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Je- 'lbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, March 3, 1977

Sources identified in

Fascist cult demands
return ·of old ways
BySEIOGAWA
TOKYO (UP!) - Rlgnust
followers of a Japanese
nowllst who committed hara
ldri in 1970 stormed into the
office of Japan's top busineBS
organization today, seized
.lour hostages at swordpoint,
and demailded that Japan go
back to rule by the emperor
. and the mlUtary.
Two of the hostages were
released tonight alter 41&gt;
hours of captiVIty.
The loor raiders, disciples
of the late noveUst Yuldo Mishima, : rushed into the
headquarters of the Japan
Federation of Economic
Organizations (Keidanren)
about 4:30 p.m. (2:30 am.
EST).
They· wore Japanese style
headbanda decorated with
the Rising Sun emblem.
Three were armed, carrying
a pistol, a ShotgUn and a
Samurai sword.
Seized by the raiders, were
Tetsuya
Senga,
67,
Keldanren 's managing
. director, and three ol his
assistants.
Keidanren is an elite club
made up of Japan's most
powerful
banks
and
industries. It has great
political influence. Its
chairman, Toshio Doko, often
is called "the prime minister
of Japanese business." JHe

MEIGS tHEATRE
CLOSED FOR
· VACATION

WATDf -FOR
·OPENING DATE

was oot in the office at the
time.
Senga
and
Norio
Nakamura, 24, a Keidanren
public relations man were
released unharmed 41&gt; hours
after their capture. The
raiders still held Kazuio
Koike, 43, and Makoto Ike, 3$,
members of Senga 's staff.
Senga and Nakamura
quoted the raiders as saying :
"We will not harm you
because we are not leftists."
Charging that Japan has
been corrupted by post-war
democracy
and
the
leadership of businessmen,
the four demanded an
interview with Doko. He said
be would talk to them only if
they laid down their arms.
Senga was meeting with
Brazil~ busineBSman wllen
the four stormed into . his
office. The raiders let the
Brazilian go, along with
seven women secretaries
they had captured on their
way in.
Police cordoned off
Keidanren's building in
downtown Tokyo about half a
mile
from
Emperor
Hirohito's palace, and talked
to the raiders by telephone.
They identified the rightists
as Shunichi Nishio, 11, Yoshio
Itoh, 29, Ta&lt;!aaki Morita, 27,
and Shunsuke Kiffiura, 42.
Nishio and !tanh are
fonner members of "Tate .no
Kai" (Shield Society), a
right-wing youth group
organized by Mishima before
his 19'10 suicide. Kimura and
Morita were members of
other far right political
·
splinter groups.
Mishima was ~pan's top
postwsr novelist and a Nobel
Prize candidate. He killed
himself in 1970 alter carrying
our a similar raid with four of
. his disciples on the eastern
headquarters of the Japanese
army in Tokyo. The five
seized the commanding

general, and Mishima madtl
an impassioned speech to
troops urging them to rebel
and overthrow Japan's
postwar constitution.
The soldiers ignored him,
and Mishima slashed his
stomach with a knlfe in a
gesture of harakiri. One of his
followers then beheaded him,
and then took his own life.
Thursday's raiders styled
themselves The "Youth
League for Abolition of Y-P,"
a reference to the 1945 conferences at Yalta and Potadam
where conditions lor Japan's
1945 surrender alter World
War n were worked out by
allied nations.

a

The action look is here In the Condo r . .. and it's a com-

fonable, walk around shoe .ln classy smooth cowh ide. The
fa shioned moe toe adds an extra sharp look. And Hush
-Pupp1es,._ Casuals are born comfortable ... just for yo u.

THE SHOE BOX
BANK MERICARD

Middleport, 0.

Social
Calendar
FRIDAY
WORlD DAY of Prayer
observance, 7:30 p. m.
Friday, Laurel Cliff .Free
Methodist Church. Program
by women's groups of Laurel
Cliff and Hysell Run Free
Methodist Churches. Slides
on Haiti and special music.
Public invited.
SATURDAY
WESTERN BOOT CB Club
meeting, 7 p.m. Saturday at
Racine Fire Station.

. CAUTIONING that it wm
be "a dilllcuit road
ahead", Secretary o1 Slate
Cyrus Vance reeeatly
returned from a Middle
East mlssioa to aaaeoa the
poaalbffillet of peace Ia
that region. Vance CODeluded that undenlaudlng
and patience are required
of ail parties If a
meaalagfu! peace Ia to be
achieved.

HOSPITAL NEWS

KRAMER BROKE
SEATTLE, Wash. )upi) A. Ludlow Kramer, who Veterana MeJDorial Hoopilal
ADMITTED - Pauline
coordinated the $2 million
free
food
giveaway Derenberger, Pomeroy;
demanded by the Symbionese Mary Ha mm, Pomeroy;
Liberation Army following Pearle Sigman, Middleport;
the 1974 kidnaping of Patricia Warren Reeves, Albany;
Hearst, filed for bankruptcy Virgie Blake, Middleport;
Wednesday in federal court. Virginia Napper, .Racine;
Kramer, ·former Secretary Karen Cremeans, Coolville;
of State of Washington, said Herbert Reedy, Albany;
he has run up debts of nearly Virginia Musser, Long
$221),000 while holding only Bottom; Ida Young, Shade;
Rose Marcinko, Reedsville;
$77,000 in real aBSets.
James Will, Pomeroy; Vera
Drehel, Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Vinas
Lee, David Hutton, Virginia
Mus8er.

Rhodes would hit hard
at bootleg cigarettes

COLUMBUS'(UPI) - Gov. tax stamps would be subject
James A. Rhodes, saying to seizure as cmtraband. The
Ohio is losing about $22 offender would be subject to
million a year because of the fine and jail term.
bootlegged cigarettes, today
The legislation also
submitted legislation to tbe increases flle penalties for
Genera I Ass em b I y counterfeiting tax stamps
stren·gthening the stale's and )J&lt;l8Se8Sing or selling
enforcement powers and ~taxed cigarettes.
increasing penalties.
It also increases the reward
"This bill will save the lor providing information
taxpayers of this state leading to the recovery ·of
millions of dollars per year in cigarette tax revenues. The
lost tax revenue," Rhodes reward Is now 10 per cent of
IDid legislative leaders in· a · the net value of the
letter accompanying the bill. contraband up to $1,000. It
The
bill
grants would go to :IAl per cent or up
investigators in the state 11&gt;' $10,000 under the bffi.
Department of Taxation tbe
Rhodes' proposal also
power to arrest cigarette authorizes the state to revoke
bootleggers. It also, for the cigarette vending and liquor
first time, establishes tbe Ucenses of persons holding or
crime of transporting more dispensing
untaxed
than 2,000 cigarettes into Ohio cigarettes, and to revoke any
for the first time without illegal transporter's driwr's
obtaining permission of the license.
·
Taxation Department.
The penalty lor this new
crime would be a maXimum
90 days In jail or $750 fine .
Subsequent offenses would
draw six months to live years
in jaU or a muimum $2,500
fine.
HORNUNG NAMED
In additioo, quantities of
WINCHESTEH, Va. (UP!)
cigarettes in e:.:cess o' 5,000 -Former Green Bay Packer
transported into Ohio without halfback Paul Hornung
Wednesday became another
in a long list of prominent
sports figures to be chosen as
marshal for a parade when he
was picked· as this year's
Shenandoah Apple Blossom
Festival sports marshal.
· Hornung, now a television
sports announcer, and a
queen to be named later will
preside over the 5th festival
April 29, 30 and May 1.

NEW SJORE HOURS
The Following Furniture
Stores Will Observe New
Store Hours Effective

Holzer Medical Center
DISCHARGES _ John C.
Benedict, Karen K. Brumfield, Mrs. Carl Burton and
da ght
B bbi J 0 De ·
U er, . o
er,
Leah J. Eichinger, Helen L.
Fal'ley, Joyce M. Foglesong,
Loretta J. Friend, Fred W.
Glbba, Dollie Haselip, Susan
L. Hoffman, Helen M.
Howard, Diana L. Ihle,
Norman R. Jarvis, Jerry W.
Johnson, Jr., Carlton L.
Mays, Mary J. McCarty,
Billy G. Morris, Patricia .A.
Peck, Frona K. Riffle, ·
Elvena Roberts, Sheila Sue
Saunders; Kathleen L.
Smith, Reba F. Tucker, Rev.
Pleasaat Valley Hospital
Kenneth · C. Vance; Yvonne
DISCHARGES - Diana M. Walker, Elizabeth Wasch,
'
Builder, Henderson; Mrs. Pribble Wilson. ·
BIRTHS - Mr. and Mrs.
John Blutson, daughter,
Gallipolis; David Spear.&lt;, Mark Halley, son Gallipolis;
Point Pleasant; Alice Mr. and Mrs. Charles J arreli,
Gleason, Point Pleasant; son, Point Pleasant, W. Va.
Mrs: Hollis Cole, Point
Pleasant; Richard Fetty,
Gallipolis; Mrs. Pearl · McDermitt, Point Pleasant;.
Richard Hatfield, Dexter, 0. ;
Kevin
Taylor,
West
.
Columbia; Mrs. James
Watterson, Apple' Grove ;
Mrs. Gilbert Buzzard,
Comfort, WV; and Elma
McGuiness, · Point Pleasant.
. . BIRTH - A daughter to
Mr. and Mrs: Willial" Burris,
Apple Grove .
·
CHARDON, 01Uo (uPI) ~
Winter's long, col&lt;! grip has
been a blessing to the maple
syrup industry, accurding to
state forester Ture Johnaon
of Geauga County.
BACK IN LINE,UP
The prolonged deep freeze
INDIANAPOLIS (UPI)
Indianapolis Racers' left has acted "like a cold
wing Hugh Harris, the team's storage" for thousands of
top scorer before he was syrup-producing maple trees
sidelined by a lorn knee and also "has prevented
ligament Jan. 25, should be bacteria frtlll entering the .
back in the lineup In time for syrup and contaminating it!'
"The proper cold-thaw
the
World
Hockey
AssOciation·playoffs in AprU, cycle in the next lew weeka
should result in good quality
the club said Wednesday.
The Racers also announced maple syrup," Johnson said
that defenseman Bryon today.
Unle11 there's an unUIUBlly
Baillinore, out 24 games with
a pulled stomach muscle, kllg warm spell, the annual
would be hack on the ice Maple Syrup Festival
Friday night In a home game scheduled for April 15, 16 and
17 will be held as usual.
against San Diego.
"'!be ideal weather In the
Indisnapolls also said II
nell
few weeks would be a
had acquired veteran
warm
period of about three
·goaltender · Paul Hoganson,
days
with
temperatures of
27, from the Cincinnati
between
32
and 50 degrees,
Stingers for future confollowed
by
a
cold snap down
siderations.
to about :lA!," Johnaon said.
"A few cycles like thai' and
Nature's purhps will start
working and the syrup will
start flowing."

Map1e Syrup
Prospects

excellent

I

His parents, his wife and

one brother preceded him In
death.
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p.m. Saturday at the
Ruffand Chapel of the Walker
Funeral Home with Denny
Coburn officiating . Burial
will be In Meigs Memory
Garden . Friends may call at
the chapel anytime after 10
a.m . Friday until time of
services. The fam ily will be
atthe chapel from 2 to 4 and 7
to 9 p.m. Friday.

Local Bowling
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Monday Nlte Mixed
Feb. 2s, 1977
Standings

Team

W. L.

No. 5
No.2
No. 6
No.3
Nn 4

42 14
38 18

28 28

24-32

2432

No.I
1244
Team high series - Team
No. 2 2275; Team No. 6 2188 ;
Team No. 5 2154.
Team high game - Team
No. 6 784; Team No. 2763 and
758.
Men ' s

high

series

-

Raymond Roach 555; Bill
!Vwlrcum 5&lt;17; Mose Norman
493.
.
Men's high game - Bill
Marcum 227; Raymond
Roach 191 and 189.
Women's high series Naomi Floyd 467; Lucy
Hendricks 460; Debbie
Dobbins 423.
Women's high game Naomi Floyd 182; Lucy
Hendricks 178; Debbie
Dobbins 170.
DINNER ENJOYED

Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Logan
were Tuesday dinner guests
ri Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
Wamsley.

·

MANY
GIFTS

40%

INGELS FURNITURE

AND

50%

OPEN 9 TIL 5 MONDAY thru SATURDAY

BAKER FURNITURE

OFF

OPEN 9 Tfl 5;30 MONDAY thru SATURDAY

OPEN:

RUTLAND FURNITURE

12 to 5 PM

.

OPEN 8 TIL 5 MONDAY thru SATURDAY

THURSDAY FRIDAY

.. MASON FURNITURE

&amp; SATURDAY

OPEN 9 TIL 5 MONDAY thru SATURDAY

r
'I

CINCINNATI (UP!)- Dr.
Raymond F . McCoy, coholder of the record for
kllgest continuous service as
a graduate school dean, Is
retiring this y~ from his
Xavier University post,
school officials said Tuesday.
McCoy, 83, dean of Xavier's
gra&lt;!aate scboolllillCe it was
(ounded in 194&amp;, will step.
down · Sept. 1, and then
assume a speclsl XaVIer
"distinguished prole11or-.
ship."
McCoy's 31 ~an • grad
acbool dean lies him with Dr.
Robert Koenbr of Ball State
Univtnlty In Muncie, Ind.,
for lonpllt continUQlll service
in I1Ud1 a pollllion.
McCoy Clint to laviw at
the Sid of World War U, In
Which he wa1 a special agent
in milltarY intelligence,
"He I'OIIIlded ~ itplel left
by the Germani on the
Frencbltallm front and was
relpCillible for rounding up
hi&amp;b Nul offtclala in flle area
around MWlic:h as the war
ended," xavier ollclsllllkl.
lavler Preaident Robert
Mulligan called McCoy'•
leadership at the school
''remarkable."
I'
i

·Archie scores .again in.
MGM 'Scouting night~
By Hobart Wilson Jr.
Featured by the appearance of two-time
Reisma n Trophy winner
Archie Griffin , the Tri-State
Area Council Boy Scouts of
America lea dership dinner
wa s
smashing success,
Thursday night at Oscar's
Restaurant in Gallipolis.
Arecord 18,690 was pledged
to scouting by commuolty
leaden in the Tri-8tale Area
Council, which includes the
Meigs-Gailla-Masoo District.
Fifty-eight persoas attended.
Griffin , former All;
American foothali player at
Ohio State University and
now a running back for the
Cincinnati Bengals in the
National Football League,
was guest speaker, and Vitus
Hartley, Jr., Pt. Pleasant,
chairman of the MGM
Leadership Division, was
master of ceremonies.
Ha rtley also refereed
"Running Up the Score for
Scouting."
"Tonight 's sum is twice

a

'

MILLARD CLAGG
Millard Melvin Clagg, 66,
Gallipolis, died Wednesday

rortunate 11 811 my life."
Griffin continued, "I've got
a floe lamUy. The Lord
blessed me with skllb! to play
athletics. It's stiU bard lo
visualize wbat bas happened
the past lew yean."
The Columbus native said
priorities established by his
parents was another reason
for his success. "My parents
taught me first to he a
Christian. Th~n , they urged
me to get an education and
lastly, be a good athlete and
Ways campaignS in the area . set a good example."
The Tri-State Area Council
is orgaaized into four

that what we received last
year," Hartley to ld the
audience aft er the final
pledge was turned in.
Leo M. MacCourtney, vice
pres ident and general
manager of WOWK-TV,
Channel 13, Huntington, is
cha irman of the 1977
sustaining membe r shi p
enrollment drive for the TriState Area Council.
The yea rl y fund-raising
dinner is held to supplement
funds received from United

Center. He was a son ot the
late Charles and Melinda
Hawthrone Clagg .

•

Funeral arrangements are

under the direction of Miller's
Home for Funerals.

GAG ORDER ISSUED
CLEVELAND (UPI) -A
gag order was issued
Toeaday in the case of Dr.
Stuart Kutler, a hospital
emergency room physician
charged with murder in the
disappearance of Arthur
Nosk~, a, Brecksville.
CUyahoga County Commoo
Pleas Judge Harry Hanna .
issued an order JrOI1!blting
the police, prosecutors,
defense attorneys and Kutler
from discussing the case with
the news metla or the public.
He said be took the action to
Jrotect Kutier'sright to a fair
trial.
The missilig hoy and his
mother, Ann Noske, 32,•
moved in with Kutler, Who is
separated from his wile, late
in January.
Miss Noske, a respiratory
therapist, told pollee Feb. 8
her son had disappeared at
Parmatown ShOJlping Cent&amp;r
in suburban Parma. · Days
later she gave detectives
from the county sheriff's
department a statement
accusing Kutter of beating
the boy to death earlier in the
month. The boy's body has
not been found.

a1 y

e
VOL XXVII NO. 226

than 7,900 boys, age 8 to 17, in
a 10-eounty area in Ohio,
West Virglata and Kentucky.
Griffin was introduced by
another fonner OSU Buckeye
pla yer, Atty . William
Eachus, Gallipolis.
Griffin , a down-to-earth
type person who has not let
success interfere with his
. own life style, told community leaders he has been

ree

•

Ie ID

TRAGEDY REFLECTE~ - Shortly after Thursday night's fire which clsirlled the
iiws of three persons on Neighborhood R.d., two exhllusted Gallipolis Volunteer firemen,
. Neil McMahon, left, and Wayne Elliott, take a break in rain on lawn in front of the victims'
OOme,

COLUMBUS - MARK WHITE, secretary ol state of

hil .

state s 11!nnanent voter registration by mail system Is 110
convenient the electorate would compt8in If it were
discontinued
White leatlfled before the. Senate Elections Committee,
which is considering a similar syslenl for Ohio. He said a drive
by voter interest grou)JII last year distributed more than ·s
mllllon registration forms and raised the number of reglltel'el\
voters in Teras from 1.4 million to 8.3 million, ''probably the
largest increaae in flle nation."

lberfelds In Pomeroy
Take advantage of the special sale prlcas
Frlclay and Saturday

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 P.M.
Jewelry 112 price, Bestlorm Bras 2 for SS.OO, Select group pictures
and wall plaques lf• price, Men's $11.95 Blue Jeans sale $8.99, One
group men's ties 'h price.
·
Plus men's $6.95 pal•mas sale 2 for $11.95, Tube socks 88c pr. ·
Glidden paint sale at Warehouse on Mechanic Street, Save on Wintuk
knitting yarn $1.19 skein, $2.49 yard l;louble knit polyester for Sl.88
yard, Sale prices on record albums, Sale of Cannon Royal Family
sheets and place mats In Home Furnishings Department 1st floor,
Save in the llousewares Department on Schick Hair Dryer, Prato
Hamburger Cooker, Hamilton Beach Electric Knife, and a final
clearance sale of Wif.nen's winter dresses.

berfelds In Pome

(Continued on page 2)

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

By U.Dited Press IDteruatlooal
COLUMBUS, OlllO - GOV. JAMES A. RHODES may say
a White House snub at a black-tie dinner was no "great
concern to me" but the grandchildren he attempted tO take to
the dinner don't agree. "fie was mad ,n said Jamie Moore,
Rhodes' nine-year old grandson. "It's just that he didn't act
like he was mad, but he was mad."
Rhodes attempted to take Jamie and Jamie's 12-year-&lt;Jld
sister, Missy, to a White House dinner Tuesday night but was
turned away because of the children. A White House spokesperson said President Jimmy Carter and his wife were
"extremely distressed" when notified of the incident. "It
wasn't a great coocern to me ," said Rhodes. "The Presfdent
was very gracious to call. The matter is closed."
WASffiNGTON - TAX SHELTERS AND OTHER
provisions of the income tax system allowed 182 persons who
earned $200,000 or more to escape paying any income taxes in
1975. Another 6,000 rich persons used special provisions in the
law to get their taxable income down to an effective tax rate of
20 per cent - the same ra!e as a family of five with an $11,000
(Continued on page 10)

aze

urs

Agent Herman Henry of the acting Gallia County
Ohio Bureau of Criminal Coroner, and Prosecuting
Identification, London, and Attorney Joseph Cain.
The two-story frame home
State Fire Marshal Frank
was
rented by Lawson. It was
Eisnaugle of Jackspn have
located
on Neighborhood R.d.
been called in to assist Gallia
just
south
of SR 141 southwest
County Sheriff James l!lontof
Gallipolis.
The structure is
gomery and his staff in the
owned
by
Mr.
and Mrs.
investigation of a fire ThursKessler
Adkins
of
Columbus.
day night which claimed the
The
fire
alann
sounded
at
lives of a young mother and
8:53
p.m.
according
to
her two small children.
Gallipolis
Fire
Chief
James
The victims were identified
as Phyllis Ann Owens, 20, Rt. A. Northup. The blaze was
2, Gallipolis, and her cilnfined to the second floor
children, Ronnie Thomas rooms and stairway.
The woman's father ,
Owens; 4, and Valarie Lynn
'
Clarence
Alonzo Lawson, Sr.
Owens, 14 months. They were
was
treated
and released at
found by Gallipolis firemen in
the second floor bedroom of
the home of her father,
Clarence Alonzo Lawson, Sr.
According to Sheriff Montgomery autopsies on the
victims were scheduled this
morning at ·the Holzer
Medical Center. However, a
hospital spokesman said no .
autopsies were performed.
On the scene Thursday
night in addition tO the 24
volunteer firemen headed by
Chief Northup were Snerifl
Montgomery and members of
his staff, Dr. Edna Gettles,

the Holzer Medica I Center for
third degree burns of the left
hand and first degree burns
to his face.
Lawson was burned while
attempting to rescue his
daughter and grandchildren.
Marvin Ours, Eureka, a
volunteer fireman , al so
suffered first degree burns qf
his left hand fighting the
blaze . . ·
Damage was set at fl ,000 to
the building and $3.000 to the
contents. Cause of the blaze
has not been determined.
Phyllis Ann Owens was
born Nov . 29, 1956 in
Chillicothe to Clarence

Alonzo Lawson , Gallipolis
and Loretta Frances Prince,
Columbus.
In addition to her parents,
she is survived by her
husband, William Ronald
Owens whom she married
March 8, 1g71 in Florida; a
sister, Sheila Marie Lowson,
Columbus; a brother, Lonnie
Lawson , paternal grandmother, Edna Butterfield,
paternal grandmother, Edna
Butterlield, and stepmother ,
Glenna · C. Lawson, all of
Gaillpolis.
·
Her son, Ronald Thomas
was born Aug. 8, 19'12 In
. Deland, Fla. and her

daughter, Valerie Lynn, was
born Jail. 10, 1976 in GainesviDe, Fla. The Owens family
lived in Deland, Fla. until
Oct. 18, 1976 when they moved
to Gallipolis.
Funeral services wiD be 1
p.m. Sunday at Miller's
Home for Funerals with the
Rev. Bill Beegle officiating.
Burial will be in Centenary
· cemetery. Frienda may call
at the funeral home alter 4
p.m. Saturday.
,
Pallbearers will be Jerry
Sparks, Larry Stewart,
Henry Snapp; Alva Sullivan,
Tom Sheets and Lonni.e
Lawson.

Pool admissions set

'

Teu~, told an Ohio legislaUve panel Wednesday .night

en tine

•

News •• in Briefs
(Continued !rem page I)
.
Colorado, North Dakota, Minnesota and Wisconsin and winter
storm warnings were posted {or South Dakota and Iowa.
~early a loot and a half of snow plied up in Salt Lake City and
more than two feet of snow was on the grolind in nearby foothill
areas.
· Heavy snow clogged portions of northwestern Iowa and all
roads in the area were reported snow-packed. Schools In much
of the area were ordered cloaed today. Rock Rapids, Iowa,
reported a foot of snow on the grolind, Spencer reported etcht
inches and Sac City and Cherokee each reported a1x Inches.

•

FRIDAY, MARCH 4. 1977

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Griffin said he has been
fortunate tomeet many good •
people in college and
athletics, and that he still
believes strongly in the three
Ds - desire, dedication and
determination.
Speaking of Woody Hayes, .
his college coach, Griffin "'
said:
"Everybody may not like
Woody, but they respect him
for what he believes in."
Griffin called Hayes one of

districts and serves more

evening at the Holzer Medical

.--------.'DEAN SETS RECORD

MARCH 1, 1977

'

Rovernrnent revenues plus

Area Deaths. l

:

.
-I
BLAINE CARTER
DALE DARST SR .
Blalne ·Carter, Sr ., 63, died
Mrs. Odell Manley has
Wednesday night at his home received word of the daoth of
makes projections of future at 479 La Grande Blvd., her un cle, Dole (Dustr. )
Gallipolis, following a six n . t 5 u f Za
11
county government 'income months Illness.
""'" , r .• ~ . o nesv e.
IW. Darst was a former
Ievels thatmightbeavailable
Mr. Carter was born May resident of Middleport.
for capital improvement 27, 1913 at Mohawk, W. Va ., a
He died at his home In
son of the late Kenney and Za
111
f
a
t
uses.
Ella Hatfield Carter. He
nesv • 0 an ppar~
Possible new sources of married the former Ruby Surviving
heart attack
Feb.
18.
are hisonwife,
Peggy
local financial aid are Frye on Dec. 2, 1933 and she Lewis Darst; 10 children ,
described, as are alternative preceded him In daath on Oct. three sisters and a brother.
levels of future funding for 26• 1975· Mr. and Mrs. Carter Funerel ser vices with
operated a restaurant In
1111
lte
d ted
local capital improvements Rutland tor some 15 rears. on
m ··Feb.
ary r 22 s were
conBryant
uc
at
the
eda
ne .
The Carters resided In Funeral Home In Zanesville.
Thereportwaspreparedby Rutland Townsh.lp for 25
James
M.
Jennings ~ars and In Gallla County
MAXINE E. SAYRE
Associates , a Columbuse past two and a halt years.. Maxine E. Sayre, 5s, 537
. lk . Carter was employed as Wayne Drive, Falrborne,
based conaulting firm , for the a coal miner for a number of Ohio, former Ma~s County
Meigs County Regional years.
Surviving · . a.re
fi ve res ld en t • dl e d ed nes da Y
Planning Commission daughters, Mrs . Gerald evening at Miam i Valley
(MCRPC ). A copy is (J uan Ita I clar k• New Haven, Hoopltal,
Dayton
.
Mrs. Sayre
Is survived
by
available for public in- W. Va .; Mrs. Paul IBlanch ) her husband, Ashton, her
speclion during normal Parsons , Gatllfolls ; ·Mrs . mother , Ethel Stewart,
busineBS hours a the CETA Bobby (Jo Ann Spaulding. Pomeroy, one olster, Mrs.
Office located on the third Route 1, Cheoterhlll ;· Mrs. Evelyn Lucke, Syracuse, and
Denzil !Barbara) Welsh . one brother, VIctor Stewart,
Door of the Court House. The Route 1, Middleport, · and Merritt. Fla. She was a
report is the fourth in a series Mrs. Clean (Sharon) Pratt, retired stenographer from
Pomeroy; a son , Blaine w
A F
of six that will result ·in a Carter, Jr ., New Haven ,· two . right Patterson lr orce
Base where she was emMeigs CounIy Capt'tal im - sloters, Mrs. Willie (Ava) . played
for '19 years.
provements Program for Ferrell , Glen Alum, W. Va.,
Funeral services will he
1978-1982 io be reeominended · and Mrs. Wendell !Allee I · held · Saturdar at 2 p.m. lit
1Q the Meigs County Com- .Veley, Portsmouth ; 16 Ewing Chape with burial In
missioners by the MCRPC. grandchildren , six great. Beech Grove Cemeter,y.
grandchildren, and a number Friends may call at the
of nieces, nephews and funeral home Friday from 7
cousins.
to 9

· improvements funding
The Meigs County Regional
Planning Commiss ion
(MCRPC) is currently
reviewing a preliminary
capital Improvement report
that lists 12 local sources,
seven state sources, and
numeroiL'! Federal sources of
funds that may be available
for capital improvements
needed in Meigs County
during the period from 1978 to
1982.
This report shows that
about $300,000 has been spent
annually on roads, bridges,
and other capital improvements in ~eigs County
during the past five years.
The projected toea I
revenue Increases In the
existing tax base indicates
that about $600,000 might be
available annually for Meigs '
County capital improvements
during the next five years.
The complete report
defines aod describes the
major sources of local

r ----- -- - -- - -- ------------- ~

MGM DISTRICT WELL REPRESENTED - The
District of
, Tri-State Area Cowicil, Boy Scouts of America was well represented
• night's aruwalleadership dinner meeting at Oscar's Restaurant in Gallipolis. t'lfllv-&lt;'ll•ht
_""i persons attended. Community leaders pledged a record $8,690 toward area scouting.
left was used to tally flle results during the "running up the score for scouting." Left to
are VitusHartiey, Jr., Pt. Pleasant, Chainnanof the MGM Leadership Div!Bion whd
·as MC and "referee" during the pledging; Ediso~ Hobstetter, Pomeroy; Archie Grilffin.
speoill:er and Paul
Gaitipolis.

SYRACUSE - Swinuning proper identification and so
pool admission charges were cents for pre--school ~hiidren
. set by Syracuse Village who must be accompanied by
Council in a regular session a parent. Swimming lessons
Thursday night.
will be $10 for 10 lessons.
A family season ticket for
The pool will be open daily
two persons will be $30 pius $3 from 1 to 8 p.m. except
lor each additional member Wednesday when It will close
of the same family; single ·at 7 p.m. On Wednesday
season ticket $20; single day eveillng will be adult night
admission $1.25 lor adults, 75 from 7 to 9:30p.m. The pool
cents for students, which wiD also he available lor
includes college students with Jl8rties at $25 an hour for a

E-RCALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to Cave St.
at10 a.m. Thursday for Mrs.
\
James Phillips who was
minimum of two hours.
It will be announced later taken to Holzer Medical
when tickets will . be Center.
available.
Council in other business
IN HOSPITAL
granted permiBSion to the
American Legion Baseball
Mrs. Pearl Jacobs, Laurel
team to use the hall Held for Cliff, was taken to Holzer
home games. Meetmg with Medical Center Thursday
council about the field were where she was admitted for.
Charlie Hamilton, coach .of treatment. Her room number
the Legion team, and Jun is 535.
Soulsby, busineBS manager.
Hamilton, thanking everyone for the use of the field in
the past, said all the teams
that have played at Syracuse
like the facilities. Soulsby
disclosed the Legion is
considering night games,
probably Wednesday
evenings.
Ohio Power Company
Council asked that a
schedule of Legion games be today .announced a plan to
supmilted · as soon as help its residential customers
poBSible.
insulate their homes to
11 was pointed out that conserve energy.
whoever uses tbe lield at
Under the proposed plan,
night will be charged for the the company would loan its
use of .the lights, a cost to be customers a maximum of
. detemlined soon.
f/50 each to be repaid at8 per
Also meeting with council cent interest over a threewas Jack Wllliams about a year period.
C. A. Heiler, executive ·vice
hole in the road at Sandhill
· that makes it impassable. president of Ohio Power,
C~uncil agreed to make said:
.
"Our proposed plan is one
necessary repairs to the road
as soon as finances permit. way we could assist our
Attending were Mayor customers to conserve in
Herman London, Eber their use of enetgy ior home
Pickens, Robert Wingett, heating and cooling, and it
Katie Crow, and Jimmy Joe also is consistent with the
Hemsley, council members, national effort to · conserve
Mary Chancey, clerk, Pollee energy. Good insulation can
Chief
Milton
Varian, make a sii!Dificant impact."
The loans would be
Williams, Hamilton and
available
to aU nisting
Soulsby.

PREP ARE FOR CRUSADE - These representatives
of Meigs County's Retired Senior Volunteer Programs
were amoog the workers helping prepare for the April
fund crusade of the Meigs Unit of the American Cancer
Society at the cancer office Thursday. This group
:::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::;:;:;::::::~::::::::;:::::::::::::;::::::::::.

Insulation loan

Bond set at $20,000

in shooting mcident
Auston Newsome,
Syracuse, has been arrested
in connection with the
shooting of Rudy Stewart,
Syracuse, Thursday morning, the Meigs Countr
Sherill's Department
reported today.
The Incident occurred near ·
one of the Meigs Mines.
NeWIOme appeared before
County Court Judge Robert
E. Buck Thui'lday afternoon
when bond was set at I:IA!,OOO.

Weather
Windy and cooler tonight,
cbance of showers. J.ows to
40. Cloudy S.turday. lnghl
1111r 116. Chance of rain 90 per
cent today, 40 per cent
tonight, 3l per cent Saturday.

The prosecution asked that
the bond be set higher than It
was.
Newsome posted bond and
was released. The incident Is
still under investigation. II
was reported unoffielally that
Stewart has been released
from Holzer Medical Center.

TWO ASSISTED
The Middleport
Emergency Squad was call~
to582PalmerSt., at5:23 p.m.
Thursday for Faye Wallace, a
medical patient, who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospibli. AI 7:'11 p.m., flle
aquad went. to the LaSalle
Hotel lor Robert C. ·Roush,
New Haven, 'who was also
taken to Veterans Memorial
·Hospital.

prepared envelopes"' be left at home where no one is at
home when volunteer workers do their door-t(Hjoor
campaign. Around the table from the left m:e Dayton
McElroy, Frances Roush, Lincoln Russell and Kermit
McElroy.

P.lan ann()unced ·
residential customers, but
limited to customer-owned
and occupied residences.
Ohio Power's pian requires
approvals by the Public
Utllitles Commission of Ohio
and the Securities and Exchange
Commission .
Necessary documents.
seeking that permission will
be filed with those agencies in
the near future.

CANVASs SET
Meigs County Heart Fund
volunteers will canvass
Pomeroy Saturday, March
12, Cor contributions. SiJrty-'
live percent of the residents
of Meigs County are affected
by heart disease.

EXTENDED 0lJ'n,()()K
Suuday through
Tueaday, chance of raiD
Sunday and ~day, lair
Monday. Hlgha Ia the ~s
and low ·50s. Lows in the
upper %Is and -30s.

Street crew is

Five Churchills
bring $146,700

Meeting in regular seBSion
Thursday at the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric
.Co. buUdlng, the Middleport
Chamber of Commerce
highly commended the
vUiage street department.
The chamber commended
the department lor its work
on the streets not only during
the onow and icy weather but
also In the cleanup work now
being carried out. U was
reported that the chamber
has purchased six new trash
containers for streets which
will be turned over to the
village for placement.
During the meeting
presided over by Emer110n
Heighton, president, a Jetter
was read from the Small
Business Administration
announcing that bustnesaes
Which suffered or are likely to

LONDON (UP!) - Five
paintings belonging to
Baroness Spencer-Churchill,
the 91-year-old widow of Sir
Winston Churchill, were sold
for $146 ,700 today at
Christie's art auctiqn house.
Lady Churchill, financially
squeezed b e.t ween
mushrooming inflation and
falling investment Income,
put the five treasured
paintings on the auction block .
tO help delray her living
expenses.
The paintings, including
two by Str Winston, were sold
for 2~ times the revised presale , estimate,
which
Christie's doubled just before
bidding began. Ali live Were
bought by London dealers.

•
•
gtven
prmse
suffer irom the energy crisis
are eligible for emergency
enetgy loans.
A meeting of the
Southeastern Ohio Economic
aod Industrial Development
group was announced for
March 31 at the Ohio
University Inn at Athens. The
chamber discussed the
holdup In the construction of
the bridge over the Ohio
River at Ravenswood and ·
agreed to contact Gov. Jamea
Rhodes on the matter, urging
that the project proceed.
Atleliding were President
Heighton, John Wariter, Mrs.
Alwilda Warner who gave the
treasurer 's report; Ml'11.
Edna Wilson who gave the
secretary's report; Mlnnll1l
Kloes, Eclllon Baker, Carl
Horky and Richard s. Owen.

.\~

�2- The Dally sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, March 4_, 197~
LOTTERY WINNERS
This week 's winning
Lottery numbers:
PolO' Gold
Three-dlgll number
059. .
Three-digit number
773.
Five·dlgit number
89829.
Double Play
Tbree-dlgll number
896.
Flve·dlgU number 07517.
Slx·dlgll number 559291.
WinDing color - blue.

GOP is

losing
•

m ASC

---7..,7,;;-of;W;n~~~~;,;;;;.;;;,-T~e;;h;uWb;-:

Archie
(Continued lrom page I)
the finest coaches in the
nation. " He 's great with
young people," Griffin
continued. People who
n'jfustfi
'n
dcroinl!tcizeknoCowachhun"H,~yeGs
•
added·
Griffin ,gave credit to his
teammates at Ohio State for
his winning of the two
Heisman Trophies. " They
really won those trophies for
me, " Arch'Ie add ed · "W'th
' ou1
th em, I't wou td no1 ha ve be en
possible."
Griffin said the Reisman
TropbY was noI hi ' goaI a t
Ohl o State. •'My goa1 was to
II I cha m·
PIa Y on a na
we came
· ooa
I
bl
I
P ous P eam.
cIose twl ce {sopbomore and
se olor years I buI never qu II e
"b
!In d
made't IIh'
, et'con uef ·tball
SWI c mg o pro oo
•
'
·d "It' bo t 11 I
G"''ff m
sa1 ,
s a u. a
expect ed · Til ey are bIgger,
fast er an d bett er In lhe
" h dd d G ·ff·
'd
pros, e a e · " 10 ·sai 1
his goa I as a pro fessiona
· t 1
th s
PIayens o Pay m e uper
· hi P
Bow I on a champ10ns
squad. He felt the Bengals
have a good chance of going

..

"

.

all the way this year.
He said individuals should
not be dependent on football.
"It's not that secure. An
injury could end a career any
time. You mu~. get that
education first , he con·
eluded.
.
. .
The next45 mmutes Gr1ffrn
spent answe~ing questions
from the audience.
Rev. AI MacKenzie.
Gallipolis, gave the in·
vocation.
Dinner spnosors were Atty.
Eachus and . Lawren~e
{Pa112o) Bast1aru, Gallipolis.
Table hosts were :
Mason County - Cha!lie
Brown, Art Hartley, VItus
Hartley, Charles Lonham,
Mike Sellards and Bob
Wingett.
Gallia County - Roger
Barron, Tim Cornell, Bob
Daniel, Dave Evans, Skio
Meadows, Dr· Bern~rd
N1ehm, Gary Owens, D~ck
Roy, Greg .Smith, Mannmg
Wetherholtand Ike Wiseman.
Meigs County - Bob Buck
and Bob Miller.

- New 'quickie
lottery game
is announced
CLEVELAND ( UPI) Ohio
Lottery
The
CommilJsion approved rules
Thursday for a new ''instant
lottery game, the secood such
game tried in Ohio.
The approval came during
a public hearing at which no
me appeared to speak lor or
against the instant game. The
$1 tickets go on sale April 5.
The new game will have
prizes ranging from $2 to
$1,000 a week for life. The
chances of winning the lowest
prize are about l·ln·lO and the
top prize will go to a winner
chosen. from among the
milllool of players who win
$2, ~. or $10 prizes.
In addition, "losers" will be
able to mail in their tickets to
have a chance to win weekly
prizes of up to f$0,000.
Any lllttery Ucket agent
1flll be able to dt.penu tjle $2,
" ..,q $10 prlzea lilt the,
prizes ol f]OO, $1,000 and
'10,000 mlllt be claimed at a'
regional lottery office.
11

less than 300wonls ICJIIIl (or be subject to reduction by
lbe editor) and must be signed with the signee's adeire
N
be 1 hh ld
b
ss. ames may
w I e upon pu llcatloo.
However, on request, names will be disclosed. Letters
should be In good taste, addressing issues, not per·
sonalllles.
£)

I
1
1
I

i

1

Q~Fdl/h
~

• • • ·•

•
•

•

Conscientious, hard working
Dear Sll':
When I read your article in the Wednesday paper
coocerning Mr. Oris Hubbard's protests wthe comnussioners
about the Meigs County Welfare Dept.,l felt I should voice my
opinion.
In my work at a local pharmacy I often have occasion to
call down for information which we need In order tiJ send in our
welfare prescription copies to the state for payment. Never
have they even hesitated to look up the information for me and
they have been very nice in doing so.
I don't know what Mr. Hubbard's complaint is but there
are always two sides to every story. I have worked with the
public for many years and I know it is much easier to treat a
customerwithrespectifthatishowtbeytreatme.
•
The Welfare Dept. in Middleport is sadly understaffed and
overworked .Thereisnowaythatanyonecouldexpectinstant
service in any business if there is along line of persons waiting
ahead of you.
I hope every one will realize that most persons who work
with the public are doing their best. Please keep this in mind
and try tiJ trea't them the same way you wish to be treated. (Mrs.) Texanna Well, Pomeroy, Ohio.

R escure... figh t
fr
*o ee mzner
Q

~

I

e

&amp;.1

TOWER CITY, Pa. (UP!)
- Ronald Adley, trapped
deep in the blackness of a
coal mine lor a third night,
called lor more food and a
cup of coffee Thursday while
rescue workers doggedly
chippedawayata5().foot wall
of coal to free him.
Officials said they hoped w
free him late this afternoon,
but cautioned it could take
until midnight.
"He's in good spirits and
feels strong," said federal
mine inspector John Shutack.
"I asked him if he needed
anything and he said, 'I'll
have some coffee and more
eats."'
Shutack said Adley,'!/, and
the father of two children,
cannot hear seven other
miners who were also
trapped by a sudden flood
three days ago and does not
know their whereabouts. The
miners were trapped when
millloos of gallons of water
burst through a wall and
cascaded through the mine.
Two other miners are known
dead and three were
critically Injured.
Rescuers, working in eight·
hour shifts in the grimy
Porter Tunnel of the Kochar
Coal Co., were more than
halfway through the wall of
coal today, moving at a rate
of between 1·11&gt;·feet-perhour in their effort to reach
Adley,
Shutack said rescuers used
·air drills, handpicl!S and a
small jackhammer to enlarge
a six-inch hole through which
they were speaking with
Adley and passing food to
him.
While efforts continued w
free Adley, hope waned for
the survival of the other
seven .
State and federal officials,
in an atiA!mpt to locate the
others, placed a seismic
· device on a hill8ide over the
general area of the accident.
"Thill ill picking up all
noiaes," Shutack said .
"Miners know that if they are
trapped, they are supposed to
give three ta~ with a piece ol

.

coal. If they (the seven) rap,
the device will pick it up."
Federal !Dine safety
officials said a giant drill,
being brought from Salt Lake
City by three Air Force Cl30
transport planes, will be used
to drill down to where the
seven are believed trapped. It
was not known when the drill
would arrive.
Shutack said much of the
water that inundsted the
mine has drained away and
rescuers have encountered
depths of only about four feet.
WaIter Vic in e 11 y ,
commiSSioner
of
the
Pennsylvania Bureau of Mine
Safety, said there still is llope
for the missing men.
"We never give up hope,"
he said. "We're doing
everything we can. .We still
have hope untll every man is
accounted lor."
Famllies of the missln.!!
miners continued a vigil
outside the tunnel of the mine
Thursday, leaving only to
attend church or wrest in a
bus provided for them by the
state.
Funeral services for Gary
Lee Klinger, 19, Hegins, Pa.,
will be today In nearby
Ashland. His body was
brought out of the mine
Tuesday.

TilE DALY SENTINEL
DEVOTED TO THE
INTERESI'OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TA~EHIU.
EJ:rt: . Edt

ROBERT HOEnJCH
Cil)' EdiWr
PuiJJI.Sht:d daily t!XCepl Salurilily
lly The Ohw VaUey Publishing Con"Jo
cmy, lll Court St., P(IDeroy, Ohio
46769 Bustneii!J Office Phone m
2156. EdilurUd Phood92-2157.
Second da.¥S ~~e PMid Ott
~· u u~r uy , Ohiu .

National atlverti.!dng t't:presentalt v~ Ward · GriffiUI Com~ny, Inc, &amp;Ulntllt and Gllll&lt;tght!r Dav.,
7~7 ntirtl Avh., New York, N y
10017

SubscrlpUun rBI.t!l : Deltvered by
c~r~rner where avaJU.ble 75 ~.:ent.ll per

wen:. By Motor Rt~ok! whtl,._, carrU!l
IM!t'IICe not iiVIdlaUJe, One uiurnh,

13.25. By mo~ul 111 Ohllll:llld W. Va,
Ur• ~ Year, t22.00 . Six rnmJths,

flUO ; Tlu cc m u nth:~,
Ebwwht1 c 126.00 yce~r , St.ll
I IJ. ~ ; Tllr cc nw nlhli,
Sub!!cripl t"u Jlncc n1dudes

Tunes--S•••!IU1cl

$7 00
rnonthS
S7 ~0
Swttl.!ll'

BERNARD BRENNER
UPI FARM EDITOR
WASHINGTON (UP)) Agriculture Secretary Bob
Bergland is sweeping out
R~pubiican
• appointed
members of his department's
50 state-level Agricultural
Stab iIi za t ion and
Conservation Committees,
deparlment officals report.
Simultaneously, Bergland
says he is seeking authority
which could be used to oust
the full-time executive
directors of state ASC offices
as well.
Veteran officials say the
turnover of farmer-members
of state ASC committees and
most executive directors of
state offices bas been normal
in past changes of polltical
administrations.
Officials said they found no
problems in dropping the
committee members, who
serve on a part-time basis.
One spokesman said most
agreed readily to subrru't
resignations, and a few who
requested formal dismissal
notices were accommodated.
All 50 of the state commit·
tees, which help handle state·
level administration of farm
supports and other federal
farm programs, will be swept
cleanbytheendofnextweek,
the spokesman said. The
committees have three to five
members each, depending on
the size of the·"'•te,
Bergland ~found
an
d
b 1 1
1
uhonexpecined lino s lathe ~~
wever,
ea g w tuc
50 state executive directors'
jobs.·
·
During
past
party
turnovers the directors
generally 'resigned without
protest when asked to do so,
or sometimes were moved to
o I her A gr. i c u It u r e
Department
posts
in
Washington. But this time,
some of the directors have
retained an attorney who has
w a r ne d .Ca r t e r
administration leaders it ·
would be illegal to fire the
offlcialsoo political grounds.
Attorney Carl Shipley said
in an interview the officials
involved hold jobs classified
as "schedule A" positions.
These jobs can be filled
without normal civil service
testing and appointment
procedures but Shipley said
courts hav~ held recently that
- because such posts are
basically administrative
rather than policy-makingthe occupants cannot be fired
By

PLAY BALL!-That appears to be what Vitus Hartley, Jr., Pt. Pleasant, chairman of
the MGM LeaderShip Division, is saying in this pho!IJ but actually, he's calling Jast. night's
meeting to order. Hariley served as master of ceremonies for the 1977 Tri-State Area
Council Boy Scouts of America leadership dinner at Oscar's Restaurant in Gallipolis. On left
is Father A. L. MacKe112ie, who gave Invocation and guest speaker Archie Griffin. Scouts in
front who led pledge wflag are Ben Davis, Pack 23ll, Salem Center and Jeff Lowe, Troop
257.

Child's killers Television log .for
• •
easy vzewr.ng
are imprisoned

By CARL A. VINES
ATHENS, Tenn. (UPI) - A
sobbing mother and an emotionless steJiather were sentenced to 99 years and one
day in prison Thursday for
the torture death of 4-year-old
Melisha Gibson.
The mne.man , three.
woman jury coovicted Wanda
and Ronald Maddux of
second degree murder after
43 minutes of deliberation
that followed three days of
testim011y oo how the girl was
beaten, forced to march for
hours on bleeding feet and
given hot sauce when she
begged for water.
''It was a great verdict/'
said District Attorney
Richard Fisher, who had
asked the jury for "no less
than· life for Wanda Gibson
Maddux" and" the greatest
number of years possible for
Ronald Maddux."
Attorneys
for
both
defendants said they would
appeal and Judge James Witt
said he would hear motions
for a new trial May 7,
"I am just trying to decide
which of the 104 errors I will
use in my aweal," said
Maddux' attorney, LeRoy
Phillips.
Mrs. Maddux, 36, broke
into sobs after the verdict
was read and continued to sob
as Witt handed down the
sentence. Maddux showed no
. emotion.
Maddux, a pot-bellied. 31·
year-old part-time carpenter
with bulging eyes, and his
wUe will not be eligible for
parole for 30 years.

Phillips said the defense
lost the case when Witt
refused to transfer the trial
further away than Athens, 30
miles from the Maddux'
home in Cleveland.
Two likely points of
argument lor a ·new trial are
the judge's refusal wgrant a
change of venu~ , and his
denial of motions for a
mistrial because of Fisher's
statements in an impassioned
final argument w the jury.
The district atwrney was
reprimanded by the judge,
after uie jury left the room,
for telling the panel to
consider "natural law" which
makes a mother protect her
young - a comment that
brought defense attorneys to
·their feet with demands for a
tnlstrial.
Witt told Fisher his state·
ments were "highly lnflam.
matory" lilt refused tiJ grant
a mistrial.
Maddux and his wife both
testified in their own defense
and sought to blame each
other lor the cruelty and
abuse that l~ft Melisha dead
of shock and exposure last
Oct. 3.
While Maddux actually tortured the child, Fisher said,
Mrs. Maddux :was equally
guilty because she did
nothing to stop it,
"I guess the worst thing
about it, she saw the child
llmping, she saw the open
sores on her feet, the open
bleeding sores, and she
provided not so much as a
Band-Aid, not anything to
help the child," Fisher said.

G-T customers
can call Carter
MARION - Customers of
General Telephone Co. of
Ohio will stand as good a
chance as millions of other
telephone users throughout'
the United States in com·
pleting a free phone call to
the White House during the
two-hour "Ask President
radio
call-in
Carter"
Saturday afternoon.
It is estimaied that
Americans will make be·
tween 5,000,000 and 6,000,000

for political reasons.
Shipley said government
attorneys "pretty well
admit" that "schedule A"
officeholders cannot be
replaced without good cause
unless they lack the
protection of veterans'
preference status. The
attorney added he was
convinced that even nonveterans cannot be ousted
without cause.
And Bergland said in an
inter,.iew he is asking the
Civil Service Commissioo to
reclassify the state ASC
eiecuti ve directorships from
"schedule A" to "schedule
C." The ''C" category is used
for pohcy'making and
confidential assistant ~Is,
and people in such jobs can be
replaced at any time with no
civil service protection.
The agriculture secretary

attempts to talk with
President Carter · by calling
toll !ree 1·900-242-1611 between I and 4 p.m. Altl)ough
the special CBS Radio . Net·
work program will run from 2
to 4 p.m., the special staff of
20 CBS attendants answering
the phones at the White House
will begin receiving calls at I
p.m. '
In view of .the more than ·
5,000,000 atter\ipts to call
expected, It Is estimated that
only aboug 1,200 calls an hour
will get through to the CBS
operators at the White House.
Because· of the llmited time,
it is estimated that only ,35 to .
40 persons will actually speak
with the President or with
Walter Cronkite, CBS news
commentator, who will serve
as moderator.

said be is coovinced the state
posts should he In "schedule
C" because they "clearly are
policy-making positions."
Another agriculture official
said be assumed if the state
directorships . were
reclassified, many of lbe
current occupants would be
replaced.
Officials said most, but not
all, of the occupants were
appointed during the Nixon
and Ford admlnistratibns.
The jobs are In three
grades which carry starling
salaries of $24,308, $28,725 and
$33,789 annually, Top pay in
the three ~ades ' after 10
years service is $31,598,
- $37 ,:MhDd $43,~ a year,

WILL CLOSED
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
William Randolph &lt;Hearst's
will can !le kept secret to
protect descendants from
terrorists, the state Court o1
Appeals ruled Thursday.
Hearst's sons appealed a
&amp;Jperlor Court denial p1 their

FRIDAY, MAIICH4, 1977
s:oo-Big.Viii!Y 3; My Three Sclns 4; Brady Buncn o;
Mister Rogeri 'NelgfiliOrhood 20,33: Star Trek 15.
5:3()-Adam:l2 ~.13; News 6; Family Affair 8; Elec.
Co. 20,33.
~
6:oo-News 3,~.6.8. 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:31)-NIIC News 3,~.15; ABC News 13: AndyGrllfllh 6;
CBS·News 8, 10; Y.lablt Soup 20; Villa Altgre 33.
7:oo-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth~~ Bowling
tor Dollars 6; Sl28.000 Quosflon 8; News 10; To Tell
the Truth 13; My Three Sons 15: Ohio Journal 20;
Marshall University Report 33.
7:31)-Porter Wagoner 3; Gong Show 4; Treasure Hunt
8; Andy Williams 10; Name That Tune 13; Pop Goes ,
the Country 15.
8:oo-Santord &amp; Son 3,~, 15: Donny &amp; Marie 6, 13; Code
R 8,10: Washington Week In Review 20,33.
8:3~hlco &amp; the Man 3,~. 15: Wall Street Week 20,33,
f ;oo-Movle "Man from Aflanfls" M, 15; Brady Bunch
· 6,13; College Basketball 8; Sonny &amp; Cher 10;
Agronsky at ~arge 33: ~owell Thomas Remembers
20.

9:31)..-Dcx:umentary Showcase 33; The Way II Was 20.
lO:oo-ABC News Closeup 6, 13; Hunter 10.
10:31)-Whlch Way To Tomorrow? 20.
11 :oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; Monfle. Python's F.lvlng
Circus 20; Black Perspective on the News 33.
11 :31)-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; ABC tfews Speclal6,13;
Movie "Soul to Soul" 8; Mary Hartman 10; ABC
News 33.

12:GO-Movle "War of the Planets" 10: Janakl 33.
12 : ~od Squad 6; Ironside 13.
1:oo-Midnlght Special 3,4, 15.
1:45--News 13.
2:30--News 3.
3:oo-Movle "Pinky" 3.
4:30--Movle "Thank You, Mr. Molo" 3.
6:oo-Salnt 3.
SATURDAY, MARCH 5,1977
6:oo-Sunrlse Semester 10.
6·31)-Matters of Life 6; TV Classroom 8: Treehouse

h

r:lnh 10: KPnhN"kV Afield 13.

7·oo-Saturday Report 3; Dusty's Treehouse 4;
Eddie Saunders 8: Treehouse Club 8: u.s. Farm
Report 10; Gilligan 13.
7:31)-Bullwlnkle 3; Children's Theatre~~ Valley oflhe
Dinosaurs 6; Dusty's Treehouse 8; Man from COS I
10: Oddbell Couple 13; Sesame St. 20.
8:GO-Woody Woodpecker 3,4.15: Tom &amp; Jerry 6,13;
Sylvester &amp; Tweety 8,10.
8:31)..-Pink Panther 3,4,15; Jabberjaw 6,13; Clue Club
8.10: Mister Rogers 20.
9:GO-Scooby·DOO, Dynomuft 6.13: Bugs Bunny. Road
Runner 8: Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10: Sesame St. 20.
lO:oo-Speed Buggy 3,4,15; Tarzan 8.10: Once Upon a
Classic 20.
10:31)-Monster Squad 3, ~,15; Kroffl Supershow 6,13;
Batman 8,10; Zoom 20.
11:01)..-Space Ghosts, Frankenstein, Jr. 3,4,15;
Shazam.lsls 8,10; Consumer Survival Kit 20.
11 : 31)-Big John, Little John 3,4. 15; Big Blue Marble 6;
Superfrlends 13; Characteristics of Laarnlng
Disabilities 20.
12 : oo-~and of the ~ost 3,4,15; Hot Dog 6; Fat Albert
8,10; Action News for Kids 13: Crockett's Victory
Garden 20.
12 : ~ollege Basketball 3,15: American Bandstand
13; Movie "The Forbln Project" 4; Soul Train 6:
Vlewpolnl8; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Crop Game 20.
1:GO-Antique Furqlture Workshop 8; Urban League
10; InfinitY Factory 33.
1:30'-Poinl of View 6; Tennis&amp;, 10; Next Generation 13;
Zoom 33.
2 :~ollege Basketball 6; Little Mermaid 13;- N~v~

36 24 .600
31 Jl .500
28 34 .452

Buffalo
NY Nefs

23 39

Tiffin Columbian 66 Sandusky
Perkins 52
Mansfield Senior S.tl Fremont

R05s 48

CAt Cincinnati}

Sands,

Thom~son, 7·0· 14;
8-24; Bo~rd , 3·2·8.

Bing took 20-foot fall
level, useaasan orcheoba pit
or fer raitllnl! performers and
scenery to the stage.
Nick Condos, identified
only as a cloee penonal
friend of Croaby's, duhed
forward wbreak the filii but
was hit by the falllng scenery
before reaching the llinger,

r

•J

.

u,~

•lnlernotlonol
Hoc~y Lt1guo
Unllod Presslnlsrnallonal
North
• w I I pis. gf go
Kalamazoo
•
31 23 12 74 280 246
Saginaw 31 23 10 72 271 243
Flrnt ' 30 26 ' 67 290 252
Muskegon
• ·" 2t 10 62 247 258
Pert 11~~11"
.
2533 656m250
I'

~,

1

5outh

,

w If pts. ,, "
30 28 6 116 258 275
30 31 ~ 64 262 259

ATHENS, Ohio (UP!)Ohio Unlvenlty head
basketball coa ch Dale'
Bandy will be retained for
another season despite his
32-44 record In three years.
The Bobcats are H5in the
Mid·Amertcao Conference
this year with two games
remaining. Ohio U. won the
conferenee crown In 1973
and 1974, when Bandy was
an assistant coach. But
since he luok over the top
post, Ohio has not ltolshed
in tbe top half.
" The Coacb Bandy case

has been settled and he has
been told lo get out and get
recruiting," said athletic
director BUI Rohr Thurs·
day.

Revering ready

Cln Western Hills 88 Amelia

41

'

IAI Cleveland!
Cle John Adams S.S BreckS·
ville 53
CAt Lorain)
Rocky River 59 Medina 46
Bay U Strongsville 45
CA!Canfonl
Perry (Stark) 57 Mantua
Crestwood 34
Akron
Springt leld
52
Massillon 49

IAI Copley I
Akron Buchtel 63 Akron E 49
IAI Youngstown)
Youngs Chaney 63 Youngs
Mooney 61

Class AA
lA! Ada)
Lima Cen Cath 68 Lima Ba th
62
CAl Ashland)
CAl Chagrin Falls)

S· l -11 ;

cure for the problem.
"I went out and got a board,
shoved it under the mattress
and , after lying down on the
bed for an hour, I became
convinced that was the
reason for my sore back,''
said McCovey.
Righthander.Larry Dierker
fractured his left ankle while
running in the outfield at the
st. Louis Cardinals' camp in
st. Petersburg and is not
likely to pitch until May I.
Dierker, 301 who was ac·
quired in a winter deal with
Houston, was hurt minutes
alter another pitcher, John
D' Acquisto was hit on the
ankle by a line drive . X-rays
of D'Acquisto's ankle were
negative.

another chance

Cln Taft SO Cin Woodward 49

60 Cle Gilmour

lA! Bainbridge)
Waverly 70 Hillsboro 62
CAt Cantonl
Sandy Valley 19 Fairless 39
Akron Hoban 74 Akr St Vln-SI
Marr 60
At Steubenville I
Cadiz 18 Bridgeport 42
Wellsville 54 Buckeye North
48
CAt Napoleon I
Ottawa Glandorl IS Bryan 60
CAtTroyl
Bellefontaine 50 Milton-Union
42
Miami East 65 Benjamin
Logan 51
Springfield Calh 63 North·
ridge 46
(At Sandusky I
Willard 8 Margaretta 62
(AI Dayton)
New Leb Dixie 69 Middletown
Mad 51
Bellbrook 58 Brookville 55
Dayton

Jefferson

68

Day

Kaiser 62
.
(AI Luaosvlllel
Ironton 84 Minford 47

Baylor. 8·
Totals 27·

Cla,..A
(AI Bucyrus)
17·71.
Mansfld St Peters 69 Manslld
By Quarters
Christ 50
Han. Trace 12 13 14 25-&lt;14
(At Fairport Harbor)
Kyger Creek 20 14 13· 24- 71 Hawken 67 Cle Lutheran E 49
IAI Nelsonville)

- -·

1:30--News 3.
2:00-Movle "The Grapes of Wrath" 3.
2:30--ABC News 13.
3:30--Movle "Earthbound" 3.
5:oo-Salnt 3.
6:GO-FBI 3.

'

Results
Class AAA
CAt Ashland I

20 43 .317 lJ ih
Central Division
W. L. Pet . GB
Wl!Shtngton
37 24 607
Houston
34 .26 .567 21h
San Antonio
34 28 548 31h
Ross
Southwestern
73
32 27 .542 4
Cleveland
Federal Hocking 69
Cplumbus
New Or leans 26 35 .426 11
CAt Bryan)
Atlanta
25 38 .397 13
24 28 13 61 248 256 Archbold 70 Fayette &gt;15
western Conference
Fort Wayne
'(At Patrick Henry)
Midwest Division
24 31 8 56 231 265 Ayersvllle 77 Liberty Center
w. L ' Pet . GB
Thursday's Results
47
Denver
41 21 .661
Detro it
37 26 587 dlh No games scheduled
CAl Ottawa)
Friday's Games
Kansas City
32 31 .508 9•h
Patrick
Henry
75 Miller City
Ch icago
29 34 460 12 1h Columbus al Port Huron
59
Indiana
28 35 444 13 117 Toledo at Flint
{AI Van Wert)
Milwaukee
21 .u .323 21 117
Saturday's Games
Wayne Trace 15 Delphos
Pacific Division
Jeflerson 66
W L Pet. GB Saginaw at Muskegon
Ka -lamazoo at Porf Huron
CAt Dayton)
Los Angeles
39 23 629
Portland
38 25 603 w, Fort Wayne at Toledo
Yellow Springs 77 Ansonia 4A
Flint at Columbus
Golden State 36 28 563 4
Covington 53 Bradford 30
Seattle
31 33 .484 9
Franklin Monroe 69 Arcanum
Phoen tx
26 J5 426 12111
66
.
Thursday's Result
Waynesville 83 Dayton
Golden St. 121 Ph,la 119, ot
Christian 44
Friday's Games
NHL St.. ndlnts
!AI Pomeroy)
San Antonio at NY Nets
By United Press International
Washington at Atlanta
Kyger Creek 71 Hannan
Campbell Conference
Boston at Detroit
Trace 64
Patrick Division
Buffalo at New Orleans
W L T Pis. GF GA
Golden State at PhOen ix
Philo
40 13 12 92 263 175
Regular Season Results
Ch tcago at Los Angeles
NY lslandrs 39 l7 9 87 225 158 Coshocton 45 New Phil ·
Cleveland at Portland
Atlanlo
26 2111 63 205 213 adelphia 4A
Saturday's. Games
NY Rl!ngen 23 29 13 59 220 239 west Jefferson 70 Marysville
M ilwaukee at Houston, aft .
Smythe Division
San Antonio at Buffalo
53
W L T Ptl. GF GA
Philadelphia at NY Knlcks
St Louis
27 30 7 ., 189 217
Ntew Orleans at wash ington
Girls
Chicago
23 34 10 56 211 24A
Detroit at Indiana
Colorado
19 34 11 49 190 231
Ohio
High
School
seattle at Portland
M innesota 16 33 15 47 189 251
Basketball Results
Vancouver 19 40 7 45 175 249
United Press lnternotlonal
Welts conferencte
Thursday
Norris Division
W L T Pts. GF GA Clyde 60 Port Clinton 29
Montreal
A9 7 10 108 320 1.53 Cle L~lheran W 80 South
WHA Stand Ings
Pittsburgh 27 27 12 66 200 210
Amherst 25
Unlttcl Press lntern•tlonal
Los Angeles 26 28 12 64 213 202 Girard 42 Warren Kennedy. 39
East
W ~ ~ Pis. GF GA • Washlngtn 19 35 13 51 181 255 ~ancaster Fisher 65 ~ogan
Qute~c
37 2S 1 75 272 235 Detroit
16 •0 8 AO 142 238
Elm 52
Clnclnnari 31 28 3 65 279 231
Adams Division
Maplewood 38 Bristol 37
lndienepls 27 29 7 61 209 233
W L T PtJ. GF GA Mooroevllle 38 Black River 32
New Engtnd 27 34 6 60 218 244 Buffalo
40 19 6 84 '241 180
Birmnghm 25 37 3 53 227 240 BostQn
37 21 7 81 2.&amp;6 201 Newcomerstown 34 Lakeland
19
x Mlnnesot 19 18 5 43 134 129 Toronto
29 27 9 67 251 2.29
W••t
Cleveland 20 34 10 .SO 189 225 Oak Hill 59 Forest Park 25
W L T Pts. GF GA 1
Thursday's Results
Ontario 116 ~exinglon 28
Houston
· 38 19 6 82 248 185 ~ Boston 4 NY Rangers 1
River View 38 New Lexington
Wlnnl
35 27 2 7'1. 2811 237 Washington 7 C~lcago 4
22
Sen of:o ~3 27 3 49 212 212 Montreal 5 Pittsburgh 1
West Lake 60 North Olmsted .
Calgary
' 26 31 5' 57 i,9S 206 ', NY Islanders • Detroit 2
33
Edmonton 26 36 2 ~ 179 234 Buffelo 7 Los ~ngtlteS 2
Youngstown Mooney 56
Phoenix
24 37 3 51 222 299 PhiiMelphla 5 ,vancouver 2
Howland 31
x·Ttam disbanded
Fridl'f 1 Games
Thursday'l Results
(No ga,.,es sc~eduled)
Calgary!.&amp; Birmingham 2
SaturdJY s Gemts
Edmonton 5·Winnlpf0 A
NY Rangers at Montrea l
Frldly's Games
Phll~delphla at Detroit
Houston at Ne'w England ·
Cleveland at Atlanta
san DitOO •t lndlaf1apolls
Vancouver at Toronto
Saturtllf'l Games
1
~~f~~~~~it.~'~~~t Louis
San Dleoo at QuebeC
·
Indianapolis at CinCinnati
Colorado at Minnesota
J Wi_nnlp~~t 1 P,hO~mhc
1 Pittsburgh at Las Angeles
~

Toledo
Dayton

r

371

United Pres51ntl!rnalional
Thursday' s Tournament

58

4-6-14;

6
9
' "'

Boys

Ohio High School
Basketball

Warrensville

' Pro
,,:,tand•mgs ,
PhlladeiJ)tlla
Boston
NY Knicks

High school
cage scores

lexmgton 59 Col. Crawford 45

r-----------.,

1:oo-ABC News 6; Movie 11 Countdawn" 13.
1: 15-Samii'Y &amp; Company 6.

an-e. ·

year, reportedly is seeking a
multi-year
contract
somewhere be\Ween six and
eight years - for well over
$300,000 per year.
Schmidt's agent Dave Lan·
field said In Clearwater, Fla.,
where the PhUs are working
out, "! don't know what's
happenlnf!. I'm confused."
Lanfield had said after
another long meeting with
Phillles' owner
Ruly
Carpenter and playerpersonnel director Paul
Owens, "we took a step
backward."
More physical problems
popped up elsewhere in
spring training.
The comeback attempt of
39-year-old pitcher Mike
Cuellar received a serious
jolt when he was spiked on
the left heel during running
01ercises at the CaUfornia
Angels' camp. Cuellar,
released by Baltimore after a
4-13 season last year,
received the wound while
running in the outfield and
will be sidelined about a
week.
Chicago
Cubs
first
baseman Bill Buckner,
recently acquired from the
Los Angeles Dodgers,
time.''
Schmidt, whose 38 home.rs sUffered a alight fracture of
led the major leagues for the his left Index finger and wut
third straight season last be restricted to limited play

history of the school that a
boys Bobcat cage team has
advanced to the finals of Its
sectional tournament.
The farthest any KC squad
went was the second game of
the Class A Sectional in 1967
when John Wickline's cagers
lost to Middleport.
Thursday night, the Bobcats took command In the
opening minutes and were In
control all the way.
A well·balanced scoring
attack.complementing a tight
II 11 boX and one" defense was
I
.
I
I the difference.
IC
I
Box Score
Hannan Traee (64) Gibson , 4·0·8 : Whitt, 4·0·8 :
NBA Slandlngs
Swain, 3·1·7: Campbell. 8·1·
ly 'United PreiS 1n1ern111onal 17 ; McGuire, 9·0·18; ·Mooney,
Eastern Conffl'ence
3-0-6 Totals 31·2·64.
Atlantic Division
Kyger Creek (71) - Salem,
W. L. Pet . GB

Experience 33.
6:GO-News 3,4,6, 10; ~awrence Welk 8: God Has the
Answer 15.
6:31)-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; News6; CBS
News 10; Lilies Yoga &amp; You 33.
7:GO-Muslc Hall America 3; Lawrence Walk 4,15: Hee
Haw 6,8; $128,000 Question 10: ~el's Make a Deal
13; World War I 33.
7:31)-Dolly 10; In Search of 13; Oasis In Space 33.
8:oo-Emergency 3,15,4; Future Cop6,13;; Mary Tyler
Moore 8,10; Foil of Eagles 33.
8:3~ollege Basketball 8; Bob Newhart 10.
9:oo-Movle "The Wrath of God'' 3,~; Starsky &amp; Hutch
6,13: College Basketball15; All In The Family 10;
~eonrad Bernstelh 33.
9:31)-AIIce 10.
10: DO-Dog &amp; Cat 6, 13; Carol Burnett 10..
10:31)-To Be AnnO\Jnced 8: Community Called Earth
33.
11 : oo-News 3,4,8,10, 13,15; Movie "A Taste of Evil" 6.
11:31)-Mary Hartman 3: Weekend ~.15; Peter Mar.
sholl8; Movie "Search" 13; Movie "The Bobo" 10:
Janak! 33.
·
12:00-Movle "The Death of Me Vel'' 6.

for two to three weeks.
Will i e M cC ovey
complained of a sore back
and said it was caused by a
soft mattress. The 39-year old
slugger, who Is trying to
become the San Francisco
Giants' regular first baseman
after a three-year stint with
San Diego ·and Oakland, said
be may also have found the

United Press Iuteroalloaal
Two of the National
League's top sluggers - the
Mets' Dave Kingman and
Philadelphia's Mike Schmidt
remained unsigned
Thursday,
. The Meta announced they
Invoked the automatic
renewal clause In Kingman's
contract and renewed it lor
one year at a 20 per cent cut
in pay.
"I don't know how to
interpret the 20 per cent
reduction in pay but I
understand why they
renewed ,my contract and
their right to do it," Kingman
said. "Right now, I'm going
fishing ."
. Kingman, whose $90,000
salary last year was sliced to
$72,000 with the cut,
reportedly is asking for $3
million over a five-year
period, $1 million of whiCh
would be a bonua for signing.
"! don't care about the cut
as long as I've got enough to
meet my mortgage payments
and I do," said Kingman, who
had 37 homers despite being
Injured much of last season.
"Now thai I'm under coo tract
again, we have plenty of

Kyger qreek's varsity will
battle Southern Saturday
night in the championship
game of the Class ASectional
at Meigs High School.
Coach Keith Carter's
Bobcats advanced with a 71·
64 victory over Hannan Trace
Thursday night In the semi·
finals of the tournament.
For Kyger Creek, It will be
the first time In the 2fl.year

33.

•.

Two big bats unsigned

Bandy getting

in tourney play

S · 3~onsumer

request that the will, a public ~Ap·parently be suata•nod. ~=/:r~~ch01 L~d
document in court files,. be
"""
•sealed, They argued the only some bruizes and a cut and released, the hollpltal
Usting of names, addres.ses alight cut 011 lbe bead," saki apollelman said.
and bequests. to the John McCarthy, spokl!llllllln
Crosby's wife Kathryn
publisher's -deseendanla lor Huntington Memorial 'rushed out of lbe w1np to his
invited hatasament and Hoapltal.
side. She 1vrd appeared in tbe
terrorl.lt attack -~ as the • "He's alert, never lost show wi~ him, aloag ,with
Patricia Hearst kidnaping. 1 consclollllless and .!-''s in . their three chUdren The appeals court cited the very good condition.
~
Nathanlel, Harry and Miry
"exceptional circumstances . Cr911by joked about the fall ·Frances - and 111111)' 11.
of the · Hearst family and with wltnesaea and the Crosby's cloaest friends,
ordered the file sealed until peramedlea who took him to Including comedian Bob
the famDy "is 110 looger the hospital by- ambulance. Hope.
under clear and · present
The audience had rlaen to
Sincer Purl Balley IIIID
danger of attack."
ita feet to give Croeb&gt;' a nm up, u lid three diJctors
LISA GilLAND
standing ovation at the llrtale !run tilt! •udlence.
ADDEr, TO AIL.STATE BAND - Lila Gilland, a
ol his "liOth Amlvwury In
The · fall stunned the
member of the Wabama White Fillcon Band, has been
NOW YOU KNOW
Slow Business" apeclal at the applauding llldlence Into
added to the 1977 West V"Irginia All State Band. She was
A 1950 treaty bejween the Ambassador Colle11e . shocked
the lOth memller chosen thl.l year from Wahama which
United States and can811a Auditorium , when . the • ''lbil il part of the Itt,"
means that Wahania haa more members in the All State • provrdes for a minimum entertainer hilt his balance Crolby jolled, u ._ Ia)'
Band than any other school in the Slate, regardless of size. I daytime water now of 100,000 and pitched off the llage, wallinl tor the ambullllce,
Other Wabama' musicians honored were Cheryl Adams,
C!1lble feet · Jl8l' second over ~utdlln11.ata flinlsY, curtain' IICelll'dlng loa maber ll.tbe
Mary McFarland, Judy Needs, Donna Marr, Jolm
Nlapra J'alil during the type, ba~ that cni!IIP"" audience. "We'll Kin It
Froendt. Robert JarreD, Carolyn Rickard, Keith G•ldstourist · season to preserve with hbn.
another try tomarrow nigh&amp;."
berry, and Unda Test. ·
their scenic value.
He fell into 1111 empty lower

:·.·::·::·:::·::·::;·::·:::::.:;:;:··::··;:·:··::·:::·::··=··::·:::·::·::·:

Bobcats triumph

2:31)..-Siar Trek 3; Golf 4,15: Ironside 13.
J:oo-Solar Energy 33.
3:31)-Marshall Basketball Highlights 3; Pro Bowling
13; Book Btol-33. 4:110--College Basketball ·3,4,15;
Pro Bowling 6; Bit with Knit 33.
4·3G-Outdoors with Ken Callaway 8: Movie "Kung
Fu" 10; Anyone for Tennyson? 33.
5:GO-Wide World of Sports 6, 13; Space: 1999 8; Catch

PASADENA, Calif. (YeJ.l,.
~Bing Crosby toppled off the
stage at his 50th anniversary
performance Thursday night,
cutting his head in a 2(l.foot
fall that shocked a celebrity·
crowded aucjlence, rut physlclans said the· 72-year1lld
crooner was not · seriously

3-Tbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, March 4,1977

for bench role
TAMPA , Fla. (UPI) Dave Revering is a guy you'd
like tiJ have on your side in a
hsrroom brawl.
Revering, 21 years old, 6-4,
and 210 pounds, batted ,29()
and slugged 27 homers for the
Cincinnati Reds' Indianapolis
farm club of the American
Association last year.
During the winter, the Cali·
fornia native was besieged by
player agents seeking him as
a client, Most of them wanted
him to play out his option by
not signing a Reds ' contract.
Revering appeared to be

Cage Scores
College Basketball Results
By United Press International
Playoffs
Southwest Conference
f Second round)
Houston 96 Te,;as A&amp;M 77
Texas Tech 66 Baylor 57
Big Eight Conference
(Semifinals)
Missouri 90 Oklahoma 75
Kansas St 80 Kansa s 67
Atlantic Coast Conference
(First round)
Clemson 82 Duke 7.&amp;
Vtrginta 59 Wake For est 57
N Car . St . 82 Maryland 72
Metro Seven conference
{First Roundl
Georg1a Tech 12 Fla St. 67
Cincinna ti 76 St. Louis 68
Memphis St 94 Tulane 80
ECAC-New England
( Semifnals)
Holy Cross 89 Conn . 77
Providence 44 Fairfield 31
ECAC-Me1ro
(Semifinals I
St . John 's 73 Manhllttan 64
Seton Hall 77 Army 71
NAtA Oistnct 7 Fmal
So . Utah 58 Mesa St. 51
Other Games
Cal Poly-SLO 73 Seattle Pac 59
Colgate 65 Alfred 63
Colorado St . 82 UTEP 57
tow! 78 Northwestern 60
Oregon St 78 Oregon 13
Michigan 87 lll tnots 12
Minnesota 64 Wisconsin 61
Puget Snd 85 Hywrd Sf 68
Purdue 78 Michigan St 69
St . Mry's Cal. 104 Prtlnd 96
Seattle 93 NeYada -Reno 84
SE La. 90 Ntc holls St. 85
Stanford 85 California 66
Wash 66 Wash ington Sf 52
Wyomtng 82 New M eX ICO 64

Cage standings
TEAM

ALL GAMES

Wheel ersburg

W L P

OP

18 1 1274 1034
Chesapeake 16 3 1189 968
Ironton
16 4 1205 983
x-Logan
15 4 1511 1089
Pt . Pleasant 14 5 1244 1148
Gall ipOliS
12 7 1073 995
x. -Portsm outh 11 8 1245 1199
Waverl y
10 9 1222 1147
x-Melgs
9 10 1251 1251
x Jackson
6 13 1082 1284
x-South Point 6 14 1176 1225
x Athens
3 14 993 1233
x-Wellston
3 16 1165 1508
This week's results :
Milton 85 Pt Pleasant 76
Wheelersburg 61 Northwest
49

IT)

Ml!!ml Tnce 78 Logan 75 {T)
waverly 70 H1llsboro 62 {T)
Ironton a.. Minford 47 ( TJ
Tonight's games :
Chesapeake vs . Gallipol is,
at Ironton , 7.30 p .m .
Sher idan 11s Nelsdnvllle·
York, at Stewart. 7.30 p .m .
Satu"rday 1$-ga m ei·:
Wheelersburg liS . Ironton,
at LucasYille, 7: 30p .m .
- Wllshlngton
CH
vs
Waverly , at eeinbr ldge, 7:30

''

\141
... _.. .

·,

NEW YORK (UPil- The
United Press

In ternati onal

in last year's Derby, has
Der by eligibles
eight
representing seven different
owners wtder his wing in this
year 's crop.
The foreign contingent on
the Derby list includes three
horses each from Canada and
Great Britain and one from
Ireland. There are more than
twice as many Kentuckybred horses, 163, among the
eligibles as horses bred in
any other state , with
F1or1da 's Wtal of 67 ranking
second .

Our Interest Is
Greater For You

5.75%
On 90-Day

Certificates
5.75 per cent paid on

90 day Certificates of
Deposit . Sl.OOO .OO
Minimum .
Interest

Payable

Quarterly .

A subst antta l penalty t5
tn YO k e d on a ll certi fi cate

acc ou nts wit hdrawn prior
to th e date of matur 1t y.

Meigs Co. Branch

..@
The A rhen s C o unt~
Sa vmg s &amp; Loan Co
296 Second St
P o m ~ r o y , Ohio

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60 years, is belter than ever now . .. enhanced wilh more
essential nutrients, v•tamins. and minerals. and the right
amount of protem to meet your horses' needs Whatever
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growth - there 's an Omolene that's right for lhe job. See
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team named

good prey since the Reds
traded away Tony Perez w of f ir st team players 1n
make room at first base for parentheses :
HI . WI , Cl.
25-year-old Dan priessen. Name, school
"
Marques
Johnson.
UCLA
Since Revering's afSo a first ( Los Angeles/
6 7 218 Sr.
baseman, one wonders why Rick ey Green, Mtc:higan
he did sign,
!Chi cago)
6-2 170 ?r.
Grinning, Revering says, Kent Benson , Indiana
"I'll know Ulmade a mistake (N. Castle. In d. I 6 11 245 Sr.
Bernard King , Tennessee
in aboUt lour weeks."
{Brooklyn. N.Y.) 6-1 205 Jr
If Reving does stay with the Otis Birdsona . Hous ton
Reds, his role primarily will (Win . Haven , Fla )6· 4 190 Sr .
. s·econd Team
be that of a pinch hitter.
Ernie Grunfeld, Ten nessee .
How does he feel about Phil
Ford, North Car olina.
that' "Anyone who says he Butch Lee, Marque tte.
would r~ther play regularly M tke Thompson. M innesota .
In the minors than pinch hit in B tll Car1wngh t, San Fran
the majors is full of bull," cisco. Third Team
replied Revering.
F reema n Wi ll iams, Port
First base is Revering's land State .
Lar r y Bird, Indi ana State.
position buf he says he'~ he
~ en ny
Carr,
Nort h
willing to try third If asked. Carolina
State
He can't see himself as an
Cedr ic Maxwell , UNCoutfielder but he believes be Charl olte.
Rod Gnffm, Wake Forest.
could be a catcher in an
Honorable ment i on emergency.
Eddie Owens, Nevada Las
"I caught most of my life Veg a s,
Joe
Hasse t t,
before I signed a professional Pr ov id ence.
Bo
E l lis,
contract,'' Revering sa1d . Marquette ; S1 dney M oncrief,
rk ansas ; Wayne Rollms,
"We have some winter ACle
mson, Phil Hu bbard ,
leagues around my home in Mi c hi gan ; Wes l ey Cox,
Sacramento aud when I play Lo u ts ville , Jack G1vens,
in them ,! usually catch a few k e ntuck y; Gl enn M osle y,
on Hall ; Mi ke Glenn.
games just to keep in Set
Southern I ll i nois , J ames
practice. I once threw out Hardy, San F ra~ctsco . Greg
Jerry Royster and Rowland Ballard. Oreg on, Sk1p
Office (both with the Atlanta Br own, Wak e For est , Walter
Braves) and that's pretty Dav is, Nor th Carol 1na.
good because they can run."
The Reds engaged in their
first full scale workout
Thursday. There was one
slight casualty - three-time
YUMA. Anz . ( UPI )
batting champ Pete Rose. He
Clay Kirby was
Pitcher
left early after straining a
on
the
right foot during
struck
chest l)luscle swinging his
batting
practice
Thursday,
hat. Officials say it's nothing
but
X-rays
proved
negative
serious.
as
the
San
Diego
Padres
Four players were missing ,
prepared
for
th
eir
first
Pitcher Pedro Borbon and
exhibition
game
to
be
held
outfielder Ceasar Geronimo,
next
Tuesday.
both natives of the Dominican
Republican are expected to
arrive Friday.
· Shortstop
Dave
Concepcion, one of five
unsigned Reda, hasn't been
beard from. Joe Mdrgan,
winner of the National
League's most valuable
player award the last two
years, is ex~cted in camp
Su!lday. He has permission to ,
report late because he is '
taking exams at California
State College at Haywood.

1 Y2 ~·.•••••.••..•.••..•..... •7 .20

TENDER MESSAGE
OF COMFORT

•
All •Amenca

Lynn Slone said the new
record indicates most
hor semen consider this
year 's Derby a wideopen
race .
In addition to Karen
Taylor's Seattle Slew, other
highly regarded contenders
include Royal Ski. owned by
Boston Bruins' goalie Gerry
Cheevers, and Golden Chance
Farm's Run Dusty Run, one
of tbe 16 nominees sired by
previous Derby winners.
However, a shadow has
been cast over the chances of
Royal Ski racing in the
Derby. fu&gt;ya l Ski , winner of
five major stakes and more
money than any other
juverule last year with a
of
$309,704 ,
ban kroll
reportedly has been placed in
swimming training in Florida
to strengthen his legs - a
sign all is not well with the
chestnut Raja Baba colt.
Two Derby nominees
emerging as top contenders
this year are Ruthie•s Native,
winner of the Tropical Park
Derby and the Fountain of
Youth Stakes in Florida, and
Silver Series, who won the
Hutcheson
Stakes
at
Gulfstream in his second
start this year .
Three no minees apiece
were signed up by Fred W.
Hooper, C.V. Wh1tney,
Dogwood Stable, Andrew
Adams, Briardale Farm and
E C. Cashman.
Whitn ey' s nom 1nees
Include Banquet Table,
winner of the Hopeful Stakes,
the Sarawga Special, and the
Great American Stakes last
season.
Cuban-born tramer Laz
Barrera , who sent Bold
Forbes to a surprise victory

P m.

SYMPAlHY
.
' .
." ·'..' ' . .

WUISVU.LE, Ky , {UP! )
- Unbeaten Seattle Slew, acclaimed the :!-year-old Horse
of the Year in 1976, heads an
alltime record of 297 horses
announced today as nominees
for the JOOrd Kentucky Derby
at Churchill Downs May 7,
Churchill Downs officials
believe the 297, Including
eight fillies, represents the
most horses ever nominated
for any event for 3-year-olds.
It exceeds by seven the
previous high oi 29() Derby
prospects nominated in 1974
for the llloth Run for the
Roses, a record many
observers expected to last
several years.
Churchill Downs PreSident

1976.77 AII ·Amerl can college
bas ketball team. Hometowns

'4 ~·......................... ·3~60
1''............... ••'•........ •4.80

FUMERS

Seattle Slew heads parade
of record 297 nominees

CHESTER,O.

MODERN SUPPLY
399 W. Main St.

992-2164

Pomeroy,

o.

'fHE STORE WITH "ALL KINDS OF STUFF"- FOR PETS,
STABLES, LARGE&amp; SMALL ANIMALS, LAWNS AND GARDENS.

�•

t- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepori-Pomeroy, 0., Fridlly, March 4, 1977
IIIOIIIWUODIR BU!ft!ALL STATISTICI roR 1976-77 SIABOI
PLAp!lf

~

W

POll

A.Do&lt;laon

19 22S

111

I,Jial&gt;do1pb 19 201
o.-wni"• 19 161

g~

90

79

Z£t.. flA !!!
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71
~ 109
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49

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119
6"

7:C 131
73" Sl

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7

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19 1078 496

46%

19 1152

43:C 422 2S7

lev reeo~a
Moet poiata

••tred1n 1976-77
••••oa:
1n l gaa.--99 •• Wellaton {old reoo~

100

1n

161

b.

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12

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8
7

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60% 612 358 1251
bo:C 685 )88 12$1

'fotala
Opponents

497

2S9

61:C
2Si'

1976

1).6

1).~
10.

18)

~8 ~6~ 2~

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191

256

5

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426

260

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6S.8
6$.8

94 ·• a .Vah ...

Moat pe1nta uoJ"ad tn 1 8... b7 both .te••--Miiga 99, Wtlleto.n 60,
·
·
Totol 17'1
.
B••t field ahoot1ng •••rage in 1 g..• b7 opponent--6S.brY•••rlf
( old rooord oO:i b7 Galllpolla In
Hlgboat point •••rogo por B""' in 1 •••••n--6} (old rotord 6) In 197
Lowe•t tree throw• ..de •••r•s• l 8... by opp~nent--2l~bi 11ro9n76to)n
.
( old r ..ord 22,. bJ Belp_r• n

97n l

Polly's Pointers
Hot water doubles
lemon juice output

By Polly Cramer

By Polly Cramer
DEAR POLLY .. By
mistake I washed a picture
window with a sponge that
had car wax on it. I have
washed the window with
everything lrom regular wtn·
dow cleaners to vinegar but
cannot remove the greasy
film and the streaks, looks
clean for a day or two and
'then is horrible looking again.
I have worn myself out
washing and' wiping so I hope
someone has some ideas for
me.-MARYB.
DEAR MARY B. -You do
have a problem. Ask your
gasoline dealer if he would
sell you some of the fluid they
; use to clean car windshields
• as that might do the job. Can·
die wax can often be dissolved tn a solution of one part
alcohol to two parts water so
you could try that. Test on a
small portion rather than
wasting time and materials
on the entire expanse of
glass.- POLLY.
DEAR BARBARA - Many
~ readers, concerned over the
~ fact that you were not able to
' buy liquid bluing at your
: store, have written to say that
; they can buy it. So perhaps it
• will be worth your while to
I shopabltmore.-POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - I am
answering Mrs. R.P. T. whose
, dishwasher has an odor that
she cannot get rid of. We, too,
• had such a problem when we
: moved into our home during
; hot summer weather and
• finally found that the fault
; was tn the plumbing as it
;. allowed the disposal to back
• up tnto the dishwasher. She
: might look into this. - MRS.
I D.B.S.
·
• DEAR POLLY -When do' tng any painttng indoors dur·

n

"

ing the cold weather .I add
three or four teaspoons of
vanilla to the paint to get rid
of any disagreeable odor. SYLVIA.
DEAR POLLY - AI the
start.of the New York I put 77
after the 19 on the checks in
my checkbook so as to avoid
errors in the foUowing weeks
when habit might ca~ me to
write 76. (Good to remember
for another year. 1
Aplunger will often pull out
small dents in the fender or
door of your car.
When going on a trip ~&lt;Ike
along an .empty overuight
. case as everyone seems to
come back with more than
they left with.
Wax milk cartons are great
to use for freezing leftovers.M.N.
DEAR POLLY- An elderly
friend told me to dissolve a
tablespoon of jelly on my
tongue when I had the hiecoughs and it really worked.
U your children go haref~t
and get ground-in dirt on
their feet, try using a sciap
filled scrubbing pad to clean
the dirt off and find the feet
will be smooth. - JUNE. ·
DEAR POLLY - Put a
teaspoon of salt in the water if
you want to boil a cracked
egg. I use a wet clean egg
stain off silver.
. Before squeezing a lemon
heat it thoroughly and nearly
double the juice you get from
the lemon. -GINNY.
Polly will ·send you one of
her " peachy" thank-you
cards, , ideal for framing or
placing in your family scrapbook, if she uses your favotite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her column. Write Polly's
Pointers in care of this
newspaper.

'
~' ----~~·
•

•
'

FOLIAGE
GARDENS

20~
Cash 'N Carry
a living gift

to brighten
someone's day.

DAUGHTER BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Phatin,
Barlow,
formerly
of
Pomeroy, are announcing the
birth of a daughter, Tera
Dawn on Feb. 17 at St. Joseph
Hospital, Parkersburg.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Albert Smith and Mrs.
Alva Phatin, all of Pomeroy.
Mrs. Smith has just returned
home after being in Barlow to
assist in the care of her new
granddllughter. Mrs. Phatin
Is the former Sandra Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. Phalin have two
other dllughters, Lena Sue,
14, and Amy, 8.

*Funk's Seed Corn
Kenworthy Seed Corn
Pioneer Seed Corn
*All Field Seeds
Fertilizer
Farm Supplies
*Feeds

*
*
*
*

\

Social
Calendar
' FRIDAY
WORLD DAY of Prayer
observance, 7:30 p. m.
Fridlly, Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church. Program
by women's groups of Laurel
Cliff and Hysell Run Free
Methodist Churches. Slides·
on Haiti and special music. ·
Public invited.
SHADE RIVER Lodge No.
No. 453 F&amp;AM, Chester, will
hold a special meeting
Friday, at 7:30p.m. work in
the Master Mason degree. All
master masons welcome.
MEIGS HIGH School
Athletic Boosters, 7:30 p.m.
Friday at the high school to
discuss sponsorship of sprtng
musical by Big Bend Minstrel
Assn. along wllli other activities; all persons in·
terested In athletic program
invited.
. POMONA Grange, Friday 8
p.m. at the Rock Springs
Grange Hall wiih Hemlock ·
Grange to be hosts.
SATURDAY
RIVAL now in progress al
Church of God, Chester,
throilgh Saturday. The Rev.
Martin Hocker, Rich·
mondale, Ohio, guest
speaker. Special singing each
evening. Services at 7:30
nightly. The Rev , Mike
Southard, pastor, extends an
Invitation to the .public to
attend.
HARRISONVILLE Lodge
411 F&amp;AM Saturday, 7:30
p.m. at the temple. Work in:
master mason degree. All
n\aster masom Invited.
HYMN SING Saturday,
7:30 p.m. at the Free.dom
Gospel Missioo, Bald Knobs.
Vocal
group,
The
Messengers, to be f~atured.
Public invited
WESTERN BOOT CB Club
meeting, 7 p.m. Saturday at
Racine Fire Station.
MIDDLEPORT Fire
department publici Ish fry, 11
a.m. to 5 p.m. Sall\l'dBY, at
fire department l)eadqu~~r·

ters.

COMPANY EXPANDS
HIJD.'lON, Ohio (UPI )
The Mid-Continent Telephone
Corp ., the nati on's fifth
largest Ind e pendent
telephone system, Thursday
completed purchase of tbe
Parma Telephone Co.,
Panna, Mich.
The Paima company
serves more than 2,400
telephones in Jackson
County.
Mid-Continent , with
operating affiliates servtng
nearly 8110,000 telephones in
12 Southern, Midwestern and
Eastern
states
with
approl;imately 45,000 telephones in 26 Michigan communities, Is the nation 's fifth
largest independent
telephone system.
The corporation also owns
the Buckeye Telephone and
Supply Co., Columbus, Ohio
- a major distributor of
equipment and materials to
independent telephone
companies, the operating
companies of the MidContinent System and to
related Industries.

Big sob sisters won't stop
new offshore energy hill
WASHINGTON (UP!) The new secretary, Cecil
The Carter administration Andrus, squinting against .the
today promised to support an glare of televisloo lights, told
offshore energy production Murphy, "We intend to make
bill whose failure last year sure that OCS (outer
was blamed on opposition contlnental shelf) operations
from big oil commpanies with Jroceed
in
an
en·
help from the Ford . virorunentally safe manadminislraUon.
'ner !'
Rep. John Murphy, 0-N.Y.,
the
Andrus
said
who guided the bill in the
House last session, only to see

~~~~pe~~:'g!tof~~

Mrs. Catherine Welsh and
Mrs. Mary Martin of Meigs
County Salon 710 were in Col·
wnbus over the weekend to
attend the 50th anniversary
celebration of the Ohio Eight
and Forty and honor the na·
tiona! chapeau, Mrs. Marie
Smith, of Latrobe, Pa.
Mrs. Ethel Van Fossen, one
oltwo charter partners at the
celebration, told ol the
meeting of 30 women in Col·
umbus tn 1927 at Veterans
Memorial Auditorium for· the
organization of Ohio Salon 23.
She said at that time it was·.
formed for fun and fellowship
for the workers of the
American Legion Auxiliary
and sometime later became
involved in the work· of
respiratory diseases in
children. She spoke of the
results of research financed
through the Eight and Forty.
Alilo speaking at . the
celebration was the other
charter partner , Mrs.
Josephine
Outland.
Departemental chapeaux

administration supporllt the
ma1n points of the bill, but

wants some changes to give
more fleliblllty in overseeing
energy development
offshore,
·
He sald President Carter
will not submit a bill of his
own but merely suggest
ameildments to Murphy's.

·Poultry threatened .

.

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KltchenAid

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BOm.ING COMPANY

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BUILDING SINCE 1915
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104 . JUST BELOW THE JONES BOYS IN
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'---Middleport

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Auxiliary
elects new
president

~teamboat Ifill

Foreman.

Karla

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Jay

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Dodder~r ,

Tamml Proffitt, third; Kevin
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Dannette Weddle, David
Talbott, Kittle Sellers,
TAMMY MEADOWS, Bruce
Johnson, CINDY EVANS,
Debbie Bryant, sixth gra&lt;je1
Sherrie · , Lawson,

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~:.:;..;:_ -;_

~· ~

INStlRANCE INQUIRY

COLUMBUS (UP!) -Sen.
Tony p. Hall, D-Dayton,
Thurllday named a threemember Insurance
subcommittee to review a
law enacted last year
requiring Blue Cross to try to
coolain health care OOIIs.
Hall said he waa alarmed at
"tremendous rate in creases "
Blue Croll has requested
since enactment of the law·

• HI h Pe110fmlnct 1(10% Salk!.Stilt Mocluilr
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FOR YOURSELF
Entri)Y SMr swnch • •

'taclllbii"GIIttGutnl" Fil·
tar

AT .•••

WERNER RADIO
· 172 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport, O.

DATE: Tuesday, March 8,1977

TIME: 1:00p.m . and7 :00p.m.

Heath United Methodist Church
339 South Third Ave.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
REFRESHMENTS
PHONE: 614-992-2641
-SPON·SOR · Mid~leport Book Store
' 99 Mill St.
', Midcileport, Ohio 457~0
PLACE:

1t' '"""" COLOR TV

~I

II

&amp;y .

grade two; Theresa Barber1

AMERIC~N

THE DEPARTMENT STORE OF

\V(h;Y«i

FOOD

Larry Wolfe has announced

lhe fourth six weeks grading
period honor rolf at Portland
Elementary School.
·
Named to the roll with B's
or above In all their subJects

Gornell,

• and many more!

MEN'S LEISURE SHIRTS
Pricecf From Sl2. 98 to $16.98

•

!fA.

Radio\ &lt;I'm sow feotures big,
2 HP motor and handy on-top,
up-front controls. Blade cuts a
full 3" deep. Quick-stopping
monuol broke.

MOM

VBS

CHARLIE

REGULAR 329.95

from all of us to

Revival dates
are announced

SEE US
FOR
ALL YOUR

"'
'

.'

No. 7744

shower

School honor roll listed

98/ack s DeckeP®
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at

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INGELS FURNITURE

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S'fJerr11 Hutton fiete d

Program presented on
stereotype conceptions

GAS RANGE

$39995

e/D•WALT

notes were read from the
White Hall Band fur a dona·
tion on thei r trip to
Washington, D. C., and from
the Arcadia Nursing Home
and- the Chillicothe Veterans
Hospital fur Christmas
remembrances. A thank-you
note was also read from the
Xenia Home for valentines
sent there, and from Loti
Wood for Oowers sent to her
while confined to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Davis thanked Pam
for having the birthday party
for Sherri Marshall. Duriog a
recent visit here. Robin and
Charlotte Lehew, members of
the unit, made shamrock nul·
cups to be used at the Eight
District community servoce
party on March 15, and at the
veterans party on March 22 at
the Athens Mental Health
Center. A visit l&lt;&gt;the Arcadia
Nursing Home. was planned
to deliver shanuock nulcups
on March 17 by Mrs. Davis
and Mrs. Paul Casci.
Get-weU cards were signed
for Christina Smith at the
Burns Center in Columbus,
Lori Wood, re~uperating at
home, and Mrs. Paul
· Eichinger, patient at Holzer.
Mrs. Davis presented the
program using the slo~ of
the pilgrims, their first
winter and !he fir st
Thanksgiving. She also talk·
ed on independence and its
background. The juniors
reviewed the establislunenl
of Meigs County on Jan. 21,
1819, looked at pictures of the
early court houses, and also
of the marker at Long Bottom
which marks Washington's
encampment in 1870.
Pizza and Kool-Aid were
served to the girls at tbe close
of the meeting by Mrs.
Robert Couch and Mrs.

passes introduced were Mrs. ·
Evallna Berkley, Mrs. Hazel
Sunday is Girl Seoul Sunday and scouts a cross the .~ow'.ly,
Elliott, Mrs. Mary Martin, will be attending churches in a group m un1form. Spec1al Gorl
Plans fur attending the
For lbe district conference,
Mrs. Doris Stanriff, Mrs. Scout bullettn inserts for .the observance are available from
Eighth
District
c-onference
to
Pam
Powers will wrjte the
Helen Colter, Mrs. Violet Mrs. Pal Thoma.
.
.
be
held
at
Junction
City,
April
history,
Robin Campbell, the
Aichholz and Mrs. Ethel Van
Mrs. Thoma service unit director for Me1gs County, advises
i6,
were
made
during
the
prayer
book,
Anna Wiles, the
Fossen. II was noted that that the first ald room at Pomeroy village hall has been made
Tuesday
night
meeting
of
the
foreign
relations
scrapbook,
since 1972, Ohio has had seven available to scouts for weekly meetmgs. All four Pomeroy
Junior
American
Legion
Aux·
and
Rhonda
Reuter,
the
national chapeaux. Con· troops will meet there beginning next week.
.
' .
Wary
of
Drew
W
ebster
Post
scrapbook.
T.hree
dolls
have
gratulations were extended to
Tuesday night at the Columbus and Southern Ohoo Eleclroc
been ordered and will be
Mrs. Violet Aiehhulz on being Co. 7,30 p.m. lhere will be a service unit meeting. Altha I tune 39
M
eeting
at
the
•home
of
dressed
for the competition.
R'ng
the nationale Ia concierge, · plans will be finalized for Thinking Day to be obse~ed on
Mrs.
Harry
Davis,
advisor,
Mrs.
Davis
distributed
the
and to Mrs. Martin, nationale March '!1,1 to 4 p.m. Mrs. Becky Mankin ls general chatrman
her great ring
finance'chairman.
and troop leaders are to advise her of the country to be members elected delegates coloring books for that conand alternates io both the test.
Mrs. Smith was introduced represented by the troop. ·
''"
"' ,
and brought greetings. She
district and department conDuring the meeting the
cJ~a mo&gt;nd
one
tltrth star
l&lt;!lked on the program of
ferences. The delegates are juniors voted to make a dona·
POMEROY JUNIOR TROOP 1276
Eight and.Forty and conctud·
$85.00
Meeting at the home of Mrs. Betty ~ne Mondll~ ni.ght, ~e Pam Powers, Paula Kloes, lion to the Christina Smith
.
ed with a poem, "Key of Ser- Pomeroy Junior troop selected Hawau for the Thinkong D~y Robin Campbell, Anna Wiles, Fuod. A donation was also
vice." On display was the celebration on March 27. Contributions were made to the Juliet Sherri Marshall and Rhondll reported made to the March
Ohio charter. There was Lowe Fund and plam were made for a visit to the Co~lry Reuter.Alternates areJennie ofDimes.
Miss Powers was pro tern
special music by Mrs. Evelyn Cousins Restaurant Tuesdlly night for a lour of the facolilles Couch, Denise Marshall, Lori
two ~•rlh ! Iars . ;~
Wood,
Paula
Eichinger,
president
for the meeting
Halfhill and Mrs. Norma and supper.
$102. 00
~~ '
.
Caruthers with one song beMother's to&gt;Je 1s expressed
Work was continued on the first a1d badge. The pledge and Charlotte Lehew and Tracey with Miss Campl)ell giving
Jeffers.
the prayer. The pledge and
tog dedicated to the charter promise opened the meeting.
by the genui ne diamond ,
The juniors went on record preamble were given in
members.
her ch•ld ren by the giO\'ftng
as endorsing Paula Kloes for unison. On display was a flag
Mrs. Smith announced that
b•rth stars in colors Ina!
SYRACl)SE JUNIORS 1204
the national convention will
match th e bi rt h month ol
Plans to attend the Syracuse Nazarene Church in a gro.up on Eighth District president, desk set, the gift of Mrs.
be at the Denver Hilton Hotel girl $COlli SundBy were made at the Tuesdlly mght meeting of and Pam Powers for depart· . Richard Leifheit. Thank-you
ear.h child
in August and at the same the Syracuse juniors at the school.
mentjuniorpresident.
Bea utiful sl yles wilh sta rs
lime Chapeau Day will be
for
1 10 6 Child ren - or
Holland was selected as the country to be represented at the
held at the National Jewish
grandCh ildren . Come in and
Day program, and a skattng party was announced
1~
Hospital which receives sup- Thinking
' see lhe radiant colors o1 all
forMan:ht4.
port from the Eight and For·
12 btrlh star s
Dreama Owens completed a requirement on the storyteller
.)'
.
ty. Mrs. Audrey Glaub, badge and there were two skits on badge wor_k by the troop.
.
departemental chapeau, Penny Wolfe Jed tn the Lord's Prayer and Jame Amberger m
presented a gift to Mrs.
_pledge to the flag to ~pen the meeting. All of the scouts
1~1Jette
Smith. It was announced that the
recited the gorl scout prorruse.
UJ,.)'
her testimonial dinner will be
held on Apri116 at Greenburg,
HARRISONVILLE TROOP 1155
Pa.
New oHicers were elected at the Monday night ineeling of
Mrs. Mike Roush (Sherry Hunnel.
Adutch supper on Saturday the Harrisonville juniors at the home of tbe ass•stanlleader, Hutton) was honored recently
Cake decorated with a baby
evening opened the weekend MrS. Rhea Willis. .
carriage
and inscription was
. ·
· ta t with a layette shower at the
of activity. Sunday mornmg
Elected were Margie Ash, reporter; Unda Ash, assJS n home of her sister, Mrs. served with sandwiches,
breakfast guests were Mrs. treasurer; Paula Carl, treasurer; Brenda Largent, palr~l Beverly Chapman, Syracuse. punch, potato chips and cofSrriith, Mrs. Mary Jane leader; Vicki Peavley, assistant patrol leader.
.
Mrs. Chapman and Mrs. fee.
Palro president of the
Membership cards and ptns were distributed. Margoe Ash Darla Haw ley were hostesses
Attending besides those Davis.
Depa~tment of Ohio, led in the pledge of aUegiance and all of the g1ris gave the pro- for the shower.
named were Mrs. Beverly
American Legion Auxoliary,
Mrs. Mary Woods won the Willford, Mrs. Margaret
and Miss Ann Escheiman, ~ireshments were served following the meeting by Brendll door prize and the game win· Sheridan, Mrs. Emma Cha!&gt;'
Auxiliary secretary. Speaker Large_nl and Christina Hanning. Mrs. Mary Ash IS .the leader. ners were Mrs. Carolyn man, Mrs. Beba Odell Mrs.
was George Glaub of the For·
Grueser, Mrs. Ann Ryther, Jeannie Cremeans and son,
ty and Eight, who talked
Melissa Woods, Barbllra Jinuny, Mrs. Mary Woods,
about the Xenia Home for OrGrueser and Mrs. Frankie Mrs. Avis Bing, Mrs. Joyce
phans. He reported on the
Sigler, Mrs. Margaret Hut:
swimming prioi and other
ton, Bobbi K. ChapiJlan, Lori
plans for improvement of
Chapman, Jean Richardt,
facilities.
Carolyn McCoy and Mrs.
AI the meeting members
Edith Ryther.
.
signed cards for Arree MarSendtng g!fts were DeniSe
shall and Susie Sonnansline
Long, Mrs. Donna Hatfield,
EAST LETART - A pro- Donahue, Mrs. Eileen Roush,
MENU FOR SUNDAY, MARCH 6th
who is ill. Reports were given gram on stereotype concep- Mrs. Julia Norris and Mrs.
Mrs. Brendll Roush, Mrs.
Fried chicken, roast b~et ,
by Mrs. Catherine Baker on tions was presented by Mrs. Facie HayJTI!In: · ..
· Candllce Wellman, Mrs. San·
hamburger
steak, flounder hsh,
MEAT:
deceased partners; Joy Barbara Dugan at the Tues·
dra Bretz, Mrs. Martha Hun·
Mrs. Mabel Shields gave
and ham.
Bowman on salon histories; dlly night meeting of the devotions at the meeting con·
nel, Mrs. Martha Dorst, Mrs.
Dorothy Brady on publicity; United Methodist Women of dueled by Mrs. Beegle. Mrs.
Baked beans, peas, and noodles.
Mildred Spencer, Lola Bolin
VEGETABLES:
Hazel Elliott on nurses the East Letart Church.
and Mrs. Belly Hawley.
Fisher had the secretary's
scholarships; Cathy Heacock
Mashed , baked~ home fries .
The program dealt witl'- report, and communications
POTATOES:
on children and youth pro- male and female dependen- and thank-you notes were
Mis. Ethel Lowery was
grams. Mrs. Elliott noted cies and ways of stimulating read. The birthdays of
Apple and peach.
elected
president of \he
PIE:
there is $600 in nurses the mind to break away from several members were noteq.
scholarship at this time but stereotypes with oneself and Get-well cards were signed Ladies Auxiliary of the Mid·
• Tossed, slaw, cottaQe cheese,
dleport Fire Department at a
FRUITS
SALAD
&amp;
that her goal is$1,500.
• applesauce and peaches .
for
Joni
Sellers
and
Lena
with others. Exercises were
It was. reported )hal there proposed to help the process Brinker, both hospitalized, meeting Wednesday mghl at
The revival to be held at the
are now 14 goal ~,l.QilS in Ohio, and learn to share along with a remembrance the firemen's headquarters.
Other officers elected for Pomeroy Church of Christ,
and that 1Hf Departemental discoveries with others. card to Mrs. Mary Roush. A
HOMEM~DE SOUPS
of Ohio has 75 percent of goal &amp;riplure for the program poem by Mrs. Beegle con· two year terms were Mrs. April 1;.13, was announc.ed at
CHILl &amp; VEGETABLE
with 1828 partners but still was taken from Gen. 27. Tak- eluded the meettng. Mrs. Fox Carol Wolfe, vice president; the Tuesday night meetmg of
Mrs
.
Cathy
Chadwell,
the Golden Rule Class held at
needs 444 for goal. Articles ing part were Mrs. Sue and Mrs. Ferne B. Hayman
for the bulletin are to be sent Beegle, Mrs. Hazel Fox, Mrs. served refreshments to those secretary, and Mrs. Marilyn the home of Mrs. Evelyn
WEEKDAYS 6 a.m. to 1 p.m. SUNDAY 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Smith.
to Mrs. Violet Aichholz this Marlene Fisher, Mrs. Sally named and Mrs. Eileen Buck. Epple, treasurer. •
A
donation
was
made
to
the
Bill
McDauiei
had
devoweek.
Gloeckner, Mrs. Lucy
Christina Smith fund. The an- tions using scripture from
niversary dln~er was set for Matt. 12 and Romans l4 o~
April 6 at the Point of View "Accountibilily to God.
HUBBARD ENLij!TS
Restaurant in Parkersburg. Reports were given and
David A. Hubbard, son of
. .. Reai Old·FashiOIIed Home Cookin~"
An invitation to a layette several were reported ill. The
Mr. and ' Mrs . Clyde W.
Hubbard of Apple St.,
RACINE - F.lfty three Marty Maynard, Li~a Pape, shower honoring Kitty Darst next meeting will be March 29
3rd St., RACINE~ OHIC
Syracuse has enlisted In the pupils at Racine Elementary Rachael Reiber. Diana on March 18 was read with all at the McDaniel home With
Simpson
,
·Tamara
The
iss,
PHONE 949-2.515
School
have
been
named
to
of
the
auxiliary
members
be· U.S. Air Force according to
Mrs. Eileen Bowers to have
Tamara
Wolle,
Wendy
Wolfe.
the
honor
roll
for
the
last
six
ing
invited.
·
T-Sgt. Ron Rife. Upon weeks . Each kept up a B or Larry Powell, Ricky Pardevotions. Mrs. Charles
The traveling prize donated Eskew had recreation follow·
graduation from the AF's six better average 10be named to sons.
·
week basic military training, the roll. Students whose GRADE 3 - Lori Adams. by Mrs. Lowery was won by ing the meeting.
Davl~ will receive training as names are in all capital wando Adkins, Kerrl Beegle, Mrs. Patty Kloes. The Lord's
had ali A. Named to Jay Bostick , Tanya Cum· Prayer was given in unison .
a Equipment Repairman of letfers
mins , Dixie Dugan, Mandy
the roll were :
Ground
Radio
Com·
GRADE 1 - Angela Hill, Melissa lhle, Lisa Mrs. Betty Ohlinger, Mrs.
municatlons. He is a 1976 Bostick, Annett Cardone. Parsons, Kelly Rizer, Kenda Darst and Mrs. Sue Metzger
. graduate of Southern High Patrece Circle. Marty Rizer , Rob i n Savage. served refreslunents to the 17
LORD JESUS, TEACH ME
Cleland, Line Curtis, Brion Rebecca VanMeter. ·
members
present.
School,
I! the er cfting !heme ol the
GRADE ; - Alan Crisp,
Diehl, Donald Riffle, Tina
1977 Standard \lacalfon Bible Schoo l
Sloter, Kim Stobart.
Ralph Fisher, Debbie Holter. COUPON VALUE
mat~ rials and corre lated h e lp ~ .
GRADE 2 - . Damon LOIS IHLE, David Powell.
(UP!) Rep
G~AD~ s · ~ James Bush,
COLUMBUS
·
Fisher, Matthew Jewell,
Kevin Curfman, Teresa Htfl, Arthur V.N. Brooks, D-Oeve·
Becky Johnson , Linda land Heights, introduced
Proffitt, Rhonda Smith, legislation designed to give
LAREN WOLFE .
II 1 of
·Portland school
GRADE 6 - Kathy Baker, housewives the fu va ue
Nick Bostick, Becky Lee. discount coupons clipped
Morris, Terry Pat- from newspapers and
Mnor8 announced Clair
terson , John Poder, David . magazines to defray the cost
Salmons, Lori Warden.
of merchandise.
I'ORTLAN D - Principal
v

1!

Mr. Friendlv

:?«.mo..~,

By Charlene Hoeflich

NEW .

[I USe • •

.

50th anniversary ~ Girl Scout Diary ~ Plans made to
celebrated recent1y I
I attend Con erence

by exotic Newcastle

.r. . .H. . .elen Help.·

... . .. .. ..

~..:.;::;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::~;o;:;:;;::;::s:::::;:;:;:;:;:;c;~ i(:~.t

Outer Cootinental Shelf.
The legislation is meant to
force energy companies into
more timely production from
the oil and gas rich
WASHINGTON (UP!) -:- fancy game bird breeding
contlnental shelf, and to give Seektngtostopanoutbreakof farm of AI Hinkle, and
the interior secr~ary more a deadly poultry disease Basically Birds, b~lh In
powers to protect the offshore before it can spread into Alpine, Calif. Similar
envirorunent.
commercial chicken and quarantines were imposed
Last year, " the seven turkey flocks, the Agriculture earlier at the Harold Yanik
,C"Arf!'l.~" . ~.HOES
sisters (biggest oil firms) Department is destroying Aviary
in
Charlotte
IEIT DOOITUIIitfELDS ; • .
directly and through their thousands of game and pet Courtl\ouse, Va.
lobbying &amp;rl!lS undertook a · birds iJt 19 stateS; including
104 I. M~• ,,...,
H!·llll
SERVICES PLANNED
.high.:pawered
media assault
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Ohio and the District of · •------"!"'-,..liiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii,
Funeral services will be held using misinformation, Col~mbia, officials
misconceptions,
Inaccuracies
announced today.
.
Saturday in Circleville for
Spokesmen said they had
Charles H. Radcliff, 81, and downright disiDrtions,"
sheriff of Pickaway County ·Murphy said, raising his already destroyed more than
for 30 years, who died voice in the packed hearing 3 000 birds in three infected
ariaries - two in California
Thursday at Riverside roo;.~~en more troubling was
and one in Virginia - where
Hospital.
tioe fact that the seven 'sob the outbreak of exotic
Radcliff, whose son, slslers' were jotned in their NewcasUe disease was flrst
Dwight, has been . Pickaway assault by the then«eretary reported recently.
County sheriff smce 1965 • of the interior," Murphy
Also, officials said, they are
suffered the heart attack ch ed
arg . ·
destroy\nl!'
all infected and
Saturday.
.
exposed
birds
in at least 58
....
···M·
···
....................
.
·.·.;.-.·o;·r.s
~.;o,-.v..v._.._
..~~;_~o;·;·~·;·
.····~·:·:·:·:·:·:•,•,-.•,•,•,•,,.,
..... ··~"·
..
...,...,.,,.,
••••••v.-.w.·"'
•· .•.•.•.•.o;•;o.•
• •• • • • • •• •• • • ••·:·:·:·:·:·.······················
, ·
.-:·:
more pet stores or priyate
aviaries from coast to coast.
The places Involved are th?se
M
* which received b1ro
shipments from the three
]X'imary infectloo sources.
By Helen Bottel
All birds exposed to the
birds shipped from the
California and · Virginia
She Is Mrs. Jekyll-MI. Hyde
aviaries are considered
11
Dear Helen:
exposed" and niust be
I have ari extremely beautiful daughter. She looks like an destroyed, officials
angel, and sometimes she is one, on those rare occasions when explained.
she needs me.
Spokesmen said about
Helen what do you do with a grown woman with school- $200 000 in
Indemnity
age dlildr~n who looks 10 ye~~rs younger thaq she is., who gives pay~nts have been ~de to
her body to anyone, any time? She has luld two abortions, two the California and Vorgtma
marriages, two divorces; a~ one of her children was born out aviaries where the outbreak
of wedlock.
.
began. An official said there
Several of her affairs were shack-ups, the rest are one- was no estimate of the
night stands. She enjoys telling me of her escapades.
number of birds involved in
You might say, "Leave her to hesven," but I worry about the 58 other locations, but it
the two children. They beg to stay With me; they don'tllke ~II might be several thousand.
these different "dllddies." My dllughter refuses to let me r81Be
Feature new Load Indemnities for destroyed
them. In fact, if 1 dort't go along with her thinking, she won't birds are paid on the basis of
As-You - Like convenience. Use less
even let me see them.
•f
ufair
market
value''
hot water and ele c~
· In other ways she Is a good mother. She doesn't neglect the appraisals. No estimate of
tric ity than previous
kids and truly loves them, though I have bought most of l~ir total potential costs was
models.Energy Saver
clothes (hera too), since they were born. (She works part-time available.
oprl on saves eve n
The
Newcastle
disease
is
'8
1
ooly.)
more.
t. When she rieeds help she comes home wlth "I Iove you, " highly contagious ailment
but when ~e has another way to go, she leaves amid a big which .:.. although not a ·
Veroatlle Convortlblo-Porlable Dlohwalhero.
.
fight, with "I hate you."
.
·
· health hazard to humans - is
Front-loading convenience . Buy one today, use 1 ~
·If this is the "modern way, I'd rather go into the deep usually fatal to poultry and
tonight. Build it in anytime.
woods and talk to the animals. How can the children escape some other birds. Officials
No wonder people who own dishwashers say
being affected by this loose morality? - GRANDMA
fear losses could be heavy if
KitchenAid Is best.
the disease gets . into
Dear Grandma:
·
commercial poultry flocks.
Insist on the best. KltchenAid
If children are well cared for and loved (as you say these
Officials said stale and
two are), they often escape the de\rilnental effects of a federal quarantines were
molher's free and easy life. This because at first they're too imposed today on a
young for moral judgments, and later they accept, but with 30 square RUle area
-' . - - enough aversion so thai they won't be tempted to copy.
of San Diego county,
' 11 isn't the best setting, but you can't change it- outside of Calif., including two of
106 N. 2nd Ave.
.
992-2635
a.custody suit you'd surely lose.
the infected . aviaries-the
Middleport, 0.
Entertain the girls at your home whenever you ca~ (a
"straight" Influence helps, if you don't presch or crit!CI2e),
aitd ~eep hoping the playgirl will soon settle lot a good third
marriage. -H.

+++
SYRACUSE Methodist Dear Helen:
Olurch yolth group, I p.m.
' You recently mentioned the national hesdquarters for
Saturday to collect pop Overeaters Snonymous. Its address has been changed to 2190
ootlles and caps In Syracuse. - 190111 Street, Torrance, Calif. Infonnatlon about local
The money to be used for _chapters may be obtained by sending a stamped, selfsummer camp funding. addressed envelope to this location. - TRICIA
Bottles, caps and small
oonations will be accepted. Dear Helen:
·
This is to Hollie who thinks women should keep their
VFW stewart Johnson Post
9926 Mason free spaghetti maiden (she prefers "sur") names after marriage, Life's too
dinner SundBy at 2 p.m. for short to be so serious. There are mueh more important things
all members and guests at to he concerned with, i.e:, which sock goos on first. - A
BRO'I'IIER.
.
post home in Mason.
p.S, This goes for you modern dames' edginess about putdown "sexist" words, in general.
SUNDAY
REVIVAL
NOW
In
Brothe~:
progress at Middleport
l'msogladyoudldn'tcall
us "broade." -HL.
Church of the Nazarene
through SundBy, 7:30nlghtly.
The Rev. Johil Lanier is the
evangelist. The. Glory Lan·
ders quartet will be featured
Frldlly through SundBy and
m Sunday afternoon at 2:30
p.m. The Rev. E. E. Cox is
the pastor. The public Is
Invited to attend.

ROYAL CROWN

•

So-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, March4 , 1977

Plan to ottencl tilt Sll..,_ VICIIion Bible SchOol PAVitw. tt's your Dppartunlty to
tumlno tlltlii-Mw,lli·lllltt 1977 course 111!1 to discuss all ospocts ~~~.~•ao 1J: 11:
SchoOl w1t11 Stlllldlrtl rtfllt-.iolivu. tl's a greot opportunity to s-.-. 1 I I
oxper~ctt wtlll Olllor's.

. .MIDDLEP.ORT BOOK STORE
99 MILL STREET

.

992·2641

Midlllllldllpolm...., 0.

'

�•

' -Tbe Dilly Sentinel, MlddlejJort-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Mllrch 4, 1971

TRINITY

C~URCH ,

Rev. W. H.

Perrin, pastor; Roy Mayer, Sun·

doy Khool supt. Church School.
9:15 a .m .: worship service , 10;30

a.m. Choir reheon5ol. TueWoy.
7.:,()

p.m. unct.r direction of Mrs.

Paul Nease.

POMEROY CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE·· Comer Un1on and
Mulberry . Rev. Clyde V. Henderson, paator. Sunctay school. 9:30
a .m., Glen ~lung , 1upl .: morning worship, 10:30 o.m., ey-ening
serv1ce, 7:30: mkt·week .-.vice,
Wednesday. 7:30p .m .
GRACE EPISCOPAL , The Rev
Harold Deeth, rector. Church services. 10:30 a.m .: Holy communion fi rst Sundoy of month. chur·
ch school, 10.30 a .m. for nursery
through 12.

POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST,
R1chard Evanson , postor, Bible
school , 9:30 o.m.: worahip~ 10:30
a .m .: adult worship nrvice and
young puople's meeting, 7:30
p.m . Combined Bible 1tudy and
prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7:30
p.m.
THE SALVATION ARMY. EnvQy
Roy W. Wming , off icer In charge
Sunday, 10 am .. Holiness
m&amp;et lng: 10 :30 a .m ., Sunday
School. Young People's legion , 7
p.m.; lfhurtday , 1 tv 3 p.m. ,
Ladies Home league, 7 p.m. Prep
classes.

BURLINGTON SOUTHERN BAP ·

When you do go to a house where
people say Grace, it can be uncomfortable. You fold your hands and lower

your head, but you feel foolish.
Wh y? Giving tha nks to God is a habit
that goes awayback. So is gomg to
church.
· If we tum away from good habits,
things that hal/e endured, could nbe that
we're the losers?

Fri day
Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Th ursday
II Timothy Titus Revelation Leviticus Uwit.i cus Deuteronomy Deuteronomy
26: 12-19
26·1- 11
19:30·37
19:1- 18
2: 1-1 5
22:1·21
2: 1·2 6

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.
Ph. 992-2101

SUNDAY TIMES-SENTINEL

BIG JIM'S PLAZA

:,erving Meigs ~ Mason

~iddleport,

And Golllo Area

RACINE PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

214 E. Main

'

.

PAUL'S BARBER SHOP
Open B to 5- Closed Thurs.

Ph. 992-5130

Poltneroy

.

Call949-lB38 For An Appointment
Racine, Ohio

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE
' SERVICES
'

Ohio

LINDA'S LADY FAIR BEAUTY SALON

"HElL" DEALER
Racine
Ph. 949-2882

Third 51.

Pomerov

John F: Fultz

Racine. Ohio

WAID CROSS SONS STORE

ELLIS &amp; SONS SOHIO

GROCERIES&amp;GENERAL ,
MERCHANDISE
RIICino
Ph. 949-2550

COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE
Locust &amp; Beech SI5.MiddleportPh. 992-9921

P. J. PAULEY. AGENT

BETSY ROSS BAKERY

Nationwide Ins. Co. ot Columbus. 0 .
Pomeroy - Ph. 9'12 -2318
B04 w. Mall.

BAKERSOFGAY~BREAD

Moddleport

~AKERS

Ph. 992-3030

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY

OF GOOD BREAD

WE FILL DOCTORS
PRESCRIPTI ONS

Huntington, W.Va .
992-2955

SEAR'S CATALOG MERCHANT

Pomeroy

THIS SPACE AVAILABLE

LOUIS W. OSBORNE
220 E. Main
Pomeroy
Ph. 992-2178

Phone 992-2156
Middleport , Ohio
WE HANDLE ONLY
U.S.D.A. CHOICE MEATS

Middleport, Ohio

GOEGLEIN SAND &amp; GRAVEL
P". 992·J214

.

Middleport

~EN
lENT
--

MIDWAY MARKET

~

1

Pemerov
Pb. 992-nel
Ph":""'" ··

1ft£ DAILY SENTINEL
-.cllceltd to lholnttretts of
Mt)OI-Ma1011 Aroo

" ' - 992-2156

THE ATHENS OOUNTI SAVlNGS
&amp;lDAN CO.
2f4 W. Second

McCOY ALICTION SERVICE

Pomeroy

Ph. 992-3863

RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN STORE

'\

Middleport, Ohio
'

Keepsake Diamond Rings
212 E. Main St.
Pomeroy
Ph. 992-3785

SALEM SJREELMARlET
Gerold &amp; Melva Elbln, Owner
Open Bto 7 dallv : lH Sun
Rutland
' Ph, 742-2424
'

ROSEBERRY'S PENNZOIL .
kRIIIII

Ph. 949-9i30

I

K&amp;C JEWELERS

.

RACINE PLANING MILL
· Syracuse

......

THE STORE WITH A HEART
Ph . 949-2626

RIDENOUR
the•ler

HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH ,
Near l ong Bolt0f11 , Edsel Har t,
pastor Sunday school , 10 a .m.·
Church, 7·30 p.m .. prayer
meeting, 7:30p.m. Thursday . .

MIDDLEPORT

PENTECOSTAL ,

Th~rd Ave .. the Rev . Will iam Knit -

tel , pastor . Ronald Dugan, Sun·
day School Supt. Classes for all
ages . evening serv1ce, 7:30; Bible
study , Wednesday , 7:30 p.m.;
youth services , Friday , 7:30p.m.

MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAP ·

meeting , Wednosday , 7:30p.m.

RACINE FIRST BAPTIST. Don L
Walker, Pastor , Ronn1e Salser,
Sunday school supt ; Sunday
school , 9:30 a .m .; morning warsh1p, 10:-40 a .m.; Sunday evening
wor,hif,, 7:30; Wednesday even·

;ng Bib o study, 7.30 .

TIST, Corner Ash and Plum: Noel
Herrman, pastor . Soturdvy ev&amp;n·
in~ service , 7 30 p.m. ; Sunday
5&lt;: ool, 10:30a.m. ·
MEIGS
COOPE RATIVE PARISH

RUTLAND COMMUNITY
CHURCH, Sunday School , 9 30
o m ; worship service , 11 a .m.;
Wedn esday prayer meeting , 7 30
p.m . you th services , Sunday, 1
p.m .; Sunday night wonhlp, 7:30.

RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE, Rev. Lloyd D. Grimm,

~,·~-

•.. OR FIND ING
THAT GIR~ ON THe

FACE IT, POD~ER! ... THE GOOD
OLD PAYS ARE LOioJ6 GONE!

Ph. 992-3971

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
GAS- SERVICE

~

ALL THOSE
RIP-ROARING
ADVeNTURES
WASH Ai&gt;JP l HAD
WHEN WE WERE
~OUNe E~.. THEN'RE

NOS IRREEEE!

DESERTED I S~AND! ...
THE'N ACROSS THE
CHINA SeA IN A
HE'APHUNTEFt'S

HES MARRIED NOW, GOT A
FAMI1.Y ... CAROL WAIJTS HilA
TO GeT AHEAD, FILL HER
FATHt=R '~ SHOE~:

OVER AND DONE!

CANOE!

liP

ORPHAN

WHY THAT
LITll~ SCAMP··

CH...: DOCTO!l·rr::~

AI\I NIE'S

SECRET·'

IT'S HER
GIFT FOR

YOUR
8\R.THDA'( -

A PRfSErn

FOR ME! HIOE IT,
NElliE .. NEYER LET
OM I PEEKED·•

ULABNER

??-lHOSE TVvO ARMIES IS

-??- WAITrr-IN TH' MIDDLE' 15 A

1

ADVANCIN CN E'PCH OTHER
OLD LADY. 5H£o TAI&lt;IN' A CQIN
~-\J2~A~M~A~S&gt;_::S~ACRE: - rr- !---1--. OUTIA HE'R PrJCI&lt;ETBCOK-r'?-

11-------'??- TI-l' OLE: L-ADY
FLIPPED A COIN . CA.ItJ'f TELLFUM HERE WHETHER IT COME:-

•

... ANO WE AU THINK WE
oHOULO CHANGE THE
NAME OF IJQIVIVAZ
FAoHIONo5!

• WI NNIE1 I'YE !lEEN TALK ING

To l'HE: OTHER MEMBERS

OF OIJQ EXECUTIVE

BOt;-RD...

Roclnt
949-2020

day .
,
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE , Rev . Erie Cox , su.,.,ty
pastor: Mr~ . Mary lottley, Surlday
school •upt. Sunday school , 9:30
Q,rn.: morning ~orthip, 10:30

. KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, a.m. Bible Sludy and proyar oor·
George Freder•ck, supt. Sunday vic•Thundoy, 7:30p.m .
morning service, 9 t30 a .m . with
CARLE10N OIURCH, Kingsbury
preoching on first a'ld third Sun- Rood . Gary King , poator. Sunday
dayofmonthbyGto~Pickens .
Khool , 9:30a.m .; evening war·
STIVERSVILLE
MMUNITV olllp, 7:30 p.m. Prayo&lt; mHtlng,

F

etJT WE IcE DOIN6
WELL UNDER THE
NAME /30NNAZ /
WHY CHAN6E

• 6TA"!J.~M FLATTE!?£0
YU\l AND THE OTHERS
THINK WE SHOULD CHANGE
THE COMPANY'5 NAME 'TO

!lE0\1J5E rr !IELON6S
TO THE. Pf?EV!OUS
OWNER&amp;... AND BE·
CAUSe YOJIZ NAME

IT?

MEANS SOME:.TH IN0.

WIN/VIE WINKLe
rASH!ONo5 ....

WIN AT BRIDGE

S:on;ilrOd-ro_r_s_c_o_res
--s.,l'a_m
_ a_g_a-.-in.,l- NORTH

WGSHEG

STGC.-VUHJHTKC JLKISHEN
Yllferday'a Oitpl...te: ENGLIBH 18 A FUNNY
LANGUAGE. A'FAT afANQ!l AND A SUM CHANCE ARE
TilE SAME THJNG, ... JACIC HEliBERT
.
' 1 1 " - Pool- IJ..Ioalt, 1...

4

• Q98

• KJ 93
tAJii3
.KI

WEST

EAST

.K10512
•QH
t109
.963

.AJ763

Y--7.
'

.2

·-

¥AIOB76
• Q4
• A J 10 B 7 2
Both vulnerable

.
Wetl

North Eatl

PaBJ 3•
Pass 4 t
PaBJ &amp;•

PaBJ
Pw
Paos

Pass
Opening lead

~

'.
IHAR AIN'T "
NO CHAIRS
LEFT, LUKEY
'

'

We used this hand last
AuifUSt to shol' the late Sidney
Silodor, one of the greatest
bridge players of all Ume, at

hll best.

Sidney wound up making
seven,. He would have lost the
hand 1f East held the queen of
hearts and w~s smart en?ugh
to cash the kmg of d1amonds,
but put yourself in East's
place. Wouldn 't you assume
that the queen of diamonds
had been a singleton and
wouldn't you have tried to
cash the ace of spades?
The reason we are bringing
this hand up again is that

several readers have written

The Almanac
Press
By
United
International
Today is Friday March 4,
the ~d day of 1977with 302 to
foUow.
its~Ump'::'~:. moving toward
The morning stars are
Mercury and Mars.
The evening stars are
Venus, Jupiter and Saturn.
Th bo n on this date are
ose r
.
under the sign of Prsces .
Famed
Notre
Dame
football Coach Knule Rockne
was born March 4: 1888.
Also on this day tn history :
In 1791, Vermont became
the 14th state of the Union.

In 1801, Thomas Jeffersor
li.come the ftrsl president '
Je
i naugurated
in
Washington .
In 1917, Jeanette Rankin, a
Montana Republican,
became the first woman
member of Congress when
she was sworn into the U.S.
House of Representatives.
In 1963, the U.S. Supreme
Court ruled ngainst so-caUed
railroad
'1eatherbeddlng"
tmder outmoded rules.

'

A thought for the day :
American essayist Ralph
Waldo
Emerson
said,
" Nothing can bring you peace
but yourself."

1t llliM lli)1t'-~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

to ask us how Sidney got rid of ~ \9 ~~ ~

his lour of diamonds
The answer is that he didn.' t. Unscramblelhese four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to form
After playing the third trump four ordlnaoy words.
he went alter clubs and alter r-~-,-,.-.,-.,
discarding dummy's jack-51
and 3 of diamonds on clubs he
~t"'-T-V~'&lt;J
was able to ruff that lour of
f-.. .A
diamonds tn dummy.

byHenriAmolq and Bob Lee

IVE

I

ALLIV

L--'j-l=:;:,c:.. .:TI

I VEALE

t

tDEDAHN

I

illlffl ~ "" ""-,..,.., ......... '-""

10 t

By Osirold &amp; .lomea Jacolly

,.
DEAL ME IN ,
FELLER5

tKB762
.Q5

SOUTH lDI

~

a
a

JHIG

DOWN HEADS OR TAIL'S1 tE'PT THAT
Of.JE ARM'! IS OOIN' AWAY CRYIN'Lt:AVIN' T 'OTHER ONE HAPPY
A'S CLAMS rr-

DweWnc ;

WG.S HE G

.

RACINE FOOD MARKET

Rev . Jome1 D. Guy nn , pastor
Sunday school, 10 om : Su nday
worship , 11 a .m .; Sunday evening
servic e . 7 p.m.: Wednesday wo r·
ship service, 7:30p.m.

NOTHI'-II:i
DOI NG : ... I'M
NOT MAKI~ (;
THe FIR~T MOVE,

35 -

(For a real auction call rne, Real Nv:.Coy)
1.0 . (Mac! McCOy
985-3944

~
,,

RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD,

AW, IT'!'&gt; THIS BUSTUP
EI\5Y! AHI:;F.
WE'VE 5EE;N BUDDIE!&gt;
ALL THE$ E 'IEAR5WIT~

b--1-+-1

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

MARK V STORE
-

9:30 o m., Richard Vaughan . supt.
Morning worsh ip, 10:30.
SYRACUSE. Morn in g wor5hip, 9
a .m.; Sunday school, 10 a.m. Mrs.
Sampson Hall , supt.

u

.

HEINER'S BAKERY

10·30.
MIDDLEPORT, Sunday school.

P1ne Grove The Rev . William Gluesencomp, Sr., pastor; Roger
Middleaworth , Pastor. Church W1llford, Sr., Sunday schoof sup t.
services 9:30 a .m. Sunday School Sunday school 9:30 a . ; Sunday
!0:30a .m.
evening sertotlce, 7 p m Prayer
BRADBURY
CHURCH
OF meeting, Tuesday , 7·30 p.m.
CHRIST, Mr , DOnald Raley, po1tor. Ernest Deeter , don lead•r .
Sunday ~ehool , 9.30 a .m .; wor· Youth meeting, Wednesday , 7:30
!oh ip service, 10:30 o .m.; Sunday p. m with Don and Martha
service~. 7 p.m.: youth group, Meodows . leaden .
Wednesday , 7 p.m.
WHITE'S CHAPEL , Coolville AD.
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST, Rev. Earl Rev. Roy O..te,r, pastor. Sunday
Shuler , pastor, Sunday 1chool school 9:30a .m .: wonhip serv ice.
9:30a.m.; Church service, 7 p.m. ; 10:30 a .m. Bibie 1tudy and prayer
youth meehng, 6 p.m. Tuesd ay HI- service, Wednesday, 7.30 p.m.
bfeStudy, 7 p.m .
RUTLAND
RACINE CHURCH OF THE
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST,
NAZARENE, Rov. John A. Call- Dennis Smith, pastor; Frank
man, pastor . Sunday School , 9:30 Young ,Sunday school supt. Sun·
a .m .: Gerald Wells , supt. Morn· day schoo l and communion . 9:30
ing wonhip, 10.30 a .m.; Sunday a .m . Worship and comunion,
evening worship, 7:30, Prayer !0:30a.m.

f

Satu rda y

IRE FINESfh-l M0BiLE HOMES
1100 E. Main
Pomeroy
Ph. 992-7034

Stncklin. pastor. Sunday chur ch
school, 9 30 a .m., Mrs. Homer
lee, supt.. morning worship ,

P· ~un\No

Scr101ures selected b~ Tna Amencart Bib~ Soctety

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
&amp; SERVICE, INC.

H A R R I S 0 N V I L L E 7.30 p.m.
,
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION al
PRESB YTERIAN , Rev. Ernosl
ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Bald Knob . Rev . Lawrence

doy , 7:30p.m.
CALVARY IllitE CHURCH . :ZO N.
Second, Middlepo,t; pa1tor, Cur·
tis Stephen. Church school, 9:30
a .m.; preaching tervices , 10:30
,
a .m . and 7:30 p.m. W.dnesdoy .
even ing Bible study, 7·30 p.m.
INDEPENDENT HOliNESS CHUR ·
CH , INC. - Coi'J'Iet Fourth and
Lincoln St1 ., Middleport; Rev.
O'Dell Manley, pattor; Sony Hud·
son , Sunday Sc;hool superintendent. Sunday tchool , 9·30 om .;
evening worship, 7:30 p.m.;
prayer and pral1e Mrvlce,
·!
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
THE PEOPLE'S CHURCH OF . ,
POMEROY - Corner Main ond
'
'
Court Sts .. third floor ovtt
Lig hthouse Restaurant. Henry
COok, pastor. Sunday school , 10
a .m .; morning worth ip, 11 a .m .;
evening service , 7 , 30 .
Wednesday evening service,
7:30 lnterdenomlnotionol , full
gospel.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD Pastor Oen.nls Bales Sunday
School, JO a .m.; wot1hlp service,
11 .30 o m. and 7:30 p m. Prayer
meeting, Wednescfay, 7.30p.m.
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH
OF JESUS CHRIST , Thoma• L.
Holmes , pastor . Bible study,
Saturday, 7:30 p.m., Evangelistic
p.m .; prayer mHt lng , Tuesday,
7:30pm , Bible Study, Thursday.
7:30p .m .
POMEROY
WESLEYAN
HOLINESS - Harrisonville Rood ,
Dewey King, pastor; Edison
Weaver. assistant; Henry Eblin ,
Jr .. Sunday school supl. Sunday
school. 9.30 o.m.; morning worship, 11 a .m. Sunday evening
service, 7·30· prayer meeting ,
T"ursdoy, 7:30p.m.
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF
GOD - Not Pentecostal. Rev.
George Oiler , pastor . Wor~hip
service Sunday , 9:"5 a .m .. Sun day school. 11 a .m ., worship ser ·
vice , 7:30 p .m Thursday prayer
m"ting, 7:30p.m .
MT . HERMON United Brethren
Church. Sunday School 9:30a.m .
Worsh1p service 10:45 a . m .
Preaching services every Sunday
alternating with C. E. Wednesday
prayer meeti ng 7:30 p.m. Rev.
James Leach, pastor. Dav id
Holter, loy leader . ~
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES. I milo
east of Rutland , junction of Route
124 ond Noble Summit Rood (T·
174 ). Sunday Bible Lecture . 9:30
a .. , Watchtower study, 10:30
a . m.: Tuesday , Bible study. 7 and
B: 15 p.m.; Thursday, theocratic
school. 7 .30 p.m ., service
meeting, B.30 p.m.
HOPE BAPTIST - 570 Grant St ,
Middleport. Bobby Elktn!, pastor .
Sunday S~~· 10 a .m.: worship
service , ,J1 o . .; even•ng service,
7·30 p.m . Th ursday prayer
mef!ting on Bible study , 7:30

DANVILLE WESLEYAN , Rev. R. Jr ., pastor. Sundoy 1chool. 9.30
D Brown, pastor. Sunday School , o .m.; worshi~ service, 10:30 a .m.
9·30 a .m.; morn ing worship Broadcast live over WMPO; young
10:45, youth serv•ce. 6:.. 5 p.m ; people ' s
service ,
6 · 45 ;
evening worship , 7:30 p.m.; evangelistic service , 7:30 p.m.
prayer and praise , Wednesday, Prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7 30
METHODIST CHURCH
7:30p. m.
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH ,
p.m .; Missionary meet ing . 7.30
Robert T. Bumgarner.
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST, p.m . flr~t Wednesday of month .
Corner of Sycamore and Second
Sts ., Pomeroy. The Rev. Wilham
Director
Miles Trout, pastor . Sunday
MASON COUNTY
POMEROY CLUSTER
school , 10 a .m., Steve Little, sup!
M1ddleswarth , Pastor Sunday
MASON FIRST BAPTIST, Second
Even1 ng service, 7 p m ; prayer ond Pomeroy Stt. , Stan Craig,
School at 9 45 a .m . and Church
Rev. Robert Hayden
meeting , Thursday , 7 p.m.
Rev James Corbifl
Services II o.m
pastor. Sunday school, 9:.&amp;5 a .m.;
CHESTER, Wanh;p 9,15 a,m.
CHESTER CHURCHOF GOD, worship service, II a .m.; ti'oi nlng
SACRED HEART, Rev father
Rev. Bobby Porter , pastor . Sun- un ion, 6:30 p.fTI .: evening worPau l D. WeltOn, pastor . Phon• Church School10 a .m .
POMEROY, Worsh ip, 10 30a m
day school. 9:30 a .m.: worship ship service , 7:30p.m. Mid Week
992-2825. Saturday evening Mon.
7 30: Sunday Mass , 8 cmd IOo.m ., Church School 9:30 a .m . UMYF s ervi ce. 11 a .m .; evening service. prayer service, Wednesday . 7:30
7:30, youth serv1ce, Wednesday, p.m .
Confession, Saturday, 7-7.30 p.m . 6 30p .m
ENTERPRISE, Worship 9 a .m. 7:30p .m.
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, P.
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHUR· 0 . 8o11 "B7 , Miller St ., Mason, W.
OF CHRIST, 200 W Main St ., Jerry Church SchooiiO o.m.
Pau l, minister, phone 992·7666
ROCK SPRINGS . Worship 10 CH , Ted Jones, pastor. Sunday Vo. Sunday B1ble Study 10 a .m ,
Conservative, non -Instrumental : a .m. Church School 9:15a .m, school. 9:30 a .m ., Roy Sigmon. Worship II a .m . and 7 p.m . Bible
supt.; morning worship, 10 ·:j): Study Wednesday 7 p m . Vocal
Sundcy worsh1p, 10 am .; Bible UMYF 6:30p.m.
FLATWOODS, Worship, 11 am. Sunday evening service , 7 ·:j); music.
study, 11 am .· worship , 6 p.m .
Church SchooiiO a .m .
mid-week service, Wednesday,
Wednesday Bible study, 7 p.m.
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST , Car·
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
7:30p.m.
OlD DE~TER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
ner of Second and Anderson.
Rev . Robert Bumgarner
· ~YRACUSE CHURCH OF THE Mason . Pastor, Walter Cloud.
CHURCH , Rev .Ralr.h Smith ,
HEATH
Robert Bumgarner.· NAZARENE. Rev . · Dale Bon, Sunday schoolt:•s a .m .; worship
postdr. Sunday sr;;hoo , 9.30 a .m. ,
Mrs Wo rley Francis, supe.-lnten· Pastor. Worsh ip 10:30 a .m. pastor ; Bob Moore , Sunday service. 11 a .m. and 7 30 p.m.
dent. Preaching serv~ees f•rst &amp; Church School 9:30 a .m. UMYF 6 School supt ., Sunday school WNklv Bible study, Wednesday,
classes for all ages , 9:30 o.m ; 7.30 p.m .
third Sundays follow •ng Sunday p.m.
. RUTLAND , Wil bu r Hilt, Pastor . morn 1ng worship. 10·"5 a .m.;
School
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD,
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST, Worship 10.30 a.m. Church School NYPS , 6 30 p.m .; evangelistic ser- Duddtng Lone, Mason , W Va.
vice , ' 7:30 p.m. Prayer and Chester Tennant , Pastor Sunday
Praochmg 9 30 a .m ., first and se- 9 30o.m .
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
fasting Tuesday , 10 a .m.; School 9·45 a .m.: Children's
fREEWILL BAPTIST
cond Sundays of each month;
Midweek
prayer
service . Church 6·45 p.m. Yaung People's Church
Rev R1chard E. Jarvis
third and fourth Sundays each
leland Holey, pastor.
ASBURY , Worsh1p 10·"0 am . Wedne5doy , 7:30 p.m ., men 's Service 6:45 p.m. Evon~elistic Sunday chool. 10 a .m .. everling
moo th. worsh ip ser\'IC&amp; at 7:30
7 .30 p. m. Prayer
p.m. Wed nesday evemngs at Church School 9·30 a .m UMW prayer meeting, Saturday , 7 p.m 1 SeN ICe 7 30 p.m . Women s M11· serv1te
first Tuesday. Bible Study Thu.s . m•ss1onory meeting, second slonary Counc1l 10om . first and meeting, Wednesday , 7.30p.m .
7 30. Prayer and Bible Study .
Wednesday , 7·30p m
CHURCH OF GOD of Prophecv,
third Tuesdays . Prayer and Bible
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST , 7 30p .m .
FOREST RUN, Warsh;p 9 a.m.
UNITED
FAITH
NON · Study , Wednesday, 7·30 p m. '
located on the 0 . J . Wh1te Rood
Mu lberry He1ghts Rood . Pomeroy.
DENOM INATIONAL , Rev. Robert
Pastor, Gerard Seton , Sabbath Church School10 a .m.
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST off highway 160. Sunday School
MINERSVILLE, Worship 10 am . Smith, pastor .. Sunday School, IN CHRISTIAN UNION, The Rev. 10 a.m. Superintendent John
School Suparintf!ndent, Claro
9:30a.m. ; Class leader , leo Hill William Campbell , pastor . Sunday Loveday. First Wednesday night
Mcintyre Sabbath School, Satur- Church School9 a .m.
SYRACUSE, Chruch School 9 .30 wors hip service, 10:30 a .m .; chur· School. 9:30a .m .; James Hughes , of month CPMA serv ic&amp;s , second
day afternoon o f 2:00. w1th War·
om. Worship service 7 JO p.m.
ch 7:30p.m.
supt .. evening serv1ce, 7:30p.m . Wednesday WMB meeting , th ird
ship Service following at 3:15.
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN Wedne l day evening prayer through fifth youth service.
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST
Rev . Timothy Smith
CHRIS'r, Elden R. Bloke, past or. meeting , 7.30 p .m . Youth prayer George Croyle, pastor.
CHURCH- Orewy Gore , supt .
Cluster leader
Sunday School 10 am ., Howard service eoch Tu&amp;sdoy.
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - 570
Sunday School, 9:30am .. morn·
Rev. Steven WUson
McCoy, supt ., Morning sermon,
1ng worsh1p , 10 :.. 5 o . m, ,
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH ., Grant St ., Middleport: Rev . Bobby
THE HILAND CHAPEL, George
11 a .m.: Sunday night ser\'ices Letart, W. Va., Rt . I, Rev Charles Elkins Sunday school , 10 a .m .:
Associate
Cos io , pastor Sunday School
BETHANY , {Oor ca5 ), Worship Chr istian Endeovor, 7:30 p.m ; Hargraves, pastor. Worsh1p ser- mornmg worship , 11 ; evening
9:30 a.m . Church School 10:30 Song service, 8 p.m , Pr.aching vices , 9:30 a .m.; Sunday school , worship. 7:30 p.m. ; Thursday
9·30a .m : e11ening worsh1p, 7·30
a .m.
8 :30 p.m . M1dweek Prayer 11 om .; evening worship, 7:30 evening Bible study and prayer
Thursday evenmg prayer service
CARMEL , Chruch School 9.30 meeting, Wednesday, 7 p.m.: Roy p.m. Tuesday cottage prayer meeting , 7:30p .m. Alliliated with
7:30p.m
meeting and Bible study , 9.30 S.B.C.
POME~OY FIRST BAPTIST , Rev. · a .m. Wo rship 10:30 a .m. 2nd and Adams , lay leader.
Peter Grondall . pastor William "h Sundays
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST. a .m . Worship service , Wednes·
APPLE GROVE , SundaY School Located at Rutland on New Lima
Watson , Sunday tt:ho,ol supt .,
Sunday school. 9.3q a.m. ; BYF , b 9·30 a .m . Worship 7:30 p.m. Ill Rood, ne•t to Forest Acre PorkJ
p m.; B1ble study , Wednesday , 7 and 3rd Sundays: Prayer meeting Rev. Roy Rouse , pastor; Robert
p m ; choir practice, Wednesday , Wednesday 7:30p .m. Fellow5hip Musser, Sunday Schoolsupt. Sun·
supper fir5f Saturday 6 p.m. UMW day school , 10:30 om .. worship
8. 30p.m .
7 30
p . m . B1ble
Study ,
FIRST SOUIHERN BAPTIST, 282 2ndTuesday7:30p .m
EAST LETART , Chruch School Wednesday , 7:30p .m., Saturday
Mulberry Ave , Pomeroy. Paul J .
White, Pastor:-Gory Basham. Sun - lst, 2nd, 3rd Sundays, 9.30 a .m. night prayer service , 7:30pm.
•
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN,
day school supt. Sunday sc hool , Fourth Sunday 10:30 a .m. Warby THOMAS JOSEPH
5hip 2nd Sunday 7 30 p.m. 4th Roger Watson . pastor; Jessie
9:30 a .m.; morning worship
10:30; ev&amp;ning worship , 6:30p .m. Sunday 9 ·30 om ; Prayer meeting White , Sunday school supt. Morn·
DOWN
ACROSS
Midweek prayer serv1ce, 7 :30 Wednesday 7·30 p m UMW ls t ing worsli lp, 9:30 o .m. : Sun· 1 11 AU hands"
1 Task
p.m·.
Tuesday 7·30 p.m.
day •chool. 10.30 a.m.; evening
%AUude
WESLEYAN (Racine), Sunday serv1ce, 7 30. Wednesday Bible 5 Musty
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CENTER,
3 Disintegrate
10
Villain's
School
10
o
m.
Worship
11
a
.m
:
Study,
7.30
p.m
.
Dexter Rd ., Langsville , Oh10, Rev .
MT . UNION BAPTfST , Rev . John
f Took the
Clyde Ferrell , Pastor. Sunday Jr. UMYF Wednesday 3:30p .m.,
nemesis
School
I I o .m
Saturday Bible Study .Thursday 7 p.m . Choir Elswick, pastor. Sunday school 11 Jewelry tenn
champ!OI)preach•ng sei'\IICes 7·30 p m . Practice Thur5doy 8 p.m .
superintendent, Don W1lson. Sun·
ship
12
In agreement
Wednesday even ing Bible study
LETART FALLS . Church School doy school, 9:45 o.m.: evening
(3 wds.)
5 Arranged
1st , 2nd, 3rd Sundays 10:15 a .m. worship, 7:30 p .m
Prayer
ot7 ·30 p .m.
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH , 4th Sunday 9 15 'a .m .. Worship meeting, 7.30 p m Wednesday
like a ladder
15 Clncy
Bailey Run Rood, Rev Emmett 1st , 2nd . 3rd Sundays 9:15a .m..
TUPPEAS PLAINS CHRISTIAN
&amp;Unspoken
athlete
Yesterday'• AIIJwer
Rowson , pastor . Handley Dunn, 4thSundoy7 .30p. m.
CHURCH , Eugene Underwood ,
7 Curve
MORNING STAR , Worship 9:30 pastor ; Howard Coldwell , Jr., 18 Mlln'a name
supt. Sunday school, 10 a .m. Sun8Luang
31 Wisconsin
Z2 Fodder
day evening service 7:30 Bible a.m .; Church School 10:30 om ., Su!'lday Sch90l Supt. : Sunday 17 Pa1'8011 bird
Mid-Week Service Wednesday 8 School, 9 130 a .m.: Morning Ser· 18 Before
city
'
teaching , 7:30p.m. Thur1 doy.
PrabanC
23 Gather
DVESVILLE COMMUNITY CHUR· p.m .
mon , 10:30 a .m.: Sunday evening 19 Mongoose's
31
ciUzen
Clerical
MORSE CHAPEL, Worshp 11 service , 7 p.m .
CH , Roger C. Turner, pas tor.
3Z "Warpaint':
prey
9 Ancient
LETART
FALLS
UNITED
Sunday school. 9.30 a .m.; Sunday a .m .: Church School 9·30a.m .
cap
Item
Tuscany
20
Ge&lt;lrge's
PORTLAND, Worship 7:30pm : BRETHREN, Rev . Freeland Norris,
morning worship, 10:30, Sunday
Z5
Beseech
Church School9:30 a .m.
evenmg service, 7:30 .
pastor ; Floyd Norris, supt. SUnday
33
Bury
13
.
U
nearthly
lyricist
THE SALVATION ARMY , 115
SUTTON, Churcfl School 9:30 school, 9:30 o .m.; morning ser· !1 Appearance
%1 Eucharist 38 "- bono ,
If JoUrnal
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy Envoy a .m. Worship 1st and 3rd Sundays mon , 10.3Q a .m ., Prayer serv ice,
plate
publico" :
Z1 Swash2% Filament
and Mrs Roy Wining , off1cers in 10 30a .m.
Wednesday , 7:30p.m.
39
CoUoldal
Z8
WeD23
White
poplar
buckler's
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
C~URCH OF GOD OF · PRO·
charge. Sunday holiness meeting,
10 a .m .; Sunday school , 10:30
Rev. Richard Thomas
PHECY, O.J White Rnod off 160, 26 Ph!Upplne
mannered
substance
'drink
a .m. Leader YPSM Eloise Adams;
Pastor
Rev. George Groyle , postorSun - . island
7:30 p .m. solvation meeting.
Duone Sydenstricker
day SchotJI, 10 a .m ; Arthur Hen John Douglas
son , Supt.; Morning Worshlp 1 11 1:1 Exploolve
l,a dies Home league, 12 noon to 2
device
Assoc1ates
a.m .· Young People's service, 7
p.m ., Thursday: prayer meeting
JOPPA, Worship 10 a .m ., Chur· ' p.m. ; Evening service, 7:30p.m.: 26 Remuneraand Bible study, Thursday, 7:30
ch School 9 a .m .. Prayer Meeting Wednesday Mid-Week Prayer
p.m.
.tlon
Wednesdoy8p m .
Service, 7 .30 p.m. , Youth
MIDDLEPORT
Z9
- Garfunkel
LONG
BOTTOM
,
Sunday
school
mMting,
6.30
p.m.
Evening
war·
MT . MORIAH BAPTIST , Corner
30 Poppycock!
Fourth and Main , Middleport. at 9:30 a .m. Worsh ip services at sh~p . 7.30 p.m.
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE nate
Rev . Henry Key , Jr .. pastor Sun· 7:30p .m. Bible study ond Youth
day School, 9:30a .m .; Mrs. Ervin meeting ot 8 p . m . on NAZARENE, Rev . Herbert Grote,
tycoon's
Baumgardner , supt., Moming Wednesdays .
poator . Worship service, 11 a .m.
nickname.
NORTH BETHEL, Worship 11 and 7:30 p.m . Sunday . S'undoy
worship, 10:•5 a .m.
talk
School, 9·30 a •. m. Richard Barton, 34
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF a .m ., Church School10 o .m.
CHRIST IN CHRISTIAN UNION,
ALFRED, Sunday Sc~l 9.30 supt .
Prayer
meeting ,
(
Lawrence Manley. pastor ; Mrs. a .m ., Worsh1p 10.45 om.; Pra~r Wednesdov . 7:30p.m.
~e F~~IIC.'I!~~=--1=-.j..._
BRADFORD CHU~CH OF
Runell Young , Sunday School mHiing Wedneodoy 7:45 p.m.;
31vivant
Supt . Sunday School 9:30 a.m . UMW 3rd Tuesday 8 P·"l·
CHRIST , Jack Perry, miniater. SunREEDSVILLE, Sundoy School9:30 day School 9·30 a .m.; morni ng 3'1 Painting the 1=-+-tEvening
worship ,
7 : 30,
town red
Wednesday prayer m"ting, 7:30 am. Worship 7:30 p.m.; Prayer church 10:30 a .m.; Sunday even·
service , 7: 30 p .m .
Meeting 7·30 p .m . Tuesday; ing
p.m.
(2 wdtt.)
MT . MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD , Visitatlon7:30 p.m. 1s t Thursday. Wednesday service, 8 p.m
4oFortimeSILVER RIDGE , Woroh;p 10 a.m.
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
Rac ine Route 2, the Rev . Jome1
teller'a
CHURCH. Rev. Floyd F. Shaak,
M. Munty, pastor. Sunday school , ChurchSchool9a.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS, Worship 9 pastor: Lloyd Wright , Sunday
cards
9·"5 a .m.: morning wor.s hip, 11
School Supt.; Morning Worship 41Keenness
a .m.; evening worship, 7:30. a .m. Church SchooiiO a .m .
KENO, CHURCH OF CHRIST, 9:30 a.ll) .: Sunday School 10 20
Prayer meeting, Tuesday, 7:30
Expiate
p.m .; Young people's mMtlnQ , George Frederick, 1upt Service a ,m.; Wednetdoy Prayer and 81·
VUJainous
weekly , 9:30 a .m. on SunCioy. bit Study 7:30 p.m. ( Sunday
7:30p.m. Thundoy .
glance
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST , Preaching first and thtrd Sundays evtr~ing worship 7:30 p .m:t~ Choir
Corner Sixth and Polmer, theltev . of month by Clifford Smith, 9:30 Practice Thursday, 7 p.fn . ._,,
DE~TER CHURCH df CHRIST,
Peter Grondol, poator. Manning a.m. ,
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Hen's how to work 1~:
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION, Chorlos Rus10ll , Sr. ; .,rroiSior:
Klaas , superintendent Sunday
AXTDLIAAX.
School. WMPO Radio program Dorrell Doddrill. pastor. Sundoy Rick Moc:amber, supt. Sunday
II LONGFELLOW
7:"5 o .m .; Sunday Sc:hool , 9:15 School. 9:30 a .m., Leonard Khool , 9 30 a .m.: worship sera .m .; Morning Worship , 10: 15 GIImore. first elder; everting ser· vice, 10:30 ·a .m. Bible Study ,
One letter tlmpl)i ttllldt for another. In thlt oamplt A 11
a .m . Youth octlv•tles and vice, 7:30 p .m. Wednesday Tuesday , 7:30p.m.
used
for the three L'a, X for the two O's, etc. Sinal• letter&amp;.
prayer
mHt;ng,
7:30p.m.
REORGANIZED
CHURCH
OF
fellowship for junior and 1enlor
apoatrophea, the len(lh ond lormollon of the wonll ore ell
MT . MORIAHCHURCHOFGOD, JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY
high studentt, 6 p.m. Sunday
hlnll. Etch doy the rode letter&amp; ere dllerent.
evening worship , 7::Kl p.m. Micf· Rac ine Route 2. The Rev. Charles SAINTS. _,orllood Racine Rood .
wHiol prayer services, Wedn... Hand , pastor Sunday school , 9:.. 5 William ,_outh, po1tor. Denny
CBYPTOQUOTU.
doy , 7:30p.m.
a.m .; morning worship , 11 a.m. Evon•. SUndar 5:'hool o.trect~r .
Evening
services,
Tuesday
and
Sunday
~hoo,
9.30
a
.m.,
Morn·
CHURCH OF CHRIST, Mid·
ing worshtp, 10:30 o .IJ'I : Sunday
dleport , 5th and Main, George Friday, 7:30p.m .
OBCNUJG .
J H. I G C
IEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH ...,enlng oerv.lce 1 p.m, WednH·
Gloze, minister , Mike ~Gerlach ,
superintendent. Terl)' Yankey, OF CHRIST, Doug Sooman, doy evaftlnt praytf 10rvlcH, 7:30
G P-G. V
YGVGEHCUNF
KC
~
youth min ister. Bible ~ehool, 9 :30 mlnl1ter. Bible 1tudy, 9 30 a .m.; p.m.
HTHlEHEM lmJST. Rev. Eorl
am.; momtng worship, 10:30 morning worship, 10:30 o.m.;
om .; &amp;lltning worship , 7:30) evening worship, 7:30 p.m. Shuler, pcntor. Worahlp Mt'Vice,
CLUENC
E B8•
prayer service , 7 p.m. Wednes- WednoodoyB1ble oludy, 7:30p.m 9 30 a.m. Sunday lchool, .10:30
liST CHAPEL, Route 1, Shad&amp;Postor Bobby Elkins Sunday
school , 5 p .m.; Sunday worship ,
5:45p.m .: Wednesday prayer tervtce. 7:30p .m.

Not many people, say "Grace" anymore. They sit down and ect. Often they
don't ellen eat together, as a family unit.
Some~mes the 7V set is the mealtime
focus of attention.

a .m .:
Sundgy evange listic
moet in g, 7.30 p.m . Prayer
meeting, Wednesday , 7.30 p.m.
UNITED
PRESBYTERIAN
MINISTRY OF MEIGS COUNTY,
Owightl. ZoYitz , director .

CHURCH, Sunday School service , Wedn•sdoy , 7:30p.m.
10 a .m .; Prayer mMIIng , Thun·
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN ,
day, 7 p m.; Su nday evening aer· Bruce Smith, pastor. Wallace
vice, 7 p.m.
Damewood, $upt B!blt School.
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, ~ :30 a m. Preaching servic;e,
Pomeroy- Marr ilanv• lle Rd.; Don 10:"5 a.m . No evening service.
t&lt;ennedy , pa1tor; Bill McElroy,
HYSELL RUN FREE METHODIST
Sunday school supt . Sundc;y CHU~CM , Rev . Herbert Ailing ,
sc hool , 9:30 o .m ., morning war· pastor . Sunday School9:30 a .m.,
ship ortd cofTl munion, 10:30 om ; Morning serv1ce, 10 30 a .m. ,
Sunday evening youth Christian youth serv1ce , 6 45 p .m .
Endeavor. 6 p.m .; wonhip ser- Evangelistic service 7:30 p.m.
vice , 7 p.m. Wednnday evef)lng Prayer meet ing. Thursday , 7:30
prayer mHting and Bible study , p .m .
.

A Canadian reader asks a L--;...::1=,.;.:~:;:Ji=--'"y~'\j
simple question which is :
.
~A _A
"What is the value of each
trick in no trump'"
The answer to this one is
that the llrst trick counts {()
and each subsequent Irick . )
counts 30.
- . . .
(Do you have a quesfion
lor lht tKptrts? Wrife "Ask rl":"L-::0::-C-::-::C~I-::A~±...,
the Jacabys " care of this ~::;:..:::::.,.::::..:.;,;....-+,...,.--,
newspaper. The Jacobys Will
1 1
answer Individual questions
1\..
J
il stamped, self-IHidreastd

I I

He really got a lot of
mileage out of his II high-card
pOints as he bid to the beart
slam, but he louod an unusual
play at trick one that saved
him won-y about the queen of
tramps.
He went rlsht up with dum·
ace ol fllamondi at Irick · envelopes are tfJCIOitd. The
Anlww hen:
~ ~
one and drOpped bls qtleen. most Interesting queaHons
Led a heart to his ace and a will be used in this cOlumn
{-lalnomlwj
-ond beart to dummy'• 1nd wilt receive copies of
.
Jumbles· SWOOP PARTY BUNION FAMILY
jack. East showed out and JACOBY MODERN I
Yasterday'o An-:. Howlhe....._tumldDIIItlclln
I
campaktned- DN HIS PLATFORM

"'l

V

mJ'•

"r!!. I_ I

YY . I T I 'i.,
_ 4 _ 4

I

\.

I

'

•

�&amp;-The Dally SentineL MiMloaort-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, March 4. 1!171

"

,

Monthly
FIMftCIII Stt,tment

Real Estate for Sale? Sell It Through The Want Ads
FINANCI4L NIPORT
OF TOWNSHIPS

WAin ADS

For Fiscal Ytlr lndlng
DtctmiHr U, 1976

ltdlord Township
Melts County

Rt , 1 loxUl
Cootvlllt, Ohio

Feb . 21. 1t'1J
I certify t~e following repor·

to, be correct .

Helen swart;

Township Cieri
Ti!l ~o . 61A .696.1111
SUMMARY OF

CASH BALANCES,
RECEIPTS AND

EXPENDITURES

P M,

5

Publication.

D•v

Berore

I

CancellatiOns,
correc
lions ucepted first d1y ot

publication
REGULATIONS

The ·Publisher reserves
the right to edit or relect

any 1d1 dtemed Ob·
ltctlonat The publisher
wiiJ nat bt rtlponslbl t for

mor.e then one Incorrect
Insertion .

Balance Jan. 1, 1976
General Fund
s 1,715 8!
Motor Veh icle License

RATES

For Want Ad S.rvlc:e
5 cents per word one

OLD furn1ture. ice boxes, brass
beds, wall telephones and
porl5, or complea households
Write M D. Miller. Rr. 4,
. P~eroy~Ohio. Call 991 7760
CASH po1d tor oil mgke5 gnd
modvls of mobile homes .
Phonv gr.a cod• 614--423·9531
TIMBER , Pomerov For9sl Pro·
ducts . Top pnce for stond~ng
sawtimber Call Kent Honbv.
1· •46·8570,
COiNS, ClJRAENCY~ tokens, old
pocket watches and chatns,
s1lv•r and gold We nHd 196-41
ond older stlver cotns Buy sell ,
or trade Coli Roger Womsley,
7•2-2331
POMEROY AUTO RECYCLING
NOW BUYING SCRAP Turn
junlc au tos 1nto cosh Also buving metols, boflerles, etc
Open Mondov . Tuesdov ,
Weds Friday, 8 00 · • 30
Saturday 8·00 · 12·00 Phone
992·6337 Old Rt 33 rust Ot:ross
Crueser s Chipper
WANTeD OLD p1anos any condt·
tlon Paying $10 and $25 each .
First floor only . Expert movmg .
Fully msured Company. Wnte
g1 v1ng directtons . W1tten
Pianos , Box 188 Sord1s , Ohio
439•6 Phone (61&lt;) 483-1605.
WANTED, CHIPWOOO. Poles ,
maximum d1ometer 10 inches
on largest end, $8 per ton,
bundles slobs S6 per ton .
Del1vertKI to Ohio Pollet Compony . Rt . 2 Pomeroy Ohio.
Phone992·2689.

-----

instrtlon .
Tax Fund
2,518 68 Minimum Charge $1.00 .
Gasoline Tax Fund
544,Ql
14 cents per word three
Federal Revenue
'
consecut,lve Insertions.
Sharing Fund
54 .c :
26 cents per word six
Totals
.. ,832 91 consecut ive Insertions
Total Rtcelpts
25 Per Ctnt Discount on
General Fund
,,096.56 paid ads and • ads paid
Motor Vehicle ucense
wlttlln 10 diYI
TBK Fund
8,816.17
CARD OF THANKS
GllsaHneTax Fund
15,.&amp;00 00
&amp;. QBITU)~RY
Federa l Revenue
$2.00 ror
SO
wordj
Shar ing Fund
2,568 00 I'"'''Wli!Ni~.
Anfi .Rec
119 ~
ac aodlf1'0rieT word i
Tota ls
36,000 -43 cents.
BLIND ADS
Total R ecelpts &amp; &amp;ala nets
Additional 25c Charge
10,812 -41
General Fund
per Advertlsem ent
Motor Vehicle License
OFFICE HOURS
Til"- Fund
11,335.55
8 30 a .m . fo S: OO p m
GasOline T II)( Fund
15 , 9~• 01
Dally, 1· 30 1m to 12 00
Federal Reven ue
Sharmg Fund
2,622 ol3 Noon Saturday.
Phone tOdiY 992 ·2156.
Ant i Rec .
119,00
Totals
40,833 10
EJr:pendltures
NOTICES
General Fund
9,519 93
ATTN,, I I
Motor Vehicle Llce"se
ALL HOUSEWIVES
Ta)( Fund
7,988 2e
Gasoline Tax Fund
l3,412.U All Ylrd Sales. Rummage,
Por~h •nd Baseme-nt Porch
Fet1eral Revenue
2,248.18 and B•tement Sates, etc
Shar ing Fund
To1a ls
33,228 51 must be pald In advance
Get yours In early by
Balence Dec. 31,1976
1,232 48 slopping by our office at
Genera l Fund
The Dally Sentinel, 111
Motor Veh icle License
Ta)( Fund
3,3.&amp;7 2~ Court Sf or writing Box
Gasoline TalC Fund
2.531 87 729, Pomeroy , Ohio 45709
With vour rem 1ttan ce
Fet1eral Revenue
Sharing Fund
374 25 -' - - - - - - - - - , - - . . 1
Anti Rec
119 00
Total
7.60&lt;4 89
RISING STAR Kennel Board ing
CASH BALANCE ,
lndgor·Outdoor runs , groommg
RECEIPTS AND
oil
breeds clean san•tary
EXPENDITURES
WE WOULD like to express our
facd1hes Chesh1re. Phooe [61.4 )
BY FUND
oppredat1on for the k1ndness
General Fund
1hown to us dur1ng the tllness ~~~
~~~--~-,-..,­
Ba lance, Ja n. 1,1976 1,715 as
and death of our mother Mrs. HOOF HOLLOW. Buy , sell !rode
Receipts
Thvlma klur We espec1ally
or tra1n horses. RUTH REEVES,
General Propertv Tax wont to thank the doctors, and
trotner Phone(614)698·3290.
Real Estate and
nurses at Holzer Med1col
Tra 1ler (Gross)
3,8.47 39
Tang1ble Personal Property
Center , the Ewing Funeral AKC COLLIE Pupp1es sable end
whtle, I mole ond 2 females
Ta)( (Gross)
38.11
ChapeL Rev Freeland Norrts,
Hove been wormed and shots
Estate Tax (Gross)
28 87
and Mr. and Mrs Robert
starte d . Cgfl 949·2571
Locel Government and
Stewart May Cod bless you all
State 1ncom e Tax
2,702 16
weekdays alter 4 p.m. or
The
Children
of
Mrs
T
helmo
Cigarette L1cense Fees
anyt1me Saturday and Sunday.
Kiser.
and Fines (Gross)
18 56
OlhOr
2,460 27
Total Receipts
9,096 56
Total Beg inning Balance
10,1112.41 NOW occeptmg p1ono students
PIUS Rece1pts
Expenditures
beginners intermediates. ad 1969 CHEVROLET B1 squo1ne 1966
BUICK Electro , '225, 2 Rokon
Total Ex penditures
vonced students Col/ 992
9,311 .56
- Adm in1stratlve
tnolb1kes Phone 949·2432
zv_~.~~~~--~
- Town Halls, Memorial
Bu lld1ngs &amp; Grounds 88.62 NOTICE, Prott s Meat Mkt 1976 OLDSMOBILE Srorf1re P s ,
- Fire Protect1on
160.00
p b , 7000 miles Phone
(Pleasanton Meat Processtng,
-Cemeter ies
19.75
Inc ) Custom slaughtenng and -~~2~6~
~~--~-,~~~
Grand Total Exp General Fund
9,579.93 processing Retail. wholesale. 1971 VW Super Beetle Phone
No
appoinll'!ent
necessary
Call
Bal , Dec 31, 1976
.1,232 '18
~3- 2613
(61&lt;) 593-8655, hours , 9 00 lUI
Total E xp Plus Bat ,
6.00 7 Pomeroy Rood. Athens, 1970 2 OR Cheve lle 1n good con10,8 12 41
Dec 31, 1976
dttiOn $850 See or 605 W Ma1n
Motor Vehicle License
Oh.
Tax Fund
:;-:-:c::::----,---::--.,----:St , Pomeroy, Oh1o
Sal , Jan . 1, 1976
2,518.68 GUN SHOOT at the Racine Cun
Receipts
Club every Sunday , I pm 350 CHEVROLET engme, excellent
runntng, cond1fl on, $150 comMotor Vehic le License
A5sorted meats .
Tax
8.816.87
plete, Phone 9CI2·3502
Total Rece ipts
8,8 16.87 RACINE FIRE Dept will have a
Gun Shoot every Saturday night 1972 CHEVY VAN Ph one
Total Beglnnln~ Balance
Plus Receipts ~ 11 ,335 55
6 p m. of the1r building 1n
992-768'1"-.....,--~-'--~
E Jt.pendlturtl
lcahcn, Ohio.
,1974 CJ5 RENEGADE Jeep 29 000
Tota_t Expend itures m1les, like new cond1t1on
Mlscel laneous
6,1!6.01 SKATE· A·WAY
ANNOUNCES
$3200 Phone 949-2860
-M a intenance
1,832 25
Schedule Open Weds., Frtdoy
Gr11nd Total Exp. ond Saturday mghts , 7 30 p m 1976 PLYMOUTH Volare 4 dr
Motor Veh icle License
till 10 p m. Available for
sedan, v1nyl roof, low m1leoge,
Tax Fund
7,988 26
private part1es , Monday, Tues .
automat•c , 6 cyl1nder excellent
Bal., Oec 31, 1976
3,347.29
and Thursday ntghts , and SaturTotal Exp Plus Bat
shope Phonal (614)378·6312
day and Sundov afternoons
Dec 31, 1976
11,335 55
1%9 PONTIAC, atr cond1 t1oned,
, Gasoline Tut Fund
Phone 985-3929 or 9B5 9996.
exc:ellent condthon 56 ,0CXJ
Bal., Jan . 1, 1976
544.01
SHOOTING MATCH Rutlond
Receipts
miles $950 Call992·2987
Leg1on Hall , 12 noon, Sunday
15,400.00
Gasoline Tax
1976
V W Rabbtt, Am·FM, CB
Total Receipts
15,400.00 NEW CARTOON Class Senes A9c
radloi roof r.,:.ck Rod1ol fires
Total Beginning Balance
w1th 16 o:r: Pepsi DAIRY ISLE,
Plus Receipts
15 ,944 01
plus patr of rad1al snow fires .
Middleport.
Expenditures
15 000 m1les. $3200 Coli
Total Expenditures
992-27:._76=---=--~-=-"'--c--:- Miscellaneous
3,830.00
- Ma1ntenance
9,582.14
1976 •;, ton Dodge P1ckup w1th
Grand Total Exp Utal1ne 6 ft btKI Also camper
Gasoline Tax Fund 13,412 l4 LOST In Pomeroy area, female
to fit anv 6 It bed Phone
Ba l., Dec . 31. 1976
2.531.8 7 dog 7 mos. old, white w1th
985-392•
Total Exp Plus Bat,
Dec . 31, 1976
15,94·4.01
block spots Her heod 1s all
Federal Revenue
block . Reword Fom1ly pet . Ph
Sharing Fund
992·7085.
54 ·43
Ba l • Jan. 1, 19 76
MA
:.:C:'"'
LE:-cs: :;b:-e-r,;o-n--,H:-us-:kc,e
Receipts
Grants- Federal
2,568.00 answers to nome "Sandr" Lost WANTED . BA8YSITTER Phone
Tota l Receipts
2,568 00 tn vicinity of Bunker Hill Rood
7•2 3122.
Tota l Beginning Be lance
Phone 992·7B89
BABYSITTER Also,
2' 621 ' 3 FOU." "No='---'=T::p Ius RExpenditures
ec el pIS
R1'-'· C
::-0::-L
: -0:-cR
: -fema
-..,1a WANTED
.
housekeeper needed to hve 1n
Mlent. and Operation
beagle. Phone985 -424-4 .
Phone7ol2 3122
Other Expenses
2,248.18
Total Exp
2,248,18
SALESMAN NEEDED to call on
Ba l., Dec 31. 1976
374.2S
dealers m W Vo , Ohto ond adrolnlng states Represents naTotal Exp Plus Bel
Will do odd jobs. roof 1ng, pom
Doc . 31. 1976
2,622,,3
k Ph
tion 's largest manufacturer of
Miscellaneous Funds
tmg . gutter wor
one n 2
portable bu1fd1 ngs Salary plus
Receipts
_ 1409_
commission . STURDI HOUSE
, ;~:!·,R,:iceipt5
n;. ~~ SEWING - A LTER AT I 0 N S
Man ufo cturing
Company,
Balance , Oec 31, 1976 119 00
Upholstering .
drapes
phone Pom t Pleasant (304)
Township Debt - Notes
reasonable. 572 South Th1rd
675 •079
Purpose for Which Note
Ave . Middleport Phone
BABYSITTER in Portland area for
Debt was Created
992-6306.
ages A and 5 one '" school 1/2
Tractor .sack Hoe comb
~"C::==---=-----:
Outstllndlng Ja n. 1,
PORTABLE WELDER , Iorge and
day, 7 am hll 6 p m m your
1976
3,700.00
small robs Con also thow
home Phone 8A3·2292 after
Redeemed Ounng Year
frozen water p•pes Phone ~· 30 p m
1976
1,900 00 9•9·2646
Ba lance Outstanding Dec .
21 , 1976
1,800.00 HAVE YOUR taxes done by on oc·
raleof lnt
6 F&gt;ct.
countant ~lso , now accepting
D&amp;te Of Ftnal Mat
1977 bookkeeping Phone 992·6206
Total - Redeemed During
or992-6173
Year 1976
1,900 00 -.~.::-:,,:.·--:---,--::c-;:-Total - Balance Outstanding NCOME TAX Serv1ce, Wolloce
Dec 21 , 1976
1,800 00
Ruue ll
Bradbury
Call
(3) o1, lie
992·7228 - - - - - -

__

LOsT.-

WANTED
Mill Right

with foreman

PUBLIC NOTICE
Offers will be received at 3 AND .4f AM. furn1shed and un ·
throfflce of Bernard V. Fultz 1
furni1hed opts Phone 992·
Pomerov National Bank
Bu ilding , Pomeroy , Oh io, until
~· ~~~--~~
saturday , March 5, 1977, at COUNTRY
Mobtle Home Pork, Rt
10:00 O' Clock A M , for ,,.
33, ten mdel north of Pomeroy .
sale or the Lillian S1leff real
Lorge lots with concrete patios ,
estate , !ltua ted at 570 S
11dewallu, runners and oft
second Avenue. Middleport,
Ohio . The real urate consists
ltrMI parking. Phone 992.7.. 79
of a fWO ·slory frame dwt!!lllng ,
wl11'1 a rooms and 2 blthrooms . 2 BEDROOM house In Rutland
C.ll992-5858,
The Guardian reserns the
right to re lect any or all bids .
3 BEDROOM opt . furmshed unfurnilhed 128 M1ll St.. MidRobtrtJ . Lewls
dl~rt . Contoct Ben Davidson
Guardian of
Llfllon Stlefl
over Spencer'• Morket or
phone (513) 731·4142
.2) 2•. 27 (3) I, 3. 4. lie

MEIGS
~Co.
. . . .I,IOY,O.
P'N.f9N176

tF YOU hove a 1ervlce to offer,
wont IO buy Of' leU IOmelhing,
oe looking for work . . or
whote'oler . . you II gtot r•ult1
folter with o Sentinel Wont .A.d.
Coll992·2156

:"!--=

------~-

..........

,

Qlslll

¥~~:.
~-

:

...· .

..,::...~

~~ ·

AUCTION FRIDAY 6·30 p.m New
d•nefte uts and other new and
used ,.. ~1 .. hondl1e at the Auc
lion Houl8, Horton St Moson
Pho~· (~)

l

...:

:_ns.m

capability. Wiling
to do production
work.
Cal 446-8570
or 992-5965

MOTOR ROUTE
DRIVER NEEDED
IN
WEST VIRGINIA

Business Services.

SfARCRAFT. Winter pnces on
mm1's trollers and lold·downs 72 ACRES, portlv lanced 8 room
rvmodeled house, full bo•e
We sell service and quality,
ment, fuel oil, forced olr heat ,
Open Sundays. Camp Conley
Starcroft. Rl 62 N Pt. Pleosont.
utlltty room, carport and ·
storoge room Phone 7A2·2BI9
$35,000
10 to '2 0 ACRES off New L1m0
M.oDile II is ior ~ Rood JERRY CLINE CON· '
STRUCTION Phone 992-7790
- - - -·
1977 GOVERNOR 1 A X 70, 3
REMODELED
5 ROOMS and bath I
1
bed rms. both ond h unfurmsh ·
acre land Phone 7A2·27b9
ed May rent lot Phone
742·2577.
MOBILE HOMES for sole. 1973
Shultz, .3 bedroom, total eloo
central atr excellent cond1hon
Virgil B. Sr., Reoijor
Col! Mason, W Vo {304 )
216 E. Second Street
n3.569J.
Pomeroy, Ohio 4S769
MOBILE HOME, 12 x 60, 3 bedrm,
Phone m -332S
underpinned wtth cement dnve
ond wollc 10 11: 10 metol FINE HOME - Solid 9
building, included on 1 1-1 0 room s1ucco hom e, 3
acres 3 m1les off Rt 7 on Co
bedroons with closets, nice
A~ _3_P_h_o~_!-~74C'2C:20
:=
28'-'-:;---:- equipped kitchen and
PACEMAKER HOUSE troller, 8 ~.: dtning . Full basement,
40 2 bedrooms. New hot wate r good coal furnace. 2 car
Superior
top . Phone 985 4151 after 530 garage with storage, nice
Steam
Extraction
Cl)rner lot on Rt. 124 at
p. m:c:-:=-:=:--:-:-::-:--:-:----:-o 535.000.
1970 WINDSOR Mobole Home, 12 NEW LISTING- 11 room
x 63 e~~: cond1hon . Phone Irick In Middleport out of
9922~
~5~----------- flood. Has 4 bedrooms, 2
Route 3, Pomeroy/ 0.
ba1hs, nat. gas furnace,
Carpet &amp; Upholstery
basement, front and bock
porches . Over 1 acre of
Phone Mike Young
land. 513.000.
At
COAL, lrmestone and cak1um PAGEVILLE - 7 room
chloride ond colc•um brine for lrame home wlfh 3
f92-2204 or f92·7630
dust control and spac1ol mi xmg bedrooms, 2 baths, front
"Till Orlglnlloro
salt for fo rmers Main Street
porch, nice siding and
Notllb.lmitatorS 11
Pomeroy , Otuo or phone 992· garden In back. $7,500.
3891
MIDDLEPORT 4
2·23·1 mo.
:----:--::---:--:---~
bedrooms
,
2
baths,
frame
COAL for sole, Open 6 da)ls per
week and even1ngs. For further house on 40X 120 corner lot.
All utilities and nice view of
mformaflan coli (614) 367-7338
the Ohio Riwr $12,000.
PROFES5rONAL
APPLES FITZPATRICK ORCHARD, w, ACRES Large 4
STATE ROUTE 689 PHONE bedroom home with lf2
WILKESVILLE, (~I&lt;) 669-3785
both on Rl. 7 In Tuppers
Aerial
Pla ins. Good location for a
FULLER Brush Products for sole
Commercial
business. Oilly $12,000
Phone 992-3.410
LOOK HERE - New 3
Schools
CAMPER , $600 Also, horse bedroom bri c k veneer ,
Weddings
trader. ~SO Phone (614) 698· dining with glass doors. 2
3290
car
garage
and
almos
t
one
--,---.,..----.,.-.,.-..,
I BEAMS and H Beams 8, 9, and acre of nice laying land.
REDUCED.
10 mch Call 992·703A
FREE GAS - Wilh the
CAPTURE TODAY forever w1th full wel l, all minerals. barn , old
color portra1ts from The Photo house. 115 acres w1fh 90
(6141915-4155
Place (Bob Hoeflich} For op· fenced. Good hunllng and
Chtstor, Ohio
pomtment , coll992 5292
fiShing Would like $30,000.
10-171 mo [Pd)
4 ROW No Till Cole corn plonter ,
Ellis 2 row Vegetab le ALL HI RED HANDS WfLL
TRY TO SELL THE
transplanter pet setter 15 us
ECONOLIN"E HOME
PROPERTY THAT YOU
ed form gates, 48 h . elevator .
INSULATION, INC.
LIST
WITH
US.
Andrew Cross, Letart Falls
1815 W1shlngtan Blvd.
Phone 247-2852 .
· Belpre, Phone (614)423·
CLAM SHELL luggage carrier, li ke
7564 doy, or 992·6039
new S..O Cham saw Rem·
eveni"'S·
mgton 34 , $75 Phone 7A2-2577 ~
Blown In flbtrgllss w1lls
FOR SALE TO THE HIGHEST BID
and attics. 20 Pet. Savings
OER SEALED BIOS WILL BE
on Vinyl and Steel Sidings.
RECEIVED ANYTIME UNITIL
Replacemen1 and storm
APRIL 5, 1977 ot 7 P M FOR A
windows.' 33 years 1clual
USED JOHN DEERE DOZER WITH
expeirence.
BLADE AND A 1965 DODGE '
MAIN
Financing Availabl1
OR FORMER POLICE CRUISER
C.
A. Newman ~ Pres.
BOTH ITEMS CAN BE SEEN A·
POMEROY, 0.
RUTLAND OHIO CONTACT
1·2S-1 mo., pd.
BRUCE DAVIS OR CAL L f NEW LISTING - Brick
742 21&lt;3. VERNON WE8ER,
lil'ld frame about 4 years
CLERK TREASURER , RUTLAND
!Old, 4 n1ce BR , modern
YILLAGE BIOS MVST 8E SEALED
l:tolh, large kllchen , NG
HOMESITES for saie. 1 acre and
AND IN THE CLERKS HANDS NO
furnace and central air
up Mtddlepart, near Ru tland
LATER THAN 7 PM APRIL 5,
c:ond 1 carpeting, paneling ,
Call992·748l
112 acre. s2a.soo.oo.
1977 TERMS CASH FROM THE
HIGHESTBIDDER
NEW LISTING- About 2
NEW 3 bedroom hoUse, 2 baths ,
miles out, 6 acres with 7
all elec I acre Middleport ,
WARM MORNING Gos 65 000
room home. J bedrooms 1
close to Rutland Phone m .
BTU L1ke new. Phone 992 2805
ba'lh, dining room , ni ce
7481
1 YEAR OLD Nann y goat, $25
k1 tchen, lovely paneling
SMAll form for sole, 10'Y. down,
Phone 742 2769
and carpeting, 2 car
owner financed Monroe Coun·
garage, other butldlngs.
ty W Vo Phone (304 ) 772·
531,234.00.
3102 or (304) 772·3227
LOOK
Ni
co
level
lot
FOR SALE
11h story frame home has 2 COUNTRY farmland w1th seclud·
bedrooms
, balh, d ining
New co -Op water sof.
ed woods, water and good OC ·
room , basement , fireplace
teners, model VC-SVI.
cess tn Monroe County, W Va.
In living room, very nice
Onlv S:t1,.95
$1,000 down, coli (304) 772
3102 or (304) n2. 32 v .
One good chatn Homelite
ne ighborhood . ASKING
Cha1n Sew .
S130.00
$14,000.00.
Commerctol
property apprcx , 17
Salle uo 00 on a new
NICE FARM- 103 acres,
acres , le vel lord
Holpotnt Refrigerator
on , 1O&lt;a1e d a 1
25 ijllable, 15 pas lure, 60 ln.
1 Good Us ed Hotpoint
Tuppers
Plams
on Oh1o, Route
timber. 3,000 lb . tobacco
Range
lit $100
7 Phone (614) 667-6304 ,
base, 7 rocwn, 5 bedrooms,
both, large barn and sheds
3 bedrooms, I1ft baths , lgrge l1v·
$31 ,666 00
.ng room, dlntng room gnd kit
MIDDLEPORT - Corner
chen, fully carpeted. Phone
lol wllh large 2'1&gt; story '
C1rnv. Mgr
992·3129, or992·5434,
992 -2181
frame home, 5 bedrooms,
NEW 3 bedroom houu built-tn
bath , carpeflng, porches ,
k1tch•n. bath and 1ft Phone
carport. 18.500 00.
742·2306
or conlgct MilO 8. Hut·
POMEROY - Buy this and
Rutlond,
Ohio.
chlson,
HAY FOR so le Also, wosner and pay fhe rent to yoursell , No
dryer Phone (61A) 698·4A91il ,
car needed just walk fo
TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio. New
three bedroom house, living
USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT. (I) shop 3 bedrooms, bath,
room, Iorge kitchen. ceramic:
Ttmbeqock 240 Sk1dder, Pet- utflify room , carpeting ,
paneling
,
porches
.
Only
bath , carpeted. ottachad
tibone Super 8 Cory Ltft, IIJ' 58,9:10.00.
gorage, forge lot . $22,900
Bush Metollurg1col Chipper
Phone (61&lt;)667-6304.
·
Contact Denn1s Smurr Phone PHONE 992·2259 NOW
AND
IN
A
FEW
DAYS
(614 ) 8 38·53A5
YOUR PROPERTY WILL 1 39 ACRE Farm, 20 acres, tillable.
six room house, botll 1 furna ce ,
SEAR's B H P garden tractor with BE SOLO.
born , ihed, corncrib, cellar
mower, $.450. 16 gouge 870
HENRY E. CLELAND
house, basement toyed up for
shotgun, $100. Phone992-2369
BROKER
another house Al10, 12 x 60
GRAVELY TRACTOR, conver to ble
HANK CLELAND
ntce mobile home Included, 1f
16 8 speed, rotooy plow,
ASSOCIATE
not sold previously . Priced and
992-2259 . 992 -2568
culti vator, mower George Hill,
shown by appointment Coli
-~~c ~ne , Ohio. Phone lil49-2632. 1----'9.:;15;..·.;.4;,;11.:;2_ _ _...4
~4 )~66
~7~~
==~------FRIGIDAIRE ,-40 1nch Elec stove,
used 3 years . Like new, $150.
Gorden Caldwell Tuppers
Ploons. Phone (614)667-3935.
FOUR SHOATS, 2 SOWS, olreody
bred . $375. for all. Phone
992-7330':'::,c:-:-::--:---:--,-New Llsflng - Nice 2 story country home, containing)
23CHANNEL c 1. Base Station,
rooms and 1'/&gt; bath, mosfly carpeted. Kitchen has all
Dimeo Sotelite Super. Phone
new buill-In cablnels wlfh bronze stove &amp; refrlg. to
985-3534 .
melch
New porches and all new alum. siding and
STEREO. NEW Amstereo radio
slorm
windows.
FA natural gas furnace and drilled
combination . $129 95 or easy
well. garden space. This house Is warm and ready for
term1. Coll992·3965.
Immediate occupancy/ come 1ake a look (uat $18,900.

'----------------------------'-.;_-'-----1

- -

992-2156
For Appointment

I

~

Automatic
Transmission Service

TRUSSES
ANY PIXH
ANY SIZE

PARTS · LABOR
GUARANTEED

Sautheatem Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.,

REASONABLE
RATES

located in Langsville
Box28-A
Rutland, Ohio 4.5715Ph . ('14) 742·UOf
We D•llver
12-22·4 mos

-----

Roodsvillt, 0 . Ph. 371.f250
2·25·1 mo.

Young's Carpeting
Route 3,

Young's Carpeting

1

IXPIRlbtCED
Radiator: ...--..

Pomeroy, 0.

Free Estimates
Installation, samples
brought to vour home
with no charge.
Corpel. Uno.-Tflo
Phone Mike Yo101g 11
H2·22G6 or H2-7t30

SMnH NILSOfli
MOTORS, INC.

2·23-1 mo.
Vinyl &amp; . Aluminum
Siding,
Storm
Windows
&amp;
lnsu lation.
Call Professionals

PHOTOGRAPJIY

Roofing &amp;Sidin~
Room Additions

GaraRe$
Homes BuiH

BISSEll'SIDING CO.

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

A local contractor
Phone f4f-2801
or 949-2860
Free Est1m1tes
No Sunday Colis Pluse
1·J0·1 mo.

Quality Work At
Reasonable Rates

: AI. TROMM
OONST.
,..ree estim1tes
Work Guaranle&lt;d
742-2328

r-A-

lnwlllioi Senkes

D.

-i-•&amp;lllks
5TON

-

~mprdner

IIIIIDOIII&amp; ~
11£1'\MUUT

.

.:PooLSales

U.INUI

Nobil Summit Road
Rl.1
Middleport, 0 .
992-5724
Complete Seles and service
and supplies.

EXCAVA liNG dozer, backhoe
ond d1tche r Chorles R Hof·
• fteld
Ba ck Hoe Service,
Rutland , Oh1o . Phone 742·2008
SEPTIC Systems mstolled by
hce nsed tnstoller Shepard
Contractors Phone 742-2409
SEPTIC TANKS cleaned . Modern
_...,Son1tohon, 992-395A .
WILL do rootmg, construcllon ,
plumbmg and heatmg. No job
too Iorge or too small. Phone
7A2·2
;.:3'::•:':
B-,--;;--::c---:;:-CARPENTER , floormg , cedmg
paneling. Phone 992-27S9.
, MOBILE Home Repair, Elec.
plumb1ng and heotmg Phone
..
992 _5858
ELECTRONIC TV CLINIC, N•w
T.V. shop, ElectroniC T.V. Clinic
Serv•ce coil, $5 95 Color B&amp; W
antenna systems stereos etc
572 South Third. Middleport .
Phone 992-6306. Corry tn ond

1

~

SWAIN'S

~ ~:

TEAFORD

~-m_o_n~
ey~·=--~~~--­

HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
covo ting , septic systems ,
dozer, backhoe, dump truck ,
l1mestone, grovel. blacktop
paving , Rt 143. Phone I (614)
698·7331.
--.-::-:=:-:-:--~----,
HOUSE PAINTING , Interior ond
exterior, Quality work at
reasonable rates
Phone
742 2328.
EXCAVATING, Backhoes, Do:r:er,
trencher, Low Boy, dump truck,
trucks, sept1c systems Bill
Pullins. Phone 992·2A78 doy or

1101~

", r •:

wnli'

n

'.Oflf~IR'

Roclne - Good 3 bedroom and dining room, low ,
ulllllles , even a garden space. Priced af only $8,500.

l.tl Pomeroy Londmorlc
soften I candiHon your
water end • Co~p Wlttr
sofltnlr, Model UC·XYI
·Now Onlyt2

Specili - 3 bedroom and attached garage, tolal
elecfrlc home under construction on 112 acre lol. Owner
will finish In 30 days for buyer or wllls'll "as Is" . May
fake frade Located near Chtsler.

'
Let us tnt your Wlltr

Chtstor - 113 acrn farm, BO acrts tillable land, nice 2
slory form ho~at. 7 rooms end bath, an hardwood
floors and bosoment. Barn and olhtr outbuildings, 2
ponds. A nice laying larm priced to go. Located ntar
C.h tsler, can f9r Appt.

7t.tS

Fru.

I

3 BEDROOM,

2'h bolh b1.i;;;[
W8fP In family room, 2 'Cor
garage, dl1hwaJher, niu loco·
t1on on I ocre lot In ~lg• Co
A1kmg
$46 ,SOO .
Phon•
992-2492
·-~BI·IEVEL HOME neor Meigs H1gh
School . Phone 992·74U

Chtsfor - Ever droom of owning your own golf
course? Here's your chance for you ell: your frllndl to
, own a nice rolling golf course, 50'12 acrn, 9 g.--s, nlco
modern dub house. oufbulldlng with all spraying and
seeding equipment, nteds some mOwing and a little
repair work on golf course. This could bt purc~ased
with tha 113 acrts llsltd above and dlvelopecl Into •
btautllul 18 hole goll oourse. call for appt.

W. Need F1rm Land
Deem At f49·2311

Call Jimmy

1

GIITiliiUIIIIIM;S

LARRU!lpll

AstraGraph

'

BRADFORD, Auctton ~r. Com ~'
Prete Ser.,.lce Phdne 949 2A81
or 9.49·2000 Roctne , Oh1o , Crill
Bradford
ELWOOD--BOWERS - REPAiR-:.
Sweepers , toasters 1rons all
small appl1o nces Lown mower
next to State H1ghway Goroge
on Route 7. Phone (614) 985
3825.
REMO:::O':E:c
LI:c
N-::
G-, ::
P,Iu-m-;-b;on-g ,-;h-e-o::hng
and all types at general repo1r,
Work guaranteed 20 yean ex·
penance. Phone 992·2409 ___
SEWING MACHINE Repo1rs ser·
vice, all mQkes, 992-228.4 The
Fabri c Shop , Po meroy
Autho rtzed Singer Soles ond
Ser'ollce. We shor_pen Sc issor_!,_
EXCAVATING. doter, loader and
backhoe work du mp truckJ
ond lo·boys for h•re, will haul
hll dirt, to so1l limestone and
grovel. Call Bob or Roger Jel
fer s, day phone 992·7089
night phone 992-3525 or 992·
5232.

---

Bernice Bede Oeol
For Sllllldor. Morch 5, 1117
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 11)
Someone may try today to shift
blame for thtLr errors to you
Don 't get enmeshed rn their
tricky maneu11erlng
TAURUS (AP&lt;II 20-Mor 20) Do
only what you deem to be for
your own good today Overreae·
tlon to social pressure could
create a costly episode
GEMINI (Moy 21-June 20) Faml·
ly linen should not be aired m
public toda y Doing so Is an lnvtlatlon tor outside Interests to
bu«-in and further complicate
things
CANCER (Juno 21 ·Julr 22)
You're too easily Intimidated today J ust because the y roar
doesn't mean others are right
and you're wrong
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Culling
corners on something you hope
will be a tax advantage could be
dlsaslrous. n·s Just your luck
)'OU1d be lhe person they audit.

SAVE ON

CARPETING

HI.W SHAG

'VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) You
resent someo~e R'18klng
dectslons tor you today - and

INS.TALLED
R"ulor$14.9S

JACK 'S BEE ' S SUPPLIES,
Reedsv11le, Ohio Bee supplies
and aqu1pment Phone (614)
378 6357,

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

,

• ·

:

Mon., Tues., Wed.

. ....•••••.
. ..

71

F~rd

Vz Ton Pickup ••.•..............•. 1695
1

71 Olds 98 lux., power &amp; air ............ '1995
71 Ford LTD 4 Dr~ power &amp; air •• ••••••• •• 795
.
70 Ford LTD 4 Dr., power
&amp; air ••••.•...•• 1895
1

.70 Cutlass S Cpe., power ..................'1295
67 Chevy Caprice 4 Dr. HT... ........... ,..• '395
67 Cadillac HT Sedan, air ...................'995
See one of these courteous salesmen : Pete
Burris, Lloyd Me laughlin or Marvin
Keebaugh •

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
Of Doing Business'
992-5342
GMC FINANCING
Pomeroy
Open Evenings Until6 : 00- TitS p.m. Sat.
just1f1ably so Especially 11 the
outcom~ 1s lops1d edly to the
other pe rson's advantage
LIBRA [Stpl. 23·0cl. 23) Don t
take on any more long -ran ge
obligations than you can comfortably handle at this time You d
be askmg for frustratio n and
anx1ety
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24·Nov. 22)
Your opmlons today are likely to
be contrary to the others in your
peer group You could feel
everyone Is out of step except
you
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Doc.
21) It's admirable to face up to
challenges today, but It's folly to
jump In agai nst heavily slacked
odds
CAPRICORN (Doc . 22-Jon. II)
You haiJe a tendency today to
regard fee lings of apprehension
as flashes of intuition Be certain
you see things tor wh at they are
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 11)
You 're still on shaky ground today in commerc1al situations
There s a strong possibility you
could ove~spend for something

J

•.
:.

Qole _Sit, At.S P..M.

41:

AIINOLD GIIATE

Morch s. 1177
Partners and assoc iates will play
1mportant roles tn thtngs that
affect you personally this year
Ta ~e care to team w1t h compatible IndiVIduals
(Are you a Ptsces? Bern1ce
Osol has wrlttan a special AstraGraph Letter for you Fo r your
copy send 50 cenfs and a self.
adclressed, srampedenvelope to
Astro-Graph, P 0 . Box 489,
Radio Ctty Stafmn New York,
NY 10019 Be sure to ask for
Ptsces Volume 5)

·n~.

By Lawreace E. Lamb, M.D.

TRACIOR SAl ES
458-1630

IIUTLANDJI '

{
'

LEON, W.VA.
,'\

1976 FORD ELITE ................... $AVE$

DEAR DR. LAMB - My
husband had a check-up
recently and they found his
cholesterol and triglycerides
were too high. The doctor advised him to go on a low·fat,
low-cholesterol diet and lose
weight.
I know this ~ important
because so many men have
heart attacks even at a fairly
yoweg age. I want to help alii
can, but I don't know which
foodll contain cholesterol.
Also, what is the difference
between triglycerides and
cholesterol? Do you have any
material you can send me
that will give me a better Idea
of this problem while I can
still do something about it?
DEAR READER- Judging
from my mail m011t of the
public is confused about the
difference
between
cholesterol and fat.
Trtglycerides and fat are
the same thing . If your husband's triglyceride level was
high that means he had
too much lat in his hlood. The
cholesterol is a large
molecule of alt"Ohol, a waxy
sullotance, yelloW18h in color.
It is carried in the

too

ON ALL USED CARS AT

A1r cond1t1onmg , AM FM stereo, w 8 tra ck, sports
inst rumentat ion group, mu ch more
·

1975 GRAN TORINO 4 DR•....... s2995
Power steer1ng a1r cond 1t 1ontng , aulomat1c
transmisS ion, AM rad1o, dua l sport m~rrors , vmy l top,
low mileage.

SMilll NELSON MOTORS
500

E.

Pomeroy, Ohio

992·2174

Main St.

1976

1973 LID BROUGHAM 2 DR•.... s2395

2 Dr , 4 cyt , 5 speed, extra clean
One owner . Sharp

Automat1c1 power steermg, a1r cond 1tion1ng, vinyl top,
dual sport mirrors , sharp. extra d ean, blue W·Wh1te
top , blue intenor

Supreme 2 Dr H T. Real sh arp
Cutl ass S One owne r Pn cP.d
right

'3495

1973 MUSTANG MACH l. .......... s2645
AutomatiC, pow€r steenng AM-8 track, n1 ce red finish,
w black interior , V 8
Power steerrng , automatiC, AM rad 1o, blue fin 1sh W·
wh1 te vmyl top .

1972 CHEV. CAPRICE 4 DR •.... ..S1995
Power steer1ng, a1r condlt1ontng , cru 1se controL AM 8
track. vinyl top .

1972 FORD PINTO WAGON ........s1395
Automa t ic transm1sston, lug gage rack , low mileage

1972 LID COUNTRY SQUIRE ..... ..S1895

F250 Camper

1975 Buick

4 speed, P.S , extra n 1ce p1ckup
Rea dy to go camp1ng

2 Dr H T , one of the cleanest
Regal s 1n town Loaded Extra
good buy

'
'4495

•4495

1972 CHEV. IMPALA 2 DR•........ s1995

1973 Olds
Suprem e 2 Dr, low mileage, loca l
one owne r A rea l nice family
car

2 Dr H T , gold w;lh vi nyl lop,
n1ce clean car One owner

'3695

'2595

~--~~~~----~ ·~--~~

1974

T-Bird

Auto , P S , P 8 , air, vin yl top
Extra low m1t eage. O'le owner
Sh arp.

Red &amp; wh ole This Bird ha s
evervth tn g The be st Ford
makes Pnced to sell

Power steenng, a1r cond lhontng, power brakes, power
door locks, power w1 ndows, luggage ra ck

1972 GRAN TORINO .5.~~~~.~.~~ •••• •• s1795
Power steenng , power brakes, a1r condition mg. VB .
dual sport m1rrors, ready to go.

'2495

1970 DODGE DART 4 DR ...........s1175

NOTICE! ! FREE GREASE JOB

6 cyl ind er, 3 speed transmi SSIOn , clean, gas saver

1970 FORD RANCHERO SOUIRE..'1695
V 8, power steenng, dua l sport m1rrors. automat1c
transmiS SIOn. sharp, Don't let t h1 s one ge t by

DAN THOMPSON FORD
992.2196

Middleport,

2 SIGNS

OF

QUALilY

o.

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

$1946
NEW 1975 APPACHE TRAILER
Ready
Fold down neve r used, 1raded for Custom Van
to roll.
1973CAPRICE4DR. SED
$2895
Dark green tlntsh , a tr conditioning , automatiC , power
steering and brakes, radio, extra sharp, good rubber.
1971 FORD 'I• TON CREW CAB
Body good , runs good

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
OPEN EVES. 8 :00P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

LAMB

$1448
~

@

c1p es m The Health Letter
a nd eliminates obesity he Wlll
probably have a significant
lowering of . both hi s
tnglycendes and cholest erol
He IS probably overweight,

.

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Vwla I. Cundiff to Edward

A. Lawson, Diana L Lawson,
Lot II, Crook's Add .,
Syracuse
Harry W. Cra 1g Jr ,
Frances Cra1g to Jean Cra1g,
Parcels, Lebanon ·Columbia
· Mtddleport
Jean Craig to J aymar Coal
Co , Pt. Lot 335, Middleport.
Harry ' Osborne Jr., Ila R.
Osborne to Henry H.
Graham, Mary L . Graham,
Parcel. Olive.
Ca rl L. Greenlees. dec. to
Ava J. Greenlees, cert . for

trans , Sc1pio.

Carmel News,
By the Day

a rather common condition in

our society, as thai IS usually
the case in people who bave
both an e l evatwn of
cholesterol and fats. These
people usually improve w1th
weight reduction .
bloodlltream w1th the fat. It 18
Egg yolks are a major
foWJd m arumal foodll, m· source of cholesteroL Fish.
eluding egg yolks , but not m chicken and red meats all
plants; and it is also contain about 70 milligrams
manufactured by your liver.
per 100 grams (three-and-a·
Cholesterol can be half oWJces). Butterfat also
manufactured from any e&lt;· c ontains
considerable
cess food you eat, including cholesterol as do organ
carbohydrates and protems I meats . The lnterSociety
am sending you two ISSues of Commission
for Heart
The Health Letter that you Disease Resources recom·
need to cope with this pr&lt;&gt;- mends that the daily mtake
blem, munber 1·2, D1et, should be limited to no more
PrevenUng AtherosclerosiS. than 300 milligams. By
This IS a national problem limiting egg yolk consumP. ,
and atherosclerosis, causmg lion, avoiding organ meats,
heart attacks and strokes, is especially brains and liver,
responsible for hall of all and butterfat you can have a
deaths. Others who want this very adequate diet that does
infonnalion·to try to prevent not exceed the limit of 300
these problems can send 50 m1lligrams of cholesterol a
cents for either issue with a day.
These and other concepts
l,ong , stamped, self·
addressed envelope for mall· are explained in the two
ing.
issues of The Health Letter_
I doubt Lllat your diet pr&lt;&gt;- that I aml!endingyou.
gram will help your husband
Because of the volume of
WI!ess he control!; biB weight mall, Dr. Lamb cannot
and that means eliminating answer your letters personal·
any fat he might have aroWJd ly but be w11l answer
his waist or elsewhere. The represenlative questions in
way to tell If he is slim enough his t"Oiumn. You can write to
Is to see how much fat he ha.q hun m care of this
Wider the skin, not what he newspaper, P .O. Box 1551,
weighs on the scales. If Ire Radio City Statwn, New
follows lhe bas1c diet pnn· York,NYIOOI9, )

l,i

If you buy your new car from Smith Nelson Motor we
wi 11 grease it FREE for as long as you own the car· So
buy your next car from Smith Nelson. ·the dealership
thai cares about you. See or call o.ne of these Friendly
Salesmen, Ceward Calver t, J. D. Story or Bill Nelson .

See : Pat Hill , Rocky Hupp
or Darrel Dodrill
For a good deal on a new ot' used vehicle .
Open Evenings Til6 :00
Except Thursday and Saturday
Closed Sunday

Public confused
on cholesterol

SHINN'S

2•·

FORD

have more clout tha n someone
you're gom g to be dea ling with
on an eyeball-to-eyeball bas1s
today It doesn 't behoove you to
take ad11antage needlessly

PISCES (Foil. 20·Morch 20) You

Fn Ttlctors and Implements.
SEE US NOW FOR DETAILS!

'············•~t·•~·····~
)

Power and a 1r

No Finance Charges Until
September 1, 1977 on Many

-i

RUnAND.IiURNI'Iull

I 742: 2211

73 Cutlass 4 dr., air ••. .....•.•........•••.. 12495
73 Olds 98 Lux. Cpe ..................... .. '3495 .
73 Olds 88 4 Or., po:«er &amp; air .••..••. •••.11595
73 Buick RI!R81 HT Cpe......... .••••••••• '3495
73 Olds Cutlass S Cpe., power &amp; air .••..•'2795
72 ~ Impala 4 Dr., air .....•...... :.. ..S1295
72 Olds 98 4 Dr., air ••••••...••••• ••.• .••12295
72 Buick Elec. HT Cpe ••••• .••.•.•••••••••• '2495
72 Ford Torino 2 dr......................... '1395
72 Buick Skylark HT Cpe••..••••••••....•••'2495

• SPREADERS

'•41

'

~

Factory a1r , topper and loaded

• PLANTERS

•• :
....

1:00tll5:00

~(
FRIDAY'
.TIL
5
• •

: · ~-

74 AMC Hornet 2 Dr•••••••.•..••••••.••..• '1995
74 GMt lfz Ton Pickup •.•.........•. ..••.•13495

fOistS

t:

~...

Thursd'v 8 ti! r,l,o on •.

•

76 Olds 88 HT Clle~ air •• ••••••• •.••••••.• SS795
76 Ford Granada, PS ••••.........••••..••• 14695
74 P~. Duster, PS, air ..................... '2795
74 Olds Cutlass Cpe., Was 13895 ........ '3695
74 Vega GT tpe ............................ '1995

• BALERS,
• PLOWS

.
.
....
..
.._...
. ,.
.
••

Full power and air

We'W' Got Sprilg Fever Prices on These
New Massey.ferguson Units.
· • TRACTORS

•

•

74 !;_adiliac Cpe DeVille ••..........•......•.15600
74 Cadillac Cpe. DeVille .................. 15500

f&amp;U&amp;R

120r15 Ft,
GrHn,gold, rtll, blue , rust.•'
Do it yourseN, wllh pod.
ding, $7.95 sq. yd. Willi
paddit19 installed ' Sl.ts
IICIUit'l yard .
• •
Coll742·2211
TALK TO
WENDULGRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

HAY FOR sol• or trade for cattle
Phone 985-3&amp;46
JOHN DEERE Oo•er No •o. $2000
1971 Dodge Von, 6 cyl
outomotlc, 1ide doon and win·
dows, $1000. Will sell or trode
for tractor and equipment
Phone (614) 667·3319, Tuppers
Plains, Ohio
TOBACCO BASE. Phono 742·201•.

•

USED CARS

SPRIN&amp;

501 NYLON

----~

USED CAR YOU
CAN DEPEND ON,
SEE
DAN ntOMPSON

VALUE
RATED

'10.95

Sq. Yd
E¥tryclly moMY sover .
Good choice colors,

mgtH

i:

FOR~

"You'll Like Our Quality Way

,._ ltZ·Uil

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

Across
!rom
Pom,erov· Middleport
area bv the Daily
Sentinel .
·

CALL

1116

Prtttribed by The
lur••u of ln1pectlon
and Supervision of
Public Offices
Btlanctt DH. l1, 1f7•
County General
SI.U,389 99
00g &amp; Kenntl
3,399 20
Auto License &amp; Gas 13U98 39
Board of Education 68.200 77
Ment•l Retarded
EducaHon
39 ,281 .35
Bd . of~eallh
18,243 .tO
CQmprehenstv• Hearing
621 '37
weter supply
Improvement
321 79
Melgl COunty Alcoholic
Program
231 12
Food Servke
718 .87
Und . Cigarettes
J39 o12
Und General Real
Estate
138 ,38• o12
Und . Trailer Tax
5.559.58
Und . General Personal
Tox
3, 184.10
Mental R:etardl"d
Title I
699.0•
Estate Tax Ctlarge 121,767 18
RevenueShar 1ng
11,362,73
Public Assistance e5,298 1A
central Hospital
Insuran ce
l65 65
COionl.allnsurance
6.00
Globe Insurance
52 90
Public Employees Retire
System
• 9,321 85
Crlfplecl Children
641.68
Sol Conservation
1,216 59
Unclaimed Moneys 21,933 76
Memorial 81dg Bond
Retire.
15.041.7~
Veterans Mem Hasp
Flc;illllf:S
239.08
Tuberculosis
19,293 es
Workmen's Camp
14 65
Real Estate
Assessment
10.416 10
Adv Real Estllte
990
LandfUI
11,253.61
C ETA
3,985 60
C.E TA VI
2.089.92
Jur Probation
2,640 00
4,051 30
Jail Renovation
Public Works
Emp Act
7,773 110
EEA
105 1A
Assessing Real
Prop
30,1100 00
Tolal
896,073.78
Balan ce Less 011erdraft
773.316 62
Outstanding Warrant
Account
269,908 56
Total
1,0A3,225 18
COun tv Trea surer 15,972 25
county Depository
1.027,252 93
Total
1,OA3,225 18
Overdrafts Dec . 31,1976
e o A
121 ,698 65
State
lAOss
All Amer1can
ln!iurance
133 35
Payroll Ta)(
18.4 61
Total
122,757 16
Auditor's Office , Meigs
County , Pomeroy, Ohio,
January, 1977
IT IS ~ER EBY CE R
TIFIEO, That the foregoing
Is a true a nd accur&amp;te
statement of the finances of
Meigs County, Ot'llo, for the
month ending Dece mber,
1976, showing ttle balance on
hand In each fund and ac
count at the beginning of the
month , th e amount received
to each, the amount dispersed
from each , the balance
rema ln1ng to the credit of
each , and t he balance of
monev 1n the treasury and
• depository.
Melos County,
Howard E ~ Frank
AUditOr
{31 ol, He

.

Real &amp;tatr f&lt;&gt;r Sale

INFORMATION
DIADLINES

9-Tbe Dally SenUnel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Ma r~h 4, 1971

Mr. and Mrs. James Circle,
New Haven , Melvin Circle of
Columbus were at the home
of Mary Circle on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. William Perry
of Holland , Ohio came
Sunday rught to attend the
funeral of Virgil Roush on
Monday .
Klm Follrod vis1ted with
Becky, Bob Bill Lee durmg
the weekenll. Everyone just stays home
and watches it snow, feeds
the birds and watches them
Dy around. The cunning little
squirrel and oppossum make
their visit.

FIFE ENLISTS
Gregory L. Fife, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Walter Fife, 1152
~ond Avenue, Gallipolis.
Ohio. enlisted in the U.s. Air
Force's Delayed Enlistment
Program according to T.Sgt.
Ron Rife, ,\lr Force reculter
in Gallipolis. A 1976 grad011te
of Gallia Academy High
School, Greg is scheduled· for
enlistment in the Regular Air
Force April 14 and upon
graduation from the AF's sb·
week basic training course,ls
scheduled
to
receive
technical training as a Aircraft Pneudraulic Systems
Mechanic.

l.

. . '•

.·si!N!i\HH~····
'
.
.

:a/

. . .

~

.·, .

/ ~•¥~

~~

~

"

I ,(I'Mat'JA&amp;~~
$~1/SRJaiiA.
.

w~w

•

1974 CADIUAC EL OORADO ......s4995
Gold melalllc wllh black vinyl lop, full power,
Climate Control. AM. FM stereo, 33,000 miles
Sharp

1975 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL ....'6995
2 Or Coupe, metall ic blue w1th wh1te vmyi top. blue
leattler mterior, fu ll power, tilt whee L rad1al t ires,
cruise control , AM · FM_~tereo tape.

76 Chevy Malibu 2 dr•.........•.........•.. '3695
74 Buick Regal 2 dr......................... '3295
74 Pontiac Catalina 2 dr.. .....•.•...•...... '2995
74 Dodge Dart Custom 6 cyl.. •..•......• .••. '2495
74 Chevy Malibu 2 dr.............•......•..'2495
74 Ford Mustang 11 .••........••.••.......•• '2495
74 Ford Galaxie 4 dr..••..................•. 12695
74 P~. Futy 4 dr............................ 12495
74 Chevy Vega 4 cyl.........................~995~
73 Buick leSabre Custom ...•••.•...•.•..•. '2495
73 Chev. Impala 4 dr•...•.••..•........••. 12495
73 Ford Wagon 4 dr•• •.•..•••.. ......•...• 12495
72 Chevy Nova 4 dr. 6 cyl •.• ..•. ..•.••.•••'1695
72 Ford Galaxie 4 dr....................... '1295

KS
73 Ford Ranchero ............................ '2695
71 Dodge Sportsman 9 pass. van ..........'1895
73 Chev. C.1 0 6 cyl.........................'1995

RIGGS USED CARS
985·4100
Roger Riebel
Located on St . Rt . 7

Ray Riggs
Chester. Ohio

PRIVACY LAW

AMBULANCE DRIVERS

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Sen.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Sen.

Stanley
Aronoff,
R· William Mussey, R-Batavla ,
Cincinnati, said Thursday he introdi,IC«&lt; a bill Thursday to
hopes to complete work on a protect from malpractice
bill next week to clarlfy the suits emergency medical
privacy bill enacted by the technician trainees acting as
General Assembly last year. ambulance drivers.
'
Aronoff said he would call a : Mussey silaa 'law enacted
news conference to explain last year did not contain
the clarification, which is language specifically
necessary he said to end protecting trainees who have
conflicts between the pr1vacy not yet met requirementS for
law and open records full certification.
Mussey said runt areas ,
statutes.
Some public officials have were havln&amp; problems in
sealed records whlCII had staffing 24-mur emergency
been open to the public medical services becauH
because of confusion OVI!I" the trainees are not protected
privacy act.
from lawsuits.

1, ,

\

\

�-..
10-The Daily Sentine~ Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, March 4, !977

---------------------------1

Area Deaths

!
I

MILLARD CLAGG
Funeral services wlll be

held at 1 p.m. Saturday al
Miller's Home lor Funerals
tor Millard Me l•ln (John)
Clagg, Gallipolis, who died

l
I

MRS. DAISY .ROUSH
SYRACUSE - Mrs. Daisy
Duckwor th Roush . 89.
Syracuse. died Friday
morning at the Breen.Field
Nursing Center in Orville .

Mrs . Roush was a life
John Steele of the Bidwell ' member of the Syracuse
Church of Christ will oftlciate First United Presbyter ia n
at the service with burial In Church . and Guiding Star
th! Centenar y c;eme tery . Council,
Daughters of
Friends may call at · the America .
Besides her parents, she
funeral home from 2 toiand 1
to 9 p.m. today.
was preceded in death by her ·
Wednesday evening .

Born Dec. 8, 1909 In Mason
County, W. Va. to the late
· Charles and
Melinda
Hawthorne Clagg, he Is
survived

by one

bl"oth~r.

Willard, Bidwell and a sister,
Mrs. Okey (Hannah ) Henry;
Gro•e City. Six brothers and

one sister preceded him In

flrsf husband. Albert Duck worth ; her second husband,

Richard Roush; a daughter ,

Josephine Harden , and a son.

William Duckwor th .
Surviving are a daughter ,
Mrs . George (Genevleve)
Schneider, SyraciJse; a son ,
Charles, Cres ton ; four
grandchildren, . Dolores
Bruba ker. Wadsw or th ;

News •• in Briefs

(Continued from page I)
inclllle aoo a standard deducation.
These facts were revealed Thursday in analyses preP&amp; red
by the Treasury Department aoo Internal Revenue Servi~ .
Treasury said 41;361 persons had inwmes, not including
interest !rom savings accounts and other investments, of
$200,1100,or more. ms said 25 persons had inco~s ol at least
$500,1100.

Autopsies .ruled out in fire victims

CLEVELAND - REPRESENTATIVES OF the Seneca
Indians said Thursday they are Intent upon getting
compensation
the federal government for the loss of land
in the Cleveland-Akron area. An American Indian historian
studying the CBBe for tile Senecas, Merle Darling, said he has
been unable to find any evidence that tile goverrunent ever
bought the bed of the Cuyahoga River or Cleveland Harbor.
Darling, appearing at a news conference with Chief
Beeman Logan of the Tmawanda, N. Y., Senecas, later half
seriously suggested that the Indians stretcb a chain across the
river and charge lake freigbters a toll lor usin,g the waterway.

!run

AKRON OHIO - GOODYEAR TIRE &amp; ROBBER CO. has
predicted there will be twice as much plastic in new cars by
William Duckworth, Ritt - 1985 and even some moving parts made of the !lljlterial. Floyd
man ; La Donna Lew is.
Melby head of Goodyear's engineered products division, said
Creston
and
Eleanor
McKerVey, Syracuse, and the shl!t to pll!stlc will wme even sooner in the area of "soft"
Johnson .
eight grandchildren.
front and rear ends.
Funeral services will be at .
He said by the 19110 model year, four rt. every 10 new cars
2 p .m . Sund ay at the
PACKETS READIED - Preparing packets of work
Margaret Goett, Mildred Hawley, Ada Hoce, Jo Ann
will·
be built with the new front and rear ends that will not
Syracuse F ir st United
materials
lor
volunteers
who
will
conduct
a
door.t!Kioor
Newsome,
standing, active official of the local cancer ·
scratch or dent. Large panels and some load-carrying parts
Presbyteria n Church with the
unit;
Gene
McElroy,
Nan Moore, a member olthe Meigs ·.
campaign
In
Meigs
County
nei:t
month
to
raise
lund!!
in
Revs. Dwig ht Zavitz and R. made of reinforced p~ic or urethane will come next followed
For All Occasions
Unit
cancer
board,
and Eva Deasauer. Mrs. Patti ·
the
annual
can~r
crusade
were
lhese
t:erresentatives
of
L. Stebbins , orfic iating.
by axle housings; drive shafts and suspe.nsion components
Buria l will be In Letart Falls made of plastic reinforced with fibers of glass or carbon, and a
Fletcher Is this year's crusade chainnan with a goal of
the
county's
Retired
Senior
Volunteer
Program.
From
tile
We Wire Flowers
.Cemetery. Friends may call
$5,000 set for the year.
left are Ruth McElroy, Bernadine Meier, Helen Handlev.
Everywhere
live-pound plastic leaf spring will replace a 1JI.pound metal
at the Ewing ~ unerat Home
anytime Saturday and until part.
II a.m . Sunday when !he body
w.ill be taken to the church to
WASHINGTON - BURLEY 1QBACCO growers have
lie In state.
oo~ again overwhelmingly approved federal !lljlrketing
C&lt;JDirols and price supports on tlleir crop, according to
Pomeroy Flower Shop
preliminary returns from a mail relerendwn.
Mrs. Millard Von Meter
Federal Agriculture Department officials said 244,816
All applications should be
Applications for the 1977
Ph. 992·5711
Ph. 99l-l03'1
COLUMBUS - The Ohio
ballotswerecastina Feb. 22-25referendum, with 99per cent in
completed
accyrding to the
work-leam-eam program are
favor of wntlnulng marketing quotas lor the 1977, 1978 and 1979 Department of Natural available lrom 'all Ohio junior instructions on the form
crops. The vote means price supports will wntinue through Resou~s (ODNR) reminds and eenior high schools, provided and mailed to: YCC
1979 and farmers will be required ID abide by marketing quotas Ohio youths ages 15-18 in- vocational schools and offices Selection Office, P.O. Box
terested in conservation work
Including a 637 million pound quota for 1971.
to apply lor a spot in the of the Bureau of Employment 23400, L'Enlant Plaza ,
Washington, D.C. 20023.
Youth Conservation Corps Services.
The youths will perfonh . Panldpsnts in the 1977
(YCC) program by Tuesday,
Michael w. Brothers, 26
conservation work on state YCC program will he selected
March 15.
Rt.
3, Pomeroy, escaped
at
random
without
regard
to
federally-owned
Sponsored on ODNR, in and
or possible d.eath
Injury
social,
economic,
racial
or
'
cooperation with the U.S. laciliti&lt;l$, ·attending . one of
Jerry Litchfield, Southside. Departments of Agriculture t~o four-week camp sessions ethnic background with the . Thursday afternoon m a
Velerans Memorial Hospital
aid .of a computer setup in traffic accident in Clay Twp.
BIRTHS - A daughter to
Admitted - E\Ia Rostoger, Mr. and Mrs. Paul McKin· and Interior, YCC will in June, July and August. Washington, O.C.
In GaWa County.
Pomeroy ; Joseph Barnhart, ney, West Columbia; a son to provide four weeks em- Both residential and non·
According to the Gallia
Applicants
will
be
notified
ployment for 1,000 Ohio residential camps will· be
Long Bottom; Evelyn Holter,
County
sheriff's department,
in
early
April
whether
or
not
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Robert
MuUin,
provided in Ohio.
Racine; Robert C. Roush, Jackson, 0.: a son to Mr. and youngsters this summer.
Brothers
was driving a truck
they
have
been
selected.
YCC projt.:ls include trail
"We are having an exNew Haven; Larry Kline, Mrs. Paul Hail, Vinton, 0.:
loaded
with
nitrate fertilizer
Students
whose
schools
or
cellent response to this construction, land
Minersvllle. ·
east
on
ciBy
Chapel
Rll. when
and
a
son
to
Mr.
and
Mrs.
employment
offices
are
out
of
popular program and we are reclamation, limber stand
Discharged - Drexel
the
vehicle
struck
a large
Micha
el
Burgess,
Point
YCC
applications
and
in·
urging interested youths to improvement, erosion control
Lambert, Glenora Swatzel,
hole
in
tile
road.
formation
materilil,
should
Pleasant.
Gilbert Mees, Goldie Lawson,
file their applications as soon and wildlife habitat lm·
The truck's load shifted
urge them to obtain ad·
Sleven Patterson, Bernice
as possible," said Natural provement.
causing
him to lose control.
ditlonal
supplies
from·
the
AS ~ psrt of' YCC, con·
Moldren, Eva Lawson.
Resources Director Robeit
The
truck
ran oH the right
.Office
of
Employee
Services,
servation education
W. Teater.
Holzer Medical Center
side
of
the
road and over·
Ohio
Department
of
Natural
programs will be offered
(Discharges, March 3)
turned.
II
was
demolished.
Resources,
Fountain
Square,
under the guida nce of experts
Edith A. Abbott, Stella
PLEASANT VALLEY
Is
a
highly
explosive
Nitrate
Columbus
43224
or
phone
In the environmental and,
DISCHARGES - Mrs. Blankenship, Lillian L. Burt,
material.
(614)
446-5900.
resource management fields .
Douglas Smith, Crown City, Lionel R. Connelley, Mrs.
0 .; Brandy Brunty, Roherts- Freddie Cox and son, Dorothy
Tuck a little away in a
t9
burg; Mrs. Dennis Long, son, M. Coy, Harold L. Dailey, Sr.,
high-interest Savings Account.
Earl
H.
Dean,
Mary
V.
Ford,
Portland, 0.; Mrs. Conrad
WASIUNGTON (UPl) Berkley, Point Pleasant: Betty J . France, Robert F. Unemployment rose to 7.5 per
And watch your money
Melanie White, Mason: Mrs. Gordon, Jason E. Hall, Keith cent in February, when
make money,.
John Burton, Point Pleasant: A. Jones, Jr., Alice Lieving, severe winter weather and
Mrs. Donald Montcaslle, Mary G. Lookado, Andrew J. energy shortages .caused
Safe. Sound. Fun to watch!
Point Pleasant: Terry Hobbs, . MaMing, Gregory G. Miller, layoffs of thousands of
lila son: David DeWitt, James C. Mitchell, Kathleen workers, . tile Labor Depart·
Henderson: Sherry Freeman, Moofty, George T. Newsome, menl reported today .
Cheshire: Mark ·Huffman, Emma J . Potts, Beulab G.
The layoffs wiped out some
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Joe Ransom, Linda S. Sham· labor market improvements
Bray, Henderson ; Elbert baugh, Mrs. Richard Sharp in early January , but
Tucker, Buffalo; Floyd and daughter, Damon T. economists w~re relieved the
. .... Special .bargai~s during the three day sale ending
McMillan, Hanford: M!Uard Stevens, Rudy A. Stewart, 0.2 per cent Increase did not
Margaret
E.
Stichtenotb,
Herdman, Letan: Mrs.
Saturday March 5th at 5 p.m.
match scare stories spread
Loraine Crump, Leon; Mrs. Susan A. Swisher, Timothy A. during the height of the crisis.
Jack Smilb, Letan; Mrs. Weaver, Mrs. David Wheeler
Joblessness ·still remains
. . .. . 30 per cent savings on Cortley Custom Made Drapery
Howard Knopp, Leon: Mrs. and daughter, Mrs. Warnie L5 per cent below . the.
White
and
son,
Edgar
C.
James Swindler, Crown City :
recession peak, and a half per
Sale, ending Saturday at 5 p.m. Bring in your window
Mrs. Landis Absten, Leon: Wolfe.
cent below the 1976 high ol 8
measurements, select your pattern and color, place your
Josephine Voss, Point
per cent la st November.
. order now.
Pleasant: Ray Ungaro, N.ew
There had been fears the
Haven; Kevin Turley,
weatber migh\ create
Racine ; Lori Richardson,
unemployment exceeding 9
..... At the Mechanic Street Warehouse save on General
Leon; Bonnie Francisco,
per cent.
Electric Washer and Dryer. Savings of up to 40 per cent,
Mason: Enoch Marcum,
Thursday
Rejects'
Kenova; Mrs. Franklin
too, on GE Refrigerators, plus a special solid state GE
Week of l·17·77
Blankenship, Leon; and
Standings
Color TV Portable Set for $399.00.
MEETING CALLED
Team
W. L.
A meeting to organize · a
No. 4
52 20
No.6.
41 31 girls softball league will be
No.5
35 37 held at 4 p.m. Sunday at the
No.2
32 40 R. C. Bottling Co. garage,
APPEARING THIS WEEKEND AT THE
No. t
30 42 North Second Ave., Mid·
Welker's Ashland
26 46
dleport. Team represen·
High team 3·games
Team 6 815; Team 4 195 ; tatives are requested to atTeam 2 761.
tend.

death .
Pallbearers wil l be Clayton
Clagg , ' Donovan Clagg,
Shelby Clagg, Warner Holley,
Dale Sharp and Grant

FLOWERS

992~2039

YCC deadline

Want Ad

•

lS

15th

Truck with

By Dale Rothgeb
GALUPOUS - There will be no
autopsies of the remains of the woman and
her two YO Wig children who .lost their lives
in a lire. Thursday night that da!lljlged
their rented home on Neighborhood Road.
Agreement on this action was reached
Friday by Gallla County authorities
following a conference and inspection of
the bodies of Phyllis Owens, 20 and her
children, Ronnie Thomas Owens, 4, and
Valarle Lynn Owens, 14 months.
Gallia County Sheriff James
Montgomery said Agent Herman Henry of
the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Identification
and State Fire Marshal Frank Eisnaugle
were at · the !Ire scene Friday. Several

sheriff's deputies were at Ule house rented
to the victim's lather, Clarence Alonzo
Lawson, Sr. Saturday mocning . ·

She, along with Sheriff Montgomery
and Prosecuting Attorney Joseph Cain,
aft~r

con£erring

with

Or . J.

Flood crests all far down the river
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Ohio River forecast center, which monitors arid
Forecast Center officials are predicting predicts conditions all along the 961-rnile
minor flooding along three points of. the long river.
The river at Newburgh Dam, just
river. The rain-swollen river is predicted
ID crest above flood stages nea r Evans- above Evansville, is expected to 'crest at
ville ,Ind., on Tuesday, and near Shawnee- 39.5 feet on Tuesday. Flood stage there is
IDwn, Ill., and Fords Ferry, Ky., on 381eel. At Shawneetown, where flood stage
Wednesday,
is 331eet, the river is predicted to crest at
''At this time, we don 't foresee any 35.5 feet on Wedoesday. At Dam 50 at
!lljljor flooding along the Ohio River," said· Fords Ferry, where flood stage is 34 feet,
carl Relyea, hydrologist in charge of the the river is expected to crest at 37.51eet on

VOL 12

_NO. 5

Wedne sday.
llelyea also said minor flooding can be
River

before the fire . It also occurred one week

alter the Gallia County Sheriff 's
Department conducted a raid at the hotel
in an effort to obtain evidence believed to
be there from the robbery of the Ohio
Valley Livestock Yards, Feb. 12.
Robbery

on

severa l Ohio

l'irst to get through to Carter in the Oval
Office over the special toll .free number 900 242 1611 - was Joseph Willman of
SterUng Heights, Mich., who wanted to
know how the President would assure the
safety of Americans against future threats
like the one raised recently by Uganda's
President ldi Amin.
.
Carter, speaking live over CBS radio,
'

the Americans are safe.
"I can't say what I'll do in the future,"
the President said, except to follow the
moves he made in th.e Uganda crisis.
CBS, which · broadcast the " Ask .
President Carter" program and paid all
the bills, manned a special telephone
switchboard in the White House complex
' to handle the callS Doodiru! in and keep an

.

TONIGHT &amp; SATURDAY
10 Tll2

Oinge:ss 455 :. Laura Car -

MEIGS.lHEATRE
CLOSED f\;R
VACAnON

THE MEIGS INN
.

I

WA'JQI FOR

POMEROY
r· .

•---~--. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - . . - - - · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
s EEDQLEEN DRYER
s EEOQLEEN WASHER

-'

OPENING DATE

05-10-8118-1

06·08-861·5
FA3690

.150.

penter .410.
,
Men's hlqh qame - Ron ·
Haning 17~ ; Roger Carpenter .
173; Stu Blankenship 170.
Women's high game Shirley Haning t62; Laura
Carpenter 157: , !Aarge
Dingess 154.

MIDDLEPORT-POM EROY

leaders "of the Moslem fai th" in that
effort, and said he has Amin's assurances

Team
W. L.
Roadrunners
54 18
Farmers Bank
40 32
Team No. t
38 34
Seldom Res! Ceramics 36 36
Salem St. !Akt. ,
34 38
Ed's Crossroads Gro. I~ 58
Men's high series - Stu
Blankenship 465 ; Roger
Carpenter 458; Ron Haning

FROM PARKERSBURG, W.VA.

SUN DAY, MARCH 6, 1977

matters during his unprecedented, twohour radio phone-in show.
~

Pick N Sho•el
Feb. 27,1977
Standings

Women's high series Shirley Haning ol.56; Marge

tntint

.

With 3 ~onVBnient cycles

J

With 4 hsndy drying cycles

\ • Ch0o.e from nonoal ,
pennanent prees/ knit
or pre-wash soak
cycles
• 5-position water ·
· temperature control
• 4 agitator and apin
apeed eelectiona
• 3 wa.oh water levela
to help you save
water

A

FE8030

•,Includeoautomatic
cycle for normal or

heavyt.t&gt;ma;

. automatic cycle for
delicate fabric&amp;;
time dry; and
penn•nant pn./lmit

•5 temperature
aettinp

· • AdiUJtable volume
control fOr bu&amp;zer

Y••••tone

VALUE

A

Y••••tone

VALUE

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
. '
.

606 E. Main ·- ~2-2094 ;... Brake Senice · Frorit End Al&amp;llnlllt • ,..,...,, 0.

orderly .queue of about 11 persons waiting
at all times.
Second up was .Pete Belloni of Denver,
and his gripe gave carter a chance to
knock down what he said was an erroneous
news dispatch on his reported intention to
Sap a 25 cent-a-gallon tax on gasoline as

part of the energy policy he will announce
April 2Q.
"I've never proposed any such thing and
I don •t know where that story or iginated,1 '
Carter said.

Belloni took advantage of the chatty
format to tell carter he read It in the
papers.
"I've never even insinuated I'd raise the

gasoline tax by 25 cents," the President
responded, and told Belloni, before moving
to the next call, "Pete, I appreciate your
bringing this to my attention."
carter sat in the Oval Office with Walter
Cronkite, acting as CBS' moderator lor the
show. They sat with their backs to the
fireplace in a pair of orange wing chairs.
Sunlight flooded in through the French
DoOrs to the Rose Garden on a brilliant
spring day.'Floralarrangements graced a
coffee table.
lntrodocing the program at 2 p.m. EST,
Cronkite called it "a new approach to
communicitions between the President

and the _people :.. historic ... and an.
experiment. n He noted no President had
ever tried the telephone approach and ran
down the ground rules lor callers.
" I'm going to be just a little bit ruthless
in cutting off long-winded questions, " he
said. "Don't make a Speech, will yoli?"
He and Carter listened to incoming calls
(Xlllution from stonnwater. agriculture, requires that by 1963 water be clean
through
a loudspeaker and respouded
mining and construct-ion.
enough to preserve fish and wildlife, and to
through
a
microphone .
OPEA Is acting on the 1972 Fetleral permit swimming and other recreation
Wa ter Pollution Control Act whieh activitie·s.

.

Ideas wanted to make water better
TWIN CALVES WERE BORN last Sunday at the farm home of Mr. and Mrs . •
Bob Williams on the Harrisonville Road. Making the heifer CJilves feel welcome
are the Willianis' children, I tor, Bobby, SCott and Brenda.

Awards dinner March 9

RIO GRANDE - A meeting to initiate
citizen participation in plans to improve
the quality of water in southeast Ohio is
scheduled for Thursday, March 10, 7:30
p.. m. at Lyne Center on the Rio Grande
College-Community College campus.
Representatives of ind ustry an d
ill:!lness, as , well as public officials,
m:udents and people who · use the waterways lor recreation, are invited to attend
in order to help fonn an advisory com-

mittee to the Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency (OEPA ). The OEPA is
cl!!Velopirtg a water quality management
plan lor the southeast Ohio tributary area
which includes the Raccoon Creek Basin,
Symmes Creek and the Little Scioto.
According to OEPA officials who will be
at the meeting, the goal of the session is to
identify problems with waterways and the
effect of problems o~ human life In the

. SYRACUSE - Robert Wingett,
Syracuse, will be ·one of three men to be
honored at the awards diiuler Wednesday·,
March 9, at 6:30p.m. at the Meigs !M.
Other men to receive "Man of the
Year Awards" are Charles Legar and Pete
~lelds . The event is being sponsor!'!! by
the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce.
Wingett is a long-time Syracuse
VIllage councilman and community
leader; Legar, Pomeroy, fire chief and
former long-time !lljlyor of Pomeroy aud
· Shields who has been with the Agricullllre
Stabilization and Conservation office
many years.
Legar was selected as the Pomeroy
outstanding leader; Wingett lor the county
area and ~lelds as tile agricultural
leader. Certificates of appreciaUoo will be
given to six other persons. Tickets, which
are $5 each, may be purchased from
Barbara Chap!lljln, secretary to the
chamber, Ralph Werry, Fred Crow and
Kermit Walton.

Support given HB 299
members to support a new collective

practices and, in rases of impasse or

bargaining bill lor public employees in·
trodpced in the Ohio House of Representatives last week.
Mrs. Frankie Ross, Ohio P.TA

disputes, the court may appoint a
mediator or fact-finding psnel. The bill
also requires collective bargaining
sessions be open to the public and forbids
strikes by public employees.
"Ohio PTA has long supported a
POMEROY - A del'egatlon from the
collective bargaining process lor school Meigs CoWJty Black Lung Assn. wUIIeave

legislatio n chairman, said the bill

establishes a process lor collective
.bargaining by public employees for wages,
b:&gt;urs, and tenns of employment, but In
the
case of public schools it maintains
area .
local
control of education through elected
These officials say they want to
school
boards. Tbe measure , HB 299, is
consider nroper management of existing
~nsored
by State · Rep. Charles F.
• sewage treabnent systems, an increase in .
Kurless
(I\~.
Perrysburg )..
soli and water conservation and control of

Washington

Employees," Mrs, R.oss said, " but we

'

Pennits stil{ needed
GALUPOLIS - A spokesman lor the
Gallia County Audllbr's Office Saturday
issued a reminder to any person or firms
111ticipatlng building in the county must
obtain a building permit.
Gallla County commissioners last
September passed legislation making it
mandatory that pennits must be obtained
before any new construction begins.

Mailboxes flattened

VlcrQRY CELEBRATION - Gallipolis DUlled top·
seeded Chesapeake, 49-47, In the finals It Friday night's
Cla11 AA Southern Sectional District Tournament at Ironton.
The victory advanced GAHS to the 1977 Class AA District

Tournament to be held this weekend at OU's Coovocalion
Cen~r, Athe'ns. Above, Blue Devil players arid fans stage a
post'f!ame celebraUon by cutting down the nets. Taking his
turn above is Keith McGuire, Blue Dev1l center. See
additional pictures and story on page c~.

.~

I

Athens via bu s this evening to join a

opposed some collective bargaining bills trotest movement in Washington, D. C.
last year because they permitted strikes, against plans for scrapping th e black lung
which we feel are disruptive of the Jill.
•
educational process.''
Only 30 local representatives can be
accorrunodated oo the bus which will leave
the Athens County fairgrounds at 10 p.m.
The bus is being provided by the United
Mine Workers of America.
However, other expenses are expected
to be incurred and the local unit Is accepting con!rlbutlons today to help with.
these costs. Any money not used wUI be
refunded to the contributors.
Those' wllllng to contribute may call
Bernice Molden, a representative of the
Black Lung Assn., 992-7724 or representatives of the Miners Wives, Gene and
Patsy OUer, 992~163.
_ Those wishing to make the trip I&lt;&gt;
Washington are to call Mrs. Molden immediately. The local group will arrive in
Washington Monday morning · and will
sart their return trip Monday night.

l!laine P. Winebrenner, Albany, flied lor
dissolution .of marriage as 'have Bus
Gilbert Daniels, Ewington and Carol Jane
Daniels, Ewington.
The marriage of Jeffrey D. Grate, Rt. I,
Middleport and Kathleen Grate, Rt. I,
Mason was dissolved as was. the marriage
c1 Allina R. Cr~p and James J. Crisp.
Deanna C. Knapp was granted a divo~
from Brian D. Knapp. Gerald Shuster was
appointed deputy sheriff.

GALUPOUS - Vandalism of lour
maUboxes was Investigated here Friday
by Ga!Upolls City poUce officers.
' Pete Alderigi, 119 Chillicothe Rd.,
reported aomeone knocked down the mallboxes and poets owned by Hoban CosiDn,
Illite Caner, Dorothy Hanley and hbn.
Junior Simmons, Gaillpolis, uld be lost a
lillfold Friday behind the First National
Bank: The wallet contained $2110.

heading to

The bill empowers the county common
pl eas court to hear charges of unfair labor

Three actions filed
in court for money
POMEROY - Three suits for money
bave been filed In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court,' including one lor $11,000
ll'iglnating in a train wreck.
Motors Insurance Co., Somerset, N. J.,
811ks $1,176 from Waitman M. Stevens, Rl.
1, Reedlvllle lor damages said tile result of
an accident on Sept. U, 1975 oo SR 681. '
Kenneth Elickf!On, Albany; . flied suit
against Sandy and lleaver Valley, Farmer's Mutua.! Insurance Co. for damages
alleged caused by a fire March 10, 1976
which W811 covered by insurance.
Donald Wo«en, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, and
Alyllls Wooten, same address, !Ued suit
for $11,1100 apinlt Hulcber Emergency
Co., Coltmb111. On Sell!. 7, 1976 when the
petition says a train diirailed and portloos
rlthe train came on the property of the
plalntlffs, allll there was lr!spasslng. The
111it Is fer co. . . .~ctory damages in the
IWDOwt of $1 ,1100 and punitive damages in
the amo111t of UO,IIOO.
Jamea E. Winebrenner, Albany and

Delegation

COLUMBUS - The Ohio Parent·
Teacher Association is urging Its 381,000

!
•

PRICE 25 CENTS

President ·Carter denies plans
to raise gasoline 25c gallon

7.5

High team game - Team 4

2 PIECE GROUP

Vinton, a brother of Mrs. Phyllis Owens,
rContinued on ps1;e A-2i ·
·

is back

'

INVESTIGATORS CONTINUED their probe Saturday at the scene of a fire
Thursday night which claimed the lives of Phyllis Owens, 2Q, and her two small
Children. An arson expert and Herman Henry of the BCI Crime Lab were at the
seene Friday. Above city volunteer firemen battle to control the fire.

C1arence Alonzo Lawson, Jr ., 18, Rt. 2,

Unemployment

El·berfelds In Pomeroy

BIGGER
SOUND

.

The building, formerly owned by Bob
Queen and the late Dale C. Gilkey, had
been insured for $100,000 just three weeks

.told Wiilman he tried to "deal directly witll
Amin in a very forceful way and let him
know we expected American lives to be
protected." •
He confirmed he had !!I• help of foreign·

"INN PLACE"

(1

The building was ownetl by Robert
Spears ofKanauga, who purchased it from
Herb Rile. That fire is also still bemg
investigated by the State Fire Marshal's
Office. Investigators were at the scene

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Pres ident
Carter assured ci tizen telephone callers
Saturday he has never considered raising
gasoline taKes by 25 cents a gallon and
chatted person-to-person on many other

Local Bowling

High Ind . game - Patti
Will iams 188; Laura Carpenter and Patti Williams
177; Laura Carpenter 154.

floors.

tributaries, such as the Green, White,
Wabash and Little wabash Rivers.
"Tributary flooding is usually a prelude
to Ohio River flooding," he said. " You
have to look at it like an assembly line.
"Although you can term the flooding
we're predicting as minor, no noocting is
ever minor to the guy whose chicken coop
gets flooded," Relyea added.

expected

GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANT

3 DAY SALE

Wi lliams 489 ; Charlene Ooczl

Lawson home was also .confined to the

second floor .
The Colony inn housed a tavern on the
north side of the first floor and a pool room
on the south side. There were also 20 rooms
and four hathrooms on the upper two

tmts

OPEN FRIDAY TIL.8 _P.M.

399.

On Feb. 2Q, Ule Colony Inn , formerly
llle Queen Bee Hotel, located at the corner
of Second Ave. and Olive St. was destroyed
by lire. Loss there was expectetl to run between $50,000 and $100,000. That fire
started on the second or third floor of llle
hotel. The fire Thursday night at the

+

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

High
Ind. 4'283;
3.games
- Laura
295;
Team
Team
6 281. f
Carpenter
508 ;
Patfl

tilree weeks.

early last week .

fertilizer

HOSPITAL NEWS

A.

Lawson , who was burned in a vain det.amerans, pathologist at the Holzer
attempt to rescue his daughter and Medical O;nler, agreed Ulat nu autopsies
grandchildren from the burning home, had would be taken due to the condition of the
rented the two .. tory frame home from Mr. bodies.
However , hi nod samples were
and Mrs. Kessler Adkins of Colwnbus.
Autopsies were scheduled on the obtained which will be sent to the BCI
victims Friday at Holzer Medical Center, Crime Lab for analysis. Cause of the
but none were taken. It was reported that $10,000 lire has not been determined. The
Gallia County Coroner Dr. Donald R. victims' funeral will be held at I p.m.
Warehime and the assistant coroner, Dr. today from Miller's Home for Funerals
Edward Berkich were out of town Friday . with burial following in Centenary.
Strange Events
Dr. Edna Gettles, a retired physician,
The lire was the· second which has
was at Ule lire scene Thursday night in her
occurred In the Old French City in the past
capacity of acting coroner.

overturns .

992-3629

•

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{

•

CLOTHING IS FREE
CHFSHIRE - The GaUia • Meip
O!mmunlty Action Pragiam will . .,, Ita
free dothing day for low Income reeld41111
from 9a.m. unlii!Z noon oo Thunday. The
clothing bank ia located mthe old Chelhlre
High School building.

.,

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