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B- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, March 21 , 1978

•

Metgs
(Continued !ram

ochool orfented grouJl'l such 1- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - : - - - - I

Plllt 1)

ast~o!':e~·
sa id
the:
Columbus and Southern Olllo

1

An Investigation disclosed Electric Co., which supplies
that _some II years ago, power to the high school and
Children of the famiUes were other buildings of the district,
release&lt;.! to attend Alexander has a 3+&lt;lay supply of coal.
and durin&amp; those years have
The Pomeroy Youth
paid no tuition.
Lea gue was given pennislllon
Meigs
Local
Board to use the ball fields at the
"·bury and Met'gs Hl' gh
mern bers expressed un· Sa ""
derstanding for the problem Schools during the 1978
and agreed to continue to summer program upon the
release the students, a step request of Donald L. Hunnel,
which should have been taken president of the league.
each year, but refused to
Hunnei and his group were

::le~:::d~~a~~ r:"S:t:.~ ~~:~~dth:;rha~e m~~;

men! would mean that those
families will have to pay
tuition, but their taxes would
remain a .part of the Meigs
Local system.
The two women Indicated
they would confer with._the
Alexander board · on the
matter Tuesday evenin g.
Mrs. Howard said she would
transfer her children to
Meigs Local. She said she is
also maintaliting a residence
~- t y, but t hat the
in Ath ens ...,un
Alexander board still con·
Biders her a resident of Meigs
County and the Meigs Local
District since she does Sjlend
a part of her time in Meigs
County at her Scipio Town·
ship home. She established
tbe Athens residency because
· of the problems In the
Alexander District, she said.
Mrs. Trout indicated she
wanted her children released
to lhe Ale10nder District
stating she would hire an
attorney if necessary to help '
her with the problem. The
women are to advise Supt.
Dowler of the outCilme of
tonight's meeting.
The board agreed to permit
groups to use school buildings
from now on. Use of the
boildlngs over the past few
months has been permitted
only to student Involved
groups because of the threat
of the electrical cutback.
Supt. Dowler said he was
tired of being the only district
that
has discontinued
meetings parti cularly of

Save 10% to 25%

in past years and his letter
indicated that others are
planned.
The league wiD be asked to
provide Goins with a schedule
of games and to make sure
that cars are parking in
designated areas during the
summer.
The board approved the
closing of schools on March 3
due to weather conditions and
approved the attendance of
Martha Vennarl to a program
review and evaluation
process workshop at Ohio
University.
Dan Morris, director of
curriculum, outlined aspects
of .a special edu cation
program evaluation that will
take place in the district.
The board granted per·
mission for Wendy Haller,
Carolyn Smith and Margaret
Teaford to attend a reading
workshop and Jane White to
attend a meeting of Ohio
business teachers if the
teachers pay their own ex·
penses involved In the events.
A resolution was approved
providing universities and
colleges with student
teachers receiving training in
Meigs Local can pay a small
fee direct to the teacher, who
supervises the student. The
resolution was passed upon
the recommendation of the
State Auditor Tho-mas
Ferguson.
The board approved its
annual appropriations
resolution providing fo-r
expenditures of ~,356,760 in
1978, the same budget which
was temporarily approved in
January. The board also
discussed the need of placing
a tu levy before voters of the
. district. Tiwre have already
been Cllmmittee meetin~s on
the matter and Supt. Dowler
reported that at the present
time, district officials do not

On your yearty insurance

know how much money will

Personal!
By combining your Auto
and
Homeowners
insurance into ONE policy
... You may be able to

premiums.

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

CALL OR STOP
AN OSEE US

Reuter-Bragan
"The
Insurance
Store"

be coming from the state this
year and next year.
However, it was decided to
have a speci.al meeting next
Monday night at which time,
it is expected millage and
time element for the levy are
to be worked out. The levy
will be placed before voters
at the .June 6 primary elections , according to plans
mad~ last night.
Dowler said he will request
a cash financial analysis
from the state auditor's offlce
If the levy does not pass.
Board member. Dr. Riggs;
Commended all involved with
the elementary basketball
program during the Season

stating. "The program was
much improved.'' Pat Kitchen discussed use of the
buildings with the board
leaning to the decision that

Phone 992·5130
214 E. Main·
Pomeroy

.

for ALL your banking
needs
.

Money.' .. You
Pick the Car
Just tell us how much you need •.. ·
then make your own arrangements.
We offer you the most assistance
with the least red tape. Come ask.
You're in the Driver's Seat

WALK-UP TELLER WINDOW
AND AUTO TEllER -WINDOW
OPEN FRIDAY EVENINGS 5 TO 7 P.M.

Area Deaths

RUTH PARSONS
RA CINE - Mu . Ruth

:

at the Union United
MethodL!t Church .with the

Parsons, 92 • Route 2, Racine, Rev · Bobby Woods and ·the
~ed Monday afternoon at her Rev . John Icenhower of·
me.
ficlating. Burial will be in
Mrs. Parsons was born Union Cemetery.
Feb. 2, 1886 a daughter of the
Friends may call at the
Ia B j in nd E .... m1
te en am a
u,..a a Foglesong Funeral Home
Stover Sayre. Besides her todaY from 2 to 4 p.m. and
parents she was preceded In from 7 to 9 p,m. The body will
death by her husband , be taken to the church one
Emmanuel, seven children, hour prior to serv
. ices.
·
and 11 brothers and sisters.

ODI officials defend state
regulation of the industry

By DICK KIMMINS ~~
insuran ce ra te-mak ing O'Shaughnessy, [).Columbus, lim itations, I feel our
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Offi· procedure,
and Sam Speck, R-New Coo- department does an excellent
cials of the Ohio Deparbnent
Sen. John K. Mahoney, [).. cord.
job of meeting these
of Insurance
Monday Springfield, himself a former
Jump noted that his depart- objectives," said Jump.
the
state's life insurance agent and ment had been required over
defended
Jump aplalned that insur·
regulation of the industry, chairman
of
the the past several years to ance companies rue coverage
saying that citizens of ststes subcommittee. sa id the · assume greater statutory rerates depending oo different
that use other methods bearing would cootinue at 2 sponsibilities, particularly in types
· of
automobile
generally are charged more p.m. Thursday with officials the areas of state self·
insurance - bodily Injury,
Mrs. Parsons Ia survived GENEVIEVE V. SHERMAN for coverage than Ohioans. of the insurance industry insurance for its automobile property
damage colllsion,
State
Insuran ce
by three sons, Preston of
fleet
and
increasing etc . - and adjust rates for
Mrs. Genevieve V. Mid· Commissioner Harry· V. called to testify .
Racine; Everett ol Negley; dleton Shennan, 84, died
Mahoney said he expected monitoring responsibility each of these areas aceordlng
Dorsa of Racine; a daughter, Monda y afternoon a the Jump told a subcommittee of testimony from Moss Ellis of over a hospitals' malpractice to age, sex, marital statua
Jbosephlne PHarsons, Rasclne ; a Mercer Nursing Home, Clir- the Ohio Senate Insurance Motorist's Mutual Insurance self-insurl'llce program.
and other classifications .
Committee that he feels the and Dick Monroe of Nationrother,
erman ayre , too, W. Va.
these
D e spite
Several states have
state "does an excellent job"
Millersport, and several
such
Born on July 8, 1893 at of regulating the industry, wide . For Jump's testimony, responsibilities, budget eliminated
grandcblldrednhl, aldrnd grMeat· Monongab, W. Va., she was
only Mahoney was in limitations had forced a drop classifications from the ratedespite budget limitations attandance.
great • gran c
en. rs.
in department personnel making procedure, a topic ·
Parsons was a member of the the daughter o the late and an increase in the
Other members of the sub- from 107 employees in 1973 to which Mahoney will be ex·
Racine Church of God.
Thomas and Mary Jane deparbnent's
committee are Sens. Robert 92 employees this year.
plored In other hearings.
Funeral services will be Davis Middleton. She was responsibilities.
" With · these budgetary
held at I p.m. Thursday at the preceded in death by her hus·
" I would describe the
band, R. M. (Mickey) Sber· department 's regulatory
Ewing Funeral Home with man in 1952 and three
objectives as j)einR to assure
burialCemetery.
to be inFriends
the Letart
Falls
may brothers.
the insurance-buying public
Survivors in c lud e a that it is beiilg aealt with
call at the funeral home at
any time after 7 this evening. daughter and .son·in·law, fairly, that the coverages
Patricia and Donald Mills, a provides are of economic By DAVID D. PEARCE
the Israelis also shelled Israeli troops would be
granddaughter,
Cynthia benefit and that insurance
United Press 1Dteruation81 Nabatlye, a major town and withdrawn.
Mills, a grandson, Sherman companies will be able to
Israeli Defense Minister Palestinian stronghold north
VAN L. ROUSH
Sillasvuo told reporters it
Mills,
and
a
great·grandson,
Ezer
Weizman today ordered of the l.Jtanl.
Van L. Roush, 94, Letart,
perform their obligations,''
was too early to tell wben tbe
Israeli forces to observe a
Western reporters touring 4,000-mgn U.N. peace·
Rt. 1, Union Community, was Nicholas, all of Middleport. said Jump.
Also
surviving
are
two
total
ceaseflre in southern the front saw Israeli planes keeping force would he able
pronounced dead on arrival
Jump and ~hree of his lop
Lebanon.
·
crossing the skies and field to take up its positions.
Sunday evening at' Pleasant sisters, Mrs. Walter 1Vi· department aides were the
vienne) Waddell and Mrs. lead-&lt;&gt;ff witnesses before the
The cease-fire, annoWJCed reports spoke of air strikes in
Valley Hospital.
That followed word from
by the Israel Defense the Arqoub region to the east. the U.N. Command in
Hom June 14, 1883, Letart, Marcus (Elsie ) Chambers, subcommittee , which is
Ministry, was effective at 11
In Beirut, Lt. Gen. Ensio Jerusalem that none of Its
he was the son of the late both of Middleport, and a nve•tigating the automobile
brother,
Dr.
Davis
Middleton,
a.m.
EST.
SiUasvuo of Finland met with · blue-bereted
George W and Jane Bush
international
The cease.fire was ordered · Lebanese Foreign Mlnher , troops would be moving Into
Roush.
Dayton.
J
h
h
Mrs. -sherman was a
unior ig is
after Israeli jets and artillery Fuad Butros to work out the southern Lebanon for a day at
He was preceded in death
member
of
the
Middleport
pounded
Palestinian details of a U.N . Security least .
by his wife Kelsie Florence
positions
near
the Lebanese Councilordered cease-lire
United
Presbyterian
Church.
target
of
B&amp;E
Roush who died in 1962.
An Israeli official said that
She
graduated
from
Midtowns
of
Tyre
and
Nabatiye and Israeli withdraWal from if U.N. troops do go to
He was a fanner and
A breaking and entering today and a U.N. general Lebaoon.
carpenter and a member of dleport High School and Ohio
Southern Lebanon, ·the first
University
where
she
was
a
look
place at the Pomeroy cautioned that it may be
Siilasvuo carne to Beirut stage will be limited to
the Union United Methodist
member of Pi Beta Phi Junior High School Monday some time before his 4,1Jro. from Israel, where officials several dozen observers.
Church.
Sorority.
For many years she night.
man force can enter southern gave no indication when the
Survivors include two
taught
in
tbe
Toledo
and
Mid·
Dwight
Goins
,
AdLebanon
to enforce a cease·
daughters, Mrs. Virginia M.
dleport
Elementary
Schools.
ministrative
Assistant
of
the
fire.
Kay and Mrs. Attarah F .
Reporta from both sides,
Dewhurst, both of Letart, Rt. She is im a associate member Meigs Local School District,
of
the
Middleport
Literary
said
entrance
was
gained
shortly
before cease-fire an·
I; one son, Douglas R. Roush,
Club
and
a
fonner
member
of
through
breaking
out
a
glass
nouncement,
said Israeli
Letart, Rt. I ; nine grand·
window
in
the
mining
classthe
Middleport
Library
·
gunners
pounded
Tyre and its
children and · nine great·
Board of Trustees.
room.
surrotmdlng refugee camps
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be
The offenders moved from with artillery fire from their By KENNE'Ill R. CLARK
Fuenral services will be
held
at
2
p.m.
Wednesday
at
·
that
room into the Senior U.S. made 175mm "Long United Press IDiematioaal
conducted 2 pm. Wednesday
the Rawlings-Coats Funeral C1tl!ens Center where they Toms. "
STARS TREK: The names once blazed from every movie
Home with the Rev. Dwight opened a pop machine
The Israelis had kept the marquee in the nation - Lllllaa Gtsb, Blanche SWeet, Leatrice
Zavitz officiating. Burial will removmg the proceeds. '
coastal road north of Tyre Joy, Helen Hayet, Douglas FalrbaDU Jr.- and they carne out
Some money was also under fire and shelled the of the past Monday night to honor their undiaputed queen. The
building use be renewed in be in the Riverview
the district for those outside Cemetery. Friends may call removed from a desk drawer bridge over the Litani River, occasion : the flbn premiere, at New York's Museum of
at the funeral home at in the center.
of the student body.
the northernmost line of Modern Art, of "America's Sweetheart- The Mary Pickford
Dr. Riggs said he had been anytime.
Israeli forces in Lebanon. In Story.'' Only the star was missing. Miss Pickford- no'l" a frail
approached ·by a potential
Tel Aviv, field reports said 84 -seldom leaves the seclusion of her Beverly Hills, CaUl.,
buyer for the Rutland
mansion, but Buddy 'Rogers, her husband of 40 ·years, was
gymnasium. He was asked to
. there to intrOduce the .documentary ~ narrated by Hoary
look further into the intent of
Fonda - on filmdom's first real superstar.
NEW HAVEN-"Easter on
the JX&gt;tential purchase. The
the Network News" will be
board voted to pay severance
MINUTEPERSONS?: Connecticut Gov. Ella T. Grasso
the theme of a sunrise service
•
pay to Gladys Cox, who
made it official Monday. The new state song. is "Yankee
oo Easter morning at the
spons~nng First Church of God, New
retired.
Doodle Dandy," and if it's .aUghUy bowdlerized to protect the
Others attending the
sensitive, Its backers say It's still better than the Yale fight
Haven. The program will be
meeting were Principals
song. A fife and drum corps filed and drummed tbe ditty as
conducted by the youth of the
•
James Diehl, Robert Morris,
Gov. Grasso signed the bill legitimatizing it. The legislature
church will begin at6 :30 a..m.
.
Eric Hart and John Mora;
cleaned .up Yankee Doodle's lyrics. Old minutemen sang it,
Taking part will he Joe
Members of the Meigs Cundiff, Jackie Greene, Toni
Randy Hunt, band director,
Zelia Reynolds, dec. to "And with the girls be handy." Modem minutepersons must
and John Redovian, Charles County Emergency Medical Sisk, Jennifer Weaver, Freeda L. Wells, Herbert render the line, "And with the folks be bandy.''
Downie and David ·Bowen Seryice are beginning a Marilyn Gibbs, Dottie Roush, Reynolds, Everett Reynolds,
representing the Meigs Local course of instruction to im· Julie Maxey, Kenny Aff. for trans ., Olive.
GLIMPSFs: Koone Arledge .- ABC news and sports
prove local pre·hospltal Wamsley , Tracy Hysell, Jeff
Teachers Assn .
president - says the network has signed up legendary pitcher
Freeda L. Wells , Wi!Uam
emergency medical care.
Don Drysdale to team with Kellb JacllsoD and Howard Colell
Weaver. lJSII Davis, Nathan M. Wells, Herbert Reynolds,
Through the efforts of Davis, Kim Hysell, Rodiley Louise Reynolds, .Everett as a commentator for Monday night baseball ... Elmer W.
Robert Bailey, Meigs County Weaver, Vicky Hysell, Tracy Reynolds,
OS
Bonnie
M. Lower, ABC vice president and network pioneer, will retire
Emergency Medical Service .Hysell, LaRonda Roush.
Reynolds to Freeda L. Wells, April I after 45 years In broadcast and print journalism to
Veterans Memorial Hospital Coordinator, a state certified
Special music will also be William Foster Wells , become a journallsm professor at the University of Missouri ...
Admitted - Raymond emergency
medical presented. Delores Taylor Deborah . Marie· Wells, Debl!y Boone will sing the title song from the film "You l.Jght
Parsons, Parkersburg; technician • ambulance and Kay Grueser .are the Parcels, Olive.
·
Up My Life" at the Academy Awards ahow April3 .:. Monlque
Carmen Jones, Middleport; training instructor has been leaders. The public is invited.
Van Voorea -feted on ber birthday at New York's Cotton Club
Lucretia Genheimer,
Nell Blain Proctorville; obtained to give 78 clock
Pauline E. Carter, to Pauline With the house specialty of vodka-laced lemon sherbet topped
. Wallace Hatfield, Pomeroy; hours of instruction to the
E. Carter, Atty. in fact, Lot, ~ a blazing sparkler - reciprocated Monday night wjth
Homer Bradshaw, Pomeroy; · local emergency medical
unpromptu song and dance and was joined on the floor by
Pomeroy.
K~ren Hatfield, Middleport; service. Additional training
another
guest, soaper star Ratb Wanilclt.... .
Wllli~m
E.
Starner,
BarFUNDS RECEIVED
Arthur Sylvester, Syracuse ; and orientation will be
bara
A.
Stamer
to
Landoll
W.
HARTFORD, W. Va.
Hobart Riggs, Rutland ..
provided in cooperation with
State
Senator Robert Hatfield Smith, Catherine M. Smith;
BOOTS AND SADDLES: He'sRagtimeCowboySteve nowDischarged - Leah Ord, Veterans Memorial Hospital.
20 acres, Scipio.'
announced
today
the
City
of
in
an arena far from the one In which his famous father striSamantha Hail.
The emergency medical Hartford has received lunda
Joseph W. Wyne, Betty I. ved. Stepllen Ford, the 21-yearold 11011 of former President
training course and services to purchase a mobil radio for Wyne to Betty I. Wyne, Gerald Ford, has signed up with the Los Angeles Roogh Riders
of the instructor are made its police department.
Joseph Wyne, 1,320 ,acres, - a 13-rnan, three-girl rodeO team. He'll compete in team
available by Tri-County Joint
Holzer Medical Center
Hatfield made the an- Scipio.
roping events when major league rodeo C:ompetition starts·tta
Vocational School's Adult nouncement after being
(DIIcharges, Marcb%0)
James H. Crow, Pamela L. four-month season in April.
.
Rodney Aldennan, Bonnie Education Department. The notified
by
Governor Crow to Robert W. Crow,.
Aldridge, Richard Baley, training programs are of· Rockefeller that the state's Cheryl A. Crow, 100 acre lot,
QUOTE OF THE DAY: )'lew York Innkeeper Irvtag Schatz,
Augusta Barribart, Gloria fered to improve the qua,llty Office of Crbne, Delinquency Syracuse : Sutton.
owner
of the Henry Hudson Hotel - named after the BriliBh
·
Blazer, Nancy Bradley, of pre-bospital emergency and Correction has approved
GeorgeS. Hobstetter, Zelda explorer who discovered New York Harbor in 1609: "You'd be
Merrill Brown, Marilyn medical care for the victims an award of $1,154.70 for the Muine Hobstetter to James amazed at the number of tourists who keep asking me if Henry
Campbell, Eva Collins, Mrs. of serious illness or ac- radio.
H. Crow, Pamela L. Crow, i .2 Hudson actuaUy slept at the hostelry. I teU them, not In tbe
Michael Fisher and son. cidents.
acres, Chester.
past 10 years since,I've owned it.''
'lbe value of the training Is
Terry Fouts, Erica Games,
Edith Gussler, Mrs. Roy recognlz~d and recom- . THREE BROTHERS
Robert Clarence Stewart, - Hunter and son, Shirley mended by the United States
Lambert, Mary l.JppenCilutt, Department of Trans· 36, Rpute I, Cheshire, who
Richard Mann, Mrs. Edwin portation, Division of State died Saturday wblle working
McGhee and son, Bernita Marshal, State Fire Service in Rutland, Is survived by
Meadows, Shirley Minton, Advisory Coinmlttee, Stale three brothers rather than
Dorothy Price, Margaret E.M.T.·A Training Advisory two brothers. Not named in
Price, Mrs. Carl Shriver and Committee , National the original obituary was his
daughter, Mrs. Rober Stover Registry of Emergency brother, Carl Edward
and daughter, Clifton Medical Technicians, and a Stewart of Oak Hill.
William!, Matsbella Windler. medical advisory committee.
Written instructional
(Blrlbs, M8reb It)
Good Friday Services
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Bostic, materials are made available
COOLVILLE
- There will
a daughter, GaUon. Mr. and to the instructor and to each
be
a
Good
Friday
service at
emergency
medical
Mrs. John Manuel, a
Christian
Trinity
daughter, Raclne; Mr. and · technician by the Division of the
Assembly
Church
ln
Coolville
ft!rs. Roger Rutherford, a Vocational Edutiltioo. This
at
7:30
·
p
.m.
with
EvangeUst
son, Rodney. Mr. and Mrs. course Ia held in cooperation
Carl Wooten, a daughter, with Tri·County Joint John Elswick speaking. The
Jackaon.
Vocational School and Gospel Tones will present .
Veterans Memorial Hospital. music. Gilbert Spencer,
pastor, invltd the public.

Ceas·e fire is ordered

·peopletalk

.

•

Mezgs EMS

Services slated

Meigs
Property
Transfers

sesszons

H pi'tal News

.

SALE

LITTLE BOYS' SUITS

OUR VESTED SUITS ARE JUST lHE lHING
FOR EASTER

·*TWO and THREE PIECE SUITS

BAI&lt;-ER FURNITURE
Middleport, Ohio

MIDOLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Depasit Insurance Corporation

:

VIsit Baker's budget
shop for Inexpensive
.
.
furniture today

*SIZES 2 to 4 and 4 to 7

MEETING SLATED
The Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation DL!trlct Board
of Supervisors will meet at 8
p.m. Wednesday In the
second floor conlerelice room
of tbe farmers Bank Ballding.
The public is invited.
MARRIAGE LICENSES
Everett Lee Gilmore, 18,
Pomery, and JoE. Ingles, 20,
Pomeroy.

FROM • • 79

ELBERFELDS ·IN POMEROY

Relief committee asks:'Where did money go?'
By JOHN T. KADY
United Press illlel'lllltioaal
Membera of the miners relief committee in Unitecl Mine
Worken Unlm District 6 went to Washington today to ask
UMW Prtlident Arnold Miller what happened to the $3 million
dopated to the striking mineu and pensioners by otber unions.
The United Auto Workers Union has donated f2 million to the
striking miners, now in their 107th day off the job, and tbe
United Steel Workers Union donated $1 million to UMW
pelllloneu. ·
However, Bill Lamb, Cadiz, Ohio, a member of the UMW
International Executive Board, said "not a penny" of tbe
mooey has !Utered down to the dlstrlcia.
Doo Nunley , a UMW District 6 official. todov orru•«l Miller

of "trying to starve the miners back to work."
Lamb said Ronnie McCracken, Bellaire, Ohio, and a
member of UMW Local t417 and Ed McCieod, Neffs, Ohio, and
a member of Local 1473, will attempt to confront MiUer In
UMW headquarters today .
Lamb, who as a member of the UMW Bargaining Council,
voted against the latest tentative agreement with the soft coal
industry which will be voted on by the rank.and.file on .Friday,
said McCracken and McCieod would accuse Miller of
withboldlng the money until the contract is voted on.
"They made It real plain before they left the would tell Mr.
Miller that they think something is wrong in holding back on
that money," ~id~mb . "They said th P~' wnulrl t ~JJ Mr Mil1€'r

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday. March 22, 1978

•

at y

U.N. troops permitted
United Press lnlernallonal
Israel today agreed to let
the first U.N. peacekeeping
trooJl'l into south Lebanon but
rlghtwing Lebanese Christian
forces vowed to fight to keep
them out and Palestinian
guerrillas said there would be
oo truce with the Israelis.
A contingent of 150 Iranian
U.N. troops stationed ln tbe
Golan Heights left for
southern Lebanon today but
there were confUcting reports
about whether they had
1
arrived.
In Beirut,' right-wing Chris·
!ian sources said tbe Iranian
troops,
an
advance
contingent of the 4,000&lt;nan
peacekeeping force planned
for southern Lehanon, had
already arrived at the
Lebanese border town of
Klea .

But there was no confinnatlon of the report from th~
!Braelis, who hold Klea, and
UPI correspondent Allen
After, reporting from the
town, quoted the commander
of the Lebanese Christian
forces there as saying he
would use force to keep the
U.N. personnel out.
Palestinian guerrillas ,
meanwhile, ignored a cease·
fire proclaimed by Israel and
fired salvos of rockets
towards Israeli lines from the
Rashidlyeh refugee camp
outside the encircled port of
'!)ire, one of the few positions
left to them lollowing the
lsraeU blitz through southern
Lebanon.
UP! correspondent. Michael
Keats, reporting from the
Rashidiyeh camp, said the
Palestinians fired several

they dido 't Cllnsider tbe money as belonging to the
International because the auto workers and the steel workers
wanted it togo to the rank and file.
.
" If we had the money it would mean we could vote on the
contract and not vote on hardship," said Lamb. "Our people
are hurting, there is no ~uestion about that. II that money is
distributed on a pr ~ate basis our district would get about
$300,000. This could go toward paying a lot of utility bills and
would alleviate a lot of hardship."
Nun ley, a mmember of th~ UMW District 6 Exec utive
Board, said Muter had sent a telegram to the UAW and USW
telling them "he had people that were supposed to be solid ling
money and they would have the proper identi fication

salvos from a truck-mounted Christian militia forces
rocket-launcher at Israeli around Klea, told Alter be
troops early today.
would fire on the blue-bereted
Palestinian officials in U.N. troops if they tried to
Beirut r eported fierce enter the town.
fighting near the town of
But when Informed of
Bazouriyeh on the hills east of Hadad's threats, an fsraeli
Tyre overnight and a army spokesman said :
Palestine Liberation Organi· "That's tough . He 's not in any
zation spokesman, vowing no position to dictate who goes
peace with Israel, said "the and who doesn't."
tenn cease-fire is not in our
The Lebanese Christians,
dictionary .''
who have been fighting
In Tel Aviv, Israeli Defense. Palestinian forces with
Minister Ezer Weizman met Israeli help, want Israel to
early today with U.N. Gen. continue its offensive in
Ensio Siilaswo and agreed to southern Lebanon .
let the Iranians enter south
In Washington , Israeli
Lebanon and take ' up Prime Minister Menachem
positions along the l.Jtani Begin was meeting with
River and around '!)ire, the President Carter for crucial
Defense Ministry said.
talks on the impasse in peace
Maj.
Sa'act' Hadad, talks with Egypt.
commander of the Lebanese

en tine

CLEVELAND- A LUCKY HUNCH paid off in the arrest
of two Los Angeles brothers allegedly carrying about two

pounds of heroin, Cleveland area law enforcement authorities
have dlaclosed.
·Pollee estimate the street value of the confiscated drug at
$2 million. The brothers, identified as Richard W. Moton, 20,
and Eric Moton, 26, were being held in tbe Cleveland City jail.

major problem

A delegation of res idents
and users of Storys Run Roa d
near the Gallia·Meigs line
met with Meigs Co unty
commi ss ion ers
Tuesday
night requesting the road be
repaired and made passa ble
during flood periods.
Charles Wa rden , SJXJkes-

residents were endangered

due to road conditions and
flooding of a small creek
running along the road.
Commi ssione rs
Henry
Wells and Richard Jones
along with highway department superintendent Ted
Warner agreed to meet with
residents uf the area and
representatives from Gallia
County to view the site and
determine what corrective
The board opened bids on
road materials for the highway department and tabled
them for further study.
Submitting
bids
on
aggregate materials were the

Baskets may
have insects

w

.i

man for the group, cit ed
several instances ln which
the health and safety of

He said the district's Parkersburg, Richards and
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
educational
program is the Sons, Inc ., Pomerl)y, and the
superintendent of . a Meigs
County school district told a absolute minimum allowed Diamond Stone Quaqies ,
legislative committee today by state law. Per pupil ·Inc., Albany.
CLEVELAND - A $S MIUJON SLANDER suit filed his problem Is convincing expenditures amount to $984
Submitting
bids
on
Tuesday against Mayor De.nnis Kucinich by police taxpayers to vote enough - among the lowest in the bituminous
materials were
asaoclations In Akron and Cuyahoga Falls is "ridiculous," a money to keep schools open. state.
the Guernsey Asphalt Co. ,
spokesman for Kucinich said.
Riebel said the district Cambridge, the Asphalt
"Our taxpayers feel they
'lbesuitfiled by the Akron Pollee Patrobnen's ~lation are paying as much as they projects a $100,000 deficit this
and the Cuyahoga Falls Pollee Benevolent Association asked can Bfford," said John year and ivill have ·to close in Material and Construction
for $20,000 In actual and punitive damages for each of tbeir Riebel, superintendent of late October o~ early Co., Marietta, the Ashland
members. It said Kucinich's March 14 speech to the Akron Eastern Local School District November unless a IIHnill Petroleum Co., Ashland, Ky .,
and the Big Sandy Asphalt
Press Club slan.dered police because he said organized crime at Reedsville, pointing out levy is passed in June.
Co., Catlettsburg, Ky.
bas infiltrated most big-city police forces.
Harry
Barton,
that the tax rate for school
operations is at 20 milia - the superintendent of Allen East
NEW YORK - A NEW JERSEY TEAMSTERS official bare mlnlmum to quaUfy for Local School District in Allen
once suspected of Involvement in the 1975 disappearance of · state aid.
County, told the committee
Jimmy Hoffa was gunned down gangland-Illy le in Manhattan's
Riebel told the House his district lost $96,000 in
I
Utile Italy section Tuesday night, police said.
Finance Committee the delinquent taxes owed tiy the
Witnesses told police two unidentified men shot Briguglio voters defeated a five-mill Pel\ll Central Railroad.
six times arotind 11:30 p.m. as he stood in the rain in front of a emergency levy three times
That district was closed for
restaurant.
CHICAGO (UP!) - All
last year, and the district had 10 days in 1977 after the
to close schools for 10 days in failure of three levies in 18 Easter baskets · bought at
DENVER - ONE PERSON WAS killed in a series of · December.
months - the latest a 9. 77- Sears Roebuck and Co. stores
dynamite explosions at two buildings near downtowii Denver
recently should be returned
"Our people say 'the state .mill hike in November.
shortly after midnight. Pollee and federillagents were search· is going to have to do someThe district forecasts a immediately for refund
ing other balldinf!ll for explosive devices.
thing,"' said Riebel, adding fourweek closure this year because the baskets may
Capt. Robert Shaughnessy, head of the deparbnent's bomb that the state already pays unless a levy is passed in contain insects.
squad, said a beavy odor of black powder hung over the scene for 75 percent of the district's June.
Sears said Tuesday there
of the blaats on Bannock Street.
might not be a health hazard
expenditures.
but ordered the recall of the
AKRON, OHIO-FIRESTONE TIRE AND RUBBER Co .
wrapped basket and all its
has dealt a severe economic blow to the Akron area with the
contents as a precaution. ·
announcement the company will shut down its bias passenger
A Sears spokesinan said an
tire line In Akron, laying off 1,000 workers.
·insect known as a powderBat tile Immediate crisis of large«ale layoffs could be
post beetle has been found in
just the beginning of Akron's problems, since Firestone
the weave of some bamboo
Executive Vice President Frank A. LePage indicated late
baskets in a number of stores
Tuesday the cootinued operation of the company's massive
across the nation . The beetle
Akroo production facility may be in da~er .
thrives on bambou and other
fibr~us materials.
COLUMBUS - THE MEDICAL PROFESSION and By KENNE'Ill R. CLARK
miners of this couniry that he
"While
the
Easter
Ucensed optometrists argued their cases before a legislative United Ptess IDtel'lllltional
can't negotiate a cootract," merchandise is wrapped and
committee Tuesday over a proposal giving the eye doctors
Miners' wives, urging said Lee Roy Patterson in not
believed
to
be
permi181on to use certain drugs In detecting viaual alhnents. rejection
In
Friday's Madisonville, Ky. Patterson contaminated , "
the
Proponents and opponents of the Senate-pasaed. measure ratification vote of ·the soft gave the present " contract ·spokesman said, "we simply
were beard at a lengthy House Judiciary Committee meeling. coal operators' latest proposal
the third do not want to take any
"We want to be better able to detect the signs of eye disease," contract offer, vowed to negotiated so far - a 00.00 chances, so we are asking
8xplained Dr. Gerald Troy of Xenia, an optometrist and picket UMW headquarters in . chance
In
Friday's customers to return all ·
pbarmacist. "If we have these additional tools, we can speed Washington today, the 107th ratification vote.
Easter baskets."
up referrals to opllthabnologiats.''
day of the strike.
"The miners are saying,
The company said up to
LAKEWOOD, OHIO - A MAN WHO HELD his ex-wile
In West Virginia, coal 'What shOUld I do? We've 100,000 baskets had been sold
hostage at gunpoint for more than 10 hours, threatening to kill operators said they were turned down three contracts in the last three weeks at
her and himself, surrendered peacefally Tuesday night and ready to deliver at least 1.5 and still don't have what we prices ranging from $2.99 to
'11'88 tsken to a hospital for examination and questioning.
million tons of coal to public want. We've been out 31&gt; $39.99.
Paul Jancsek, 29, Cleveland, held Betty Jo Cardac, 33, utlUties and Industries within months and things are getting
Lakewood, captive in ber third-floor apartment, according to 24 hours of a contract a little tough,'" Patterson
police, who said the woman apparently wsa not harmed during ratification.
said. "1 no longer have to Four fined,
In the coal fields, union preach about Miller as being
the siege.
Facia in,the case were to be presented to the prosecutor. leaders lobbied for approval stupid. He's put it down on two forfeit bonds
of the pact in Friday's vote paper with this contract."
Four defendants were fined
COLtfMsus - THE NUMBER OF OHIOANS filing and few observers would
Wives of Pennsylvania
jobless claims last week Is estimated at 157,m, a 3.9 percent hook odds on the election miners agreed, and about 100 and two others forfeited
drop from the previous seveJHiay period, an Ohio BureaU of much be)'Ond a range of 00.00. of them said Tuesday they bonds in the court of Pomeroy
Employment Services spokesman said Tuesday. ·
Coal aperators warned the wlll picket the union 's Mayor Clarence Andrews
'lbe spokesman aaid 1,511 Ohioans exhausted their contract
now
under Washington headquarters Tuesday night.
unemploymeott benefits during the week ending March 11.
Fined were Bill Reeves,
consideration will raise today both agflilst
production
costs
and ratification and against Pomeroy, $50 and costs,
intoxication; James Broome,
RICHMOND, VA. - VIRGINIA, ALREADY AT odds with consumer utlUty bills, and Miller.
North Caiollna over reglonai water problems, appears on tbe growing rankS of the miners
"We don't feel Miller can Middl~rt. $30 and costs,
verge of a tullscale fight with 1111other neighboring state over a Who must accept or reject It do his job," said organizer assured clear distance ;
propolled blgher ~ m eleclricity.
clammored for removal of Nora Waltman of Johnstown, Robert Riffle, Pomeroy, $200
Atklrney General J. Marsball Coleman said Tuesday that
Arnold Miller, the man they Pa. ''I cannot see my and Cllsts, petty theft, and
VIrginia IIIIIY sue West VIrginia If it tries to raise the tax It elected unfoo president last husband or any miner Charles Bailey, Pomeroy,
clwrg1111 oo elfctriclty generated there but exported elsewhere . . year.
relumlng to work for less $50, left of center.
Forfeiting bonds were
The man who lost that than what they bad Dec. 6.
WASHINGTON - THE TWO SENATORS FROM Ohio election saw the long and
"We've been In this strike Henry Pilsburg, johnstown,
, 1'llllllday voted aplnst a three-part emergi!IIC)' farm bill, bitter walkout as vindication 106 days now. We're so far in $350 posted on a charge of
- wl*bnnpprovedby thefuJISenateona 87-2Svote.
debt now it's not going to hurt driving while intoxicated,
of his campaign.
Seal. Jolin Glem and Howard Melzenbaum were among 15
and Lenore Slack, Mid·
"Arnold Miller has proved us to go a little farther."
· Democrat~ voting to defeat the measure.
dleport, . ~4, speeding,
· beyond a doubt to the coal

•

•I

meets with '
• •
commission

Tri-State Mate rial_s Corp . 1

.
' wives
.
Mmers
urge no vote

l'i fl t't•n Ct•nt s
Vol. 2M. No. 2:1H

Delegation ~·I

measures can be taken.

By United' PreosiDteruaUonal

"He told those unions no one else is supposed to be doing
this," ssid Nunley, noting relief committees from' the various
districts have been soliciting oa their own. "He's trying to
starve the miners back to work.''
Nunley also said attorneys hired by the individual UMW
Districts have found flaws in the health and welfare pr~vlsions
of the contract.
"I think Miller made a mistake waiting so long for the vote
on the contract," said Nunley . " It gave us too much tilne to
research it. Now we're finding loopholes."
Nunley said he would attend a rally in Logan, W.Va . tonight
to go over the contract with otber UMW officials from West
Virginia.

OVER 200 attended a 12th Masonic District meeting held in Middleport 011 March II. At
the conclusion of the business meeting a group of 55 Jnembci'S of the Pusl Masters Unit of
Aladdin Temple Shrine, Colwnbus, exemplified the work in tho third degree under the tlircction of Edward Braitwaite, left front row in the picture. With him are fJ·o11t, I tor, Dan Arnold, Harrisonville Lodge; Glenn T. Crisp, worshipfulmm;ter uf the host hxtgc, Middleport
363 , F&amp;AM ; back, I tor, James Ciatworthy, Darrel Wost anti Andrew l.cmicy , uil district
dil'ectors. Clatworthy is director of the 12th district.

.

.

Grand jury frees Hawley
No true bill of indictment
was returned Monday by the
March term of the Meigs
County Grand Jury in the
case of Leslie Hawley, 459
Broadway St. , Middleport
charged with volunta ry
manslaughter in the shooting
death of hi s son·in·law,
William Alan Rife, 22 ,
Bucyrus on New Year's Day .
A
£amily ' argument

resulted in the shoo ting
death.
According to police in·
vestigative reports, Rife had
· been shot with a .32 ca liber
pistol in the back yard of the
Hawley residence at 4:20
a .m. Jan . 1.

Po m e roy ,

ob st ru c tin g

justice, trafficking. in drugs
and possession of a co ntrolled
substance; Charles Butcher
RL. 4, Pomero y, truffiCking ir~

theft; Bruce

Fll~ n i n g,

Ht. I,

Lon~ ·uuttum , theft ; Jack W.

Osborne, llichland County,
r cce l v in ~::
stolen Mlmds;

drugs. and possession of a

Kenn eth Mol1icr , theft ;
1\onuid llutchcr, trafficking

Cllntrolled substance; Alpha
Butcher, Rt . 4, Pomeroy,

~.:untruilct.l ~ ub:it ant:c .

traffi ckin g in drugs und
possession of n coiltrullcd

witnesses rct.umh1g 12 true

substance; HnndaM~~rc.

bills.

4 lo._

~.

'

I

J

f\

in dr ugs ;md

po sscs~.:~i o n

of n

'lbe jury exumincd over 25

Thomas heads
golf course

Rife, who had been shot in
the stomach, apparently tried
to leave the scene in his car
John R. Thomas, Pomeroy, purtunity to discuss matters
which was ditched in an ailey will
assume operation of the with their rcpr eser~t a llv cs in
between Broadway and High
Sts. Rife died later that Pomeroy Golf Course, April g! •Vcrnmcnt .
morning

in

Veterans

Memorial Hospital.

Ap·

1,

according t o an

~n ­

Spcciill g uests

r1,r

the

nouncement Tuesday at th e mcetmg were Mrs. Shirley
th e

Le wis, welco me wagnn field

Pomeroy
Chamber
of.
enough evidence to indict.
Commerce.
Twelve other persons were
It wa s announ ced that
indicted by the grand jury
Thoma
s will do a conaccording to Prose cuting
siderable
amount of work to
Attorney Rick Crnw.
grounds
as well as other
the
Indicted were Delbert
improvements.
The course
Putman, theft ; Dennis Toley, has been operated
by the
aiding and abetting ; Randail Hackett family for apButcher, RL 4, Pomeroy, proximately a year.
obstructing jusiice, traf·
Niese! Duvall, Reedsville,
licking drugs and possession the 1977 Big Bend Regatta
of a controlled substance; Queen, reported on atten.ding
Robert Butcher, Rt . 4 20 festivals and events in Ohio
'
representing the Big Bend
Regatta.
At most events, she was
permitted to give short talks
about the local regatt'a . Miss
Duvall said the appearances
were bencfjcial to the local
promotion . She thank ed
SAN LUIS, Sol\_ora, MexiCil everyone for her year of
(UPI) - Two Mexican buses reign .
During
the meeting
collided head-on in a
rainstorm near San Luis presided over by Fred W.
Tuesday night, killing 28 Crow, president, Fred
passengers and injuring 40 Morrow, local Ohlo Power
others, according to the Co. manager, reported on
attending the 84th annual
Mexican Red Cross.
The Red Cross said one of con vent ion of the Ohio
the buses was en route from Chamber of Commerce in
Guadalajara to Tijuana, and Columbus.
The meeting was attended
the other was traveling from
Tijuana to Guadalajara . by some 1,100 business people
They coltided head-on in a wh o were given a~ op·
narrow dip In Highway 2,
about 40 kilometers from the
border town of San Luis,
Fuel tanks ruptured and
the wreckage was engul!ed iii
names, trapping many of the
passengers inside the huge
WASHINGTON (UP! ) buses, the Red Cross said.
The Red Cross spokesman Congress is within one step of
at San Luis said the victims sending President Carter a
were
burned
beyond bill eliminating mandatory
recognition, and many of tbe retirement for abnost all
Injured were critically federal workers and raising
the
minimum
forced
burned.
from
65
to 10
retirement
age
Some of the injured were
in
most
private
industry.
taken by ambulance to hospi·
The House passed the com·
talslnSanLuls; Yuma, Ariz.,
bill 39H Tuesday
promise
and Mexlcali , Sonora.
Several of the more severely and 'the Senate was expected
burned were flown by to go along, probably this
helicopter to hospitals in Los week. That will complete
Angeles . The Red Cross congresaionalacUon on one of
spokesmAn said both buses the most important pieces of
social legislation to emerge
were nearly full.

r e pr e s ent a tiv e from
Charl eston , W. Va ., und
Teresa Bihl, Gallipolis, who

parently , there was not

noon

lun cheon

28 killed
in wreck

of

hu s bee n at'tive in the

wclcume ~agon prog ram.
. Mrs . Lewis outlinccl
general otspel1S of a welcome
wagon program for Pomeroy
and will return in the near
future to discuss specific
piUns for such u local ven-

ture.
Boyd Ruth , a chamber
member, spoke favorably of
the weiCilme wagon program
designed to greet new people
Cllmiog into the community
and offered his help in
developin g such a local
program.
A committee composed of
Ruth, Pat O'Brien and Kyle
Allen was named to study the
possibilities and report back
to the chamber at a later
meeting.
Attending the meeting were
those named above and Phil
Kelly , Bill Quickel, Norbert
Compton, Ted Reed, Jr ., Dale
Warner , Bill Nelson, Rod
Stagall , Bill Bayer, Bill
Grueser, John Anderson ,
Walter Grueser, Allen
Ri chard s and Thereon
Johnson.

Retirement at· 70
one step away

I

,_f

from this Congress.
Rep. Claude Pepper, [)..
Fla ., 77, chairman of the
House Aging Collll!littee and
chief sponsor, said tbe bill
shows that "we refuse to be
a~complices in a form of
discrimination that punishes
the victim for the most
unavoidable of human
experiences
simply
growing older.
"In many elderly hearts all
over the country ... there 'II
come back a new spirit of
youth, a new vitality," he
predicted.

•

(f

'

�\

-

3- The Dally Senl111el, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Wedneaday. March 22, 1978
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Wedneaday , March22, 1978

Flood
•

warnmg
•
rema•ns

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb. M.D.
sexual relatiOns It should
c.:crt.cunly be done m women m
the early 20s and beyond The
Pap smear test 1mght be
ormtted
1f a woman has
DEAR DR LAMB - Would
had a complete
already
you please put 1n the paper
hysterectomy,
as the nsk of
"hat a complete yearly
vagmal
cancer
1s ver y s hght
phys1cal exammat10n should
mclude? Some of us women Indeed
A breast excnmnat10n
have been gomg to the doc tor
should
be done m all women
and askmg for a complete
cun Hppear at cmy
A
lwnp
yearly phySICal and we fcoel1t
age
and
even
though breast
has not been complete Our
cancer
IS
rare
m the 20s It
breasts and pnvate parts
does
occ..:ur
A
simple exwere not exammed We were
ammattun
1
s
all
that
ISneeded
too embarrassed and dnl not
m
these
C
iJses
to
1dent1fy
pr&lt;r
know how to ask \Ohy we JUSt
pa1d and left We were really blenlS In women a httle
angry wtlh ourselves for not older, breast cancer becomes
askmg why. lhinkmg of our the nwnber one cause of
cancer deaths, there should
pr1de before our health
If you would please prmt be no exc..:use for not domg a
this 11 would help other breast ex.ammatwn
An exammat1on should also
women too And maybe some
• exammat10n
mclude
a finger
of the doctors need to know
what we women thmk about ol the rectum Many of tbe
cancers of the rectum and
II
I used to go to the doctor colon can be fell th1s way,
and the nurse would say wt· these cancers are the second
dress from head to toe and we most common cause of
got a complete ex:amtnallon cancer deaths '" both men
from head to toe We were so and women
I am sendmg you The
happy 1f nothmg was wrong ,
Health
Letter nwnber 10-2,
and happy we found Jl lll t1me
Your
Valuable
Medical Ex
1f there was something amiss
It 1s so hard for some of us armnahon, to gtve you a more
women to even ask for an ex· detailed report on what men
ammatlon And that also and women both shoLJld ex·
makes us angry for havmg pect from an annual ex·
too much pr1de We need your ammatwn and why you
shoLJid have one Others who
help
DEAR READER - You've wa nt thas mformataon can
golll I'm sure that most doc- send 50 cents w1th a long
sel l-addressed
tors do a complete phys•cal sta mped
and they certa ml) shuuld No envelope for at to me m care
examma tton of a woman 111 of lh1s newspaper, P 0 Box
her ch1ld·beanng years or 3"26, San Antomo TX 78292
Not all doctors lh111k you
beyond ts complete without a
need
a regular exa nunat10n
pe lv1c exatmnatJOn The ex·
but
I
disagree
It depends on
cephon nught be the young
why
and
how
the
exammatwn
g1 rl who has not had any sex
IS
done
Certa111ly,
1f you don't
life
A Pap smear shou ld be do the procedures that spot
Ulken to check for any ai&gt;- the maJor problem areas
such as ca ncer .a nd heart
normal cells Th1s test was not
done until the early 20s m the disease then you shouldn't
past But 111 recent tunes, bother but that JS an mdiCl
because of changmg hie menl of the quality of the exstyles, 1t has been agreed by ammataon, not Its usefulness
ma ny docto1 s that th1s pro- A maJor portion of the causes
cedure should start shortly of scrwus 11lness and death
after a g1rl first starts havmg ca n be prevented for years or
cu red af fo und early enough

Cmnpldt'
physical m·cdt'd

ho::~=======
,tow ~ •

Washington
Report

lh t lalt' IH't'
~liiJcr

Anyone who has tuned m
Saturday mCJrmng teleVISion
1s struck by the heavy advert isi ng bombardment
auned at children Animated
characters parade across the
screen, peddl111g such thmgs
as chocolate and strawberry
flavored cereals or cerea l
that look like cook1es Despite
manufacturer cla1ms that
theJr cerea ls are fortified
with v1tamtns and tron ,
cntlcs are ummpressed,
cllargmg most ready-to-eat
cereals are nothmg more
than d1sgu1sed "Junk " foods
Cntlcs say these sugared
products a re so nutrlhonless
and detnmental to a child's
health, "sweet messages"
earned on ch ildren s TV
programm ing should be
banned Into th1s controversy
the Federal Trade CommiSSion stands ready to tssue
a panoply of regulatiOns to
force these commercials off
tlle arr
The FTC s,ees ch1Idren as a
particularly vulnerable and
unpress10nable lot m need of
spepal federal protecllon
from the 'unfatr" ad·
vert•smg of cereal, soft drmk,
and candy makers Left
unprotected from the 7000 to
10,000 "sweet" commercials
an average child watches in a
year, FTC feels tooth decay
and obesitY wlll grow to
epJdemJc propo•llons among
ch1ldren
FTC Chairman Michael
Pertschuk has sa1d that
children ' lack the JUdgement
and experience to see that
something that looks good to
tllem 111 the short run may
hurt them In the long run
They cannot protect themselves against adults who
explOit
their
presentmmdedness."
In
Its
recommendationS that await
the Commissioners' action,
the FTC staff concluded that
"k1d vid" advertising of foods
"induces clllldren to take
healtll risks which they are
not equipped to assess "
The point of these two
statements is self-evident
Ch1Idren do indeed lack
judgement and are not fully
equipped to know what is
good for them, especially the
food they eat. But it does not
follow that the Federal
government should make

,

those Judgements for all our
children There 1s somethmg
ca Ued a " parent" who can do
th1s chore After aU, children
have no money , parents do
Children do not buy food ,
pa rents do Quldren do not
control the fam1ly TV set,
parents do Chlldren do not
set family values , parents do
In other words , all the thmgs
FTC wants to do are umquely
parental responstbthttes
Parents have the Judgment
their offsprmg lack and can
exerctse lt better than any
remo t e
Washington
bureaucrats ever could
Granted, some parents pacify
a child's whining for
somethmg by g1vmg them
what they want, yet most
res1st such pleadmgs When a
parent says no, fnctJon between the parent and ch1ld 1s
created, accord111g to the
FTC By banmng such things
as cereal ads, FTC says 11
would elumnate the source of
that faiiUIY tension So while
act111g to ostensibly protect
children from TV mer·
chandtsmg , what FTC IS
perhaps more realistically
try111g to do IS protect parents
from their own children and
their own responsibJhlles
A balanced, nutritional
diet , as Important as 1t 1s, 1s
still a fundamental child
rearmg respons1b1hly for
parents A child's health 1s
f1rst protected and best
protected as nature Intended
in the home and not in
Washmgton

TtiEDAILV SENTINEL
DEVOTEDT0111E
INTF..REST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Edt&amp;or
Publishet.l daily u:cept SMluniay
by 11ll: Oh10 VaUey Pl.lbhshlng

ComJlllny MuiUmetha Jnt
Ill
Court St Pumeroy Ohlo' t5769
Bw;mesa Off1~e Phone 992 2156
EditorUtl Phune 992 2m
Set:onll d .lfs.!l posU.gt- Poif ld 111

Pomeroy OhiU

N!ilwnal 111dVI!rtl.!fmg

Onu Yen

' 22 00

&amp;x rmmth£

Three mu11th 8

El.st~where

$26 00 yeHr, Su:

$7 00

mun~

'1 3 50, Three munlhs $7 SO
Sub:stTiptaun prit'e mlludeS sw1U&lt;ty
Times-Senltnel

VA REMINDER
Veterans and other persons
hav~ng education ehg•b•hly
under the GI Bdl have been
rem1nded by Ralph E Sm1lh,
director, Veterans Admlmstratton RegiOnal Offtce,
Cleveland, that the veteran
gene rally will not be pa1d
e du ca tt o n assastance
allowance by the Veterans
Admm1strauon beyond the
date ten years aft er the
veteran's last d1scharge or
release from act1ve duty
Veterans arc encourage~ to
take advantage of thts once m
a hfetune opportumty to go to
school under the GI Bill

RI CfiAKI&gt; Bl/IC I ON tlt·ft I ~ ~ tht• p.t•rennial brldl·smaid of the Academy Awards. The Welch actor has ne ver won

an Oscar lhnug h ht• l111 s bt•t•nrwmmaled for the a"ard seven t1mes - this year for his portrayal of a psychiatrist
'" " Equus nur11111 !'&lt; 4 n·star Pt•tcr Firth I right) , 1s 111 the runnmg for a " best supportmg actor" Oscar

Ackerman issues statewide order
COLUMBUS (UPII-State
Healtll Director Dr. John
Ackerman and Supermtedent
of
Pubhc
Instruction
Franklm Walter today asked
all school admiiUstrators to
exclude from school on April
17 all pup1ls not properly
munumzed
Ackerman and Walter, m a
JOllll letter to superintendents

or all publl~ and pnvate
schools 111 Oh1o, reminded
tllem that the unmumzatlon
law clearly states that popils
not 111 compl13nce w1t11 the
state liiUTlumzat1on law must
be demed a dmlsston to
school
They sa1d lax enforcement
of this law has resulted m

COL UMBU S

COLUMBU S (UPt ) ,_ Here Is

a glance at acflvlty Tuesday 1n

the Oh1o General Assembly
HOUSE
Bills Introduced
HB 1169
Hug hes
Repeat s
prov1S1on for persons to qual fy
as day ca re adm1n sfra tor s "by
comp lefmg af least two years
of co llege lra•n•ng
HB 1170 Norr 1s Reduces fhe
mm 1mum age for operat on of
motonzed b1kes from 14 to 12
years for business purposes
HB 1171 C_,rney Est.,bliShes
a statew1de plan tor 1 Iter
cont r ol recy cllng i'lnd r esource
recovery
HB 11 72 Chr1sfman C reat e ~
the oft ce of nspector general
of nurs ng homes and perm1ts
damage su1 t s to be b r ought
aga 1nst nurs1ng hom es for
11 1Dial1on of regulations 9r
patient r ghts
House
Concurs
in
Senate
Amendments
Am HB 654 F• nan Increases
liability
msuram:e
requ1red
l1m 1tS tor operators of tra ve
img portable am usement ndes
77 0

B1lls Passed
HB 741 , L
Brown
Makes 11 a felon y to di'lmage a
place of bur1i'll 78 0
Am He 699
Bega la Re
qu res state un 1vers 1t es and
col leges to prepar e statements
of
1mpact
on
n e1ghbortng
pol1f Cal SUbdlll i SIOnS Wlfhm 90
days of a ca p1tal Im provement
.,ppropr.at•on 52 29
HB 11 15
Hmig
Requ.res
employers to m &amp;ke mont!y
W1lhhold1ng ta .11 payments not
later tha n 10 banking days after
the close of each ca lendar
month 83 0
Am HB 811 Mayer Clanf•es
who may be considered t he
parent of a child 10 determmmg
school d1 s tr• ~:;t of res1dents 78 7
Mot1on to Recons1der Lelt
Pendlnv
Am HB 699
Bega l a Re
quires sl at e un lver s1 11es and
colleges to prep.!!re stl!tements
of 1mra ct
on
ne•ghbonng
pol•t•ca subd •vlslons w1th1n 90
days or a ca p1 la l Improvement
appropn8hon 52 'N
Am

SENATE

BillS Introduced

SB "59, Roberto Authonzes
townsh1p tru.s tees to set ser v•ce
charges for non prof i t res1d ents
who rece1ve ambulance serv 1ce
trom the townsh •P
SB 460
Carney
L1mlts
mmerai leases on school lands
to 15 years except tor oi l or
gn exploration
Senate
Concurs
In
House
Amendments
Am Sub SB 270, Calabrese
TrMsters mspectlon s1te for
plans. and speclf•cat•ons on
publ •c building contr&amp;ct bid S
from aud1tor s off1ce to publ 1c
works dlv1slon 27 o
81!15 PISsed
Am HB 329 1 Thompson
Allow~ cou nt1es
to establiSh
microfilming boards 28 0
Sub H B 203, Lehman Per
mils p.,yment of first half real
estate ta xes w1thout makm g
pa yment of second halt taxes at
the same lime 28 0

SERVICE SET
A Good Fr1day service will
be held at 7 45 p m. at the St
Paul Lutlleran Church There
Will be a reading of the
passion history and hymn
s1ng111g .
A sunr1se service w1ll be
held at 7 a m Sunday at the
cllurch. The public 1s Invited

REVIVAL SPEAKER
The Rev Robert Byers w1ll
be speaker at a reVJval to be
held at 7 30 each evemng
Thursday through Sunday at
the Eagle R1dge Community
Church There Will be special
Singing The pubiJc IS 111v1ted

United Press lnlenlllllonal
If tbe New York Knlcks
could play every game the
way tlley played Tueaday
rught agamst Denver, maybe
their ehamp10nsh1p teams of
the early 1970s wouldn't seem
like such a dun memory
New York snapped 1ts fourgame losing streak as Bob
McAdoo poured 111 35 pomts m
tile Knicks' 110-114 squeaker
over tile Nuggets
Forward Jun McMillian
and guard Earl Monroe ea~h
scored 17 and Toby Kmght
bad 12 pomts commg 1ff the
bench
11
lt was an unportant wm
for US 1" swd McAdoo ·
ThiS was a Cllllhdence builder
for us "
The Kn1cks surpnsed the
M1dwest DIVIsJOn-leadmg
Nuggets early by Jumpmg to
leads of as many as 17 pomls
m the frrst quarter, but the
game was lied 12 t1mes 111 the
fourth quarter
Da\ld Tbompoon Jed the
Nuggets w1tll 29 pomts and
Roberts had a career-lugh 27
In
other
games ,
Washmgton downed Boston,
119-107, Kansas C1ty beat
DetrOit 118-111, Ind1ana
downed Phoemx II 9-115 ,
Houston edged ChiCago 10199, San Antomo topped Los
Angeles 109-105, Milwaukee
heat Atlanta III0-8G, New
Orleans edged New Jersey
117-114,
Golden
State
defeated Buffalo 111-104 and
Portland downed Seattle 102-

NORWOOD, Ohio (UPII A federal mediator hoped
today to fmd grounds for a
contract a~reement between
SJemens-Alhs and 650
st.nkmg employees, off their
jobs for 19 days
The 6SO members of Local
765 of tile InternaUonal Umon
of ElectrJCal Workers left
their JOOO at m1dmght March
2 when thet r contract
e&lt;plred The umon IS at odds
with S1emens·Alhs over
wages and benefits
The mediator met w1tll both
Sides last Wednesday, but
could not mold an agreement
SJeme ns-AIIls, a JOint
ven ture between AllisChalmers and Siemens of
West Germany, makes
industr13l electncal motors

Livestock
Legislature
Farmers are welcoming report
at a glance
spring plowing season

repr.esen-

l&lt;ltne Ward Grilf1lh Company
£n~ &amp;umelll and G11llagher o 1v ,
'~ ' Th1rd Avi.! New Yurk N y
IOO!i
Su~crJpt J oo rMie!i lkhvered by
ec~rru~r where MVI:Iilallle Th tents ptr
week By Molor Roule whert ta m er
~Jt"rvl ce nol available One month
$125 By mall Ul Ohlu 11.nd W VII
$11 50

United Pre .. lnleruallonal
A flood warrung remamed
m
eff eel
m
three
northwestern Ohto COWlbes
today as three rtvers, swollen
by recent heavy rams,
continued to nse
National Weather Service
officials sa1d the Maumee, St
Joseph and T1ffm nvers 111
Defiance, Henry, W1lhams
and northwestern Wood
oounues, which overflowed
their banks Tuesday, were
e&lt;pected to crest at up to
seven feet above flood stage
sometune Thursday
Several roads were closed
111 Defiance and Williams
counUes Tuesday rught by
flood waters, but no homes or
busmesses were unmedJately
tllreatened
Forecasters sa 1d the
Maumee Rtver would crest at
7 feet above flood stage at
Deftance Thursday morrung ,
6% feet above flood stage at
Napoleon Thursday murmng ,
and 5%feel above flood stage
m Grand Rap1ds Thursday
rught
The St Joseph R1 ver at
Montpelier was expected to
nse to 5'h feel above flood
stage by early Thursday and
tile T1ffm River at Stryker
was to reach 5 feet above
flood
s tage
Thursda)
afternoon
The floodmg fo llowed
nearly an mch of ram that fell
m extreme northwestern
Oh10 late Monday and early
Tuesday

Texas claims NIT title

Knicks snap
losing spell

Mediator
seeking
agreement

week"
By DEBORAH FRAZIER
• Thomas sa1d at least
United Press lnternallonal
100,000 of Baca county's
· Stnkmg
farmers
tn
America's gram belt are 290,000-acre wmter wheat
welcommg spr111g by plowmg crop would be plowed under
under part of the tr wmter or leased for grazmg He sa1d
farmers would plow under an
wheat crop
As part Of Its conlmwng average of 2,000 acres a day
Farmers 111 Hereford,
demand for a break--even
prtce, Amencan AgncultW'e Texas, stgned pledges on the
called for half tile w111ter amount of land they would
wbeat crop to be plowed plow under Roddy Allred of
Amencan Agriculture there
under, sta rtmg Tuesday
sa1d
the actavtty was
Farmers m Colorado,
unorgamzed
and no figure
Kansas, Nebraska and Texas
was
available
on the number
responded by plow mg
of
farmers
tak111g
part
til rough some or the II" fields or
In Montana and Oklahoma,
young wheat.
Agriculture
"We're gomg to be going a Arnencan
lot stronger tllan 50 percent," spokesmen said the starting
srud Ray Morgan of Hugoton, date was postponed because
Kan "We're gomg to be the cold wmter bad slowed
plowmg up about 50 acres and the sprout111g process, but
pasturmg orr 130 or a total 280 Widespread participation was
acres That leaves us w1th expected
J C. Lew1s, a farmer from
about 100 acres
Okla ,
sa1d
"We Just decaded to go with Guymon,
Agncultu re
•t all If you're gomg to American
support tlus, you might as members m has area wanted
to wa1t until tile wheat crop
well go all tile way "
Turrung the wmter wheat was VISible and the public
acreage over to grazmg 1s an wouldn 't clwm tile plowmg
alternative because 1t occurred because ''the wheat
prevents wmd eroSion, ~a1d wasn't any good anyway '•
In Georgt.a , Ohio , Iowa and
Ke1th Thomas of Sprmgf1eld
Colo
' other eastern farm states, the
The crop ls planted m the plantmg season has not
fall, lies dormant during tile begun, but spokesmen for
wmter and usually IS Amencan Agriculture sa1d
smaller tllan normal crops
harvested m June and July
''The wmter wheat crop 1S were planned
Dean Suneral of tile Ohio
the fmest wheat 111 the world
and goes mostly for bread Farm Bureau Federatwn
and human conswnptlon," satd some farmers have
Thomas sa1d " It will lake a promised to Iun1t producbon
while, but people will feel to no more than hall the
what we are domg th1s normal crop

-

47 50 50

75

J4

925 1290 Jbs

.46 .49 ,

h1gh good and lo w
cho1ce 2 3 870 1225 lbs 44 48
good 2 3 7.40 1300 lbs 41 50 .46
standard 2 3 BOO 1350 lbs 35

4385
Slaughter heifers Chotce
and pn me 2 3 850 1100 lbs 46
49 low dressing 49 50 3 4 860
1000 lbs 45 48, low dressmg
44 45 cho1ce 2 3 800 1100 lbs
43 46 h1gh good and low
choice 2 3 775 1075 lbs 40 45 ,

good

2 3 760

975

lbs 40 43

standard 1 2 730 950 I bs 35 40
Slaughter cows U t 1llty and
commerc1a l 2 4 900 1600 lbs
30 37
low dressing 36 20
37 10 cutter 1·2 750-1 350 lbs

25 33 75

Sla ughter bull s

lndh.ndual

1 1420 lbs 44 25 1 2 1000 2170
lbs 34 25 40 25
Vealers

72 78

Prim e 160

230 l bs

110 140 lb s so 54;

t h01ce 170 240 lbs 65 72 95
120 lbs 39 49 50 good and
cho1ce 160 235 lbs 50 63 85

135 lbs 32 50 39 good 170 260
lbs 37 50 55 95 lbs 21 30

Feeder cattle Cho1ce and
pnme steers 410 550 lbs 49
54 good mostly holstei ns 470

800 lbs

35 40 , choice and

pnme heifers 320 525 lbs 39
41 76 1nd1v1dual 45, good 310

510 lbs 36 37

Hogs Barrows and gilts 2
lower, sow~ 1 3 lower feeder
ptgs steady to 2 htgher,
barrows and g1lts 1 3 2Hl 240

ibS 46 25 47, SOWS 1 3 J00 650
lbs 37 75 41 35 450 650 lbs
42 35 43 85 , boars JOO 650 lbs
30 lot 206 lbs Jl so, feeder
p1gs per head , 1 2 25 30 lbs

26 28 JS 40 lbs 30 33 so 60
lbs 41 so 44, 1 3 25 JS lbs 18
23 50
Sheep Slaughter lambs
s teady , spr 1ng slaughter
lambs chotce and prtme 22 45
lbs 11 3 145 49 70 lbs ao

107 50

Eastland will not
seek seventh term
By STEVE GERSI'EL
that I w1ll not be a candulate
WASHINGTON (UP!)
for another term," the ']3..
Sen James 0 Ea.tland, year-old Eastland sa1d
preSident pro tern of the
He srud tllat when he
Senate and chairman of the announced for a seventh term
Senate Jud1e1ary Committee, m October, he fell the
announced today he w11I not "poSitions of power and Influseek reelection even though ence belonged to the people 1
he sa1d there 1s every represent" and added,
indica bon he would win a "These posts were thetrs to
seventh term
recover at w1U - but not
In a three-page statement, mme to lay down "
Eastland srud he could not
Eastland SaJd his doctors
discharge h1s duties as a bad adVIsed hun be could
senator over the next months Withstand another su-year
and at the same time conduct term "Now - however - I
a long and arduous campaign am faced with tillS question,"
agamst a growing list of he sa1d "Can I d•scharge
contenders.
those duties and at tile same
Eastland, a conservative time conduct a long and
Democrat from Mississippi arduous campaign?
and one of the last of the old" I have concluded the
line southern barons, will answer IS no," Eastland said
bave served more tllan 36
The veteran Democrat sa1d
years when he retires after reports from every section of
his present rerm exprres next the state "md1cate very
January
strongly tbat I would have
"I want to rell the people of been reelected.
"But tile controllmg factor
Mississippi - who have been
so ~ood and generous to me-- here is that, durmg the

(UPI)

Tuesdays livestock au ct 1on
Compared to last week
s!au ghter steers and heifers
1 50 higher , slaugh te r cows 2
lower slaughter bull s stea dy ,
feeder ca tt le 1 6 h1gher
Slaughter st eer s
Cho1ce
a nd pnme 2 3 915 1280 lbs
.49 50 5 1 85
c ouple .52 85
53 35 , cho1ce 2 3 900 11 75 lbs

numerous outbreaks or
serious but preventable
ch1ldhood dJSeases
The letter also noted that
low levels or munumzatioo
are sett111g tile stage for
possible outbreaks of polio,

diphtheria and whoopmg
cough
There bave already been
ep1demtcs of measles and
rubella across the state m tbe
past scllool year, the letter
srud.

Sermonette
JESUS CHRIST OUR SAVIOUR
"All we like sheep have gone astray; we have turned every
one to his own way; and the Lonlhalh laid on him tbe Inlqnlly
of us all." lllaJah 53:8.
The 53rd chapter of lsruah foretells the sufferings or Jesus
Christ, the reason for his deatll, and the advantages a fallen
race reeeJves. ln wr1t111g to the Corinthians, Paul says, "For ye
know the grace of our Lord Jesus ChriSt, that, tllough he was
r1eh, yet for your sakes he became poor, that ye through his
poverty might be r1eh." II CormthJans 8 9ln the 50th Psalm
and tile lOth verse we read, "For every beast of tbe forest is
miiiC, and tile cattle upon a thousand hills." Yet our Lord
became as tile poorest of men tllat we might be ricllln .spirit.
The Master testified, "The foxes have holes, and the birds of
the arr have nests, but the Son of man hath not wbere to lay his
head. " Mat:hew 8.2tlb What a wonderful Saviour'
In the second verse of this cbapter we read, "For he shall
grow up before hlm as a tender plant, and as a root out of a dry
ground. he hatll no fonn nor comeliness; and when we shall
see him, there IS no beauty tllat we should desire him " Christ
had a tender spu-1!. He felt for mankind We find him weeping
over Jerusalem, m tile presence of death he shed the tear. He
was moved With compassiOn for the smner, and forgave the
VIlest of smners when they confessed their sins and believed on
him Even the eneiUies of Christ said he was a friend of
smners
The world saw oo beauty In him, but every redeemed son
and daughter of Adam's race sees beauty In tbe blessed Lefd
and Savwur Jesus Christ The story 18 told of a little girl who
carne to her mother one day and saJd, "Mother, why do you
always wear gloves'" The mother replied, "Because my
hands are such ugly, unSightly hands." "But", said the
daughter, "Mother, what is the matter With your hands•"
"Please take off your gloves. I want to see your hands ." The
motller dtd so, and as the little grrl saw the burned, drawn
hands, she said, "0, motller, put the gloves back on "Then she
said, "But, motller, bow came yoor hands so burned and
drawn '" She satd, "When you were a baby the house was on
fire, your bed and your clothes were on fire and in rescuing
you I burned my bands." The little girl said, "Take oflthe
gloves again, I do want to look at your hands." She did so, and
tile llttle grrl affectionately patted and kissed the unsightly
hands and said, "These are the most beautiful hands 1 have
ever seen " Yes, Jesus Chrs1t suffered for us that we ought
live - Uoyd D Grlllllii, Jr, Pastor, Rulland Church of tbe
Nazarene.

•;
•
•

By MARK FRIEDMAN
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK I UP! l - Alter
Texas ' convmc1ng 101·93
VICtory over North Carolina
State 111 Tuesday mght 's
Nati o nal
Invllallon
Tournament championship
game , Texas Coach Abe
Lemons, as expected , had a
one-lmer loaded and auned
'My little fat kid didn 't do
too bad, d1d he '" he deadpanned
Lemons' little fat kid, Ron
Baxter, who sports a mJdsecUon tile Size of a basketball,
poured m 26 pomts, hauled
down a game-lugh 12

m Washmgtoo .
Klugs 116, Plstum Ill.

rebounds, dished off f1ve State refused to alter a full
ass1sts and made two steals court press that cost 11 the
to earn co-MVP honors With ga me
' They tr1ed to wear us out
teammate Jun Knvacs as the
tourney's outstandmg pla}er with that press ." sa1d
· I always wanted to play Kr1vacs ' But we' re m 60quarterback, but I was too mmute shape for a 41knlnutc
overweight and decided to try hallgame. They pressed In
b a s k e t b a I I," sa1d the order to \\ear us out so Ron
sophomore forward " I was Just threw tile bomb That
surprised I was named co- wound up wearmg the m
MVP. Kr1vacs deserved 11, do\\n '
Knva cs hmshed w1th 17
(John I Moore deserved ll, the
first-hall po1nts and when the
whole team deserved 1t ''
Baxter's long outlet passes Wolfpack defense came too
to Knvacs (33 pomts, mne far out to stop him, Baxter
asststs) accounted for scores worked his 11ay down low,
of uncontested la\'UP!'; And NC' amassm~ 14 pomts as !he

The Pistons rallied from
defiCitS of 20 polllts but OtiS
Brrdsong and Luc1us Allen
kept tbe Kings ahead as
Kansas City further JOlted tbe
Pistons' NBA playoff hopes
Pacer$ 119, Suns liS·
lnd•ana scored )IS first
VIctory this season over Pho·
emx m four attempts as
Ricky Sobers tossed 111 28
pmnts , James Edwards
added 27 pomts and Dan
Roundf1eld 21
Rockets 101, Bulls 99.
Ch1cago was trwlmg at the
open111g or tile !mal period,
but after Steve Sheppard
scored h1s second basket and
another basket by Dw1ght
Jones, John Mengelt's twopomter put tile Bulls ahead
for good, 94-93
Spurs 109, Lakers 105·
George Gemn h1t two free
throws w1th five seconds
remammg to tee the game for
the Spm&gt; Lakers' rookie
Kenny carr massed two free
throws wtth 21 seconds left ,
allow111g Gerv111 to cl111ch the
game
Bucks 100, Hawks 86
Marques Johnson scored 11
of his 21 pomts and Dave
Meyers added e1ght as the
Bucks broke the game open 111
tile third period Charlie Cr1ss
had 19 for tbe Hawks
Jazz 117, Nets 114
R1ch Kelley hit 21-of 25 free
RANDY STEWART, son of ldr and Mrs Roger
Stewart of Pomeroy, entered his hrst bo&lt;mg tournament
tllrows for a career-b1gh 33
over tile weekend and came home w1lh lbe Gold Medal m
pomts as tile Jazz celebrated
tile flywe1ght dms10n of the Soutbea.tern Ohio Golden
Pete
Marav1ch's
return
wtth
96
Gloves
Tournament The tournament was held at
a
VICtory
Ma
raVIch
played
12
Bullets 119, CeltJcs 107
Trunble
Randy defeated George Pappas of New
mmutes
w1th
a
heav1Iy
banReserve guard Char les
Lexmgton Suqday afternoon to wm the fiywe1ghl div1s10n
Johnson reeled off [3 of hiS 22 daged knee
for 12 and 13 year olds The fiywe1ght category IS 11 I
pomts m the tllU"d quarter to Warriors 111, Braves 104 •
pounds Randy had to box two matches to wm the medal
Robert Pansh scored four
help the Bullets stave off a
111
the
last
mmute
to
late Boston rail) John pomts
Havlicek f1mshed the game enable the Warrwrs to With·
Wales Conlerence
a
fourth·penod
w1th 23 pomts to lead tile stand
Norns D1vlsl on
comehack
by
Buffalo
Center
Celllcs m hiS last appearance
W L T Pts
53 9 9 115
Swen Naler keyed the Buffalo I
I x Montreal
Los Ange les
27 30 14
68
comeback with 11 pomt.s m
Detroll
'11 JO 12
66
tile fourth penod
27 32 17
P1f! sburgh
61
Washmgton
13 44 12
38
Trailer Blazers 102, SuperAdams DIVISIOn
Tri-County Sonics 96:
W L T PIS
N BA Standmgs
Boston
47 14 9 103
Tom Owens and Lionel
By Un1ted Press lnternattonat
Buffalo
41 14 16
98
Eastern Conference
Hol1111s eacll scored 26 pomts
Sport
To ronto
39 21 10
AtlantiC 01\IISIOn
as tile Trw! Blazers cl111ched
19 42 11
49
W L Pet
GB Cleveland
• tlmched d1v1s1on tftle
50 20 714
tile home court advantage m x Phil a
Tu esda y's Result s
Yorl&lt;.
37 35 514 14
Shop
the Western Conference New
Boston 5, Cleveland J
Boston
28 &lt;11 406 2112
Minnesota 7 Pi ttsburgh 1
playoffs
Buffalo
26 44 311 24
Butta to 6 Los Angeles 2
New Jrsey
20 53 274 311l
Wednestlay 's Games
• F1shmg Tackle
Central D•v151on
NY Islanders at Toronto
W L Pet
GB
and Rods
Atla nta at Detroi t
San An ton
4d 27
620
ChiCago at Wash•ngton
and , Reels
Wash
37 JJ 529 6•n
Co lorado at P •tlsburgh
New Orlns
36 37 493 9
• Guns and
NY Rangers a t St LOUIS
Clev tan d
34 37 479 10
Thursdays Games
At l anta
34 39 466 11
Reloadmg
Toronto at Ph•lad elphla
Houston
24 49 329 21
• Ball Gloves
Sf LOUIS at Atlanta
Western Conference &gt;9
Colorado at Montreal
Midwest DiVISIOn "'
Campmg
Ch tcago a t Bos ton
W t Pet
GO
EqUipment
Los Ang at Mmn eso!a
Denver
42 29 592
SCOTTSDALE, Am (UP!) M1
IW
38 3.4 528 4 1 1~
• Archery
- Nmtll•nnmg smgles by Ch icago
36 37 493 7
• Indoor Games
33 38 465 9
Scott Thompson and Hector ""Detro•t
lnd ana
29 43 403 13 "~
• We
have G1ft
WHA Standmg5
Cruz drove 111 the tymg and
Ka n C1ty
28 43 394 14
By Umted Press InternatiOnal
Certificates
Paclftc D1vis1on
wummg runs as the Chtcago
W L T Pts
W L P.ct GO
Cubs overcame tile Cleveland x Portl nd
W nn1peg
46 23 2
94
55 16 775
New England
39284
82
Phoen1x
43 30 589 13
1Jld1ans ~ Tuesday
601 Mam St
Houston
35 30 4
14
Sea ltle
39 32 5.49 16
Dave Kingman hJt a two- Los
Quebec
34 35 J
71
Pt. Pleasant, W.Va.
Ang
38 33 535 11
Edmonton
34 34 2
70
run homer off R1ck Wwts for
Golden 51
35 36 493 20
C•nc nnat1
31 36 3
65
lC ClinChed diVISIOR t1t1e
the first two Cub runs m the
B1rm .nghm
31 38 3
65
Tuesday's Results
lnd •anapot s
23 43 S
51
s1xth 111mng
It was
washmgton 1 19 Boston 107
Tuesday's Resutts
Kan C1ty 116, Detr o•t 111
Kmgman's th1rd sprmg
N ew Eng land 6 lnd 1a n apot.~
l nd 1i'lna 119 Phoen1x 11 5
Across from Courthouse
homer
3
Ch1cago 101, Houston 99
B•rmmgham 5 Quebec 4
Milwaukee 100 Atlanta 86
Greg Gross' tnple and a
PKONE
Wednesday's Games
New Orlns 11 7 N J 114
two-base hit by Cruz
675-2988
Houston a t Cmcmnat1
Sa n Anton o 109 Los Ang 105
Wlnn•peg at New England
tnggered a two-run Cub
New York 115 Denver 114
Open Sunday 1· p m 6 p
B1rmtngham 8f Edmon to n
Golden
St
111
Buffalo
104
Monday thru Saturday
eighth
Thursday 's Games
Portland 102, Seattle 96

,------------,
: Pro
:
:Standings\

"

1
•
'
•

•
'
'

'

Cubs rally,

top Indians

9amto8pm

Senco • Oren • or
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peopletalk:

NHL Stand.ngs

Oy Un1ted Press International

WIIETIIER rr NEEDS IT OR NOT: Celelrities were out In
force Tuesday In the B1g Apple on behalf of spring house- •
cleanmg Smgers LIDdo R01181adl and Bebby Short, actreo.ses
Celeste Holm and Qretehen Wyler, ex-foolball star Kyle Rote
and former boxer Rocky Graziano helped kick off New York •
Telephone's "I Love a Clean New York" campaign Meyor Ed 1
Ko&lt;h says tile ant1-lltter drum-thumping is designed to
persuade res1dents to clean up tllelr neighboriloods once a'
month.

coming e1ght months - the
STARS STORMED: High waves thai recently lashed the :
duration of a rigorous and cele!rJty-packed Malibu Colony on the beach west of Los
expensive campaign
Angeles tapped some famous bank account&amp;. Among hornematters of the utmost owners toting up damages are violinllt J111ehl Heifetz, rock
Importance
to
~very
star Uncia Ronatadt, Rod Steiger and Barten Meredith.
MISSISSippian and hery Heifetz lost some beachlront In the stonn, and MiN Ronstadt's
American w11I be before the nome suffered more than $10,000 In dama8e. Steiger •ys his
Congress.
teahouse was damaged and his seawall lroken but ''we are
" It IS clear to me . that ' higher tban everyone else - the heigllt •ved us." Meredith :
time for these and other lost his tea house and a third of his patio to the stonn.
cntlcal Issues cannot be
divided between my post of
QUOTE OF 'l1IE DAY: Prallie Du Chien, Wis., county •
duty In Waslnngton and the official Robert G. DDimaD, demanding state removal of Ill
camp1ngn trail "
rattlesnakes from his OOIUlty alter the legislature banned 1 $1- ;
Eastland sa1d, "Matters of a-bead bounty on the reptiles. "1 upect 1 quick reply. U 1 !
th1s nature require a ehmce don't get it, I'm golnc to get a bag of timber rattlers and go •
- and I must choose to over to Madison and d~p them right on the Senate floor." - •
remam at my po~t to
I
represent tllose who have
GUMPSRS: Normu Maller waa a hoot and Tr-aman Capote i
placed tlieir trust In me "
was billed as "song leader and cblef uaher" Tuelday u 1 '
Senate Democratic Leader crowd of celebrities turned out for an "oltl.fuhlmed revival ,
Robert Byrd, told of camp meeting" In New York to celebrate Random House's •
Eastland's deoslon, SBid be publication of lltllaon Rllder'• new novel, "Miracle" ... :
was "sorry and sw-prised to Gernian actor Karl J~• morrled model MarJie ikbmlll
see him rebrlng."
Tueaday at Na11111u in the Balvunaa ... Della Mutla Jr., son of '
In 1941, the Grand Coulee the singer and a three-year veteran of the pro temll tolD", 11u •
Dam on the Columbia River 1 signed to play for the Plloenlx Racquets of the Wtrld T111111 t
began producing electric Tennis league ... Nllllllll added to the Olear show cut: Furab
power for the Pacific Faweelt-Majon, director KIDI VIdor and Geae Jtelly, who will
star in a dance production....
Northwest.
I
f

Wednesday' s Games
Cleveland at Boston
Ch•cago at New Jer sey
Los Angeles at Hou $fon
wa sh ngton at New Or lea ns
Ph1la at Kansas C1IY
Buffalo at Seattle
Thursday 's Games
Denver at San Anton•o
Portland at Milwaukee
lnd•ana a t Gold en State
New York at Phoen x

I No games schedu led)

International
league
Umled Press International
Hockey

North

W l T Pis GF GA

Saginaw
Kalama
PI Huron
Flml

37 22
31 27
31 27
30 29

Muks

23 39

10 84 320
13 75 282
11 73 275
10 10 317

South

23 6
258
288
329

9 55 247 270

Campbell Conference
W L T Pis GF GA
Pi!lf!"ICk DIVISIOn
W L T Pis Ft Wayne3.4 20 14 82 263 254
NY Isl anders
42 16 13
97 Toledo
28 26 15 71 281 273
Phllad elph•
40 18 13
93 Mllwau
22 31 15 59 214 249
Atl an ta
28 25 18
7A
Tuesday's Result
NY Rangers
2" 32 13
61 Kalamazoo 4, Muskegon 3
Smythe D1V1S10n
Wednesday's Games
W L T P h Port H uron al Grand Rapids
11
27
26
17
Ch1cago
19 38 15
53 Flmt at Fort Wayne
Vancouver
15 36 20
so Td1edo al Milwaukee
Colorado
17 42 12
46
Thursday's Game
St Louis
15 46 9
39 Toledo at Kalamazoo
M•nnesota

PER BAG

Whitney 11 Jth 21 po111ts
In tile consolallon game.
J1m Ba ll ey and Hollis
Copeland l'()I]Jbmed for 41
pomts and Rodney Duncan
gu1ded a relentless Rutgers
offense lo lead the Scarlet
Kmt:.hls over GL'O rgetown , 8572, for a third-place flmsh In
the tourney
Batley, who scored easily
un s~ver a l h1gh, a rc lnn ~
passes thrown by Duncan,
scored 17 of hiS '1:/ points 111
the operung half to lead
Rutgers to a 49-24 lead at the
break Copeland, w1th 12
pomts at the half , flmslwd

Looghorns he ld a 54-J!J lead at
the half
The pattern con unued 111
the second half and when
State adJusted Its defense to
stop KriV a c ~ and Baxter,
John Moor e 122 pomts, seven
assistS ) and Tyrone Branyan
(14 pomts, SIX rebounds)
began h1ttmg foc Te xas
W1th 14 mmutes remamlng
'" the game, the Longhorns
had buill an msurmounUible
69-45 lead
Hawkeye Whitney topped
NCSUite w1t11 22 pomts, but 16
after the game was out of
rea ch Tiny Pmder backed

With 14.
~·or Georgetown , J ohn
Duren SC&lt;&gt;red 23 points and
Cra1g ESherlck added 15
""It was a mce Unlc game,"
said I,emons, 1nserung a
c1gar between a toothy grm
' I m not so smart, I m not
respon Sible
for
wha t
ha ppened out tllere tomghl If
l was so smart, I'd be In
another bustness '
Wolfpa ck Coach Norm
S!oWJ said, "'f dldn'l thmk
they'd get layup after layup
like U1at so I stayed w1th the
press Don 't be crllJcal of my
club but c01npllmenlar) of
Texas ' '

Pete expects 3,000th hit early in May
BY Sl BURICK
I had to do to make lt was
Sportt Editor
stay healthy Thank God, I
Dayton Dally News
have"
CINCINNATI - Pete Rose,
How rare 1s the 3,000
always totally aware of his achievement 1 Well , cons1der
personal statistics, has 11 that the only other active
f1gured down to the exact Nationa l Leaguer wuh a
date and the game By the chance IS the Cardmals' Lou
time the 1978 National Brock, who'll be 39 111 June.
League season 1s a month old, and has 2,834. Brock broke
Pete expects to be slanumng mto the majors 111 1962, a year
out his 3,1100th major league before Rose d1d But 11h1le
hit, wh1ch would mstall h•m Rose continues to be a 200-Jutm a ~ ' ltneup " reached per-year man. Brock' s
prevwusly by only 12 players production the last three
'" 110 years of professional years has shrunk to 163, 150
baseball
and 133
Rose, who w1ll be startmg
In the American League,
h~&gt; 16th season on Apr1l 6,
onl) Carl YastrzemskJ of the
smce breakmg 111 w1lh the Boston Red Sox, who's 38, has
Reds as a non·ro~ier rookte m a shot He comes 1nto his 18th
1963, closed out1977 w1th 2,966 season w1th 2,724 h1ts
hase hits 111 h1s personal
Consistent 300 hitter Rod
aecount
Cre w, of the Mmncsota
Personal
sta ti stic Twms, younger than the
awareness? What other ball others at 32, 1s still gomg for
player would know that hiS No 2,000 w1th 1,897
15th year Apnl ballin g
More remarkable, tt seem~
average 1s 308? Pete knows to th1s reporter, are the great
'If I happen to get off to a players of the past who d1dn't
hot start, I could even get the make the 3,0110 class There
3,1100th m Apnl," Rose ad- were, of course, extenuatmg
VIses The 1dea of gettmg 34 ctrcumstances m the great
hit s 111 21 games agamst the Ted Wtlhams' case He lost
kmd of p1tchmg that Will be nea rly ft ve years whale
offe red by Hou&gt;lon San servmg In Un cle Sam s
Franc1sco and. Los Angeles m Ma nnes Amazmgly, such
no way fazes this 36 year--old heroes as Frank Robtnson ,
who ha s never lo~t as much Rogers Horn sby, At Sunas an ounce of his boyish mons, Frankae Frtsch, Mel
enthusiasm
ott, Charlie Gehrmger and
'More likely, though, " he George S1s!er also faded to
confesses, bowmg to stark make It
rea lism, "1t'll happen m the
All on thiS list but Robmson
first week of May I hope I get are m the Hall of Fame, and
11 at Riverfront Stad1wn m Frankie IS a vniuul cmch to
front of 50,0110 people "
make It as soon as he
W1th a Wistful look 111 h1s becomes eligible There's an
eye,
Pete
s uggests, excuse for Babe Rutll,too He
"Wouldn't It be great 1! No spent the early years ol hls
3,000 was a game-w111mng career as a pitcher before
hll '" Only Rose would be swJtchmg to the outfield to
thmk111g 1n terms of an even become the greatest home
more
mem o rabl e run hitter- of his tune He
achievement. one beyond the f1mshed With 2,873 llfetJme
plain, unvarnished , hils
statistical bit
Consider the hll totals of
The Reds w1ll be coming some other sti ll-curre nt
home from a three-game tnp veteran oatsmen of renown
to New York on May I They Rusty Staub, 2,189, Bert
play two games around a day Campanens, 2,022. Willie
off With Philadelphia, then McCovey, 2,020, W1Ille
start a four-game, three-day Stargell, 1,911
senes w1th Montreal at
So this 3,000-hlt club that
Riverfront
Pete Rose IS approachmg 1s
"I'll probably get It aga111st the height of exclusJvJty Yet
the Expos," Pete volunteers
hear thiS "In a way, thr1llmg
as
the 3,000 figure w111 be, 1
Rose Witnessed one 3,1100th
don't
think It's as Important
hit The great Henry Aaron
got his tn Cmctnnatl Pete to me - at least, not yet - as
also remembers how thrilled settmg the major league
he was to read about No 3,0110 record last year for a switchfor by·now retired conr hitter "
FrankJe Fnsch set the
temporaries like Wtlhe Mays,
the late Roberto Clemente standard In his years with the
New York G1ants a nd St
and AI Kallne
" When Wlllle g0t No 3,0110, Lou1s Cardmals as a
I remember tellmg myself all sometimes - rlghthand ed ,
sometimes - lelth and ed
batter Wllh 2,880 Pete bashed
No 2,88lm St LoUJs last J uly
25
"In this record, f stand
WORK PARTY
Pres1dent John Hood of the alone," Peter says wtth
Middleport Youth League unconcealed pr1de Th1s
announces a work party for
Saturday at the Middleport
park. Everyone Interested 111
getting the ball fields 111 shape
for the season JS asked to be
at the park at 9 a m

•Parts
( ,. Plus

means, of course, that he 1s
about to become history 's
f1rst switch-hitter wllh 3 000
hilS
Also on hls mind 1s the Jdea
of beating Ty Cobb's mark of
mne 200-hlt years, wh1ch Pete
lied With hiS 204 !OtaJJn 1977
' Do you realize that man
was m baseball 22 years' "
Pete asked 'I'm going to get
mme m 16 And ll should have
been 15 Players' strike In the
sprmg of 1972 took eight
games off the schedule, or I'd
have had him by now " Pete
settled for 198 that year
In all fa•mess, it should be
noted, however, that Cobb 1s
the on ly member of the 4,0110h•l club with a total of 4,191
While Rose ISn't exa&lt;1ly
renowned as a dtstunrc
hitter, h1s 143 career homers
stand liS a Nut10nal Lcugue
reeord for swltCh·htlters
Aetually , he IS prouder of
his two-base hll total of 521
He led the league 111 lh•s
re&gt;pcct m 1974-75 76 'I ve
done
that
on
ag gressiveness," he says
'Every yea r, I hustle about n
dozen smgles mto doubles
Isn't ll dJsgraceflll that
when 1 go for twu
I st ill have the ele
ment of surprtse on my
s1de' Dut I'll never try to run
on a n outfielder hke
(Ho uston's) Cesar Cedeno
He's a lways aware"
H1s late dad, Pete Rose,
Sr , unplanted the Idea of
shootmg for 200 hits ~k m
1965 That wa ijo-l)le 1)1
l'ete
wa s elected 1when lhe
players d1d the voting ) as the
Nut10nal League's startmg
Ali.Star second baseman
'' Dad sa1d, Look, you're
h1ttmg good You've made
the All -Star team That
proves you don't have to hit
home runs to be a star If you
get smgles and doubles, you'll
score a lot of runs with hitters
hke Frank Robmson and
Vada Pmson behmd you ' I
was developmg my role as a
leadoff hitter at the hme "
Rose knows that awareness
of h1s personal •tats h• s led
some unthlpkmg persons to
rder to him as an egomamac
For thts, he has an answer
' I'm the only guy who sa ys
every sprmg , 'my goal ts 200
hlls ' Why's that such an ego
trlp 9 ' '
Ans wert ng
has
own
queslwn, Pete exp lam s
' knowmg where I st•nd i~
the department that I do the
best m helps make me a team
man ffl ca ngct200hJts from
the lea doff pos1llon and score
100 runs, my team can't be a
loser If I balled third, my
goal would be 1011 runs hatted

department It 's hke u man
knuwtng huw much money
he s got rn the bank "
""What If you get Nn 2,999
Wllh a game &gt;tllll o be played
on the road ' Wuuld yuu Sit It
out '
"No If I'm healthy 1 want
to ploy I'd never rlsh losing
my momentum Besides, you
CfJn lusc the pennont by nne
gnmc Hc nll'mbcr , that
happened to us 111 1964 I'd
hate fo1 us to lmic a gamo
because I was on the bench
and then lose the J"mnant by
one "
l'hat kmd uf egomamac,
Pete Rose ISn't

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The A th em Co unty
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296 Second Sf
Pom eroy , Oh1o

Ill

"I not only know my own
st.ats, I always know who's
Iea dfng m hits, runs and
doubles Those are my

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�5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednellday, Morch 22,1978

Inventor criticizes
'explosive' techniques

Today's

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor
TAMPA, Fla. (UP! )- If I were Leon Spinks, I'd be a little
worried right now.

CINCINNATI (U PI )
Coaches who insist that
at hletes ' 'train explosively"
are "guilty of nothing less
than criminal malpractice,"
complains the Inventor or the
popular " Nautilus" strength~
buildin~ equipment.
Arthur Jones, wh ose
"Na utilus '' machines are
used by high school, college

it. Well, that style of training
is nothing less than criminal
malpractice.''
Jones con d e mn~d. lor
example, dropping a 30().
pound barbe ll three feet and
having an athlete catch it.
He said many people don't
realize how much impact an
object has when it is dropped .

Not only because Ule World Boxing Council stripped me of
my title , Ule landlord came down on me for being behind In my
room rent, or the police hauled me in for driving Ule wrong
" Do you kn ow how far an
way on a one-way street.
and pro teams in severa l airplane has w drop In be
Those are the obvious reasons.
A much more important reason lor Spinks to be concerned Is sports, Tuesday critic ized smashed ?" he asked. "Just
be doesn't seem t.o be getting proper guidance or direction "explosive" • body-building rour and one-half inches.
"And then you've got an
techniques that emphasize
from anyone.
athlete
being told t.o catch a
s
udden
bursts
of
energy
He's In a world completely foreign t.o him, one Into which he
JOO.pound
barbell dropped
aga
inst
massive
resistance
.
was thrown without ever being prepared, alter only eight
J ones, featured speaker at . Ulree feet. All you're doing is
professional fights, and now his amateurishness in dealing
wilh situations ordinarily confronting every heavyweight a University of Cincinnati just ya nking your joints
"S ports
Me di c ine loose."
champion has him totally bewildered.
Although
J o ne s'
Before beating Muhanunad Ali for Ule title, Spinks told me Symposium,'' recommended
he didn 't see Ulat much difference between lighting .In the "s low, even.paced" ' 'N autilus "- (so ·named
repetitions that gradually because the equipment's cam
amateur and professional ranks .
"The only thing I see is that when you're lighting in the pros, bring a person through set resembles the chambered
Nautilus mollusk) exercisers
of
res istan ce
you can hold more than you can ill the amateurs, you can get s tages
have been popular ever since
overloads.
away with more,'' he said-, meaning inside Ule ring .
"Some people are going he invented them back in 1948
- Spinks already has discovered that even heavyweight
in a Tulsa , Okla., YMCA,
around saying, 'You ' ve got to
champions can't get away with everything.
Insofar as having his title taken away by the WBC becanse tra in explos ively ,"' sa id some people say newer
he faUed to negotiate ;,in good faith" t.o meet Ken Norton in his Jones . " And there are ·devices a nd techniques are
thousands of well-meaning , better.
first title defense, Spinks was merely a pawn .
Jones violently disagreed .
The WBC is a loosely organized group with no real legal but ignorant co;:~r hf's tn-i ng
standing. As Ali has said many times, when it comes to
recognizing who actually is the world champion, it's public
opinion tha t counts, not the opinion of any one group such as
the WBC .
Smith called an inability to
YUMA , Ariz . ( UPI) Remember when the World Box:ing Association "vacated"
Roger
Craig,
who
had
a
"communicate effectively"
Ali's title in 1965 because he insisted on giving Sonny Li~ton a
with
his players, coaching
losing
record
as
a
pitcher
and
return match?
no
experience
as
a
leader,
is
staff
and
management.
Harold Conrad, representing Ali at the time, remembers
What
Sm ith ,
whose
attending a WBA meeeting in Norfolk, Va ., where the action Ule new manager of the San
appointment last year by
Diego Padres.
was taken.
Alvin Dark was fired as Kroc paved the way lor Buzzy
" A guy from Massachusetts got up at Ule meeting and said,
Tuesday
by Bavasi to resign as general
'I vote In take All 's title away,'" recalls Conrad. "Then a guy ma nager
manager, meant, is that Dark
Executi
ve
Vice
President
from North Carolina said, 'I second the motion.' When is the
didn't
consult with him on
Ballard
Smith,
owner
Ray
last time you ever heard or a fight being held in North
player
derisions. Smith had
Kroc's
son-in·law,
for
what
Curolina?
" I tried to tell the WBA people they couldn't do it, that lhe
public wouldn 't ho)d still for it , but they stripped Ali or his title,
anyway."
Conrad turned out In be right. The public never accepted the
WBA 's champion then nor will it accept the WBC's cl)ampion

He said comparing his
system with others "is like
asking is a 717 jet better than

a log for transportation."
" I don't think this system is
the best," he declared, " I
know it is. However, I'm not
saying it's the ultimate, but
we 're doing 10 times, maybe
50 times the research
anybody else is."
Jones also contended his
type of exercising was good
lor all muscles and for ail
sports, " except maybe
checkers.!•

"Whether yOu 're man,
woman or gorilla, you have
the same muscles and you
have t.o develop them," he
said. "I'm not saying I can
make an elephant out of a
human being, but I can take
him to his potential."
Jones, wbo has been ca lled
a "genius," put in a colorful
appearance
at
the
symposium . He refused to tell
a reporter his age or his
education, insisting that "tbe
only thing that matters is
what a man says."

Reds opener sellout

Craig new San Diego manager
no baseball background when
Kroc moved him into the San
Diego fron t office.
Craig was Dark's pitching
coach when Smith named
him to become San Diego's
fifth manager . He joined the
Padres in their first season,
in 1969, and except for a twoyear stint with Houston. he
has been a part or the San

Tax incentive bill stirring

Sutton says players
confident of victory
United Press lpternatlolllll Sulton expressed coofidence pressure defense against the
Razorback s,
Arkansas didn 't make it ~ his team's ability to face quicker
howev~r.
despite
the fact it
the
challenge.
easy on itself on the way to
''Ocr basketball team truly was that defense which cut
Ule NCAA semifinals, just
managing to hang on Sunday believes we can win the down Arkansas' sizable leads
and beat tough Cal State· national championShip,'' said against Cal State-Fullerton
Sutton. 1'We are very and UCLA In its previous
Fullerton.
games.
But things will be even coofident.
"We probably don 't have
come
in
four
years
"We've
more difficult Saturday when
the·
quickness to pressur~
from
nothing
to
a
program
the sixth-ranked Razorbacks
Arkansas
all game long,"
that
has
great
respect
across
take on top-ranked Kentucky
in the semifinals of Ule NCAA the country," he cootinued. said Hall. " Those three
tournament in st. Louis. In "And we've proved Ulat our 'triplets ' are outstanding
the other game, Notre Dame league · is the fastest offensive performers and
laces No . 9 Duke. The improving conference in we're going to have to shut
them down.''
winners will meet Monday college basketball."
In the other semifinal,
He
said
that
before
night lor the championship.
Notre
Dame is looking lor the
Southwest
Conference
One of the obstacles facing
Arkansas Is ·psychological representative Texas won chanc.e to do what no other
Kentucky has long been a Ule NIT title Tuesday night. team in NCAA history has
The Razorhacks are led by done - win the national title
powerhouse in college
basketball while Arkansas is quick guards Marvin Delph in foot ball and basketball in
the
first
Southwest and Ron Brewer and forward the same academic year.
Notre Dame, which has lost
Conference team in 22 years Sidney Moncrief, ali of wbom
in
the regional semifinals the
receieved
All-America
to have a chance t.o make the
past
six years, faces a tough
mention
this
year.
NCAA finals . Neverllleiess,
team
which
Kentucky Coach Joe B. Duke
UP! Coach of the. Year Eddie
Hall doesn't see his bigger manhandled Villanova, 21-6,
Diego organization under team using a full-court to reach the final lour.
lour managers - Preston
Gomez, Don Zimmer, John
McNamara and Dark.
Smith announced · Dark's
firing Tuesday morning and
said Craig was being
CINCINNATI (UP!) ~ Another Natlooal League
appointed interiln manager
opener In ClncluoaU, another student. Tbe CincluoaU
with a one-year contract.
Reds, traditional hosts of the National League season
. " It was the shock of my
opener, announced Tuesday that the April 6 opener
life ," Said Craig of his
agatost the Houston Astros bas been sold out.
appointnlent, "but it was the
Opeotng Day is treated like a holiday In baseball·
best shock I've ever had . My
happy.CtnclonaU, where the Ursi pro baseball team
main purpose now will be to
was formed, and where 51,884keat Riverfront Stadium
get the players totally
ts virtually always assured of beiog sold out for the
relaxed so Uley can perform
opener.
to the best of their
.call8bilities."

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statebouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Legislation proposed by the
Rhodes administration
calling lor tax incentives for
industries e:~pBnding to tbe
inner cities is stirring in the
Ohio Senate.
But indications are Ulat
progress wiU be slow, as
majority Democrats try to
see that tax breaks in fact
create jobs and school
districts don't lose money .
.The Senate Ways and
Means Conunittee began a
study Tuesday or a revised
version of a bill granting tax
abatement to industries
expanding operations in inner
cities, and discovered Ulere
are a number or rough edges
to smooth out.
The conunittee also heard
testimony on a House-passed
bill exempting from state
taration materials held in
foreign· trade zones for
exhibition or assembly.
That measure is aimed at
spurring development of an
international trade mart
featuring a permanenl
exhibition
or
heavy
manufacturing parts and
eqUipment at Brook Park
adjacent to Cleveland

•

'

•'

88

00

•

•

\

Angels have.good
1-2 pitching punch
but that's all
By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
When you 1ook past Frank
Tanana and Nolan Ryan, who
combine to
give
th e

California Angels perhaps the
best 1·2 pitching punch in the
major leagues, a nd view the
mediocre arms tha t comprise
the rest of the California staff
pes si mism
replaces
optimism.
Annoyed Ulat the San Diego
Padres sent a B Squad to play
Ule Angels' A Squad three
weeks ago, Genera l Manager
Buzzie
Bavasi
plotted

revenge by agreeing t.o play a
California A squad against
three college teams while
sending a B Squad to play the
San Diego Padres in early
April.
However, Tuesday, Bavasi
noted the discrepancy when
the Angels' had the problem
of building a staff around
Tanana and Ryan.
" We have too

many
pitching problems to split the

squads for those days, "
Bavasi said.

He made his announcement
after Don Aase and Ken Brett
combined in an eight-hitter
and Willie Mays Aikens
·doubled in two runs in the
Angels' &gt;-I triumph TUellday
over Cal Poly Pomona.
On other Cactus and
Grapefruit fronts:
Ron Cey drove in two runs
with a double and a sacrifice
fly , leading the Los Angeles
Dodgers t.o a 6-1 victory over
the Atlanta Braves
Homers by Ken Singelton and
Terry Harlow led the
Baltimore Orioles to an 11·7
triumph over the Texas
Rangers ... Tbe Kansas City
!Wyals rallied for an 11·10 win

over the New York Yankees
on Darrell Porter's twCH"un
homer in Ule ninth.
Ron LeFlore hit two
homers as the ~trait Tigers
to pped the Philadelphia
Phillies, 6-5 ... Bob Davis'
two-run homer enabled the
San Diego Padres to defeat

or

. Suitable for
Jogging &amp; Tennis
For Your
Summer Casuals
Sundresses &amp;
Tiered Skirts

~ . THE FAB.RIC SHOP .
~ Second SL
Pomeroy, 0.

returned in connection with

the fire.

ques-

SNAP·CUT 8"
ANVIL PRUNER

By BERNARD BRENNER

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes

March 14, 1978
Tuesday T·i "ipllcate
Le,1gue

Pis.

Shamrock Motel

64

David Brickles
. Genera l Contractor
Royal Crown Cola
Mark V

47
42
28

57

Royal Oak Park

Franc i s Florist
26
High Indivi dual game Nora Rice 182; Pat Carson
181; Beverly Hens let 178.
High ser ies - Pa Carson
496; Nora Ri ce, Annette
Phalln 482 ; Bev Hensley 476.
Team high game - Royal

The lawyers, who said
Smith look the Fifth on
advice of his counsel, said in
their motion that witnesses
have to show a "real and
Par k 471 .
appreciable" risk of sell· Oak
Team high series - Roya l
incriminittion In order to take Oak Park t333.
the Fifth.
Last week, it was reported
that club owners look tbe
Fifth about 1,000 times in
depositions.
•
The fire, which kiUed 165
people and injured 50 olhers
By United Press International
last May 28 in nearby
· Tuesday
Southgate, Ky., has triggered
Baseball
some $2 billion in civil .. San Di ego _: Fired Matiager
Al).lih Dark and replac:ed him
lawsuits filed by victims and on
an Interim basis
wit h
re latives of victims. The pi tching coach Roger Cra ig;
lea gue pitch ing coach
lawsuits have been lumped minor
Chu ct&lt; Estrada wi ll replace
together In one case, but tbe Cra.lg .
St . Louis - Sent to minors
trial is not expected to begin pitchers
Earl Bass and Joe
until next, year.
Edelef'l; cetc her--- Terry Ken .
Meanwhile, a grand jury is nedy; Inf ielders Ron Farkas.
Tom Herr, M i ke Ramsey and
continu~ an investi~ation to Manny Casti llo ; and outfielder

Sports
transactions

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT STORE

Army - Named Bi ll Permak·
off · o f St. John's as · head
ba seba ll coach ,

Soccer

Houst on (NASL) Sign ed
mid f ielder Ag ust in Sanchez of
Mexico Ci t y and goa lie David
Benner of the Univers ity of

Houston.

Football

Washington ~ Signe d runn i ng
back Jim Kiick, safefies A I
Cowans and ~ei th Jenkins and
runn ing back John Henson .
Los Angeles N am ed as
co n d it ion in g coach Clyde

· Phone 742-2100
Prices Effective Thru Sat., March 25th

Evans,

.1 lb. GOLDEN ISLE

VAC. PAK SLICED BACON•••••••••••• !.k.g;. $1.29

22T·M )

( 59144-47

F~ENCH

CITY

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HAM
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SMOKED CALLIE
HOME MADE HAM SALAD •••••••••••••• ~.s:. 99c
6 to 8 lb. average

J .S H.P., • ·cycle Brigg' e ng ine . Feature\ Pu ll 'N Go s1cHting. Hos
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Self-Storing
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Or ange vinyl c=ooted ;rips. 19T

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HOMELITE 10" GAS
CHAIN SAW

OHIO COBY

By Pc . $1.59

10

LONGHORN CHEESEsnc. $1.69 BAKING

~~~K~~A~~RGAR';~sE 69e·

doubie and homer led the
Houston Astros over the
Cincinnati Reds, !;.1 .. . Ninth·
inning single s by Scott
Thompson a nd Hect.or Cruz
drove In the tying and
winning runs in the Chicago

· LB

~

lb. IDAHO

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POTATOES .~.".~.

5 lb. FLORIDA

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PINK GRAPEFRUIT. ~~~.

129

89e

ONL¥~995

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SILADIUM
[~!Al§§
[Ri~~(GJ§
SAVE UP TO 20"/o

1 lb. BOOTH OCEAN PERCH ••••••••• :~~~.!l.59

decision over the

Cleveland Indians.

16 oz. SWEET BRIER

Wayne Nordhagen's bases-

filled· double in Ule fourth

Nylon Une

inning keyed a £our-rwt rally

t.o lilt the Chicago White Sox
a 5-4 win over the Toronto
Blue Jays ... Ellis Valentine
hit a thre~un homer as the
Montreal· Expos beat the
Minnesota Twins, 10-6 .. . The
B"rewers

The powerful 1ool tllot weigh• only
21'llbs. New, improved spool de•ign .

lost

9

0

000 002 022-4 16 0

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Eosy ·fill funne l top. see-throug h
c=orrotiOn·reliiiOnf pOI)'ethylene

Circle or Mtment. PS!

coniainer. Mol,:f• l ·gallon. 6621

SOLID PACK .TOMATOES.·............. 2 Cans 79$
46

Handy , low pr-iced 1.6 cu. inch chain ~aw, Rugged and depend.
able. 10" g\Hde bar and outomotic chain oiling. Llghtwelght1
startino. With e xclusive SAff-T-TIP. XL

White or Decorjltive
TISSUE
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1S t;~ oz . V·IE"i"TI

A.dit.ntable c-ontrol chontts ~
~on, fine mist to full
spray instantly 563C

J

SJT. 3327.

85$
.....

INSTANT NESCAFE COFFEE........... ~:~ •.s3.29

CHILl WITH ,BEANS •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 4SC

w0tt1 ,~

~9

weren't able to see him."
Mrs. Holliday glanced out a
kitchen window Tuesday and
spotted Keith's blue cap In
Ule pool, 10 feel from the
house, Akers said. She then
called a neighbor, who looked
in the pool and confirmed her
fears .
The Ho!Udays had been
buoyed recently by hopes a

Tuesday ,

oz. DEL MONTE

MEIGS ACE HARDWARE
MEIGS PLAZA, MIDDLEpoRT,

.,

OH~

sullen

Triblme, Detrolt F'ree Press,

l.os Angeles Times, Miami
Herald and Atlanta Journal·
Constitulion. The ads offered
a $10,000 reward for
information on Kellll .
Area store windows and
bus advertise ments bore
pictures or the blond-haired
boy, offering Ute same $t0,000

re\lo·ard.
Kentucky police were
unable to lind any solid leads,
altholll\h they administered
lie detec tor tests

s uspet•ls . The
themselves

few miles south of Cincinnati.
He wasn't seen alive ugain .
That
night,
as
temperatureS nudged zero,

consider the legislation and
possibly make moves under
existing law t.o help tl)e
farmers .
Bergland said the president
directed olliclals to draft cost
and economic impact ligures
on several potentia l new
steps, including a scaled·
down version of a land·

'
LEBANON RESULTS
LEBANON, Ohio (UP!) Jug 's Knight nosed out three
challengers Tues&lt;)ay night in
a photo-finish t.o win the
featured $),400 eighth race at
Lebimon Rac'eway.
The winDer, driven by Jim
Conover, covered the mile·in

2:11 and returned $5, $4 and
~. Hal Now Tux finished
second and paid $10.80 and $5,
while Caramel B showed and
kicked back ~.80.
Lil Bea Buck and Noble
Mite teamed up for a 4-7
nightly do.uble combination
Ulat was worth $94.20.
A orowd of 1,368 wagered
$147,449.

retirement program which is
part of the Senate farm bill.
The agriculture secretary
said there is a 50-50 chance
Carter will approve a
moderate plan under which
farmers would be paid for
idling part of their grain
acreage.
Bergland
said
the
administration also has
authority to buy surplus
wheat in the open market and
t.o expand its existing grain
reserve program.
The · Senate measure,

tacked on t.o a minor Houseapproved bill deuilng with
ra is ins, now goes , to an
expec ted Senate·Housc
conference committee.
House
Agri cu ltu re

The monitors at Rlverby
lor this weekeod wtll be
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Murray lor the Salurday 1
ttll 3 p.m. lour a0d Mrs.
Bruce Atk.losoo and Mrs.

Joseph Stiles lor the late
tour. On Suaday lhe early
duty wtll be shared by Mrs.
John Halliday ·and Mrs.
Reoe Broyles: the 3 till 5
p.m; shift by Mrs. Elliott
and Mrs. Tom Tope.

: ?? ::? : &lt;: :: :

LIMITED TIME ONLY!
Sifadium sla 1ntess IS a
beautiful metal that looks
like white gOld. But •l's
stronger Weii!rS better.
And .rs tarnish-prool· Best
of all. it costs much less
Jhan gold I

.......

~
~.

MAtN ·

underwent

polygraph tests.
Finally , the

Hollldays

culled in WluHen to hx1k (or

KciU1 fulltime .

meet today to consider 100 percent o( purity - would
requesting a conference on depeod on how mnch land the
the L'Omplex Senate package . farmer was wiliin ~ to leave
The Senate approved its idle .
The Senate also tacked on
farm bill by a 67-26 vote alter
a
n
amendment by Sen.
combining two a lternate proGeorge
McGovern, D.S.D.,
dllction..Cutba_ck progrums by
Sens. Herman Tulnwdge , 1). raising IU78 support loan
Ga., a nd Robert Dole, R· rates and boosting Um target
Kan. , into one package Hnd prices which determine how
adding an
amendment much direct support subsidy
raising t978 crop • upport loan payment farmers gel.
'llte wlmat support loan
rates and target prices for
rate,
for exa1nple, wnuld rise
grains and cotton.
from
the t11rrcnl ,2.25 a
The produ cti on-curbing
direct
the bushel to $2.115. The current $:1
programs
Agriculture Department to a bushel wheat target price
pay farmers $4.2 billion to would go UIJ to ~i.55.
Sen. ·Edrnund Muskie, Didle up to 46 million acres of
Maine
, complaining that
grains, cotton and soybeans.
nobody
could calc ulate the
Tabnadge said the pian
cost
of
the
combint.'d Doi~­
would boost farm prices t.o
Talmad~cM
cG
ovcrn
ph1ns
add about $8 billion In farm
to fuud buy ers and taXpayers,
income .
Under Dole's bill. which called the bill a ''three·
has strong backing from headed monster ."
'l'he Dole bill alone, he said,
farm strikers, i ndividua l
could
raise food costs for a
gram. and cOlton farmers
fami
ly
or four $1:10 to $200 a
would decide on their own
year
.
Taxpayer
costs could
levels of Lncome support. For
be
in
Ule
billions,
he said .
eac h farm, the leve l of·

18 Lb.with
'Capacity
: :;: :::=::=:: 1·~~::r
~
wastl8f

MINISTERS TAKE PART
A three hour Commuulty
Good Friday worship service
will be held at Trinity
Church, Pom eroy . The seven
last words ·of Christ will be
used as the theme. ·Several
ministers will be taking part
in the ser vice a nd there will
be special music. The public
Astros s Reds 1
is invited. The ministers in
Houston 200 020 001 -5 tO o cha rge Will Include Rev.
Cln.
OCiO tOO 001)-1 8 2.
Floyd Shook, 12 noon; Rev .
Dixon,
Andujar
( 4).
Samblto {7) and Herrmann ; Wilbur Hilt, 12 :25 p.m.; Rev.
Moskau , Cap llla (7) , Borbon William Middlesworth, 12:50
(8), Sarmiento (9) and
Bench, Plummer (5) . W - p.m .; Rev. Richard Thomas,
Di xon . L - Moskau. HR- 1: 15 p.m.; Rev . Dwight
Houston, Wa tsOn.
Zavita, 1:40 p.m.; Rev.
&amp;bert Bumgarner, 2:1l!&gt; p.m.
and Rev. &amp;bert Persons at
SUNRISE SERVICES
2:30 p.m.
Easter sunrise services will
be held at 6 a.m. at the
Middleport
Independent
Holiness Church, Fourth and
Lincoln Sts., Middleport. The
Rev. O'Dell Mardey, pastor, CANDLELIGHT SERVICE
CARPENTER - A can·
invites the public.
dlellght communion service
will be held at 7 p.m . Friday
College Blsketb.all Result s
at
the Mt. Union Church near
By United Preu International
Carpenter. Sunday sunrise
Tournament Results
National lrivitatlonal Tourney
service will be at 6:15 a.m.
New York City
and evening service at 7 p.m.
Championship G1me
Texas 101 , N.C. St . 93
with the Rev. Dale Berry,
Consollllon Game
Ottway,
as guest speaker.
Rutgers 85, Georgetown 12

YOUR RING
ONt YCOSTS $49 .95
WHEN YOU BRING
THISAO IN!

11•

to nine

Hullidays

Committee members were to support target prices - up t.o

\~?:-~:::;

Fabric Cycte

Model LA49

Jig 18-lb. capacity
0 Heavy Duly Spiral Ramp
Agitator-for big wash
loads
Knit fabric cycle
Three agitation/spin speed
selections
Five-position water saver

with "Re-select" setting
Fi ve·position w"ater

SPECIAL

temperature control including 3 Permanent
Press settings
0 Bleach dispenser
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0 Porcelain e na mel top and
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Lint tilter.and recirculation
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Fabric softener dispenser
(optional accessory)
o Backed by Nationwide
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Yot. ran be

LILIES - MUMS -: AZALEAS

7V. oz. KRAFT

MACARONI &amp;CHEESE DINNER ••••••••• 2/69c

a

Michael Holliday told
reporters, " All I want t.o say
is it's been a trying time and
my wife is really tore up. I
want to thank each one of you
lor the assistance you've
given in trying iu locate
Keilll.
"Thank you," he added,
trying to hold ~ark tears.
Alexandria fi reme n
removed th.e body, taken to
the
Hamilton
County
coroner's office lor a n
autopsy
Wedn es da y
morning.
Keith left his home 11 u.m .
Dec. 21, to watch construction
work In Om neighborhood, a

&lt;.,tJIP.

'' 1''·

WASHER-DRYER

$48995

P AIR

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CORSAGES - CUT A.OWERS
ARRANGEMENTS
PERMANENT MEMORIAL A.OWERS

Pomeroy ·Flower Shop
Mrs. Millard Van Meter
106 Butternut Ave.
Pomero·y, o.
Phone 992-2039 or 9'12-5721
We accept all major credit cards ' and we wire
flowers everywhere.

.

sure.
serv1ce

"hr ,'lnniHHI

Symbol of hope

SLICED PEACHES •••••••••••••••••• ~ ••••••••••• 65$

·-·····
planh oH to a strong start.
Nitrogen balanced diet. 201bs.

move comes amid

administration would use the
congressiona l recess to

TOMATO JUICE •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.65$
4 Roll

!With Tho
Coupon)

For all pur~e·heavy duty
OUtdoor use. .50 ftet in
lengttt with rounded cor. 16·

The

signs the administration may
embark on its own program
to ease farmers' plight.
Agriculture Secretary Bob
Bergland, alter a meeting
Tuesday with President
Carter,
said
the

oz. HUNTS

6 oz.

Fott rtleose nufrienr. get your

UP! Farm Editor
WASHINGTON (UP!) The Senate, pressed ·by
striking farmers, has voted to
raise farm price supports and
offer producers two methods
ol earning more money by
cutting back 1978 plantings.

CHICKEN. NOODLE SOUP••••••••••:••••••• 2/47c
LEVER ACTION
HOSE NOZZLE

Long Handled 06 .689 .87
Shovels
70018_,.,

'

e nce

103/• oz. CAMPBELLS

Good thru 3-25-78

Waits, Dobson (7), and
Hassey, Kendall (71 ; Burris,
Lamp (6). Hernandez (9) and
Rader, Co. (7) . W - Her.
nandez. L ~ Dobson. HR Chicago, Kingman.

Co••n 3C).76' diom. Diffu&amp;tr pM1
adjustl from heavy to fine spray.

HOMBLm'

ACE fLOWER AND
VEGETABLE FOOD

again Tuesday In the Seattle
Mariners, ~. a nd it was
learned Ra¥ Fosse, projected
as the Mariners' starting
catcher, may have to undergo
surgery for a knee injury.
Carlton Fisk hit a Ulr~un
homer and Ted Cox drove in
two runs with a double and a
sacrifice fly as the Boston
Red Sox defeated the
Pittsburgh Pirates, S-4.
Cubs 61ndians s
Cleve.
000 100 40&lt;f-5
Chi . !NL)

l

Gran Trimmer

to

Milwaukee

8206 )
( 73370

MORGANTOWN,
W.Va .
(UPI ) - A 9lkninute public
television program of United
Mine Workers Union oflicials
explaining provisions of the
ten tali ve coal contract will be
aired in Ohio · before a
ratification vote Is taken .
Ollicials ol station WWVU
said Tuesday the program
features
UMW
Vice
President Sam Church and
UMW economist Don Pierce,
explaining tbe contract to
live rank-and-file coal
miners.
The program, taped in
Morgantown Monday, will be
aired by WWVU tonight and
by other public television
stations in West Virginia,
Ohio, Kentucky and Virginia
Thursday night.

hundreds of volunteers
turned up to search for !he
boy. State police conducted
two major searches and
several less extensive ones In
following days, to no avail.
Aerial photographs of the
neighborhood were taken by
pollee twice.
As days stretched into
weeks, the Hollidays sought
t'Ontrlbutions to buy ads in
Ule New York Times, Chicago

private investigator from
Omaha ,
Neb..
who
specializes in finding missing
per9011s , would turn up a lead
on
their
son .
The
investigator. Donny Whalen ,
began lull~ime on the r ase
Monday .
At a televised pre"1' confer·

Senate okeys support hikes

BOWLING

Mike· Potter .

·FT.
CORD

ALEXANDRIA, Ky . (Ul'l )
- The mysterious three·
month disappearance of
Keith Holliday, brought to the
country's attention by reward
alb in newspapers, ended
somberly Tuellday when Mrs.
Judy Holliday discovered her
6-yeaMid son drowned in the
lamlly swimming pool.
Kentucky State Pollee Lt.
John T . Akers, who
spearheaded an exhall$1ive
Ulree-month search, said the
boy evidently had been in the
frozen above-ground pool
since disappearing Dec: 21.
Although firemen had
searched the four-foot-(!eep
waters, Akers said a layer of
algae at the bottom
"probably was the reason we

explained

Striking mine workers are

'feam

Long search is over

will be

scheduled to vote on Ule latest
contract agreement Friday.

College

the San Francisco Giants, 9..a
Bob Watso n's si ngle ,

Cubs' 6--5

answer

incrimination .''

t.oid him they wished to have a brief discussion in priva te.

ACE REAR DISCHARGE 20-INCH
ROTARY MOWER

The lawyers complained
that at a deposition last week,
Smith "continuously refused
to

determine if any criminal
indictments should be

Standings

incrimination.

tions
· claiming the
privilege against self·

60" TERRY
60" CHINO
40" PLISSE

action ."
After D' Amato made his little speech, the WBA members

"We have decided that because Floyd Patterson is making
these large sums of money , he need fight only once a year."
What Leon Spinks needs, it seems to me, is someone to guide
him and fight for him outside the ring as vigorously as he does
inside it. Someone like Cus D'Amat.o.

uses ·a mendment

capa bil ity and even a snap.on presser foot . Cabinet
carrying case extra. Model 247.

ever

that the Jansuage In Ule bill
limits tax abatement to
industries locating in ooly a
few major cities.
" I Ulink there'll be a lol of
changes before that bill
comes out of eommittee,"
said James A. Duerk ,
direct.or of economic and
community development.
Both the Senate and House
scheduled floor sessions for
1:30 p.m. today.

Former employee

YOUR BASIC GOOD DEAL ON THIS FASHIONMATE

Leon Spinks can use some help desperately and if I were he,
I'd make it my business to have a little talk with someone like
Cus D' Amato.
In an enterprise known lor its lack of integrity, D' Amato
stands out like a rose in a field of weeds. Thoroughly honorable
and free of deceit, D' Amato once stood off the powerful
International Boxing Club and WBA all by himself when the
. WBA tried In strip Patterson of his title.
' jYou people have- threatened to take the title away from
Patterson Uhe doesn't defend it within six months," he said.
'jl'll give you two reasons why you can't. First, with the tax
structure being what it is, Patterson would be fighting for
nothing if he fought within the next six months and nobody, not
you or anybody else, has the legal. aut~;ity to order a fighte.r
t.o light lor nothing.
·
'&gt;,_; w-'
''Secondly ... if you take Patterson OW • all'li~l; ll sue each
of you individually and collectively and I'll win because all of
yo u know you are not a legal body empower ed to take such

Fifteen minutes later, one of their spokesmen annoWiced :

receiving tal breaks should
Hopkins Airport.
Meanwhile, both the Senate furnish employment for
and House held routine floor people who need it most .
sessions dealing with minor
" It's in better condition
bills.
than when it went lnw the
A variety of questions were subcommlttee,' ' said Thomas
raised about the inner city J . Moyer, executive assistant
development measure as it t.o Gov. James A. Rhodes.
emerged
from
a
''The discussion seems to
subcorrunittee.
'
be going In the direcUon we
The bill, sponsored by Sen. want, and we Ulink we can get
WiiUam F . Bowen, l).{;lncln- a bill Ulat can be signed by
nati , has been a goal of the the governor ."
Moyer said he i~ conrPrnf'd
Rhodes administration since
197~ and has been In the
Senate fOI' almost a year.
It would grant abatement
on real and personal property
taxes to Industries expanding
in high unemployment areas
and hiring the jobless or
welfare recipients.
There
are
built-in
guarantees that most of the
new employees would have to
CINCINNATI (UPI) - A
live in the affected city, and former employee of the
that a certain percentage burned-out Beverly Hills
would have t.o be on welfare nightclub " continuously"
or unemployment.
look the Fifth Amendment in
There is also a provision pre-trial depositions, lawyers 1
calling lor a payback t.o lor lire victims have
school districts to make sure complained.
they do not lose tax revenues.
The lawyers have filed a
The Rhodes administration motion in U.S. District Court
indicated concern over some in suburban Covington, Ky. ,
of the constraints written into seeking t.o limit Burt.on Smith
the bill, although officials of New Richmond, Ohio, a
agreed that industries former maintenance
employee at the club, from
taking the Fiflll Amendment,
a
U.S .
Constitutional
privilege against sell·

MACHINE. Thi s Fashion ' Mate sold so well last month,
It 's still on sale. It's a super little zig -zag mach ine that
has all the basi cs. including a front drop-i n bobbin
that 's easy to see and r.eplace. extra Wi de zig. zag

now .

Contract

,1·

�•

r

6 _The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pom~oy, ~-· ~~!Idly, March 22,1978

ij

j;:

fi

·~
~?:

' ,,,,~,,;,:;)':':;;:$&lt;&gt;;,1»~==·=·:·:::·::.\::=:;,,~,,,,,,;,,,,,,::;:.,~*'~··"':::::·='-1

,I

Helen Help

uS

• •

• Hy

:~;

Helen Bouel

1:;

*;·.&lt;

Rehearsal dinner enjoyed
RUTLAND-Mr. and Mrs.
Vernon Weber hosted a dinner ~t their home Friday
evening preceding the
rehearsal lor the Saturday
weddilljj of their son, Dallas,
to Miss Beth FuiU.
The table was

HE BROODS OVER BROTHER'S DEATH
DEAR HELEN :
My brother. 21, died from an overdose or illeg¥1 drugs. That
was seven months ago, and my older brother. 21&gt;, is going crazy
over it. He too was on drugs several ye•rs back, but kicked the
habit. He is not addicted (yet ), but takes dope to help him
rorget .
.
His wife and our parents don't know where to turn. He went
to one psychiatrist, who only put hlrn on downers. Drugs to
right drugs? Ha ! Now he won't St!t!k help. When his wire says
anything, he beals her up . He never did this before. Yet he says ~ .....~
he'll kill hintSeir irshe leHves him.
What CHn we do'! - NEEDS HELP IN NEW YOHK
DEAR N.H.:
You didn't say, but I'd guess your brother's big problem is
guilt. Does he believe he guided the yoWlger man into drugs
that caused his death?
If you can encourage him to talk •bout It, you may t'Onvince
him that a drug-help center- a free clinic or government agency- could bring him out or his depression and away from dope .
His wile might call AWAIC, 212-686-1676, (Abused Women 's
Aid in Crisis ), a New York-based hot line lor battered mates. lf
he Wlderstands that she will leave him unless he seeks help,
chances are good that he'll choose a counselor over suicide. H.
DEAR HELEN :
Yesterday was my "daughter's 30th bi rthday. Although I
gave birth to her, I have neVer bl&gt;en with her on any of her
special dHys.
Thanks to ALMA I Adoplees Liberty Movement Association ), we were reunited neoul y two years ago. But we were
both so stirred that we did not esl.;lblish a realistic relationship. To me, she was still a baby, and proba bly to her I was "a
middle-aged interloper. We had pHrted company by the end of
the year.
_
·
Two weeks ago I got a telephone call !rom her asking if we
could be "lust friends ." I have realized my mistakes, and
answered .:Yes! " But this time we 're going slowly . We won't
see one another until she is ready, and that's not yet.
1 have approached many legislators to stress the ract that a
mother about to surrender her child ror adoption isn 't in
physical or 'emotionalmildition to make the decision without
. impartial coWlSel. A hardened criminal is required by law to
have legal counsel - why not an unwed mother'
My on ly ·'e~id '' came from the social worker. I refused to sign
surrender papers until my dau~=:hter was 10 months old. During
this time the worker told me repeatedly· that the agency
wanted to work ·with me in whatever decision I made. Yet I
learned from my grow~ daughter that the adoptive parents
were told when she was si x weeks old that there would he a girl
baby available ror them shortly .
I was a divorcee, and could have raised her with "welfare"
assistance. No one pointed out these positive fa ctors to me. My
agency was one-sided- toward Hdoption.l suspect this happens
also today .- F.B.
Corrunents, anyone? - H.
Earth Heal
Geothermal energy literally me a ns "ea rth-heat"
energy, and geothermal
areas are those areas where
the heat is great enough and
dose enough to the sunace to
provide a·heat sou rce, In ad·

tlilion, the heat source must
be in or ne(:lr an · area of
permeable rocks which contain enough water to transfer
the heat to the sunace either aJong fractu.res or
through drill holes,

TURNS FOUR - Rusty
Maynard celebrated his
fourth birthday recently
with a party at his home in
Mason. He is the son of Mr.
and Mrs . Russ Maynard. A
honey bear cake was served with ice &lt;:ream and pop
to David and AlUI Zirkle,
Debbie Zirkle, Bre11da
Zirkle, Racine ; Paul and
Jill Maynard, Point PleaSant; Roberta Maynard,
New Haven, Rusty's sister,
Samantha and his parents.
Sending girts were Terri
Zirkle, Racine, and Harley
Swisher, Middleporl.

Youth to have
.
.
sunnse serozce
The youth of the Gallipolis
Christian Church will be
presenting this year's Sunrise
Service at 7 a.m. at the
church.
,
They will present candlellgh1 scripture readings
"From Gloom to Glory." The
program ·is under the
direction or Pat Ranegar of
Cheshire and Margie Carpenter of Pt. Pleasant.
Carolyn Taylor will slng
"Christ Arose" accompanied
by pianist, Frank KW1Szabo.
Those participating in the
scripture readings are :
Bryan Coburn, Kimin Vinson,
Pam Ranegar, Janet Burris,
Natilie Simms, Jimmy Hale,

with an arralljjement d
mwns in peach, yellow and
~een, the colors ol the wedding.
Attending were the Rev.
and Mrs. Robert Bumgarner,
Mr. and Mrs. Merlin Ross,
Mr . and Mrs. Bernard FuiU
and daughters, Becky and
Barbara, Middleport; Mr.
and Mrs. Dennis Weber, CGlurnbus ; Mr. and Mrs. Dean
Weber, Coshocton; Donna
Weber, Steve Jenkins, Duane
Weber , Mrs. Marjorie
Milhoan, Miss Mae Weber,
the honored couple and the
hosts .

Circle plans
Easter visit
A visit with residenl8 at the
YoWlg Horne in Pomeroy was
plaMed dUring the Easter
season when the EJecta Circle of the B. H. Sanborn MISsionary Society mel SWlday
alternoon at the Middleport
First Baptist Church.
The lellowship tea w
be held the first Mon•
day in AprU was discussed and it was noted
that women of all churches in
the area have been invited.
Mrs. Eloise Wilson gave
devotions following a prayer
by Mrs. Texanna Well, chairman. She used the 23rd Psallri
and a meditation. The love
girt prayer was by Mrs.
Gwinnie White, and Mrs.
Marjorie Walburn presenled
a report on " The King's
Messengers" from a book on
Haiti.
Mrs . Wilson and Mrs. Ethel
Hughes ·served refreslunenls
to those named and Mrs.
Freda Hood, Mrs . Pearl Horrman, Mrs. Janice Gibbs, Mrs.
Goldie Roush, and Mrs.
Florence Rhodes. 1

In 1968, President Lyndon
Johnson recalled Gen .
William Westmoreland as
. commander of U.S. troops in
Vietnam and made him Anny
chief of starr. Gen. Creighton
Abrams took over in Saigon.

Doris Bennett, Allsha Simms,
Sharri Dixon, Barry Nelson,
Robbie Ingles, .John Dixon,
and Brent Coburn.
· The public is wann1y invited.
Denny
Coburn,
minister, Jack Perry,
associate minister. For more
inlormatlon call 446-1863.

Easter cantata is announced

Buckl ed UIJ fur fashion atop a wood
botta'm w1th
tan
lea ther uppe rs,

Comrie foot notes
Spring Shoes Arriving Daily

CHAPMAN SHOES
"Next to Elberfelds in Pomeroy"

"Jesus Is Coming" by John
V. Peterson will be the
cantata sung Easter Sunday
by the choir ol the Gallipolis
Christian Church.
Peterson, a musician and
poet, i.s a serious student of
the Bible, well qualified ror
writing such a work ~ it
flowed from his heart and
from his personal c9 n ~
victions. The personal, im~
minenl and bodily return or
Christ, one or the great
central truths of scripture, is
the earnest interest of
believers today . The raith in
this "blessed hope" is being
reinforced by the music of the
church as well.
Those singing some of those

~~;,\-~';~~;,~~ . ~~';
,...---Buit)· ----.
BY JOHNNY CARSON. PALM BEACH,
SEWEU AND HART SCHAFFNER &amp;
MARX.

truthS, solo or duet are:
Unda Miller " Will You Be
Ready"; Carolyn Taylor,
"And I Saw Heaven Open";
Eric Scites, "Like Him";
GaiTy Adkins, "Let Not Your
Heart Be Troubled"; Sue
Brandeberry and Jack
Perry, "Events or the
Ascension." Talented
Director of the choir Is
Barbara Scltes of Pomeroy.
The cantata will be
presented at the Sunday
worship service at 7 p.m. The
public is invited . Denny
Coburn, is minister and Jack
Perry is Associate Minister.
For more infonnation call
448-1863.

POLLY'S POINTERS

~&lt;cao· out or break as quickly sht' u s ~s your htvorite
Pointer, Pt!t!VC or Problem in
•• "rdinary tlu·ead. - EVA
Polly will liCil&lt;l you one or her column. Wlite POI.I.Y 'S
hc1· s igned thank-you POINTERS in care of this

1\t' WSpc:J pcr ~uupun dippers if

7- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March 22. 1~78

UMW make contribution

IK!W S pa~r .

Several contributions were
made when the United
Methodist Wom en met
recently at the Minersville
Church.
The group contributed to
the Hearl FWld, the March or
Dimes and Easter Seals. It
was voted to purchase new
standards ror the sanctuary
flags and several gel-well
ca rds were sent to shutins.
Mrs. Ruby Grueser, presldent, had charge or the
meeting_
Mrs. Mary Pugh conducted the program whkh
opened with scripture rrom
John, a poem, ·' Easter Has
Dawned" ami an E~ster
Prayer . Readings on
Easter were given t:, Mrs.
Grueser, Mrs . 'Be tty
Jewell, Mrs. June Sayre.
Mrs. Mary Russell , Mrs .
Stella Grudser, and M1·s.
Mildred Phillips who also
gave an Irish reading. The

Polly Cramer
Uncovering

old brass

Send one ...Take one home.
OurFTD

IJEAH POLLY - I WHS
an old l,rass bt!tl tl10:1t
lle:ts bt.ocu pcjintt!tl over with
shellac ur vamish. We l10:1vc
tried lu jl&lt;&gt;lish the brass but
cannot rernovt· the L"ovcring
uvcr it. Can you s ugg~st a
way to clc::tn ami p•·esc•·vc the
brass' -.C.F.
OEAR C.F. - You have to
l'emove the coating un your
bed belore trying to polish it.
I a m presuming this is a rea l
or·ass bed I not plated 1 since
you say it is antique. Paint
thinner or even turpentine
1night remove it. Expe1·imcnt
on an inL'Oilspicuum; plal't!.
The ideal way would be to
Lake it to a prufessiunall;rass
dccmcr anti polisher. H would
bt: well wmth tht! t·ust if yuur
bt:&lt;l is a real antique .
To do it yourself, wash
Untss with soapy water anti
as you drY it let yvur hands
touch the br·ass as little as
possible. Apply denHtUred
Hlcohol to all the brass surrace and let dry berore spraying. on a transparent, colorless metal lacquer. Then
wipe orr with " soft doth .
Thai will be all lhHl is
necessary fur quite sonu.•
time. When lacquer shows
sigi1s of wee~ ring off,. rt;&gt;move
with alcohol, repolish witlr
brass polish if need be and
then re-lacquer.- POI.I ,Y
DEAH POLLY - My Pel
Pei:!Vt! is with .tht! lctx serviec
one receives in sume of tilt'
large department store~. Om:
has lu find the plC:ice in lht!
stort! where the cashier is and
then sUJnd in a line fur 15 ur 20
minutes. The stores.cry about .
all the shoplifting and I am
nut surprist!d since there are
so few salespeople about.
Often I have wHnted to to·y on
some dresses and there was
no one a round to even show
me the" way to the dressing
room. -GERTRUDE
DEAR POLLY - My husIJaiH.I is a construction workel'
and is often laid olf during the
winter when our bills ar·e the
highest. To l'Ompensate ror
ll)is I try to keep a sevel·almonth supply of staples 1rood
arid cleansers) on hand and
never buy any of these items
except when they are on sale .
Over a year's lime this
rllllkes rur big savrngs. 1r
money gets tight we spend a
week or more 'using up things
on hand and nul making any
major pur·chases. The satne
principle is used ror buying
home furnishlngs and
clothing. I hope to win one ol
your clippt!I'S so I ca n mur·e
easily cut out more coupons
and thus do some additional
saving.-D.V. ·
QEAR POLLY -I rind dental floss is excellent for sewing un fml.fons. It dues not

-Easter Baskef

~ivt'n

Bouquet
Colorfu l spring flow ers in

· an t!mhroidered W\Wen
hasket . We can
se nd

it

almo~t any·

whert! to family ur
fri e nd s - th~

FTD

way. Easter' is March
26th . Ca ll or
visit LI S now.

'15.00

CHOICES

nieeting was d osed "''ith
th e I~o rd 's Pra yer in

Karen Blaker Ph.D.

Wl iSQil .

;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;

BAKER FURNITURE
.' '

Middleport, Ohio

Visit Baker's budget
shop for ·inexpensive
'
furniture today

PLACE YOUR
EASTER ORDERS
EARLY

'.

\j

•7

20% off

cash 'n carry .

59 N. Second St.
992-5560
Middleport, 0.

Good thru March 26, 1978

rcpt~~l

Twelve complete sitter's course
A sitter's course designed ing lor handicapped inprimarily to assist those car- . dividuals was completed
Monday night by 12 Meigs
Countians.
Dr. Bernard Niehm, director of consultation and education of the Gallia-JacksonMeigs CGrrunWlity Mental
Health Center, and Mrs .
Mary Skinner of Personal Advocacy and director of the sitter's course, presented certificates .to those completing
the course during the rinal
session at St. Paul Lutheran
Church.
The final session featured a
panel pr parents or handicaJ&gt;ped children in an open
discussion with Ute sitters
narrated by Dr. Niehm. Present to talked •bout artilicial
respiration, bJeeding, polsoning and burns were Joe Struble and Roger Hysell, local
emergency squadmen.
Other areas covered during
Ute seven-week course were
basic skills in general child
care, discipline, and setting
limits on behaviour 'by John
Brarruner, Mental Health
Technician, and Harriet
Kaufman, P~ . D.-; a program
on epilepsy and medication
rules for administering along
with mental retardation by
Dr. Richard B. Simpson;
handling and feeding the
cerebral palsied child by
Nora Eason, R. N. and skill in
the care of speCial types of
handicapped children by Sue
Apple.
Also included in the course
was instruction by Sheila
Sawyer on how to use special
equ ipm ent
sucn
as
wheelchairs and braces.
Nan Mykel, Ph.D. discussed With the group the emo-

averS GEdge?

Snow white liliesthe symbol of
Easter. Grown
In Dudley's own
greenhouses
to assure )IOU
of freshness.
3 to 15 bloom.

'·

SITIER'S COURSE GOMPI.,ETE~- Mrs. Mary
Skinner, standing left, and Dr. B~rn~r'tl ,Nlefun, right,
presented cert(licates to, left to right, seated, Janet
Horky , Trina Gibbs, Helen Bailey, Pamela Rilfle, and

Who'll guarantee
· you a

Step 2: CJ.ll a trut'tl. Do not
the samt! ri~o:ht unle~
)'uu or your husband hll:j
m~ AH DH. l!LAKEH - My something NE W to add obout
hu:;Uaml cHHI I have bt.-"Cn his ur her fcclin~s.
nuuTil'tl fur l'i~ht· yuars. We
Slcp 3: Us.· tht• time ond
l wvt~ H guud relationship "'"' r~y you would have exbut we fi ght Hl.Kml surm· the 1"'"""' on the right to discus.
thing su uftt•n.
the undcrlyin)t reHsuns why
I wrwt him tu lt·ll me wlmt this purticuiHr conflid has
{Uil\! he will Uc lrouw frum
Ol't'urrcO so regularly . You
wurk s~1 ( L'tlll have duuwr mt:ty fear, for insUtnl't!, lhut
r~ady . He tl11nks I'm (.tSktng
Ius spontaneity is merely u
tuu mudi . tit• wunl:; lu bu rn:.-'C t•nvt•r fur mcctimgs with
l u &lt;H"l't•pt an IUVIUJtiull (ul' Ulhl'l' WUiliC il.
drink s w1lh busi nt· ss
Sh·p 4! Ont•c the rc~:tl issues
ou;socialcs ur frieml.s t:tfl l' r un· darif1t~l . Hgrce unlt com~
work - t'\'Cil ~1 . the bt.st prumist• sulutiun llutl will
minute.
n lt~kc (.1 rt.•uccurrcnce uf the
li t• feels I a11 1 bei ng overly fig ht unlikely.
rigid. I think he is just plain
H e~titi ve fightin~ is u.ual·
s.lrish.
ly CHUsed Dy rcclin~s or in·
Eve ry tllnt~ he WH lks in ~e c uri ty . Bringing those f.,.,J.
lulc, I think , " Hen· we 1-(U h1gs oul intu the open should
agahr. Wh y doe sn't he clktt a rea:;;s urlng rc_.s pon~e .
!cu m '! " And we lu~ v-t~ tht\
At tim! puint; the right itself
saalt' fight. This happens wiiiJ)I't)lJably sct•m unimpor~
t:tbuut lWI L' t' H week . Wh1-1l cuq ~tnt. Then, when the fight is
we do to :-,tup lhis im•t•sst:tnl '*b11u t to n.•ucc ur·, the
Ka therine Neutzling, and standing, Sandy Davis, Christy
figlllillg '~
l't'JH.'titivc ritual c..: un . be
Ramsburg , Kathleen Jacks, Debbie Derenbergcr. Debbie
DEA
H HEAIJE H - Chrunic bypitsscd tQ cum:cntrute- on
Hei n, Vicki Hoffman , Loti Seth , at the final meeting of the
eomplarnts ;rrl' conmu111 in lite rcul ISSUe - why the rcclsitter's course Monday cvenin~ : The course was offered
uw:-; 1 ll litrTi H.gc.s . Some ings of inst!t'ut'ity .
through the Community Mental Hea lth Cent er.
t·uu plcs at't't•pt llrl'rn on tile
Inti mary without t.'unflicl is
grounds tim ! , if they get Hl01rg ilnposi:li iJic. U yo u truly cu re
uthl·rw bt•, al l o win~ nne 4\lmut unothcr pcnmn uml try
pn•di t'I :Jblc
( und tu m:hicve t:lu... t•uCss, lllfllli.lllil g i'H IJJ t •) fight l o I"COL'L'UI"
fcrenl'cs will cn wrgc that
liunal impact of handicap(T U1erapy.
t' illl rc lco-1:-; e pe nt -up r nu:-;1 lJt• worked out.
ing on childand Joan AnderWith yuur rcpclilivc fight
A listing of the certified sit- lluStiJ itll'S.
I tlisag1·ct• with this aJi- umh~r cuntrul , y uu cm1 t:un~
son, a th erapist, talked about ters is now on fil e with the
occupational and physical Employment Orrice. Mrs. pruadL Elllling S L~ ch strug - t ·er 1ll"ll tc uri murc eunstrucgles is better fur the nrar- tiw fighting . Fighting, if
Skinner reports.
ri&lt;.~t!,c . l!t•l"t' a n • SCVCn1J SICJ)S
tluuc [air!)', CU ll ~ iHl e ffL"C•
tha t III(IY help :
tl vc dev1cc to achieve greater
.
Step 1: Dissect the right by tnl1111aey' .
day 7 p.m. nt Coo n Hunters writing down your version of
Write Lu Dr. Ulakcr in core
buildng at Meig s Co unty how it starts. who says what uf thi s newspupcr, P.O. Box
lt1 whom, tmtl how it cuds . 489, Hmliu City StHlion, New
I
1 Fairgrounds.
HUTLAND
YOU TH llavc your husband du the York , N.Y. 1001.9 ..Volume of
Baseball League meeting, 7 sa me thillt!, . Once you ttgrce uwil p ro hibi t ~:~ perso na l
WEONEStJA Y
p.m,
Thursday, . Gene Wise on the f.lllatmny of the fight. rCpiics, but questions ·or
FREE CERVICAl. cancer
residence,
Sa lem
St., yo u will be. n •o1dy to move tu gencrc1l intcrc~t will bC
clinic,
Hea th
United
Step 2.
di s ~.: us.scd in futurt! column:;,
Rutland
.
Election
or
oHicers;
Methodist Church in Mid·
dl!;.' pm1 W~ dn esday i ca ll 91.12· prospective coaches and all
7o31 daytime or 993-5832, interested residents invited.
weekend or everlin gs for
appoint 11leut.
MAY TO SPEAK
POMEHOY The Pomeroy Church or
Members of the Love Joy Sarah Fowler gave devotions,
MilJDI.E:POHT
LIO NS Christ will be having its
Circle
or the B. H. Sa nborn Mrs. Bernice Baker bad a
CLUB , 12 noon Wednesday at
annual sunris~ service March Missionary Society o£ the poem, Alwllda Werner bad
the Meigs !nn.
· 26, Easter Sunday . The Middleport Fir•t Baptist prayer, and Mrs. June Kloea ·
THE SUNDAY and Wed- services will begin at 6:30 Church staged an Easler par- was at the piano for group
nesday night services at the a.m. Tom May, a senior at ty at the Meigs Cow1ty In- singing.
Pomeroy Church or the the Cincinnati Bible College, firmary Tuesday night.
~'ollowing the party the
Nazarene will begin at 7 p.m. will be the guest speaker. He
Each of the residenlll was group returned to the home ol
instead of 7:30 p.m. until is the class president at the presented with an -!l;a•ter Mrs. Katie Anthony lor· a
further notice. ·
·I·
schoo l and is also the basket and a rruit tray . Mrs. meeting. Plans were dlacUMTHE SOUTHERN Band associate mlnister at the
c'&lt;l for the annual rellowship
Boosters will mee t thi s Town ·and Country Christian
tea to be held at the church oil
evening at 7:30 p.m. a t the Church in Shelbyville, InApril 3. Cleanup and serving
hi~h schooL .
.
diana on the weekend s.
conuniltee• were appointed .
SLATED
THURSDAY
SALISBUHY PTO Wed- Following the sermon, breakA letter wa• read rrom Mrs.
RACINE - Maundy Thursnesday 1 p.m. No program or rast will be served in the
Elizabeth
Gardr\er and the
day t:omrhunion services wUI
refreshments.
church basement with _the be held at 7:30 p.m. at the scholarship money was coJTHURSDAY
youth group in charge. Also
lecled. The meeting was ClosTWIN-CITY SHRINETTES on Easter Sunday. Sunday Racine Wesleyan Church. ed with a prayer by Mrs.
will meet at the home or Mrs . School will begin at 9: 30 and There will be services at 7:30 J..(misc Davis.
Mary Bowen, Thursday at the morning worship hour ut p.m. on Good Friday and at
Mrs. Anthony serve&lt;l a
7:30 p.m. Sunday there wlll
7:30p.m.
·
10 :30. Everyone is invited .
salad
course to those named
be an evening Easter service .
MIDDLEPORT Cub Scout
at the church for the entire and Mrs. Ullie Hubbard,
Pack 24o Thursday 7 p.m. at
charge InCluding Letart Mrs . Oeida Chase, Mrs.
Middleport Legion Post.
Falls, East Letart, .Apple (~ora Sigmon, and .Mrs.
WOMEN
NEEDED
Fnmces Smart.
Family, friends and new cubs
Grove and Racine.
Meigs
area
women
in ~
invited. Pinewood derby race
terested in participating in a
will be held.
MEIGS COUNTIANS rur women 's softball program
Wildlife Conservation ·n1urs- are asked to call 992-5726 .

Anatomy of o fight

Scott Sou(ler , son ol Mr .
and Mrs. Lawrence Groggel
ol Box 52. 80 Portland Rd .,
Portland, enlisted in the U. S.
Air
Force 's
Delayed
Enlistment Program, according to S.Sgt. Vernon J .
Zeger, Air Force recruiter,
221 N. Columbus Rd., Athens.
Scott , a senior at So uthern
Loca l High School, Racine, is
scheduled for enlistment in
the Regular Air Force on
Sept. 13, 1978. Upon
graduation rrom the Air
Force's six-week basic
traini ng course, Scott is
sc heduled
to
teceive
techni cal tra ining in the
Automatic Tracting Radar
Career Field.

-1 ·- ·-·-··- -·-··- · -I
I Social I
I
I
Calendar

Party staged Tuesday

While Quantities Last
Quantity Rights Reserved
We are nQI responsible for typographical errors!

~
CHOCOLATES

PALMOLIVE
GOLD

n acdolton to all ~ ~~ ~
/1\DIH n l ~
Qu~r l ~r l v rncomt
oa•Oon on ~ . two t~r~e .

leur or

.

51~

vear

cer l ilrtl tf ~

l n l~r est ~ ·y·

A~le mcMnl~ 11 ~ ou d~~" f on t~1 h!r t11 es
l~ (t amclvnl ot $~ 000 00 or more

"''Ill

::=:

fe d ~r;~ l ~ tQulat•on s

t1

requ •re ! ~uos t ao t •al
for ~rema Me ,.,ttdlalt'al ol tf lllll·

• ~·~s

DEODORANT SOAP

4
$ 75

BAlH

... more comfortable
than feet! sanda ls and so.,no l

a1e one l resp .·open and lu ll ot lite. DeiJghtlully
colorful . amaz1ngly co mfortable .. Hu::;h Pupp1 es • SP''"91
sa ndals open I he doo• to wa rm days ahead .

A FULL
SERVICE

SIZE

Hush Puppies·
Spring Sandals

'2000

Give Thanks
For Al.l Of
Life's Joys

· BANI~

LIMIT 4 PLEASE

Easter. It's a lime
to look upon the
world around us . with
a renewed sense of
peoce and love . . .
faith and hope .
A lime to refled
on lfle Eoslei mir·
ade ... and all thai
!Is meaning holds
lor us. We wish you
and your loved ones
all the blusings of
this Holy Holiday.

NELSON'S REGULAR 29• EACH

The Ohio Valley Bank has a maximum
interest rate savings plan to fit your needs.
So when you thi!lk savings, think Ohio
Valley Bank savings and stop in to discuss ·
the benefits of all our .savings plans. You'll
find out why we guarantee a saver's ·edge
with maximum rates and a plan to fit your
· needs.

•

LIMIT 2 PLEASE

'I IF I

til '

~

• ThOuiOrw:l$
or hght1

•

• Adtln!oble

NELSON'S REG. 69• EACH

Ohio Valley Bank
G a lli pO liS . Oh 10

1-l!'mb('• tO!C

· The Leading Savings Plans Are AI The Leading Savings Bank

•

Rejoice
In The
Spirit
Of Easter

HARTLEY'S SHOES, INC.
'·'Middle Upper Block"
Pomeroy, Ohio

Store Hours

9 a.m.- 5 p.m.

Mon~thru Thurs. &amp; Sat.

Our office will close at 12:00 noon. March 24
GOOD FRIDAY

9 a.m.- 8p.m. Fri.

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE

Closed Sunday

POMEROY, 0 .

�Kids! Color these pict~res and you can win

0

COLORING CONTEST
"

TWO

/ ..

-'

1st

l. Just color one or more of th e drawings on tlwst• pag-es, fill in tht• blanks

and take your entry to the sponsoring- siorc before 5:00 P.M. Mart·h
27th.

PRIZE
Here's our friend the Easter Bunny.
The way he hops is quick and funny.

$J500

2. Entries will be judge,d iJI two difft-rent agt: t'a\t.'gories, ag-es 4-8 and
~~TWO

3rd·
PRIZE

NAME - - - - - - - ADDRESS - - - - - AGE--PHONE ______

ELBERFELDS
..
IN POMEROY

$5

This tiny chick peeps up to say Have a Happy Easter Day!
bunny is '!laking a Bicentennial to-do .. .
He's pointing tnis basket red, white and blue.

NAME------ADDRESS _ -- - - - - - - AGE--PHONE ________

NAME _ _ _ _ _ _ __

ADDRESS _ _ _ _ _ __

-

AGE __ PHONE - - - -

GOESSLERS
JEWELRY STORE

POMEROYPnm,pnw
NATIONAL
BANK
Ohio

ag-~s

9-i2.
3. Children may e nter a s many pictures as they like hut can onl y win mw Let's ce le brat e Easte r, Christ's res urrectio n,
With a joyful he art ... praye r and re Aectio n.l

'
pr1ze.

NAME---------------ADDRESS-----------AGE
PHONE ______

4. Crayons only may be used t9 color pictures .

FABRIC SHOP

5. Decis ion s of the judge will b e final.

)

•
'

. .. ..
..

•I
l

••

B11nny painting egg - brtght colored
eggs so pretty and neat
making Easter a special treat.

Mother hen watches baby chicks,
happily, do merry tricks.
lliC'rrovnns ail ready? Get set and color ...
it yourself with no help from Mother.

NAME----:-----ADDRESS ________
AGE _

PHONE - - - -

• BAKER FURNITURE

NAME ·- - - - - - - ADDRESS - - - - - AGE-PHONE _______

MARGUERITES SHOES
Pomeroy

Ohio

TWIN CITIES
GATEWAY
Middleport

This chick thinks this basket is very funny,
The eggs are hiding a little Easter bunny.

NAME _ _ _ _ _ _ __
ADDRESS _________
AGE _

PHONE - - -

DAN THOMPSON FORD
Middleport .

'

NAME _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
ADDRESS - - - - - - AGE-PHONE _ _ _ _ _ 11 ;

Quietly reflect, sing renew the spirit that Easter does bring.
's all .look up to the heavens above .. .
nd thank the Lord for his peace and love

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE

NAME---------ADDRESS----------AGE ,_
PHONE - - -

Po_meroy

FRANCIS FLORIST

NAME - - - - - - - ADDRESS - - - - - - - - - AGE--PHONE ______

POWELLS
SUPER VALU
Pomeroy

·PomerGY

Bunny and turtle, his animal frlel!d,
wish you Easter Joy without end!

In the meadow animals play;
they know Easter is on Its way.

NAME --.,.....-----ADDRESS ----------~
4GE--PHONE ________

I

Mrs. Rabbit, and her cuddly bunnies too,
Want to wish a very happy Easter to you I

NAME ______________
ADDRESS---------'--AGE - - PHONE - - -

VILlAGE PHARMACY

NAME-------ADDRESS - - - - - AGE--PHONE--------

RACINE HOME
NATIONAL BANK
Racine

Let's all rejoice, kneel .d own and pray ..
And rekindle the spirit of Easter Day!

NAME _____________

ADDRESS-------------AGE _
PHONE - - -

ADDRESS - - - - - AGE~PHONE ________

FARMERS BANK

RUTLAND FURNITURE

PomerGY

Rutland

Rejoice and si~g alleluia on Easter
waVIo
And praise our Lord . He showed us the

NAME
ADDRESS

•
I

'I

.

NAME
ADDRESS
AGE ... - PHONE _ _

NAME - - - - - - - - ADDRESS - - - - - AGE __ PHONE:._
· ----------

DAVIS INSURANCE

heritage house
OF SHOES

Pomeroy

Middleport

AGE _

'

NAME ___....______....._
ADDRESS - - - - - - - AGE-PHONE ______

PHONE - - - -

MEIGS BRANCH

ATHENS COUNTY SAVINGS &amp; LOAN
PomerGY

I

Give pause to rem e mber the Easter story :
Of our Lord's love .. . the praise and alor·llt

The resurrection shows us the way
as we relive lhe Joy of the first Easter
.day.

Baskets 1~11 of Easter toys and joy
tor every girl and boy!

NAME--------

Easter Is a time to pray
and celebrate this holy day.

· ·KINGSBURY HOME SALES
•

PomerGY

Here's a basket of pretty Aowers for you,
Filled with daAodils, tulips, daisies, too!

NAME ______________

ADDRESS---------AGE
PHONE ______

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
. Pomeroy

�10-The Dauy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomerov. 0 .. Wednesday, March 22, 1978
Bat • Jlln I , IY/ 1
Total Receipts
Tote! lhtei pts &amp;

FINANCIAL AEPOAT
OF THE BOARD OF
EDUCATION

Balance~

For Fisc•ll Veu Ending
Otctmber 31, lt77
Southern lout

ScMol District

M ~i gs County
Bo• 176, Rac: ,ne, Ohio
4S711
Much lO , 1971

ce r t i fy

the

fo ll ow i nQ

report to be corr ect .
Linda J . Spence r

Clerk T reas u rer or
The Board of

Education
6U 949 1700

C.uh Reconc:iliat ion
Total Fund Ba la nces

Dec . JL 1977
S 153.7BILSJ
Oepo sitorv Balances
Racine Home Nat ion al

112, 453 .25
Sub Total Dt?POS ltory

Balances

1.188 04
11,88,),39

112,453 .25

Inv estments ;
·
Cert i f icates of Deposit

46,023 90
Sub Tota l Investments

46,023 90
Total
158,477 15
Outstand mg Warrants
Dec . 31, 1977

( Oedu ctf
4,688 61
· Reco ncitea B atance
Dec. Jt , 1977
153,788 53
Summary o f Cash
Balanc es, R ecei pts
And Expenditures
General Fund
Ba l., Jan . 1, 1971
20,573 .51
Tot al Rece i pls
1.073,90 1 18
Total Receip t S &amp;
·
Bala nces
1,094 ,&lt;174 .69
E"xpend ltures
1,077,629.78
16,844.91
Ba l. , D ec. 31 , 19 77
Disadvan t aged Pupils
_ Program

U , 171 43
Expend i ture~
11 ,544 04
Bal • Dec Jl. 1971
2.617 .39
Bond Retirem eru
Ba ! • Jan . 1, 1977
.12.948 5'1
Total R,ceipts
70.601 '2 1
Total R-eceipts&amp;.
Balance:;
113 ,549 73
Expend itu res
71.1-45 61
Sal . Dec . Jt , 1917
36.404 . 57
Lunch Room Fund
Bal Jan . 1, 1977
(3, 378 87 J
Tolal Rer;eipts
100,394 .78
Tolat R ecei pts &amp;
Balarrces
97 ,0 15.96
E •renditures
88 , 116.03
Bll , Dec 31, 1977
8.889 .93
Bu i lding Fund
Bal., Ja n . 1. 197.7
398 , 570 .77
Total Recei pts
9,898.63
Total Receipts &amp;.
Balances
408 ,.469.35
Expendi tur es
367.407 .67
Blll , Dec. 31, 1977
46 ,061 ,68
ESEA Tille 1
Sal , Jan . 1, 1977
3oi.::l86. 10
Tot al Rece 1pls
86 ,4 63 .66
Total Rece ip ts &amp;
Balances
120,8.49.76
E)(pendlfu r es
77 ,889 .71
Bat , Dec J l , 1971
4'1,960.05
ESEAT i tl e I V B
To ta l Rece ipls
3,h89 .89
To ta l Rece i pts S.
3,698 .89
Balances
Expendi tur es
3. 698 .89
To ta l - Ba lance Jan .
1 , 1977
494 ,388 07
To ta l.- Total
Rece ipts
1.3 57 ,8&lt;11 . 74
Total Total Receipts
&amp; Balances
1,852 ,229. 81
To ta l- EKpenditures
1,698 ,4.t1'. '28
Tota l - Ba lance
De c . 31, 1977
153.788. 53

Total Recetpl! t N t~r~enue,
Non Revenue &amp;
Tr1nsfer1)
11.883 .39
Total 8 et;~inning 8al1nce
P IUI Rece ipts
l.t , 17l..t3
E ••encliturn
General A.dm l n is trat ion
Sa tar ruand Wages
350.00
Instruction
3. 131.77
Other EKp .
Health
Salaries andWagn 6,063 .11
Other Exp .
650.55
M isce l laneous
0Jher Ex p
60.00
til etund - F undlng Agency
319. 12
Total Exp .
10,574 .65
Trans fen to
969 .39
General
TotAl Trllnsfers
969 .39
Total Exp . &amp;
ll ,Solol 04
Transfers
Bal. , Dec . 31, 1911
2,6'27 .39
Total E,.;p &amp;
Transfers P lus B !:!~l. ,
Dec . 31.1 917
14, 171.43
Bond Retirement Fund
Blll.. Jan . 1, 1917
47,9ol8 .52
Rece i pts
p -rop erty Ta_. (G ross )
General - Real Estate
59,124 .70
Tangible P ersonal
.t ,OS\.3 5
Other Non -Revenu e
7,425 . 16
70 ,601.21
T ot8 1 Rece ip ts
Total Beginn ing Balan ce
Plus Re&lt;;ei pts
11 3,549 .73
E•penditures
Fees &amp;. C1'1a r ges
W i11'11'1 etd - Tax
7,42.5 . 16
Settlement
Interest On Bonds
33 ,120.00
36 ,000 .00
Bond Red em pt ion
Total
p.
17' 145.16
36.404 .57
Sa l., Dec . 31, 1977
Tota l Exp . Plus
Ba l .. Dec . 31.1977 113 ,5 49 .73
lunchroom Fund
Bal. , Jan . 1. 1977
(3,J78 .82l
Receipts
Sale of l unch es
30.047 .11
State Subsidy
70.352 .07
Total Revenue &amp;
Non ·Revenue Rece ipt s
100.394.78
Total Revenue &amp;
Non ·Reven ue Receipts
100,394 .78
Tote\ Beg inni ng Balan ce
Plus Rece i pts
97 .015 .96
Elllpenditures
Salaries and Wages 39, 19 3.3 4
Food &amp; Food Handl ing
Supplies
47 ,26.4.4.1
011'1er Ex p .
1.668.28
Total Exp .
88 , 126.03
Bal. , Dec . 31 ,1 977
8,889.93 .
Total EKp . Plus
Bal. , De c . 31 , 19 77 97,015 .96
.
Building Funds
Bal. , Jan ·. 1. 1977
398, 570 .12
A eceipts
1nterest- tna c ti ve
Funds
9,898 .63
Tofal Rece ip ts
9,898 .63
Total BeQinn inQ Bala nce

Cuh Belance,
Rtetipta.-And
E•pendlh1re5
ev Funa
General Fund
Rec eip ts- Revenue
Ba l. , Jan . 1, 1971
20.573. 51
Proper ty latx (G rossi
Getterai- Real E5tate
120.966.97
Tangible Personal
14.572 . 11
Slate Subsi d ii!'S
School Foundation (Gros~ J
Bn ic A llowance
633.68 3.81
Vocational Education )44 .27
Other State Subsidies
19.765 .99
Other Revenue '
5,221.53
Total Revenue
Rec ei pts
89.1.554 .68
Rece•ph- Non . lfevenue
Proceeds Sale of
Notes
151.50 0.00
Ad I ustments &amp;
Re·funds
11 .172.86
Total Non .Revenue
Receipts
170.272.86
Total Receipts
l ,064,827 .5..e
Tunsfers From :
Title I
8, 448.52
OPPF
969,39
To ta i Transfers
9,417 .91
To ta l Receipts
( Re11en ue,
Non -Revenue
&amp; Trllnsfers)
1,074,245.45
Tota l Beg inning Batann
Plus Rec elpf!l
1.09~ .81 8 . 96
Expend ltures
Total Adm in ist r a t ion
Ex p .
38, 039 30
Tota l l nslr 1.,1ction
Exp .
5.(6,119 .29
Tota l Co -Ordinate
Activ iti es Exp .
966.74
To t al l i brary E x p . 11.941.26
Tota l Pup i l T ransp .
Ex p .
70, 453 .41
Tot&amp; \ School Plant
Op eration E.:p .
\3 4,664 .73
To ta l Schoo l Pla n t
Maint . Exp .
14,468 .54
To ta l Ot1'1er Auxil ia r y
Expense
171.906.03
tntr:,rest on Loans
1.203.68
Repa -y men t of Loans 81 ,000.00
To tal Other Non ·
Operating Exp .
88 ,203 .68
Tota l E,.;p .
1,0 76,763 .00
Tran sfer To
DPPF
5.89
Til le I V 8
860 .89
Total Tra ns f ers
866.78
Genera l F u nd Bal .,
D ec . 31 , 1977
16,844 .91
Total Exp . and
Tran sfer s Plus Bal . ,
1,094,474 .69
D ec . 31,1977
Disadvantaged Pupils
· Program Fund
SaL Jan . I , 1977
1.288.04
Revenue Receipts
Slate Subsidy
12 ,877 .50
Transfers From
General
S.89
Tota l Translers
5.89

... .

•"

': •" •.

~

e ..

··.. .··"·. .·· ' "• ·.,
t

.'

\

•

ALWAYS FRESH

..........
~.~;'-. '; . .

·~~· - ·

"'.R~
·Y

"' "'(1'
Y.

'

\'

v-·

•

Ker1neth McCullough, R. Ph.
Charles Riffle, R. Ph .
Ronald Hanning, R. Ph
Mon. thru Sat. 8:00a.m . to9p.m .
Sunda'/10 : 30to 12:30andSio9p.m .

PH. 9n-29SS ,

PRESCRIPTIONS
Friendly Service

E.Main
Open

Nights ti 119

Pomefoy , 0 .

Plu\ Rece•pts
401 ,469 3!
Expend 1tuns
B~o~ i td ings
359,733 10
Othe r
2,614.57
Tote I e;,.;p
162,407 .67
8~1 .. Oec 'll. 1917
.46,06L68
TOHI I E•p . Plus
Bat , Dec . 31. 1971 ol08.469.35
E .S . E .A. T itle 1
Bat , Jan t , 1917
3oi,386.1 0
R~ce l pt s

Federal Subsidy
69, 182 .00
Total Rece i pts ·
69, 182.0()
Tr•nsten From
T itle 1 100T71
11.281 66
Tot al Trans f ers
17 ,281 .66
Tollll Rece i pts and
Transfers
86,46 3. 66
Total B eginn ing Balance
Plus Recei pts &amp;
Transfers
120,849 .76
E xpendihl res
General Admin is tration
Slllllr ies and Wllges
2,0ol8 .80
Other Exp.
48 .85
Instruct ion
Slll~ries and Weges 49 ,44 1.22
Other E ,.;p .
620.66
To ta l EKp .
52, 159.53
Transfers To
General
8,448 .52
T i tle I OJJT78
17 ,281.66
25,73,0 . 18
Tota l Transfer s
Tot al Exp . &amp;
77,889 .71.
T ransfers
42, 960.05
Ba L. Dec . Jl , i977
Tota l Exp . &amp;
Transfer s P lus
Ba .. De c . Jl. 1977 120,849.76
E . S . E . A. Title IV· B
Receipts
Other Federal Subs idies
2.838 .00
Total Receipts
2,838 .00
·
Transfers From
General Fund
860 .89
Total T ran sfe r s
860 .89
Total Receip ts and
Transfers
3,698 .89
Tot al Beg inn ing 881an ce
Plus Re ceipts &amp;
Transfers
3,698 .89
Expenditures
Inst ruction
Other Expenditure s 3,698 .89
Tota l EJr!ip .
3.698 .89
Tota j EKp . &amp;
Tr a nsfers
3,698 89
To t al E)(p . &amp;
Transfer s Plus Bal .•
Dec . 31. 1971
3,698.89
Between Fund Transfer
A econc illat ion
To Fund
8,448 . 52
Genera l
969 . 39
Genera I
DPP F
5 .89
17,281.66
T i ll e I OJ JT 7a
T i ll e I V · B
860.89
Tota l E ~~: p . Transfers
27.566)5
From Fund
T i tle I
8,448.52
DPPF
969 .39
Genera 1
5.89
T i tle I IOOT77
17,281.66
Genera I
860.89
Tota l Rec . Tr ansfers 27,566.35
Assets and Liabilitie•
DecemberJ1 , 1977
Assets :
Depository Bala nces
107,7 64 .63
ln 11estments
46,023 .90
La nd
.15,000 .00
Bui ldings
3,2l6,7SO.OO
Equipm en!
255,151 .00
Total Assets
3.710.689 .53
L iabi lit ies :
· Account s Pa yable 1. 693,752 .66
Bond I nd eb te dn ess 498,000.00
NQte Ind ebtedness
71 ,500.00
Total l iab il i ties
2,263.252.66
E Xcess (or deficiency)
, of Assets
1,447.436.87
Tota l
3,7 10,h89.53
Indebted ness Part 1 Bonds
Purpose For Wh ich Debt
Wa s Created
Const. - New High School
Ou tS tanding Jan . 1,
1977
114,000.00
Redeemed During
Y ea r 1977
16 ,000 .00
Balanc e Outstanding
Dec . 31. 1977
98 ,000 .00
tnt Rat e
6.8
Maturi t y Year
1983
Ad dition s to High Schoo l
Outstanding Jan . 1,
11177
420,000.00
Redeemed During Year
1977
20.000 .00
Balan ce Ou tstand ing
400,000 .00
Dec 31 , 1977
Int .. Rate
&lt;1 .5
Maturi t y Y.ear
.
1996
Total Bonded Debt Ou tstanding Jan . L
1977
534,000 .00
To tal Bondf&gt;d Debf Rf&gt;dee med D u ring Year
1977
36,000 .00
To tal Bonded Deb! Ba lance Out standing
Dec . 31r 1977
498,000.00
Indebtedness Part 2 Nates
Purpos~ For Wh ich Debt
ytas Creat ed
New Issue s During
Year 1977
37,000.00
Redeemed During Year
1977
.
37 ,000.00
lnt Rate
5·p c t
Maturity Y ear
1977
Cu rr en t operating expenses
New Issues During
.
Yea r 1977
10,000 .00
Redeemed During Year
19'77
\0 ,000 .00
lnt . Rate
5pct .
Maturi ty Y f&gt;ar
1977
Current opf&gt;rating expenses
New Issue s During
Year 1977
40,000 .00
Redeemed During Year
1977
40.000.00
tnt . Rare
5 pet .
Maturity Y ear
1971
Reopen i ng schoo l for instru . .
N-ew l,ssues Duri.ng
Year 1977
17 ,875.00
Balan ce Outstanding
Dec . 31. 1977
17 ,875 .00
Int . Rate
spct .
Maturi t y Year
1978
(Emergency School Levy)
New Issues' Dur ing
Year 1977
17 ,875 .00
Bala nce Outstanding Dec .
31, 1977
17,875.00
lnf . Rate
5pct .
Maturity Year
1978
New Issues During
Year 1977
17 ,875 .00
Balance Outstanding
~
Dec . 31 ,1 977
17,875.00
Balance Outstanding
Dec . 31, 1977
17,875 .00

5 pet .
lnt Rafe .
Maturity Year
1979
Same purpose tor 4 -1
New lssun During ·
Vear 1977
17 ,875.00
Balance Outstanctlng
Dec . 31 , 1977
17,875.00
Int. Rate
pet .
Maturity Year
1979
Total Note Debt New Issues Dur ing
Year 1977
158 •.500.00
Total Note Debt Redeemed Qt~ring Year
1977
87 ,000.00
Total Note Oebt Ba lance OuiStand ino
Dec . 31 , 1977
71.500.00
Menor•ndl Dati
TaK Valuation
Assened
11 ,.t10.341 .
Sc hool Tu In mills
per S.l ,OOO Valuat ion :
Ins ide 10 m ill
li m i taf ion .
3.50
Outside 1.0 mIll
lim ila tlon
22 .50
Bonded D eb t Mil l age
h.OO

s

{3) 1:2', He

REPORT OF
RECEIPTS AND
EXPENDITURES
Village al Pomeroy
Milgs County
For the year ending
Deumber 31,1977
Poput1tlon U72
1970 Fedenl Censu5
Cash Reconcill11lon
Total Fund Balan ce s.
Dec. 31.1977
S.259,7J.t.78
Depository Balances :
Pomeroy Nationa l Bk.
80,93 \.83
Pomeroy National Bk.
·
... 734.20
Farmers Bank &amp;
Sa11 . c o.
33,900 .00
Total Depos i tory
Balances
l19,5h6 .89
Investments :
Cert i ficates of DepoSit
130,000.00
Other l n"Vestments
( In c luding SllvingsJ
13, 000 .00
Tolal lnvestm enfs 262,566 .89
Total Treasury Bal. 262,566.89
Outst~ ndlng Checks Dec .
31 , 1977 ( DedUCt )
2,832 . 11
Tot~I · Blllllnce , Dec .
259,734 .78
31. 1977
Summary af
Fund Transadions
Balance Jan . 1,1917
Genera I· Fund
38.960.90
Water Works Fund 61,6'26.93
Sewage Oisp . Fd .
(Wa ter Poll. Con t.)
39,03153
Street Cons!. M &amp; R
Fund
9,619 .47
State Highway Improvemen t
F und
4,898 .82
Cemetery Fund
. 1.128 .611
Improvement Funds 14,805 . 44
Debt Ser"V . Funds
65,572.90
Federal Rev . Sl'1ar. 22,351 .67
· Anti Recession Fund 1.205 .00
Fire Dept .
3,4.t 3.95
Utility Fd .
4,769 .55
Total
26-4,857 .55
trust and Agency
Funds
17 ,428. 27
Grand Total
282,285 .82
R eceipts- R e"Venue
Ge neral Fund
149,223.97
Water Works Fl,lnd 139,682 .33
Sewage Disp. Fd.
(Water Poll. Cont.)
63,703 .45
Street Const . M &amp; R
36., l.t 3.29
F und ,
State Highway
Improvement Fund 2.897 .21
Cemetery Fu.nd
4,401.40
Debt Serv. Funds
1,97 1.02
Federal Re"V . Sharing
23,802.00
Anti Recession Fund 2,073 .00
F ire Dept.
12.'194.57
Utility Fd .
28,579.71
Total ·
.t65,471 .95
Grand Total
.t65,471 .95
Receipts- Nan- A evenue
Cemetery F und
9,000.00
Debt ser11 . Funds
3,000.00
Tot&amp;!
12,000.00
Trust and Agency
Funds
3,320.00
Grand Total
15.320.00
Total · Receipts
Genera 1F und
188, 184.87
Water Works Fund 201 ,309.26
Sewage Disp . Fd .
(Water Poll . Cont.)
102,134.98
s treet Const . M &amp; R
F und
45,762 .7h
State Highway
Improvement Fund 7,796.03
Cemetery Fund
12,972 .79
l m pro"Vement Funds 14,805.44
Debt SeriJ . Funds
69,5.tJ.92
Federal Rev . Shar . 46,153.61
. Anti Recessio n Fund 3,278.00
Fire Dept .
·16,438. 52
Utility Fd .
33,3;'19 .26
Total
742,329 .50
Trust and Agency
Funds
742,329.50
Grand Total
763.071 .77
Total Disbursements
General F und
137,175. 12
Water Works Fund l64,8b5.85
Sewage Oisp . Fd .
(Wa ter Poll . Cont .)
69,114 .81
Street Const. M &amp; R
Fund
38,572.63
State 'Highwlly
I m pro .... em ent F.und 2,986. 20
Cemetery Fund . 12,528.56
Improvement Funds 14,805.4.t
Debt Serv . Funds
10,501.30
Federal Rev . Shar . 23,666.80
Anti Recess ion Fund 1,741.93
Fire Dept .
11 ,914.29
Utility ~d .
23,335.·U
Total
511,208 .38
Trust and Agency
Funds
2,134.61
Grand Total
513,3.42.99
Persanal Service
General Fund
66,018 .31
Water Works Fund 32,651.38
SewaQe Oisp . Fd .
(Water Poll . Cont.l 8,818.08
Street Cons!. M &amp; R
Fund
19,390. 41
Cemetery Fund
11 ,494 .43
F_ederal Re"V . Shar .
4,036. 19
Anti Re cessio n Fund 1,741.93
Fire Oept;
4,119 .85
Total
148,270.58

rchiiFood Savings !
,
l''HEB~'' STORF ·
Thursday, Mar. 22 thru Mar. 2:5
Right Res~rved To Limit Quantities
Monday thru. Friday
9 : 00til7 : 00 '
Saturday 9 : 00-9 !00

BOLOGNA

CLOSED

$119
IDAHO POTATOES .•••••••~a. •••
lb.
9

5 lb.
sag
E

..

GREEN PEPP_ERS ............ .'.... ~~~Ls.

·~········· · ···· ·· ······· · ··

•

BACON•• ~S!-.1~~~ •••••••••••••••••••••••·~ •••••••••••••• ~.~·.'1.49

•

PINK GRAPEFRUIT. .............
SWEET

JOWL

LB~l

49

794
154

WHITE MED.

EGGS

DOZ.

69~

VALLEY BELL

conAGE
CHEESE

24 oz.
Crtn.

99~

Alfred
Social Notes

,~

E70x14

SUP~R

70
SERIES
WIDE TRACK
Tubeless, "blems"

RAISED WHITE LETTERS

ONLY s2895

Plus

~2.44

F.E.T.

Mounted Free
Another Great Buy From

MEIGS TIRE CENTER
John F. Fultz,

Mgr,

992-2109
.500 E. Main

Check These Special Buvs
DOL E-Crushed-SI.· Chunk

303
Can

CLIFF STAR

32 oz.
Jar.

APPLE JELLY

5

QtiCKEN
Green

Beans
ASSORTED

COOKIES
ARGO

p

Fed . Re"V . Sharing
19.630.61
Totals
67.913.86
Public Health &amp; Welfare
SerVices
Other Care Trell·tmimt
pfthe Ill
942. 18
Cemetery
1,034. 13
Payment to Co unty
Health Board
3,080.08
Tot als
5,056.39
Basic Utility services
Water Works &amp; Supply
48 ,763.66
Sanitary SPwers &amp;
Sewage D i sposal
19.379.99
Tot als
68,1 43.65
Transportation .
Street Construction and
Reconstru ction
19 , 182 ..22
Street Maintenance &amp;
Repair
2,986. 26
Parking Meters
&lt;On .Street I
6,2 14.77
Totals
28,383. 19
General Government
Mayor'' s Off ic e
13,768.63
Elections
88.30
County Auditor's &amp;
Treas .' s Fees
1.416.88
State EKaminer ' s Fees
3,305.38
Workmllns Comp .
5,709.72
Totals
24 ,288.91
Program Totals Summary
Security ot Person~ &amp;
Property
61 ,913 .86
Public Healtl'1 S,056.39
Welfare Services
68, 1&lt;3.65
les ic U ti lity Serv .
28,383. 19
Transportation
2..e,288.91
General Govt .
Tonus For All
Programs
193,786.00
C•pitallmprovements
General Government
Totals
6,517 .50
Lands - Bui ldings
6,5 17.50
Totals
6,,517.50
Pro_g ram Totals summary:
General Govt .
[, ,5 17 .50
Totals For All
Programs
6,517.50
Total Disbu.r stments
Security
Of
Persons
&amp;
Property
PO! iCe law Enforc.emen·t
67 ,940.45
9,516.82
Pol ice Pension
2,780.46
Misc .
1,741.93
Anti Recession
F ire Dept . Fd .
7 ,723 ..t3
17 ,32 1.95
Utility Fd.
Fed . Rev . Sha ring
23,666.80
130,691 .84
Tote Is
Interest
960.00
Nongover nmental ;
Debt Principe 1
3.000.00
Grand Tot a 1
134.651.84
Pub l ic Health &amp; We l fare
Services
Other Care - Treatment
pf lhe Ill
942. 18
CemeterY
12,528.56
Payment to county
Health Board
3,080.08
Totets
16, 550.82
Gr~nd Total
16 ,550.82
Bas ic Uti li ty Services
WaterWorks &amp; Supply
81 ,4\S .O;
Sanitary Sewers &amp;
28,198 .07
sewage Disposal
109,613. 11
Totals
Interest
106, 500.00
Nongovernmental:
45,000.00
Debt Prlf1Cip81
Nongovernmental:
Other
1,17-4.30
Grand TOtal
262,287.41
Transportation
Street Construction
And Reconstruction
38,572.63
Street Ma!nt . &amp;
Repa ir
Parking Meters
(On .Street I
6,214 .77
Totals
47 ,773.60
Grand Tot a I
47,773.60
General Government
Mayor's Office
20,756.93
F inance Adm .
3,390.00
Legal Adm .
1'.9 15 .00
Leg isllltive
845 .00
Lands &amp; Buildings
6,5 17 .00
Elections
88 .30
County Aud itor's &amp;
Treas .'s Fees
1,416.88
State Examiner's Fees _
3,305.38
5,709 .72
Workmllns Comp ;
43 ,944 .71
Totals
Nongovernmental :
5
· •·
Program Totals Summary:
Security of Persons &amp;
Property
130,691.84
Public Health &amp;
Welfare Services 16, SSO.S2
Basic Uti lity Serv . 109, 6\3. 11
., .773.6ll
Transportation
.t3, 9.t.t.71
Gener!l Go-wt .
Totals For All
3_.8,51.t.08
Programs
Trust &amp; Agency
Funds
2, 134.61
Total Interest Paid I07,C60.00
Total Non .Governmental :
Debt Principal
45,000.00
Total Non .Governmentat :
Transfers
9,000.00
Total
Non ·GovernmentaiL
Otl'1er
1,174.30
Grand Total Municipal
Disbursements
513,3.t2.99
Transfers
From General (Park . Meter

'No.1
Cans

4

3
4

65

~

$100

JOJ
Size

weeks with her mother, Mrs.

303
Size

Saturday 1 p.m. annual
Easter Egg hunt will be on
church ground .
Easter Sunday 7 p.m . Don
Genheimer from Africa ill
be speaking. Picture slides
will be shown .
Mr . and Mrs . Ja ck
McKienpy , Cleveland, visited

EASTER SPEC/AU'!
LOW PRICES
LARGE SELECTION

March 20 lor ruptured ver·
tebrae and spinal injury. Our
sympathy is with him and the

POTTED LILLIES. ~ ~. '.~ .1•0• ~~~?:: .2• ~~~'.': 1.... 14.75

family.

POTTED LllLIES .~~ .'~. ~- ~~':':~ 1•• • ••• •••• •• • •'3.25

Mr. and Mrs. Charles D.
Woode visited her brother,
Clifford Hayes, a surgical
patient in Holzer Medical
Center Room No. 209, Sunday
afternoon . Other visitors
were his wife, Thelma , who
goes every day and Mr. and
Mrs. Steve Roumeletle of
C..I umbus, Ohio.
We also have rece ntl y
learned our neighbor, Mrs.
Fae Amos, has been in a
Parkersburg hospital. Sorry
we didn't know it. Our hopes
for a speedy recovery.
Lowell Matthew Guthrie ·
observed his birthday on
March 16. Lowell is the
grandson of Mr. and Mrs.
George Guthrie,

1

HYACINrnS .... ... ~. ~ ~~:': ~ .. . .. .... ..... .. .. '2.50

Reminds you that they have a
store full of Spring Fashions
wi lh " Specia I Sale Prices "
from Monday, March 20th thru
Easter:

TULIPS .....•. •..• :~ ~~.u_•, ~-~~~~~ ..... ........12.50
HARDY AZALIAS .. ~ ~~·:. ~~~~~~- !~!'. ~!?'?~! .. .. '4.75
1
MUMS ........•.... ?~. ~ ~~~. ~~':':':'. 1............ 13.75
GARDENIAS. ...... .......... ......... ,.. ... . '4.75

'

OPEN DAILY

s:oo-s,oo
Shop Frida.v till 7: !HI

ALSO FOLIAGE PLANTS&amp;
HANGING BASKETS

HUBBARDS GREENHOUSE
Syracuse . 0 .

992 -5776

YOUR FRIENDLY KROGER STORE

OPEN
10 AM· 9 PM

Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Eichinger and Suzannah,
Colwnbus, spent a weekend
with Mrs. Opal Eichinger and
Laura Jean.
Mrs. Esther Ridenour took

EASTER SUNDAY MARCH 26TH
RIOriN I AM MONDAY MAICH 27TH

.,.

t.do o l , _ .,.._,,.-~ " ,...,,. ro tOQurred ro bl ,..,...,
........, lor ~ "' MC:h tt.. •oge. Sto,.. .. cec&gt;t ..

Tota l Exp.
69.114.82
Schedule at Total
tndebtectness Debt Retirement Funds ·
Ouhtinding J•n. 1,
1917 Prln . Only
Sewer Syst . MR Bonds
ol20,000.00
Sewer Syst . GO Bonds
8.t ,OOO.OO
Waterworks MR
Bonds
965,000.00
Total
1,469,000.00
Redeemed During Yr.
Prln. Only
Sewer Syst . MR Bonds
10,000.00
Sewer Sysl. GO
7:000.00
Bonds
Waterworks MR
Bonds
30.000.00
Total
ol7,ooo. oo
OutstJnding oec . ll,
1977, J:'rln. On.tv
Sewer Syst. MR Bonds
&lt;10,000.00
Sewer Syst. GO BOnds
77.000.00
Waterworks MR
Bonds
935 ,000.00
Total
I ,422 ,000.00
Debt Retirement
Fund512-31-71
Cash &amp; lnvestmt5.
Sewer Syst. MR Bonds
.t9,45h.79 Sewer Syst . GO Bonds
65 .308 .36
Waterworks MR
Bonds
77,953.75
Total
1lll,765. 15
Memoranda Dat.J
Assessed Valuation ,
1977
9,395,587
Tax le11y
Inside 10 Mill
Limitat ion
I. 70
Outside 10 M i ll
Limitat ion
4.00
Pomeroy, Ohio, Jan . 26.
1978
I
hereby
certi fy
the
foregoing to be correct .
·Jane Walton
Village Clerk·
Treasurer
Date - Jan ·. 24, 1978
131 22, \lc

IN THE
COMMON P~EAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

~-~~~

nourd -rllio 1 &lt;1 II - lln tur&gt; our ol 1n ad¥...,I o ~.. vou vor..rr &lt;;hO!C I o l 1 co mo-•llblt
II.,.,
~~~-Ilia
rn. ..,.. _..,.. ...- • ,...,
d'w:lr. ....n..:h ~.,mil YO&lt;.t lo pur c hfr•IN ...,...,_, • ..,
Ill ll'&gt;e ~~ pt&gt;ea
lO Olyt
~II.., , -

"""'*'

,.,_,111'0
''''!!""

E_..-t!&gt;or&gt;Q • OU Dil l II lii. rogeo "lii'J'A' .,IMCI l Ot YDUI lOl l !
Ultii ...,&gt;D" •au••dr.£ ol manuiiOC'I ul ., U vou a t~ no r
.. ,,.,_ " ' "'""' ... ~1 ~~~ C.ll .-ou• !ltm ,.,,th rhe U &lt;nt b &lt;l nO
01 1 co m!Mfl_l ~l b• lna n r •l'l und your pu rcn1 u ptrtf

WHOlE 14 · 17-lB . AVG .

----.~Semi Boneless

Cm'YIIGHT 1911 f H( dOGU CO .. U(MS ANO ,II([~
0000 SUIIIO,._l ....... ICH

lt7tiN

t•

THRU U .TUICAl llfl&amp;.ITCH U ,

Wl IUII\1( !Hi liGHT TO LIM!! QUANrtrtU

3$

.I

Jiffy Meat Entrees

299c

Boneless Top
Sirloin Steak

$ 89
lb.

Save:

~~.·.~~:

·lb.
Pkg.

...----=-·-..

IIICLUDIIG IHIS 1111) ·

.......

I

liMIT ONE COUPON PU 'AMU y
C.W._.._,,IMCIII. IIIt-UTIIIri.I, IIMCIU. II!a
NU.Cf rtam&amp;M~Jtnn, I.ICAIIWI

~~

.

t ~ ·.

""'~••••··--

I1

FROZEN U .S .D .A . IN SPECTED ,

GRADE

$1
·
4

I
I

Young
Turkeys ... .. ... ..

I

HOllY FARMS . U.S.O. A . INSPECTED

c

Mixed
Fryer
f»ar1ts ..... ........... .
Bone In
Loin Strip
Steak
.......... lb . .

Kroger
. ~~ :
Brown &amp; Serve Rolls :

•
I

ANY SIZE AVAilABlE

U .S. C.OV 'T CiRAO EO CHOICE

$

29

I
I

liMIT ONE COUPON PU f AMI\ y
tttN1t
ltlt-UIJIMI .,... 11 1111
• •••••~~·:.~mnMI LICA!.tu!s

•••u.,... u

SliCED ..

.'te . 89•

Fresh
Picnic
Pork Roast

9

5;;~~::~~

F;~;;~VEMAINOISH

Kroger
Fried Chicken

California
Strawberries

$ 29
Quart

$:r_9 WJ99

PINT 69'

. $289

Virgiqia
Baked Ham .... ...... .... lb.

WHOlt 01 HAlf ... Ll. $2,69

- EASTER PARTY TRAYSAssort1d Varieties Available At Your Kroger Deli
Please Allow One Day For Preparing Your Party Tray.

2
.

SliCED , CHUNKED. OR CRUSHED

EASTER FLOWERS

Kroger
Cake Mixes

~I
' • • 1
.

·~··----

Spotlight
Bean Coffee

vs .

i

I
11-oz.
I
I
Pllgs.
'
I
I
I
IUMII fOUR PNCS. WIJH COUPON AID 17.50 ADDITIONAl PURCH!Sf I
I
IIICLUOI!C IHIS lt!M)
.
I

~--~-

LARGE

""

t

lb.

U .S. GOV 'T GRADED CHOICE

SLICED BONElESS

or:

1
0
lUI II TWO I'IIU. WIIH COUPO~ UD 11.50 ADDITID!At PUICHI$1 I

$ 19

Country Club
Canned
-lb.
Hams . ··~..;;... ·~"""'-:..:.:..:..:.:.

STUFFED PEPPERS

:

Smoked Hams

NONI

lOLa root•u•'
HB . CAN ... $8 .99 OR 8-lB . CAt' ... $13.99

I

~

TOTAL SATISFA CTION GU AAAN TEE

Lou Irene Raseberry,
Plaintiff, ·

of,.,_.

$100

BY BERTHA PARK ER

Attendance at the Free
Methodist Church March 19
was 83. Weather permilling,
Easter morning Sunrise
service wiil be held at the
Roadside Park on Route 33.
Otherwise meeting will be at
the church.

re&lt;-ently with Rev. and Mrs .
Landon said. "Few, save the
A thought lor the day '
Floyd Shook.
British poet Letitia Elilabeth poor, !eel for the poor."
Mr . Timmie Lyons and
children, Rot k Springs,
visited Sunda y with Mrs.
Emma Fo&amp;.
NOW OPEN FOR THE SEASON
Mr . and Mrs. Gene Alkire.
son Kevin and Miss Cleo
9 til s Mon . thru Sat.
Parker , Col umbu s, spent
Sunday with Bertha Parker.

Mrs. Tom Nice.

a.

B oz.
Pkg.

J.aun-1 UHf

L. M. Copenhaven. St.
Alt»;t.ns, and her sister, Mrs.
Roy Sergent, Tornado, W. Va.
Mrs. Goldia Wolf has been
returned to her home from
the Veterans Memorial
Ho$)lltal.
Mr. and Mrs . Richard
VanMeter, Gary, Ind .. are
visiting with his mother,
Mabel VanMeter and Mr. and

Betty Lou Roseberry Caver
•t al .,
Defendants.
No. 16·.ou
- NOTICE OF SALE Pursullnt to an Order of
sate issued by the Common
Pleas Court of Meigs County,
Ohio , I will offer tor sale at
publiC auct1on on tt1e 22nd day
of ApriL 1978, at 10:00A .M . on
the Court House Steps at the
court House jn Pomeroy,
Ohio , the following described
real estate:
Tl'1e follow ing real est!te
situated In the Township of
Lebanon , County of Meigs
.and Stllte of Ohio, and
bounded and described as
follows :
.
The north hlllf of tt1e west
eighty acres of the southwest
quarter of Section 3.4, Town 3,
Range 11 of the Ohio Com .
pany•s Purchase, ~e the slime
more or less .
Also eight (8) described at
follow.s: Previously entered
for texat lon In the name of
Samuel Baker , Range 11,
Town 3, section 3.t, Lot 6.40
No . l.t, acres 90 lrllllue SlOO·
quarter E . part Of s9t.ithweat
1!... The said eight acrtl being
• r•rt of the above described
to to be Ia ld off by m etet and
bounds In the northwest
corner ot said tract In as near
a square form as practicable.
Being also two rods In width,
Fd . l
to Cemetery Fd .
9,000.00 beolrlnlng at the northeast
corner of the nortl'1 half of the
Basic Utility Servlns
southeut Quarter of Section
water Fund
4, Town 3, Range 12, situate In
Bal., Jan . 1, 1977
61 ,620.93
Chtster Township, Meigs
Rece i pts-From Service
County, Ohio, and running
139,359. 94
west to the county road
322.39
Misc.
leading from Adams Mill to
201,309.26
Total Receipt~
Racine, supposed to contain
Expenditures :
about 28 rods be tl'1e same
- Person,al Serv.
32,651 .38
more or less .
- operlltlon - Mli int.
Ref,rence Deeds : Vol. 261,
&lt;8,763.66
Page 263, Vol. 231, ·Page 327
-ueor :serv•ce and Vol. 269, Page 611, OMCI
Bond• Int.
'~•lO.IJ
Recorda Mel;s County, Ohio.
Total Exp .
16-4,865.8
Terms of Sale: Cash, tor
Stwer Fund
not less than two. thirds
Bai .,Jan.1,1977
39,031.53
appnlsed value , and sublect
Receipts-From. Ser"V.
63,103.C5 - to real estate taxes for 1971.
Property appraised at
Total Receipts
102,13.t.98
$5,S33.00.
E)(pendltures :
James J. Proffitt,
• - Personal Serv . . 8,818 .08
Sheriff of
- Operation &amp; Malnt.
Meigs County, OhiO
19,379.99
- Debt Service (31 22, 29 1•1 5, 12, 19, It
40,916.75
bonds &amp; tnt .

GrV;dn~~e,ra 1S

st:

CAMPBELLS

LONGHORN
CHEESE

TASTEE SLICED

We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Stamp•

.

'

WIENERS

Racine, U.

..$149

CUBE .
STEAK

lLJieSter
News N0 t es

m .oo

PINEAPPLE

FRESH LEAN

20 COUNT

11-The Dilly Sentioel, Mlddleport..P&lt;meroy, 0 ., Wedneoday, March 22, 1978
Continued from page 10
~
her aon, LoweU,to a ParkersMuftl&lt; iJol Dlslluno 1111011
burg holiJlital Monday where
I v Proenm
he was to have the cast
Personel Str'9'icts
removed from h' 1 r - 11
Socurlly Of Per&gt;&lt;&gt;n• &amp;
'
IS eg . ...we
Properly
suffered a broken Jeg last
Pollee Law Enforcement
July.
S2.110.01
By Clarlc.e Ah
Anti Recess ion
1,71'2.93
Fin pep t . Fd .
Mr. and Mrs. Huey HaU,
4,119.15
FM . Rev . Sharing
4,036. 19
Totets
n ,m .te Akron, visited with Mr. and
Mrs. Rosa Cleland Sunday.
l'ubtlc Health
Welfare
5er¥"1ces
Mr . and Mrs. Harry
Cemetery
11..t94.43
Fellure,
Gallipolis, and Miss
Tot• Is
1l ,o19-4.43
hslc U tili ty Services
Lou Toben, Pomeroy, called
Sunday School attendance
Water works &amp; Supply
on Mr. and Mrs. Arthur oo March 19 was 52, the of·
!2,65 \.38
Slnltary Sewers &amp;.
DeTray. Robyn and Todd, fering was $30.45. Further
S.wage Oisposll
8,818.08
Sunday
afternoon.
plans were made for the
Totals
41.ol69.46
Recent visitors of Mr. and Easter Sunrise Services for
Transportation
Street Construction and
Mrs. John Hayes have tieen next Sunday at 6' 30 with
Reconstru ction
19.390.41
Mr. and Mrs. James Guins· breakfast to follow in the
Totals
19 ,3oi0.41
Genenl Government
ler, Pickerington, Mr. and church basement. Then the
Mayor ' s Off ice
6,988.30
Mrs. Carl Duckworth, Zanes- Wlual Sunday School and
Finance Adm .
3,390.00
legal Adm .
1,915.00
ville, Bill Quivy, Shade, Mr. church service and an Easter
leg i slat ive
8115.00
and Mrs. Richard VanMeter, "l!i hunt for the children will
Tot als
13 ,138.30
Gary,lnd., and Mr. and Mrs. be held.
Program Totals Summary :
Security of Persons
William Yo11J18, Rutland .
Worship services we~e held
a. Property
62.777.98
Mr . and Mrs. Charles at 10 ,45 with the Rev.
Public Health &amp;
·
Welfare Services 11 ,-'19 ... 43
Knight have returned borne Thomas speaking on "The
B8Sic Utility Serv .
.tl.-'169.46
after a week's visit with her Ma~ Who Moved a City."
Transport• ion
19,390.ol1
mother in Florida.
GeneraiGo11t.
13 ,138.30
Forty-one attended tbe Pabn
Totals For All
D.
D.
Cleland
and
Mrs.
Sunday
service . Special
Programs
148,270.56
CallM!nter, Colwnbus, called music "Jesus and Me" was
Other Oper1tion
&amp; Malnt.
on Denzel Cleland and Mrs. SUI\8 by Howard Flanders
Security
of
Perso ns
&amp;
Allen, Tuesday.
Clarice
Property
and Florence Spencer.
Pollee Law Enforcement
Arthur DeTray spent a
Clair Edward Follrod
15,060.ol4
couple of days in Toledo on underwent
Pol ice Pension
surgery
at
9 ,5 16 . 8~
M lSC',
business.
2,780 .... 6
in
Riverside
Hospital
Fire Dept. Fd .
3,603.58
Mrs. Mary Hayes spent two Columbus, Ohio Monday,
Uti I ity Fd .
17,321 .9.5

Prop~rty Taxes
5• • 113.96
Grand Total
lo18,270.SI
State L•v ied Locally
Optrltlon &amp; MJ inl,
Shared Taxes
87 ,663. 12
Gen•r• t Fund
55,639 .31
Int ergovernmental A id ,
Water Work s Fund 41.163.66
Gnnts &amp; Contra cts
Sewape O ls o . Fd .
•
2s.87S,OO
( Wll ter Poll . cont. I 19,379.99
Charoes tor Public
.
Servlce'ii
2SO,.t60.76
Stree t Const . M &amp; A
F Jnes, Costs &amp; ,
Fund
19, 182.22
Forft itures
11 ,649.05
Statt H it;~ hway
licenses . Permits &amp;
Improvement Fund 2,986.20
Inspections
-'161.50
Cemetery Fund
1,0J.t.13
Other Revenue
13,187.56
Feoeral Rev . Shar . 19,630.61
Grand Total Mun ici pa l
F rre Dept.
3,834 . .t4
Rece ipts
oi6S,-471.95
Utility Fd .
23 ,335 . .tol
Non-Revenue
Total
193,780.00
Other Non ·Re11en ue
Grand Tota l
193,78h.OO
Other Reimbursements
Capital Improvements
3,000.00
General Fund
6,517 .50
Transfers
9,000.00
Totlll
6,517 .50
Trust 8nd Agen cy Funds
Grllnd Tota l
.
6,517 .50
3,320.00
Non-Governmental
Total Other Non .Re11enue .
Genera 1Fund
9,000.00
15,320.00
Water W orks Fund 83 .450.81
Source Tota ls Summ~rv :
Sewage O i sp . Fd .
Other Non ·Revenue 15,3 20.00
I Water Pol L Cont.l
Gr!nd Totlll Mun ici pa l
4o.916. 7l
Rece ipts
15.320.00
lr'npro .... ement Funds 14,805 .44
Total Rece ipts
Debt Sen . Funds
10, 501.30
Property Ta ,.;es
Fire Oept.
3,960 .00
R E &amp; PU Prop ert y
To t al.
162,63.t.30
T8x
41 ,100.15
Trust and Age ncy
Funds
2, 1Joi.Ol ' Tang ible Personal Property
Ta x
15.073.71
Grand Tota l
164,768 .91
Total Property T a)(es
Balance Dec . 31 , 1977
(G ross )
56,173.96
General Fund
.5 1,009 .75
State -Levied Loc ally
Water Works Fund 36, 443 .41
Shared Ta~r&lt;es
Sewag~ D isp . Fd .
Local Government Fund ,
(Water Poll . Cont.)
SalesTax
29,357.28
33 , h70. 16
Estate and Inher itance
Street Const . M &amp; R
,
Tax
14 ,990 .23
Fund
7, 190. 13
Cigaretle Licenses
604 ..48
State Higl'1wey
LiQ uor and Beer
Improvement F und .4 , 809 .83
Permits
4,071 .25
Cemetery Fund
4H .23
Gllsoline Tax~s
17 ,747.00
OebtServ . Funds
69 ,042.h2
Motor Vehicle l icense
Federa l Rev . Shar. 22 , 486.87
20,886 .88
Fees
Anti Recession Fund 1, 536.07
Totlll Sl'1 ared T8KeS 87,663. 12
Fire Dept .
4 , 524 . ~3
lntergovermental
Aid, ·
Ut ili ty Fd .
10,0 13.82
Total
241 , 121.12 ' Grants &amp; Contracl s
Federal Rev . Shar . 23,802 .00
Trust and Agen c y
Anti . Recession
2.073 .00
Funds
18 , 613 .66
Totlll l ntergo"Vernmental
Grand Total
259 , 734 .78
Aid
25,875 .00
Municipal Receipts
Charges For Public Services
Bv Source
Sewerag~ Sewage
Revenue
Disposal
63,703.45
Property Taxes
Parking M eters
RE &amp; PU Property
( On - StreerJ
38,548 .58
TaK
41 , 100.25
Waterw orks lind Supply
Tangible Persona l Property
139,682.33
Tax
15,073.71
4,-'101 .40
Cemetery
Total Property Taxes
F i re Dept. Fd .
(Gross )
56, 173.96
Total PUblic Service
State -Lev i ed Locally
Charges
250,460.76
Shared Taxes
F ines , Cost s &amp; Forfeitures
Lo ca l Government Fund,
Court F ines and
Sales Tax
29 ,357.28
Forfeitures
31 ,648.05
Eslate and Inherita nce
Total Fi nes , Cos t s &amp;
Tax
1&lt;1 , 990.23
Forfeit ures
31 ,b48 .05
Cigarette L icenses
604 .&lt;18
Li cense s, Permits And ln ·
liquor and Beer
spec tion s
Permit s
4,077 .25'
Building, P.ermits ·and
Gasoline Taxes
17,747.00
Licenses
462 .50
Motor V eh icle License
Tota l Licenses. Permi ts &amp;
Fees
·
20, 886.88
Inspections
462 .50
Total Shares Taxes 87 ,663 . 12
Other Revenue
lngergovernmenta\ Aid.
Interest Earnings
6,996 .50
Grants &amp; Contracts
All Other Misc . Rev .
Federal Rev Shar . 23.802 .00
(Except Re"Volving FundsJ
Anti · Recesston
2.073. 00
6.19 1.05
Totlll tntergo"V ernm enta l
Total Otl'1er Revenue 13,187.56
Aid
25,875 .00
Other NOn · Revenue
Charges For Publ ic Services
Other Reimbursements
Sewerage &amp; Sewage
3, 000.00
D isposal
.
h3 ,703 .45
Transf~?rS
·9,000 .00
Pa'rkfng Meters
Trust and Agency Funds
·wn .st'reetJ
38,548.58
3,320 .00
Waterworks and
Tot ai Otl'1 er Non .Revenue
Supply
1 39.682 . ~ 3
15.320.00
4,4ot...eo
Cemetery
Source Totals Su mmary :
4,125.00
Fire Dept , Fd .
Property TaKes
56, 173 .96
Total Pub lic Ser vice
State .Levied L ocally
Cl'1arges
250.460 .76
Sl'1ared Taxe s
81,6b3 . 12 '
Fines , costs 8. Forfeitures
lnter go~Je rnmental Aid,
Court Fines and
Gran l s &amp; Contrac ts
Forfeitures
31, 649 .05
25 ,875.00
Tota l Fines, Costs &amp;
C1'1!rg~s for Publi c
Forfeitures
31 , 649 .05
Services
250,460. 76
Licenses , Permits and In ·
Fines , Costs &amp;
spections
Forfeitures
31,649;05
Building , Pe rm it s ·and
licenses, Permits &amp;
Licenses
462 .50
Inspecti ons
462 .50
Tota l Licenses , Perm Its
Ott1er Revenue
13, 187.56
8. Inspections
462 .50
Otl'1er Non . Rellenue 15,320.00
Other Revenue
Grand To tal Mun ici pal
Interest Earn ings
6,996 .50
Receip\s
480,791 . 95
All Other M isc. Rev .
(Except Revoi"Ving F und s )
6, 191.05
Continued on page 11
Total Other Revenue 13, 187,56
Source Totals Summllry :

Juice Packed
Kroger
Pineapples .....
DOMINO liGHT BROWN SUGAR OR

1OX Confectioners
Sugar ... ......... ·.........
"NT RITUINAILliOnLES

R.C. Cola or
Diet Rite .... ..
KROGE~

Hi Nu 2%

Lo.wfat
Pope
Milk .................. Ctn.

$
·lb

Pkg

..
1

�n- '!'be Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pcmeroy, 0 ., Wedneoday, March 22, 11178

WANT AD
CHARGES

tN LOVING memory of our 1on
and grandson, Ryan Roger
Aous.h , who died ot birth one

1$ WOfdw ur Under
Cuh

Olilrl(t

ldMy

1.110

1,25

l'dta)'ll

UiO

1.90

ldM)'¥

1.10

2 .~

11111)'11

3.(111

3.7$

E¥c:h word ovH tM minimwn 1$
wurds il 4 t.'ml» prr wurd prr liMy.
Ad» running ut.ht-r tNn l'Uftlla'Utlve
dlly.11 will tit: ctwrKed ilL UM! I daly

.....

yeor ago . March 20, 1971.
We th ink about him in
rhougl-it1 and dreams

,..,

That words con nher tell.
God l!lleu our li ttle son and
grandson
And keep him in our core
We look to Heaven with wide

Jn nwmury, Ql.rd of numb 11ntl
Obihwry: I L't'nLi ~Jl'f wurd, $3.110
minltnwn. C11sh in wdYIII'Il't .

Mobile Hotnt!.!l.lliel£ lind Y11nlults
Mn IIL'\."epttd unly with t.'lllh wilh
on.lt!r. !5 t.'tnt chllrge ftH' 11odi cMrry·
lAM Bu11 Numi.Jtor In C11rt u(The ~n·
Unel.

The Publlllher r~~rvl2:i \he righl
l.u Wit r.1r rtltct 11ny iid!l dtttl'lftl ob~tionMI. The Publisher will nut bl!

~pvnsiblt~ fur mure INIIllltlt incur1M~ in~rUon .

Phone 992-21 S6

RACINE

Voh.mteer

F1re

NOTICE

•

tory choke guns only . Auorted
m.ats .
- - - - :--"":
CLEARANCE SALE begin~ Mon ..
Feb. 13 qt Sew-N-Sew Outlet ,
Moiri Street . Rcu~in&amp; . All
polve!ter double knits reduced
•O % and so•t. Thread big 1pool
5 for $1.
low. · low

FERTIUZER, NITROGEN,
POTASH, FERT~PELS

Swldu.v
t P .M.
Fri(hty wfternwn

&amp; BLEND
For Thursd•y. Much 23, 1971

Pomeroy Landmark

ASTROeGRAPH 9.
Bernice Bede Osol

_Jack W. C.orHy. MQr .
.. . .
Phone m -2181

~\~~

~mnwllidlmv

THE MEIGS Countv Humane Socle·
ty Easter Bazaar h"os been
pos tpono1d until March 24th and
~5th cfueto weather cand ition1 .
FARMERS - ACCO SEED Dealerships ore a va ilable in your
area. For information write
Stan Coakley . Rt. 1, Kill buck ,
Ohia-4•637 .
OFFERS WILL be receJved a t the
oHice of Bernard V. Fulh,
Pomeroy
Not ion al
Bonk
Building. Pomeroy, Ohio, unt il
10 o"dock A.M., March 25,
1978, fo r the sole of a 1975
Plymouth of-door sedan , 36,000
mile1 . Good con dit io n.
Kenneth C. Welsh, Gu ardian of
_ A_d_d_on_ne Fre ~
n c::h:c_.- ,::----:-~OSE WEIGHT · up to 7 pounds _
a
week or mo ney bock . Get TRIM
AID . Week"s supply only $3 .98 .
Ava ilable a t VILLAGE PHARMACVS, Middleport oncf New
Haven ."~-;

March 23. 1978
You ma y dream about _those
taraway places you 'd like to
visit , but true success and
happiness will be found in your
own backyard th is com ing
year. Don't miss seeing the
fo rest lor I he ~tess .
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprlf 19) You
cou ld make a big m ista ke
where yo ur work is conce rned
if you permit your attention to
wander . Concentrate on the
tas k at hand . Hav•ng trOuble
selec ting a career? Send tor
you r co py of As lro·Graph Letter, Mall 50 ce nts lor e ach and a
long , se lf~ addressed . s tamped
envelope to Astra-Graph P.O.
Box ~89. Radio Cily S tat io n ,
New York. NY 10019 .. Be s ur e to
specify yolir birth sign .
TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) Your
optimism can make yo u gu lli ble
JV
in tus iness mauers today .
Your com mo n :sense won·t
•~
desert you II you 'll only rely on
11.
.
GEMINI (May 21·Juno 20) An y
doubl s you ha ve abou t a major
·dec ision that affe c ts the fa mi ly
should not be ignored . Discuss
il wilh all parties co nce rned
US
and procee d ca utio us ly .
CANCER (Juno 21-Jufy 221
·You ' re barking up the wrong
tree if you th ink Ieday 's tasKs
JackW . Carsay,Mgr.
can be swept under the rug .
PhOne m-2111
Postponing lhe job on ly adds .
e~~:tra headaches .
LEO (July ZJ.Aug. 22) A sellce nte red outlook today impels
you to be e~~:travagant with your
own re so urces as well as those LOST: 1 10 week old female
of othe rs . The indulgence
belted pig. lost at CR 82 . Call
could be costly .
992-7785 or 985·•223 .
VIRGO (Aug. 2J.Sopt . 22) Com·
par in g your family members'
abilities to outsiders ' talents is
un realis tic and insulting . Don' t
upecl more of your kin t~an LPN NEEDED. Work 3 to 11 or 11 to
1 , Phone 1-667-3196.
you 're able to give .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) You're AVON · HAVE 4 hours a day ? I
restless, easily bored and the
need 3 people to sell qua li ty
normal te ns ions of 1he day
products in their own Territory .
co uld unduly irritate you . Your
Excellent earnings . Coli
disposit io n c hanges when you
7ot2-2354.
bury yourself in your work .
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24·Nov .22) SALESMAN WITH management
oppor.tun·ltieJ. Hospitolitotion ,
Do n't be taken by a friend 's
retirement , and disab il ity
tale of woe today . Bel o re open ·
benefits prov ided by company.
ing your hearl and your purse,
Starting salorv $160 and up . Imdo some independent lnvestl·
med iate opening in Pomeroy
gat ing .
area. Notionally known com·
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dtc.
pony. Phone 8 • 11 om
211 It 's just a figment of your
614-4•6-2273 .
imagina tion if you think others
can 't walt 1o help you today .
Succ ess will be denied un less
you do the job yourself .
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan .19) TIMBER . Pomeroy Forest Pro·
Don't jump to conclusions
ducts . Top price for standing
based u pon hearsay or partial
sawtimber . Call 992-5965 or
information . It will be inaccu·
Keni Hanby , 1-&lt;11&lt;116-8570.
rate and you c ould fi nd yourself
COINS , CURRENCY . tokens , old
in over your head .
pocket watches and chains ,
AQUARIUS (Jon.ZO.Feb . 19)
silver and gold. We need 1%4
There's a warning for you to
and older silver c:oim, Buy , sell ,
tread . cautiously In using
or trade' Coli Roger Wams le y,
lrlBnds in b"usines s s ituations .
7•2· 2331.
This Is one day where senti ~
ments don't blend well with OLD FURNITURE, ice boxe1 , bran
beds, iron bed1, etc., complete
commerce .
households. Write M . 0 . Miller,
PISCES (Fob. ZO.Morch ZO)
At . !4 , _Pom.e roy , Ohio or call
. Don ' t let a family member make
992-7760.
·you feel guilty because you
:-::---want to spend some time with NO ITEM TOO
Lorge or too small .
. friends today . U's seltishness
Will buv 1 pi~• or complete
on his or her part.
household . New , used , or a nti·
INEWSP"'PER ENTERPRISE AS!;N 1
que1 . Martin's Furniture , 20 N.
!lnd St ., Middleport. Phone
9'12-6370.
CHIP WOOD . Poles max .
TheAimuae
diameter 10" on largest end. $8
Ualted Preoolalei'DAIIoual
per ton . Bundled slob. $6 per
ton . Delivered to Ohio Pollet
Today is Wednesday,
Co .. At . 2, Pomeroy. 992 -2689 . ·
March 22, the 81sl day of 1m
GOOD USED trOctor witt"t
with 284 to follow.
hydraulic. 3 pt . hitch. 742·307ot .
'!'be moon Is approaching
$CASH$
for junk carl . Frye's
Ita full phaae.
Truck
ond
Auto Ports. Wrecker
Tbere II no morniJig star.
Service. Tire 1oie and Repa ir .
Tho evening stars are Mer·
Rutland , 742-20e l or Penn:rail ,
cury, Mars, Venus, Jupiter
7A2-9575.

If wou want the
lowest P"""" on

Baler Twine now's
the time IO bUJ.
Call today,
Pomeroy Landmark

I.

·

L..;:==:....--------'

and Slturn.
Thole born on tbls date are
under the sign of Aries.
American

actor

WHITE CAST Iron lawn furn iture.
Grope
pattern .
Phone
1-378-6226.

Karl

Malden (Malden Sekulovicb)
stephen Decatur, Americlln
wu bern March Z2, 1914.
navlll hero, waa mortally
On lhil day In lu.tory:
In 1791, CGIIIreaa enacted wounded In a duel with

lorblddlnc

leclslltlon
trading
with

nations.
In

1820,

slave
forelan

·

Commodore

Pho_~e ~ ~ 4!_~ - 0292 .

THE RACINE Gun Club Gun Shoot

4P .M.

the d11y lldvre public11tiun

~~&lt;.'W="'"""==;:

19'75 CADILLAC COUPE de VILLE .

Check our
prices on

"''"'"Y
Lhru
Frld11y

o• look ing for work ... or
whoteyet ... you·ll get results
foste r with et Sen1inel Wont Ad.
Co11 991-2156.

Aidi;e;e;-~~~=5:.~=~::

---

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

If YOU hov• o urv1c.e to otfer,
wont to buy or sell something,

Department will sponsor o gun
shoot every Saturday at 6 pm at
their bu ildin~ in lkishon. fo~­
tory choke guns only .
every Sunday cfternoon . Foe-

Commodore Jamea Barron
outside Washi~llton, D .C .,
over Barron's removal from
active duty.

&gt;&lt;r

13- The Doily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday,March 22,1978

1

TRACY

Sobl• block. luHv · equipped .
742·2215.
197b BLACK GRANADA .-', block
"invl top , P,S., P.B.. A.C.. AM ·
FM radio . 7ot2·3187 or 992-5323 .
1965 DODGE DART . Cood work
cor. $200 . Phone 992-6192 after
~~_:_-

___·___

RUGS, WAlL Hangings and
of90n• . Nice for Christmas .
Reasonable. Coll992-2214 .
B &amp; S MOBILE HOMES. PI-:-

Pi'.a-

.s. ont, W . Vo. bes1de Heck's.
1973 Broodmo re 1• x 64 2
bedroom
1973 Dorion I• • 6lJ 2 bedroom
1972 Victorian U x b7 3 bedroom ,
2both
1972 CaYel'\lry 12 x6S 3 bedroom
1969 Sta tesman 12 x 60 2
bedroo m.
REDUCE SAFE &amp; fast with ~8~~e
Tablets &amp; E-Vap "water pills"'"
Nel$on Dr ug·

-HEALTHY

.

YOUNG pigs for sole .
9ot9-2774, otter 5 p.m .

-

---

---

COAl . liMESTONE . sond , grovel .
ccltium chlo ride. fertilizer , dog
food . and all trpes ol so h. EM ·
celsio r Salt Works . Inc., E. Main
- ~ :..' ~~~e roy . 992-3891 . - - 19o!9 WILLYS tru ck , 4WO . 1969
VW . Por tab le Dryvr . Call
992-5601 .
DATSUN
992·7453 .

197ot

1970 CHEVELLE SUPER Sport . SSOO.
992 5301.
196-4 CHEVV IMPALA . V-8. 283
automatic . 992-2627 after 5.
- ------~--·
1973 EL CAM INO Estate truck .
Automatic , P.S., P.B. , AM-FM
rad io. air shocks. 742·2320.
---'--~·-.,·

ECONOMY fRACTOA with all ot·
tothments , lihe new . asking
$2250 . Phone (6 1•) 698-3290.

PICKUP. $2100.
~-·

---..,---.-

REALTY

General Contracting

GeorgeS. HobsloHor Jr .•
Broker
107'12 Sycamore St .
Pomeroy, Ohio
PHONE 992-6333
Office Hours :
9a . m . to5p.m .
Closed Thursdays and
Saturdays at noon.
Your Full Time
Rea I Estate Broker
l lf2 Acres of -wooded. land
Idea l for trailer or home.
Located 1 mile off of Rt . 1.
near Tuppe r s Pialns, Ohio .
· Already approved for
septic tank, and planning
commission. Will sell
under land con tract for
$3500 .

One 4 bedroom, ranch,
very. modern, West Shade.
near Chester, Ohio.

VA-FHA, 30 yr . linanc;ing, also
refi nancing. Ireland Mor tgage ,
77 E. Stole , Athens , phone (614)
592-3051 .
3 AND of RM . fur nished ond un- TWO STORY frame house , 6
rooms ond bot h, cellar, out- '
furni shed opts. Phone W2 buildings , 4 acres land, ot edge
543• .
of Rutlond . Comple te lroiler
CO UNTRY MOBILE Ho m e Parle
hook ·up olso . 2 bonks o ppra i ~ ­
Route 3.3 . .no rth Of Pomeroy .
ed property ot $15 ,500. Phone
Lorge lo ts . Coli 992-7479
992-7094 .
12 IC 60 MOBILE HOME near
NICE HOME in ru ral area wi th 26
ter . .Phone 992·5858 .
oc~es . New alumin um siding.
comp letely insulated ond
APT .
FOR
rent .
Renta ls
remodel ed. Storm windows .
ossis5tance rote5 for Senior
LOrge carpeted living room ond
Citizens . Co ntact Vill age Manor
bo th. Coll985-411 1 or 992-5b21
Apts .. Middleport , 992-7787.

De:.

UPSTAIRS APT., 3 rms . and a RUSTIC HillS. s,..ra cuse. Nice
three bedroom ho me, total
bath . No pets . Write Bo11 729-T.
elec tric . carpeted, with carpor t
co Doily Sentinel. Pomeroy .
and cir conditioning . Phone
Oh io::·--~992-5J48 .
THRE~ BEDROOM. ronch--;t"yle
house on i3 dcres of property. THREE BEDROOM house . Tot01
electric. Rustic Hills. Sy rocu5e ,
lease required. References re·
Ohio. 992·2063.
qu ired . 985-ot321 alter 5,
THREE BEDROOM home . 1/ 1 acre .
Carport. lu ll bo5ement finished
wit il wo rkshop . 6 years old .

-----

992 -2'257 .
-----------·-

OHIO RIVER vie-w. Like new 70 x
14 mobile home witk a ttached
MAIN
family room 18 x 29 . 3 bed rOom .
POMEROY, 0 .
2 baths , double carport . 2
covered patios on ,/. acre .
WOOD
BURNING
Landscaped lot. 992-7680.
F irepla c e, 3 ;pdrms .,
modern ranch, approx. 1
a c re, 2 car garage . In
excellent condition . ONLY
$31 ,500.00 .
Modern , 3
.RANCH bdrms .,
leve l
lot ,
carpeting. d in ing room ,
nice kitchen . Close to town .
10 FT . Truc:k camper. Self·
ONLY $26,600 .00 .
con tained. Sleeps~- Cos t $950 .
BASEMENT -'- Ranch in
992 ·b12A .
Pomeroy, 3 Bdrms ., bath ,
lots of yard space. AS KING .
PORTABLE MAVTAG washer and
dryer with stand. 1 year old . $18,000.00.
742-3 187 or 992-5323 .
APPROX. 8 ACRES Many building sites, som~
GOLD G. E. ref rigerator and gold
Sunray stove. $150 lor both . woods , wate r &amp; elec .
Coli 992-5158 or see a t 23 1 S. ovaflab l e .
INVEST
3rd St ., Midd lepo rt .
$13, 100.00 .
COUNTRY - Large older
LIV ING ROOM suite. Albert Hill ,
home, garage, storage
9•9-2261.
building , lh ls Is f&lt;K the
. EASTER BUNNIES and. GUinea pigs
large fainily, level lot.
for sole . $2 .50 each . 7•2·3150.
ONL V $8,000.00.
1977 CHEVY STEPSIDE pick up.
THREE LEVELS 5
~600 . 992·2912 .
Bdrms., lots of space, In
town , needs some minor
NEED A WATER .repairs . A STEAL
$6.725.00 .
SOFTE N ER?
WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
LAt Pomeroy Londmortc
ALL
TYPES
OF
toften &amp; condition your
PROPERTY. LIST WITH
wattr wltb Co-op wattr
US TO SELL. WHEN
ooftoner. - 1 UC-SVI,
BUYING BE SURE OF
Now Only
WHAT
YOU'RE
GETTING.
LET
US
SERVE YO.U.
Ltt ut tnt your w1ter Fret
HENRY E. CLELAND
REA.LTOR
HANK , KATHY &amp; LEONA
Jock W. C.roey, Mgr.
CLELAND
Phonom-2111
ASSOCIATES
992-2259-'-992-6009
992-6191

"289.95

Pomeroy Landmark ·

9.-_:
til

CALL

One 3 bedroom, new , Crow
Subdivis ion, near Five
Points .
Cheryl Lemley
Associate
Home Phone 742-2003
Hi lion Wolfe. Sr.
Associate
Home Phone 949-2589

r----------.,
992-3325
216 E. Seca~d Street
ALMOST NEW - Country
ranch home on Rt. 7. 3
large bedrooms, central a lr
and heat. 21/2 baths . Very
nice large kitchen, dining ,
family room, with native
stone fireplac e . Lots of
extra large closets, 2 car
garage &amp; almosl llf2 acres.
Many other features .
RIVER FRONTAGE Plus a 4 bedroom home,
bath , · natural gas F . A.
furnace. Excellent garden.
Want $16,500.
RIVER VIEW - 2 lomily
home with owner living In
one and renllng the other
out .
Garage
in
the
base ment and 2 lots.
In lown. 3
RT. 124 bedrooms, bath, natural
gas furna ces, basement,
fro~ porch and garage on
cofler lot . Offer .
13 ACRE$ - On hard road
in Orange Township: Lots
of woods, several acres In
bottom ·and 2 trailer spots.
2 bedroOm trailer goes with
sale . $13,000.
53 ACRES In the
country .
Bedford
TOwnship , all minerals ,
spring water, small stream
and fen ced . $16,500.
NEW LISTING 2'h
acres.
In
Chester
Township. T .P. water, and
electrlc available. $5;000.
WE ARE NOW BUILDING
OUR LISTING ROLL FOR
THE SPRING SALES. lF
YOUWANT YOURS SOLD
YOU SHOULD CONTACT
US NOW. LISTING YOUR
PROPERTY WITH US AT
A REASONABLE PRICE
WILL LET ONE OF OUR 4
EXPERIENCED
SALESMEN SELL IT.
CALL992-3325
A PROFESSIONAL
SUE P. MURPHY
HELEN L. TEAFORD
G. BRUCE TEAFORD
ASSOCIATES

I

Blown Insulation

AT 446·7881

Evenings C.ll446-3716 or 446-7811
I ACRES - Reduced lo $18.000. IncludeS. small house
In good condition. Al10 2 mobile home spaces wllh
septic tank. Good rental Income. Near function of Rt. 7
on Rt. 124. ·
MUST SELL NOW! 2 story home In Mlddfeporl near
churches, shopping etc. T~ owner has to sell this home
Immediately. Features 3 bedrooms, farge family
room, eet. ln kitchen and dining, cellar &amp; garage with 3
room opt. Will sell to first reasonable offer.
REDUCED TO S2S.OOO- 2 story stone frame on large
lot; In Middleport. Has formal entrance &amp; dining. 2
l.orge bedrooms, living room with fireplaces &amp; eilt-fn
kitchen. Centro! gas heal &amp; gorove.

&amp;LAZESl
DON'T THLME

VOU SAID 01./E
D06NAPPER GOT
MV SHOULDE&lt;l f'&gt;A6 .
!IV 5LM•HI N6
TH~ STRAP!

AI

.,. .......,.

!112·220&amp; 111992·7530
IIO!llio holt.ofon

THE TECHNICAL
DATA WA? IN
THAT I!A&lt;!H!

2-23-imo.

ACELocated
HARIMARE
ln- Tho
MEIGS PLAZA
Middleport, Ohi.o

ROGER HYSEll

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

GARAGE
oH Rt. 7

~4

miles

'
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~

by-p1ss on

I•

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ro H/o.TE

...SilT

IT.,; '1001. m't'

...'&gt;HE \®JTS '1:&gt; KOOIJ YJH~

S\TTI;R .•.

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'tll!
FI(CM

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~emTY,

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rl-..111OOJI&gt;JP!U.••,...._,.,..

WHAI A e.IFtl.. M I(:;,HT
PUI ON A!&gt; 5HE ENC'S
A QUAR'~EL WIIH

''

Anniveruries

'i

Specie!.Occasions

_,..'''

BGbHooflkh

MOORE'S

Garages

Muffler . Brakes
Shocks - ' Tires
Battery.
Installation Service

AI Tromm
Construction
742-2328
Free Estimates
Work Guaranteed
2-lO.tfc

Ph. ffl -2848

WHAT?

HE'(, BOSS ••• S1 A.RR.

*

~LITTlE

w"'

@lfr! ~ .' "f::!P. !.'

M "ANO HIS

PAL IN ANNI E'S PLACE

11ll

I - grand

.... ·-.

plano
5 Miss Muf·
fel"s visitor
11 Medicinal
plant
1% Diatribe
· 13 Mllland
et al.
14 Worn away
15 Botanical
gardens
site
16 CQffee or
Orson
17 Manifest
19 Chatter
22 Jury list
24 Roman
· official
26 Took to

.,_. ,

..-.,.-, I

We have enlarged our
service department and
will Service Hc;ttpoint and
.Other brands .

Pomeroy Landmark

9e .Jack w. ear,.,y, Mgr. ·
.. . . . . Phone"2·2181 . .
HOMESITES fo,r .sa le , 1 acre and
up . Middleport . near Rutland ,
Coli 992-7481.
NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 baths,
all elec .. 1 ocre, Middleport ,
dose to Rutland . Phone 992·
7ot81.
COUNTRY farmland with sedud·
ed woods, water and good oc·
cess in Monroe County, W. Vo.
$1 ,CXXl down . call {30-4 ) 11?.·
3102 or (304) 772-3227.
Commerc:la l property opproK . 17
acre! , level land , located ot
Tuppers Plains -on Ohio, Route
7. Phone (614) 667-6304 .

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

LOOK WHAT WE GOT - 57 ACRES with a ~Ice 1'12 .
story house with 3 bedrooms and 1'12 baths. Mostly
carpet. This house has been remodeled Inside and out.
It has a big central fireplace with heatalator and Is
Insulated. Small barn and about 20 acres fenced . Nice
country setting oft blacktop road . Shown by
appointment only . Priced $&lt;112,000.00.
4 ACRES of nice laying land not far from Southern
High School. Nice building sites. Ideal for new home
builders . Call now for Info .
$11,700 wJII buy a good 2 bedroom house with both
Garage and storage building . Nat. gas heat. DrivewaY
. Is elect. heated. Nice Ohlo River view. Furniture can
be bought extra. Price reduced for quick Mle.

SEWING MACHINE Repairs . service , all makes . 992-2284 . The
Fabri c Shop . Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Soles and
Servke. We sharpen Sd$50rs.
EXCAVATING . dozer, loader and
backhoe work; dump trucks
and lo-boys lor hire; wi11" haul
fill dirt , to Soi l, timeltone and
groveL Coli Bob or Roger Jeffers , day phone 992· 7089, night
phone 992-35.25 Or 992· 5232 .
EXCAVATING , do:rer , backhoe
and ditche r. Charles R. Hal·
field , , Bock Hoe Service ,
Rut la nd , Ohio. Phone 742-2008.
Will do roofing, construction,
plumbing and heating . No job
too Iorge or too small . Phone·
742-2348.
HOWERY AND MARTIN Excavating. septic sys tems .
doter , backhoe, dump truck ,
li me-tone , grovel. blacktop
paving,' Rt . 143. Phone 1 (614)
698-7331.
BATHROOMS AND Kitchens
remodeled, ceromk: tile, plumbing, carpentry, and general
molntenonce. 13 yea rs e.-:· '
perience. 992-3685.
PULLINS EXCAVATING. Complete .
Service. Phone 992·2478.
WINTER GET to your house? let us
make necessary repairs . AI
Tromm . Construction . 742-2328 . .
NEIGLER'S FOR building houses. '
Call q-49-2508 for house designs
and estimates . Guy H. Neigler , ,
Racine .

SAVE ON
CARPETING
DRIVE A LlffiE
&amp;
SAVE A LOT

PRICE DRASTICALLY REDUCED- flh 8cres nice
laying land with a nice 12x64 all carpeted mobile home
completely furnished. 2 bedrooms · built on with nice
family room with fireplace . Ga r;den space, work shop.
block cellar and city water. Nice country setting.
C&gt;-vner may take nice mobile home as part payment
Price now S1A,300.
·
50 ACR~S- FREE GAS. Why worry about the high
cost of heating yoor home, drying your clothes, ho"t
~ater etc. We have a 1112 story house with 3 bedrms
and bath, dining room wifh fireplace . Full basement'
Large pond stocked . Prf&gt;ed only $42,500.
·.

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horse
27 Heraldic
wreath
28 Sluggish
30 U&gt;afer
31 Sea : Fr.
32 Medieval
sword
:U Newfound·
lsnd cape
35 Seek the
vote
38 Over·
night bag

Rubber Back Carpet
As Low As

9' and 12' Vinyl
Flooring In Stock
Buy where you can come in
and see what you're getting
- Good selections - Fully
stocked.
Coil ~42-2211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
742-2211

Rutland

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Yealerday's Alulwer

21 Milwaukee's :U Racing's
specialty

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23 First·

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38 Follower

to law :

of an ism
33 Location

abbr..

IF YOU NEED
A SOFA. THAT

41 Contrived

• A 6 :1
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to

work It :

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Yesterday'• Cryploquote: NOTHING Ill
11IING JN. THE WORlD REMAINS TO BE
OVER.-UNCOLN SlEI'FEI'iS

BED FOR
YOU

JW

DONE . EVERY·
DONE OR DONE

©trTI Kiq Feature• S)'n.ditat.e, Jne.

15 IN STOCK

-- .

L HAVE TO HURRY 140ME
lOOAY, SCHOOL ... WE'RE
GOING TO VISIT M'l UNCLE

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UNCLE WHO

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WHEN THE
HOCkE'f _
FRANCHISE
MOVED, IT
6ROKE HIS (:b
'-.HEART./
:;i£#tJ.t:l.-

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WHAT 'S THAT
I.{E SAY, SNUFFY ?
I'M TERRIBLE HARD
OF HERRIN'

twu

,Jimmy

hurdle . " Sure I ' ll make it," .

won. He had jumped the llrst
he said, as h e le d the king ·

an~ quee n of t-eart~ and run

the club suit, discarding the

four or diamonds on the firth .

North East
7 NT

Pass
Pass

S&lt;&gt;ulh
2NT
Pass

club .
He reached his hand with :
the k ing of diamonds . Ev·
eryone hHd three card~ left. ~
Dummy had the A 4 of

spades and the 6 or diam onds, East h a d the 10 9 of
spades and J of hearts, :
South had the Q 5 ol spades ·
a nd the A · or h ea rts, and
West the K 8 of spades and ·
the 10 or diamonds .
·
Jimmy led th e ace of

hearts and the defense was

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

finishe d . If West pitched his
diamond then. duminy ,

Six. not r ump is easy . Seven
notrump, which was bid by

tricks with the ace ol spades
and the six or diamonds. If
West threw the eight of
spades, J lmmy would discard dummy's s ix of dlamonds and at tric k 12 would

her world-class expert husband , Jimmy, was not easy
at all .
" How ca n you bid like
that '!'' growled Jimmy ,
when dummy was shown.
"You'll make it," said
Patricia, and sauntered ·on
lo ge t a c up or coflee .

" Right," Jimmy sa id to
him se lf .

·seemed

The

contract

e xtreme ly "' bleok .

But Jimmy, as any c hampion would, ro·n nulated a
line of play that would at
least give him a chance.
At trick one it was c rucial
that Jimmy win In the c or,
reel hand. He had to win the
a ce of diamonds in dummy

BARNEY

I COMETO
GIT BACK TH.AT
THUTTV CENT YE
OWE ME. LUKEY

tri c k

t Q 7
• 10 g

Patricia Cay ne, playing with

LONGFELLOW

!&lt;'liSE

YOUR ~.OPES '
VNOVLY.'

•.

down . He n eeded the king Of

At

Opening lead : • J

JZPV

r

• .I 10 9 8 5
• 83

Pass
Pass

AXYDLBAAXR

GZXJ

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.. 7 6 2

1+

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how

TELL- YOU , BUT
l 'A\ AFI&lt;'IID IT

I!'·

crossed to his king of clubs •
and played n spade to .
dummy's jac k. The finesse

• K 42
• K J 64
Vulnerab le : North-South
Dealer : North

river

BN

'·I

EAST
• 10 !I 7 :t
• J H5 4 :1

SOUTH
: ~ io2
9

E~:H: ~J~~

WINNiE-'- I HI\VE
SOME IHINS TO

I.

diamonds as an entry t o his ·
hand to squeeze West n ea r
the end of the hand.
.

• KQ

WEST

One letter simply stands for another. In thil sample A la
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc . Single letters
apo&amp;lrophes, the length and formation of the word1 a·re 1
h10ts. Each day the code letters are difl'erent.

M~ HT

:r-22

NORTH
• AJ 4

CRYPTOQUOTES
TriAT HE WAS Ju:OT A
VICTIM OF AMNE:71A .
ACTUI\ LLY BELIEVED
IT MYSELF /

I'

. 48 Accordinll

herb

Ji

BE "THANKFUL SHE SPARED
VOU THE DETAILS. RJIZ.
YEAIZtl I D~VE PEOPLE
CIG'IZY TELLINB THEM
~ILL WOULD RETURN
50ME 171\Y...

..I•

to it
38 ~tP.uon There's nothing
or else h e would certainly go •

29 ~~kly

Wt1t

WINNIE

••

,.,.,.

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

hOW"

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BRIDGE

38 ~";':~~

way"

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341 Over
37 Wheel's hub -~~~:::==-.;~-=---~

25 ~~~ct

musical
comedy

II

,:,.

Wednrsday, Marc h 22

..:.. Ridge

DO~N'"I" Ne&amp;D~u::n...

G) • •. ' t

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1·.

Cable Channel s 6 :3()--Testimony Time
7:00 - Paul Gau dino Family Fitness
7:30 - Coach's Corner
8 :00 - Spec to L.fi' dltlon
· 10 : 00 - 700 Club

genius
4 Affinnalive
answer
5 Bullock
6 Corsair
7 One of
the Ages
8 Family
member
9 Gelder·
land city
10 - Ryder ·
16 _ esprit
18 Swerve
19 Famous

Heming-

~

•,'

"·

3 Budding

" 42.Late news

..

•

I Dog talk
2 Wings : Lat.

41 "-

FRANK &amp; ERNIE

•••
.

Largest Selection In The V1ll1y
KIDS lN YOUR HAIR, LOOK HERE Flve
bedrooms, nice 1tf2 story house, lariJt living room with
shining oak flooring, fargo kflchen wflh dining area 2
lull baths, 2 bodrooms down and 3 upstairs. Co('lplet~fy
Insulated With F. A. nat. gas furnace. Lorge pilrchos &amp;
garage . Loc. In Chester . Price $19,800.
Wo N. .d Llollngo
,
We have buyers for many typos of pro!Mf1y
CALL JIMMY DEEM, Asooclott 1 949·2311.

You look, Sl im! I'm afraicl
t o!

Looks Now all wou have to do
qood, is pick up a babwat t he
Clovial hospital to put into it!

All carpet installed wllh
padding at no charge .
Ex.,.rt installation.

•4.aal\:d.

Norw ooa ,_ N.J. 07648. Make c f1ecks payable lo

by THOMAS JOSEPH
' ACROSS
DOWN
'

II'""---------.. .

34,

6LuaM~td'

_!!!! _._' ;'

APPLIANCE .
SERVICE

r

BASIC KITIV CORPSE UNLO CK
.
What was Noah 's profession 1- ·· ARK· ITECT"

Answer

newspaper, P..O. Box
Nawspaparbooks.

.
.

BRADFORD , . Auctioneer, Com- WATER WEll Drilling . Alsooil ond
plete Ser vice . Phone 9ot9-2487
gas ¥\!ell work . Heaton Drilling
or 9•9-2000. Racine, Ohio . .Crill
Co ., David S. Hea ton, Rl. 3;
Bradford .
Pomeroy , Ohio . Phone
985 -4335 .
ElWOOD" BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers, toasters : irons, oil TURLEY "S WRE CKER Ser..- ice .
small appliances. lawn mower,
Racine, O hio. Day or night .
WILL CUT Ond deaf la nd for chip'
next to State Highway Garage
949·2657 .
wood o;md pile brush . Phone
on Route 7. Phone (614) 985·7•2·2056.
3825.
REMODELING , Plumbing , heating
and all types of general repair.
Work guaran teed- 20 years experience. Phone ..,....," _2,.09 .

"( I I I I I

The lates t JUMBlES ar11 her e in JUMBLE BOOK 110 and JUMBLE
BOOK ,, 1. Available tor $1 .35 EACH , poslpald !rom Jumble, c/0 this

...

·'·Wll" HEATERS!

WILL CARE lor the elderly in o ur
home. Phone 992 -7.314 .
TAKING All con tracts fo r mowing
· gross, trimming , also planting
ond nu rsery work . Ri ck lm·
boden, Rutland. 742-2909.

I Jumbles

Yesterd~y 5

DAT LITTL E

JUSl COHARED

Pomeroy;o.
3· 15-lfc

Now arrange trte c1 rc1ed letlers to

(Answers..tomorrow)

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

Room Additiliils

~OYFRIE:ND.

form the surpr1se answer . as sug·
gested by Jhe above cartoon

Print answer here:

UTILE ORPHAN ANN IE

2-16-1 mo.

HE:R

ILEMITY
j
liT

'
.,••

PillS ports

K
~ Roofin~
Remodeling ·

I I I

hL/o.SSI':S.

.... ~ ., . ... oo

b

RYJEK

-rn~ CHAMPA/oi.IE

YOJ

~

'

Woddinp
Portr~its

3· 12· 1 mo.

SEPTIC TANK
CLEA.NING

,,,,"
.'
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THE PHOTO PlACE

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

IALESANDSERVICE
11 -9-tfc

. ,,•I

PJ /o .. ,,. c, ..~, ,. •• •

-~

51. Rt. 143, toward Rutlond,
0.

300 Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Pomeroy H2-6282
or 992-6263
BA.M. Io4:30P.M.

I[!

SMITH
MOTORS, "INC.

Open
9; 00 til 9: 00 Mon .. Friday
9: 00 til6 :00 S.turdoy
12:00 til 6 :00 Sunday
2·2-tlc

CARTER

Chester, Ohio
10-30-c

I

I

--'

WALLPAPER,
PAl NT &amp; SUPPLIES

&amp; .

Box 3

•

C;npil• UplloiSttiJ
,hone Mike Youn1

Free Estlmoltl
Phontffl-3H3
J .J .Ifc

BOLEN MULCHERS

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

.

·-~.,-. _0.

lAVENDER
OONSTRuctiON
SyrocuH, Ohio

LAWN BOY MOWERS

Residential
and
commercial. Call far
estimate. 24 hour service.
Anyday, anytime.
Phone 985-3806

.U I

Carpeting

- So .. Filtl &amp; MontY-

Small Engine
Sales &amp; Service
491 Locust Street
Mlddltporl, 0 .
Phone 992-3092

HURRY!
Limited Supply
3-16-1 mo.

......

Young's

Blown Into Wals
and Attics

WILKINSON

__,,
. I
I

Stperior
Sllit11 blrKtion

Cellulose Fiber

Route 2
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Estimates by Appointmtnt
Phone 992 -7119
2-2Hfc

hie Priced Now
Ttlru April lOth

'j

Paul Gaudino Family F itness
700 Club ,

THURSOAY , MARCH n, 1971
l :•s--Farm Report 13 ; 5: SO...PTL Club 13: 5: 55-Sunrlse Semester 10: 6: 0&lt;1-PTL Club 15.
6:2s-For You ... Biack Woman 10; ' :30-Doc;:tors on
Ca114; News 6; Sunrise Semester 8; 6: 45-Mornlng
Report 3; 6 : 51)-Good Morn ing. Wesl Vlrglnla 13.
6 :55--Chuck While Reporl5 10 ; News 13; 7:00--Todoy
3,4, IS; Good Morning Amerlco!l 6, IJ ; CBS News 8;
Bullwlnklt 10 .
7:30-Schoollu 10: B:OG-Captaln KangCIIrOO 8, 10;
Sesame. St . 33 .
9:0D-Merv Griffin 3: Phil Donahue 4. 13.15. Edge of
Nigh! 6: Family Affair 8: Malch Game 10.
Andy Grlffltl"l 8; Family
9·Jo-Emergency One 6;
Alfalr 10.
IO .oo-Sanford &amp; Son 3.4, 15 ; Tattletales B; Joker's Wild
10; Not For Women Only 13.
10:30--&gt;Hollywood Squares 3.•. IS; Andy Grfffllh 6;
Price Is Right 8 ,10: Rick Faucheux 13.
11 :oo-Wheel of Fortune J ,4, JS; Happy Days 6, 13.
11 :3G:-Knockoul 3. 1.5 ; Family Feud 6. 13; Partridge
Family 4; Love of Life 8, 10; Sesame St. ~0 ; Nova 33.
11 :55-CBS News 8; Loving Free 10.
11 :0G-Newsc.enter 3; $20,000 Pyram id '3 ; News -4.6.10;
To Say The Leas! 15: Gombil 8.
12:3Q-Ryan' s Hope 6, 13 ; Bob Braun 4 ;. Gong Show 15 ;
Sellrch for Tomorrow 8. 10 ; Elec . Co. 33 .
1:oo-For Richer , For Poorer 3; All My Children 6,13;
News 8; Young &amp; the Res11ess 10: Not For Wpmen
On l y 15.
1:3G-Days o l Our Lives 3, 4, 15; As The World Turns
8 , 10.
1:()()-0ne Lite to Uve 6, 13; 2 :30-Doclor s 3,4,15 ;
Guiding Light 8, 10.
3 ~ oo-Another World 3.4. 15 ; Generlll Hosplt~l · 6, 13 ;
Lilias Y09a &amp; You 20: 3 : 3~- Allln The Family 8. 10 ;
You Bet Your Life 20.
4 :00--M ister Car toon J; Edge ot Night ll; My Three
Sons 4 ; For Richer For Poorer IS ; Merv Grltfln 6 :
Gilligan's Is. 8: Sesame Sl . ~0.33; Gomer Py le,
u SMC 10.4: Jlf.- Lf tfle Rascals 3. 1S: Gl ll )gan ' s ls . 4:
Brady Bunch 8, 10; Mary Ty ler Moore 13 .
5 :00--Bonama 3; Star Trek 4 ; Gunsmo!Ce 8 ; Mister
Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33 ; Hogan's Heroes 10;
Emergency One 13; Petti coa t Jun ttl on lS .
5 :Jo- News6 ; Etee . LO . :tU, JJ J ~y l er Moor~ _1 u ;
Hogan ' s Heroes 15.
6 :()()-NeW$ 3,4,8, 10, 13,1S; AB C News 6; Zoom 20.
6 :3()-N BC News 3,4 ,15; ABC News 13 : Ca rol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8, 10 ; Over Easy 70,33 .
7:QO-Cross-Wit s 3, 4; Liars Club 6; Gong Show 8; News
10; To Tell The Truth 13 ; Gilligan' s Is . 15 ; Ho cking
Va lley BluegraSs 20; Mars hall U. Report JJ .
7 ~ 30-- Ho llywoo d Sq uare s 3,4 ; SIOO.OOO Name That
Tune 6; Tatt letales 8; Ma c Neil Le hrer Report
20,33; That's Hollywood! 10; Nashville On The
Road 13 ; M ar ty Robbins.' Spotlight IS.
8 :0&lt;1--Chlps 3, 4; Happy Days 6,1 3; Oral Roberis 15:
Wallons 8, 10; Once Upon A Classic 10,33.
.
8:3iP-Fish 6.13; Originals 20; Arvilla 33 .
9:00- Biack Sheep Sq uadron 3,4, 15; Barney M ille r
6, 13; Hawaii Flve-0 8, 10; Worl d 20,J:l .
9: 3o-A.E .S. Hudso n St. 6, 13 ; 10 · 00- Pollce Wom-an
3.4,15; Bar~tta 6, 13; Barnaby Jones IJ; Anna
Karenlna 3J ; Or al R·oberts 10; News 20.
10 :30--Loc k Stock &amp; Barr el 20.
ll :Oo-News 3,4,6,8,·10, 13,15 ; Dick Cavett 20 .- Over
Easy 33 .
11 : 3o-Johnny Carson .3;4, 15; Starsky &amp; Hulch 6. 13;
Movie "Ke ll y's Heroes" 8; ABC News JJ : Movie
"011ce Before I Ole" 10.
12 :0o-Jana ki 33 ; 12 .4r&gt;--Toma 6,13: LOo-Tomorrow
4 ; 1 :So--News 13 .
Movie Channel 4 '5 a. 7 P .M . - Hedda iPGI
9 &amp; 11 P .M . - The Rl1z IR I

WEDNESDAY . MARCH22. 197A
8:0Q-Grlulv Adams 3,-4,15 ; E ight is Enough 6,13;
Return of Capt. Nemo 8, 10, No\la 20,33 .
9 .00-Charlle's Angels 6. 13 ; Movie " The B ig Bvs" 8. 10;
Great Performances 20,33 .
9 :30-Mo¥1e " All You Need Is Cash" 3. • ,15 .
10 :00--Perry Como 6, 13: lO :Jo-News 20 ; Book Beat
33 .
11:00-- News 3.4,6,8. 10. 13.15; Dick Cavett 70 ; Lilias
Yoga &amp; Vou 33.
11 : 31}-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Police Story 6, 13 ; Hawa ii
F ive.QB; ABC f'lews33; Mov ie " The Moon Is Blue"
10.
12 :DO-Janakl 33; 12:40-Mystery ol th~ Week 6, 13 ;
Kojak 8; 1:00-Tomorrow 4; 2 : 1G-News 13.
Movie Channel 4 5 a. 9 P .M . - The Eag le Has Landed I PGI
7 8. 11 PM. - Whifls (PGI
Cable Channel Five 6 :30P .M . - Testimony Time

I

I

lHE WISEMAN REAL ESTATE AGENCY
IN GAWPOLIS

DAVID BRICKLES

One three bedroom home, 2
acres of ground on Rt. 7,
Tuppers Plains, Oh io.

STARCRAFT FALL Sale . Minimotors , 20' and 22' . TraVel
Tra ilers. 18' 5" $3.799, 25" 7" '
Bunkhouse S• .S75. Fold-down ,
$1 .700 up . We se ll service and
quality . Open Sunday5 ."'Eomp
Conley Starcroft Sa les , Rl . 62,
N. of Pt, Pleasant .
1972 ARISTOCRAT
TRAVEL
T ro il~r. 18" IUtlf-contoined. Call
992·3580.

AUCTION · NO SAL.E Tuesday
night . Regular sole Fr iday 7pm
ond Saturday 7pm at Ohio Ri11er
Auction . Me igs Plaza , Middleport , OH . - - - -

HOBSTETTER

TELEVISION
VIEWING

ON,TRACY-WAIT't.L YOU
A GANDER AT WHAT .JOB
Ao\AOLE BOYS l..iNED
HIM UP WITH . •.

I
.....
I·•

Business Services

FOR SALE by owner; 3 ocrel of
5&amp;dusion nVQr Jocklon. 1971 J
bvdroom ffiObile home 25 _.. lot
• unken fam ily room , fireplace .
8 • 20 !iiun deck. Lorge gorden
spot , outbuildings .. Perfed for , - - - - - - - - - - . ,
vocation or summer place . Kitchen Coblnots, Rooflnv.
$22,000. Call 985 -3988 . if m .
Concrete
Patios ,
terested .
Sldtwolks ,
New
Construction
&amp;
Remodeling.

00 -

10 . 00 -

.....

open.d eyes
And we con olmotf '"him there . HOOF HOLlOW Morn a. Buy. sell
trade or tra in. r-,lew and used
Sodlv mined by Daddy and Mom saddles Ruth Reaves , Albany .
my (Jioger ond Chritty}. grand ·
(6U ) 698·3290
porenl t and F:;
o;:
m;::;lr;
Y· ' - RISING STAR Kennel , Boarding
Indoor
and outdoor runs .
Groom1ng all breeds. Clean
1onilary faciliti es. Cheshire .

THE

,.••

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

our

Whit:h we wanted him to share
The loss and grief we sometimes

•

.

DO '-IE WANT TO TRY
MY HERRIN' AID?.

would

take the last two .
.

'
•
,

·
•

gobble up West's now single- •
ton king of s pades with the :
ace and score the grand ·1
slam with the queen of

spades.
" I made it." Jimmy bub-

bled to Patricia when she
returned for the next hand.
"Of course you did." she

said .
IN!o:WS I'A I'Eil

IO:NTJ-:;UPUISE ASSN . )

!For a copy of JACOBY MO[).
ERN , send $1 to: " Win at
Bridge ," care of this ne wspa· ,
per, P.O Box 489, Radio City
Stali~m . N_ew York, N. Y. 10019.)

�•

14 - The Daily Sentmel Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesd$y, March 22, 1978

Ceasefire is ignored
BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI )
- palest miB n guer r illas
today tgnored a cease-ftre
procia101ed by Isreal and
battled Israeli troops en·
!ra nched in occupied south
Lebanon U N peace-keeping
units were reported mov10g
mto the area.
" The wor d &lt;;ease-fire does
not exist 10 our dictiOnary,"

satd Yasser Abed Rabbo,
chainnan of the Palestine
Ltberatt on Orgam za tion' s
mformauon department
A Palesttnlan gu errtlla
commun ique sa 1d ,

"Our

forces clashed wtth Israeli
troops in more than one
location m south Le banon

throughout the n1ghl and
early Wednesday "
The
guerrtllas
also
reported hevy Israeli ar·
Ullery ftre on the town of
Nabatlyeh,
a
major
Palest101an stronghold north
of the L1tam River ~' We
returned the enemy ltre," the
commuruque sa1d
In Washmgton, President
Carter and [sraeh Prune
Mimster Begm scheduled a
rmal showdown meet ing

today to dtscuss thetr sharp
dtfft culttes with Israel' s
etght·day
tnvaston
of
Lebanon and other Mtddle
East ISSUes
Israeli gunboats, jets and
artillery hanunered pockets
of Palestlntan troops 1n

forces had shelled the Israeli
rear guard, both 10 northern
Israel
"O ur rockets h1t thetr

FBI reported payment
WASHINGTON (UP! ) •' ormer FBI Dtrector J
Edgar Hoover wrote three
top secret memos to Attorney
General John Mttchell and
Henry Kt ss10ger at the Whtte
Hou"" m the early 1970s to
report sus pi CIOUS South
Korean
lobby tng
and
payments to U S pohticta ns
But when a House subcommittee revealed that on Tues·
day, Mttchell satd only one
Hoover not e reached h101 tehng of a Korean CIA
coonedmn w1th Suzt Park
Thomson, an atde to former
Speaker Carl Albert, and
another Korean-born atde to
ex-Rep Cornelius Gallagher,
D-N.J
A spokesman lor Kiss10ger
swd "he doesn 't recall seemg
any" of the three Hoover
notes Ktssmger decl10ed an
invttation to testtfy today, but
told the panel he would try to
appear m April.
The House lnternaltonal
Relallons s ubcommittee,
whtch released edited

southern
and then
Defense
Wetzman

Lebanon Tuesday
abruptly halted
Mtntster Ezcr
said Israel began
observmg a cease-fire at 6
p m (11 am EST )
At first , the cease-hre
appeared to take hold but the
reports today shattered hopes
that the ftghung was over
A second Palestinian
commuruque sa1d guerrtlla

HOSPITAL

NEWS
Velerans Memorial Hospltal
Admttted - Cly~e Beha,
Coolville; Herbert Rose,
Racme , Ida Stanley, Shade,
Madeline Chaf10, Pomeroy,
Herbert Shtelds, Racme ,
John Van Mater, Jr., Mason ,
HaU te Armes , Syracuse ,
Mary Nelson, Rutland. Fntz
Buck, Racme , Steve Lambert, Proctorvllle, George
Nesselroad, Pomeroy

Dtscharged
Frahk
Wolford, Alma Young,
Mmme VIning ,., Brenda
LeMaster, Brenda Casto,
Franklin Casto, Kea rney
Rathburn
Holzer Medical Center
1Discharges March 21)
Jo Ann Adk10s, Bertha
Bates ,
Charles
Buet,
Samantha Campbell, Bryan
Cremeans, Eva Faulkne r,
Donald Ftelder, Mtcha el
Hampton, T101othy Harvey,
Mason Hemphtll, Rhoda
Hoffman, Conme Hussell,
Mrs Steve Ktser and son,
John Laber, Melame Lewis,
Walter Mtller , Opal Morse ,
Cindy !Wsenberger, lsobel
Sheets, Wtlham Watson.
1Births March 21)
Mr. and Mrs Hobert Lowe ,
a daughter, New Haven , Mr
and Mrs Wilham Me·
Pherson, a son, Gallipolis.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
DISCHARGED Bill
Harr10gton , Btdwell; Myrtle
Whtte, Mason; Della Davis,
Southside; Roxann Cooper,
Potnt Pleasant; Gertrude
Paxton, Pomt Pleasant, Mrs.
Kenneth .Btrchfteld,
Gallipolis ; Mrs. Homer Cole,
Tuppers Platns. Sylvta
Mullins, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Wtlltam Gardner, Galltpobs;
K101berly Hupp, PatriOt.
BIRTH - A daughter to
Mr and Mrs. Fred Thompson, Pomeroy; a daughter to
Mr and Mrs. Robert Smtih
Jr., Point Pleasant.

verstons of the Hoover
messages . p1AnnM tn wtnrl up
its hearings today wtlh
quesltonmg of Pak Bo Hi , an
alleged KCIA operaltve 10
Washington who ts head of
the Korean Cult.ral and
Freedom Foundation.
What happened to ,;,.ver's
memos was unclear, but they
may show why the Korean
lobbytng contmued for years
Each note satd at the bottom
the FBI mforrna•ion came
" an
JXtremely
from
sensitive" source and no
further 10vestigauon could be
conducted.
They said in part
- Korean President Park
Chung
Hee's , offtctal
res tdence was 11 direct1y
mvolved m dtrectmg the
contrlbutton of several
hundred thousand dollars to
the Democratic Party" m the
Uruted States.
- Tongsun Park, the milhonatre n ee merchant
mdtcted on U S federal
brtbery charges, "ts acting

under KCIA directton but is
not a KCIA employee as
such."
- Park made payments to a
congressman with money
earned 10 rtce deals. Sources
said that was former Rep
Richard Hanna, ().Calif., who
pleaded guUty Frtday to a
charge ol conspiracy and
admitted taking over $200,000
from Park.
Mttchell, 10 his ltrst
congressional ·

testimony

siiiCe he was convicted and
sent to jail on Watergate
coverup charges, told the
House panel under oath he
knew little about K~rean
lobbymg and was surprised
by Hoover's September 1911
report that Miss Thomson
was connected to Korea's
CIA.
He S81d he personally told
Albert the infonnalton, but
the Oklahoma Democrat had
a "rather passtve" reaction
and
considered
Mtss
Thomson " a nice young

llldy ..

Campaign bill dead 'turkey'
VIce president of Common
Cause, the ctttzens advocacy
group whtch has long sought
public fmancmg of House and
races, angrily
colleagues and unammous Senate
denounced
Thompson and
Republicans tn the House
Rep
John
Brademas,
D-lnd ,
jomed him to kill a btl! that
would have reduced l101its on a semor member of the
contrlbuhons to congresslon· Thompson panel
"Thetr legtslative proposal
al electiOns
A vtctun 10 the 209-198 to drastically cut political
defeat of a move to call the party hmits completely
measure to the floor Tuesday sabotaged thts effort to enact
publtc
was the tssue of public congresstonal
f10anc10g,"
said
Werthe101er
fmancmg of congresstonal
campatgns - a plan that was
to have been offered as an
amendment
The btll would have cut 'to
$15,000 the present $50,000
parties can gtve indtvtdual
candtdates, and reduce from
$5,000 to $3,000 the amount
political action committees
can contnbute to parties
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ran·
Rep. •'rank Thompson, D- dall Sweeney's 38-day
N.J , manager of the btll, satd campatgn for the Democratic
he mtght ask hts House Party
nommallon
for
Admmistratlon Committee to Secretary of State ended
draft a new measure that today with hts dropping out
would avoid the ISSUe of and endorsing Sen Anthony
public ftnancmg. Thompson J. Celebrezze, Jr, Dsatd public fmancmg was a Cleveland.
maJor factor 10 defeat of the
Sweeney satd at a news
rule Tuesday
Fred Wertheuner, seruor

GENE BERNHARDT
WASHINGTON (UP!) One Democrat called it a
turkey Stxty-etght party
By

"If they come back wtth a bill
wtthout pubhc fmanctng that
means they had a fix on to kill
ll

tl

"I would hope we could Illy
this turkey to rest in the
qutckest possible way," satd
Rep B F. Sisk, D-Calif , an
opponent of public linancmg
Other Democrats, mostly
southerners, opposed
reducing tbe limit on the
political action conunlttees
on which they depend heavily
for contrtbutions

Sweeney drops
out of race

$300 million
emergency
bill okayed
WASHINGTON (UPI)
The .,House Wednesday
approved an emergency $300
mtlUon btll to help states hit
by weather-related disasters
in the past year, including
Ohto
The measure passed on 8
393-4 vote and was sent to tbe
Senate
The House Appropriations
Committee, which drafted
the measure, said 10 a report
accompanying the bill that
regular disaster funding of
$150 mtlUon lor the current
ftscal year has been depleted
and that added funds to cover
areas declared a disaster by
Prestdent
Carter
are
urgently needed .
Dtsasters ctted tn the
report
included
the
Johnstown, Pa., and Kansas
City, Mo., floods of last year,
which together will require
some $180 million, and the
more recent wmter emergenctes m Mtchigan,lndiana,
Ohto, Massachusetf11, Rhode
Island, Connecttcut and
Californta

~ew and fhuthein

@ltio

8/ecluc rimnjtany o/fwe~
will /;e clowd
Friday, March 24

.. foi
Good Friday

,Jfa?J.e a mce day

L

target s," it satd. "Flames
could be seen 111 the area.
Ambulllnces and helicopters
could be seen evacuatmg
casualt1ea "

EXTENDED FORECAST
Frldloy throuch Sunday,
lair tbrouch the period.
Hl&amp;b• will ranee lrom the
mid 101 to the lower 501
Friday and In the 501
Saturday and Sunday.

/ouiiHtrvl

Mayer files
for reelection

MANSFIELD, Ohio (UP!)
- Rtchland County Common
Pleas Court Judge James
Mayer, ordered removed
from the bench because of
mental
and
phystcal
problems, today filed for
reelection as an 10dependent
m the November elecUon.
A special conurussion appomted by the Ohio Supreme
Court earlier this month or·
dered Mayer removed from
office
Rtchland County Electlon
Board Dtrector Perry Wolfe
swd Mayer's filing will be
handled like any other candi·
date unless he Is instructed to
do otherwise by Secretary of
State Ted W. Brown.

WARPLANE SALE
STUDIED BY PANEL
WASHINGTON (UPI) Prestdent Carter called
members of the House
Internaltonal Relaltons
Committee to the White
House today to discuss hls
conlroverstal proposal to sell
warplanes to Israel, Saudt
Ara bta and Egypt.
The White House satd
Carter was to meet wtth tbe
panel at 4:45 p.m. EST in the
Cabinet Room. Secretary of
Stale Cyrus Vance and
Defense Secretary Harold
Brown were expected to brtef
the legislators on the package
plan to sell the advanced new
Fl6
jets
to
Israel;
sophisticated F15s for the
first time to Saudi Arabia and
the older F5E's to Egypt.
The
meetmg
was
announced as Carter held a
second round of talks with
Israeli Prime Minister
Menacbem Beg!~ at the
White House. The sale of
warplanes to Israel's Arab
netghbors is opposed by the
Begm govenunent.
And pro·lsraeli
congressmen have expresaed
their opposition to lump10g
rrulitary shipments to israel
in the same deal with the
Arab states.

conference that Hit lS now
apparent that a conteated
primary would prove costly
and divisive . The Democratic
Party's nominee would then
emerge in a weakened position "
Sweeney,
part·ltme
director of the Ohto Vtelrnan
Era
Veterans
Bonus
Commtsston and employee of
State Auditor Thomas
Ferguson, announced hts
candtdacy Feb. 13.
''ThiS decision does not
mean that I will he inacttve
during this most 101portant
elecUon year," he added. "On
the contrary, I will devote my
energtes toward electing Sen.
Celebrezze and the entire
Democrati..;: bcket."
Celebrezze was endorsed
by the Democratic Party for
the nomination earher this
year.
The filmg deadlute for all
primary races is 4 p.m.
Thursday

Appalachian
Highway bids
to be opened
on Apri/18
OOLUMBUS (UPI ) - Gov.
James A. Rhodea annoWtCed
today that btds to contract an
addittonal 16 milea of the
Appalachtan Development
Highway from Cincinnati to
the Ohio River 10 Washington
County will be opened April
18
All but 37 mtles of the
htghway
have
been
completed. The remaining
mileage is expected to be
constructed m 1919 and 1980,
said Rhodes.
The two projects scheduled
for construction llus year are
eastward from Ohto 133 west
of Williamsburg to Mt Orab
in Brown County and between
1 Seaman and Peebles In
Adams
County .
Both
segments are about eight
miles lung.
Complelton of the gap m the
htghway
between
Williamsburg and Peebles
had been delayed P'JPding
/approval of an envtronmental
impact statement by the U.S.
Department of Transporta·
tlon

---------------------------.

Middleport !
Area Deaths !I
I
Lyons officiating. Burial will
REX ARGABRITE, JR.
ER squad Rex
Argabrlte, Jr , 56, be in Stewart Cemetery.
has 3 runs
Three calls were answered
Tuesday and Wednesday
morning by the Mtddleport
Emergency Squad.
At 10 :33 a.m. the squad
went to the Middleport
Elementary School where
Earle
Wood,
school
custodian, ha&lt;l recetved a
hand injury He was taken to
the office of Dr J . J Davis
for treatment
At2·41 p m the squad went
south of Mtddleport for Steve
Lambert, 2~. Proctorville,
who was taken to Veterans
Memortal Hospital with
lacerations and a possible
fractured hand alter being
tnjured 10 an auto accident.
The drtver of the vehicle
which struck the Lambert car
did not stop following the
aeetdent, ofltcials satd.
At 1:17 a.m. Wedneaday,
the squad went to Route 124
near Mtddleport for Charles
Burt who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center

2 students, 15,
GIRL, 13, HELD
INFATALSHOOTING
WELLSBURG, W.Va
( UPI) - Brooke County
Sheriff's deputies said today
they are holding a 13-year-old
gtrl from Steubenville, Ohio,
10 conneclton wtth the fatal
shoot10g of a frtend late
Tuesday m Wellsburg.
The deputies identifted the
vtcUm as Gloria Spruiel, 13,
also of Steubenvtlle They
said the pair were viSitmg
frtends in Wellsburg when the
sbootmg occurred.

Oil spill is
stretched more
BREST, France (UPI) - A
new g~yser of oil spewed
from the wreckage of the
supertanker Amoco Cadiz
today, stretching the world's
biggest otl sptll further along
the Brtttany coast and kill10g
off birds in one of France's
top wildlife reserves.
A ragmg storm prevented
sa lvage teams frnm pump10g
out 100,000 tons of crude still
trapped 10 etght sealed tanks
and an otl company official
expressed fears the ship WJJl
be dashed to bits on the reefs
Etghl Dutch experts landed
by helicopter on the tossing
shtp Tuesday to ftx em·
placements for 14 Amertcan
pumps that amved m Brest
from Tulsa, Okla.

held for blaze
CHARDON, Ohio (UPI) West Geauga Junior High
School reopened today after
bemg closed for two days by a
fire allegedly set by two 15year-old students.
The two youths were
ordered Tuesday by Geauga
County Juvenile Court Judge
Frank Lavnch to have
psycbologtcal testmg at the
Portage-Geauga Juvenile
Detention Center. They are
charged wtth arsons and
criminal damage
The school, serving 1,000
students from Chester,
Russell and Munson 'l'Wps.,
sustatned $200,000 damage in
a fire Sunday. Ftre ollicial.s
said the bl02e started in a
chemistry lab storeroom and
spread to four classrooms,

causmg part of the roof to
collllpse.

Underwriters
hold session

Thirteen members of the
Metgs · Gallia • Mason
Assoctallon of Life Un·
derwriters and two guests
met last week and discussed
the vartous promotions held
dul')ng Life Insurance Week
and
extend thetr thanks to the
CANTATA SET
news
media.
The Chotr of fhe Middleport
It
was
aMounced that the
Church of Chrtst will present
assocllltlon
bas a special
a cantata, "Hallelujah speakers
panel
available to
What A savtor" at 6 a.m.
speak
Subjects
cover life
Easter morning sunrise·
tnsurance,
health
and acservices. The choir is being ctdent. ·Also available
are
directed by Becky Blaze and
lnstructtonal atds and a slide
solotsts will 10clude Peggy
Brickles, George Glaze, Mike presentalton on their project
Stewart, Earl McKinley and lor the year, entitled 'Fanuly
Sharon
Stewart
Ac· Ttme', which bas been
companiment will be by viewed by such orgaruzatlons
Clance Erwm at the organ as Uons, Rotary and even
and Jenmfer Sheets at the Chambers of Commerce.
It ts pointed out that the
plano with James Sheets as
asaoctalton does not solicit
narrator.
Other choir
members include Christl for any company but is
Hess, Beckt Fry, Cindy composed of agents from
Glaze, Dorothy Roach, various local companies.
Shirley Bumgardner, Lena Anyone havmg interest in the
McKinley, Dorothy Davts, organization is invited to join.
If anyone wishes to contact
Mack Stewart, L. D. Har·
CHICAGO (UPJ) - Thtrd· linger, and Gene Davl.s. A the association ask your life
ranking House Republican contiilentel breakfast will be insurance agent or write
Meigs-Gallla·Mason
John B Anderson, with the served
the
following
help of perhaps thousands of presentation The public is Association of Life Un·
derwriters, Box 628 Pomeroy,
llhno1s Democratic crossover 10vited.
Ohio 45769.
votes, has crushed a conIt was announced by
servative challenge in the
George
Crump that Mason
ltrst pr101ary of the 1978
SERVICES SET
County
clubs
is starting to
election season.
Swu-1se sernces will be
Anderson eastly beat the held at 6 a.m. Easter at the schedule the slide presen·
Rev. Don Lyon, former Freedom Gospel Mtssion, tation with Ken Reynolds
pastor of the Open Bible Bald Knob. The public is also asaisting
Church who used the mvited.
traditional conservattve
rallying issues -the Panama
Canal, gun control, abortion
and homosexuality - in his
FORFEIT BONDS
unsuccessful campatgn
The defendants forfeited
bonds in the court of Mid·
dleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday ntght.
They were Roger L. Btssell,
WAVES CRACK HULL,
39, Chester, $350, posted on a
SPEW OIL IN WATER
charge of driving wbtle in·
By EDWIN SMI'I1I
toxicated.. and George
211-161H STREET
BREST, France (UP!) Lemley, Jr., no age or ad·
The last intact compartments dress listed, $50, posted on a
of ihe supertanker Amoco disorderly manner charge
PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.
Cadiz were broken open
today by wavea 30 feet high
675-4539 or 67~64
that banged the hulk against
FRANK FILES
razor-&lt;tharp reefs and spewed
Meigs County incumbent
NOTICE
the remainil)g 50,000 tons of Auditor, Howard Frank,
crude oil onto what is already Republican, Tuesdloy filed his
the worst oU slick on record. petition of candidacy seeking
A spokesman lor Amoco reelection, the Meigs County
¥Ved .• ~r.22,29
International told reporters Board of Elections reports.
6to 7:30P.M.
that only 50,000 tons oot of the
Rol end Eastman, Bedford
220,000 tons the tanker was Township, also a Republican
Free to High
carrying were sUll contained has filed a petition of canSchool Students
by the vessel and that theae didacy lor nomination lor the
were spilling rapidly.
Audllor's post.

Reedsville, died early Frienda may call at the
Wednesday morning at funeral borne any time after I
Camden·Ciart Hospital In p.m. Thursday.
Parkersburg following an
extended lllnesa.
He was born at Spencer, W.
Va., a son of the late Rex
CHARLES E. MANLEY
Argabrite, Sr., and Bessie
Funeral
servtces for
Spencer Argabrlte. He hid
E.
(Chuck)
Manley,
Charles
spent most of his life In
Reedsville. He served as a 61, Clevelllnd, were held
chief motor machinist in the March 16 at I p.m. at the
U. S Navy during World War Johnston Funeral Home tn
11. He was retired from the Cleveland.
Son of the late Corbett E .
Co.,
Universal
Glass
and
Gaynell Agosta Rice
Parkersburg.
Manley,
he is survived by two
He Is survived by a son,
sons,
Richard
( Dtckle)
Charlea, and a dloughter,
and
Manley,
Columbus;
Mrs. June Scherllng, both of
Houston, Tex., live brothers, Charles (Corky) Manley, Jr.,
John of Belpre. Floyd, Cleveland, a daughter, Reba
Kensington, Md., Russell, Manley, Clevelllnd, and five
Norfolk, Va., Clarence of grandcltildren. A daughter,
Tarpoq Springs, Fla., and Doris Yvonne Manley,
Stanley of Wooster; his preceded him 10 death.
Also surviving are a
stepmother, Mrs. Cora
'
brother,
Walton R. Manley,
Argabrite of Millersport. A
Reedsville,
Route 1, two
number of nephews and
sisters,
Thereaa
M. Manley
nieces also survive. A brother
and a sister preceded him in Aleker, Point Pleasant, W.
Va., and Evelyn L. Manley
death.
Jewell,
Carpenter and an
Funeral arrangements are
aunt,
Merl
RaWff, Cheshire,
being made at the Spencer
Route
I.
Funeral Home in Belpre.
In Cleveland for the funeral
services were Walton R.
Manley, Reedsville, Theresa
Aieker; Potnt Pleasant;
HOWARD M. DAILEY
COOLVILLE - Howard M. Evelyn Jewell, Carpenter, C.
Dailey, 61, Route I, Guys· W. Manley, Mtddleport, and
ville, died Tuesday evening ai V. J. Manley, North Oln\sted.
St Anthony Hospital tn
Columbus following a brtel
illness
He was born m Athens, a
son of the late Hollie and
KEARNEY RATHBURN
Ferma Bail Dailey. He wu a
RUTLAND - Kearney
retired carpenter and was a
veteran of World War II. He Rathburn, 70, Salem St.,
had been a resident of Rutland, died early Wed·
nesday morning in the Holzer
Stewart most of his Ufe.
Survtving are his wife, Medical Center following a
Roberta Minerd Oatley, a long illness.
A fanner all of his life, Mr.
daughter, Mrs.
Larry
(Saundra) Pugh, Route I, Rathburn bad made his home
Guysvtlle, a grandaon, Steve wtth the Merle Davis family
Pugh, Guysville, a brother, lor the past 36 years. He was
James E. Dailey, and three born May 10, 1907 in Salem
sisters, Audrie Dunfee, Edith Township.
Surviving are two half
Wires and Ruth Wires, all of
Stewart; a half brother, ststers, Mrs Alta Faulkner
Vtrgll Dunfee and two step- and Mrs. Jean Doldy, both of
ststers, Dorothy McGill and Columbus and several nieces,
Delpba Williams, all of nephews and cousins.
Funeral services will be
Stewart and several nieces
held at 2 p.m. Saturday at the
and nephews.
He was preceded in death Walker Funeral Home with
by his parents, his stepfather, the Rev. Robert Porter of·
Lester Dunfee and a step- ficlatlng. Burial will be in the
Nelson Cemetery. Friends
brother, Darrell Dunfee~
Funeral services will be may call at the funeral home
beld at 2 p.m. Friday at the any time after 2 p.m. Friday
Whtte Funeral Home in and until the services on
Coolville with the Rev. David Saturday.

REPEAT SA LEI

EUREKA
UPRIGHT SWEEPER

Anderson has
easy victory

ADJUSTS TO DEEP-CLEAN ANY
CARPET FROM THE LOWEST
NAP TO THE THICKEST SHAG.

• Exclutl.. 4-poolllon Dloi·A·!IIJ1"
rug helgbt ldluttment
• Powtr·drlven be1ter-b1r brush

roll lootene embeddld din lnd
grH, while brullhtt IWHP It up

• Edge KINner cletnt thotlaat
tough Inch olong b-ards

REG UPRIGHT $89.95
TOOLS REG. $19.95
)OTAL REG. SIO!.JO

MODEL
1416

$

95

".

The Southern Local School
Dtstrtct Board of Education
Tu esda y nt ght ga ve pernussJOn for the Ractne High
School Alunml Assoctation to
use the htgh school gym·
naslum and cafeten a on May
26 and 27 lor the annual
reunion
Th e board approved
recommended changes m the
pollctes dealmg with han·
dtcapped students to compi)'
With recent Interpretations of
the law
Approval was g1ven for a
Tnle IV·B project whtch wtll
he used to purchase library
books, films, cassettes and
reJated malenal
Mrs Dorothy Wooda rd was
added to the subsutute
teachmg list and a ltst of
personnel that wtll have
access to the conlidenUal
fil es of handtcapped children
was approved
Southern JuniOr Htgh
Boosters were gt ven per·
misston to use the gymnasium for a dance on Aprtll
The restgnatton of Mrs
Ann Boso as a cook at
Syracuse Elementary School
was accepted and Connee
Williams Vt8S RIVen perfTliSSton to attend the Ohto
Gtrls ' State Basketball
tournament on March 30 and
(Continued on page 10)

THESE ARE the leading ladies of the town who wtll
he provtdmg a great deal of the comedy In the upcoming
productton of "Mustc Man " by the Metgs Htgh School
mus1c department From the left are Lmda Eason,
Brynda Black, Susan Wrtght, Cathy Blaettnar and I.aurH
Hoover Mtss Hoover ts servmg as asststan~ to the
director, Mrs Pa1ge Hunt, vocal mus1c ~ urerv 1 snr .

•

enttne

at

e

Tickets f 0 1 U1e muslcll l, Ole f1rst to1Jt1 pruduc('d at M('I)'..S
Htgll School , tnuy be purchuscd nt tlw New Ym k ( ' l oOu n~
House or SwashCI"·1Alhse Dr\4.\ Stm c 111 1\ llt lt'l oy ( '1 11 lllln
tame fOr the opening, Mnnh .11, 1 ~ 7 ~0 p 11 1 wi ll It' u
curt am ttme on the sccnnd sh t1w m~: w1ll b4• n p m nn ApT 11
1

M-G-M units are
• •
•
participatmg
Cub Sunil

VOL. XXVIII

\ ... . ...

NO 239

P.OMEROY-MIODLEPORT, OHIO

...............
..
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·::~'!·~:-~::~--•·::::M~··:·.············ ···········-:··-:··-:··-:···~·· ··x··..:···~.,~········
~

~-.;..::;

JJVews. • •in BriefsJ

..

By Unlled PresslnternaUonal
CHICAGO - POUCE SAY THREE Ohto women bad
$13,000 worth of martjuana and barbtturates taped to their
thtghs and ankles when they got off the Air Jamaica flight at
O'Hare International Airport They were charged with
possesston of a controlled subatance and possesston of
marijuana, narcottcs untt Sgt. Patrtck Ward satd Wednesday.
Police S81d they found several martjuana seeds Tuesday 10 the
luggage of Frances Toler, 23. They checked her 10 private and
found more than three pounds of marijuana taped to her
thights, Mike F1eming, public affairs officer for U S Customs
in Chicago, said Wednesday

CINCINNATI - OHIO LIQUOR OONTROL AGENT
Robert T DeLyons Sr., on trial for allegedly accepttng a brtbe
from a Cincinnati delicatessen owner, told a jury Wednesd$y
be dtd not know the man who allegedly collected the bribe for
him. DeLyons told a Hamilton County Co mmon Pleas jury he
never met Wilbur Seymour, who allegedly was offered $100 by
DeLyons to collect a $300 lribe from the Hi-Rise Deli and
Sandwich Shoppe ..The delicatessen was cited Sept 9 for sellmg
alcohol to a 20-year-old man.
CINCINNATI - A FEDERAL COURT ORDER that the
population of tbe Southern Ohio Correctional FaciUty be
reduced by 300 inmates probably will be appealed by the stae,
Allen Adler, aSSistant Ohio attorney general, said Wednesd$y.
U. S. DIB!rlct Court ordered the Lucasville prtson populahon
decreased by 2S inmates a month, to 1,700. There are 2,000
lnmatea at the facility now
OOLUMBUS - STATE TREASURER GERTRUDE W.
Donahey filed petitions Wednesday affirming her candidacy
lor reelection to a thtrd term. Mrs. Dona bey, unopposed lor the
Democratic nomination, filed 2,766 signatures She said
computerization bas enabled the treasurer's office to more
than double the output without increasing the staff under her
direction.

'YOUNGSTOWN, OHIO - THE FIRING OF Alllance
school teacher Barbara Kinser because marijuana was found
In her apartment was upheld Wednesday by Maborung County
Cmunon Pleas Judge Sydney Ri8elhaupt. Knox Township
police raided the woman's apartment last Aug 16 and reported
finding a small amount of marijuana an&lt;l drug paraphernalia.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Board
okeys
event

•

~

j

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 1978

Union denies pressure
WASHINGTON (UPI) Leaders of the Untied Mine
Workers were accused by
Ohto's striking coal mmers
Wednesd$y of withholding
relief funds donated by other
wuons m an attempt to
encourage ratification of the
latest proposed contract.
A UMW spokesman dented
the charge, althQugh he was
unable to say bow much of an
estimated $3.5 millton in
donations has been passed
along to strikers.
Ed MacLeod of Belatr,
Oh1o, a wuon local offictal,
satd UMW Prestdent Arnold
Miller had not taken steps to
distribute the funds, which
Includes $2 million from the

Uruted Auto Workers and II
mtlhon from the Untied Steel·
workers of Arnenca.
•'The reason that he bas not
done this is that he has joined
wtth the BCOA (Bii!IITlinous
Coal Operators Assoctalton)
and the government m a
concerted plan to force a
contract upon us - any
contract," MacLeod said
"Arnold Miller thinks that
tf we are dented the benefit of
these donations, we Mil be
more likely to vote for hiS
contract thts Frtday,"
Mac'-"od satd.
"This money was given to
us, it was not given to Arnold
Miller," he added. "We want
the donations, and we want

them now "

Mac'-"od sa1d he and hts
group plan to remam m
Wash10glon unttl the money
IS released or Miller resigns
UMW press spokesman
Paul Fortney satd some of the
money had been sent out, but
satd he did not know how

much
Fortney satd later the
money would be sent out to
the dtstrtcts, based on the
number of ~tnkers ln each
dlstrtct The dlstrtct \hen wtll
process mdlvtduals requests
for asSistance

Back to work order issued
HII.IJlBURU, Ohto (UPI)
- C1ty Council ordered police
and £1remen who have called
m s1ck ror two days tn a wage
disagreement to report for
work today
In a speCial meetmg
Wednesday ntght, ctty

mght fIre Chtcl Thomas
Stephens, with 15 volunteers
on call, sa1d the damdgc
would have happened even
tiad regular fu em en been on
dul)

council ordered policemen

Cleland seeking nod'
Henry E (Hank) Cleland,
Jr , 317 Wrtght Street,
Pomeroy, has announced that
he wtll seek the Republican
nommahon for the off1ce of
Metgs County Commtsstoner.
A hie t101e restdent of
Metgs Co , Cleland ts a
graduate of Pomeroy High
School and Ohto University,

Cleland has been active 10
several CIVIC a nd serviCe
organizations m the county,
bav10g held several offtces
and chairmanships. He has
served as scoutmaster and
committee member for
several Boy Scout and Cub
Scout troops in the county,
having
received
two
where he received a organizer awards for hts
bachelor's degree He has activities in fonnmg new
also completed some work on troops 10 Metgs County He
the graduate level at 0 U. He was prunarlly responsible for
1s a Vtetnam veteran, having the formalton of the Metgs
served three years in the U. County Human Resources
S. Anny as a commissioned Counctl and he has served as
officer (1st Lt.), one year of Htke-Btke chatrman for the
that tune with the Ftrst In· Metgs Associatton for
lantry Divtsion (the Btg Red Retarded Citizens lor the past
One) in Vietnam. He worked three years
as a counselor for the State of
Cleland ts a member of
Ohto Bureau of Vocational Drew Webster Post 39,
Legwn,
the
Rehab1htabon for four years Amencan
Chamber of
and served on the presbgeous Pomeroy
State Co unctl of Cour.selors Commerce,
Middleport·
for that agency ..
Pomeroy Rotary, several
At the present, Cleland ts Masomc bodies and various
affiliated with Cleland Realty professional realtor
10 Pomeroy. He has taught assoctations. He and his wife,
several Real Estate courses the fanner Kathleen Marte
for Rto Grande college and he Roush of New Haven, have
ts a Semor Certtfled Real four sons and the)' are
Estate Appratser.
members of the Tr101ly
Church and Sunday School 10
Pomeroy

SQUAD RUN
and etght firemen back to
The
Mtddlepnrl
work b) 9 a m today None of
Emergency
Squad was called
the pollee or firemen who are
to
the
Rtvervtew
Apartments
out attended the meetmg
8
15
a
m
Thursday
for
at
Ftre dtd an estimated
Susie
Edwards,
a
medtcal
$250,000 damage to the Smtlh
and Hopk10s Co sawmill JUst pallent, who was taken to
north of the Ctty Tuesday Holzer Medtcal Center

extensive health msurance
WASHINGTON (UPI) Over the past three decades which covers four out of five
there has been a stunrung nse Arncrtcans, and msurance
m the size of doctors' btlls and retmbursement practices
the outlook Is for more of the "which allow the pliystctan to
same,
says
a
new determ10e the fee and level of
insurer reimbursement. ' '
government study .
To make matters worse ,
The Counctl on Wage and
some
doctors may even set
Price Stabtlity, whtch
''target
levels ' ' of annual
monitors tnflatton for the
·
mcome
"and
when demand
White House, issued a 158for
their
servt ces 1s
page report Wednesday
say10g fees patd to phystctans msuff1cent to achteve that
have soared 80 percent raster mcome level , they raise thetr
than general consumer pnces fees m order to achieve ll ' '
Depite
offertng
no
smce 1950
The medtan annual mcome recommendations to reverse
of the natton 's nearly 400,000 the trend, the study warned
doctors has reached $63,000, there 1s htlle reason for
the study S81d, higher than optumsm that prtces may
any other occupational or level off 10 the future
The Amertcan Medical As·
professional group
The study satd the ma10 sociation tssued a statement
Chtcago
tts
reasons for the fee escalation from
durmg recent years wer-e: headquarters acknowledg10g
lack of competitive pressures that the counctl 's study
some
serious
to restram fee 10creases, " raises

Two hurt in three accidents
I

Steve A

HENRY E. CLELAND, JR.

Lambert, 22 ,

Chesapeake, was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospttal
for treatment of in)Urtes
suffered in a traffic accident
on SR 1 in Metgs County
Tuesday afternoon The
report was brought to the
Gallia·Metgs
Post
headquarters late Wed·
nesday.
According to the invesugatlve officer, an
unknown vebtcle pulled out
into the roadway 10to the path
of a truck drtven by Lambert.
In order to avOid a collision,

.,

Troo p!-~ , ~111d

P dl ks, ~ ~ nu l
Fxploi CI \ 'psi:-;

Lambert drove hts vehtcle off
the rtght side of the htghway
He swerved back to the lelt
but hts truck struck a state
truck driven by Harold J
Gebhart, 45, Marietta

Gebhart also compla10ed of
rnJ urtes but was not lm·
medtately treated. There was
moderate damage to the state
truck and heavy damage to
Lambert's vebtcle.
No citation was tssued in an
accident at ~·42 p m Wed·
nesday on US 35, east of
Mtlchell Rd State troopers

satd an object fltpped from "
car drtven by ~Ichael Zorn ,
24, Gallipolis, strtkmg an auto
operated by Janet M Am·
brose, 59, Pomeroy .
A ftnal acctdent occurred at
6 p.m. Wednesday on SR 7,
south of SR 218 where an auto
driven by Mtcbael R
Newberry, 36, Ashland, Ky.,
attempted to pass just as a
church bus driven by Jerry
D. P10kerman, 38, Gallipolis,
made a left turn There was
moderate damage No one
was mjured.

1IIHl

(i1 h l'l'

p .U IIt I JIIlt lllj,

l'VC J1 1 S

tn the Maso n c;all r11, .t ru l
llll Spt'tll lll Ji ,JJ 78 ~ hu \\
Mc1gs Counncs W lll h ci Vl! tlw wt ll &lt;~ l so mvulve 11\.t n y ulh t' l
oppot1 umty to be c1 pH il uf 11u· g1ouw; hnl h 111 huot h s lUll !
lar gest Sco u lm~ Spu·t. ~&lt;.: ul :n Jl P d O !II l ll l~ U !l lilt: S lli ).W
cv~1 held 111 th e It h '\1 .! 1('
11!1 !mh11 g hcll tlb. s ir t~ t'r s, d ll tl
AI ea Coura:JI, Bu y Sl'fl ut s of ulltl'I S Alsv Ull lnth•d wtll ht·
AmeJJ Ca w 1 Ma y l l Th1 s
super Srl! ul Show will ht• I H~ ltl
at the CiVIC C~.:nt c1 u1 ll un-

t mgton dnd w1H rn vul vc ~ ~~&lt;.:. 11
youth fl om t h t u u ~h u u l the
l'ntlre \0-(ou nt y cu cu 11 f t ht•

Council

bo y 's

llWOI\' CillClll

Ill

large scale event ts

porta nt

t !u• ( OUI\ l: ll CI HII I IJ !Iclll~ l d p
Pim' \\olid Der hy plus llt liJthe r
P1!1 4' Wcwd Dct hy fnr .m y
!lldlvl Li ua l CuiJ nJ Wl'lwh p,
l h:t l dt 'S III S Ill poiii ii iiJHh•.
Tn k et s '" c 1 w 111 1~ :-;old by
S~.:uut s 11 11d

luc .11 ( uhs

Cu unCll S&lt;.:out Executlvc W
Rol&gt;crt Cree am u,unnnl th.t l
111s the des1rc of the Tr1-s t c~ t e
Area Cuune1l 1hat t)vcr y Cub.
Scout and E.xplorcr tw vt; un
upportumty uf bCIIIJi i11 the
show unJ ~wlltng show
tickets C1cc .uldcd that a
lhl s

i.ll l trll~

!M it \I [ I!J:oi SUJUtUJg

Exl!J u._t;t,;Cll~
wil l hl'
dt\•td c•d dm urr g pur·twrpHtmg
lUIII S Wtlh I he I t' ll ll lllldCI

1. Phl l ,t;llti fi,r,.$1 e~ h ..
ft u iiL tJdct so~ l t•S

J.'. l llll l-\

(I I

IU\' 1' 1

.... ,

the li! SI of

IJI IH hl t: III J.'. !l it' SIJ UW

Window is

e xpc rt e n ~.:c

Cub P~l cks . .Seou l TrquJ•s
and Explorer Po sts .1rc nuw
s1gnmg up to par1lClpHtc wtth
appli cations due 111 the Sco ut
Serv1cc Cent er, 73:1 7th 1\ vc ,
Huntmgtun, W Va 257() 1
unmedtately
The local umt c ,HJ 1 h 111 1SP
the s ubject of lhCir booth All
booths should tn vo lvc hoys
domg natm a! t;ub, Sl'II UI r11

Explorer acti vities such &lt;~S
pastor castmJ.( , rope Jrl,tkm l.! .

Physicians' fees soar 80 percent

I

RAVENNA- LISBON MORNING JOURNAL Managtng
Editor William H. Marshall, 30, was killed in a two-car
collision on Ohio 14 four milea ' southeast of RaveMa
Wednesday. Marllball reportedly was returning home from
work when the accident occurred at 1:34 a.m. He bad been
conunuting between Bedford Heights and Usbon.

' HOME AJRNISHINGS-lST FLOOR

'

on g10al motton whtch closed
the Courthouse temporarily
for a year
Powers said they had been
mv it ed to g1ve their reports a t
past meet ings but had not
shown up
In other d1scusston a t the
meeting , Shertff J a mes Hall
a ppeared to see tl th e
Commtsston was gomg to
mtplen1ent hts countywtde
ptl ot poli ce J)'rotectlon
program
" All revenu e sha nn g
money ts spent, ther e IS no
money left, " Powers told
Hall He satd that to Implement the program they
would have to drop other
programs Powers also said
he was votmg no to purcha se
two more pollee crmsers
Wh1te Powers satd he would
vote nu , Rard1n sa1d he was in
favor of purchasmg at least
one crUiser smce It may Lake
SIX to seven month s to rece1ve
Jl.
Dunng the rather heated
discussiOn, Powers sa1d that
m the past f1ve years, the
Shenlf's budget has tn·
creased from $50,000 per year
to $2o:i ,OOO He satd 10 another
ftve yea rs tl would be
$1100,000
·'Most of those mcreases
have been m salanes," Hall
told Powers
DISCUS SIOn- centering
(Continued on page 10)

CINCINNATI - CITY OOUNCILMAN Davtd Mann said
Wednesd$y the Cinclnnatt Gas &amp;Electric Co. ranks llth·worsl
of 14 gas firms nationally he compared for number of leaks per
mlle of mair) ll,ne. Mann, who computed the figures from U.S
Department of Transportation reports, said only two
companies in Pittsburgh and one in Denver ranked lower 10 his
comparison. However, be said he wasn't sure of the ftgures'
significance.

INCLUDES 6 PC. ATTACHMENT SET

DISCO ClASS

Clerk's Offt ce wtll reopen
The motion po10ts out that
on the first Saturday of Aprtl,
a member of the Corrumss10n
wtll unlock all the outstde
doors of the Courthouse at 9
a rn . and they wtll remaUl
open unttlnoon However, the
motton also notes that the
Commtsston wtll not lnfrmge
on the duttes of other offt ce
holders by mak10g them open
on Saturda ys s lnce the
CommiSSIOn does not have
keys to these offtces
Whtle the motion passed,
Commtsstoner Btll Rard10
absta10ed He said the mol ton
was vague " If you open the
courthouse then all the off1ces
must be open , 10cludmg the
CommiSSion Office ," he
stated
Apparently, no move Will
be made to open that offtce
whtch ts manned by Ad·
m1ntstrat1 ve Asststant
Lawrence Butcher and
Secretary Ronna Handley
Powers pomted out that
Mrs Handle} already puts tn
more tune than she ts pa1d for
smce she works several hours
at mght dur10g the week
Durmg ctiscusston on the
subJect , Rardin wanted to
know why the vartous offtceholders had not come 10 to
gtve a report on the
feastbtllty of keepmg thell'
off1ces closed on Saturday's
smce this was part of the

OOLUMBUS - OHIO BELL SPOKESMAN Tom Cotton
has labeled as "hogwash" a charge that his ftrm and another
telephone company m the state may be overcharging
customers. In Washington, North American Telephone
Assoctatlon Prestdent John T. McShea Wednesday said
Cincinnati Bell and Ohto Bell could be overcharging busmess
and reaidential customers by as much as $100 million annually

INCLUDED: 6 PC. ATIACHMENT SET

NOW
ONLY

New Haven wtll get a ftre
department-rescue squad building, the Co urthouse wtll
be reopened on Saturday and
the Shertlf's Department
apparently will not get any
add1honal police crUisers thts
year.
Thts and other action
resulted during a lengthy
meeting of the Mason County
Commisston
Wednesda y
evemng
Buildtng Service Corp of
Pomt Pleasant got the contract to erect the butldmg for
New Haven as a result of
submitt10g a bid of $75,251.
Besides erectmg the
build10g, the bid also covers
construction of a concrete
foundation
The only other company to
submtl a btd was Upton
ConstructiOn Co , whtch
submttted a btd on the
butld10g only for $56 ,152
Building Servtce Corp. also
submttted a lower bid on the
buildmg only for $54,576
After saymg he had
recetved a lot of complamts
from the public regardmg the
closmg of the Courthouse on
Saturdays, Comm1sswn
President Bob Po"ers moved
to reopen the butldtng
However, thiS does not mean
that many of the offtces, such
as the Sbertff's Tax Office,
Assessor' s Offtce, Co unty
Clerk's Office or the C1rcutt

WASHINGTON- THE COMMUNICATIONS Workers of
America today pledged $1 millton from the union 's defense
fund to relieve the financial stress on striking Uruted Mine
Workers uruon members. The coal strtke has lasted 107 days,
leaving mmers without paychecks since December Several
other uruons, mcluding the Umted Auto Workers have pledged
asststance to tlie UMW.

SAVE

BAllROOM
DANCE STUDIO

•

CLEVELAND - EDWARD T MJ;;YER, president of
Meyer Products, inc , Cleveland, Wednesday pleaded guilty to
one count of income tax evasion shortly after a federal grand
Jury indicted hlDI on three tax counts Meyer, 58, formerly ol
Shaker Hetghts, Ohio, but now living 10 Scottsdale, Ariz.,
admitted he reported taxable income for 1972 at $187,731 when
it should have been $242,610

ELBERFELDS

MIKKI
CASTO'S

New Haven gets new
fire-rescue building

questionS ubout ph; sictan a&lt;:ttvittes "
However , It said 1t needs
more tune to s tudy the
report , ano mat tt will have a
full statement wlthm the next
two days
Ame ncans spent $:15 btlitQn
for doctors' serva:es dwmg
the fiscal year whtch en ded
last Sept. 30, comparc'&lt;l "1th
$2 7 billion m 1950, the repotl
satd

Former PonH"roy

broken at
Meigs High
t ount v

M!,' tgs

!) hcrt ff

.l .tJIICS I 1-'1 11 ff lt1 J t' pu ti H Ius
dcprt 11.tncnt t:-; UJvt·st tJ4il lJIIJ.(
the va11 d.tlt ~ rn (1f ,1 wtndow &lt;~l

Mc tg:-;

llt ~h

s( !Jqol

JkpttiiCS

I C4't!IVC d a U t \\ Hl 'I ]1

p

Ill

W e• l n ~s tl;t y

hom tl w school
(.:Usto dl tln tlw l u v.tn1 lnw
bCSHIC /-1 S id~ dum }l ad JIISI
bee n broken out ami .• VPiude
was scc11 Jcav mg the HI e.t
Ace or c..IUIJ.: to Ilw t cpc 111 , the
u•~1 t&gt;d m n smd lw l1c1 d hct11d
the gl.tSs h1euk and l!;u l gone
luthc rrtJilt entr o\1 1{ (' thtnkmg
tl us wos whet c the tlmrwgc
Ot( lii"I Cd,

A s he 140t I •) the

front cnttanl't', li e uhserved 11
small wh1tc Cd l li•otvm1: the
lo wer Jh ll kmg lot 'l11c Will ·
d (•W \H i s h1oken hy a thrown
beer lmttl c
Invcst iJ;atlon ts c•,ntmumg
1n thts mcrd cnt

Dep ut 1es

t 1 a n s por tc t.l

ami Mont e
rtJ fflc to the Ohto Penal
resident shot
Hece pt 1on an d Med1cul
Center
to be ~tn servmg terms
Mrs Alma Th omp so n ,
of
I
5
yc:-~ r s for brcrr k m ~ mul
Columbus, fornJ cJly Almd
Hoe01ch of Pumcruy IH m enten ng 111 Uc:luher 1977
llley ente1cd gUilty pieRs
cnucal condltton at St Anun
Btlls of Jnrorma twn an d
thony Hospttal tn Columbus
w e r ~ sent enced last Sa lurda y
as the result of a gunshot
wound rece1ved tn a robbery by Common Pleas Juuge
at her employment Wed- John C B•con after the
Court had rccctvcd the pre·
nesday afternoon
se
ntence. mvestJ gatio n report
Mrs
Thompso n
wds
fro
m th e St ole Parole
workin g at th e Kenm ore
Auth
onty
Cleaners c ustome1 cuunte1
when a young woman enter ed
the establishment , shouun g
" freeze" at Mrs. Thompson
and another employee at th e
Lows m lower 20s north to
counter
tower 30s so uth Partly
Mrs Thompson had her clo udy northeast Fr1duy ~tnd
back to the young woman a nd mostl y c loudy so ut h and
as she started to turn around, so uthwest w1th chance uf late
she was shot 10 the back
a fternoon shu wei s eK:treme
After the shootin g the so uth Htgh Fnday upper 40s
woman hurdled the counter, to mul 50s.
took some money and ran
from the shop.
SQUAD CALLED
Mrs. Thompson was taken
The Pomeroy Emergency
to St. Anthony Hospttal where
she underwent surgery for Squad was called to Unton
several hours lor tnju rtes to Ave. atlO 01 am. Wednesday
the sp10e and liver She was fo r Marte Letfhett who had
then transferred to mtensive fa lien She was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospttal
care
Dt' IHI I S

H.1£fl e

Weather

,

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