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                  <text>12-Tbe Dolly Sentinel. Middleport-POOllll'oy, 0., Tue!day, Feb. 22,1971

News~.

in Briefs

Schools
(Continued from ·page I)
Middleport Ubrary Board
and a financial report from
the libraries was given.
A letter from the Meigs
Local Teachers Assn. was
presented asking the board to
set a meeting date for the
~ntng of negotiations.
A number of fonns ·were
adopted for implementing
due process for handicapped'
children and youth as
developed
by
the
Southeastern Ohio Special
Edu cation Regional
Resource Center. All informatim on the forms is to
be held confidential.
A letter was read from the
Almeroy Youth League, Don
Hunnell, presid e nt ,
requesting use of Salisbury
and Meigs High·· School
facilities this summer .
Dowler said the league had
done excellent work last year
and an agreement will be
worked out.
Minutes of the Del!. 14, 1976
meeting, at which John
Triplett was not rehired as
derk, were amended with
live pages deleted because
they were not the type of
notes common in board
minutes. The minutes were
adopted after the pages were
deleted.
Mrs. Wagner reported that
she did oot have the financial
report ready because the

(Conunuea tram 111ge I)
llld the caJifornla·Nevada bOrder. tt OCC\I1TEid at 10:24 p.m.
PST and luted only a few seconds. A spokeoman of the Mono
Ccunty llher!ff'sofflce said there were oo reported damages or
injuries.
SAN DIEGO - RICHARD WESSON, 49, was battered to
death Monday in a giant food blender,
Wessm, a maintenance man at Food Maker Inc., was
working lnslde the seven-loot-long blender when a coworl!er
tripped and !ell against the button activating the machine,
authorities said.
NEW ORLEANS - BEER KEGS, .PAINTED faces, five·
bour parades and mostly orderly crowds were among the hall·
1118rks of this year's Mardi Gras celebration.
·
Canal Street was a solld mass of revelers Monday night for
the Krewe of Proteus parade, the last before today's "Fat
Tue!day" celebration which ends Mardi Gras. On Bourbon
Street, beer kegs stretched 10 and :II in a row on sidewalks,
waiting to be tapped for the crowds.
Pollee said the crowds were mostly quiet and orderly,
though there were more than IDl arrests in the eight-day
period preceding Mardi Gras on such chaiges as public
Intoxication, selling without a permit and theft. ''I wouldn't
want to call it unusually quiet," said Sgt. George Bourgeois.
"It's relatively quiet, though."
PITI'SBURGH - THE STATE MINIMUM RETAIL price
for milk is scheduled to drop two centa a gallon next Tuesday in
the l:kounty Western PeMsylvanla ar... However, the
PeMsylvania Milk MarkeUng Board ]l1ans a hearing the
following day that could result in higher prl~s by mid-Aprll.
Peter EUsh, mUk board chairman, said profit margins in the
mUk industry are "not too healthy" because of declining
!I'Ofits and Increased costs. He cited the cloaings of two area
dairies, Menzie Dairy and Beverly Fanns. The hearing will be
at 10 a.m. March 2 in Room 301, Slate Office . Bullding,
Downtown. Consumers, milk dealers and farmers are invited
to testify.
.

company which is receiving

. Carter budget

mmey for a comp~ler has not
ji'ovided instruction. It was
agreed that Dowler will file a
!I'Otesi with the company.
The board gave Martha
Vennari permission to attend

(Continped from page I)
will import more than ou~lf of Itsgas and on during 1977,
the first lime this country has depended on foreign energy
sources for more than half of its needs.
In other actions, Carter withdrew Ford's legislative
proposals to reduce food stamp and school lunch benefits and
to increase payroll taxes for low and moderate income
workers.
Ford's proposals mel strong resistance on Capitol Hill and
were given little chance of enactment by a Democratic
Congress.

a work session for local

Wrestlers
Big 3 m finish jn
(Continued from page
Eugene Cafiero warned that, last place:
despite the record profits, the
•

'

I)

No, 3 automaker's 1977-modei
car and truck prices do not
cover aU the rising costs for
materials, labor
and
services. They did not rule
out a. further price increase
on current models.
The automakers are
gearing up for an expected
strong lljll'ing and plan to
build 916,000 new cars in
March, higher for any montli
since October, 1973, when the
Arab oil embargo triggered
the slump.
·
Continuing labor ji'Oblems
at GM and Chrysler,
however, could dampen
March production plans.
Some 8,600 GM workers are
striking at plants in Parma,
Ohio, and · Clark, N.J .
· Chr}'lller was faced with a
threatened walkout today by
3,000 workers at its Warren,
Mich., stamping plants.
· The 916,000 cars planned
for March includes some
storm· recovery production
lost in January, but aloo is
designed to bulld up dealer
inventories for spring and
summer.

THREE RUNS MADE
RACINE - The Racine
Emergency Squad answered
three calls Monday. Taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
were Maggie Gilmore at 10
a.m.; Dana McCain, 6:35
p.m., and Tammy Tallent,
10:30 p.m .

Results of the Southeastern
Ohio Athletic
League
Wrestling meet last Saturday
resulted in victory for
Athens. Meigs finished last.
Results of the Logan-Meigs

matc~~an41,MeigsZ7

.
Britton

roordinators on handicapped
at Nelsonville Friday and
Dwight Goins, steering
committee chairman. to
attend aNorth Central School
Assn. meeting in Ironton on
March 2and 3. Meigs Local is
.., for evaluation this spring
by the North Central
organization.
Attending the meeting were
Supt. Dowler, Morris, the
assistant; Mrs. Wagner, and
lloard members, Wendell
Hoover, Dr. Keith Riggs,
Virgil King, Robert Snowden,
and Ptincipals John Mora
and Robert Morris.

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

:
I

Area Deaths

HAROLD D. ROBINSON
CARPENTER - Friends
here have learned of the
death of Harold D. Robinson.
60 , Lancaster , Ohio, Mr .
Robinson, sooi ' of the iote
Vesta and Nora Stanley
Robinson, was born near

C.rpenter and was reared to

m;~nhood here, graduating
from Columbia Local High
School .
He married the former Ada
Belle Trainer, also of this
area , after the death of his
first wife In 1965.
Beol des hIs wife, he Is
survived by three sons by his
first marriage/ and a stepdaughter, Monica Maynard,
and a brother , Stanley
Robinson , Columbus . Ser vices were held In Lancaster
wi'fh burial in Columbus.

OPAL DUNHAM
ALBANY - Services were
held here Sunday at the
Blgony . Jordan Funeral
Home for Opal Dunham , 65,
who passed away In Rock
tsland, Ill ., where she had ,
been flown about three weeks
before 1o be near her son and
family.
Mrs. Dunham was born In
Leon, W, Va .. the daughter of
~ late . John -and Sophia
Yauger Sines .
Survivors Include her
husband ; Carl, of near
Carpenter ; a son, John B.,
Md daughter.ln-law, Jl!lnel
(Jeffers) Dunham ; two
granddaughters, Connie and
Yvonne Dunham , and two
grandsons , John Carl and
Richard Dunham , all of New
Boston ,
Illinois ;
two
brothers, Clarence Sines ,
leon, W. Va . and Raymond
Sines, Lesage, W: Va .; and a
sister , Mrs . Gladys Bauer,
Arcadia, Calif .
Services were conducted br.•
Rev.. Wllbuf Baxter of letar ,
W. Va ., with burial In School
lot Cemetery near here.
Those from a distance here
for the serVI c:es were the John
t:&gt;Jnham family, Mr. and
Nrs. Charles Baldwin and
Jocty, Mrs . June De Roo, Mr .
and lks. James Giles and
llr. and Mrs. Richard Jeffers, all of New Boston , ill .;
llr. and Mrs . Clarence Sines,
Leon: Mr . and Mrs. Donald
Sines, Qolando, Fla .; Mr . and
llrs. Raymond Sines, Mr .
and Mrs. Walter Chapman
and children, Mr. and Mrs .
George Rice and family, Le
Sage, W. Va ., and Mrs .
Melinda Lewis, Mr . and Mrs .
Qoland Seils and James and
Herman
Lewis, atl of
C&lt;&gt;iumbus .

OLIVIA McCORMICK
Ol ivia Miller McCormick-,
91 , widow of the la te Robert

(L) won by forfeit.

(M), 11-2.

112 pound Class - Kelly
Helber (L) · pinned Jack
Hwnphrey (M) in Ist period.
119 pound class - Geiger
(L) won by forfeit.
126 pound class _ Carl
Green (M) pinned Miller (L)
in 1st periOO.
. 138 pound class _ Gary
Priddy (M) decisioned
Griggs (L), 5-4.
145 pound class _ Duane
McLaughlin (M) pinned
Myers (L) in first period. ·
155 poimd class - Emerson
(L) pim\e~ Sieve Kinzel (M)
in 1st period.
167 pound class _ Robert
Hakamont (M) pinned
Spence (L ) in 2nd period.
175 pound class _ Cullison
(L) pinned Dennis Donahue
(M) in 3rd period. ·
185 pound class _ Woltz (L)
decisimed Ray WiUord (Ml.
7•2.
Heav eight By
(L)
yw
ers
piMed David Davis.
The Bulldogs whipped
Logan ",.,.!5, Meigs 52_-15 and
Ironton 46-18 to easUy take
first place with 142 points.
Th e lronton Ti gers f1'nished
·g
second • Wl'th 85 pom'ts ' nosm
Out host Logan With 83 · Meigs
linishedwith65forlastplace._.
•

THE INN PLACE
Wednesday Nrght Special

a

,

By RICK VAN SANT
C!NCINNATI (UPI )- Two
of eight persons held hostage
earlier this month at a home
for unwed mothers testified
today that accused kidnaper
Jessie · L. Coulter put tbe
barrel of a sawed-off shotgun
into the mouth of a woman
hostage and that accused
accomplice Rita Gibran held
a knife to the neck of another
hostage. ·
It was the first time any of
the hostages had testified' in
court ahout what happened
during the lf&gt;.bour ordeal
Feb. 11 and 12 at the
Catherine Booth Home for
unwed mothers.
Also today , Hamilton
County Municipal Court
Judge Sandra Beckwith
rejected pleas from defense
atlorneys to reduce bond and
said. that both Coulter, 42, of
Detroit, and Ma. Gibran, his
37-year-old ex-wife, will
continue to be held under $1
million bond each while their
cases go to the grand jury.
One of the hostages, Mary
Owens, 30, a nurse at the
home, testified that Coulter
held a sawed-off shotgun
against a hostage identified
only as "Selly."

. "Mr. Coulter grabbed Sally

CALL ANSWERED
The Pomeroy E-R Sq~ad
answered a call to 226 Union
Ave. , at 3:55p.m. Monday for
Edna S. Hart, who was Ill.
She was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
CLASSES RESUME
Baton classes of Mrs. Judy
Riggs held at the recrealion
building at Royal Oak Park
will resume at the regularly
scheduled times on Wed·
nesd~y evening.

Visit Our Salad Bar
Pepper Steak
Mashed Potatoes
and Gravy .
Vegetable
Hot Roils

Coffee, Tea or Mil!&lt;

MEIGS lHEATRE'
Plus Tax

THE MEIGS INN

' Pomeroy, o:

Phone 992·6304
PIZZA SHACK Phone 992-6304

I

a.DSED FOR

VACATION ·
WATaf FOR
OPENING DATE

by the hair of her head and
put the shotgun in her
mouth," .said Miss Owens,
who also testified she was
bandcuffed while she was
held in the locked,
windowless room.
"I was handcuffed twice,"
she said. "Miss Gibran handcuffed me the seeond time
·1vlth my hands bOhind me."
· She also testified that at one
other point, "Mr. Coulter
slapped me in the face. "
Another hostage, John
Fisher, 19, a student at
Antioch College and a parilime worker at the home,
testified Miss Gibran at.one
timelieldalmifetohisthroat.
" Mr. Coulter asked Miss
Gibran to watch me," he
said. "She put a blade to my
neck aod said, 'Don't make
me kill you honey, cause I
will."'

Coulter and Miss Gt'bran 's
cases were heard separately
today, and the testimony
came a t M'ass G'b
1 ran ,s
preliminary hearing when
ber attorney, Tom Miller,
contended thai Miss Gt'lran
was not an accomplice.
Asked by Miller l'f Coulter's
instructions to Mtss Gilran
came as a "command" or a
41
request," Fisher answered,
"a request."
,
Fisher also testified that at
one point Coulter "asked"
Miss Gibran to hold the
shotgun, "and she dld,"
Prosecutor J . Anthony
Sewyer, who contends that
Miss Gibran was an
accomplice, asked Fisher,
"When Miss Gibran had the
·.gun, did she at that tbne point
the gun at Mr. Coulter and
shoot him?"
Replied Fiaher, "No."
Declared Sewyer, ''There
is absolutely oo doubt in my
mind that Miss Gibran will be
indicted on multiple counts
by the grand jury."
Coulter, who had come to
the home searching for
information about hi.! son
born there 20 years ago and
put up for adoption, and Miss
Gilran curt'enUy are charged
rn one count of kidnaping
each.
Mis1 Owens, in her
testimony today, said that
Coulter pointed the sawed-off
sHOigun at her llhortly after
he and Misa Gllran entered
the home.
"f!e told me be wanted a
room without any windowa,"

Grader bought on 2-1 vote

I

(Bob) McCorm ick, a resident ·
of 1332 Tenth Ave., Hun ~ngton, W. Va., died around 2

p.m . Monday en route to
Cabell County Hospital. She

resided with her onl y child. a

son,

Robert, In Huntington.
lks. McCorm ick was a
former teacher in the
GOIIIpoils City Schools . She
was the daughter of the late

John and aarbara· Benner
Miller, born June 2, 187'1, In

Green Twp. She marrted
Robert McCormick around
1920. He preceded her In
death in 1975.
She was a member of St .
Louis Catholic Church of
Gallipolis .
.
One grandchild survives .
Grav61de services wll l be
held 10 a.m. Thursday at
Mound Hili Cemetery . Father
A. J . Golubiewsk l will of .
ficiate.

Friends ri1ay call at
Miller' s Home for Funerals
between 1 and 9 p.m. Wed ·
nesday .
.

MASON , W. VA.
Wahama ·White Falcon Band
musicians received 13 of the
17 superior ratings given at
Region II Solo and Ensemble
Contest held at the Marshall
University School of Music on
Seturday.
Adjudicators for the event
included Robert Clark and
John Mead, both memberS of
the music faC!Jity a\ the
University.
.
Students were judged on
the five rating scale with a I
or superior rating being' the
highest.
Receiving I ratings on solos
were Debbie . Starr, Lisa
Yeago,. John Froendt, Terri
Johnson, Karen Brown, Lisa
Davis, Mary McFarland,
Cheryl Adams and Unda
Test.
Students receiving superior
ratings on, ensembles included flute duet, Terri
Johnson and Karen Brown;
flute quartet, Jennie James,
Rhonda Kay, . Teresa Jones
and Debbie MacKnight;
clarinet quintet, Lisa Gilland,

PEARL t;. JACOBS
Pearl Clifford Jacobs, 86,
Rt. 2, Pomeroy, In the coal
mining business for a number
ot years, died Tuesday at St. .
Joseph's Hospital, Parkers·
burg.
Born Dec. 8, 1890 to the late
Gilbert and Nell ie Powell
Jacobs, he was also pr:eceded
in death by six children .
Surviving are his wife. Tina
Buck Jacobs ; two sons.
Oifford, Pomeroy, and Paul.
South Shore, Ky .; four
daughters, Mrs . Theo Davis
and Miss Betty Jacobs, both
ot C&lt;&gt;lumbus , and lks . Donna
Gilmore and Mrs. Wanda
Eblin, both .of Pomeroy ; 16
grandchildren 20 great grandchildren , and three
great -great.g randchildren.
Mr . Jacobs was· a member
of the Laurel Ci iff Free
Methodist Church for 53
years. l-ie v.10rked in Pomeroy
coal m i nes his entire life and
Two persons were injured
for 18 years, operated the
in a traffic accident ·at 10:32
Jacobs Coal Co. He was a
fo rmer
Salisbury
Twp . a.m. Monday on SJ;t 35 on the
Gallipolis by-pass.
trustee.
Funeral service S will be
The Gallia·Meigs Post
2:11 p.m , Thursday at the State Highway Patrol said an
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
auto driven by Collis E.
Church with the Rev . Floyd
Shook officiating. Burial will ' Adkins, 45, Vinton, came off
be ln Rock Springs cemetery . the exit ramp to the Silver
Friends may call at the
Memorial Bridge and crossed
Ewing Funeral Horne from 7
the
lane in the path of a truck
to 9 this evening and from 2 to
~rated by Leroy H. Carter,
4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday .
The body will be taken to the
32, Chillicothe.
church where it will lie 'in
Adkins and a passenger,
state one hour prior to ser ·
Elizabeth
Adkins, age nine,
vices .
were
taken
to the Holzer
In lieu of flowers, the
family
prefers
that Medical Center by SEOEMS
contributions be m~de to the for treatment of various
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist injuries.
Church building fund.

Two

injured in

auto wreck

woman hostag·e threate,ned

h
h
h
ld
(Ll)OSdec~!~~ssJohnCa~~~~ Wit s .otgun e . .
98 pound class -

.

: Wahama musicians take
·13 of 17 excellent ratings

~

mouth

she said. "Miss Gilran was
following along beside hbn.

Eastern's
honor list

'
d
announce
EAST MEIGS - The first
semester hooor roll has been
announced for the Eastern
Junior and Senior High
Schools by Principal c. A.
Gooding.
Named to the roll were:
Seventh - Scott Skinner, A
roll; Kila Young, John Ribel,
Terry Snowden, Tim Ryan,
Rllger Gaul, Jeff Jones, B
roll.
Eighth - Melanie Root,
Tracy Sayre• A roll·• JIITI'
Bahr, Carla Chichester,
Richard Bearhs, Tony
Kennedy, April parker,
Kathy Pooler, Brenda
Rucker, Greg Wigal, Ray
Werry, Barbara Wells,
Tammy Starcher, Marcy
Sexson, B ro11 •
Freshman - B&lt;l'ky Ed·
wards, Teresa Spencer, Uta
Young, A roll; Jeff Kimes,
Kaleen Millhone, Laurie
Provence, Sheila White, B
roll.
Sophomores
Kay
Balderson, ·Cindy Pitzer,
Lawrence Pooler, Karen
Probert, Dawn Sorden,
Debbie Spencer, Sherr I
Starcher, Vida Weber, A roll;
Shirley Bennett, Joy Boyles,
Terry
Brown,
Sheri
Buchanan, Susan Hannum,
La uri Matthews, James
Ryan, Rusty Wigal, B roll.
Juniors - Becky Windon,
Dorothy Runyon, David
Brown, A roll; Mary Mora,
. Tammy Pitzer, Rocky Van
, Meter, Diana Massar, Lori
Young, Sonia Beaver, Sheila
Buchanan, Karen Fick,
Mickie Holloo, Joe Kuhn,
Den~ll Rucker, B roD.
Seniors- Teresa Buckley,
Carolyn Harper, Jeff
Hedrick, Jayne Smith, Juli
Whitehead, A roll; Kevin
Burton, Teresa Carr, Pam
Congrove, Debbie CoMolly,
Teresa · Edwards, Marlin
Evans, Kathy Follrod, Susie
Goebel, Mike Smith, R roll.

·There was heavy damage
to Adkins' car and light
damage to the truck. Adkins
was cited to Municipal Court
for changing lanes without
caution.
Frank W. Porter, 72,
Gallipolis, was charged with
failure lo slop within the
assured clear distance
following an accident at 8: sa
a.m. on SR 7 at CR 2.
The patrol said Porter's
vehicle struck the rear end of
an auto operated by Michael .
R. Willis, 19, Bidwell. There
was minor damage.
No charges were filed In an
accident at 2:35p.m. Monday
m SR 35, one mile west of SR
325. State troopers said an
.auto driven by James D.
Bush, 22, Dayton, slid into a
parked vehicle . owned by
Kenneth E. Folden, 20, Rio
Grande. There was minor
damage.

Actions filed

Mary McFarland; woodwind
trio, Jennie James, Mary
McFarland, and Terri
Proffitt; and woodwind
quintet, Usa Davia, Cheryl
Adams, Carolyn Rickard,
April Parsons, and Uncia
Test.
Three soloists were given
applications which makes
them eligible to audition for
the honor of being one of the
10 or 12 "honor finallBts" for
the Slate of West VIrginia:
The three students were
Linda TeSt, Mary McFarland
and Cheryl Adams.
•
Piano accompanists for the
students were Lynn Kitchen
and Pat Yeago.

Judy Needs, Edie Shepherd,
Lora Smith, and Donna
Marr; and the briiBB en·
semble, Keith Goldsberry,
Kathy Test, David RNe, Lisa
Reynolds, CarUyn Rickard,
Sarah Zuspan, · Melanie
Sisson, John Froendt, Pam
Roush, Bob Jarrell and Brent
Hart.
Those students who
received th.e second highest
rating, or n, on solos were
Kathy Test, Jennie James
and Karen Stodola. Rhonda
Kay received a IT! on her
solo.
Students receiving a II for
ensembles were clarinet
duet, Cheryl Adams and

•

Veterans Memorbli Hospital '
Admitted _;. Wilbur Smith,
LangsviUe; Kenneth Muliins,
Cheshire; Bessie Oliver,
Middleport; Maggie Glbnore,
Racine; Kay Hockman,
Cheshire; George Frederick,
Long Bottom ; Maxine
Brumley,
Middleport;
Charles Pennington, Middleport; Bernice Molden,
Pomeroy; Amy Eynon,
Syracuse; Beulah Oehler,
Belpre; Nara Hariman, Long
Bottom;
Edna
Hart,
Pomeroy.
Discharged - Vivian
Jones, Lois Schoonover:
Marjorie Gibbs, John Newell,
Ann Fleming, Joann Conkle.

Wells and lloosh said if the county intended to buy a new
grader within the next year or two it should be bought since
prices would escalate, They apparently agreed a new grader
was needed in a year or two.
Jones stated that he voted no as he felt they should not buy
any additional equipment unW other problems at the countY
garage were worked out.
The commissioners also discussed the county highway
depa~nt appropriation for 1977, No agreement was
reached, and the matter was again tabled pending further
review with the engineer, Buehl.
Larry Hivnor, CETA field representative, and Naomi
Brinker, local administrator, r~viewed with the

•

at y

e

HOSPITAL NEWS
Carley, Vickie L. Metheney,
· Mrs. Cleon R. Pratt and soil,,
Treba L. Russell, Jennifer J.
Showman, Anna M. Slm·
puns, Danny J. Tenopplous,

VOl. XXVII NO. 219

Pleasant Valley
Discharges - Jack Smith,
Letart; Fred Nibert, Point
Pleasant; WIUlam Phelps,
Letart ; Albert Middleton,
Point Pleasant; Anthony
Cemlni, Point Pleasant; ·
Everett Thacker, Point
Pleasant; Herbert King ,
· Letart; Richard Dyer, Point
Pleasant ; Mrs. Robert
Chattin, Clifton; Gordon
Handley, Buffalo; Mrs.
David Flowers, Robertsburg;
Holzer Medical Center
Mary Seyre, Point Pleasant;
(Diocbarges, Feb. ZI 1
Leslie Marcum , Kenova;
Sedie C. Adner, Wesley E. Isabelle McLaughlin ,
Alien, Gerry M. Cain, Shawn Kanauga ; Vertie Blain,
A. Capehart, Marjorie E. , Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs.
Carhart, Hazel R. Combs, ' Rnnnie Johnson, Pomeroy;
Lawrencene Cordell, Mrs. Shannon Tucker, !,eon; and
Albert Ehman and daughter, Beverly Dingus, Mason.
Katherine C. Harris, John H.
Births - A son to Mr. and
Henderson, · Marlin E. Mrs. William Edwards,
Johnson, Allee J. Marcum, Racine, and a da~ghter to
Anna . M. Massie, Barbara Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Oxyer,
Ann McCalla, Joe C. Me- Galli polls.

YOU'RE ALWAYS
SAFE. ••

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I

DAN TIIOMAS
Dan Thomas, 15-year-old
aon of Mr. and Mrs. Don
Thomas, Pomeroy, will
receive the Eagle Scout
Award, at 2 p.m. Sunday at
tbe Trinity Cburcb In
Pomeroy. Dan Is the
youngelt member of
Pomeroy Boy Scout Troop
2ft to have earned this
bonor, the bigbest given In
S~oatlng. All of Dao's
friends are Invited to attend the ceremony and the
reception wblcb wlll follow
In tbe cbareb social room.

:s;lll
:~

Plans are being completed
to add a coronary care unit at
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
Scott Lucas, administrator,
told the Pomeroy chamber of
Commerce at its noon lunch·
eon meeting Tuesday at the
Meigs Inn.
Lucas said plans call for
two beds in the coronary care
unit and two beds in an in·
tensive . care unit. Th e
coronary section will be
located where the obatetric
department once was
located.
It is expected specific plans
will be completed by March I
and bids will he let in tale
Marci), construction to gel
underway by May I, and
completion by Aug. I.
Lucas told The Daily
Sentinel only unforeseen
events would cancel out plans
for the hospital expansion:
Specifications in the blue
prints are subject to change
too, but evert these are of a
firm nature. Lucas indicated
ll!e expansirn will be made
without federal funding .
Lucas explained that the

coronary unit i§long overdue
as there is a definite need for
such a .service since most
people prefer to stay al
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The fa cility will of course
hav e to m.eet slate and
federal requir€men~s . Lucas

FROM NAME BANK
Lock-up your valuables In a safety
deposit box. Several sizes available
to accommodate Jewelry and special
documents. You shouldn't be with·
out one.

• • •

By PAMELA REEVES
WASHINGTON (UP!)
President Carter got . a
from
Mideast
report
Secretary of Slate Cyrus
Vance today and said he was
more convinced than ever "this is a good year" for a
lasting peace between Arab
and Jew.
Vance met with Carter and
top military and dilopmatic
advisers at the White House
to discuss his recent trip to
Israel and several Arab
countries. He carried

J 0 ··;:,~l&lt; sages
we have seen. show we
should play a cruCial role,"

NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J. -THE BOY SOOUTS, caught
up ill a modernday identity crisis, are changing the name they
were born ~th 67 years ago. Bowing to the tnteresta of women
and mlncrity grou111, the Boy Scouta of America said today the
wcrd "boy"la old-fallhloned and even offensive to many of its
members.
The crganizatton, headquarlered here, said it Ia changing
the name to Scouting USA. The new name will appear In
advertiaementa, literature and on calling cards. ''The word
'boy' is objectionable to minorities, our young adult male and
female }eaden and naturally to the young women enrolled in
our coed· Exploring program," the organization said.

"THE

FRIENDLY BANK"

WASHINGTON - A GIRL BORN IN 1975 can expect to
llw to be 76.5 years oil, National Center for Health Stallatlcs
said today , A 1975 boy can live on the average 68.7 y~rs.
Without regard to - . the llfe expectancy of a child born in
1975 is 72.5 yean -a record high rate exceeding slighUy the
72.4 year life expectancy rate projected In provlalonal
estimates last aununer,
Flnal1975llfe and death statistics llhow the death rate also
wu a record low, and lower than predicted earlier, Death
ralelinc:reued In 1975, the latest year reported, for only three
of the 15leadlng causes of death, the center said; Influenza and
pneumonia, reflecting an epidemic last winter; cancer, which
remainllhe second leading killer; and suicide.
·
'!be cancer increase waa not aa great, however, as the
(Continued on page 12)

MtttFPoRY,..oHIO
Member Federal Deuosit lnsul'lilce eo.wniliW.
DEPOSITS INSUR.ED TO ~40,DO!Q ·
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.
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PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

FMC Corp. charged in
carbon tet discharge
CHARLESTON, W. Va . attempting to hla• a
(UP!) -The FMC Corp, has dangerous situation and also
deliberately hidderr waa possibly violating stall!
dlacharges of , carbon and federal water pollution
tetrachloride and Jepcrdlzed control acts and regulations.
public health, according· to Ia this your example of
Natural Resources corpbrate responalbllltf?"
Departmelll Director David Callaghan wrote in the letter.
Carbon tetrachloride is
c. c:aJIIPn.
.
used
tn many cleaning fluids
'11let.. the gilt of a letter
llld
has
been found to cauae
Callagban haa sent to John
cancer
and
liver and kidney
Hcito, Jlllll8&amp;8l' of the South
damage.
Ollrlnlan CGIIIpaiiY'
FMC has not officially
Clllqbln claimed the finn
accepted
responsibility for
falllld to report oulfalla ol the
the
70-ton,
75-mlle chemical
c:blml,..l that occurred on ·
spill,
which
has moved out ol
Feb.lO and Feb. II, and
West
Virginia
but could
nlwtld to let DNR and EPA
endanger
communltlea
along
•Jdallsample the !!Iter on
the
Ohio
River
In
Kentucky
Feb. 7.
.
''Oiul can only conclude llld Ohio.
••t the company was

staled.
Lucas said that in 1976 the
hospital had 2,m admissions, served 5,103 people
in the emerge ncy room,
performed 1,500 operations
and had an annual payroll of
a little over a million dollars.

NITA WISNISKI

Action against
hypertension '

"For a small hospital we do more to do with the relaxing
a lot of work," he said. Asked of the curtailment than
if an obstetric unit would ever anything else.
The Ohio Chamber of
be opened again at the
Everybody talks about the over a three week perho spital Luca s replied, Commerce will meet in weathe but nobody does iod and if the problem
"ptobably not ," since the one Columbus on March 15 and 16 anything about it. A popular exists after that time, a
they had was not financially when Fred Morrow will at· topic these days also is high referral will be made to a
.sound. He indicated people tend. Crow will attend a blood pressure (hyper- physician who will attempt to
did not use the department meeting of the Ohio Chamber tension ) and it's encouraging determine the cause of the
when it was at the hospital, in Athens on March 8.
problem and . prescribe
Attending were Crow, to know that the Meigs medication, if needed.
that only one to two babies
County
Health
Department
IS
were delivered a month . Barbara Chapman, doing something about that.
The program has been
"People of the area did not secretary , Leo Vaughan,
funded by the Ohio Depart·
The
department
loda
y
take advantage of the service Robb, Lucas, Mayor An· announced that it has been ment of Health through
when it was offered," Lucas drews , Vera VanMeter, funded for a nine-month federal funds and is designed
Morrow, Vernon Weber, John
said.
program which is designed to to establish an ongoing fight
Fred Crow. president, Anderson, N. W. Compton, deal exclusively with high against hypertension which is
announced
thai
the Mayer, Koebel and Thereon blood pressure. The program a major cause of deaths.
Johnson .
celebrities
banquet
honoring
will include educational Personnel of the local health
a good year, " lowara
Robert
Wingett,
Charles
aspects,
clinics, hom e department realizing the
reaching a peace settlement,
Legar and Pete Shields and
visitations
and free blood need for . a program to
said the President, who .
others
will
be
held
March
9
at
EXTENDED
OUTLOOK
pressure
service
to the public educate the public on the
previously got an inforl)lal
the Meigs Inn.
Friday through Sunday,
dangers of hypertension and
of
Meigs
County
.
briefing from Vance on the
Crow, of the upcoming a chance« ralo Friday and
find
persons afflicted with the
Named
to
carry
out
the
trip.
Regatta,
said
nothing
is
Saturday
and
fair
Sunday.
ailment
applied for the
program
through
the
Meigs
In a busy morning, Carter
definite on Sunday boat Highs will be In the 50s
funding
.
County
Department
of
Health
also arranged a meeting with
In i)er work with the
Rep. Jonathan Bingham, D- races. He suggested perhaps Friday and Seturday and in is Mrs. Nita Wisniski, R.N.,
they could have john boat, the 40s Sunday. Lows wiU Addison , who will
program,
Mrs. Wisniski will
be
N.Y., who recently spent
skiff,
and
crew
races.
raoge
from
lite
upper
!Is
to
go
into
homes
of the county if
available
to
speak
before
any
seven hours with Cuban
Roger
Davis
of
Kingsbury
the
mid
30s.
persons
who
are
ill are unable
Meigs
County
organization
on
leader Fidel Castro, Bingham
Homes
attended
the
meeting
to
visit
the
health
department
the program. She can be
said earlier he found Castro
and
Crow
asked
if
the
office.
She
also
will
recruit
contacted al the he alth
ready to talk about rehe
had,
Hurricane
boats
to
work
as
personnel
department office, 992-3723.
establishing closer ties with
(Hurricane
boats
go
on·
land
volunteers
in
ll!e
program.
·
Mrs. Wisniski will be taking
the United States,
Rain, possible thun·
and
water)
could
be
used
in
a
Anyone
concerned
with
An!ong those sitting in on
dershowers tonight and the blood pressure of hunthe session with Vance were race and Dav,is thought this Thursday. Lows tonight in the dreds of M;eigs County hi gh blood pressure or
wishing Mrs. Wisniskl to
Air .Force Gen. George CQuld be arranged.
mid 40s, highs Thursday in residents over the next nine speak before an organization
Wall
er
Robb
of
the
Brown, chairman of the Joint
lower 60s. Probability of month period and she
Chiefs of Staff, Vice Pomeroy Citizens Action precipitation 50 per cent stresses that the service is should contact the health
President Waller Mondale, Group disclosed thai the today, ill per cent tonight and free. A person discovered to department at the earliest
Defense Secretary Harold action group was not among Thursday.
have an abnormal reading convenience.
the
top
10
chosen
by
the
Small
Brown
and
Treasury
will be scheduled for a check
Secretary Harold Business Administration and
the Farmers Home AdBlumenthal.
ministration for development fudning . Robb explained that the group will get
back to the cleanup projfC( as
Meigs County engineer order of the board of Meigs
This order will be operative
soon as the weather permits. Wesley Buehl said today load County Commissioners, have from Feb. 21 to June 1. The
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence limits on county roads, by been reduced 25 percent.
present limit is 19,000 pOunds
Andrews said the village w.as
•ross weight; the 25 percent
hoping to secure a grant
through the Housing Urban
Development for funds to
repair village streets.
'11 roads in the county have
Bill Mayer, representing
oeen posted and violators will
the Pomeroy Pastry Shop, a
be
prosecuted
under
"It would take something new member, sta ted that he
authority of Ohio Revised
like the record rapid warmup was interested in the
Code No . 5577:
we had in March of 1960," be chamber and commended it
Persons having reasonable
said. "One day then in for doing an outstanding job.
requests
or find it necessary
•· f th be d
,
Red Carpet IM.
western Pennsylvania the
John Koebel of the Rest'den..,
o e n area m
A group proposes to on occasion to carry a weight
temperature went . to 55 Columbia Gas of Ohio Ma~n County, W· Va· a.nd establi•h an indoor tennis
degrees, then to 65. the next outlined relaxed gas curtail' Gallta _Coun~y and Me1gs club and indoor swimming over the posted Umlt must
day, followed by tWo more ments, said tbe situation was County m Ohto are invited to pool club in the tri-county secure a pennit for their
vehicle io exceed the limlt. in
days of 75.."
better, but not as good as they a meetmg to ~xplore a area. The swimming pool and case of having to move a
Relyea ·said rivers that still would like to see it. He said pr~posal to prov1d~ indoor tennis courts are · already trlliler, -or of high water, for ·
could become swollen by the warming trend and swunmmg and tennas Thurs· constructed at the Inn. The example, Buehl said.
snowpack melt include the conservati on effort s had day at 7 p.m. at the Point object is to learn if there is
Allegheny in Pennsylvania
enough interest to warrant
and the Cheat and Greenbrier
having the areas covered to
tn West Virginia .
allow use of the pool and
"The clues to where the
courts in winter months.
Ohio River might flood will
Persons interested are
come from its tributaries,"
Two defendants were tmea
asked
to call any of the
he added. "But, we do have 70
and two others forfeited
following
co-chairmen,
Dr.
flood control reservyirs along
Labor's lobbyists also will David Cole, Dr. Richard bonds in the court of Pomeroy
MIAMI BEACH, Fla,
various
Ohio
River
Mayor Clarence Andrews
tributaries that we didn't (UP!) - Big lahor promises be well financed. The AFL- SimpsOn, J. J. Wedge, Cindy Tuesday night. Fined were
Park,
Billy
Johnson,
Carol
have when we had the big to fight big business In an CIO executive council voted
during
its Shadle, Dr. E. S. Villanueva Mae Fairchild, Pomeroy, $30
expensive, emotional bailie Tuesday,
flood of 1937."
and costs, !allure to yield the
Relyea said Lake Erie before Congress this year midwinter meeting, to and Jack Fowler.
right of way at an intributaries such as the over the basic law governing imp()se a temporary, onetersection,
and Paul Hatfield,
Sandusky, Mawnee, Chagrin, ·the right of workers to cent-a.fllonth assessment on
Dexter,
$:.10
and costs and
Grand, Vermilion, Cuyahoga, bargain collectively with all union members to raise an
three
days
in
jall for driving
eslimated $800,000.
Black, Huron · and Rocky their employers,
while
intoxicated.
The AFL.-CIO will seek to
AFL-CIO President George
rivers have the same flood
Forfeiting bonds were
revise
federal labor law in a
r'ined in the court of
potential as the Ohio Meany precipitated the bailie
Thomas
Roush, Columbus,
Tuesday by launching .an single omnibus bill, which Middleport Mayor Fred
tributaries.
$50,
for
squealing
tires and
Meanwhile, officials of tbe historically ambitious one spokesman described as Hoffman Tuesday night were Dale Teaford, Racine, $30,
U.S. Interior Deparbnent's legislative campaign to stop labor's most ambitious effort Kenneth R. White, 34. assured clear distance.
Mining Enforf:1!ment and what be deserilled a, the since the Wagner Act was Almeroy, $200 and costa and
Safety Administration, erosion of w~ers ' rights passed in 193S . Most three dars in jail on a
saying they are concerned under the National Labor subsequent revisions have dtarge o driving while inbeen piecemeal.
toxicated, and $25 and costs
about the possibility of floods Relations Act.
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The
most
controversial
on a disorderly manner
He predicted the lime was
from melting snows in
SYRACUSE
The
item
will
be
repeal
of
the
Raymond
C.
charge;
Appalachian mirling regions, right for the pockage to be
Syracuse
E-R
squad
Friday
right-to-work
provision
mder
Douglas, 51, Tuppers Plains,
have ordered emergency In- enacted by a heavily
spections of coal waste im- Democratic Congresa ·and a which 20 states have $200 llld costs and three days transported Mrs. Ralph
new Democratic President. abolished union shops, where in jail, driving while In- Radcliffe from Veterans· •·
poundments.
"Floods can place a major He said be knew no reason all workers are required to toxicated ; Ryan K. Dill, 19, Memortaf Hospital to a
stral n on some im· why President Carter would join a union. Labor last Pomeroy, $1S and costs, Marietta rest rome. Saturday
poundments, especially in not sign every piece of challenged the law In 19115, speeding, and Donald E. Mrs. Edna Wlggbts wu tala!n
areaa of West Virginia and legislation in
labor's but failed to get It repealed by Stobart, 35, Pomeroy, $10 and from Veterans Memorial
Hospital to her ·home.
Congreas.
costs, illegal license. .
Pennsylvania," said MESA package.
AFL-CIO officials believe
Forfeiting bonds were Monday at 6:30 a.m. Velma
administrator Robert E.
But he acknowledged that
he expected tough opposition the batUe must be waged nmothy A. Ellis, 18, Mid· Panons was taken to Holler
Barrett.
Five years ago, 125 peroons froln the "right to work'' again because ·some states dleport, $22, Denzil L. !.led! cal Center where she
were killed when a coal waste lobby, which has pia~ a have UBed right-to-work tq · Proctor, 43, Middleport, S27, was admitted. Monday at 1
Impoundment near Buffalo multbnillion dollar campaign lure IndustrY with promises and Martin E. Seellg, 19, p.m. Amy Eynon wu taken
Q-eek, W.Va., gave way.
to resist any changes in the of cheap labor.
Pumeroy, $37, all posted on to . Veterans Memorial
Hospital and admitted.
law.
charge&amp; of speetling.

Vance had
goodnews

By Uolted Press InlmlllUoaal
Carter said before the formal
BALTIMORE -MONEY CONTRIBUTED to help re-elect triefing, "But tbe d&lt;~!isions
fermer President Nixon in 1972 will now go to four men who · have to be made by the people
participated in the Watergate burglary that led to Nixon's in the Middle East."
resignation.
"I believe there is a
Baltimore attorney Daniel SChultz, who represents four unanimous feeiin~ that this i.•
Wateraate burglars, said Tuesday that a ~ million civil suit
filed by the lour against the Committee to Re-elect the
President was settled for $:110,000. Schultz, representing
.Watergate burglars Bernard Barker, Eugenio Martinez,
Vlrgillo Gonzalez and Frank Sturgis, said the money- $50,000
to each man- will be paid from a trust fund left over from the
1872 Nixon campaign co.:llllittee.
·

SAFE DEPOSIT BOX

en tine

WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 23, 1977

r;~e:·:~;::.,w·m~,,~s~-,;:;:;,;;,,~.,~.,~.,,,,,,,,,z.:·,n
·:&gt;·:;,:;,,,,B.,.,
,,.,,,,,,r,.,,,,,,z
,,:,,e,,,,,,:~s,,,,,,\\l ~;*l~~:.t:~~?:::

WITH A

commissioners changes in the CETA program, which will lake
effect soon.
Bill Taylor, executive director of SEOEMS; Ted Turner,
finance director, and Mrs. Joanne Stewart, meniber of
SEOEMS board of directors, requested a renewal of the
contract that Rutiand station ha• forE-Rand transfer service .
The commlssloners agreed to study the request. No action was
taken.
Jones asked for information available in regard to the
Unemployment Office being relocated in Pomeroy. Wells
agreed to check into the matter.
Freeland Norris and John Rice were appointed to the 848
board and Fred Hoffman was appointed to the board of
Buckeye Hills.

Hospital to expand services

..

in Meigs court
The Packaging Corp, of
America, Ev~nston, Ill., has
filed suit for money in the
amount of $6,1195.70 against
Clifford Hill, Rt. 2, Racine, in
Common Pleas Court.
Patricia E. Martin ,
Elk~rt. Ind., filed for support under the R&lt;~!lprocal
Agreement Act against
Clifford Ray Smith, Middleport, as did Barbara
Purdy against Robert L.
Purdy. Patricia Clehind,
Rutland, filed suit for divorce
again•t Wayne Cleland,
Langsville.

The Meigs County comml.ulon oo 1 split vote Tuesday
approved purchase of a $53,500 road grader, the majority
convinced escalating prices should be beaten with the
IIW'Chale oow, not later.
W PredpltaUng the action was a letter from county engineer
l!8ley Buehl urging act!Qn on hla earlier request for a new
road grader fer the higbway department. The cotrunl8slon
voted 2-1 to purchase, with Richard Jones voting "no," Henry
Wella and James RQullh "yes."
The grader ,listed at $53,500, callle less trade-Ins of f21),000
for the county's old grader and two used scrapers at a net cost
~the county of $33,440. Tbe seller is South~stern Equipment

No relaxation
in flood watch
By RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI (UPI)- The
Ohio River, its tributaries
and Lake Erie tributaries
remain flood threats, a river
expert warns. .
"Because some of the snow
is gone alid because the ice is
going, some people feel the
flood potential is all over,"
says Carl Relyea. "Well, it's
not.
" March is our most
frequent month for floods.
The flood prospect now
depends on how much rain we
get and when we get it. We
have to. watch out for those
spring rains,"
Relyea, chief hydrologist at
the Ohio River Forecast
Center, points oot there have
been small floods along
several
Ohio
"lver
tributaries each of the past
eight years.
"We probably can be fairly
sure of som~ minor tributary
flooding this $pring, but
where and to what extent
depends on bow heavy the
local rain is. However, it
would take a !ieries of heavy
rainstorms throughout the
Ohio Valley to produce major
flooding and it's unusual for
that to happen.
"But it's bad to have a
p&amp;ychologlcal letdown and
figure for sure we won't get a
b!g Oood·," he added. "It's
still a wait and see situation
because of the rain.
"It depends on how Sji'lng
comes tn. WID It come·in with
concentrated, heavy rain or
willlt come in with gradual
rain spaced apart?"
Relyea aLso said ''enough d:
a snqwpack remainl in the
mountalng of western
Pennsylvania and West
Virginia to produce Ooodlng
there If we get a rapid
temperature wannup,

Weather

Load limits reduced

Group proposes ;~~i"~!~usu:;:u~~s t:.:

~~~~~ _P!2i~~! ..

Two fined, two
forfeit bonds

Labor, business
battle uexpected

Several fined
in Middleport

,

�"2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. 23, 1977

Texaco denies .gas is
held up for profits
By WilLIAM E. CIAYTON

WASHINGTON (UPI) - A
Texaco vice president says a
House subcommittee misses
the point if it thinks idle
natural gas fields can be
ll!rned on easily to get tbe
country thtough the energy
emergency.
R. B. Palmer, senior vice
president in charge of
Texaco's worldwide
exploratioo efforts, denied
any suggestioo by the House
subcommittee on oversight
and investigations that
'Texaco,
waiting
for
maximum profits, willfully
holds back gas it could
produce
quickly
and
profitably.
The subcommittee invited
• him to tell his story today.
Tuesday, .subcommittee
staff investigators contended
Texaco and other major oil
and gas firms let a "profit.
beforei!as" philosophy hold
sway over the public interest
in times of emergency.
Dr. John Galloway,
director of the subcom·
mittee's energy ·task force,
said Texaco has half a

trillion cubic feet of natural fully.
Palmer said the two fields
gas in the Tiger Shoal and
are
tied up for two Texaco
Ughthouse Point natural gas
customers,
and for the com·
fields in the GuH of Mexico,
pany's
own
use in its Port
that it could produce easily
Arthur
refinery.
by sinking new wells.
It is "a straw man case" to
The company is merely
contend
Texaco could
waiting
for
"profit
produce
the
gas faster for the
maximization," Galloway
emergency,
when it is tied to ·
said.
.
20-year
contracts
for the
Rep. James Collins, R·
approximate
amount
of the
Tex., said Galloway ignores
gas
in
the
fields
,
Palmer
said.
the need for conserva'tion. He
"Should we short, now,
said If producers went all-out,
regardless of cost, gas would those people who are
run out long before the nation depending on that gas for
had alternate sources ftf future years?" he asked. "We
are not free to produce these
energy.
Galloway said Texaco's reserves.''
Palmer
said
the
to
accelerate
failure
production "is attributable to subcommittee seemed to he
the .. . profits-before-gas using the question of idle but
conunitted reserves· 1188 an
philosophy."
:
He and Strongin said a attempt to explain way the
Federal Power Commission dire gas shortage in this
study showed the fields would country."
"We see that gas shortage
bring Texaco a lli per cent
return on investment at as the result of a long period
prices well within federal of mismanagement of our
price controls, and up to 100 resources , " he said . He
per cent ~eturn at some of the blamed government controls
prices Texaco said it would on gas prices for much of the
need to develop the fields problem.

••

Senate gets local option

hill from House Tuesday
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBljS (UP!) - Tbe
Ohio House has passed and
sent to the Senate a bill
allowing greater flexibility in
placing local option beer and
liquor questions on the ballot
Action came Tuesday on a
78 to 8 vote at the same time
the chamber approved a
proposal empowering county
commissioners to cooperate
with pUblic and non-profit
private
agencies
in
establishing programs to
provide food to needy
persons.
That measure, adopted 88
to I, contains an emergency
clause which means it will
take effect immediately if
passed by the Senate and
signed by Gov . James
Rhodes.
Sponsors say the legislation
is needed to furnish food to
poor persons who have spent
the bulk of their money on
high fuel bills this winter.
The bipartisan liquor bill
: sponsored by Rep. Donna
· Pope, R-Parma, allows
· placement of one or more
local option questions on the.
ballot
Underclltl'entlaw, If a beer
or liquor proposition is placed
on the ballot by petition,
. voters in a precinct must
: answer four questions
· involving sale of carry-out
: beer and wine, liquor by the
:: glass, beer and wine for
:· consumption on and off the
·: premises, and location of
;. state liquor stores.
:: Under
Mrs.
Pope's
&lt;proposal, the only questions
: on the ballot would be the
:· specific ones petitioned for ;
-: the others would he left off.
: "This bill doesn 'I really
·: hurt the 'wets' any more than
-: it hurts the '&lt;lrys' ,"she said,

maintaining the current
method
makes
it
"unnecessarily difficult for
voters. 11
Mrs. Pope said if any of the
four questions is defeated, it
may not reappear on the
ballot for four years. "If the
petitioners only want one
question decided, wby should
they be compelled to place all
four on the ballot?". she
asked.
.But Rep. James E. Betts,
R-Rocky Rive~. one of the
opponents, said Mrs. Pope's
bill might "make things
easier to circumvent what the
community really wants."
"I'm satisfied that there
are adequate options now,"
said Betis, "and 1 see no
reason to change."
Mrs. Pope's bill ·also
permits separation of &amp;mday
sales questiohs determining
whether any &amp;mday liquor
sales may take place or
whether they may take place
only in restaurants and other
places where food accounts
for at least 50 per cent of
gross receipts.
Rep. Francine M. Panehal,
D-Cieveland, spoosor of the
emergency food bill, pointed
out it would not cost the state
any money but would merely
empower county
commissioners to provide
financial support to "food
basekt" programs.
CUrrently, state law allows
them only to support
programs providing social
services to the elderly.
"We are merely asking the
legislature to allow us to feed
our own people with money
approved by the voters," said
Mrs. Panehal. "We must do it
now'" she added. ''Three
months from now will be too

Lehman, D-Shaker Heights,
and Alan E. Norris, . RWesterville, introduced a
proposed constitutional
arnendiilent calling for the
sale of $275 million in state
bonds
for
improving
correctionaal facilities.
Th~ bonds would be paid off
through a penny increase in
the cigarette tax and an 8().
cent hike in the current $2.25
tax on a gallon of liquor.
Reps. Robert A. Nader, !).
Warren, and Scribner L.
Fauver,
R~Elyria,

reintoduced legislation
defining death in the legal
sense.
Under the biD, death would
occur if, in the opinion of a
physician, spontaneous
respiration and circulation
ceased irreversibly, or if
brain waves ceased if the
individual were on a life
support system.
House
Republicans
introduced a collective
bargaining proposal for
public employes providing
for a framework for negotiations and fact-finding and
mediation procedures, but no
right to strike.
"A primary goal of our
legislation
is
the
uninterrupted delivery of
public services," said House
Minority Leader Charles F.
Kurless, R-Bowling Green.
"Public employes enjoy
special status and cannot be
viewed as being on the same
level in labor relations with
workers in private industry.
There is no such thing as a
'right to strike' for public
employes, and Republicans
wUJ not support any move to
grant such a right.''
Both the Senate and House
late."
were to reconvene at 1:30
Meanwhile, Reps. Harry J . p.m. today.

DR. LAMB

,---------------------------,
1
Lelten ol oplaloa are welcomed. They sbould be . 1

3- The llailySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. 23, 19'17

F~ctories, private homes, waste enoilgh
1 leulllu 300wordllollg (or he oubject to re•ctloe by 1
I the editor) aad 1111111· be •llaed wltb tbe slgaee's ad· I
I dreu. Namea may be wllbheld upea pubUcadoa. I
energy to get out from under Arab States
However, oo requeat, umea will be dlacleled. Letten :
I should be Ia cood taste, addreoslng issues, lOt 'per· ;; t
Fonner President Gerald Ford and VIce
ATLANTA (UPI) - The best way to end
1 sonalltlel.
1 . American dependence on costly forellln oil President Walter Mondale will join energy
and dwindling domestic.reserves is to save chief James Schlesinger, and aeveral other
energy wasted every aay by factories and Cabinet olflclala In hooorary poeltlorw on the
private households, according to Sen. Alliance board ol directors, Percy lllid.
In welcoming any Input the leaders of
Charles Percy, R-Ill.
:I • • •
UlUQ'l,:
rural
electric cooperatives could make IQ
Percy, addressing some 11,000
t
the
solution
of the energy crlals, Percy was
I
I representatives of more than 1,000 rural
joined
by
lomier
Ohio Gov. Jobn Gilligan, .
electrical cooperatives at their 35th annual
newly
appointed
administrator of the
meeting, said Tuesday, "We can tap a new
Agency
for
Intematlooal
Development.
Appreciation extended Fred Crow· .
energy source - conservation energy- that
Gllllgan
said
his
agency
wai trying to
can reduce our dependence on expensive
recruit
the
''yOIIIIg
at
heart"
at the meeting
foreign oil and dwindling domestic
DEARSffi :
for
service
projects
abroad
because
of tbe
I was the Secretary-Treasurer of the Ohio Valley · supplies."
expertise
they
bad
acquired
both
In
"Conservation energy" should come from
(Baseball) Association (OVA) for the 11 years of its existence,
organizing
cooperstives
and
in
developing
the ''replacement of wasteful habits and
and . I wt,.h to express appreciation to Fred Crow and the
technology with more efficient ones In our the technology of bringing electricity to the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce for the~ recent awards dinner
countryside.
daily lives," said Percy.
honoring the OVA old-time ball&lt;!,ball players.
"The genius of the cooperative movement
Through such means, Percy sale! the
First, ninetyiline per cent of the credit should go to Fred
is
characteristic of America and represents
equivalent of about 16 million barrels of oil
the
very rest.in the American tradition," tbe
Crow for his tireless Job of planning the affair. As Jack Rogers
per day could be saved by 11185, when the
fonner
Ohio governor said.
(the retired high school baseball coach who put Point Pleasant
goal of ''zero energy growth" is a realistic
While
money alone wiU not solve the
on tbe map in !Ugh school baseball circles) and I agreed at the
poilsibillty.
.
problems
of the underdeveloped countries,
To promote this goal through
dinner, it must have been the greatest thing done in local
Gilligan
said
the tranafer of teclmology held
conservation, Percy said he and Sen. Hubert
histocy in honor of any.sport. We made this statement because
great
promise,
particularly in the case of
Humphrey, DMinn., had organized a
the affair was not a commercial promotion of any sort, but a
rural
electrification.
private, non-profit organization called the
sincerely honorary action in a nostalgic manner.
Alliance
(O_Save Energy._
Was this theme successful? No doubt about it, if you saw
the old timers greet each other before the banQUet. Most of
them did not merely shake hands - they embraced and
hugged. This proved the success of the plan. Most of them had
not seen each other foc many years, and probably had been
fighting on the diamond at their last meeting; hurling
invectives at each Other which would not have been permitted By JOHN F. SIMS
concentrated orange juice supply frozen concentrate at
oo live television on family viewing time (especially if there United Press laternatlODal has calmed down.
the bargain rate.
were any lip readers in the viewing audience). But all that was
The
sequence
of
events
so
On Feb. I, the
An
Agriculture
Department
of Agriculture
far
has
been:
forgiven and forgotten. Baseball surely must be the greatest Department estimate that the
The
f'lorida
growers,
estimated
that
this year's
nation's orange crop this year
fraternal binding in the wocld.
anticipating
a
record
crop,
orange
crop
would
be 3 per
Fred Crow himself had been a great football end at Ohio will be 3 per cent bigger than
offered
frozen
concentrated
cent
up
on
last
year's.
State, and a long-hall hitter on the diamond. But, as he said as last year's record would
- In February, wholesale
toasbnaster, during his last baseball years he had slowed appear to put the lie to claims orange juice at the bargain
rate
of
$1.61
per
dozen
six·
price
of friJZOII concentrate
down quite a bit as a baserunne.r. He did not mention that he of devastating losses in ounce cans to wholesalers at has risen to $2.60 per dozen
Florida caused by January's
bad hit the longest ball in OVA history. This happened at the freeze.
the beginning of the year.
cans and retail pri~s have
Racine field where there were no outfield fences. His Ruthlan
Wholesalers
and
followed.
But the growers insist the
swat hit the school building on the fly 500 feet from home plate. department's estimate has ·retailers took up the offer
The growers insist things
with
gusto,
bought
39
million
are
not as rosy as the
They threw him out at third base.
been misinterpreted and
gallons
and
used
the
Agriculture
Department
point to lower juice yields per
concentrate
as
a
bargain
report
indicates.
But he was the hero of that game, anyway. With the score case of fruit and the large
"The biggest confusloo is
tied in the ninth inning he singled. The nest two hatters hit number of oranges and leader in supermarket sales.
On
Jan.
1e-:111,
Florida
that
everyone listened to the
grapefruits that have fallen
triples and scored him with the winning run.
was
hit
with
one
of
its
worst
estimate
of a recocd nuniber
Fred mentioned about his pitching debut, and that he had from trees since the estimate cold spells In history and
of
boxes
of fruit, but
hit the first three batters in the line-up. But he failed to was made.
panicky
growers
estimated
disregarded
the fact the
Florida growers have toned
mention that two of them were still in the dugout
their
losses
at
up
to
40
per
(USDA)
said
the
report was
down thjlir early dsmage
Fred's m~ntion of OVA umpires caused me to recall that estimateS'- some said up to cent.
preliminary, that the juice
one certain league umpire, who is now a newspaper editor, was 40 per cent of the crop would
- For another two weeks yield was lnuch lower ..." said
having a lot of gripes from hitters about his eyesight on balls be lost - and the futures the growers continued to Donald Farmer, assistant
general manager of Florrlda
and strikes. I supposed that this was the USIJI!I thing - alibis market
for
frozen
Citrus Mutual, the state's
for the hitters who forgot to swing at good pitches. But I went
biggest citrus cooperative.
hunting with this umpire that faU, and out in the woods I saw
"Using the USDA figures,
him pick up a snake and try to kill a stick with it. Then i agreed
which
we think are too high, it
with the hitters.
·
still will take slightly more
But back to Fred - I am sure that the old-timers
than six boxes of fruit to
considered the meeting their high point in baseball. Their
make the juice obtained !rom
faces glowed with appreciation. And they all want another
five boxes last year,"
reunion sometime in the future. - Donald C. Wolfe, Racine,
Farn)er said.
Citrus growers reported
Ohio.
By CHARLES P. WAlLACE adminislration's concern for this week "the fruit is falling
MCISOOW (UPI) -Calling civil rights.
like rain from · the warm
him "our brother in C,hrist,"
After Carter's election, weather." But official
an
entire
religious many dissidents wondered damage figures are not
community has appeale&lt;l to whether Carter, a devout expected until March 9.
· President Carter for help in Baptist, would come to the
Farn\er said the indilstry
leaving the Soviet Union.
aid of repressed Protestant believes the juice yield will
The group of 520 sects in the Soviet Union in eventually average out to be
EGLIN AIR FORCE in March and at that time, he
BASE, Fla. (UPI) - E. plans to have some Pentecostalists complains of addition to traditional U.S. 1.1 gallons per box of fruit,
religious persecution and support for emigrating Jews. and that additional crop
Howard Hupt, wbo served 32 statements to make."
"Until that time, Mr. Hunt hopes to emigrate to tbe
Goretoy said he served six reductions are in ihe offing
months in prison for
years in a labor camp and because of the amount of fruit
masterminding the 1972 will have no conunents," United States.
"President Carter is our internal e&gt;:lle for his religious that dropped fr.om trees after
Watergate burglary, goes Rubin said.
Hunt originally was brother in Christ," Nikolai work.
free today.
the Feb. ,1 survey.
"For many decades . the
Authorities said Hunt scheduled to be released Goretoy, elder of the com·
Using the USDA estimates,
would Ieaye the federal Friday, bUt the U.s. Parole munity, told an unofficisl Pentecostalists of the Soviet about 148 million boxes of
minimum security prison at Commission agreed to news conference Tuesday. Union haven't had the oranges will be processed
"When he speaks out on freedom to practice their own into frozen concentrate juice
Eglin Air Force B!lse at an release him two days earlier
unspecified time todsy. They so he could testify in human rights we would lilre religion," Goretoy said. to make 170 inllllon gallons.
said he had demanded Washington in a $4 million him to speak also of how "Now the authorities propose
Last year, when the final
privacy and refused to say civil lawsuit filed by squeezed Christians here are to register us as a separate crop was slightly less than
Watergate burglars Bernard because he is also a community and this would now predicted, the indUBtry
when he would depart
compel us to give up our packed 193.6 millloo gallona
His attorney said Hurtt Barker, Eugenio Martinez, Christian," Goretoy said.
Carter last week sent a religious principles.
would head north on Virgilio Gonzalez and Frank
of concentrate, or 23.6 millloo
letterofsupport to civil rights
"Of course, we can't do It gallons more, from less fruit.
"personal business." sturgis.
On the eve of his scheduled campaigner Andrei Sakharov We prefer to die rather than
believed to concern a New
The USDA now says the
York exhibition for his prison release, however, Attorney assuring him of his to reject our religious yield will be a~out 1.13
principles. Therefore we gallons per box, which would
paintings, a writing career Daniel Schultz, representing
the
·burglars,
,
disclosed
in
that has already produced 40
~"!:~. to try to emigrate:• be a loss of 5.12 million
suspense novels, and his Baltimore the suit had .been
gallons. But both the gr"""rs
settled out ol court over the
Goretoy said a live· and the USDA say more ·
plans lor a lecture tour.
member delegation from his boxes will be cut in future
Hunt's Miami attorney, weekend for $200,000.
"The
settlement
of
the
Pentecos\!llist conummlty in reports so the loss will be
Ellis Rubin, said the former
lawsuit
will
not
affect
his
the
northern Caucasus 1had much higher.
CIA agent ''will he coming to
release,"
Rubin
said.
petitioned
Soviet leader
the Miami area the first week
As for the dlflerence In
WardenEarlAikensaid: "I
Leonid Brezhnev and other price nationwide, indllltry
don't think there will be any
top of!lcials for permission to
MASON CIT'/, W. Va. - emigrate to the United analysts pointed the finger at
change in Mr. Hunt's release
local distributors,
date. I'm sure I would have Bob Nicewander scored 22 states.
The average price of a six·
been notified by now II there points and grabbed a gameHe said the community, ounce can of concentrate In
high 21 rebounds to power part of500,000 Pentecostalists
was a change.''
New England last week was
Hunt ori~inally was Wahama to an M-76 win over · in the Soviet Union, was 29-33 cents for private label
!lentenced from 30 months visiting Spencer here p-epared to leave for Israel, !rands and 3S-39 ·cents for
to eight years for master· Taesday nlllhl.
If need be,.but said he hoped
The big senior center, along to get a loan to help pay fo~ national brands. Ellewbere
minding the break-in at
in the country the prices
the Democratic National with Improving junior 'I't!n the cost of moving the 100 ranged between 'll and 31
Headquarters. The Parole Smith who fired in a game- families.
cents.
from the standpoint of satura- Commission a!UIQunced last high 25 points, led Wahama to
week that Hunt would be a 16-8 first quarter lead and
tion?
DEAR READER- You're released after making the White Falcons were never
on the right track. A polyun· arrangements to pay a headed after that.
Spencer did, however,
saturated fatty acid has more $10,000 fine given !fun In
than one place on the' carbon addition to the prison make a run at the Falcons in
the middle two periods, but
chain where there ill room for sentence.
W~ama ro.se to the occasion
hydrogen atoins. Asaturated
.---...-------?1
each time to cut short both
RACINE - The Southern ability to feed and clothe
fat has aU the spots filled with
rallies.
High
School Future Farmers America. Members wore
hydrogen. When a food
Mike
Goldsberry
chipped
in
of
America
are celet?rating tbelr special FFA jackets
manufae\llrer adds bydrogen
with
13
for
the
White
Falcons
National
FFA
Week.
today and plaMed to drive
to the wlaturated fat he is
who
al10
got
10
points
from
The
week
Ia
traditionally their lrjlctors to achool.
changing it to a saturated fat.
Greg Bleeal~.
set aside for observance
Last week the chapter
The catch is how much of
Gary
Varney
toppea
beginning the Saturday elected new officers for the
the unsaturated' fat is con·
Spencer with 24 wblle Tim before George Washington's 1977·71 year and they are
verted by the .hydrogenation
Epling chipped in with 16. birthday, Feb. 22, and ending Herb Ervin, presldant; Ray
process. If it is only a small ·
Floyd Bowlby and Rick the following Saturday. Canter, vice president; Rich
amount it is not so impor!Jlnt
Lance added l:i and 12 Wash!~ made significant. Flagg, treasurer; Becky
but the more that is
respectively.
contributions to American McGraw, reporter; John
hydrogenat~d the more
agriculture in additioo to his Holman, secretary; Ed
saturated fat will he in the
•
military and patrlollc con· Roush, sentinel; Todd
product. That is why plain
tri butions.
The
FF A Roberta, student advlaor;
food labelS that tell you exae!recognim his work In their Tom Ba.u, chapllln. Aaron
ly how much of the fat is
ceremonies and particularly Satre Is the advllor. Goall
saturated, monounsaturated
during FFA Week.
Include more participation by
and polyunsaturated are
Th~
FF A
theme, members In chapter ac·
na:essary to judge the value
"Agriculture's new tlvltlea; more community
or danger of ll.'jing it in diet.
Gentratlon"
aymbol!Jea ihe aervlce and Improved public
restricted in fat and
belief
of
members
in the relatlona.
s;;turated fat contcm.
future and confidence in their

I

!

D~J.Y:~~.

or a program that is less likely to cause this side effect.
A lot of the mediCines that
are so effective in controlling
high blood pressure also have
undesirable side effects.
Sometimes a patient has to
live with the side effects in
ordertoliveatallbutaslong
as there are alternatives it is
better to ~ke the alternative.
The most important alter·
native is weight control. If
your husband has one ounce
of fat under his skin around
his waist get him .on a diet
and walking_ program that
enables him to lose weight
gradually and sensibly. AdeGUate weight reduction often
dues wonders to control high
blood pressure.
I am sending you The
Health Letter number 1~,
Blood Pressure, to give you
more information on what
controls it. Others who want
this informatiOn can send 50
cents with a long, stamped,
self-addrelj.S(,'(] envelope lui'.'·
1
I

· it. Write to me in care-of this
newspaper, P.O. Box 1551,
Radio City Station, New
York, NY 10019. Do not en·
courage your husband to stop
his medicines on his own.
That can be dangerous for a
person on high blood pressure
medicines. With some
medicines suddenly stopping
them wiD cause a sudden
severe rise in blood pressure.
He should let his doctor help
him with his program.
· DEAR DR LAMB -In one
of your coiWlUIS ·you pointed
out that the sa!urated fat in
coconut oil stimulates the
body to form excess
cholesterol and fatty par·
ticles in the bloodl.1ream.
Does hydrogenation of
vegetable oils, which I
understand results in h•t·~cu ·
inl' nf •lit: fdl, cnange the unsaturated fats of such oils into
more hi~hly ''"tum!cd fat. '1
in other words, if a product
Ia bel says the product con·
~&lt;!Ins "soy uilliydr"g~n&amp;!ed"
'" it ncces,•nly I;atccpl•l.lc

'

lI

lot out of us. Our goa l was to Terrapins their 81.00 upset
win the league championship. win over ninth-ranked Wake
Arkansas,
wi th
the But once it became apparent Forest and said, "That's my
Southwest Conference title we had a chance to go most important shot ever."
already clinched, struggled· unbeaten in the league that
The Deacons dropped to a
Tuesday night, Atlantic Coast was on the team's mind. And 21h'i overall record and an 8-3
Conference leader Wake they went to work trying to conference mark. Maryland
Forest lost a rare home game accomplish it."
moved to 1!1-6 overall and 7-4
and Metro Conference
Ma ryland's Brad Davis in the league.
champion Louisvi lie let Uie scored on a 15-foot driving
Freshman Darrell Griffith
doctors take over.
jump shot with three seconds put on a dazzling display of
Ron Brewer scored 22 the play that gave the slam-&lt;l unks and acrobatic
poi nts and helped Arkansas
to a large lead, 'but the
seventh..ranked Razorbacks
Members oltbe'&amp;lutheastern Ohio Sportswriters and
had to fi ght off a furious . Broadcasters Asiwclatloo wiD meet In Jackson Sunday,
second-l1alf rally to down
Feb. 27, to select the 1971 Atl.SEOAL Basketball Team.
Texas A&amp;M . 6:1-m - the first
The league's eight bead couches will also be In
time Arkansas had won at
attendance
to recommend players for nomination to tbe
College Station in 18 years first
and
second
teamo and honorable menUon.
and complete an 1mdefeated
All
players
oelected
will be honored at the All-sEOAL
' SWC season.
Ba
nquet
to
he
)leld
In
Ironwn
In April.
The Razorbacks fini shed
The
meeting
is
scheduled
lor
1 p.m. at Jolly Lanes In
the regular campaign with a
Jackson.
25-1 record, the mosl wins
JACK SAUNDERS
UPI Sports Writer

By

ever for an Arkansac; club in a

Orange ·crop not bad

Moscow Pentacostals

wanting Carter's help

Hunt free today

d
•
NICeWan er
gets 22 in
Falcon win

Drug causes impotence
By LawreaceE. Lamb, M.D..
• DEAR DR LAMB - My
1 husband, age 40, suffers from
: hypertension. He is taking
Hygroton. The trouble is the
medication has the side effect
of decreasing his sexual urge..
~ His libido is II(JI&gt;Oxistent. It
did not happen suddenly. It
• has been getting worse year
~ by year.
Before he started taking
, this medication our sexual
~ relationship Wl!l! excellent
; and exciting. I have · been
verypatient,knowingthathis.
• life probably depends on his
controlling his blood
pressure. How IQng must he
be on this medication? All his
life? II so, what can we do to
improve our sexual rela·
lions?
"
DEAR READER ••
.: . Hygroton and some other
; medicines used in treating·
'· high blood pressure can
' cause impotellce. Your husband should lalk with his doctor about this and see if he
can sritch him to ~ medicine

Razorbacks finish season at
25-1 overall, best in history

FFA is celebrating
national obse,ance.

v

basketball for lOth-ranked
Louisville as the Cardinals
flat!e ned Northeast
Louisiana, 95-liS, to give
Coach Denny Crum his sixth
straight 20-win season.
Northeast Louisiana Coach
Lenny Fant knew it was only
a matter of time before
Louisville 's Doctors of
Dunk" started doing their
thing .
01

uwe weren't expecting to

get heat this bad," Calvin
Natt , the nation's sixth
leading scorer, admitted. "It
got kind of embarrassing
when they started dunking on
us."
In other games. Joey Hassett 's . 26 points paced
Providence's 84-71 triumph
over Villa nova and Houston,
led by Mike Schultz 's 21
points and Otis Birdson 's 20,
edged Baylor, 78-76.

one season, and became the

first SWC team in 21 year s not
to lose a conference game
(IIHll.

"The players and l are
emotionally drained ," said
Arka nsas Coach Edd ie

TWO
STARTERS
the Meigs
Marauders this season have been 6-3, 215 lb. center Allen
Stewart, left, and 5-10, 145lb. guard Steve Randolph. Both
are seniors.

Ridicule heaped on Kuhn

the New York Yankees and Corbett , be there.
Hy l'A'I'RICK J . KILLEN
the Boston Red Sox.
Fin ley also said he talked to
Cli!CAGO
fUP
I)
Sutton. "This win was very
~'in
ley
said
Lin
dblad
had
slu
gger Di ck Allen last
Oakland
A's
owner
Charles
im portant for us and it took a
0. Fmley has threatened to told him he planned to talk to Friday for 310 hours, so long
" pl aste r "
ba s eball Pla;er Association executive he made Allen 90 min~tes late
for a meeting with Chicago
Commissioner Bowie Kuhn director Marvin Miller
with another suit if he voids Wednesda y for "leadership ' White Sox Pres id ent Bill
yeeck. Finley sa id he offered
th e sale of Oakland relief and advice."
The A's owner said if Kuhn Allen a contract and expects
pitche&lt; Paul Lindblad to the
wants him to come to New to hear from Allen's attorney
Texas R:-~ngers.
York
to discuss th e Lindblad today.
Wha t's more, F'inley said
deal,
he
will insist on a letter
He said he gave Allen some
Tuesday night, Kuhn lacks
from
Kuhn
setting forth an of his homemade chili and
"tl1e guts" to oppose the deal.
Texas owner Brad Corbett agenda and also require that Allen told him the chili was
After GAHS bu ilt up a 5-j) has
rejected
Ku hn 's all the principals in the better than his mother used to
lead, the Pirates held invitation to attend a hearin g Lindb lad de al . including make.
Ga ll ipolis scoreless the final on the sale in New Yor k ~
5:04 of the fi rst period to take Finley sa1d. And Lindblad,
a 6-5 lead .
accordingly to· ' Finley, MR. FLUGG
by Jon Peterson
Wheelersburg led 16-13 already has signed a contract
during the halftim e in· with the Rangers and expects
termission.
to report Friday.
Gall ipolis rallied to lake a
Finley said Corbett told
26-22 lea d into the fi nal Kuhn "All you're trying to do
period.
is harass Finley. ''There 's
GAHS held the upper hand nothing wrong with the deaL
•. .ANO iW"-1 P~NiiN&lt;7
until Rod Spradlin came olf It's all legitimate."
the bench to pop In a lung
WA.~ .JUS.T A
Fi n ley
be c ame
jumper at the 4:27 marl&lt; to progressively angrier as he
''?I&amp;MeNT OF MY
give WHS a 32·30 lead.
spoke of Kuhn. "You can
·!! was tied at 32, 34 and 36 quote me as saying if Kuhn
I ~A.&amp;lAAT\ON':
before the Pirates "stole it stops this deal he will be
away" from the Gallians in plastered with another law the final min ute of pla y.
suit,' ' Finley said . He hasn't
Jeff Meadows had II points got U1e guts to cancel this

Pirates turn GAHS errors

Today's

Sport Parade

•

into 17th wzn, 42 to 36

Vi siting Wheelersburg
forced three Gallipolis turnBy MILTON RICHMAN
overs in the final! :12 of pla y
UPI Sports Editor
and the Blue Devil errors
NEW YORK (UPI) - Pete Rose and Dave Concepcion resulted in the game's final
haven't signed their contracts yet Doll Gullett; Tony Perez six points, giving Coach Mike
and Will McEnaney are no longer around, and some see Hughes Pirates a 42·36 vi c·
foresha.dowing sig"' of dsrk days and rough nights ahead for tory.
The score was tied 36-all in
the world champion Cincinnati Reds. One man more than any
a
bitter · defensive struggle
other, however, completely dlssgrees.
when the aggressive Pirates
"I have faith ," says Sparky Anderson.
stole the ball out front . Pirate
''They're good people and they 're good ballplayers. Ev- ace Jeff Meadows was fouled
erybody keeps asking me oow I feel about oil' chances this as he drove in for a layup.
year. I feel great! Why shouldn'tl7 We're the first National
Meadows sank both charity
League club in 54 years to have a legitimate shot to win three tosses to give WHS the upper
straight World Series. Nobody in the National wgue has ever hand, 38-36.
GalJia came back up court.
done that."
and
again the ball wli'S stolen
The Reds open their training camp in Tampa, Fla., Friday.
by
the
Pirates out front. And
Sparky Anderson always likes to get everywhere early so
again,
Meadows was fouled.
~Jol's leaving his home in Thousand Oaks, Calif., for Florida.
The 'Burg's top scorer sank
tomorrow morning. He let the Reds know some time· ago he two more free throws to make
didn't want to hear any talk about money, ~on tracts or playing it 4().36 with 15 seconds. left.
outoptioos in the clubhouse and although he hasn't changed his
Gallipolis lost the ball a
mind about that, he doesn 'I plan to go around listening in on third straight time on a
charging foul. This time ,
every conversation .
"I made that as a general statement but you have to be Gary D. Bailey sank two fre e
realistic," he says. "How are . you gonna stop talk? It's throws with seven seconds
impossible. What I'm gonna do , though, is tell the players you left. That was the hall game.
Wheelersburg, Ohio's sixth
don't wash your clothes in front of everybody else. We're here
ranked Class AA squad
to go to work and that's what we should do. Some people have (latest Associated Press
said we're gonna have this problem and that problem. ranklngs) and seventh·
Honestly, I don't see that at all. Nobody can beat the Cincinnati ranked In ·the Ohio coaches
Reds but the Cincinnati Reds themselves."
weekly UPI poll. upped Its
Even with Guilett and Perez gone, Anderson still believes
the Reds are stronger than anybody else in the National
w gue West.
.
''They have enough talent,'' he says, "and they've always
had enough desire to grind it out. I have enough faith in these
CLEVELAND (UPI ) guys that when they put the. uniform on, they put everything The Cleveland Barons apelse aside and concentrate completely on what they know they parently have played their
have tb do. They're the world champions, and they're proud of last game in the National
that They're not gonna let someone simply walk op and take Hockey League.
The Barons players .say
that away from them."
they· won't play their home
Sparky Anderson, who was 43 Tuesday, is starting his eighth game against the Buffalo
season with Cincinria ti and if any of the Reds are In the Sabres tonight and will not
physical shape their manager is in, spring training should he a play again until the team's
breeze lor them. Straight as a board at 163, Anderson is five financial troubles are settled .
pourids less than what he was when he played for the Phillies 18
But Clarence Campbell, the
years ago and can't wait to get started. Bernie Stowe, the NHL president, says "it is
Reds' super-efficient equipment man, already has uniform, highly improbable" the
team's problems can be
No. 10, waiting foc him in Tampa.
"Every time I put it on, l say thank you,'' says Sparky solved.
" We don't have a solution,"
Anderson. "I consider it a privilege.''
Campbell conceded foilowin g
He tries to Impart that same feeling to his players and has an eight-hour meeting of the
generally succeeded. Much of Sparky Anderson's success as a league's finance committee
manager lies in his approach to the job. He's completely dedi· in New York City!
cated to it, yet he doesn't ever allow it to r~ch that point
The Barons players met for
where his players feel that he cares more about the job than he 210 hours Tuesday with Alan
does about them. Sparky Anderson always manages to stay Eagleson , executive director
close to his players. He does that in many little different ways, of the NHL Players
most of which evolve around plain, simple per110n-to-person Association. and league
representatives William
cornmunlcatloo.
Wirtz
and John iiegler. At
There will be no long lecture at that first session Friday.
.
the same time, the finance
committee was meeting in
New York where today, the
league's Board of Governors,
chaired by Ziegler, is due to
meet.
"I have suggested
consider retirement,

final regular season mark to

17-1. The Pirates only Joss
was 6().53, to the Portsmouth
Trojans. ·
Coach Hughes' Pirates, in
the past three yea rs, now own

a 60-4 record.
Coach .Jim Osbo r n e '~ Blue
Devils dropped to ll-7 on the
season .

Once again the Gallians
outscored t heir opponent

from

the

fi eld,

but failed to connect at the
charily line.
The Blue Devils shot in
unreal 18 percent at the foul
line, hitting on ly two of 11
attempts.
GAHS outgoaled the high·
scoring Pirates, 17-15, and
controlled the backboards.
37-25.
. Wheelersburg was is of 38
from the field for a cool 39
percent. The Pirates canned
12 of 2(J free throws.
Turn overs were about
even. The Pirates had 10
miscues and GAHS tl.
Gallipolis hit 17 of 52 field
goal attempts for 32 percent.
The Gallians lost Ga ry Swain
and Brent Johnson via per·
sonal fou ls.

Barons washed

with us!

and

outrebounded the opposition,

r-----------;_-------,

'-

11

for the winners, as did fresh -

KC girls lose

losers.

GAHS will be idle unti l next
Tuesdav when the Blue
Devils begin play in the Class
AA Sectional Tournament at
Iron ton.

up in NHL

them to sleep . on it, and I start in Oakland in 1967-!!8,
expect th ey may reti re has a potentialliabihty of $11
tomorrow," Eagleson said

million counting contracts

Tuesday night
"Th ey won't pl ay tomorrow
night's game," he added.
Ea gleson said sale or
leagu e operation of the
franchise, which before this
season had been operated by
the lea gue in Oakland , appea red . to be " remote
possibilities."
"The palyers ha ve tried for
three weeks to keep this
franchise alive," he said..
"The players assoc iation is
convinced it can no longer
pursuade them to play nor
shall I attempt to do so."
Eagleson said three options
were open : sale of the
franchise, league operation of
the fran chise the rest of the
season or selling or auctionin g the players to ' other
teams and abandonin g he
franchise.
·
Said Campbell :
"The NHL, as a leag'ue,
does not have the capability
of stepping in and doing
anything . The weaker teams
economically speaking have
no rescuing P.OWer. This
franchise , going back to its

presently in force and those
with years still to come."
Barons player representative Bob Stewart sa1d the
broken leg suffered by rookie
Mike Fidler Friday night
brought the situation to a
head .
"They guy Fidler mi ght not
he paid his money and this
lessens his chance of a team
taking him ," Stewart explained . '
"We appreciate Mr. Z1egler
and Mr. Wirtz coming for
discu ss ions with us, " he
added. '!But unl ess we see
money in the bank for the
future , we won't be playing
any more hockey : •
Barons owner Mel Swig
fail ed to meet his players'
' pa yroll Tuesda y for the
second time in a month.

-

PLANNING APIZZA PAR'IY
PHONE ·

dea l. "

man Sault Gray. The latter
~' in ley fil ed a $:1.5 milhon
led WHS on the boards with suit against Kuh n for voiding
seven reb ounds.
his multimillion.Uollar sales
Terry Wall was the only last season of Vida Blue, Joe
Blue Devil in double fi gures Rudi and Rollie Fingers to
with 1'2. Keith McG ui re
picked off 11 rebounds for the

to Southern
The Kyger Cree k girls los!
to Southern for the second
time 'this season, 57-42.
Bre nda Lawre nce from

Southern led all scormg, wilh l~k2j_~~~~t==~=~~j:i
24 points. Teammates Jean L
Ri! chhart and Cheryl
Roseberry added 14 each.
Kyger Creek was led by
Vi cki Stroud with 16 points.
Mary Rollins had 11 , Gloria
Amos scored 9, Cathy Baylor
tossed in 4 and Judy Darst
had 2 for the Kyger Creek
ga ls.
In the junior high contest,
Kyger Creek captured a 21-16
PLACE YOUR ORDER NOW AND
victory.

Kyger Creek's Kim Bickers
ga ined scoring honors with 10
points. Liz Nibert scored 4,
Tammy Williamson, Roberta
Gilbert, and Ruth Saxton
each added 2 and Lcs Taylor
had one for the Kyger Creek
teain .

Brenda Boso and Teres~
Smith each scored 6 to lead
the Southern scoring .
Kyger Creek will play host
to Symmes Vall ey Wednesday at 6. Thursday the
varsity will travel to North
.Ga Ilia where play will begin
at 4:30.

JING BIL
WITH AN

AUTOCRAT.
WOOD BURNING
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-Enjoy three siZes of your liiVOrite
pin•s·
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.
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992-6304

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TO THE FORMER SECOND WARD
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.
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WILl HOLD YOUR NEW GRAVELY UNTIL' APRIL
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I :I f,1 •l ·11 fsj :i i i ifJ

PICKENS HARDWARE CO.
Muon, W. Va..
Open: Mon .. Thurs. &amp; S.t. 8-5: 30
Friday 8-8

Pomeroy, o.

204 Condor St.

MOORE'S
AUTO PARTS
124 W. Main

Pomeroy, 0.
Phone 992-2848

9 to 5 Mon. thru Fri.
9 to

Noon S.turday

�'
4-TheDallySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. 23, 1977

r-----------,
\

\Walton's return just in time

Pro

lStandings \
Stanolnos
'v United Prou lntorn•tion•l
NBA

~:::~~1 z";;'1 ~~~;~~·

w. L. Pet. GB

s,;~\~~el phl o

·

~ l~ :~ ~7

Knlcks
21 31 .466 ,
~ ~~~~~s
l~~ ~i
Central Division
wosnington ~· ~4
0 :_Ga
~~~::'ionio
l~ :~l;
Cleveland
30 26 .536 2,,
~~:.?~leans
~~ : l~ri 1
Western conference
Mldwesty)' 1 t•·~~. . GB
Denver
38 19 .667 ~~,o~: City ~g
· l:~
lndlono
27 n .458 12
NY

;i lg

PfJ

li
Jl

~~:~a9u0kee

::;

i

ll

i' '

lg :;

.~J~ j~, ,

eac;t;c.z.;v~sio;ct. GB
Los Angeles 36 21 .632 ~
Portland
37 " .607 1

Gotden State

32 '17 .54? •• )

Seattle

30 30 .500

Pnoeni'

26 32 .4A8 10''

71,

NY Knick:s

New Orleans

BvttatoTfl~5 ~~~~n~JO;e\~!ts

102
san Antonio119
135 Los Angeles 103
C1'1 ic ago 11a Go lden Sta te 10'
Denver llB Houston 106
Portland 113 Boston 111
Wednesday's Games
Denver
at NY Nets
M
•I waukee at New Orleans

ua_lledPressiuternaUooal
Bill Walton IS back wlth the
PorUand Trail Blazers and
not a m()(llent too soon.
PorUand lost seven games
and dropped out of fll'st place
in the NBA's Pacific Division
during the big redhead 's
thre+eek, l(liJame absence
because of an inflamed
Achilles tendon. But in less
than a ha!fiJame against
Boston Tuesday night,
Walton provided some of
what the Blazers have been
missing and they ended up
with a 11:1-lll triumph over
tile Celtics. In 22 minutes, be
grabbed nine rebounds, had
fiveassists,twobJockedShOtS
and four points.
Portland needed a big
.
. ht f
scormg mg
rom 5011\eone
with Walton still working
back into shape and got it
from Uonel Hollins, who
came up witil a career high 43
points. Hollins hit on 20of 31
shots from 1he floor as
PorUand 's five guards scored

Segments."
PorUand is now just a game
behind Los Angeles, which
was walloped,13&gt;-103, by San
Antomo.
All the NBA's home teams
were victorious again
Tuesday night as Buffalo beat
Phoenix, US-114, the New
York Knicks downed New
Orleans, 119-102, Chicago
ripped Golden State, UB-102,
and Denver kayoed Houston,
118-106.
Spurs 135, t.ake_rs 103:
George Gervm scored 25
points to lead a balanced San

a total of 82 points. Havlicek
led Boston with 33 points
Thur sday 's Ga mes
hil Wh'te
dd d
1 8 e 25 ·
NY Knick s at Atl anta
w e
Gold en Sta te at Clevela nd
Walton nearly blew the
Milwauk ee at San Antonio
game with nine seconds left
: Ho uston at Phoen ix
NHL standings
when he missed three free
By Unit ed Press International
throws, any one of which
Cam pbell Conference
ld h
1· h d th
Pa,rick Division
WOU
ave C InC e
e
w L T Pts, GF GA contest. But -a last-second
Ph il a
36 12 12 84 244 165
NY ISiandrs 36 16 9 81 207 148 shot by former Blazer Sidney

GIRLS

High School Basketball
Tuesday
Ada 91 Wa ynesfield 40
Archbold 57 Napoleon ~ ~
·Bl oom /
Carroll
Pickering ton 40

WHA Standings
By United Press International
Ea st
·
W L. T Pts . GF GA
Quebec
35 22 1 71 25 1 209
Cinc innati JO '17 3 63 268 22 1
lnd ianapls 26 28 7 59 205 2'19
New Englnd 2-i :34 6 54 210 240
Bir mngtl m 23 35 3 J9 208 225
;o; -Minnesot 19 l B 5 43 136 129
West
W l T Pts . G F GA
Houston
34 18 6 74 219 168
Winnipeg
33 23 2 68 266 208
San Diego 33 25 '1 68 205 202
Edmon ton 25 33 '1 ~2 16a 21 8
Calgary
22 30 5 119 17 8 197
Phoenix
23 34 2 48 703 271
;K-Team disbanded
Tuesday's Results
Quebec 4 Ind ianapolis 2
Ci nci 4 Birmi ng ham 4, ot
Winn i peg 3 Houston 2
Edmonton 4 New England 3
, •
Wednesday's Games
• Hovston at Ca lgor y
1 Winn ipeg at Phoenix
:
ThursdaV's Games
. Quebec at Birm ingham
1 " PhOenix at San Diego

' Sidney 57 West Carrollton 56

l

Symmes Valley SO Green Twp

47
, Upper Sandusky 73 Bellevue
' 63
• Urbana 62 Clark Nor .

I

: the as tern 51
' Vandalia Butler 59 Tecumseh

• 58

• Vinton Cou nty 74 Greenfield
McClain 49
.
• Watkins Memor i al 85 Newark

· Cath 73
Wa verly 64 Athens 5.4

Wayne 78 Troy 75 of

Wayne Trace 81 Paulding 78

of
Wheelersburg 42 Gallipol is 36
Willard 65 Galeon 56
Woodward 75 Hamilton
Garfield 73
Wynford 6A Elg in 47
Xenia 102 Fairmont East 85

.,-

41

Card inal Midd lef ie ld 55
Kirtland 45
Col. Watlerson 46 Col Walnut
Ridge 44
Fairmont

Cilv

Atlan ta
25 24 11 6'1 194 197
NY Ranger s 22 26 13 57 212 221
Smythe Division
W L T P'ts . Gf GA
St . Louis
27 28 6 60 1a4 205
Ch ic ago
21 3 1 10 52 194 224
Colorado
19 32 10 Aa 1a3 220
Minnesota 14 31 15 43 laO 239
Vancouver 11 38 6 40 165 235
Wale:s Conference
Norris Di \·ision
W l T Pts. GF GA
Montrea l
44 7 10 9a 293 1d2
Pi.ttsbur gh 26 24 11 63 193 194
Los A ngel e~ 22 27 11 55 192 187
Washingtn 17 33 13 47 167 24J
Detroit
15 36 a 38 149 215
Adam s 01\'ision
W l T Pts . GF GA
Buffa lo
35 18 6 76 214 162
Boston
34 20 6 74 126 191
Tor on lo
29 23 9 67 239 710
Clevel and 1a 31 10 46 ' 173 210
Tuesday's Results
NY Islander s 2 Colorado 1
Washington J Pi tt sburgh 1
Los Angeles 4 51 . Louis 0 , Wednesday 's Games
NY Rangers at Toronto
Montreal at Atlan ta
Detro it at Chicago
Boston at Minnesota
Buffalo at Clevela.nd
Thursday 's G'ames
Ph iladelphia at Buffalo
PittsburgM al Detroit
,' Var]CO U\I er at Los AngeleS

Adams, the most points ever
scored against Buffalo.
Knl&lt;b 119, Jazz 102:
Bob McAdoo scored 27
points and Earl Monroe
added 23 as . the Knicks
rebounded from a 12-point
deficit at the start of the
game to easily beat New
Orleans, despite points by
Pete Maravich.
Bulls 118, Warriors 102:
Artis Gibnore scored 24
points to pace six Chicago
pla.yers in double figures .
Ch1cago took command of the
game in the second quarter
when Gibnore scored .nine
points and the Bulls shot 11
per cent from the field ,
sinking 14 of 18 shots to lead ,
65-48, at halftime.
Nelsonvil le York 96 Warren Nuggets 118, Rockets 106:
Local 89 ol
Denver exploded for 45
New Albany 87 Centerburg 80 first-quarter points including
Norfh Central 68 Hilltop 53
Norlh Gall Ia 78 Kyger Creek 12 by forward Bobby Jones,
77 ot
and survived a fourth..nuarter
North Ridge v ill e 82 Ver "1.
milion 69
scare to beat Houston. Tbe
Northr idge 82 Granville 64 Nuggets, Jed by center Dan
Oak Hi lls 72 Northwesl 53
Issei wl·th 22 po·l·nts and Jones

: Antonio scoring attack U!at
inc luded 17 from Larry
• Kenon, 15 from Mike Gale
and 13 from Mark Olberding.
KareemAbdu1.Jabber led the
!.akers with 29
Braves 115, su;.. 114 ,
Randy Smith stole the ball
from Paul Westphal and
drove for a layup with seven
seconds left in the game to
cap a 36iloint performance ·
and give Buffalo its ' fourth
straight victory under new
Coach Joe Mullaney. It also
ruined a career-high 47 point
spree by the suns' Alvan

E 47 Bell brook 39
Hubbard 42 Howland 35

Lancaster r Fisher
63
Millersport 35
t Olmsted Falls 6(1 Buckeye 30
Shelby 57 Bell we 31
Struthers 41 Boardman 31

Wick§ missed.

Portland Coach Jack
Ramsay said, "When Bill
gets ready to play 35 to 40
minutes we 'll play more
consistently. We plarmed to
play him in just five minute

Tuesday
Akron East 86 Wadsworth 67
Am~ nda
Clearcreek
68
Liberty Union 56

Antwerp 100 Ohio City 57 .
Ash labula 75 Ash tabula
Harbor 6~

Ayersv i lle 60 Pettisvil le 42
Beechcroft 69 Worthington

.

Big Walnut 75Marion Cath 55

69

Ro ckhurst 73 Cu lver Stockton 61
St . Fr an Ill . 78 G. Wil liam s 15
Stl'1 wstrn Kan . 68 Be thel 67
Westmar 80 Dordt 78
Wheaton 97 North Cen tral 8?
S(luthwesl
Arkansas 63 Texas A&amp;M 62
Hard in -Simmons 83 TCU 76
Texas Te ch 64 SMU 62
Texa s 90 Rice 51
West
Ambassador 75 Ca l Poly SL D 60
Alh in Act ion 86 Mont . St . B?
Biola 78 Cal L utheran 73
Cai -Dav is,87 Sacto St. 69
Hywrd St . 87 Sa n Fran . St. 83
Southern Ore. 82 Willam ette 80
· Utah St . 8a Denver n
San Diego u. 9~ Ca i-Rvr sde 68
~W es t m ont 78 Fresno-Pacific
69

Ironton

12. 2 829 663

Logan
Gallipolis
Waverly
Meigs
· Athens

11 3 1108 747
9 5 m 120
8 6 90'1 839
7 7 950 9~1
3 11 746 883

Jack son

3 11 .175 960

Wellston
TOTALS

3 11 805 1161
56 56 6914 6914

with 21), had a 73-49 halftime
margin and appeared to have
an easy win. But Houston
rallied in the third 'quarter,
ou•·-rm
· g Denver, .. 17, and
\0)\..V
trailed by only nine going into
the final period.
o),)-

MOndaY's reSult:

Tuesday's result :
Waverly 64 Athens SA

SEOAL RESERVES
TEAM
W L PP OP
Ironton
1~ o 706 ~92
Logan
II 3 741 583
Waverly
9 5 593 533
Ga llipolis
8 6 576 537
'Athens
7 7 631 619
Meigs
~ 10 504 58~
Jackson
· 3 11 599 756
Wellston
0 1~ 561 807
TOTALS
56 56 4911 4911
Monday 's result:
Athens 44 Meigs 42
Tuesday's result ;
Waverly 48 Athens 37

Bloom ,. Carro l l
59
Pickerington 56
Brook.vilfe 51 Milton Union 47
Canlon
Cen
Cath
78
Marlington 68
Carding ton 78 Hiland 67
Car lisle 73 Greenville 67

Chagrin Falls
Name 47

Cin

Roger

7~

Bacon

LaSal le 47

Cle Holy

48 Cin

Cle Lutheran-E 57 Newbury

53

Cloverleaf 48 Orrville 45

Col Grove 64 Kalida 62
Col

Linden

68

Ca nton

McKinley 63
Col Sf Cha rles 53 Col WaJ.
terson 49
Continental 81 Hicksville 65

Coshocton

~7

Ashland 56

Alter 96

Dayton

Hamilton

Taft 75
Dayfon Belmont 65 Day
Cham .Jul 6~ ot
Dayton Roth 1'0 Dayton Col·.
White 66
Dayton Stlv, Pat 57 Day
Wright 51
East Clinton 72 Blanchester

60

Eaton 73 Edgewood 64

Fairborn Baker 88 Oakwood

67

Fairmont W 68 Beavercree k

43 '

Fi ndlay 73 Sandusky 67
Fort Jennings 67 Ottoville 61
Frank l in 78 Springboro 70
Frank l in Hts 33 Teays Valley

32
Gra ham

66

Clark

Nor.

thw'e stern 65
Green Hills 87 Harrison 78
Greenon 62 Bellefontaine 54
Groveport 65 Ga hanna 56

Hamilton Twp 98 Olentangy
81
Houston 73 West Liberty

Salem

5~

Jefferson 58

Valley 39

Pymatunlng

Lahcaster
Fisher
Millersport 71 at

72

Landmark 70 Ohio Deaf 65
Lex i ngton 57 Fredericktown
~4

Licking Valley 80 Licking Hts
70
Lockland 67 Taylor 66
L ogan Elm 90 Berne Union 69
Madison 65 Newcomerstown .
M

Marion Local 52 St Henry 42
Medina 53 Avon Lake 38

Miamisburg 72 Carroll 58

Midpark 83 Valley Forge 47
Mt Gilead 72 Buckeye Valley

69

Mt Healthy 66 Cln Aiken 57
Napoleon 64 Defiance 63

Coach C. D. Hawhee's
Waverly Tigers wrapped up
fourth place in tbe SEOA!,
standings Tuesday night with
a 64-54 triumph over the
visiting Athens Bulldogs.
The Tigersraced off to a J()2 lead and were in command
throughout the .contest as
they led by quarter scores of
24·16, 34·25, and 47-33 enroute
to their eighth league win .
Waverly finished the
season with a 9-9 in all games
and 8-6 in league play while
Athens, upset victors over
Ironton and Gallipolis,
concluded with a ~I5 mark in
all games and 3-11 in loop
competition as they shared
24

Red Barons
16
Gutler Busters
8
High Individual game
Lanny Longstreth 163 ; J. R.
Wamsley 161 ; Nick Riggs 145.
High series- J . R. Wamsley 420; Lanny Longstreth
4!3; Dave Sm ith 395.
Nlte ONis 803.
Team high series - Nlte
ONis 2374.
Early Wednesday Mi xed
League
Feb. 16, 1V77
Team

P1s.

Smith Nelson Motors
Zlde's Sporl Shop
YOIJng' s S\lper Markel
Oilers Four
·

52
42

.ro
3~

26
26

Tenth Fram ers

Nelson Drug Co.
High Individual game Bob Couch 212, Pat Carson
188; Larry Dugan 203, Mar y
Porler 187: A. L. Phelps, Jr .

BOWLING

in OC playoffs

~ 199, Carolyn Bachner 184.

High series - A. L. Phelps,
Jr . 551 , Betty Slth . Carolyn
Bachner 521; Bob Couch 537,
Pat Carson 50S : Larry Dugan

Tri County League
Fej&gt;. 15, 1977

champ Wooster in the
Northern Division semis at
Wooster , while in the
Southern Division Otterbein plays Muskingum and Ohio
Wesleyan meets No. I Wittenberg at Otterbein.
The division title games
will be played Saturday night
and winners of those two
games meet for the OC
championship Monday night .
In other games involving
Ohio teams Tuesday night,
Dayton whipped Biscayne
(Fla.) 8~; Central State
whipped Cedarville 87-75;
Hiram overwhelmed
Washington &amp; J efferson
( Pa.) 101-78; and Manchester
(Ind .)
squeeked
by
Wilmington 95-93.

Standings

Name
Pts.
Pomeroy Cement
Block
Co.46
.
.
~

&amp; R. Firestone

36

32
30

C i ne' s Construction Co.

508, IY.axlne Dugan 461.
Team high game -

Zlde's

Sport Shop 714.
Team high se ries - Zide's
Sport Shop 2011 .

the basement with Jacbon
and Wellston.
Tuesday
night,
the
Bulldogs staged a second
period rally that carried
them to within three pointl,
at 26-23, but the Tigers then
ripped off sii otralghl points
which eventually sweUed to
an 18-polnt bulge In the fourth
period. ·
l
Chuck Thompson swished
19 points to lead the Tigers
with Robert Holsinger adding
18, Mark Fielder 10, and Jack
Crace 10.
Rob Topping hit for 17
points and Mark Wallace 12 .
for Athens, who played
without high scoring Bob
Meek as the result of a wrist
injury sustained in the loss to
Meigs on Monday night.
The Tigers tallied 28 of 60
field goal attempts for 43 pet.
and hit 12 of 15 at the charity
stripe. Robert Holsinger
snared 14 of the 50 Tigers
rebounda.
Athens fired in 22 of 56 from
the floor for 39 pet., converted
10 of 19 free throws, and had
just· 22 rebounds with 'Arthur
Chonko snagging 11.
The Waverly . reserves
locked up third place in the ·
final standings by turning
bsck Athens 48-37.
The box score :
ATHENS (54)'- Wallace 52·12 ; Topping 7-3·17 ; ~ennell
2·2·6; Chonko 4·0·8; Goldsberry 2·3·7: Walton 2-0·4.
TOTALS 22 · 10· 5~.
WAVERLY
(64)

CUBE
$ '49
STEAK·····················
LB.

BEEF STEW MEAT
LB.

~~19

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A modern-deli~ .22 with I!Qdi ~onol Wi~
quality ~rH: Windlat~ Proof.s...f borrel.
a«XJpost ffont'•ioht •.\djwfabt. rear tight.

Sunday .1 pm til 7 pm
COLEMAN

311. WASIIMU
SLEEPING

us•

BAG

~"-•11ol e lloo
,.,,

•1a••

Score by quarter s:

t6 9 8 21- 54
10 13 17-o4

2~

Reserve score : Waverly 48,
Athens 37.

Pts.
40
36

Stampede

REGULAR PASsENGER
TREAD REt_APS

.1195

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.
JOHN FULTZ, Mgr.
Plimeroy,O.

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PKG.

Sports Dept.

Ott••

OIL
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.
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AUTO.IC»DY

REPAII KIT

'200

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Always in good talle,
always correcl. Classic
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13"·14" and 15"

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Bowling Stones

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Saturday Afternoon

Super· Stars

WILSON

IINOU.SHOT

Heck's Reg.
'25.99

Computer Services 904.
Te~m
high series
Computer Serv ices 2511.

Team
Nif•LDNis

5588

. WINCHiiTIR

'"'""' ,..,,,, .....

Henry Clatworthy 519.
. Team
high game

Feb. 12,19n
Standings

$

Heck's Reg.
'69.99

37A

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l

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Wa verly

Open Daily 10 am til 9 pm

, ·?if&gt; WINCHISnR

OEPT~

6·6·18: Fielder 5-0·10 ; Crace
5·0·10; Davena 2·1·5 ; Randy
Thonl'as 1-0·2. TOTALS 26-ll-

ARMIIRONe

l'xl2'

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., ••

&amp; Brown

$25

111

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18.88 each

LISnRMINT
MOUTHWASH
and
GARGLE

!M:iddlle of Upper Block. POmeroy, o.
TEMPORARY STORE HOURS
10 a.m ; to 5 p.m. Mondaythru
Thursday and Saturday
Friday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

MIN. 24 Pll'$1011
1"1-.re'• r..nr bMn o Miter vinyl vatu..

...........

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12' COPN• CLAD

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EACH

The tough , Yin..,! •wrb•m~an~long -or·
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corpet ..H.ctt,morble detigM. Got. right
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BOOS'IIR CABLIS

$1288

Heck's Reg.

'6.48

Hec"'• Reg . $17.97
HOUSEWARE

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HECK'S REG. '2.59

110L
WHITIRAIN

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FLICKER
LADIES' SHAVER

UXTIIAHOLD

24 OL bottle

ARMOUR VIENNA SAUSAGE •••••••••••••••5.~·.;:~.3Pl.OO
ARMOUR POTIED ~- EAT ••••••••••••••·••• .";.o:.~~". 51'1.00
ARMOUR BEEF STEW••••••••••••••••••••••••••••!•.o.~~ 7fJ'
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Coca-Cola or Sprite

RED DELICIOUS

'119

APPLES
3B~ 79~

HEAD

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ALL TABlE

OPEN
WE WELCOME
FOOD STAMP
SHOPPERS

Heck's Reg. 1.66
Cosmetic
1

9til7
Mon•.s.t.
10 til 5
Sunday

LAMPS

Prices Effectiw Til~ thru Sunday

'

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$1 .47

C'tWIJr

•r.

CcaneticDepl

HOUSIWAII DIPT.

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32CUP

PIRCOLA

$ 88
JIWILIY
IIIPT.

8-16 oz.'
BotHes

Hec:"' s Rlfi .

HICK'SIIG.
$1.14

Heck's Reg.
$I 3.99

Plus Tax &amp; Deposit
i .

SPORTS

~
22RIPLE
;;

.VOSes Norman 205.
High seri es - Blaine ·
Carter 583 : Ed Voss 541;

VAWES
BEEF •••.•..••••..•..•

HECK'S REG. '1.11

Don Nelson 209; Bla ine
Carter 206 ; Blaine Carter and

WITN1HESE

LB.

TROUT
NET
77~

Thompson· 7-S-19; Holslng,e r

PRODUCE SPECIALS

GROUND

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUNDAY, FEB. 27t WHILE QUANTITIES LAST ·

Eagl.e~ Club
Computer Services
24
Strikers
22
High Individ ua l game

ii9.

The winners advance to the
division semifinals Friday
night while the losers were
eUrnlnated,
Heidelberg tangles with
Ohio Northern and Oberlin
takes on regular season

in final.SEO battle

Standings

Usual surprises
United Press fnternaUonal
The Ohio Conference
basketball playoffs usually
provid~ a few surprises and
Tuesday night was no
exception.
Heidelberg, No. 6 in the
· Northern Division standings
at the end of regular season
play, upset No. 2 BaldwinWallace 49-47 at Berea in tbe
night's Jirst eye-&lt;Jpener and
ceilar-dwellipg Oberlin
easily handled No. 3 Mount
Union 93-75 at Alliance in tbe
evening's other surprise.
~W led 43-.111 with eight
mmutes left to play when
Heidelberg scored six
straight ,points to take a 45-43
lead. Sc!llt Patterson scored
what proved to be the winning
basket with 3: 20 left.
Baldwin;Wallace had a shot
with just two seeondsleft, but
. missecf.
Don Kegerreis paced
Heidelberg with 14 points and
BW's Rob Wintoo took game
high honors with 15 markers.
Jimmy Jones scored 23
points and Lendor Comby
added 18 to pace Oberlin to its
big win over Mount Union.
Oberlin W,k the lead with
3: 221eft in the first half and
beld' it the rest of the way .
David Truax was high for
Mount Uruon with 21 points.
The results of otber oc
tournament games were
about as expected with Ohio
Northern downing Kenyon 8$78 in the final North Division
game. Muskingum, No. 2 in
the South Division, had
problems with Marietta but
finally came out on lop 7:1-72
in overtime; Ohio Wesleyan
got by Capital 6IHi3 and
Otterbein edged Denison .oo-

Waverly beats Athens

Road Runners

Meigs 67 Athens 55

Christ 62

Bexley 56 Grandview 44

Dayton 82 Biscayne 60
DC Tchrs 87 St . Mry's Md . 83
Ga . Col i n Og lethorpe ll
Gu i lf ord 109 Elon 84
High Poin t 64 At I. Ch r is 61
Illi no is St. 103 Marsha ll 93
Louisvi lle 95 NE La. 65
Ma r yland Bl Wak e Forest 80
Newberry 92 Coastal Car . 8 3
Sou thwest La . 61 L a. Coli 60
Ark ansas -L R lOll Dillard 105
VMI 81 Randolph ·Macon 75
Wilmington 97 F.ed. City 81
Midwest
Blcickbu r n 79 Greenvl 78
Butler 71 Wabasl'1 611
Centr al St . 87 C~ darv l 75 .
Cncrdia Il L 78 .Trn ity Ill . 66
Drak e 88 Wict1 1ta St . 78
Findlay Ill Dyk e 9?
Ft. Hays St . 87 Krn ey St 85
Grace 70 Bethel 58
Hiram 101 Was·h. B. Jeff 7B
lli nois Tech 79 St. Xav ier 73
In d. Cenl 90 St . Joe's Ind. 87
Iowa Wes leya n 96 Grinnell ao
Lor as 53 Marycrest 49
Mancl'1esrer 95 Wilmington 93
Missouri -Rolla 74 Drury 6~
Monmouth ( Ill .) 85 Eureka 84
N'wstrn Iowa 80 Briar Cliff 78
North Park 91 Aurora 82
Pi tt sburg St. 74 l&lt;an . Newm nn

~

Reading 62 Wyoming 57
River Valley 12 Riverdale 71
South Amherst 14 Keystone 61

SEOAL VARSITY
C Final)
TEAM
W L P OP

53

BOYS

65

Squth

49

Uniontown Lake 5~ Cana l Shaker His 74 University
School 61

Fulton NW 52
Young s
Ursu line
Austintown Fitch 52

Bellbrook 66 Gr eene-v iew 56
Berkshire 69 Richmond Hts

Col lege Ba sketball Resu lh
By United Press Interna tional
Easl ·
Amh erst 48 Coa st Guard 40
Assum pt ion 95 Brvant 71
Bowdoi n 91 MIT SB
Cornell 73 Ya le 56
Dow ling 89 Jr sv Ct y St . 16
Fairfield 93 Bu ffalo a3
F Dck nsn 61 St . Fran NY 60
LeMoyne 90 Sl , L awrence n
Mansvl 70 York NV 59
MassachUS\!' ti S 96 Maine as
NY Tech 71 Stony Brook 64
Nyack 84 NE BiblE' 61
Oswego Sl . 72 Fr edoi1 ia 67
Penn ao La Sa lle 70
Providence a4 Villanova 71
- R .I. Coli 67 SE Mass. 65
Robrts Wstyn 70 Mediall e 5'
Rochester 87 Alfred 59
Rutgers 98 Fordham 73
Wrcster St . 100 W New Eng 89

Oranqe 61 Chardon 43
Painesvi lle Harvey 76 Kirtland 4ll
~
Jlatrlck Henry 56Montpelie~

ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P 9P
Wheelersburg
17 1 t213 985
Logan
1A 3 t367 951
Ironton
14 4 1057 88~
Pt. Pleasa nt 12 2 892 793
Gallipolis
11 7 1013 945
Portsmouth tO 7 1110 1082
Waverly
9 9 1151 1085
Meigs
9 9 1179 1175
Jackson
6 12 1035 1220
South Poi nl
5 13 1060 1106
Athens
3 15 951 1155
Wellslon
315 1019 1440
Non-SEOAL results:
Pl. Pleasanl 6' Ripley 53
Wheelersburg 42 Gallipolis 36
Huntington High 81 South
Polnl 70

28

High school cage scores

Lno~i ~nn~ !t'esw::~~?r'6i~

Sea ltle at Kopsas

Cage standings

MUNIIY .. QI.

SILF BUnERIJII
POPCORN POPPER

SJ99
H.clc'o Reg. $9.96
JIWIUIT DIP!.

su.Nsn
IOOI90MIN.
BLANK 8 TRACK
TAPE .

'200
.Heck's Reg. •2.99
Jewelry Dept.

�&amp;-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday,F'eb. 23

Can't Make Up Your Mind?

Farm bloc pleading for fatter crop supports
.

.

By BERNARD BKI!:NNI!Ji
WASIUNGTON (UP! ) Farm leaders paraded before
the House Agriculture
. Committee Tuesday with
appeals for new long-term
farm legislation, including
higher noors under prid!s of
major crops.
Senate
Agriculture
Chairman Herman E.
Talmadge, ~a., meanwhile

opened farm bill hearings
before his COIDmittee with a
pledge to push for enactment
of a lour or five year bill
rather than the "quickie, oneyear" extension of current
farm programs proposed by
some lawmakers.
Talmadge said a one-year
extension would be unfair to
farmers who would be unable
to mak'e Ion~ range

production and investment
plans.
And
although
lawmakers face heavy time
pressures if tliey warit to
produce a long-term omnibus
!ann and food bill by the May
15 d~adline set under blldget
procedures, Talmadge said it
can be done.
"Passing bills is what we
get paid for - l might add,
handsomely pairl for." he

.

of long term leglslatioo rewriting a 1973 farm act
which expires this year including Increased support
targets and crop support loan
rates hased on estimates of
farmers' production costs.
The farm groups offered
varying formulae for setting
Midcontinent Farmers future props.
A National Farm Coalition
Association all urged passage
plan would set the support
target for wheat - which is
expected to be $2.47 a bushel
this year under the expiring
1973 l~w - at $3.:»&gt; a bushel.
The NFO formula would push
the rate to $3.60, and the
9. Ada (9-0I
· 32
Midcontinent
farmers group
10. Lancaster Fisher 1 (9·31 27
Others with five or more proposed $3.01.
points : Lakeside Danbury.
A plan introduced earlier
West Unity Hilltop, Tinora , by Tainnadge, also using a
Arcanum,
Miami
East, cost of production formula,
Huntington ,
Cardington,
Norwayne , Mil lers po r t , would produce a $2.91 target
Edgerton , . Midd l efield support for wheat.
Cardinal, Bristolville Bristol,
Allan Grant, president of
Smi thv ille, R i dgeway
the
American Farm Bureau
Ridg emon t, ·Liberty Benton ,
Zane Trace Guernsey , Indian Federation, testified hi s
Valley North , Holgate and group was dropping its
Caraway.
previous opposition to the
said in an apparent reference
to
the
controversial
congressional pay raise
Which took effect this week.
In the House hearings,
~pokesmen for the National
Farm Coalition, National
Farmers Organization,
National
Grange
and

Columbus·Watterson is best Ohio girl team
COLUMBUS IUPIJ - This
Week's UnHed Press ln terna1ional Oh io High School
Board of Coaches ' girls
basketball ratings with first place votes anct won - lost
records In parentheses :

ClASSAAA
Team

Pfs.

1. Columbus Watterson 6 (14·
01
119
2. Medina 5 I 11 -01
109
3. Toledo Cent Catho l ic 1 112·
Ol
96
J., Columbus Walnut Ridge
110-1)
78
5. Springfield North 11 4·01 50
6. StrutherSI I11 ·11
48
7. Gahanna Lincoln (9-1)
32
B. tie Middletown 18·21
25
8. tie Madison 1 110-01
25
10. Greensburg Green (12.
11
. . 19
Others with five or more
points : Eastlake North ,
Ketter i ng Fairmont East ,
Cleveland Lincoln West l
Delaware, Westlake, Toledo
Bowsher , Bowling Green ,

Xenia , Toledo Libbey , Bay
Vi llage and Mentor .

Chardon , Uti ca, Archbold
and .AAadelra.

CLASSAA

Class A

Team
Pts.
I. Ontario 4 I 12-0)
9!
2. Warsaw River View 4 ( 120I
93
3. Columbus Hartley 1 (9 .J) 91
4. Perry 2 111 -0I
57
5. Swanton (11 -21
50
6. Warren Champion ( 15-2) 47
7. New Concord Johrr Glenn
(9-3)
46
B. Cortland Lakeview 1 11&lt;~
I)
44
9. Campbell Memorial ( 10

Sl
10

Team

Pts .

1. Frank fort Adena 13 (100)
140
2. Delphos St. John 3 I13-0)1 10
3. Russia I 111 -0)
90
4. Minster 111 -0)
76
5. Carey 118·01
. 75
6. Rocky River Luth West 3
(8·01
72
7. New Riegel ( 14-2)
60
_8. Convoy Crestview (10-1) 52

wins the tournament, as an
at~arge

team.
The winne r of th e
Presidents' Conference and
two at-large teams will also
participate in the lour-team

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U Wittenberg loses the Ohio
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VIKINGS WIN
Coach Gary Salyer's
Symmes Valley Vikings
defeated Green Local, 56-47
Tuesday night to advance to a
second game in the Class ·A
Sectional Tournament 'at
Minford. Symmes Valley, 117, must now play the powerful
Oak Hill Oaks, 16-1.
The Vikings host Hannan
Trace Thursday night.

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NO SALES TO DEALERS
QUANTilY RIGHTS RESERVED

Prices Effective Thru
·February 26, 1977

BAUARIYS SAGE OR
HONEY BEE

SAUSAGE •••••••••••••••••
LB.

the evening he said, "yes."
Atty. Douthett then asked if

there was a crap table there.
Stewart said there was, but
he did not know who owned it.
Later, Stewart said it "might
belong to John Smith."
Stewart said that between
$400 and $500 was in his
billfold.
PI!. Goelling testified in
regard to stopping a 1960 blue
and white Oldsmobile which
was driven by Herb Rife. Sgt.
Owen also offered testimony
regarding the 1960 Oldsmobile which Rife was driving.
Both officers said James
Teddy Lawson and Clarence
Alonzo Lawson, charged with
aggravated robbery In the
incident, were in the car
when Goelling stopped it
while on routine patrol at
11:07 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 12:
Thompson, former owner
of the car, said he sold the
vehicle to Spears earlier that ·
day.
Lt Plants testified con·
ceming the arrests of the ·
Lawson cousins. He also
gave a brief account of a
search of the Colony Inn and
the 1960 Oldsmobile on
Sunday, Feb. 13.
· Defense counsel Douthett
called as his only witness,
Teddy Lawson. On behalf of
his client, Lawson's court·
appointed counsel, D. Dean
Evans, objected to his
testifying. JUdge Betz did not
directly s...tain tbe objection,
but waited to see what type of
questions would be asked.
Douthett asked six questions
to which Ally. Evans pleaded
the fifth amendment on five

WILSON'S SAVORY

BACON ••••••••••••••••••L~-.
FRENtH CITY
.

USDA CHOICE .·

BONELESS
CHUCK ROAST•••••••••• ~~
USDA CHOICE

$ 49 ·

.

f·

RIB STEAKS ••••••••••••~~ ••
USDA CHOICE

LB.

STANDING RIB ROAST••

Douthett then asked 'the
court to dismiss his client due
to insufficient evidence. That
request was overruled. Judge
Betz said there was probable
cause to bind Spears over to
the grand jury.

RANDOM WEIGHT,

2

t2-oz. $1
Pkg•.

,

(~~~~~·style

Sliced Bacon. ....... lb.

·

H!mogenized
Got$139
Milk .... ............. .. ......... Ctn.

89 C
5••• $129

Tylenol
.. loo-cs.
.Tablets ...... WITH couro• Pkg.
c•INKLICUT

I roger
French

lb.

~~=::~~ . . . . . 2fo•49~
69
c
t:fu~ .................
;~~~:s~::~~~;-•l•h 10 C
HOTHOUII

Jamestown Pure
·I lb
·
Pork Sausage ...... R~n~

Jb.·

If._

u,
.m..,
., .,. roue lAIN CHICle t.r ... .._.,... tptchll .. .._
.,..sol

jHko..,--••
"netl"':Ill..,..
"

,.. ..tt. tf you.,...,.,

.

1•1111 WASHINGTON STAll

TOTAIIAnlfACTlON OUAIANTBO
• W1 Mve wiMit we HMrttu, ff ot all ,..,dille.
to conI . cUtloM M,oM eur wm,.l.'" "'" Ht ol1" IICIMrt;taecl . ..
' dol. . . "'~ • co,..,. •• aw-e~ ot a •W.r
Wo . . . . . . , _ -

wlttt 1 1,..... JIUfdt....
•• .,.pJ ...,._.,_,, IMm or Nfuncl ~~ ,......,.,

to $2.5 million to provide
WASHINGTON (UP!) beefed-up security and up to
The government is ordering $2 million a year to maintain
~ompanies
· to it.
utility
transform every nuclear
The requirement, he said,
power plant into an armed is for plants to be able to
fortress
capable
of repulse an attack by
withstanding attack by dedicated saboteurs who
trained guerillas who may have automatic weapons,
have belp from inside.
explosives, rnllltary training
Tough new Nuclear and perbaps an accomplice
-Regulatory · Commission · inside.
security rules ~ing effe~t
Plani guards and "armed
this !aU will require atomic response force personnel"
plants to have more gua..-ds, would be armed with pistols,
install surveillance shotguns,
and
semiequipment and assault automaticrilles. There would
barriers search employes be an average 10 guards per
and visiiors and maintain a plant, compared to a present
''
defense force with authority three.
to shoot to kill.
"There Is no lndlcatioo of
The cosi will be high - up any threat to nuclear
to four Urnes what power facilities," Rusche said.
plants now spend on security "However, there hu been a
and some employes may general increase in terrorism
dlslllle the new restrictions. arolUid the world."
But NRC officials say they
Rusche said since 1969
will shut down any plant that there bave.been 170 apparent
fallB to comply.
sabotage elforts - none
· "Every station, every successful - against U.S.
plant when it meets these nuclear plants. There were 68
new 'rules, will be better . such' incidents in' 1976 and
protected againlt the threat · three so lar this year.
of ubotlsge than It is today,"
Once the new rules 1re
says Benard Rusche, the published in the federal
NRC's reactor regulation 1\el!ister, probably Friday,
Chill.
each plant will baverds90 dayds
Rusche announced the to hire more gua
an
III!CIIrity crackdown in a news prepare a security plan, and
conlel't!llce Tuesday ..He es-- 18 months to install
Umated it may cost each of equipment and
erect
lhe n~tlon's et plan~d or barricades.
antlfipated nuclear plallts up
\,

Florhll Mite or

Pink Gnpefrulf ... ,..

6 $1·
for

REGULAR OR BEEF

WIENERS ••••••••••• !~~~.

HEAD
LETTUCE •••••• ~ ••••••

J$
heads

SALAD

TOMATOES ••••••••••~~

By EDWARD K. DeLONG

SPRtNGDAU

I

Tablets
WITH
•lllDM-1.-

1

NEW HAVEN, W. Va. Airman Richard L. Slden,
aon of Mr. and Mrs. LeoUe
C. Sider• af 20% Seveatb St.,
baa been selected for
technical tralolag at
Cbaou te AFB, 01., In the
Air Foree aircraft matnteaance fteld. He recently
completed bRslc training at
Lackland AFB, TeL Slden
Ia a 1976 graduate of
Wabama Hlgb School.

he heavily armed

9c
8
99c

Sliced
11b
Luncheon Meats Pi.s:

=~-==·:=.r.t~lvGJ
I
I

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.

AIRMAN SIDERS

Nuke plants _
will

.

1

i ___
I . WITH COUPON
I . ,••I'IIIICIIAII••
I
t.t~ . ••

•

I
I

Betty Crocker
Hamburger Helper

::~~

5-lb$699
Canned Ham ... c••

ur~rr·;;-1

PROGRESS

U.S. GOV'T. GRADID CHOICE OONEl$

(~;;~Club

1

-----------

NOW
IN

, U.S. GOV'T. GIA.Df.D CHOICE

Fresh, Assorted
Pork Chops.. ... lb.

-WITH COUI'ON

I

$149. Boneless Top
Boneless Boston
. Round $teak... .. ... .. .. lb.
Roll Roast ....... lb.
Boneless Beef
Rib Eye Steak .......
::ast .. •. 169

SHOULDIR POT IIOAST

1/t·CINTER CUTS , 'i/,•FIRST
CUTS IY COUNT

1

,.,.......

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE

U.S. GOV1 GRADED CHOICE, BEEF CHUCK,

A second person, Robert
, Spears, 33, 644 Fifth Ave.,
Kanauga, charged with
complicity in the armed
robbery Feb. 12 at the Ohio
Valley Livestock Yards on
Vinton Ave., was bound over
to the Gallia County grand
Jury In a preliminary hearing
Tuesday afternoon in
Gallipolis Municipal Court.
Bond was fixed by Judge
Robert S. Betz at $10,000.
Earlier in the day, Herbert
Rile, 46, Gallipolis charged
with Spears with complicity
in the armed robbery, was
l&gt;ouild over to the grand jury.
His bond also was fixed at
$10,1100.
Last week, ·James Teddy
Lawson, . 18, and ' Clarence
Alonzo Lawson, 18, Rt. 2,
Vinton, charged
with
aggravated robbery in
connection with the incident,
were bound over to the grand
jury.
Spears, the present owner
of the Colony Inn (formerly
the Queen Bee Hotel ) which
was destroyed by fire Sunday, was represented at the
hearing by Atty . Marshall
Douthett of Jackson.
Giving testimony Tuesday
afternoon were Tommy Joe
Stewart, manager of the Ohio
Valley Livestock Company;
Pll. Bernard Goelling and
Sgt. Joe ·owen of the
Gallipolis Police Dept.; Lt.
Geor ge Plants, chief investigator for the Gallia
County Sheriff's Dept., and
Danny Thompson, Rio
.Grande.
In his testimony Stewart
described the events which
occurred at the livestock
company around II :30 p.m.
Feb. 12. He said two men,
wearing nylon masks and
carrying sawed-off shotguns,
forced the door open and
entered the building where he
and several other persons
were.
The masked men ordered
them to take off their pants.
The clothing was placed in a
box along with their billfolds
and other contents.
Stewart also described the
alleged robbers, and on crosseumlnation
by Atty.
Douthett, repeated the names
of others who were robbed.
These others were Ken
steger, Woodrow Haner, Bill
Parks, Bill Parks' girlfriend
(Sandy), Stewart's wife,
Clarence E. (John) Johnson,
Virgil ,Kames , Joe Kames,
Raymond Karnes , John
Smith, Mike Bryant, Jay
Fannin and Dr. David
Thomas.
While
under crossexaminatiOn Stewart, when
asked II the individuals were
"shooting crap" said, " I
wasn't, but lour or live others
were." When asked if he had
been shooting crap earlier in

St01e Hours:·
Mon.-Sat 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

SLICED INTO

I,

I
WITH COUPON
... AmiUr.T, ,._...ft,ltn
I SllltJ
ll.lfiii.ICMU srm ar.a r~[ill
I . ~.., ()fl!l ,.. COWoM
.K¥

Boneless Round
Tip Roast.'......... lb.

Rib Half Pork Lo1n$11·9
Pork Chops ....... lb.

:

"·"·494

U.S. GOY'T . GRADED Ct:IOICE

FlESH

1

Hr

USDA
CHOICE

,

•

to Jury

St. Vincent 1 (9-

01
11
10. lie Olmsted Falls 1 IB· ll 21
Others With five or more
points : Oregon Cardinal
Str l1ch, Akron Our Lady of
Elms , Columbus Hamilton
Township, Perryspurg , West
Muskingum , Wav~rly , Upper
Sandusky ,
Coventry,

Spears is
hound
•

Q

tie Akron

Wittenberg to host tourney
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio
(UP!)- The NCAA Division
Ill Great Lakes Regional
haskethall tournament will
be held at Wittenberg
University.
Wittenberg, which finished
the regular season with an 184 mark and captured the
Southern Division title of the
Ohio Conference, Tuesday
was invited to host the
tourney and also received a
bid to participate in it, either
as conference tournament
champion or, if another team

support program included in
the 19731aw and now supports
its extension. But Grant
strongly opposed use of cost
of production formulas as a
hase for supports and urged
that Congress avoid &lt;hstic
support hikes which might
lead to surplus pc;Qduction.
Grant joined other farm
leaders, however, in hacking
proposals to help farmero
hold surplus grain in an onfarm reserve.
In the Senate, Sen. Robert
Dole, R-Kan., announced he
now is convinced future crop
support loans should be
pegged . above the level
inohided in the tentative draft
bill he cosponsored with
Talmadge.
5en. John Melcher urged
quick action to help 'farmers
suffering from low wheat and
cattle prices and prospects of
drought damage: The farm
problem is the biggest hole in
President Garter's economic
stimulus package, he said.

7- _The Daily Sentinel, Middlepart·Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Feb.

C-LOROX .........~
$ 19
DETERGENT••••••• ~ ••••
49 oz.

THANK YOU .

.APPlE PIE FILLING •.•·!~~
WAGONER'S ORANGE
OR GRAPE DRINK •••• !2.~.

(EXCEPT BEEF

2 LB.
DINNER ••••••••••••••••

TENDJeltLEAF

DUNCAN. HINES

TEA BAGS

CAKE MIXES

49c
\

48CT• . .

I.

W/C

.2/$lw;c

Limit 1

Pir ·customer

' Good Only At Powell's

othr bplres 2-26-77

~ !;!!!!.!~

ARGO PEAS

is~ 01.

6/$1

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
·
Expires 2-26-77

SUPER VALU

GRAPE JELLY
32 Ol.'
Wit
'

sgc

Li mil 1 Per Custamer

Good. Only At Powell's
Expires 2-2'"77

. I
\,

�•
li-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Feb. 23, 19'17

Wildermuths .enjoy vacation

New hymnals is class project
Why Older FolD Put on Weight

EXTRA

I've read that beginning at age 50 ~ou start shrinking in
height an-average of one-ball inch every five years, or so.
So far (age 59) my appetite haSil't shrunk to compensate.
I'm nearly an inch shorter than I was, therefore should weigh
at least five pounds less, which means I rnlist cut my calories
down by almost 100 per day, not to speak of several ~undred
calories off because I'm now more sedentary.
ltJl a consequence, I starve ! ·
MOst older people don't enjoy starving, therefore put on
weight - .and they wonder why because their eating habits
haven't changed.
·
·
So there's the reason, but I still resemt Mother Nature
playing such dirty tricks. W)ly can't she redlice our appetites
~ she whacks away at our height and strength? - 1400
CALORIES A DAY AND RESENTING IT
.

SPECIAL.

~Helen :

IN THE

GROUP OF BOY'S
Polyester Knit

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

BIO,. IG SA·VINGS • • • UP TO 75% OFFJI
Irregulars

FAMOUS
BRAND
PANTY HOSE
AND PANTY
All ill one

1400:
;
Why indeed?! ! !
ltJl another resident of the 1400 calorie per day purgatory, I
say, "Mother Nature/' you're a sadist!" -H.

+++

$}95 Value

If Perfect

NOW
99!Pai
ENTIRE STOCK OF WINTER

HANDBAGS
Regular ,
510.00 to s2a.oo

DearW.D. :
Tell me, what is love, l&gt;ut communication, trust and
respect, friendship -and holding hands because you feel like
It? Perhaps you think you've never really loved each other, but
your letter says loud and clear -you have a closeness many
llrewor~ypes never achieved. --' H.

NOW

75%

+++

pear Helen:
. The letter from "can't Understand 'Em" brought me a
chilckle.
How true -we do so many things because our mothers or
fathers did them before us. (Why else would a friend put salt
~d pepper on his watermelon, except that his grandfather and
dad ate it that way?)
·
· In the early days of marriage, a huge row started with the
way I cut up a grapefruit for serving ; aild carried on to include
all the dumb things we did, just 'cause our families had.
Now, every lime the conversation about Such "nit(Ygrlttys" gets heated, one of us remind!l the other not to "start
llP a grapefruit episode." .~ STILL CAN'T UNDERSTAND
'EM
,

SPECIAL
GROUPS
POLYESTER
KNIT

JUMP
SUITS,,.

Dear Helen:
· How right y,9u are, Helen, our parsimonies come from the
way we. were ral.!IM.'
.
·
,
. Every tim~ I catch .myself saving a used paper tqwel - to
dry and use a gam -I have to laugh ... my mpthet has done this
as loog as! can remember, and! am nearly 50.- CAIWLINE

.

NOW
REDUCED

'

Dear Caroline:
,
And I'll bet you both smooth out used peper napkins to use
again if they're barely soiled.
In these recycle-&lt;:onscious 'days, that's not parsimony it's good sell.'le. - H.

35%
SPECIA
GROUP OF

BARBERTON, Ohio (UP! ) a second floor apartment at
- A two-story downtown the rear of .the Bargain.
building housing apartments FUrniture Store.
Two storesalong side of the
and a furniiure store burned
Monday in a fire that did furniture store, Evelyn's
between $30,000 and $35,000 Luncheonette and Har~·s
Auto Parts, sustained some
damage.
water
damage .
Fire officials in the Summit
One
fireman was treated
'County community said the
for
smoke
inhalation.
blaze apparenUy broke out in

SPORTSWEAR
CLEARANCE

•JACKETS
•SKIRTS

Broken Sizes

40NLY '
BOY'S POL VESTER

SPORT COATS
'

•BLOUSES
•DENIM '
SKIRTS
NOW

·Mountain

7-5%

Mist
Cotton Batting

OFF
. SPECIAL GROUP OF

QUILT LINED

$999

ONE RACK OF JI,JNIOR

CORDUROY AND
DENIM JEANS

NOW

DEARFOAM
SLIPPERS

SPECIAL GROUP

WASH
CLOTHS
NOW

'59
AND
'6990

90

4 SI 00
FOR

Sizes 38 to 46

STANDARD SIZE

.Solids &amp; Patterns

QUILTED
· PILLOW
COVERS

MEN'S

GENUINE
LEATHER
COATS
AND

LEISURE SHIRTS

Reg' $2.50
NOW

Most of these
are brand new
Spring Leisure
Suits.

CEIUNG TILE
Na,N ONLY

15

~ Per

.

Square Ft.

GOOD SELECtiON OF .STYLES
IN STOCK

50%

S34.95
Value

HOGG

&amp; ~USPAN

. MATERIALS CO.
, 7_73-SS$4

MaSOJ)J W. 1/a.

$2488

ENTIRE STOCK
OF BOY;S

BEDSPREADS

fArdu"l and

FULL SIZE ONLY

Regular

Denim Jackets

20.00 .

1

REDUCEo50%0Ff

NOW

$13

,

CORELLE
DISHES

BEAUTIFUL WOVEN

BATH
TOWELS

SI'39

20 Piece Set
Solid White

JACKETS
NCM

Entire Stock

UNDER SHIRTS
. Reg . s4.0o
now '2"

Value

NOW

100% Polyester

$999

$16.99

'95.00 to 1110.00

Solids &amp; Fancy
Patterns

MEN'S THERMAL

9 CUP
PERCOLATOR

Regular

BLANKETS

72x90
Regular and Thermals

99

COlors : Gold,
Avocado, Rust,
Blue and Off Wllite

THRU
THRU

11 AM TIL 8

so '

'lP

To Sell!
I

A·

ELECTRIC BlANKETS

Only

RDAY

$499

I

I

~

&amp;'26•

Mr. and Mrs . Millard
Wildermuth . of Middleport
returned Saturday from a six
week vacation with sightseeing in 17 states and Mexico.
The couple joined Cui. aod
Mrs. W, K. Kincaid of San
Jose, caUl. fur the vacation.
Leaving here on Jan. 4 the
couples went to Florida
where they visited Disney
World, the Kennedy Space
Center, and Mart'O Island.
From there they went to !'lew
Orleans, La., and the LBJ
Ranch in Texas, and then the
Alamo.
Stopping in Phoenix, Ariz.
they visited Mr. and Mrs.
Forest (Butch) Bachtel and
1\(rs. Juanita Bachtel. '!bey
traveled on to Las Vegas,

I

Shower fetes Mrs. Ihle

ti..
~

:RACINE - Mrs. Nick !hie
and Mrs. Buddy Pyles en·
tirtained recently with a
~yetbi shower honoring Mrs.
Mike lhle. The .shower was
held at the Nick !hie home.
' Gifts were placed in a
bassinet .which had been
decorated by Diane Ihle.
Using the stork as the shower
theme, the hostesses served
cllke, nuts, mjnts, punch and
coffee.
t Guests were Mrs. Ronald

Hart.; Mrs. John Il11e, Mrs.
Gerald Hart, Tracey Hart,
Mrs. Linley Hart, Mrs.
Charles . Pyles, Mrs . Doll
Manuel,. Robin and Donita
Manuel, Mrs. Ed Miller, Mrs.
Ron Grimm, Mrs. George
Cummins, Mrs. Bill Hayman ,
Mrs. Gary Norris, Mn
Robert Hart, Beth Ann Hart,
Mrs. Alan Cumingham, Mrs.
Rober! Louks, Mrs. Frances
Roberts, Mrs. Robert Beegle
and Nikki lhle.

\,

~

Games were played with
prizes going to . Mrs. Bill
Hayman, Mrs. Robert Beegle
and Mrs. Gary Norris. Mrs.
Bill Hayman also won the
door prize.
Sending gifts were Mrs.
Don Walker, Mrs. Freeland
Norris, Mrs. Esther Smith,
Lucille and Brian Diehl, Mrs.
Dennis Manuel, Mrs. Helen
Simpson, Mrs. Harry Evans,
Mrs. Victor Brown, Earl Hart
and Mrs. Gilbert Hart.

I

fieart fund drive
~et for

Social
Calendar

Sunday

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at
the home of Mrs. Dwight
Wallace. Mrs. Sibley Slack \0
review "The Letters of
Rupert Brook."
POMEROY · Mlddleporl
lions Club, regular meeting,
Meigs Inn noon Wednesday.
OHIO Valley Commandery,
otated convocation, 7:30p.m . .
All Sir Knights should bring
rituals .
WILDWOOD Garden Club,
7:00 Wedilesday at the home
li Mrs. Vernon Nease. Mrs.
Dwight Milhoan, assi sting

Youth raOy
held Fritkzy
Diarl:§ ] ones
.

'--··~

ENGAGED - Mr. and Mrs, Tony Jones, Tuppers
Plains, are aDIHJunciog the engagement of their daughter,
Dtane, to David L. Carnahan, son of Mr. and Mrs. Larry
D. carnahan of Chester. The bride-elect is a junior at
, Eastern High School, and her fiance is a senior there. '!be
wedding will take place sometime following Miss Jones'
graduation in 1978.

Polly's Pointers

IN lH£
SILVER BRIDGE
PlAZA

'

Nev. : and into Califorrua by their1 son-in-law and
where they went to the San -daughter, Mr. and Mrs. John
Diego Z!lc, and stayed oYer· Allensworth and daughters,
night with Mr. and Mrs. John Kristin and Cow1ney, and
Kinc:ai~. The Wildermuths'". son, Jim Wildermuth, The
and the Kincaids attended the Allensworths retilmed them
Andy Williams golf tourna· to Middleport and sperit the
ment at San Diego and also weekend with the Wilde~·
toured the Hearst Castle. muthsi and Mrs. FlOSSie
They traveled north as far as Allensworth.
Eugene, Ore. and then
Col. and Mrs. Kim;aid Came
returned to the Klncaids' to Ohio at 'ThankSgiving time
home at San Jose and from and then went on to Connee- .
there took sightseeing tours ticut for Christmas with their
into San Francisco son, Tom and his family.
' They returned to·Middleport
.
Hollywood and Monterey.
'!be couple flew home from · for New Yeat'Sahd then were
San Francisco Saturday. joined by the Wildermuths for
'!bey were met in Columbus the trip.

A Master youth rally was
held Friday night at the
Middleport United Pen·
tecostal church with the
eva ngelist, Rev. G. M. Allen
as special speaker.
'!be attendaQCe was 130
with several churches and
their pastors, representing ·
this general section.
. The service opened with
prayer and congregational ·
singing, then followed by
special singing by members
representing their respective
churches .
'!be service was turned
over \o Rev. Allen, who after
accompanying his wife, Mrs.
Allen in . a song, gave a
message to the congregation,
entitled "It's almost time for
the Wedding." '

1.-.-..---- ----- ···

fur\!
Get down to the biiggesl
. look in fashion since
I ! The low. low dre.s~
sandal goes flat out
fun .. just watch it ftirt
your longer .~,.;,,.,.

; '!be hbuse-to-house fund Mrs. Alwilda Werner
drive for the Meigs County reported that Mrs. Loretta
Heart Association will he t'tm· Saelens has completed the
ducted in Middleport Sunday questioneer . on the project,
fr 0mlto5p.m.
Profile of Ohio Women in
i Plans for the drive were Business, and sent it to the
By Polly Cramer
made ai Monday night's state organization.
meeting Qf the Middleporl
The spring district meeting
•flusiness ·and Professional will be at Logan on April 17
DEAR POLLY - I would answer my purpose perfectWomen's Club held at Mid· with the 50th anniversary of
like
to know how to remove ly. When removing them 1
Clleport village hall. The club •BPW to be celebrated at that
ball
point
ink from vinyl chair soak each square with a wet
bas solicjted in the village uri time. The fall meeting will be
The 1976 Meigs County Fair
covers.
I
have· tried some cloth and am sure the square flower show staged by the
J'leart S,unday for more than at Shawnee Park in October
sprays, but had no luck. I is thoroughly soaked before Fair Board in cooperation
'f' years, T)lis year's chair- and it will be a family affair.
would appreciate some help. even trying to remove it. This with the Meigs County
man is Mrs. Grace Pratt.
Silver dollar attendance
·E.E.P.
takes some . lime and pa- Garden Club Association took
tleadquarters will he village awards were won liy Mrs.
BLACK
DEAR E.E.P. - Have you lienee but does work. Then a third in Class B (10 to 15
)lall.
Eva Robson and Mrs.
RED
tried hair spray ? It is great the wall.can be washed with club) in a tie with 1\luskingum
Mrs. Janet Korn reported Werner.
hostess.
for this.- POLLY.
warm water and the paint is .Cowity in county fair flower
NAVY
~n the Young Careerist com·
At the Young Caree rist
ASH
Wednesady
Service,
DEAR
POLLY
.:
One
of
my
lefUntact. I.Iearned this from show competition in-Ohio.
petition for District 17, held competition Sunday Mrs.
Swiday at the Holiday Inn, Eloise Wilson, Mrs. Marjorie Grace Episcopal Church 7 Pet Peeves is with the instructions on the package
Mrs. James , Carpenter,
Gal!ipolis, and hosted by the Walburn and Mrs. Linda p.m. Wednesday in parish packagers of luncheon meat. so do try it, Mrs. J.S. for it . who served as 'show chair·
hall. Holy communion.
At lunchtime when must of us works.- H.K.H. ·
IIUln with Mrs.'· Joe Bolin,
_.u·ddl
,., epor t Cl ub. Karen ·Lambert had charge of
THURSDAY
are
in a hurry to fix a quick
DE~R POLLY -You will ·
Goins, Meigs Local teacher, registration. Mrs. . Dortha
'
THE LOYALMEN and sandwich, we have to strug· be able to see and preventthe received the word this week
. 'Was first runner-up in the Salser and the ·Middleport
from Mrs. Allen Grossman,
Women's
Class
Middleport
gle with that thin plastic strip loss of croquet .wickets · slate and county fair flower
'fompetitioit Winner was Citizens National Bank fur·
CliUrch
of
Christ,
Thursday
that is all around each slice. (hoops) in the grass if you show chairman for the Ohio
:Mrs. Deborah Oughton, nished favors of book mal' I: 30 ·p.m. at church,
One
has tv be very careful in . wrap the top and sides with Association of Garden Clubs.
~!hens.
ches, pennies in bottles and
Next Door To Elberfelds
\,
removing
this or else you will . yellow plastic tape.
• Committee chairmen · the dinner napkins. Mrs. RIVERVIEW Garden Club
11teme of the show was "Bud
104
E.
Main
992-2815
Pomeroy
Two or three old tires of Promise; Bloom of Pro·presenting_reports were Mrs. Alwilda Werner, president, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the find• yourself with a strip in
your
mouth.
To
me
these
fastened
against the end of gress."
Louise Davis, finance, and had charge of reservations borne of Mrs. Claremont
strips
of
plastic
are
as
dlstur·
the
garage
will · prevent
~rs. Dollie Hayes, program. and participated in the Harris with Mrs. Herman
bing
as
hair
in
food.KAY.
qamage
to
the
car bumper
"W.&amp;~.;:;m;;..&lt;&amp;:;&amp;:'%"''"' district presidents ' 1111eeting Grossnickle as co-hostess.
DEAR POLLY- I have had and the wall should you drive
'~ · ·
· ' ·.·x · .w,,. held prior to the luncheon. The program topic is sucDevotions were presented. by ce!llful gardening and an good luck removing ink from in too far.
clothing by soaking the slainTo prevent losing the key to
Florence Trainer and Gladys Bliction wlll be held.
ed
part
in
rubbing
alcohol
a
padlock that is not in use,
~. Trainer who had spiritual MEIGS Christian Women's
overnight
and
then
launder·
slip
the key on a key chain
·
music and inspirational Fellowship to be held at the
ing as usual. (Test first). and the chain on the lock. . ; r.lr. and Mrs . Carrol poemsand(houghts.
HANNA ..
$nowden of Gallipolis, and
Members of the club serv· Bradford Church of Christ ·HERMAN.
Thursday, 7:30 p.m . In·
DEAR POLLY - and Mrs.
DEAR POLLY - If you
1&gt;frs. Joan ~ay of Rutland ing as greeters wete Mrs.
J.S. - I , too, have been using have trouble keeping em·
were Sunday afternoon Luuiseui Davis, Mrs. Grace stallation of officers.
';yisltors of ~.Jr. and Mrs. Roy Pratt, Mrs. Janet Korn, Mrs. SYRACUSE Cub Scout those picture hangers with broidery floss from tangling,
Pack 242, blue and gold
,Snowden, 1
Kale Welsh and Miss Karen banquet, Thursday, 6:30p.m. adhesive backs for fifteen use a wide toothed comb such
years and have had no truu· as you can buy in ihe dime
; Mrs. Sw:y carpenter and Sutherland. Mrs. Suzy
at the Syracuse Elementary ble. !like to change my pic· store. '!bey are great for
•Mrs. Joan May were business carpenter was general chair· School.
lures often and do not like holding those loose pieces. ~itors in Parke..Sburg, W. IIUln for the district coinpeti·
FRIDAY
holes in the wall, so they KELLY.
:Va. Monda§.
lion.
CHURCH Women United of
~ Roy Holter; sons, Ed and
Meigs County planning
::Man, and David Burt spent
1 HOSPITALIZED
session
for World Day of
:;the past weekend in Colwn· Mrs. Frances Carleton, Prayer, Friday,
1:30 p.m. at
, bus attending the State Hols- Rose Hill, Pomeroy, under·
Sacred
Heart
Church.
All key
: tein Convention. Roy served went surgery Tuesday at
women
urged
to
attend.
: as a judge for the queen con- Holzer Medical Center. She is
SATURDAY
inRoom213.
:test.
SOUP AND Bake Sale
•
Saturday at _the Syracuse
Presbyterian Church annex
beginning at 1l a.m. Bring
own containers for carryout.
SPAGHETTI Dinner
"
....:::~======'::!..~~ Specially dulgncd lo ulcbralr
Saturday from 5:30 to 7:30
Nqrge's 80tlh yeilr tui a home
p.m. at Middleport Masonic
appUan..-:e manurafilt•rtr and
25th year a,"i 11 manuf•~: ·
Temple sponsored by Meigs
FABRIC SALE
lurt.r of top-loadlng
Chapter, Order of DeMolay.
IIUiom .atl~ wuhtr~.
= ATHENS - The Ohio Pat Welling, associate Tickets are $1.50 each and
1 TABLE
~ University School of Dance professor of dance, will may he purchased from any
ASSORml FABRICS
present a new group work for DeMolay member or pur·
~Will present its annual Dance
dancers and Sue chased at the door ..
~Concert .~arch 3, 4 and 5 at 8 13
THE GOOD News Trio wiU
~P·II!: 'In me Patio Theater on Blankensop,' a senior dance
AU
•the -Ath¥DS campus. A2 p.m. major, will perform a work be at the New Haven United
Mf4lAZJNES
: matinee will silo be held she choreographed.
Methodist Church Saturday
: Saturday, March 5.
Tickets may be reserved at at 7:30. p.m. Public invited.
&amp;
11
Sha,kers," a classic Memorial Auditorium Box
SEWING BOOKS
• modem dance work recon· Office on the Athens campus
~ structed for the coneert by or purchased before each
( Rlchar9; Ploch of the Dance performance.
DINNER ENJOYED
, Notation Bureau in Colum·
A family dinner was held at
~ rus, wl)l headline this year's
the home of Mr. and Mrs .
(ff ·
..llhow. Originally created In
Wilson Carpenter Sunday.
-.TO PLAN SERVICE
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Carroll
~ 1931 by Dorta Humphrey,
• 10 C1cle Seledlo,n
A plamlng session for, the of Cincinnati joined their son,
.: "shakers" was last per·
• P~rman~nt Prus Care
• formed In Athens In 1970, and World Day of Pray~r services Matthew, wbu spent the
• 5 Water Temperature,Comblnatlons
~has a cast ol I4 dancers and wiU be held at 1:30 p.m. Fri· weekend with his grand·
• Cool-Down Spray Rlns~
day at the Saured Heart · ·parents, and the other guests
r live millie. .
• Cold Water Wash
" New works created for the Church by Church Women were Mrs. W. 0. Barnitz and
• Porcelain Top lk Lid
~ dance majors by the faculty UnitedofMeigsCounly. Mrs. Mr . and Mrs . James
Cordelia
Bentz,
pre~ident,
Carpenter
and
son,
Jay.
~ of the School of Dance are
' also scheduled ; Gladys ask.&gt; that all key women of
" BaUin,_professor -of dance, the churches be present.
will present a large group
STILL IN PROGRESS
DATE CHANGED
t ;work based on tradltl~nal
'!be
Meigs
Chapter,
Order
• AJIPilaChlan folk materials, a·
Sin&amp;w Modtl174 '611 Olf Rill PriCe .............. NoW 1299"
r projecf supported by her of DeMolay's : Sw.eetheart DRYVIWG~ ·
Modtll60 Rei- '119.95 ..... .......... .
• fourth choreographic gral!l competition has heen moved
ORWELL,
Ohio
(UP!)
A
from
March
5
to
March
12
at
~ from the National En•
f dowtnent for the Arts. She the Middleport Masonic lroken water pump in the
~ also arranged a piece which Temple, 7:30 p.m. For fur· village water tower left about
McCIII 's, ICwlck-S.w,
1,000 residents of this southSimp!k:lty Pitt.,"'
t wlll be performed by ther information on entering, western
Ph . tft ·2214
115W.
Ashtabula
COunty
girlil
may
call
Mary
Ault
!l!l2·
• Mai'gal'et Tcheng, asalstant
"2·2635
~ profeuor of dance , and 5454, 992-5020, or fhe~hire, community \'irtually without
water
Tuesday.
·
387-7514.
~ Violinist Betsy Behnke.

Hair spray still
great ink remover

·Flower show
places third

CHAPMAN
SHOES

· Pomeroy ·.
' Personal Notes

· West Bend

i 00% Polyester

touring 1 7 states, Mexico

Readings were on faith in an
unchanging world and there
was a playlet entitled
"Fea~tPng on the Word of
God ." To answer roll call
members gave a scripture
verse on love.
The Lord's 'Prayer ·in
unison· dosed the meeting
and reireshm~nts of cherry
pie, ice cream and sand·
wiches were served to those
named and Marie Roy ,
Carolina Miller, Cora Webb,
Ura Morris and Glara Powell.

I

537.99

VESTED
.SUITS

.

Sizes 38 to 46
Regulars &amp; longs

MEN AND BOY'S

Twin Burger
Value

$2499

DENIM SHIRT JACKETS
Reg . s21 .so now 50% off ·

$}999

BLACK ANGUS

50% OFF

Regular '43.00 to '65.00

'11M

Value

NOW.

.FAMOUS
BRAND
-LEISURE
SUITS

Slacks

m.99

99

MEN~S

MEN'S

fry Baby

ZIP-OUT L-INING

$1199

$

NOW

PRESTO

COATS

eg ular
$4.00 to $5.00

LADIES

Limit 2 Rolls

ALL-WEATHER

Values
· To $22 .00

9'9~·

Li-mited
Supply

75% OFF

Reg. $25.00NOW

LADIES
P.V.C. JACKETS

81 "X96" Size ·
Regular $2 .49

WINTER
COATS
NOW

75%0FF

LADIES DRESSES

FAMOUS BRAND MEN'S

12"x12" PLAIN WHITE

$499

Regular
$17.00.

NOW

FAMOUS
CANNON BRAND

· g·g~

Values
To S7.oo

•VESTS

SO% OFF
NOW

HOUSE
SUPPERS

NOW

$16.00

Values to

99~

SPECIAL GROUP
OF LADIES

Waltz Length
Two groups,
100 pet . nylon and
polyester and
cotton blend .
Sizes: S,M,LXL,
XXL
Pastel COlors

·•SWEATERS
•PANTS
•TOPS

KNIT
SHIRTS
Reg . $8.00 to

Kn~

"

DENIM JEANS
NOW
ONLY

' Mrs. Badgley reported at
the meeting on cards, flowers
ar&lt;~ visits to shutins. Athank·
you note was read from the
Dobbin Powell family. Mrs.
Marjorie Grimm, ways and
means chairman, suggested
8' hat sale for the March

meeting to be held ar the
home of Mrs. Grella Simp!:
son.
The president, Mrs. Helen
Slack, led the devotiona l
period using song, "What a
Friend We Have in Jesus" to
open the meeting. She read
Proverbs 17 7 and there was
a meditatlo~ ~n friend!l and
prayer by Vera Beegle.
The program by Miss
Beegie was on the theme "A
New Beginning or a New
Year, but the Same God."

';f::::::~::::~:~::;::::::~:::::::::::;::::;;:::~;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~;:;:::~::::::::::::::::::::~::::;:::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:~:~;:;:::;:i:

And .
Broken Sizes
'ValuestoS16.00

'6.00 and 17.00

FALL ANO WINTER

LONG SLEEVE

Polyester

PANTS

legular

MEN'S

CELOTEX
at the
lOWEST P'RICES EVER!·

SHIFT
. GOWNS

VERY FAMOUS
BRAND NAMES

NOW

CEILING TILE

~dgley .

SAVINGS

~

Dear Helen :
Tile letter from the woman who sald she merried because ·
the time was right but not the man: I must answer it;
. My wile and I met when we were in our 30s. We both felt it
wasoowor never, so we married to avoid being single.
· Things went from bad to worse. We admitted we'd never
loved each other. '!bat hurt! But it shook us into action.
We began working at marriage. We kissed and touched
more often. We learned to say, "I'm sorry." We faced up to the
fact that we'd be IHl happier apart, that were were many good
lhil)gs about our union, including two wonderful children, now
grown.
Today we're closer than we've ever been. We hold hand!l in
pubUc and private, we conununicate, we 're !riend!l , we have
trusf aild respect.
Maybe we dldn 'I have the fireworks kind of love, but we've
wilt a closenllSS that grows with the years.
· ·. To these yollf!g people who say marriage without love is
Uke a book full of empty pages, I say, fill 'em with your own
.Ideas. - WE DID ·

' RACINE - The project of
purchasing new hymnals for
the Racine First Baptist
Church was taken on by the
Jlooster Sunday School Class •
~ a recent meeting at the
home of Mrs. Dorothy

Heritage Model
10 lb. Capacity

~School of Dance
~

•

~to- present

concert

~

r

. 'lh PRICE

10%

~.JQ,u·
+~~+~
Shop

.

\.

\

~
--·-

INGELS FURNITURE ·
. I

�..
••

•

1

•

111-'111" Dilly Sentinel, Mlddleport·Pomet'OY, 0., Wednesday, Feb. 23, 19'71

li-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Feb. 2J, 1977

.

Real Estate for Sale? Sell It Through The Want Ads

~CY

Television ·log for easy viewing

'
WAin AOS
INFOilMioTION
OIAOLINIS
/
5 P .M. Dev
ltjt:fre.
Publlcetton .
·
Ctnctllt tlons.
corrtctlons eccepttd first day of
pubtlc:atlon .
• llEOULioTIONS
Tht Publlll'ltr rtstrves
the rlaht to tdlt or nltct
any ldl deemed obltctlonal. Tht publiSher
will not bt rtaponslblt for
mor.t than one lnc:orrect
lnttrtlon .
RATES
For Wtnt Ad Strvlct
S ctnfl per word one
Insertion .
Minimum Cl'\trgt Sl.OO.
u cents p•r word three
consec.utlve lnltrtlona.
26 cents r,•r W!'l'd Ilk
cOftsttutlvt nsertlons.
25 Per Ctnt Discount on
paid tdl 1nd ~ads paiCI
within 10 dtys.
CAilD OF TH.ANKS
I OIIT\I.Aolt:V
$2 .00 lor $0 wordf
For~. M . 24, tm
,··~~~N~e~drrron.r weird 3
AAII!I (Morch 21·Aprll 11) cents.
ILIND AOS
Unless they are financial elf.. '
Additional 2St . Charge
perta, don't let anyone advise
per Advertisement.
you on Investments or ·dlabur..
OF"CI HOURS
sing lundo today. Thlo Includes
1: 30 a .m. to 5 :00 p.m.
· friends artd family .
Dally, 1:30 a.m. to 12:00
Noon Saturday.
TAUIIUI (Aprii .20·MIJ 20) The
~hone todov 992 ·2156.

S.alilll c.rier

Wlnted In

Stric••,.

Free Prizes.
Phone 9_92-2156.

Intentions ot new acquaintances
today may not be as honorable
as yours. Try to analyze their

motives.

GI!MINI (MOJ 21.J- 20) Ac·
tlons taken In anger or out of
spite will almost certainly

boomerang. Your secret today Is
to be forgiving and understan-

ding .
CANCER (.luno 21-.luly 22) Be
realistic regarding you r
aspirations today. Things may
not happen as quickly or be as
rewarding u you anticipated.

LI!O (JuiJ 21-Aug. 22) In an Important C$re8r matter today the

odds are Ukely to be stacked
agatost you. Take care how you
handle the situation.
You're a little harsh today on

subordinates and co-workers.
You may come down on them
too heavily and tater be sorry.

LlaRA (Sopt . 2S.· Qcl. U)
Neither a borrower nor a lender
be today. The former cAtegory
mli..y put your· reputation In

jeopardy and the latter lirlngs
only headaches.
ICOIIPIO COot. 24-Nov. 22) It
doesn't nBcessarlly follow that
your opinions reflect those of the
majority today. You could lind
this dellnltely Isn't the case. ,
8AGITTAAiU8 (Nov. 23·Doc.
21) If using new tools or
material&amp; today, ba espsclally
safety-conscious. Something
urlous could happen If your
work habits are shoddy.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-.lon. 11)
Departing from your usually pru ..
dent financial practices today
could prove disastrous. Hew to
the sate and conservative line.
AQUARIU~ ~~~n. 29;;Fob.

It) II

yoU have anything Important to

do today, go it alone as much as
poselble. Asslst'ants would only
hamper your productivity.

PIICII (Fob. 20-Morch 20)
Rivet your aftentlon on what
you're doing , afoot or In a car .
It's the kind of day you could
ab•entmlndedly walk Into a

~~
Fob. 24.• ~177

This year, someone who Is well -

established may approach you
an Interesting p1 c~oaltlon .
On the other hand , avoid
Johri ny-come-latelys or fly-by·
nights.
w~h

(Are you a Pisces? Bernice
Osol has written a sl)fJCial Astra ~

Graph LeNer tor you. For your

992-s.tl• . Sadly missed by Bue

and Nellie Brawn .

Young's Carpeting
Roulo 3,

1973 CAMARO CPE .
$2948
Air condlllonlng, 8 cylinder, power steering, radio,
sport wheels, good rubber, dark rod . .

kave o service to offer ,
want to buy or t.ell some thing ,
ae looking for work. . , . or
whalever . , • you'll get results
foster with a Sentinel Want Ad .
Colt 992·2156 .

1976 MALIBU CPE .
$3148
Automatic. air conditioning, 8 cylinder, power steering
and brekes, radio, good rubber, light green .

l~m.,.y,

0.

Free Estimates
Installation. samples
brought to your home
with no charge.

1976 TORIN04 DR. SEDAN
$2148
Air, automatic, power· steering, B cylinder, good
rubber . light green .

C..rpoi-Lino.-Tilt
Phono Mlkt Yo'"'g II .
m-2206 or m-mo

Will do odd jobs , roofing, pain .
ting. gutter work . Phone 992 -

~~I~:~~t'k~C •·

.

~·

~~ll.i.i tl ' ' ' :' •

-

COAL, limes tone. and calcium
chloride and calcium brine for
dust control ond spedot mixing
salt for formers. Mcin Strbet.
Pomeroy , Ohio or phone 992·
389 1.
COAL for sate . Open b days per
week and evening5 , For lurt her
informoticn coli (614 ) 367 -7~38 .
APPlES. FITZPATRICK ORCHARD .
STATE ROUTE 689. PHONE
WIL KESVill E, (614 ) 669 , ~785 .
FUllER Brush Produc ts for sole.
Phone9'n ·3410.
CAMPER , $600. Al so. horse
tro iler , $~50 . Phone (61 .4) tJq{J .
3290.
STEREO, new om":tm lm 5lereo·
radio combination $129.95 or
terms. Coll992 -39b5.

Weddings

South .,..

Truss

Co.

MolHI.. Homes for Sak
1977 GOVERNOR 14 x 70. 3
bedrms. both end •;, unfu mish·
ed. May ren t lot. Phone
7&lt;2·2577 .
BRAND NEW 14 x 56 3 bedroom
Elcona total elec., total Wrap
Fom.(o r. e~Ctro insula tion
package . the bes t lur11i1ure .
carpet , mirrOred wardrobe
doors . wi red for drye r, plumb·
ed for .washer and, separate ·
utility room. We hoOJe hod this
one m uc ~ roo lang, conse·
quently , we ore otfering the
following deaL This hon1e Is
pr1ced at $8595 to include
delivery ond set ·vp . In addition
to this exceplionot deal , we
will do one of 2 things: Make
the first b payments for in . not
to e~~:ceed $500 or we will in·
stall o washer and dr11er f ree of
charge. - Con be seen ot
Kingsbury Home Sales , 11 00 E.
Ma in St., pom eroy, Ohio.

ACRE farm . 'I rooms , bath ,
l;&gt;orn , pond , a nd turn itu re priced all for '$18 ,500. One mi le
trom l on -sville,Ohio on C.R . 10.
Pi".,ne 742·2b68 .
'

b '/,

uQihei97-A TTENTION
':'
WITH OVER AN
OF GROUND,
IB\LITY
OF
ONAL LOT. 2 BR .
MUMt:,
CARPETED ,
Y LARGE UTILITY
ROOM PLUS SHOP ,
LARGE BACK PORCH
LOOKING OUT INTO THE
WOODS . PRICE $2A,OOO_.,
804 EWMain
Pemetoy
992 -2298
After Hours C. II
992-7133
CONTACT:
Lois Pauley '
Branch Manager

TEAFORD
Virgil B. Sr., Rullor
216 E. Second SlrHI
Pomeroy, Oloio 45769

Phonem-ms

NEW LISTING - Like new
3 bedroom home. Beautiful
kitchen wllll Obi . sink.
stove, utility room, large
gorege, workshop spste.
near Tuppers Plains. 21-M
RT. T24 WEST - Older
home, 4 bedrooms. both,
level lot. gas heat. corporl
and garden In Rutland.
MIDDLEPORT -· Nice 3
bedrooms with closets.
dining room, nice kitchen
wllll dishwasher, disposal
end breakfast nook . Full
basement, S&lt;reened porch
end garage. $29,l00.

. . ..

Service

MAIN
POME·ROY, 0.
NEW ·LISTING - 1 floor
pian , 2 bedrooms. din ing
room , bath, nice kitchen,
range &amp; oven, lot of
cabinets,
carpeting ,
paneling. basement &amp;
garage, porches . Lovely at
just $16,500.00.
NEW LISTING - Old
Route 33 - 5.64 acres of
ground, utilities available.
Excellent lor building
sites, see It today. $6,667.00.
NEW LISTING - Old
est a bllshed bus lness,
owner retiring, Home and
Auto
business .
For
Information please drop
Into llle office.
MOBILE HOME - With '12
acre
of
ground .
2
bedrooms . large living
room, very nice dlne in
kitchen, metal storage
bldg . 12x60 and ready to
move Into S7 ,500.00.
SPIRAL STAIRCASE Lovely 1'12 story frame.
Excellent
neighborhood,
1112 baths, 3 bedrooms.
family room . carpeted, NG
forced air furnace . Cqrner
lot. Look just $23,935.00.
DOUBLE LOT ~ Ranch
type, 3 large bedrooms.
closet space galore. both ,
lovely kitchen w.dlnlng bor
and air cond ., sewing
room , full basemen! wshower and 2 car garage,
NG forced air heal .
$19,500.00.
HOW TO SELL YOUR
HOME PROMPTLY ... AT
FULL MARKET VALUE
LIST WITH CLELAND
REALTY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER .
HANK CLELAND
ASSOCIATE
.
992-2259 . 992-2568
985-4112

,

LITI'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

READABL£

LITTLE

RATES

ER···'tOU''W'E.
5LEEPtHG

lifE~

RHCIIYI!It, 0. Ph. 37a..2~ .
1-23-1 mo. Pd . .

TIME-·
h\1\YBf THAi'.S
.,.y ••
A LOtiG

BLA · A · A~ . .

TASTE IS
O!FFEREHT---

1H IS

;;.:,=:c...

Rcd111 &amp; Sidil&amp;

.•

Room Additions
Galaals

·'•

Homes 'Built

Froii Esllmoln
Work Guorentlld
742-2328

~

'

(;41

,caw; OtJ

I

T6~\_.

~LL ~00\.!T HIM!

GASOLINE ALLEY

(w;~r;yo.;;risiairsY~an~W1~;are:-""l·
.. .and what are
ljou doinq toniqht?

__

~

~

CENTRAL REALlY CO.
New Listing - Nice 2 story country horne, conlalnlng 7
rooms and l'h belh, mostly carpeted. Kitchen has ail
new bulli·in cablnats with bronze stove &amp; refrlg. to .
match . New porches and all new alum. siding and
storm windOws. FA natural gas furnace and drilled
well, garden space. This house Is warm and ready for
lmme&lt;tiale occupsncy, come teke a took just $18,900.
Racine - Good J bedroom and dining room, low
utilities. even a garden space. Priced at only 18,500.

ctiitftr - Ever dream of owning your own got (
course? Here's your chance lor you or your friends to
own a nice rolling golf c:our111 50'h acres, 9greens, nice
modern club house, outbuilding wllh ell spraying end
seldlng equipment, ,.,.. some mowing end 1 little
repair work on golf course. This could be purchased
with the 1!3 acres llsled above ond developed Into a
· beautiful 18 hole golf course. call for eppt.
We Need Farm Uind
Call Jimmy Deem AI 949-2388

..

RISING STAR Kennel Boo rding .
lndoor·Outdoor runs, grooming
all breeds, dean sonlt_ory
facilities. Cheshire. Phone (61•)
~7·0292 .

.

--··--~-----

HOOF HOLlOW.- Buy , sell , trade
or trllin hones. RUTH REEVES,
_!folne~cp~,~~l':i ') 698·329((
AKC COLLIE Puppies, Joble and
white , 1 male and 2 females .
Hove been wormed and shots
s tarted , Call 949 · 2571
weekday1 ofter 4 p.m. or
I onvtime Saturday and Sunday .

:

:

.•

.

:

itS to name. t:reir
plane-t: a mi/(:'ofl

tifl1~.

~

:

on!~

\

. me-'?-

:3

tor-

WHAT

'ft~ltM f~'\t ~THAT SCRAMBLED WOIID GAME

~ ~ ~~ ,.

crock

REVVE

38 Original
sinner

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the lbree L's, X fm· lhe two O's, elc. Single letters.

apostrophes, the length :md formati on

or

the words are all

hints. Earh day the code letters are dillerent.

e

YOU PULLED A
fAST ONE: ON
HIM?

VM

NV

XOA

VM

OEH
VXOV

PM M H

10

AXYDLBAAXR
L{)NGFEI, LOW

Is

A B R U,

byHonriArnoldandllobl..oe

Unserambie these to~r Jumblesl
one letter to each square, to form
four ordinary words.

37 Ending for "-;c+-+-+-t--tcook or
''

YOE

6:{}{}-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6 :J()...NBC News 3,.1, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News B, 10; Once Upon a Classic 120.33.
7;{}{}-Truth or Cons . 3; America; The Young Experience 4; Bowling for Dollars 6; Muppel Show 8;
News 10; To Tell the Truth 13; Wild Kingdom 15;
Almanac 20; Americana 33.
7;3{)-Hollywood Squares 3.~ ; Ohio State Loffery 6;·
Price Is Right 8; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33;
Wild Kingdom 10; Nashville on the Road 13; Dolly
15.
8 :oo-F anlastlc Journay 3,4, 15; Welcome Back, Kotter
!3; College Basketball 6; Waltons 8,10; Classic
Theatre 20; Masterpiece Thealre 33.
8:3{)-What's Happening 13.
9:{}{}-Best Sellers 3,~,15,• Barney Miller 13; Hawaii
Flve-0 B; Classic Theatre 33; Ten Who Dared 10.
9;3o-Tony Randall !3.
to:oo-Streetsof San Francisco 6,13;" Barnaby Jones 8;
Honeymoonars' Trip to Europe 10.
·
·
10:JO.-News 20.
11 ;OO-News 3,4,6.8, !0,13,15; MacNeii·Lehrer Report
33; Woman 20.
11 : 3()-J ohnny Carson 3,4, 15; Academy of Country
Music Awards 6,13; Kojak .B; Mary Hartman 10;
ABC News 33.
.
12:oo-Movle " Water melon !\olan" 10; Janakl 33.
12;40-McCioud 8.
1:oo-Tomorrow 3,.4; News 13.

.

QNVX

X NY·

AXMDRH

ABB

RNTB

XB
XB

ORQOZA

XOA

W M Y L 0 E Z . - W X 0 I R .B A

BTOEA
XDPXBA
Yesterday's Cryploquote o IT TAKES TWO THINGS TO
BOWL OVER A TREE - A HEAVY WIND OUTSIDE AND
DECAY INSIDE. - ART SISSON
Cl1977 Klnl Fulures Sy ndi.cate, Int .

I I I
IANSAUEj
I I K

II
IVEL£N~ I I
V" --,

"- ..-l

Now arrange theclrdod lett.,. to
form the surprise answer, as aug ..

gestod by the above cartoon.

Print IUrpriManawerhere:
Yesterday's

a Ill I )

(lvlswers tomonow)
Jumbles: RURAL GRIME TURKEY CLOTHE
•. He "drewtheHno" tllrHpolltlcal
~. swor. lnlllltullonsl- THEIR "RUlER"

I

BARNEY

.• •

.:

l:~

Cllle Sit. At 5 P.M.

RUnAND FURNITURE
ARNOLD GRATI

8 wrcls

HARM 1&lt;/N
IT DO f--

l'DNIDS FIND$ our

~........

741-2211

Mq votce

and so will crou

thQ~

failed ~tdth

.•• £1UT
WHE:N

.

Thun&lt;!IY,IIII Nooo&gt;

~.

wds.)

pulpit

0

Rut lion.

\

arbiter

CRYPTOQUOTES

·RUTLAND
·FURNITURE

11001115:00

30 Ring

and such

Clll742-2211
TALK TO
WENDELL ORATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

Mon., TU.s., Well.

home

18

35 More sunburned
36 Old

sq""r• yant.

•
•.
:••. .......... ,..... .=
H fRii)AY TIL 8 ·. !l
. ..
...,....·:
...............,...........
e•

12 Goad
16 Dobbin's

34 Bullets

Grilli, gold, Nd, blul, 1'1111.:
Da II yourself, wlllo pad.
ding; S7.95 sq. yd. Willi
poddlniJ lnolallod SI.U

:

.

wds.)

. Yesterday's Answer
27 Ship
29 Fashion
with gold
31 Jane
2% Ram's-born
Austen
!rumpel
novel
Z3 Tune
32 Spwne
25 Bottling
establish34 Arab
ment

20 lnferlile
21 Overlay

26 Gold, 1n

(2

~

..

(2

II Overeat

Co. 20,33.

happy
family

Hl-lD SHMi

=

wds.)

33 - big

SOl NYLON

i~.Ji~:::0=-e,;;~

(3

4 Devour
5 Agree
6 Catcher's
vulnerable
spot
l ·Ankles
10 Apprise

25 sleuth
Fictional

'

'10.95

-=·=·=---. =..;;::::: =--

DOWN
I Cheva lier
song
2 False god
3 Proclaim

Genoa

!~~~~~-~ "

~

The answer is that since the
invention of contract in 1925
lhe bid tor the greater number
of tricks has always been the
winning bid. Between bids for
the same number the rank is
notrump , spades , hearts,
diamonds and clubs .
·.
(Do you have a question
lor the experts? Write "Ask
rhe Jacobys " care of this
newspaper. The Jacobys will
answer individuar questions
if stamped. sell-addressed
envelopes are .enclosed. Tho
most infaresring questions
will be used in rhis column
and will receive copies of
JACOBY MODERN.)

21 "Cielito - "
L 28 Stabilizing

'

-~

A New Jersey reader wants
to know why a bid of three
not ru mp that count s 100
doesn't outrank a bid of lour
clubs that counts 80.

South should have raised
two notrump to three instead
of bidding three diamonds . He
had honors in all suits and no
singleton . His three-diamond
bid got him to four spades and
gave Alan Sontag and Peter
.W eichsel a chance for some
successful razzl e-dazzle
defense.
It started with trick one .
Peter opened the deuce of
hearts . The five wa• played
f r o m dummy and Alan
falsecarded with the queen.
The play couldn 't foo l his
partner and did fool declarer
who look the Irick with the
ace and led the five of clubs .
Peter hopped right up with the
ace and led the deuce of
diamonds .
Peter knew South would go

ACROSS
1 Morsel
5 Vaudeville
feature
8 Concept
9 Jarred
13 Shed
II Moon
goddess
15 Indisposed
16 Attack
11" Burmese
statesman
19 Seedcase
20 To the point
%1 "Georgy -"
%2 Merciless
Z3 Burn a bit
24 Cut down

AI. lROMM CONST.

·_;,~..........--'--

Peter was sure to score the
setting trick with his jack.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

~

___ ___

THURSDAY , FEBRUARY 24, T977
6;0()-Sunrlse Semester 10. ·
6 ; 1 ~Farm Report 13.
6:2{)-Not for Women Only 13.
6: JG-OSU Overview 4; News 6; Sunrise Semester B;
Urban League 10.
6 ; 4~Mornl ng Report 3.
6;5{)-Good Morn ing , West Virginia 13.
6 : 5~Good Morning, Trl State 13.
7ooo-Today 3,4,15; Good !\olornlng America 6,13; CBS
News B; Chuck While Reports 10.
7: os-Porky Pig 10.
7;3{)-Winter School 10.
8o{}{}-School Wlthouf Schools 6; Copt. Kangaroo B;
Sesame Sf. 33.
8 o3{)-Winter Schoo.l Conti nues 10.
9o00-A.!\ol. 3; Phil Donahue 4,13,15; Andy Griffith 8.
9:3G-Cross.Wifs 3;. Concentration 8; Winter School
Continues 10.
!0 ;{}{}-Sanforcl &amp; Son 3.4.15; School Without Schools 6;
F&gt;rlce Is Rloht 8: Mike Doualas 13.
10:3{)- Hollv.wood Sguares 3,4,15; Winter School Continues 10.
ll oO{)-Wheel of Fortune 3.15; Elementary Science 4;
Double Dare8; Morning Show 13; Elec. Co. 20.
11 , 14-Math 4.
11 : 3~Shoof for the Stars 3,15; Happy Days 6,13;
Vocational Education 4; Love of Life B, lO; Sesame
St. 20.
11 : 5~CBS News 8; !lois. Flxlt 10.
12 :00-News 3,4,10,6; Don Ho 13; Name That Tune 15;
Divorce Court 8.
12 o3{)-Lovers &amp; Friends 3,15; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Sob
Braun 4; Search for Tomorrow B. to.
1; oo-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6,13; News 8;
Young &amp; the Restless tO; Not For Women Only 15 .
1oJ()...Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; Family Feud 6,!3; As
The World Turns e.10.
2:{}{}-$20,000 Pyram id 6,13.
2;3{)-Doctors 3.4.15; One Life to Live 6,13; Guiding
Light 8, 10.
3:00-Another World 3,4, 15; All In The Family B,IO;
Antique s 20.
3o15-General Hospital 6,13 .
3;3o-Match Game 8.10 ; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 2ll.
4:00-Misfer Cartoon 3; Lillie Rascals 4; Gong Show
t5 ; Mickey Mouse Club 6;\..ucy Show B; Sesame.St.
20,33; Movie "The Curse of Frankenstein" 10;
, Dinah 134; 15-Liffle Rascals 4.
4;3o-My Three Sons 3; Partr1dge Family 4;
Emergency One 6; Partridge Family 8; Flints tones
15.
.
5:{}{}-BigValley 3; My Three Sons 4; Brady Bunch 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Star Trek T5.
5o3{)-Adam·12 4.13 ; News 6; Family Affair 8; Elec.

~IM'tJf'd'

•

Quality Work At
Reasonable Rates

~·--.--·..,..~

Chester - 113 acres farm, ao ·a cres tillable land, nice'
story term house, 7 rooms and bath, all hardwood
floors end bastmont. Barn end other outbuildings, 2
ponds. A nice loytna farm priced to go. Locetld neer
Chllfler. cell for Appl.

WATCH THIS AD TO SEE
THE NEW CHANGE .

''

HOM ESITES for sole . I acre and EXCAVATING, dozer, backhoe BRADFORD . ,Auc tiQneer, Com· ;
up. Mlddleport1 near Rutland ,
ond ditcher. Cha.rles R. Hot-"' plete Service . P.hone 9~9-24~7 ~
Co11992·74BI.
field Bock Hoe Service
or .9419-2000. Roc1ne, Oh+o, Cntt
Rutlo,
n
d,
Ohio.
Phone
742
-20os.'
Bradford.
---.---,
·NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 baths ,
- . -·
a ll eiec .. 1 acre . Middleport , SEPTIC Systems Installed by ELWOOD BOWERS. REPAIR dose to Rutland . Phone 992lic"ensed installer . Shepard
Sweepers , toasters . irons, all ,
7&lt;81.
!moll appliances ." lawn mower .
Contractors. Phone ?42-2409.
~
-·- - ~--· · --·--···~
neic t. to State Highwoy Goroge
SMAll form for sole . 10% down, SEPTIC TA NKS cleaned. Modern
on Route 7. Phone (61.4 ) 985·
owner financed. Monroe Coun_s?~ i~li~~992: 3_?~4 .
3825.
ty , W. Vo . Phone (304 ) 772·
Will
do
roofing
,
construction
.
REMOO
c:c
ElcIN
:-G
'"'."p'"'tu_m
_b-:1-ng-, heating
3102 . , (304}772·3227.
plumbing and hec~t i ng . No iob
Qnd all types of general repair.
COUNTRY farmland with secludtoo Iorge or too small. Phone
Work guoro!lleed 20 years ex ed woods. water and good oc!~~·2_
3~ · - _ _ __ ___
perience. Phone 992·2•09 .
cen in Monroe County, W. Va .
CARPENTER
,
flooring
.
ceiling,
SEWING MACHINE Repolrs, str·
·S1,000 down , co li (304) 772·
paneling . Phone 992·2759.
3102 or (304 ) 772-3227.
. ·all makes, 992·2284 . The
-··
--···--..
.
... - --- . MOBILE H9fne Repair, Elec ., 't'ice
F~:~bri c
Shop , Pomeroy .
Commercial property apprax . 17
Authorized Singer Scles and
plumbing and heating . Phc;me
acres, level lond, located at
992·5858 . ..;.
~ervice._~e sh~-~~_en Scissors .
Tuppers Plains on Ohio , Rout~ .. '··-7. Pnonel61&lt;) 667-1&gt;304.
E·XCAVATING, dozer, loadtr oncf :
ElECTRONIC
T.V.
CliNIC
,
New
.
..
.
-·
backhoe work ; dump trucks •
T.V. shop. Electronic T.V. Clinic
3 bedrooms. 1/'t baths. large livServic• caiJ. $5.95. Color, 8 &amp; W and lo·boys for hire: will haul •
ing room , dining room qnd kit·
fill dirt , to soil, limestone and
anten na systems stereos. etc.
chen , fully cdrpeted. Phone
grovel. Call Bob or Roger Jef· ·
572 South Third, Middleport.
992·3129. or. 992·5&lt;34.
..
fers . day phone 992·7089 , '
Phone 992 ·6306. Carry in and
NEW 3 bedroom house, built-in
night phone 992-3525 or 992. s~~e~o.n!_r: ____ - - - kitchen , both and '!,, Phone
HOWERY
AND
MARTIN
Ex·
742-2306 or contact MilO 8. Hut·
231i2iii
.
co ... oti ng , septic systems , p5ii
chison. Rutland , Ohio.
do1er, backhoe , dump truck,
SAVE ON
ONE LOT in Syracuse . 'Phone
limestone. grovel. block top '
992·3714.
paving, Rt. 143. Phone 1 (614)
CARPniNG
698·7331.
TUPPERS PLAINS . Ohio. New
three bedroom house. living OIL , GAS Furnaces , oil burneri, :
roOm , Iorge kitchen , ceramic
repair, and ports tor trailers '
both , carpeted . attached
and homes . 2-4 hour service,
INSTALLED
garage. Iorge lot. $22 ,900Phone 843·2165.
·
..
-·----..:..
..,.._
R•llor
$T4.95
.Phon•.[614)667-6.304.. •...
HOUSE PAINTING, interior and
3 BEDROOM house, carpeted ex exterior. Quality work at
Sq. Yd.'
cept kitchen , utility room , total
reosoncbl e rates . Phone
Everyday m-y sivef."
elec .. aluminum siding . fen ced
742·2328.
Good chalco cOlors • .
bac k yard , fully insulated,
washer and drver . HoOk·LPs. EXCAVATING , Bod~hoes , Dozer,
trencher, low Boy, dump truck .
See ot 169 Beech St., Midtrucks
, septic systems. Bill
dleport or call 992-7 120 or
Pullins . Phone 992-2478 doy or
9~ 9 -2 150 from 8ti115.
12 or 15 Fl.
•
night .

WOULD YOU - Buy five
ecres with an 01~ 2
bedroom house, wlih full
blsement, cistern, electric,
In the slicks for $5,000?

HOUSE
FULL
OF
FURNITURE. ALL OR
PART. NEW LISTINGS
WELCOMED.

PARTS - LABOR
GUARANTEED

'''

Spoclal - 3 bedroom arid otlachid geroge, total
elec:lrlc home under conslrucllon on·'I• acre lot. Owner
will finish In 30 days for buyer or will sell " as Is" . May
take trede. Located rwar Chester.

BUILDING
LOTS
Wiler, electric available at
Rock Springs, Five Points
and Syracuse.

4.

.

• A.IIZ·ZI74

RESTAURANT - Now
In an exco llenl
locat ion . A·ll equipment
needed for the operation .
Want only $13,l00.

opentln~

Pass 2 t
Pass 2 olo
Pass 2 N. T. Pass
Pass 3 •
Pass
Pass Pass Pass
Opening lead - 2 If

Automatic
Transmission Service

. monufoclurod housing.
Double wldol I moduler
' homts by Skyllno a Fuqua
Hornn Inc.
1100 E. Main St.
l'llmoroy, Ohio
992-7034
Hrs. 9:ooa .m.
To Dlltk

.............. lltol

West

SWAIN'S

Kingsbury tbne
Sales Inc.
We handle only 1111 Joost ln

Radiator .-.-..

I.3.

o!oH
Both vulnerable
North East Soutb

By Oswald &amp; James Joeoby

AI 100 Kerr St.
Pomeroy,O.
1·17-lmo ..

EXPERIENCED

o!o 643

• Q9

"Tllo OrlglntiOI'I
Not T1lo lmlttlors"
2-:z:J. 1 rno.

614-992-2798

12-22-4 mos .

t6 5

011 KQ1085J

At
992-2206 or 992-7630

STRIPPING, IEPAIRING
REFINISHING &amp;
UPHOLSTERING

A utl•nd , Ohio 4577S~h. C6t4l 74l-2409
W• Deliver

I' QJ7643

II A 9 8

ALLEYOOP

Phone "'ke Young ·

NOTICE! ! !

Box28-A .

EAST
olo A7

SOUTH (D)

Carpel &amp; Upholstery

lAR!Il,!!~DER

K Q lO

WEST
o1oH2
11 2
eKJ J2
o!o A9872

Routo l. l'llmoroy, 0.

WI-

4thtiSEiBARJJt

o1o

Young's .c.,etilll r

19b9 CHEVROL ET Bisquoine; 1966 '
BUICK Electra . .225; 2 Rokan
MIItr iolbikes . Phqne 949-2432 ,
SllllfiC.SGffiiT
1974 PlYMOUTH GOLD Duster , 6
GUTTEIS -II;$
cyl. au tomatic, power steering , .
(614) 915-4155
less tha n 22,000 miles . e.wChnttr, Ohio
ce ll ent cond ition . Phone
10·11·1 mo (Pd)
Pl. tt2·Jtll 4 1~. ~
992·7797.
,·..----"-;..;.;...;.;.;=;_;;;....1
' IMPALA. AIR~
1971 CHEVROlET
-- · ··
CONO ., Auto., Good cond. , ~
~
$850. Ph . 7.4 :2·2488.
I
-·•· :mu ,·. . . ,
1971 OLDS C;tloss 2 de . n.L . .
bucket seats, console w1 ~h h1 s
TRUSSE'S
ond hers Hurst sh 1f ter . .
oul9mot ic on floOr , built-in
ANY P("JJCH
ta pe player ~ air , oir induction ,
' ANY SIZE
fibe rglass hood . Excelh:ml con·
Qh'
dition. Green with block in115\d'll . IJ
terior : Call . George Grate.
o.a...
' Phone
.
Rutland , Ohio 742·2103 after
NIIUH _ ~
MODERN
CHEMICAL
6 3o p.m.
lpcated in Langsville

I

Bo$T PAL~

:

RU"1LANOe

i

'"

10 :00-Tales of the u Unexpected 3.4.15; Charlie's
Angels6, 13; Albert Paley ; Metalsmith 33; News 20.
10 :3{)-Montage 20; Book Beat 33.
11 :{}{}-News 3,A.6.8.10, 13,15; MacNeii·Lehrer Report
33; Monty ~ylhon's Flying Circus 20.
11 :3()-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Rookies 6, T3; Columbo 8;
; BC News 33.
12 : ~ovle "The Stripper" lO; Janakl 33.
12 :4{)-Mystery of the Week 6, 13.
1 : ~Tomorrow 3,4.
2o1{)-News 13.

right up with dummy's ace .
South did just that and
proceeded to cash dummy's
top clubs in order tq discard
that same queen of diamonds .
Then South led a lrwnp from
dummy.
Alan ducked and South was
in with the king. He led a
heart with every intention of
finessing dummy 's 10. After
all he was sure that Peter's
original heart lead had been
from the jack .
At t hi s point the hand
collapsed . Peter ruffed and
led a fourth club .' Alan ruffed
with the ace of trwnps while
poor South discarded a heart.
Nol that it did him any good.
Alan led back a heart and

23

• 96
II K 10 5
+ A 10874

Superior
Steam Extraction

IIUIAIQIUT

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

~

NORTH

mo.

--IAIIIa
S1lllll
Wl-&amp;0001$

Schools

Sale.\ .

WHY 5HOUI.D
THAT MAI&lt;E ME
HAPPY-- IF IT
COS.T5 !\olE MY

HIM A5
PI&lt;:E51DENn ... THEN!&lt;WS 15 Ac e OVI'R
THE COMPA~Yl

WHAT '$ TO
Cl'LoeRATE'

or 949-2860
FrH Esllmtloo
No Sundar C.lll PIHse

,_..._

Commercial

McKEE PICKED YOV
TO 5UCCEED

Phone 949-2101

Stevenson 4,15.

Cr088 ruff to bear

CAPTAJN EASY

A local contractor

llllllllill51nlca

Aerial

•

SIDING

I

Dollars 6; Pop Goes the Country B; News 10; To Tt\1
the Truth 13; Mayor's Repgrt 15; Consumer Sur·
vlval Kit 20; Big ·Green Magazine 33.
7:30-Dolly 3; S100,000 Name That Tune li; Match
Game PM 6; $25,000 Pyramid B; MacNeil-Lehrer
~eport 10,33; The Judge 10; Break the Bank 13.
8 : ~rlzzly Adams 3,A3, 15; Bionic Women 6, 13;
Gunsmoke B; Nova 20.33; Good Times 10.
B;JO.-Jocksons tO.
9:oo-cPO Sharkey 3,4,15; Bareffa 6,13; Movie "The
Parallax VIew" B, IO; Childhood 33; Soundstage 20.
9;3{)-We Think You Should Know J; Mclean

WH~ AT BRIDGE

Si ing 1
Storm
Windows
&amp;
Insulation.
Call Professionals

lllwn

PHOTOGRAPHY

,

1

FR

PROFESSIONAL

AU:tu

&amp;.

ECOIIOLita HOME
INSULATION, INC.
1111 Wotlllngton IMI.
Bllpre, Phont (614) 4237564 · day, or "2-6039
IYfiii"IS•
llown In llborjllals· w1111
and attics. 20 Pet. Savhlgo
on Vinyl l .nd SIMI Sidings.
Ropt.comtllt and storm
windows. l3 years actual
IKpelrwu:t.
F\ntnclng Avalt.bt.
C. A. Newman, Prn.
1-25-1 mo.. pd.

2·23·1 mo.

.-n •

.

.

IF YOU

· . Pomeror

'

.

WfllNESDAY, FEBRUARY23, 1977
_
5:oo-Sig Valley J; My Three Sons 4; Brady Bunch 8;
Mister Rog~rs' Neighborhood 20,33; Star Trek 15.
5:JO.-Adam .t2 &lt;; Family Affair 8; News 6; Adam. l2
13.
6ooo-News J,4,6,B,I O,t3,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6oJO.-NBC News J,A,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Vegetable Soup 20; Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 33.
7;{}{}-Truth or Cons . ~; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowli ng for

Business SeMJices

omeroy
Uf'
Motor Co.
QUAlm
nL
'. * '

7&lt;2·2217 .

.
Astro -Graph, p.o. Box 48P, NOTICE OF APPOINTMEN
Cue No . 12027
Radio City Slotion, Now York, Estate of George Schuler
N.Y. 10019. Be sure to ask tor Deceutd.
ENGINE, tro rtsmiuion and
Notice Is hereby ; lven that
Pisces Vofume 5)
radiator for ·1969 Dodge, 318;
Bernard · v . Fultz of M id ·
! NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE A&amp;'I'N.)
also 1974 Buick Rego12 door, 11,
dleport, Ohio , h n been duly
vinyl roof. 32.000 miles, ex appointed E•ecutor of the
celltmt condilion . Bvilt-in tcpe
Estate . of George Schuler ,
player . cruise control , lilt
deceased , late of R . D.,
Tile Alma!ae
wheel, opera windows . •ss
Middleport, Me igs County ,
engine. $2850. Phone 992-2280.
OhiO.
cr·edllors
are
required
to·
Unlled l'rellrl IntemaUooal
file their claims with said · {;ONV ENIENT HOU_SE, antique
bufft;tt . building t/ x T . Phone I
, Today II Wednelday, Feb. tlduclarv with in three months.
(30&lt;) 882·2852.
Dated this Jrd Clay of
23, the 5tlh day of tm with
February 1917 .
FARMAll SUPER A Cultivator's
311 to follow.
mower, plow . Coli after 7 p.m.
Ma ,nlng 0 . Webster
Tile moon Ia aj!Jroachlng
9&lt;9·2870 .
Judge
Ill lint quarter.
Bar &amp; 2. bor stools . has paddi ng
The morning stars are {2} 9, 16, 23, 31C
around edge , B ft. long, 4 doors
M«ccii'Y and Mars.
for storage out ol new trailer,
• Tile evening stars are
S7S. Also, double axle, wheels
ond tires from trailer, good for
, Ve11111, Juplloer, 800 Saturn.
making trailer to ha ~l heavy
PUCO Cut No .
'1bole born 011 lhll day are
e qu ipment , $75 . Phone
71-632 - T~ . PEX
.tlllda' tile lip oll'lleel.
9flHI90.
LEGAL NOTICE
German &lt;""upoeer George
Notice Is hereby gjven that
Patty Triplett and 163 other
Frederic HaDdel II'U born subscribers
~il8 A
ot tl'\e Portland
Feb. 23, I.Aii.
Exchanae
of
General
Telephone Company of Ohio
On tbla day In hlllory:
wn H R sof l[ Nl R'
ha\fe flied a ·complaint with
In 1M2, I JapMele lllbma· the Public Util ities Com .
rlne ftrtd li llbella at an oil minion of Ohio seeking the Lot l'llm1n1y Undmtrk
ot non-optional
soflt11 a condition your
.rtiiJay Santa Barbara, establlsP'Iment
two.way extenCieCI area ser .
walor
and a Co-op wator
Clllf., 2'&gt;1 monlhl after Pearl vice between the Portland soflt11or,
Model UC-XVI.
exchange
at
General
Harbor wu au.ebd.
Telephone Company of Ohio
In lNI, Iii memlten ol the .-.d tht Chester Exchange of Now Onlyt279.05
1M11 Dlvlakll ol tile U.S. Western Resrrve f elephone Ul US fHI your w•lor ·
. Tl'\e commission
Marina
planted
ail Company
FrH.
has scheduled this metter ,
Amtrican Oag atop MI. case No . 76· 632- TP · ~E X. for
Landma~t
Sarlbacbl on the Paclllc public ht•rlno on Wednesda y,
!\olarch 30, 1977; ot 9o30 A.M.;
f:.j
,Jack
W
.
citM)',
Mlr.
illand of Iwo Jlma.
at Council Ch•mbers , VIl lage
Phlnt m-2111
Hall , Pomerov. Ohio, with
In -aiTMd
· Prelldent
Richard
..
Thursday , March 31, 1977
Nlml
In Belllfum
to re~trvtd
for continuation If CARPET. BREAKFAST Sol. club
necn11ry. At 11'\,is hearing ell
tour ol Eurape.
choirs , Magndvo.w &amp;lee. organ.
parties Of Interest will be
2 end tables. Phone 992-'!47b.
In 1m, Prlllidlnt Nboo afforded
an opportunity to
cmferred In Nbl(l with present evidence rtll!vant to 1%7 NAMCO Mobi le Home, 12 x
57, two bedrooms. gas fvrnaca ,
Olinele Pr&lt;llller Chou ER- th il mat ter . Further In·
formation m1y be obtelned by
oir conditionet . portly furnish .
Ial.
1.1'
addressing an In quiry to the
ed and corpeted. $4,300, Phone
Public Utflltles COmmiss ion of
130&lt;} 773·5131 .
otllo,
110
E
est
Broad
Strut,
.
A (boupt for tile day: Columbus. 0h50 43715.
PIGS FOH sn le . Also. 1'165 Ford
Tbomu Jeffenon aid,
Statio11 Wagon Cnll IJ,.f1.7857.
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
''When • man e •• • COMMISSION OF OHIO
Lit&lt;,_: NEW. 4 F ire~ ton &lt;t Tow" k
pabUc trUII, h« should BV : Ra ndall G Applegate.
Ca•mtry . 8.00 ~ \6.5 10 pty r ir~ ~
Secretary
Cflllldlr blmltlf .. pubillc
..... ith &lt;'•ght t"lolfo ' llfl\o $'1(J ~ a ~h
Pl,one 9&lt;r.l·349A .
~."
!2} 23 ti l 2. 9, lie
(

-

TWOlostCOON
Oogs In Racine areo
Friday night . Phon•

copy send 50 cents and a self·
addressed, stam,.d envelope to

....

@) 2 SIGNS,

'Mit DO Hi" Is m!s.sing. Part ;-------:-:o~::-::~
hound , white with brown and
block . 50 . Coil 992-S29P or

7&lt;09.
SEWING · Al TE RA TION S o
Upholstering ,
drapes
reasonable. 572 South Third
Ave., Mid dl epor t. Phone
992·0306.
PORTABLE WEIDER . locge and
small jobs. Con also thaw
frozen water pipes. Phone
NOTICES
7&lt;9·20&lt;6.
ATTN.: II
ALL HOUSEWIVES
HAVE YOU!Ilto;~~es done by an oc·
All Yard Still, Rummage,
countont . Also; now accepting
Porc;.h and Basement Porch
bookkeeping. Phone 992-6:106
end ltHment Stltl, etc .
or992 -61 73.
must bt paid In advance.
Get yours In tlrlv by
INCOME TAX Service, Wolloce
stopping by our office at
Russell , B ra dbur~ .
Col i
The Dally Sentinel , 111
992·7228.
Court St. or writing Box
729, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
ALL TYPES of upholstering . We
with your remittance . •
speclalilfl in antiques . Phone
992-3377 or 985-4274 anytime.
PIA NO TUNING. Phone lone
Dan iels, 9Q2 -7082 .
I
Will DO housecleaning. Call
NOW accepting pia no 51udenh ,
992·252&lt; .
beginners, intermediates, ad·
vanc&amp;d dudents. Call 992·
2270.
Fodtem: • ·
--- ·-··
NOTICE . Pratt's Meat Mkt.
(Piecsonton Meat Processing , 3 AND 4 RM . lvrnished and un·
lurnished opts. Phone 992·
Inc.} Custom Jiaughtering. ond
5&lt;3&lt;.
processing . Reta il , wholesole.
No appoinment necessor~ . Call COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork . Rl.
(614 ) 593-8655, hours, 9:00 till
33 , ten miles north ol Pomeroy .
6 :00 7 Pomeroy Road. Athen s.
large loiS with conaete-potios.
o n.
.sidewalks , runn ers and off
stree t parkiny . Phone 992.7479.
GUN SHOOT at the Racine Gun
Club every Sunday . 1 Ptn AVAtlABLE AT Rh.terside Apts. l
meah.
bedrm . oportment. $l(l0 per
.ASsorted
' f"Onth
. 2, bedroom opt ~. Sl33
RACINE FIRE Dept. will have a
per mon th. Eq ual Opportun ity
Gun,Sh6cit every Saturday night
Housing. Phone .992.3273.
6 p.m. Of their building in
Bashon , Ohio.
2 BEDROOM house in Rutland.
•·- - - . - -· . . -·- Coii992·5B5B .
PICTURES ARE forever . Coil The
Photo Ploce (Bob Hoeflich) 2 BEDROOM TRAILER, $30 week .
992-5292 .
A!l uti lities paid . Phone
992·332&lt;.
SHOOTING MATCH . just off Rt. 7
by ·poss near Rock Springs SMALL APT. in Middleport . Call
Cemetery, every Sunday. 12
992-~262 . Kor Cecil .
noon .
3 BEDROOM apt. furnished , vn·
furnish-ed . 128 Mill St. , Mid·
dlepart. Contact Ben Davidson
. .
over Spencer's Market or
phone l513} 731 ·41 •2 .
OLD furn iture, ice boXes . brau.
bedi . wall telephones and 5 RM S. AND both furni shed in
ports , or complee households.
_ lo~gsvitle . Phone 742·24041 .
Write f.J. . , 0 . Miller . Rt . .. .
Pomeroy . C?l'ii~ . ~all99? ·?~~ ·
CASfi paid lor all makes and
models of mobile homes .
Phone area code 614-423-9531. $25.00 PER Hundred stuffing
en velopes . Send sell ·
TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Pro·
addressed, stamped envw-lape .
ducts. Top price for standing
Edroy Mills . Box 188. Albany.
sawtimber . Coli Kent Hanby.
Mo. OU02.
1·&lt;46·8570.
I BEAMS and H Beams. 8. 9. ond
COINS, CURRENCY, tokens , old
10 inch . Call 992-7034.
packet wotches . and chains,
FIREWOOD,
$25 pickup lood.
silver ond gold. We need 1%.4
and older sll't'er coins. Buy . sell. - Del ive red ot reasonable
or trade ' Call Roger Wa rpsley. · distance . Phone 949-2590.
7&lt;2·2331.
,----:-----,
CASH! I! lac [vnk con. Fryes
FOR SALE
Truck and Auto . 24 HOUR
One good uud Gibson side.
WRECKER SE.RVICE ! Phohe
by-side refrigerator ... Sl15
7&lt;2·2081 .
New Co -Qp water sot POMEROY AUTO RECYCLING.
teners, mddel VC-SVI.
Only 1279.95
NOW BUYING SCRAP . Tum
One go'od ch1 in Homelite
junk autos into cosh . Also buy·
Chain Saw ... .
1130 .00
ing metals , balleries, etc.
Sa Ve sso .oo on a new
Open Monday . Tuesday .
Hotpoint Refrigerator
Weds., Friday , 8;00 . 4:30: .
1 Good Uud Hotpoint
Saturday 8 :00 · 12:00. Phone
Range
S100
992-b337 . Old Rt . 33 just across
Gru&amp;ser's Chipper.
---·-~

VIRGO (Aug. 23 · 8opt. 22)

Lomt and found

OH,
SPIRIT OF
SNUFFY'S
PAPPY--

THAT
AIN'T MY

Ol PAPPY!!

PAPPY!!

�12-Thel_?aUySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. 23,11177

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

:
I

Area Deaths
'

THELMA G. KISER
RACINE - Mrs. Thelma
Gladys Kiser, 62, Rt . 2,
Racine. died Tuesday at
Holzer Medical Center .
She was born Dec. 19, 1915
to lhe late Stephen and
Minnie Devrlck Hayes. She
was also preceded In death by
her husband, Freddie Erwin
Kiser, two sisters, and two
brothers.

Surviving are seven sons.
Okev. James, Howard and

~ROUTE

DRIVER NEEDED
IN
WEST VIRGINIA

!I Dust

storm rips through
Press ·- wrapped it around a omaU

By
United
Inte1118Uoul
Sprlngllke weather gave
way to ,snows In the great ,
Plains today and resldenta In
west Tens dus out from the
year:s first destructive dust
storm.
W. Va .; Mrs. Bonnie Varian,
"Dust Devil" winds ripped
Clifton, W. Va .; Mrs. Bar·
bar a Compton , Van5anl, Va .; through the Texas panhandle
two brothers, Holly Hayes. town of Speannan Tuesday,
Clendenin. W. Va . and Ray heavUy damaging eight bust·
Hayes, Dunbar, w. Va .; a nesses In a Shopping mall..
sister , Mrs . Ellie Scarbrough.
Long Bottom ; 28 grand - Gusta toppled the :!:!Moot
children and three great- traiiSI!IItting tower of radio
grandchildren .
station KBMF -FM and

Devld, all of Racine ; Char les.
Nel•onv ll le ;
Harol d.
Napoleon; and Roy, Grand
Forks, N. D.; sl • daughter s.
Mrs . Mar ie Norr is . Joan
Kl5er . Mrs . Phyll i s Randolph, all of Racine ; Mrs.
MaHle Rippetoe, St. Albans,

Mrs. Klsef was a member
of the Racine Baptist Chur ch.
Funeral services will be 2
p.m. Friday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev.
Freeland Norris officiating.
Burial will be i.n Letart Falls
Cemtery . Friends may call at
the funeral" home any time.

Across
from
Pomeroy-Middleport
area by · the Daily
Sentinel ..

CAll.
992-2156
For Appointment

SWARTZIU.
Pomeroy Emergency
Squad went Ill Mulberry Ave.,
Ill . 6:23 p.m. Tuesday for
Archie Swartz. who was ill.
He was taken to Holzer
Medi.cal Center. At 8:22a.m.
Wednesday, ·the squad went
Ill Bailey Run for Brenda
Templeton who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Th~

THE INN PLACE
ThursdJJy Nrght Special

'

building housing the station.
Winds guatlng to 'Ill miles
an hour were repqrted In
'"IQrl;, Teo., and winds
shattered · windows in
Amarillo.
~ow and blowing snow
spread from the Rockies Into
the ·Certtral Plains where
lejnperatures had reached
Into the .71111 on Mmday.
Heavy snow wamlnp were In
effect for northern Wisconsin
and Upper Michigan.
Travelers advlaorleo were

HOSPITAL NEWS
Velen• Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Tamara
Tallent, Racine; Ernest
· Stewart, Minersville; John
Gilland, .New Haven;
Dorothy Collins, Pomeroy;
Kimberly Kennedy, Middleport; Anna Russell,
Middleport; Victoria Cundiff,
Syracuse ; Mary Wallace,
Middleport. ·
Discharged
Brian
Haning, Martha Chambers,
Lori Wood, Emalene Johnson, Patricia Plumley, Paul
Dodson, Ava Gilkey, Nan
Moore and Naomi Bentley.

posted for IIOIIthWest South IUburban Miami al'ell hotels
Dakota, the southeutern two with shivering, grumbl)ng
thlrda of Mlnne~~gta and tourlata had Ill go without
northwest Nebraaka where water for 18 hours because r4
!!lockmen's advisorieo alao a broken water main.
were In effect.
Melting 1!110W and Ice In
The National Weatber West VIrginia produced the
Service warned of the possibility ' of Ice Jain
possibility
of
severe ftoodlng, and JrOmpted a
thunderstorms In northwest Rash Rood watch for portions
Kansas, northwest·and west- of eastern West VIrginia
central Mlsuui-f, utreme through tonight.
southeast Nebraska and
Californians prayed for
soutltwest Iowa. Tulaa, Okla., more rain and ski reoort
hail .70 of an InCh of rain by I operators In Utah began
a.m.
·
recalling 2,320 seasonal
The warming trend kept employes after a 30-lnch
ilhead of the snows, raising 8111lwfall. Only five reoorts
temperatures to 70 degrees stayed open during the winter
Tuesday in Louisville, &lt;Ky., droUI!ht but several r4 the
and 81 In Cln~ti, for the closed ski areas announced
wannest day since last Oct. plana to reopen for the
15.
weekend amid forecuts II.
Unseaoonable cold plagued more snow.
Florida again, with Tampa · The Utah Ski Asaoclatlm
reporting a rec...d low of 32 estimated recreation .centers
. for the date Tuesday and bad all'elldy lost $17 mlllioo
West Palm ileJich 41, to break compared to last year.
a 37-year record. Several

PLEASANT VAlLEY
DISCHARGES - Robert
Waldnlg, Sr., Racine, 0.;
Larry Crum, Glenw~od:
Mrs. Mall'Vin Bennett, Point
Pleasant; Andrew Campbell,
Gallipolis; Mrs. Ronald
Cromley, Point pleasant;
Homer ·oavls, Buffalo: .
Daniel King, Point Ple8S8nt;
Mrs. Lawrence Gerlach,
Pl&gt;int Pleasant; Von Stewart,
Jr., New Haven; Mrs. Elnier
McFarland, New Haven:
Nancy McDade, . Evans;
William Dye, New Haven;
Karim Jenkins, Marietta, 0.;
Mrs. Bernard Moeller,
GaUipoUs; Mrs. David Davis,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Kenneth
&amp;nitb, Pomeroy; Reba Sines,
Pl&gt;lnt Pleasant; Mrs. Thomas
Hunt, Thurman, 0.; Mrs.
Ronald Bostic, Apple Grove;
Mrs. Roy Ellis, Point
Pleasant and Irene Cline,
Pl&gt;int Pleasant.
•, .

Plus Tax

THE MEIGS INN
992-3629

Pomeroy, 0 .

Kiln 2006.

WDGE TO MEET
'!be Twin City Sbrlnettes
will meet at 7:30p.m. Thur&amp;day at ·the home of Mrs.
Henry Ewing, Mulberry
Ave., Pomeroy.

HOMEMADE HAM SALAD.••••••••••••••••••• ~~ 99'
SUPERIORS

ASSORTED WNCH MEATS. ••••••••••••••• ,.n~~gr
SUPERIOR BULK WIENERS ••••••••••••

I

5 lb. RDRIDA Bag 89~
ORANGES············

RAIL PLAN
COLUMBUS (UP!) Legi.slatioo was Introduced In
the Ohio House Tuesday
requiring the Ohio Rail
Transpor\.atlon Authority Ill
come up with a high.apeed
rail plan for major cities by
Dec. 31.
The bill, sponsored by Rep.
Arthur R. Wilkowski, DToledo, would alao name two
legislators to the fivemember ORTA board and
allow the legislature to ratify
or rewct any changes In the
plan.
The plan was to have been
due last July 10 but ORTA has
e~perieneed difficulty In
getting started. It has lacked
funds, and Wilkowski has
been ita cblef critic.

Cuyahoga Cowlly.
Caucus
COLUMBUS (UP!) ·
Cuyahoga
County
Democratic Representatives
Tuesday chose Rep. Edward
F. Feighan of Cleveland as
chairman of their 14-member
delegation.
Rep. TroY Lee James was
elected vice chairman and
Rep. Virginia Aveni of.
Lyndhurst was chosen
secretary.
After they chose their leaders, \)le delegation endorsed
a $25 million mass
transportation appropriation
In the biennial budget, $15
million more thari the amount
JrOposed by Gov. James A.

32 Oz. Ore-Ida

KRINKLE CUT POTATOES

Bag

20 oz. Welchs Grape Jelly••• ~ •••••• ~ ••••••••7"'
16 oz. Kraft Cheese Whlz ............ nAtlar

32 oz. Dark Karo Syrup., ••••••••••••••••••••
.

".

16 oz.

SHIELD LAW

COLUMBUS (UP!)
Bipartisan legislation was
submitted Ill the Ohio Senate
Tuesday extending the
Jrovisions of tbe neWI!nien's
"shield law" to public
lroadcast reporters.
Sen. Paul E. Gillmor, RPort Cllnllln, said he and Sen.
Neal IF&gt;.. Zlnuners Jr., DDaytOli', offered the bill at the
request II. an educaUonal
television station In Bowling
Green.
the "shield law," which
protects reporters from
revealing their sources of
biormatloo, applies mly Ill
the print media and non-

Aunt Jemima ·Pancake Mix:, plain ........ 45•
5 lb.
Martha White Plain White Meal···89' box
2 lb. Granulated Suaar••••• ······•···· 49• ltox:

lnst. Coffee·

lroadca""rs.

CONSUMER REFUNDS

COLUMBUS (UP!) Legi.slatioo offered In the
Ohio House Tuesday ·would .
disallow the practice of :
making refunds In the form of
On 90-Day
merchandise credits unless
notice were prominently
Certificates
posted in the store.
The bill was Introduced by
5.75 per cent pal~ on Reps. James L. Baumann, D90 day Certificates of Columbus, and Terry
Deposit. $1,000.00 ' Tranter, o.clnclnnatl.
If the proposal becomes
Ml nl mum. Interesl
law,
COIIIIII!IOra would be
Payable Quarterly.
empowered to seek recovery
al the actus I value II. the Item
.A substantial ,en•lfy Is
If
notice were not posted.
Invoked , on 111 eertlflute
eccounts Wlthdr1wn •prior
to the dift of m•furity.

.Meip Co. Branch

~
Tht Athens county
Savintl &amp; Loan Co.
2M Second St.
Pomtroy, Ohio

McLaughlin brothers
·are league champions

MEETING CANCEU.ED

ELBERFELD$ IN .POMEROY

MENS WORK.UNIFORMS
...

PANTS

'7'5
Matching Shirts

'6'5

Solid colors, charcoal; navy.
suntan, forest green and olive.
Pants In slzes 29 to 50 walst.matchlng long sleeve shir-ts, sizes
14'12 to 20.
50 per cent polyester, 50 per cent

cotton, permanent press.

Just received I big shipment,
mtn'i lndl1napolls work
gloves, cottons, jerseys,
cotton
1nd
ltathtr
combinations 1nd 111 ltallltr
glovts.

ELIERFELDS IN POMEROY

Duane, a senior, wrestling
in the 145 pound class, went
undefeated on the season.
Earlier this season he was
voted the most valuable
grappler in the Fairland
Invitational Tournament. He
also brig(ltened Meigs' day as
he won his weight division
last 'Saturday.
Robert Nakamoto, 167
pound class, received a
second place trophy as he
went 2·1 on the afternoon.
Ray Willford, a 166 pounder,
also had a 2-1 record in bls
class, but due to the tourney
roles which provided a
winner· in case of a tie, Ray
was not presented the trophy.
He was tied with two other
wrestlers who also went 2-1 in
bls division. Meigs finished
fourth in the tournament.

Bruce Beach, 19, Langsville, was found guilty on a
cbarge of tampering with
evidence Wednesday afternoon following a two day
jury trial.
Beach was charged with
lreaklng and entering the
Rnbert Fetty farm residence
()II Jan. 23. on the charge of
lreaklng and entering he was
fQund not guilty by the jury
and the eharge of receiving
and concealing stolen
property was dropped.
Rid&lt; crow, prosecutor, was
the attorney for the state and
Charles Knight rO.,resented
the defendant, Beach.
This morning Meigs County
Common Pleas Judge John C.
Bacon sentenced Beach to not
less than 18 months or more
than 10 years to the Ohio
State Reformatory in Mansfield. Knight iflformed The
Daily Sentinel the defense
plans to ask for a new trial.
The prosecutor said Beach
removed and concealed
evidence on the night of
robbery from Fetty residence
knowing that an official investigation would likely he
Instituted, with the purpose Ill

Impair its value as evidence.
Crow had to elect which
He returned to the scene two marge to convict on as
days later and did the same conviction could not be on two
1hing, Crow said.
similar charges, if they have
same import. Receiving and
stolen property
Aid squad makes concealing
was
a
misdemeanor
pW1ishable by .six months in
several runs
jail; breaking and entering is
I'Jllishable by six months to
The Pomeroy Emergency ·five years, and tsmpering .
Squad answered several calls with evidence carries a
Wednesday evening and sentence of 1 to 10 years.
Thursday morning. At 5:47
Crow said he elected to
p.m. Wednesday the squad drop the charge of receiving
was called to the home of and ron cealing stolen gonds
Dona Covert near the Hiland and the jury found Beach not
Church. Covert who had guilty of breaking and enreceived a back injury was tering but guilty oftampering
lsken to Veterans Memorial with evidence.
Hospital where he was adJurors were Mildred
mitted.
Zeigler, Kay Sayre, Louis
At 7:53 p.m. the squad went Osborne. Rodney Pierce,
to near Chester for Eher Ruth
Erl ewine,
Iona
Gillilan who was also taken to Bri ckles, llortnie Willford,
Veterans Memorial Hospital Mary Lee Ma~ie, Ebno F.
where he was admitted. At &amp;!lith, Wanda Wolfe, Avanel
4:46 a.m. Thursday, the unit Halliday, Lllrothy Cashdollar
went to Mechanic St. for and Nola Swisher alternate.
Pauline Derenberger who·
GOOD SCENERY- An encouraging sight in Pomeroy's business seclllr is construction
was taken to Veterans
worker&amp; setting forms at the Stiffler Department Store location on W. Main St. The store
Memorial Hospital and was
was demolished by fire In January, 1976, and several legal entanglements have been cleared
Brewing
of
beer
was
known
in 5:30 a.m. transferred to
Holzer Medical Center by the as early as 6,000 B.C. in up in preparing to rebuild the structure. The Court St. section of Ute store already has been
remodeled and is in operation.
Mesopotamia .
squad .

Now You Know

•

at y
VOL XXVII NO. 220

PO~EROY-MIDDLEPORT,

OHIO

•

enttne

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1977

PRICE Fl FTEEN CENTS

Pomeroy man electrocuted
George (Bud) Young,. '27, was electrocuted near his
P.omeroy Route 3 home just after II am. Wednesday whUe
installing a citizens band radio antenna on a hill beiJind his
home.
With Mr. Y01mg atthe lime of the accident were Ed Nelaon.
and Rnger Chaney of Rnute I, Minersville. The department of
Meigs Sheriff James Proffitt said the victim got the antenna
Into a 7200 volt line of the Ohio Power Co.
The Middleport Emergency Squad, called to the scene

because the Pomeroy Squad was on another 'call, arrived at
11:24 am. Mr. Young was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where he was pronounced dead at 11:56 a.m. The area
In whiCh the accident oc=ed Is known as Dark Hollow.
On the scene also Ill complete reports on the accident were
personnel of the Ohio Power Co. and Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric ()).
Aveteran of the Korean Cooffict, Mr. Young was preceded
in death by his father, George J. Young; a sister, Delores Jean

By United Preas International
, COLUMBUS - EFFEctiVE SUNDAY, load limits on
transportation of fuel oU, salt and gaoollne will be reduced
from 90,000 pound&amp; to the regular 80,000 pounds. State Trans•
portatlon Dlreclllr David Weir said Wednesday the special
NAiiiOBI, Kenya (UP1) -Radio Ugaada said todaY
overload limits were lasued Ill alleviate the heating emergency
Tamanlau
troops bave massed near the border with
In Oblo when severe weather hit.
Uganda
and
President Idl Amln's forees are ready to deal
Overloaded !rucks would Increase damage to highways
wllh
any
Invasion.
A Tamanl•n spokesman called lhe
during the spring thaw, he said. "Because of the prolonged
report
"abaolule
balderdash."
cold spell the daniage Ill our highways already is estimated In
'!be broadcast aald Taii2Jlnian troops were stationed
the millions of collars," liaid Weir. "We see no reason Ill
By
EDWARD
K.
DeWNG
six
mlles from the Ugaodail border aud warned If an
submit our roads to further dlimage with overloads."
. WASHINGTON (UP!) attempt was made to take "even an lacb" of Ugandan
HOPEWELL, Va . (UPI) COLUMBUS - THE NUMBER OF UNEMPLOYED President Carter . says
:errttory, Ugandan marines and the air Ioree would rebnlf
The sulphur carrier Marine
them.
&lt;»Uoans filing cootinued claims for unemployment benefits natural gas producers are
Floridian today smashed Into
The broadcast followed by a day AmiD's
during the ~eek of Feb. 19 declined by a slight.8 per cent from holding gas off the market
the
. Benjamin Harrison lift
anuouncemeat that a military uprlaiDg IDvolviDI!
the previous week.
and he might do the same if
bridge, collapsing one section
"Zionists and lmerlallsts" In his at;my bad been c11111bed
Albert G. Giles, administrator of the state Bureau of . be were in their shoes.
and d~plng four vehicles
and that a couP, iD which American, BriUsb or Israeli
Employment Services, said the figures indicated that ?J\,358
That, says Carter, is one
intO ·the James River.
paratroopes were to have taken part, bad beeu lolled.
newly unemployed workers filed Initial claims whlle 232,248 result of a "horrible
A Coasi Guard spokesman
'!be United Slates called the allegations ''absurd" aad
peraons unemployed a week or more filed for continued CO!Igiomeration of coo fusion"
said
two survivors were
c1a1ma
surrounding present energy
a State Department spokesman In Wublngton called lor
pulled
from the water and
·
policies. He liays his energy
au lnvestigaUOD into human rigbis violaUoDll iD the east
two
cars
and two !rucks were
be
African country.
·
MIAMI BEACH, FLA. -PRESIDENT CARTER has reorganization, to
found.
The vehicles had been
assured AFL-CIO President George Meany he will not force submitted next week, and his
waiting on the span for the
labor to swallow a distasteful and-inflation program for comprehensive energy plan,
ship
to pass when they were
the future if the policies do
monitoring wage Increases, according to .Meany's aides. to be unveiled In April, should Instances where natural gas change."
dumped
into the murky
is withheld from the
Meany received private assurances from the President this end the confusion.
waters
of
lbe
James.
Carter said he will work for
The President !Did a news market," he said. "That's
week after he announceqJabor will not cooperate with the
It
was
n.ot
known
whether
a trial deregulation-for four
administration's stlggested )J'ogram for overseeing wage and CO!Iference Wednesday his understandable. If I was or five year!!--{){ new natural there were any casualties.
plan, calling for sacrifices running an on company, 1
price Increases. Carter later made his pledge pUblicly.
gas prices. He said he does
In Washington, administration economist Charles Schultze from all Americans, can would reserve the right Ill not know how he will do It, but
release
or
reserve
soine
supWednesday continued to defend the need for an antl.(nflatlon succeed. mly if people are
EXTENDED OurLOOK
pledged he will not back out
program. Federal Reserve Board Chairman Arthur Burns, CO!Ivinced they w111 get a plies of natural gas.
Saturday through
"If we can let the oD on the pre-election promise Ill
meanwbUe, struck,a rare note of accord with Meany. Bums rapid payoff. He believes
Monday,
a chance of
companies know In a work for deregulation he •
told a congressional committee the government should avoid they wm.
showen
Saturday
and to
Carter was asked why the predictable. way what our made to the governors of
dlscusalng any anti-lnftation mechanism at this point because
norlhem
Ohio
Sunday.
It
public should accept policy will be two mmtbs or Oklahoma, Texas and will be fair Monday. Highs
It could generate ~ lack of confidence in the economy.
sacrifices when the oil two years or ?Jl years In ihe Louisiana.
"I helleve we've now got will be In tbe 40s and lows
YONKERS, N. Y. -AT LEAS!' $1.3 MILI.JON from the Industry is suspected of future ... then I think they'll such· a horrible con- will he In the 30s early
Yonilel'll Raceway harness track was stolen by robbera who holding natural gas off the be much les~ likely to glomeration of confusion Saturday and In the upper
surprlaed early arriving Hudson VaUey National Bank bank market In hope of higher withbold supplieo of on and in the energy field that
!Os or lower 30s early
natural gas from the market
employes colllllng the receipts. Although bank officials Jrices.
"I think it'sobvlous to all of just hoping they'D get lllme nobody knows what's going to Sunday and Monday.
refused to say how much money was taken In the Tuesday
happen next," Clirter said.
morninl! holdup, II was learned Wednesday that a WeDs Fargo us that there are some bonanza ilicreased price In
manifest showed the $1.3 mll1lon total.
,- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , - ' - - - - -- -- - - - - - - - - - - - -1
The Yonkers money, turned over to a bank vice president
at midnight Monday, Included the track's take frcim Friday
and Saturday night racing programs and a Washington's
Birthday session. '!be FBI said the boldupmen apparently bid
In the basement of a !lve-alory office building housing the bank
and beld up two employes wbo reported to work ahead of
nilrmal office boura to count the Yonkers money and clean up a
meeting room.
fleldli and' is the arrival point of 538
By DAVID L. LANGFORD
elite of New York's art world,
trains a day. Its defenders say it
NEW· YORK (UP!) - Jacqueline
campaigned for ]reservation of
DETROIT -MID-FEBRUARY DOMEsTIC new car sales
would cost almost $1 bUUon tQ build
' Kennedy Onassls Wednesday
Grand Central - which she called
feU U per cent from a year ago because many Americans
the same structure lllday.
unfurled the banner of "class" amid
"a universal symbol between New
lllayed lndoora cmtng the harsh winter weather rather than
Designed In the Ecole des Beaux
forces arrayed between New York
York City's past and present"- at a
venture oul In a.rch of a new automobile, according to
Arts
style of architecture and
aJy's Grand Central Sislion and the
news conference in the. Oyster Bar
lncllultry sources. The four U. S. auto companleo reported
constructed
of Connecticut granite,
wrecking ball with which Penn
restaurant, deep In the· heart of the
Wednelday they sold only 192,077 can In the Feb. 11-?Jl period.
its
main
concourse
is 275 feet long,
Central Railroad hopes to bring it
cavernous station.
Delpite the decline In the F•b. 11-?Jl period, strong early
120 feet wide and 125 feet tall.
tumbling doJ'II.
Beame called Grand Central ''the
February aalea -partly catchup from late January - pushed
· In 1967, the · copper-t9pped
"Grand Central is like our beaches
grandest, most~oved train station in
aaleo In the tint mdays of the month up 4 per cent over last
terminal, with its sculptures,
. and our foresta. It Is a .natural
the WO(id."
,.,ar In line with Industry eaUmates.
marbeled floors and ornaments, was
resource," she told bl!ckera of a
Philip Jobnson, architect and
declared a landmark by the New
court battle Ill save the historic 64another impasslooed defender,.aald,
MOSOOW- TWO ~VIET COSMONAUTS flnlahed their
Vork City Landmarks Preservation
year~ld landmark. "This is the
"Grand Central is to New York what
million In
today and prepared Ill return to Earth after
Commission. Sill years later Penn
marshaling of the last charge, and I
Notre Dame is Ill Paris."
111 UIIIIIIIIDy brllf7-&lt;lay atay aboard the Salyul 5 l(lace statim.
think we will prevail."
Central sued to strike the landmark
Penn Central, which owns the old
c-t'lll Vlklor Gort.lko and Yurl Glultov were reported
Manhattan Borough President
status and in 1975 the railroad won
terminal, is unimpressed with the
to be felllnl weD u they packed up the reaulta of two weeks of
Percy Sutton added a footnote to the
its case. .
historic significance of the place.
~ cm the orlitlng lab.
battle cry.
After a long and complicated legal
1Jie railroad wants Ill lear It down
The 1'111 newa agency reported Wednesday the
''Grand Central is like Jackie
battle with the Committee to Save
and raise a 5klllry office building
COIIIIOIIIull were l'tllltor~ Salyul 5 to ·~~~~om&amp; tic !Ught," as
Onassls -a place of class - and it
Grand Central Station, the case will
on the site.
111f1 faand the cnft wileD they 1lnlred up Feb. 8. They then
.ought Ill be preserved," he aald.
go this spring hefore the New York
Grand Central Station was built in
moved the ..-reb materlala Into the 8o)'uz 24 apacec;raft that
Mrs. Onasals, Ranked by Sutton,
·19l6at a cost of 165 million. It boasts
Court of Appeals.
CII1TY them back to llirlb. In tbe Pill the tranafe~ave
MaiOr Abraham Beame and the
a f~~de Ionge~ than lwo lwtball
..
(Continued on page 10)
'

Holding Border war threatens·
gas off
admitted

WASHINGTON - GENERAL FOODS, the country's
largeat aeller II. ground coffee, told Congreaa.today It 10011 W1l1
be forced to ralae coffee prices again.
B1l1 Tower, prealdenl of llle ccmpany's Maxwell HoUle
Division, aald akyrocketing Import prices haw trimmed
profits ''to 111e1r Joweet level In many years." !fe deocrlbed It
as tbe lowest Jroflhltuat,lon a1nce the early 111'/0nhen federal
price and wage emtroll were In effect.

WORK GLOVES
MEIGS lHEATRE
ansm FOR
VM.ATION
WA'Iai FOR
OPENING DATE

Coach John Bentley's
Meigs High School wrestling
team, c.ompletlng its ab-.
breviated season last
weekend at Logan in the
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
Conference Tournament,
produced · two
league
· c!Jampions in the brothers
Kevin
and
t;luane
McLaushlin. They are sons of
Mr. and ·Mrs. Kenneth
McLaughlin, 862 East Main
St., Pomeroy.
Kevin, a junior, left, was
champion In the 132 pound
class and highlighted his day
by helng voted the co-most
valuable wrestler In the
tournament, with Loran!
Ipacs of Athens. Both boys
pnned all three of their OJr
ponents. Kevin has lost only
ooe mat contest Ibis season.

News •• in Briefs

P om e roY c o u n c II' s
Feighan said he hoped the regularly scheduled meeting
delegation .would work as a Mooday night was canceUed
"cohl'aive unit" In the 112th because of President's Day ,
holiday. ·
·
General ~bly.

5.75%

12 oz. Jlf Creamy Peanut Butter •••••••••• 13•

By JOAN HANAUER
UPI TeieYIIIGB ~
,
NEW YORK (UP!) -A eerlee rl evenll bu llllmd .
~ about wt.t'a what with "Wbo'a Who," bill a ·~ ·
IIJXlileape!Wlll for CBS llid neither low ratlnp, prHIIIIItiGD, •
nor 11ecutive lhufllell poled a threat for the IIIWI map•"• •
format Jll'OIIIWll.
·
;
"""-'a Wbo " or "Sao of 80 Minutes" u It wu called bt •
~:..went o~ the air earlier tbla year With Dill Rather, "
Otlrles Kuralt and Barbara Howar empbui&amp;IJII tbe ~'people" ,
. upect of the - · Eseculive producer wu D!lt HeWitt, who
a1ao Ia 11ecutive producer of ''80 Mlnuteo."
•
Now Hewitt hal decided the double chore~ were more than •
he could halldle and be wa.i neg~ ''80 Mblllu." He wW ••
drop "Who's Wbo" to concentrase m ''al Mlnutel."
~
John Sblmlk, CBS vice pre8ident I« public affaln •
troadcaatlng, w1to hal been tbe vice prtlldenllal,-nnk ; ·
overseer for both ·'tO Minutes" and "Wbo's Who," l1eo wm •
beccme aclinl aecutive producer for "Wbo'l Who." Thai •
means he win be apendlnc a lot of lime with the rww .00W, so •
another newa department vice president, Bob Cbandler' wm.
hancDe the VP chorlli for "Ill Mlnulu."
•
What that meanalli terms of corporate ladder cllmbq re- •
mains to be seen, batlt won't effect the future II. ''Who's Wbo." •
In the meantime, ''Who's Who" alllo was prHmpted tbll
week by Bill Moyers' CBS Reports on "Arizona, Here We ';
Come 1" The reason for that, CBS eJplaina,la that the network :
only allon the newa dlvlalon a limited amount of time. U It •
wants to JrHIIIIIIIora apeclal, It mUll JrHIDPtOne of Ill own •
shows. And "Arizona" bumped "Who•s Who."
~
There wouldn't be lillY queatlm about ''Wbo'a Who" If It ·..
IICOI'ed as high In the Nlelaen ra~ u ''80 Mlllltes," wltlch
consistently ranb In the lop ?Jl and often bits the top 10.
.
'!be week ending Feb. •· "Who's Who" ranked 15th on a lilt "
of 89.
.
•
Brown, Adams, Highland,
CBS saya)l wm go along witb ''Wh~'s Who"- afler all ''tO ,.
Ross, Pike, Scioto, Vinton, Minutes" took several years to take Qff and It didn't have to •
Gallla,
Jackson
and compete with "Happy ll8ya" and ·~Laverne lit: Shirley." · - .
Lawrence Counties.
The Fonz and friends were·in tile lop ~o apGia In the Nielsen
Area Nine Agency on ratings, and ABC dominated tbe top ten, with only CBS' ''MA·
Aging, wblch received ap- · .8-H" and ''One Day At A Time" keeping ABC from a clean •,
provaf to spend $306·,820, sweep.
·
covers Belmont, Carroll,
For thoae who think ABC can do no wrang, the last show oo '
Cosh oct on, Guernsey, the lilt also was an ABC entry- "Most Wanted," llllh on a lilt
Harrlaon, Hobnes, Jefferson, • of 89.
.
MusklngUm and Tuscarawas
The 10 top network televlaloo programs for lbe week ending
CounUes.
Feb. ?Jl, according to the A.C. Nlelaeq Ql., were:
The federal funds, which
1: "Happy Days;" 2: "Laverne &amp; Sblrley;" 3: "How The :
came to the Commission . West Was Woo" (ABC Monday Movie); 4: "M-A-8-11;" 6: ..
111der Title In of tbe Older "Otlrlie's Ancell;" 6: "Secreta" (ABC &amp;mday movie); 7:
Americana Act, is to be used . (tie) "One Day At ATime" and ''Sb: Million DoUar Man;" 9:
for service to older people In "Dirty Mary, Crazy Larry" (ABC ~y movie); 10: .
such areas as information "Welcome Back, KOtter."
and referral, transportation,
home health senolces, legal
assistance, education,
recreation, health assess(Continued from page I)
ment, and protective services. ·
JrQvlsional stall!lllca predicted.
·
The new funds were
awarded for the year
YOUNGSTOWN, OHIO- NURSES AT THREE boapltala
beginning Aprll 1 for the two here ratified a new cmtract late Tueaday night, ending the
area agencies. Each also threat of a strike. 'lbe nro-,ear contract c:overinll about 610
received $12,2SO In state funds nuraea at Younptown Nortmlde HOIIIftal, Southside Hoapltal
Ill 8S8illl In program plan- and Todd Bableo and Otl1drenl Hospital, Includes a pay
ning.
lncreaae of 87 cents an bour the flnl year ol the cmlracl and II
cenll an hour the aecnd year. Nunea now make "·33 an hour.
'!be contract also ~Us for a coat ol Uvlng allowance plus
NOW YOU KNOW
several fringe bene!lll. Meanwhile, )he Youngalllwn HOIIIltal
Th~ Grand Canal in Chins,
Assodalion Immediately announced a bike In room rates to
which connects the Yellow pay for the new cmtract. Room rates went up t2JO per day In
111d the Yangtze Rivers, Is~ all three hoapltala,
·
.
times as lCIIg as the Panama
AI. a rtllllt of the lncreaaa, rates at Northside and SouthCanal, yet It was built without side are • .60 per day for semiprivate rooms and $100 per day
modern equipment 1,300 for private 1'0011111. New ralu for Babies and Cblldrena hoapllal
years ago.
were not avallable.

Rhodes,

. .- - - - - - - - . commercial

Our Interest Is
Gre1ter For You

••

totaling $565,050

COWMBUS - The Ohio
Commlssioo on Aging has
awarded $565,050 in federal
fundli to two Area Agencies
oo Aging to provide social
services Ill senior citizens.
Martin A Janis, director of
the Conunlssion, said ap)rOVal ri tbe plans submitted
by the two . Planning and
Service Areas (PSA) came at
the February 16 meeting of
the Commission held in
Columbus.
Buckeye Hills - Hocking
Pomeroy Bawling unes
Valley Regional DevelopEarly Sllnctoy Mlxod
ment District, PSA 7, was
Lngue
awarded
$258,430 for
Feb. 13, 19n
program planning and
Stondlngs
Teom
Pis. supportive social services.
Jack's Dairy Bilr
.u This area agency covers
Olne's Construction Co.
41

Holzer Mecllcal Center
·\Discharges, Feb. 2%)
·Janet P. Brown, Harold
Burcham, John W. Call,
Lawrence M. Fowler, Matthew Gatrell, Vickie S. Hall,
Jeffrey R. Hawley, Mrs.
Hersel Herdman and
daughter, Debra L. Honaker,
Melissa A. Howell, Susan F.
Hughes, Hazel Kilgore ,
Elizabeth E. Kuhn, Olga
Msnowes, Rhnda D. Midkiff,
Julius. Pasquale, Armlntie
Ramsey, Russell L. Rhodes,
ElSon B. Richards, Melillla J.
Robie, Glenda L. Ross, Mrs.
John RuSllell and daughter,
Forrest R. Russell, Jr.,
32
Stanley C. Saunders, Kitty L. Town Kiln
Tom's
Carry
Qlt
28
Sialfer, Barbara E. Sheets, l'llmeroy Flower Shop
23
Keith A. Spencer, Calvin K. Mlrk V
·
18
Spires, Karl V. Sprague,
High lndl vidual game Rebecca L. Stewart, Unda J. Darrell Dugan 220, Betty
\\Ill !latch 18-1; John , Tyree
Tennant, John M. Thompson, 195,
Betty Smith 174; A. L.
Esta Welch.
Phelps, Jr. 188, Betty
(Births, Feb. Z'l)
1\!lltlalch ln.
Mr. and Mrs. David Leach, •High series- .John Tyree
Betty Whitlatch 528;
daughter, Jackson; l!lr. and 535,
Lorry Dugan 517. BeHy Smith
Mrs. John L. Helni, son, of/1; Darrell Qlgan 512, Lena
Wellston; Mr. and .Mrs. Howard 482.
Daniel P. Davies, daugbter, • Team high game - Town
Kiln 700.
Gallipolis.·
. Team high series - Town

T.Y•••in Review

Beach is guilty .of tampering

Approve grant

Local Bowling

Visit Our Salad Bar
Ham
Sweet Potaloes
Vegetable
Hot Rolls
Coffee. Tea or Milk

Texas panhandle

•

Young, and a brother, James A. Young.
SurviVing are his wife, Peggy; his mother, Mrs. Ellen
Young of Pomeroy; two sisters, Mrs. Patly Iloerfer and Mrs .
Dottie Nelson, both of Pomeroy; a grandfather, Henry
Cunningham, Pomeroy; a grandmother, Mrs. Alma Young,
Pomeroy, and several nieces, nephews and cousins.
Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m. Saturday at the
Ewing Funeral Home with the Rev. Floyd Shoo~ officiating.
Burial will be in Rock Springs Cemetery. Friends may caD at
the funeral home at anyUme.

Bridge smashed
by sulphur boat

Jackie Onassis joins battle to save New York Ci!y's
historic and symbolic Grand Central Smtion

Early morning motorists
watched horrified as the
unladen tanker appeared to
have a steering failure and
headed for the fixed portion
of the three-quarter mile long
bridge. The 612-foot Marine
Floridian, which had tried to
stop by dropping anchor upstream, blasted its horn Ill
warn those on the bridge to

Bass to be
sentenced
Pierce held
for felony
Brysn Eugene Bass, by sheriff
Syracuse, has pleaded guilty
sl~ counts of robhery, a
second degree felony, which
carries a maximum penalty
ri 15 years, being a possible
llllsl of 90 in the penal institution according to an
entry in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court. The
matter was continued for presentence investlg•tion and
report and the defendant was
remanded to the custody of
Steriff James J. Proffitt.
Bass was arrested In
connection with the Jan. 13
armed robbery of the Five
Points Grill when two men
wearing ski masks confiscated the money of patrons
at gunpoint and emptied the
cash register.' He was
arrested three hours later in
Pomeroy at Crow's Steak
&amp;use on identification of
patrons at the grill. Others
arrested with Bass were Tim
Hayman, 21, Racine, and
Keith Pickens, 21 , Pomeroy.

Ill

..,.ce

"'Il

get away.
Wayne Bolton, 31, wlio was
waiting for the ship to pass
through the channel as he
was on his way to work, said
the vessel veered slowly
toward the fixed span.
In desperation, Bolton said,
Ute ship released its anchors
Ill try to stop.
"I saw the ship coming
down river, about 100 yards
away," Bolton said. "I said to
my friend Paul, 'God, that
ship is going Ill hit the
bridge .' I saw it dropping
anchor.''

FIELD 11lAIL SET
A coondog field trail will he

he)d Sunday, Feb. 27,
beginning at 10 a.m. at the
Jackson-Vinton Club House.
Fred Mayn•rd will serve as
fteld marlhall.t,'l'be pubUc Ia
Invited.

Meigs County Sheriff
James J. Profitt's department reported the arrest
today of Michael Pierce, 18,
Rl. I, Middleport, on charges
ri reckless operation, Oeeing
a police officer and having no
valid operator's license. He is
being confined lit the Meigs
County· jail. He will appear in ·
county court Friday.
Ai!lo arrested was a 16year-&lt;&gt;ld juvenile on charges
ri delinquency and cashing of
checks for $250 from the W. C.
Hill residence on Happy
Hollow Road. The checks
were cashed at the Rutland ·
Department Store, Rutland
Pool Hall and Carpenter's
Grocery at Rutland. The
)I)Utb has been released to
the custody of his parents
pending a hearing In Meigs
County Juvenile court.

Weather
Mostly cloudy and cooler
lllnighl with lows near 40.
Partly" cloudy Friday with
lighs In lbe mid to upper 50s.
The
probability
of
)J'ecipitatlon is 70 per eent
fnday and 2G·per cent !might
111d Friday.
· Winds will be BOuthWNterly~ • to llll!ili .this .
allel'fiiiCII and tonJcht.
. .

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