howdy Doody 6 ; Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame
St. Jl.
8·30-Big Valley 6
9 OG--A M. 3; Phil Donahue 4, 13, 15; Andy Grllflth B:
Mike Douglas 10.
9·30-Cross-Wits J; Edge of Night 6; Concentration a.
IO:oo-Sanlord &amp; Son 3.4, IS: Dinah 6: Mike Douglas 13.
10 .30-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15: Price Is Righi a,10.
ll oo--Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15 ; Happy Days 6,13, Elec .
Co 20.
11 ·30-Shool lor the Stars 3,4,15; Family Feud 6,13;
Love ol Life 8,10; Sesame St. 20.
11 :55-CBS News B. Ms . Flxlt 10.
12 :oo-News 3.4,6,1 0,13. Divorce Court 8
12:30-C hlco&amp; the Man 3,15. Bob Braun 4: Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10.
1 oo-ToBeAnnounced3i i AIIMyChildren6 ,1 3; News
8; Young &amp; Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.

I USSEO

No. 203 - House and lot In
town , alum. siding and

carpeted

ty . W. Yo Phone (304) 772·
3102 or (30•1 772-3227

Saw
s.s
1 Good Used Poulan Chain ,
Saw
UO
S_urvivor S1fes ontv Ut.ts

beaulllul view of Jhe river,

Included. Price $35,000.

SIVI UO.OQ On I new
Hatpolnt Refrign1tor.
1 riltw 20 cubic tt.
Chest Frnzer
$ll9 .9S
Now tn aTocK, complete ltne
of bulk garden seeds •nd

McCulloueh Chain

No. 202 3 acres with
mobile
home ,

with

CHESTER -113 acre farm, BO acres tillable land, nice
2 story farm house, 7 rooms and both, all hardwood
floors and basement. Barna and other outbuildings, 2

i .good

No. 199 - · 1.3 acres with

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
byHenriArnoldandBobleo

I I I

YEAH ...

SEWING MACHINE Repairs, serVIce, all makes, 992·22S..C . The
Fabric Shop ,
Pomeroy
Authonzed S1nger Soles and
Service. We &amp;horpen Scissors

near schools. 3 bedrooms ,
dtn 1ng, l arge living room

SMALL form for sale, 10~. down,
owner financed Monroe Coun-

3102 0' (304) 772-3227.

Syracuse, middle of town , Idea l
for mobde home or new home
Seplit tank and water top
Phone992 -7402 , or 742-2194 .

m1t )

KORPE

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

1 car garage. 525,000.

New Co . Op Wlftr sorteners, model VC·SVI.

COUNTRY farm land wtth sedud·
ed woods , water and good access tn Monroe County. W. Vo
$1 ,000 down, call (304) m -

1167·3bb8.

bath, partial basement and

$5 ,000.00 -

Assoc1ates \

ALLEYOOP

Carpet-Li no.- Tllo
Phone Mike Young at
992-2206 or 992-7,30

13 A pnd 1974 Mobile home, one
other mobile home Stfe. Drilled
well, on 681 near Tuppers
Platns , S10 ,900. Phone (61.4)

b : 4~Mornlng Report

~ ~ ~~ ®

clty water and carpeting.

in . 537,000.00
CORNER LOT - 2'12 story

WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
YOUR FARM - CALL
TODAY.
HENRY E. CLELAND I
BROKER
Hank-Cath-Leona Cleland

J&gt;

ftfl\lN"J

4-24-1 mo.

4-2B-1 mo.

NEW LISTING - Nice :
bed.room
home
with
natural gas, F .A furnace,

chen, family room and nice

garage, in Middleport .
Look lust $8,500 00.

Phone 949-2814
9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

wonderful buy at $10,000.

carpeting. full basement
w i th large rec . room ,
garage, 1 level acre close
frame with c arport . 2
fireplaces , 5 bedroom s,
formal dining , bath, foyer,

builders.

rnent necessary for the
busi ness, ample parking ,
or can be made into a
home. This really is a

NEW LISTING- Good old

JUST LISTED -

JUST

Conttnuous
one piece
gutters. We hang it, or do it
yourself. Special prices to

Virgil B. Sr., Realtor

and secluded, over 3 acres,
11/2 story frame home, 3 or
4 bedroom s, fireplace,
quipped kitchen, permapane windows, trailer

JUST LISTED -

GUTTER SERVICE

RACINE - Good J b&lt; ~ n._l
dining room,
utlliti es,.,even a garden! ~\.~ ... at only $8,500.

onion sets.

C:trpet &amp; Upholstery
Phone Mike Young
At
992-2206 or 992-7630

6 ·»--SU Ovvervlew 4; Urban League 10; News 6

10 ·Jo--Biack Perspective on the News 20; Americana

Shirley's Beauty Nook

Route 3, Pomeroy, 0 .

HARLEY HANING

THURSDAY. MAY 12,1977
b·OO-Publlc Affairs 10.
6: 15-Farm Report 13.
6.2(}--Not For Women Only 13.

9·30-&lt;&gt;ne Dav.at A Time B,IO; Best ot Ernie Kovacs
20,33
10 OQ-Police Slory 3, 15; Pilot " The Cabot Connection"
B,IO; News 20; The Way It Was J3 .

,._ t!z.2174

John St.

Young's Carpeting

NEW HOMES
&amp; REMODELING

l .QO-Tomorrow l ,.t.

1.30-News 13

Frankltn &amp; Jefferson 33, Opening Soon at a Theater
Near You 20.

Free Estimates
No Sunday Calls Please

Superior
Steam Extraction

CARPENTER &amp;
BUILDERS

RESTAURANT TO FIND IT!

sMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

1-10 I mg

Ph t!Z-3t!3

10-17-1 mo i Pdl

Hariman 10: ABC News 33
12 :0G--Movle ""A Fine Madness" 10; Janak! 33.

Shoorl Story 20,33.
B·JO-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6.13: Baseball 4.
9.0Q-Rich Man, Poor Man 6,13 M·A·S-H B,10; World of

Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860

LARRl,,~}~DER

Chester, Ohio

LIKE NEW Shultz Mobile Home on
2 1/l acres. level land concrete
porch, 8 x 35 with owntng,
astro-1urf covered , 20 K 38
block garage, cell ar wt lh utiltty
room 0\lerheod Shade and
fruit trees in Longsv1lle . Phone
742 21jl65

--

A local contractor

AUIIIINIJII
$10111&amp;-SOffiTT
GUTTEIUWIIINGS

(614) 915-4155

LISTEN[ n1. ACT LIKE I"VE
LOST 50METHIN" AND HAVE
TO 50 BACK 1~51DEo THE

BISSEU. SIDING CO.

IE'IAC£,[Nl

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

Rt 124 Cook 's Gap Hdl Phone
992-5626 after 5 30 p,m

11 · 30-Johnny Carson 3,&lt;4, 15; Movie .. Journey Into
Fear" 6,13, Movie " Scream of the Wolf" Bi Mary

Soc1ety 15.
B:oo-Movie "Jeremiah Johnson" 3,15; Happy Days
6, 13; Who's Who 8, 10; Redscene '77 4,· American

Vinyl &amp; . Aluminum
Siding,
Storm
Windows
&amp;
Insulation.
Call Prolessionals

llown

Aer~al

74BI """'--,'"""'"--,--~--

Only 1279.95

5-6J, m?.:J""~

FREE E TIM TES

--13 ACRES. 3 bedroom , oil utilttles ,

~

Beh in d Rutland Grado
School. Evening work by
appointment. Ph. 742-2005 .

PROFESSIONAl

HOUSE FOR sole tn Syracuse , 2
bedrooms, and both, lot 100 11:
150 Garage, cementdnve and
sma ll storage bldg Furntshed '
orunfurn1shed Coll992-7147

LOT 150 x

Al ignment,
wheel
balancing, tune-up,
brake work, minor
repair.

J.J

-

'

mergency

7 30-Hollywood Squares 3.~ : Lei's Deal With It 6·
Match Game PM B, Ma cNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33;
In The Know 10: Wild Kingdom 13; TV Honor

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

Complete
Sales
and
Service and Supplies.

'

13, My Three Sons 15; Anyone for Tennyson 20;
American Issues Forum JJ.

DUG.8N'S -

Nabil Summit Road
Rl. l
Middleport, 0 .
992-5724

'

5·30-Adam 12 4; News b. Family Affair B· Elec Co
20,33.
'
. .
6·oo-News 3,4.6.8,10,13,15, Zoom 20; Fire &amp; Ice JJ.
6 30-NBC New$3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News B,IO; Yll,Qeloble Soup 20.
7:oo-Trulh or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4: Liar's Club
6: Country Canlvol B; News 10: To Tell the Truth

L----------------------------------_J

BEAUTIFUL TWO story home wtth
two cor garage, 5 bedrooms,
dl ning room, Iorge living room,
modern ldtchen , 2 '1• baths
Iorge recreohon room, fullv ot;
condttioned . '/ • mde lrom
school One quarter mtle off
Stole Rouln , 30 year financing
OYo+loble. Call 992-3863 bePween 9 o m . and 3 p.m.

li:OG--News 3,4,6.8, 10,13,15; MacNeil -Lehrer Repon
33.

Valley 3; My Three Sons 4; Brady Bunch 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20 33 E

AIGCi

Business Services

----

Thursday and Frtdoy at Hun nel's on Rose Hdl Turn off Rf
33 at s•gn 1ust beyond Pomeroy 1-42 1n. cost tron kltchensink 1
Corporaft on ltne q o m tdl 3
bastn and 1 drotn board, hang
p .m. Roll -owoy bed , bosst net,
,on wel ll type, white, 1-3 burner
clothtng and many other items
gas hot plate Phone 992·5714 .
Let Pomeroy Landmark
GARAGE SALE · Thursday May 12 ECONOMY TRACTOR wtlh all at
soften &amp; condition your
at the Baum Addilton oft Rt. 7
tochments. L1ke new, ,asking
water and a Co·OP water
by the skattng rink. LoTs of
$2250 Phone (b~ b9B-3290 _
softener, Model UC-XVI.
men, women and children 's
FOR MEMORIAL DAY , Beautiful
clothtng and o stereo,
"Now Only ·'279,95
select1on of flow ers . Baskets ,
3 FAMILY Garage Sole tn Chester
sprays , wreaths , 'JOses Fay's
Let us test your water
on Mol11 Street nex t to grade
Novelty Shop. N Second St .
Free
school. Wednesday Ond Thurs · ~ leport ,
d
a
y
HOMEGROWN Tomato plants , imYARD SALE. TWO FAMILY. Roge'
prO'Ied Mexi can early Vtolent,
l.i,Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Mowery reSidence, ftrst house
golden Jubilees . Al$0 golden
Phone992-2181
on 143 ocros.s from Ja.;k's Club .
A cre cebboge. Across from t he
Thur, doy and Fnday
sw i mmtng
pool
Thom aS
Hayman , Syracuse, Ohio.
3 FAMILY Yard Sole
Mindy
Seymour, 308 Page St., Mtd - GOOD RICH Top soil Charles R
dleport Thursday and Frtdoy ,
Hotfteld Backhoe Ser\ltee . Wtll do odd jobs 1 roofmg, potn·
12, 13th, 9 ti ll 4. Clothes
ftng , gutter work . Phone ~2 Phone 742·2008.
baby s, gtrl's clothing, curtatns :
_.]40'1.
bedspreads. treadle sewing 1975 FORO 3000 tractor Model
KA-1 1.4-C tn excellent cond t SEWING · Al TERATIONS
mochtne, baby stroller
Upl'lolstertng ,
drapes
tion Used about !2 hours . For
5 FAMILY GARAGE Sale , Thurs .
more
i'nformotian ,
coli
reasonable 572 Soutl-t Th.rd
day, Fridoy Saturday . Antiques ,
A'J e., M tdd l eport . Phone
992-2B78
clothes ,
baby
furn1ture ,
9'l2-630b
1973
KAWASAKI
250
2600
mdes,
hous•hold 1tems 1966 4 wheel
excellent condition , $500 8 ft PIANO TUNING , lone Daniels 12
drl\le truck . 33 N pas t parks,
years of se r'J ICe. Phone
long topper , luggage rack on
right on Co Rd . 20, fourth
top, cabinets tnSide. $300
992-2082.
house.
Phone 985·3860.
YARD SALE, Friday and Saturday,
thlll 13th and 14th at the Layne GOING OUT OF BUSINESS
A norted ...anety of QCCOsionol
residence tn Chestme behtnd
Baptist Church fr~m 9 tillS p.m
tables . Wood shelvmg with 1973 TRAILER 1.4 x 70 unfurntshed .
plastic surface 10 in . wide by 8
Call 992-bb88 . 9 till 5 or
YARD SALE , Mor 11, 12 , 13, 14 at
ft . long $2 .00 eo. p1ece, also 8
n
wide
by
8
11.
long
$1
985 -3501 after 6 p,m , or con
the Ivon Wei · form off Rt, 7.
75
1
Form on nght before getting to
eoch piece, Form,ca surface __!_~ ct Tanya Da'Jts .
Royal Oak Pork . 9 td19 .
shelving 10 tn . x 12 It .: 5·8 in , 1973 GREENBRIER Mob1le Home ,
$5 .00 each piece , 10 1n K 8ft
65 ~e 12 3bedrooms , 7 x 13" roll
PORCH SALE 660 Htgh Street,
$.4 .00 each piece. Flakeboard 4
out on lt'Jing room , central o1r ,
Mtddleport , Ohto. Thursday ,
fl. )( 8 tt x 1/, in . $3.20 each
porch and awn1ng. Coli John
May 12 from 9 fill 5. Nice glass,
sheet
Hardboard, Formtco
Bentz , 949-2876
dishes and misc. ttems. 6 leg
Sheets. Assorted furn iture :.:....::.:..-·~-'---oak table and gloss door, chmo
hardware · pulls . cab1net
cupboard Con be seen at this
hinges , etc. Screws . bolts and
time.
nuts , $1 00 per pound Permi t
for sole, 1 acre and
343 MASON FURNITURE COM· HOMESITES
up M1ddleport, near Rutland.
PANY (TNT AREA) Poi nt Pleo
Coli 992-7481
sont, W Va .
------NEW
3 bedroom house , .2 both$:
3 AND 4 RM . furntshed and unoil elec. , 1 acre, Middleport,
furnished opts Ptlone 992close to Rutland. Phone 992_ ,1434 . I

couNiiV~M-ob1le Home Pork, Rt,

IIOUSE FOR SALE b.,. Owners . 4
rov rns and both ponneled, u..,.
1ng room and corpe1ed Wtll
sell for S6SOO Colt 992·b250
after 5 p m 10 Lynn St., M 1d
dleport

-

1210 Washington Blvd.
Belpre, Ohio
FORESTRY

HfOUCED S2000 3 bedroom, 2 ' r
bath s
d o uble 90rog e
hreploce 01r condition•ng, 1
o&lt;r e lot . Phone992 2492.

HOUSE .FOR Sole, 2 ~tor~~ 6~o';;
bath, basement , carport , Iorge
lot on College Rood , Syracuse ,
Ohio. Phone 992-7 203

&amp;
Garden Center

992-7274.
1~72 PINTO Run ·A Bou t, l~ USED

FOR SALE

Cottid 675-1333

MYSTERY

~

RISING STAR Kennel eoardmg , COAL , limestone, and' colc11.1m
Indoor Outdoor runs . grooming
chlonde and ca letum brine lor
all bfeeds . , .;IDQn son 1tory
dus t control and spe&lt;1ol m·~•ng
fa cili ties oe 367-71 12 Ct1eshtre
sol i tor farmers , b .;elslor Soli
Phone (61-4) 36? ·0292.
Work s, Ma1n Street Pomeroy,
Oh10 Or phone 992· 3891
HOOF HOLLOW Buy , sell , trode
or train horses RUTH REEVES APPLES, FITZPATRICK ORCHARD
tro,nef. Phone (6l -4) 698 ·3290.
STATE ROUTE 689
PHONE

Pomeroy Landmark

'

•

GUESS WHO .JUST WALI&lt;ED
NTO THE; CJ.IIEF'S OFFICE, THE

for Sale

3 fAMILY YARD Sale by the State
Highway Garage , Rt 7 Chester
Moy 12, ond 13 Whole sets of
dishes, linens , screen doors
some furnitu re, 1ewelry and
A REWARD In the amount of • unitorms Mise
$2 ,000 Is herby offered to any FRIDAY , MAY 13 th Watch for
penon or persons who prostgns lower end of Syracuse ,
~ttdes informotton which leads
Mary Gutnther , Southern Bond
to the detection, opprehenston
Boosters
ol'ld con ... ictton of the person or
persons responsible far the VARD SALE Weds &amp; Thursday :
Coli 992-2295 after 5 p m or
9,00 tdl 5 p .m Bob Woldntgs
murder of Wesley Dale Musser
can be seen at 11 4 Condor Sf ,
res idence . Rf 124 across from
Any tnformotion pertamtng to
Pomeroy , Ohto
• Ractne Planning M1ll Cloth1ng . lOST IN Middleport, one-year-old
some should be gt ... un to the
female toy collte . Answers to GRAVELY TRACTOR for sole
glassware , baby furniture ,
Metgs County Shertff's OepartM owe r
1ncluded
Phone
the name of Cht co Phone
mise itnms
mentby calling 992-337 1. Sign.
992 50b7
ed, Frances Musser .
SEVERAL FAMIL V Garage Sole ,

'•

Television log for easy viewing

'

Ohe lJ ; Star Trek 15 .

L'l ~&amp;t )4c.

100

1day

'

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES

.

11-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Wednesday May 11 1m

\

FUST,G\T AN ' BURY \T
UNDER A
'iORESELt
A WILD· PERSIMMON
TREE WHEN
TURKEY
CLAW
TH'MOONIS
FULL ?

LANDS NO!!
USE IT FER A

�12 - The DallY :sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesda y, May II. 1977

- ---..

SORORITY OFFICERS - officers of Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter were installed Tuesday evening at a meeting of
.the chapter held in the meeting rooms of the Columbus

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

Area Deaths

GEORGE BROWN

LETART, W.Va.- George

w. Brown, 54. Letart . W.Va .,
who died Tuesday was born
Nov. 27, 1922.
He Is survived by his wife,
Addie Bee Biggs Brown ; one
son t M ichael, Ra cine : his
parents, Homer and Caroline

Stonehitt Brown. Letart, W.

Va .; three sisters, Helen
Wiers, Ni fro , W. Va .; Ilene
McDan iel , New York ; Mary

Rickard ,

Denver ,

Colo .;

three grandchildren and
several nieces and nephews.
He served In the South
Pacific during World War II
and In the Korer-n conflict . He

was a member at thP. Mason
Historical Society .
Funeral services will be 3

p.m . Friday .at the Ewing
Chapel with the Rev . Dave

Fields officiating . B~rial will
be In Greenwood Cemetery .

Fire-aid units

called out 41
times in April
The Middleport Fire
Department answered 41
caDs in April according to the
report of Fire Chief C. Robert
Fisher.
-or the total calls, seven
were alanns to minor fires,
one was a false alarm and 33
were emergency-medical
runs.
Of the 33 emergency runs,
2&gt; were in town and eight
· were out of town. Total
manhours for emergency
runs amounted to 158.5 hours
with the emergency vehicles
driven 682.7 miles during the
month. Total manhours for
fire caDs only totaled 104.7
with an average of II men
answering each call.
DaMy Fink, Broadway St.,
was accepted. as a new
member of lh~. fire department.

MASON DRIVE-IN
Fri., Sat., Sun.
MaylJ-14-15

Double Feature ·

MOTHER JUGS
&amp; SPEED PG
Plus

TAKE A HARD
RIDE
PG

MARIE SPURLOCK
Mrs. Mari e Spurlock . 65.
wife of Everett Spurlock ,
Waterloo , died unexpected at

7. 30 p. m. Monday at her
residence.
'
Born March 16, 191 2 in
Cabell County, W. Va., she
was a daughter of the late
Emory and Laura Sowards
Calls. She had resided in the
Arabia . WaterloO area since
19&lt;S.
On Feb . 3, 1932, she was
united in marriage to Everett
Spurlock whb survives in
addition to 10 children :
Emory Spurlock of Mt .

Gilead. Ohio ; Donald and
Haskett (Cub) Spurlock, both

of Patriot ; Cart and Jusi in
SpurLock of Marion, Ohio ;

Jerry and Will iam Spurlock

of tro.nlon ; .three daughters,
Mrs. Arnold ( Eva) Drum·
mond of . Ironton ; Ju l ia
SpurloCk of Ironton; Mrs .
Jacob (Janet) Stanley of
Patriot; 26 grandchildren,
two great-grandch i ldren, a
brother , Tom Call, of lesage,
W. Va ., two sisters, Mrs.
Effie Short of Lesage, and
Mr s. lona Short of Glenwood ,

w. va. ·

The body ts at Phillips

Funeral Home wher e fri ends
may call6-l0 p. m . Thursday .
Funeral s.ervlces will be a"t 1
p. m. Friday at the funeral
home ·w ith interment in Aid
Cemetery .

Five fined in

and Southern Ohio Eleetric Co . Installed were Sheila
Reeves, vice president, Kathy Cumings, president, Unda
King, corresponding secretary, Maurisha Nelson,
recording secretary and Susan Lanning, treasurer.

2 Meigs health
services noted
Meigs County is benefitting
from two subcontracts, both
related to health services, in
programs by the Corporation
for Health Education in
Appalachia Ohio (CHEAO)
which reviewed all its
projects in a meeting of the
board of trustees recently in
Cambridge.
The Meigs County Council
on Aging is producing a
program of seminars and
workshops
on
health
educatiQn topics for senior
citizens, and the Gallia-Meigs
Community Action Agency
has a health education
program for pre-schoolers.
· Meigs County has been
selected by CHEAO as a site
for a student health team this
summer. The project will be
a multiphasic screening
program for all Income and ·
age levels. The coordinator
for the project is Major E.
Joyce Smith (Retired ).
Election of officers and the
executive committee was
held as was the drawing for
terms of office for the new

Weather

members of the expanded
board. Harold D. Brown,
2001'.. West Main Street, .drew
a three-year term of office as
a trustee .
CHEAO is a private, nonprofit organization which
offers health education
programs to health practitioners and the public. It
serves the 28 Ohio Appalachian counties under
funding from the Appalachian Regional Commission. Offices are located
in Athens and Cambridge.

Court hears
nine cases

Two defendants were fined
and seven others forfeited
bonds in the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews
Tuesday night.
Fined $350 and costs each
and given three day jail
sentences on charges of
driving while intoxicated
were · Charles Burdette,
.Middleport, and Roger
Brown of Cottageville, W.Va.
Brown was also fined $50 and
costs for npt having an
operator's license. ,
Forfeiting bonds were
Juanita Justis, Middleport,
$30, posted on an assured
clear distance charge;
. Raymond Smith, Pomeroy,
$28, speeding; Sheila Hawk,
Hemlock Grove, $30, failure
to yield the right of way; John
Branham, Huntington, W.
Va., ruMing a red light, $30;
Dana Clinton, Belpre, $2&gt;,
speeding; Kathy Fry,
Syracuse, $30, assured clear
distance, and Roy Boggs,
Shade, $50, no operator's
license.

Fair tonight, with lows
between 45 and 50. Mostly
sunny Thursday, with highs
between
75 and 80.
Mayor'~
Probability of precipitation
near z.ero per cent today,
Fined in the court of tonight and Thursday.
Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night were
EXTENDED OUTWOK
Virgil V. Glaze, a4, ColumFriday through Sunday,
bus, $200 and costs and three ·fair Friday and a chance of
days in jail on a charge of · shower~ Saturday or
driving while intoxicated; Sunday, Highs will be In the
Donald R. Smith, 19, 70s or the low 80s and lows
Pomeroy, $15 and costs, will be In the 40s or low 50s.
speeding; James H. Garey,
24, Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
TAKENTOVMH
improper backing; Paul
The
Pomeroy Emergency
Reeves, 42, Albany, $2&gt; and
Squad
was called for Mrs.
costs, disorderly manner;
Deborah
Cundiff at 5:18 p. rri.
Bill Reeves, 51, Pomeroy, $25
SQ\JAD CALLED
Tuesday.
A medical patient,
and costs, disorderly manThe
Middleport
Mrs. Cundiff was taken to
ner.
Emergency
Squad answered
Forfeiting bonds were Vida Veterans Memorial Hospital
a
caU
to
Beech
Grove Road at
May Green, 66, Vinton, $25, where she was treated and
11
:07
a.
m.
Tuesday
for 18posted on a charge of running released . AI 8:43 p. m., the
month-old
Shawn
Petrie
who
a stop sign, and Newton A. squad was called to Laurel St.
'was
ill.
He
was
taken
to
Simpson, Flint, Mich., $27, for Mrs. George Nesselroad,
posted on a speeding·charge. Sr., who was ill. She was also Holzer Medical Center.
taken to VMH where she was
admitted.

Court

FAMILY DINING

AT ITS BEST

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted - Fred Hill,
Albany ; Clarence Norris,
Racine; William Fortney,
Little Hocking;
Mary
Nesseiroad, Pomeroy.
Discharged - Della Price,
Hazel Curtis.

Thousands of miners
still out on .strike
BELLAIRE , Ohio (UPI) - Thousands of miners in
Eastern Ohio continued a wildcat strike today despite
urgings by United Mine Workers union officials to return
to their jobs.
At least 1,500 miners remained off the job at three
Peabody Coal Co. operations in Coshocton County and
another 1,500 were off the job at four Consolidation Coal
Co. deep mines in other parts of Eastern Ohio.
"They didn't come back last night and we don't expect
them back before at least the first of next week," said a
Peabody spokesman at Coshocton.
"They're stiD on vacation, " said a Consolidation
spokesman at Cadiz. " We have about 1,500 out at four
underground mines. They didn't come back last night and
we don 't expect them to come hack today either ."
UMW District 6 President John Guzek claimed between
60 and 75 per cent of the district's 15,000 striking miners
were back on the job Tuesday.
The strike began about two months ago over a series of
disputes at four mines.
The most serious dispute was at .the three Peabody
mines in Coshocton County where the coal firm has
instituted a stringent absentee policy.
The policy shortens the amo\Ult of time a miner can
miss work without being dismissed.
The miners contended that Peabody's policy violated
their 1974 contract and was unfair.
The UMW executive board meeting in Morgantown,
W.Va. earlier this week declared the Peabody policy at
Coshocton to be ''national in scope" which means the
Bituminous Coal Operarors Association must declare the
policy invalid or renegotiate it .
If the association doesn't respond in 60 days, UMW
president Arnold Miller has the right to call a nationwide
coal strike.

•

Suicide is ruled
LETART, W. Va. - A
Mason County man was found
dead in his car at ap. proximately 12:30 p.m.
Tuesday afternoon in a
private driveway off US Rt.
33 in this community.
George Witliam Brown, ~.
was pronounced dead at the
scene by County Coroner
John Grubb from carbon
monoxide poisoning.
The Mason County Sberllrs
Department received the caD
to the scene at I :04 p.m. and
responding · were Sheriff
James C. Hall, Sgt. N. E.
Benson, and BiU Woodyard,
assistant prosecuting attorney.
The Sheriff's Department
theorizes that Brown con-

nected a radiator hose to the
e1haust pipe of his car, along
with three garden hoses
attached and taped together,
and ran the hoses into the left
front window of the car. The
vehicle was still running and
the defroster was on when the
officials arrived.
The car was parked across
from his parents' residence,
headed into a field . Brown
had reportedly left his
parents' home at 11 :30 p.m.
Monday evening.
Coroner Grubb estimated
the time of Brown's death to
be 4a.m. Tuesday morning. A
note, believed to have been
written by Brown, was found
on the dash of the vehicle.

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THURSDAY, MAY 12, 1977

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Repair of road
'becomes concern
. A committee of concerned
citizens appeared before the
New Haven council on
.Tuesday evening to inquire if
the town could repair Layne
Street, which according to the
committee, is in had condition.
The committee, made up
of• Charles Hargraves,
Reba
Vance,
Anna
Fay Roush, Lawrence
Stephens
and
Henry
Perry, was told
by
Mayor Charles Roush to
write to the State Road
Department in Charleston for
more information on the
·road's repair.
The council gave Chuck
Allensworth permission to

Coins stolen
'

out of hank
NEWHAVEN;W. Va .- An
estimated $58.0li worth ·of
coins was stolen from the
Mason County Bank here
some time between Monday
eveping and Tuesday morning, according to West
Virginia State Police Trooper
J. L. Fitwater.
The burglars apparently
gained entry into the bank,
which is located on Layne St.,
by prying open a back door.
Anlong the coins stolen were
five silver dollars. The investigation is continuing.

en tine
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

•

purchase a new gun for the
town police department and
issued a warning to citizens
that aU building permits must .
be approved by it before
construction is begun. ' If
construction is started before
the permit is approved, there
will be a $&gt;0 fine.
Building permits were
issued to Robert Ciaslin,
George - Lewis, Village
Pharmacy, Rex Roush,
Elmer Wood, Randall Roush
and James King.
Vacant lots are to be
mowed by May 24, council
announced. If lots are not
mowed, a letter will be sent to
the property owner.
Council discussed the
condition of town roads at
great length, and it was
decided to hold a special
meeting, open to the public,
on,May !Sat 7 p.m. at the city
building. All interested
persons are urged to attend.
: The council reminds
residents that no motorcycles
are to be ridden on private
property withOut the owner's
permission, and no motor •
cycles are to be ridden on the
highway or side-streets If the
driver does not have an
qpei-ator's license.
·
Attending were Mayor
Roush, Wendy Divers,
recorder, and Virgil Weaver,
. Harold .Moxley and John
Thorne, council membP.rR.

MARK J. RANDALL (right) described the work of the Ohio Rail 1)-ansportation
Authority (ORTA), during yesterday's meeting of shippers at the Holiday Inn, Kanauga.
Randall Is chief planner for the bRTA. Seated at the head table with him were Clyde M.
,Ramsay (left), president pf the Gallia County Community Improvement Corporation, and
Tom Tope, president of the Gallipolis Area Chamber of Commerce, who presided.

N.
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Elberfelds In Pomeroy -

Is This The Scene

you've always dreamed of
yourself in but could
never afford.
Make your Dream

come bue in

1978 by starting a
Vacation aub now

Come in today and start a
Vacation Cl~b. Make 49 weekly
payments and Farmers Bank wiil
make the 50th one for you.
Stop in and be early for that
Dream Vacation l'lext year.

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•

Carter, 38-0,and voted $117million more tban the Whi~ House
wanted for a fast breeder reactor at Oak Ridge, TeM. Carter
sought $33miUion to finance the project as an experiement.
The House approved extension of a three-year, $14.5 billion
series of federal housing and community development
programs, including a new formula for assistance favorable to
other cities. The legislation faces Senate action and an
eventual House-Senate conference committee.
A conference committee finaDy resolved a House-&amp;!nate
deadlock on 1978 defense spending. The stalemate over a $3.2
billion dllference in a $120 billion Pentagon budget had held up
congressional action on budget targets for the upcoming fiscal
year.
The House and Senate still must ratify the $4.1 billion

Shippers to look
into rail plans

FREE CWTHING DAY
The Gallia - Meigs Community Action Agency will
hold its Free Clothing day for
low income persons on
Friday from 9 a.m. until 2
p.m. The agency's Clothing
Bank is located in the Old
High School Building In
Cheshire.

9xl2 Unoleum Rugs ·········~····sgsos
'
Sofa Beds ••••••••••••••••••••• $11r

One of the major pieces of legislation to emerge from the
young Congress - the $4 billion public works measure
intended to create more tban 600,000 jobs- was scheduled for
presidential signature. White House sources said Carter would
sign the cornerstone of his economic recovery package Friday .
The Carter plan to limit increases in hospital rates got its
fim hearing and encoontered some criticism before two House
bealth subcommittees. HEW Secretary Joseph Califano said it
would save taxpayers $t9 billion in the first year and
suggested the 9 per cent ceiling on rate increases be boosted.to
10 per cent.
The President's attempt to restrict government support
for plutonium production suffered a more direct setback.
The House Science and Technology Committee defied

e
VOL. XXVIII· NO. 20

BEDROOM SUITES •••••••••••••• '14r

THURSDAY NIGHT SP ..".

BySI'EWART POWELL

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Portions of President Carter's
leglslatiw program advanced in Congress, but the successes
were balan~-ed by at least one setbac~ and the threat of
llllother.
· Coogress also acted Wednesday on a wrlety of money
matters. And there were developments in the ethics
lnvestlption olaUet~ed South Korean bribery on Capitol Hill.
The While House plan for election-&lt;lay voter registration
survived a Republican on-.laugbt in the Senate Rules
Clmmitlee. Majority Deinocrats whipped a GOP attempt to
haul Attorney General Griffin BeD before the panel to publicly
dllcuas the poaalblllty of voter fraud and agreed to additional
salesuatda to prevent IUegal voting.

ELBERFELD$

at The Farmers fink.

THE INN PLACE

Congress holding up parts of Carter's program

~Farmers Bank
•

2

Q

•
POMEROY, OHIO •
$40,000.00 Maximum Insurance
For Each DeposiiAir
Member Federal Depilslt
Insurance Corporation

vwtedPressiDteruauonal
.,.,
TEL AVIV, ISRAEL - GRIEF-sTRICKEN ISRAEL
,staged a daylong series of funerals today for ~ paratroopers
and airmen killed in a military hellcopter crash. Newspaper
· "rePorts speculsted that technical or human error might have
"'eaused the crash of the Sikorsky CH53 during night maneuvers
In the wilderness near biblical Jericho. There were no
,j urvivors in l8rael's worst military alr disaster.
. But the military command declined ro comment pending
lhe report of a higJH-anldng committee of investigation. The
'funerals took place in hometowns from Haifa in northern
~ Israel to Yeruchllm in the Negev Desert.
' Ai the Mt. Herzl military cemetery in Jerusalem, six blue. bereled air force enlisted men and officers carried the coffin of
'·u. Uri Starik, a trainee pilot who had just returned to active
duty after surviving an auto crash.
AUSTIN, TEX. - "OLD SPARKY," the electric chair at
the Texas State Penetentiary at Huntsville which has been
gathering dust since 1964, s®n will be put into ·permanent
storage. The chairfs retirement was made official Wednesday
)'hen Gov. Dolph Briscoe signed into law legislation providing
for e&lt;ecution of criminals by injection of lethal drugs.
Briscoe's action makes Texas the second state to legalize
executions by injection. Oklahoma Gov. David Boren Tuesday
signed iniAl law similar legislation and Briscoe said he thinks
other stales wlU follow suit. "I hope it wiD provide dignity with
death as far as the death penalty is concerned," Briscoe said.
"I see this piece of legislation strictly as one aUowing a
greater degree of dignity in carrying out the death penalty. l
think this bH.l moves in a proper direction."
WASHINGTON- THE NUMBER OF CHAUFFERED
Cadillacs is dwindling on the House side of Capitol Hill but the
net gasoline saving won't help the energy conservation
program much. In their parking places wlU be new
·Oidsmobiles 98s, which get four miles more to the gallon. But
~ere w1U be three instead of two cars being used. Speaker
Thomas O'NelU aMo\Ulced the switch Wednesday.
• The Olds 98 "gets 18 miles a gallon. The Cadillac got only
11.'' he pid. House Minority Leader John Rhodes announced
he alao would switch his chauffered Cadillac for an
Oldsmobile. Democratic leader Jim Wright said he quit using
1its limoosine some time ago, but now also will use an Olds 98.
' O'Neill said he·could not speak lor Senate leaders, but an
(Continuec:I on page 6)

Sheriff Proffitt said:
' Meigs County residents should be wary of persons passing
llirough the co\Ulty wanting to do various types of roof painting
and driveway seal coaling. The sherllf urges the residents to
.deal with local, known persons when having any work of this
type done. A cheap job can be con artists wiU turn out to be
.more expensive in the long run. KNOW THE PERSON THAT
)I'OU DEAL WITH!

• His department has received another complaint regarding
theft of Dowers from cemetarles in various parts of the county .
1'he lalell report Involves the theft of an Azalea bush from the
Rocksprings Cemetary. "Anyone seeing persons removing
any Dowers, or arrangementa, or or other property from any
grave site, please obtain the license plate number, color, make
of aulD and immediately notlly us so tbat a deputy can check it
opt," he said. "It Ia only through cooperation and assistance of
Jbe citizens that any law enforcement agency is able to do its
job."
: . Mra. Otis McClin~k, Racine, has reported her Australian
' blue heeler catUe dOll Is miasing. The dog is light grey in color
·ijld tlbould be dragging its chain. Anyone seeing this dog Is
uk~·ID caD either the McClintocks at 94' 2253 or the sheri~J's
office, 992-3311.

KANAUGA - Shippers Dundas and from Kerr to
agreed at the information GaUipolis and Pomeroy. This
meeting Wednesday to set up was a month ago, and the
a committee in the next two three Ohio Rail Transdays to investigate par- portation Authority experts
ticipation in an arrangement present among the 23 atthat would keep a railroad tending Wednesday
inoperating between Kerr and formation meeting at the
Pomeroy.
Holiday Inn said that they
Federal matching funds had only a couple of weeks to
can help keep Ohio railroads determine financial figures.
operating where they have
"That's why you're hearing
asked for abandonment, but . a lot of lfs and anda and we
the matching must be from don't knows," said WiUiam T.
pt'lvate sources, and the Nielsen, ORTA planner.
meeting at Holiday Inn
Mark J. Randall, chief of
turned up a · few private planning for the ORTA, said
sources unwilling to help.
that application for a matThe Ohio constitution ching setup must come within
,forbids the state's matching_ a 15-&lt;lay period dated from
· federal funds, even on the 90- the filing of the closing order
10 basis which comes out to with the Federal Register.
$2,695 a month from shippers'
A few of the shippers
pockets.
emphasized the speed needed
ICC (Interstate Commerce to meet that deadline.
Commission) approved the
Others objected to what
Chessle system's closing of they
considered
the
Its lines from Creola to parasitical nature
of

.

CINCINNATI (UPI) Former Republican Senator
and Ambassador William
Saxbe
complained
Wednesday that Richard .
Nixon
"wrecked
the
Republican Party."
"I have no compassion for
him/' Sax be said of Nixon. "I'
think he handled hlmsell very
badly,
" He
wrecked - the
Republican Party, perhaps
irrepara bly. I'm hopeful
there can be some recovery. ' '
Sax be, a native · of
Mechanicsburg, Ohio, was a
U.S. senaror from 1969 until
1974, attorney general under
Nixon in 1974 and then U.S.
ambassaor to India until last
year.
Now a lawyer and cattle
farm owner, Sax be nixed
WILUAM T. NIELSEN, PLANNER with the Ohio
speculation he might become
Rail Transports lion authority, was at Kanauga's Holiday
an Ohio gubemarorial canInn, where he discussed abandonment of railroad lines in
didate.
"I have no interest at ·the
Meigs and Gallia counties.
present time in getting involved," he said. "I don't expect
ro be a candidate for gover•
nor."
Silxbe was here to address
Ohio
Trucking
the
Association convention.

Chessle's serving nonparticipants in the $269a
monthly match. It's the law,
however, ORTA officials
said. Chessie must carry on
for 364 days after the closing
order, which, ORTA sais, will
end May II, 1976.
Consolidated Rail Corporation, which serves some
of the shippers on the short
route, has no obligation to
serve others, according to
one opinion.
From Meigs County were
George Amott, Middleport,
chairman . of the Meigs
County Railroad · committee
and J. H. Searey, Pomeroy,
of Midwest Steel.
From G11illa County were
Torn Tope, president and
Thelma Elliott, executive
secretary of the GalUpolis
Area chamber of Commerce;
Don Brown, Gallia Roller
Mill; James Howard,
Howard-Wayne Feed; Lester
Plymale, Kyger Creek Power
Plant; Earl Durham, Central
Soya; Bill Jenkins, O'Dell
Lumber;
Doyel
Rose,
Gallipolis Reduction; cart
Welffenbach, Keener Sand
and Clay; Gary H. Baas,
GQllipolis Reduction, .'and
Hannan Hager, Bidwell,
General WQOds and Veneer.
From Vinton County were
Rudy Adelmann, McArthur;
and Mr. and Mrs. Tom Byrd,
Austin Powder.
There were three news
representatives and Sue
Whittaker from ORTA.
:·:-:-:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::.;.:·:·:·:=:·:·:·:=:·:·:·:·:

EXTENDED 01JTLOOK
Saturday through
Mqnday," lair and mUd
through the period, with
highs In the 70s or low 1108
and lows It~ the upper 40s or
50s.
.=:= :·:·:-:::-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:-:·:·:-:.:·:·:·:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:E-R CALLED OUT
The Middleport E-R Squad
went to the New Lima Road
at 7:20 p.m. Wednesday for
Charles Beller who was taken
to Veterans Memorial
Hospital . where he was
treated and released.

Disadvantaged youths
will have more jobs

Weather
SuMy today and Friday, 7a
to 80. Fair tonight, lows to 50.
Probability of precipitation is
near zero per cent tnrough
Friday.

FELL FROM TREE
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad answered a call to the
Roger Turner residence at
Langsville at 5 'a9 p .1,11.
Wednesday for 11-year-old
Clinton Turner who had fallen
out of a tree. He was taken to
Veterans Mem11rial Hospital
where he was treated and
raieased.
VAN DAMAGED
The Middleport Fire
Department answered a call
to the marina at 2:30 p.m.
Wednesday where a van
owned by Bernard Orenstein,
Cincinnati, had caught fire.
Damages were set at $200.

Seven mines still closed
in District 6 of Ohio
BELLAffiE, Ohio (UPI) - AI least seven mines in
Eastern Ohio remained closed today ·as 3,000 striking
members of the United Mine Workers Union Distirct 6
refused to report to work.
The mines closed Included three Peabody Coal Co.
operations in Coshocton County and four deep mines of
Consolidation Coal Co. in the Cadiz area of eastern Ohio.
It was not immediately determined if other mines were
~closed today.
"I told them to go back ro work," District 6 President
John Guzek said Wednesday. "That's alii can do. They
just won't go."
Miners were also off the job Wednesday at a Y&amp;O Coal
Co. mine and at an Oglebay Norton mine.
The series of wildcat walkouts began about two months
ago over a series of dt.,putes at four mines.
An absentee policy instituted at the three Peabody
mines in Coshocton County is the most serious of the
disputes.
The policy shortens the amount of time a miner can
miss work without being dismissed.
The miners contended that Peabody's policy violated
their 1974 contract and was unialr.
The UMW executive board met in Morgantown, W.Va.
earlier this week and declared the Peabody policy at
Coshocton to be "national in scope" which means the
Bituminous Coal Operators Association must declare the
policy invalid or renegotiate it.
UMW president Arnold MiUer has the right to caD a
nationwide coal strike If the association doesn't respond in
60 days.

Ohio shorted
• federal pie
m
COLUMBUS (UP!)
House Speaker Vernal G.
Riffe Jr., D-New Boston,
today urged President Carter
to locate a centrifuge nuclear
enrichment plant at Piketon,
Ohio, on grounds Ohio is not
recelvinglits fair share of
federal fUnds.
Rllfe wrote Carter, who is
expected to decide next week
whether to locate the
federally-funded $4 billion
fuel processing facility at
Piketon or OakRidge, Tenn.
11
0hio, for whatever
reasons, i"s not receiving its
fair share of federal doDars
based upon the ·size of its
population and the amount of

taxes its dtizens pay," Riffe
wrote.
"Obi() received $1,182 per
capita in fed era I ·funds for
1976, placing 47th among :the
5Q states. TeMessee received
$1,591 per capita, putting It in
24th place.
"In money for natural
resources, environment and
energy programs, Ohio
ranked seventh among the
states; being allocated, 4 per
cent of the total federal lunda
going to the states," Riffe
continued. ·~Tennessee was
second in the nation with 9
Jl!lr cent of the tAltal."
The Ohio House speaker
said Ohio has 5 per cent of the
nation's population and
receives 3.5 per cent of
federal reimbursements, and
that Tennessee, with 2 per
cent of the country's
population, receives 1.9 per
cent of the federal money.
"I hope you will keep these
facts in mind when coming to
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - An a final decision on where to
Ohio State Uniyersity. place the centrifuge uranium
professor in the College of . enrichment facility," Riffe
Social Work says thousands wrote .
of students who graduate
. from high · school this year
will be functionally illiterate.
Leonard Schneiderman
said by functionally illiterate
REJECT BID
he means that graduates wMl
MOSCOW (UP!) - Another
not have the skills to write a bid to release Rudolph Hess
personal check, address an from Berlin's Spandau
envelope, fill out a job ap- prison, where he's the only
piicatlon, read a recipe or inmate, failed Wednesday
shop for groceries.
when the Soviet Union turned
"The inability to read ef- down a request to free the 83fectively may be among the year-oid former deputy to
most significant of several Adolf Hitler.
factors
holding
some
"We remember evertying
Americans in an underclass about the past," the weekly
!roll) which upward mobility Literaturnaya Gazeta said.
is difficult or impossible," he
Hess new to Britain on May
said.
10, 1941, and parachuted into
Schneiderman tends to Scotland in a wild attempt to
blame the standardized negotiate a separate peace
teaching methods In the with llritain .. He was senoperation of schools.
tenced to life as a war
criminal. Soviet opposition
has frustrated numerous
eflorts over the years to
release him .

Dliteracy
. crea
· se
On m

Program. They will secure
all jobs, supervise the work
programs, pay all wages and
keep the records. ·
These programs were
conducted
last
year,
. however, this year the
programs
have
been
enlarged due to increase of
available funds .
Judge
Webster said
providing work for young
people is one of the best ways
to help solve the "juvenile
A Stop Smoking Program
problem", especially in this will begin in Pomeroy,
county which has few job Sunday, May 15, at 7:30p.m.
opportunities.
and run through May 1~ with
He
ex
pressed
his
a
pa
follow up session on May 23,
AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI)- The San Antonio , showed some
preciatlon
to
the
Ohio
Youth
all
at Veterans · Memorial
next time a steaming plate of imaginative lobbying in
Commission
for
its
assistance
Hospital
in the East-West
chili is placed before you, beating stiff competition
in
juvenile
matters
and
dining
area
.
show some respect. You are from stew, gumbo and
especially
for
its
program
Forty
personshave
signed
about to dig into the official barbecue.
that
made
funds
available
lor
up
for
the
program.
There
is
Texas state dish.
Last month the supporters
Gov . Dolph
Briscoe broke the world record for the job placements for youths room for more. Since it is
Wednesday signed into law biggest pot of chili cooked in who haile difficulties and also important to know how many
legislation proclaiming chili one container over sm open to the Gallia Meigs Com- people to prepare for preas the official state dish.
fire when they served up a munity Action Program for registration is urged. The
Supporters of chili, led by one-ton pot of bubbling, spicy securing funds and the fine program is free . AU sessions
work they were doing in • should be attended for best
Reps. Ben Z, Grant, 1&gt;- chili.
admlnistell\l'g the programs. ·. results.
.,
Marshall, and Ron•ll31rd, D-

Action to coordinate
agencies having responsibility in the employment of
disadvantaged youths in
Meigs County was begun
Tuesday at the courthouse in
the office of Judge MaMing
Webster, juvenile judge, with
DeaMe Dooley of the Ohio
Youth Commission, Doug
Stanley of the Ohio
Association of Community
Action Programs, Tom
Calhoun of the Gallia-Meigs

Community Action Program,
and Carl R. Hysell, Juvenile
Officer of the Juvenile Court.
Employment is provided
through Title I and Title Ill
Funds provided through the
Gallia-Meigs Community
Action Agency, together with
money available to the
Juvenile Court by The Ohio
Youth Commission.
All programs will be administered , by the GalliaMeigs Community Action

target for the 1978 budget, including a national defense
spending ceiling of $118.5 billion.
Federal reimbursement of up to $00,000 for victims of violent
crime was okayed by the House Jud!dary Committee. House
consideration is expected next week on teh three year, $150
million authorization measure to provide som~ federal
reimbursement to stales compensating victims for medical
costs and low wages.
,
The House Ethics Commitlee, sources said, decided to ask
congressmen including committee members to Ust funda, gifts
and favors accepted from South Korean agents. Meeting in
closed session, the committee rejected a more stringent
measure to require the disclosure.

Chili rww Texas' state dish

Stop smoking
program begins
on May 15th

JAIL ART
MIAMI BEACH, Fla .
(UP!) - Despite critical
disdain and snubs from
guests, Watergate burglar .E.
Howard Hunt pocketed $7,500
from selling nine of Ja
paintings on display at his
one-man show, which closed
Wednesday.
Hunt painted the pictures
while at the federal prison at
Eglin Air Force !lase, Fla.
Hunt said he needs the
money to pay a $10,000 fine
assessed as part of his
penalty for the Watergate
burglary and to pay "hundreds of thousands of
dollars" ln,.4efense cost~..

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