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~The

'

Sunday Times.,S.ntinel, Sunday., March :iD, 1977

Loitg wait

as sports
merit badge

is ended
By ALLAN R. BRUCE
United Press ID!ernallonal
The wait is almost over, but
the 10 years or so tbat intervened have not lessened
the pain.
·
The familie s of 12
American men lost in Viet·
nam more than a decade ago
received word Friday the
bodies of their loved ones
have been turned over to a
spedal White House mission
md are en route back to the
United States.
Some wrvivors are still are
mt ready to accept tile fact
their i!ons or brothers or
husbands are dead. Others
speak in hushed tones of
"relief'' the wait is over, but
say the oorrow rtmains.
"li isn't exactly the end of
waiting untu it's official,"
Alexander C. Ducat, 74, a
and
retired educator
government worker, sald
Friday in Bethesda, Md.
H'Then , we'll have to accept
it.
His son, Air Fore~ Lt.
Bruce C. Ducat, was shot
&lt;hwn over North Vietnam
Dec. 2, 1966, in an F4 Phantom jet. The lieutenant's

Debate shaping
future of Ohio
coal industry

Golf added

HUNTINGTON - Golft one
of tile oldest of ga mes, is the
subject of the newest merit
badge of the. Boy Scouts of

till he never appeared at a
jJ"iS9n camp according to
Pentagon records.
In Omaha , Neb., Mrs.
Frank F. Roark said she
accepted 12 years ago tile
death of her Navy pilot son,
U. William Marshall Roark,
md is grateful to have his
remains returned to the
United States.
"It's goiflli to be a relief to
know ... where his remains
will be when we get them,"
Mrs. Roark said. "But it
hasn't lessened any of the
sorrow. You live with
oomething like this eve,.Y

II

' .

Lunch Menus

.

..

1974, Mr. Archie Watklna,
Tenor, was voted the most
roveted single award in ,
Gospel Music, that of Mr. •
Gospel Singer - Big Mike :
Holcomb was also voted as .
the Number.OneBass Singer.
The Inspirations were also ·
highly honored by receiving :
the • votes as America's '
Number One Gospel Singing
Group. In 1975 Archie
Watl!lns was voted again Mr.
G(Jspel Singer - Mike
Holcomb was again voted
number one bass singer,
Eddie Deitz was , vote4.
nwnber one baritone and The
Inspirations once again got
the Number One Gospel
Singing Group.
The lilsplrations record for
Qmnan Records of Waco,
Texas. Many songs they have
ooared to popularity. Songs
such as "Reunion In
Heaven," "Jesus Is Coming
Soon," "When I Wake Up To ·
Sleep No More," "Touring
The City," "I'm Taking A
Flight," "Jesus Is Mine,"
md "I'm One Of His Own."
This Is the style of The Jn.
spliatioos.
They appear weekly on the
nationally syndicated awardwinning Gospel Singing
JubUee.

Proffie shows
who's in debt
MARION, Ohio (UP!) Blue collar workers and
~veminent workers head ·
the Ust of delinquent debtors, according to a survey
~members of the American
C'&lt;lllectors Association, an
international organization of
26,000 financial collection
agencies,
Pat Frye of' the Credit
Bureau of Marion , Inc.,
association member, Friday
released the debtors' oc-.
cupational profile which
indicated construction
""rkers, factory workers and
laborers make up over 29 per
cent of the families in debt In
the U. S.
Government employes
accounted for another 9 per
cent while farmers, sale•
represents lives, office
workers and the self·
employed also ranked high.

an

JETLINER HIJACKED
Ammunition store gutted by blaze
BEIRUT, Lebanon (UP!)
- Two gunmen . today
BROOKLYN , Ohio (UP!) ladder truck to spray water
hijacked a Turkish airlines
Exploding
bullets lllrough the burning roof of
727 jetliner with 173 hampered
efforts to put .out a the building. They were
passengers and 7 crew
members and forced it to fly fire in an ammtmition store unable to enter It because or
the bullets.
to Beirut. Reports from the Friday.
The fire gutted the AbeleThere was no immediate
airport said the hijackers
Davia Cor p. ) a one-story estimate of damage and the
demanded 5,000 pounds Irick building. No injuries
cause was listed as undeter($3001 and safe conduct to a were reported.
mined.
Palestinian refugee . camp.
Firemen used an aerial

BERFELDS IN POMEROY

-

:s:

FPCI-170T-7

wctdec

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BY
PRINTZESS • LANSON • JEROLD

LC·3

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•
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• Mea t Tender and
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• Knits / Permanen t
Hydrators
Press / Regular
• ,AutomatiC Ic e
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SALE
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• Cycle·end s1gnal

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• S::lec tri -clea n Ove n
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• Excl usive Radian·
tu be su rface units
• Full-widt h storage
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READY TO WEAR DEPT., 2ND FlOOR

other new Spring and
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Accessories for women

and children on the
Second Floor - Blouses
· Skirh · Coordlnotu •

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'

Jewelry

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Cosmetics.

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...

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

,;&gt;.c.

{"''~"'

\

•

enttne

MONDAY, MARCH 21. 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

wins rank

RUTLAND
The facilities. Medicare ...ignSoutheast Ohio Emergency ment which pays 80 percent
Medical Service (SEOJi;MS), .1f the charge is acceptoo.
which operates out of the fhere are two vehicles at the
Rutland station with an all Rutlaod Station,
Other medical services also
volunteer squad made 100
runs during the first 75 days are offered at the station.
of 1977, according to Mrs. Last week a nurse from the.
Janet Bolin, one of the Meigs County Health
Department conducted a
volunteers.
The runs averaged $7 blood pressure training
mllea. SEOEMS Is the only session with the volunteers.
acency handling transfers Also • frrr hlood pres.•ure
from homes or hoapltals to clinic is being CU"'bpvr.:nrrrl
nursing homes, other by SEOEMS an4 the Rutland
hospitals or . treatment . Fire Department, wl!t:kly "t
the station by the volunteers

Don Thomas presented the
Eagle poem, and Dan
Thomas was the Eagle
Escort. Casto is the third

Finalists ready for spelldown
Sixteen finalists will take
part In the annual Meigs
County spelling bee to be held
at Eastern High School at

:;~ . will be Nellie Parker,

By United PrelsllllernaUooal
TilE CONGO'S 11-MAN INTERIM Mll..ITARY GOVERNMENT today kept the natioo sealed off from the world
following the a88888ination of President Marlen N1ouabl, and
the nmclal radio demanded the slayers pay ''with the same
currency of blood." Radio BrazZaville Sunday accused fonner
President Alphoose Maaaamba-Debat of masterminding the
coopaitempt that led to Ngouabl'sslaylng Friday, and said he
and '"many others" were arrested and being questioned.
"Those wbo killed President Ngouabl are the kiUeti)llwns
of Congolese 1!1-President ,Alphonse Maasamba-Deiiat,"
overthrowrl by Ngouablelght years ago, the radio said.
''ThesekiUeramualpaywiththesamecurrencyofblood,"
said the broadcast, mooitored In the Zalrean capllal or
Klnsh888; directly acrOBB the Congo River from Brazzaville. A
nationwide hunt was under way for Barthelemy Klkadidi, a
former anny captain who led the attack oo Ngouabl at hl5
llvlnl! quarters in the army headquarters, the radio said.

Rhodes grills
gas firm boss

of 'eagle'
Mark Allen Casto, 15,
received the rank of Eagle
Scout Sunday afternoon in
ceremonies held at Drew
Webster Post 39, American
Legion Home in Pomeroy.
Above, Mark is pictured
with his mother, Gertrude
Casto, 1120 E. Main St.,
Pomeroy, to whom he
presented the traditional pin,
and his father, Franklin
Casto, Route,3, Pomeroy, to
wh·om he presented a tie
clasp. A reception for friends
and relatives followed the
cennonies.
At right, Bob Arms ,
Scoutmaster of Pomeroy Cub
Scout
Troop
249 ,
congratulates Casto, 15, upon
becon:ling ao l',;agle Scout.
William Knight, Tri-'County
Scout Chairman, a fonner
Eagle Scout In Pomeroy,
conferred the rank; Hank
Cleland was .master of
ceremonies; Pat Wood, gave
prayer and the Eagle charge;

The bill was approved on a least that much was paid in
9-7 siralght party~ine voti!!, taxes . However, those
with Democrats supporting making above $30,000 in
and Republicans opposing it. family income would get no
The bill Is almost exactly rebate and those making
what President Carter between $25,000 and $30,000
requested , except that would get proportionately
proposed tax Incentives for smaller rebates .
businesses have been
In addition, numerous
rewritten extensively.
groupa would get full $50
The bill could reach the payments even If they paid
Senate floor next week, tittle or no tax. This Includes
where a rugged battle is recipients or Social Security'
assured.
railroad retirement, wellare
A fight is expected oo the and similar programs.
rebate, which Republicans
The standard deduction tax
sirongly oppose and which a cut is brought about by doing
number of Democrats . away with the old method or
support only lukewarmly and calculating the deduction as a
say they back it ooly out of· percentage of Income and
party loyalty.
instead suhetituling a flat
Under the bill, all deduction of $3,200 for
TULSA, Okla. (UP!) - taxpayers would get a rebate couples and $2,200 for single
Authorities searched the or $50 for themselves and persons.
rolling countryside in south- each dependent as long as at
west Tulsa County today for
the wife of a wealthy builder
and a female employe who
were abducted Thursday in a
$500,000 kidnap case.
Undersheriff Frank
Thunnan said most of the
search would be conducted on
foot, although planes may be
used.
uwe're going to use everyCOLUMBUS (UP!)- Gov. Columbia ' s interstate
thing we can that won't be
James
Rhodes today called ·pipeline to lransport natural
destructive to any evidence,"
B.J
.
Clarke,
chairman of the gas in Ohio without Federal
he said.
~
Authorities are looking for board of th.e Columbia Gas Power Commission
Kendall Ashmore, 35, a System, In c., Wilmington , ''interference.''
-Storag e for Columbia
fonner beauty queen and Del., into his office for
wife of wealthy Jenks, Okla., "specific answers to three Gas of Ohio's supplies.
- Develo pm e nt of
builder Phillip Ashmore; and direct questioos. "
Columbia's
estimated halfRhodes
said
in
a
March
16
Kathy Ann Brown , 21, who
miUion
acres
of oil and
helped train Mrs. Ashmore 's letter to Clarke requesting
the meeting that Fred Laird, natural gas leases in Ohio.
horses.
"We need Columbia' s
District Attorney S. M. president of C'&lt;llumbia Gas
support Ill protect Ohio
active
Corp .,
"Buddy" Fallis said he would Transmis sion
from
disastrous hardships
file kidnap charges today Charleston; W. Va ., could
next
winter,"
wrote Rhodes.
against a suspect arrested supply only " vague and
"
We
need
Columbia's
early Saturday, Larr·y ambiguous" answer-s to the
answers
now."
• • ... •·
Eugene Chaney, 3-1:" Clla!iey qul!litlons.
Clarke and Rhodes were
"Therefore, (we) repeat
has denied any knowledge of
Joined
in the meeting by· the
our questions so you clearly
the abduction.
Governor's
Labor Energy
member this spring of
Police said Chaney has understand them," wrote
Advisory Conunittee, a group
Pomeroy Troop 249 to receive taken a lie detector test, but Rhodes.
the highest rank in scouting would not comment on the
The questions Rhodes of organi2ed labor leaders,
wanted answered concerne&lt;l.; and energy officials of the
- the Eagle.
outcome.
- The availability of state government.
WAS!fiNGTON (UP! ) ~
The
Senate
Finance
Committee today approved a
tax cut biU that would send
$50 rebate checks In mnr•
than 90 pe. cent of
Americans and give a small
cut to most of thoSe who use
Ute standard deduction.

Search
on for
women

Mark Casto

w;;;;~iiri;;;t ~I~aJ
'''

~' ~

~ ~: j!' 1 •

wiit from station in Rutland

Dresses - Denim Jeans .

Jump Sullo - Long

- utilities haV'O decidejl to import low-eulfur 0011! rath!ll' than
remove gaseous pollutants from smokeslacu. Utllltles can't
burn hlgh-!Julfur coal.·The comrustion from high sulfur coal
[l"oduces a relatiV'Oly hannlesB gas which combines with
suhstaDc'es In the atmosphere to produce highly-toxic sulfuric
acid and sulfate particulates.
·· There are generally two price they pay themselves for
methods tO control sulfur coal imported to Ohio from
dioxide: remove the sulfur western,· j'captive mine"
from coal or remove the fields.
The opposite tack has been
sulfur dioxide from stack
gases with a "scrubber."
taken by the C'&lt;llumbus &amp;
"With scrubbers you burn SOuthern Ohio Electric C'&lt;l.,
dirty coal and clean up the which has a "captive mine"
gasasltleaves the stack. Use too - located In Ohio highor cleaned coal reduces wear sulfur clial fields.
"We had the first scrubber
and tear on the boiler as well
as reducing undesirable In Ohio at Conesville," said
stack emissions," explained C&amp;SOE's Jim Fenstennaker,
Blair A. Ross, a vice senior vice president in
president of the American charge of operations.
Electric Power Service Corp.
"They arf expensive to
last week before the Ohi8 install, expemive to operate,
House Public Utilities have a lot of problems and we
aren't very happy about
Committee.
The U.S. EPA wants Ohio's putting them on," he added,
electric utillty indU8try to "But as to the question of
install Due gas desulfuri- whether we use scrubbers of
zation equipment - scrub- western (low-sulfur) coal.
bers - and therefore be able western coal is a more
Ill burn high sulfur coal.
expensive alternative.
The standards the federal
"We don't look Ill scrubbers
clean air people drafted are as the ultimate solution. We
being challenged in federal think
fluidized
bed
court and are under review combustion will do a better
I
for possible modification by job. n
That technique, now in the·
the Ohio EPA.
Most electtlc utilities say pilot plant stage by Battelle
scrubbers haven't been Memorial Institute,
perfected (\he lifespan ts said 'Columbus', and other energy
to he only 22 years) and cost researchers In the United
too much (about $150 million States, grinds coals Into a
for a 600 megawatt .powder, mixes it with another
substance and burns the
generating plant).
Other method&amp; of reducing mixture to produce heat
emissions are, or soon wiU be energy without sulfur dioxide
available, according to utility emissions.
In the Qhio General Assemspokesmen.
bly,
Rep. Arthur Bowers, [).
"Compliance with sulfur
Steubenville,
has proposed a
dioxide emission standards
bill
said
to be
by mixing low sulfur coal
unconstitutional
by
utility
with local (high sulfur)
Industry
lawyers
to
coal ... would a·dd
prohibit
utilities
from
chargapproximately $3 per month
to the average residential ing oll$lomers for the higher
-customer's bill," said AEP's cosi of imported coal.
Sen. Kinsey Milleson, [).
Rosa.
Freeport,
has proposed that
•'()n the other hand, if
utilities
be
given a series or
compliance was obtained by
tax
breaks
il they Install
use of a scrubber, It would
scrubbers
rather
than leave
cost an additional $7.70 lor
Ohio's
low-sulfur
coal
in the
the average residential
ground.
customer," coocluded Ross.
The Jast.battle in the war is
The American Electrit:.
a
long way off. The next big
Power C'&lt;l. owns extensive
confrontatioo
will be In the
low-eulfur coal reserves in
spring
when
the
federal court
the western United States and
in
Cincinnati
hands
down a
the Ohio Power C'&lt;l. , among
ruling
on
the
challenge
other utility retailers.
An unstated reason for the brought by Ohio's electric
firm's objections Ill the use of utilities to the proposed
scrubbtirs is the favorable federal standards.

100 trips made by SEOEMS

Be oure to soe all the

i .

NO. 237

•

$50 tax rebate
bill gets boost

CAiRO
THE PALESTINE LIBERATION
Organization's parlliment.ffi:elile has adopted 1 platfonn
that 110urces say means the PLO Ia no looger bent on !Jrael's '
destruction, and re-elected Yasaer Arafat as Its leader. Arafat
said Sunday the platform gave him the fiexlbllity needed to
take part In Middle East ~~egotiatlons, and quickly made
statements that the sources said endorsed U. N. fesolutions
that upbold Israel's rights as 1 natloo.
'nle 15i101nt platform was awroved 194-13 at the end ol a
fllne&lt;iay aeaslon of the Palestinian National Council. Only the
radical Popular Ftorit for the Uberatlon of Palesilne-oppOsed
(Continued on page B) ·

Washable suede in fawn and powder' blue- and polyester
coats that are comple·t elv washable.
Misses sizes 6 through 20 and half sizes 14112 through 22112

DWM-4

VOL XXVII

standards.
The battles . are being fought In the Ohio General
Assembly, before the 6th U. S. Circuit Coort of Appeals in
Cincinnati and In corporate boardrooms where IDDIII - not all

Gospel group, the Inspirations

College to visit BHS

at y

e

CX&gt;LUMBUS (UP!) - Eastern Ohio lawmakers and the
United Mine Workers argue that the future of Ohio's highsulfur coal industry is the bottom line In the war over hilw the
state's electric utility Industry compiles with air pollution

America.

According to Robert D.
Carpenter, Vi ce President of
the Tri-State Area Council,
this raises to 19 the number of
sports-oriented merit badges
its 1.5 million 11-t&lt;rl7 yearold Scouts are eligible to
earn. There are, currently,
120 subjects covered In the
merit badge · field , the
traditional backbone of
Scouting's advancement
program a trail which leads
NEW DEPARTMENT HEAD - Clark Vickers was
from
Tenderfoot to Eagle.
·promoted to Director of Housekeeping and Linen Services
.
Earl
L. Collings, comat·Pleasant Valley Hospital. He has been employed with
munications
director for the
the hospital for the past six years, with his most recent
Professional
.Golfers '
day."
position as a orthopedic technician in the Physical
Association
of
America.
said
To Mrs. Carl Kolstad, 69, a
Therapy D~partment. He Is a graduate of Point Pleasant
Many people see the In·
POINT PLEASANT - The
"many
efforts
through
the
retired nurse from Parkville,
High School and is married to the fonner Sherry ·sole,
~irations as the ultimate-.jn
11
Inspirations
will
appear
at
years
have
gone
into
the
Minn., it was more of a
New Haven. They reside at liS English Court.
establishment of such a the Point Pleasant High Gospel Quartets. 'i)lis waif
relief than anything" to learn
badge and we are pleased it School at 2 p.m. on Sunday, emphasized in 1970 when CBS
her son's body had been
finally
is a reality."
March 27, under sponoorship News did a ten-minute
returned.
of
the Poiot Pleasa nt Rescue documentary on The lnGolfing
traces
its
history
'~ We'd been waiting for
~irations . In 1972 they were
Squad.
back
nearly
900
years
to
news for 10 years now," the
voted by ·America's Ga;pel
Advance
tickets
at
$3.50
are
Scotland,
where
it
was
all'
rmther of Lt. Cmdr. Thomas
C. Kolstad said. " We're
RIO GRANDE - The unique educational at- parently developed from a available at the squad office, Music fans as the Number
game
called the Citizens Bank and the ~e Gospel Group.
mping they'll bring him here rollege campus comes to rmsphere in which hoth a Roman
Their tenor, Archie
"panganica."
The
first
golf Peopl e's
Bank,
Point
for burial - back wtth his Buckeye Hills Career Center four-year private college and
was named the
Watkins,
Pleasant
;
Greg's
Market
in
course
in
the
United
States
family. He would have been March 25 at 9 a.m. when · a two-year community
.
Number
One
Tenor. In 1973,
was
established
in
Yonkers,
New
Haven
;
Rutland
Fur42 years old in July if he had Bernie Murphy , admissions college share the same
Martin
Cook
was voted the
niture
Store
and
lhe
.
MidN.Y.,
in
1888.
Proponents
say
.
lived. You never forget, but rounselor from Rio Grande, campus. Such a program
Number
One
Musician,
more
people
play
the
game
dleport
Book
Store.
in
Meigs
yuu kind of heal up inside." will be visiting Buckeye Hills allows all students from Ohio
Archie
Watkins
was
voted the
C'&lt;lunty.
Tickets
at
the
door
toda9
than
any
other
outdoor
remains were contained in
Career Center as part of the to start at reduced comNumber
One
Tenor,
and
";11
be
$4.
Children
12
and
sport,
including
over
10
ooe of 12 black metal boxes
ro lleg e's
program
to munity college rates thus
Eddie
Deitz
was
acclaimed
lllder
will
be
admitted
free.
million
in
the
United
States.
turned over to the mission b)'
acquaint hi gh school students making it possible for Rio
the Number One Baritone. In
Other "individual" sports
Vietnamese in Hanoi.
"ith the opportunities Grande to more adequately
which
are
already
on
Ducat and his wife,
in
coll ege fulfill its belief that "all high ·
available
Shapiro named
Elizabeth, 68, still feel the Air
education.
ochool graduates should have Scouting's merit badge list
Force arbitrarily listed their
Rio Grande College - an opportunity to attend include : archery, canoeing,
cycling , fishing , hiking ,
oon as dead in 1971 eithout to new position
C'&lt;lmmunity College offers a wllege."
horsemanship, motorhoating,
my real evidence. Now, he
orienteering,
rifle and shotsaid; they must wait until the
gun
shooting,
rowing ,
remains are positively
CLEVELAND (UP!)
skating,
skiing,
small
hoat
identified before accepting it. Robert S. Shapiro has iJeen
sailing,
swimming,
and
water
"! don't know. Mer all named director of operations
dog with meat sauce, French skiing. In addition Scouts
Gallipolis City Schools
.these years I really &lt;hn't feel in the Pittsbur(lh area for the ·
fries, buttered spinach, jello may earn badges in athletics
MENU
my different," said Marie Cleveland Nets of World
Monday, March 21 - Blue salad, and one-half pint milk. and sports, both involving
.Gipson, mother of another Team Tennis, the club said Devil burgers with pickles,
Friday, March 25 - Fish multiple atllletic events.
alnnan. Her son, Navy CaJt. Friday.
buttered carrots , buttered sandwich with tartar sauce,
Ray H. Bowling of San
The Nets wiU play 10 of corn, sliced peaches, one-half high school: grilled cheese,
Bernadino, Calif., was shot llleir home games at the pint milk.
elem., cole slaw,' green
&lt;hwn over North Vietnam on Pittsburgh Civic Arena,
Tuesdoy, March 22 - Hot beans, ice cream and one~half and one-half pint milk .
NOv. 17, 1965, in an A4 filling an opening left in that roast beef sandwich, mashed pint milk .
Wednesday, March 30
Skyhawk jet. He already had city when Frank Fuhrer potatoesw ith gravy , buttered
Monday, March 28 - Hot Sliced turkey , mashed ,
the WTT's peas, bread, butter, pudding,
flown his regular mission that disbanded
dog with meat sauce, shellie potatoes with gravy, buttered
day and was filling in for an• Pittsburgh Triangles.
and one-half pint milk.
· beans , buttered carrots, peas, bread, butter, sliced
Shapiro, a Pittsburgh
ailing pilot on a second
Wednesday, March 23 pudding, and one-half pint peaches, and one-half pint
mission when he was cap- native, previously served as Chili with crackers, tossed milk.
milk.
tured.
director of operations for the
Tuesday, March 29 salad,
bread,
butter,
sliced
Thursday, March 31- Blue
Other servicemen said they WTT's former Florida pears, and one-half pint milk. . Sloppy Joe on bun, French
Devil
burger with pickles,
saw Bowling captured alive ' Flamingos.
Thursday, March 2i - Hot fries, cole slaw, sliced pears, buttered corn, fruit salad,
potato chips, and one-half
pint milk.
Friday, April I - Sea dog
PIN AWARDED - At a recent district reception· fo".
on bun with tartar sauce,
the Most Worshipful Grand, Master of Masons In Ohio,
green beans, tossed salad,
Turn yourself into a proud Frigidaire owner and save!
Charles S. Ward, Mentor, Ohio held at Rio Grande .
bread , butter, ice cream, and
College . Brother Buell Clark, lelt, 847 Second Ave.,
one·half pint milk.
Gallipolis, Ohio , was presented a 50 year award by the
Choice of white or
Grand Master . There were more than 200 present for this
chocolate milk .
affair. Brother Clark is a member or Morning Dawn
Lodge No. 7, Gallipolis, Ohio.

•

t•

Eastern
High
School
librarian, and judges will be
John Riebel, Charles Dowler
and Bob Ord, superintendents
of the Eastern, Meigs and
Southern Local Districts,
respectively. Greta Suttle of
the county office is chairperson.
Tomorrow night's champloo will receive a trophy and
enter the state spelling hee on
April 20 at Columbus. A
plaque will be presented the
school the county champion
attends. The runner-up on the
county level will also receive

a trophy.
Each school will be
represented tomorrow night
by a champion and the
runner-up will serve as
alternate in the respective
school. ·
Listed below are the contestants with the champion of
each school listed first, the
ahernate, grades and parents
in that order:
Chester Elem., Terri
·Wood, 5 Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Wood; Randy Bahr, 5, Mr.
and Mrs. Henry Bahr.
Eastern Jr. High, Kathy
Pooler, 8, Mr. and Mrs.
Emerson Pooler; Scott
DUion, 7, Mr. and Mrs. Roger
DUion,
..
Riverview Elem., Rhonda
Ribel, 6, Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Riebel; Brian Collins; 6, Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Collins.
Tuppers Plains, Melissa
Scarbrough, 5, Mr. and Mrs.
Leslie Scarbrough; li::lizabeth

Collins, 6, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Collins.
Bradbury Elem., Keith
Scott, 6, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Scott; Kris 'Snowden, 6, Mr.
and Mrs. Arnold Snowden Jr.
Harrisonville, Christina
Haning, 5, Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Haning; Deborah
Lewis, 5, Mr. and Mrs.
Bradford Lewis.
Meigs Jr . High, Jayne
Hoeflich. 8, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Hoeflich.; Rebecca Tillis, 7,
Mr. and Mrs. Amos Tillis.
Pomeroy Elem ., Nicky
Riggs, 5, Dr. and Mrs. Keith
Riggs; Gina Johnson, 6, Mr.
aod Mrs. Larry Johnson.
Rutland Elem., Jeff Carson
6, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Carson; BP.tty Murphy, 6, Mr.
and Mrs. Hawthorne Murphy.
Salem Center, Clinton
Turner, 5, Mr. · and Mrs.
Roger Turner; Angela
Myers, 5, Mr. and Mrs.
William Maust.

Salisbury Elem., Sherri
MarshaU, 6, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Marshall; Michael
Kennedy, 5, Mr. and Mrs.
Edward
Kennedy;
Letart Elem., Angela
Rhodes, 5, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Rhodes; Diana
Rhodes, 6, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Rhodes.
Portland Elem., Tammy
Meadows, 6, Mr. and Mrs.
James Meadows; Debra
Bryant, · 6, Mr. and Mrs.
William Brayant.
Racine Elem., Lori Warden, 6, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Warden; Tracy Riffle, 6, Mr.
and Mrs. Daniel Riffle.
Southern Jr. High, Peggy
Bush, 8, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Bush, Kelly Pickens, 7, Mr.
and Mrs. John Pickens.
Syracuse Elem ., Kim
Morrow, 6, Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Borrow ; Sandra Foley,
6, Mr. and Mrs. Gary Foley.

$4,688 asked in lawsUit
A lawsuit asking $4,668.05
has been filed in Meigs
C'&lt;lunty Common Pleas Court
by the Pomeroy Cement
Block Co., against Ronald
Thomas, dba All Weather
Roofing and Construction,
Middleport, and Ronald

Virgil Roush
remembered by

Voters turn out Mrs. Gandhi
NEW DELIU, India (UP!)
- Prime Minister Indira
Gandhi was swept from
power today in an resounding
parliamentary election
defeat and her Congress
party, which has ruled India
since independence in 1947,
tralled the opposition. A
spokesman for Mrs. Gandhi
said she would resign later
today.
Hours after her defeat was
announced, Mrs. Gandhi
revoked the harsh and
·unpopular
state
of
emergency · which she
ilnposed 21 months ago and
which was largely credited
for her downfall.
Official relllllts for 2116 of r.40
parliamentary seats showed
the Congresa party won Ill
and its allies 17, while the.
Janata party, · an opposition
coalition, held 140. The rest
went to a scattering or ot l.c··
parties. ..
_
Mrs. non•'hi polled 1"".517
votes to 177,729 lor her rival,

Raj Naraln, a Socialist
lawyer, in her home district
of Rae Barell, seemingly
laying to rest her party's
slogan that "India Is Indira
and Indira is India."
Her controversial »-yearold son sanjay lost· by 75,000
votes in a constituency
adjoining hers. Both were
defeated
by
Janata
candidates.
A personal aide Ill the
prime minister,
H.Y.
Sharada Prasad, said she
would submit her resignation
later In t!e day. He de$Cribed
her as "pretty cheerful"
despite her loss.
.
Other party sources said
jhey
expected
acting
President B.D. Jatti to ask
Mrs. Gandhi · to remain in
office and head il brief
caretaker government until a
new prlme minister is sworn
ln.
V . ~ H:t ju,' n,i!cneral secret , , v of the Congress party,
wit porty orficials would

meet later in the day to select
Mrs. Gandhi's 1cplacement
as leader of the party.
The party with the most
parliament seats will form a
government later In the
week. Should the Coogress
party lose, the two leading
candidates for
prime
minister would be Jagjlvan
Ram and Morarji Desai.
Ram, 68, led a rebellion
within the Congress party
last monll) and fonned the
Congress for Democracy
Party that lined up with the
opposition Janata Party :
Desai, 81, has been a foe of .
Mrs. Gandhi's since he led a
1969 party revolt.
Both men were jailed under
Mrs. Gandhi 's emergency
rule , which also imposed a
strict press cenoorship and
suspended civil liberties.
Public anger at the
rneasur,. hEHt become the
main issue in the election
campaign. Her opponents
billed the race as a choice

between "democracy and
dictatorship,"
Other .voter grievances included compulsory
sterilizations and Sanjay
Ghandi's growing influence
in the government.
,
The campaign started with
Mrs. Gandhi's surprise Jan.
18 decision to bold elections.
The oppositloo, fragmented
in all •revlous electloris,
united speedily on the
emergency isaue and later
Jagjivan's rebellious
Congress party faction lined
up witll it.

JUVENILE REMOVED
A 15-year-old female was
taken to the Ohio Youth
Commission today after
being fouod guilty of a8sault
on a Meigs H\gh School ·
teacher and violation or
probation, Carl Hysell,
juvenile probation officer,
reported.

• •
COmmiSSIOners

Thomas, Norwood.
The Atkinson Dauksch
Agency Insurance and
Security
Bonds
Inc .,
Columbus, )las filed suit for
$1 ,502 against Richard
Bailey, dba B&amp;K Excav&amp;ting
C'&lt;l., Middleport, for what is
due on an account.
Penelope C. Malesko, Rt. 1,
Albany, and Steven J.
Malesko, Algona, Iowa, filed
for dissolution of marriage.
The marriage of Rev a Snyder
and Jame s Snyder was
dissolved.
:=::;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:;:::::::

A resolution of appreciation
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
In commends !ion of the late
Wednesday through
Virgil Roush's "outstanding
Friday,
chance of snow
and meritorious service to
flurries
to north and
Me)gs County" has been
showers
In
south Wedissued by the Meigs County·
oesday.
F&amp;lr
Thursday
and
Board of C'&lt;lmmissloners.
Friday.
Lows
mostly
In
the
The resolution , Issued by
20..
Highs
In
the
fOs
and
Henry Wells, Richard Jones,
low 50s.
and James E. Roush, on
March 8, cites Mr. Roush's :;:;:; :;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; : ;:; :;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:~;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::
service to Meigs County as
Letart Township Trustee and
as an outstanding Meigs
C'&lt;lunty fanner.
Rain tonight, ending
The tribute to Mr. Roush Tuesday and clearing by
was recorded In the minutes afternoon. Lows tonight in the
ol the Meigs C'&lt;lunty Board of mid 30s. Highs Tuesday in the
Commissioners' meeting on upper 40s. Probability of rain
March 8 at which time a 10 per cent today, 90 per cent
moment ol silence was held in tonight and 80 per cent
his memory.
· 'Tuesday.

Weather

Civil War era
rifle stolen
Meigs County Sheriff
James J . Proffitt Saturday
afternoon investigated the
reported theft of a muzzle
loader rifle from the Joe
Bolin residence In Rutland.
Bolin told officers the rifle
was a Civil War rifle in good
condition, a .58 caliber "U.S.
Bridsburg."
Ralph Radcliff, Syracuse,
who looks after the estate of
Wallace Hill, Rt. I, Racine,
reported the residence was
entered recently and a Sears
water pump removed. The
lncideot is under In- .
vestlgatioo.
ll

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

TRAINING OFFERED
RUTLAND- Mrs. Janet
Bolin will conduct the
American Red Crot1s multimedia !inlaid program for
bus drivers and teachers
taler this montll. Others
Interested In enrolling are
asked to conllcl Mrs. Bolin
lor tbr lime and date. The
elght-honr course will be
given In two evenings from
6 to 10.

E-RCALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad wu called at 1 a.m.
Sunday for Katie Walburn,
Pomeroy, who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.

�3-TheDaily Sent10el, M1ddlcport-Pumeroy, 0, Monday, March21 , I!¥fl

2-The Dally Sentin~l . Middleport Pomeroy, 0 , Monday, Mal ch ll. 1977

Arrowhead spread uses alien labor
Copyright 1977
Investigative Reporters
and Edtlon Inc,
Dlslrtbuted by United
Press International
A mammoth Arizona c1trus
!ann partly owned by the
brother of Senator Barry
Goldwater, R-Anz, has
operated for more than a
decade from the labor of
illegal Mex~ean ahens who
have been pa1d cruelly
meager wages and forced to
live m subhuman conditiOns
Members
of
an
Investigative Reporters and
Editors liRE ) team who
ignored a guard at
Arrowhead Ranches, a farm
northwest of PhoeniX coowned by the Senator's
brother, Robert, diSCOvered
that ahens there .
- Pa1d $100 or more a head
to
''coyotes"
(ahen
smugglers), one of whom
callously left a boy With an
inJured leg m the desert to
face !2ik!egree heat w1th
only a gallon of water and a
b1t of mariJuana
•
- Lived arrud thell' own
excrement and garbage m
orange crate shelters and flyinfested camps sh1elded from

cur1ous eyes by black plast1c
sheets hWlg on trees
- Worked from dawn to
dusk for as l1ttle as $5 a day, a
pittance bled down by phony
soc1al secunty deducllons
and food pr1ces mflated by
the1r overseers
- Were slupped like cattle
m locked trucks as far away
as Idaho, where those not
rN!eded for farm work were
turned m to unrrugrat10n
author111es for deportation to
Mex1co
Arrowhead Ranches Is a
partnership headed by
Robert Goldwater. Sr . who
owns one-th1rd of 1ts stock
The other two-thll'ds 1s owned
by members of the PhoeniXarea Martor1 farruly
The ranch IS a subs1d1ary of
Goldmar Inc , a large
development and mvestment
company that operates the
farm and 1s mvolved m many
large real estate deals
Robert Goldwater, &amp; , IS
pres1dent of Goldmar and
se rves on 1ts board of
directors Harry Rosenzwe1g,
former cha1rman of the
Arizona Republican Party
and a life long fr~end and
adviser to Senator Barrv

Goldwater, .erved on the
board for more than a year
prwr to h1s res1gnallon about
s1x
months
ago
In April1972. Senator Goldwater gave a speech to the
Scottsdale Dmner Club at the
Arizona Biltmore m PhoeniX
He was asked by an umdenllfled member of the Uruted
Farm Workers Uruon whv h1s
brother Bob h1red "Illegal
labor," mea nmg Mex1can
nat1onals
"My brother Is over 21 and
he knows what he is domg ,''
the senator retorted "If you
people would get off your
butts and go to work, he
wouldn 't have to h1re

Gene Wood, sa1d the poor
performance m 1976 was due
to the reass ignment of
enforcement pr1or1ty to the
border area and away from
Phoerux Border enforcement
efforts have been effecllve,
he sa 1d Wood sa1d no
polltical influence was ever
directed at control efforts at
Arrowhead
Whether 1t 1s pohllcal
mfluence, md1fference or
another factor that allows
business -as- us ual
at
Arrowhead Ranches makes
little practical difference to
the ahens there Accounts ol
th etr
treatment
are
horrifymg
The story of DemetriO D1az,
told m a sworn ststement
obtamed by IRE reporters, IS
typ1cal In 1973, Diaz ps1d
$100 to a smuggler named
Alberto, who transported hun
and 20 other a hens from deep
ms1de Mex1co to the

makmg
shift Without
bathrooms, afra1d to lea ve
because of a guard posted
there and threats that they
would be p1cked up by the
Border Patrol1f they d1d
"The Border Patrol are my
friends," a foreman named
Meza asserted, according to
Oiaz " If there IS ever a
report, the Border Patrol
calls me , and I tell my
workers to hide "
Since 1974, when D1az
dictated his account, things
have changed very little m
the occhards of the MartorlGoldwater combme IRE
reporters, though harassed at
times by a buzzmg all'plarN!,
orchard employes m tracks
natiOnals ''
and a man w1th a shotgun,
And m an mterv1ew last
vis1ted Arrowhead three
December, Gene Butler, the
times to probe conditiOnS
senator's fonner son·m..:Jaw,
said he recalled a fanuly
there
They found frightened
discusswn m which Robert
aliens huddhng m crude
and the senator sa1d that if
pa ckmg -crate shelters
the border patrol pressure
agamst the damp cold,
agamst the use of aliens kept American border
up, they would have to go out
They Jumped a fence there, washmg m canals, eking out
of busmess
then followed Alberto on a what psssed for llvmg on an
The efforts to control the march of four days and mghts average salary of $5 a day
use of allen labor at through the desert After
A pubhc health nurse who
Arrowhead have been futile, three days, !hell' food ran out, accomparued the reporters
accordmg to Raymond F and they killed and ate a was repelled by the prurut1ve
Feld, 46, head of the US desert p1g Durmg the trek, cond1tions She called them a
bord er patrol office m "one young, short boy hurt health threat not only to the
ahens, but to the pubhc
his leg," Diaz recalled
block IS the
" It was a homble
"His leg IJBS so swollen
law It IS legal to hire ahens, that the boy couldn't walk s1tuat10n ,' she exclauned.
a lthough 11 1s 11legal to Alberto gave h1m some 'The condillons m which
knowmgly harbor them mariJuana to make the boy these men hved
no
Another problem 1s lack of walk the boy couldn't get san1tary facil1lles, no shelter,
manpower Feld and four up
crowded together
make
agents are ass1grN!d to patrol
"Alberto wouldn't let us them pnme targets for
a 36 ,000-square-mlle area carry hun, saymg, 'No, leave d1sease and mfect1on
extendmg roughly from JUS! him • The boy was left m the Commumcable diseases like
south of Phoemx to the Idaho desert w1th one gallon of tuberculosis, lice, scabies,
border
water and unable to walk, an impetigo, influenza, etc ,
FIVe men can't do any- entire rught's walk from the would spread through a camp
thmg,'' Feld asserted "We U S border "
like this very rap1dly "
,
could clean out those groves
The aliens were not aU
The gnm unphcat1ons of
(at Arrowhead) and grab 300, such
behaviOr
were men, however, The reporter
400 wets (a hens ) 1! we JUSt unm1stakable "On the path found women and ch1idren
had the manpower "
of the desert were many sieepmg on the ground
The border patrol distr1ct human skeletons and loose w1thout blankets Tbey found
offiCe m Tucson has more hones, alongside empty water a farruly of f1ve, mcludmg a
agents because, bemg closer cans, " D1az stated w1th pregnant woman, hvmg m a
to the border, 1! has a h1gher horrifymg sunpllcdy It was packmg crate They saw a
pnonty than PhoeniX Pr1or no Isolated mc1dent Another Six-month old baby lymg on a
to February 1976, Feld illegal who took part m such a blanket, hiS d1rty face
recalled, he was g~ttmg s1x to trek sa1d one of h1s covered w1th fl1es
10 extra agents from that comparuons was bitten by a
Paycheck stubs found on
off1ce for br1ef per1ods of rattlesnake He, too, was left the ground m an alien camp
concentrated enforcement behind
ev1denced a questiOnable psy
Since then, eve ry request
D1az sa1d his group was pracllce The Soc1al Security
he's fi led has been Ignored, eventually led to an orchard number on one check,
Feld sa14
Feld ac· that "belonged to Martori's" mstance, was t)()().Ot).4394, a
knowledged that he has no They worked SIX days a week, phony number There were
proof or even strong D1az sa1d, for weekly checks other stubs w1th equally
md1cations that his problems that ranged from nothing to mvahd numbers
stem from powerful polltlCal $40 Out of the meager pay
Even the best workers
mterests mvolved w1th came phony deducbons for could make only about $10 a
Arrowhead However, he Social
Security
and day, ahens told the IRE
sa1d, 'I can't help but wonder exorb1tant charges for food team, and they all hved in
1f I'd get more support 1f we bought for the workers by constant fear that the Border
were hasslmg somebody the1r foreman
Patrol will p1ck them up
before
they get pa1d, or that
else "
' For a bag of flour, two
Feld ' s 1mmed1ate dozen eggs, salt and three they Will fall v1ctun to gangs
supervisor m the border cans of beans, we were of toughs who beat up and rob
pstrol office mTucson agreed charged up to $20, wh1ch was aliens
Along With the lemons and
that "there's no quesllon that taken out of our checks," he
oranges they. have p1cked m
our efforts m that area Said
( Phoemx farmm g operaThe aliens hved m a lemon the Arrowhead orchards, the
tions) have not been very orchard from December to ahens have harvested a huge
satisfactory"
April, sleepmg in beds made crop of bitterness and
However, that supernsor, of cardboard or orange heartache
deputy ch1ef pstrol agent crates, cookmg over f1res,
"I own a little farm m

a

Rare exhibit
opens in p~::~umbl111g
,
•
• on March 24
Cincmnah
CINCINNATI (UP!)- Taft
Museum offlc1als sa1d
Thursday 50 of Amenca 's
'most beautiful and rare
arllsllc treasures " Will he
displayed March 24 through
May 8 at a spec1al exh1b1llon
called "Best ol Fifty "
The exhihlt10n commemorates the 501ll anru versary of
Mr and Mrs Charles P
Taft's g~ft of thell' h1stonc
home, thell' art collection and
endowment funds to the
people of Cincmnati-a g1ft
wh1ch estabhshed the
Cincmnati Institute of Fme
Arts and paved the way for
subsequent openmg of the
Taft Museum
" For thts anmversary
exhibition, the Taft Museum
has asked 50 of th1s country 's
most distmguished museums
to lend one of the1r fmest
treasures-a work of art of
exceptional quality and
beauty which IS a highlight of
each museum 's collecllon,"
museum off1c1als smd
"The resultmg exh1bl110n,
'Best of F1fty, ' 1s an
array
of
unpresslVe
unsurpsssed examples wh1ch
span over 3,000 years of
human art1sllc achievement
and represent cultures the
world

over ,"

officials

added
Included are pamtmgs,
sculptures, texllles and
several objects m gold and
prec1ous• stones
"We are thrilled With the
manner m which th1s

exhibition has evolved," sa1d
Katherme Hama, museum
director 'The enthus1ast1c
endorsement and cooperatiOn
ol each
parllc1patmg
museum has been most
gratifymg and promiSes to
make the 'Best of F1fty' one
of the most v1sually stunrung
and purely enjoyable
exhibitions ever held at the
Taft Museum "
Among the 50 works of art
assembred are a gold rhyton
from anc1ent Iran lent by the
Metropohtan Museum of Art,
anc1ent Chinese bronzes from
the Asian Art Museum of San
Franc1sco and the Freer

Gallery of Art Study
Collection, a 13th Century
French enamelled croz1er
from the Detrmt Institute of
Arts
Also, Claude Monet's pamling, "Haystacks, Setllng
Sun" from the Art Inslltute of
Ch1cago and a pre-Columbian
gold bll'd of prey pendant
from the Dallas Museum of
Fine Arts
The oldest work m the
exhibition IS a necklace from
Egypt's 18th Dynasty (157~
1314 B C ), made of gold and
precrous stones and lent by
the St LDws Art Museum
The most recent 1s Franz
Kl1ne's abstract
expres slomst punt1ng ,
"Dahha," done m 1959 and
lent by the Whitney Museum
of Amer1can Art m New York
City

11

Woodcock to Carter: Mission possible
HONOLULU (UPI ) - A
While House m1ss10n seeking
mformat10n on Americ an
servicemen mtssmg m
V1etnam and Laos returned
from Southeast As1a today
and was reoortin~ bv nhone
to Pres1dent Carter that 1ts
rruss1on was accompliShed
Leonard
VVoodcock,
president of the Umted Auto
Workers and chairman of the
f1ve-member
comm1ss1on ,

was scheduled to telephone
Carter from U S m1htary
headquarters 111 Hawau
fn three days m Hano1, the
comm1ss1on rece1ved the remams of 12 Amencan fliers
lost m the lndochma war, got
agreement for a contmumg
hunt for more of the 2,550
m1ssmg AmeriCans and
opened the way for normal
US ·VIetnamese relatiOns
An overmght stop m Laos

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
By Lawrence E Lamb, MD
DEAR DR LAMB - I am
completely confused and hoJ&gt;lllg you can help me The doctor I go to for h1gh blood
pressure has put me on
medicme to lo)&lt;'er 1t I go to
another doctor for checkups
after hysterectomy surgery
and he put me on Premann
I was really feehng great
until the blood pressure doctor took me off Premann saymg 1t was keepmg we1ght on
that he was trymg to get me
to take off I called the doctor
who prescnbed Premann
and he says I need 11 but stop
laking 1! and see
The results are I am havmg
tembie hot fla shes, wet
sweats m the mght and feel
dragged out Also I have gamed 15 pounds Is there an
answer?
DEAR READER - In cases
like this the pallent usually
henef1ts if the two doctors
discuss the problem w1th
each other Busy days o((en
I
&lt;

produced a promise from Charles Yost, Rep G V
Commumst ofhc1als to "Sonny tt Montgomery, D
search for 559 Americans M1ss , and Mrs Manen
m1ss111g there and a request Wnght Edelman of the
for U S reconstruction a1d Children's Defense Fund Cambodia refused to allow wrote !hell' report to Carter
the delegallon to enter 1ts durmg the nme.hour fl1ght
country
from Clark All' base m the
Woodcock and the other Ph1hppmes to Haw an's
commtss10n members - Hickam F1eld
Tbe delegation scheduled a
former Senate Major1ty
news
conference m Honolulu
Leader M1ke Mansfield,
for
10
30 p m EST
form er U N Ambassador
The comouSSlon will hand
1ts wrltien report to Carter m

Honnone lack causes ills.

make this d1ff1cult but 1! 1s the
1deal
Takmg you off Premann
did not help you lose we1ght
On the contrary you gamed
we1ght wh1ch IS bad for
yourblood pressure.
The estrogen m your
mcdlCme IS padlcularly
use! ul m stoppmg the hpt
flashes and sweatmg bf
menopause You don 't need
large doses usually to ach1eve
th1s effect Possibly your doctor could g1ve you a small
amount of JUS! estrogen or a
synthet1c estrogen to accomplish this for you
Because of changes m
metabohsm durmg th e
menopause, wheU1er 1! IS Induced by surgery or occurs
naturally, 1! IS dlff1cult for
some women to av01d gammg
we1ght The body metaboloon
and often one's phys1cal actlVlty slows down
You must get on a we1ght
control program and I all!

sending you The Health Letter number 4-7, We1ght LDsmg D1et, which you can use to
control your calor1es and stlll
get a balanced d1et Slick to 1!
With rehguMls zeal and you
Will lose we1ght
You could help yourself
w1lh an exerc1se program
Develop a dally walkmg pmgram Walk a total of three
rrules a day If you wmgh
around 130 pounds that Will
use an addlllonall50 calor1es
a day or the eqUivalent ol
over 15 pounda of body fat a
year The exermse plus the
diet should help you solve
your problem
Others who want thiS d1et
plan can send 50 cents for 1!
Just write to me m care of
th1s new;'Paper, P 0 Box
1551, Rad1o C1ty Station, N~w
York, NY l0019 M011t people
who have h1gh blood pressure
can help themselves a g1eat
deal by elumnatm~ any extra
body fallhey have Ccrtamly

•

15 pounds could make a great
deal of difference
The d1et plan I am sending
1s the bas1s for a permanent
well balanced vaned d1et.
Once you have reached your
goal you can add other foods
to the bas1c plan as long as
you don't add so many
calories for your level of activity that you start to gam
we1gbt agam The d1et trams
you to be able 'to stay slun
rather than spend a llfetune
ol ' feast or Iamme" and 1! 1s
better for your health
I would hke to suggest too
that you restnct your salt at
least by not adding salt to
your cookmg Estrogen tends
to cause salt, and hence
water retention, which your
blood pressure doctor 1s trymg lo avo1d But that 15
pound we1ght gam IS not
water and you can elnmnate
the sa it and water 1etcntwn
w1th mt'lllclnes bul uot tile
ca lones stored us fat

a Wh1te House meetmg
Tuesday It w1ll be up to
Carter whether it wdl be
made pubhc But the
corruruss1on wrote 1ts report
w1th the Ameman pubhc's
reading 1! m mind
CommissiOn members declmed to say what was m the
report But 1t was obVIous to
reporters aboard the A1r
Force KC135 across the
Pacific that the reception in
Hanoi was responsible lor the
qu1et good humor durmg the
fl1ght back to America
The remams of the 12 01ers
proceeded the delegation to
Hawau and military experts
are atlemptmg to poSlbvely
Identify the re0181Ds.
In Hano1, a Vietnamese
OffiCial told UPI he believes
that the rruss1oo l1o unproved
relatlons tbat 1t was now
poSSible that Carter rrught be
willing to have a Vietnamese
delegallon VISlt Washmgton
The f111ll agreement from
Han01 lo try to determine
what bappened to the mlssmg
Amerlc~ns was in llne with
what Carter has said was the
key to any further step
toward
better
USVIetnamese relations
The V1etnamese gave the
comrrusslon a long oral message for Washmgton and
Prerruer Phan Van Dong
added a wr1tien letter to !hell'
luggage
Atnencan diplomats sa1d
they expected Carter to
consider, with at least 110me
sympathy, lifting the US
veto on Hanoi 's U.N
membersllip, easing the
trade ban with Vietnam and
helpmg Hanoi and posaibly
Laos get more international
development aid, probably
through the U N and other
hands
J

MexiCO " one Ulegal sa1d
desrxmdenUy

"How many

ch1idrendo you thmk I have'
Ftlteen I heard about aU the
money I could make m the
Uruted Stales So I d1dn't
even plant my f1elds I grow
peas And oow look at me.
I'm bvmg underneath a
tree " Because he and the
others were 1llegal aliens,
they were not g1ven the
housmg Arrowhead provides
for domestiC m1grant labor,
which 1t also uses
Cond1llons at the farm were
discussed m an mtervtew

herN!ath a palm tree m the
sunny back yard of the
Paradise Valley horne of
attorney Joseph P Martor1
W1th Martorl, counsel to
Goldmar Inc , was Robert
Goldwater
"I have asked about 1t and
was told we don't use allen
labor," Martor1 told the IRE
reporters " It IS our
corporate policy not to use
allen labor " Martor1 sa1d
several pers ons, mostly
MartorlS, superv1se the Citrus
farm work force for the
corporation He said he had
asked them about reports of
al1en labor, and they told hun
"poppycock "
Marton and Goldwater
both acknowledged they had
rN!Ver gone mto the fi elds to
personally check those
reports Both demed knoWing
that armed patrols guard
the1r f1elds, that p1ckers are
recru1ted 1n Mex1co and
taken on tortuous treks
across the desert, that they
lived under trees without
livmg or washmg facilities,
and that !hell' paychecks
were gouged for food and
Soc1al Secur1ty deductlons
Asked 1f they m1ght have
been gathermg mfonnat1on
about allen Qll'mg from the
very persons responsible for
such practices- the supervisors - both men srud they
(Contmued on page 8)
"""-~~~"';:.»:*.

Social
.
Calendar
MONDAY
MEETING OF Salem
Townsh1p Trustees to d1scuss
formatiOn of township
voluneer fire department,
7 30 p m Monday at Salem
Center School , pubhc mv1ted
SOUP Sale at the Star
Grange Hall on Monday
Sandw1ches Mll be served
and the pubhc 1s mv1ted to
e1ther eat at the hall or take
contamers of the soup home
CARL HYSELL , Me1gs
Juven1le Off1cer, will he guest
speaker at meetmg of
Diester Elementary PTA,
7 30 p m Monday at school; .
el ectlon of officers
MEIGS BAND Boosters,
7 30 p m Monday, band room
&lt;i high school to discuss band
llmquet, awards, additiOnal
untform pur c has e,
oorrunahm of new off1cers
!lld food booth for May's C B
Roundup
RACINE PTO Monday,
7 30 p m at elementary
school
MIDDLEPORT Busmess
and ProfessiOnal VVomen's
club, 7 30 p m Monday at the
Columbm Gas Social room
Federa\lon and fmanc O'
comm1ttee to hav e the
program
TIJESDAY
RUTLAND
Baseball
League meetmg, 6 :.1 p m
Tuesday at Gene WISe home
m Rutland for all mterested
persons
MEETING TO establish
Me1gs Jmior High School
Parent-Teacher Forum
designed to prov1de a
medium through which
parents and teachers could
v.t&gt;rk together to develop full
potenllal of the junior high
school for students All
PBrents Including those of
[l'esent SIXth graders urged
to attend, 7 30 Tuesday in
school cafeter1a.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Middleport
Uons Club, Wednesday noon ,
Me1gs Inn
POMEROY Chapter 80 ,
Royal Arch Masons, 7 30
p m Wednesday, Pomeroy
Masonic Temple
BOSWORTH Council 46,
Royal and Select Masters,
stated assembly, 8 p.m.
Pomeroy Masonic Temple
SPECIAL meetmg of the
board of trustees of the Rio
Grande Community College
Wednesday, 7 p m in the
community college office
Purpose of the meetmg Is to
select a secretary-treasurer
for the community college

State tourney play starts Thursday

Who 'dda thought women
would ever repair and
rebuild railroad eJJgines?

Tourney

ClEBURNE, Tex (UPI) - One ci the lui lndultrlal
male hast1ons is eroding
•,,Since Jan. I Santa Fe Rallway has hired three women to
work in a shop which repJ1ln and rebullda locomottvea
and cars The shop employs 1,000 pei'!OIIS but since Wocld
War II only two females had been e!fiP}oyed
Santa Fe officials said the recept hiringa were oot !be
result of federal pressures
•
C W Cramer, superintendent rl sh0[18, said Santa Fe
hirmg after the first of the year and took out an
advertisement 10 a local newiJ)IIper which stated the
railroad was an equal opportunity employe~
The ad brought one or two women to the shop In the
(l'evious eight years Cramer had only one woman apply
and she faDed her phy&gt;lcal
"When the first one or two were hired on It S)l'llad by
wocd of mouth that the salary was pretty good and there
was no discrlmlnation as to Job actlvillu," tald
spokesman George Grader. "The WMm'l hlrees were
given the same tests and apprenticeships and treated
equally and that's the story "
The average Santa Fe shop hourly wages range from
appl'O%lmately $5 50 to $6 for beginning labor aoo
apprentice (JOSltions represented by various union crafts
Cramer tells the story nf a Federal Rallroad
Administratlon inspector who recently checked e~lne
units at the shop and said he had never seen the cablllook
so clean
"It's a woman's nature to clean up better than a man,"
said Leola Anderson, a car department foreman, the only
remaining female shop employe from the World War n
era. "Thill is my 1lle "
Mrs Anderson started in the shop as a teetHger In 1945.
She sa1d she Is not a women's llbber but 15 'enthuslastlc
about the new hirees
"Now I have compsny," she stid "I hope they hire a lot

was

more "
Judy Carlock is a member of a clean-up gang assigned
to Mrs. Anderson. She gave up a job as a hospital lab
teclmic~an to jom Santa Fe.
"The guys don't show any resentment, they don't even
cuss 10 front of me," she said. "Wherever you are, If you
demand respect, you'll get respect "
Other women are training as sheet metal workers,
locomotive laborers, electricians and machinists.

POLLY'S POINTERS
Polly Cramer

Use canning rings
on slippery rugs
DEAR POLLY - I put two
DEAR POLLY - Even
sets of bathroom rugs m the though many of us wear
dryer and the backs that clothes that reqwre little or
made them st1ck to the floor no 1ronmg there are tunes
came off so now they are too when they do need a b1t of
slippery to use. I would like to touching up w1th an 1r&lt;&gt;n One
know what I can do to make day when I need to do a b1t of
them usable agam - M C
this the steam psrt of my 1ron
DEAR M C - Some carpet did not want to work so I f1lled
supply houses sell a hqwd an empty man's cologne botrubber that can be applied to tie With water and used that
the backs of rngs w1th a brush to dampen the places that
or old p1ece of carpet Apply needed some touch-up lronliberally but watch to he sure mg I was very happy With
1! does not penetrate to the the results I used a bottle
top
that has a removable top and
If this IS not obtamable, found 1! 1deal as 1! g1ves off a
wrnd three rubber ca!llllllg fme spray -MRS G F
Jar rmgs together w1th
DEAR POLLY - I have a
thread Apply such a group to couple of Pomters I would
each corner of a rug and fmd like to share With the other
they form suct10n cups that readers. Use a string to shce
Will help prevent slippmg - a layer cake rather than a
POLLY
knife. Work the stnng from
DEARPOLLY-Mrs EM left to r1ght.
who washed her jeans w1th
When prepsrmg tossed
glass fiber curta1ns can soak salad for a large group I
them overnight m c1der (not place the prepsred lettuce,
white) vmegar This can also etc , m a large clean garbage
be put on the skin m case 11 bag and put m the
has attracted some of the refrigerator When the guests
f1bers and 1! w1ll cut the stmg- amve I add the dressmg to
mg The vmegar odor will the greens m the bag and
soon disappear -PAT.
shake well so the greens are
DEAR POLLY - People lightly coated With the dresswho live alone and on limited •mg This IS a gnat help and
budgets fmd buymg garbage time saver as the greens can
bags soon taxes their budgets be prepared early m the day
so I save all my bread bags -NORMA
and put m them what garbage
DEAR POLLY- It psys to
I have to diSpose of durmg a , always keep a safety pm pmday The bag is put m my kit- ned to the ms1de of a coat
chen garbage can and then I pocket and when a button IS
put several of these hags m a pop~ off when you are out,
regular garbage bag before 1! can lle fastened on w1th the
collecllon tune - K R M
pm until you get home and
• can sew 1! on Aloose one can
often be savtd, lri _!lme and
one IS 5!1Ved buyll!B a lot of
buttons -MRS H K
Polly will send you one of
her ~'peachy" thank-you
cards, ideal for frarrung or
placmg m your family scraJ&gt;"" hook, i! she uses your favonte
Salurd"a yil.lleA\D~II
Pomter, Peeve or Problem m
League
her
column Wnte Polly's
March 5, 1977
Pomters m care of this
Stand!ngs
Team
P" newspsper
Super Stars
64
Nile Owls
60
.Bowling Stones
AA
Road Runners
38
THE DALY SENTlNEL
Red Barons
24
DEVOTED TO TilE

BOWLING

Gutter Busters

H1gh game -

10

Tommy

Si mmons. Lanny Longstreth
180, Bob Haggy 173, Cliff

Kennedy 163
•
High ser ies- Ron Cullums
451 , Bob Haggy 429 Lanny
Longstreth 418
Team high game - Nile
Owls 812
Nlfe
Team high series
Owls 2286

INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
QIESJER L TANNEHIU.
Eate Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Clly Edllor
Publi~hed U.lly except S..lurday
IJy Tiae Oluu VMUey Pubfiahlng ComlillY I ll Court St Pwneruy, Otiu

46789 8t.WIIItllll Orrlce Phone Wl
2156 Et.Uional Phone99'b21~7
8e(:und chiS! PQ6lage p.~~ Jd 11l
Pom~:ruy Ohio
NaUor11l 11dvertbing: repre!ltDU.tiYe W11.rd Griffith Company J~
c

&amp; ttlaelll 1nd G11llqher Div

7S7 Thud Aw , New York N y'

ASK TOWED
Marriage licenses were
issued to Bobby Joe Patterson , 21, Pomeroy and
Sheryl Ann Davis, 18,
Pomeroy , David Allen Sayre,
:!0, Racine and Roma Lynn
Nease, 20, Minersville

10017

results,
• •

parnngs
Boys
Ohio H1gh School
Tournament Re sults
Un1ted Press International

Regional Finals
ClusAAA
(At Canton)
Barberton 81 Cle St lgna l1 us
62
(AI Konl)
Elyria 52 Toledo Scott 46 loll
(At Dayton)
Ciil LaSalfe 65 Kettenng
Alter 61
(At Marlon 1
Cols Linden McKinley 6
Cots Marlon Franklin 48

COLUMBUS (UPI)- It'll
be the big three and
Cincmnati LaSalle Thursday
rught when the fll'mg begms
m the 1977 Class AAA state
h1gh school basketball
tournament
,
Barberton, Columbus
Unden McKinley and Elyria,
all unbeaten and ranked I, 2,
3 all year m the United Press
lnternahonal Oh1o H1gh
School Board of Coaches
ratmgs, JOln lOth ranked

Class AAA
tAt Dayton)
Springfield N 54 Day Wayne
A.S

Day Col White 56 Fairmont E

46

IAt Canton)

Thrt'!~

mcmth1, S7

~

half ti me

lAA)
All four of the Class AAA
semifinalists have been to the
!mal four before
Barberton, possessor of a
:ill-game wmmng streak, 1s
th e defendmg b1g school
champwn, and Linden, wh1ch
lost m last year's semifmals,
won the lltle m 1975
Elyria last appeared m 1973
and LaSalle m 1967
Latin IS the h1ghest rated of
the AA schools, f1mshmg

IntermiSSion

Green 43 Perry 39
CAl New Concord!
IAt Upper Sandusky)
Zane Trace 49 Str ausburg 42
Shelb~ -4.5 Ashland 25
lndt an Valley N 46 Shadys1de
tAIColumbusl
32
Walnut Ridge 47 Gahanna 46
IAt Daytonl
Col Watterson 57 Col E 36
Twm Va lley N 30 Arcanum 29
IAI Mentor)
CAt Wauseon)
Mentor 45 Eastlake N 42
Hil ltop 58 Patrick Henry 41
A Pl.lbhc Serv ce of tht snewspaper&amp; The Ach-ertlstng Counctl

We just
calit
do the
job

A!J

United Press International
Tbe St lDlliS Cardinals'
new manager, Vern Rapp,
ISSued a "no beards or fac1al
ha1r " d1rective and Al
llrabosky, one of the National
League 's top relief pitcher,
has decided the rule strips
him of his mdiVIdUallty and
his "Mad Hungar1311" 1111llge
Hrabosky became the brst
Csrdinal player to challenge
the rule Sunday when he
threatened to file a gr1evance
w1th the Major League
Players Association
11
1 haven't made a dectslon
about
a
gr1evance,"
Hrabosky sa1d, " but I'm
very, very close The
manager told me tbat I'm a
better ball player because I
made the sacrifice Well,
what about anyone else'
What sacrifiCes d1d they
make"

without
you.
•'

~'re.

counting
on
you.

Hrabosky launched h1s
latest cnllc1SI11S of Rapp 's
pohc1es after an hour~ong
meeting between
the
Cardinals and Cmcinnall
Reds players and Marvin
Miller, executive director of
the players assoc1allon , who
was making his annual tour
of the spring tralniDg camps.
"You ask me how my
attitude IS'" Hrabosky said.
"It's atroc1ous I can't speak
for the rest of the team, but
look around you The guys
are just standing still. The
reason is they're afraid to
move
"look at those guys over
there," Hrabosky sa1d,
pointing to the Reds
"They're having fun That's
because they win. But our
dub bas yet to develop a
wmning attitude."
Catcher Ted Sbnmons disagreed that Rapp's new discipline IS lq)O[lUlar with the
Cardinals' players but said
llrabosky would be within hiS
r1ghla In filing a grievance
"It
wouldn't
be
undermining the manager's
authority," Slmmons said
"The fact is he doesn't have
that authority In terms of
regulations against
lllOUIIaches and hair, all a
player has to do 18 f1ie a

grievance . "

Red Cross. The Good Neighbor.

In

Sub:lcripUon price rnclude¥ SwiC!My

exhibition games
right-hand ed

0 unday,

TiJnt~Jtlnel

,,

Jordan's wmners
Ironton led 13-10 after one
per1od, and 26-24 durmg the
halftune mterm1ss1on M1ffhn
held a slun 36-35 advantage
gomg mto the fmal per1od
Ironton fell behind by five,
48--43, wlth 4 47 remammg m
the contest Kev Fa1rch1ld s
goa l (4 28) cut 1t ba ck to
thre e, 48 45, and Dean
Royal's JUmper w1th 1 58 left
cut M1fflm s lead to one, 4847
Bruce Howa rd wh o 1s
bound for R1o Grande College
thlS'fail, scored on a drlVlng
layup w1th 1 4lleft to g1ve the
Punchers a 50-47 advantage
Old rehable M1ke Brown
countered w1th 47 seconds left
to make 11 50-49
Ironton forced a Mifflin
turnover In back court 11lth 38
seconds left. The Tigers
worked the hall around until
Fairchild's short tumper
missed Its target with 12
seconds left In a fight lor th e
rebound under the Tiger
hoop, Ironton kicked the ball
out ot bounds
Iro nton
rece1ved
a
techmcal fo ul w1th e1ght
seconds left Chr1s Taylor
sank two charity shots \Hlh
seven seco nd s left aft er
Howard m1ssed the techmcal
shot
RICh Howard led the T1gers
w1th 15 pomts Dean Royal
added 11 Greg Mdton led the
wmner s w1th 16 pomts

Marvm Walker added 10
Ironton h1t 22 of 55 field goal
attempts for 41 5 percent The
Tigers were fi ve of mne at the
foul hne and had 32 rebounds,
12 each by Royal and Robm
F1tzpatr1ck
M1ffhn was 20 of 39 from
the field for 51 3 percent The
Punchers were 12 of 15 at the
fou l hne MHS h1t liS f1rst 10
shots m succession
Th e Punchers p1cked off 25
rebounds nme b) the 6-8
JUmor Walk er

Box scores
CLASS AREGIONAL
CHAMPIONSHIP GAME
STRASBURG 1511
Zettman 3 2 8 Seward 3 0'6
L au t e ns c hlage r 0 0 0
Numbers 12 0 24 W1llts J 2 6
Boy lan 0 0 0 Wannn er 0 0 0

Far thong 2 15 TOTALS 23 5
51
SOUTHEASTERN l63 l Carro ll 2 6 10

Prater 7 6 20

Eldr idge 1 3 5 Schuler 8 0
16 Estep 3 0 6 Schrader 1 0
2 Kellough 1 0 2 Chaffon 1 0
2 TOTALS 24 15 63
Score

by quarters

Strasburg
SE

19 10 12- 51
12 14 16 21 - 63
10

CLASSAA REGIONAL
CHAMPIONSH 1P GAME
1RON TON (49 1 - Roya l 5
1 11 Sesher 3 1 7 Fa•rchlld
3 0 6 Brown 3 0 6 Howard 6
J 15 Will iam s 0 0 0 F1tz
pa fn ck 2 0 A TOTALS 22 S 49
M1fflln (52 ) - Howard 3 0

6 Newby 3 0 6 Taylor 3 2 8
Molton 56 16 Walker 34 10
Lill ie 0 0 0 Craft 0 0 0
Sutford 0 0 0 Sm1lh 3 0 6
TOTALS 20 12 52
Score by quarters
13 13 9 14- 49

Ironton

M&lt;fflon

10

lA

12 16-52

Grapefruit roundup

New Rtegel 43 Ltberty Benton

37

~tervlcc

•13 SO

Ross Southeastern, now 2.11, takes on Mansfield St
Peters, 22-4, 10 Fr1day's 2 30
P m. Class A sem1-flnal
conte st
Conti n ental, 20-6, w1ll battle
Ft LDram1e, 18-ll, m Fnday's
II a m Class A sem1fmai
opener
Champ10nsh1p fmals m the
AA event 1s 7 30 p m
Saturday The Class A fmals
are 3 p m Saturday
In Class AAA play, Elyna,
24-ll, w1ll take on Barberton,
24-ll, at 6 p m Thursday
Cmcmnab LaSalle 21-3, wdl
take on Lmden McKmley, 240, at 9 30 p m Thursday
Coach Don Maurer's
Strasburg Tigers bowed out
at 17-0 Coach Buddy Bell 's
Ironton team f1mshed w1th a
20-5 season mark
Strasburg tra1led 12 10
after one penod The Tigers
were on top 29-26 dur111g the

Strasburg tra1led 42-39 gomg
mto the !mal per1od
Jeff Numbers led the
Tigers with 24 points Coy
Prater led the Panthers w1th
20 markers
Strasburg h1t 36 5 percent
from the field and 83 3 per
cent from th e foul hn e
Southeastern h1t 39 3 from the
f1eld and 75 percent fro m the
foul hne The Panthers
controlled the boards, 43-32
Jackson Center 55 Russ1a 52
Jeff Schuler p1cked off 13
IAI Lima Bath!
caroms
for Coach Larry
Ada 67 R•dgemont 42
(At Ottaway
Delph&lt;S Sl Johns 60 Ollov&lt;lle
47
IAt F1ndlayl

SubiK:ripUt~r ratft Dtll~red by
earner where I:IYII!btble 7$ cen1r1 p!r

¥tt:lik 8,11 Motor Ruuk! wht!re cnrler
not available, OJw monlh,
IP 2!i By msilln Ohlo arid W V•
01'11! Ye11r 122 00 Sax moodw
Ul M, Three month11 S1 00
Eltiewhere $211 00 ye~tr Six nwnU.

Mansfield St Peter's, 22-4,
clashmg at 2 30 p m
Conciudmg uie first set of
the semiS will be the AA
games,
w1th
Ottawa
Glandorf, 22-2, takmg on
Cleveland Cathedral Latin,
22-2, at 6 p m Fr1day and
Dayton Jefferson, 17-7, and
Columbus M1ffhn , 21 3,
play1qg at 9 30 p m
The three finals are set for
Saturday at 11 30 a m
( AAA ), 3 pm (A) and 1 30

Southeastern, Mifflin
advance to state meets

Class AA
IAt Dayton)
Dayton Jefferson 65 Bexley 55
IAt Bowling Green )
Ottawa
Gland orf
75
Lexington 59
Ross Southeastern of
(At Athens!
Richmondale
and Columbus
Cols Mifflin 52 Iron ton 49
Mifnm captured Class A and
(At Canton&gt;
Cle Cathedral Lahn 58 Akron AA Reg10nal titles and tnps
South 53
to the state tournaments th1s
Class A
weekend followmg Saturday
(At Bowling Green&gt;
triumphs
over Strasburg and
Cont1nental 65 New Bremen
62
Ironton in the Convocation
(AI Athens)
Center at Athens
Ross
Southeaster n
53
Ross Southeastern rallled
Strasburg 51
m the fb\al [our minutes of
(At Canton)
Ma nsfield St Pete r s 70 play to oust Strasburg, 63-51
Mogadore 57
whlle Mlfflm came back m
IAt Dayton)
the
!mal per1od to eliminate
Fort Loram ie 68 Middletown
Southeastern Oh1o League
Fenwick All
champiOn Ironton 52-19
Pairings for the Boys Ohio
Mifflin 21-3 on the year, will
State Basketball Tournament
battle
Dayton Jelferson, 17-7,
at Sf John Arena , Co lumb us
In
Friday's
second Class AA
Class AAA
Elyria (24 0) vs Barberton
semifinal coolest at St John
124 0). Thursday. 6 p m
Arena In Columbus, beginClncmnati LaSalle (2 1 3) vs
ning
at 9:30 p m.
Columbu s Linden McKinley
Ottawa Glandorf, 22-2,
124 01. Thursday, 9 30 p m
Finals, Saturda y 11 30 takes on Cleveland Cathedral
am
Latm, 22&gt;-2, 1n Fr1day s f1rst
Class AA
Ottawa Glandorf 122 21 vs AA t1It at 6 pm
Cleveland Cathedral Latin
(22 2) , Fnday. 6 p m
Class AA
Dayton Jefferson (17 71 vs
(AI Kalida I
Columbus Mifflin 121 3)
L1ma Bath 55 Archbold 52
Fnday 9 30 p m
I At Dayton)
Finals Saturday 7 30 p m Jefferson 44 Springboro 43
Class A
I At H1lhardl
Continental (20 6) vs Fort Col Hartl ey 50 Col Wehrle 47
Loramie 118 8) Fnday 11 R1ver Valley 42 Teays Valle y
am
39
Ro!S Southeastern 123 1) vs
Cta~sA
Mansfield Sf Peter's 122 41 ,
(AI Canal Winchester)
Frida y 2 30 p m
Lancaster F Cath 72 New ark
Finals, Saturday, J p m
Calli 42
tAl Willard)
GirlS
Mans St Peters 45 Sa ndusky
Ohio H1gh School
51 Marys 41
Tournament Results
I At Bellefonlalne)
United Press International

LaSalle m what should be an
excrting AAA tournament
Elyr1a and Barberton, both
~ . meet m the f1rst of two
Thursday mght sem1fmal
games at 6 p m Then, at 9 30
p m , Linden, also ~. takes
on LaSalle, 21-J
The Class A action begms
Fnday mormng w1th
Continental, 2().6, and Fort
lorarrue, 18-8, playmg m one
semifmal at 11·30 am , and
Ross Southeastern, 23-1, and

pitchers R1ck Rboden and
Burt Hooton combmed on a
flve.h1t shutout to lead the
Los Angeles Dodgers to a 4-0
VICtory over the N~w York
Mets m the Domm1can
Republic Dodgers' Manny
Mota h1t a two-run homer
Wayne Garrett and Del Unser
also hit two-run homers to
spark the Montreal Expos to
an ~ wm over the Houston
Astros Buck Martinez had
three h1ts , mcludmg a tworun homer , to lead the
Kansas City Royals to a 9-7
trmmph over the Toronto
Blue Jays
Jeff Burroughs , h1ttmg
safely m hiS lOth straight
game, drove in a run w1th a
double to spark a three-run
first mrung that helped the
Atlanta Braves defeat the
Texas Rangers, 5-3
National League Cy Young
Award-Winner Randy Jones,
who underwent arm surgery
after last season, went f1ve
innmgs for the f1rst time th1s
sprmg, g1vmg up three runs
m the San D1ego Padre 9-7
loss to the Cleveland Indians
Outfielder Bob Gorlnslu hit
a three-run homer and had a
run-scoring tr1ple Sunday to

lead the Mmnesola Twins to a
1~7 VICtory over the Boston
Red Sox
The Pittsburgh P1rates
Sunday sa1d rellef pitcher
Dave Gmsll had given them
permiSS IOn to trade h1s
contract to the Oakland A's
Because G1usU, 37, 1s a I~
year veteran who has been
w1th the same team for at
least f1 ve years, he had to
g1ve hiS consent to the trade
He was part of a run"i'layer
tr ade negotiated last
Wednesday by the Pirates
and A's
College Ba sketball Resul1 s

Bv un.ted Press lnterna tronal
Saturday
NCAA Um\ er s• ty D1 ~ n
( F1n al Regional Rounds)
East
No Car 79 Kentu cky n
M1det~ s t

UN C Cha rlorte 75 M1 ch 68
M1dwe st

Marqueu e 82 Wake Forest 6B
We st

Nevada LV 107 Idaho St 90
NCAA Coli 01\ln II
f Final Round)
( Champ1onsh1p )

Tenn Cha it 71 Rndlph Macon 6~
( ConsO IIfiOR )
No Ala 93 Sacred ....art 77

SundaY r

National Invitation
( FiRIII Round)

( Champ•onshlpl
9..a Houston 91
(Consolation)

St Bonn l !

V fflanovl! 102 A leMma 89

fourth 10 the f10al UP!
rallngs, wh1ie Mifflm was
s1xth and OttawaGlandorf
17th
Jefferson
was
unranked
Southeastern, the only A
school With less than four
defeats, was also the only one
hsted among the top ten m the
rallngs, fmlShmg fourth St
Peter's was 13th and the
others, Continental and Ft
LDram1e, unranked
Dr Harold Meyer, who 1s
retlrmg this year as comnuSloner of the Ohio H1gh School
Alhlehc Assoc1at1on ~nd
overseemg hiS fmal state
tou rnament, rece1 ved a
standing ovallon from the
coaches and school off1c1als
present at Sunday's annual
coaches meetmg
Meyer was congratulated
on the JOb he had done as
comrruss10ner by Barberton
Prmc1pal Paul Frank
' I'll assure you,' sa1d
Meyer, "It's been a labor of
love and I'm gomg to rruss 1!
But,! think 1t's time someone
else takes over ''
Meyer w1ll he repla ced by
current
A-ssociate
Comrruss10ner George Bates

Bucks to
look some
different
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
Sta te Umvers1ty foo tball
coach Woody Hayes 1s
plann111g one major change 111
h1s hneup when he opens h1s
27th gnd campa1gn April 2
He also has somo other
holes to hll , both on offense
and defense
Hayes plans to move freshman defens1ve tackle Kenny
Fr1tz to offens1ve guard and
repiacmg him w1th o!fens1ve
guard Gary Dulm
One hole m the backf1eld
was created w1th the
gra duation of Pete Johnson
Hayes srud he has several
freshmen who backed up
Johnson ready for a crack at
that JOb
But they Will have to battle
Jelf Logan and Ron Sprmgs
who held down the
replacement JOb qu1te often,
rncludrng tbe win In the
Orange Bowl
Defensive holes were
created by graduations of
Bob
Brudz1nsky
at
end, N1ck
Buonam1c1
at
tackle
and
Ed
Thompson at hnebacker
Filling those holes w1ll be the
JOb of defensive coordinator
George H11l
Tb&lt;: veteran coach expect
80 candidates for the 20 dsys
of sprmg practice which ends
w1th the annual mtra-squad
game May 2
Also greeting the players
will he three new assistants
Dave Adloph from lllrno1s,
Blll Myles from Hebraska
and Gary Tranqu11l from
Navy
Freshman Greg Cast1gnola
wlll have a chance to nail
down the backup quarterback
slot smce another hopeful
M1ke Strahme 1s pl aymg
baseball
One welcome returnee w1ll
be J1mmy Harrell, who
started all 12 games at
wmghack last year and has
elected to use h1s redshll'l
year
J1m Moore, rec overmg
from knee problems that
s1delmed hun much of last
season, wllt be challenging
starter Greg Storer at tight
end
The Buckeyes, runnersup
m the Blf! Ten last season,
open the 1977 campa1gn
agamst Miarru of Flor1da
Sept. 10

Today's

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Ed1tor
BRADENTON , Fla (UP!) - Perspll'atlon ran down both
s1des of W1lhe Stargell's face, and he was brea thmg so hard, he
had a lt he could do to get the words out o~h1s mouth
"I hate you," he gasped,lookmg nght at Chuck Tanner, who
was putting h1m through sheer torture by hitting ground balls
JUSt out of h1s reacQ
''I really hate you," Stargell repeated , barely managing to
get the words out
The Pll'ates' new manager only laughed and h1t another
smart one-bouncer far enough to Stargell's r1ght that he had to
all but break h1s neck to get 11
"That 's aU r1ght," Tanner hollered at hlffi "You ll love me
m October 11
Chuck Tanner was playmg hiS own little pnvate game w1th
Willie Swgell , hettmg the b1g first baseman he couldn l come
up With 10 stra1ght gro unders Tanner hit at him w1th a fungo
st1ck The game 1s a great phys1cal conditioner and Tanner
plays 1! w1th his other players
He stands a few feet off home plate, h1ts them ground balls
and bets them they can't grab 10m a row before one reaches
the outfield grass If they can catch 10, they're excused If they
can 't, Tanner keeps hittmg until then can't take anymore He
never loses because he bas the game ngged
Anytime anyone manages to grab as many as e1ght stra1ghl
Tanner makes sure to put that mnth one so far out of reach tlmt
no one m the world could poss1biy come up w1th 1!
"!do that whenever someone gets e1ght on me," he winked
' I never take a chance letting anyone gel as many as rune
They m1ght get lucky and come up With that lOth one by
mtStake "
Tanner laughed, at h1s own fiendiShness
Turmng around , he noticed Al Ohver standing by the batting
cage
"Hey AI," he balled hun, 'I'll bet you can't catch 10 "
"You re nght "answered Oliver, who had played the game
w1th Tanner before
"B1ll V1rdon d1d the same th1ng one year when he was
mana gmg over here," Oliver remembered "1 got all 10 He
shpped up on that lOth one "
"Nobody every got !Ostra1ght on me , 'put mTanner "If you
ever grab 10 on me, you get a car from me
"You deserve a car," sa1d Ohver
"Junmy Reese , coachmg w1th the Angels now, taught me
how to use this fungo stick," sa1d Tanner, holdmg up the one he
had m h1s hand "He taught me m Quad Cities, my fll'st year as
a manager He 's the best 111 the busmess when 1t comes to
fungomg He can sbll hll 'em today and he 's got to be 70"
Back on the Pll'ates' bench later," Tanner talked about the
b1g mulbplayer deal the Pirates made w1th the A's last week
Pittsburgh gave up a half dozen players to get the one TanrN!r
wanted, Phil Gamer , who played second base for him w1th
Oakland last year Tanner plans to play Garner at third w1th
the Pirates
' I had hun all last season w1th the A s and I love him,' ' the
Pirates' manager bubbled ,
"He's the Pete Rose type He gets hiS uniform dll'ty , if you
know what I mean He comes to play All he does IS put the
chew m his mouth, and go to work Now that we have Garner, 11
inakes (Bill) Robmson more valuable VVe can use hlffi at f1rst
base, tbtrd base or m an outf1eld pos1llon "
RoblllSOn, who hit 303 and had 21 homers for the Pirates last
year, IS the extra-sensitive type , and he hasn't been too happy
smce fmding out Garner Will be Tanner's third baseman
Robmson thought he 'd be
"The way I look at Robinson , he's the John Havlicek of our
club," sa1d Tanner "Remember how Havlicek always used to
come off the bench and spark the Celtics' That's what I feel
Robmson can do for us "
R1ght now Bill Robmson doesn't want to know about John
Ravilcek or anybody else All he wants to know IS where he's
gmng to play thiS year and the only thmg Chuck Tanner can tell
him IS to get ready to play tliree different positions Not an at
once. of course

Stage set for finals
By CHRIS SCHERF
UP! Sports Writer
North Ca rolina college
basketball fans long have
followed the game w1th a
rebg10us fervor and, w1th the
Tar Heels and North Carolma
- Charlotte's 49ers performm g m1racle after
m1racle, they are ready to
tum the NCAA semlf111als
Saturday m Atlanta 's Omm
mto a good , old-fashiOned
reviVal meetmg
North Camlina Coach Dean
Smith, who could use a good

fa1th healer, has managed to
surv1ve senous injunes to h1s
three Olympians to earn a
se mifinal berth agamst
Nevada-Las Vegas
UNCC was suffermg an
identity cns1s even m 1ts
home state before 11 knocked
off Syracuse and foll owed
With last Saturday's 75-llB
ups et
of
top·ranked
Michigan Now the 49ers
stand between Marquette and
1ts b1d to wm a national
champ1onsh1p for 1ts rellrmg
coach, AI McGUire

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~Z-3i44

�4- The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Mrnulay. March 21, 1\!'rt

Bonnies' Sanders hero in win

Tigers take it
all this time
ISLAND, Ill. ( UP I)
- Wittenberg was runnerup
last yea1 but this time woo
the NCAA Division III
na tional ba s ketball
championship by leading all
the way to a 7~ win over
Oneonta State.
The University of Scranton
defeated Hamline University
of MinnesOta 60-59 Saturday
night to take third place in the
tourna ment. Last year
&amp;!ran ton beat the Tigers 6().li7
in overtime to take the tiUe.
The Tigers, led by Rick
White's 26 points, Wittenberg
weathered Oneonta State's
late rally to capture their
first national championship
since 1961, at the end of the
first year for Wittenberg
~OCK

coach Larry Hunter.
Wittenberg broke away to a
1~2 and rolled on to ~28
margin by intermission.

Oneonta State narrowed the
deficit to 60-59 with 7:18, but
W!::cnberg reeled off 11
straight points to assure the
win. Key freethrow shooting
by White and Greg Seay
helped mainta!h the led.
Wittenberg, finishing the
season at 23-ii, was. 17 for 18
from · the freethrow line.
Oneonta State now is 21-6.
White, who scored 14 points
in the last hall, was voted the
most valuable honors of tournament. Teammate Clyde
Eberhardt also was on the
all-tourney team.

NEI\' YORK (UP! ) - Otis gave St. Bonaventure the
Birdsong was cast in the lead for good with just more
leading role, but at the end than a o:ilillte to play and
the All-America guard from Glenn Hagan and Tim WaterHouston was shoved aside at man sank key foul shots in the
center stage by an unknown. last minute to seat the
Greg Sanders became tbe victory.
center of attentioo in the 4oth
"The key shot was that
National
Invitation thing Silnders took that he
Tournament by scoring 40 really shouldn't have taken,"
points and grabbing a game- Bonni~' Coach Jim Satilin
high 12 rebOunda to spark St. said of the basket that put his
Bonaventure to a 94·91 team ahead, ~. with 1:03
victory over Houaton &amp;mday left. "I suppose since he has
in the NIT final. The such a good touch it was
performance earned Sanders
the NIT's Most Valuable
Player award .
Birdsong was almosi as
spectacular for Houston,
getting 38 points. But the S- By CHRIS SCHERF
foot-4 guard tired in the last UP! Sporta Writer
The ·Philadelphia 76ers
few minutes and couldn't
have
joined the rest of the
prevent the Bonnies' rally
Nationa·l
Basketball
from a !~point deficit.
Association;in,
beatlrig up on
Sanders' 25-foot jump shot

Hunt figures his big star will
get even bigger, and better.
"He's still growing/' said
Hunt. "He's not filled out yet.
I look for him to be at least
seven feet. "
And, for ability?
" I don 't think there is any
Umit to how good he can be if
he gets ,in the right
program," sald Hunt. "He 'II
be much better in college
because they won't be able to
put two and three people on
him. Right now, he can't
move inside.
Williams shot 57 per cent
from the field the past season
and 72 per cent from the free
throw line . His high individual scoring game was
46.
Scott, whose teammates
)'llark and Marty . Bodnar
were both named to the
second ~m, the first time
any school ever had three
players named to the UPI allstate squad, was runnerup to
Williams in the player of the
year balloting.
A S-2 lefty with springs in
his legs, Scott was the leading
scorer (23 per game) on lhe
top;anked Barberton team
which will carry a :;().game
winning streak into thl~
weekend's state tournament.
Penn, a three-year starter
for Unden Coach Jene Davis,
11

second straight year, ran its
unbeaten streak to 50 in a row
with Saturday's Canton
Regional victory over
Cleveland St. Ignatius.
But, Greynolds was not
around for more than half the
season after suffering the
heart ·attack three days
before his team's first game.
Assistant Joe Subotickl
guided the Magics . until
Greynolds' return and got one
coach of the year vote for his
efforts.
Greynolds received 18 of

led the Panthers to an
unbeaten 18-0 regular season
. and into the state finals for
the third straight year.
A relenUess defender, the
lightning-quick Penn led
Linden in scoring with a 20
per game ml!fk and also in
most other categories.
Montague, whose Elyria
team fmished 18-G, and also
made it into the final four of
the state tournament,
averaged 20.7 points and 10
rebounds per game the past
season.
Smith, a muscular S-8 who
also has the college scouts
drooling, averaged 18.7 points
per game for East Tech, and
is also considered an ahove
average defender and
rebounder.
The Bodnar twins, both S-2,
head up the second team
which also includes 6-6 Jim
. Rhoden of Lebanon, Dayton .
Roth's 6-3 Dwight Anderson,
the only junior on the first
three· teams, and 6-6 Garry
Massa of Cincinnati St.
Xavier.
Third team selections are S4 Chris Ash of Newark ; (;.6
Vince Brookins of Cleveland
Collinwood; 6-4 John Flowers
of Sylvania Southview: IHl
Jay I..etunan of Defiance; and
5-7 Vince Phelps of
Springfield South.

ASTRO GRAPH

resources and those ot others , Nets were led by · Bubbles
You could cause yourself un necessary grief .
Hawkins, Mike Bantom and

TAURUS (AprU 20-MOJ 20) You AI Skinner with 22 points
could

encounter surprising op- each.

-In other games, Seattle
defeated Milwauliee, 11~107,
Denver topped Detroit, 133104, Boston beat Kansas City,
.118-110, Phoenix defeated
result from sins or omission . Portland,
126-106,
Don't let you r responsibilities Washington topped San
pile up
i
Antonio, 135-116, Cleveland
CANC'ER (June 2-1-July 22) beat Buffalo, !.1.5-108, and Los
Avoid situations with friends 10· . Angeles beat New Orleans,

20.0.

SECOND TEAM
Jim Rhoden . Lebanon. H .
Sr .. 20.6.
Dwight Anderson, Dayton
Roth, 6·3, Jr ., 24.0.
Gary Massa. Cincinnati St.

Xav ier. 6-6, Sr .. 21.0.

Mark Bodnar. Barberton,

6·2, Sr .. 18.5.

Marty Bodnar, Barberton.

6·2, Sr .. 16.0.
THIRD TEAM

Chris Ash , Newar k, 6-4, Sr .,

18.0.
Vince Brookins, Cleveland

Delaware Hayes; Joe Miller,
Columbus Whetstone ;

Delbert Miller, Columbus
David

Marion Franklin ;
Mc Gu ire,
Xenia ;

e&gt;pected quarters. Important
Keep your temper In check.
GEMINI . (MIJ 21-Juno 20)
Prob lems today are likely to

Tim

Mosley , Clncinnali Taft ; D.ale
McGorly, Toledo Bowsher;
Ben Needham , GroveportMad ison; Mike Nic holls,
Gallon ; Jim Price, East

Cleveland Shaw; Tony
Roeh r ich , Cincinnati
LaSalle; Mark Reed. Cin·
cinnatl

Anderson;

Rich ardson,

Bcib

Clncinn a t)

Collinwood. 6·5, Sr., 18.3.

Joh n Flowe·r s, Sylvan ia
Sou thview, 6-.4, Sr ., 28.0.
Jay Lehman, Defiance, 6-0,

Sr., 23.8.
Vince Phelps, Springfield
South, 5-7, Sr .. 10.3.
SPECIAL MENTION

Dave Bockhorn , Kettering

AI ter ; Pa u I Chadwell ,
Gall oway Westland ; Marty
Cr isto, Warren Western
Reserve ; Todd Dietrich ,
Cincinnati Oak Hills ; Mike
Hoffmeyer, Cincinnati Elder;
Paul Heurman, Akron
Firestone ; Doug Lane ,
Cuyahoga
Fall s;
Art
Schlic hter, Miami Trace ; Art
Timberlake,
Canton
McKinley ; Marty Wise,
Cleveland St. Ignat ius ;
Sterling Wil liams,- Columbus
Linden McKinley _
HONORABLE MENTION
Dale
Allen ,
Toledo
DeVIIbln ; Jerry Browne ,
East Liverpool ; Paul Biddle,
Sandusky; Mike Brickman,
Findlay ; Tim Colliver .
Lemon

Young men and women
often ask why they have to
pay
more for their
automobile Insurance.
Drivers In their teens and
earlier twenties cause far
more than· their share of

.
I

'lite medicinal values of the

t:·aftlc accidents. Reports
tho National Safety
Council : 21.8 percent of all
motor ists are 2_. years of
age or under, '(el these
youthful

operators

are

Involved as drlv'rs In 38.6
per cent of all accldenls
and 37.3 per cent of all fatal
mishaps,

Agrea\ many young people
a•e sk il led, responsible
dr ivers. Obviously, though.
quite a lew are not.
There's no substitute for
development competence
and the right attitudes,
including
a
positive
approach to defensive
driving.
Ou r
agency , provides
financ ia l protection and
service In case of accidents
Involving youn9 drivers. " "
but mary of tllese
cah
be
That's why we
prevention Is ttle

best policy.

Garage so full
there's no room
for the cor?

I'Gmeroy

Clean it out
with a
WANT AD!

money is at stake.
co. ~ld fla re over 100-95.
something insignificant.
SuperSonics 118, Bucks 107
Slick Watts, held scoreless
LEO (July 23·AU(I. 22) Don't e&gt;-

pect to coast wllere important
goal s are concerned today. It's
going to take grit and determina-

tion to get what you want.
YIRGO (Aug. 23•Stpt. 22) Your
ideas won 'tdraWravesfromyour
friend s today. they 'll t;&gt;e even

tass palatable if yo.u 1ry to force
their accep tance. ·

.LIBRA (Sopt, 23·0cl. 23) Bo
prudent in your business toHay.
1f you pull a boner , It co uld have
far -reaching and very expensive

effects.
SCORPIO (Ocii 24-Nov . 2a)
Close associates requ ire kid

the first three quarters,

scored nine points in the final
period, had several assists
and a key steal to spark the
Sonics' victory over the
Bucks. Fred Brown led the
Sonics with 23 points, while
Bob Dandridge led the Bucks
·with 27 .
Nuggets 133, J;'lstons 104 :
David 1bompson scored 29
points as the Nuggets took a
four-game lead in the ·
Midwest Division with their
victory over the second~lace
Pistons. Dan Issei had 26
points and 13 rebounds for the
Nuggets, while M.L. Carr had
29 points for Detroit.
Celtlcs liB, Klags llO:
Jo Jo White's 41 points
·
d th C lti • 'cto
pace
e e CS VI ry
over .. the K!Qgs. John
Havlicek had 19 points and 10
assists for the Celtics. Ron
Boone led the King; with 24

/

-

\

There's a perfect way to clean out all that
junk stored in your garage-simply turn it
all into instant cash with a Want Ad! Somebody wants to buy those items you no longer want and you ' ll be surprised-and
pleased - wit h how fast you'll reach that
somebody tfirough your ad in the classified
pagesl So give us a call today and we'll help
you write a low-cost Want Ad to get the results you wa nt!

,.

Variety club to
make Easter favors
Easter favors for the
children
at
Veterans
Memorial Hospital will be
made by the Bradbury
Variety Club.
,
Meeting Thursday at the
me 61 Mrs. Kathryn
Werner, plans for the Easter
project were made and Mrs.
Jackie Hoover was appointed
to be the project chainnan.
Mrs.
Bernice . Winn
preaided with Mrs. Werner
giving the devotions. Reports

Whatever you want to buy, ·
sell, rent or lease .•.you'll
find fast results with a
wont ad!

THE DAILY SENTINEL
'

.

;

.'

'

$11oppi. centers, or Slllcill?
Let your fingers find theni' mciiL

DR. RONALD F. RIVIERE

used free verse.

Mrs. Nan Moore announced
a family dinner to be held on
April 17 following the mor·
ning worahip service. It was
decided to continue the
custonn of decorating the
church for Easter and Mrs.
Emerson Jones was ap·
pointed to have charge of the
flowers .
A St. Patrick's Day theme
was carried out in the table
decorations and refreshments served by Mrs .
Rinehart, Mrs. Fred Hlbha,
and Mrs. Jones. The table
was e&lt;ntered with an
arrangement of daffodils and
forsythia in a crystal hat
container surrounded by
green netting.

Helen Help · I

\il

US • • •

1

OR RIVIERE

1·800·282·6411

pages

O/ l'u111 I,.,.,,/ f,r[,~~ ·

I

By Helen Bottel

Middleport, 0.

!\!I

Is He His Brother's Keeper?

were given by Mrs. Arline
Davis and Mrs. Evelyn
Murray . For roll. call
members told something
about St. Patrick's Day. Mrs.
Werner read a poem entitled
'Garden Time" and Mrs.

1

.

FOR PRICES CALL ...,._j
OH IO TOLL FREE

Monro'e ; · Verdl s

·•

Chatter Club met Thursday

Iii

Dear Helen :
Now that our children are out on their own, we find
ourselves with several empty bedrooms in our large house.
Which is okay by me!
But my husband wants to move his retired brother into
those emp,ty rooms . Claims he will not he a bother.
Helen, after all these years, I wallt a litUe quiet and
privacy, and, most of all, togetherness with my man.
Converting to a two-family house wouldn't work, so don't
suggest it. Like Garbo, I vant to be alone.
Do you think I'm selfish' - NO ROOMER, PLEASE

ls

One or two day
full denture service,
partial dentures

f.'l/t t'

children, Whittier as the
Quaker poet, and Walt
Whitman as the poet who first

. New arrival

PHONE 992-2156

01111. i\, J, STAI11 LI - DR. K. H. CHUNGDR. VICTOR ~, LlANO - Oft 0 . J. STOMI!IAUQH

t fll! J, ,- '.'

••
••
••
••

Olevla Cotterill read the story
of St. Patrick.
A potluck dinner was held
at noon with Mrs. Winn giving Dear No:
(think you're wise. A live-in retired relative - even the
grace. A housewares party
was held in the afternoon with most compatible of men .:. can put heavy strain on husbandMrs. Ruby Rife, the wife relationships, unless both totally agree to the
demonstrator. Proceeds went arrangement.
Extra bedrooms are great for studies, storage, guests,
Into the club 'project fund.
The next meeting wiU be at grandchildren, and general expanding. Why short yourselves?
And your husband should be glad his wife' cares enough to
the home of Mrs. Murray on
; Mr~ and Mrs. Jim Warner, Ap~U 21 at ;19=30 a.m. others "vant" him alone. - H.
1754 McFadden Road, Colwn· attending· were Mrs. Peg I
~us, are announcing the birth Hutton, Mrs. Olevia Cotterlll, Dear Helen :
gf a nin~ pounc!, two ounce Mrs. Hilda King, Mrs.
For years my husband played around and" paid no
daughter, Nicole Lynn, at the Virginia Whitlatch, Mrs. attention to me, exeept when he was knocking me around~ He
Rlversi'de - - Methodist. Suzanne Richmond, and two gave me every reason in the book for divorce, but I stayed.
Hospital, Columbus, March guests, Charlotte Erlewine Small children, fear of being alone, insecurity, money (his), all
16. Nicole is their first child. and Dinah Stewart.·
seenned reasons enough, though It was hell. I stopped loving
Mrs. Warner is the former
him.
Lori Grindley, dabghter of
Then, almost overnight, he changed - from a devil to a
Mr. and ~s., ,Edu,&lt;;lrindley,
WideopreadVa~daliam
perfect angel.
· He's become thoughtful and generous, good to the kids (he
Columbu.t., ~ '" "
. • ··- ~ON ,_(~JI'.f;) . - More
Patern~afi'illlftQ7jS.1Jre .., tb~~ !200 • a.~I,&lt;!S had their never was before!); he doesn't step out, or even want to go out
Mr. an?_.~i"r.si· "':'!1\111111'1 Wlildows smaShed Saturday with me socially. He even tells me I should find a lover if I
Warner, Mtadleport,, and the night by what police say was wish. He avoids making love with me, but passes It off as
gr~t-gran~nts are Mr~: apparently a group of youths "being thoughtful."
. I guess I should be grateful, but all this turns my stomach . .
Lucille ·lli:!tt'.: __Cohunbus, bept on causing random
It's phiJily! I'd almost rather put up with .the overbearing lion
Mrs. · R. t!: ~ ' ~'l'!D~Ie,r, ·• detltructjoh.
that live with the mouae he's become.
Mine{Sv~ u·
41rii&amp;i.
~ '•·~n
~ ... - '· ·D
,o11 ce' said report s were
Warner,'·P ero,
I cim't stop remembering his mean years, and thinking
.
stlll coming in Sunday afJim Warner has been ternoon from ear owners who they may return any time. Our children are nearly grown now.
employed as an electromc reported windows shot out I've stood lllis "angel" act for almost 10 months. Should I
leave ?- FROM BATTERED TO BORED
technici~n at the Industrial with a pellet or BB gun.
Nucleorucs Corp. in ColwnThe reports came from all
bus for the past four yeai7'. sections of the city. Police Dear B to B.:
Some might advise, "Count your blessings and work on
·He a graduate of the Ohio said apparently the vandals
Institute of Technology, Col- drove around town Shooting renewing love." I won't! Not unless you feel there's a spark
left.
umbus.
out the windows.
.
My guesa (and I could be wrong) Is that your lllsband
· "played" himself out - and now, perhaps temporarily
TO GIVE HISTORY
L~FF - A • DAY , impotent, he's come home because no one else will have him.
A hiJ!ory of a .church in
"Mason County which Is to be
Reform may last.only untl! he gets a second w!J\d. And if he
· '----"'-- · doesn't, your life will continue boring.
reconlltructed was given by
~
Before you leave, lry finding · the real reason for his
Franklin Martin at a recent
change,
and explore your own resenbnent, with the help of a
meeting of the UCht tuid Ufe
counselor.
Then, if it's stilt your choice, aet on it. You deserve
Men'• Fellowship of the 1
new·
beginning.
- H.
·
a
Laurel CUff Free Methodist
+++
!llurch. Steve Eblin prealded
at the meetln&amp; with Ed Van
- - Dear Helen :
,
Inwagen giving devotions.
p.
I too wonder why newspapers and magazines must label
The nm meeting w!U be at
•)~ people by age. The number of years you 've lived aren't
the home of Bob Barton with .,.
. .T.z:~ important.lt'swhatyoudo wtth them that counts. Here's for a
' ~ BUer, Jr. to ha~ the =:,
future wben age is no longer publicize«! - or asked for on work
devotions. Refreshments ., , ..,
·;- .. · ·· - · · · -·-;. applications. It's the last discrtmrnation block to conquer. were aerved.
Just bark, l II take you out NEARING 60

DENTURES· DENTISTRY

'Yau'({ Smi lt• Torrtfm •!I' If

••

meditation on
spiritual shar i r~ and
fellowship was ~1ven for
devotions .
Mrs. James
Euler,
program leader, gave a
"A
program
entitled
Nostalgic Evening of
Poetry." She described
Longfellow as the poet of

nature. A

INGELS FURNITURE

I

RIVIERE ·CENTER 949 E. Livingston Ave., Columbus
Weekday' 8 : ~~A . M . to 6:30P.M .

A $25 contribution to the
Christina Smith Fund was
made at the Thursday night
meeting of the Class 12 of
Heath United Methodist
Church.
Meeting at the church, Mrs.
Robert Rinehart opened the
meeting with a poem on
prayer and the beauty of

Brigadier's Storage Bed

DALE C. WARNER
102 W. Main

•
•• Thumb
••
••
wrinkles and the men use it •
Notes
as a shampoo to prevent •

Class contributes to fund

celebrated

prevented.

992·2141

.... ·~_:; ......:•

Birthday

accidents
say -

r·(;~~~~-

aloe vera, were
dlscu8sed by Mrs. Addalou baldness and graying. In- •
A weekly feature of Meigs
I..ewis at a recent meeting of lema! benefits described' by •
County
Garden Club members.
the Winding Trail Garden Mrs. Lewis include improved •
. Club held at \he home of Mrs. digestion and ulcer relief as
Margaret Parker.
well as treatment for ar·
Mrs. Linda Van Meter and presided. Games w er~ played
BY MRS. CHARLES KllijL,
Titled "The Grow It thritis and rheumatism. For
Mrs. Mary Starcher hosted a with prizes going to Mrs.
CHESTER GARDEN CLUB
Yourself. Drugstore," Mrs. internal use, Mrs. Lewis said
meeting of the Chatter Club Dorothy Roach , Mrs. Betty
GIVING YOUR LAWN PROPER CARE
I..ewis described the plant as the cut foliage shoutd· be
Thursday night at the Van Biggs, Mrs. Opal Biggs, Mrs.
The key to a heautifullawn is regular feeding, watering and
the living remedy for cuts, steeped in water or pieces of
Meter home.
mowing. If the lawn is maintained with the right care, it should
bums and abrasions. She the iresh leaf chewed.
Van Meter, Mrs. Hattie
Mrs. Susan Cleland Fisher, Mrs. Cleland and ·
suggested growing your
For growing the plant, a be healthy with little lrouble with weeds, insects and diseases.
STACY QUEEN
MOWING
Mrs. Alice Jacobs. Mrs .
own treatment on the kitchen potted specimen thrives
Mowing should be done weekly. The clippings should be
Roach and Mrs. Betty Biggs
window sill where it is always outside during the summer if
' JAMES TO SPEAK
won the door prizes.
fresh and ready for it is protected from the full caught each mowing to prevent thatch buildup. Thatch buildup
State Rep. Ron James will
Salad, sandwiches, cookies,
emergencie&amp;.
sun. Summer rains help the hampers the penetration of air and water into llle soli and
be
guest speaker at a meeting chips and punch were served.
Mrs. Lewis said that its growth if the plant Is kept utlimately the ~ecline of many lawns.
of the American Legion
Mow so that you remove only about a third of the leaf
healing
qualiti es
are warm and well drained, but
auxiliary, Drew Webster Post
medically recognized and the foliage will rot If the plant blade. Grass.manufactures food in the leaf blades; when too
39, Tuesday at 7:30 p.m.
much
of
the
leaf·is
removed,
the
entire
plant
suffers.
many creams, ointments and is kept 11! a cold, damp .place.
Other speakers will be
Use
a
mower
with
a
sharp
blade
set
at
the
proper
height.
cosmetics are made from ·th e For a window plant, Mrs.
Charles Legar on civil
plant's juices and sold around Lewis said it should be kept For cool-season grasses, such as bluegrass, fescue or bentdefense and a representative
grass,
this
is
about
two
Inches.
Zoysia
is
cut
at
one
to
two
the world.
·
on the dry side, given light
of the Meigs Coumy Heahh
It Is expensive and' easy to fertilizer now and then, and inches.
Stacy Dawn Queen, Dept. on hypertension. The
All
grasses
benefit
if
the
blade
is
raised
as
much
as
onegrow your own, she said. The mist 'the leaves occasionally
hall inch during the hottest part of summer. This added height dsughter of Mr. and Mrs. meeting Is open to the public.
plant's ·secret is the clear with tepid water.
Jerry Queen of 750 Sycamore
jelly wiJich Is stored insl~e Its
During the meeting plans provides more shade and conserves moisture for the root St., Middleport, celebrated
thick succulent leaves, a were made for an April wild system. ·
When using the necessary power mower always be extra her third birthday with a parjuice which form s a flower tour at the home of
ty at her home.
protective coating over a cut, Mrs. Judy Bolin. Mrs. Parker cautious around children and pets. Before starting to mow,
burn or abrasion and so 'gave devotions along with the pick up all loose objects and remove them from the mowing
Complete with Mattress
A Mickey Mouse cake and
promoted healins t Mrs. club prayer. Mrs. Marilyn area.
WATERING
blue and · white decorations
AGreat Youth's Room
Lewis said .'.UlaU.fi~ natural Wisecup had the garden
Rainfall
can
usually
he
depended
on
for
needed
moisture.
were
used for the party,
ointment needs no processing calendar and suggested that
BEAUTIFULLY FINISHED AND BUlL T OF ALL·
SOLID HARDWOOD. TWO BIG DRAWERS GIVE
to be effective. The treat- lawns he raked , graded and When a dry season is in, other irrigation must be done . Games w~re played a!l&lt;i
Frequency
of
watering
will
depend
on
the
amount
of
rainfall,
Stacy
opened
gift.
•
~.om
the
PLENTY OF ROOM FOR STORAGE. 39", 80".
ment, according to Mrs. fertili zed.
She
said
soil
type,
age
of
lawn,
root
competition
with
other
plants,
and
guests.
Ca~
~.
ice
cream
an&lt;i
I..ewis, Is to break off a leaf of evergreens should be in·
lemo11ade were served to the .
the plant, slit it open, and spected for insect damage the efficiency of your watering system.
Grass
that
is
wilting,
has
dull
color,
and
a
loss
of
resilience
Mr. and Mrs. Walter
then smear the gel liberally and that infected branches
needs
water,
Grass
that
has
sufficient
water
is
spongy.
If,
after
Grinstead,
Mrs . Judy
on the area to lie/treated. This should be cut out. She spoke
walking
across
the
lawn,
you
leave
footprints,
it's
time
to
Johnson
and
Susan,
Jennifer
keeps the ar~a moist and of the importance of a wind·
and
Scott
Miller,
New
Haven,
water.
draws out the pain.
break for new evergreens
Deep
irrigation
once
a
week
is
more
beneficial
than
a
light
W.
Va.;
Mrs.
Ruth
Queen
and
Mrs. Lewis said that until the weather warms.
daily
sprinkling.
Roots
are
encouraged
to
stay
near
the
surface
children,
Gary
I..ee,
Jr.,
&amp;otunused portions of the healing Mulch should be removed
greenery will stay fresh from the flower beds once the when watered lightly. Deep roots are much more sell- tie Jo, Jeffrey Allen and
Michael Brian, Mrs. Hoy Nitz
wrapped in plastic and stored danger of frost has passed sufficient and less dependent on irrigation.
The
best
times
to
water
are
early
morning
and
late
and
Shannon Lee, Mrs. Jimin the refrigerator. She noted and the bird bath should be
when
less
water
is
evaporated.
If
water
is
applied
·
afternoon
my
Queen and Tammy Jo,
that in cold weather, a put out as soon as the weather·
too
late
in
the
evening,
it
may
stand
on
the
grass
and
Debbie
Queen, and Stacy's
Severed leaf also keeps well permits, Mrs. Wisecup said.
encourage
the
spread
of
disease,
such
as
powdery
mildew.
grandmothers,
Mrs. Ellen
The traveling prize was
oo a bathroom windowsill
.
FERTILIZING
Lane
and
Mrs.
James
Queen,
while a rash, pimple or other furnished by Mrs. Iris Kelton
Most
lawns
should
he
fertilized
in
early
spring
or
late
fall
Middleport,
and
Mrs.
Vona
and won by Mrs. Cora Beegle.
problem is being treated.
at
the
rate
of
about
20
pounds
per
1,000
square
feet.
Organic
Gillenwater,
Langsville.
It has relieved the pain and ·For roll call member s
redness oi sunburn, cleared brought a semperviv.um for nitrogen releases its nutrients more slowly and is available to
up diaper rash , and healed display, Four types were the grass for a longer period. A complete fertilizer, such as I~
106 N. 2nd Ave.
992-2635
assorted skin blemishes, she exhibited. A blue ribbon for 1~10 is recommended.
Do not fertilize cool.,..eason grasses during the summer.
reported. Some ailments, she the arrangement, "Easter
They
tend to be dormant in hot weather. Warm season grasses
said, are best treated with the Parade" was won by Mrs.
should
be; they make their maximum growth in hot weather.
large mature leaves although Parker. An arrangement of
To
avoid burning the grass, do not apply fertilizer,
smaller shoots have been chrysanthennums, fern , and
an inorganic type, when the grass is wet. Water
particularly
used with good results. .The baby's breath in a basket
the
lawn
immediately
after applying fertilizer to wash off any
older snears have a stronger . surrounded by colored grass
that
is
clinging
to
the
leaf blades.
cidor and the gal is yellowish and eggs was her display.
rather than clear. Mrs, Lewis
A dessert course was
al!o reported that the plant is served by the hostess. Atnow IIDtler investigation for tending the meeting besides
be!Jeficial effects on x-r,ay those •named were Mrs.
Wilma Terrell, vice president ~:j::::::::-~:::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;::::;;;:;:~:~:;: :::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:::=::::;:::;:;:;;::;;::;;::;;:;:;:~
artd radiation burns.
In Mexico, 1\frs. l..e\I'IS said who had charge of the
the women rub the leaves on meeting, Pat Thoma, and
their faces to prevent Jackie Brlckles.
plant ,

day where
Tempers

glove treatmO,t 1oday . Be
domineering and-you could lose
valuable allies. ~:
SAG ITT Alii US (Nov. 23-Doc.
21) You have•. an unhapp y
penchant tor making things
tougller on yourself tllan they
should be today.• Don't use.cgm. pliclltod unlr ie,~ mothodi" ~t
work .,
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon. tt)
the 6? votes cast to finish well Just because yo4 were helpful In
the past is no asaurance an ac• points.
ahead of runnersup Mike quaintance
will come through for Suns 126, Trail Blazers 106:
Riley of Elyria and Ron you today. Save
embarrass ment
Alvan Adams' 'lJ points
Holtrey with eight each and by not ask ing.
highlighted the Suns' triumph
Columbus Linden McKinley's AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fib. 18) over the Trail Blazers. Paul •
Jene Davis, who had seven. Don't bring problems Into the Westphal contributed 23
Other coaches with more house today that,,ren't pertinent points and Ron Lee 20 to the
than ooe vote were John to the fam ily. ~11u could spoil
Phoenix victory . Maurice
Lawhorn of Warren Western everyone's dinnit.
·
'•
Lucas
Bill Walton each
Reserve with four, • Dan PISCES (Fob .. 10·Mirch 20) had and
f
U d
Before
affixing
your
signature
to
16
or
Por
an Baker of Delaware Hayes,
any
Important
documents
today.
Bullets
135,
Spurs
118:
Bill Cady of Cincinnati
know
what
you
are
signing.
Also.
Phil
Chenier
scored
25
LaSalle and Roger Renz of
weigh
your
words
to
others.
pointsandE!vinHayeshad
24
Defiance with three each, and
.as
the
Bullets
llroke
their
John Hillard of Princeton
~(!)~ .
· five-game losing streak with
with two.
their lriumph over the Spurs.
lolflrd'hr[l(jliTI The win moved the Bullets
I.!.IIJU Ui.UJ.Jt.!J\} into secood place in the
March 22, 1177
Central Division, three
A great amount of energy will be games behind Houston.
Purcell ; Rick
Rosnack ,
e)(pended
this year in adding to George Gervin led San
Wickliffe ;
your resources. You'll succeed If Antonio with ~ points.
Tom Schneider. Cinc innati
Western Hills; Kevin Strick· you don't put too many Irons In Can 115, Braves 108:
Austin Carr scored 22
land, lebanon ; Mitch 1he tire.
(Are you a~ ries ? Bernice
in nd fi
th
la
Seemann, Toledo Central
ve .o er P yers
Catholi c; Emzer Shurelds, Osol has writtetj;a special Astro- po ts a
Lima
Senior ;
Steve Graph Letler lb.l: you. For your were in double figures in the
Seskevlcs. Vandalia Butler ; copy send 50 r)fnls ond a self- Cavs' well-balanced attack.
Brian Tllow. Rocky River; addressed, stamped envalope to The cavs broke up a close
John Tillow, Rocky River; Astro-Graph, . P;O. Box 489, game in the third period when
Reg~le Talley, Trotwood· Redio City Station, New York, they outscored the Braves,
Mad1son; Dennis Wlnn . N.Y. 10019. Ba sure to ask for 3S-20. Adrian DanUey scored
Canton Timken ,
Aries Volume 6.}
Player of the year - Herb
Williams. Columbus Moriah
Franklin.
Coach of the year - Jack
Greynolds, Barberton.
On this day In history:
In '17110, Thomas Jefferson
of Virginia became the first
u.s. secretary of jllate. He
later was the third president
of the United Slates.
In 1918, American and
German soldiers fought the
key World War I Battle of the
Somme.

FOR YOUNG
DRIVERS

Plant medicinal
v~lues reported

position today trom som, least·

Clas$ AAA All-Ohio prep team
CO LUMBUS, Ohio {UPil - Clears, To! !!do Scott ; Kevin
The 1977 Unifl!d Press In· Clayton, Shake.: Heights; Tl!d
' tern a1ional Class AAA Boys Duggins, Cincinnati LaSalle;
AII·Oh io Basketball Team. Dan Dailey, Wintersville ;
with height, grade and John Davis, Columbus
scori ng average :
Linden McKinley ; Chris
FIRST TEAM
Franga, Newark ;
Richard Montague. Elyria.
Mike Flynn , Massillon
6·9, Sr .. 20.7.
Perry; Ron Gregory, Mid·
James Smith , Cleveland dletown ; Mark Green,
East Tech, 6·8, Sr .. 18.7.
Cambridge ; Oerron Hvnter,
Herb Williams, Columbus Princeton ; Dave Hortman ,
Mar ion Franklin, 6-11 , Sr .• Miamisburg ; Clift Jones ,
27.0.
Cleveland Heights ; Jeff
Carter Scott, Barberton, 6· Klein, Walsh Jesuit; Clark
2. Sr .. 23.0.
Kellogg, Cleveland St .
Todd Penn, Columbus JoseRh ; Andy Kolesar ,
Linden McKinley, 5· 10, Sr .. Ham il ton Taft ; Lance Lukas,

guys were great at the free
throw line at the end,
especially Hagan."

the New York Nets.
The last time llle two teams
met, the Nets beat the 76ets
in Philadelphia. At that point,
there was only one way to go .
"We played well enough to
win this time," said George
McGinnis, who !;cored 28
·
•
points \n the 111-104 victory.
·
8
d
0s
I
Julius Erving scored 24
Bermce e e 0 points
and Caldwell Jones
ARIES (March 21 -Aprll )I) blocked eight shots as the
You're a poor custodian today , 76ers stayed in command
so be very careful with your throughout U1e game. The

Greynolds top AAA ·coach
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Jack
Greynolds of Barberton, who
battled back from a severe
heart attack suffered just
prior to the start of the
season, has been voted the
United Press International
Class AAA coach of the year.
The selection of Greynolds
by coac hes, writers and
sportscasters around the
state was his second in the
last five years, having also
been honored in 1973.
This year's Barberton
team, unbeaten for ·the

Sanders said. " I'm very
proud that we won. !think the

But Houston used a full-court
p-ess in the seeood hall to
build a l~int lead with 10 ·
minutes remaining and led by
8&gt;-liO with 4:07 left.
"We felt we were in good
position when we pressed
them," said Houston Coach
Guy Lewis. "After that, we
stopped playing with as much
hustle and enthusiasm. Their
goy Sunders is a tremendous
player and he surprised me
with his rebounding ability."
Birdsong, who was the
NIT 's top scorer with 116
·points , made the AllTournament team along with
Sanders, Hollis, Villanova's
Keith Herron and Alabama's
37 for the Braves.
T.R. Dunn.
.
Lakers 100, Jazz 95 :
"I took a couple of had
Rookie forward Tom Aber- jump shots and missed a lot
nethy came through with of easy shots in the second
eight points in tbe fourth half," Birdsong said. "I feel
quarter to help los Angeles very ftturtrated and very
win despite a 46-point effort down."
by Pete Maravlch of the Jazz.
St. Bonaventure, 24-6, beat
Kareem Abdul -Jabbar led Rutgers, . Oregon and
too Angeles with 29 points Villanova to reach the tiUe
and cazzie Russell added 20. game with Houston. The
Cougars finished their season
A thought for the day : · with a 29-8 record.
British novelist William
In the game for third place,
Thackeray said, "Tis strange Keith Herron scored 3li points
what a man can do, and and his brother, Latry, added
women yet think him an 20 to lead Villanova to a 102-89
angel."
triumph over Alabama.
Birdsong scored with two
seconds remaining to pull
Houston within ooe point, but
Essie Hollis scored at the
buzzer to clinch the Bonnies'
first NIT title in nine tries. St.
Bonaventure's. best previous
finish was third in 1952, 1958
and 1971.
Hollis, a &amp;-foot~ senior
forward , scored 17 of his 24
points in the first hall and
Sanders added 15 to help the
BoMiesto a 45-42 advantage.

Everybody beats .Nets now

Williams top player
COLUMBUS (UP! )- Herb
Williams of Columbus Marion
Franklin, who grew from a
gangling &amp;-7 soph0111ore into
one of the nation's most
sought after seniors, heads up
the
United
Press
International hoys aU-Ohio
baskethall team announced
today. ·
The
6-tl,
220-pound
Williams , an awesome
defender with a silky soft
shooting touch, is joined on
the talented aU..Ohio first
team by 6-9 Richard
Montague of Elyria, 6-8
James Smith of Cleveland
East Tech, S-2 Carter Scott of
Barberton and 5·10 Todd
Penn of Columbus Linden
McKinley, the only first team
repeater.
Williams, considered a
"franchise" by college
coaches who flocked to the
Red Devili' games to see him
play, averaged 26.1 points, 16
rebounds and 7 blocked shots
per game in leading his team
to a 15-3 regular season mark.
"He excells in all parts of
the game ,'' said Marion
Franklin Coach Lorenzo
Hunt. "He's got to be the best
defensive high school center
in !he nation. He enjoys
playing defense."
Even though he's now S-11,

about the best shot we could
get. But when it went up ...
AAAGH ! It was one of those,
'No; no, no ... YEAH!' shots."
It was also the final basket
for Sanders, who made 14 of
23 shots from the field and 12
of 16 from the free throw line.
"If I had missed I wasn 't
going to look at coach,"

5--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, March 21. 1977
Prevention is
the best policy · · ·

)

'I

li lf ·'I

'

Unfortunately, your CB base
statiommwnna will not only help you
reach rho~e people, it could also put
you in touch with our power lines.
And.the slightest contact between
you, your antenna and our lines
could be fatal.
So, before you put up your
antenna, here are a few suggestions
you should follow.
First, we recommend you have a
pmfessional do it for you.
Okay, if you're determined to do
it yourself, look out for power linl;ls.
The ones attached to poles. And the
ones attached to your house.
If you can't tell a power line from
a phone line. don't experiment.
Steel' clear.

Then make sure you locate your
antenna (including supporting mast
and guy wires) at least one and a
half times its total height from all
power lines. Which means, a 30-ft.
high antenna should be 45 feet away
from all power lin.es in all directions.
That way, if if fa lls during construction, or gets blown clO\vn during
a storm, it won't hit any lines and .
endanger you or your neighbors.
TI·ying to carry an antenna, climb
a laddel' and keep your balance all at
the same time is risky business, too.
Wait t'oi· a calm day, assemble
the anteima where you intend to put
it up, be s\.n·e to ground the antenna
properly and get somebody to
help you.

Ohio Power Company
Working together is the only way.

�6-The Daily Serytinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Mond•y, M•rch 21, 1977

Sell or Trad~~- Through The Sentinel Want Ads

i--------.---,

I nJRN YOUR I Buy,
II UNWANTED !1 Nolicee
I1 ITEMS
1
1

INTO
CASH,I

I

I

1
1

I

I

I
I

I

NOTICE.

Prot fs

•
•

Meet

WANT AD
CHARGES

Mk t.

(Plea san ton Mea t Proc enmg
lnc .l Cus tom slaughtering , and

~.";11

No appoinmenl necessary . Co li
[61_.) 5'7.J.l~655 , ho urs. 9:00 till
6:00 7 Pomeroy Roo d. Athens ,

G~~ -

j tf
e

f

ers coun s

a

5

I one word.
I
l1

Day
I
13 Days

.05

fr om L u ther Bar to e
r esid en ce, L on g Bottom .

II

I
1
I
1

I
I
I
I

9.
10.

11.

1
I
I

I
I 13.
I
I
I U.
1 1s.

1 16
I

I

I
I

·

1
1

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I

2•.

I
1

25

I ·
I ·26
I ·
I 71.
I

I
I
1
I
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·
I

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he

1;J5

~ONDA

"~ ~~
X L 100.

good

cond ition . Pr ice d $300. 1976

WE WISH to e xpress our deep
appreciation and-thanks to all
the Fire Departments t hat

to tne tire at tne

Clarence Koeh ler home The
respon se to the cal l was
answered qui ck ly and shOwed
great teamwor~ from the
1101unteers and all the neigh bor s wh o helped . We a lso
wi sh to thank. Mrs. Beuli!lh
MalCey , John H aye s, Elo ise
Connolly ,
the
Coo lville
Emergen,c y Sq ua d . Sheriff
Pr offitt an d h is deput ies, Dr .

Pickens , those who sen t food
and flowers , Wh ite's F u ner~l
Home a nd the Rev . Richard
Tf'lomas. Words cannot ex.
press our
feelin gs of
I gratitude.
I
Randy Koehler , Marilyn

I 28 '
29.

1
I 30.
I
I

k nows

a~~-1.

1 responoeel

1 23.'

I
1

cr

whearabouts , please call lhfit
funeral home
__

I

II
I

I

1

seen ,

•

31.

1 R_o_b i ns_o_
n ._:~~t_c~~~ l_
v ._
II

- ADVERTISEMENT
0 0 8 105
II
FederFa t La nd an- d Water
I
Conser11atlon
Fund Act
1 33.
I Pro ject No. 39 -00431and HUD
· I Commu n ity oe. . e lopm ent
I
1 Block Grant Pro lec:t No . B-75 ·
I
DN -39 ·0022
1
I Sewage System for
Nom•
I Munic ipal Park Swimm ing
I .
Pool, VIllage ot Syracuse .
I OhiO .
I
1 .. ..... ... .. ...... .. . ~ I Bids will be received until
1 12:00NoonE .S.T. onMonday ,
I
March 28 , 1977 , tor the con .
I Y;J ...
I struction of Sewage System
1
I for Munici pal Park Swim ·
I 32·

I

1
I
I

· · · · · ... ·· · · · · · · · · · · ·
Phon..

I ';'v'~ic:s~~~d~ro .t;f w~1 i1~~~~r:!
I the bids shall be opened by
1 the Cler k of the Village and

publicly read by her at th e
I Village Hall , Sta le Route 124,
1 ....... ... . : ......... ~ ; I Village of Syrac use, Ohio .
1 Bids may be mailed to the
I
. Vi)la ge or Syracuse, Ohio ,
I Send Coupon
I 45779, Attention : Mr . Herman
I London , Mayor .
I and remittonol fa : ,
I
Informa tion tor bidders ,
I
torm of contract. pla ns ,
1
I specifica tions , and forms of
a rlftetl
1 bid bond , performance and
I
payment bond , and other
I document s may be elf&gt;amint'!d
I Daily Sentinel
I i!lnd are obta inab le at the
I Pomeroy, Ohio
I Village Ha ll , s,racuse. Ohio.
I
upon the payment of the sum
- - - - - - - - -- - - • of S10 .00 . whi ch is not
refundable .
AI! bids mus t be in pla in
sealed envelopes mark ed on
the outside " Bid for Sewage
1973 HILLCRE ST 12 X 70 , J Sys tem for Mun ic ipal P~rk
be drooms, shag c arpet , Sw imming PooL Villag e of
ell:c ellen t c onditio~;~ . May re nt Syr acuse , Ohio ." Each
lot. Fir s t r lgl'l t in Syracu se .. bidder must have on the
Phone 992 ·3980
outs ide ot th e b id enve lop e his
- -- ·
nam e and address, and each
bond must be accompanitd
by a bid bond or certified
check In the a mou nt ot 10
FR EE INSP EC TION for percen t of th e total b1d. The
te r m ltes ! Any sin gle dw ell ing bid bond shall be cond itioned
re side nce treated for ter . that if the bid is accep ted a
mites, $109. Sout hern Pest contract will be en tered into
Con trol, Rac ine , Oh io . P hOn e and its performance proper I y
secured .
949 2803 or 949-2786 .
If the bid e m braces both
labor and materia l such
items sh all be separately
stated with the pr ice thereof.
No bidder may withdraw
hi s b id ror a period of six t y
days from the da te of bid
open ing .
This proi ect is federally
ass isted . Contracts to be
awarded under th is
in
vi t ation for bids wil l be
subject to
Presidential
Executive Order No . 11246
requir ing affirmative action
for equal employm ent OP ·
port un ity.· Cont ractors are
t vrther advised that t he
January "2i. 1972 EQual
Employm en t Opportunit y
EJCec ut ive Order of the
Charles R. Mash, Sylvester Governor of Ohio is also
Slane, Mary A. Slane, Anna appli cable to this bid in ·
vitation .
.
The owner reserves the
L. Mash to Anna L. Mash,
right to wa ive infor malities
Charles R.- Mash, .86 A., or
to relect any and all bids .
Sali!bury.
Succe ssfu l bidd er mus t
comply with the Oh io Work ·
Sylvelter Slane, Mary A. men 's Compensation Laws
!lane, Charles R.' Maah, Anna and .a lso com ply with a ll
other sta te , federal end loca l
l..MIIIhto~ K. Mash, .86 taxes and law s .
Suc cessful bidd er mu s t
A, Sa lllbw-y.
proceed Wit h the work within
Vernon Perry, Oranna t wD w~ek!. of the ~igni n g of
PaTy to Carl McQulrt, Lula the contract and the pro iect
mus t be t u lly comJYie t ect
Mae M&lt;:qulrt,
50
A. ; with
in 30 working days
Colwnbla.
thereafter ekcept1ng only
delays as may be oc ThertJI Randolph to Earl such
casioned by str ikes ,
un·
1.. Faudree, Thelma L. seasonable wea lher or acts of
God .
Faudree, Parcels, Olive.
Johnnie R. Kibble, Helen L.
VILLAGE OF
SYRACU SE. OHIO
Kibble to Johnnie ::. Kibble,
By Her man London ,
Helen L. Kibble, 2..50 . A.,
MAY OR
(3) 14 , 11. 2t c
Olive.

--------

Meigs

Property

Transfers

s.

.

1973 CHEVROLET C&amp;C2 TON
13615
Big sl )( 292 cu. ln., 4 speed, 15 ,000, 2 speed, Oem .axle.
Ready lo work .
11448

1971 FORO ¥, TON CREW CAB
Body good, runs good.

Nw n ~ 1

w1th

ful'
t'HL'ry·
In C11rc uf Till.• St·u·

ol'dt't' 25 t:t'nl d »trl{c

UJK Box.

t·;~~h
111 L~

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

Aerial
Commercial
Schools
Weddings

Automatic
Transmission Service

==J ·

COAL. lim estone, and calcium
chloride and cok1um brine for
dus t control and specie/ mixmg
salt for farmers . MOin Street ,
Pomeroy, Ohio or phone 992·
3891.

-------APPlES , FITZPATRICK ORCHARD.
STATE ROUTE 689. PHONE
WilKESVIllE . (614) 669-3785.
FULLER Brush Products lor so le.
Phone 992 · 3.410~.
CAMPER , $600. Also. horse
troller, $450. Phone (614) 698 ·

Will do odd jobs . roofing . pain·
ling . gutter work . Phone 992
7409.
•
5EW IN G - Al TERATIONS ,
drapes
,Upholsterin9 ,
reasonable . 572 South Third
Ave . . Middleport . Phone
992-6306.
.

'

T~AT 'f; PUHING IT (AHEM :) "("
SOMEWHAT BLUNTLY-- BUT

DOES THAT MEAN
1\/ILLING TO
ACCSPT THE BOARD
OF DI~EC TORS '
TERMS r

YQU ' ~E

Rotc~sville, 0. Ph. l71-6210

E55ENTJAL L.Y YOU'VE GO T
T H ~ PI CT UR~!

L

BlOWn
Insulation SIIYices
fi11111ti11 Aal ii~
Blown lniiWolk l AHics
STOIM
WIIIIIOWS &amp; OOO!S
IEPOO,ENT
WIN DIMS
IWMINUii
SIOIII&amp;-SOifiTT
_____i!!!!£1t$MIIIINGS

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

i(l.cKE.E 1NDU5T R!f:S·.YOll '1.L.

HAVE TO FIGHT FOR IT!

Bid tells all or nothing

Nobil Summit Road
Rl. 1
Middleport, 0 .
992-5724
Complete
Sales
and
Service and Supplies.
3-14-1 mo.

&amp; BARt4
TRUSSES
ANY PIXH
ANY SIZE

HO.

Southeastern Ohio

• K9

Kitchen Cabinets, Roofing ,
Concrete
Patios ,
Sidewalks ,
New
Construction
&amp;
Remodeling.

Carpet &amp; Upholstery
Phone Mike Yo'u ng
At
992-2206 or 992-7630

A local contractor
Phone ~49-2801
or 949-2860

"The Originators .
Not The Imitators"

Free Estimates
Na Sunday Calls Please
3111$1 mo .

EXPERiENCED
Radiator ,.......-.,
Service

WITH OIL CHANGE
AND FILTER

Pass

~.

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-DAY

~~

J-11 -1 mo. pd.

Young's Carpeting

•

SOME I?AY, ~EH SHE'S

•••

ctDER .. • BUT NO USE

TElLlNG HER HOW --- SHE
SEEMS HAPPy HERE. ..

Free Estimates

Bl ackwood convention.''
Ji m " For the record when
you bid a Blackwood four

A Pennsylvania reader asks
if you can inquire as to wh 1ch

not rump you ask. your pa r tner
to res pond fiv e c lubs wi th no

before the ln ck is turned .
The answer is '' Yes .''

by

W7 FT\f&lt;[;()r-J, BUT WH ~ R~

110 ~D IJ PIJf

D
Soft liqhts...
sweet music!

1 Belle ( Sp.)

word
5 Of which

2 " Robin - "
3 " Large,"

SEPTE'MBE:R
MORIJ

•

1he perfect
atmosphere!

IJI)DIST

CAMP

.-1--\d_f_II--.J..,-h- ---.
COU

0 OW -,;

em,

but I'd mi55 Adam-12,
Gunsmoke and Hoqan's

Heroes'

--

5 Mr. Cox

12 "Shane"
co-star

6 Oklahoma

town
(2 wds. )
7 Nebraska city
II Kind of ra id 8 Prisoner
15 Wholly
on the run
16 Peak
9 Walked
17 Popular
II Drawing
cocktail
room
( 2 wds.)
13 Venezuelan
19 Adverse to
peninsula
(abbr. )
18 Bad pitch
20 French river 21 French
21 Kind of
author
club

22 -

f~ :'O -'~:

e

~~~;~~~~~;:;_~~~.~nos -~ :
·-·~

---·--- .
'

I·······. :

Close

·

P.M.

••

_RUTLAN_D FURNITURe

.-

e:
e

. .;;

e•

Yesterday's Answ£'r
22 Fashion
23 Short
operatic
song
24 Cordovan

29 Like

Harpo's
hair
30 Ward off
31 French c ity
35 Remove
or mocha
from copy
25 Ex-First
37 Fish for
Lady
smoking
27 Temptress; 38 Turkish
vampire
weight
,.....,.......,.,.....,.,.....,.,....,

lily

25 Boobytrapped
26 Russian
city
• 21 Pattook of
28 An •••
Sinatra
29 Judge's
chamber

32 Favorite
33 Psychic
Geller
34 Shrew-

THIS 15 A CHEAP IM/1\Y-TASHI.}.N 0' WHAR WS'RE
60IN 1• We'LL TAKE A'5 MUCH FOO~ AS VIE

At-.!' 611 CUT~-

HE ser::.~v~r=o
o--:....._;:;u NIC5Y-

'-"""'f-...

mouse

36 Strangers ; b-+- +-folks
12 wds.) · b--1--+-!~
39 Metalli c
10 Howard - b+~-+-+---1'---41 Kind of
bird
42 Additional L..L.......L--JI-..1....!.·2.i

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It : 1 SMACH
II

(

WINNIE

• WOW/WIIAT U/CK!!!
;.. FEW wEEP:e AGo

DIDN'T EVEN
A JOJ; ....

•

pLAVE

· '"''"""

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

.

I I I

I
.

[)

One letter sim ply stands for a nothe r. In this sample ·A Ia
used for the three L's. X for the two O's. etc. Single lelters. r~..,-,=-:-:::--,1
apostroph es, the length and form a lion of the words are all 1_:..
N.;:A
:..:.:I.;.T..:l:::;:E~f,--r;~

r

hints. Earh dny the code letters are dift'erent.
r

... AN D 'TONIGHT I'M GOING10 A MOTION PICTURE
PREM IERE WITH A

CRYPTOQUOTES

ox·· o

BEAUTIFUL
HOLLYWOOD
87i4RLETI

VI P C
U W S N
YOU KNON EVERYTINIE
I SEE 'THAT 5K'iN ON
lOP OF OUR NEW
BUILDING I HAVE ID
PINCH MY5E'LF ID BEE
IF I'M DREAMING- I

FRIDAY·TIL 5 . ·

· Pomeroy landmark

Mo. and La .

II Cruel perSon

-----

e

compound s
4 Between

month

992-2156

•

"great, '' in

prince
10 J ewish

TheDai~Sentinel

.

(For a copy ol JACOBY
MODERN. send $1 fo : "Win
at Bridge . .. clo th is
newspaper, P. 0 Box 48g,_
Radio C1ly Station , New York ,
N. Y 10019)

DOWN

I Nursery
Charles is

~Dui&lt; K!&gt;l-/7 AFWR ~OU WC..K IT -z

Paper Carrier
in Syracuse
Phone

w

play e d e a ch card

THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

WANTED

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

playe r

~

,_

f

fi v~ - c luh

_,..._could use th e

· TEAFORD

e
e

jumped in a new sui t and then
rai sed to show that particular
holdi ng ."

aces, five diamondS for one,
fi ve hearts for tWo , five

Route 3, Pomeroy, 0 .

Pomeroy Landmark

e ••

T

s pad es for three a nd five
notrump for four ."
Osw•ld : "It didn 't take long
lor pl ayers to find out lhal you

279 •95

:•

I•
4 N. T

for our annual rev iew of the

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

FOR S4J.L _

Pus!i
Pass
Pass

South

Oswa ld . " It is about t1me

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

Route 2
Pomeroy, Ohlo45769
Free Estimates Ph. 992-7119

...

-·

Nort h Eas t
l""
Pass

By Oswa ld &amp; James Jacoby

General Contracting

~=-;.~::

CHESHIRE
ASHlAND

Jim : " Since we are discuss·
in g bidding toda y, North 's
jump to four spades showed
jus t what he had - nineteen
high -ca rd po i nts and no
singleton ."
Os wa ld · " With eighteen or
nineteen high-card point s and
a singleton North would have

DAVID BRICKLES

2-23-1 mo.

FREE WBE JOB

West

Pass 5""
~N
Pass 6 •
7•
Pass Pa ss Pass
Opening lead - 4 •

Route 3, Pomeroy, 0 .

Bis!ell Siding Co.

wa s &lt;Jble to ask for kings and

when Nort h showed one king ,
South wa s able to bid seven."
Oswald : "1lte play at seven
was short and simple. South
drew trumps with three leads
and claimed ."
.

• J 96 4
.Q10 7 4

No rth·South vulnerable

12-22-4 mos .

TUESDAY , MARCH 22,1917
6 :oo-Sunr ise Semester 10.
6 ·15-Farm Report 13 .
6'2ll-Nol For Women Only 13.
6 .3o-Teacher's Classroom 4; News 6; Sunrise
Semester 8; Concerns &amp; Comments 10.
6' 45-Mornlng Report J .
6:5ll-Good Morning, West Vi rgin ia 13.
6·55-Good Morning, Trl Slate 13 .
7:0G-Today 3,4,15: Cood Morning America 6.13: CBS
News 8; Chuck White Reports 10.
7 ,os-Porky Pig 10.
7 ' Jll-Schoolles 10.
8' oo-Howdy Doody 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame
51 . 33.
8.3ll-Big Valley 6.
9 :GO-A.M. 3: Phil Donahue 4,13 ,15; Andy Griffith 8:
Mike Douglas 10.
9 , JQ-Cross-Wils 3; Edge of Night 6; Concentrat ion 8.
IO :Oo-Santord &amp; Son 3,4,15 ; Dinah 6; Double Dare
8,10; Mike Douglas 13.
10 :3ll- Ho llywond Squares 3,4,15; Price Is Right 8,10.
11 :GO-Whee l ol Fortune 3.4.15: Morning Show 13.
11 : 3D-S hoo1 for the Sfars 3,4,15; Happy Days 6, 13;
Love of Life 8.10: Sesame St. 20 .
1155-CBS News 8; Ms. Flxi l 10.
12 ,oo-News 3.4.6 ,10; Second Chance 13; Name That
Tune 15 ; Divorce Court 8.
1UD-Lovers- Fr iends 3, 15; Ryan' s Hope 6,13; Bob
Braun 4; Search for Tomorr ow 8,10.
1:0o-Gong Show J ; All My Children 6,13 ; News 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10: Not For Women Only 15.
1· Jll-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; Family Feud 6, 13; As
The World Turns 8,10.
2 ' G0-120,000 Pyramid 6,13.
2, Jo-Doctors 3,4,1S; One Life to Live 6,13; Guiding
Llqh l 8,10.
'
J: OG-Anolhr World 3,4, 15; All ln The Family 8,10;
"
Consu mer s Su rvival Kit 20 .
3; 15-Genera l Hospital 6,13.
3,3[)-Matc h Ga me 8,10: Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
4:0G-Misler Cartoon 3; Little Rascals 4: Gong Show
15 : New Mickey Mouse Club 6: Luc y Show 8:
Sesame 51. 20,33 ; Mov ie "Red, Hof and Blue" 10;
Dinah 13.
4: 15- LIIfle Rascals 4.
4 Jll-My Three SoM 3; Partridge Fam ily 4;
Emergency One 6; Partridge Family 8; Fllnlsfones
15.
5, oo-Big Valley 3: My_Three Sons 4: Brady_ Bunch 8;_
Mister Ragers' Neighborhood 20,33 ; Sta r Trek 15.
5: Jll-Adam -12 4,13 ; News 6; Fa m ily Affair 8; Elec.
Co. 20,33 .
.
6:GO-News 3,4,8,10,13,15: ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6 : 3D-NBC News 3,4, 15: AB C News 13; Andy Grlffllh 6;
· CBS News 8, 10: Vegetable Soup 20: Studio See 33.
7:GO-Tr ulh or Cons. J; ·America: The Young Experience .4 ; Bowling for Dollars 6; Country Carnival 8; News 10;' To Tell the .Trvth 13; My Three
Sons 15; Cooking with a Cantlnental Flovor 20.
7:3ll-Ho llywood Squares 3,4: Let' s Deal Wllh It 6;
Match Ga me PM 8; MacNeil-lehrer Report 20,33;
In The Know 10: Wild Kingdom 13 : TV Honor
Society 15.
8:oo-Baa Baa Black Sheep 3,4,15 ; Happy Days 6,1 3;
CBS Reports 8,1 0: Pr ice of Peace &amp; Freedom 20;
Mlssa Solemnis 33.
•
8:JD-Laverne &amp; Sh irley 6.13:. Who's Flrslln Defense?
20.
9:0G-Pollce Wom an 3,4,15; Eight Is Enough 6,13;
MASH 8,10.
9:30--0ne Day at a Tlme 8, 10; Anyone for Tennyson?
20: Oasis In Space JJ.
10 :GO-Poll ce Story 3,4,15; Family 6,13 ; Kol ak 8,10;
News 20; Decades of Decision 33 .
10 :3ll-Biack Journal '10.
11 :GO-News 3.4.6.8, 10, 13, 15; Mac Neil -Lehrer Report
33.
11 :3o-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Movie ""Consp iracy of
Terror ," 6,13; Co lumba 8; Mary Hartman 10;
Practical Dermatology 33.
12:0G-Movle " The Black Orchid " 10.
12 :3ll-Janakl 33 .
1:00--Tomorrow 3,.4 .
LID-News 13.

J im : " Today 's hand shows
the advantage of using five
clubs in this doubl e role. South

SOUTH
• Q 10 865
¥ K Q 83
• K7

We Deliver

Young's Carpeting

'

•J
• 10 9 6 2

Ph . ( 6141 742' · 2409

Superior
Steam Extraction

Vinyl and aluminum
siding, storm win dows and insulation.
Call Professionals

• 974
• QI08 2
• .I 8 5

response to show either no
aces or four aces . It stands to
rea son th at the Blackwood
bidd e r c ou ld t e ll whi ch

number was being shown."

EAST

Located in Langsville
Box 28-A
Rutland, Ohio 4577S

. ~10- 1 m9.

21

WEST
" J75

Truss Rafter Co.

lARRl.~~~DER
Ph. 9!2-3!93

NORTH 10 1
&lt;1o A K 3 2
¥ A4
• A5 3
&lt;io A6 3 2

l

'""' lht lorpol
..
lnsta ltation, samples
AT
-lotlooPIANO TUNING. lone Dan iels . 12 3 AND 4 RM . fur nis hed and un·
brought to your home
years of service . Phone
furn ished opts . Phone 992·
with
no charge .
992-2082 .
5434 .
Nllirlnlial
NEED A
ARTIFICIAL INSEMIN ATION Ser- COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork, Rt .
C.rpei-Lino.-Tile
33, ten miles nor th of Pomeroy.
WATER SOFTENER!
llice . OAIRV·BEEF For service or
Phane Mike Yo101g ol
info rmation coli. TIM RINGER ;
Lorge lots with concrete patios,
Cheshire, Ohio
992-22114 or 992-7630
AMERI CA N &amp;REEDERS SERVICE .
sidewalks. runnen and off
let Pomeroy Landmark
Phone
614-367-0626
Home 662-4323 or Answering
street parking. Phone 992·7479.
soften &amp; condition your
2-23-1 mo.
Service. 593·6244 .
J-16-1 mo.
P~MZ-2174
water and a Co -op water
FARM ON ri ver, 51 acres . 7 rooms
sollener, Model UC-XVl .
WILL TRIM or cut trees or shrub·
and bo Ih. Phone 992-5908.
bery. Phone9.49·2545.
Now Ontv.
JACK'S BEE SUt-'I"' Ut~. Reedsville, BRADFORD, Auctioneer, Com·
3 ROOMS ond both furnished opt .
plete Servic;e, Phone 9'.49·2487
Ohio. Bee supplies and equip·
Al l utilities. poi~ . 356 North
or
949·2000. Racine , Ohio . Crltt
let
us
test
your
water
ment
.
Phone
(614)378
-6357.
Fourth Street. Middleport .
HOMESITES for sole, I acre and
Bradford.
Free.
William Sm1fli .
up. Middleport, near Rutland .
ElWOOD SOWERS REPAIR Co ll992·7481.
WANTED : MAN for raofing and SHULTZ MOBIL E Home, furni shed .
Sweep~Jrl. toastert. Iron s. a ll
spouting, some duct work.
Li ke new, has ci ty water and
NEW 3 bedroom hduse, 2 baths,
small appliances. Lawn mower.
Must be oble to go ahead with . gas. Phone Albert Hill, Roc1ne , ¥.~Jack W. Carsey', Mgr.
all e lec. , 1 acre , Middleport ,
-aiil; Phone992-2181
nex t to Slate Highwo)l Garage
job. If interes ted, write Box
949-2261.
to Rut land . Phone 992·
close
on Route 7. Phone (614 ) 985·
--·
150, Pt. Pleasant, W. Vo. 25550.
7481.
3825.
USEO FORESTRY EQUIPMENT.
Give experience ond ell(pected
Hough Skidder Model S7B:
\ WOQ8.
REMODEL
ING, Plumbing, heating
Virgil B. Sr ., Realtor
Mich1
gan
Model.
55A6;
Rebuilt
and
all
types of general repair .
216
E.
second
Street
R.N. NEEDED for SoturdO)I ond RISING STAR Kennel Soording ,
Morbark 3.t8" Chip·Poc com·
Work guaranteed 20 years ex ·
Pomeroy,
Ohio
4516t
Sunday shift. Coli Arcodia Nur·
lndoar·Outdoor ru.ns, grooming
plete with screen. Contact Den·
perience. Phone 992·2409,
sing · Home, Coolville, Ohio.
Phone 992-3325
oil breeds, clean sanitary
nis
Smurr
.
Pho
ne
(614)
Phone (614) 667-31 96
SEWING MACHINE Repairs , ser·
facilities . Ches hire. Phone (614)
838-5345.
vice, all makes, m ·2284. Thv
TUPPERS PLAINS - Old
367-0292.
CO~N PLANTER, .t row w1th disc .
Fabric Shop, Pomero y.
7 room ho use with 112 bath ,
HOOF HOLLOW. Buy , sell, trade
openers. Fiberglass boxes , her ~
Authorized Singer Soles and
out cellar and P/~ acres of
or train horses. RUTH REEVES .
biclde and insecticides. Phone
Servio.
We •horpen Scissors.
levelland
on
Rl.
7.
Asking
MAIN
troi~er . Phone (614 ) 698·3290.
Dale Kautz , 985-3831 .
$12,000.
EXCAVATING
, dozer, loader and ·
POMEROY, 0 .
POODLE GROOMING. rea sonable . USE D HOOVER Sweepers. $24 50
RESTAURANT - Here's a
backhoe work , dump truck5
NEW LIST! NG - 31/o acres
rates. Colli or oppl , 742 ·:)1 62.
cosh or te rms Call992·51.46.
business for a family . Good
and lo·boys for hire; will haul
of
ground In PomerOy,
corner locat ion In Pom eroy
fill dirt. to soli , limestone and
-DOBERMAN PiNCHERP~ ~AKC, C.B. T~C horl i e One by Teaberry
exce llent building sites
al $13,500.
gravel. Call Bob or Roger Jef1.4 weeks block ond rust Ears
with onrenno. Phone 992-3717
potential. Could di vide Into
ters, doy phone 992·7089.
cropped . tojl cut.oll shots .
MIDDLEPORT
-2
STEREO COMPO NENTS including
13 lots. City water and
night phone 992-3525 or 992;
Phone 742·2967 alter 5 p.m
bedrooms, nice bafh, large
receiver amplifier changer,
5232.
sewage a11ailable. Asking
dining,
2
porches
and
level
ENGLISH SPRINGER Sponiel pups ,
and 4 speakers . For more in ·
$5,800.00 .
.
lot. Nat. gas , city water . EXCAVATING. do&lt;er . backhoe
AK( . liver &amp; white , field trial
formation, coli 992 -5009 oher
NEW
LISTING
In
$16,500
.
and ditcher. Cha rles R. Hotbred . Champion blood lines.
Pomeroy older home wi th
HARRISONVILLE - New
field . Bock Hoe Service,
Call Jim Butcher, 247·2206 or ~~~p. m. - - - - - - potential
for
two
BROWN ING EAGLE C.B Bose sto·
3 bedroom brick veneer
Ru tland, Ohio . Phone 742·2008.
992-5426.
lion. Phone 992.5348 .
a partments . 100 x.40 lot .
home with d ini ng. sliding
SEPTIC Systems installed by
AS KING $8,500.00.
glass doors, and forced aIr
licensed installer. Shepord
LOCATED on old Roule 33,
heat . One acre lot on 124.
Contractors. Phone 7-42·2-409.
$200 WEEKLY Possible 'stuffing
about 5 miles out nice
Want $29,500.
en11elopes SEND self ·odd ressed 2 BEDROOM 8 x -4B . portly furnishSEPTIC TANKS cleaned . Modvrn
laying ground . 10.7 ·acres,
MIDDLEPORT Good
stomped envelope to: Edroy
Sanitation, 992-3954.
util ities available, close to
ed. Phone (304) 882-3348 .
bri c k b uilding with 3
Moils , Box 188CO Albany, Mo.
school,
on
good
bla
cktop
apartments next to the
WILL do roofing , construction ,
TRA ilER WITH lot In Rutland . FOR SALE. All elec neorl)l new
64402 .
road.
.
home in Rutlond oreo . Bose·
bu si ne ss section. One
· plumbing and heotlng . No job
Phone992-7.454 .
STOP PAYING RENT 'LIFE GUARDS for Sy racuse
mvnt, 3 bedrooms, attached
too lo,ge or tOo small. Phone
furnished &amp; 3 garages.
garage , $29 .900
Phone
You can own this newer
· Municipal Swlmnilng Pool. let· 1973 HILLCREST 12 x 60, 7 x 10 ex .
7 42 - 23~8 .
Only $20,000.
panda , furn ished. a.c., extros,
ters of oppllcotion to be sent to
home for less than you
NEW LISTING - Large 3
742-253•.:_1:._
. --,--.,,-CARPENTER , flooring, ce iling ,
$5300.-Phone Belpre, .. 23.6773.
Jesse Brown ing. Manager. Rt.
think . 4 bedrooms. bath,
bedroom frame home with
ONE ACRE, 3 bedrm .. 2 s.tory
paneling, Phone 992-2759.
1, Box 38, Portland, OH 45770
utility c onnect ion s,
1973 CAMERON MOBILE Home , 12
bath, nat. gas F .A. furnace.
home , dining room, Iorge both.
MOBILE Home Repair, Ehtc •.
carpeting. 118,000.00.
x 60 2 bedrooms, completely
Large li ving wi th woodnatural gas , large porch. nice
plumbing and heating. Phone
AN OLDER HOUSE WITH
furnished . All electr ic. Porch
block goroge. $20,(X)(). Phon&amp;
burning firepla ce, storm
992-5858.
and underpinn ing included .
A
NICE
LOOK
New
windows and doors and
992-S:_73:::
2·' ---"---Phone (3041675-5540.
si ding, for ced air furnace,
ElECTRONIC T.V. CliNIC , Now
large lol fo r $17,500.
HOUSE
WITH or without trailer in
OLD turniture, ice boll(es , brass
storms, 3 la r ge BR., lVl
T.V. shop, Electronic T.V. Clinic
NEW
LISTING
J
Pomeroy. Good 1nvestment.
beds . wall telephones and
baths, carpeting, paneling ,
Service call , $5.95. Color, 8 &amp; W
bedroom block house, bath,
Coli992·7AS4
.
ports . or complee households .
basement. Beautiful view
an tenna l ')'items 1tereos. etc.
rural water, cistern, new
Write M. D. Miller, Rr. 4,
iBEDROOM HOUSE and both on
of the river .
S72 South ThJrd, Middleport.
garage with good cellar
Pomeroy, Ohio. Co li 992· 7760.
River Front Street, Moson.
Phone 992·6306. Corry in and
AN AMAZING VALUE - 2
and large lolln the country .
1976 M.F.G. Gypsv Boat , 16 ft . .
Pho ne (304) 773-5697.
save
money.
Br
.,
2
baths,
dining
R.
or
J
$16,500.
CASt! paid for oil makes and
with walk thru window, 1976
Loafing R., Living R .,
NEW LISTING - Troller
HOWERY AND MARTIN Exmode ls of mobile homes. Chr)lsler 75 h.p. motor. Phone APPRO)C. 15 ACRES, born.
Office Bldg. Carner Lot.
, hoyfield on Sond Ridge . Phone
cavating, septic systems .
lots at Five Points. 1\11 set
c:_2:_·_:_
5 1,_,2~:·
6 '"-----Phone ar9a code 614 ·423·9531 . __:99
neighborhood.
E xcellenl
(614 )367-7401.
dozer, backhoe, dump tntck ,
up
ready
to
move
on
far
UMBER, ~omeroy Forest Pro· FISHER WOOD l]lurning sto11es and
All for 1ust 122,000.00 .
limestone, grovel. blacktop__
only 15500.
ducts. Top price for standing farm lumber. PHONE Facemyer 3 BEDROOM ranch, 11/, baths, 1
MORE BUILDING · SITES
paving. Rl. 143. Phone 1 (614)
IF YOU WANT IT SOLD,
ocre, all elec. fini shed garage .
sawtimber. Call Kent Hanby, and Salmons lumber Co ., Inc.
698-7331.
- 4.3 acres near Mulberry
SEE OR CALL US AT 991Fully ca rpeted. Fwe Paints
1·446·8570.
Rt. 7 Middleport. Ohio, (614)
Hgls.
ONLY
$8,250.00.
3325 .
orea . $30,00J. Phone 992-2928
EXCAVATING, Backhoes, Dozer,'
COI NS. CURRENCY . tokens. old 992
:~·c:_7::
'2'-'5:__
· ---CALL
CLELAND
HEL'EN L.
oher S p.m.
trencher, Low Boy, dump tnKk ,
pocket wa tches and cholm, SMITH &amp; WESSON model 28 . 357
REALTY TO SELL YOUR
AND
GORDON
B.
trucks, ••ptic systems. 8111
1
silver and gold. We need 1%4
magnum with holster . belt , 3 HOUSE WITH 5 lots , both ond 11
PROPERTY.
ASSOCIATES
Pullins . Phone 992·2478 day or
wi
!h
4
bedrooms
,
double
and older silver coins. Bur . sel l,
bo..:et. shells , Perfect condition .
HENRY E. CLELAND
night.
garage, outbuildi ng ond cellar.
or trade' Coli Roger Wom~ ley .
$200. Phone992·35 17.
BROKER
Phone
(6141
698-5607
or
(304)
742-2331.
- --Hank Cleland, Associolt
,I
773-5759.
W~NTED ,
CHIPWOOO. Poles.
992 -2259 . 991-2568
•
•
APPROXIMATElY 7 or 8 acres , __ _ _
maximum diameter · 10 inches
tel-4112
_:___
_..J · • .
•
wooded land in Rock Springs.
on largest end, $8. per ton.
New Co -Op water sof.
te ners, mode l vc ~ svr .
bundles slobs $6 per ton.
~~992--'·2::_:
789
::.::._--'--'- Only $l19 .9S
Delivered to Ohio Pollet Com·
'l
ST
ORY
4
Bedrm.
brick home in
1
Good
Used
Poulan
Chain
.
~.
pony, Rr. ·2, Pomeroy , Ohio.
SMALllo•m lo• oole , 10% down . 1
Mon ., Tues., ed .
,. . 1
Silw.
US
-~2 ddlepo~ne 992-3457 .
Phone 992·2689.
Salle sso .oo on a new
1
owner
flnoncod
.
Momoe
.
C
oun
-r
8:00til5
:
00
·•
6'/t ACRE FARM , 7 rooms , both.
1
t-lolpa int Refrigerator.
CASH! I! for junk cars. Frye's
rv. w. Vo. Phone (3041 772..
·
8 f' l N
·•
born
.
pond.
and
furniture
pric·
1 Good Used McCullough
Truck and Auto. WRECKER SER·
~or (3041 772-3227.
: •
Thursday
1 oon
••
ed all lor $18.500. Of]&amp; mil•
1
Chain Saw .... •••••• • • $95
VICE! Phone 742·2081 .
1 Good used 40 " Hotpo int
from l angsville, Oh1o on ( .It COUNTRY farmland with seclud· •
Range .. ~••••• ••••• • • s roo
PIGS WANTED. Everett Holcomb.
10. Phone 742 ·2668.
ed wo6ds. water ond good oc•
~
Now In stock, complete line
Rt . 3 Albany. Phone (614)
REG,STEREOHeRE.
F
oRD7o~~~
qf
bulk
garden
seeds
And
celll
nMon•oeCount-/.
W.
Vo.
I
$1 ,000 down. call (304) 772- I
69ll-5025 o• 992-2737'
onion sets.
calve&amp; by side. 1 mile east of
3102 Of (3041 772-3227.
• •
• .•
WANTED, ONE mole goat , Phone
Rutland. Ohio on Stole Rt. 124.
DenniJRoush . 8A3-2B34 .
(o~;ercio1 property opprox . 17 • •
.A '
See H1rom Slowter .
Jack W. Carsey , Mgr . HOUSE . 6 ROOMS ,--;,~d-both , 6
ocr••- r... , land, tocar•d •• •
...• ·
Sant.~5
~~
Tuppers Plolns on Ohio, Route e
Phone nl ·l181
and three·fourth a cres inside
7. Phono (614 I 667-6304 .
1
city ll m1ts. New siding ond
;
r .
•
STRAWBERRIES in ba,skets and
storm windoWs, 3 a cre~ fenced
IF YOU hove o service to offer.
flats, now bl'loring, pansies ,
ho"'•·
• • ·
for small posture, $18,500. NEW3
kitchenbod•oom
, both and
'h, buJlr-ln
Phone •'
.
,.
wont to bu)l or sell something.
cabbage, lettucl'l , broccoli ,
Phon~ 992·7352,
couliflowl'lr, Brussels Sprouts,
oe looking for work . . ?r
whatever . . you'll get resu lts
onions. Cleland Forms and 7 ROOM HOUSE, new carpet,
ARNOLD GRATE
RUTLAND.!!
Green ho use . Ge raldine
roof , insulation owner linonc- REMOOHED 5 ROOMS ond -both , 1 1 142-2211
foster with .o Sentine l Wont Ad .
Cleland.
ocrelond. Phone 7&lt;2-2769 .
~&lt;t . Coll992-7.454 .
I I II! I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I • • . I
W
Coli 992· 2156.

,

BRIDGE

MIGHTY GENEROUS,
NT5 -- 6UT NO THANK? !
IF YO U WA~ T CO&gt;JTRO ~ OF

2-25-1 mo.

3290 .

STEREO. NEW AM.fM stereo
WANTED TO rent wi th possible
radio combination . $129.95 or
opt1on to bvy: 50 to 200 acres ~sy_!!rms Call 992·3965 .
secluded land, some tillable
with inhabitable House. Colum· SHAK ESPEARE BASS Boot l 4' ,
1976 Mercuri 20 h.p. with elec·
b10, Scipio, Bedford, or Rutland
tnc stort. 1976 til! trailer , plus
Townships .
Wr 1le
Tony
other extros , $1695. Phone
Russego, 1331 Meadow Rood ,
992-3126, C. P. Rillle , ~-Columbus, Ohio 43212.
LIVING ROOM set, bun~ bed~.
twin bed, breakfast toble, etc.
Phone992·7454 .

'·

RATES

FREE ESTIM T S

1969 CHE VROLET Bisquoine: 1966
BU ICK Electra. 225; 2 Rokan
triolbikes. Phone 949~ 2.432 .
1976 CAMARO 305 . 2 borrell
automatic , silver with red
pins!riping . Still under warranty . Ccll 992-5709 .

MAKE YOU

J"._..,HAPPV.

~

REASONABLE

OPEN EVES. 8 : 00P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO
1973 VEGA. factory air, 4 speed.
Phone 992·7332 ofte! 5 p.m.

NOTICE; IF IT'LL.

.••
·-••.
. .

PARTS · lABOR
GUARANTEED-

(614) 985-4155
Chesler, Ohio
10-17-lmo i Pd)

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

1972 NOVA 4 dr , radio and
heater, ovtomo t1c, p.s., low
mileage. Phone 742·2880..:
1974 FORD MAVERICK, o.c., ps .,
rod 1o! tires. deltJke trim , 200
Mt111diiy
cu . in . 6 cvlinde r, 19,000 miles .
NoonQn&amp;tturtlay
Coli Mike Young. 992-2206.
Tuc.'&gt;l.ll!v
1970 CADILLAC Coupe De Ville.
thru F 1 1&lt;i~y
Loaded, good condition. $1050.
4P.M.
Phone 992-3517 .
the dl!y IJcforl' pu bhcll llon
1%9 CHE VELLE SS 396, 4 speed,
Swld t~y
power steering , power brakes.
~ P. M .
Con tact lewis Pulve r at
...:=:':.':'~:'':'':II':'I'I:'W:':'
992-3498, hours 9:30 · S 00.
1Cjl72 NOVA. 2 dr. hardtop , 307
automatic, Cragor mags, ex·
cel lent co ndit ion . Phone
992-22S7 .
1971 HORNET. four door. one
MILKSHAKES, THE old.foshioned
owner. good shape . Phone
wor. . Dairy Isle, MiddleJ)Ort
992·7524 alter 5 p.m.
Go den Bucke)le members 10
per cent discount ony purch_os,!:

L

SWAIN'S

PHOTOGRAPHY

unci.

Till' Pubhshct· 1-escrw~ tht• l'igtn
to l'dlt ur rt&gt;jt!d any alb ~mt'd o.,o1,.
jl'CIJOttal. The Pubhslwr WJJI IIUI Jx•
rt.'S i"'IISII.llc fur mul't' than one lnt'UI'·
n .'(t inset1 Jon.
Pi kl lll' 992-Witi

ON A MOMENT S

·'"'•

Report 20.33; Price Is Rlghl 10; Ca ndid Camera l!;
Nas hvil le o• fhe Road 15.
8:oo-Li ttle House on the Prair ie 3,4, 15; Brndy Bunctl
6,13 ; Jeffer sons 8,10; Mic robes &amp; Men 20, 33 .
8: 3ll- Busllng Loose 8, 10.
9 :QO--Mo vie " The li fe and Assassina tion of the
Klng lls h" 3,4,15; Most Wa nted 6.13: Ma ude 8,10;
Palllsers 20,33.
9: 3ll-S a lute t o Bette Da vis 8,10 .
10 :QO-Feat her &amp; Father Gang 6, 13; News 20; Sound·
stage 33 .
10:3ll-Farm Digest 20.
l Ull- News 3,4,6,1.10, 13.1 5; Monty Python ' s Fly ing
Ci rcus 20; Black Journa l 33 .
11 :Jo-.Johnny Carson 3,4,15 ; Streels o~ San Francisco
6,13; Koiak 8; Mary Harima n 10; ABC News 33.
12:GO-Movie " The J ayhawkers" 10: Janak ! 33.
12: 4ll-Dan Aug ust 6,1 3; McC loud 8.
1:oo- Tomorrow 3,.4 .
1:50-News 13.

MONDAY , MARCH 21 , 1977
5·QO- Big Valley 3; My Three Sons 4: Brad y Bunch 8:
Mis1er Rogers' Neig hbor hood 20,33; Star Tre k 15.
.S :JQ--Adam-12 4; News 6; Fam ily Affa ir 8; Elec . Co.
20,33; Adam -12 13.
6:QO- News 3,4,6,8,10, 13,15: ABC Ne ws 6: Zoom 20.
6 ' 3D-NBC News 3,4, 15; AB C News 13: And y Grifllth 6.
CBS News 8,10; Vegelable Soup 20.
7·oo-Trul hor Cons. 3; To Telllhe Tru th 4.13; Bowling
for Dollars 6; Buck Owe ns 8: News 10; My Three
Sons 15 ; Character istics of Learning Disabil ities
20; Know Yovr School s 33 .
7:3()- Thai Good Ole Nas hville Musi c J; In Search of 4;
Muppet Show 6i Gong Show 8; Mac Ne il Lehrer

•' POLICE MEN\Q'1

.,:j

PHOTOGRAPHY

KEN GROVER

1976CAPR1CECLASSIC4DR.
15948
Firethorn with matching interior. a ir, radio and tape,
full power, loaded with all the extras. (Demo 30 day 100
per cent gvarantee.
·

V~ nl set lt'S

II ~~~~---- ------

I 21
1· '
I 22.
I
I

Nome on back , !f ahyone has

I ZSO Honda m 1ni-t ra i!, ex 1 eel tent cond iti on . $300 . Phone

20.

1

LOST OR Stolen · Beagle rabb it
dog, license No . 750. Reword
for information leodmg to the
return of him. Phone 992 -5247 .
Or 992·74 13.

I - .. .
I F'W-:&amp;Ie

1 17.
1
I 18.
1 19.
1

(30• 1 675-3707 o• (614 1
446 ·7~41
~----TWO ST Bernards , found . 1 mole
Approx . 1 to 2 )ItS. old. Call
Meigs Co. Humane Society .
843-3009.
LOST' · REO ond white Beagle lost
in Minersville area , Call
949-2805 or contact Jerry
Grueser. Minersvill&amp;

PROFESSIONAL

.tiS

word u\.'t!l' lht• ltlllli!I 'Wll 15

Mobile Humc Sll1e~ i!itd
arc lll'L't'JilL'&lt; I only w1th

------------=-

I lOST · APPROXIMATElY 25 choirs
borrowed from the Ewing
Funera l Home a year ego.

I 12.

t.:IS

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I coonhoond . lost in vicinlt)l of
I Bvrlinghom on C. ~ 33. Phone

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1 !1t ~s ...... 11 Lw- dlll t'~ t&gt;tl at lilt' 1 dH.y

Cun Shoot every Saturday night

two a lum in u m ex t ens i on
ladders and red wheelbarrow

20

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Television log for easy viewing

MIS TER
COMMISSIONER,.
1 CAN C ALL OFF

' -~"

Business Services

2 SIGNS Pomeroy
OF
.
®ALITY Motor Co.

15Wonbur Um.lt•r

processing. Reta il, whole sa le.

-•

Auto Salt!!!

Auto Sale•

Write your own ad on I
SHOOT or the Ra cine Gun
I this coupon. Place I
Club emy Sunday . I pm
I one word on each line. ' I
Assorted mee ts.
.
I Each group of, figures I RACINE FIRE Dept. will hove •
I or

7- The Da ily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday. M~rc h 21. 1977

. "f.IEI{, Ci-&lt;ARLIE Jl~O[l!N ...

DON'T LET I{OUR TEAM
DOWN 6~ SHOWING UP! "

PJDU

xw

GP

CWG WH U

I I
.

JC

.

CLAMBE

NSAAFPD

Yesterday's Cryploquole: PROGRESS IS IMPOSSIBLE
WITHOUT CHANGE; AND THOSE WHO CANNOT CHANGE
TIIEIR MINDS CANNOT CHANGE ANYTIJING. -GEORGE
B. SHAW
BARNEY

A OADBURN
PIN-UP!!

.

_

I

~

~ ~

I. IT) . I

APJXIPND.-JCWC

'-IE KNOW WHAT MI../
BOY WIL FERT'S
GOT INTH '
WOODSHED ?

1
.

ONLV ONE?
SHUX--TATER'S GOT
THREE-ODD DOZEN
OF THEM
THINGS

IT'6 5TRON!EJMAN 51UFF!
Now arrange the clrcted letters to
form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

�. 8-The D~ily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday. Mar!'h 21. 1!177

Arrowhead
(Continued from page 2J
truSted their supervisors.
One of those supervisors Is
Francisco Sanche&lt;, wbo was
hired in about 1~ as labor
su pe ri nt e nd e nt at
· Arrowhea&lt;l. Feld , of. the
Phoenix Border Patrol office,
described Sanchez as the
undisputed kingpin of illegal
labor smuggling In th e
Phoenix area, is not the
entire state.
"He heads a very large
organization," Feld said. "I
· know that over the past eight
or 10 years Sanchez has
smuggled thousands of aliens
and has made a fortune m so
doing ."

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holzer Medical Center
iDisrhargrs March lil
' Harold And erson, Ro se
Bloom fi eld, Elmer Boggs,
Ida Conley, Karen Conner,
James Evans, Sharon Fenik,
Mrs. Blaine Friend and son,
John Galun , Marvin Gard·
ner, Willis Greene, Michael
Hale, Myrtle Harrison, Willie
Johnson. Nora Jones, Allee
La mbe rt , Arthur Leach,
Pearl Little, William Marrah,
Jr., Kellis Martin, Woodrow
Maynard, Ona Moore, Cornia
Morga n, Velda Ohlinger,
Martha Phillips, Henry
Pierce, Billie Plybon.
Matilda Rowley , Claudia
Ruth e rfor d. Pat r lcia
Scha ekel , Jam es Smit h,
Richard Taylor, Gol die
Terry, Wilford Tippl e, Pansy
Young.
!Birth s, March 18)
'
Mr. and Mrs. Roger C9sby,
da ughter, Wellston ; Mr. and
Mrs. Michael Wasch,
daughter, Jackson; Mr. and
Mrs. Dl ngus Martin, son,
Vinton .
(Discharges, March 19)
William Ba rnette , Holly
Bo)'er, Cora llryan, Elijah
Estep, Sr., Mrs. James
Harris and son, Dorothy
Harrison, Clarence Hineman,
Jerry Johnson II, William E.
Kau!f, Harriett Mays, Steven
Mooney , Michelle Morrison,
William Mullins, Ruby
Nance Carl Ratliff, Roger
~a lt s~an, Lesli e Shelin e,
Garne t Smeltze r, Alice
Smith, John Taylor, Cla ir
Turner, Lcren Wolfe.
(Births, March 19)
Mr. a nd Mrs . Douglas
Moses, Sr., son, Rio Grande;
Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Newell,
daughter, Rodney ; Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd Newsome,
daughter, Vinton; Mr. and
Mrs.
Harvey
Woods,
da ughter, Columbus.
(Discharges, March 20)
Clemma F. Boston, Russ
Capehart, Carol J. Deck,
Go ld ie Durha m, La von ne
Evans, Mrs. Terry Farley
and daughter, Mrs. Charles
Goheen and son, Elmer lhle,
Mrs . JimmY Kennedy and
da ughter, Norma Kuhn .
Gregory Lee, Mrs. David
Littleton and daughter, Amer

Pleasa nt ; Vernon D~ lt on .
Henderson; Bruce Sturgeon.
Henderson and Duniel Rice,
Pint Pleasant.
Birth - A daughter to Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Ellis,
Vinton.

Feld told IRE reporters he
obtained a birth ~rtlfica te
proving Sanchez is a Mexican
national born In the state of
Sonora, and pushed for his
deportation. Sanchez, ha s
fought deportation , Feld
asserted.
Feld 's eff or t~ to stop
Sanchez were not limited to
the deportation proceedings,
Feld said.
In the spring of 1976, Feld
got an informer to Infiltrate
the Arrowhead operation. At
Sanchez ' direction, the
informer took two loads of
aliens to Idaho, one load in
the back of a locked truck,
aod the other in a large UHaul van . The Informer
witnessed payments·by aliens
w Sanchez, and received
money himself from aliens
and from one Idaho rancher.
Aliens not needed In Idaho
were turned in to be deported,
Feld said.
Feld, who believed he had
1'a hell of a case' ' a2a~t
Sa nchez , not ified
hts
su periors in Tucson, but
"they just kept stalling and
stalling" and the rase died,
he said.
The informer, questioned
by an IRE reporter ,
corr oborated Feld's story
and also descrihed how
Sanchez once threatened him
with a hartdgun , "fie pulled it
out and showed it to me," the
informer said.
"He said if I was ever
caught (smuggling aliens for
Sa nchez) , I was not to
mention
t his
place Myers, Theodore Nibert ,
Mrs . Jack Parker and
(Arrowhead ) or .him.
"He said if it happened, If I daughter, Ruth Patterson,
fingered the ranch, his gun Salag hiel Quesen berry,
Do nald Tay lor , Na ncy
would shut me up."
Taylor.
In 1972, 10 farm workers
!Births, March 20)
pointed the fi nger at
Mr. and Mrs. Jo hn
Ar rowh ea d Ra nches,
Sanchez,
and
other Buckley , daughter, Oak Hill;
Individuals and farming Mr. and Mrs. Carlos Aya la,
operations in a class-action daughter, Gallipolis; Mr. and
Cha rles
Say.re,
lawsuit . filed in Maricopa Mrs .
daughter,
Point
Pleasant.
County Superior Court in
Phoenix. The suit accused
PLEASANT VALLEY
Arrowhead and others of
DISCHARGES - Tamara
discriminating against' U.S.
citizen farm wor~s in the Woodall, Gallipolis; Sharell
county by hiring aliens Hupp, Patriot , 0 .; Estella
Baker, Point Pleasant ; Clara
instead.
Hend ers on;
It contended such practices Ro binso n,
had caused more than $30 Danielle Warner, Leon; Dillie
mlllion in da mage to the McCormick, Gallipolis; Louis
plaintiffs during 1970 and Durst, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
1971. The suit was dismissed William Shaeffer, Kanauga ;
by U.S. District Court Judge Mrs . Arnol d Blankenship ,
Walter E. Craig, who ruled Leta rt ; Mrs. Park Lee, Point
that.the suit fa iled to specify_ Pleasa nt ; Mrs . Ever ett
Leon; Worthy
any violation of federal la w Riffl e,
Daylong , Gallipolis Ferry;
by the growers.
About two months after the Mrs. Russell Slayton, Vinton;
IRE began poking around In Vir gin ia J ones, Point
the harvest fields, Goldmar Pleasant ; Edith Simpkins,
and Arrowhead distributed Point Pleasant ; Raymond
re-cruitment pam phlets to Moss, Apple Grove; Terry
local Chicano farm h a n d s at Adkins, Grimms Landing;
unemployment and social- Sandra Oliver , Gall ipoli s
Ferr y; Dou glas Bugg ,
service offices.
A source who had lived In Le ta rt ; Mrs. Douglas
the area for eight years said Preston, Vinton; Pamela
It was th e fir st time Powell, Ashton; Jean Moore,
Arrowhead had solicited local Henderson; Harry Hudn~ll ,
Leon ; Mrs. Wallace Burns,
taborers for employment.
But oth ers assert Goldmar St. Albans ; M-rs. Orville
has on a number of occasions Williamson, Southside; Mrs.
called the State Department Don ·Pullin and daughter,
of Labor, Economics, Em· Point Ple asa nt ; Tiffany
ployment to get Americans to Pierson, Point Pleasa nt ;
Jamie Woomer, Point
pick fruit.

Veterans Memoria l Hospital
Sat•;·J ay Admission · George Goodnlte. New
Haven.
Saturday Discharges Hughie Ogdin, Gerald
Reuter, Robert Manley ,
Rebecca Thomas, _J ane
Snouffer, Lenna Brinker,
Margaret Spe nce r, David
Lambert, Sherry Snyder ,
Arpha Waddell, Eva Stewart,
Carrie Swartz, Ralph Parcell, Ella Pay ne, Roger
Imboden.
Sunday Admissions Clifford Hall, Racine; Shawn
Gilmore, Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges Mlst ee Grueser, Karen
Cremeans, Ruth Sellers, John
Gilliand, Gary Scholderer,
Steve Patt erso n, Patri cia
Bauer, Tony Gilkey, Neva
Grlmm.

Carter
greets

Fukuda

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

. Area Deaths
LAVE NA SIDERS
MAR IETTA
Mrs . Chill icolhe.

Mr . Rowe was preceded In
dea th by his parents, Charl es
and Ada K. Jarvis Rowe. He
was also preceded in dea th by
two sons, Riakv and Antho('ly
Rowe, and 10 bro ther s and
sister s.
A ve teran of Wor ld War II
and a member of R a ~l ne
Amer ican Leg ion. he Is
survi v ed b y his wi fe,
Virg inia , fOur sons, John H.,
Rowe, Jr ., Leb~non , Pa·. : Roy
A. Rowe, Huron. Ohio ; Jerry
L. Rowe, Pomeroy and J . D.
Rowe, M iddlepor t : four
daughters, Judy K. Farley,

Funeral ser v ices will be
held at the New Haven Un i ted
f.Aethodist Church on Tuesday
at J p.m . wit h Rev. John
Ca mpbell off ici ating . Burial
will follow in the Graham
Friends m ay ca ll at the
F og lesong Fun era l Home
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m .
today, and at the church from
noon un til J p.m . Tuesday.

MARIAM BU LMER

WASHINGTON (UPI ) The Whi te House today
pursued its "no-frills" policy
for foreign visitors as
President Carter and Japan's
Prime Minister Takeo
Fukuda begin two days .of
(Continued from page 1)
talks expected to center on
'
to any negotiated settlement with Israel-objected and refused
world econollllCS.
Following the prime minis· to be represented on the new PLO Executive Committee. The
ter's arrival at the south platform also calls for an independent Palestinian state and
grounds of the White House, PLO participation in Middle East peace talks.
and a private meeting, both
RAVENNA OlllO - CLASSES WERE CLOSED today as
leaders tonight participate In
what is termed a "working teachers in the' James A. Garfield School District near here
conwiued a Strike which began Friday. A public meeting will
dinner.''
Such dinners, instituted by be held tonight at the schools at which time the teachers will
Carter, eliminate much of the present their views to tbe public. The 86 teacher~ walked out of
traditional pomp normaUy classes Friday. The system has 1,700 students m three butldtied to the visit.'l of foreign ings.
.
.
School Supt. Robert Black said the schoola were closed
heads of state. Tbe attire is
limited to business suits and because "we are concerned about the safely and welfare" of
generally wives do not the students. Teachers' association president Dennis King said
attend . The White House it was up to the school bOard to call for a resumption of talks,
contends the approach allows which have continued off-and-on for some 14 months.
"We wantonly our fair share. We are not trying to milk the
participl!nts to make .more
district
" King said . ."Garfield ranks very low in funding for
practical use of their time.
The . administration this instruction. The money Is there lo make us more competitive
week asks Congress to with other schools and thus improve the quality of education at
overhaul voting laws , Garfield." ·
including creating universal
voter registration, altering
PARIS - A COMMUNIS'NlOCIAI.JST alliance has won
the Electoral College and control of a majority of French cities with stunning election
extending public financing to gains that could foreshadow a leftist victory in the 1978
congressional races.
parliamentary elections. The Comm~ist.Socialist wins in
The President instructed Sunday's local elections threaten to wtden a split wtthm the
Sunday School and attended center-right coalition that put President Valery Giscard dservices at the First Baptist ,Estalng in power over how to avert an end to 1ts 20-year rule .
Glscard suffered another defeat when his hand-picked
Church Sunday, along with
First Lady Rosalynn, and candidate for Parla mayor, Industry Minister Michael
their daughter, Amy. It is the d'Omano lost to former Premier Jacques Chirac, a Gaullist
seco~d time Carter taught the
leader who split recently wlth .the pr~ident. CIUJ:ac's 48 seats
in the 109-seat city council will make h1m PariS' f1rst mayor m
adult Bible class.
The Carters, along with more than a century. The city has been governed by prefects
others in the congregation, for the past 102 years. ·
voted to accept Mrs. Mary
Incomplete reports showed the leftist election landslide,
Fitzpatrick as a member. She ·targer than most experts had predicted, swept 156 of France's
was released from a penal 221 major cities. The left also won the popular vote, 52 per cent
institution in Georgia last 1o 40 per cent.
month, after being convicted
of murder, In order to serve
as Amy's nursemaid at the ;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;
White House.
The Carters had met Mrs.
SORORITY TO MEET ·
Fitzpatric.k when she worked
The Ohio Eta Phi Sorority
at the governor's mansion in
Georgia on a work release will meet Tuesday at the
Columbus and Southern
program.
Las t
week,
Stuart Electric office at 7:30 p. m.
Elsenstat , th e President's There will be an election of
domestic affairs adviser, said officers.
Carter's voting package
Includes universal voter
registration, which would :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:
mean that persons essentially
would have to do little more
than prove they were old
enough to vote in order to cast
ballots in a federal election.
The plan also calls for a
loosening of the Hatch Act
restrictions to allow fed eral
employes greater leeway in
.'
political participation. It also
includes a broad proposal lot
extending public financing to
congressional races.
The Electoral College has
long come under attack as .
being an outdated method for
electing a president. The
Carter plan calls foc having
the college more accurately
reflect voter feelings.
During .the. Bible class,
which lasted about 45
minutes, Carter said, "We
tend to become proud and
Visi t Our Salad Bar
satisfied" with ourselves and
Sweet and So ur Pork
warned that "complacency
Fried .Rice
and pride separate us from
.Peach Teaser s
God."
Hot Roll s
"I think it might be good for
Coffee, Tea or Milk
Plus Tax
us to think how the kingdom

News •• in Briefs

.

V·NeckT•Shirt
&amp;Brief
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3 tor 15.19

SIGN AGREEMENT - After a year of negotiating,
an agreement between the Ohio Civil Service Employees
Assn. and the Meigs County Engineering Department was
signed Monday evening at the office of the Meigs County
Commisaioners. The agreement means an lmmedlate
Increase in wages of 30 cents an hour for all employes plus
15 cents additional per hour for all who have worked in
excess of five years. Under the terms of the agreement
employes also will be entitled to time and half for all hours
over 40 and discrlmlnatetion Ia banned for or against any
employe on basis of race, religion, colo• or national

.

:~''-.,;~":~;:-t' BRIEF Hor 4.69

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.

~· The neck IS cui even lower

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, Match 22, 1977

than last year. so you may
enjoy open-collar shirts-but
V-neck keeps your underwea r
out of s1ght The V-neck is
very absorbent for active
sportswear. The soft cotton
provides good lit wash1ng
after wash•ng. Sizes S. M. L. XL.
Briefs oHer you ail-day comfort
and genlle s upport . Heat
resistanl wa1st fits wilhout
bind1ng Sizes 28-44

l aa r onda l ~

Rardern deL L os Ang e l ~s .
Ca li f.; Charl es, Akron. One
son Preceded hi m in death .
Oth er surv ivor s includ e
and one

ITolher, Bob, Crown Cily.

Two sisters and one brother
preceded him ih death. One
niece, Mrs. Ruth Ross who
was rai sed in the Wa ugh
h:&gt;me, survives.
Funera l ser vices will be 2
p.m . Wednesday at the
Waugh -Hal ley -Wood Funera l
Home w ith th e Rev . Richard
Graha m off ici ating . Burial
will be in Oh.i o Val ley
/Vem ory Gardens . Friend s
ma y cal l
th e f uneral home
2to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m . Tuesday .

at

Pomer~
•

••••

SENIOR CITIZENS
Are Preferred People

At Farmers Bank

CINCINNATI - A RATIFICATION VOTE Is scheduled
Thursday on a tentative agreement that has averted a
threatened strike at General Motors' huge auto assembly plant
in suburban Norwood.
·
Some· 4,000 United Auto workers union membrrs had
warned they would strike Monday unless agreement on
disputed work rules was reached. More than 43 hours of near
contlnuoWt bargaining resulted in tentative settlement just 30
minutes before Monday's 10 a.m. strike deadline. Details of the
agreement, signed by union and company officials, were not
disclosed pending the ratification vote by union rank-and-file
membership.

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION

WATCH FOR

CINCINNATI - DESPITE RECENT CARBON
tetrachloride spills Into the Kanawha and Ohio Rivers, the
publlc's health "has not been in jeopardy," contends FMC
Corp. FMC made the claim Monday in a full-page
advertisement in the Cincinnati Enquirer.
Various Cincinnati officials have complained that spills
from FMC's Charleston, W. Va ., plant have endangered
Clncinnati'sdrinking water, which comes from the Ohio River.
"First and loremo.st," the FMC ad said, "your health has not
been In jeopardy by the spills. The best medical evidence
available from experts on the subject clearly Indicates that the
varloua amounts of carbon tet fowld in the rivers were not
dangerous;"

OPENING DATE

THE INN PLACE

TuesdJJy Night Special

WAREHOUSE CLEARANCE
OF QUALITY ADMIRAL

FREEZERS
CHEST
8 Cubic ft ........... .. ...... ... ... .. '250
15 Cu-bic ft ......... ........... ...... ;300
20 Cubic .ft ......................... •350
25. Cubic ft, ......................... •400

UPRIGHT

f'... . .... . . .. . .. .

10 Cubic ft ....... ·.................. '255
_1~ Cub_l~
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I I

.

of God, through our chUrch,
can,he expanded in the years
to come," he said, observing
that followers of the Mormon
fa ith have 20,000 volunteers
workin~ in Latin America.
He s u~~csted that Baptists
might follow tile exumple.

,

THE MEIGS INN
992 -3629

Pomeroy,

Phone 992-6304
PIZZA SHACK Phone 992 -6304

·=======

Free Checking Account For You ·
We invite you to use this preferred service with no
st:rvice charge., All those 65 years and over ere
welcome to OJ)en an account any time. Stoo In end
see vs now.

"----·~
z b

o.

NEW DEUII, INDIA - PRIME MINISTER INDIRA
Gandhi resigned today but will remain as India's caretaker
until the oppolition alliance that handed her and her Congress
party a humiliating election loaa can fonn a new cabinet this
week. Mrs. Gandhi submitted her resignation and those of her
cabinet to acting President B. D. Jattl, but said they will stay
on unW a new govei'Jllllent Ia selected by the politicians who
ended her party's ~year domination of India.
Even before the official announcement of Mrs. Gandhi's
resignation, jubilant leaders of the Janata People's party and
the Consre• for Democracy h,ad begun jockeying to fill the
power vacuum left by the ousters. Aspokesman for the victors
said the new deputies elected In the parliamentary elections
~ week will meet 'I'huraday to. select a new prime minister
and party leader' ~ preferably by COI18enaus but through a
ftoor fight lf nece~~~ry.
..

Because We Furnish A

Fs

e

By Bob Hoefli ch
An ap pr opr ia tion s
resolution providing ex·
pe nd lt ur es to tal in g
$3,718,622.50 for the 197 7
By Unlted Press International
calenda r year was approved
OOLUMBUS - HOUSE DEMOCRATS HAVE proposed a and bids on three new 66~million appropriation for the state to finance low-interest
passenger school buses. were
buainess Joana as a pilot ln~ntive for Industrial development. accepted Monday night by.
House Speaker Vernal G. ~e Jr., D-New Boston, said the Meigs Lcca l Board of
Monday the appropriation would be worked into the 1978-79 Education.
state budget In the form of an amendment to be offered In
General · fun d
apFinan~ Committee about mid-April.
propriations for the year of
IUffe said the money would allow the Ohio Development $3,290,955 include:
Financing Commission to dispense the loans for companies to
Administration, salaries
purchase land, buUdlngs, machinery and equipment. "The and wages, $103,000.
Ohio Development Financing Commission already exists in
Instruction, $1,833,240.
law," said -Riffe . "It could be the mechanism lo administer a
Coo rdinat ed activit ies,
vigorous loan program."
$250.
Riffe said the plan Is modeled after a slmllar progrma
Auxil ia ry ag enci es ,
used in Pennsylvania for 20 years.
$165,600.
Operation of school plant,
PITTSBURGH - ALUMINUM CO. OF America Monday $104,0011.
raised the pri~ of unalloyed primary aluminum ingot by 3
Maintena nce employes,
cents to 51 cents a pound effective on aU shipments after $16,000.
March 25.
Special service,s $20,100.
Alcoa did not say so, but trade circles said demand from
Supplies, $219,300.
aluminum casters serving the automobile industry probably
Materials for maintenance,
wss a facior in the Increase. The automakers this year $47,600.
announced the average aluminum content of 1978 model cars
Equipment replacement,
will rise from S8pow1ds, a level which has been fairly constant $82,500.
for some years, to 64 pounds and some predicted it would rise
Contract and open order
to 125 pounda or more by 1985.

• Aslo Hanes ·Big Mim T-Shir1s and Briefs to
Size 54 • Complete Selection
of Regular T·ShirtS
Boxer Shor1s • Athletic ·Shirts • And Boys'
Hanes T-Shirts and Briefs sizes 3 to 20.

-Eiberfelds In

origin, sex, marital status, employe organization or
political affiliation, age, or for the purposes of evading the
spirit of the agreement. Above, front, 1-r, Mike Clifford,
staff representative of the OCSEA, a native of the
Pomeroy-Middleport area ; Wesley Buehl , county
engineer, who signed the contract for the county; back,
Richard Liter, committee member; Lewis Harper,
committee member, Ted Warner, superintendent, and
David Spen~r. office manager at the county garage.
The agreement also provides for the establishment of
a grievance committee. Clifford said the OCSEA has 100
pet. local membership.

•

The eost of c•ble TV was a
top to pic with Pomeroy
Council Monday night.
Due to the numerous calls
received by Pomeroy Mayor
Clarence Andrews In rega rd
to Middleport senior citizens
paying $3.50 a month for
cable TV, and Pomeroy's
paying $4.50, Mayor Andrews
asked Dick Newell, manager
of PolnTView Cable, to attend.
Newell explai ned that
regula r custom ers in
Pomeroy, when the cable was
first lnsta lied in 1970 paid
$5.50 a month anil senior
citizens and disabled persons
paid $3.50.
In 1974 council agreed to a
nine percent raise which in
effect increased rates from
$5.50 to $6 and the $3.50 rate to
$4.50 Newell said.
Newell stated that he has
on s~vera l occasions asked
for an increase from Mid·
dleport and Mason and has
been unsuccessful. However,
Newell said "something will
be done" in the next couple
months in regard to the
situation in Middleport and
Mason.
Newell also explained that
31 percent of their customers
in Pomeroy we re senior
citizens and added it is up to

at y
'

the mdlvlduat to notify the in, urance on the buil di i~!; .
company when he rearhes 65
Councilman Harry DaviS
and ;,, the head of a suggested a used mooo r be
household. The company is to purchasoo for an old water
offer a form for residents to truck to be used at the
fill out in regard to senior cemetery. He aLso suggested
citizens, disa bled and head of til at the village pur chase sa ~
lx&gt;usehold.
for the streets next winter
The question of what to do rnther than usin g so many
Wlth the senior high bui lding ci nders on grounds that by
was brought up by coun- the time the street &lt; are
ci lman Dr. Harold Brown. deaned sa lt is cheaper.
1lle village was turned down
Ralph Werry , co un ci lman,
oo a federal grant Ill renovate repo rted that two drain s
tlie building. Brown asked if needed. clean ing on Condor
oouncil planned to give the &amp;. according to Reno Lind.
building ba~k to the Meigs
An ordinance to regulate
w eal School Boa rd , which use of am usem ent devices
sold it to the village for $1 for and providing a tax on such
a period of fi ve years , or had devices was given t he second
ether plans?
reading.
Some memb ers tho ught
It wa s announ ced th at
Pomeroy should give the d ean up week will be held
building back since its in· April 4-11. Mayor Andrews
suran ce is so costl y.
commended the city street
It was also suggested that cr-ew for an excellent job and
the building committee could added that a grea t deal of
check with Cha rles Dowler, · work had be en done at the
superintendent , and Wend ell cemetery.
Hoover, school
boa rd
Meeting with council were
rresldent, toseeifthey wou ld Mrs. Dick Finla w and Mrs.
object to the villa ge tearin g Howard Legan in rega rd w
the bulldng down and putting wsightly houses on Condor
another in it.'l place.
&amp;., especi ally ones partially
Larry Powell, councilman burned down la st winter.
and chairman of the build ing
The ladi es stated tha t
committee, is to check wdh at one of the vaDJ wler today. Council has cant houses ga rbage is
wtil April I Ill renew the piled high and when the

win d blows the debris is
&lt;&gt;trewn throug hout the neighlxirhood .
Ol ief of Poli ce Jed Webster
"'lunteered to rnntact the
health department in regard
to the matter and check the
situation himself.
Also meetin g wi th council
was James N. McReynold s,
Quick Job Printer, of Athens,
"~o asked to bring a Mobile
quick printer van to Pomeroy
one day a week .
Pe rmission wa s not
I Continued on page 10)

Baseball players
·in vited to meet
A meeting of all persons
Interested in either entering a
team , or pa rtic ipating as a
player, In an Independent
Baseball League th l.s su mmer will be held Wednes day,
March 23, at 7:30p .m. at the
Syrac use, Oh1o Munic ipal
Building, located along Rt.
124 tw o miles above
Pomeroy .
Bill Hu bbard, in an·
nounc in g plans fo r the
meeting, said it is hoped that
the leag ue can be established
"1theight or more teams
from tri-county area towns.

•

enttne

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28, No. 238

Schools appropriation is $3,718,623

eig ht gran dch il dren, eig ht
great - grandc ~ il dren

\

\

Bidwell and
!Mildred)

2,

\

f:;;;, /~\-'
--·
----·

late Char les E. an d Polly

Halley, Rt.

'

®

Gardn er Waugh .
He is sL•rvived by his wife1
Mna Lewis Waugh whom he
ma rr ied Nov. 6, 1920 in
Ga lli pol is ; two da ughter s and
rn e son , Mrs. Rona ld (Violet)
1/rs.

Cable tv fees ·reviewed

Hanes

Cemetery .

Mariam Bul mer , 81 , of
Hartford, died Saturday at
the Holzer Medica l Center .
She attended the Fir st
Church of God in New Haven ,
and was a member of the
On June ~3 , 1917 she
Py thian Sisters of Hartford.
married James A. Siders who Midd leport ; Brenda Tu ttle,
Born May 10 , 1895 in
Mine.r
sv
i
ll
e
;
Be
cky
and
died April 2. 1973. She was
, Hartford , she was the
Donha
Rowe,
both
at
home
;
also preceded in death by
daughter of the late John
three sons and one gra ndson . two sisters, Jessie Parson ,
Hudson Smith and Mariam
Ashland
.
Ohio,
and
Anna
She is survi ved by one son ,
Thom
as Sm i th.
Leland Siders , Marie tta , Wines, Raci ne ; two brother s,
Her hus band . Walter
Gilbe
r
t
Rowe
,
Wlersdal
e,
seven gra ndchildren and ni ne
Bulmer, Sr .• died in 1969.
Fla .• and Ver non Rowe, New
grea f.grandchildren ,
Sur vivor s incl ude two
Funeral services wi ll be Brigh ton , Pa .; si x grand· daughter s, Miss Lucy Jane
chi
ldren
and
se
v
~ral
nieces
Wed nesday, r: 30 p.m . at the
Bul mer , Hartf ord , Mrs .
McClure-Schaefer
Funera l and nepheWs.
Ar thu r (Mariam Ali ce )
Funeral services will be
Home In Marietta . Graveside
Smi th , East Li verpqol ; thr ee
serv ices will be cond ucted at Tuesday at 1l a.m. at Ewing
son s, Wal ter
Hal lwood
3 p. m . in Rave nswoo d Chapel with Rev . Jerr y Nea l
Bul mer , Cardena , Calif. ;
officia
ting
.
Burial
wil
l
be
in
Ceme tery . Fr iends may ca ll
Donald Sm i th Bu-lmer and
at the fu neral home any time. Le tar t Fall s cemeter y .
LQuis M ilb ur n Bu lmer ,
Fr iends may ca ll at the
Pal md ale, .Ca lif .;
one
funeral
home
at
any
tim
e.
RYAN ROGER ROUSH
brother , John Hu dson Smith ,
RAC INE - Gravesi de
Hartf ord ; 15 grandchildren
EDGAR LAYNE
servi ces tor Ryan Roger
and
15 grea t-grandchil dren
Edgar C. Layne, 82, NeW
Roush, infant son of Roger
and se ve r al n i eces and
and Christy M ichael Roush, Haveri, died Sunday at the
nephews.
Rt. 2, Racine. who died it t Pleasa nt Va lley Hospital.
Funer al ser vi ces will be
Born December 21, 1894, in
birth Sunday at Pleasant
held a t the Foglesong
New
Haven
,
he
was
the
son
of
Val ley Hospital , wi ll be held
l Home on Tuesady at
at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the the late All en L. and JFunera
P.· m . wi th Rev. Willi ;:tm
Margrelta P . Capeh ar t
Letart Fa lls cemetery .
1Bud) tja 1fi~l~ . offlc ijlli.ng.
Bes ides his parent,, .Ryan lay ne.
Bur ial will fol low in the
His wife, Ma rie R. Lay ne,
is survived by grandfarents,
Gra ham Cemetery.
Mr . and Mrs . ·Her ber Roush, died in 1963.
Friends may call at the
He was a re tired employe
and Mr. and Mrs. Char les
funer al home after 2 p. m .
M ic hae l , and his grea t- of the Phi ll ip Spor n Plant,
today .
grandpa r en ts, Mr , · Edna member of the New Haven
Roush, and Mr . and Mrs. Un ited Meth odi st Chur ch ;
Russel l Find ley, all o.f mem ber Am erican Legion
. STANLEY WAUGH
Smith-Ca pehart Post No. 140
Racine.
Stanley
Waug h, 87, 111
Friends may call at t he of New Have n ; me mber
Vin
ton
Ct.,
Ga
llipoJ.is.. died at
Ew ing Funer al Home after 7 V.F .W; and a veteran of
12 : 15a .m. th is mor ning at the
World War I.
p .m. Tuesday .
·
Holze r Medi cal Center . He
Sur viving
are
on e had been in tail ing health
dau
g
hter
,
Mr
s
Rober
t
JOHN ROW E
sever al year s.
John H. Rowe, 56, 1637 (Mary) Cook, New Haven ;
A retired fa r mer , he wa s
one
gr
andson
,
Ph
i
l
Cook
,
Li ncoln Heigh1s, Pomeroy ,
OOr n Aug . 25, 1899 in Ohio
died Saturday at the Veter ans R ave n swoo d ~ on e great .
Twp.. Gall ia County, to the

Portla nd Uni ted Methodist

Church and a charter
member
of
Portlan d
Women's Society of Christian
Serv ice.

ELBERFELD$

and nephews .

Admi nistration Hospital In

Lavena Gladys Siders , 77, Rt.
1, Marietta, died Su nda y at
her resi dence.
Mrs . Side r s, a f o r ~er
resident of Portland havtng
moved to Marietta in 1965,
was born Dec. 7, 1899 In
Jackson County, W. Va., the
dauahter of the late U ndse11
and Etta Rardin Snodgrass.
She was a member of the

g rand son, Brandon Cook ,
Ra'llenswood ; a sister. Mr s.
Geor ge ( Arr. ) Jewell , New
Haven, and several nieces

Farmers Bank

Development district to meet

POMEROY, OHJO

S40,000.00 Maximum Insurance For Each. Dttos~

Member Federal Deposit. Insurance Corporation
''

services, $125,650.
Fixed charges, $550,715.
Contingency, $20,000.
Capital outlay, $3,000.
Making up the balance of
the appropriations outside of
the general fund are bond
retirement , $155,667.50; lunch
room, $232, 000, and per·
m an ent impr ove men ts ,
$40,000.
The board accepted the bid
of John Gibson · Motors ,
Athens, on the chassis for
three new school buses. The
bid of the firm, the low of
three submitted, was $10,175
per unit excluding freight.
Other bidders were Meigs
Equipment, Pomeroy, and
Stowe
Truc king
and
Equipment, Marietta.
Edwin H. Davis and Son,
Langsville, was awarded the
bid on the three bodies at
$6,665 per unit. Other bidders
were Way ne Sales , Inc.,
Newark , and Northeast Ohio
Bus Sales at Canton. The
Davis firm was the low
bidder.
Discussion on the motions

showed that the low bids had
to he accepted unless it was
proved a low bi dder Is
irresponsi ble.
The board employed Jeffrey S. Buell on a substitute
basis to work with the junior
high band under the super·
vision of Randy Hunt. Hunt,
former _·junior high band
director, has
replaced
Dwight Goins, high school
director, named recently to
an administrative assistant
post in the district.
Add ed to the substitute
teachers list were Julia
Hutchinson, Rebecca Cot·
terill and Becky Mill er. Goins
was named as titl e IX
coordinator of the district, at
no additional salary , to
replace John Redovian who
resigned that duty.
Joy Bentley and Rita Slavin
were authorized to attend the
girls basketball tournament
in Columbus April ! and 2 and
Sharon Birch, R.N., was
authorized to attend a school
nurses' workshop on April 13
In Columbus.

Belva Glaze was hired as a
substitute cook and Donna
Cobb as a substitute aide. A
tuition stud ent, who · was
expelled last Novemher, was
reinstated as a tuiti on
student. Dan Morris was
appointed director
of
curriculum and instruction
and hi s res igna tion as
assistant superintendent was
accepted.
Morris outlined problems
with the Environmental
Protection Agency In rega rd
to the Salem Center and
Harrisonville Elementary
Schools where coat is burned.
In essence, Morris has
asked for a variance for the
two schools so that coal can
continue to be burned
there.
II
was
also
announced that Morris,
in
his
new
position t
has made plans to use the
"Apple Crate," a va n em·
ployed during the days of the
teacher corps program, for
instructional purposes.
The board a ~re ed that
(Continued on page 10)

Seniors to finish on schedule
Although graduation of
seniors In the Meigs w eal
School District will take place
as originally scheduled last
fall, before the long hard
winter which brought many
school closings, other classes
of the district· will continue
until ,almost mid-June.
Meeting in regular session
Monday night , the district 's

board of education agreed
that bacca laureate for
seniors will he May •29 and
commencement May 31. High
School Principal James Diehl
r e comm e nd e d that
graduation go as originally
scheduled due to the com·
mltments of seniors to jobs
and additional schooling.

Diehl indicated the State
Department of Education is
recomm end ing seniors be
permitted to graduate on
schedule.
Acc ording to the new
calendar adopted last night
by the board - based upon
actions of the Ohio
Legislature to date in re~ard

$267,644 funded
for Meigs Bldg.
Rep. Ron J ames, 92nd
House district, announced
today th e state controlling_
ooard approved funds
Mmday for a multi-purpose
mental health fa cility to
ser ve Meigs, Gallia and
Jackson counties. The state
has rete11sed $267,644 for the
rroject which wUI be mat·

d\ed by the same amount in
local funds , according to
James.
The fa cUlty would be
located in Pomeroy adjacent
tn the Veterans M&lt;morial
Hospital. The stru&lt;:ture wnt
have 16,000 square feet and be
!Eslgned to serve the out·
patient mental health needs

rJ :110 pensons In the tri·
oounty area.
Last week the Meigs
Count y commi ss ioners
employed a Columbus arc:t itect firm to design the
build ing, which also will
house a senior cttizens center
and other public agencies.

Parents are needed for new fonn

Parents of this year's sixth
graders
In the Melgs Local
President Floyd Henderson meeting , the council will hear
School
District
are especially
ha.rJ IICheduled the Buckeye Richard C. Hartman, ·
Hllh · Hocklng Valley executive director of the urged to attend a meeting this
Regional Development National Association of evening when It is proposed to
District's General policy Regional Councils. Public organize · a teachers' and
council meeting Tuesday, attendance of the business parents' forum at7 :30 p.m. in
April 9 at the Athens Country meeting and to hear the the junior high school
Club at approximately 8 p.m. address of Hartman Is en· cafeteria in Middleport.
rite organization, to . be
!,Following the b.u.slness couraged.
\

known as a 1-'forum, " is
designed to create a group
through which the full in·
structlonal potential of the
junior high school con he
developed.
Parents of present seventh
and eighth graders in the
dlo1rlct are also urged to
attend. Unless t~ turnout Is

to extra days granted for the
energy crisis and weather
conditions - the fourth six·
weeks grading period will end
March 25.
The fifth six-weeks will
begin March 28 and end April
29. The final six weeks will
start May 2 with !chools to he
closed on Ma y 30 fo r
Memorial Day. The last six
weeks will end .on various
dates for schools of the
district due to the variances
in closings during the winter.
AI the junior and senior
high schools, the six weeks
will not end until June 13
while at Bradbury, Mid·
dleport , Harrisonville an d
Salisbury, the six weeks
period will end on June 7 and
on June 8 at the Rutland and
Pom eroy Elem ent a r y
Schools. At Salem Center the
final day· of school will be
June 10.

substanti al by parents, no
progress can he made in
forming the new group.
The organization steering
group Includes parents Allen
King, Mrs. Amold Snowden
and Mrs. Ernest Swindell and
teachers Charles Downie and
!)on Dixon.

Money needed
to pay balance
on unifonns

MONSIGNOR HORAK

Title of monsignor is
awarded Donald Horak
The title of Monsignor has
been conferred upon Donald
E. Horak, son of Mr. and Mrs.
George Horak, Pomeroy.
Monsignor Horak l.s one of
six priests of the Diocese of
St eubenville upon whom
Pope Paul VI has conferred
the title, according to an
anno uncement

from

the

office of the Bishop of
Steubenville.
Monsignor Horak was born
Feb. 13, 1938, in Pomeroy, one
of four children of George and
Elizaheth Zwilling Horak. He
attended Sacred Heart School
In Pomeroy. His high school,'
college and theology work
were completed at St. John
Vianney Seminary at
Bloomingdale, Ohio.
After studying at Catholic
University, he received a
master of arts in classical

languages. He was ordained
May 23, 1963, In Pomeroy by
Bishop John. King Musslo.
After assi gnments as In·
structor at St. John Vianney
and St. Joseph Preparatory
Seminary In Parkersburg, he
Is now the spiritual director
at St. John Vlanney, and
diocese director of vocations.
The investiture for Mon·
signor Horak, who has been
named Chapla in of His
Holiness, will he held at 8
p.m. on April ll at St. John's
Arena In Steubenvill e
followed by a reception in ·
nearby St. Agatha Hall. On
Sund ay , April 17, the
congregation of the Sacred
Heart Church In Pomeroy
will hold a dinner following
the 10 a.m. mass honoring the
new Monsignor.

Snowden· resigns

The resignation of Robert Snowden as a member of the
Meigs Local School District Board of Education was accepted
when the board met in regul8r seSsion Monday night.
Board President Wendell Hoover presented a brle~ letter of
RACINE - .The Racine
resignation dated March 18 which stated only that Snowden
Baseball . Association is· was resigning. He gave no reasons.
looking for ways to make
The board accepted the resignation and agreed to send
money to pay off the balance Suowden a letter of commendation for his servicea. Hoover
of money due on uniforms. said Snowden had given him the letter on March 16 when the
Meanwhile final slngup day Is board met in special session.
set for Saturday, March 26
The board can take no action on the appointment ~- a 1
from 10 a.m. until qoon. A replacement
until 10 days after the acceptance of the
bake sale will be held resignation, but must appoint a replacement within 30 days
Saturday. April 2, pop bottles after accepting the resignation. If the board does not appoint a
and ca ps will also be. replacement within the 30 day period, the probate judge
collected that day, and a ear (Manning Webster) makes the appointment.
wash will be held April 9.
The board seta special session for 7:30p.m. on Apri14 and
The pu bile Is asked to It Is expected that the appointment will be made at that time.
s upport ~e boo~ers .

"'

4:

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