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                  <text>10 - The Daily Sentinel, Midclleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday, March 8, 1977

Cub packs will select themes

Christina Smith fund
standing·at ·$2,111.65
A public lund drive for
Christina Smith, 11, seriously
burned when her nightgoWl'
caught fire on Feb. 6, Ms
reached S2,!ll.65 .
The drtve is being sponsored by the Women 's
Auxiliary of the Middleport
Fire Department with Mrs.
Marilyn Epple as chairman
and Mrs. Phyllis Baker as cochairman.
According to the family.
Christina is confined to the
new Burn Center of
Children's Hospital in
Columbus. Friday, she underwent surgery on her hands
and skin grafting is expected
to start in the near future,
possibly this week . Fift y
percent of Miss Sl)lith's body
received third degree bums
and she suffered second
degree burns over fiv e
percent of her body.
Funds being collected by

public contributions are lJJ_ be
applied to Christine's hospital
bill which is expected to run
into thousands of dollars. The
Shriners are atlempti n ~ to
provide help and Miss Smith
does have · some hospita l
coverage throu gh the insurance policy of her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Roush , of near Pomeroy.
Contributions may be sent
to Mrs. Marilyn Epple. 48 N.
Fourth Ave., Middleport.
Latest contributors to the
fund by community include :
Middleport - Mr. and Mrs.
Lewis F. Long, Mr. anjl Mrs.
Wilbur
Koenig , Reed
Koenig, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
McElhinny. Mr. and Mrs.
Chet Erwin, CharleS and
. Gwinnie White, Mr. and Mrs.
Perry Mitch, Carrie Kennedy, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Byer,
Middleport Fire Department
Auxiliary, Mr. and Mrs. Don
Lowery, Mr. and Mrs.

GIVE
YOURSELF
A LIFT

0

Buy a New Car
Today
With Our
.
Low Cost Auto
Loan
.

.

We' ll lend you 'ca sh in a hu rr y ... no hitches involved!
Just call for information about the var iety of easy
payment plans we have av ailable. Ther e's one to suit
every budget. So don 't delay buyi ng that car . ..
thumbing it can get awfu l toug h!

"THE

Thomas Da rst. Debbie
Ohlinger's lirst grade at
Middl e port Eleme ntary
School, Mr. and Mrs. Everett
Michael. Mrs. Mary Lyon,
Mr. and Mrs. · Dwight
Wallace, Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Barnhart, Mr. and Mrs. John
Metzger. Ulllan Zerkle. Mr.
and Mrs. Willie Davis, Mr.
and Mrs. Judson White, Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Mack, Mr.
and · Mrs. Millard Wildermuth, Gertrude McElhinny.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sauer,
Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Price, Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Owen,
Bradbury El ementary
School , Middleport Fire
Department, Feeney Bennett
Post 128, American Legion,
Lena McKinl ey, Bernice
Winn, Mrs. Lula Murray.
Minersville - Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Arnold, Kathryn and
Myron Miller.
Cheshire - Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Sisson, Richard and
Marie Pickens.
Syracuse - Mr. and Mrs.
Mark Smith, Evelyn Smith,
Mr. and Mrs. George Conde.
Pomeroy - Mr. arid Mrs.
Gerald Rough, I.B .E.W.
Local 1561, Ladies Auxiliary
of Big Bend C. B. Radio Club,
Lorain Sterrett, Mrs. W. A.
·Morgan, Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Kennedy , Mr. and Mrs. Eldon
Morris, Mr. and Mrs. L. F.
Schoenleb, Mr. and Mrs.
Louis Thompson, Sharon and
Chuckle Smith, Xi Gamma
Mu Sorority, Big Bend
Citizens Band Radio Club,
Homer and Belva Willard,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Strauss, Mr. and Mrs. Wyatt
Chadwell , Mrs. Homer
Hawkins, Lawrence and
Mary Stewart, M. V. Bengel,
Mr. and Mrs. Adrian Roberts,
Miss Dorothy Long, Mr. and
Mrs. l:larley Haning, Mr. and
Mrs. Lester Russell, Gerald
and Elizabeth Hilferty, Adult
Class of Rock Springs Sunday
School.
Racine area - Mr. and
Mrs. Marvin Hill, three
anonymous donors, · Mr. and
Mrs. Benny Wilson, Joe
Swain, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Beegle, Kenneth and Pearl
Reynolds , Mr. and Mrs. A. C.
Bradford, Antiquity Baptist
Church.
Mason, W. Va. - Erma
.Wright, Jean Higginbotham,
Roger Reynolds.
Also, Mr. and Mrs. Victor
Babbitt, Dublin; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Shafer, Jr.,
Marion ; Agnes Randolph,
Worthington; Marie
Houdashelt, Jim Riley ,
Athens; Florence Michael,
Albany; Mr. and Mrs. John
Kreager, Newark ; Nelle
Shaw, Gallipolis ; John
Moore, Doug Rector, Belpre;
Malinda Smith, Reedsville;
Tweedy Family, Sunbury;
David Hunter, Columbus.

FRIENDLY BANK"
PITTSIUIIGh

illbens ,ational
-lrPK;._ATI

hk·

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Deposit Insurance ~ratior
· DEPOSITS INSURED TO '40,000

DYLAN WINS
SANTA MONICA, Calif.
(UP! ) - Singer Bob Dylan
has won a court ruling to have
certain legal documents in
his divorce case closed to Ire
public.
Superior Court Judge
Edward R.afeedie approved
the action sealing the records
Monday to protect Dylan, his
estranged wile nnd tlleir five
children from harassment
and annoyance.
Dylan's wife filed for
divorce from the 36-year-old
singer last Tuesday.

~!'J~~t~~~~
•
n
m m~
• Choice of two flnlahea:

Genuine 10

YOUR ASSURANCE OF
FINE QUALITY,
YEARS OF WEAR AND

nutmeg meple or.antique pine

• Flneat A~n crllftlmanahlp

..

HUNTINGTON - Cub
Scout packs in the fr i,~tates
Area CoWteil will he doing
tllelr annual planning soon.
~ i ng an excfting list of
!llggested program themes.
!.eo M. MacCourtney, vice
~resident of the coWtcil, said
nK&gt;re thm75 Cub Scoot packs
will he selecting monthly
themes for the next 12
months. Each theme is
designed to provide fun ,
variety, action and purpose.
Each pack brings together
its pack leaders and the
Scouts who serve as den
chiefs to determine the theme
lor each month, pack aclivtties, and den, home,

ROBERT THOM

r

~rojects.

Th e suggested monthly
themes, carefully researched, planned, and written to
give a varied program for the
rext year, are:
March, Kites - Spring.
. April, Our Latest States.
May, Genius Night.
JWte, Muscle Builders.
Jujy, Trails, Treks, Trips.
August, Water Fun.
September, . Doorways to
Adventure.
Oc tob e r , Di s cover
America.
November, The American
Indian.
December, Do Your Best.

·
Journey
Going Places.
• Blue and Gold •·
February,
Tradi lions
March Let's Go to a Cir-

cus

'

A'mong the special events
that may I&gt;! included 'm each
pack's program during the
coming year are safe bicycle

Carter ·lifts restrictions
on travel to four nations

-'-Ivmg
· , '"'ub Scout physical
..
f"l
ss • learn -to-s
I ne
. d wim
b
~rogram, a Cubmob1le er Y,
the pinewood or space derby,
service projects, and par~
tidpatl(ll in School Night lor
Cub Scouting, when ne_w Cub
.. a pa ckmthe
Sco_uts JOin
spnng or fall.

Playing o( tape being announced
The Personal Advocacy
Program will present a
playing of the cassette,
"More Alike than Differe~~t ,"
a bJ pe about sex and the
menblll retarded, on March
10 at 1 p.m. nt the Meigs

Community Mental Health
Center, 236 W. 2nd St.,
Pomeroy.
All advocates, friends ,
parents and other interested
persons are invited.

:.;.;;.;;:,;::...;,;:;~~~'11'11T11'1rrnn'TI!TirTTTT1rnTirnT'I'Tn'l'1rTITlmrTBTnTITTTIIT't'"l'l~ ·'

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Evangelist is

SENIOR GYMNASTS - Mary Blae\jnar, right, and
Becky Thomas, are the two senior athletes on the Meigs
High girls gymnastics team that will compete at the
district level Saturday in Athens. There are 12 girls on the
Meigs team.

coming for
•
two sessmns
·Evangelist Robert Thorn of
Louisville, Ky ., will be the
guesi speaker at the Chester
Church of God March 12 and
Services on Saturday will"
beat 1:30 p.m. and on Sunday
at 11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.
Pastor Rev. Mike Southard
invites the public.
Thorn was born Feb. 26,
1915 in Oudlsh\)(lrn, SA. He
went to work to help support a
widowed mother at the age of
14.1\1 a young age he became
addicted to alcohol but
through the obedience of Mrs.
Gladys Webster he was led to
the Lord.
Since receiving the call to
preach in 1951 he has traveled
all over the world. He is•
known for his prophetic
ministry. Many are saved,
healed, and filled with the ·
Holy Spirit at bis meetings.
He is the author of a best
seller, "The New Wine is
Better," with a new book now
on the market , "Making
Known His Deeds." He has
·appeared on the 700 Club on
numerous occasions.

Laurel Oi££
News Notes

VOL. XXVII NO ..229

the restrictions.
The United States has ho
diplomatic relations with the
four C(lmmunist countri es
and said such relations are ''a
doubtful prospect" at this
time , the President said. He
stressed the need for
''necessary precautions" by
U.S. travelers because they
have no protection from an
American Embassy.
Carter said the travel decision was in line with the
Helsinki accords, which call
for the right of free travel for
everyone. The President said

•

di ff e r e nc e

be tween

employment among yo Wtg
Americans by providing
rights ."
"soverign lega l" borders in about one million permanent
Carter also said a Midclle an
eventual
peace new jobs and another one
East peace settlement might settlement .
million summer jobs.
includ e " s ub s t a nti al
".Israeli defense lines may
Carter said he was very
withdraw! of Israeli control" exte nd
beyo nd
those co nc·er.ned abo ut "the
over Arab territories recOgnized borders/' Carter ext r aor din a r ily hi gh
captw-ed in the 1967 war. He said, mentioning such unemployment rate among
said a settlement might begin possibilities as mon itoring young peo ple," especially
"with minor adjustments of si tes and international zones those in minority groups,
the 1967 borders."
between the coWttries.
where he said the rate ran as
Carter said he will meet
Carter opened the news high as 40 per cent in some
with leaders of both sides conference by announc ing areas.
before May and that both the that he was sending Congress
He said he was proposing
Israelis and the Arabs must a $1.5 billion program ''a youth conservation corps' '
realize that th ere is a designed
to cut
un- to be administered by the
Departments of Agriculture
and Interior and " a
communi ty conservation
corps in our urban areas,"
with an emphasis on training.
Together with existing programs, he said his plan would
produce "about a million jobs
on a permanent basis plus
another million jobs during
''defens ible bor ders " and

•

at y

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

he wanted "to I&gt;! sure we
don't violate these travel

enttne

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 9, 1977

the summer."

The President said in response to another question
tllat he will stand by his
campaign pledge to withdraw
American ground troops
from
South
Korea ,
expr essing belief tha t a
period of fo ur to fiv e years "is
appropriate" for that· move.
Carter said the details of

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

.'Additional HUD grant lost
A letter from the Department of Housing and Urban
Development (!:IUD ) was
read to the Meigs CoUnty
Commissioners Tuesday
night infonning them that an

4
PuH Sleeve Top
$3.25
Gingham Jumper
$5.50

TANK TOP 13.50
BOXER SHORTS 12.59

Attendance at the Free
Methodist "Church March 6
was 99.
Mr. and Mrs . Joseph
Higgenbolhem, Columbus,
Mr. and f&gt;!rs. Jerry Whiblker,
Newark, visited recently with
Rev. and Mrs. Floyd S~ook .
Mrs. Pearl Jacobs is a
patient in Holzer Medical .
Center. Her room number is
335.
Mrs. Edna SChaefer and
Mrs. Fern Dora Story visited
recently with Mrs. Schaefer's
brother, Mr. Fritz Sblhl, New
Marshfield.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Wells,
Middleport, spent an evening
recently with Mr. and Mrs.
N. E. Schaefer.
Rev. Cecil Wise, Chester,
attended Sunday morning
service at the local church.
Mr. and Mrs. Lennie Lyons,
Rock Spriil'gs gave a surprise
birthday dinner Sunday for
Mr. Lyons' grandmother,
Mrs. Erma Fox. Those
present were Mr. and Mrs.
John Douglas, Mrs. Nancy
Howard, Tracy and Jason,
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Howell and
Jeff Howell, Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Walker; son Brian, Mr.
and Mrs. Mike Douglas.
Mr. Joe Guess, who is 86
years old, has ridden his bike
700 miles the last two years.
. Mrs. Erma Fox spent
Thursday with her daughter,
Mrs. Ruth Douglas, Guysville.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Bauer,
Marion, Mr. and Mrs. Ted
Mathew, Huron, spent
several days with Mr. and
Mrs. Dick Karr.
Mr; Joe Guess, .Thomas
Fork, visited recently with
Thomas Parker.

Cap Sleeve Top
$3.25
Calico Patches Print Plnb
$4.50

additional block grant
request for 1977 has been
denied.
The request was for water
and sewer line construction
where the multi -purpose

development of an access
road , Page Street reconstruction, and a plat map
update.
Commissioner Richard
Jones pointed ou~ that this
MlS an additional request lor
funds in the amount of
$500,000. The county received
funds in 1916 for the senior
citizens cen.ter (multi....
By Uolted Press lnteruaUonal
·· purpose building).
The commissioners showed
CAREY, OIDO - AN EXPLOSION OF 40,000 to 50,000
di
sappointment
with the
poWtds of dynamite rocked this northwestern Ohio community
decisioo
by
HUD
·and will
of 3,500 early today, shattering hundreds of windows and
confer
with
Congressman
leaving numerous families bomeless, Wyandot County sheriff
Clarence Miller on the
mark Kauble said .
·
matter.
"It's ll!ll8Zing, but there were no injuries, at least not as we
A resolution was inknow right now," said Kauble. Kauble said the explosion at the
National Lime and Stone Co. quarry near here was heard as troduced commending the
far as 611 miles away. The firm has been struck since Feb. 19
but authorities said they did not know whether the explosion
was connected with the labor dispute.

fNe';'~~":,,:,i~~B;~:t:~

·&lt;

WASHI~GTON -

REPUBUCANS WER,E dead set
$g~inst it and Democrats didn 't rehlly liKe It 'either, but
•
,President Carter's $iiO tax rebate passed the House by a
margin of more than two to one.
Carter's pl81) to give a government check to almost every
American in families making less than $30,000 was passed, 262 . By PETER P. SPUDICH
to 131, Tuesday, as part of a $12.7 billion package and sent to
WARRENSVILLE
,lbe Senate where it faces a ho-llurn·receptlon. But it's expected HEIGHTS, Ohio (UP! ) .- A
to pass there too possibly with some changes .
black gwunan, who had held
a police captain hostage for
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT CARTER HITS the road about 44 hours, surrendered
next week, visiting Massachusetts, West Virginia and New
as promised today after
.York Wednesday and Thursday to further gauge - and President Carter agreed to
\&gt;erbaps influence - public opinion .
speak to him. Carter
Carter will attend a town meeting at Qinton, Mass., March acknowledged he was setting
16 and stay the night at the home of a friend. He flies to a "dangerous precedent"
Cllarleston, W. Va., the next day for a two-hour White House- with the agreement.
sponsored panel on energy and goes from tllere to New York
President Carter said in his
City to address the United Nations and attend a reception in his
televised
news conference
..honor .
that he would talk to the
gunman, Corey Moore, 26,
CINCINNATI - PATRICIA J . SHONTZ is the first woman Warrensville Heights , if
ever nominated to sit on the Kroger Co.'s board of directors, Moore released Capt. Leo
offidals of the nation's third largest supermarket chain said Keglovic, 48, a diabetic.
Tuesday.
.
''The capblin came out witll
Mrs. Shontz, a professor of business administration at the the guns," said a police
University of Michigan, is on the boards of Detroit Edison, department spokesman. "He
Jacohsen Stores, Inc., Manufacturers National Corp., is in good health. Moore will
Manufacturers National Bank of Detroit and Warner Lambert be held in the city jail here.
Co. Kroger shareholders will vote on Mrs. Shontz' nomination There were no problems."
to tlle 15-memoor board at their April'!4 annual meeting.
Moore took Keglovic and a
high school coed hostage in
EUGENE, ORE. - STRETCH &amp; SEW, EUGENE-based · the police station here at 2
finn which sells knit fabrics, instruction books and patterns, p.m. Monday but released the
will beglh construction of a $1.75 million distribution center girl ll hours later in exnear Cincinnati, Ohio, next September, accorcllng to a change for a television set so
company officials.
.
he could watch media
F1oyd Skor, Stretch &amp; Sew vice president, said the coverage of is demands.
company will reblin Eugene as its headquarters and West
"The request was made to
Coast distribution center but decided to build the Cincinnati me to talk to Mr. Moore,"
center because most of the finn 's suppliers and customers are Carter said. "I replied that I
located in the East and Midwest.
would be glad to bllk to Mr.
Moore after the officer is
WASHINGTON -DISEASE AND ASTHMA will tonnent released.
tens of millions of Americans living in big cities unless
"I understand he would
industry is held to air quality standards, a physician with the release the officer after this
American Lung Association said Tuesday.
news conference and I hope
!.
br. Carl Shy, who works with the organization's office in be is released," said Carter.
, Washington, testified at a hearing by a House health
subcommittee looking Into possible a111endments to the aean
Air Act of 1970. He said exposure to air polluted beyond
lllandards puts a "considerable health burden" on people Bonds forfeited
:breathing with air.
.
.
Forfeiting bonds in the
Particularly among children m polluted areas, there is
court
of Pomeroy Mayor
'"significantly greater frequency of acute respiratory illness,"
Clarence
Andrews Tuesday
'Shy said. 1
night were James· Snyder,
, WASHINGTON- FORMER OIDO GOV. JOHN Gilligan Rutland, $350, posted for
was formally nominated by President Carter Tuesday as driving while intoxicated ;
administrator of the Agency for International Development. Mark Zielinski, Reedsville,
"Carter and Gilligan have known each other since days when $31, speeding, and Melvin
both were governors. Gilligan lost a bi&lt;j for reelection In 1974. Durst, Middleport, $50, InGllllgap, 55, Is a fonner Englls professor, Cincinnati city toxication. Don Bolin,
:coundlman and coogressman. Since he was governor. he has Pomeroy, was fined $50 and
.done government work in Nigeria, Belgium, West Gennany costs, on a charge of per-and France. He was a Woodrow Wilson Fellow at the mitting an unlicensed driver
to drive.
· Smithsonian ln!llitutlon in Washington.

••

Striped

Floral

Pui~IMr

Gypsy

$3.00

Blouse
$4.75

We've.corralled all the
newest styles in this special
fashion collectiO!I for kids!
Shorts, tops, sleeks and jeans
that coordinate to make this
the best Sprinc collection ever.

Zip Front

Pants
$5.75

Band Front

. Pants
$5.00

Jacquird Knit Crew

MEIGS THEATRE
aDSED FOR

li

Utile Shflpr
Knit Jumpsuit
$5.11

$175
· RompirS~

$2.00

' CoLUMBUS (UP!) - Two
resolutions honoring the Irish
man and woman of the year
"' ch01en by a local chamber
-Gf commerce were adopted
.-by the Ohio Senate Tuesday.
7' Both were sponaored by
1len- Harry Meshel of
~'Voungstown, who routinely
jokes about his Greek

MAIN STORE AND MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE
OPEN FRIDAY 9:30A.M. TO 8 P. OTHER WEEKDAYS 9:30 TO 5 P.M.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
t

~urk needed between the
Chester Fire Station and the
old county court house. The
commissioners agreed to
check the situation and make
repairs, weather permitting.
Commissioner Jim Roush
asked that Mrs. Naomi
Brinker, director of the
CETA program, attend the
next meeting of the commissioners so the program
can be discussed in detail.
, The commissioners in·spected the lire escape
recently constructed at the
jail and ga ve their approval
of the work. Attending were
Henry Wells, Jon es and
Roush.

..(

'"

heritage.
Sen. Robert O'Shaughnessy
of Colwnbus, who begins his
preparations to celebrate St.
Patrick's Day early in the
year, said after the voice vote
on Meshel's resolutions that
he wished he had included his
name as a co~ponsor .
I~

Gallian is

SPECIAL NOTICE
There will be a special
meeting f..- all coaehes and
representa tins of tea11111
intereot.ed In parUclpating
in the Ohio Valley Ind ~Jl•nd~nt Bueball
Lri'Ju~ tonight at Syracuse
City Hall. The meeHng will
begin at 7.

arrested in

more tickets
Additional tickets for ihe
district basketball tournament at Chillicothe on
Friday eveuing have heen
seciD'ed by Southern High
School.
Prlneipll James Adams
said lhat 200 additional
tickets wiD be obtained
tonight to go on sale, first

W. Virginia

POINT PLEASANT - A
Gallipolis man was arrested
here early today on two
charges, one being possession
of a controlled substance.
Police Chief Jim Gaskins
said arrested on Main Sl. at
come,
first
served,
approximately 3:37a.m., was
Thursday morning.
Glenn David Smith, 25, Rt. 2,
Persons planning on Gallipolis. He is scheduled to
attending Friday night be arraigned before a local
should make every effort to magistrate today on charges
secure advance tickets of possession of a controlled
since only between 200 and . substance and public in300 tickets will be sold at toxication .
the door Friday night,
Officers John Sallaz and
Adams said.
Ray Cox observed Smith in
what they charge was an
::: : ::;:~:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:; :;:;:;:;:; :;:;:; :;: ;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:; : ;. ;: ;. ; . ;
1
' intoxicated
condition .''
After arresting him for public
intoxication, they f~und a
quantity of marijuana on his
person.

Pennission
sotlght for

new facility
The Ohio Department of
Health advises that the
Arneritel Corporation, 1810
MacKenzie Drive, Columbus,
has filed an application for
the construction of a new 100l&gt;!d convalescent center in
Pllmeroy.
Colt of the project would
mnomt to $1,820,000 and the
areawide comprehensive
health planning agency inwived is the Ohio Valley
Health Services Foundation,
1 Blue Line Drive, P. 0. Box
146, Atllens, Ohio. The application must oo approved
by the Ohio Director of
Health.
Persons interested in the
JrOposed project are invited
to call or write the Ohio
Department of Health, 450
East Town St., Columbus, or
the comprehensive health
plmning agency.

LIFELINE
COLUMBUS (UPi) - The
House Utilities Conunittee
Tuesday
accepted
a
substitute bill establishing
"lifeline" utility rates for
elderly and disabled Ohioans
and assigned it to •
subcommittee chaired by
Rep . Irene Smart, DCanton .
·

'

Right to gripe
tsn 't gtven up ·

.

PETE SffiELDS

be given
. I

The Middleport Fire
Department answered five
calls Tuesday.
At 11 :30 a.m. , its E-R unit
went to the Route 1 bypass
near CR 5 where a car and a
bicycle had collided. No one
was hurt.
·
At 2:4li p.m. firemen went
to Storys Run to extinguish a
brush fire. At 5&gt;15 ,p.m., the
E-~ unit took Sarah McCarty,
Bryan Place, to Veterans
Memorial Hospibll and at
8;07 p.m., went to the LaSalle
Hotel where Deana James,
Racine , had fainted .
Emergency treatment was
provided on the scene.
At 10:09 p.m. the squad
went to 50 Riverview Place
for Nellie Eblin who was
taken to Hol~er Medical
Center.

·.

recogn1't'IOD
Pete Shields, Letart Falls,
will be one of three men to oo
honored at the awards dinner
Wednesday, March 9, at 6:30
p.m. at tlle Meigs Inn. Shields
will receive "Man of the Year
Award" for outstanding
agricultural leader .
Certliicates of appreciation
will be given to six persons.
Also to be honored with be
Charles Legar and Robert
Wingett.
Shields was
associated
with
the
Agricultural Stabilization
and Conservation office
many years.

Elderly man
hit in road

An elderly Logan. W. Va.
man
was injured in a traffic
·:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:·:·:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::·:·:·:·
accident at ll:30 a. m.
EXTENDED OIITLOOK
Tuesday on SR 7 at CR :i in
. Friday through Sunday, Meigs County.
a chance of showers on
According to the Gallia Friday and .Saturday, with Meigs Post State Highway
unseasonably
wann Patrol, 83-year old James A.
temperatures
Friday. Taylor, pushing a bicycle,
Turning cooler Saturday went into the path of a !"Jr
and Sunday, Highs will be driven by Merrill R. Alkin-In the 60s Friday and in the ,. oon, 11l, Logan. Atkinson's cae
upper 40s or the middle 50s
struck Taylor, then ran off
Saturday and Sunday. the road and overturned onto
Overnight lows wlll be in
its top.
the 40s arly Friday and in
Taylor was not injured.
the 30s early Saturday.
Atkinson was treated at the
:::::.:c:::::::;:::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::. scene by the Middleport
Volunteer Emergency Squad
for
minor injuries. No
t
OU dlarges were filed.

F':aremen go
fi call S
OD Ve

the troop removal would have
to be "work~ out carefully "
with the So uth Korea n
government, with Japan kept
fully
inform ed
of
developments.
He said the South Koreans
would nee d \0 build up
sufficie nt groWtd forces for
its own protection during the
period of th ~ witlldrawal, and
that he envisioned the United
States continuing to provide
air cover for the coun try .
"My commitment to with draw American gro und
troops from Korea has not
changed," the President said.
Carter was asked about a
task force on terrorism and
violence report to tlle Justice
Department las t week
indica ting there may be
resumptions
of
civil
distrubances in the United
States.
He said he is "oppposed to
mass arrests and I would be
opposed \O preventive
detention as a general policy
and even as a specific policy"
unless it is an extreme case .
Carter said he believed
"abuses of tlle past (by police
and government) in many
cases hav e exace rbat ed !!
civil tensions in the United
States.
'

Shields to

. . , . Adams getting

giVeS up

'Toddlers' Pant Sets
$7.25 ta,$1.21

late Virgil Roush for his
service to the coWtty and his
rommunily.
A letter was read from
Pomeroy attorney Frank W.
Porter, representing the
Meigs
County
Bar
Associati on, requesting a new
court room be established in
the court house to handle
cases from county court,
probate and the juv enile
section. Th e commiss ion
agreed to study the proposal
and discuss itfurther with the
Bar Association.
Meeting with th e commissi oners were Ross
Oeland and John Wickham of
Cllester in regard to repair

GlUlman , , , , , , , ,,,., , ,.,, ,.,, ,.,.,.,,.,., .,., ,,;:, , ,,,,.,

MEDAL FOR TISHLER
MIDDLETOWN, Conn.
(UP!) - Dr. Max Tishler of
Wesleyan University has
been named the 1977 recipient
ol the American Institute of
Chemists Gold Medal, one of
tlle highest honors of
chemical science.
Dr. Tishler has made
significant CGntrlbutions in
tlle fields of vitamins,
steroids, antibiotics and sulfa
druge.

-----

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter·
WASHINGTON (UPI) Presiden t Carter toda y
ordered all restrictions lifted
on travel by U.S. citizens to
Cuba, Vietnam, North Korea
and Cambodia as of March
16.
Carter told a televised news
conference that he has reen
"concerned about the
problem of American citizens
tr avelin g
to
forei gn
countries" and disclosed he
had ordered Secreblry of
State Cyrus Vance to remove

e

13.

VACAnON
WATaf FOR
OPENING DATE

f

Wehetos, and special park

Weather
Clear tonight, lows in the
mid 40s. Swmy, continued
warm Thursday, highs near
70.
Probability
of
. Jrecipilation near zero today
!l"ld tonight, 20 per cent
tomorrow.
TAKENTOVMH
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to Mulberry
Ave. at 4:33p.m. Tuesday for
Lydia Ebersbach who was
blkeh to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where she was
admitted.
NOWYOUKNOW
The H's in the 4-H Club
ltand for head, heart, health
and hands.

.

GliTHR.IE, Okla. (UPI) - pay raise.
Rep. Torn Steed, D.Okla .,
"It 's been a long time since
unhappy because the folks he's been back to the grassback home complained about roots level. I don't think he
the latest congressional pay really knows what 's going on
raise, recently cak:ulated his here," he said .
$13,000 raise cost the average · Mary Hopkins, 76, said, "l
blxpayer a nickel.
think it's a good thing for
"!carry a bunch of nickels people to get up and do these
in my pocket so I can pay off things."
anybody who bellyaches
"Maybe li they "do tllese
about how much they 're little things nose-to-nose we
paying me," said Steed.
will get to know our
Shoe salesl!lan John politicians better," she said.
McKean took Steed up on the uThey'll find out we are
offer and quickly gathered listening."
5to names on a petition
She said she resents candirequesting the nickel back. dstes thinking she is a "ni ce
Steed, who plaiiS to retire in old lady."
1979 after 30 years in
"Well, I'm not a nice old
Congress, sent a check for $26 lady. I don 't like to be patted
even though Guthrie is not on the hair or kissed on the
even in his district. But Steed head. Baloney to that. If
said protesters who accepted they 'd say, 'Listen, old gal, I
the money forfeited "their need your vote. Then I'd say
right to gripe. "
all right ,'" she said.
During the next week, those
who signed the petition can
.pick up their nickels at two
drugstores. However, they
also may sign a waiver , .
saying they are not giving up
their right to free speech for a
nickel and their nickels will
Fined in the court of
be retlll'ned to Steed, McKean Middleport Mayor Fred
said .
Hoffman were Nancy A. Roy,
McKean said he did not like 18, Racine , $15 and costs,
the tone of Steed's letter.
speeding : Celesta C. Bush,
"It was kind of like he was 29, Midclleport $15 and costs,
snubbing his nose at us,' ' speeding ; Wesley A. Barnett ,
McKean said. "I'm not going 19, Pomeroy, $15 and costs,
to lose my freedom of speech following too closely ; Curtis
for a nickel. ''
Riffie , 40, no address listed,
Some other residents $75 and costs, assault.
agreed.
Forfeiting bonds in the
"I don 't believe they're court were Rnbert Dugan , 40,
entitled to that raise. They're Rutland, $50, disorderl y
getting a cost-of-living raise manner ; Edgard G. Van
later this year anyway," Mater, 21, West Columbia,
Mark Ekiss; a pharmacist, $300,
driving
while
said. "I think it's a little bit intoxicated ; Thomas R.
ridiculous. My right to gripe Walters, 18, Midclleport, $50,
for a nickel -it's worth a lot reckless operation, and Don
more to me than a nickel. If Lovett, 53, Midclleport, $50,
he tllinks he can shut people disorderly manner.
up by giving people a nickel
he's crazy."
He said he believes at least
80 per cent of the public, at
least in Guthrie, opposed the

Several fined

m town court

He'd Jike to

rotate games

Sales off 33%
during January
COLUMBUS (UPI) Retail sales in Ohio for
January dropped 3:: per cent
from record setting sales the
previous month, or a 1 per
cent decrease after seasonal
adjustment, the Ohio Slate
University Center for
business Research said
Tuesday.
·
The center said the
decrease in sales was the first
adjusted seasonal decline
from December to January
since 1912 and the first
January decrease since 1910.
The severe winter weather
and the energy crisis caused
increases in such sectors as
food, automotive, heatingplumbing and electrical
supplies and durables such as
snow handling tools.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - State
Rep. James W. Rankin, DCincinnati, irked tllat the
state high school basketball
championship tournament is
always played in Columbus,
introduced ·legislation
requiring tllat all high school
tournaments . be rotated
among major cities.
"There's no useful purpose
In the basketball tournament
always being played in
Columbus," said Rankin,
pointing out that Cleveland,
Cincinnati, Dayton and
Toledo have arenas with
seating capacities exceeding
or equaling that of St. John
Arena at Ohio State
University.
Rankin's bill would require
that the tournaments be
played in a city no more often
tllan every 'five years. A
violation would require every
high school to secede from
the Ohio High School Athletic
Association.

..

''

'

l

�2-Tile Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March 9, W77
3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wt!dnesday, March ~.1977

Rhodes puts· industrial stimulation

Central State eliminated in NAJA meet

plans into General Assembly again
OOLUMBUS (UP! ) - Gov. advantages.
James Rhodes has sent back
The major bill submitted to
to the Ohio General Assembly the legislative leadership
grant
three of his pet plans to Tuesday · would
stimulate Industrial plant abatement of real estate,
modernization and inner city personal property and
redevelopment through tax corporate franchise taxes for
a specified number of year
incentives.
Similar legislation was of- for industries ooilding or
fered in the last session but expanding in areas of chronic
was not acted upon by un employment and
majority Democrats , who deterioration.
Qualifying firms would be
feared lost revenues would
entitled
to a five-year abateoutweigh the economic

ment of corporate franchise
taxes, up to 15 years' aball!·
ment of real estate taxes and
up to eight years' abatement
of personal property taxes.
The bill also would furnish
inner cities with a special
$100 school subsidy for every
new employe hired by
companies taking advantage
of the program.
in
an
Rhodes,
accompanying letter to
legislaitve leaders. described

sector."

"Many of Ohio's plants are
rapidly reaching a level of
obso le sce n ce
and
deterioration that threatens
jobs and the eco nomic
security of thousands of

Rhodes alao proposed bills
granting a three-year a:emption from the personal
property tax for new
machinery and equipment
purchased this year or later,
and a:panding the provisions
of the ''impacted cities" law
tQ include abatement of the
personal property tu in
inner city redevelopment.
"With this additional incen·

"Many of the most
seriously deteriorated plants

Governor admits WefJlth; no details
"I have worked for every- $144,300 in cash for a
. COLUMBUS (UPI )-Gov.
James A. Rhodes says he is a · thing I have ," said Rhodes. condominium in his wife's
wealthy man today because "In all·my public life no one name in July 1976. This is
he has worked hard for his has ever taken one dime from where Mrs. Rhodes is
money over the years but will the public till: We don't allow spending the winter.
not discuss the specifics of his our employes tO drink on the
The governor said there
wealth
"for
security job, steal from the public or must be some mistake on the
reasons," it was reported sleep around.
tax records (Scripps-Howard
"H I ever hear of anyone Newspapers obtained a
today.
Rhodes told Scripps- doing anything like this, they photo-&lt;:opy of the recorda)
Howard Newspapers hard . will be out."
because he only paid $127,000
The governor said he is for the unit.
work was the reason he could
afford Ill buy a plush ocean- entitled Ill his private life and
Rhodes said he borrowed
front condominium in Florida is not inclined to make his the money from Ohio
end to spend many cold fmancial holdings public .
National Bank in Columbus.
winter weekends in the · "There are a lot of nuts Rhodes put up other security
running around, kidnappers for the loan , so the
Sunshine State.
those types," said con domini urn · is
and
"If I told you how much
not
money I made in business you Rhodes. "U I would discuss mortgaged.
would fall right off your my personal holdings I would
Rhodes · said the $267,000
chair," Rh.odes said in a be inviting trouble. We don't market value placed on his
rambling interview in which need any of that."
condominium by tax officials
Other public figures in Ohio in Broward County, Fla., is
he also discussed his wife's
health and his Florida have v~luntari ly released not correct. He said he
condominium along personal financial doesn 't know what the
milllonaires row in Fort Lau- information including former market value is Ill day.
Gov. John J . Gilligan and · Rhodes also said he
derdale.
Rhodes said he made his U.S. Sens. John Glenn and received a $19,800 discount on
fortune as a private business- Howard Metzenbaum. Most the property - a sales
man between 1971 at the recently, President Jinuny discount promotion offered at
conclusion of his second term Carter made such a financial the time to .anyone who
and 1975 when he started his disclosure.
wanted to buy.
"Let me tell you that
third ~rm.
.
, "The ~esident has the
Durmg these years he was entire Army to protect him ,"
involved in such ventures as the governor replied.
Scripps-Howard
·banking, real estate development and parinerships with Newspapers reported last
·investments in motels, land m~nth that Florida tax
records show Rhodes paid ·
:and fast foods.
By DANIEL F. GILMORE
WASHINGTON (UP!) -

$127,000 Is really not a lot of
money Ill pay foc a Florida
condominium," the governor
said.
Rhodes said he purchased
the condominium for several
reasons. His wife, he said, is
suffering from a serious back
disorder and the Florida sun
is better for her than the cold
Ohio winter.
"I will be bringing Mrs.
Rhodes back to Columbus
also the doctors here can
check her over, " the
governor said. "I paid a lot of
money for nursing services
for Mrs. Rhodes in Florida.
She will be hospitalized soon
in Columbus."
The governor. said the
Florida condominium offers
"full security" for his family
and the property is a good
investment for his children
and grandchildren.
Rhodes said he is currently
making paymentS to Ohio
National Bank on his $127,000
loan.
"I just sent them a check
for $9,000," he said.

tive," the governor wrote,
mariy more Ohio cities will
utilize this law to attract
employers- into · blighted

areas."

:address local Legion
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. :Department (State) Com·mander Jack T. Gribben of
:the West Virginia American
:L!glm will be the guest
;speaker on Monday, March
-14, when the Smith.Capehart
:Post 140 celebrates its birth·
·day.
: A bmquet will be held at 6
:p.m . at the Legion Hall on
•Mill Street, New Haven.
: Jack T. Gtibben, raised and
:educated in Wheeling, has
-been a member of the
:Department of Public Safety
:for 21 years. In recent years
-he has serVed as his
:Department's Personnel
;Officer and Director of
·Training, and is now Com:manding Officer of the West
:Virginia State Police Turn·
·pike Division.
: Cmunander Gribben is a
· veteran of four years' service
: In the United States Navy
•during the Korean War. He
· attended the college of
:steubenville, Ohio ;
:' University of Virginia Traffic
&gt; Management School; · the
.; National Safety Council
:. Traff_lc Inventory School,

JACKT. GRIBBEN
Angola, Indiana; Police
Personnel Mana gement
School,. Police Supervisors
School,
and
Police
Management School, all at
Northwestern University;
New York University Center
lor Safety Education, and the
Unive rsity of Maryland
Management School.

The House As sassinations

Committee, with a new
chainnan in charge, moved
today Ill provide evidence to
Congress that ~ urther
investigations are warranted
into the murders of John
Kennedy and Martin Luther
King Jr.
Rep. Louis Stokes, D.Qhio,
52-year old Congressional
Black Caucus leader, was
named chairman Tuesday by
Speaker Thomas O'Neill
alter the House voted to
accept the resignation of
tempestuous Texas Democrat Henry Gonzalez. ~ _ ·
Stokes took over the
committee at the most
critical juncture of its stormy
five-month existence.
The panel will die at the end
of this month unless Stokes
can Improve its Image and
prove to a skeptical House the
investigation should continue
lor the next two years.
Gonzalez' resignation , followed by his bitter charges of
commmittee and House
leadership sabotage, spurred
the panel Monday Ill get its
affairs in order. But it left
until today 's meeting,
exj,ected to be conducted
almost entirely in private, the
two items most Important to
il• future:

More western water projects out
By ELMER W. LAMMI

WASHINGTON (UP! )
Another 19 water resource
projects - Including a half·
completed $2.7 billion powerhouse at the Grand Qlulee
Dam in Washingtnn-have
Dunked the administration's
initial
screening
for
continued construction.
A list obtained by UP!
Tuesday rated 45 western
projects either ''pass" or
''fail" with projects in 10
western states failing to meet
either environmental or
economic criteria.
The lisi apparently
represented a preliminary
screening of projects on
which President Carter may
. call for a construction halt, in

- Presentation of a budget
more palatable Ill Congress
than the $6.5 million a year
price tag first proposed.
Consideration
of
briefings and hearings on the
progress and ' sub6tance of
both investigations.
The latter item may prove
the more difficult since the
committee will have Ill
divulge to COngress what
leads it has uncovered so far
to refute earlier official
findings that James Earl Ray
acted alone in killing King at
Memphis, Tenn., in !968, and
that Lee Harvey Oswald had
no help in the murder of
Kennedy at Dallas, Tex .• in
1963.
Committee members have

Veteran• Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Eula Welker,
Pomeroy; Michael Stevens,
Middleport;
William
Williams, Pomeroy; Doris
Adams, Racine; Ethel Underwood, Syracuse; Lydla
Ebersbach, Pomeroy; Ray
Van Matre, West Columbia,
W. . va.; Jerry Owens,
Syracuse.
Discharged - Gladys
Burch, Dorothy Collins, Eric

Couple tries to
watch weight

..

"

self-addresse d, stamped
envelope. Be sure it is complete and clear enough to be
read. Others who want infonnalion on weight control
can send 50 t-ents for this
issue with a long, stamped,
self-addressed envelope for
mailing. Write to me in care
of this newspaper, P.O. Box
1551, Radio City Station, New
York, NY 10019.
You are wise to want to prevent obesity. To paraphrase
an old saying, "a pound of·
prevention is worth a p&lt;Jund
of cure." You will · be
healthier and live longer in
good health if you avoid
obesity.
I designed the weight losing
diet to be a balanced diet. It is
the skeleton fur any wellbalanced ·diet. If you can use
more calories and not gain fat
then you can simply add what
you like to the basic diet r&gt;lan,
Also I want to emphasize
the iJT}portancc of rcnwiniu ~;

active. As you get older there
is a tendency to do less
physically. Make physical activity part of your daily life. A
daily walk is great and helps
prevent obesity. A good "fat
prevention" program should
mclude lx!lh ' a sensible diet
plan and a sensible physical
activity plan.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Is it
necessary for a 58-year-old
woman

who

has

not

that if you have gone through
the menopause and have not
had a period for two years
you are most unlikely to have
a pregnancy . Some
authorities i;ay if a year has
passed that is sufficient. I
would recommend that a
woman ask her doc-tor about
her own status if there is any
doubt about whether she has
completed the menopauae
and she is less than 57 years
old.
·
Remember that birth control pills are just female hor·
mones and some doctors like
to have women continue some
of ' these tu prevent the
changes that O&lt;.'I.'Ur with the
menopause. So don't decide
on your own that you should
quit. Your doctor may have
you nn them for a ~·Mid
rcaSOJI, or may wish to switch
you to solne other mt!diGines
to help yuu if you nct!d hormnnc SUf.IJ.MWt dm·ing Uli~

menstruated for 11 years to
use protection during sex to
prevent pregllllncy'l Please
answer as this is very urgent.
DEAR READER - This
question keeps coming up. To
solve your inunediate problt:m the answer lor you is
NO.
Fur the rest uf wurnen with
the question of '" when can I
slur&gt; bil'th control r•ills' " ynu
should know then• IS 1~1
rtliaiJle record of any
prci-(JU:tncy in etny wormm
phHsc uf yuur life.
uhcr age 57.
In general , you cC~n '-!:,.:,Wuc

1.1

hinted for weeks of. "new
evidence" in both cases and
that two, three or more
witnesses are ready to
testify.
Walter Fauntroy, one of
lour blacks on the panel, said
last week . Ray had written
.from his Tennessee prlaon
cell saying "he is willing to
testify."
Ray is serving a 99-year
sentence received for
pleading guilty to the murder
lx!t is now trying Ill get a new
lrlal .
The committee was also
reported trying to evaluate a
mysterious note allegedly
written by Oswal\1 Ill the late
Ta:as multlmllllonalre H.L.
Hunt just before Kennedy
was killed.

HOSPITAL NEWS

Dr. Lamb

By Llowrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - My
husband and I are in our upper 60s and quite well. We
keep busy and thank our Lord
daily for our good health.
We watch our diets, as I qo
: have high cholesterol. Locki, ly !'Ire been kind of a health
: nut most of my life so I have
: been moderate in all things.
· I am writing you for The
: Health Letter number 4-7,
: Weight Losing Diet. We both
•love to eat and there is that
: problem of keeping our
. weight down so I though!
· maybe we could get a few
•suggestions that would help.
·: We are both the right
,. weight for our age and want
: to keep II that way.
; DEAR READER - Yes, I
• would be glad to send it to you
: but your letter did not have
; your address on it. I'd like to
-take this opportunity to tell
! all readers to be sure they
· have their address on their
: letter llll well as on a long,

WINS SCHOLARSHIP- Paul Cross, center , a freshnuln in the College of Agriculture,
Home Economics and Natural Resources at The Ohio State University majoring in
Agronomy, is the recipient of the Ohio State Undergraduate Scholarship in Agriculture for
1976-77. The Undergraduate Scholarship in Agriculture recipient is selected on the basis of i
indicated major area of st~cty, outstanding leadership ability and potential contriblition to
the field of Agronomy. Paul is shown here with Dr. Edward E. Darrow, Assistant Dean for
Student Affairs, left, and Dr. Roy M. Kollman , Dean of the College of Agriculture, Home
Economics and Natural Resources . Paul is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Cross ofRoute 2,
Racine , Ohio and a 1976graduate of Southern Local High School.
1

Stokes heads committee

:State commander to

Sports Writer
KANSAS CITY, Mo . I UP!)
- lllinois Wesleya n and
Texas Southern must have
!Jcen in attendance on tilt'
open it),~: day of the NAJA postsea~on
basketba ll
tournament Monday when
three seeded teams were
eliminated and two others
had to battle hack from big
deficits to remain alive.
It was obvious that
Wesleya n and Southern

reversed.''

Ohioans," he wrote.

!lone, Frieda Deeter, Lela
Forrest, Hurley Hutton,
Robert Ro111h, Doris Stevens,
Sara Congo, Pearle Sigman,
Hattie Barringer, Virginia
.Napper, Mark Hood
PleaBBnl Valley
Discharges
.James
Belcher, Gallipolis; Ralph
Kerwood, Gallipolis; Ernest
Quillen, Addison; Mrs. Keith
Krutter, daughter, Pomeroy;
Danielle Ireland, Gallipolis;
Patty Sue Barker, Glenwood;
Mrs. Wallace aurdette, Point
Pleasant; Herbert Raines,
Lakin; Mrs. Harley Marcum,
Leon; Evelyn Thle, Mason;
Jimmy Nlda, Point Plliasant;
James
Crump,
Point
Pleasant; Mrs . William
Newell, Southside; Mary
Gerlach, Point Pleasant;
Michael Roach, Mason;
Carroll Bates, Henderson;
David JohniOII, Gallipolis;
Gladys Thomas, Leon ;
Martha Oldaker, Robert·
sburg; Mrs. Rex Patterson,

ntE DALY SENTINEL

DEV&lt;m:DT0111E
INTERESI'OF

MEIGMIA80N ,4REA
CH&gt;li'I'ERI.. TANNEHIU.
EJ.M, Efl.

ROBERTHOFFUCH
CllyEtlllor

PuUIL!iht!ll daily t:lL'C!pt Sa1urdMy

Uy TI~t~ Ohiu V~tlley PublislliliK Comany, lll Cc!urt St., Plimrroy, Ohlu
45761. Bllllifle¥11 Offici! Plllllle 9922156. Editoritd Phvne992--2157.
'Second cw~·-~ ~tage pllid at
Pon~ruy , Ohio.
Niilkltw! adverlbin.c rcpre~~en­

U!Uvc W&amp;mJ • Grilfitb Culnp;my, Inc.. Boltirwm Wid Galll&amp;ghcr Dlv.,
757 TI1h'd Ave., New Yurk, N.V.
10017.

Su!J!••ripUon

rllt.t.' l:

Delivered by

whert' I!Valliible 7S C\.1lb ~r
Wl'l'k. Hy Mutur Route whun.• Cllrril!l'
wrvicu IMII HV¥ila ble, Oik' munlb ,
f:!.:!$. Ay lllHII 111 OIUn Cllld W. Va .,
t'lrtltr

U1w

V t'h l .

JI J .,.1,

Stl.OO: Six months,

Tlin•t• IIWIIIhl'l, $7.00:

J·.l:" 'l\111'1'!' ·~· IJI )'t'IH': ~ilt
~~- · : Ill : '1111'1'1' lllltlllh .~.

~.n l~ ~·~ ptu 11 ,

p·•· •'

I Ull t . ---llll !t '! •

30 minutes !Jcfore dep!lrting 1 Ccutral S~tt!) were dead
w1th 7:07 remaining and his and there was no need
Tttans holdinK their biggest digging the hole any deeper
round gamt&gt;s ·rur.,flay, ttlnl ]l'ad of Lht• game , 72-45.
for them. There was no way
lx!th teams showcased plenty
Tcli.i::IS Southern nm off to a lhev were going jo come back
of poise in easily disposing u£ 21J.jloint fir st half lead against from 20 points the way we
their opponents.
Central Stale and then were playing."
Second,.;eeded Wesleya n coasted home to victory as
In games on the day card,
sent St. Augustine's (N.C.) Alonzo Bradley scored 21 ninth-seeded Clarion State
home by an 67-97 score and points
and
Lawrence IPa .) beat Augsburg (Minn. I
fifth-seeded Southern did the Williams 20.
UU-84 in overtime behind
same to Central State !Ohio J.
"We did what we needed to Reggie Wells ' 30 poi nts;
89-95.
do in the first half ," said
Wesleyan got 31 points Texas Southern coach Robert
from All -America center Moreland. "At the half, they

IJPI

are located in Ohio's cities,"
the
gov~rnor
said.
" Deterioration of these
plants has resulted in lost
jobs and production and
declining tax resources for
our cities. This trend must be

the state's tangible personal
ta x
as
property
"counterproductive to the expansion of Ohio's industrial

learned . somet hin g
somewhere when they took
the r&lt;~ urt for their openin~

Ry RICK GOSSELIN

lliUIIth.~
17 3(J

uu ·lmhos S' II HIII}

,

•
I

Budget ,
who · Interior Department, the .
addition Ill the 19 already and
acknowledged
the
list
but Office of Management and
slated to be dropped .
White House officials called it "a prelimi nary Budget, the Counc il on
Environmental Quality, the
queried by members of workitlg paper."
Tennessee
Valley Authority,
An
Interior
Department
Congress from affected
the
Army
Corps
of Engineers
staii!S at first denied the spokesman said the list was
the
Agriculture
merely the first step in a and
existence Of such a list.
Department.
"three-tier
review"
process
But Sen. Henry Jackson , 0Jackson said Lance also
a
panel
with
Wash., said he received a call by
assured
him there was no
representatives
of
the
.
from Bert Lance, director of
intent
tQ stop work on a third
the Office of Management
powerhouse a t Grand
Co ule ~-a project marked

Minister sentenced for
heating his daughter
MADISONVIUE, Tenn.
(UP!) - A fundamentalist
minister was sentenced to six
months in jail Tuesday after
admitting he beat his 17-yearold daughter and chained her
to the floor of their home
because she -wore jeans to
school.
"I guess I was too severe,"
the Rev. Charles Powell told
the judge before sentencing.
"But I thought I was .doing
what was right."
Powell, minister of a rural
Holiness Church in Monroe,
was found guilty of malicious
injury Ill children, a misdemeanor, by Judge J .P.
Kennedy .
Powell acted as his own
attnrney. quoting the Bible Ill
justify his treatment of his
daughter , Karen.
Both Karen and her sister
were ordered removed from
the couple's custody. The testimony, Fisher said, showed
that alter Karen was brought
home, Mrs. Powell held the
girl while Powell removed
her pants and began beating

E·R CALLED
The Racine ER Squad was
called Monday at 8:30 a.m.
for Jack CorneD, RD, Port·
land and at 11 :25 a.m. for
Denzil Boggess, RD , Racine.
Both were taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Tuesday at 10 a.m. they
removed Freda Deeter,
Racine, from Vetera ns
Memorial l:lospltal to her
home.
son, Point Pleasant ; and Mrs.
Paul McKinney, daughter,
West Columbia.
Birth - A daughter to Mr.
and' Mrs. Phillip Weaver,
Syracuse, 0.
Holzer Medleal Center
(Discbarges, March 8)
Ethel 0. Angel, Tammi L.
Angel, Harold D. Arthur,
Pearl M. Atwood , Evelyn D.
Austin, Rena E. Davis, Kevin
R Farrar, Jane Flck, Cecil
Hall, Louella H. Hearon ,
Robert F. Holloway, Ruth E.
Irons, Brenda K. !son,
Clarence H. Jones , Mrs.
James Littlejohn and
daughter, Alma L. Me·
Qlrmick, James W. Mont"'mery, Frana E: Orender,
Mrs . Richard Plymale and
:r&gt;p, James V. Reynolds ,
Anna G. Sayre, Sondra
Sleward, Corbett T. Stull,
Eulah G. Swindler , Mrs.
David Thompson and
daughter, Mrs: .David
Triplett and son, Fred 0.
White.
(Birtlis, March 8)
Mr. and Mrs. Allred
.iol!nlon, daughter, Wellston;
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Gill, son,
Wellston; Mr. and Mrs. John
C. Wiseman II, on, Point
Pleasant, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs.
Thomas Meade,
daughter, Vinton.

I

her with a three-foot hickory
stick as hard as he could.
"He wore out three or four
sticks according to his wife,"
Fisher said. "The girl said
pain overtook her alter about
12 blows. Her sister said there
were in excess of 50 blows and
his wife said there were 5(1 or
75 blows."
The testimony showed
Powell, apparently fearing
his daughter would try Ill run
away , then took a 22-loot
chain, locked it to the girl 's
ankle and fastened it to a hole
bored through the living room
floor.
Karen scribbled a note
which was taken to a
schoolmate by her l!i-year old sister the following day.
The schoolmate gave the note
to a teacher and juvenile
authorities were notified .
Authorities went to the home
and found the girl still
chained to the floor , though
Powell and his wife tried to
hide her witlJ a quilt, Fisher

&amp;aid.

"fail" on the list.

More than $1 billion has
already been spent on the
proj ect. If completed, it
would produce an additional 7
million kilowatts and once
again make Grand Coulee the
world's biggest hydroelectric
power project.
·
Jackson was "shocked" by
the
implica tion
the
administration might seek a
halt to the project in his home
state and to a second $56
million Washington project to
supply irrigation water for
500,000 acres of now arid
land.
Interior Secretary Cecil D.
Andrus later released a list of
criteria to be used in
reviewing all federal. water
pro jects
for
which
co nstruction funds were
requested for the 1978 fiscal
year beginning Oct. L
The three basic criteriaenvironmental impact, the
costto-benelil ratio and
safety questions-were the
same as those ailed on the
"pass-fail " list of projects.
Andrus said projects failing
the initial screening criteria
would be subjected to further
study, while those that
satisfied all three initial
criteria would be "exempted
from further evaluation."

NEW. YORK (UP!) - The New York Knicks reveal the
identity of their new c~J&lt;~ch today and for one or two of you out
there who still haven't been taken into their confidence, his
name is - big surprise - Willis Reed. 1
There never really was anybody else in the picture although
from time to time you may have heard some names like Bill
Bradley, John Havlicek and AI McGuire. Those names were all
so much smokescreen.
The three-year contract the Knicks are giving Reed calls for
$375,000: or $125,000 a year , representing a $50,00tkl-year,cut
!tom what he got when he played for them and removing any
doubt whom corporate management sees as a more valuable
commodity, the player or the coach.
· Willis Reed has no professional coaching experience whatsoever. That doesn't matter much because everybody is
confident he's going Ill do a line job. Red Holzman, the Knic)ls'
present coach, Mike Burke, the team's president, and the
people at Gull and Western Industries all are sure' that the 34"
year-old Reed has all the leadership qualities and basketball
knowledge necessary, so that makes it unanimous.
"I couldn't possibly think of a better man," says Holzman
putting in his final season as coach of the Knicks. "I think he 'll
make a terrific coach."
Burke says:
.
. .
"Eddie Donovan (Knicks' general manager) and I constd·
ered all the possible candidates to coach the warn and ho~estly
speaking, we felt Willis was the best man. We_feel lie has
everything to help restore the team to a postlton II once
enjoyed the charisma, the know-how and the conftdence of the
players because of their belief In his leadership ability,''
What has Gulf and Western got Ill do with Willis Reed? Only
this : It owns 39 per cent of the stock in Madison Square Garden
Corporation, making it the principal shareholder in the
Garden which owns the Knicks. Moreover, tt IS seeking to buy
all the 'outstsnding shares in the Garden it can. Gulf and
Western which owns Paramount .Pictures also, has no
aversio~ at all to charismatic figures like Willis Reed . In fact,
being highly Image conscious, it welcomes a Willis Reed, still
the strongest link with Knicks' fans to the mo a~d 1973 seasons
when the team won its only NBA champiOnships . Reed was
MVP in the playoffs both those seasons, makin~ him the only
~ime winner ever.
·
Reed came Ill the Knicks as a somewhat shy 22-year-old
country boy from Bernice, La., in 1964 and left them a lremendously popular big city sophisticate three years ago when
continuous knee trouble made hlm quit at 32. There have been
no financial problems lor him because he never went ~t and
bought any RolJs..Royces or fancy six-figure ~orne~ durmg hts
hey-day oot one thing has been nagging at him smce he qwt
playing and that was ~estlessness.
.
One of the riddles lew professional athletes can ever explam
· is how utterly.bored and tired they can grow of the sport they
happen tn be making their living in, but how a~XIous they
usually are to get back in it soon after they get out.
There's another aspect and It has to do with that old saying,
out o1 sight, out of mind. Some of yesterday 's stars are aston·
ishedand deeply wounded at how quickly they are forgotten or
how some of the kida of today's generation do not even
recognize their nameS.
Here in New York, Reed's name remains familiar because
he hasn't been away that long. For 10 years as a player, he
gave all of himself t,lult he had and nobody in Knicks' histor:y
ever· was more popular. Reed received practically ~ htS
professional experience under Holzman, so as a coach himself
he undoubtedly will apply much of what he has learned under
Holzman, still regarded..one of the finest coaches in basketb~ll.
Only a short time back, Willis Reed was offered a coaching
job with the Buffalo Braves. He said he'd think it over. When
the opportunity Ill coach the Knicks came along, though , he
didn't need a whole lot of time to think about it. Once you've
been away, there's nothing like coming back home again.

Army promises ·
to protect public
By ROBERT KAYLOR
WASHINGTON (UP! )- If
the Army does any more open
air testing of potential germ
warfare weapons it will make
sure the public is protected,
according to Pentagon
officials.
The p&lt;JSSibility of future
tests, despite new disclosures
that potentially lethal
organisms were tested in the
open air before the biological
warfare program ended in
1969, arose during a Senate
health subcommittee hearing
Tuesday .
" If we are going to do any
more open air biological
testing on a military
installation we will be sure
the public is safe," said
assistant Army secretary
Edward Miller.
Miller testified as the Army
released a detailed study of
·its biological warfare
program which disclosed for
the first time that 48 teats of
"pathogens," substances
harmful to man and in some
cases potentially fatal, were
conducted in the 1950's and
1960's, mostly in the open air.
The study also :
- Reviewed previously
disclosed
tests
using
1

'sim ulan ts, ''

bacteria

believed harmless but that'
have recently been criticized
as (&gt;088ibly causing infection,
in public places such as New
York
subways
and
Washington's National
Airport to determine
vulnerability to attack. ·
- Disclose~ that 504
workers · were accidentally
~i

infected by pathogens and
that three.at Ft. Detrick, Md ,
including a ·construction
worker who was not directly
connected with the program,
died.
- Said Defense Secretary
Harold Brown was involved
in "large increases in U.S.
Army biological warfare
programs" while serving as
the Pentagon's research and
engineering director in 1961.
It said Brown felt biological
weapons
had
"great
potential."
Richard Nixon ordered biological agent stockPiles destroyed and the program
ended in November, 1969, but
research on , dafenslve
measures continues.
Miller mentioned• these
briefly in his testimony,
!!"Ying the only test which he
Knows of for the future
involves a "detection and
alarm system." He gave no
further detalls.
The Army study said tests
invoiving human volunteers
started in 1965 on prii!Qners
from the Ohio and t.tarrland
state penitentla~ies,
conducted by Ohio State
University and the University
of Maryland, a~d on
volunteers from the seventh
Day Adventist church.
Among agenta t.estell in the
open air oc on hiiiiWill were
such potentially fatal ones as
r abblt fever, Rift Valley
fever, Rocky Mountain
spotted fever and Q lever, a
cattle dlaease that can strike
humans.

All GAMES

TEAM
W L P OP
x-Wheelersburg

Friday's games :
Gallipolis vs . lron1on, 7 p.m.
at OU
Wash ington
CH
vs .
Nelsonville -York , 9 p.m . at

.
2 1319 11 01 ou.
4 1425 1270
4 1272 1028 NEW SUPER
4 1596 1165
COLUMBUS (UP!} - R.
4 1236 1017
5 1~5 1260 Hal Nichols , 34, Sharon
5 1241 1134 Center, has been named state
1 1122 1042 bankil(g superintendent
8 1245 1199 effective April 3.
10 1276 1229
Nichols will succeed F.
10 1251 1251
O'Donnell
who
13 1082 1284 Scott
6 14 1176 1225 resigned.
3 16 993 1233
Gov. James Rhodes
3 16 1165 1508

18
Wash. CH
17
Ironton
17
x· Logan
16
x-Ches .
16
Pt. Pleasant 16
• Nei.-York
13
Galllpotls
13
x,Ports.
11
x-Waverly 10
x·Melgs
9
x-.Jackson
6

s-South Point
x-Athens
x-Wellston
x . Canpteted season .
·
TutSdav's results:
. Pl. Pleasant SO Parkersburg
South 47 (T)

ol ~vP&lt;i

inc;t

Girls and boys
tourney scores

Bearcats ready
for Marquette

lx!rg , at Parkersburg .

Cage standings .

Ja ck Sikm :-~ . whn

Tuesday named Gene A.
McMahon, 30, Columbus,
interim superintendent of
banks until Nichols assumes
Wilming ton ~ Wash ington
his new duties.
CH 54 (makeup!
McMahon has been deputy
Thursday's game:
Pl. Pleasant vs. Parkers- superintendent of banks.

By RICK vAN SANT
·
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
"Big 0" is gone his mission
not quite acco~plished, so
now for the University of
Cincinnati basketball team
it's up to the "Big G."
The Big G is Gale Catlett,
the country-&lt;:hic coach of the
Bearcats who open NCAA
tournament play · Saturday
against Marquette.
The Big o, of course, was
Oscar Robertson, the player
wbo did everything for the
Bearcats a couple of decades
ago - except lead them to the
national title.
Oscar, a one-man scoring
machine, pumped in 50 or
more points in six games
while making All-America in
195!1, '59 ai\d '60. But it was
not until Oscar had departed
that a more team-oriented
Cilley club won the NCAA in
1961 and '62.
Fifteen years have slipped
by since Cincinnati was king,
but tfianks tQ five years of

carefully l!lid groundwork by
Catlett, the Bearcats this
year
are
legitimate
challengers for the NCAA
crown.
The combination of
Catlett's recruiting-&lt;:oaching
skills, hi s fascinating
"country boy comes to the big
city" imag e :v&gt;d his
sometimes controversial gift
of gab ofll!n leaves tlJe coach
overshadowing the team.
But the fact is, Catlett's
teams have been getting
better and betier ev~ry year .
The 36-year old native of tiny
Hedgesville, W.Va ., opened
his first year of head
coaching here in 1972-73 witlJ
a 17-9 record . Improving
slightly to 19-3 the next year,
the upward swing continued
with 2Uand 25-9 seasons and
his current club carries a
glistening 25-4 mark into
tourney play.
With experis fi guring the
NCAA is wide open this year ,
Catlett's finest-ever team is

rated a good cha nce of
making the finals in .Atlanta
come March 2&amp;-28.
Catlett's crew gets its
punch from tall (6-4) guards
Steve Collie r and Gary
Yoder. The tw? penetrate
well, and Yoder IS especially
aggressive.
The big man is 6-10
southpaw Bob Miller and the
forward s
are
cool,
calculating Mike Jones and
hotshot, fir eball Brian
Williams. Jones is a steady
performer, but Williams hits
in streaks.
The Bearcats' will get a
tough tnurney test right at the
start in Saturday afternoon's
rematch with AI McGuire's
Marquette W~rriors at
Omaha, Neb.
Marquette lost a 63-62
squeaker in Cincinnati a
month ago and the Warriors
might have extra incentive
Saturday because the tourney
is tbe retiring McGuire's last
shut at an NCAA title.

I~rry McGhee scored 16
points to help 13tbseeded
'East . Texas state bounce
Briar Cliff (Iowa , 70-59; and
Dave Oliver also sco red 16
points t o direct Central
Washington Stllte to an easy
72-56 win over Keene College
!N.H.).
in ni ght games, Alcorn
State (Miss. J placed four
players in double figures

Girls

(At Cincinnat i)
Cin Ta lt 67 We stern Hills 64
Cin E lder 66 Cin Moeller 60

Ohio High School

Basketball

United Press International

loti

Tu esday 's Tournam ent
Re su Its

Class AA
(A t Sa lem)
Young s Rayen 92
Pal estine 77

Class AAA
!AI North Ridgeville)

Wes tlake 57 Fa ir view 31

(At Hubbard )

Poland 65 Youngstoom S 41
War ren W Rsv 49 Austin town
Fi t ch, 44

(At Bellefontaine I

Rus sia 51 Botk ins 28

Anna 47 Sidney Lehman 35

I At

Perry I

Jackson 54 N Can ton Hoover
36
Can ton
M cK in l ey
46
fv'oassil l on 40
Glen
fv'oarling t on 46

·

Can ton

Oak

68

(At Ath ens I

l.Dncaster 88 Miami Tr ace 23
Por tsmouth 55 Athens 3
Cht llico the 66 Marie1ta 27

lARGE
FRANKS

(AtTroyt

Springfi eld Cath 40 Be lle.
fonta ine 38
Spring f ld
Shawnee
45
Spri ngfi el d NW 42

F ENCH CITY

~ Rides on a cushion of
• air for effortless mobil ity

lo Full-Time edge-cleaning
All arou nd
furniture
guard

Class A

Columbiana 57 Windom 55
/1/'ogad ore 68 M c Donald 55

(At Marion I

Highl and 77 Cardin g t on 51
Ri dgeda le 72 Jonathan Alder
64

(At Chillicothe)

IAI Daylonl

Fa ir mont W 69 Fairview 25
Dayton Alter 59 Dayton Roth
41
Carroll 50 West Carrollton 37

tAt Findlay I

Ti ff i n Columbian 40 Fremont
Ross 31

Lucasvi ll e Valle y 78 Ea~1ern

Pike 66

(At Oily ton)

Middletown

Fenwick

Sou lheastern 55
Franklin Monroe 56
sailles 54
Covi rg1 on 57 Ripley 'R

70

Ver -

Findla y 50 Wapakoneta 35
Class AA
(At Bucyrus)
Upper Sandusky 6.1 Bucyrus

34

Regul ar Season
Re su It s

O!kwood 90 Ti pp City 76
Piqua 65 Sidney ·so
Daylon Chr ist 79 Worlhington
Chri st 58

Willard 23 Mohawk 22
(At Ironton)

Soo th Poin t 67 Chesapeake 51
(At Millersport)

Southern
takes
on
.Shade
.
tonight in tourney final
scoring, especially in the first
quarter
whi ch ended
~'luthern 16-15. Southern was
then able to p)l)l away and
. maintained a slight edge for
the rest of the game.
High scorer for Southern
was Richard Wolfe with 15
while Tim Perry for Waterloo
had a game high 19 points.
Other Southern,scorers were
K. Wolfe 9, Rees 10,
Rosebercy 2, Chapman 10,
Ash 6, Brown 2, and Pape 6.
Other Waterloo scorers were
George Jolley 14, Greg Jolley
2, Rice 2, and Riley 11 .
By Quarters
Southern
16 32 43 6(J
Waterloo
15 2!i 3ll 46

RACINE - The matchup
High scorers for Shade
for tonight's final game in the were Wayne Cremeans and
Southern DistriCt Seventh Jay.Moore with 12 each while
G r a d e B a s k e t b a 11 Mike Barnhart had 16 points
Tournament at the junior for Federal Hocking . 'Other
high here has Southern going Shade scorers ~ere Thompagainst Shade at 7 p.m. for son 7, Skinner 3, and Lee 9.
first place and Eastern Federal-Hockin g scorers
playing Waterloo for third · were Adams 5, Green 2, Gloss
place in a preliminary game 11 and Russell 2.
to begin at 5:30p.m.
BY QUARTERS
In the first game last Shade
13 27 37 43
Thursday night Southern Fed. Hock .
7 18 24 36
handily defeated Eastern !illFriday night, in Game
35. Southern jumped out to a Three , Ea stern gained a
21-7 first quarter lead and chance for the third place
Eastern just could not catch trophy by defeating Federalup.
Hocking 42-36. This game was
High scorer for Southern very close most of the way .
was Richard Wolfe with 17 The score was lied up 12-12 at
points and John Riebel was the end o( the first quarter
_high for · Eastern with 14. and at half tiine FederatThe Eastern Seventh Grade
Other Southern scorers were Hocking led 21-20, The third oosketball team coached by
K. Wolfe 13, Rees 6, quarter score was Federal- Joe Mitchem on tlie evening
Roseberry 4, Chapman 8, Ash Hocking 27-24.
d March 3 pla yed Racine,
I, Brown 4 and Pope 5.
But in the fourtlJ , Bissell losing 57·35. John Riebel had
Other scorers for Eastern had 6 points, Riebel 4 and 14 points,and 16 rebounds for
were Cole 8, Riffle 4, Bissell 2, Spurlock 4 to put the Eagles U1e loser s. By quarters,
Massie I, Spurlock 4 and R. on top .
Eastern was 7-13- 21 -35 .
Smith 2.
High scorer for Eastern Racine was 21-3&amp;46-li7.
Score by quarters :
was Greg Cole with 14. Other
By losin g that game,
Southern
21 32 46 58 scorers were Riebel 8, Bissell EaStern next took·on Federal
Eastern
7 13 21 35 12, Massar 2, and Spurlock 5. Hocking on March 4, whom
Game Two was more Federal·Hocking scorers then .defeated, 41-35. Greg
exciting as Shade beat were Adams 10, White 2, Cole was high with 14 points,
Federal-Hocking 43-36. Tilt' Harnhart 9, Green I, Glass 9, Mike Bissell had 12 and
game was closer 11\an the Kennedy 2 and Powell 2.
,;:•bel got 10 rebounds.
score shows as FederalBY QUARTERS
' By quarters, Eastern was
Hocking was down by only 3 East.
12 20 24 41 12-20-24-41, • and Federal
points with about one "minute F.H.
12 21 'll 35 Hocking 12·21-27 -35. Winning
to go.
.
In the second game this game, Eastern was to
Shade had gotten off to an Southern defeated Waterloo return to Racine to play
early lead and Federal- 60-46 to reach the finals Waterloo this evenin~ at 5:30 '
Hocking could not make up against Shade. Southern had p.m., in the prelimmary to
the difference.
a cold ni~ht and had trouble the championship contest.

Lancaster Fisher 65 A m anda

Clearcreek 37

!At Lake)

Magodore
Wa ynedale 36

45

F iel d

Fairless 43 Akron South 20

tl).t Piketon )

Waverly 84 Washing ton CH 26

(At Urbana)

Clark Northwes tern 48 Milt on
Union 42
Graham

55

Springfie l d

Sha wnee 42
(At Lima)

Van Werl 63 Lima Catholi c 37
Col dwater 39 Lima S h awn~
16

"

(AI Canfield)

Youngs Ray en 36 Ma thews 28
Cam pbell 7l Ja ckson Milton
Class A

(AI Millersport!
Mller sport 61 Libe rt y Union

4S

(At Ontario)
Plymouth 39 Col Crawford 18
(At Bluffton I

Ada 51 Hard in Northern 27

(At Parkway

New Bremen 25 Marion Local
12
•
Min ster .48 P arkway 37
(At Racine)

Sou ther n 47 Federal Hock ing

"11
Regular Sea son
Results

Dayton Wa yne 50 Dayton
Stebbi ns 27
Trot woo d - M adison
42
Fairborn Baker 44
Sictley 46 Piqua 41
Oakhill 43 Taylor 40

Spr ingfi eld Loca l 36 Lowellvi lie 25
Boys

Ohio High School .
Basketball
United Press International
Tuesday's 1ournament

Results
Class AAA
(At Canlonl

Can tom Ti mken 72 All iance
55

(AtOxlor&lt;ll

Mlddl etown 49 ~in Sycamore
~

Leba non
60
.Ta lawanda 36

Ox I ord

..... ........

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··•••
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2 Lb.

East

Youngs East 57 Waterloo 55
( At Delaware)
Col Mifflin 53 Ci r clevil le 42

·····:
..... .......
..

FRENCH CITY

topped by Alfredo Monroe 's
17 to rip Mount Marty (S.D.) ,
00-54 ; Emporia Stllte IKan.)
upset fourth -see ded
Fairmont College 1W.Va.) 7671 on the s1rength of 21 second
hal! points from the free
throw line ; and Henderson
College (Ark .) tripped TriState (Ind .), 64-54 .
In the ma jor match-ups of
today's sel'Ond round, topseeded Newberry meets
Central Washington Stllte,
Dlinois Wesleyan takes on
15tlJ-seeded Hawaii-Hilo, and
Texas SoutlJern plays 12th·
seeded Wisconsin-Parkside ,
the only team to score 100
points in a game thus far .

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•
• - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wedoosday , March 9, 1977

Reed named Knidks coach

Miller expects OSU to 'bounce back'
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer ·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)The fall from the top was a
swift one for Ollio State
basketball Coach Eldon
Miller.
·
Miller guided . Western
Michigan to the MidAmerican Conference
championship and a 25-3
record just a year ago, then
left to- ~e over the faltering
program Bt hio State.
He knew it wasn't _going to
be changed overnight and;'"although the 1976-77 Buckeyes
won a couple more garries,
they still finlshed in the Big
Ten basement with a 4-14
conference record and 9-18
overall.
"The great joy for an
athlete is winning ," the
native of Gnadenhutten ,
Ohio, told the annual ·
appreciation banquet
Tuesday night , "and that's
what we want to put our mind
to.
.
. "! feel good about the
people in the progr8111 now,"
Miller said. "We've got to get
them a little help through our
recruiting. The distance
between where we finished
and the top is not that great.

With the kind of support this
university has, we can't
miss."

Miller, admitted there were
many hard lilnes the past
season.
" It wasn't all ·fun this
year," he safd. "They (the
players) had to be to~. had
to be mature. It's a credit to
the type of people recruited
here by coach (Fred )
Taylor ...quality people."
Although Miller said he
didn't want to talk about the

'

-,,

..

Turner seeks injunction

to lift year's suspension .

By KEN ROSENBERG
UPI Sports Writer
People who work for
Commissioner Bowie Kuhn
used to think they worked in
baseball. Now they're not so
sw-e. Sometimes they think
they work in a law office.
That's because Kuhn has
spent much of his time the
last year involved in lawsuits.
The latest · to bring suit
March ll and 12.
Others placing were against Kuhn, not too
Duane 's brother, Kevin, surprisingly, is Ted Turner,
second in the 132 lb. class; owner of the Atlanta Braves.
Carl Gheen, third in the 126 On Tuesday, Turner sought
lb. class, and Ro~ert an injunction from U.S.
Nakamoto, third in the 167lb. District Couurt Judge Newell
class, and Gary Priddy, Edenfield to lift a .one-year
suspertsion m PtPrl nnt tn l,im
fourth in the 138 lb. class.
In a field of II teams of
southeastern Ohio Class AA .
high schools fielding wrestling teams, Meigs finished
fifth with 95 points behind
Belpre
with
177'h,
C~esapeake 148, Warre n
lAlcal 138'1'z and Ironton 109.
Others in the meet and in the By t:HRIS St;HERF
orderoffinishwereFairland; ' UPI Sports Wri!er
Nelsonville-York, Hillsboro,
The Denver · Nuggets
Sheridan, McClain and South discovered Tuesday night a
Point.
half for David Thompson is
ln1lvl1ual Results
enough to get the job done.
98 lbs. - Forfeit.
Thompson scored only four
105 lbs. - Eblin, Meigs, points on a 2-for-10 shooting
pinned
Butcher,
SP ; performance in the first hall
decisioned Trefy, H., 6-U; lost against the New York Knicks,
to Adams, B, 6-5 and lost to but he made up for any
Joseph, !, S-2 in overtime.
mconvenience caused his
112 lbs. · - Humphreys, teammates by sinking II of 13
Meigs, lost by pin to Carney , field goal attempts in the
S.
second half.
119lbs. - Forfeit.
Thompson's 30-point
126 lbs. - Gheen, Meigs, performance ga ve the
decisioned Myers Me, 4-2; Nuggets a 114-103 victory
lost to Randolph, 8, 7--5 ; over the Knicks, whohad held
decisioried Sheets, Nel-Y 5-2; ., a 24iJomt lead early m the
pinned Webb, F.
,
second quarter.
132lbs. - K. McLaughlin,
Thompson's scoring was
Meigs, piruled Lester, C; especially Import a nt
pinned Mender, N; lost to Tuesday mght because
Moreland B. by default Denver center Dan Issei was
(injury). '
sidelined with a pulled groin
138 lbs. - Priddy, Meigs, muscle.
•
lost to Place, W, IZ-2; pinned
"When Dan'snot her.e !feel
MiUer, S; pinnedHall,H ; lost I have m~;e of a burden
to Alexander Me.
offensively, Thompson said.
145 lbs. - D. McLaughlin,
Marvin Webster finished
Meigs, pinned Marks, W.; with 15 points and 17
decisioned Wickham C 3-3 · rebounds, while Bobby Jones
decisioned McMillian 14-0'. had 14 points and eight
155 lbs. - Warner, Meigs, rebounds.
lost by pin to Loew E ;
Bob McAdoo led tile Knicks
decisioned Raike Me 4-2· with 31 points and 14
lost to Malster, s', 11-1:
' rebounds, while Walt Frazier
167 lbs. - Nakamoto, added 19 points and Spencer
Meigs, pinned Gallaugher, Haywood 18. .
Me.; decisioned Moore, S, 8In other games Tuesday,
2; lost by pin to Thomas F.; Buffalo beat Portland, 102-95;
· pinned See, W., and lost to Atlanta edged Pltiladelphia,
Gross, H, by pin.
99-98; Seattle topped New
175lbs. - Rife, Meigs, lost Orleans, 96-91; San Antonio
by pin to Bush, w.
defeated Phoenix, 122-115;
185 lbs. - Willford, Meigs, Detroit beat Milwaukee, 109lost by pin to Best, C; 107, and Golden State topped
decisioned McDonald, N., 9-4, Cleveland, 112-102.
and lost to Gross, H, by pin. Braves 102, Trail Bla•ers 95:
Unlimited - Davis, Meigs,
Re~rve _
Don Ad~ scored
decisioned Bocook F 5--4. 10 pomts m the !mal seven
lost by pin to Col~gro~e , r.', minutes to help Buffalo snap
lost by decision to Jury, Me. a four.garne losing streak
in overtime.
with a victory over Portland,
who played without center

ATHENS ~ Meigs High
School
wrestlers last
weekend placed five athletes,
including one a.• champion in
the District Tournament
here.
The district champion is
Duane McLaughlin, 145 lb,
division, who is.tuning up his
holds this week lor
competition in the state
tournament in Columbus

By GENE CADDES
UP! Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) "I'll tell you one thing ," said recruited.''
The list also includes
Ohio State. coach Woody
several
outstanding running
Hayes, "nobody got better
backs,
including
two United
defensive backs than we
did.tl '
Press International · first
Hayes' 1977 recruiting year team all-01\ioans In Doug
has been labeled all the way Donley of Cambridge and
from ngood" to 11SUper /, and Cliff Belmer of Mansfield
Hayes hirnseH describes it as Senior.
"Donley has great speed
,"a fine class of recruits."
and
is a class kid,'' said
· Hayes, who was known to
Gibbs,
"a typical Ollio Sta~
be unhappy at times with last .
player.
He played the best in
:year's defensive secondary
the
toughest
games."
'Play, came up with lowDonley,
6-1,
180, had 245
outstanding candidates there
yards
against
Canton
in Middletown's Todd Bell,
·Canton 11!cKinley's Ray Ellis McKinley and 2116 against
Md Out-ot-staters Vince Dover. "Nobody's done that
:Sidillngs of Blairsville, Pa., 19 McKinley lately," said
•and · Robert Murphy of Gibbs.
Belmer ( 6·2 205 ), said
iBuellton, Calif.
.
.
, Alex Gibbs, one of Hayes' Gibbs, "was evaluated as the
fDp recruiters and newly- best running back in the
appointed offensive state. He's big and strong and
coordinator, called Bell "a can play either tailback or
potential great player. He fullback."
Hayes al!o signed a pair of
can run and he'll hit you.
Everybody knows how good New Jersey running backs in
5-ll, 11!i-pound speedster
he's going to be."
Calvin Murray and 6-1, 225
Felix Lee.
Lee played only one game
llis senior year because of an
injury but was "the .best
running back in the east as a
junior," according to Gibbs.
Linebacker is another position where the Buckeyes did
well in this year's recruiting.
Alvin Waahlngton of Cleve.
land Benedictine, the Epitropoulos twins of Warren
Harding; Keith Ferguson of
Miami, )"Ia., Tony M~aro of
Chicago, Ill ., and Leon
Ellison of Washington, D.C.
are all linebacker recruits.
"A lot of people rated
Washington in the'same class
with Todd Bell," said Gibbs.
"He's a potentlal great one. I
personally think.he'll play as
a freshman."
Ferguson .is S-4 and 225.
"He's supposed to be the best
athlete in the state of
F1orida," said Gibbs.
Also signed by Ohio State
were Sandusky's Luther
Henson and David Allen of
Warren .Harding, both first
team all-state.
"Henson is a big kid who
can run," said Gibbs. ''He's
in the same mold of (Edcile)
Beamon, (Nick) Buonarnici
and (Pete) Cusick.'' ·
Of Allen, Gibbs said, "!
Plow a perfect seedbed in
have a feeling he'll enter into
one operation~power or
our picture fast."
tool cultivate, spray, comOther Ohioans among this
post, mow, and more. A
year's
recruit&amp; are rniddiP
Gravely convertible tractor
.
guard
Terry
Bach and kicker
and attachments does it alL
Doug McEldowney, both of
Get a Gravely and see how
your garden grows.
Centerville; offensive tackle
Tim Brown of Warren
~ :~
Western
Reserve
via
r
Coffeyville
(Kan
.)
.,.
Community
Coilege;
r,
quarterback Norm BIITOWS
}.,
of Portsmouth; center Jlm
II'
DeLeone of Kent ; Dave
''(
Medich of Steubenville ;
•'
quarterback-punter Tom
I ' , 204 Condor Street
Orosz of Fairport Harbor;
992-2975
and fullback Joel Payton of
J.•
Pomeroy, Ohio
Mentor.
Rounding out the list are
OPEN : h&gt;J
quarterback Alvin Taylor of
9-5 Mon. thru Friday
'
&lt;
Oolfeyville; offensive tackle
vi
9-Noon Saturday
David
PhilliP.S
of
'Parkersburg , W.Va .; .,
defensive end Ron Miller of
Auburn, N.Y.; and guard
Nick Millef .of Upland, Pa.

GRAVELY
TRACTOR
SALES

selection of Miller as head dt•cision we made a year ago
(to hire Miller ) ... was indeed
coach .
"As the season has come a wise one.f believe that now
and gone,'' said Weaver, " the even more than I did then.

in district mat games

Gibbs called the 6-2, 19$pound Ellis, "the most
IUider-rated player we

,..

.

Meigs finishes ·fifth

Hayes .likes
'77 recruits

like

'

....

future, he made 11 clear what
llis biggest need is in building
a winning program - size."
"We want to get a couple
taller people," said Miller,
whose biggest starter the
past season was 6-7 freshman
Jim Ellinghausen.
Retiring Athletic · Director
Ed Weaver, who returned
early from a Cllicago meeting
to attend the banquet
"because of the feeling I have
for Eldon· Miller," said he
was plea•ed with the

NEW YORK (UP!) Willis Reed, the National
The Ohio State basketball Bolden of Cleveland was Basketball Association's
program is again on the selected, by a vote of his most valuable player in 1969tea mmates , as the most 70 and a star center for 10
threshold of excellence."
years, will succeed Red
Senior captain Larry valuable player,
Holzman
as coach of the New
The only other award made
York
Knlcks
today.
during the diruler was the
The
official
aMouncement
"attitude award, " which
of
the
appointment
of Reed
went to reserve guard Greg
will
be
made
at
a
press
Romano of Lancaster,
conference
beginning
at I
The popular Bolden, a fourp.m.,
EST.
Holzman
year Buckeye starter, intro·
duced his four fellow seniors, announced last Satw-day that
Romano, Clance Hammond this would be his last year as
of
Columbus,
Mike coach of the Knlcks.
'
A 6-foot, 9-inch, 240Daugherty
of
Bedford
and
of the suspension and other
pounder
who comes from
Bob
Lucas
of
Cleveland.
penalties levied by Kuhn .
Bernice,
La.,
Reed retired in
Kuhn, who is still awaiting
1974
after
multiple
knee
a decision on Charles 0.
injw-ies.
Finley's lawsuit, also drew
Reed was a sec'ond-f'ound
the wrath of the New York visit Havana . Not this spring,
pick
of the Knicks from
Yankees concerning a anyway, because time is
Grambling
in 1964 and was
running out.
proposed trip to Cuba.
the
only
player
to be named
Signings, negotiations and
Cuban Premier Fidel
the
most
valuable
player in
Castro suggested a few weeks. actions on the field:
the
playoffs
in
two
different
Rioo Carty, who batted .310
ago thatthe Yankees visit the
seasons-1970
and
1973.
island. On Monday, the U.S, last year as the Cleveland
He also was named MVP in
State ·.Department gave the Indians' designated hitter,
the
1970 All..Star game. Reed
signed
a
two-year
contract
commisaioner permission to
averaged
18 pointa a game
send a team to Cuba. Kuhn, with the club.
during
his
Ill-year career and
Pete
Rose,
three-time
NL
however, Is most interested
17
points
a
game in playoff
batting
champ,
remains
at
an
in sending a team of all stars.
contests.
impasse
in
his
negotiations
"We're prepared to do what
Reed will be taking over
is good for the country," said with Cincinnati Reds ,,.
perhaps
the IJlOst puzzling
Riehle
Zisk,
acquired
from
Yan'kee General Manager
team
in
the NBA. Despite
Pittsburgh
in
the
offseason
Gabe Paul. "If we're asked to
having
what
is reputed to be
and
still
unsigned,
hit
two
do something by the State
the
highest
payroll in the
home
runs
In
a
Chicago
White
Department, we will do it. H
league,
following
the
Sox
intrasquad
game
and
the commissioner is taking a
acquisitions
of
Bob
McAdoo
Buzz
Capra,
worked
two
position that it (the Yankees'
going) is not good for scoreless Innings as he at. and Tom MeMlllen this
baseball, I do not agree with tempts a comeback from a season, the Knicks have only
the c ommisSion-er' s sore arm with · the Atlanta a slim chan.ce to make the
playoffs.
Braves.
position."
The most likely prospect is
that no American team will

by the commissioner for
·tampering
with
San
Francisco's free agent
outfielder Gary Matthews,
who Turner eventually
signed.
In his suit, Turner charged
Kuhn with exercising 'imbridled. authoriiy ... exactly the
type of excessive action
wllich public policy abhors."
The suit also asked that the
Atlanta's loss of a first-f'ound
draft choice as a penalty be
overturned.
A hearing is expected next
week on a request for a
preliminary injunction by
Turner to block enforcement

Thompson's 30
sinks Knicks

a:

Bill Walton. Adams finished
with 15 points and nine
rebounds. Adrian Dantley
topped the Braves with 29
points and Randy Smith
added 21.
Pistons 109, Buclls 107::
Marvin Barnes sank a 20foot jumper with four seconds
left to lift Detroit over
Milwaukee, which rallied to
tie the game as Swen Nater
scored eight points in the last
five minutes. Ralph Simp.Wn
led the Pistons with 20 points.
Bob Dandridge had 28 for the
Bucks and Nater 21.
Hawks 99, 76ers 98:
John Drew capped a 3().
point performance by
converting a jump shot as the
fi nal buzzer sounded in
Atlanta's · victory over
Philadelphia. Len Robinson
added 21 points· and 21
.rebou.!)ds for the Hawks.
George McGinnis of' !'hila·
delphia led all scorers with 32
points.
.·
SuperSonics 96, Ja" 91: _
Fred Brown scored 25
points
and
· Nick
Weatherspoon and Slick
Watts had 23 each in leading
the Sanies past the Jazz, who
played
without
Pete
Maravich. .
Spurs 122, Suns 115:
Larry. Kenon and George
Gervin each scored 29 points
to lead the Spurs to victory
over the Suns. The Suns were
led by Ricky Sobers and Paul
Westphal .with 24 points
apiece.
·
Warriors 112, Cavaliers 10%:
Reserve guard Charles
Johnson scored 12 of his 14
points in the final quarter to
spark the Warriors' sixth
victory in their last seven
games. Jarnaal Wilkes led
the Wilkes with 21 points,
while Campy ·Russell had 17
and Austin Carr 16 for the

5- The Daily Sentmcl , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Mareh 9. WiJ

Tornadoes one victory away
fr.o m Ohio's Class A sweet 16
llAClNE - The Soutl1ern

Tickets Rl

$~

each are

·Tornados go to the Class A available at Southern High in
Di strict Tou rn~ment in Racine until noon Friday,
Chilli~othe Friday evening
for lhe first time in t2 years.
All the Carl Wolfe cuachedSo uth~ rn team has to do there
is win one game ·and they
become onr of Ohio's sweet 16
in theu· class. The ppposition
rriday, starting at '7: 30 p.m.
will be the winner of a first
round gn me between Union
and
Southeas tern
of
Richmonda le 119-l going into

according ill Principal Jim
Adams.
Coach Wolfe has three
seniors and two juniors who

have carried the main load in
fashi oni ng the Tornados
perfect 21~ record .
Eighteen game totals liefore tournament play
began, Southern averaged
80.7 points per game to its
opponents' 55.4 per game.
play ). Win Uwt one, and
Leading shooters were:
Southel·n is in the regionals at
Richard Teaford, 6-0
Oh io Unive r si t y ' s junior, hitting 51 pet. from the
Convodttion Centi.1 r.
. field, 77 pet. from the foul
I

line. 1U.5 points per game.
Joe Brown, 6-1 senior, 56
pel. from U1e field, 59 pet
from the free line, averaging
I I.:! points per game.
Chip Brauer, 6-3 Senior, 54
pet. from the field, 72 pet.
from the free line, 18.4 points ·
per ga me.
Eric Dunning,':HJ se nior, 53
pet. from the field, 73 pel.
from the free line, averaging
12.1 per game.
John Sayre, :HI junior, 40
pet. from the field, 76 pet.
from the free li ne, av~raging
6 points per game.
The Tornados' sixth
seventh a nd eighth boys

also produce. Junior Kelly
Winebrenner often is fi"t off
the bench. He shoots at a 42
pel pa ce from the fi eld, H2
pd. from the foul line, and
produced an average of 7.7
points per game .
Carl Johnston, 44 pet. and
50 pel., 4.1per game and Rick
''indley , 40 pet., 48 pet. and
5.4 average, have logged
considerable playing time.
Both are seniors .

Others on Wolfe's varsity
squad who have gotten in the
scoring co)umn are Dave

Roush, 3.1 average ; S. Baker,
1.5 average, and Perry Hill, .5
average.

ERIC DUNNING , senior guard, 5--9

Southern High girls
also _in di,s trict play
By Greg Bailey
There's another Southern
team going to Chillicothe to
play in the district tournament, and by some coincidence it has the same
nam e, the "Southern Tornados."

Sign-up day in

Bot this time it 's the girls'
turn as they earned the
Sectional title at Racine
Tuesday night by downing a
rough Federa I Hockinb clu b,
47-39. They pat the girls'
record at a clean 14-0 while
Federal bowed out with a 9-2

with us!

Racine is set
for Saturday ·

PlANNING APIZZA PARTY

RACINE - The Racine
Baseball Association will
have sign-up day Satw-day
from 9 a.m. to 12 noon at the
kindergarten building.
The sign-up will be for pony
league, little leRgue, pee wee
league, T-ooll and for junior
and senior girls who will have
a program if enough sign up.
Regulations state that
youngsters taking part in TIBII.. ~ be tl)rough kindergarten tl\ls year' and llfust
not he eight years old before
·Aug. 1. Sign-up fee is $5 a
Jiayer.

JOE BROWN, senior forward , 6-0

~ason

PHONE
..THE ALL NEW

MEIGS INN PIZZA SHACK
-Enjoy three sizes of your favorite
pizzas.
-Try our delicious subs while you
sip your favorite 'suds.
Eat In Or Carry Out
Phone
992-6304

CHIP BRAUER, senior center, S-4

CARL JOHNSTON, senior guard, 8-4,

r ecord.

Junior Cheryl Roseberry
paced the Southern attack
with a big 22 points while also
hitting the boards for eight
important rebounds . Sharpoilooting junior Jean Ritch. hart was held to 10 markers,
but she was credited with
passing off for six assists.
Senior

center

Br enda

Lawrence had eight points,

'

Iii i i, ,\ Ill:,;...-.-•

but she hit the boards for 12 the losers.
carom s. r'ederal Hocking
Southern committed two
controlled the board s 4().33, &amp;raight turnovers to start the
bu t in the seco nd half second half and the Lancers
Southern matched th em and illo~ advantage of them and
lllal seemed to be the dif- narrnwed the score to four,
feren ce in th e game.
2i-21 with 6:30 remaining in
Southern jum ped out to a llle third period. But then the
qu ic k 2-0 lead when Tornados got hot and the
Roseberry hit Rt the 7:26 lancers went cold as the
mark, bul Federal's star Racine squad of Coach
guard Karen Boggs ti ed 1t Connee Wit !Jams zoomed out
with one of her own . But to a 38-25 lead with over a
Southern came on strong as minute to go in the quarter,
Rnscberry hit for eight fir st the quarter endlllg 36-27.
quarter points to ennble her
It looked like it was all over
team to Ia ke a 13-li fir st for the IAlll ccrs of Coach Lois
periocl lead.
Sauer, especially when the
Soulllern increased its lead big center Co nrad fouled out
ill ten, 25-15, midway through early in tile fourth period. But
the period, but six foot J udy Southern go t cold from the
Conrad started pumping in Door, and Federal Hocking
the points for Federal and the &amp;arted connecting, and by
Lancers stayed within the 2:00 mark of the ga me,
llle score ;tood 43-:!9 with
striking distan ce at in·
termission. 25-17. Roseberry Federal coming on strong.
had 14 points in that half But with :39 showing on the
while Boggs tossed in'nine for clock, Roseberry sank both
ends of a one and one, then
ten seconds ·later stole the
ball for a lay-up to put the
icing on th e cake . Th e
Southern girls will play the
winner of the Minford Sec-

Caravan will
follow te,am
to Chillicothe
Faos of the ·Southern
Tornados are forming a
caravan

to

travel to

Chili Icot he Fri~ay to
support the basketball
team
in
district
competlt
Those who wish to join
the caravan are to 111eet at
Soutllem High School in
Rachte at 4 p.m. with their
cars de cora ted if they
wish.

Anyone wishing additional information may
call 99Z.5623.

19 of 00 oilot.s for a very cool 28
percent, the big story was the
turnovers as Southern
rommitted just five while the
losers had 15 miscues.
Southern also hit on 9 of 20
free throws wllile Federal .
managed just 3 of l5 .
Karen Boggs led the
, Lancers with 21 poin ts while
Conrad ;Uso hit double figures
1vith ten . Pam Coe and
Sharon Boggs each had 12
rebounds for the losers, and
tional next week in
the team hit 37 percent from
Chil licolll e.
Although Southern hit 'iust. the field , ca nnin g 18 of 49.

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WHEN HE'S WASTING GAS.

'1855

guard , -~.

•4495

•4495

18" STRAIGHT PI~CE '1.75

64

JOHN SAYRE, junior

·;speed. P.S., extra nice pickup.
Ready to go camping .

1973

· 73 Pontiac

~ - NWJERS .

I

Regal

2 Dr . H,T,, one of the cleanest

C)

ELBOWS

I

power steering ana

brakes.

4

INCREASE
YOUR
GAS
MILEAGE

70 Pontiac Firebird
• Automat ic,

RICK FINDLEY, senior forward , 5--11

DAVE ROUSH, senior forward, 5-ll

r

•3495

lWIN T EXHAUST REPAIR PRODUCTS

NO. 600

i.

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

Pomeroy. Ohio

992-2174

500 E. Main St,

'2995

KELLY WINEBRENNER, junior forward, 6-0.

Dr. H.T., gold with vinyl top, ·
nice clean car. One owner.

2

Reds, Rose haggling

•2595
Auto., P.S., P.B.. air, vlnyf.top.

over contract tenns

Extra low mileage. O'le owner .

Sharp.

*3895

TAMPA Fla . (UP!)- The
Cil'.clllll8ti Reds and Pete
Rose, the club's three-time
National League batting
champ, are still .. haggling
over a contract. ·
Cincinnati atforney Reuven
Katz reported no progress
Tuesday after an hour
conference with Reds
General Manager Dick
Wagner. Rose and the club
both have a figure in nnind
and apP&amp;renUy neither is
inclined to compronnise. Katz
said he would fly biiCk· to
Cincignati today .
Rose is one of five unsigned
Reds players. Pitchers Gary·
Nolan, Pat Darcy,_ Rawly

. 1972 GMC % ton
Auto. , P.S., P. B., camper special.
Local one

own~r .

~

.

' 2495

NOTICE! ! FREE.GREASE JOB
If you buy your new car from Smith Nelson MOtor we
will grease it FREE for as long as you own the car. So
buy your next car from Smith Nelson, ·the dealership
that cares about you. See or call one of these Friendly
Salesmen, Ceward Calvert. J, D. Story or Bill Nelson .
'

RIGIIARD TEAFORD 1 junior forwel'l, 1-0.
'(j

STEVE BAKER, juaior guar:l, 5--9.

-

.~

. ..

I&lt;'

"

East wick and shortstop Dave
Concepcion are the others.
All are represented by
player agent Jerry Kapstein.
Kapstein informed the
Reds Monday that he was
bedded down with the Du and
could not make it here ftom
Providence, R.l. Tuesday,
word from Kapstein's office
was that he would try to be in
Tampa today.
Reds Pre&amp;ident Bob
Howsaril has made it clear
that any player still unsigned
"Thursday will have his
contract automatically
renewed with a 20 .per cent
cut in salary .

�6 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wedne$day. March 9, 19n

Rico Carty agrees to terms with Indians
TUCliON , Ariz. I UP! I Rico Carty, who battled .310
last year as the Cleveland

lntlians' designated hitter ,
has agreed ro contract tenns
and will report to training

ca mp Thursda;• morning ,
club officials announ ce d
Tuesday .

Seghi, reportedly agreed to a
two-year contract in the
neighborhood of $230,000.
Carty, through his agents,
Alan and Randy Hendrick of
Houston, Tex., had been
reported originally asking
some $900,000over five years,
then dropped his demands fll
Tulane.
MOUNTAINS : Jim $350,000 for three years.
Carty, who was selcct&lt;:d as
Williams, Colorado State;
ille
Indians' "Man of the
Jerry Tarkanian , Nevada·
Year"
by Cleveland baseball
Las Vegas ; Ken Hayes, New
writers
, also had 34 doubles ,
Mexico
State ; . Norm
t3
home
runs and kno~ked in
Ellenberger, New Mexico;
84
runs.
Dutch Belnap, Utah State ;
lost to Toronto in the
Jim Killingsworth, Idaho
American
League e&lt;pansion
State.
PACIFIC : B9b · Boyd, draft, the Indians reobtalr,ed
Southern California ; Marv Carty in a trade which sent
Harshman, Washington; catcher Alan Ashby and
Ralph Miller, Oregon State; utility man John Lowenstein
Bob Gaillard, San Francisco; to Toronto.
Carty, 36, has a !Uetime
Gene Bartow, UCLA; Bill
batting
average o( .308.
O'Connor, Seattle.

Carty, whose renew a!
clause was revoked Monday
by General Manager Phil

UPI names Michigan 1977 college champ
'

NEW YORK ( UP!) Coach Johnny Orr of
Michigan thought his club
deserved to be ranked No. 1 in
the country and the UP!
Board of Coaches obv iously
agreed with him Tuesday
when it voted the Wolverines
the national collegiate
basketball championship.
Capitalizing on a pair of
upsets , Michigan, ranked
third a week ago, catapulted
to the top spot when topranked San Francisco
suffered its first loss after 29
victories Saturday against
Notre . Dame and secondranked Kentucky was
defeated by Tennessee in a
game which decided the
Southeastern Conference
title.
"I don't think there's any
question we deserve to be
rated No. 1 going into the
NCAA tournament," said
Orr. "We want to be rated No.

SOUTI!ERN HIGH SCHOOL girls, after defeating Federal Hocking Tuesday night for
the sectio.nal Class Agirls basketball title, couldn't resist doing what the boys' teams do . It's
simple. They cut down the nets at Southern High . - Gary Sisk picture.

1. It won 't make any
difference in the fllurnament.
People have been shooting for
us all year. We've only got
one goal left now."
San Francisco, No. I since
January, finished second, 79
points behind Michigan, 24-3,
which garnered 23 firsliJlace
votes and posted 374 points.
San · Francist'O was first on
nine ballots.
North Carolina, drawing
three firstiJiace nnds, was
third with 275 points, UCLA ,
with four votes as the top
team and 254 overall, was
fourth and Kentucky, With
one firstiJiace vote and 200
points, was fifth.
Nevada-Las Vega J
retained . its No. 6 ranking
with 185 points and Arkansas
remained seventh with 169.
Tennessee moved up from
loth to eighth with 168 points,
Syracuse moved up two
notches to ninth on 49 and
Utah, not even ranked last

Previous UP/ cage champions .
NEW YORK IUP II - The " 1962·63 1963-64 annua l ·u n i ted Press In 1964 65 ternationa l
College
1965 -66 Basketball national champ i OOS :

1950-51 -

'

Kentuc ky

195152 - Kentucky
1952 ·53 1953 ·511 -

I ndlana
Ind iana

1954 -55- San Francisco
1955 ·55 - San Francisco
1956 ·57 North Carolina
1957 -58 - West Virginia
1958 -59 - Kansas State
1959 -lil - California

1960-61 - Ohio State
1961 -62 -

Qh in

Cincinnati
Ci nci nnati

Michigan
Kentucky

1966 -67 -

UCLA

1967 ·68 -

Houston

1968·69
1969 ro
1970·71
1971 -72
1972-13

UC LA
Kentucky
UCL A
UC LA

-

-

UClA

North Carolina ·

1973 · 74 -

State
19711-75 -

1975 ·76 1976 -n -

Ind iana
Indiana
Michigan

week , finished its season as
the loth rated team.
Here by sections are the
coaches who comprised the
UP! major college basketball
ratings board:
EAST: ~u Carnesecca , St.
John 's; Chuck Daly, Penn ;
Tom Young, Rutgers; Jack
Kraft, Rhode Island; Jack
Powers, Manhattan, John
Thompson, Georgetown.
MIDWEST : Johnny Orr,
Michigan; Bob Nichols,
Toledo; Digger Phelps, Notre
Dame ; Ray Meyer, DePaul;
Tex Winter, Northwestern;
AI McGuire, Marquette.
SO liTH : Frank McGuire,
South Carolina; Dean Smith,
North Carolina; Lefty
Driesell, Maryland; C.M.
Newton, Alabama; Hugh
Durham, Florida State;
Norman Sloan, . North
Carolina State.
MIDLANDS: Joe Cipriano,
Nebraska; Norm Stewart,
Missouri; Denny Crum,
Louisville; Ted Owens,
Kansas; Jack Hartman,
Kansas State; Joe Sfllwell,
Bradley.
SOUTHWEST: Guy Lewis,
Houston ; Ned Wulk, Arizona
State;
Eddie
Sutton,
Arkansas; Ron Ekker, West
Texas State; Fred Snowden,
AriZona ; Roy Danforth,

SINGLE SHOT

REBOUNDS BALL- Pam Coe, Federal Hocking, rebounds the ball, having the better
position over Southern 's greatrebounder Brenda Lawrence (13 ). Southern defeated Federal
Hocking 41-39 for the sectional basketball title, girls Class A, and advances to district play.
- Gary Sisk picture.

Little Red School House
days recalled for pupils
Contrasts in many aspects bellied round one in the times , but in today's
r:i elementary schools over center of the room . One day technolo gJcal society, we
the years were noted when when no one was near. it need the kind of schools
Mrs. Elva Cottrill told of her · tipped over, but her which provides an adequate
teaching experimces Friday, resourceful eighth grade bovs · basis." She stressed that
• fll Mrs. Hysell's fifth grade dragged it outside, emptied it . many of her students made
students
at
Pomeroy of fire, , and when cool , great contributions to
Elementary. .
. trought it in, set it up, and !llciety.
Mrs. Cottrill, Minersville, wilt a new fire. In most of the
with 40 plus years of ex· schools, the "lig boys" did all
perience, was accompanied of the janitorial work, carry·
fll Pomeroy Elementary by ing buckets of drinking water
Jeanne Braun, of R.S.V.P. and tringing fuel for the fire .
NBA Standings
Press tnterna't iona l
Mrs. Cottrill first told of the
During World War II , she Bv United
Eastern Conference
elementary school she at· oorked at a school higher up
Atlantic Di'ldsi on
W. L. Pet . GB
tended as a student. This is a in the mountains , Ca bin
Phil adel ph 1l! 37 '16 .587 wilding which still stands Creek . Here , beca use of Bo~ton
33 31 .516 &lt;1 1 1
79 36 .4J6 9
near Nease Settlement, the strategic importance, there NY Kn i cks
Bull a to
15 41 .379 131 1
"Banner School." It is more 'M!re regular bomb drills in NY
Nets
'20 45 .308 18
than wo· years old and is which the schoo l par·
Central Di vis ion
L Pet . GB
surrounded by ancient oak ticipated. All buses were Wa sh ington W
39 25 .609 trees which are ap· camouflaged, and blackouts Houston
37 26 .587 11 J
San An tonio
37 18 569 '1 1 ,
proximately 100 to 12~ years were held re~ularly . At this Cleve
land
J3 '19 .537 .S
old Her fa ther ~1sn attended school, a newspaper was Alli)nla
27 39 409 13
this SChool, which lists among Jl'epared by the students, and New Orteaa~ 26 39 . 400 13' 1
Western Conlerence
its a!mnni some of Pomeroy's assembly programs were
Midwest Divi sion
W. L. Pet . GB
mo st importa nt business held mo nthl y at the church
Denver
~2 2~ .656 men, past and present.
auditorium . The high school Detroit
39 28 .58' 4 1 1
Mrs. Cottrill 's
first .tudents traveled 22 miles to Kansas City 33 31 .516 9
Chicago
31 3.4 ..i77 1p ,
teaching assig nment was theirschool.
Ind iana
30 35 462 12 1 ;•
comprised of students in first ,
When one of Mrs. Hysell's Milwauk ee
11 111 13"()(1 73
Pacif ic Division
third , fifth , and seventh .tudents asked, "Which way
W. L. Pe l . GB
grades with a ·total .enroll· ci schooling do you consider Los .AnQeles .:10 74 675
39 27 SOl i
ment of 13 members.
the best'" Mrs. Cottril l Portland
Sta le )8 29 .; 67 )I ;&gt;
Her
next
teaching answered : "The schools of Golden
32 ]4 . ~ 85 9
Sea n It
oosignment was at Rose Hill those days were for those P hoPnix
76 ]8 , A06 14
School near Pomeroy. Here,
!ile ta~ht three grades with
m average enrollment of 44 .
When she moved to West
Virginia, Mrs. Cottrill taught
in a minin g town near
Olarleston. Her school was a
new building on the edge of a
ANY SIZE
creek bank. She learned
13"
- 14" and 15"
the previous school ha~,
floated away on the last flood.
Here the creek came up
5
regularly, but the students
&gt;
knew the warning signs and
Casing and
always alerted the teacher
SOc
Fed.
Ex . Tax
when to move oul The grades
taught here were one, three,
five, se:ve.n, and eight.
One of her experiences bere
992 ·2101
John Fultz, Mgr .
Pomeroy, 0 .
con~~~emed the slove, a pot-

REGULAR PASSENGER
TREAD RECAPS

$1195 :~~ appable
'

Meigs Tire Center, Inc.

13. Louisvi lle (2 1-51)

20

18

15 . Providence (25-4)

l7

16. Indi ana St . (25-2)
17 . Mnnesota 1201
18. Alabama (23-4)
19. Detr oit 1201

15
14 ·
13
. 12
11

20. P~rdue 119-81

M o d~l

77 412 ) 1.

-

1

j

Get ou r fl on t d rop m
bobbin t ig ·la g sl! tc hmg
and a lot o f m ach rnc lor
~ery littl e mon e)' Cabmet

THE·FABRIC SHOP ·
McC.111's , Kwick-Scw , Srmp Ji cilv Pa't1erns
992- 22 8~

Pomeroy , 0 .

SLICE BACON ................................~~?; 95c

. Limit
. . 2

BLUE BONNET•••••
oz. Kratt

6

Singles.
Plain
or Pimento

16

Pkg.

oz.

.

fopa1
'21.00

Middle of Upper Block
Pomeroy , 0 .
OPEN

9 a .m. to 5 p.m. Mon. thru Thurs.
9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Friday
Sal. 9 a.m . lo 5p.m .

SPORTS DlPT.

GARCIA
MAGNESIUM

SERVING·;: TRAY

TENNIS
RACKET

$100
HECK'S REG. s1 88

'13''

HECK'S REG.

WIENERS ••••••.••••• !.k.9.-•..98'
'

59"
59"
~

11.99

1

HEAD LETTUCE .... _.. H~i1.~..3!r
NEW CABBAGE.. .........~~:. 29'

~-

~

RED RADISHES..... 2~~~~. 29'

HECK'S REG ..1.5.79
JEWELRY DEPT.

CASSmE
90 MINUTE

-I~

TAPE

'100

!CA 13111 =~===

HECK'S REG. '1.99
80 OR 90 MINUTE
JEWElRY DEPT.

PRESTONE
DE-ICER

OLD SPICE
STICK DEODORANT
•REGULAR •LIME •MUSK

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S

99•

REG. '1.29

79~
tDSMITIC DIPT.

100 COUNT

ANACIN

[!

.

WINDSHIELD and
WINDOW SEALER

a a~

HECK'S REG. '1.05

SPORTS DEPT.

RED DEVIL

ANTIQUE KIT
MIN:60
PER STORE

2

FOR

12 oz. Nestles Choc. Blts •••••••••••. '1.29 pkg.

$500

'

TIRE PUMP

'166
t:tECK'S REG. '2.59

HECK'S REG.

46 oz. We.l shald Grape Drink •••••••••••••• 59•

$3.99 EA.

Pomollve Llq. Dish. Detergent••• 19• ·
I

oz. Instant Nescafe Coffee .. '1.79 limit 1

.

4 roll Charm In Tluue •••••••••••••••••• 87' Rkg.
.

HECK'S REG. 11.88
HOUSEWARE

· SPORTS DEPT.

FRABIL
DELUXE 9.
SNAP STRINGER
'1.44

16 oz. Kraft
~. .
Miracle Whip Salad IQ,resslng ••••••••••••••. 69•

t

$499

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

'7''

HECK'S REG.

2 lb. Booth Fish Portions .....................sl Box

oi.

SHOE RACK
$100

I

69

22

FOR EK-4 OR
EK-i CAMERA

64"

18 oz. Smuckers Blackberry Jam ••••••••• ,89•

Soft and comfortable , you say·.
That ' s lust Wl'ta't I l"lted. Always
cushiony and r "1nfortable . The
c.~su ;,a l sanddl.

HECK'S REG. *1,99

Rayon Top Vinyl Bottom Asst. Tricot
Lining 36" Zipper, 2 'l b. Camron 34" x

HOMEMADE HAM SALAD •••••••••••••••••••••••••••~~·. 99*

INSTANT
PRINT FILM
9 PAIR

CUB
SLEEPING BAG

oz. Argo

IQuarters
Lb.

DON'T MISS THIS LIVE
DEMONSTRATION IN OUR
SPORTS DEPT.

.BASEBALLS

HECK'S REG. *23.99

SUPERIORS PKG.

88

TO DEMONSTRATE THE PROPER USE OF
YOUR ROD&amp; REEL ... ANDTOANSWER
YOUR FISHING TACKLE QUEST IONS.

KODAK

HECK'S REG. *1.18

e~ l r~ .

12 oz. Hormel Canned Spam ••••••••••••• '1.09

NAVY

HARDWARE
DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT,

lH W. Si!cond

$5

Hec.Jc'sReg.
$688.88

77t;

ssgoo

c!l ~ e

· 8 HP ahCK:k mounted tngine for power aMt quiet.Hicitnl 09tr11fion; odd fully -pMIImol ic
widl·trod tirt~~. Jumbo 18"rli.SO in ilt rtar. 15"•6.00 infront . 36" 1woih twin bladt1 moun led in
11 full-floating ci.Ming.d..:k . S.Ot.d beam 1-Moo!Jighh foroll-hour IOflly. Four speed HD lrcntc•l• .
3 forword ....... 1 ,._.... Btiggt &amp; Sfrotlon engine . R.ar disckariP cutting dec:k.

TROUT
NET

'l

THE FASHION MATE •
MACH IN E,
. NOW ONLY .
o r, c il r • ~rng
Model 247

LAWN MOWER

JEWELRY DEPT.

Gel o ur e11clu srve

sutf11ce and push butt on
l1 o n1 drop · in UobD m

tackle pro in our store
Saturday, March 12th
4:00 P.M. to 9:00 P.M.

DYNAMARK 36 INCH·B HP RIDIR
PULLY ILIC1'RIC atAIIY

HeciC's Reg. *59.96

12 ox. Skinners Nooclres •••••••••••••• 39~ bOx

&amp;

INSJANT PRINT
CAMERA

I

...

AMERICAN CHEESE

Hartley 's Shoes

__ ......J

.E!!P. £, Se-. 2 wa y scwmg

49

14. Marquette 120-81

.. -- -·-

'75 ONTHi

3. North Carolina 3 1123-4) 275
4. UCLA 4 (23·41
254
1931 team went to the Rose 5. Kentucky I 124-31
200
Bowl, losing to Southern 6. Nevada Las Vegas 1 12521
185
California, 21-12.
7. Arkansas 126-1I
169
Survivors include his .8. Tennessee 122-51
168

31
29
22

lill

SAVE
STYLIST* MACHINE
WITH CABINET

votes in parentheses;
Fina l Week
Team
u
Pts.
I. Mchigan 23124-31
374
2. San Francisco9 (29-1) 295

10. Utah 121 -61
11 . Kansas St. 122-71
12. Cincinnati (25 ·4)

0 "' ...

AUTOMAnC.

'

'49''

College ratings

9. Syracuse 25·3

.

.

and number of fir.st-place

LAGUNA HILLS, Calif.
(UP!) - Bernie Bierman, a
col)ege football Hall of Fame
coach whose Minnesota
teams
were
na tio nal widow, Clara , two sons,
powerhouses starting in the William A. Bierman, St .
1931ls, is dead of a heart Paul, and James M.
Bierman, los Angeles, five
attack .
grandchildren
and one greatBierman would have been
83 years old this Friday. He grandson.
died Monday night at
Bierman's body was to he
Saddleback Co mmunity shippedln Minneapolis where
Hospital in this retirement priva\f graveside services
community where he came to will be held at an undisclosed
live in 1969.
· date.
The McDougall Family
Physically, Bernard W.
Bierman was the ideal Mortuary of Sa nta Ana,
Calif ., sai11 no funeral
picture of a football coach services
would be held in
a well-built and muscular
man, handsome, with regular California. The family
features, steady blue eyes suggested friends may wish
and a "!batch of white hair. to make contributions fll tbe
His teams did not indulge in Henry L. Williams Memorial
frills but were known for a Scholarship Fund at the
hard-running, crunching University of Minnesota,
Minneapolis.
style of play.
Bierman bad been ailing
He was a star halfback at
since
1973 when a pacemaker
Minnesota during his playing
was
implanted
in his chest
days, 1913.15, and was head
.
because
of
chronic
heart
coach of the Gophers for i6
years, winning five national trouble. He suffered a stroke
championships and six Big after the surgery. Two weeks
ago he was admitted to
Ten conference titles.
From 1927 to 1931 he was Saddleback and succumbed
head coach at Tulane. His to a heart attack, the
attending physician said.
Bierman served with the
Marine Corps in World War l
FEDERAL HOCKING Olarlene Jarvis 1-0·2. Karen
and World War II , retiring
Boggs 9-3-21, Sharon Boggs 2- with the rank of lieutenant0.4, Pam Coe 1-0 2. 6'0" Jud y
Conrad 5-0·10. Totals 18-3-39. colonel. He was an athletic
director with ille Marines in
Coach, Lois Sauer .
SOUTHERN
Jean WW II.
Ritchhart
3-4·10,
Cheryl
After retiring from football
Rose berry 10-2-22 , Brenda
Bierman
spent several
Lawrence 3-2-8, Lisa Allen J.
seasons as a · radio-TV
1.7. Total s 19-9-47. Coach,
Connee Wil liams .
commentator, then just rook
By Quarters
it easy, playing golf with old
6 17 2739
Fed. Hock ing
friends
and doing some
Sou1he rn
13 25 38 47
philanthropic work.

Berkley wm have a

HECK'S REG. lfi4.99
SPORTS DEPT.

United Press International
Board o f. Coaches' final
college basketball ratings
wdh won -lost records through
games of Monday, March 7,

Ex-Gopher
coach dies

ATTENTION FISHERMEN!

·~·
WINCHESTER

NEW YORK IUPil - The

C:t;d p

SHOTGUN

I

(

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

-..... . . . ·'

:;.· ~:,

.:. '

PAI.N RELIEVER

•119

HECK'S REG. *1.69

COSMETIC D9T.

6.4 .oz.

CLOSE-UP
TOOTHPASTE

79(
HECK'S REG. *1.09

COSIImt 119r.

r

�9- The t,, ly Sentinel, Middlepurt-P0111eroy, 0 ., Wl'dnestl&lt;J)', Mard1 !1, !!Iii

Alfred UMW observes ..
.._
World Day- of Prayer •

New Haven circle
meets at Scott Hall

'

•

MHulcv Po:,t

Bereavement Can Cause Changes
Dear Heltin:
My husband works hard and has been pretty nice to me
and our children during 30 years of marriage.
But after his father died about three months ago, he
dwlged. He has become bitter and inconsiderate. H~ won 'I
talk and he goes out bowling and card playing five mghts a
week and on weekends. He 'sdrinldng more than he should.
He wasn't horne Christmas, even though my folks and our
children and grandchildren were here: that hurt!
I know he isn't cheating one me. What could be wrong?FLORIDA
Dear Florida :
It's logical to suppose · your husband is e.x.periencing
emotional cooflict over his father's death. If the tie between
them was very stroog, he may feel a loss he can't articulate, so
he dulls It by drinking with his buddies.
More likely, there's a sense of guilt or unfinished business
("I could have loved him more ... I could have treated
him better.") And this !night hide "release," if Dad ruled With
an iron haoo or created family problems. I'd guess your
husband'tconscience, plus a tinge of little-boy freedom (which
makes him ashamed) is pushinb him out of the house, away
from people who remind him of things he'd ra !her forget
He'll probably snap out of this misplaced mourrung by
himself, given the family's sympathetic understanding.lf not,
then enlist the help of a clergyman or other counselor. -H.

l.h.~

1\1 Ju•rwau

l'u nt n lJut wns h• t ht·
Clll'istina Smith fund, tht• IA·gtUI; Auxilii:try lilt-elm~
Hl'itl't fund aru.t tht• Mctrdl uf Tu"sd"y at the home of Mrs.
Dun~s we1·e madl~ by LeWIS Huth Rrown.

Mrs. All~n Hampton, presi-

dt•nl, had charge or the

Social
Calendar

mectmg whidJ upcnL-d 111

ritualistic form . Mrs. Charles
~aumlers,

C OJIUIIU~Iity

St!r-

VIc

,.hairman, had charge of

the

p~o..L•ram

since this is

Cununwtit)' ~f'!rvice month
fm· the Auxiliar) . T~re was

a reading ··This is An'l'N-ica ' '

WEDNESDAY
THE LEBANON Golden
Ai!e Club will meet at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Hilton with a noon potluck
dinner follow ed by en·
tertainment in the afternoon.
FREE CERVICAL cancer ·
clinic for aU Meigs area
women, Wednesday, I to 3:30
p.m. at Veterans Memmorial
Hospital. Call 992.,'1383 for
appointment and 992-7531
from I tO 4 p.m. Tuesday for
appointment.
.
POMEROY - Middleport

by Mrs. Campbell Harpe?
Americanism

M1·s .

Ernest

chainni:ln .
~Bowles,

legi slative chainnan, men-

tioned letters which had been
sent to legislators regarding
veter·ans i:lrFairs.
It was reported by Mrs.
William Smith the poppies
have arrived. Mrs. Will
Winston; chaplain, noted that
she had sent a sympathy card
to Mrs. Smith at the death of
her brother.
The March bulletin from
Mrs. Arnold Richards ,
+++
Ums aub, Wednesday noon, Eighth Distrit1 president,
Dear Helen :
Mei&amp;"~ Inn.
was read. A card was receivHow disappointed I was to read the elderly Henry's
POMEROY Chapter 80, ed by the unit from Miss E1·:
"ConcubUb" letter,'and to see that you didn't catch him up Royal Arch Masons, stated
short for his sacrilegious remarks. It appeared he was trying convocation, 7: 30 p.m. ma Smtih, Eighth District
conununity serviCe chairt.. Justify immorality by using "spicy, choice bits" from the Wednesday, Pomeroy
man, thanking the unit for a
Bible.
Masonic Temple.
contrilmtion
for the party to
Solomon had many wives, and Lot's daughters erred as did
BOSWORTH Council 46, be held March 15 at the
other Biblical characters, but Henry should have quoted Royal and Select Masters,
Corinthians 6:9-11 : "Do not err: neither fornicators, nor :tated assembly, 8:30 p.m.
idolators nor adulterers, rior the effeminate, nor sodomites, Wednesday, Pomeroy
nor. tllie~es nor the covetous, nor drunkards, nor the evil- Masonic Temple.
tongued n.; the greedy will possess the kingdom of God ... "
Rose Lodge, 1:30
AJ.sd, if Henry's "good old days" were really that loose, p.mWHITE
.. Wednesday, Middleport
they weren't very "good."- CXlNCERNED AND SHOCKED, American Legion hall.
AGE 23
REVIVAL in progress at
Chester Nazarene Church
Dear.C and S:
through March· 13. Services
I stand by my first impression. Henry, 85, wrote a tongue- 7:30 nightly. John Lanier of
in-eheek, humorous letter which put spice into the "good" old Junction City , evangelist.
days, and !loved him for it.
Herbert Grate, pastor. Public
You may not enjoy the following letter either, but Invited.
I;Oillehow I'm partial to septuagenarians with spunk. Read on:
PAST Councilors Club,
+++
Chester
Council
323,
Dear Helen:
Daughter~ of America,
I'm past 75 and I don't think we should reprimand the Wednesday, 7:30p.m. at the
young folks of today- too much- for their sex activities. Sex . hall with Mary Hayes and
has been going on since Adam and Eve, who, you'll remember Mary Showalter, hostesses.
raised Cain.
.
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Fifty years ago !lived seven miles from a state teachers'
Gardeners,
8 p.m. Wedcollege, and I had a Chevle Cabriole.t with a rumble seat. If
nesday
at
the
home of Mrs.
there ever was a lovers' car, that was 11!
Edgar
Reynolds.
1could drive down College Street almost any nice evenii16
MIDDLEPORT Literary
and pick up about any kind of girl I was looking for. So~e wore
QUb,
2 p.m. Wednesday at
bloomers, some wore chemises, and others w.ore step-lllS. The ,
the
home
of Mrs. Emerson
ones in bloomers were questionable; those with chemises were
Jones.
Mrs.
Nan Moore to
cooperatlve if I didn't rush the issue, and the ones who wore
review
,
"Edge
of the World."
step-Ins were lovers that loved it. And I admired them for it. Roll
call
will
be
an interesting
JUST AN OLD MAN Wl'ni MEMORIES AND ASMILE
!act from the book .
·
THURSDAY
Dear Young Spark Who Helped ught Up the Flaming
MEIGS County Humane
Twenties: .
.
Society,
Thrift
Shop,
Sir, youma!t:e me blush -sort of. -H.
Pomeroy, 7:30 p.m. Thursday. Public welcome .
ROCK Springs Grange,
7:30 Thursday night at the
hall.
OHIO Valley Junior
Grange regular meeting
Thursday at Letart Falls
Grade School rather than
Letart Community Building
Polly Cramer
due to heat problems in latter
ixlilding. Anyone with transportation problem call Mrs.
Florence Smith.
FRIDAY
ByPollyCramer
the snow and.toss 11 .astde.
SOUTHEASTERN Ohio
DEAR POLLY- Can you One can get rid of twice as Black Lung Assn. meeting, 2tell me how to remove green much ~now m half the lime 4 p.m . Friday at Senior
: crepe paper water stains and Wllh~ut havmg
bend a~zens Center, Pomeroy.
from a dark pine table ? Con- over. Of course, this. has to~
HAPPY Harvesters aass,
; densalion from a plant done before the snow has Trinity Church, 5:30 p.m.
seeped through during the been driven on or trampled Friday with a dinner to be
holidays and the table dues underfoot or It woul~ become served by tpe hostesses
• not have a protective finish , so packed dow~ a _shovel preceding the meeting. Mrs.
only furniture wax and would be needed after all.
Archie Swartz will give
polish. - MARYR.B.
DEAR
POLLy
devotions.
DEAR MARY R.B. - If Everyt1mel get a new coat or
your table has a heavy wax j~cket the ~1rst thing ~u break
RETURN Jonathan Meigs
finish the color may not have 1s the thread loop that holci:" Chapter, Daughters of the
penetrated through it. 1 the belt. My Mom bought a American Revolution, 12 :30
would remove the wax and IJIIir of round shoe laces, cut p.m. Charter Day luncheon
•, see the state of the adual them to f1t and sews them m Friday at Trinity Church.
'' wood. 1 can find no authority the seams to make new loops Good Citizenship winners to
• . for your particular stain but that outlast the garments. - be honored.
the colored water doubtless STACY.
MARY Shrine 3i, Order of
works much like an ink stain.
DEAR POLLY - The one- the White Shrine of
You might try a furniture half pound plasllc marganne Jernsalmt, 8 p.m. Friday at
cleaner. If that does not work t'Ontamers are Ideal to use for the Pomeroy Masonic
perhaps it could be rubbed holding cos1~elt~s. One can Temple. Election of officers
out with rotlenstone and oil, be used for lipsticks, roll-on will pe held and all reports
· as is often prescribed fur ink penumes, nail pohsh, cotton are due at that time.
stains. Sanding pf the entire balls, etc.- BONITA.
SAnJRDAY
top may be required as a last . DEAR POLLY - Men who
RIO GRANDE Baptist
.
resort' Such off beat types of fmd that those new double
,
.... d
ft
few Assn. meeting, I 0 a.m. 1o 4
1
'• stains often reljuire a lot of .,ge razors cog a era
p.m. Saturday at ' Racine
.: experimenting. Good luck ! ::. shaves can make them last First Baptist Church with
• :POLLY.
longer by clean.tng between Rev: Conrad Lowe, senior
,'.
DEAR POLLY - One of the blades With an old mini!ter of North Parkers:, the readers asked for ideas toothbr.ush. The blades Will burg
Baptist ' Church,
for mounting 8 match book last twwe as lung w1th fewer
k b
W V
k d U; MRS CS
Par ers urg,
.
a.,
1,
;
collection. My soo and I have 111c san cu :- · " · speaking on "The Growing .
I. . · been collecting such covers Pollr, wtll. se~~d you one of Churc:1" ; covered dish
I;· for about five years and think her peachy thank-you
we have one of the best ideas cards • ideal for framing or hllcheon at noon.
~: available. We purchased a placmg in your family scrapHEART Ftmd volunteers
piiiSiic IOOlle leaf page !or a book; if she uses your ~II be canvassing Pomeroy
;. three-ring notebook that favorite Pointer, Peev~ br Saturday.
holds 20match bouk covers in Problem in her t'Oiwun.
ROBF;RT Tbom , evangelist
• separate divisions (each is Write Polly's Pointers in care will be at Chester Church of
about two inches square) . of this newspaper.
God Saturday at 7 p.m. and
1,
,; They are clear on both sides,/
Sunday at II a.m . and 7:30
.: Such loose leaf pages were
p.m. The Rev. Mike Sothard,
:,1
pon:hased at a station·ary
BIR'111DAY HONORED
pastor. invites the public to
1
'
•'
store. - L.R. S.
The birthda· y or Kenncu1 attend .
•'
DEAR POLI.Y - Those Romine, Spring Ave .,
MEETING SET
people who almost break Pomeroy was observed Sun'
The Southeastern Ohio
their backs shoveling snow day. Attending were Mr. and
would be a lot better off 1F Mrs. Kenneth Ilomine and Alack l.un~ Association wUI
j
they would get hold of an old c..nnic Sue, Mr. and Mrs. meet frnm 2 to 4 p.m. Friday
• pwoh broom. They could Gene Hmnim·, Tom and a thl' Meigs County Senior
simply push the snow asidt· Kevin, M1·s. M"e llonune, Citizens Center, F.. Main St.,
!, with such M brooni insle:ul ,,! Mr. C~nd Mrs. I ll-l h' Cuhurn , Pomeroy. All intere•terl

;I bnda I shower wus held unde-elecl of Dick ~mil h.
· recently at the home or Mr.
Games were played with
ami Mrs. Lester Housh p1·izes going to Mrs. Herbert
IKmurmg Jo Ann Roush. 1\oush and M1·s. Nancy
Russell. The door prize went
.;:;:;:;:;:;:;.:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::· to Mrs. Gloria Manuel.
,
Cake,
ic'e
cre~m.
coffee
MONITORS LISTED
and Kool Aid were served to
Rlverby monlton for tbls
the guests. Attending besides
weeken1 have been an·
those named were Mrs. Inez
DOWICe-.f by \he Frellch Art
Hill, Shirley Dugan and Kim,
Colony
Satur1ay's
Mrs. Donna Johnson, Mrs. Jo
monlton are Mrs. Daniel
Whllely, Mrs.. Tandy Ann Willford and Alisa, Mrs.
Gladys Shields, Mrs. Roger
Simpson, I to 3 p.m. and
Manuel, Angie and Aimee,
Mrs. Ronald Calhoun, Mrs.
Racine ; Mrs. Dorothy
H. 0. Francis, 3 to 5 p.m.
Walker, Mrs. Donna Smith,
Sunday's monitors are
Mrs. Chester Tannehill, Mrs. Bonnie Barton, Mrs.
Mrs. Robert Moore, I to 3 Hilda Smith, Mrs. Genevee
Chesher, and Mrs. Bea
p.m. and Mrs. Carl Irvin
Stewart,
Middleport; Mrs.
and.Maxine Klmalrd, 3 to 5
Teri
Roush,
Mrs. Tammy
. p.m.
Hill, Vickie Roush, Heidi
Ashley, Mrs. Bernice Roush,
Mrs. Ann Findley, and DebAthens Mental Health bie Nelson, Letart Falls;
Center.
.
Mrs. Margaret Ruse and
Round-robin get-well cards Diana, Minersville, Mrs.
were signed for Miss Sharon Karen Connolly and Shelly,
Buffington, patient at Syracuse; Mrs. Kay Rail,
Veterans Memorial Hospital, Mason, W.Va ..
Mrs. Shelman Butler at
Sending gifts were Mrs.
Findley, and Mrs. Genevieve
Eileen
Buck, Mrs. Donna
Burns at Colwnbus.
Lavender,
Mrs. Mary Roush,
The April meeting will be
M1~. Pauline Hoffman and
•t the home of Mrs. Hampton. Refreslunents were serv- Tami, Mrs. Betty Roush,
Stephanie Ord, Penny Smith,
ed by Mrs. Brown.
Judy Lavender, Mike Rose,

ALFRED - The Alfred
Uniteij Methodist Women
observed World Day of
Prayer on the evening of
March4at Bp.m. at the home
of Dan and Janet Moore (the
old Desmond Swartz home at
Lottrldge which they
purchased two years ago, and
have
remodeled
and
redecorated,)
A short buBineas meeting
CARD PARTY

A St. Patrick's Day card
party will be held at tbe
Sacred ileilrl Catholic
Church rectory 011 March 17
at 7:30 p.m. ReoervaUoos
are to be made by that
night. Information on
reservations may be
secured by lelephonlng
712-2557, · 992·3202 or
1192-3837.

Mrs. June Ashley, Mrs. Jeannie Connolly, Kathy King,
Mrs. Eileen Roush, Mr. and
Mrs. Brian Johnson,. Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Sheridan, Mrs. Ed·
na Roush, Mrs. Grace Durst, ·
Mrs. Goldie Gilmore, Mrs.
Roberta Lewis, Sharon and
Cindy Roush; and Mrs. June
Wickersham.

was cooducted with Nellie
Parker, president in charge:
and opening with prayer by;!'J'
the pastor, Richard Thomas,.~
The hymn sung was "What A "'
Friend ." A $5 offering was;.;
sent to "Fair Chance" and IC
letter from Irene Matthias· ~
was read concerning future .,
district events.
·' ,
The name ·Sarah Casey,;..;
whose work Is in Bason, W'
Va., was given as missiol)llry""
worker for the month, with a. •
C8l'll signed for her blrthda~.;i
on March 8. Janet Moore ,.;
accepted the prayer calendar;:r
for April.
~I
The neltl regular meeting-. 1
will be April 19 at 8 p.m. 'with
Janice Pullins. Helen Wood!:
will lead an Easter programt ',
Thelma Henderson had
charge of the World Day of
Prayer program with all
having a part. "Love Ill:,'
Action" was Ute theme of the
program.
The
hostess served . •
refreshments during then,
social hour to Rev. Richard"'
Thomas, Joyce Archer, Osie;;;
Follrod, Nina Robinson',"'!
Clara Follrod, Thelm~_' 1
Henderson, Nellie Parkerr
June
Stearns,
Kate
Rodehaver 1 Janice Pullins~'"~
Sue Pullins, Anna Thompsotf•;
and Helen Woode.
""

-

~Ji(I· KiJ y ~ 1 arkcr .

persuns arE' invitPd to attcnrt.
I

Mrs. Holcomb honored
~ith surprise party

~ cigarette,

••

A scout leader asks: "How can I arrange to do a project
with my group of youngsters about the dangers of cigarettes? ,
It is a subject that interests me but I need fa cts and matenal to
give them.~~
.
.
ANSWERline : Your local American Cancer Soc1ety Urut
will be very glad to help and you might he surprised by the
many interesting items that are available free of charge ..For
example, there is . a . special film for youngsters entitled
"Decision for Mike," with a film guide for yoo to use ; the
''Story of a Cigarette," a coloring book with a good health
message; a variation of "The Three Little Pigs" story tn com1c
strip style, and much more.

CXlNCLUDES PROGRAM - Robert Fox, Pomeroy,
; concludes week ofwprking with children in Gallipolis City
:; Schools. Mr. Fox shared poetry experiences and worked
• with students in writing and appreciating poetic ·, ., . The ; Middleport
: expression. Mr. Fox is shown ·above in Mrs. Ernestine ' 1 congreg~tion of Jehovah's
: Spriegel's fourth grade class at Green Elementary
Witnesses has been named
: School.
. "holt congregation" for the
••
semi-annual regional con••
vention March 12 and 13 in
''. l-ondon, Ohio . .
A;.host for the southeastern
Ohio
conference of· 10
.
congr~gatlons, the local
of Technology.
group is receiving a three::; HUNTINGTON , W. Va. Seth
Carlin
is
a
prize
::American violist, Marcus
; Thompson, will present a winner of the Yoiliig. cqncert ''• ' ,.
:'lli'Ogram of music by Artists International
wTelemann, von Weber, Auditions and Hudson Valley
: Persichetti, and Hindeinith, Philharmonic Young Artists
: Thursday, March 17 at Competition . . He has performed • numerOus solo
: Marshall University.
" l'erlorming at II a.m. in recitals and as soloist with
ATHENS
.,
Ohio
: Smith Recital Hall on the the Boston Pops Orchestra
Uqiversity's School of Music
and
Natiroal
Symphony.
A
: Qmvocatlon Series of the
wjll present a Faculty
: Marshall Artists Series, Dr. graduate of the Juilliard Woild)l'ind
Recital Friday,
School
of
Music,
Dr.
: Thompson will be assisted by
March II at 8:30 p.m. in the
Thom.pson
serves_
as
• pianist Seth Carlin.
.
school's Recital HaD.
: Admission is $1 for adults, Profes!llr of Humanities at
.The Ji'ogram will introduce
the
Massachusetts
Institute
: 50 cents for youth or by
Jonathan '. DlouHy, p~incipal
of
Technology.
• Marshall University student,
Seth Carlin is a prize ohoi!t with the Akron and
: faculty or staff identification
winner in the lnterna~onal Canton Symphony Orchestra,
•• card.
m campus as instructor in
: The program includes Busoni Plano Competition in
.
oboe
winter and spring
Bolzano,
Italy
and
is
a
par: uSonata in E Minor for Viola
quarters. Also featured are
ticipant
in
the
Festival
of
Two
: 111d Piano" by Georg Phillipp
faculty members · Harold
"' Telemann, "Andante and Worlds in Italy and Marlboro Robin~n , bassoon; aSsisted
Music
Festival
in
Vermont.
.: Hungarian Rondo for Viola
by Janice Robison, hal'p'
: 111d Plano" by Carl Maria
sichord;
and Kenneth An·
: won Weber, ·''Infanta Marina
drews, fllte .
• for· V1oia and Piano" by
Music on the program
:: Vincent Persichetti, and
includes
Andre Jolivet's
WASHINGTON (UP!) : "Sonata, Op. ll, No. 4" br
"Sonatine
pour Hautbois et
Former Colorado State tight
• Paul Hindemith.
Basson,"
"TriO
No. 1 in C
!: Dr. Thompson is the winner end Bill Larson, who last Major" by Joseph
Hay!bl,
• of the Young Concert Artists season played in the minors,
J.S.
Bach's
"Trio
Sonata
in G
: lnternatiooal Auditions and has another shot at making it Major ," and Vivaldi's
: Hudson Valley Philharmonic in th~ National Football
"Concerto in G Minor for
:; Young Artists Competition . League.
Flute,
Oboe and Bassoon."
• He has performed nnmerous · Larson was signed on TuesThe concert is open to the
: solo recitals and as soloist day by the Washington Red· public wlthoti charge.
: with the Boston Pops Or· . '.flkins as ~,free agent.
.
: chestra and National Sym. 11rso"'~l!lliiJUyJ¥ayedwlth
• phony. A graduate of the · the San Frar!cls&lt;;O 49ers m
: Jullllard School of Music, Dr. 197&amp;, after betng Signed as a
:: Thompson
serves
as . fr."!' a!(ent, He was ~vena try
: Professor of Humanities at ' by tjle Oakland Ra1ders after
" the Massachusetts Institute ·rhi~ too~year.

.~ Musical program s~ted
g

'"•

'

•

.,

.,.'"

.

"

'

,.

,

••

,
•
n

·'r

.'

COMPARISON
SHOP

.,

:

.

'. '

•

:

• • • OVER YOUR CUP OF COFFEE

'·"

1111:d mg 1Jf
( 'h ;lpt t• r 1 ~:! .
a

! ip fr;wt un ·.
I ll \ tl&lt;lllu!IS Wt.! I'C l't.!&lt;J d tO thl'

tlnio-1 ,,f till' Fn.&lt;lc r" St:11

• {.

'

recent meet

, J!.

'·

· j

f)al'ftl·ll ,

Mr~. Pat McKnight hosted

sl11'1eld ,

worth y

p&lt;.ttrwt .
prL'stdet.l &lt;lt t !tc t llt.!t~tl ng dtu··
m g whwh ti m e f.'Oilll llUIIll'lr

Bel pre ,

Webb

:ttapli~r f.lt

Stuck purl, George
l.c wt:l Hchn•us Clwpte r ot
De law a r e.
Wes t wooli

I

lions wen · rc ~nl fru111 (:rand
Cl li:l fJtcr ~·(·g;trdt ng rescrva·
tturt s aw l housing for the

li1l ilert Chapter at Suuth

mcl!ttng Ill Oc.:tubcr. Tha nk·
you notes were rcad from the

w.l'l'ell Chapter.
Due to the abse nce uf the

Chapter at Cuu:im1ati; the
Clmr!e:;lun, OIHu, and the

OES Hospit;d Circle for a

worthy rnat run initiation was

dOnation, from the Helen

I~slpon cd

un til the April

111cctin g

Wl! rl!

Chesher ,

GcJtevcc

day visit by John D. Busby .
district supervisor. He begins
his visit this evening at 7:30
p.m. with a Bible address at
!he Kingdom HaD, located
ooe mile east of Rutland on
ru. 124.
Wednesday through Friday
Busby will direct the activity of groups doing home
visitations . During their stay
in Meigs County, Mr. and
Mrs. Busby will be dinp er
guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Fowler, Mr. and
Mrs. Albert Tromm, Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Fowler and Mr.
and Mrs. Lane Daniels.

ttnel.

wnr-t hy
Refrt!1'lhll1cnt., were .serv·
Mrs. ll&lt;:.t Darnell, cd.

rn~ tl 'on ;

st'LTCLi.t ry ; Har ry Chesher,

Bethel makes party plans
Plcm1; hC:t vc Ueen l.'urnpll!tell

lcmcs there at !I p.m., and

for a party fur rm:rnhcrs uf
Bethe l 62, Internati onal

then will return to the King

Order of Jobs Da ug hters,
the1 r gue:5tl-i, C:~mJ mernbers of

DeMulay.
At 6::10 p.m. the group will
meet at the hume of Katily
King fur a

pb~ZC:l pC:~ rty .

From

there Iiley will go to Mason
f 111" rt huw lin~

party at the

home. Jobi es will rema in fur
~ slwnber party. Members of

tile host group are reminded
tota ke rood for the party.
Sa turday uight several of

the Jub1es will ta ke part in
the OeMolay Sweetheart
competition at the Midulewrt Masonic Temple.
·;

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HANGERS

It recent meetmg of the

Earth ... a scholar to all existing ihings,
Friendly Neighbors CluiJ.
Abiding to tile laws of the universe, both good I&lt; bad.
Presiding at U1e meeting
Casting shadows over the life song she sings,
was Mr~- .!anct Venoy.,
Spinning a web of opaquene~.f&gt;ver ~.fi!!lda of lov~; so sa~ .. r.wues were played with
Ethically systematized, to fit illlr'riloral m01'81e,
prizes going to Mrs.' Eileen
Essential In essence, yet, very unestablished.
' Bowers, Mrs. Lucretia Smith
More land than she can haoo,~, one,1118Sfiye, corru~t, corral. and Mrs. Eleanor Werry. The
Engaged and malic, her beauty, Oh, sd blemished.
h·awling 'prize was won by
Blind to her occupants who worship her esteem,
Mrs. Bowers, and winvning
I . ••
:
Her memory so short, her dialogue unending .
the door pl'i~e wa~ MfH. era
1:
Disapproved by many, innocent as she may seem ,
Buchan~n .
' ' ~,
• AJlolwhichlsreal,yet,lllmepreferpretending.
Mrs. Smith will host the
::
Some may disapprove, and try to disarray 1
Mm'Ch n1ceti11~ al which time
: But because of what she's done for UIIL'I, we still
a puUuck dinner will be· hcl&lt;j
•
eJtisl today:
in "lrlervant·c of the 2tllh anI:!
niver1111ry uf the duo. Othm'&lt;
:
Poem written by Debbie Hein, daul!hter of Mr. and Mrs. "tt••ntlin t• Wl'l'c Mr&lt; .
Utcblrd Hein, Minersville. Mi~ Hein is a junior at F.astern l·:iiiH IKJIII \~ e ll, Mrs. M1idn•d
~ School.
·
'• ' -.~~·· ~ ' i ~ 4 :;$ ..... :
1 l"i ~ \ rnuld Hrul Mrs. Elsi1·1Ju1t'S.

l&lt;ttiJt:l' tlt Ci rcle tu lm he ld
Apnl l! alli ::!O til li.C Vl! d y f.lll d
t11 lltspt.'t.:ttuus ill Ne w M,l:lr·

mccling. Pru-tcms for Lht:

Pt4~TER POT

Club holds

The Poet'S Cf?111er

C:

Pamper your feet and spare your car • ~ • shop the

Daily Sentinel.

Faculty recital
planned Friday

..

I', \ l ' lt!t "ill lt.:

Lt·WIS fan uly, mtd Mrs. Edna
Ma:..: Jr tl' r; ask tll wlw 1 ~
n·t 'llJX'I'IIt lll:.: al humt· fruut a

36" BEADED

Congregation to serve
as hosts for ·convention

..

•

~:~t

Jllt' IJ dJt .'r .

I think, how can this one cigarette harm me ? Can

it 1 "
· ANSWERline : As far as science knows, one cigarette can't
hurt you unless you start a fire. But, it has been est•blished
I
that the damage that cigarettes do is dose-related, whtch
means that the more you smoke (and the more you smoke high
tar
and nicotine cigarettes) the greater the chance of 11lness.
Mrs . Edna Holcomb of ill for some time, is greatly
There
are twenty cigarettes in a pack but If you multiply a
Kanauga who celebrated her . improved and now makes her
pack-a-day
habit by 15 years, you get a smoker tn the lung
lirthday on Saturday, was mme with her daughter and
cancer
danger
zone.ln other words, smoking damage adds up.
given a surprise birthday illn~n-law, Mr. and Mrs. Don
party on Friday .evening at Facemire.
Aconcerned relative writes: "My cousin lives in another
the home of her daughter,
Those attending were Mrs.
state
and she wrote to say that she has to have a colonoscope
Mrs. Don Facemire.
Edna Crump , .Mrs . Mae
examination
done for cancer. Please explain what this is."
Mrs. Robert Bussell a,11d Jones, Mrs. Pearl Pearson,
ANSWERline
: A colonoscope is a new instrument that
Mrs. Flo Smith were the . the hostesses, Mr. and Mrs.
enables
a
trained
physician to examine the entire six-foot
l01stesses for the affair. Mrs. Don Facemire and the
length of the large intestine. This permits the. assessment of
&amp;lcomb, who has been quite ll:lnoree.
any sign or symptom that can't be explamed by other
. diagnostic means such as X-rays. In some mstances, the
physician will use the colonoscope to remove llny samples of
suspicious tissue ·that can then be exammed under a
microscope for cancer cells. Also, growths (called polyps) can
sometimes be removed as a preventive measure . Colonoscopy
is usually not a painful procedure but a mild sedative is usually
given.

••
••

:o

l'~vi11~ to bend over, sc:~mJI up

fellowship teas.
Judy Hesson reported on
A woman writes: " I have been recHling more and more about
th e refini shed class rooms drugs for breast cancer . Are they being used !or all women
and there are nlne windows with this disease ?"
U1at nrt.•cl r urt ains and rod~.
ANSWERline: Cancer is the kind of disease that must be
The group derided to take treated in a highly individualized way for the very b.St results
this on as a project with and there are many methods of treatment. For many women,
Marlene Campbell as surgery alone is the way to treat breast cancer, other wome.n
chaimmn .
might reljuire surgery and radiation, others m1ght benefit
Sentence · prayei'S closed from surg~ry plus a particular cancer drug or more likely
the mectin~ and refresh- ·from a combination of cancer drugs. While it is true that new
ments of cookies and ice studies have touched off great interest in the potential of
cream were served to II breast cancer drugs, par~tularly when they are given early in
members.
.1
the patient's treatment plan, these drugs are not being given to
aU women with breast cancer .
A labor union official explains : "Each time I smoke a

~

"'"

•

l/1~ · d!iJI"It 'r w;•:-. 11t UJ)(•d Ill
JI Jt •Jr u, n · ul l ld t•n I .Pw l-., a

Three ll'l:trrs w0rr rr:ut
from state offit•rrs t·qntai ning - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- TIHJI'sd;J\ IIIJ..: ill d l till' r..·l ul J h ·ppJI ,\., ,~ . , t !ll l t " T t' l l iplt:.
mePt inK da tt•.s for rntm·e
A regular featur~ . p rcp&lt;::~red by Ow Amt&gt;ru:;.m Cl:lncer
1\ utlli'VII Evans. ~i.'!SI ~C!lJ lc
lra ini ng
sess ions a net Society, to help save your li fe fr om cancer.
wurt l!y . !Hal rou. i!f! d Paul

•

'Tlry rottenstone on table stain. .

':
!

Answer line
American Cancer Society

.

POLLY'S POINTERS

t• '
r:

NEW/ HAVEN, W. Va. The New Haven Unit ed
Methodist Mission Circle met
in &amp;ott Hall recently with
Mrs. Pete Burris in charge.
Slides of Sweden were
!flown by Rotary Exchan ~e
rtudent, Christian Soderberg.
Aquestion and answer period
loll owed.
Elrelion of offieers was
held and those elected were
' Evelyn Danbury , president;
Naomi Bumgarner, vice
· president;
and
Jean
Hendrickson, . secretary
treasurer . Numerous
chairmen were also chosen.

Charter draped for former member.·

-C~A~N~C~E=-=R=-~---

DftiiiT

SHOP THE STORE NEAREST TO YOU!
PLEASANT • SILVER
•M

�.•
10 - The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wedne&gt;;day, Man·h 9, W7i

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

New course at Rio CC designed for
those who like to work with children

MASON - The Mason City Historical Society met on
March 3 at the former ·Lewis home for their regular monthly
meeting and •made plans to have a Rubbermaid Party on
March .10 at 10 a.m. A bean dinner will be held on March 12for
club members at the I,ewls home.
Mrs. Landon Smith presided at the meeting on Thursday
and Mrs. Earl Ingels, Sr,, presented the devotionals, Psalm
66:1-J and verses 3-9, and closed with prayer.
The group gave the pledge of allegiance to the flag . The
secretary's report was given by Mrs. Fred Taylor and the
treasury report by Mrs. Delwon Roberts.
Potluck dinner was served. at noon. Attending were Mrs.
Landon Smith, Mrs. Delwon Roberts, Mrs. Rllssell Barton,
Mrs. Cecil Smith, Mrs. William Zerkle, Mrs, Earllngels, Mrs.
Delmar Alexander, Mrs. Ray Proffitt and Mrs. Fred Taylor.

s pun~ur

3rt'

J;'!fliRIJ:

to

sin~h·

a

t•limlnatiun

indtJWndcnt

hnskt•tbull

lournamrnt

Marrh 17, t8, .19 and ZO.

AII teams Interested are
tn t•nntart the director.
Larry HIIK's af 98fi-4163.

cha ng in~ behavior.
Edwards is dirertor of
counselin~ at RGC.CC. He
joined Rio's staff last year
and .is responsible for student
counseli ng. He received his
Ph.D. from Kent State
University in i976 and has a
wide background as coun·
se lor in bnth community
mental health and higher
education settings.
The class is open to any
resident of the four-county
community college district
for a fee of $15. Registration
will be held the first night of
class. For more information,
phone RGC-CC at 245-5353.

:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:::;:::::::::::::;:·:::::·

PAHK~: HSHURO

• Point

PleastJnt ov ercame tJ seven

POINT PLEASANT llOl Nibert

17 ,

McDe r m i tt

16,

12,

Howard

4,

•

..
"

Vaughan 6.
B v Quarters :
South
14 12 10 11- 47
Point
12 8 14 16Tl0

Boaters urged
to register early

SAVINGS

COLUMBUS - The Ohio as does the auto registration
Department of Natural fee .
Resources (ODNRl today The registration agency in
urged Ohio boaters to Meigs Coijnly is l llrenzo
register their watercraft Davis, doing business as the
Davis Insurance A~ency, 114
oorly this year.
Court
St., Pomeroy.
The 1976 registration exJired March 1. This year's
NOTICE FOR
blat and motor registrations
APPLICATION
are available from agents
UNDER THE UNIFORM
DEPOSITORY ACT
throughout the state.
OFFICE OF THE
Annual fees for watercraft
COUNTY TREASURER
MEIGS CO UNT Y
and
outboard
motor
POMEROY , OHIO 45769
registrations are: outboard
Applications
wil l
be
hul1s, rowboats, canoes, recei"oJed by the under signed
th e off ic e of th e Boar d ot
bjlrges or rafts, $1; sailboats at
Mei gs County Commissioner s.
ll!d outboard motors, $3; Po m eroy , Ohio until 9 : 30 a. .m
the 22nd day of Mar ch . 1977 ,
Inboard powercraft and on
from any fin a ncia l insti tut ion
sailboats with auxiliary in- legally eligible whi ch may
r e to submit a written
board engines less than 100 desi
appli c ation to be pu bl i c
horsepower, $7.50; inboard deposi tory ot the Ac t ive and
powercraft and ~ilboats with inact ive and interim depo sits
th e pu bli c Moneys of said
auxiliary inboard engines 100 ofBoard
as pro vi ded by the
Un i form Depos i tory A c1.
horsepower or more, $10.
Section 135.01 et seq . of the
A writing fee of 50 cents, in Revised
Code of Ohio .
addition to the regular fee, Is Said appl ic ~ " ons sh all be
made in conformi ty w ith th e
charged by the licensing fol
lowing resolution pa ssi ng
agents for each registration February 72. 1977
" Be it resolved that the
issued.
ti mated
ag gr e g ate
Temporary 21-day es
ma~&lt;imum amounts of Public
registratims lor both boats fund s sub iect to th e contro l of
said board to be awarded and
and outboat motors are be
depo site d as inactive
available for boaters wanting deposits is (S350 ,000 .00 l and
probable
maxim u m
the
to use their boats . im- amount
of Active Deposit s at
mediately, but experiencing any t ime dur ing the per iod of
difficulty in obtaining a designation is (S l, BOO,OOO .OO l
and the probab ly ma ximum
permanent registration.
amount .of interim deposit s is
Boaters registering boats (S 1. D00,000 .00) and be it f ur th er reso·tved that · b ids be
, 14 feet or longer and motors received
until 9 : 30a .m . EST
10 horsepower and more, on the 22nd day of Mar ch , 1977
that notice to all bank s in
must present their title to get and
said Coun t y and such ot·her
a registrati on . Watercraft banks as may be ne cessary be
titles are stamped annually given publ ica tion as provided
by taw . Said Board of Coun ty
'at the time of registration, Commissioners r eserv e th e
just as automobile titles are. r ight to rel ect any or all bids."
Awards of the Active and
Those individuals who inact
ive deposi ts of Publ i c
uired boats before Jan . I, Moneys subiect to the co n t rol
Board will be made on
t 1964 when the state's ofMarsaid
ch 22 , 1971 tor a per iod of
,.atercraft titling law two veers . commencing on the
1st day of April 1971. Awards
became effective, are not of
in terim deposits of Pub I ic
require&lt;( to present a title Money wi ll be made March '17 .
\\hen registering the craft. 1977 for a period of tim e
vided by the Co u nty
• Another incentive to obtain· pro
lr easurer com m en ci ng on the
blat and motor registrations 1st day of Ap r il 1977.
· App li ~ations shou ld be
early, Hall poin\ed out, is that ' sealed
and en dorsed " AP ·
the registration fees do not pli cations under the Uniform
reduce throughout the year Deposit or y Act "

YARDMAN

5 H.P. TILLERS

v

............:~~

Now

For
Spring

PICKENS HARDWARE CO.
. Mason, W. Va .

Open : Mon .- Thurs. &amp; Sat. 8-5: 30
Friday 8-8

',.,

COPYIKMfT 1977- fHI 100011 CO. lliMS AND "ICR

,,.

0000 WMOAY fiiiiM(M t , lffl fHIU $~ TUtoA V MAIO! ,, ,

WI IUIIVI Tl4111GHl TO liMIT QUANTinU. NOfilf SOLD
I'ODIALIIS.

ALL KROGER STORES RESUME REGULAR STORE HOURS

OPE.N 24 HOURS A·DAY

' "&lt;1

'"&lt;I
•OJ
n 'l

EXCEPT CLOSED SAT. MIDNIGHT TILL 9 AM SUNDAY
DOES NOT INCLUDE HINTON &amp; WHITE SULPHUR

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE
BONE IN FUll CUT

Round

Steak

19
.

.••I'..,

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE

Boneless Full
Cut Round Steak lb .

l lti
j~

14· 17·LI. AVERAGE

2oneless Boston
Roll Roast.. .......

Whole
Fresh .Hams .... ....... .. .lb.

lb.

U.S . GOV'T GRADED CHOICE

Macaroni• &amp; Cheese4
$1 Boneless Top
·
7'/ • ·oz.
Sirloin Steak. ... ..
Kroger D1nners.. .. . ao ...
U.$, GOV'TGIAOib CHOICE

Boneless Top
Round Steak. .....

lb.

5149
5 99

1

$-li.CAN ... $7 ...

Country Club
Canned Hams ...

99

c ".,.•
.

$499
.

l

~ ll

nn e

hi

.. J

,orl
tll
..; I'

1~. $179

U.S. GOV'TCIAO£DCHOICE

Bottom Round
Or Rump Roast ..

---------·
8' OFF
WITH COUPON

&amp;110 II( PIICI'!II: Df Old
II·IH . IQI

:
I

ChHriOI
Cereal

Ground
Chuck ........... :....lb.

~

•·•••

* SPARK PWGS ..........~1:~:.~~.~~~..... 98'
*OIL FILTER .............. ~~~:.:?;~!.... 'l.99
TUNE-UP SET....•.•....:'::..':~:~~ ... 12.49

* SOLENOID SWITCH ... ~~~~ .~~?!... 14.29
*BRAKE SHOES ........~~:::~-~&lt;.~.'10.99
* ALTERNAtOR......~.~~~. ~.~.d-~..~:~~: .. 128.35

* STARTER ..........~.~~~~:~~~..~:~~: .. '25.77
I Fairlanel

* Heavy Duty
* All WEAtHER SHOCKS:,~

$

16.68
12
'''9.88

• • • 0 0-. • • 0 • • • 0 • • 0 0 0 • • • • • • • 0 • • 0 0 . .

$

Kroger
White Bread....... ..
KROGER HI NU2% LOWFAT MILK . CULTURED

aunnFLAKI aun!RMILK?•

I

Lipton Cup
ASoup

H~mogen1zed ·•;..Gat
· Milk ........ .... ...... ctn.

1

__ , ________ _B
I

I

•ouNo To•

I

nu "'ltciMM or 011

~

I

1
: •
J

OFF

WITH COUPON
. II ·~ . N~

Of

"'
:
I

.... TIIIIIIOWf 011 0111

I

Kroger Variety P..

:

Luncheon Meats

'"..

Frying
•·lb. $1 'Chicken Thighs .. .lb .
~-:.··
HOLLY~AAA~S.u.s.o.A.
J
o•
GF....
ch· k
rylng IC en.
C AU
Drumsticks
.........lb.
VARIETIES
Serve 'N' Save

79

Bayer
Aspirin Tablets... ~·;_t .
E)!
I

1

8

~"

'.
""
'"
•
!(.'

Df. •

-------------·
..a so•
~~~g~~~ .. .. .... 4 :~o;;. 88 C LunCheon
IIIUiliiSITIIII.IIIKIJUtli
-CiffUPUUIIJIUrtl lltAIIUU

ggc.

34c

~1

"'I

?I

ot •

"''"

lll&amp;eiTI

''".

.~

5Hdltss
oi:i"iit; ·;;"'
s119
Whitt Grapes ..~ ..... .. Jb.
---------·
WASHINGTON ITAJI
60' OFF "l R. C. Cola ........ . '""
oEP&lt;»IT
Red or Gold•n
._,.,.....
I
I
••·"·"'
I
Delicious Apples ......Each
:
SpetllgM
:
Hi-Dri
I
leanCoHH ..
Fresh
________
•ano•'--u.am
@
I
Towels
Asparagus.................lb.
1
----------·
20c OFF
Washington State
WITH COUPON
I
D' Antou Pean ......... I
......... llr,...·· .............. - ................ ,. HotHouse
,. " ..'"..""
.................
,...
I
~..u...
......................
.
Rhultarlt .................. .lb.
-~.--u.
I ..,..--..
...n• tmrua E)o

--- ------

M.WIJ&amp;~fiiiCI. llltll
..all .wuu1U 111TI l UOI. TAW OF

I

-

I.

I

- ..........

-lll'ft-.:lllft&amp;lM-

······"···
-··---------

DF I
12

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THOMPSON

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........... ....................
.......................... -....
............
~

IHSIZ£

By Mrs. Francis Morris
Mrs. Frankie Neigler is a
medical patient at Holzer
Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs .. Floyd Farra
received ,word their son,. Joe .
Farra, is in Syracuse
Hospital, New York with a
heart condition.
Mr, .Carl Shedister of
Parkersburg, W. Va. visited
Mr. Edison Brace who is
confined in his home with a
broken leg.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Woodgerd of Marietta visited
his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
William Woods Sunday .
Rev. and Mrs. Don Walker
and Mr. and Mrs. John Ihle
returned from their trip to the
Holy Land, Rome and Israel.
eThey report a very enjoyable
• tlme. Rev; Walker's parents,
who were here with their
children, returned to their
home at Lizemore, W. I{a.
Miss Grace Ellis and Miss
Ruth Ellis of Columbus
'Visited Miss Edith Hayman
Saturday:
Mr. Wayland Marr of
Lancaster visited his sister
and brother-in-law, Mr. ·and
Mrs. George Nelgler when he
came to attend the funeral of
Mr. Vtrgil Roush.
Mr. and Mrs. Mack Howard
and Helen RifOe of Hartford,
Va .. visited Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Riffle Friday.
Evelyn Young of Gallipolis
~pent the wee~end with her
'parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Cleland.
Mrs. Helen Alck of liltart
Falls was a dinner guest
Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Miller. ·
Miss Helen . Wilcoxen of
Ohio State University spent
the weekend with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Martin
Wilcoxen who took her back
• to Columb?s Sunday af• ternoon.
,
. Mrs. Margaret Houdashelt
accompanied Mr1 and Mrs,
Milton Houdashelt and
• Beverly and Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Lewis to Belpre Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Curtis of
•
Norwalk and Mrs. Marcia
Ann Wells of' Washington C.
H. spent tilt weekend with
their parents, Mr, and Mrs.
Harry Curtis.
M~:~. ·Linley 'ilart bas been
confined In her home a week
with viral pneumonia·.
Men of Fjrst Ba pttat
Church had a work seulon •t
the new · chil~h Tuesday
evenlnl after ·.being dOled
down due to thlluel shortage.
They hope for ·work to continue now·to be finished by
Easter. ·
ASII: '10 WED
A rna~ ~ wu
luued to William Ray
Fergu1011, 40, Welt Cofuinbla
en(Gwenda 1\oae Sw111n, 41,

w.

HOlLY FAIMS , U.S.D.A.

·---------·
---------·
10' OFF "l
•MD

''"
'",,

GIADI'A'

WMtrTUSin.l-.ll, lltl
~
IUt'f Tl API'LIUII.I n&amp;II t lltll fUU VC

WITH COUPON

$169
lb.

1 A'NY Sltl PKG.

121
I
I
I
I

Henry we ll s
Richa r d E Jones
James E . Rou sh

Racine

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE , IEEF CHUCK
SHOULDll POT ROAST

"

1! - 'fhe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , M,,, · ~~•.II'lil!l7ii71 . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1 1 l • •

JXJint deficit in the finill three ~MI~...-4MI~..........~........~~
minutes here Tuesday night
an d went on to defeat
Parkersburg South 50-47 in
the Section I Region II
playoffs.
The Big Blacks now face
Parkersburg In the finals of
ON
the sectlonals Thursday night
a the Solth gym.
Steve McDennitt paced the
Big Blacks, who ran their
record to 16-5, with 16 while
Ed Nibert and Jeff Holland
added 12 each . South, which
finished the season at 3-17,
got 12 points from Bob Burge
~ Lay-Away
and 10 from Bob Stone .

·rhc Almanac
By
United
Press
International
Today is Wednesday,
March 9, the 68th day of 19n
with 297 to follow.
The moon is approaching
the last quarter.
.
The morning stars are
Mercury and Mars.
Box score:
The evening stars are
PAR~ERSBURG SOUTH
Venus, Jupiter and Saturn, 1471- Burge 11, Will iams 8,
Slone 10, Klrl&lt; 4, Wilson 2.
Those born on this date are Godfrey
9, Deems 2.
under the sign of Pisces.
Italian navigator Amerigo
Vespucci was born March 9,
1451.
an agreement with the Case
On this day In history :
Manufact\ll'lng Co. of Racine,
In 1822, the first patent for Wis., to end one of the longest
A thought · for the day :
President Calvin Coolidge artificial teeth .was awarded strikes on record.
said, ''There is no right to to' Charles Graham of New
In 1962, 31 men were killed
.
stri.ke .against the public York City.
in a coal mine explosion in
In 1947, after 440 days, the
safety by anyone, anywhere,
United Auto Workers reached West Germli~Y ·
anytime."

News Notes : :

CUFTON - Dawn Blake, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Denver Blake, celebrated her seventh birthday with a party at
the home of her grandmother, Mrs. Uoyd Williams, Clifton, on
March 2. Games were played and prizes given . .
Refreslunents were served to Dawn and Sheila Stewart,
Debra and Darin young, Scott and Melissa Kearns, Matt
Rickard, KeVin Peters, Tina and Carl Kearns, Marcia and
Danny Robinson, Kelly Reynolds, Tammy Kennedy, Becky
Hoffman, Tammy and Brian Varian, Dean Scites, Chris
Grogan, Kristen Clark, Jackie Blake, Kay and Mike Robinson.
Adults attending were Vicki Clark, Laura Johnson, Helen
Williams, Judy Scites, Marie Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Gilkey and Mark, Mr. and Mrs. Denver Blake and Mrs. Lloyd
Williams.
Dawn also received cards from Frances Oliver, Helen
Barker, Evelyn Lockett and Rhoda Fox.

Th• · Ea~lt· rn t\lhlt'th·,
1\0HSh' flii

mrans of

class to be offered at. Rio spring quarter , beginning
Grande College-Community March 31. The 10 week course
College (RG C-CCl during will be taught Thursdays
from 7 to 9 p.m.
·:;f:~-:::~::::::::::::::::::::::;:::;:::::::::::;::;:o:;;;;:;;;;;;;o:;:;:;::::::::::::::~!:!::::::::::::;:;:-;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::.;;:::·
According to instructor .
Dr. John Edl"ards, the course
is designed for anyone ,
parent or not. who is in·
terested in working with
By Allila Marshall
ill\ children. Classes will include
lecture, discussion and o~r
MASON - Mrs. Clarence (Cinderella ) Baier was port unity to practice methods
presented a special membership in the United Methodist for dealing with parent-child
WomE!n on Sunday morning at Mason United Methodist relationships.
Church. The presentation was lllllde by Mrs. Catherine Smith,
Edwards said the class is
president of the organization.
to
explore
intended
Others having received this award are Mrs. Howard techniques
of
comVanMatre, Mrs. John Chattin, Mrs. Ray Proffitt, Mrs. munication, between parents
Margaret Pickens, Miss una Giboo, and the late Katie and children. Dr. Thomas
Foglesong.
Gordon's book, "Parent
Effectiveness Training," will
CUFTON- Mrs. Gary Clark, Clifton, entertained Feb. 27 be used as a basis for
with a birthday party for her daughter, Kristen, age 5, at their discussion.
home. Games were played and prizes awarded,
Participants will also have
Cake, ice cream and.punch were served to Jason Quillen, a chance to learn about the
Syracuse, Mrs. Randy VanMeter and Mat, Dawn Blake, Misty consequences . of faulty
VanMeter, Abna Zimmerman, Mr. and Mrs. Alburtice Young, communication between
all of Clifton; Mrs. Butch Schwarz and Heather, Ann parents and children and
Hargraves, Mason; Juanita Clark and Patty Clevenger, New
Haven, Chris Grogan, Mason; Betty Hanun, Pomeroy.
Sending gifts were Mrs. Nancy VanMeter and Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Young.
RIO GRANDE - "Being a
·Parent in the 70s" is the title
of a new continuing education

·~ Mason County
~~

TCII 'HNEY l'l ,hNNFil

H,ol land

Big Hlacks win tourney ppener

,;

•

Pl!tfieroy.

com missioners .
Me igs County

(Jl 2, 9, 2tc

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

Store Hours:
Mon.·Sal. 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
NO SALES TO DEALERS
QUANTI1Y RIGHTS RESERVED

Prices Effective Thru
March ....12, 1977

LB.

PORK STEAKS •••••••••••
:/(.!!

",)~GROUND

LB.
CHUCK ••••••••

USDA CHOICE BONELESS
8

CHUCK ROAST ••••• ~ ~ ••••

$. 19

CENTER CUT RIB

PORK CHOPS ••.•• ~~· •••••
CENTER CUT LOIN
,_ $
29
PORK CHOPS ••••• ~~·••••

ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 19) Be
ext r em ely careful who you
choose as a business associate
today. The wrong person cou ld
lose money lor both of you.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) lm·
promptu decisio ns or those
sp u rred by a n ger ha ve a
deleterious ettect upon you today. Do nothing fro m haste or
aggravation .

COUNTRY STYLE

PORK SAUSAGE •• ~!·....
.

.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Neither prOmise more than you
can deliver to day nor haras s
subordinates to save face . You 'll
·reap only heartaches.

CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Should yo u have a tende ncy to
gamble for high stakes today ,
pl ease sub d ue it . You get
nothing for nothing .

LEO (Jul, 23-Aug. 22) Oelails
elude you today. You cou ld
fash ion what you th ink is a
perfect wheel but neglect to use
enough spokes!

LETTUCE ••••••••••••
HEAD

VIRGO (Aug. 23·Stp1. 22) Being
boastful a·r arrogant Is a sure

way to turn off those who are on

JOAN OF ARC

your s.lde . Humility makes
friends out of enemies.

LIBRA (Bopt. 23-0ct. 23) It's
thing If you waste your own

Kidney

one

re sources today, but muc h
worse to squander another's

trust.

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) Vou
ca n become adamant i f
someone tries to foist thei r
opinions off on you. especially
where your self- interests are
concerned.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc:.
21) Problems today will be mostly self-created . You could avoi d
them by not sticking your nose in
other people's business.

CAPRICORN (Doc:. 22-Jon. 1i)
You're frugal in certain areas to·
day but In other activities you' re
too extravagant. Cut down on
nonessentials.

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 18) An
excessiVe amount of your energy
Is apt to be spent on in significant
goals. Clarify your objective or
the day could be unproduct ive.

MORTON FROZEN u oz.

,
DUNCAN HINES
MOIST &amp; EASY

TV DINNERS....

t31h 01.

SNACK CAKE ·MIX.

LOVIN SPOONFULS

PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20)
One-upmanship isn't your game
today. II someone tells a tall tale,

you'll only
to lop II.

loo ~

foolish by trying

HUNTS CATSUP..:~~~ ••

and knocks for you thi s yea r. The
Problem is not the ·breaks, but
whether ~ou know how to handle
them.
(Are you a Pisces? Bernice

Osot has wri,ll'1

a spec;iaJ Astto·

Graph Lerter for you, For your
copy send 50 cents and a sell-

addrelledt stamped envelope to
Astro·Graph, P.O. Bo• 489.
Rarlfo City Slaffon, Now York,
N.Y. 10019. Be sure to as!! lor
Pisces Volvme ·5.)
v

COUPON

COyPDN

GOLD MEDAL

KRAFT

FLOUR

llorch .10, 1177
OpportUnity knocks and knocks

Beans~~~~

SELF-RISING All PURPOSE
SLB.

59~

MACARONI &amp; CHEESE

Limit 1 Per Customer :
Good OnlY At Powell'•
Offer Expires l-12· 71

COUPON

COUPON

FLAVORITE

, KRAFT

PIN10 BEANS

VELVEETA CHEESE
2lB.

W/ C

limit I Per Customer
Good Only AI Pow•ll's
Offer Expires a:n .n

CAT FOOD...~~-~... /
$159

$

~;~·

W/C

limit I Per Customer

Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires l-12-77

.
'

3/$1

:]

: .~
W/ C . 'I

Limil1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
otter Expires 3· 12-77

:1

:
· ·

· •

... ' . ' . . . . . . . ' ' ' .. - ~
.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ·1

�r

13 _The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , March 9, 1977
12-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday. Marl'h 9.1U77

........ . . . . .
. ... &lt;1' .. ... _ ....

WEDNESDAY, MARCH f, 1977
s ·Jil-Adam 12 .1,13; lliews '6; Family Affair 8; Elec.
Co. 20,33.
·1
6:00-New• 3,4,6,8,10, 13,15; ABC News &lt;I; Zoom 20,33.
6:31l-NBC New• 3,.1, IS; AIIC Niw~J; A~dy Gr\11\th 6;
CBS New• 8, tO ; V"9'!table,~oup 20; tlllos Yoga &amp;
You 33.
7.00-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth • : Bowling•
for Dollars 6; Pop Goes the Country 8; News 10; To
Tell the Truth 13; 'My Three Sons IS; Consumer
Sur•lval KIt 20; Big Green Mgagazlne 33.
7:Jil-Dol1y 3; $100,000 Name That Tune 4; Match

-~

(!\)

Game PM 6; $25,000 Pyramid I; MacNeli-Loltrer
Report 20,33; The Judge 10; Break the Bank 13;
Wild Kingdom IS.
•

BRIDGE
Oswald and Jim Jacoby

•

New toy get high bid

SUCH A NICE' DAY O!JT t:; N'T
IH .. SO l&gt;li:IGHT AND :;uN'-IYI

NORTH lV I

. 7510
• K

only count to nine top tricks
This left him with a chol~e of
club and heart finesses for his
contract, but South thought he
saw a better way to recover
from the trouble htS btd of one
too many notrump had caus·
ed
He stmply cashed the lour
top dtamonds. West shed a
spade and a club, whereupon
South threw him in wtth a
spade It looked so easy The
defense could take three
spade tricks and then would.
have to lead a club or a heart.
Unfortunately , for South ,
West cashed four spade
tncks

9

52

• A6 4
• AJ 92

WEST

EAST

.AK 10432

• 98

• Q8 3

.16 4

• 52

t10983

.86

•QH4

SOUTH
.QJ 6
• AJ9
t K QJ 1

ALLEYOOP

"'K 10 3
East-West vulnerable

WELL, I'LL BE . ! IT AIN'T
A CRITTER AT ALL! IT'S
FOOZY'S KIDS!

North East South
I•
Pass 2 N T
Pass J N T Pass 4 N T
Pass Pass P.ass
Opemng lead - 2 •
West

UTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

.---------~L.ITTLE

ORPHAN ANNIE - t 0
E:H? OH, I OC!N'T
THINK 50, NElllf -

HOW SHUT 'lOUR EYES
AND GO TO SLEEP · AND
PLEASANT DRE AMS · ·

1"\A 1 HA 1 MAY
SIT UP AND

THINK FOR

ANNIE

'

A WHILE--

AND I

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

Television log for easy viewing

DICK TRACY

A Nebraska reader asks tf
the b1ddmg proceeds on club·
pass -one spade-pass-two
hearts-pass is that two heart
bid by opener a one-round
Ioree.
The answer is that in
modern expert btdding it is
played as a one-round force,
but in most systems this
reverse bid is merely played
as very strong , but not quite
forcing

SO

MUCH

ALIKE• ·ANNIE - AM 011PMAN -·
MY MOTHER DIED TO 6RING

INTO THIS WORLD ··
BUT I HAD A FATHER •••
~E

COLD, HARD MA~ ••.
FINE DOCTOR 1HOUGH HE
WAS ·· I'M 100 MUCH LIKE
HIM , I' M AF"AIO - BUT ANNIE-MO PAREHTS-YE1 TH'
SWEET EST TYKE ··

(Do yov have a qvest1on
ror me e•perts? Wnte "Ask
Ihe Jacnbys " care of this
newspaper The Jacobys wrll
answer rndiVidual questions
11 stamped. self-addressed
envelopes are enclosed T~e

Blackwood, but rather to show
this 18 to 19 potnls
S th
t d t t 't t
ou. wane 0
I OU
and finally dtd , but Wtth a 17point rather than an 18 or 19point hand
West decided there m1ght
well be some reason to con·
ceal hts stx-card spade suit
and opened the deuce. South
won With the queen and could

A

rr

mosr mrerestmg questions
wrfl be vsed rn th1s corvmn
and will rece•ve coptes of
JACOBY MODERN.)

~Jtewd'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
DOWN
ACROSS
I Indonesian I Hackneyed
2 Cognizant
tsland
3 Author,
5 Ascended
Ira10 Over4 Chemical
whelmed
suffix
II Stiff net
·12 Fruit
5Less
frequent
(2 wds.)
6 Dock14 Grecian
workers'
nickname
15 Fruit drink • union ~~"
7 One way ,_,.
16 Shrew·
to end
mouse
meeting,
17 Author
(2 wds.l
Deighton
8 Chisel
18 German
9 Goaded
article
II Pattern
19 Indian
13 Large spoon
fodder
20 Japanese
plant
statesman
ZO Below par
21 Plunge
22 Adhesive

-.--- -"'"--BORN LOSER

~OO'R£ Jl{[OfJL~ D~B I~

Li?lJ KOO\IJ I

ll!~ Cli&gt;GS WHO FAI~D

ll!IS TEST, Wll-So~FORLf!

J\k,

·-·

GASOLINE ALLEY

Yesterday's Answer

21 Prohibitionist 29 U.S. naval
hero

22 Moore or
Lowell
23 - Vivaldi
%1 Car feature
Z5 Reaclj!d to
· a full
moon
27 Asian
country

30 Waterway
31 One of the
Shaws

32 Ruminant

mammal

37 Do badly
38 Apple
elder
lady

25 Kind
21 Upon
27 Singing
Starr
....(.;.1.1.£..1..- 21 Greek l•tf••r lu:-f-1r..LLUJ.WJ.wJ.&gt; 29 Lad
u.w.lllll!J.lU

30 English
river

"High_ ..
~~~~~~~~~~~";~~";... 3433 Metric
measure

3S Nigerian

LILABNER

SAY lWO .ARMIES WERE'
RUSI-I IN' AT EACH OTHE:'RAH STEP IN TH~
1
,_-" '"·
MID~E'"
'EM !'-

36

lrp~ibes~:U~rna;;;;;;n;~ llut--t-

IF VOU nave a ser~ce to offer .
want to buy or sell something,
oe lookmg for work . . . or
whate ver .
you 'll get results
foster w1th a Sentinel Want Ad .

Coll992-2156
I

'

_. FAMILY VARO Sole , Soturdoy,
March 1~th at Carl Authersons
residence

..
""

-

f!l

'("

'

367-0292
HOOF HOLLOW. Buy , nil , trade
or tram horses RUTH REEVES,
trainer Phone {614) 698·3290.
AKC REGISTERED Pekin gese Pupp,es , ready to go Pho ne 1 (la..)

882 2683.
POODLE GROOMING , reasonable
rates . Call for oppt. 742 -3162.
~-----------

DON'T IIOQI&lt;'f

"THAN~DIAN/1 . /MKING­

YOJ MEAN

AI301JTIT1 ·
WINNIE,ItL

YOt) MANAGER OF
OONNI\Z WAS ONE OF
THE SMAIZTE5T

MANAGER OF

MOJE5 I IMDf' .1

FAS#IONS ·

lf\KE CARE
OF 10017E
VETAIL'J .'

WINNIE
WINKLE
DON'T 'rOll?

RA

RD

CIW,

S L F W 'D
I

ZM'F

NP

ORCRIW
-

NM

NM M W

ICLUMON

I KJ

CRYPTOQVOTilS

A IV

ZLDUSRWB

M F R'·
DMGM·

NOTICE TO BIDDERS

"'
'"

·.•
.,
;;,
"'
;:

''

:~

'"
"
~·

"
"
:

"
.,
"
"
'

..

~

,

ULWFGMGRBSD

y~~~f~ ~:te; ;;~~~E IS A'GOOD PLACE TO

Print

IUrprlw .,.~ htrt:"D [ I

-'to

11111·
~

I I J"

VISr~IT:B:UT:A~POO~.:R:P:LA:CE~TO!·S:T~A~Y-~~JOS~H~B~If.JI~fN~GS~~~-~~-~-~t ow,!1'J;~!)!·~.i~~~~""-'·~;-;!;"!tom~!OI~'io·o)
BARNEY

C)

IU1 lllna r ..~ t•odl011f,1eo,

•'

AUNT LOWEEZV !!
NOW THAT '!'OUR MASTER
HAS RUN AWAI.(, I'M
SUPPOSED TO FEED I.(QU

'-IO'RE TH' CRANt&lt;lt.ST
FEMALE IN TH' HO~LER

tl

For Wa"t Ad Servin
S cents per word one
Insertion
M ln 1mum Charge Sl.OO
lA c ents p~r word three
consec utive 1nsert1ons.
21 cen ts per word S IX
con sec utive lnsert 1ons
25 Per cent D1scovn t on
ell ad s paid In advance .

bile ht;arlng on Wednesday,
arch l _O, r. 1977, at 9 30 AM .,
· Coun~II • Chambers, VIllage
all, Pomeroy, Oh io, with
ursd8y ,1 March 31, 1977
sertied for continuation If
n cessary , At this hearing all
p rues of Interest w ill be
afforded an oppor:tunlty to
.P..'esent ev Ide nee relevant to
"'is matter
Further In format ion mJy be Obtained by
ddreulng en Inquiry to the
ubllc Utl Utlts Commission of

Dhlo. 110 East Broad street,

ntColumbus, Ohio •3215

QTHE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OH 10

u [i~Y : Randall
l Secretar'f
(w~~ J

23 'IJJ

G . AppleiOiJate,

2, l• Jtc

1971 FORD "" TON CJIEWCAB

min i mum
·
Ea c h ad ditional word 3
cents .

BLIND ADS

Add ltlonal 2Sc Charge
per Advertisement

NOTICE.

Protf'l

Moot

Mkt

(Pleasanton Meat Proceuing,
Inc.) Custom slaughtering , and
proce11mg. Retel l, wholesale.
No appolnment mtcessary . Coli

(61.1) 593·8655, hours , 9 00 till
6:00 7 Pomeroy Rood . Ath.no,
Oh.
GUN SHOOT at the Racine Gun
Club every , Sunday. 1 pm
Assorted meoli.
Gun Shoot every Saturdov n1ght
6 p.m. at their building In
__Ba
_s_
ho_~. Ohio
:.:·:__ _ _-,-

llllam S.1 Crou, of Recine,
IO, hll Hetn dUlY appointed
xecutor. of the ~stete ' ' J .
Ilion eros--. deceased. late of

lgs eglly, Oh lo

Credit
f e tht
f uciM'V

art nqulrtd to
claim 1 with 'aald
lthln four months .

Doted fhls

bruor~ U77 .

)~

"I

26th doy

8.13-2613 .

J97b CAMARO 305, 2 borrell
automatic, silver with rltd
p1nstr1p1ng Sllll under worran ·

tv Coll992-5709

1974 OLDSMOBILE Tornado , fully
equipped Phone 992·35 11 after
5 30 p m

1974

VEGA

of

no 0 Webster

',
•
Jvdoe
Court ot 'c :-"'on !'1ias,
IJ!n\tllli Division

HATCHBACK

uutomatic, 4 new fires good
cond1t10n . Phone 742-2748

m

WILKESVIlLE . (61.1) 069-3785

automatic , ps . p b., Toke over
poymenb . Phone

m -6038.

1975 PONTIAC ASTRE . 2 dr hotchbock , new tires
Con tact 985-4290.

l1ke new

'f.~
. ~ ~I:.
OLD furn 1ture , ice boxes, brass
beds , wall te lephones ond
ports or comp lee households
Write M . 0. Miller, Rt. 4,

I BEAMS ond H Beams 8 9, ond

~Po~~~~!·-~'-o~ ~~~ ~9!2-7~~·
CASH paid for oil mokel and
model• of mobile home• .
Phone ar ea code 614-423-9531
TIMBER Pomeroy Forest Pro ·
ducts Top pnce for standing
sawtimber Call Kenl Hanby,

1-.1·6·8570
COINS, CURRENCY. tokens, old
pocket watches and chains ,
silver ond gold. We need t%4
and older 11tver coin1 . Buy, tell ,
or trade Coli Roger Wamsley.

742 2331 .
.
---- --POMEROY AUTO RECYCLING.
NOW BUYING SCRAP. Turn
junk ou tos Into t:osh , A. lto bu'f·
'"g metals, botttrln, etc.
Open Monday ,
Tue1day .

BTU . L1ke new Phone 992 :2805

USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT (I)
Tlmberjock 240 Slodder, Pel·
tlbone Super 8 Cory L1ft 60
Bush MetallurgiCal Ch1pper
Contact Dennls Smurr . Phone
SEAR s 8 H P garden !roc lor w1th
mower $450 16 gauge 870
shotgun, S100. Phon~ 992-:2369.
FRIGIDAIRE 40 1nch Elec stove.
used J years L1ke new, $150
Gordon Coldwell
Tuppers
Ploins. Phone (6 I 4) 667·3935

··-···

STEREO, NEW AM-FM sle&lt;eo
rod1o combmohon. $129 95 or
eos.y term1. Coli992-396S.

--·-

--

-·~-.

NUDA
WA lFR Sllf1EMR 7
Let Pomeroy Landmark
&amp; condillon your
water and o Co-op woter
so1t1ner, Mo.l UC-XVI .
Now Only'279.95

soften

Let us test your water
Fr".

, PamelliJ Landmllk
:~Jock W. C..rsey, Mgr.
.

Weds .. Fndoy . 8:00 · 4 30 •.

Pltone 9f2-2181

tv

----------

-~-

--~

-

~

--

,, ' m'= ;;:- 'fii.,- !We

" 2 BEDROOM B M

.

.

•&amp;.portly furnish·

ed. Phone!304l 882-33&gt;18.
-··-·
. -~-

3 AND 4 RM. lurnlohed and un·
furnished

opts .

PhoM 992·

ond Saturday nights, 7,30 p .m

till 10 p.m. Avoilobla lor
prlvote parties, Monday 1 Tu11 ,
and Thuudoy nlgtltt, and Sotur·
day ond Sunday afternoons

Phone 985-3929 01915-9996 .

33, ten mUes north of Pomeroy
Large lots w ith concrttt patios,
sidewalks, runnen ond off

strttt
Phone
..parking.
..,._
. ,. 992-7479
.
~

~--.

2 BEDROOM TRAILE'R, lrown s

TrQIItr Pork . P'-a 992·3324.
.-------- . NEW CA.RTOON Glau Ser1es : 49c 3 ROOM FURNISHED opt. Call
wifh 16 ••· Popsl. DAIRY ISLE,
991-2288 o.- 992-23&gt;18 oftor S
-~

. _M•~I~!t ·
------··
SWEEPER AND Sewing Machines
Mepalr Port1 and Supplies.
Dovl1 Vacuum tleoner, 1IJ, mile

2 BEDROOM Fur. opt. Phone

up George• Crook Road. off
Slofo llouta 7. Phone (614)

FURNISHED APT . for rent for

Rock Springs
Cemlttery, every Sunday , 12

noon .

.P·.'!'· . . - -~- . .

condition . l7S. Phone (614)
66?-331!; _T~~p.e~.P!?~n_s. ~hio
3 PIECE coffee table set Phon•

992-2571 o•'lt2-7828.
1')37 FormoU F·20. rubber wheels,
good condit ion See ot Albony
Ohio, Rt 2, 157A.-1, Gary

Welch.
SEARS ROEBUCK IOO.OOO'btu goo
fyrnace, never used. $150. Not
odoptoble for mob1le homes

3 room and bath furnishM aport·
ment, utilities paid, 356 North
~lh St , ~id~l_epor! ~-~ia
2 TRAilER t()TC: , U ,,...,.r,.d,.,,.., coli
9'12 -0.JJ.
. .

-- -·

·-- --

..

' :,

ages 4 and 5; one In 1chool ~~

home

In your

Phone 843·2292

5:30p.m.

afTer

882·257,,
1976 M F.G. Gypsy floot. 16 If.
with walk thru window . 1976
Chrysler 7S h.p motor 1973 ,
Winnebago lrozt Camper, oc - 1
tual miles, 6600 . Phone

992 5126.

pm .

ONE BEO~OOM lurnlohed apt.
Coll992-3129or992-S43-4 .
!OST, tROWN ond whlto lomola
Pointer dog on Rl. 143 on Har. .. ·~
. ,
'~
r'-onvllle Rood. Owned by R. E.
r,w·!fale.cftftlf.-~,
- R!'!~ .992-5072 .
JOHN D£ERE Dater No. 40. ~:
1971 Dodge Von, 6 cyl.
IWp~~ry·d~f;
'
. ..
outomotic, side door1 ond win LUYSimR In Portland aroa lor ' dowo. $1000. W11i tOll Of trodt

.dOv. 7 a.m. till 6 p.m

tanape bedroom suite . 1971
Ford Torino : one small
reft~gerotor.
Phone (3 0.. )

992·?288 or 992· 2348 after 5 ~ l_o yln_g he_ns:_Phone _992 21 83

elderly couple. Phone 992 2571
"'992·3975

for

tractor

and

FOR SALE
Ntw Co ~ Op wtter sof.
tenlrt, model VC-SVI.

Onlr t279.1S

One toad chain Homellte

Choln Saw ... ,

SUMO

Savt sso .oo on a new
Hot_polnt R efrlgerator
1 Oeod Ultd Hotpolnt
~en••

.

1101

..... Lllldnllll
.

ell W. tartfY, Mgr.
'hont "2 ·2111

.

.

eqUipiMftl.

• Phone (614) 661·:1319, fupporo
Plolns, Ohio.

TOBACCO BASE. Phone 742·201.1

Price 117,200
No. 198 - 4 Bedroom home,
modern
k ttchen ,
new
steam heat has apt . and

beauty

t+OMESITES for sale, 1 ocr• and
up. Mtddleporl , near Rutland

Collm 7481 .

shop with

PHOTOGRAPHY

Route 3, Pomeroy , 0 .

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

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

" The Originators

(614]9BS-41SS
Chester, Ohio
10-17-1 mo IPdl

Not The lmil1tors"
2-23-1 mo

EXPERiENCED
Radlnto'!lr .-.-..-.

~~
..... HOOSE&amp;

N-liaS

Route 3, Pomeroy, 0.

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

Southeastern Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.

-

Young's Carpeting

BARf\1 -...

TRUSSES
ANY PlliCH
ANY SIZE

Located in Langsville

Ph.992-2174

Carpet. uno.-Tile

Box 28-A

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Phone Mike Young at
992 -2206 or 992-7630

Rutland , Ohio 45775
Ph (6 14) 74 2-2409
We OeiJver
12 22 4 mos

'"""""

2 23-1 mo.

FREE ESTIMATES

equipment tn shop

Business Senires

"'BBow"

BRADFORD Auc l1 oneer . Com
piete Serv tn:&gt; Phone 949 2487
or 949 2000 Ra c1ne Oh1o Cntt
Brodlord

lnSIIlalion Services
F11umctn1 Avatll~le
Bklwn tntd Walls I Atttts

PARTS · lABOR
GUARANTEED

STORM

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR

WIIIIIOWS &amp; 0001$

Sweepers toasters 1rons oil
small opplionces l awn mower
ne)(l to Slate H1ghwoy Gar age
on R au l ~ 7 Phone (6 14) 985

REPLAt:EMUT

WINOOIIS

REASONABLE
RATES

ALUMINUM

3925

SIDIIIG-SOF'Fin
GunERUWNINGS

Ph. H2·l99l

2· 25-l mo.

~ 1 ~1

mo

Pn ce

REMODELED 5 ROOMSond both I
acre land Phone 742·2769
Bl lEVEL HOME near Metgs H1gh
School Phone992 7414

EXCAVATING Backhoes , DoLer,
trencher , l ow Boy dump truck .
EXCAVATING dozer , loader ond
Tru cks sept iC systems 811 1
ba ckhoe war~ dump !rucks
Pullins Phone 992 -2478 day or
and Ia boys for h1re . will houl
n1ght
•
fdl d1rl , to sod , l1mestone and
JA CK 5 BEES SUPPLIES
gravel Coli Bob or Roger Jel
le,s doy phone qn-7089
Reedsvrlle , Oh1o Bee su pplies
mght phone 9c:l2 3525 or 992
and equ ipment Phone (614 )

5232

378 6357

S;,i ~it't!S:~=-"·= -=-~

TEAFORD

-

FINE HOME -

7409.
SEWIN G AlTERATIONS

MAIN
POMEROY, 0.

Solid 9

room stucco home , 3
bedrooms with closets , nice

some repair 5.4,800 00.

good coal furnace , :2 ca r
garage wl th storage, ntee
corner lot on Rt. 124 at

and 3 lois located on corner

$35,000.
NEW LISTING - 11 room
brick in Mi&lt;llleport out of
flood . Has 4 bedroom s, 2

traffic past this ground
daily .
POMEROY - 2 story

baths, nat.

bedrooms, bath, dining

gas fur nace,

basement, front and back
land. s13,000
PAGEVILLE frame

home

acre

Of

7 room
with

3

bedrooms . 2 bath5, fron t
porch , n 1ce siding and

garden In back . $7,500.
MIDDLEPORT 4
bedrooms, 2 baths . frame
Ali utilities and nice view of
the Ohio Ri ver 512,000
l'h ACRES - Large 4
bedroom

home with

1h

bath on Rt. 7 In Tuppers
Plains. Good locat ion for a
business. Qlly Sl2,000 .
LOOK HERE - New 3
bedroom br 1ck veneer,
di ning with glass doors, 2
car garage and almost on e
acre of nice laymg land .

REDUCED.
FREE GAS - With the
well, all minerals , barn, old
hou5e, 115 acre• with 90
fenced . Good hunting and
fishing . Would like 530,000.
ALL HIRED HANDS WILL
TRY TO SELL THE
PROPERTY THAT YOU
LIST WITH US.

U p hal sler~ng ,

NEW LISTING - l'h story
frame . 2 bedrooms, bath ,
dining R.. large lot. Needs

equipped k1tchen and
dlnrng . Full basement.

porches. Over 1

-

W1ll do od d tobs . roof1ng , pa1n
ling , gutter work Phone 992

Virgtl B. Sr., Realtor
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy. Ohio 4S769
Phone 992-3325

NEW LISTING - Bu ild ing
of Routes 33-7-1 24 Ideal for
Commercial.

fra me

has

Loads

3

of

l arge

room , fireplace, basement,
,NG heat . Porches overlook

the river (beautiful view!
$12,500.00.
RUTLAND - 4 acres with
,older home . 3 bedrooms,

bath. NG heal, alum .
siding, porches, trailer
hookup. S15,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Brick &amp;
Frame 2 bedroom•. bath,
dining

room ,

drape~

reasonable 572 South Th~rd
A ve , Mtddl epbr t
Phone

992-6306
PORTABLE WELDER , Iorge ond
smoil 1obs Con also thaw
frozen water p1pes . Phone

949-2646
HAVE YOUR fox es done by an accountan t. Also now oc.cepling
book~eep1 ng. Phone 992-6:206
or 992 -61 73
INCOME TAX Servtee, Wolloce
Ru ssell ,
Br adbu r y
Coli

992-722a
Wl LL

00

Housedeon mg

Coil

992 252.1
Wlll

DO

housework

Ph one

992 7135 .

n1ce level lot . House need s
some repair. $8,900.00 .

MINERSVILLE - I floor
plan, 2 bedrooms, bath,
lovely kitchen. range &amp;

PIANO TUNING , Lon e Oan 1els 12
yeors of se r v1ce
Phon e

992-2092

oven.
New
furnace,
basement.
garage .
Ex cel lent
condition.

$16 ,500 .00.
WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
ACR .:AGE AND NEWER
HOMES. LET US SELL
YOUIIS NOW.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.

~lSPVit~"'
- ---- -- - - - fNSTIWCTION

nnw"

~"'ployfd

ff»&gt;ll'fflflt'J

EXCAVATING doHH
backhoe
ond d1tch er Charles R Hal
held , Bock Hoe Ser v1c e,
Rutland . Ohio Phon e 742 2008
SE PTIC System s ms tal\ed by
l1 censed mslaller
Shepard
Contrac Tors Phone 742 2409
SEPTIC TANKS deoned
Somtat1on, 992 3954

1t1 S.'l'f' '"'tk1111

/ttld ""'""" •H"'f" ,.,.llf,S

"'""'$18,300,.,;~
•• , _ . - .,. 1lrt US lhpf uj Lt~bot­

•lf,...... or hbor-

rr•rur~J

Modern

WILL do roofr ng, co n struc tr on
plu mb1 ng ond healing No JOb
too Iorge or too small Phone
742 2348

--.

~

--

CARPENTER , flooring
ce1hng,
ponelmg Phone 992 -2759
MOBI LE Home Repa~r
Elec
plumbing and heatmg Phone
992 -5858

EtcCTRONIC TV CLINIC , New
TV shop , Electron1 c T V Clm1 c
Sen11ce coli , $5 95 Color, 8 &amp; W
antenna systems sTereos etc
572 South TtHfd, M1ddleporl
Phone 992 -6306 Carry m and
_!ov;_mo~ey

HOWERY

enclosed

porch , block garage, •ery

Plumbmg , heohng
and alltt.pes of genera l repo1r
Wor k guaranteed 20 yeors e)( ·
panence Phone 992 -2409

SEWING MACHINE Repairs ser
v1ce ali m ak e~ 992 -7284 The
Fobr1 c Sh op
Pome r oy
Authomed Smger Sales and
SerVI(e We sharpen Scissors

$35,000.
104W. Ma1n
Pomeroy
992-2298
After Houro Call
992-7133
CONTACT:
Loi• Pauley
Bran(h Manager

..

R E M OO~U N G ,

LAI&lt;RX.:~y~~DER

Reedsville, 0 . Ph. 378-62SO

all

house on 40x120 corner lot

Saturday 8 00 · 12 00 Phone FABRIC SALE One week on ly
992-6337 . Old Rt. 33 jut! across
Monday , Morch 7th thru Sotur
Gr~!s.•r _s_~h~Pf!r~ _
day , Marc h 12th. All our usual
good qual• material $2.98 ptr
W.ANTEO OLD pianos , any condiond under . Nothing
tion . Poymg $10 and S25 each · yard
h1gher. Houn : 9:00 A.M. lo
First floor only hpert mov1ng
7·00 P.M Mondoy thru Fndoy
Fulty Insured Companv. Write
Closed Satu rdays except for
giving d1rections
W1tlen
sole w"ks Coroitno Fobocs on
Pianos , Box 188, Sord11. Ohio
Route 7 one-half mile nor th of
439.16. Phono (61.1) -483-1605.
. -·
Che-sl111r, Oh1o Henry and Mary
WANTED. CHIPWOOD. Polao,
Hunter owners .
max1mvm d10m1ter · 10 tnc.has
on lorgast end. $8 per 1on; 1975 HONDA CRI2S: 1972
KAWASAKI 175 . Phone
bundles slobs. $6 1M' ton
992 -3367.
Otllvtrtd to Ohiv Pollet Com·
pony. Rt . 2, Pomeroy , Oh1o. 2 PIECE Living room 1u1te 1 ~;~ood

Phone 992-2689.
"r . -- - .
~u

No. 189 - 5 Acres more or
less ha s 12 x60 mobile home
with expando, large pat io,
10x l5 u tt l1 tv bu ll dtng ,
completely
furnished .

(614 1838-53.15

- - ·~·

Aerial
Commercial
Schools
Weddings

Automatic
Transmission Service

3290.

10 tnch Coll992 7034
FOR SALE TO THE HIGHEST BID
OER . SEALED BIDS Witt BE
RECEIVED ANYTIME UNIT IL
APRIL5 , 1977 ol 7 P.M FOR A
USED JOHN DEERE DOZER WITH
1969 Ford LTD motor $200 00
BLADE AND A 1965 DODGE 4
1963 ChevroleT Motor $75 00 .
OR FORMER POLICE CRUISER .
9.19 - 21~
BOTH ITEMS CAN BE SEEN AT
RUTLAND. OHIO CONTACT
1974 MALIBU ClASSIC, Londou
BRUCE DAVIS OR CAll
roof . tnple black 2 door V-8
742 2143. VERNON WEBER .
350, cutamot1C , P.s , P S Am
CLERK-TREASURER , RUTLAND
and ~ape . Call 9'92 _5637 .
VIllAGE BIDS MUST BE SEALED
197.1 OlDSMOBILE CUTLASS S
AND IN THE CLERKS HANDS NO
36.000 m1IH. good cond1t1on .
LATER THAN 7 PM APRIL 5.
Tune· vped.
$3200 • Coil
1977 TERMS . CASH FROM THE
m -5B52 anytime.
HIGHEST BIDDER
t965FORDMUSTANG . 289eng;ne WARM MORNING Gos 65 000

1973 PLYMOUTH OUSTER, 3-40,

Young's Carpeting

SWAIN'S

CAMPER
S6DO
Al so. hor se
trader . S4SO, Phon e (6 14) 698-

1973 VEGA STATION , new tires .
air conditioning Good running
cond1 hon
e xcell ent
gas
mile-age . $1400 or best otfer
Phone 742-2565

cutomai 1C, good mtenor, body
rough , good work cor. S200.
Phone 992-628 1 or 992 ·5663

PROFESSfONAL

535 ,000

FULLER Brush Products for sole
Phone 992 -3410

5434.
Phone 9.19-23.18.
SKATE·A·WAY ANNOUNCES
Sr,hedule Open Weds .. Frldoy COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork. Rt. TRUCK TOPPER B II one wh1to

ctned .

Notice 11 hereby given that

Phone

39 ACRE Form 20 acres Til lable
51)( room house both furnace ,
born , shed corncr ib, cellar
house , basement ioyed up for
another house Also 12 x 60
ntce mob1le home 1nduded 11
COAL. limestone, and calc1um
no Tso ld prev1ously . Pmed ond
chloride and calcuJm bnne for
shown by oppmntmen t Coil
dust control and spec1al m1xing
(614 ) 667 3866.
salt for formers. Main Street
Pomeroy , Oh1o or phone
72 ACRES. port ly fenced . 8 roo m
remodeled house ful l bme
3891.
, fuel otl. forced atr hee l
APPLES FITZPATRICK ORCHARD ment
ullltty room
carport and
STATE ROUTE 689 PHONE
stora ge room Phone 742 -281Q

RACINE FIRE Oapt. will hove o

by·pall near

'

Super Beetle

Superior
Steam Extraction

NEW 3 bedroom house, bu dt m
k1Tr .,.en bolh and ' , Phone
742 -2306 or c.ontocl M1IO 8 Hvtchtson Rutland. Oh1o.
TUPPERS PLAINS Ohto
New
three bedroom house l1vmg
room large ktlchen ceram1 c
bath , carpeted , alloch ed
gar age . Iorge lot $22 900Phone (614 )667 -6304

1971 VW

Revivethe
of

CommerCial properly oppraw 17
ocres level land , locat ed at
Tupper s Plams on Onto Route
7 Phone (614) 667 630.4

&amp;OBITUARY
S2 00 f or
50 word

1969 CHEVROLET 81squotne; 1966
BUICK Electra , 225; 2 Rokan
lrtalbtkes Phone 9.49-243:2

BRING NEW ltFE
TO YOUR CARPETING

3102 or (30&lt;1772 3227

CARD OF THANKS

'SHOOTING-MATCH, -~;~ o11 Rt-.,7
'
NOTICE 0 .. APPOINTMENT
r
•
ClstNo. U052
st1te ., J: DILLON CROSS,

COUNTRY farmla nd wtth seclud ed wood!i , wa ter and good oc
cess m Monroe County W Vo
$1 ,0CO down co li (304 ) n2

$1448

Body good, runs good.

m -0294

T•

SMALL larrY) fof sole lOu'• down
owner fi nanced Monroe Coun ·
ty W Va Phone (304 } 772

197S EL CAMINO TRUCK
$3f~l
8 cylinder, automatic. power steering and brakes, rally
wheel•, black and block v•nyl trim

-

~

"

lonn lhe IUtpriM - · M
gttltd bylltlboviCIIIoon.

Motor Co.

NEW t97S APPACHE TRAILER
$1941
Fold-down never used, traded for Custom Van . Ready
to roll

PUCO Cue No .
76-632-TP -PEX
LEGAL NOTICE

Notice Is hereby given thet
Po11tty Triplett and 163 other
bSCiil bers of the Portland
xchange
of
General
elephone Company of Ohio
ve filed .a complaint wnh
he Pub l ic · Ufllltlu Com mission of Ohio seeklnO the
establishment of non optlon;fll
wo -way exten~ed area ser ' wice between the Portland
_M_exchanoe
of
Gentral
Telephone Company of Ohio
-~d the Chester Exchange of
; estern Reserve Telephone
mpeny : The commission
s sctitd\Jied this matter,

Business Services

Ni:W J bedroo m house 2 bath!&gt;
all elec , 1 acre M1ddlcpon
close to Rvll ond Phone q9'J
7.481

3102 0' (304)712 3227.

-

"

I
Now ttrlnge the circled

The Publisher rese rves
the right to ed it or relect
any
ads deemed ob ·
lectlo nal The publisher
will not be responsible for
more then one In cor r ect
Insertion .

oo

,
:
.

IDIVERF
I
I II 0

I·

REGULATIONS

Sealed proposals y,rltl be
noon Saturday
r ece-Ived by the Clerk of the
Phone today 992 -2156
Board
of
County
Com m issioners , Galtla County,
Oh io at the offi ce of the co . m t y
NOTICES
comm 1ssloners at the Countv
A.ll Yard Sales, Rummage- ,
c ourthouse in Gallipolis. Ohio
Porch and Basement, etc .
until 12
Noon , Ea stern
must be paid In advance .
Standard Time , March 31,
Get yours In eerlv by
1977, and opened Immediately
stopping by our office at
thereafter, for furnishing and
The Da11y Sentinel, 111
complete Installation of the
C:ourt St . or wntl ng Box
loose equipment et the Gellla.
729, Pomeroy, OhiO 45769
Jac:kson,
Meigs
County
with your rl'!m lttance .
Commun 1ty Mental Health
Center in Gallipolis, Ohio ,
according to the plans and
specifications prepared by
Hayes, Donaldson , Witten myer &amp; Partners , Architects,
601 Eighth Street, ftorts
IN MEMORY of Donold Sheets
mouth, Ohio and on flle In the
who possed away March 9,
off ice of the clerk of the Board
1976.
of County Com m iSlJ.Ioners
Copies
of
plans
lind We cannot say. we must not soy ,
speci fi cations end proposal ThaT he IS deod . He It lUSt awov .
blanks, together wlth any W1th a cheory sm1le and wove of
fur t her Information desired , ,. the hand.
mav be secured from the He hos wondered mto the prom iS·
offlce of the Architect, upon
edlond
deposit of a check In the
.
am aunt of $25 .00 for each So th1nk o1h1m 1ortng on as deor
project, made payable to the lnthelaveofthere , o~theloveo f
Ar chitect
here
Upon receipt Of a reouest, I sit around teors streom mg down
accompanied by a deposit as
my face ,
named above, the Architect But 1 know He's found o better
wllt forwo!lrd copies at bidding
place
documents as named In
11 heor h1s vo1ceon
·
d 'iee h' '
pre ce d 1ng
para g raph , I sll
CHARGES
smile
SH I P P l N G
COLLECT .
But It seems like he's traveled so
Deposi t w d I be refunded
many m1les
upon the return of t he p lens Son , 1tssopa1nfultowalt,
and specifications in good Bull know you w 11i be wo1il ng at
condit ion and with posteqe or
thegoldengote.
e xpr es s charges prepaid Sod
db
d
d
W1thln ten (10) doys after the
ly mlsse
'( Mom on Do
date bidS are opened . Deposit
brothers. and sls_ters_. __ ~
w il l not be refunded upon IN LOVING Memory of Donald L
return
She ets w ho w as 1o k&amp;n 1rom our
dale of documents at a later
Each bid shall be ac llv•s. March 9, 1976. Sodly
comp an 1ed by a bid bOnd in an
mtiSed by all who knew a nd
amount o f 10 percent of the
loved l'um
total sum of the proposa l, For whatever elliie wefo1 l to do ,
including all add alternates, We never foil to thtnk of you .
supported by a Power of At- How we long forJov r embrace
h
d 1
'
torney for the bondi ng agent , a Th ' h
roug slg ton soun o every
Certificate from the Depart ment of Insurance authorizing
piece
the Surety Company to do God has you 1n H1s keeping .
suret')( business In the State of We hove you in our hearts .
Oh 10, .and a current f inancia l Andthtrtwew•llkeepyau .
statement Of the Surety Fortver, yes , forever and o day
company The bonds shalt be JtanandCoss 1e
on the form bound In the
specifications , wh i ch bontt
shall be forthwith returned to · = == = =
the bidder In case the contrac::t
Is awarded to another bldder .
A proposal shall be-Invalid and
WE WISH to upress our apprecia not considered unless 1 bond ,
tion , ond grot1tudeto every on111
with suffic ient sureties, In a
who helped in any way during
sum equal to the total sum of
the lllnen and death of our
the proposal , Is fll ed with suctl
proposal. nor unless such
si~:ter and Mother. Espec1olly
proposal and bond ere flied In
Or. Telle and oil the nurses at
one sealed envelope
Veterans Memorfal Hospital
Bids are to be sea led and
who were so kind The friends
addressed to the Clerk of
and ne1ghbors who brought
Gall! a County Commissioners,
food and to all who sent the
Gallla County, Ohio , Office of
beau t1ful flowers . Wt wont to
the County Com m lsslonen et
thank all the mlnisten who ofthe
Countv
Courthouse .
Gallipolis, Ohio .
fered prayers . God bless oil of
The Gall le County Boord of
'f9U . Bt~;~thars , Sisters, and sons
Com m issloners reserves the
of Vivian Johnson
right to reject any end all bids .
No bidder may w ithdraw his _ ...,.__,_____ ~- __
bid tor a period of sixty days . THANK YOU to ollthe stoll oliho
By Ordsr of the Gallla
Veterans Memonal Hosp1tot .
County
Commlu l oners,
aptclolly,
Or. Telle and Or.
Gallipolis , Oh io
Ridgeway. Also , o thank you to
Dorothy Con dee
those who aent flowers . cords
Cl erk
and visited me dunng my stay
· tn the hospi1al. Your kindn eJS
131 2, 9, 16, 3t c
!t appreciated Jon I Sellers

'

"'.':::=:::::J

OF
QUALITY

8:30 a.m to s 00 p m .
O&amp;!ly, 8 30 a .m t o 12 oo

se Nb.' 76-632-TP -PEX , for

----'-"'"~;£::E:f~:.2fi.__ , ..

omeroy

t SIGNS

P .M .
0 av
Before
Publication
Cancellai Jons ,
correc tions accepte~ t 1nt dey of
pub li cation

5

lt.·al Estate for Sale

·-

OFFICE HOURS

~fl~~ fi}~
THAT 8CAAII8LID WOAD OAIJ!E
~ ~ INUW~·
byHtnriArnoldlndBobLie
Unocromblt thtlt four Jumbles,
one letter lo ei!Ch ~quare, to form
four ordlrtlf'l woidl.

One letter simply sLands for another. In thli aamp1e A b
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the worda are all
hints Earh day the rode letters are different

AutoMies

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

RATES

Indoor -Outdoor runs . grooi'T\Jng
all breeds , dean sanitary
focil111es . Cheshire. Phone (614)

n

13:

Porllond -

RISING STAR Ke11nel Boord1ng,

~

7:00-TrutliorCons.3; :roTelltheTrulh4; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Muppet Show 8; News 10; To Tell the
Trutli 13; My ThrM Sons 15; Almane&lt;: 20;
Americana 33.
7:3G-Holl~o0d Squares 3,4; ·Ohio State LoHery 6;
Price Is Right 8; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33;
Wild Kingdom 10; Nesllvllle on the Road 13; Dolly
15.
8:00-Billy Graham 3,15; Welcome Back, Kotter t3;
Perspective.. The Aging Matorlty •• Billy Graham
Crusade 6; Wattons 8,10: Classic Theatre 20;
Masterpiece Theatre 33.
8:31l-Whars Happening! I
9:11().-.Best Sellers 3,~. 15; Barney Miller 6,13; Movie" A
Circ le of Children" 81 Ten Who Oared 10; Classic
Theatre' 33.
9.31l-Tony Randall 6,13.
10:00-Steve Lawrence &amp; Eydla Gorme 6,13;
Honeym-•' Trip to Europe 10; News 20.
10;30-The Mo1e: The Story of William Kurelek 33;
Woman 20.
ll :00-Niws 3,4,6.1,10,13,15; MacNeil-Lehrer Report
33.
11:31l-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; .Geraldo RI-a 6,13;
Ko[~k 8; Mary Hartman 10; ABC News 33.
12:00-Movle "Come Blow Your Horn" 10; Janak! 33.
12:«1---Movl• "The Looking Glass War" 1.
1:0G-Tomorrow 3,•; News 13.

the

-- . - - -·
~~1.~ti~ ~. ~=~
inside .

8:31)-.Big Valley 6.
9:oo-A.M. 3: Phil Donahue 4; Andy Griffith 8, Mike
Douglas 10.
9·31l-Cross-WIIs 3; Edga of Night 6; Concentntlon 8.
10:00-Sanford &amp; Son 3.~. 15; Dinah 6; Double Dare
.,
8, 10; Mike Douglas
10:31l-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; Price Is Right 8,10.
llOG-Wheelof Fortune3,4,15; Morning Show 13; Elac. ,,
Co. 20.
11 : 31l-Shoot for the Stars 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6,13;
Love of Life 8, 10; Sesame St. 20.
11 :ss-&lt;:BS News 8; Ms. Flxlt 10.
12:00-News 3,4,6,10; Second Chance 13; Name That
Tune 15; Divorce Court 8.
12:3~Lovers &amp; Friends 3,15; Ryan's Hope 6.13; Bob I ·
Braun 4; Search for Tomorrow 8,10.
1:~ Show 3; All My Children 6,13;
News 8; "
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1:31l-Oays of our Lives 3,4,15; Family Feud 6,13; As
The World Turns 8,10.
l :OCI-$20,000 Pyramid 6,13.
2:31l-Uoctor&amp; 3,4,15; One lie to Live 6, 13; Guiding
Light 8,10.
3:00-Another World 3,4,15; All In :rhe Family 8,10;
Antiques 20.
3: Is-General Hospital 6,13.
3:31l-Match Gama 8,10; Lilias Yooa 8i You 20,
4:00-Mister Cartoon 3; Little R11cals 4; Gong Show
15; Lucy Show 8; Sesame St. 20,33; Movie "Snow
Devils" 10; Dinah 13.
4: 15-Little Rascals .1.
4:31l-My Three Sons 3; Partridge Family 4:
Emergency _One 6; Partridge Family 8; Flintstones IS.
5:00-Big Valley 3; My Three Sons 4; Brady Bunch 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Star Trek IS.
l:JG-Adam-12 •.13; News 6; Family Affair 8; Elec.
Co. 20.33.
6:00-News3A,6,8,10,13,151 ABC News &amp;;Zoom 20,33.
6:30-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Grlltllh 6;
CBS News 8 ,10; Once Upon a Classic 20,33.

on

Ba shon Rood. If it rotns. wil l be

THURSDAY, MARCH IO,lf77
6:00-Sunrlse Semester 10.
6: 15-Farm Raport 13.
6:20-Not For Women Only 13.
6: 30-0SU Overview 4; News 6; Sunrise Semester 8;
Urban L011gue 10.
6 : ~s-Mornlng Report 3.
6·50-Good Morning, West VIrginia 13.
6· 55-Good Morning, Trl State 13.
7:00-Toclay 3,4,15; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Chuck White Reports 10.
7·05-Porky Pig 10.
7: 31l-Schoolles 10.
8:00-Howdy Doody 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame
~-33

By Oswald &amp; James Ja~oby
Give a child a new toy and
he wtll experiment with it.
Some brtdge players do the
same lhmg wtlh a new bid. .
South had heard about the
super two nolrump response
to show 18 or 19 pomts and a
· balanced hand . You respond
two notrump. II partner con·
M MU N ION
tinuestothreenotrumpyougo
p.;....________ on
to four - not as

ARE.

7:
8.00- '
7:35-High School Basketball 9.
8:00-Bllly Gaham SpecJ.I 3,15; Bionic Woman 13;
Grluly dtms • : Billy Graham Crusade Special 6;
Gunsmoke 8; Nova 20,33; Good Times 10.
8:3G-Jacksons 10.
9:00-CPO Sharkev 3.4.15; Beretta 6.13;; Movie "Mr.
Ma/estyk' 1 8,10; Childhood 33; Soundstage 20.
9:31l-We Think You Should Know 3; McLean
Stevenson ~. 15.
10:00IO:OG-Teltl of the Unexpected 3,4,15; Charlie's
Angels 6,13; News 20; Scenet from a Marriage 33.
10:31l-ln Search of the Real America 20.
11 :00-News 3A,6,8,10, 13, IS; MacNeil-Lehrer Report
33; Monty Pvthon' s Flylnq Circus 20.
lt :JG-Johnny Carson 3, ~. IS; Rookies 6, 13; Movie
"Day of the Evil Gun" 8; Mary Hartman 10; ABC
News 33.
.
12:00-Movle "Life at the Top" 10; Janak! 33.12:4().•
Mystery of the Week 6,13.
1:00-Tomorrow 3,4.
2 : 1~News 13

.,

'.·

AND

MARTIN

h

coveting
se pt1 c sys t ems ,
dozer , backhoe. dump truck ,
l1me5tone
grovel
blacktop
pavmg Rt. 143 Phone l (614)
698-7331

------....
SAVE ON
CARPETING

Hl-1.0 SHAG
INSTALLED
Regular$14.95

11.-fl"'" •1875

NO FUTURE? IN A$$ AUTI

10,95 Sq, Yd.

5
Everyday

money

saver .

Good cltolce colors.

Associate

501 NYLON

992-2259 -992-256B
985-4112

12 or 15Ft.
Green, gold , red , blue, rust.

Conlicter a Prof811:1Mlnal Career

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
New Listing - Nice 2 •lory country home, containing i
rooms and l'/2 bath, mostly carpeted. Kitchen has all
new built-In cabinets with bronze 5tove &amp; relrlg . to
match . New porches and all new alum stdlng and

storm windows . FA natural gas furnace and drilled

Driving a .. BIG RIG .. We are a
Private Training School ofterWlg 1 PART r..., or FULL Time
TIOining Program. II you are
- ing, Don't Cluii ,Your Job.
anend our Weekend Training

program or attund our 3 Week
FULL Tme Resident Training .
"" " ' lr~m •., lr~~ r"kr

well. garden space. This house is warm and ready for

PARK ERSBURG
422- 40 80

Immediate occupancy , come take a look lust $18.900.
Racine - Good 3 bedroom and dining room . low
utilities, even a garden •pace Priced at only $8,500.
Special - 3 bedroom and attached garage, total
electric home under construction on '12 acre lot. Owner
will flnl~h In 30 day• for buyer or wilt sell"as Is" . May
take trade. Located near Chester.
Chtlltr - 113 acres farm , 80 acres tillable •and, nice 2
story farm house, 7 rooms and bath, all hardwood
floors and basement. Barn and other outbuildings, 2
pards. A nice laying farm priced to go Located near
Chester. coil for Appt.
Chtsler -

Ev~r dream of owning your own golf

course? Here's your cMnce for you or your friends to
own a n l&lt;::e rolling golf course, 50'1:3 acresr 9 greens, nice

modern club house, ou!bulldlng with all spraying and
seeding equipment, needs some mowing and • IIH!e
repair work on golf course. This could be purchased
with the 113 acres listed above and d~•eloped Into a
beautllul 18 hole golf course. call for appt.

r..IIWftllf&lt;

•••
:
••
e

•

•

Do it yourself, with padding, $7 .95 sq. yd . With
padding Installed $8 .9S
square yard.
Call742·22ll '
TALK TO
WENOELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
Rutland

712-2211

.
...
..
.
••
•• •
,

Mon .. Tues., Wed.
B:OOtiiS:OO
ThursdayS til Naon

• :

:.

·• · .•

·:.i. FRIDAY TIL 5
•

-~.•
,
.. .

.•• ·······~·•

• • .

~:
~

Close Sal At.S P.M.

•

•

: RUnAND FURNITURE _:·
:
L..---~----'!'.-------- ......................... ..
.We Need Farm Land
Call Jimmy Deem At 949-2388

:
e 7~2-2211

ARNOLD GRATE

'I

RUTLAND.-

I'

!I&lt;

�14-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday. March 9, 1977
~---------------------------I

:

Area Deaths

I

.

,

ORLAND GILLIAND

REEDSVILLE - Orland
W. Gi lliand . 67 . Rl. 1.
Reedsville, died a1 his home
Tuesday evening as a result
of self~ infl l cted gunshot

wounds .
The Meigs Count y sheriff's
was informed of

~epartment

.

I·
I

Marion .
Surviving Mrs. Bentz who
was formerly of · Meigs
County , are her husband.
Floyd, and three sisters , Mrs.
Della Frost, Marion. and·
Mr5 . Edward Boen and Mrs.
William Lowen , both of

Pomeroy . Officiating at

the incidenl Tuesday al 6: 10 services will be the Rev .
p. m .
Sheriff James J . }&lt;enneth Roshon. Burial will
Proff i tt was assisted by be in Beech Grove Cemetery .
acting cornor Dr . John Fr iends may call at the

Ridgway and deputy Randall

Carpe nte r
in
the
in vestiga tion which .fhe ·sneriff
said today is being continued.
Mr . Gilli and was born In

' Bedford Twp. to the · late
pavid

E. and Mary

Jeffers Gilliand.

Inez

A member of the Success

Church of Christ, he was a

retired employee of the FMC

plant at Park.ersburg where
he worked more than 30

years.

·

Survi ving are his w ife ,
Eunice Spencer Gill iand ; two
sons , Edward L. , Mansf ield

and AFC Jeffre y G.. serving

with the U.S. A ir Force in
GriSsom ,
Ind . ;
tw o
daughters, Eva Mae Gillfand ,
Columbus and Mrs . Ann
Fausnaugh, Grove· Ci ty; a
· brother, Ferdinand, Ches ter ;
three sis ter s, Mrs . Dora
GOldsberry, Athens ; Mrs .
Oma
Carsey
Mart in ,
Parkersburg , W. Va. and
Mrs .
Leo ta
Warne r ,
Guysville ; eigh t grand·

children.
He was preceded in death
by thr ee brothers and three
sisters.
Fu ner al ser vices will be
i: 30 p .m. Fr'lday at the White
Funera l Ho me, Coolv i ll e,
with Mr . Joseph Hoski.ns of
Grove City officiatin g. Burial

wi ll be in Cherry Ridge

cemetery . Friends may call
at the funer al home any time
after noon Thursday .

AlTA M. BENTZ
Funeral services for Mrs .
Alta Mabel Bentz, 71 , Mar ion,
who died Monday at Com m un i ty Medica l Center ,
Marion , will be held at 11
a.m . Friday at the Ewing
Funera l Home.
Mrs. Bentz was born Dec .
18, 1905 a daughter of the late
Dav id an ~ . LouiSe Bookm an
Fox. She was a member of
Grace Bapt is t Church in

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION
WATCH FOR
OPENING DATE

funeral home Thursday from

1to9p.m.

Market Report
, GaiUpoU., Ohio,
March 5,1971,
.
Sales Report o!
Oblo Valley uv .. tock Co.
STOCKER CATTLE SI'EERS - 250 to 300 lbs. 26
to 36.50 ; 300 to 400 lbs. 25 to
3HO; 400 to 500 lbs. 27.50 to
38.75; 500 to 600 lbs. 25 to
:.l.SO; 600 to 700 lbs. 24 to 35;
roo 11:8. and over 24.50 to ·
. :li.50;
HEIFER CALVFS-250 to
:110 lbs. 22 to~ : 300 to 400 lbs.
Zl to 3!.25; 400 to ~ Jbs. 23 to
31.50; 500 to 600 Jbs. 25 to
32.75; 600 to 700 lbs. 25 to
32.75; 600 to 700 lbs. 22.50 to
31; 700 lbs. and over 24 to 33.
STOCK COWS &amp; BULLS
(By The Head) - Stock Cows
145 to 25() ; Slock Cows and
Calves ZlO to 315 ; Stock Bulls
:110 to 275; Baby Calves 5 to
52; (By The Pound) Canners &amp; Cutters Cows 19.a0
to 26.25; !lolstein Cows 26 to
30.a0; Coliimercial Bulls
(1,000 lbs. and over) 27 to
ll.25.
VEAL CALVES- Tops 220
lbs. to 250 68 to 76.50 ; Medium
:110 lbs. to 300 47 to 01.50; Culls
fi down .
SOWS - 3!iO lbs. up 32.50 to
li.
PIGS - 8 to 29.

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - .State
Rep. Irene Smart, D-Canton,
and 10 other Democratic
House mlllllbers Tuesday
introduced legislation
requiring gas utilities to
make arrangements to meet
residential service · needs
each winter.
Under Mrs. &amp;Dart's bill,
the estimate of needs would
have to be calculated May I
of each year for the following
winter, based on the. coldest
daily temperatures ever
recorded in the service area.
If the Public Utilities Com- .
mission determines that a

INTEREST

Of Deposit

sl,OOO ~inimum
1 Yr. Term
Ninety day interest penalty
if
wi1hdrawn
matur ity date .

before

Meigs Co. Branch

f!J

Th e Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan Co .
29~ Second St .
Pomeroy , Oh io

!!!!/

Editorial comment,
opinion, features

need licenses
COLUMBUS (UPI J Twenty-four Ohio House
members, led by Rep .
Michael Stinziano, D·
Columbus, introduced
legislation requiring the state
Department of Agriculture to
license animal shelters and
pounds.
' Stlnziano's measure sets
forth standards for the care
of animals at such
establishments and
empowers the director of
agriculture
to
make
Inspections and suspend
licenses for violations.
He said the bill resulted
from an inspectioo which
un cove red Inhumane
treatment of animals
impounded at a shelter in
Gro'!eport outside Columbus.

~House

Republicans acting
in cohesive opposition

\

01110 POLITICS
lly IA"e Leonard

ELBERFELD$

gas company has failed to
make such arrangements by
Nov. I of each year, thel!ltility
would have to pay the state 5
per cent of its daily earnings
for each delinquent day.

..!.v

'

i

I

'i '·
'I. :

I

, : i

(,.

Il
I .'

I

;

GOP leader

J
/

'

• :r·(. .. /
. . . .;.:. I., ~: -~r. .-'~=-=:.~=:,~
-.-/...
1'-/.
~/ .

·

I

t!

J

/

~

ii !

needs time
COLUMBUS (Ul? l ) Senate Door debate of a
measure to repeal the
$750,000 limit on state debt
was set for Wednesday, but
Senate Minority Leader ·
Michael
Maloney
of
Cincinnati 19ld his colleagues
on the Senate Rules
Committee Tuesday he
needed more time to . study
the legislation.
Floor deba te is now
tentatively set for Thursday.
The resolution, sponsored
by freshman Sen. Marcus
Roberto, Ii-Ravenna, would
place on the November ballot
a proposed amendment to the
Ohio Constitution to let the
legislature authorized
general obligation bonds in
an amount tied to the state 's
ability to pay them off.
A similar resolution failed
in the legislature last year .

I

I

By Katie ~:row
An awards dinner Wed·
nesday night at the Meigs Inn
was a gala affair when approximately 100 persons
turned out to honor Robert
Wingett, Charles Legar and
Pete ShieldS.
The event was sponsored
by the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce.
Others recognize~ were
Leroy Bartrwn, who por·
trayed Santa Claus for the
chamber; Jim Frecker and
Charles MuUen fot helping
with the Christmas lights,
Dwight Goins and Neacll
Carsey for their fine effort in
selling tickets, and Ed
Kennedy,.who was unable to
attend, for his electrical
work. . .
.
Richard Jones was rnaoter
of ceremonies and the in·
vocation was given by VIrgil
King.
...
Jones said Wingett, Shields
and Legar are an outstanding
group of men.
He Introduced the president
of the chamber, Fred Crow,
wha said a great deal of effort
went into the selections.
Those chosen were selected
by a committee of five,
Richard Jones, Katie Crow,
Beulab Jones, Thereon
Joha.son and Fred Crow.
The first honored was
Charles Legar who was
presented his plaque by
·Kermit Walton. He was cited
for being In viUage government for a nwnber of years

You'll want to see these fine quality sheers
and priscilla curtains plus the new drapes,

.t

ready for your selection.

Also big selections, now, of area rugs in
all sizes, new colors, new patterns, table
covers i'n cloths, vinyls, rounds, squares,
ovals and oblong. Complete line Kirsch
Drapery Hardware, window shades, bath
towels, sheets, furniture covers, bath
mats and sets.

I t,
1 -~

1

/

I

;

HOME FURNISHINGS -1st R.OOR -

OPEN FRIDAY 9:30 TO 8 P.M.
OTHER WEEKDAYS 9:30 TO 5 P.M.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Meigs easy

for the slaytngs of seven Hanafl Muslins in 1973 be turned over
to them for retrlbutioo.
Grip quoted· the raiders at City llall as saying "they are
prepared tD die because they killed our family.
"This is for aU Islam. It is oot a personal grudge. It's just
that justiee should be done.'' he said.
Dozens of flak•jack eted pollee surrounded the three
buildings in the tense standoff as the mayor announced at midmorning that negotiatjons were "going through .~'
The terrodsts released a woman hostage suffering from
chest pains and an ambulance took her to a hospital.
Seven persons were believed being held in city hall, three
blocks from the White House.
· About 15 were held at the Nationallslamlc Center, a mosque.
And the message from Grip said "over 100" were at the
national headquarters of B'nai B'rith, where the .woman was
released at mid-morning.
All were seized within four hours Wednesday when six to
eight gunmen Jed by llamafi leader Hamaas Abudul Khaalis
took over the bulldings.
"I have men waiting to do something very, very bad,"

as clerk and mayor of
Pom81'9Y. He also served on
the boJrd of public affairs as
president. "'His service as
mayor for 14 years was the
second longest period since
Deacon Long who served 18
vears.
Legar is a member ot the
Pomeroy ER Squad and !Ire
department of which he Is
chief. I.,egar responded that
the fire department members
should be commended for the
excellent job they have done.
I.,egar also Is a successful

businessman.
Legar's family, his wife,
Polly; his son and wife, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Legar; his
daughter and husband, Mr.
and Mrs. Cecil Midkiff ;
daughter, .Maria and his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. John
Terrell, were introduced.
Jones in Introducing the
next honored guest, Pete
Shields said Pete was a
in
classified
expert
agricultural, an influential
man, a quiet man who has
served his county well

Meigs County authorities
are seeking Identification of a
male body which was found
along the Ohio River In Letart
Township Wednesday
morning.
Meigs Sheriff James
Proffitt and Deputy Coroner
John Ridgway answered a
caU to the scene at 9:05 a.m.
in response to a telephone call
from Robert Lewis, owner of
the farm where the body was
found. The two officials were
met by Lewis who took them
to the body which had apparently been washed onto
the river bank. It was
estimated that the body had
been in the river from two to
eight weeks.
The remains, taken to the

Ewing Funeral Home were to . relatives through the
be taken \O Col~bus today, clothing. According to Dr.
for an autopsy at Ohio State Pickens the man was
University to determine the believed to be between 45 and
cause of death, Meigs 55 years of age, partially
Coroner Dr. R. R. Pickens bald; was wearing a white I·
said.
shirt, a white shirt with a blue
The Bureau of Criminal floral design on the front , a
Investigation also has been brown jacket which zipped up
notified.
the front, double knit trousers
Last night, a resident of in a brown and grey check
Athens visited the funeral design and a black belt, one
home to determine if the and one-half Inches wide with
deceased was his brother who a half roun&lt;\ buckle.
had drowned in the Hocking
Anyone feeling that they
River. However, the man might be able to identify the
could not Identify the body as .body Is asked to contact Dr.
his brother.
Pickens office or the
Dr. Pickens Issued a department of Sheriff Proffitt
description of the clothing of at once. Officials would
the rnan In hopes that lden- appreciate any leads which
tificaUon can be made by the public might offer.

days depend
on lawmakers' action

'

NYLON

TWEED &amp; PATTERN

FOR

KITCHEN OR

LIVING ROOM

GOLD, GREEN AJtD RED

Th~~~~
are bound to go in a hurry

.•. so step on it

PORCH GREEN .
CARPET

THE MEIGS INN

. $4~9 Yard

'5HAG

With Rubber Back

'4"

Sq·
Yard

$695

economize! _ _ _ _ _ _ _,;;.;.;;;.;.P,~~..,.-------.;.--~

HI-Low SHAG
Was $10,95

RED ioo%ENYLON CARPET

NOW $695Sq. Yard

*4"

Only

INGELS .FURNITURE
106 N. 2ND

ONLY

sq.

Yard

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO '

992·2635

.

In the Clan AA Girls'
Sectional basketball tournament a f Coal Grove last
EAST MEIGS - Make-up makeup classes, if needCO,
night, Meigs rolled over days;
If necessary, were set · the ~hool year will end on
Jackson 75-35 and earned the
by the Eastern Local Board schedule with graduation set
right to go against GaWpoU.
of Education Tueaday night. for May 22.
Friday night in the chamThe board conferred with
Supt. John Riebel said the
pionship game. That game, make-up days will depend Elllie Folmer, president of
also at Coal Grove, will start upon the final action of the the Chester PTA, and agreed
at 7:30.
Ohio Legislature. H I~ days to ~nntt a room or part of a
Meigs took an early lead are allowed for bad weather, room at the Chester School to
and was never really then no clauea will have to be be used . as a library.
threatened as the Marauder rnade up. However, If only 10 However, If tt sliouid be
lasses put ten girls Into the dayi are aUowed, then four needed as a clasaroom then
scoring colwiln. Pivot lady W!ys wiU have to be made up. changes wiU have to be made.
Cathy Meadows Jed all
The board. accepted the
Should the four daya have
scorers as abe tossed in 18 to be made up, the board resignation of Mrs. ·Helen
points on eight field goals. deCided on classes for Heaton,
high
school
Pam · Vaughan was right Saturday, April 2: April 7 and secretary, and two apbebtnd her in scoring with 14 B which would have been plications for the post were
whUe Glenda Brown added spring vacatloo, and Aprll16, received. Added to the
nine.
another Saturday. With the subetltute teachers list were
Beth Vaughan gleaned the
boards for 17 rebounds and
the Meigs crew of Coach Joy
·
Bentley bit I fine 49 per cent
from the floor, and 42 per cent
at the foul Une.
MASON -: The first pubUc Perry, sewage superlnKim ~nley Jed the lolleMJ
revenue
sharing lund tendent, were asked to check
with ten markers 11 the Iron
·
meeting
was
held by the on new equipment and
WOQlert lhot lUll 17 per cent
Muon
.Town
Council on motors for the sewage plant. ·
from the floor, 3S per cent
Wednesday
evening
al the . It wasaMOunced that June
from the charity llrlpe.
dty
building
where
council
7 will be the towp election
Other _ . . for Meigs
dileuued
ways
a1
spending
day. Eleclloo forma must be
W«t : Btt11Vauafllll7, Tracy
lbe
IIICIIiey,
and
a
leCOIId,
l.r.t
tn to the town clerk on
llurdetle I, lbr)' Boa- I,
llldllle
meeting
wu
set
for
orlihre
May II at ·noon. '
Pat Vaa&amp;blll 7, lklnla Alb 4,
\f"'nnlday,
March
II.
The
l'ritllnl
nre NaYar Pnd
Tllllil Alb •• 'Oat)' OlafiiiiiJI
budget
will
a11o
be
dlJcuued
Taylor,
C4luncll
m1111btrs
2. T.all • 32, II, 7.
It this time.
a..rtaite Jlllb, Ed Perry,
Other - · for Jacbon . Coancll ordered '!he town Lawrence
Rouab
and
wen: Amott 4, M-r 2,
park
and
tennis
courts,
Catherine
Slnlth,
and
Calvin
Jewell I, Eullne 2, MeDonald 8, Ro1111 S. Totals· 1&amp;, opened and LIW11nc4! Roush Smith, public re]atlonl man
water superintendent, and Ed for the water tank project.

How to spend discussed

,, •.

~

v
'

to

ostages

Khaalis said in one ofthe first in a series of rambling telephone
messages broadcast by local stations.
He demanded that six men serving life sentences for the
exeeutions of two women and five children in 1973-members
of the Hanafi sect. Four of the children were Khaalis.
In demanding delivery of the convicts, Khaalis said : "I want
to see them show how tnugh they are."
Hcalso asked that the murderers of Malcoim X a founder of
the Blac~ )'duslim movement, be brought bef~re him. He
demanded the return of a $750 fine he paid for disrupting the
murder trial of those con~icted in the 1973 slaytngs.
Mayor Washington announced the money was sent Khaalis
during the night.
New York City area theaters Wednesday halted showings of
the fiim "Mohammad Messenger of God " sometimes In midscene, in compliance with another demi.nd
Police ~eported they were studying payroll iists to determine
th~ 1dent1ties of those held hostage in the B'nai B'rith. The
buil&lt;lin.g also houses the Communications Workers Union • and

the union reported most of'its employes there were among
those held prisoner.
The mayor was one of many officials who escaped from city
hall when the gurunen invaded. He barricaded himself in his
office, and hours later was led to safety by police.
·
In his statement tod_
ay, he said negotiations "are going
forward" and the city government was following a strategy of
avoiding "over-reaction.'1
1

' Discu~i ons -negotiations

if you will-are going forward "

Washington said, but gave no details of whether officials we;e
· near any kind of settlement.
Washington said he ;vas told that "the hostages are not
suffering other than being confined."
Asked if any new demands had been received or whether any
of the original demands had been relaxed , he replied no to'both
questions. He also said no deadlines had been set by the
gunmen holding the hostages.
The mayor said members of the diplomatic corps were
involved but he declined to identify what diplomats had tried to
·help.
.

through the ASCS, and a hard
worker in the community of
Letart Falis.
Thereon Johnson presented
Shields his plaque.
Johnson stated that Pete
actually began his career in
193p after graduating from
;Racine High School. Pete has
served his . county well in
many capacities, on the
CommUnity Action Board,
the board at Veterans
Memorial Hospital, Meigs ·
County Regional Planning
(Continued on page 12)

Identity of dead man
sought by-officials

winner over Make-up
lronettes

Carpet With Rubber
Backing You Can
Install YourseH
and Sav.- Money

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28, No. 230

·3 .Meigs men honored

sheer curtains made of 100 per cent
Dacron that wash so well. White and a big
selection of solid colors . Choose ao to 120
inch width in lengths from J6 Inches
through 90. New this season is a Priscilla
curtain in white ninon .

Thursday Night Special

Plus Tax

WASHINGToN (UPI)
HBnafi Musllms broadcast a
warning to pollee today that any attempt to free more thajllOO
hostages held in three hillldings would jeopardize the lives of
their jlrlsoners.
"We are llanaft MuSlims to the death," they said In a
message relayed by telephooe and ra!llo by Alan Grip, one of
their prisoners. He Is press aide to City Council Chainnan
Sterling Tucker .
"And If the pollee have any icleas about storjning this room,
It will put all of our lives in lnunediate Winger as weU as the
over 100 hostages at B'nai B'rith ..." Grip relayed from the
Dl.strle\ of Colwnbta city hall.
The hostages were taken Wednesday in attacks on city haU,
the National Islamic Center mosque and the national
headquarters of B'Nal B'rith, a Jewish service organization.
One person was shot ID· death and eight wounded by the
terrorists.
Mayor Walter Waahing!Dn said negotiations with the
terrorists had blgun. But he declined to say whether the
gunmen showed any signs of yleldq,
The terrorists Wednesday demanded that those imprisoned

A brand new se lection of these popular

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IN POMEROY

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, March 10, 1977

Just hope Otina's
about done testing

THE INN PLACE

Visit Our Salad Bar
Fish or Deep Fried
Oysters
French Fries
.
Hot Rolls
Coffee, Tea or Mi lk

Good luck, Tornadoes,
against
Southeastern!
.

governor to selve the problem Demi&gt;crats In one area. He
wasn't working properly, the suggested that . negotiating
Ul'l Statehouse Rtporter
GOP presented a bill to sessions should be open to the
COLUMBUS (UP! )- After amend the procedure and public - Wlheard of thualar
four years In the. minority, provide ..some enforcement. in collective bargaining.
Republicans in the Ohio
Their proposal was introKurfessalsocameinwitha
House are showing signs of duced at a special session on timely bill helping residential
developing a constructive, the energy crisis, and it came property owners hit by blgh ~
cohesive opposition to so swiftly that it Irked House gas bills during the severe :
majority Democrats.
Speaker Vernal Riffe Jr., D- winter.
:,
For two years after surren- New Boston.
He proposed that the ;
dering control of the House in
Not long afterward, . deadline for tax payments be •
1973, the GOP generally Minority Leader Charles extended without penalty ~
By Don Oakley
pouted, refused to believe it Kurfess, R-Bowling Green, because of the unusual ::;
Even allowing for the wtwrillen law which
(excluding the wartime bombs), and in 1949 was a minority and pointed to a loophole In a clrcwnstances.
~
says one must never speak ill of a Com·
for the Russians - and lasting unti1 1963 complained about unfair Democratic bill providing
Avariety of GOP represen- 1
munist or socialist regime, the absenee of
both countries exploded bomb after bigger treabnent.
makeup-free school closing tatives, with Democratic sup- •
any outcry by so-called world opinion in the
and beller bomb in the atmosphere.
The tempo of the next two days foc energy reasons.
port, offered legislation ,
wake of China's latest atmospheric nuclear
Demands for a nudea t· test ban treaty years was dictated by the
He observed that teachers establisiJing an Office of ~
explosion is remarkable.
mounted with each explosion until one was "Six.{)ay War" in which would have to be paid extra Olild &amp;lpport and Fraud In •
Remember all the agitation when the
finally agreed to in 1963. Thirty-three other Democrats demonstrated for, any voluntary makeup the state Department of j
United States was conducting above-ground
nations announced they would abide by the their absolute controi of both days, a fact which was not Public Welfare to attempt tD
nuclear tests at regular intervals during the
tenns of the treaty, allhough they did not legis lative chambers . advertised when the blll was cut down on ,unnecessary :
1950s and early '60s? Remember SANE and
sign it.
Republicans saw red, but offered.
welfare payments.
·
.~
other protest groups which sprang into exAmong loose neither abiding nor signing could do little except defend
Republicans from rural
There is no doubt that the •
istenee'
were Franee and China, who of course had Gov. James Rhodes.
areas were the first to Democrats still run the show ~
China exploded a9other nuclear device on
their own plans for developing nuclear
Now they are striking out demand equal treatment for In the House. They can do ,
Nov. 17, the l~h and la rgest in its history,
weapons.
on their own. They have schools closed because of anything they want, within !
sending anothet· radioaetive cloud around
A decent respect for the opinion of abandoned their loud wailS of snow or flooding, and that rea5!!D,. and the Republican . ;
the globe to rain down on the just and unjust
mankind by the UnitedStates and Russia , or anguish in favor of legislation may yet be proposals will never grab •
alike. For all the reaelion it aroused, in the
eoncem for the well-being of future genera- constructive criticism.
passed.
headlines or dominate the ~
world conununity, it might as well have,
lions, had nothing to do with the lest ban
'fhey are pushing forth a
Kurfess has assembled a legislative scene.
;
been eomposed of apple blossoms.
treaty. It was simply that both c-ountries had nwnber of alternatives to cadre of bright young
But the change in tactics ...
Not so remarkable, however, is the of·
learned about as much as they could from Democratic bills, many of lawmakers proposing seems certain tD score some ;
ficial silence of world governments,
above-ground testing and now believed they them with worthwhile alternatives to Democratic' points and keep the ~
· 11y I he united States and the Soviet
could safely accede to "world opinion" by proVJSIOns
··
Democrats on their toes. ·
especta
which may be b'll
1 s on public employe
•
Union. We cannot pretend to divine what
confining f4 ture tests to below ground.
incorporated intD the final bargaining, motor vehicle
It will also develop a solid •;
goes on in the minds of the people in the
With such examples to guide it, it is not products.
·
registration procedures, program
which
GOP '
Kremlin - or even in our own State Departsurprising that China should feel that it has
At the same time, they are "sunset" legislation to eUmi- candidates can take to the ·
ment, fur that matter - but it seems obas much right as any other soverign nation cooperating in bipartisan ef. nate unnecessary agencies public in future elections, not ,
vious that both governments are ·reluctant
to pollute the world with radioactivity, forts in a number of areas. and a sch(I!JI district income to mention the constructive · ·
to say or do anything that could jeopardize
though fortunately its bombs have not been
And from time to time, they tax tD replace property tues. legislation that is bound to '
1
their delicate relations with Ute touchy
the "dirty" type exploded by the first two are engaging in a little "on~- ·
Each has some featw-es result.
-~
Chinese.
,
nuclear powers in the early days.
upmanship" to keep the whic~ wiU not be acceptable
Ironically' this new
.They may also rea lize that they haven't
We can perhaps be thankful for that. In ·Democrats off balance.
to the Democrats, but there effectiveness is beginning .
got a moral leg to stand on to support a for·
the meantime, ailuut all we can hope for is
The first sign of budding are also some provisions when the GOP is at low ebb '
mal protest. The day each country exploded
that China will be the last great power to Republican effectiveness which may be adopted.
with 37 of 99 members In a
its first atomic bomb it abandoned all future
feel it must develop a panoply of nuclear ar· came at the outset of the
In the bargaining bill for "veto11roof" House. Perhaps
right to tell other countries how they should
maments and that it will do so in less than energy crisis. When it public employes, Kurfess there is solidarity In smaU
behave.
the 17 and 14 years it took the United States hecame evident that the state went a step further than the nwnbers.
"
Beginning in 1940 fur the Unfit;:;ed::.,;;S:;:ta;,;le:o;s.__•.nd• t•h•
e•U•.S•.S•.R•._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.;,Ia;w;;....;,em;;;:;p;;.
ow;;.e;;,;r~in;;:g:,_.,:th:;:e_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ "

Gas needs met in newest hill .

PoWids may

on Certificates

_______,..,..._._____________.....,-.....,

THREE HONORED- Man of the year awards were
presented to Robert Wingett, Pete Shields and Charles
Legar, left to right front, Wednesday night at the Meigs

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Saturday through
·. Monday, chance of showel'll
Saturday and Sunday and
fair Monday. Highs will be
In the 70s Saturday, the 60s
Sunday and the 5011 Mooday. Lows will be In the 5011
Saturday and ·Sunday and
the 40s Monday.
.::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:::-:·:::::·::::::::::::::::::::::::.

Fema}e CaSt
of up to
50 needed
Any one for an old·
fashioned minstrel show?
Plans are being made for a
clown theme minstrel
presentation as a part of the
annual spring show of the Big
Bend Minstrel Assn. to be
staged in late April. The cast
for the minstrel, to be made
up entirely of women, wiU
require 40 to50 women for the
vocal chorus and soloist
group.
In order to determine If
adequate interest Is present
to proceed with that type
presentat ion , women,
preferable 18 or over, who
would like to take part are
asked to telephone Charlene
Hoeflich, 992·5292, Mrs.
James Soulsby, 992-2.'177, or
Mrs. Robert Buck, 992-;3833.
The spring show will be
sponsored by the Meigs Local
Athletic Boosters. Rehear·
sals will start next week
according to present plans.

Inn; back are Fred Crow, president of the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce whn sponsored the event, and
Richard Jones, master of ceremonies ,

numbers
project is advancing
Jim Page, project engineer
for the Meigs County countywide house numbering
project, said today the first
house numllers will be
released soon. .
The engineer sa id field
personnel are working full
time on the roads obtaining
persons names, using newly
flown aeria l photography
which shows residents'
houses. House numbers are
assigned on an additional set
of photography for a permanent county record.

Page said each rosa's new
house numbers are compiled
and sent to the post office for
verification, prior to each
resident receiving a personal
letter informing them of their
new address. Page 'explains
that post office involvement
is very important and that
Meigs County postmasters
are being very cooperative
and helpful.
According to the engineer,
road naming is progressing
and na mes for roads
proposed by the township

trustees will be published
prior to formal adoption by
the County Engineer and
County Commissioners. This
procedure will give residents
ample opportunity to review
the names prior to use.
Several townships have
already submitted names,
which are being reviewed. '·
Page indicated the timeconsuming portion of house .
numhering is the field work,
so emphasis to date has been
to get that portion of the
program underway.

Pickens gets 4-15 years

the names of Rebecca CotKeith Pickens, Pomeroy, served upon the imposition of
.terlll, Julia Hutchinson and
who
pleaded guilty before the four to 15 year sentence
Becky MiUer. Mrs. Grace
Judge John C. Bacon recently on conviction of the six counts
Stout was named to the
on six counts of robbery, was of robbery.
substitute cook list.
Wesley David Clark
sentenced to be confined in a
The board agreed to apply
pleaded
guilty to charges of
penal Institution for not less
for permission to purchase
forgery
and
was released on
than four years nor more
two new school buses and the
his
own
recognizance.
His
than 15 years on each count,
clerk, Eloise Boston, was
case
was
continued
pending
sentence to run concurrently,
authorized to request an
pre-sentence investigation.
the court has. disclosed.
advance draw from the
Also on probation for a Willie Maude Coates,
county auditor in order to
breaking and entering Middleport, · ftled a suit to
meet the March 20 payroll. It
charge, the defendant was quiet title against Clifford
was agreed to aUow the
ordered to serve the Icenhower · and Helen
Chester and . Riverview
remainder .of the sentence of Icenhower, Pomeroy, and
hnUdings be used for Bible
six months to five years in a Richard C. Ebliil and Reta
schools In June. Duane Wolfe
state penal institution, before Ellen Eblin, Pomeroy.
and LaiTY Heines, faculty
he is to receive credit for time Three divorce cases filed
members, were given permission to attend a coaches
meeting, missing one-hall
day of school on April 15.
Clerk'· ' receipts
FIREMEN BUSY
Tbe board employed Mrs.
The
Pomeroy
Fire
Jennifer Berkheimer for an
Department
and
Emergency
additional one-baH hour each
IT'S SOUTHEASTERN
of $1,644 noted
Unit were busy Wednesday.
day at Riverview School to . Southern High School
At 1:20 p.m., the departhelp with the breakfast wm take on once defeated
program. About half the Ro11 of' Southeastern al ··\ The otttce of Larry E. ment went to a brush !Ire at
Spencer, clerk of courts, the. roadside park on RQute
studenU of the school are . Rlcbmondale Friday
collected $1,6« in Febniary. 33, at 1:25 p.m. to Cbe~er
talting part In the breakfast evelllag In tile Dlatrlct
'!'he
county's share was Road for a brush fire neat the
PI'OIII'IIIIt Riebel reports.
Cla11 A bl!aletball to~r­
$1,309.75, the state's f334.25. Ada Harper residence, at 4
Tbe next meeting was eet a aament tn Chllllcotbe.
The office llaue&lt;) 6$6 titles, p.m. to a brush fire on
,..t urJier than usual, at 7 Gamettmela 7:30p.m.
'IZI
notations of liens, 131 Peacock Ave., at 5:04 to a
p.m., on AprU ~- Baud
Ro11 of Sontheastera
memos, 10 salvage titles, 585 vehicle fire near Elberfelds:
'mlllbera attending were defeated a atrong West
applicationa, affidavits and at 7:15 p.m. Mrs. Norma
'Oril Slnlth, David Smith, UDIOD club 8$ to 17 Wedassignments, 35 penalties, Goodwin was taken from the
Dorothy Calaway, Doug aeaday night to get tote tile
and nine certified copies. home of her son, David, to
Billell and Dorset Larklna; «rm Friday against
There were .92 auto In· Veterans Memorial Hospital
admlnlltratora Riebel · and Southern.
spectlons for total fees of and at II :37 p.m., the squad
Olelter Gooding, high school
S2'16, the county's share, $23; took Gilbert Mees, W. Malo
principal, and Mrt. Boston,
state's share, $253.
St. to VMII.
the clerk-lreasurer.

were Joan Leslie Pickens
Portland, against Franci~
Levi Pickens, Portland· Ruth
Priddy, Rt. 4, Pomeroy: from
Raymond Priddy , Mid·
~rt ; Linda Hewitt, Rt. 1,
Long Bottom, against Harry
Hewitt, same address.
Kathryn Diane MtUer was
granted a divorce from
James Michael Miller and
plaintiff was restored to her
malden name of Kathryn
Diane King. The marriage of
Roger G. Theiss, Rt. 2,
Racine , and Myrtle E.
Theiss, same address, was
dlssolved.

Weather
Cloudy tonignt, lows in the
low 508. Cloudy, chance Ot
showers Friday, highs in .l,he
mid 60s. Probability ~ f
precipitation near zero today,
20 per cent tonight, 50 per
cent Friday.

NOW YOU KNOW
It I• J10118lble to survive
without food for 40 daya;

without water for four dan
and without air for four
minutes.
'

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