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                  <text>Cable tv fees reviewed

SIGN AGREEMENT -After a year of negotlating,
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
Commissioners. The agreement means an immediate
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 )'ears. Under the terms of the agreement
employes also will be entlUed to time and half for all hours
over 40 and discriminatetion is baMed for or against any
employe on basis of race, religion, color or national

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, March 22, 1977

or1gm, 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,
conunittee member, Ted Warner, superintendent, and
David Spencer, office manager at the county garage.
The agreement also provides for the establishment of
a grievance conunittee. Clifford said the. OCSEA has 100
pet. local membership.

e

The cost of cable TV was a
top topic with Pomeroy
Council Monday night.
Due to the numerous calls
received by Pomeroy Mayor
Cla rence Andrews in regard
. 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 PoinTView Cable, to attend.
Newell explained that
regular
customers
in
Pomeroy, when the cable was
first installed in 1970 paid
$5.50 a month and 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 several 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 were senior
citizens and added it is up to

•

at y

the mdividual to notify the
compa ny when he rearhes 65
and ;, th e head of a
'household. The company is to
offer a form for residents to
fill out in regard to senior
citizens, disabled and head of
household.
·
The question of what to do
with the senior high building
was brought up by councitman Dr. Harold Brown.
The village was turned down
oo a federal grant to renovate
the building. Brown asked if
council planned to give the
wilding back to the Mei gs
!.Deal School Board, which
~ld it to the village for $1 for
a period of five years, or had
&lt;ther plans?
Some memb ers thou ght
Pomeroy should give the
wilding back sin ce its insurance is so costly.
It was also suggested that
the building committee could
check with Charles Dowler,
superintendent, and Wendell
Hoover, school board
IJ'CSident, to see if they would
object to the villa ge tearing
the buildng down and putting
another in its place.
Larry Powell, councilman
and chairman of the building
committee, is to check wtth
!))wier today. Council has
until April I to renew the

insurance on the building .
Councilman Harry Davis
suggested a used motor be
purchasoo for an old water
truck to be used at the
cemetery. He also suggested
that the village purchase salt
for the streets next winter
rather than using so many
cinders on grounds that by
the time the street&lt; are
cleaned salt is cheaper.
Ralph Werry, councilman,
reported th at two drains
needed cleaning on Condor
St. according to Reno Lind.
An ordinance to ·regulate
use of amusement devices
and providing a tax on such
devices was given the seco nd
reading.
·It was announced that
dean up week will be held
April 4-11. Mayor Andrews
commended the city street
crew for an excellent job and
added that a great dea1 of
work had been done at the
cemetery.
Meeting with council were
Mrs. Dick Finlaw and Mrs.
Howard Logan in regard to
unsightly houses on Condor
St., especially ones' partially
wrned down last winter.
Th e lad ies sta ted that
at one of th e vacant houses garbage is
piled high and when the

en tine

wind blows the debris is
strewn throughout the neighlllrhood.
Chief of Police Jed Webster
volunteered to contact the
health deparbnent in regard
to the matter and check the
situation himself.
AI~ meeting with council
was James N. McReynolds,
Quick Job Printer, of Athens,
v.ho asked to bring a Mobile
quick printer van to Pomeroy
one day a week.
Permission
was not
rcontinued on page 10)

Baseball players
invited to meet
A meeting of all per~ns
interested in either entering a
team, or participating as a
~ayer, in an Independent
Baseball League this summer will be held Wednesday,
March 23, at 7:30p .m. at the
Syracuse, Ohi o Municipal
Building, located along Rt.
124 two miles above
Pomeroy.
Bill Hubbard, in announcin g plans for the
meeting, sa id it is hoped that
the league can be established
witheight or more teams
from tri-county area towns.

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 2!!, No. 238

Schools appropriation is $3,718,623
By Bob Hoeflich
An appropriations
resolution prov iding expe nditur es totalin g
$3,718,622.50 for the 1977
By United Press Intematlonal
calendar year was approved
COLUMBUS - HOUSE DEMOCRATS HAVE proposed a and bids on three new 66·
$3 million appropriation for the state to finance low-interest
passenger school buses were
business loans as a pilot incentive for industrial development. accepted Monday night by
House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr., D-New Boston, said the Meigs Local Board of
Monday the appropriation would be worked into the 197S-79 Education.·
state' budget tn the form of an amendment to be offered in
General · fund
apFinance Conunittee about mid-April.
propriations for the year of
Riffe saidjle money would allow the Ohio Development $3,290,955 include:
Financing Commiasjon to dispense the loans for companies to
Administration, salaries
purchase land, buildings, 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 mechanisin to administer a
Coo rdinated activitie~.
vigorous loan program."
$250.
Riffe said the plan is modeled after a similar progrma
Auxiliary agencies ,
used in Pennsylvania for 20 years.
$165,600.
Operation of school plant,
PITTSBURGH -ALUMINUM CO. OF America Monday $104,000.
raised the price of unalloyed primary aluminum ingot by 3
Maintenan ce employes,
cents to 51 cents a pound effective on all 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.
aluminwn casters serving the automobile industry probably
Materials for maintenance,
was a factor tn the increase. The automakers this year $47,600.
SMounced the average aluminum content of 1978 model cars
Equipment replacement,
will rise from 58 pounds, 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 pounds or more by 1985.
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
Although graduation of
disputed work rules was reached. More than 43 hours of near · seniors in the Meigs Local
continuous bargaining resulted in tentative settlement just 30 School District will take place
minutes before Monday's 10 a.m. strike deadline. Details of the as originally scheduled last
agreement, signed by union and company officials, were not fall , before the long hard
disclosed pending the ratification vote by union rank-and-file winter which brought many
membership.
school closings, other classes
of the district will continue
CINCINNATI - DESPITE RECENT CARBON until almost mid-June.
tetrachloride spills tnto the Kanawha and Ohio Rivers, the
Meeting in regular session
publlc'.s health "has not been in jeopardy," contends FMC Monday night, the district's
Corp. FMC made the claim Monday · in a full-page
advertisement tn the CinciMati Enquirer.
Various Cincinnati officials have complained that spills
from FMC's · Olarleston, W. Va., plant have endangered
Cincinnati's drinking water, which comes from the Ohio River.
"First and foremost," the FMC ad.said, "your health has not
been tn jeopardy by the spills. Tbe best medical evidence
available from experts on the subject clearly indicates that the
various amounts of carbon tet found tn the rivers were not
dangerous."

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 permanent improvements,
$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
Trucking
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 Wayne Sales, Inc.,
Newark, and Northeast Ohio
Bus Sales at Canton. The
Davis firm ~as the low
bidder.
Discussion on the motions

showed that the low bids had
to be accepted unless it was
proved a low bidder is
irresponsible.
The board employed Jeffrey S. Buell on a substitute
basis to work with the junior
high band under the supervision 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.
Added to the · substitute
teachers list were Julia
Hutchinson, Rebecca Cot·
terill and Becky Miller. Goins
was named as title 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 student, who was
expelled last November, was
reinstated as a tuition
student. Dan Morris was
appointed director of
curriculum and instruction
and his resi gnation as
assistant superintendent was
accepted.
Morris outlined problems
with the Environmental
Protection Agency in regard
to the Salem Center and
Harrisonville Elementary
Schools where coal is burned.
In essence, Morris has
asked for a variance for the ·
two schools so that coal can
continue to be burned
there.
It
was
also
announced that Morris,
in his new
position,
has made plans to use the
"Apple Crate," a van employed during the days of the
teacher corps program, for
instructional purposes.
The board agreed that
(Continued on page 10)

Seniors to finish on schedule
board of education agreed
that baccalaureate for
seniors will be May 29 and
commencement May 31. High
School Principal James Diehl
recommended that
graduation go as originally
scheduled due to the commitments of seniors to jobs
and additional schooling.

Diehl indicated the State
Department of Education is
recommending seniors be
permitted to graduate on
schedule.
According to the new
calendar adopted last night
by the board - based upon
actions of the Ohio
Legislature to date in rel'(ard

$267,644 funded

NEW DEIJD, INDIA - PRIME MINISTER INDIRA
Gandhi resigned today but will rematn as India's caretaker
unW the opposition alliance that handed her and her Con.gre~
party a lrumillating election loss can fonn a new cabinet thiS
week. Mrs, Gandhi submitted her resignation and those of her
cabinet to acting President B. D. Jatti, but said they will stay
on until a new government Is selected by the P9liticians who
ended her party's 30-year domination of India.
Even before the official announcement of Mrs. Gandhi's
resignation, jubUant leaders of the Janata People's party and
the Consrea for 'Democracy. had begun jockeying to fill the
power vacuwn left by the ouatera. A spokesman for the victors
said the new deputies elected in the parliamentary elections
1ut week wt11 meet Thurlday to select a new prime minister
and party leaders - preferably by consensus but through a
floor fight If necessary.

Development district to meet

for Meigs Bldg.
Rep . Ron James , 92nd
House district , announced
today the stste controlling
lllard approved funds
Mmday for a multi-purpose
mental health facility to
serve Meigs, Gallia and
Jackson counties. The stste
has released $267,644 for the
!l'Oject which wlll be mat-

ched by the same llmount in
local funds , according to
James.
The facility would be
located in Pomeroy adjacent
to the Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Tbe !lructure wDI
have 16,000 square feet and be
designed to serve the out·
potient mental health needs

ci 300 persons in the tri·
county area. .
Last week the Meigs
County commissioners
employed a Columbus architect finn to design the
building , which also will
muse a senior citizens center
and other public agencies.

Parents are ·needed for new fonn

Parents of this year's sixth
graders
in the Meigs Local
President Floyd Henderson meeting, the council will hear
School
District
are especially
baa scheduled the Buckeye Richard
C. Hartman, ·
urged
to
attend
a meeting this
Hills-Hocking Valley executive director of th e
evening
when
it
is proposed to
Regional Development National Association of
organize
a
teachers'
and
District's General policy Regional Councils. Public
parents'
forum
at
7:30p.m.
in
council meeting Tuesday, attendance of the business
the
junior
high
school
Aprll9 at the Athens Country meeting and to hear ·the
Club at approximately 8 p.m. address of Hartman is en- cafeteria in Middleport.
The organization, to be
i,!Followlng the business couraged.
\

known as a "forum," is
·aesigned to create a group
through which the full in·
structional potential of the
junior high school can be
developed.
Parents of present seventh.
and eighth graders in, the
district are also urged to
attend . Unless t~ turnout is
~

substantial by parents, no
progress can be made in
forming the new group.
The organization steering
group includes parents Allen
King, Mrs. Arnold Snowden
and Mrs. Ernest Swindell and
teachers Charles Downie and
Don Dixon.

to extra days granted for the
energy crisis and weather
conditions - the fourth sixweeks 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 Schools to be
closed on May 30 for
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.
At the junior and senior
high schools, the six · weeks
will not end until June 13
while at Bradbury, Mid·
dleport, Harrlsonvllle and
Salisbury,· the six weeks
period will end on June 7 and
on June 8 at the Rutland and
Pomeroy Elementary
Schools. At Salem Center the
final day of school will be
June 10.

Money needed
to pay balance
on uniforms

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 is one of
six priests of the Diocese of
Steubenville upon whom
Pope Paul VI has conferred
the title, according to an
announcement from the
office of the Bishop of
Steubenville.
Monsignor Horak was born
Feb. 13, 1938, in Pomeroy, one
of four children of George and
Elizabeth 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 Mussio.
After assignments as instructor at St. John Vianney
and St. Joseph Preparatory
Seminary in Parkersburg, he
is now the spiritual director
at St. John ViaMey, and
diocese director of vocations.
The investiture for Mon·
signor Horak, who has been
named Chaplain of His
Holiness; will be held at 8
p.m. on Aprilll at St. John's
Arena in Steubenville
followed by a reception in
nearby St. Agatha Hall. On
Sunday, 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 tn regular sdsion Monday night.
Board President Wendell Hoover presented a brief letter of
RACINE - The Racine resignation datoo March 16 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 Snowden a letter of commendation for his services. Hoover
of money due on uniforms. said Snowden had given him the letter on March 16 when the
Meanwhile final singup day is board met In special session.
set for Saturday, March 26
The board can take no action on the appointment of. a1
from 10 a.m. until noon. A replacement unW 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 bQttles after accepting the resignation. If the board does not appoint a
and caps will also be replacement within the 30 day period, the probate judge
collected that day, and a car (Manning Webster) makes the appointment.
wash will be held April 9.
The board set a special session for 7:30p.m. on April• and
The public is asked to It Is expected that tbe appointment will be made at that time.
support 1ie boo~rs .
~

,.

�2- Tbe Daily Senbnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday, March 22. 1~77

~·-

Ohio helpless Columbia executive tells Rhodes
By LEE LEONARD
UP! Slatehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
cha1rman of the board of
Columbta Gas System, Inc ,
has defended his u!llity 's
preparations for the dreadful
wmter of 1976-77, clauned
there is little the state of Ohio
can do to tmprove the
s1tuat1on and predicted tbe
same cr1sls for next wmter

unless 1t lS wanner

'

B J . Clarke, the board
cha1nnan, met Monday wtth
Gov. James A. Rhodes, state
energy eJqJerts and maJOr
GABRIEL MRAZ
labor muon off1c1als for 1'f.!
hours and then answered
newsmen's questwns about
1ts plannmg for natural gas
supphes
"There are those who say
that if we have the same kind
of wmter next year, we will
Gabriel (Gabe ) Mraz, a have the same dtfftculty,"
native of Youngstown, has SBid one reporter.
"I do not qmbble w1th
been named new pastor of the
Bradford Church of Chnst that," responded Clarke
He SBld his utility was
Mr Mraz who worked m
industry 12 years in Youngs- wtthm one-half per cent of 1ts
town before reachmg the normal wmter storage
dec1s1on to enter the capactty last Ocwber, and
mmtstry, 1s a full-tlme sold only a " mtmscule
student
at
Kentucky amount" of gas, none of
ChristlBn College at Grayson, which could have been used
Ky. He and hts.family, whtch m Ohio
Clarke SBid Columbia was
includes his wtfe, Karen , and
two sons, Jody, 6 and Mat- prepared for wmter temperathew, 4, will move to the tures of 10 per cent below
Bradford Church parwnage normal.
''There ts no way we can
at the comple!lon of classes
at the end of May During the plan for somethmg whtch
school year, Mr Mraz wdl be occurs only once every 200
at the church on weekends. years," said the ullhty
A veteran of the Vtetnam executive
Nevertheless, Clarke faced
Conflict, Mr Mraz had a wellpaid job and was hvmg a an avalanche of questions at
highly soctal life when he the meetmg In the governor's
chose to enter the mm1stry cabmet room about what
"I dectded there must be happened to the state's
more to life than what I was natural gas supply and what
feelmg and so I dectded to can be done to prevent a
enter the mmtstry I JUst recurrence next wmter
Clarke satd Columbta's
want to help as many peo2Ie
Ohto customers were treated
as I can," Mr. Mraz satd.

i

Gabriel Mraz

named pastor

of cpurch here

Turmoil in India seen
COLUMBUS (UP!)
India's government turnover
will mean closer relations
between that country and the
Umted States, but not
immediately, former Uruted
States Ambassador w Indta
Wtlbam B. Saxbe satd
Monday
"It's not going to be a flopover," Saxbe said m an
mterview m the Columbus
Dispatch
Saxbe also predtcted that
Commumsm 18 not dead m
Indta and the Commurust
party Will make a real effort
to move in.
The former U S senawr
.and US. at((}rney general

also s8ld the Umted States
should not mterfere rn the
mlernal affatrs of Indta but
should help when asked He
srud the help should not be
money but techmcal help and
markets for Indian goods
Sax be sa1d a real cr18is can
be expected durmg the
struggle for supremacy m
lndta
''There could be violence,''
he sa1d
"They w1U have some difltculty m orgamzmg a new
government," said Saxbe
"They have been pretty well
disorgamzed They w11l have
W pull themselves U!gether "

said the ullhty off1c1al m
durmg the past wmter's fuel answer wa quesllon by Ray
shortage. and little can be Koss, regwnal director of the
done at the state level to Uruted Auto Workers, 11ho
unprove the outlook fur next t'Omplamed · '~ What can we
do the next wmter and the
wmter
" I can't s1t here and say to next wmter and the next'"
you that I know of much more
Clarke, swrunoned to the
that we can do as far as meetmg by the governor
maJOr supplies go," sa1d the after a lesser Columb•a
head of the Wthnmgwn, DeL- off1c1al last week prov1ded
Rhodes
termed
based ulthty which furnishes what
natural gas to OhiO and s1x ' 'inadequate " answers on
dr•lhng, storage and tranother slates
The governor dtrected sportation, promised to do
Clarke to furrush a "detailed, ''whatever can be done" to
wrttten report" by March 28 gel self-help gas flowmg
on Columbia 's storage wtthm Ohio
He srud thts mcludes chal·
factlibes and leased land, and
wname a spectfic person at lengmg a Federal Power
rule
on
hts utihty w work on Commission
dehvermg self -help gas mtrastale shtpments m court
drilled m Ohto w pomls and seekmg a stay of any
cease and destsl order durmg
w1thm the stale
Clarke agreed, although he appeal, 1! necessary
"What we want to know 1s,
s8ld storage would not necessanly help the supply IS Columbia approaching tl11s
problem. He satd about the with a 'crlsis' athtude ?"
only way to solve that would asked James A Duerk, state
be federal deregulation of director of economtc and
natural gas pnces and commumty development
"We
have
been
"masslVe amount of money"
devoted w acqlllrmg new approachmg this on a 'crisis'
basiS for about five years,"
reserves.
"We have to contmue to do answered Clarke.
what "e haveo been domP "
as !an Iy as anyone else

EPA Ohio rules
will favor coal
By J R. KIMMINS
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Ohto Environmental
Protec!lon Agency sa•d
Monday 1! plans w reJeCt
proposed federal sulfur
diOlnde regulabons and draft
1ts own plan w make better
use of Ohio's 47-rmllion-ton-ayear production of h•ghsulfur coal
The proposed federal
regulatio~ are currently
bemg reVIewed by the 6th U S
C1rcu1t Court of Appeals m
Cincmnati in a c1vd swt
brought by Ohio's electnc
utihty mdustry
The Umted Mme Workers
umon and eastern Ohto state
legislators have complamed
that the proposed federal
regulations would ca use
severe unemployment m
Ohio's coal mdustry because
of a dmumshed market for
high-sulfur coal.
Jack Wunderle, Oh10 EPA
chtef of alf pollutton, Monday
revealed the state's plans w
draft 1ts own pollution plan
when he asked, and received,

federal sulfur d10x1de
regulattons were based on
errorneous data , mcluding
the assumptton that coalfired utility boilers operate
contmuously
"We are attemptmg wget
the dsta that the U.S EPA
used to draft 1ts plan," satd
Wunderle So far, slate
enVIronmental off1c1als have
been unsuccessful m gettmg
the federal data
The Ohio EPA could have
accepted and enforced the
proposed federal plan, but a
senes of pubhc • heanngs
earher this year convmced
the slate, sa~d Wunderle, that
the federal plan had several
!!errors "
"We want to draft a plan
taking mto account •these
errors," srud Wunderle "We
hope to demonstrate the
federal plan was m error."
Oh10 has been resistmg tbe
unpoSIIIOn of federal sulfur
dtoxtde regulabons smce
1967, when Congress passed
the Clear Air Act, whtch
reqwred that states set a1r
quahty standards
In 1971 and 1972, the first
state plan was drafted and
forwarded the US EPA It
was reJected by federal a1r
pollutiOn offlctals. A second
state plan was later
discarded by a federal court,
promptmg the U S EPA to
draft 1ts own plan last year

$38,603 from the state
Controlling Board w hire a
Columbus consultant to help
draft the plan
PEDCO
Env1ronmentahsts, Inc , who
helped the state draft tis
earher sulfur dwxlde plans,
was h1red and Wunderle said
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
the
consultant
would
complete Its work by May.
Then, srud Wunderle, the
• . By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D. been reluctant to promise you
slate
plan would undergo
DEAR DR. LAMB - I got that you will get pregnant
public
hearmgs before 1ts
marrted recently and my hus- because 15 per cent of couples
subffilSSlon
W the U S EPA
band and I agreed to walt do not have ch1ldren - that
regwnal
off1ce
m Chtcago by DarreU Roush to
before startmg a faffilly I 1s, havmg nothmg to do 111tha
Labor Day.
went to my doctor for btrth "lipped womb "
Any state plan must st1ll
control pills He gave me a
A t1pped womb sunply
be be broadcaster
meet
the approval of the. U S.
Pap test, but while domg 1! he refers lo the fact that the
casually sa1d I ha~e a !lpped uterus IS not posttwned so EPA.
If the electr1c utiltties are
womb I bombarded hun w1th thai lis dome (bhnd end1 1s
PORTLAND - Darrell
questwns as lu my chances of pomted above or toward the successful m the1r challenge Roush, son of Mr and Mrs
getlmg pregnant and 1f I do pub1c bone In the adult of the proposed federal plans W,1lham Roush, Portland,
concetve w11l I be able to female the uterus IS hke a m court, Wunderle sa1d who has returned from
carry my chtld fur mne mon- pear with the blossom end federal acceplance of the Detroit, Mtch. where ftrst
ths. He sa1d 1! was nothing pomled toward the wall of the soon.to-bewntten state plan class FCC wtll begm on-theand not wworry aboultt He abdum~n and the stem em.l or mtghl be enhanced
JOb trammg m boradcastmg
"The Ohio EPA beheves
gave me a prescnpt10n fur cervtx directed downward,
He studted at the Ervm
the pills. I told hun I would upemng allhe top or near the there are some advantages w Instttute In Cmcmna!l and 1s
nut lake them because he was blmd end of the vagmal the State of Ohio preparing 1ts a graduate of Southern Htgh
so vague m responding to my canal. When the uterus 1s Ill&gt;' own plan, and therefore School, class of 1975 Darrell
. questions
ped 1! 1s usually ubhze Ohto's natural 1s a member of the
1
rclrodisp1H ced'' mearung resources .. . specifically Reorgamzed Church of Jesus
• I told my husband about my
doctor's vtstt and my f~ars the uterus has fallen coal," said Wunderle.
Christ of Latter Day Samts
Wunderle satd the Ohio where h1s father 1s pastor
about not bemg able to get backward
pregnant My husband sa1d to
The pomt you need to know EPA thinks the pronosed
lake the p1lls; 1! I couldn't get 1s thai studtes have been done
pregnant, the doctor would to see 1f displacement of Ute SIDE GLANCES
Gill Fox
not have g1vep them to me I uterus would affect ferllhty
love my husband and would Whtle some '!lpped wumhs"
like to thmk that be and t~e were observed m mferttle
doclor are correct, but I'm couples lh1s was not the cause
worrted and not sallsf1ed w1th of the mferllhty After all,
etther I consulted a s1nce 15 pe1 cent of couples
gynecologist and she 11as are mfer!lle 11 would be sureven vaguer than my regular p••smg If all of these women
doctor.
had perfect reproducllve
What I want to know from systems
yuu IS, With a tipped womb,
Even 1! displacement of t!IC
constdenng my health to be uterus changes U1e locatwn of
excellent, w11l I get preg- lhe cervix to some extent th1s
nant• I am not lakmg the p1lls w1ll not prevent pregnancy
and I haven't gotten preg- All that has to hapen 1s !01
nant. I haven 't told my hus- spenn to get to the openmg,
band because I do want to whereve1 1t JS, and they w11l
have hil; chlldren and I have 1mg1 ate to the uterus. A nm 11 planted m my mmd !halt! mal pregnancy 1s then Just as
will lake me years to con- hkc!y lo oct:ur as m a woman
t'elVe and 11 I take the p11ls 1! wtthoul a lipped utc1 us
will lake even longer Am I
Those who want mfulmawrong? Or Will I have to have t•un on u,. menstrual cy&lt; lc
my womb stratght before I and m~nupau.se t iin scJJLI 50
can conoove1
cculloi with a long, stumped,
DEAR READER - By the sell-addressed envelope lm
l.ime you get my reply you Tile Health l.cllcr numiJcJ
may have already found out i).!Z Wr11c to lJ&lt; i.&lt;Jillh, '"
that you can get pregnant t.:HIC nr ll11s IH. .: W~JIUJ)l'l p 0
Won't your husband be sm- Bux 1!;51 , Ra1..ho f'lly Stut lhli
pmed!
New York, NY 10019
'I m kmda tl•cd tonight so how about just p1ck1n' out your
I SUf&gt;eCl your dOf!ors have
favonte of "' prayers anrl domg ' replay?"

HEALTH

Wh1l e Duerk descnbed
Clarke as "shghtly more
responstve " than W.F. Latrd,
the Columb•a v1ce prestdent
who met w1th the SBlDe
people m the governor's
office last week, he srud uwe
may have to take some
further steps" to secure the
destred action on drdlmg,
transporta!lon and storage by
the uhlity
Rhodes opened the meeting
by reading a four-page statement
whtch repeated
questions about Columb•a's
plans for transporllng Ohio
gas wtthm the slate,
sea rchmg for storage
fac1hties and steppmg up
dnlling programs
" In add1tion to these
answers, we would like your
corrumtments on Columbm's
supply pos1!10n for next
wmter," the gov;rnor sa1d
"What we want 1s clear,
convincmg evtdence that
your future JUdgments w1ll be

made m the best mterests of
the people of Ohio," Rhodes
contmued. " It 1s Uus s1mple ·
11 two4hlfds of the people of
Oh10 are gomg to continue w
depend on ~ou, you are gomg
whave wshow them by your
actions that you are worthy of

Power-packed Yankees sounding bush

shipments, Columbia woold
"be w11ling wgo to court and

Under quest10mng by
Warren J Smith, secretary·
treasurer of the Ohio AFLCJO, Clarke sa1d th•s would
mean seeking a stay of any
FPC stop order m the most
that trust. "
Under queshonmg, Clarke favorable court whtle an
SBid h1s uhllty would be appeal proceeded.
"I don't thmk we'd get it
willing wstart Intrastate gas
flowing through interstate (the slay)," added Clarke.
Clarke a !so said under
'ptpelines and nottly the FPC
tmmediately to avotd questlonmg ·
- Federal regulallon of
vwlallon of the Natural Gas
wellhead prtces has been a
Act.
"I'm sure no one around "devaslating deterrent" to
thts table wants me to VIOlate development of gas reserves
- Inadequate reserves, an
the law and rlUI the r18k of
going wja1l," Clarke srmled. mab•hty wcontract for fresh
"We want w emphastze supplies and "the coldest
!qat we are not asking wmter on record" caused the
Columbia to take any ac!lon gas shortage
-Columbia's planning and
that v1olates any of 1ts legal
dut1es w the Federal Power curtailment plans " were
Commisston, '' agreed e~actly the same as we have
Rhpdes
used m past wmters and
Clarke srud that 1f the which have stood us m gond
comnusston disallowed such stead ,

llY MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
WINTER HAVEN, Fla. (UP!) -Now that tl 's all over,
Freddie Lynn can talk about it much more ea~ily . He can look
back on all the things that happeoed whim last season and tell
YQunowmore objectively what hts gut feelings were then.
He remembers a tune around the ffilddle of June, a time not
especially good for etther hun or the ball club .
Freddie Lynn, the AmeriCan uague's MVP and Rookie of
the Year a season earlier, still hadn't signed his contract.
Neither had Carlton Fisk or Rick Burleson. The feeling existed
the three were going to play out their option and leave the Red
So%, and thtssUBpicion turned many fans agamst them.
To make things worse, the team was &amp;'f.! games back at the
l.ime, and sitting on a bus outside Fenway Park before the start
of a long road trip, some of the Boston players mwardly
wondered whether they'd be coming back anymore. Some fully
expected wbe traded before the June 15 deadline. Nobody felt
unmune.
Sitting there on the bus walling for it w get slarted wthe
Blrport, the Red Sox players listened to some of the heat they
were getting from those baseball fans who find the same kind
of fascination for a bus full of ballplayers as a moth finds for a
glowmg electric light bulb
Freddie Lynn remembers the fans around the bus yelling
some things at the ballplayers Some of the players were sa1d
to have answered the fans, "Goodbye, Fenway Park "Freddie
Lynn says now he wasn't sure then whether he'd be back m
Boston or not, but he doesn't remember answermg the fans
back.
"My feelings ran hot and cold last year," says the Red Sox'
gifted 25-year~ld center fielder ''There were some days I felt
th1s tsn't the place for me Fortunately, most of the days I
wanted to play m Fenway Park. I still do. My wlfe, Dee Dee,
didn't know what to think. We're both from California, and 1
think deep down, she was hopmg I would wmd up gomg wthe
California ball club. I was very open-rmnded. Truthfully, I
wanted wstay wtth Boston, and I'm happy I did."
That's fairly apparent as Lynn goes about gettmg ready
down here. He looks good His physical condttion 18 excellent
and so is his attitude . Don Zimmer, the Red Sox' manager,
feels the fans got on Lynn unjustly last year
"I think he got a bad rap," says Zim. "He came up to me
near the end of the season and said, "!can't play, Sktp, I hurt
my wrist.' Some guys thought he was joking I never thought
that once. Last year everybody said Freddie Lynn wasn~ the
same player he was the year before. He hit 314 and drove m 65
runs, but you gott.a remember he IIUSsed 30 games because of
Continued on Page 4

TERENCE LEE
Airman Terence D. Lee,
whose parents are Mr. and
Mrs. Louis D. Lee of 6G MUI
St., Middleport, has been
selected for technical
training at Sheppard AFB,
Tex., In the Air Force civil
engineering structural and
pavements field . He
recently completed basic
training at Lackland AFB,
Tex., and bad attended
Meigs Higb School.

Brezhnev's criticism facing Vance
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UP!) Undeterred by a barrage of
cnhc•sm from Sovtet leader
Leorud Brezhnev, Prestdent
Carter is gomg ahead with
plans wd1spatch Secrelary of
State Cyrus Vance to Moscow
later thts week for anns
talks.
Carter summoned the
Nat19nal Secunty Counctl wa
ffildafternoon meeting today
w put !mal touches on a
proposal to get the Strategic
Arms Lunttation Talks off
dead center Vance, who
leaves Fnday, w1U dtscuss
the proposal with Brezhnev
and other Sovtet leaders.
The Prestdent had no d1rect
response to Brezhnev's
atlacks Monday on Carter's
strong defense of human
nghts and support of Sov1et
disstdents
Press Secretary Jody
Powell sa1d the speech 1s
' "very long It 's betng studied
now."
Carter arranged w unvetl
his leglslabve proposal for
untversal voting regtstratton
and congressional campaign
fmancmg w the Democratic
leadership at a breakfast
meetmg wday
Later he scheduled a
farewell meeting w1th
Japanese Pnme Mmister
Takeo Fukuda Accordmg to
Japanese ofhc1als, Carter
Monday personally reaffirmed to Fukuda h1s
mtentwn of wtthdrawmg
Amertcan ground troops
from South Korea after
consullation.

Powell said Monday that no comment on Indian Prune
preparations for Vance's Muuster Indtra Gbandi's re·
m1ss1on w Moscow were on soundmg defeat, other than w
track, and from all pra1se the fact that "cthzens
mdtcatlons 11 both parties of the world's largest
consider hts tnp to be an democracy" had expressed a
Important step toward free ch01ce in an electwn He
rehevmg the burden of the satd 1t "should be an
arms race and preventing msptra!lon m the global
nuclear destrucbon of all the context" because ~~many
people of the world "
countrtes do not have that
The SALT U agreement fight "
Carter's overmght house
expires in October Carter
seeks a sLmple extensiOn as a guest was Gov Jerry Brown
first step and negotiations on of Cahforma, one of hts
the more controverSial ele- opponents m the pnmary
ments mvolVIng the Backfire campatgn, who also attended
bomber and Crwse missile the Whtte House dmner
later, but so far the Sovtels honormg Fukuda
have balked Gerald Ford
At a Cabmet meetmg
made the same proposal to Monday, Intertor Secrelary
Brezhnev and was turned Cecil Andrus revealed that
down
probes of natural gas leaders
The Carter spokesman had on federal lands "will result

m substantial amounts m the
pipeline next fall "
Carter plans to announce
his comprehenstve energy
program at a jomt session of
Congress April 20, but says
some parts of the program
are leakmg
He wid the Cabmet some of
the
provlSlons
under
consideration are becoming
pobhc because of the need lor
pnor consultahon with
affected organizatwns
Energy adviser James
Schlesmger announced here.
cetved some 13,000 responses
w some 450,000 While House
letters sollcttmg the views of
individuals and groups on
energy conservatiOn policy.
Carter plans to hold a news
conference thts week,
probably on Thursda),

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS (UP!)- MarQUIS Mtller, a four-year
starter for Columbus St
Charles and "a complete ball
player," has been voted the
Uruted Press International
Class AA basketball player of
the year
The 6-6 Mtller, who
averaged 19 7 pomts per
game the past season m
leading the Cardinals wa 13-2
regular season mark, barely
edged out West Lafayette
Ridgewood's Dave Olinger by
a smgle vote m the olAv•r of

gathered to lend credence W
some of the legends
"We're try1ng w do th18
nght and we have a little l.ime
to do it," Scott sa1d "You've
got to do th1s thmg
sctentlfically or you'll end up
hke everyone m the past has
"This 18 not a process that
you're going wgo in and grab
a bunch of gold bars and
come out''
Modern stones of the treasure dale U!!937, when Milton
E "Doc" Noss satd he found
ptles of gold bars mstde the
peak. He S8ld a dynamite
blast covered the entrance
before he could remove all
the gold
Nosswas ktlled m 1949 man
argument w1th a would-be
partner
The search IS concentrated
at an opening named the
Snake Hole about two-thirds
of the way up Vtctorio Peak,
which r18es about 700 feet
above the dusty Hembnllo

Basm on the White Sands
M1ss1le Range.
The Army has gtven Scott
!Odays, until next Monday, to
produce pos1bve evidence
that a treasure extsts.
Searchers excavated an
opemng mw the Snake Hole
Monday and several of tbem
crawled mstde to photograph
and map a 320-foot long fault.
which leads w the Dome and
Rmg Rooms.
One of the searchers,
former Atr Force Capt.
uonard Ftege, sa1d he
believes a passage from the
Rmg Room has been closed
by a cave-m. He said the
passage, 1! 11 can be
excavated, leads to another
room where he saw ptles of
gold bars m the late 1950s
Ftege, who passed a polygraph test of his .Wry, SBid he
believes if the gold is not
found 1t has been removed by
the Army.

ternat1ona ! Class AA Boys

All Oh•o Basketball Team
w1th

I

everybody' happy

f

grade

and

Bob Lowne

1

j

l

The club has done some
maneuvermg smce the end of
the 1976 season but the same
old problem remams - a
decided lack of pow3r
Altobelli gets around that by
saying hts team this year wUI
be built around pitching and
defense
Strengths - Four top-night
starling pitche~s m John
Montefusco, Jun Barr, Ed
Hahcki and Lynn McGlothen
and a solid bullpen quartet of
Gary Lavelle, Randy Moffitt,
Charhe Williams and Ed
Heaverlo. Also, better than
average catching with Marc
Hill, Gary Alexander and
Mtke Sadek, and two-tune
N L. batting champiOn Bill
Madlock w play th1rd.
Weaknesses- No power w
speak of bestdes Madlock
unless Jack Clark, who
played In 26 games at the end
of the 1976 season, comes out
smoking from the start, and a
hole at first base, where 39year~ld Wtllie McCovey has
been the best player thts
spring
New Faces - McGlothlen,
Madlock, pitcher John Curtis,
Infielders Rob Spernng and
Vic Harr18 and oulftelder
Terry Whitfield.
Outlook - A lot of nice
things have to happen for the
Giants to fmish higher than
fourth In probably the
roughest division m the btg
leagues tilts year.

"If we make
an error on
your taxes,
we pay the penalty.
And the interest~'
Reason No. 14 why H&amp;R Block
shoulct do your taxes.
H&amp;R Block doesn't make many mistakes.
Our people are tra1ned not to. But 1f we
should make an error that costs you
additional tax, you pay only the additional
tax. Block pays any penalty and interest.
We stand behind our work

I'~R

BLOCit

r:1E INCOME TAX PEOPLE

618 EAST MAIN
Open t A.M.-6 P.M. Wootuloys. 9·5 Sot
Pllone 9J'l.J795
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY

6

2, Sr , 24 2

named ~~
Marysville ,

Reed . Johnstown
Monroe, 6 1, Sr , 24 2

Cleveland

SPECIAL MENTION
John Bradley. Ashtabula

Harbor , Mark Carr , Millbury

Randy Gardner

Eastwood .

Lee Horne . Pori Clinton Bdl

Glandorf. 6 1, Sr , 24 5
Buckeye

K1mberley. Coshocton Greg

Pothast,

Ottawa

Marquts Miller, Columbus
Charles 6 6. Sr . 19 7

Dave Olinger, Rtdgewood,

6 A,

Sr , 27 I
SECOND TEAM

Eddte Crowe, Carlisle, 6 2,

Sr , 22 0
Pele Hess. Elyna Catholic.
6 3. Sr . 20 3
Art

Fox ,

North

Taylor, 6 3, Sr , 25

Bend

4

Dewey Mtlton , Columbus

M1tflm , 6 2, Sr , 1A 5
THIRD TEAM
Paul

Wtll1ams.

South 6 1 Sr . 18 0

Akron

Larry Wi lson , Bexley, 6 4,

Sr, 17 o
Jack Cole, Carrollton, 6 5
Sr , 19 I
Ron Myers Sandy Valley,

Koenn,

Pauldmg .

Mtke

Lew1s, East Palest1ne, Todd

Millard . Bex ley. Tom
Motlka Columbus Hamilton
Townsh1p , Guy
Neal ,
We ll•ngton , Tom Orzolek.
Martms
Pegues,

Ferry , Kendell
Dayton
K1ser ,

Randy Re•le, Upper San

dusky ,
Louis
Solomon ,
Twmsburg
Chamberlin ,

Tony Williams, Painesvi ll e
Harvey

HONORABLE MENTION
Keith Abney, Mason , Kenl
Baker. Mt Gilead , M•ke

Brown , Ironton ,
Curt1s
Blo)(on,
Warrensville

Heights. George Canalos.
Lorain Catholic , Chuck Cane
Logan El~ John Denen
Washington Courl House
Enc Doctor. Lima Bath. Don

'for nuthin. 111

Well, Oklahoma State must
have offered Hartman plenty
of "nuthm" because he
accepted the head coaching
posttion there Monday mght,
abandomng
the
best
basketball program In the
Btg Eight for ,the worst.
" I hke the challenge,"
explained Hartman at a press
conference followmg a !!).
rrunute meellng wtlh hil; final
Kansas State team. "Every
JOb 18 a challenge. There's
deftmtely one at Oklahoma
State and that has to be a
factor .''
Hartman returns w h18
alma
mater as the
replacement for Guy Strong,
who resigned at the end of the
season . The Cowbo)'ll had the
worst record m the Big Eight
last year at 6-21 while
Hartman's Wildcats had the
best mark at 23-a.
Oklahoma State has not
had a winnmR season smce
INNOCENT PLEA
DAYTON, Ohio (UP!) - A.
rural Lanesville, Indiana,
truck driver Monday pleaded
mnocent in Dayton MlDiicipal
Court to two counts of
vehicular homtclde.
Louis Edward Mousty, 47,
was charged in connection
with a double.fatallty traffic
accident last Friday on
Interstate 75 in Dayton
Mousty was driving a aemttrailer which pollee said triggered 1 seven-vehicle crash.
Herbert Mix, 32, and Michael
Nigro, 34, both of Centerville,
Ohio, died when thelf small
auwmoblle was rammed and
burned

1969-70 and diopped 15 of 16
games w Hartman's Kansas
state teams.
"There was only one
basketball job In the country
I'd consider and that's
Oklahoma State, my school,"
Hartman said. "! want w
emphaSize that the people,
the basketball fans at Kansas
state, have been fantastic I
love them I hope they
tu1derstand "
Hariman reportedly will
receive $1011,000 a year at
stillwater wtth a guarantee
that a new fieldhouse will be
built within four ,years w
replace the 7,400-seat
Gallagher Hall.
Hartman, whose Kansas
State teams did not finish any
lower than second place m
the Btg Eight durmg the last
six years, ts walking inw a
program that just two weeks
ago was reprimanded by the
conference for its shady
recruihnent of junior college
transfer Ricky Daniel.
Hartman, who leaves the
Wildcats after a seven-year
tenure m which he won three
Big Eight championships
while posting a 1~2 record,
said his right-hand man at
Kansas State, Jerry Hohnes,
would be joinmg him at
Oklahoma State.

Dayton Jet

ferson ,
Ray
George .
Bellefonta 1ne, John Hagerty,
Jefferson Unton , Mll&lt;e Hurst.
Dayton Northridge
Enc
lnms, 01x1e , Jeff Kessler ,
Johnstown Monroe . Jeff
Martm , Bellefontatne , Dave
Mason , Youngstown Rayen ,
Jeff Meadows, Wheele rs
burg
Dave
McCurdy ,
Spnngfteld Central CatholiC ,
Gary Me Nell , London ,
Roger Orslnell1 , Warren
Kennedy, T1m Osborne West
Muskmgum , Dea11 Roya l
Ironton,
Rob
Roesch
P1cker1ngton .
Kevin
Roseberry, Bella1re , Jeff

Sm1th, Buckeye Soufh Zack

Scott, Columbus Hamilton
Township , Mark Swans1ger ,
Sprmgf1eld Local , Tom
Sheline, Elmwood ,
Bil l Szabo, F1relands , Leon
Tucker Akron Sou th , T1m
Tolzda,
R1ver ,
Jan1s
Dean
Trupovn1ck5
CadiZ

Tslpls. Medina Highland

Kevm Vol bert, Loratn Brook
stde
John Wallace West
Branch, Greg Worley Rock

H•ll. Bill

Ferns, Cad1z , Tony Gatto
Grandview , Mike Griffin,

Hartman returns
to alma mater
MANHATTAN, Kan (UP!)
The Kansas State
basketball P,l'ess gwde said
the school only had one name
on 1ts list when 1! went looking
lor a head coach In 1970, and
1t was Jack Hartman.
4
' Now," the story in the
press guide contmued, ''those
roundball·crazy folks m
Purple Pride country
wouldn't let Jack Hartman go

Randy GISt

Rtch

Cathedral Lalm. 6 0, Sr , 20 6

Tom Barrtnger, Elmwood .

I

ffilgh( ..
~"or all thm personahty
problems, th~ Yankees have
a 6-5 sprmg record after
Monday 's 4·3 tnumph over
the Los Angeles Dodgers
Elsewhere, m camps where
the emphaSIS 1s on baseball·
Berme Ca rbo h1t two
smgles and a homer and
Regg1e Cleveland went s1x
mmngs for his th1rd wm of the
spnng as the Boston Red Sox
defeated the St Lou1s
Cardinals, 11-6 Doug Ault,
former Texas farmhand
consldered one or Toronto 's

matenal because of h1s
qutckness and ball-handlmg
and shootmg abth!tes
"As an outstde shooter, he
was as good as we had," sa1d
Teeters, "but we couldn't
afford wtake him away from
the basket "
St Charles, which lost only
to AAA powers Columbus
Linden McKinley and
Newark durmg the regular
season, was 48-12 durmg
MtUer's final three years
"He's the complete ball
player ," satd Teeters,
"offensively and defenstvely,
attitude and academics."

Lake Don Danhoff, Willard .

FIRST TEAM

65,Sr,220

t10ns, up 54 per cent from
1975.
The frequency of opt1ons
transactions can tot up large
comnussions that eat inw
profits but option trading still
1s the hottest product on Wall ,
Street
•
"It isn't just the broker; :
people want 11 U!o," said l
Robert P. Colin, executive
vtce president of the
secunties firm of Faulkner, '
Dawkins &amp; Sullivan. "Some :
people like to go to Vegas If :
they don't go to Vegas they :
will gamble someplace else." '
Some btg Investors will l
~ have to wait for puts,
however. Trust departments
·of nahonally chartered ,
hanks, whtch can sell call ' )
optwns on, stock they own, ,
• have not been •given blanket :
approval for selling puts by 1
the Comptroller of the :
Currency. ·Puts are too l
, speculative, the agency says. 1
• Many brokers disagree and
' their major selling tactic for ,
Options is to emphasize their
conservative appllcations even mor~ so 119!! with the
commg mtroducUon of puts.
Will small investors take to
p\lts? ,;.
...
"Absolutely," sa)'ll Howard
M Brenner; senior vice
president of Drexel Burnham
&amp;Co ., noting the protection a
put option can give investors
for a sudden stock price drop.
"They understand insiD'ance"
Next: The ballet~ of puiiD~
caD tra11ng.
•

he1ght,

scortng average

Ken

Options : opportunity for
investors and brokers too

try but many observers think
much of the opttons actlVlty
now stems from large block
traders usmg options In
conjunchon w1th movmg
thousands of shares of .Wck.
"The little guy who stepped
up to the plate hopmg w hit
JUst wtth calls often has been
blitzed," says Kenneth
Dolan, v1ce president and
opt1ons manager for Smith
Barney, Upham,Harr18 &amp;Co
But he thinks addmg puts to
the optwns arsenal w11l open
far more opportunilles to the
option player.
A 1975 l.J:&gt;Uls Harris study
commissioned "· by the
American Sloe~ Exchange
found the typlctal options
mvestor was a 44-year~ld
male college gra,duate wi!h
an annual mcome of· nearly
$35,000 and assets of $104,000,
not countmg hls home and
personal possesaions.
The survey of 319lndlvldual
and 56 institutlonal optwn
mvestors found 42 per ~lit
were "highly satisfied" and
38 per cent were "somewhat
satisfied."
Brokers also appear salts!fled . Option commisswns
proVIde 10 per cent of many
firms' revenues now perhaps double that for some
others - and help replace
revenues lost because of
\M!k By Mc.ttur Roote where UAnitr
negotiated comrmsalon rates
servK't! uot wvailable, One momh,
aspects, for example, to on liocks. Merrill Lynch,
!:'." YBy m•l 1122m 000hi•.~!_Hl w ~~· people who haven't even Pierce, Fenner &amp; &amp;nith, the
Vll~
~ar,
I ~
moo"' .., Invested m ca IIs belore "
ttl ~o; Thr~e montha. 17 GOi
natlon's largest brokerage,
E""wtoerellll oo '""'· s.. •noollw . It IS just not mdlvtdual
S13 50, Three JllUnthl, f150
I •
lm ed th ( S8ld 13.5 per cent of its 19'16
Subocrloli"::.~ke ~cluU.o Swuioy
InvestorS ( IS est at
a commissions came from op·
'l'llneJ+&amp;n•~•,..
500,0UO have g1ven op!lons a

the year ballotmg.
Both Miller and Olmger,
along with Bob l.J:&gt;wrte of
Cleveland Cathedral Latm,
Dave Dtttmar of Tliwnsvtll
Buckeye South and Ken
Pothast of Ottawa-Glandorf,
were named w the UP! allOhio f1rst team
"Marquts Mtller 1s a class
mdivtdual," satd St. Charles
Coach Wally Teeters "He's
going w make wmething of
htmself," hopefully an
atwrney
Miller, although playrng
the post for St Charles, 1s
considered college guard

COLUMBUS, Ohio IUPII The 1977 Un~ed Press In

k
•
Grants manager ma lng So~fh~e6 ~ ~~~~~;·o
By JOE SARGIS
UPI Sporll Writer
PHOENIX (UP!) - .Joe
Altobelli ran the tightest ship
of any big league manager in
Arizona this sprmg.
He kept hil; San FranCISCO
Glllllts busy aU the time and
he managed to do 1! while
makmg every player happy.
Thal'sa pretty good trick In
lt.!elf and it worked perfectly
down here. The questton now
18 can he make 11 work as well
once the regular National
League seaaon starts In April
and hil; club has w play
powerful teams hke the
Cincinnati Reds and Los
Angeles Dodgers
"! don't know how good a
team we will be," says
Alwbelii, a rookte btg league
skipper but a man who has
managed at every level m
baseball and 1s no one's fool,
at least not any player's
"But I know we will play 11111
per cent every day, even in
August and September and no
matter how far we are m
front or behind If a player 18
gomg to demand a big league
salary then he will have w
play like a big leaguer every
day and in every situation "
This type of philosophy Is
new wthe Giants and there is
no way wguage what effect 11
may bave on the players.
Alwbelli is hopmg 1t will have
a positive effect because he
knows going m he doesn't
have that good a team.

next batter
"We had a long lalk th1s
mormn~ and 1t 's hke 1
thought, Mickey has some
personal problems that have
nothmg to do w1th baseball,"
SBld Martm, soundmg more
like Conme Mack than Btlly
the Kid "Instead of lea VJng
them at home, he brought
them to the ball park
1
'You JUSt have to handle
Rivers differently ," Marlin
counseled ringstde reporters
"Alot of people think Mtckey
wtll do thtsagam But I don 'l
But knowtng Mtckey runs
through moods 1 I!Uess he

AA All-Ohio teams

0

Mystery fills gold search

been the sound of angry
v01ces , ultlmatums , highpowered meeungs and other
stuff generally assoc1ated
With bush leaguers
There was more of 1!
Monday when Manager Billy
Martln and centerhelder
M1ckey Rivers went at 1!
agam
The
latest
confrontation occurred
because Rivers was removed
by Martin from Sunday's
game wtth the Plnladelphia
Phtlhes after he loafed
chasmg a single and then
dropped a fl y ball hit by the

Columbus' Marquis Miller tops all

51

By BRAD SMITH
WHITE SANDS, N M
(UPI )- Like a play w1th 10
acts and a new character for
each scene, the VtcU!rio Peak
gold treasure search unfolds
wtth modern mystery
What, if anythmg, lies
1ns1de the desert peak behind
the rubble from a cave-m m a
room known as the Ring
Room? Who left the tm cans
and dynamtte found 1n
another cavern named the
Dome Room•
A professtonal treasurefmding ftnn has centered its
search for a legendary
treasure trove that would
dwarf the gold m Ft. Knox on
a fault m Victorlo Peak The
fault leads mto two separate
rooms about 3110 feet below
the surface.
Norman Scott, who heads
WASHINGTON (UP!)
the search whtch began
The Carter admuustrahon IS Saturday, satd Monday
co ns1der1ng alternative · enough mformatwn had been
actwns w force eleotnc
power plants and large mdustrtes to convert to coal
fuel, wh1le supporting
Iegtslatwn deSigned to reach
the same objectiVes.
Federal Energy Adm~mstrator John O'Leary
Wid a Senate subcomlTUttee
on energy and natural By JAMES A. WHII',t,;
resources Monday 11 was UP! Business Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) - It
''premature" to dtsclose the
was
only a matter of time alternatives, but satd FEA
the
natwn's
optlons
was working wkh Congress
exchanges
now
are
on the
m the effort
brmk
of
offermg
securttles
O'i.A!ary asked for a SIX·
month extenston of current mvestors another form of
authority to order such potentially profitable riskoonverstons, pending passage taking
The newcomer to the
of comprehensive energy
marketplace
Is listed put
legtslation
options, the mmor Image of
hsted call options which have
proved immensely popular
sil)c~ their mtroduction In a
S\~ndardized
form on
IN HOSPITAL
exchanges
m
1973.
1
Mrs. Ruth Steele, Route 3,'
Pomeroy, has been returned' Acall option is the right to
to Holzer Medical Center in buy 11111 shares of,stock at a ,
set price wtthm a g1ven time;
Galllpohs, where she is una put the r1ght w sell
dergoing treatment
Puts will start small Wlth
no more than five listings on
. - - - " ' - - - - - - - - , ' each of the na!lon's five
"niEDALYSENTINEL
exchanges June 3
DEVOTEDtonrE
But many In the securttles
INTF..RESTOF
MEIGS-MABON AREA
mdustry, flushed with the
OIESTEII LTANNEHIU.
success of listed calls, see m
Elec. Ed.
ROBEKTHOEFLICH
puts anoth er means to
cu, Edllur
generate Investor mterest Published dally excepl Salurdly
d
f
by n~e Ohio VMUey Publishms eoman a pot o corrumss10ns.
any, 111 Court Sl, Pomeroy, Olio
"! thmk puts will have a
~769 BW~me" Offit:e Phune t82(
1m (
(h
me Eu1torial Phon•!l!1Hll7
grea er
puc on
e
Second cl"' P"''"i' paid ''
industry than calls did," sa1d
Pomeroy, Ohio
Michael Post, vice president
Nutlunal Kth:ertbing repnaenIBtivo ward . Gr~flti1 Company, Jn.
of the Atlanta brokerage ftnn
c Botllnell• M.nd Gaillgher Div,
Johnson, Lane, Space, SmiUt
m Tlurd Ave, Now Yurl!, NY. &amp; Co "They will not only
10017
SulolcrlpUon rales Delivered by
app]y to (he market already
CIIITiel' WheN! KVailtlbll! 7S Cl!nlli pel'
toUched bUt Open Up DeW

Alternatives
looked over

By FRED DOWN
UP! Sports Writer
Somebody down there m
Ft. Lauderdale, Fla , should
advtse the New York
Yankees thetr fans back m
New York are beguuung w
wonder whether they 're
rootmg for a debatmg team
or a baseball team.
The no1se out of the
Yankees • camp thts sprmg
has been singular for absence
of the sound of the crack of
the bat on the ball - the
sound whtch supposedly 1s the
essenbal attraction of the
game tn~tP.:ui ther" h::~~

test 1t m court."

We~r.

Coshocton .

Dave Z1egler, Coshocton
Player of the year MarquiS Miller , Columbus St
Charles
Coach of the year - Henry
Lazasz , Buckeye South

He shot 59 per cent from the
f1eld the past season ad 70 per
cent from the free throw lme,
while averagmg over 15 rebound per contest and getting
nearly 4 aSSIS(S
Olmger, a 6-4 forward , was
the leadmg scorer on the
three AA all.Ohto teams wtth
a 27-l average
A fme outstde shooter.
Olmger led Ridgewoo d w an
unbeaten l~ regular season
and the No. I spot m the !mal
UP! Class AA Board of
Coaches rallngs
l.J:&gt;wne, a 6-foot guard, a w
notch ball handler who
played
agaiJlst
AAA
compellllon much of the
tune, averaged 20 6 pomts
per game m leadmg
Cathedral Latm w a 16-2
regular season
The 6-8 Dittmar, who has
excep!lonal shootmg range
for a b1 g man, led Buckeye
South w a perfecl regular
season, 18-G He averaged 22
pomts per game for the
Rebels, who flmshed No 2 m
the Class AA ratmgs
Pothast, a 6-1 guard, was
the wp scorer on a fme
Ottawa-Glandorf team ,
averagmg 24 5 pomts per
game
North Bend Taylor's &amp;-3 Art
Fo&lt;, w1th a 25 4 average, was
the wp scorer of the ilve
members of the second team,
which alw mcluded 6&lt;i Tom
Barrmger of Ehnwood, 6-2
Eddte Crowe of Carlisle, 6-3
Pete Hess of Elyna Cathohc
and 6-2 Dewey Milwn of
Columbus Mifflm
Named to the third team
were 6-1 Paul W1lhams of
Akron South, G-4 Larry
Wtlson of Bexley, 6-5 Jack
Cole of Carrollwn, 6-2 Ron
Myers of Sandy Valley and 61 Rtch Reed of Johnstown
Monroe

best prospects, drove m tllree Walker 's two-&lt;un tnple was
runs with two homers wlead the b1g blow for the Oakland
the Blue Jays wa 5-1 vtclory A's m a 7&lt;i triumph over the
San Franc1sco G1ants ..
over the New York Mets.
Von Joshua and Dan Bruce Boehle hlt a three-&lt;un
Thomas h1t solo homers and homer and drove m Sll&lt; runs
Jun Wohlford knocked m I.. ding the Califorrua Angels
three runs w1th three h1ts m to a 12-3 dec1s1on over the
the Milwaukee Brewers' !0-3 ·Cleveland lnd1ans
tnumph over the Seattle
Marmers
Gene Tenace's
THIS WEEK'S ~t'El
checked swmg two-run smgle
capped a four-run e1ghth
mnmg, whtch gave the San
01ego Padres a 4-2 tnumph
over the Chicago Cubs
Enos Cabell collected three
I.JSED CARS
hits, scored three runs and
stole lour bases as the
Houston Astros downed the
Cincmnat1 Reds, 10-8.
Rookie Sieve Kemp's
leadoff homer m the botwm
of the lOth gave the Detro1t
Tigers a 6-5 vtctory over the
Montre al Expos . J1m
Red w1fh red rvmyl roof ,
Palmer allowed two smgles betge cloth 1ntenor , power
&amp; factorv ~lr
m six mnmg s as the
Baltlffiore Onoles scored a 40 wm over the Minnesota
Twms
Fernando Gonzalez , a
naltve of Puerto Rtco, smgled
mthe go-ahead run m a threeYou ' ll Ltke Our Qualtty
run !Olh mnmg, whtch
way Of Do1ng Business
GMAC FINANCING
earned the Pittsburgh
Pomeroy
Pirates to a &amp;-3 vK-tory over 'f 9'2 5342
1
Openmg
Evemngs
hl6 •00
tlle Pittsburgh Pirates at San
T•
l
s
p m Sat
Juan, P.R Rookie Denms

1973 OLDS
CUTlASS 4
DR. SEDAN

'2495

Karr &amp; VanZandt

If your insurance agent can't give you
" worry free" service. fire him and h1re
M1ck.

"Let Mick Do It!"

(

You may never have to worry about
insurance again .

DOWNING CHILDS ~§J
INSURANCE AGENCY INC.
Middleport, 0.

992-2342

I .azasz named
classiest AA
'76·77 coach
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Veteran Buckeye South
Coach Henry Lazasz has been
voted the United Press
International Class AA coach
of the year.
Lazasz, who led the Rebels
to a perfect 18-G record and
the No 2spot m the UP! Ohio
High School Board of Coaches
ratings, was an easy wmner
m the ballotmg by coaches,
wnters and sportscasters
from around the state.
Lazasz picked up 21 of the
66 votes cast, Wllh Ron
Ntekamp of Ottawa-Glandorf
and John &amp;nith of Cohunbus
Mimm a distant second and
third wtth etght and seven
votes, respechvely
Btll Gorscak of No. I
ranked West Lafayette
Ridgewood was fourth wtth
five votes and Ketth Sooy of
Oberlin F1relands next wtth
three
Wtth two votes each were
Bellefontame's Will Collms,
last year's Class AAA coach
of the year, Dave Hltchen of
Genoa, Bob Smith of Akron
South and Steve Kick of
Ken ron

/

Get ba(kin the
driver~ seat
at City Loan.

•
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CITY LOAN

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ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VAU.Ft
Pomeroy, Ohio
HRS , IU.OO A M hi II 00 PM. Sun Thurs. tO 00 A.M.
111 12 00 P M. Fr~doy ond Saturday
See Us At the Pomeroy Benrt Br;ti!J~

125 E. Main Street 992-2171
' lliHIOV

�•
%"fli&lt;·i*lll~~~~-~:~

4- The Daily Sentinel. Midrll•oort·Pom•roy, 0., Tuesday, March 22,1977

Motivation: Woody Hayes style

Social
Roots for teen proble~s
Calendar
' '

Hayes view of contemporary American society isn 't totauy
RALEIGH, N.C. (UP[) - Woody Hayes stood b&lt;olore more
bleak.
than 200 prep coaches and asked, "How do you motivate a kid
"These sociologists do all their surveys and tell us what's
When asked what he felt
today?"
·wrong
with
America,"
he
said.
"Hell,
I've
been
into
more
good
were
the chief causes for
The Ohio State football coach then answered his question and
WEDNESDAY
youngsters
getting into
expounded on '·Coaching as a Profession" at the annual North American homes than aU dal!ln sociologists combined, and I
SPECIAL meeting of the
Carolina State high school football clinic Friday night in can tell you that's where today's heroes are. Not at hsnquets or board of trustees of the Rio trouble, the Juvenile Officer
clinics or cocktail parties. Hell,l've never heard an intelligent
Reynolds Coliseum.
Grande Community College of a large county said, (1)
broken homes, (2) little or no
"Hell. I don't motivate (em,'' he answered. 11 [ get them to conversation at a cocktail party."
Hayes rarely talked to the coaches about f_ootball, but it was Wednesday, 7 p.m. in the church attendance, (3) school
motivate themselves. Thst's the only kind of motivation that's
never lost in the discussion. He feels that every subject community college office. district , (4) parents paying
worth a damn."
Purpose of the meeting is to
Hayes discussed coaching, recruiting, education, morality, applies, in some way, to the football field.
select
a secretary-treasurer little attention to teen ac"This.is a book that every coach should read," Hayes said,
tivities.
literature, military history, family relations, racial relations,
waving a-small paperback. "You should go out and buy a copy. for the community college. National statistics mention
drugs and pornography.
TIIURSDAV
"These magazines they sell these days," he said. "They Read it. Read it again. Read it to your wife or to anybody
SIGNUP
DAY for boys and these causes consistently
among the top ten. other
publish these magazines and go to court then the newspapers who'll listen.
"It's called 'Essays' and, in particular 'Essay in Common girls of Syracuse - Miners- important factors given are:
come in shouting "Freedom of the press! ', That wasn't what
ville area, interested in
Session' by Ralph Waldo Emerson.
- Homelife involving
Peter Zenger had in mind back in 1725.
"'Our strength grows out of our weakness ...A great man is summer baseball, Thursday, frequent partying by paren\5.
·•He IITOte about the king," conlinued Hayes with a smile of
5:30 to 7 p.m. at Syracuse
- · Father away a lot or
satisfaction. The coach was a history-english major at Denison always willing to be little ...When he has a chance to be Municipal Building . .
·
deceased.
University, and his knowledge on either subject would put defeated ... '," Hayes re~d .
RIVERVIEW Garden Club
"I've read that every year for the last 45 years," he said.
- Parents who drink
some college professors to shame.
Thursday
evening, 7:30 p.m. frequently,
While Hayes is a developer of good football players, he sees
openly,
Hayes is known for his honesty and he is outraged by lying
at the home of Mrs. Denver "socially," excessively.
and cheating. He went so far as to report recruiting violations to it that the same players get a good education.
"Sure we get some guys in today that are poor students," he Weber. Co-hostesses will be
" Giving" children
at Michigan State that ga ined the Spartans a three-year NCAA
said. "But If we don't take them somebody elae will. The only ·Mrs. David Chadwell and everything desired.
probation.
Mrs. Ernest Whitehead. For
"We cleaned up our league last year," he said. "We cau~t a thing that disturbs me about it are the ones who don't take the program will be advice
A. broken horne Is of no
· team that had been cheating for 25 years. Weputit to them and advantage of their educational opportunities.
concern to those not Involved,
"SOme don't, and if that happens I corner 'em, push 'ern up from an expert and a especially a local law en·
we made it stick. They got the harshest penalty ever handed
against the wall, shove my fist rn their lace and say "You work bouseware party will beheld. forcement agency, unless
doym.
TWIN City Shrinettes,
"I don't want any damn cheaters around me. H a man will ..- I'll shove this damn fist down your throat.
things get out of hand in the
Thursday,
7:30 p.m. at the process. Yet, If a by-product
"It's amazing how smart some of 'ern get after that," he
cheat, then he'll break his word. The first thing I want is
home of Mrs. Beulah Ewing. is chlldren who break the law,
added.
.
character.''
MIDDL~PORT
ChOd then . it becomes, and right·
Hayes didn't get into the X's and O's of football at the clinic,
Hayes says he's got two rules on his team - there are no
Conservation
League,
Thursbut he did summarize his coaching philosophy.
haters, white or black, and no drugs.
fully so, community in"if you're gonna throw the ball you better have someone who day, 7:30p.m. Columbus and volvement. In these times,
"We had a case last week in Columbus," he said. "Two
young fellows were selling pot. Nothing harmlul in tbat was can cal£h it," he said of his offensive theory . "But the biggest •Southern Ohio Electric Co. people no longer stay
Mrs. Mary Rose to be the together "for the sake of the
thing about the passing game Is, don't use the damn thing.
there?
speaker.
Afterwards to go to children" ... some won't even
"We're in a great profession," Hayes told the coaches. "The
"They found 'em in a room with pot all around 'ern on the
the
Pizza
Shack. Members get married for this
floor . Each one had four bullet holes in the back of his head. impact we have is unbelieveable. We have great power. But we
reminded
to
take bottle caps reasoning . But, whatever
don't dare misuse it, because we're dealing with human lives."
That's the kind of people you're deaung with."
for retlemptlon.
causes the dissolUtion of a
MIDDLEPORT Cub Scout home, if there are children,
Pack 245 meeting with there is no escaping the fact
uniform inspection to be held that they are involved and
7 p.m. Thursday at Feeney- affected, though not always
Bennett Post 128, American outwardly apparent.
Girls'
waverly {22 -ol vs SpringRegionaiTournament
f i el d North wes tern ( 14· 1).
COCOA, F1a. (UPI) - The Legion Home.
Should children be allowed
Pairings
Thursday, 9 p.m .
•
J ~ Houston Astros scor&lt;.d three
PRECEPTOR "Chapter, to witness the bickering,
United Press International
Fina ls : Saturday , 2: 30p .m .
runs in the sixth inning with Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, name-calling and -endless
Class AAA
Class A
(At Norwalk)
IAI Wooster)
the help of Enos Cabell's two meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thursday arguments that usually
Coach C. L. (Johnny ) stolen bases, Jim Fuller's at home of Nellie Brown.
Shelby (IB-1) vs Medina
Mansfield St. Peter 's 112-51
precede divorce, as some
(19-0) , Friday, 7 p.m.
vs Midd lefield Cardinal (19- Ecker's Rio Grande College run-£COring single and an
EMMA Smith Circle of the parents believe, to "better
Toledo Centra l Catholic O), Fr iday , 7 p.m.
Redmen opened their 1977
{19 -0) vs Bay Village Vay (16Sal ineville Soulhern (12-2) spring exhibition . schedule error Monday to take a 11).j! Reorganized Church of Jesus prepare them lor the real
1) , Friday, 9 p.m.
vs Rocky River Lutheran
exhibiiion victory over the Christ of Latter Day Saints world they wlll face?" ObFinals: Saturday . 7 p.m :
West . (17-1), Friday , 9 p.m . with a bang in Florida Cincinnati Reds .
will meet at home of Goldie viously not, such open policy
At Canton Fieldhouse'
Fina ls : Saturday , 7:30p.m. Monday by winning a triple
Clendenin
Thursday evening; in the home is reflected
Right-hander Mike Stanton
Greensburg Green (20-2) vs
( At Bowling Gree"
header.
a
white
elephant
sale will he strongly and consistently in
benefitted from the Astros'
Mentor (17- 4 ), Friday 7 p.m.
Ada (18.0) vs Delphos St.
In
the
first
game,
Rio
Warren Western Reserve
John (20-0J, Friday , 7 p.m.
rally to .record the victory held.
(16 -4) vs Clevelan d CollinWest Un i ty Hi lltop (20-2) vs downed Bloomfield, N..J., 5·2. despite allowing seven runs
SOUP SUPPER at social
wood (1 4-3) Friday, 9-p.m. • New Riegel (20-2), Friday , 9 Skipper Johnson pitched a and seven hils . Doug room of Bethany M. E.
Final s ; Sa t'u rda ')',7:30 p.m. p.m.
tltree-hitter . Brett Wilson had "Konieczny came on to allow Church, Dorcas beginning at
At Westervi lie)
Fina Is: Sa turday, 7: 30p .m.
three hits in four trips for Rio just one hit in the final three 5 p.m. Thursday; vegetable
Ravenna ( 11 -6) vs Zanes(A1 Delaware)
ville (10-3), Fr iday 7 p.m.
Zane Trace Guernsey (19- Grande.
innings to preserve the win. and bean soup, pie and
Columbus Walnut . .Ri&lt;J9e· · 0) vs Indian Val ley North 112In the second contest, Rio
DENVER (UPI) - The
Cabell, the Astros' lanky sandwiches. Take containers
(13-ll vs Columbus Waf - 31. Friday , 7 p.m.
edged Kentucky Wesleyan, 9- third baseman, collected for carryout; sponsored by ·Denver Bears Monday anterson (20-01. Fr iday, 9 p.m.
Sou lh Webster Bloom (16-ll
Dorcas Women's Fellowship. nounced the signing of former
Finals : Saturday . 7: 30p .m.
vs Lancaster Fisher Catholi c B. Wes Harriston was the three hits, 8cored three runs
winning hurler. Brett Wilson and sUlle four bases. Julio
major league pitcher and
IAI Dayton Arena )
(18-41, Fr iday . 9 p.m.
Cinc innati Mother of Mercy
Fina ls: Satur~ay , 7: 30p .m . went four-for-four in this tilt Gonzalez, an underdog to win
veteran
coach,
Marv
(10-11 vs Hamilton Taft (13(At Dayton Foeldhouse)
and
had
two
RBis.
Dusty
Grissom,
.as
the
team's
new
NEWYORK
(UPI)
-Steve
the second base job, also had
81 , Friday, 7 p.m.
Middletown Fenwick_(10-5)
Moran
was
three-for·four,
pitching
coach.
Cauthen,
the
16-year-&lt;Jld
three hits and scored three
Springf ield Norlh 121-01 vs vs Arcanum (14-01, Fnday. 7
and knocked in the winning times.
Grissom , 58, coached for
sensational jockey, won the
Dayton Colonel Wh ite (lB. l),
p.m .
Friday , 9 p.m .
Jackson Cen ter {16-4) vs run in the bottom of the
The Reds' Don Werner hit February poll in the race for ihe California Angels,
Fina ls : Saturday, 7: 30p.m .
Frankford Adena ( 19 -0 ), seventh inning. Steve Mlller
White
Sox,
the game's only home run. the 1Jth annualS. Rae1lickok Chicago
Class AA . .
Friday. 9 p.m.
homered
for
the
Redmen
.
Minnesota
Twins
and,
last
"Professional
Athlete
of
the
Joe
Morgan
was
the
only
(At Canton Fie.ldhouse) .
Fina.ls : Saturday , 7:30p .m .
In the third game · of the Cincinnati player with two Year" Award.
season, for the Chicago Cubs.
Navarre Fairless (17 -1) vs
Corlland Lakeview 12 1-1).
day, Rio slipped past Rhode hits and he helped the Reds
He pil£hed one year each
Auto
racer
Cale
Thursday , 7 p.m.
Island College, 8-7. Roy Kelly score six runs and tak:e an ~ Yarborough was second and for the Detroit Tigers, White
Akron Coven try . ( 14-4) vs
was the winning pitcher. lead in the fifth inning.
basketball
star
Pete Sox, Boston Red Sox, St.
Campbe11 Memor ial (16-61.
Gene
Orr
had
three
hits
and
Maravich
was
third
in
the Louis Cardinals, and six
· Thursday , 9 p.m.
HOLLYWOOU, Fla. (UPI) ·
three
RBis.
Larry
George
Finals : Saturday , 2: 30p .m.
years with the Giants.
voting.
- David Shula, son of Miami ·
(At Bowling Green}
had
two
hits
and
two
RB!s.
Eastwood ( 14-3) vs On1ario Dolphins' Coach Don Shula,
NEW YORK (UP!) For the day, Brett Wilson
plans to attend Dartmouth
(20-01. Thursday, 7 p.m.
Wayne
Bianchin, 23-year-cld
Lim a Bath ( 16-3) vs Avon
College instead of accepting a was seven for nine.
left
wing
of the Pittsburgh
I 11 -41. Thursda y, 9 p.m.
Tilday's schedule in Florida
football - scholarship at
F inals : Saturday , 2:30p .m .
Penguins,
was named
F1orida State, where he had find\; Rio taking on the National Hockey League
I At Westerville I
Dresden Tri.Valley (14-.2) signed a non-binding l,etter of University of Rochester and player of the week from
Continued from page 3
Central Connecticut State
vs War saw River Vjew (18 -0),
intent.
March 14throughMarchlo~ injuries. I wouldn't exactly call .314 a 'sophomore jinx' year
Thursda y, 7 p.m.
"I got my acceptance at University.
Columbus Harlley (1431 vs Dartmouth, and that's where.
' would you• Some people even said Lynn and 1 had worda. w~
Rio's baseballers will was_ann~~ced to~y.
Marion River Va lley 1"11 ·41.
.
B1anchm
scored
f1ve
goals
~r had a cross word between us e!tl)er when I was a coach
return
home
next
week.
I want to go," said the
Thursday , 9 p.m .
10 four games durmg the
or alter I became the manager."
·
Finals : Sa turday, 2:30p .m . younger Shula, who intends to
(At Cayton Arena)
week·
Considering
everything
that
happened,
Freddie
l.,ynn feels
play football for the Ivy
Dayton Jeffe rson (13 -6) vs wgue school.
he
had
a
decent
year'
last
seaaon
even
though
It
wasn
'I on the
WASHING TON (UPI)
New Richmond ( 17-2). Thurs .
same
par
aa
the
season
before
When
he
hit
.331,
drove
in 105
Guard Joe Colletta, who shot
da y, 7 p .m.
·
DISSIDENT
APPROVES
runs
and
had
21
homers.
Last
year
he
hit
only
10
homers.
51 per cent from the field and
CLAREMONT, Calif.
"I suppose If I had the two years reversed, everyone
averaged 23.2 points per
(UPI)
SOviet
dissident
would've
have said that was great," aays Lynn. "'lbe way
game for Bergen Catholic
Vladimir
Kozlovsky,
who
left
aome
talk
about what I did last season, they make me feel I had
High School in Oradell, N.J .,
Russia
for
eotile
in
the
United
a
bad
year.
I don't look at It that way. How many people hit
has signed a letter of intent to
States
.
four
years
ago,
.314?"
attend Catholic University.
Milwaukee Brewers
Press
By
Unite1
Not that many at all. Only five in the American League did
The 6-foot-2 Colletta, from Monday praised President
Purchased outfielder Steve
International
Carter's
human
rights
stands
any
better.
·
Brye from Minnesota Twins. Richfield, N.J., led Bergen as '1errlfic from the point of
Mon1ay
Zimmer
plans
to
have
Lynn
hit
second
this
year,
hoping
he'll
Catholic tlJ a 23-2 record .
Pro Football
College Football
view of a Russian dissident." be on base for some of the long ball~s like George Scott, Carl
New York Jets-$igned
Northwestern University " It certainly helps the Yastrzemskl, Carlton Fisk and Jim Rice to drive in.
Named Larry Mortier as tight end Richard Caster to a
morale of the dissident
"It'll be the first time in my life I'm hitting second " says
defensive backfield coach.' series of five one-year
community. It Is the biggest Lynn, "I'm a free swinger, but I'll have to take more pitches
contracts.
Indiana University
A thought for the · day: morale booster they hsve had and get aome more walks. Ill have to sacrifice ribbys for runa
Appointed Wally Neel as Pro Soccer
British poet Letitia Elizabeth in years," Kozlovsky told a scored. Instead of shooting for 100 runs batted In, I'll have to
Chicago· (NASL) - Signed Landon said, "Few, save the lecture audience at The
defensive end coach.
try to score 100 runa. The players and managers understand
Polish star Conrad Biger.
Baseball
poor, feel 1..- the poor."
Claremont Men's Colleges. that. I hope the fans will." ·
·

Regional pairings

5&lt;-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-P!lllleroy, 0., TUesday, March 22, 1977

Let's talk about our teens

Astros outlast
R~dmen
Reds, win 10-8
Wln three
•
lR Flon(J,lt

the case histories of law enlorcemcm . an only be
thousands of teens who have 8 factor for good, with tlie
later been arrested. The child's welfare being the
broken home may not be the ultimat,e goal.
·
•'
immediate apparent cause of
Next week we'll go Into
the teen's violation , but "greater detail on. the school
knowingly or otherwise the dropout.
b
child may have developed a
Ari\CJe.. ~P,oqsored
Y
syndrome having its foun- Young's Super Market,
dation in the family 's , Locust St, , • Middleport,
separation.
provided py J . ~- Cremeall.!,
Don't the parents have Middleport Chfj!f of Pollee.
rights, the right to seek
happiness in a new environ·
ment, with or without a new
marriage partner? No one
argues the point that each is
entitled to start · anew, the
underlying question Is , what
about the human rights of the
ch ildren ? Are they not
''entitled?''
The
school dropout
problem, far reaching in all
causes and effects, is often
tied in directly with the
balance of the marriage and
homelife in general, but not
always. A child showing
dropout potential should be
given a crash course in the
results he may expect; the
public library is probably the
best source for statistics, but
having the teen talk to
someone else who dropped
out - preferably one who
took .this rout~ and later
returned to finish school - is
. a good, practical demonstration of the fallacies.
So many times, in exploring the background of a
youngster in trouble, we find
he has never been made to do
anything he dido 't wish to do ;
he has never been made to
realize there is a higher
to give her a gilt, but
power in his home. Young
Easter is a great
people, allowed the luxury of
reawn
to show her
this thinking, have a rude
you
~re
with Pr~scilla•
awakening when they go out
ri~gs
and
pendants.
into the real world, especially
when they get into trouble,
and other people's rights
have to be oonsidered.
If it ever becomes
" ALL YOU ADO
necessary for a law en·
IS LDV£" ~
forcement agency to become
involved in correcting your
child's behavior, rest assured
everything will be done to
help him or her get back on
JEWELRY STORE
the right path. In these
Court St., Pomeroy
situations the attitude of the
parents 'determines at what
point corrective measures
start and, more impurtant,
ofteh the direction and extent
of the affort. In any event,
parental cooperation with

'·

,~ IJou ~- "

doni need
areuJon...

Priscilla~

Goessler's

. BIG FREEZER
SALE

Sports Parade

Diamond business

·

WAREHOUSE CLEARANCE
OF QUALITY ADMIRAL

8 Cu~lc ft ........................... '250
15 Cubic ft .......................... •300
20 Cubic ft ......................... •350
25 Cubic ft ......................... •400

UPRIGHT
10 Cubic ft ..................·....... '255
13 Cubic
ft. ;.......................•290
'
·~-

·-~-

' I

Wagner's Orange Drink ..........,.....~.3/'1

Ken Quart Ja.s ........................ ~~. •1.99
Dinty Moore Beef Stew ............. ~~.~...a9c

5th &amp; Pearl · Racine,
PI&lt;EB~'

u.

STORE

Marin 22 - March 25
Right Reserved To Ltm"it Quonlllie$

We Gladly A&lt;eept Fed. Food Stamp•
Monday thru Friday

Armour Vienna Sausage ........ I~.-~~. 3/'1

Idahoan Instant Potatoes .... r.~t~t~~~: 59c

9:00107 ;00
Saturdar 9 to 7

CLOSED

LB.

DAIRY SPECIAL

VALLEY BEll

COTTAGE CHEESE

89~.
• •
24 oz.
CARTON

•

BEEF.
LIVER
29~

CELERY

ROME
·APPLES
3LB. BAG

69~

"·HAM·:.;·

BOB EVANS

LARD·
2ll.

'

...

'

DEU·CACY
·;, ~i: ..

•"

1.1

'LB.

...

1:

Ill:·

.... ,. 'f

Uy Helen and Sue Bottd

\lll

Mv!ce for the Down at Hearl
For the program, Mo~ . Rap :
·Mrs. Irene Brannon of Rio
Grande, newly elected Patrick Li,Jchary reviewed
Don't you get weary of all the "misery" lettefs? Here 's a
district Iiirector, and her hus- "The Man Who Moved a blanket prescription for self-pitying people : Send 'em a
band, wer~ guests at the Mountain" by Richard C. · placard that says, "Eat a live toad in the morning and nothing
Saturday luncheon meeting Davis. The boOk is about Buf· worse will happen to you all day."- CAUFORNIA GIRL
of the Meigs County Retired falo MoWJtain, located in
Teachers Association.
· Virginia near the West e .G.:
. Jra Wolfe welcomed lhe Virginia tum pike. "The story
... Nor to the toad! But not all our letters and downers.
members and guests and the is about clannish Scotchmen, Read on :
group sang the' doxology their conflicts with others,
+++
before the meal. There was and a young man named Bob Dear Helen and Sue :
silent prayer in honor of two Childers who became a
I'm 18 and have been married four months. When I visited
minister . home last I saw my younger brother giving our folks rough
deceased members, Mrs. Pres byterian
Gladys Hayman and Seth Childers' ministry as well as times . Lecturing him on the stinky way he acts, I realized a lot
his influence in securing bet- about myself.
Nicholson.
. Wolfe read an Indian ter roads, and building
My last year at home, Mom and I had a lot of.differences,
prayer to open the meeting schools and churches is as most 17-year-olds and their mothers do. As customary, I
and commented on the need related in the book. He died smarted off to her.
for seeing the humor in life. at 69 and was eulogized by
But it's finally,dawned on me: all she's done, all she does,
Mrs. Anna Hilldore gave the Woodrow Wilson , The all she'll keep on doing for thoae around her. She has gone
auditor's report and there Roanoke News and other without to give to us. Whenever we wanted or needed
was a short talk by Mrs. newspapers.
something badly enough, she forgot the word, "No," or when
Brannon.
we did something not too terribly wrong, she always managed
tlJ look the other way.
1 hope the old saying "like mother like daughter" comes
true for me. If I can only pick up half of her kindness in my
lifetime, I'll be_better than most people. I hope I'll be the kind
of mother my wonderful Mom was and is. - PUMPKIN

Past matrons donate
$25 to Smith fund
Past
matr ons
of
Evangeline Chapter, Order
of the Eastern Star, Middleport, voted to make a $25
contribution to the Christina
Smith FWld at a meeting held
Friday night at 1he home of
Mrs. Virginia Buchanan.
Read at the meeting was a
thank you note from Mrs.
Kathryn Knight for flowers
sent to her when she was ill.
Elowers were sent to Mrs.
Euvetta Bechtle, now home
from Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Mrs. Emma K. Clatworthy

Dear Pumpkin:
When you become that kind of Mom, you'll realize those
''differences'' you remember with guilt are par for a mother's
was devotional leader using course. She won't recall them as vividly as you do; in fact, she
the poems, "He Was One of may even share the blame . Part of love is worrying over the
Uso and uln the Garden of · hurts you may once have caused - which the loved one may
Gethsememe." Mrs. Mary already have forgotten. - HELEN
Hughes will have the Apri115
+++
meeting at her home. Games Rap:
were played wilh prizes goYou asked about high school attitudes toward sex, drugs,
ing toldrs. Helen Reynolds, elc. You'll be glad to know that overdone sex, pot, pills and
Mrs. 'katie Anthony, Mrs. cigarettes are losing out for most of the kids at our East Coast
Clatwurthy, and Mrs. Grace high school.
.
.
Lately it's alcohol that now fits into the scene. Most people
French. Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Buchanan to handle drinkiog with responsibility. Our parties usually
those named and Mrs .. consist of listening to the latest · rock, putting on drama
Beulah Hayes, Mrs. Evelyn impromptu, sitting around the piano or just rapping. H
Lewis and Mrs. Rosemary someone overdoes, a friend insisis on driving him or her home.
I'm not saying drugs aren't available aod accepted, but
Lyons.
those who take them aren't "in" any more. Their friends
worry about them and try to get them off the stuff. You're
never encouraged to take drugs here.
I think today's youth is becoming more serious and
responsible and in this kind of life there isn't room for a lot of
sex and wild partying. The pressure to be "popular" is off and
individuals are freer to make their own decisions because the
crowd is no longer following a certain pattern. - GLAD

Women in Shakespeare
program is scheduled
•

Pastor
SUrprised
The congregation of the
Syracuse First Church of God
honored their pastor, the

Rev. George Oiler, with a
surprise birthday party
reeently.
He wa s presented a
Llecurated birthday cake
along with gifts. Sandwiches,
potato chips, Kool Aid and
cuffee were served to George
Freeland,
Richard
Duckworth, Janel Nea l,
Genia Wal burn , Sandy
Neig ler, Donna Koehler ,
Lenora Jenkins, Mr. and

~

Social
Calendar

BALM

Bubble Bath or
Bath Oil Beads

2.75 oz . Jar

$}49

Reg . 52 .99

Mrs. Guy Harper, Sampson
Hall, Paul Voss, Norma
Wilson, Kim Wilson, Kellie
Rought, Stephanie Rought,
Bernice Levacy, Jo Ann
Wears and Alke Jones.

SALE

DIAPARENE

HAR.D OR MEDIUM
Reg . 79c
SALE

25

¢

BACON

NBACON

BY TltE PIECE
LB.

79~

FRESH FISH

...

SALE

GARDEN HAND TOOLS

'Apricot-Green Apple
Strawberry
8 oz . ·
SALE
Reg . $1.85

65¢

Reg . 89c
SALE

JERGENS
BATH
·SOAP

LISTERMINT
MOUTHWASH &amp; GARGLE
12 oz.

Reg . $1.51

6/$1 00

Reg . 35c

.

89¢

SALE
MENNEN

MAJORETTE TOY TRUCKS

SKIN BRACER
6 oz.

Reg. $1.85
Reg . $1.50

SALE

89'

99¢

SALE

PERSONNA

STAY-FREE
MAXI-PADS

DOUBLE II

30's
Reg . 52.62
SALE

RAZOR

$149

Reg . $3 .50

DAISY SHAVER

SALE

SALE

MIXING SPOON SET
Reg. 98'
6.4 oz.

~eg · su 9

SALE

SALE 85'

DERMASSAGE
LOTION

COLGATE 100
MOUTHWASH

6 oz .
Reg . $1.36

12 oz .
Reg . $1.42

SALE

SALE

49~
().TIPS
COrroN
BALLS

SHICK

604
INJECTOR

+Platllllm

SO's
Reg. 71c
SALE

7's

Reg . $1.65

SALE

39~

89~
G.E.
MAGIC CUBES

V05 SHAMPOO
VS-11 15 oz. Normal
VS-11 15 oz. Oily
Reg . Sl.SO

J's
Req. s:i.29

REUTER-BROGAN

HAS

89*

70's
Reg . $1.69

.

POLLY·s POINTERS

KROGER

BABY WASH
CLOTHS

EARTH BQRN
SHAMPOO

Mrs. f3aity
entertl.lins
sewing club
Mrs. Shirley Baity hosted a
meeting of the Sew-RiteSewing Club at her Lincoln
Heights home Wednesday
night.
Mrs. Pandora Collins
presided a t the meeting with
Mrs. Carolyn McDaniel giv·
ing the treasurer's report and
Mrs. Evelyn Giimore the
secretary's report A white
elephant sale was held.
Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Martha
Hoffman, Mrs. Collins, Mrs.
Lenora McKnight, and Mrs.
Gilmore. Refreshments were
served to those named and
Mrs. Lucy White, Mrs. Joni
Hoffman, Mrs. Betty
Wehrung, Mrs. Ann Browning, Mrs. Mildred Wells, and
Mrs. Flo Strickland.
..

Sale79~

16 oz .

c'~~~ $1.36 Value

Mrs. l..anny Jenkins, Mr. and
Mrs. R. L. Miller, Mr. and

Dear Glad:
MAGGIE GOES HOME
Thanks for your upbeat letter.
The program is a series of dowment fur the Humanities.
. LANCASrER, Ohio (UP I)
May we hear from -other high school students across-the - Maggie Good has quit her
Emphasis will be on
dramatic readings and
discussions to be presented Shakespeare's views and how country? Tell us, readers, do you agree or disagree with intense Citizens Band radio
by the Women's Resource they can help in the "Glad"' - HELEN AND SUE
broadcast plea to help a
and Policy Development w1derstanding of the changfriend meet some medical
Center in 14 Ohio cmes and ing roles of women today.
expenses, but that doesn 't
Refreshments will be servtowns this spring.
mean the fund drive has
It will be presented free of ed following the prorrended.
·
charge to the public under :::::::.~~ili: .:::s:::..:.~~~Mrs. Good spent nearly
the auspices of the Alpha Epfour days - from Friday
silon Chapter of Alpha Delta
night until Monday night - at
Kappa, the Middleporthei
CB radio issuing a. plea
Polly Cramer
P.omeroy Area Branch of the
for money foc what she called
Aroericap Association of
the Charley Fund. Her pleas
. University Women, and the
By Polly Cramer
DEAR POLLY - I have netted $10,090.49.
Retired, Teachers AssociaThe money was put in a
DEAR POLLY - Face and help for Janis who has grass
tion of Meigs County.
bank
to help her _friend Jo
hand creams have left greasy growing between the bricks
TUESDAY
· The series is supported, in
Anne
Claycraft meet the
AMERICAN
Legion stains on my solid color in her sidewalk. I have had medical expenses of her son,
part, by a grant from the
Ohio Program in the Auxiliary, Post 602, 7:30 sheets and pillowcases. Has this problem for years. First Charles David Claycraft, 5,
anyone had success in remov- thing in the spring is to put
Humanities, a State Based Tuesday night at the hall.
ing such stains?- ANNE B.
some gasoline in a small who was hit by a car
Program of the National En·
MEIGS Area Holiness
DEAR ANNE B. - One watering can with a spout and Wednesday nii!ht near his
Association at Hysell Run
authority suggests placing dribble it on any weeds or home here .
The child remains in
Free Methodist Church · the stains fa ce down un paper grass coming up. If they are
critical
condition in a
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. The Rev.
towels and then applying a saturated they will nut return
Columbus
hospital. .
John A. Coffman, pastor of 'dry cleaning solvent to back or at least not before the.next
'
the Racine Nazarene Church,
side of stain, brushing !rum spring. I even go along !he
guest speaker. Public invited.
tlie center to the outer edges edge of my sidewalk in front tons through both sides of the
with a clean white cloth. of the house ' where they blouse up just that far and the
RUTLAND
Baseball
'
Dampen.stain with water and overlap the walk. (Polly's blouse will look as if it was in·
. 'nle -annual Sunday school wgue meeting, 6:00 p.m.
rub with BAR soap or light note - Be sure the conwoner tended to be that way. - T.M.
clintest kick~ rally was Tuesday at Gene Wise home
duty
liquid detergent. Rinse has a small spout so . the
Polly will send you one of
beld recently at tt.. Mid- in Rutland for all interested
andlaunder.
gasoline only goes whe1·e her " peachy" · than k-you
dleport . United PentecosDrl persons.
I have had good ·hick needed and don't smoke or cards, ideal for framing or
Church WJder the direction of
MEETING TO establish
removing
lipstick stains light matches while doing placing in your family scrapMrs. Linda Knittel, wife of Meigs Junior High School
(grea
sy)
from
pillowcases by this.)- MRS. E. F. E.
book, if she uses your fa vorite
the pastor, Rev . William Parent-Teacher Forum
rubbing
petrulewn
jelly
into
DEAR
POLLY.
When
Pointer,
Peeve or Problem in
Knittel.
designed to provide a
stains
and
then
applying
lishopping
fur
sk
irts
or
her
column.
Write Polly's
Theme for the nine week medium through which
quid
detergent.
With
a
light
trousers
take
along
some
Pointers
in
care
of this
contest is "Baseball" and the parents and teachers could
rubbing
stains
disappear.
small
safety
pins.
Pin
one
innewspaper.
kick-&lt;Jff rally began by choos- IWirk together to develop full
Rinse out and then launder as side the frunl center waist·
ing two team captains. Carl potential of the jWJior high
usuaLPOLLY.
band of whatever you dec1de
Nottingham was selected as school for students. All
DEAR POLLY - Thor- to buy and have no more worteam captain for the slug- parents including those of
roughly
clean a roll on ries about whether or nut the
gers, and David Acree aa ;resent sixth graders urged
deodorant bottle that the top tag os in the front or back.
captain of the tigers. The ob- to attend, 7:30 Tuesday in
comes off of and fill with Modern pins do not rust so
· ject iB to see whiJ;b.Wilnfcan !i!hool cafeteria.
water to use wben pressing can be left in when garments
omo ETA Phi Sorority seams. This is great as .one are washed and the ability to
bring In the-nou.t new people
Tender Message
to the Sunday school over the Tuesday at the Columbus and never gets too much water in feel a pin is a great help in
of Comfort
nine week period. For each Southern Ohio Electric Co .. one place.
centering skirts.
n.W person, a "home rWJ" is 7:30p.m: Election of officers.
When putting on gripper
Tired of losing buttons? IHh..--~-....
AMERICAN
Legion snaps sew four stitches so put on that blouse or shi
recorded.
To the individual who br- Auxiliary, Drew Webster across the base and they and button it !llOSt of the way
ingain themoatnewpeople, a Post39, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at l'!'ver slip. The ,threads can up but leave enough space
ball glove JV111 be given. A se- the hall: Rep: Ron James to be p~lled o,u! afte.r:-\!Je.~ ar,t', ,operl so it can be slippeq over
cond place prize of a hat and SJl!l·~·op legislation, Charles on. -MRS,C:'A.W,· • • • ' • •the head. Then sew the buta third place . priZe of a Lesar 01) civil defense, and a ; DEAR ~!i'OLLY,!;'.J.: 1\iy 'l'ott •
baseball will be awarded.
representative oi the Meigs Peeve (and' believe · me it
On April. 23, the seventh u A!IU)tY JW~Jtii " Department •-peevew ,_, pl61lty}'t'Uncerns
.week of the contest, a ball 'dn'hypertenSI6~ ; The meeting ti1e_metc'llail18 1ri tl\ls co\intry
game will take place between is open to the public.
who s~ll products made,
pie two tea~. Pa11i~!pants
WEDNESDAY
manufactured and produced
~invited. : ~.
MIDDLEPORT Literary in foreign countries. Often
"The Insurance Store"
Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at they'are made of the poorest
,..
... • · • the home~ of Mrs. James quality materials and cost
1. Auto Insurance
1. Jewelry and Other
2. Home Insurance
HOME HOM 9181'11 ,: Titus. Mr • Richard Owen to outrageous prices. What is
Valuable~
3 Mobile Homes
9.
Business
Package
•": Mr. and !' Po'l n." ..Wilbu . ·-rjflew "Roots."
much worse is thai they are
4. Healtl\ Insurance
Policies
s. Life Insurance
10 . Liability lnturance
CSRVICAL Cancer Clinic, paying or supporting those
" 'Bailey, Pomeroy, R. D., h,ave
6.
lnt ln~urance
11 . Farm Insurance
returned hcxne ~Iter Wli!t,lg Wednesdfy at Veterans t'Uuntries while thousands uf
7. Motorcvc•es
their daughter, 'and ~family, Memorial Hospital. For people in this country w~_tl;.
' Mr. and Mrs. Davl4 Wiley appointment telephone . 992· the streets jobless. •,.ngry
"If You Have It, We Can Insure It"
"lind daughter, ~ja. ln 3382 or the cancer office, and homeless. - N.1&gt;. ··
" Danville, Cal!(. Dav1d, . JI•s Tu~ar, or Thursday, I to 5
•·transferred lhere ' from p.m.
PACKAGE POLICY- Put your aulo , home. health
and life insurance Into ONE pol!cy . Save mariey and
• Ravenswob(j,,fla the Kaiser~ ~
have one premium due dAte for all your Insurance.
' Center In- ~and la~t falL ,
'
' ThiS IS the ~trip west
POMEROY • Middleport
Some Of Our Other Services:
"lor the Baileys.
Lions Club, Wednesday noon ,
· Copy Service-Notary Service-Car Leasing
Meigs
Inn
.
'
SerVICI!
'
POMEROY Chapter 80.
Royal Arch Masons. 7:30
VISIT HERE
REUTER·BKOGAN IN~URANCE SERVICE
•••
p.m. Wednesday, Pomeroy
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest J onell Masonic Temple.
" The insurance Stone"
• and aon. Columbull, were
BOSWORTH Council 46,
SundaY visitors of Mr. and
214 E. MAIN
PH. 992·5130
··Mrs. Harry S. Moore. M~. Royal and Select Masters,
stated assembly, B p_.m .
·Mtflre lS lrpprovlng from his Po!f1eroy Masonic Ten'lple.
~---,.nK.'entlllness.
. ·

YES

SLAB
LB.

~~

,.,_,_,_,:\i:

SYMPATHY
R.OWERS

Whole Kernel Corn .. )~~.~. 3/'1

'

.

if',,,,;,,,,,,, , ,G::,;;;;i~;'' ' ii';';,.,.,.,

Contest
begins

FREEZERS
CHEST

·

Irene Brannon
attendS meeting

SALE

SALE

$}Z9
SINUTAB
NASAL
SPRAY

PLANT STARTER
by Landmark
Reg . $1.39

SALE

89¢

S'IMONIZE
SUPER BLUE

CAR POLISH
10 oz.
Reg. $1.59

5 oz.

Sinutab

-~- I

Reg . 51.60

SALE

SALE
. r:·

69c

�&amp;-The Daily ::entinel. M;rltileport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Tuesday, March 22, 1977

SUPER
MARKET

Raul Castro's actions take
some glow off his objectives
Copyright 1977
Investigative Reporters and
Editors lnc.
Distributed by United Press
International
When Raul Castro, an
International affairs attorney
and
former
U.S .
Ambassador, took over the
governorship of Arizona in
1975, he attacked the climate
of corruption with gusto .
. Perhaps it is too early to
state there has been a
dramatic fall from that lofty
!I'Omise, but signs of slippage
are evident, not the least of
which is castro's failure to
report as income, in a state
declaration, a $25,000-$40,000
vacation home in northern
Mexico's San carlos Bay ~
given to him in 1974 in
payment of a legal lee.
When interviewed, Castro,
a Democrat, .said he would
have to check with his
accountant to see if the house
had been reported on his
federal tax return.
IRE's investigation also
found that Castro has held
meetings in the Governor's
office and a Washington,
D.C., hotel with a former
client he himself describes as
a "con man .. .schemer ...swindler."
. The former client, who has
been involved in recent dealings with a convicted land
fraud swindler and another
man indicated for stock
fraud, paid castro with a
'10,000 check which he never
cashed.
Other signs of erosion found
In the castro administration :
He
dismisses
suggestions ·or conflict "of
interest as wellintentioned
mistakes.
- He appoints tough
a&lt;lmlnistrators to clean up
the state police and corporate
corruption, but his cronies
get state building rental
contracts by underbidding
competition and then getting
state approval lor cost
overruns and rent hikes.
-He appoints men to state
office despite confidential reports of questionable
character.
- He campaigns against
mob&lt;onnected businessmen
he says have infested the
state, y~t insists he does not
recognize some of their
names among his campaign
contributors.
An exami.nation of some of
these cases makes the

erosion more discernible:
THE HOUSE
In April, 1974, well into the
gubernatorial campaign,
castro put his law practice on
the sheU and began collecting
outstanding legal fees. · In
payment for preparing contracts for the San Carlos Bay
retreats, Castro was given
one of the estates by .friend
Rafael caballero, northern
Mexico' s principal land
developer. Neighboring
developers valued the estate
at $40,000; castro suggested
it was worth $25,000.
The house, which castro
does not identify as anything
but a legal fee, does not
appear on his sworn
declarations of income with
the secretary of state for,l974,
1975 or 1976. It does appear,
however, as a property asset.
In a discussion between
IRE and Castro on the status
and value of the house, the
following
exchange
occurred:
Q. Can other people just go
In off the street and use the
house when you're not there?
A. No. Absolutely not.
That's my house.
Q. Then you have exclusive
uae of the house?
A. Yes. A:; I said, it's my
house .
Q. Then why didn 't you
1eclare It oo your Income
tax?
A. Did I say it was income'
Q. You sal-t it was a legal
fee.
A. I... I see what you mean.
I'll have to see my
accountant.
Two weeks after the inter-

vie'w, the

comm issio ns. Since then

Marley has been accused but not criminally charged of ordering Bolles' death.
IRE 's investigation of
Marley's appointment found
several surprising aspects.
Although Castro first told
IRE he had been unaware of
Marley's past brushes with
the law or the extent of his
liquor interests, IRE found
that castro had been given
information about Marley's
past before making the
appointment . The
information was contained in
a thick dossier 1Jrovided to
the governor's office by the
Department of Public Safety.
IRE also learned that
been
Marley
had
recommended for the
appointment by Dwight
Patterson, Mesa rancher and
castro confidante who loaned
$10,000 and contributed $2,000
to the governor's campaign.
Patterson had been stateappointed trustee for
Emprise Corp., half owner of

governor'~ office

said .he was still checking·
with the accountant to see if
he had included the house on
his U.S. income tax
statement. ·
TilE APPOINTMENT
In Jariuary, 1976, castro
named Kemper Marley, one
of Arizona 's most powerful
citizens, to the state racing
commission. Marley was
Castro's · largest single
contributor - $19,000, plus
$5,000 from
Marley 's
daughter. Marley also heads
United Liquor Sales Co., a
liquor wholesaler in the state.
Marley was forced to
resign not long after his
appointment because Arizona
Republic reporter Don Bolles
wrote a series of articles on
Marley's past associations
with liquor tax rackets and

Goldwater denies
gangster cronies
By
United
Press
International
Investigative J;teporters
and Editors Inc. have
charged in a series of
previously published articles
that l'tobert Goldwater, the
brother of Sen. Barry
· Goldwater, R-Ariz .,
maintained business and
personal relationships with
reputed organized crime
figure Moe B. Dalitz.
1n addition, the IRE said
Robert Goldwater received
free rooms at the Desert Inn,
and that he has a line of credit
at the Las Vegas gambling
casioo. The IRE also said
Goldwater has accompanied
Dalitz on golf courses and
other outings.
Robert
Goldwater
responded
to
these
allegations in a letter sent to
attorneys for United Press
International and to other
news organizations saying :
"As I told the (IRE)
reporters, I have been acquainted with Mr. Dalitz lor
some nwnber of years, but
have entered into only a
single buB!ness transaction
with him- the placement of
a store in The Desert IM in
Las Vegas in i963. oJ have
played golf with Mr. Dalltz on
occasion and have seen him

malfeasance while serving on
the sl.1te la ir and highway

socially," Goldwater wrote.
"I am not at all ashamed to
have
maintained
an
acquaintance with Mr .
Dalitz. While I know nothing
of your reporters' allegations
with respect to Mr. Dalitz, I
do know that during the time
that I have known him he has
been a public spirited citizen.
He has been a generous and
frequent contributor to
charitable causes and has
been a ·very respectable
ctizen of his city, state and
country," Goldwater wrote.
In responding to the IRE
report that he had gambling
debts in Las Vegas,
Goldwater Wl'ote:
" Your (IRE ) reporters
have asked about my
gambling debts at The Desert
Inn in Las Vegas. There
simply have been no debts
incurred 1and certeinly none
in the amounts suggested by
their inquiries. I have no· idea
from what source they
obtained their information,
but it simply is not true,"
Goldwater Wl'Ote.
According to Larry Hammond, attorney for Robet
Goldwat~r. Goldwater is
waiting to see all the articles
published by the IRE before
making any further public
statement.

NEW HAVEN, W.Va. Tech.-Sgt. Kenneth M.
Gibson, "'n of Mn. EUie
Gibson of New Haven, bas
graduated from the Air
Force Logistics Command
Noncommissioned Olflcer
Academy at Robins AFB,
Ga. The sergeant Is a
medJeal

services

lecbn!clan at Wrtgpt·
Patterson AFB, Ohio.

Arizona's dog racing
monopoly, while Emprise
was appealing a federal court
co nspiracy
convicti on
involving hidden ownership
of a Las Vegas casino by
Detroit Mafiosos,
As ·a convicted fel'ln,
Emprise was barred from
getting racing permits under
Arizona law. When the appeal
was rejected, Emprise got
around the state law by
setting up a new corporation,
Ramcorp Metais, to take over
its Arizona interests. The
racing commission accepted
this device, which amounted
to the same people doing
business Wlder a new name.
Marley's appointment to
replace anti-Emprise ·racing
commissioner Robert
Kieckhefer put him . in a
position to protect his own
business interests. A:; the
state's · leading liquor
supplier , he had been
wholesaling liquor to the
Emprise ra ce tra c k
concessiOI!S for 30 years. It
was a potential conflict of
interest.
castro has said he really
didn't know Marley very
well. Yet, when the Arizona
Republic first confronted the
governor with information on
Marley, Castro said he
intended to go through with
the appointment in deferen~
to a ~year friendship with
Marley. Then he would ask
Marley to resign - whic)J he
did.
castro's aide, Dino DeConcini, nlade a surprising state~
ment while discussing the
Marley appointment. He said
the governqr's office does not
"routinely run background
checks"
on
potential
appointees because of limited
time and questionable
legality.
When it was pointed out to
castro that he had appointed
his former law P..tner, Al
Rogers, to do nothing but
screen appointments, castro
replied : " It's true , we
haven't been as diligent as we
should have been."

Transfers

Allen E. Jenkinson, Af·
fidavit, Middleport.
James A. Taylor to Arthur
A. Taylor, Irene Taylor, .52
acre, Salisbury .
Maggie Whittington, U!o
Whittington to Ray G.
Searles, F'reda P. Searls,
Lots 5~. Rutland.
·
Juanita V. Cozart, Charles
R. Cozart to Samuel W.
Cozart, Parcels, Lebanon.
George Cummins, Opal included comments con~
Cummins to Carl Schultz Jr., cerning the school's breakfast program as well as
1.4,acres, Racine.
tentative mak,e-up dates for
school to be in session.
Highlighting the evening's
·saturday Afternoon
meeting
was a special guest,
Jr. League
Bill
Durst,
Olive Twp.
March 12 , 1977
S1andlngs
volunteer fireman, who gave
Team
Pts. an infonnative program on
Super S1ars
72
Nile Owls
68 "Fire Prevention in the
Road Runner s
46 Home." · ·
Bowlirig Stones
4.4
Plans for the April meeting
Red Barons
24 Include an Arbor Day
Gutter Busters
10
High game - Cl iff Kennedy Program to be presented by
17 1; Lanny Longstreth , Bob the Riverview Garden Club:
Haggy 168; Bob Haggy 152. recognition of past PTA
High series ....,. Bob Haggy
presidents, as well as a bake
472; Lanny Longsfre1h 430 ;
sale
for the benefit of the Boy .
Ron Cul!ums 404.
Team game - Super S1ar s Scouts under the leadership
787 .
of Chuck Hauber.
Team series - Nlfe Owls
2265.

Local Bowling

STORE HOURS
Mon., Tues .. Wed. &amp; Sat.- 8: JOtil 5:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

MASON FURNITURE
773-SS92

Herman Grate

Mason. W. Va .

9 ro 10
SUNDAY
10 ro 10

DEALERS PLEASE!
OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M.
OPEN SUNDAY 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M.

FRESH &amp; LEAN

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED
FRESH -

LEAN

BONELESS

FRESH &amp; LEAN

PORK
ROAST
HOMEMADE
PURE PORK

9

. . . . . ~·.89¢

SUPERIORS
ALL BEEF

9¢

SIDE .
BACON ••• ~~: .

with us!
PHONE

USDA CHOICE

•'

...

BEEFSAll

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

$ 69

CUBE

••

STEAK •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
LB.
.

•

•

ROUND BONE SHANK

WIENERS ...
SUPERIORS

SUPERIORS

POLISH

SUPERIORS

FRANKIE
12 oz.
WIENERS ........~~&amp;~ ••

12 oz.

WIENERS

BANANAS. .•....
DAIRY

5

Ll

SUPERIOR
SMOKED

59~

$1 00

LB.

POLISH SAUSAGE

SPECIALS

BROUGHTOt-jS

. .
f:'lastic $119
Gallon
MILK ................... .
2~

0

BROUGHTONS

HOMO
1;, Gallon
MILK .................. .

79¢

EGG
1 Pound
NOODLES Pky.

LB.

39¢

JUST
ARRIVED
.NEW SHIPMENT
OF
,.'

MIRACLE WHIP
Quart
Jar

'

FULLY BAKED

SEED
POTATOES

U.S. No. 1

PAN ROLLS..................~.~~g~••

IDAHO
POTATOES

AND

ONION
SETS

99~

47¢

BETSY ROSS

SOFTWEVE

BATHROOM TISSUE
2 Roll

10 LB. Bag

FROZEN FOOD SPECIALS
SCOT PRIDE

VANILLA
ICE MILK
GALLON
NORTH STAR
VANILLA

ICE CREAM
SANIMICHES
6 Pack

HUNT'S

69~

•

TOMATO
PASTE

•

~I

'•
•

BANQUET
CHICKEN-TURKEY
&amp; BEEF
.

POT PIES

4 For $}

89¢

BREAD
DOUGH
5

P~ck

BIG

99¢
2

BEANS 'N FIXINS

12oz .
Cans

REESE

•

PEA"UT BUTTER
CUPS10 Pak 79~

CALIFORNIA

ORANGES

20 oz.

c~n

59e

PILLSBURY
BISCUIT

89¢

'159

SUNSHINE

25 lb.
Sag

'339

ALL WEEK

·coLA
8-16 oz. Bottles

TIDE
SOAP POWDER

$119

. ·•' .
•

I

Coupon Exp. March 26, 1977
Twin City Gateway

CHEESE SIN·GLES
12 oz. Pkg. 89~

Tubes

COUPON

HUNT'S
TOMATO SAUCE

WESSON OIL

No. 85

..

T\)RKEY-CHICK EN-SAL!SBU RY
OR MEAT LOAF

GOLDEN ISLE

COUPON

COUPON

49 oz. Box

DOG FOOD

8 oz.

4

PURIIoiA

4lb . .
Bag

=~~ooouoooooooooooooo~•: ..~ 3

49

MACARONI AND CHEESE DINNER

CAT CHOW

SHOESTRING
POTATOES,

79e

I

$119

59~

Pkg.

COUNTRY EGGS
Dozen

E-IDA

40oz .
Bag

39

SOUP
·.MEAT .................... ~~~~

o
z
.
69¢
2
15
Cans

Coupon Exp . March 26, 1977
Twin City Gateway

No. 85
24 oz . Btl.

79¢

Coupon Exp. March 26, 1977
Twin Ci'ty Gateway

BANQUET
DINNERS

oz.49¢

11
Pkg .

.,:; -:-;-. -:. -:, ,.,'
!\~~\ .. .1

i;

MAXWELL HOUSE
VAC PAC COFFEE
No. 405
2 Lb. Can

::

&gt;i

$539

. ·I

.. ,,

Coupon Exp. March 26. 1977
Twin Citv Gateway

'

.

~~~~~~~iiiiiiii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:f~i~~~~~~~~~.4~~:·~~·~-~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~
~~~~~~~~~~~;,~~~,~-i-~.r--~-~~-~'~l
~~I
COU PON

DIET
RITE
8 16 oz. Bottles

" "" ·

HEFTY
TRASH BAGS
~~ Ct. fkg $169
Coupon Exp. March 26; 1977
Twin City Gateway

DR. PEPPER
a i6 oz. Bottles

THE AI.L NEW

MEIGS INN PIZZA SHACK

SIRLOIN
$
TIP STEAK........... ,.........~~·.. .

12 oz .

R. C.

PLANNING APillA PARTY
MASON FURNITURE

WE ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS

well attended
REEDSVILLE - The
Riverview PTA meeting
recently held at the school
was well attended by parents
and teachers of the school.
David Durst, sixth grade
student at Tuppers Plains
school , a · guest at the
meeting, led the group with
the flag pledge. Discussion
was led flY the president,
Teresa Collins, concerning
recent p~rchases and
projects for the schqol. The
PTA unit also voted to again
sponsor the local boy scout
unit. Nominating and
auditing committees were
named. WiMing the attend·
ance banner and room pr.ize
was third grade. Mrs.
Weber' s announcements

Meigs
Property

OPEN DAILY

VALLEY BELL

PTA meet

PRICES GOOD THROUGH SAT., MARCH 26, 1977

99•

WOO LITE
I

No. 205
16 oz . Btl .

99¢

Coupon Exp. March 26, 1977

LESTOIL .
4

No. 205
28 Oz. Btl.

79

Coupon Exp. March 26, 1977

·

·I

MRS. BUTTERWORTH .$.;
SYRUP
~;
No. 125
24 oz. Btl.
Coupon Exp. March 26 , 1977

~~~~~~~~;;~~~~~~~~~:~~~~~~~T~wiin~C~it~y~G~aitiew~ay~~~~~ ~~~~~~T~w~iniCiiityiiGiaite:w:~~y~~~~~:~~~~1~~;;~;:~~T~wiiiniCiitiyiG~aiteiwia~y~~~~~·~l
H'•EINZ KEtCHUP
tt ·· 14 oz. Btl .

39"

.

~

Coupon Exp. March 26, 1977
Twin City Ga

STA-PUF
FABRIC SOFTENER
No, 205
JJ oz. Btl.

59¢

Coupon Exp. March 26. 1977
Twin City Gateway

IMPERIAL
MARGARINE
NO. t05
Lb. Pkg.

39¢

Coupon Exp. March 26, 1977
Twin City Gateway

EVERFRESH
.GLAZED DONUTS
(Frozen)

14 oz. Pkg.

59

¢

Co11pon Exp . March 26 , 1977
Gateway

�- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .,

a- The DaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport-~y. 0., Tuesday, March 22, 1977

._;~~;;~~;--,

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Almauae

Unlied Press Internalloual
Today is Tuesday, March
, 22, the 8181 day ol 1977 with
284 to follow.
The moon is between its
new phase and first quarter.
The morning star is Mars.
The evening 8larll are Mercury, Vems, Ju!iter and

Saturn.
Thoee born on this date are
under the sign of Aries.
American

actor Karl
Malden (Malden Sekulovich)
wu born March 22, 1914.
On this day in hlslory:

---~~-

t::J\

2 SIGNS
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1976MONTECARLOLANDAU
.$5941
SliVer, deluxe Interior trim, split seat, air, full power,
t~pe . loaded with many goodies (Demo) 30 &lt;lays 100 per
cent guarantee.
1976 NOVA CONCOURS4 DR .
S4898
V-8 automatic, vinyl interior, air, load~ with
accessories, approximately 4.600 miles, cream color,
real sharp. (Demo)
1976 NOVA 2 DR. CABRIOLET
S3"8
6 cylinder, automatic, power steering, spt. mirrors,
comfortllt, rally wheels, radio and tape, door lock ,
color crea m. vinyl Interior. Sharp!

THE BLACK Lung Anoclation of
Pomeroy, Oh. Bernice Molden,
wishes to thank everyone for
their donations toward our trip
to Washington . It was greatly
appreciated.

your NIL
Von Schrader

b)'

dry-folm method.

No muu. No fuss.
No odor. Use the

GUARANTEED

same dlf.

REASONABLE

work
vuuanteed
All

RATES

Reedsvll,lo, 0 . Ph. 378-4250

NOTICE , Pratt's Meat Mkt .
(Pleasanton Meat Processing,
Inc.) Custom slaughtering. and
proc:essing, Retail, wholesale.
No oppoinment necessary . Coli
(614) 593-6655, houfl , 9:00 till
6:00 7 Pomeroy Road . .Athens .
Oh .
GUN SHOOT at the Rodna Gun
Club e ...ery Sunday . 1 pm
Assorted meats.
RACINE FIRE Dept. will · ko..,.e a
Gun Shoat every Saturday night
6 p.m . at the ir building in
Boshon, Ohio.
MILKSHAKES . THE old·foJhloned
way . Dairy l&amp;le, Middleport.
Golden Buckeye members 10
per cent discount ony purchase.
SHOOTING MATCH at Rutland
legion Hall, every Friday , 7
p.m.
WILL CARE lor elderly lady in
p ri ... ah
home . Lo co l
references. Phone 667-3305 .
THE NEW Owners of a tan female
German Shepherd left at the
Meigs Co. Dog Pound 3·4
weeks ago Would like to have
some more Information from
it'i previous owners , Please
ca11992-7653.

WANTED : MAN for roofing and
spouting, some duct work .
Must be able to go a head with
job , If interested, write Box
150, Pt . Pleasant, W. Vo. 25550.
Give experience and expected
wage.
R.N. NEEDED for Saturday and
Sunday shift . Call Arcadia Nur sing Home, Coolville, Ohio .
Phone(614) 667 ·31'16.
$200 · WEEKL V Possible stuffing
envelopes SEND self-addressed
Stamped envelope to : Edroy
Mo ils, Bol( 188CO Albany . Mo .
6&lt;402.
LADY TO liiJe in for room and LOST OR Stolen · Beagle rabbit
board for wagei . l ig ht
dog, license No . 750. Reword
Hou sekeepi ng .
Phone
for Information leading to the
9'12·3923.
ret urn ol him. Phone 992-5247 .
Or992·74\ 3,
LOST · APPROXIMATELY 25 choirs
borrowed from the Ewing
For Wodnoadoy, March 23, 1977
Funeral Home a year ago.
Nome on bock . If anyone has
seen . or knows the
wh.orobouta, pi8&lt;Jse coli the
funeral home at 992-2121 ,
S50 REWARD to anyone knowin:g
ARIES (Merch 21·Aprll 19)
lh4!! whereabouts of two
Whereas yesterday you weren't
alum inum extension ladders
too sharp. today you profit from
ond red wheelbarrow taken
from Luther Bartoe residence,
your mistakes and are very
Long Bollom.
astute at business. Hooray for
you .

ASTRO•GRAPH

TAURUS (April 20-Mey 20)
Success is likely today because
you ' re qu ietly dete rmined .
Before people realize what's OlD furniture, ice boxti , bran
beds, wall telephones and
happened, )'OU're king of the
parts , or complee households.
mountain.
WritO M. D. Miller , Rt. 4,
GEMINI (May 21-Juna 20)
Pomeroy, Oh io. Call 992-7760.
Someone who thinks quite a bit
of you will take you Into t)is con- CASH paid for all makes and
models of mobile homes .
fidence today. He's putting his
Phone area code 614-423·9531.
trust in the right person ,
CANCER (June 21-July 22) TIMBER 1 Pomeroy Foresl Pro·
ducts. Top price far standi ng
Keep In mind tht~ sound
sawtimber. Call Kent Hanby,
business advice given you by a
1-446·8570.
friend today . This person knows
COINS, CURRENCY, tokens , old
where of he speaks.
pocket watches and chains .
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Your
siiiJer and gold. We need 1964
th inking is ambitious today. The
and older si lver coins . Buy, nil,
rewards could be great. To think
or trade' Call Roger Womsley,
and not act , however , nets
7&lt;2·2331 .
nothing.
WANTED , CHIPWOOD. Palos .
VIRGO (Aug. 23·8ep1. 22) You
maximum diameter · 10 inches
may l;lBIJe to be a bit more firm
on largest end ,
per ton :
bundles slobs S6 per ton .
with another today than you
Oeliv~ed to Ohio Pallet ·Comhoped would be necessar~ . It's
pony , Rt. 2, Pomeroy, Ohio .
Im portant that this person knows
Phone 992-2689.
you mean what you say.
LIBRA (S.apl. 23-0cl. 23) CASH! ! ! for junk cgrs. Frye's
Truck and Auto . WRECKER SER ·
Partnership situations look good
VICE I Phone 742-2081 .
for you today, if your counterpart
WANTED , ONE mole goat. Phone
can match your own mettle.
Dennis Roush, 843 - 2~ .
SCORPIO (Del. 24-Nov. 22) It
may be necessary for you to
make a difficult career decision
today. If your plan Is well thought
out, sticl&lt; to your guns.
RISING STAR Kennel Boarding,
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec.
Indoor-Outdoor runs , grooming
21) You'll have better luck disall breeds. dean sonitory
cussing serious matters If you do
facilities . Cheshire. Phone (61-i)
It away from the office at367·om.
mosphere . Be sure to say
everything that's on your mind . HOOF HOLLOW. Buy, ull, trade
or train horses . RUTH REEVES,
trainer, Phone (61-4) 698-3290.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jen. 11)
Managing situ ations Is your POODLE GROOMING, reasonable
strong suit today If you r concern
rates . Call for appt. 742·3162 1•
lies mainly with the fate and forDOBERMAN PINCHER Pup•. AKC.
tunes of others .
14 weeks block and rust. Ean
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fab. 11) In
cropped , toll cut.oll ahots.
serious deli berations, don't dis·
Phone 7-42-2967 after 5 p.m.
count your mate's opinion . A
SPRINGER Sponlal/ups.
meeting of minds Is Imperative ENGLISH
AKC. Liver &amp; white, tiel trial
Ieday.
bred. Champion blood lines.
Coli Jim Butcher. 2•7·2206 or
PISCES (Fob. 20·March 20)
'19'2-5426.
You're more astute at material
matters today than you give
yoursell credit for. Vou could
turn a tidy little profit·

sa.

3 AND 4 RM . 'furn ished and un.
furnished opts. Phone 992·
5434 .

COUNTRY Mobil• Home p;;Af
33, ten miles north of Pome~oy:
Large Iota with concret1 potloa,
1radlng w!Ut foreign nations.
March 23, 1t77
sidawolks, runn•n and off
In
1820, Commodore
street parking, Phone 992-7f79.
You will make aoma lnlluantlal
Stephen J)ecatur, American contacts
this year that will prove FARM'ON-ri;;r~SI~es~,-;;;;;;
naval !Mro, wu mortaUy valuable In Important ways. One
wounded In a duel with such person could even help -~~ -bo~h._ Phono '19'2·5908.
3 ROOMS and ba.th furnlst;d opt.
CC1!1!!l!H!gre James Barron
enlarge your bank account.
All utili ties, paid. 356 North
(Are
you
an
Arlts?
Bernice
oulllde Washington, D.C. ,
Fourth Street , Middleport .
Osol
has
written
a
special
AstrofNfl !llrrm'• removal from
William Smith .
Greph Letter for you. For vou
IICtlve
copy send 50 ctnrs and a sell· SHULTZ MOBILE Hom; , fu;nis~~-.
In IMI, the Grand Coulee eddrt,.td, atamped envelope to Ulce new, ho1 city wgter and
Dim 1111 the Colwnbla Rlwr Aolro·Grtph, P.O. Bo• 489, gas . Phone Albert Hilt, Roc:ine,
beean p~oclucing :!ectric · R&lt;tdlo Cily Slarlon.. New Yor~. 949·2261.
N.Y. 10019. Be sure IO .. ~ lor FURNISHED APT, for rent. Phone
power for the Pacific
Aries Volumt 6./
'19'2·3975 o' m -25111 .
N1illi\ttll.
J
..~

-- -

Vinyl and aluminum
siding, storm windows and insulalion.
Call Professiona Is

BIOWillnlllltion SeiVices

Fl01ncin1 A•li~b~
!loon illlll Wals &amp;A Hies
SIOIM
WIIIDOWS &amp;DOORS

Bissell Siding Co.

WANTED TO rent with poisible
A local contractor
tor sole, I acre ond
IE~IACE,EIIT
option to buy : 50 to 200 ocres HOMESITES
up.
Middleport,
near
Rutland
.
Phone 949-2801
WINDOWS
.
secluded land, same tillable
Call '192-7481 .
with inhabitable house. Columor 949-2860
IUJMINUM
bia. Scipio, Bedford, or Rutlond NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 baths ,
SlOIIIC-SOIIITT
Free Eltimates
Townships .
Write
Tony
all elec., 1 ocre. Middleport ,
RuS$ega. 1331 Meadow Road.
dose to Rutland . Phone 992 No Sunday Calls Please
Columbus, Ohio-43212.
7481.
3S11$1 mo.
SMALL form for sole, 10'Y. down ,
owner finonced . Monroe Coun ·
f&amp;il03&amp;1
ly . W. Vo. Phone (304) 772·
3102 Of (304) 7J2.32T/ .
COAL, limestone, and calcium
Kitchen Cabinets, 1jooflng,
chloride ond calcium brine for COUNTRY farmland with secludConcrete
Patios,·
dust control and special mixing
ed wood&amp;, water and good ac ·
Sidewalks,
New
salt for formers . Main StrHt,
cess In Monroe County, W . Vo .
Construct,lon
&amp;
Pomeroy, Ohio or phone 992$1,000 down. call (3Q.I) 772·
Remodeling.
3891.
31Q2 Of (304) 772 -3227 .
AT
APPLES, FITZPATRICK ORCHARD. Commercial property opprox. 17
STATE ROUTE 689. PHONE
acres , level land,. locoted at
WILKESVILLE , (61 4) 669-3785.
Tuppers Plains on Oh iO, Route
7. Phone (614) 667-6304 .
FULLER Brush Firoducts for sole.
Phone '192-3.110.
NEW 3 bedroom house. built-in
Cheshire, Ohio
kitchen , both and 'h. Phone
CAMPER , $600. Also, hone
Route2
742-2306 or contact MilO B. Hut ·
trailer, $450 . Phone (614) 698·
Pomeroy, Ohio45769
Phone 614-367-0626
chison , Rutland, Ohio.
3290.
Free EsfimatesPh. 992-7119
3·16-1 mo.
STEREO. NEW AM-FM stereo REMOQElEO 5 R;OOMS and both. 1
J-11·1 mo. pd . ' - - - - acre land. Phone 7-42-276:9.
radio combination. $129.95 or
easy terms . Coll992-3965.
FOR SALE. All alec. nearly new
SHAKESPEARE BASS Boot 14'.
home in3 Rutland
Base· J~~~~~~~~~~~
ment.
bedroomsarea.
, ottoched
l!n6Mercury 20 h.p. with eiec.
Route 3, Pomeroy, 0.
garage,
$29 ,900
Phone
!ric start . 1976 tilt trailer , plus
742·2531.
other extras . $1695. Phone
9'12-3126. C. P. Riffle.
ONE ACRE , 3 bedrm ., 2 story
ANY PlliCH
home , dining.room, large both ,
FISHER WOOD Burning s~oves and
Installation. samples
natural gas, large porch , nice
ANY SIZE
form lumber. PHONE Facemyer
brought to your home
block garage . $20.000. Phone
and Salmons lumber Co .. Inc.
'19'2·5732.
Rt. 7 Middleport, Oh io, {614)
with no charge.
992-7425.
APPROX . IS ACRES , born ,
C..rpet-Lino.-Tile
hayfield on Sand Ridge. Phone
STRAWBERRIES In baskets and
Located in Langsville
(614)367·7401.
Phone
Mike Yaung at
flats , now bearing; pans ies,
Box 28-A
992-2206 ar "2-7630
cabbage, lettuce , broccoli , 3 BEDROOM ranch , 1•;, bothi , 1
Rutland, Ohio 4S77S
cauliflower, Brussels Sprouts,
acre, all e!ec. fmished garage.
Ph . (614) 742-2409
2·23·1 mo.
onions . Cleland Forms and
We DeliiJer
Fully carpeted , FiiJe Points
Greenhouse . Gerald ine
12-22
-4
mos
.
area. $30.000. Phone 992-2928
Cleland .
alter 5 p.m,
USEO FORESTRY EQUIPMENT . HOUSE WITH 5 lots, barh ond '/,
Hough Skidder Madel S7B:
with 4 bedrooms , double
yYill do odd jobs, roofing, painMichigan Model 55A6: Rebuilt
goroge, outbuilding ond cellar. 2 STORY 4 Bedrm. brick home in
ling, gutt8r work . Phone 992·
Morbark 348" Chip-Poe . comMiddleport. Phone 992-3457.
Phone (614) ,698·5607' or (3Q.I)
7409.
plete wi th screen. Contact Den·
773·5759.
GEORGE HOBSTETTER . J&lt;. Real SEWING · AL T ERA II 0 NS :
nis Smurr . Phone (614)
APPRO)(IMATEL V 7 or 8 ocres
Estate Broker, Pomeroy, Ohio.
. 838-5345 .
Upholstering ,
dra pes
wooded land in Rock Springs.
RACINE · 2.46 acres. 3
reasonable. 572 South Third
USED HOOVER ,Swoepers . $24 .50
Phone 9'12-2789.
bedrooms , living room . kit·
Ave ., Middleport . Phone
cosh or terms . Col1992·51-46.
c hen . bath , carpeting ,
6'h ACRE FARM, 7 rooms , both ,
9'12-6306.
droperies , fuel oil heat, central
C.B. T-Charlie One by Teaberry
born , pond , and furniture pric·
oir condit ioni ng, stave . PIANO TUNING, lone Daniels. 12
with antenna . Phone 992-3717.
ed all far $18,500. One mile
years of serv ice . Phone
refrigera tor , hookup for
from La ngsville, Ohio on C.R.
STEREO COMPONENTS including
washer
and
dryer.
front
porch
,
'1'12·2082
.
10. Phone 742-2668.
recei..,.er amplifier . changer ,
on . Tuppers Plains-Chester ARTIFICIAL INSEMINATION Ser·
and 4 speakers. For more in- HOUSE . 6 ROOMS , and bath. 6
water sy,stem . Approx imately
vice. DAIRY-BEEF For ser..,ice or
formation . call 992-5009 after
and three-fourth acres inside
'I~ mile from Racine. Phone
information · call : TIM RINGER ;
8:30p.m.
city l1mils . New siding and
949·2589 Priced $15 ,900. Hilton
AMERICAN BREEDERS SERVICE .
storm
windows.
3
acres
fenced
Wolfe, Salesman.
BROWNING EAGLE C. B. Base sta·
Home 662·4323 or AnSwering
for smoll pasture. $18,500.
tion". Phone 992 -5348.
Service, 593-6244 .
5
ROOMS,
BATH . utilities , double
Phone 992-7352.
cor garage on large lot in Don- WILL TRIM or tut trees or shrub1975 HONDA XLIOO, good condition . Priced $300. 1976 ZSO Han· 7 ROOM HOUSE . new carpet , , ville on S. R. 325. Phone
bery . Phone 949·2545,
roof, insulation owner financ.
742·3017 .
do mini- trail, ex&lt;:ellent condi·
ed . Coii992-74S4.
~·~~--~-------- FREE INSPECTION f9r termites !
tiqn. $300. Phone 992·5606 .
GEORGE HOBSTETTER , Real ·
Any single dwelling residence
6
'
/
t
acres,
garden
spot,
iome
Estate Broker. Pomeroy, Ohio.
MASSEY FERGUSON tractor with
treated for termites. $109.
pasture, firewood with wood- CHESTER - 3 acres land. 3
backhoe and loader: 1976 Ford
Southern Pest Con!rol, Racine ,
burning
stove,
fuel
oil
heat.
bedroom
houie
,
2
baths,
itandtruck 700 with dump bed , less
Ohio . Phone 9f9-2803 or
outbuildings 2 bedroom house,
up shower. storm doors and
than 6000 miles , Same as new:
949-2786
.
near hosp itol and tow n.
windows , woll to wall
Hydraulic post driver, new ; 400
$19,500.
Phone992-59f7
.
FREE
INSPECTION
for termites!
carpeting, refrigerator and
boles of hoy . mixed: sandwich
Any single dwelling residence
mochine: 3 point hitch turning 3 liEDROOMS home, all elec.. 1 stove, 2 outbuildings. Plenty of
treated for termites , $109.
plow ; three 1-4" bottom plow.
both , utility room by kitchen. fruit trees, Very good condi•
Southern
Pest Control, Racine,
lion
.
Priced
$35,000.
Hilton
Phone 843·2900.
ll5 I( 115 lot, 1 cor garage in
Ohio. Phone 949-2803 or
Wolfe , Sa lesman . Phone
Rutland.
Phone
742-2869.
REDUCE SAFE &amp; fast with GoBese
9&lt;9·2786.
9&lt;9-2589.
Tablets, &amp; E-Vap "water pills"
Nelson Drug .
TWO BOY's 20 inch bicycle, baby
bed, 1958 Chevy 6 cylinder,
1973 HILLCREST 12 ' , 70, 3
standard; RCA Victor .radio;
bedroo ms, shag carpet, ex·
VIrgil B. Sr., ReaiiQr
nice childrens clothes ronginQ
cellent
condition .. Moy ren t lot'
216 E. Second Slreet
from size 4 on up. Phone
First
iight
in $yrocuse. Phone
742-2078.
Pomeroy, Ohla 45769
992-3980.
Phone "2-3325
MAIN
1970 12 x 5o 2 bedroom mobile
POMEROY, O.
home . 19n 12 x 45 one
TUPPERS PLAINS - Old
bedroom mobile home. 20"
7 room house with 1;, bath,
NEW LISTING- 3'1• acres
new mower. Con be seen at 493
WATER SOFTENER 7
out cellar and Ph acres of
of ground In PomeroY.
Broadway St. , Middleport.
level land on Rt. 7. Asking
excellent building sites
Phone 992-2535.
$12,000.
Let Pomeroy Landmark
pOtential. Could divide Into
12 x 60 WITH 20 x 8 room. total
50ffen &amp; condition your
RESTAURANT - Here's a
13 lots. City wa1er
.
elet. at Tuppers Plains. For rent
water and a Co-op wat@r
business for alamlly. Good
sewage available. Aski(IU
or sale. Phone 667·3305.
softener, Model UC-XVI
corner location ln Pomeroy
$5,800.00.
at
$13,500.
NEW LISTING In
12 x 60 TRAILER on 2 ocres , spring
.Now Only•279,95
MIDDLEPORT
- 2
Pomeroy older home with
water on natural gas. $5900.
bedrooms, nice ba1h, large
po1entlal
for
two
let us test your water
Phone 992-3955.
dining, 2 porches and level
Free.
apartments. IOOx~o lot.
. lot·. Nat. gas, city water.
ASKING $8,500.00.
$16,500.
LOCATED 011 old Route 33,
HARRISONVILLE - New
about 5 miles out nice
Jack 'w. C..rsey, Mar.
3 bedroom brick ven~er
laying ground. 10.7 acres,
..-..,
Phone 992-2111
IF YOU hove o seriJice to offer,
home with dining, sliding
utilities available, close 1o
wont to buy or sell something,
glass doors. and forced air
HOUSETRAILER WHEELS and tiret ,
school, 011 good blacktop
oa looking for work ... or
heat , One acre lot on 124.
2-4 inch boy 's bike , C-5 Hamelite
road.
'
whatever .. . you'll get re1ults
chain &amp;ow, two 2 wheeled
Wanl $29.500.
STOP PAYING RENT foster with o Sentinel Wont Ad.
trailer fromea , firewood, baby
MIDDLEPORT Good
You can own 1h/s r.ewer
Call'l9'l·2156.
swing·o·motic: , 2 ft . high truck
brick building with 3
home for less than you
LARGE YARO Sale. Moving oul.
topper. &amp;mall refrigerator .
apartments next to the
think. 4 bedrooms, bath,
Lots of furniture , clothing, and
busin•as section. One
Phone 992=:·.:5::
94'::7.:,.=::--,;-- utii Jty connections.
misc. Somethings for everyone.
furnished &amp; 3 garageo.
carpeting. $18,000.00.
1976 HONOA 750, 1700 mile!&gt; , e:~~: ·
Tuesdoy - Thursday on New
Only $20,000.
cellenl condition . Phone
AN OLDER HOUSE WITH
Lima Road In Rutland.
NEW LISTING - Large 3
__!.85-3919 oftor 6 p.m.
A NICE LOOK Now
bedroom frame home with ·
siding, forced air furnace,
REGISTERED HEREFORO cows with
bath, nat. gas F .A. furnace.
storms,
3
large
BR.,
1'12
calve• by tide. 1 mile east of
Large living with wood·
baths,
carpeting,
paneling,
Rutland, Ohio on State Rt . 124.
burni(IU fireplace, storm
basement. Beautiful view
See Hiram Slawter ,
windows and doors and
of the rllier. ·
large lot for $17,500.
AN AMAZING VALUE - 2
NEW LISTING
3
or
3 Br .. 2 baths, dining R.
New Co-Op w1t1r sOt.
bedroom block house, bath,
Loafing
R
..
Living
R
..
teners, medel vc.svt.
rural water, cls1ern, new
Olflco Bldg. Corner Lot.
Only $27M I
garage with gQOd cellar
1 G"ood Uud Pout1n Ch•ln
Excellent
neighborhood.
S.w .
SSJ
and large lolln the country.
All for just 122.000.00.
S1ve sso .oo on 1 new
$16,500.
MORE
BUILDING
SITES
Hotpoint Refrlger1tor.
NEW LISTING - Troller
- • .3 acres near Mulberry
1 Good Used McCultough
lots
at Five Points. All sot
ONLY
18.250.00.
Hgts.
Chi In SIW .......... ,. 195
up ready to move on for
1 Good used &lt;40" Hotpolnt
CALL
CLELAND
only $5500.
R1n1•••••••••••••••• 1100
REALTY TO SELL YOUR
t,low in·stock , comptetellne
IF YOU WANT IT SOLD,
PROPERTY.
ot bulk garden seeds and
S!E OR CALL U~ AT "2·
HENRY E. CLELAND
onion &amp;ets.
1325.
BROKER
HELEN L.
Honk Cltllnd, Assoclltt
o\ND
GOROON B.
"2-221~
.
"2·2561
• J1ck w. Carsey, Mtr .
ASSOCIATES
Phone f92 ·2111
12

BRIDGE

..

Oswald arid Jim Jacoby

' I

•I

Tight squeeze makes seven

CAPTAIN EASY

Pool
Nobil Summi1
Rt. l
Middleport, 0.
992-5724
Complete
Sales
and
'Service and Supplies.
3·14· 1 m

HOW DO WI' I&lt;NOW MEI'CHAM
AND SM0G6 CAN SPE'AI&lt; FOR
ALL THI' DlllECTORS ~

!!oUT WE 'LL FIND OUT AT

IT'5 50 AWFUl
NOT KNO WitJ C:.
WHAT'S HAPPENED
TO HIM~ ... IF HE'S
!oEEN l&lt;IPNAPPED,
WHY DON'T WE
G~T A lfAII!iOM

TOMOI&gt;.~OW'S

&amp;OARD MEI"TING!...
TH~N WE'LL HAVr TO 5TART
CONTACTIN6 STOCKHOLDERS•
AND AS.KIN(; FOR PRO)C.IE5-!

PEMAIIC&gt;?

General Contracting

Young's·Carpeting
Free Estimates

Southeastern Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.

TEAFORD

NHDA

r . Pilmeroy Landmark
Y.;O:

Superior
Steam Extraction

,___....__

l

.,

• KJ 96
• J 10 3 2
oloJ 9853

SOUTH
'1' 2

t KQ 4
"'KQ 76
North-South vulnerable

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

West

No.rth East

So uth

Pass

1t
Pa ss
44
Pass
5 N. T. Pass

4 N. T.

Pass

"The Drlglnators

Pass 7 4
Pass

Not The Imitators"
2·23-1 mo.

1•

6"'

Pass

Pass

Opening lead - 7 ¥

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
We recommend s t rongly
that you play lhat the fiveclub response to Blackwood

shows zero or four aces . This

leaves some special use for
the fi ve-notrump response but

--

we recommend even more
!JTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

SMITH NELSON
MOTOIIS,INC. ·

I·~lt. H!-2174

, _,

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-ICHOOL
I'M SURE
SHE'LL CATCH
UP VERY

500N .

PROFESSIONAL

SURE ~ E
WILL, MIS'S
RoetN·~E

DoCTOR·-

'

"HilPPiEST

DAYS OF
ONE'S L IFE~ THE'f
ALWA'I'S USED TO TELL
US ··· THEY WEREt4' T

YOU

LAlfR,AriMtf··

MY' HAPPIEST DA'I'S
i'OR 5URE ..

PHOtpGRAI'HY

strongly that you just leave
t hat one out. You a ren 't likely
to need it.
Two of the greatest playe rs
DAYI
ol alltime , whoarenowplayT l l r - - - - - - - - - . i n g thei r bridge in a nother
TELL A KID THAT PROBA8L't' world , did have a use for this
SHE'lL NEVER eE AS HAPPY
bid and their specia l conven·
AGAII't AS SHE IS ~ IGHT
tion did come up once.
THEN-- PRE TT Y GLOOMY
Sidney Silodor , who sa l
OUTLOOK, I'D SAY--Nor t h, responded fi ve
notrump to show lour aces·

Aerial
Commercial
Schools
Weddings

I.

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY
(614) 985•4155
Chester, Ohio
10·11·1 mo(Pd)

11\ 191 7 '"low Y n 1~ Now• Inc
All Ro1 h U Ruo n,r of

BORN LOSER

WHAT'S

HAP!"!;;~W

A~WJ ~P!W,TI()I.l FOR ~~
40 THAT
THm WOK

TO IAI1

~OtJI-lttR .

BRADFORD, Auctioneer. Complete Service. Phone 1:iL49 ·241p
or 9A9·2000. Racine , Ohio , Critt
Bradford .
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers, toosten , irons , all
small appliances . Lawn mower.
next to State Highwoy Garage
on Route 7. Phone (614 ) 985 3825 . .

A Canadian reader wants to
know whY a two is sometimes
called a deuce .
It is derived from the Latin
" Duo " and the t' rench "Deux "
both of which tran slate into
"two."
(Do you have a question
to r the experts? Write "Ask
lhe Jacobys " care ol lhis
newspape r The Jacobys will
answer individual questions
il slamped sell·addrassed
envelopes are enclosed. The
most in terestin g questio ns
will be used in this column
and will receive copies of
JACOBY MODERN.)

by THOMAS JOSEPH

38 Snow field

I Playbill

39 Sioux or
listing
Comanche
5 Asian
( 2 wds. J
peninsula
40 Secondhand
11 Julia Ward DOWN
12 Languishing I Preside
13 Kind of
(over )
2 Main
code
14 Nebraska
artery
Yesterday's Answer
river
3 Affable
Proceedings 26 Manchurian
15 Suffix for
( hyph. wd. )
meteor
4 Beverage
16 Lack
port
16 "In the -,
"for two" 19 Principle
29 Audacity
20 Sensational 30 Famed
small
5 Attach
hours . . "
6 Exasperate Z3 Paton's
New York
17 Tither's
7 Anecdotal
"- the
boss
Phalarope" 32 Arizona
figure
coUection
18 Wickerwork 8 Foes
(2 wds )
city
material
to the
24 Iowa's
35 Sire's
20 Afford
death
specialty
male
21 Mind
( 2 wds.)
25 Ladder·
36 Babylonian
22 Major or
9 Severe
like
Minor
23 Omar's
product
24 Manitoba
. Indian
25 Not ,all
26 Destroy
12 wds.)
27 Egyptian
Christian
28 Zealous

10

REMODELING. Plumbing , heating
and all types of general repa ir.
Work guaranteed 20 years ex ·
perience . Phone992-2f09.
SEWING MACHINE Repairs , ser ·
vke, all makes, 992·2284 . The
Fabr ic Shop , Pomeroy . .
Authorized Singer Soles and
Service. We sharpen ScissOrs .
EXCAVATING, dozer, loader and
backhoe work; dump trucks
and lo-boys for hire: will haul
fill dirt. to soil , limestone and
gravel. Coli Bob or Roger Jef .
fers , day phone 992-7089 ,
night phone 992-3525 or 992 5232.
EXCAVATING. dozer . backhoe
and ,ditcher. Charles R. Hat ·
field, Bock Hoe Service ,
Rutland , Ohio. Phone 742-2008.
SEPTIC Svstem5 installed by
licensed installer . Shepord
Contractors. Phone ~42 - 2409 .
SEPTIC TANKS cleaned. Modern
Sonitotion, 992 ·3954 .
Will do roofing, c'o"-n-,:,,u-c"tl-on-.
plumbing and heating . No job
too large or foo small. Phone
742-2348.
CARPENTER , flooring , ceiling ,
paneling. Phone 992-2759.
MOBILE Home Repair, Elec .,
plumbing ond heating. Phone
m -5858.
ElECTRONIC T.V. CLINIC , New
T.V . shop. Electronic T.V. Clinic
Service call , S5.95. Color, 8 &amp; W
antenna sy5tems stereos . etc.
572 South Third, Middleport ,
Phone 992·6306. Corry In and
save money .
HOWERY AND MARTIN EKca..,qting, septic systems, ,
dozer. backhoe, dump truck, '
llmestone, graiJel, blacktop · •
paving, Rt. 143. Phone 1 (614)
698·7331 .
..
EXCAVATING. Bockhoa;, Doze,,
trencher, Low 8oy. dump truck,
trucks . septic 1ystems. Bill
Pullins . Phone 992-2478 day or
night.
JACK'S BEE SUPPLIES, Reedsville, ·
Ohio. Bee supPlies and equip· ',
menf, Phone (614) 379-6357.
·1

and no kings. John Crawford
proceeded to bid six dubs to
ask his partner to bid seven if
he held the queen of trumps
and Sidney obliged .
The lour-zero trump break
together with the bad breaks
in the minor sui ts gave Johnny
a problem but he was able to
handle it.
He pl ayed dumm y's ace of
s pades at trick two . East
showed out but J ohnny was
able to lead to his king and
pick up West's jack.
Then he played three rounds
of clubs while discardi ng a
diamond from dummy . He
cashed his kmg and queen or
diamonds and continued with
his last trump to force poor
East to unguard ei ther the
jack of cl ub s or jac k of
dia monds.

~tew#
ACROSS

------r COMP~f;W~,

7 PM - WMPO • 92al FM
92 in .the

____,..---'

·EAST

WEST
• J 8 76
• Q 10 8 7 5 3

Route 3, Pomeroy, 0.

.SWAP SHOP

Pomeroy Landmark

• A976 5
A2

o1o

"'K954 3

31 "Brown
I

l~ l

o, lft l ~ .. &lt;oQOlroOonl

" ··G"" "'M''"'

CUSS TH' L.UCK !~­
HeS WAKIN 1 UP!rH8'LL see TH 1 6 ;:::
NE:XTONE-

· October
32 Opposite
of max.
33 Hawk's·
cage
34 Food
storage
.center
36 English

per lence 4; Bowling for Dollars 6; Country Carnival 8; News 10; ·To Tell the Truth 13; My ThrM
Sons 15; Cooking with a Continental Flavor 20.
7:3D-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Let' s Deal With It 6;
Ma1ch Game PM B; Mac Neil-Lehrer Repart 21).33;
In The Know 10; Wild Kingdom 13; TV Honor
Society 15.
8 oo-Baa Baa Black Sheep 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6.13 ;
CBS Repor1s 8,10; Price of Peace &amp; Freedom 20;
Missa Solemnls 33, ·
i
8:30-Laverne&amp; Shirley 6,13: Who's First In Defense?
20.
. I
9:QO-Pollce Woman 3,4, 15; Eight Is Enough 6,13;
MA SH 8, 10.
9:30--{)ne Day at a Time 8,10; Anyone for Tennyson?
20; Oasis in Space 33.
IO :QO-Police Story 3.4,15; Fam ily 6, 13; Kojak B. 10;
News 20; Decades of Decision 33.
10:JQ- Biack Jour nal 'lo.
l i :QO-News 3,4,6.8,10.13.15; MacNeii·Lehrer Report
33 .
11 : JG-Johnny Carson 3,4, IS; Movle ""Conspiracy of
Terror," 6,13; Columbo 8; Mary Hartman 10;
Practical Dermatology 33 .
12:0Q-Movle " The Black Orchid" 10 .
12 :311-Janakl 33 .
1:oo-Tomorrow 3.4 .
1: 1o-News 13.
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23,1977
6:0Q---Sunr ise Semester 10.
6:15-Farm Report 13.
_
6 .2D-Not For Women Only 13.
6:3Q-AG.USA 4; News 6; Sunrise Semester 8;
Christopher Closeup 10.
6:45-Mornlhg Report 3.
6:5Q-Good Morning, West Virginia 13.
6: 55-Good Morning, Trl State 13.
7:QO-Today 3,4, IS; Good Morning America 6. 13; CBS
News B; Chuck White Reports 10.
7: 05-Porky Pig 10.
7: JQ-Schoolles I0.
e:oo-Capt . Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St. 33.
B:JQ-BIQ Valley 6.
9: oo-A .M. 3: Phil Donahue 4,13,15; Andy Griffith 8;
Mike Douglas 10.
9:3Q-Cross.Wits 3; Edge of Night 6; Concentration 8.
10 OQ-Sanford 11. Son 3.4. 15 ; Dinah 61' Double Dare
8,10: Mike Douglas 13.
10 :JQ-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; Price Is Right 8,10 .
11 :0Q-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15; Morning Show 13;
E lee . Co. 20.
11 ;JQ-Shool for 1he Slars 3,4 ,15; Happy Days 6,13 ;
Love of Life 8. 10; Sesame St. 20,33.
11 :55-CBS News 8; Ms. Fi• it 10.
12 :00-News 3,4,6,10; Second Chance 13; Name That
Tune 15; Divorce Court 8.
12:Jo-Lovers a. Friends 3,1 5; Ryan' s Hope 6,13 ; Bob
Braun 4; Search for Tomorrow 8,10.
1:oo-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6, 13; Search for
Tomorrow 8,10.
I : 3Q-Days of Our Lives 3,4,115; Family Feud 6,13; As
The World Turns 8,10.
2:Q0-120;000 Pyramid 6,13 .
2:3Q-Doctors 3,4,15; One Life to Live 6,13; Guiding
Light 8, 10.
3:0D-AnolherWorld3,4 ,15; Allin The Famlly8,10; On
Aging 20.
3: 15-General Hospital 6,13.
J :JQ-Ma1ch Game 8,1 0: Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
4: ()()-Mister Cartoon 3; Little Rascals A; Gong Show
15; New Mickey Mouse Club 6; Lucy Show 8;
Sesame St. 20,33 ; Movie " A \lme for Every
Season" 10; Call It Macaroni 13.
4: 15-Little Rascals 4.
4:3Q-My Three Sons J; Afterschool Special 6,13;
Partridge Family 4,8; Fllntstones 15.
S : QO-~ig Valley 3; M,y Three Sons 4; Brady Bunch 8;
Mlsler Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Slar Trek 15.
5:JQ-Adam·12 4; Newo 6; Family Affair 8; Elec.
Co.20.33; Adam-12 13.
6:oo-News 3.4,6,8. 10.13. 15; ABC News 6.
6:JQ-NBC News 3,4,15: ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Vegetable Soup 20; Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 33 .
7: 011-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Pop Goes the Country 8; News 10; To Tell
the Truth 13 ; Mayor' s Report 15; Consumer Sur,
vival Kit 20 ; Big Green Magazine 33.
7: JQ- Dolly J; $100.000 Name That Tune 4; Match
Game PM 6; S25,000 Pyramid 8; MacNeii·Lehrer
Repart 20,33; The Judge 10: Break the Bank 13.
8 :oo-Grlzzly Adams 3,4,15; Bionic Woman 6,13;
Gunsmoke 8; Nova 20; Good Times 10.
8: 3Q-Loves Me. Loves Me Not 10.
9 :QO-CPO Sharkey 3.4.15; Baretta 6; Movie 'Possee"
8, 10; Dance In America 33 ; Focus 13; Soundstage
20.
9:3Q-We Think You Should Know 3; CPO Sharkey. 4.
IO : QO-K i~gston : Confidential 3,4,15: Charlie's Angels
6, 13; News 20 ; Scenes from a Marriage 33.
10:3o-Montage 20.
11:oo-News 3,4,6,8,1 0,13, IS ; Mac.Nell' Lehrer Repart
33; Monty Py1hon' s Flying Circus 20.
11 :311-Johnny Carson 3.4.15; Rookies 6, 13; Movie
" You Can't Win ' Em All " 8; Mary Hariman 10;
ABC News 33.
12 :oo-Movie " Rhapsody" 10; Janakl 33.
12 :411-Mysh!ry of the Week 6, 13.
l :QO--Tomorrow 3,4.
1: IQ-News 13.

=+-+-! lj'fll}f.\.0\])1}

~THATSCRAIIBLEDWORDGAME

~ ~ ~~ ., .

byHenriAmoldandBobLH

-+-1--1

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter lo each square. to form
=+-f-+~ fou r ordinary words.

river

ETTEW

37 Unworried
(2

wds. )

.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTEIs

Here's how lo work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply •lands for anolher. ln this sample A.IS
used for the Lhree L's, X for the two O's, elc. Single letdP's.
apostrophes. the lenglh and lormaLion of the words are all
hints. Each day the code lrtters are dillcrenl.
CRYPTOQUOTES

SUJOT

]'--1'--'--'1'--'1 ~P

l:...LK

ILAMORF I

RESPON51B~E

FOR
LAUGHTER IN
THE COU!n

WINNIE
Ml&lt;. MILLER 5AID I 5 HOULD
510P BY AND BEE HIM FOR

' OOv WAIT TILL
MOM; GIZ'INDMA
A:~D GIZ'INDPA
HEAR ABOUT

FINAL 1Ni7TRUCTION5. I
GUESS HE WANTB TO
CHECK ME OUT, 1DO!

TH!o ...

OQLSL
MRD

HYS

CSL

HRBV
XL

TLAYLGOG

J Q M B Z S L R.

SH H 0 G ,

0 QL

iJ

B CG 0 •

OXH

J CR
H R L

0 QL S

DMFL

MG

X M R D G.

QHZZMRD
JCSOLS
Yesterday's Cryptoquote : IT'S EASY TO BE 'AN ANGEL
WHEN NOBODY RUFFLES YbUR FEATHERS. - ANON
0 18"'7 Kla&amp; Featun1 Syndic::ale, lne.
BARNEY

LISTEN TO THE

.

22

'I' A 4

Young's Carpeting

BUY, SELL
. OR lRAD£?
'

FOR SAJ.L

NORTll lU I
A AQI02

08
o!o iO 4

WITH OIL CHANGE
AND FILTER

CHESHIRE
ASHLAND

TUESDAY , MARCH 12.1971
S:QO-Big Valley 3; My Three Sons 4 : Brady_Bunch 8; .
Mlsler Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Star Trek 15.
5:Jil-Adam.J2 4,13; News 6; Fam ily Altair 8; Elec .
Co. 20,33 .
6:oo-News 3.4.8,10. 13.1 5; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6. Jo- NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 1J; Andy Gr iffith 6 ;
CBS News 8, 10; Vegetable Soup 20 ; Studio See 33 .
7:(){)--Truth or Cons. 3; Amerlca : The Young Ex ·

.' '

FREE WBE JOB

DAVID BRICKLES

Television log for easy viewing

•'
'

.Automatic
Transmission Service
PA.R~_ •J.AB()R

your own home

l'jj::t.;
~

_....,---..,HE'LL PAY
WELL.

SWAIN'S.

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

ACTUALLY, LEYDEN. THE PICTU~ES ARE FOR A FRIEND
OF MINE WHO'S BEEN OUT OF CIRCULATION · t M
"'".
OUT OF ~E COUNTRY FOR SEVERAL YEARS.

Business Services

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2-25· 1 mo.

In 1'191, Coligraa enacted
legislatloli forblddln&amp; slave

cmty.

'

AuloSal...

----

I Bernice Bede Osol

29.

I

BUICK Ele&lt;tra. Z25; 2 Rokoo
trial bikes. Phone 9~'1·2•32 .
1976 CAMARO 305, 2 borrell
automatic, silver with red
pinstriring. Still under warranty . Col '192-5709.
-~
1969 CHEVELLE 55 396, ' speed.
power steering, power brakes.
Contact lewis" PuiiJer at
949·2463. houn after 6 p.m.
'
--1974 NOVA, 6 cyli nder, p.b., p.s..
automatic, 4 door , $1650. A
steal. Radial tires . Phone
__
m_ -2_524" :'==:::- - - - : 1'171 AMC MATADOR . p.s.. p.b..
V-8 · automatic , new battery,
and front tire.s . Makes good
work cor . $550 . Phone
9•9-2660.

PuUli.!lher relltlrves tl~ right

tu l!dlt or reja"t any 11ds dt't'mt'd olljt.&lt;ctiunlll. The Publisl~1· will nut ~
l't!SJKIIIStlll e £ur more than one irll'UI'r~1 insertloH.
Phone 99'.!-:U:ifi

~·----

11.;...
· _

Anlo Sale..·

AnloSale•

ITEMS
INTO
CASH!

DICK TRACY

6~0VGHT 'iOll
SOME COLD CE~EAL

I

THANK I./OU1MILO ..:THAT
WAS VE~~ NICE OF 'IOV

'1'0U'D SETTER EAT li
FAST, CHARLES .. THE
11\ILK IS RUNNIN G
THROUGH 11\1.{ FINGtRS 1

I
I 0

\ CUSSEN

KJ

Now a"ange lhe circled loti.,. lo
form the surprise answer, u tug-- ·

gestod by the above cartoon.

Prlntantwerhere: THE [

XI J XXJ
(Ans~ersromouow)

Yeslerday's

Jumbles: HOUSE CHASM . ENTAIL BECALM
Answer: H's strong-men •tuffi-MUSCLE

I

�10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, March 22, I9n

Lawmen
search for
coed killer
PARKERSBURG, W.Va.
(UPI) - Lawmen from two
states manned roadblocks
and patrolled streets of this
riverfront city today in a
search for two men who
escaped from the new Wood
County Correctional Center,
including convicted coed
killer John Calvin Bayles.
Teams of police from West
Virginia and Ohio threw up
road checkpoints and sent out
foot patrols within minutes of
the Monday night escape.
"We've got all kinds of
~-"people searching," said one
police officer. "State, city,
county- everybody."
Bayles, a 25-year-old native
of cross..-iver Belpre, Ohio,
was convicted last March '!I
in the strangulation slaying of
Jima Ann Dotson. He was
held pending an appeal of the
life sentence imposed on him
in her death.
The lil'year-old cooo from
Boaz, Wood County, was
driving to a morning class
Sept. 26, 1975, when het car
stalled along Interstate 77.
Her body wasn't found until
more than two weeks later
across t!Je Ohio River in
s.iyles' hometown of Belpre,
following an intense search
by students and police of
rura l pockets in Wood
County.
Bayles allegedly loosened
the bars in a rear window of
the jail, allowing him and
Frank
Sheppard ,
21,
Parkersburg, to escape.
Authorities were holding
Sheppard on the federal uni-

fonn fugitive from justice act
over his refusal to waive
extradition to CUmberland
County, Tenn., where he
(aces a possession of stolen
properly charge.
Neither man was believed
armed.

Schools
(Continued from page I)
since no assistant tra ck coach
was employed at the senior
high school a track program ''
.
.
~ll be put mto effect at the
]unwr h1gh for both boys and
girls with John Krawsczyn
and Charles Downie as
roache~ .

Morrtswascommendedfor
securing a two and one~ aU
ton make bed truck from a
.
surpl ~&gt;~ depot m Columbus.

The board had authomed
recently the purchase of such
a vehicle and Morris secured
· 1
bo

tt

.o r a

ut $350 . A new

~htcle would have cost between six: ~d eight thousand

&lt;illlars . Morris reported that
.
. .
the surplus ~~tude IS m excellent condition.
Attending the meeting were
&amp;!pt. Charles Dowler Goins
· f
' ·
an d. Morns o the central
office ; board members ,
Hoover,

Mrs .

J ennifer

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --- - - - - - - - - - I

resident of 1900 Chestnut Sl. .

Gallipolis , died at 7 p.m.

dealh. fie was a World Wa r I I

casua lty.
One
brot he r ,
Delmar , Pomeroy, preceded

him in dealh .
Five

s ister~ survive : Mrs . Ferrell

Diehl , senior high, and Bob

Three g~andsons survive :

teachers.

you
provide tre problem

Eugene. MIChael and Jeffery
Canaday, all ot Gallipolis.

One granddaughter , Tamm1e
Sue Fried ma n, Gahanna, and
two great -grandchi ldren,
Anthony and Amy Beth
Canaday , Ga llipolis, su r vive .
Funeral services were held
2 p.m. Tuesday at the Ewing
Funeral Hom e, Pomer oy .
Bu ri al
was
In
Letart
.Cem etery.
Honorary pa ll bearers were

Go lden , Rober t. Marshall ,

Gerald and Ronald Canaday
and Eugene, Michael, and
Jeffery Canaday along with
nephews Hen r y, Charles and
Robert Kiesling .

Mrs. Bolin to
host ·gardeners

we
supply tre soluton

Why gamble? Protect your
valuables from fire, theft or
loss ... in one of our safe
deposit boxes. It costs you
just penni es a day ... a
s ma ll price to pay for real
peace of mind!

.1\b

ao11om I Bash an RoacH . a

Fl orence M cGra,h , Athens,
and Earl Hartung, Akron ,
and several aunts and uncles. .

brother s sur vive ·

Gol den , Norlhup; Rob ert.
Ru11and ; · Mar shall, R1o
Grande; Gerald, Hall, Mi ch ..
and qonald, Gall ipolis. Three
(E dna) Nida y, Blanche
Canaday and Mrs Harr y
(Mary) Bai ley .. all of
Gallipolis.

.. '
md Ed Bartels , representing

Thelma ()"r , Route I, Long

Sunday enrou te to Hol 1er Neigs County school teacher
Medica l Cen ter .
for 45 year s, died ~nday at
A tJfe . tong resident of Camden Cla rk Ho spita l in
Gallipol is, Mr . Canada y had Parker sburg .
been in failing health for
Mr s. Orr was preceded in
several months.
death by her parents, Leon
He was born July 30 . 1903, cYid lesSie Clarke Morehead.
in Gal l ipolis, son of th e tate and
brother.
John
a
Naama n Rufus and Anna Morehead.
Swi tzer Canaday .
Surviving are her husband,
Mr . Canaday was a retired Pa ul ; a sister, Mrs. Paulin e
emplOyee of Acme Boiler Co., Darrah , Route I , Par kers a firm he wa s affiliated wi th burg, and several nieces and
for 24 years .
nephews .
Duri ng his act ive years
FlJleral servi ces will be at
wi th th~t ~ ompany 1 he was 1p.m. Thur5day at the Ewing
widely known throughout the Funeral Home with t he Rev.
Otli o Va ll ey for hi s excellent Freela'ld Norri s off"iclat!ng .
servi ce s. Fo l lowin g hi s Buria l will be in Sutton
re ti rement, Mr . Canada y Cemetery . Friends may call
ow ned and ope rated The at the funera l home at an y
Canaday and Son Wel ding li me.
and Boiler Repair for 30
years. He also had many real
INFANT SCHAEKEL
estate interests in Gallipolis .
CHESTE R - Graveside
He was a member and
cha irman of the board of r ites for the infant son of Mr .
Mrs .
Edward
A.
tr uslees of I he Bel l Chapel and
Sch aekel , Chester, born on
Church .
Mr. Canaday was also a the evening of Marc h 12 and
member of th e GallipoliS died the next morning at
Eagles Lodge, and was a Holzer Med ical Cen ter . were
March 15 al Lone Oak
com munity leader in lhe ~d held
, Point Pleasant.
French City lhroughoul hi s Cemetery
Besides the paren ts the
adult lofe.
Mr . Canaday wa ~ educated baby Is survi ved by a brother ,
in the Gallipolis City Schoo ls Ji mmy Allen , a sister, Janlne
an d was act i ve i n all Mi chel e; pa t er nal grand par ents, Dr . and Mrs. E. A.
alhletics .
Schaekei, l ewisburg, W. Va .,
Surviving ar~ his wi fe,
pa1ernal
great Florence Cumm1ns Canaday. and
Earlier this month, the grandparen t s, Mr s. Maybelle
Lewisburg , and
Ca nadays celebrated their Schaeckel,
. and M rs . Bernt 0 .
54th wedding ann iversary. Mr
Jacobsen, Rock ford . Il l .;
One daughler , Mrs. Harry ma ternal grandparents, Mr .
(Helen) Fr iedm an , &lt;;;ahanna,
and one son, Jack Canaday, and Mrs. Tom McGra th of
Ga lli poli s, also survive . One Chester, and maternal great.
grandpa rent s, Mrs. V~rneda
so~, Eugene, preceded him in Har t ung , Ches ter : Mr s .

Sleets, Dr. Keith Riggs and
. ·1 K.
p · · Is J hn
Vlrgl
mg; rmctpa
o
Mora, jumor htgh; James
Morris Pomeroy and Middleport Elmtentary Schools

MRS. THELMA ORR
LONG BOTTOM - Mrs.

CASSIUS CANADAY
Cassius M. Canaday . 74, a

RVTLAND - The RuUand
Garden Club will meet
Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at the
born e of Mrs. Janet Bolin.
Mrs . Bolin will demonstrate
Japanese floral design using
forced branches. Members
are to answer roll call by
naming a type of Japanese
arrangement or school of
orientar design . Mrs.
Margaret Edwards will have
the educational display which
will be a variety of spring
flowers in bloom and the
gardening tips will be given
by Mrs. Juanita Lambert.

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION
WATCH FOR
OPENING DATE

Graves id e ser vices for
Ryan Roger Roush , in fant
son of Roger and Chri st y
M chael Roush wil l be held at
1 p.m. Wednesday ra ther
tha n 2 p.m .

. STANLEY WAUGH
Pal lbearers for the funeral
service of S1anley Waugh, 77.
.....no died Monday m orning
have been announced .
They are Ronnie Halley.,
Jimmy Halle y, Mike Waugh ,

Olarley Waugh. All an Waugh

a1d Rog er Brumfield
,
Services are 2 p.m , Wed ·

nesday at the Waugh·Hall ey.

Wood Funera l home w ith the
Rev . . Richard Graham of .
. fi ciat ing . Burial will be in
Ol io Va l ley Mein orr Gar .
~ns. Fri ends may cal from 2
to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m . today .
Mr . Waugh' s survivors
include his wi fe, Ann Lew is
Waugh ; two daugh ters , Mrs .

Ronald

Bidwe ll

(Vio let)

(Mildred)

and

Bjg Moose would have
been happy with services

l off March 27th

Area Deaths

!

'77 Crusade kicking

Halley,

Mrs.

!an

Arun del. Los

Mgeles, Calif.; son , Charl es,
Akron and daughter -in -law,
1&gt;/rs. Dorolhy Cornell Waug h,
Columbus.

TIE UP FIDO NOW
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Mayor Hennan Lrndon today
warned re sidents of the
village to keep their dogs
oonfined to their property or
face proserution. Dogs found
running loose, or without dog
tags, will he taken to the dog
pound he warned.

PLAY BALL!!
There will be a meeting to
organize the M-M Men's Slopitch softball league Sunday,
March 27 at I p.. m. at the
Royal Crown Garage, North
Second i\ve., Middleport.
Bob Whal ey, league
president, said managers or
representatives of all of last
year's teams and of new
teams are invited.

The Meigs County Unit of
the Ameri ca n Cancer Society
will kickoff its 1977 Crusade
March 27 from 2 to 5 p.m. at
the Meigs Inn banquet room.
Throughout ·the afternoon
films will be shown and the
public may enjoy free
desserts. All board members
and volunleers are asked to

Convention
in Hartford
set April 7th
HARTFORD, W. Va
This town will elect new officials, with the de adline for
regi!tration .and town convontirn set for Ajril7, council ·
decided at a recent meeting.
Town ordinances were read
oon~erning ne\1' road laws
and appointin g a police
judge.
Mayor Charles Black asked
residents to be careful while
lltrning trash because it is
fire seaso n. He also anmunced that dogs are to be
tied or confined and not
allowed Ia rpn loose.
Cotmcil approved an ordinilnce making it unlawful
for water user s to remove
water meter box covers or
tamper with the meter in any
way.
Attending were Ma yor
Black, recorder, Maxine
Arnold and council members,
Vernon Grinstead, Rupert
&amp;ward, Kenneth Greene and
Donald Fields.

BOOSTERS TO MEET
The Southern Local Band
Boosters will meet this
evening al7 in the band room.
All parents are urged to attend .

mourners.

"Eternal God, we would like to modulate with you ...
on the channel of love ... we pray that our ears may be
on this morning, for we 1().8 and 11).4 in Jesus name."
He read a CB prayer : ''The FCC Is my shtpl)erd; I
shaD watch out . .. It fiDeth my mall with plnlnlckets .•.
My antenna rwmeth over ... "
Big Moose Is not reaDy gone, t!Je mlnlaler said, "He's
just out of range."
Big MQOse is survived by Loverbug and Uttle
Rascal, four other children and six grandchildren.

Hospital News

Cable tv
(Continued from page I )
granted since council has an
ordinance against selling on
the &amp;reels.
At the last meetin g of
cmm di it was erroneously
reported Brown and Phil
Globokar voted "yes" on the
tractor bid of . Southeast
Equipment compa ny and
'11o" on the ea~eme nt given
to Prime builders. In fact
they voted ." no" on the
tractor bid and "yes" on the
easement.
Attendin g were Mayor
Andrews, Werry, Louis
· Osborne, Davis, Brown,
Glo bokar, and fowe ll,
councilman , Jane Walt on,
Qerk, Chief Webster. The
meeting was opened with
jrayer by l.ou Osborne.

SANTA ANA, Calif. (UP!) -If Big Moose had hla
ears on, modulating up there with the Great
Broadcaster, he woulil have liked biJ funeral.
His fellow citizens band radio enthwdasts said
goodbye to Big Moose - Mounce Brady Jacillo~ as he
was prosaically known to the rest of the world - with a
CB fWieral.
·
·
Jackson , 60, a dedicated CBer who founded the
Flying Frogs CB club and belonged to several others,
was killed in a traffic accident WI week.
Ranks of antema-topped cars lined up outside the
funeral chapel to hear the Rev. George A. Wood, a
fellow enthUsiast and minister of the Lemon Heights
Baptist Church of Orange, eulog!u Big Moose as an
example of "how the Great Broadcaster uses us like
CB radios.
.
''The Great Broadcaster plugs you into biJ power
and modulales lhrough you," the minister told the

attend, brin ging their
favorite dessert.
And again it is time for
daffodil sales. Daffodils are a
symbol of hope, the hope of
curing cancer. The Pomeroy
Flower Sliop has agreed to
arrange them . A dozen
daffodils will be arranged
with greenery and be sold in
milk white vases for $4.50.
Daffodils by the dozen will be
$2.75.
On April I and 2 American
Cancer Society Volunteers
will be on Pomeroy and
Middleport streets selling
daffodils. Order in advance
by calling 992-7531 or 992-3708.

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Roy
Ellis, Pom eroy ; Fulton
Spears, Henderso n; Mrs.
Cha r les
Litcht"ie ld ,
Southside ; Roy Russell,
Gallipol is ; Lisa Hurl ow,
Point Pleasant ; Mrs. James
Gillispie, Redhouse ; Eugene
Ca rter , Gallipolis; Jesse
Chrislia n, Ripley; Ronald
Russell, Mason; Granville
Hill, Point Pleasant; Mary
Gerla'ch, Point Pleasant;
May Jones , Point Pleasant ;
Mrs. Ru ssell Akers, son,
Pliny; Mrs. Gilbert Marlin,
Buf!alo: Mrs . Roger Roush,
Racine and Harold Clark,
Point Pleasant.
Births - A daughter to Mr.
and Ms. Daniel Plants,
Jackson: a daughter to Mr.
and Mrs. Lawrence Will,
Middleport, and a daughter to
Mr. and Mrs. ·Marcus Rice,
Soulhside.
VeteraDB Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Dana Howett,
Sha de ; Charles Sto ne,
Middleport ; Martha Johnson,
Racine.
John
Discharged ·
Bechtl e, Rebecca Bailey,
Edna Stiles, Tabitha Perez,
Norma Goodwin , Judy
Buchanan, George Meinhart,
Evelyn Davis, Thomas Cook.
Holzer Medical Center
!Discharges, March Zl)
Linda Bentz , Mi chelle
· Bosworth, Robert Cassidy,
Lucy Cheatwood, William
Qements, Mrs. Roger Cosby
and daughter, Mrs. Kenneth
Q-usan and daughter, Nellie
Eblin, Ber ni ce Glassburn,
Shan non Grow, Brenda
Imbod en, Everetl Keels ,
Brian Kilgour, Cecil Kirk ,
Mrs. Timothy Lambert and
daughter, Mrs. Dingus
Martin and son, Catherine
Miller, MatTis Webster.
I Births, March 21)
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin
CUtlip, daughler, Jackson;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wellis,
daughter, McArthur ; Mr. and
Mrs. James Kuhn. son,
Timnnan .

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

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursday through
Saturday, fair Thursday
and Saturday and a chance
of showers Friday. Highs
mostly wUI be lo the 40s
Thursday and lhe In the 5()s
or low 60s by Saturday.
Lows wUI be In the 20s
Thursday and in the 30s
Friday and Saturday.
;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:::

Weather

HELL'S FIRE FILMED
The movie, "The Burning
Hell" will be presented at the
Peoples Chureh, Main and
Court Sts., Pomeroy (over
the Blue and Gray
Resta urant) April3 at 7 p.m.
Pastor Henry Cook said the
film is free to the pubUc.

JUDGMENT ASKED
A lawsuit asking $2,668.00
.has been filed in Meigs
CAlunty Col)llllon Pleas Court
by the Pomeroy Cement
Block Co., against Ronald
Thomas, dba All Weather
R~ofing and Construction,
Middleport , and Ronald
Thomas, Norwood.

Snow; with temperatures
dropping into the low 30s by
this evening. Cloudy and
colder tonight, lows in the
upper 20s. Clo udy Wednesday , highs In the mid 40s.
Probability of precipitation is
E-RCALLED
80 per cent today and 20 per
The Middleport
cent tonight and Wednesday. Emergency Squad answered
a call to the VDlage Manor
Apartments at 6:38 p.m.
;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:
Monday for Chrisline
Branham who was Ul. She
DUCK DIPLOMACY
was
treated by the squad.
WASHINGTON (Ul'l)Japanese Prime MIDlster
Takeo Fukuda calls
TO MEET APRIL 15 .
Japanese. foreign policy
The next meeting of the
" ~uck diploma cy," and
Presldeot Carter says he Meigs Black Lung Assn., has
koows
why. heen set for 1 p.m. on Aprill5
Explaining to American at the Senior Citizens Center
guesls at his working White in Pomeroy.
House dinner for Fukuda,
Carter said: "That means
CLUB TO MEET
that everything Is calm on
The Past Officers Club,
top, but ·you're paddilng
Racine Chapter 134 OES, will
!Ike crazy underneath."
meet Thursday, March 34 at
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Wllliam Stewart, 11 FremonL
Athens.
ASK TOWED
A marriage license wsa
NOW YOU KNOW
iss ued to John Edward
Canada, the world's second
McLa ughlin , 31, Pomeroy largest nation in area, gets Its
and Barbara Faye Richards name from a 16tlrcentury
23, Rt. 1, Long Bottom.
' Indian word for 14 village."

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
ijJi\~Hg';fJBlt

PRINTED VINYL

:L~
with
VELVET· TOUCH

Finish

"THE

ilibe~A~ational sink

THE INN PLACE

Wednesday Night Special

MlllDLfPOIIT to. ~
IJili~V

Awalloblo In FDIIDWIIIII Sl111
lncludllll! Frlngo '

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

54" l! 54"-lquoro
54" x 72" OWDng
62" • IS" Oblong
62" a IS" Oval
62" x 104" Oblong
62" x 1()11" Owal
62" • 126" Oblong
54" lowntll
72" ID~o~nd1

Our NEW Telephone Number lis

992-6661
Installment .Loan Departmenl Number Will
Remain The Same 992-3077
Member Federal Deposit Insurance CorporatMJn
..

DEPOSITS INSURED TO $40,000

FINALIST SPELLERS - These 16 finalists or
alternates from Meigs County schools took part in the
annual Meigs County Spelllng Bee held Tuesday night at
Eastern High School. They are front, I to r, Jeff Carson,
Rutland Elementary ; Sherri Marshall, Salisbury; Dlsna
Rhodes, alternate, Letart; Clinton Turner, Salem Center,
nmne~:-up; Jayne Hoeflich, Meigs Junior High, winner;
Tammy Meadows, Portland; Lori Warden, Racine ; back
row,! tor, Terre Wood, Chester; Sandra Foley, alternate,
Syracuse; Melissa Scarbrough, Tuppers Plains; Keith
Scoct, Bradbl111' ; Peggy Bush, Southern Junior High ;
Kathy Pooler, Eastern Junior High; Rhonda Riebel,
Riverylew ; Debrah Lewis, alternate, Harrisonville, and
Nicky Riggs, Pomeroy,

Miss Hoeflich
best · speller
Jayne Lee Hoeflich, an eighth grader at the Meiga Junior

High Scblol in '1!ddleport, won the annual Meigs County
Spelling Bee Tuesaay night at Eastern High School.
1be contest Willi one of the longer events, staged annually
by the office of M~igs County &amp;!perintendent of Schools Robert
Bowen, lasting an hour and a half. The last ball hour of the
event for the 16 finalists was between Jayne and Clinton
Turner, a fifth grader representing the Salem Center School.
1be pitfall word was "threshold" which Jayne speUed
correctly and then the following word "thrice" to win the
championship.·
As winn~~. Jayne will John Riebel, Eastern Local
represent the. county at the Schools Superintendent;
state spellin~bee to be held in Charles Dowler. Meigs l&lt;)cal
Columbus o~ April 30. She Schools Superintendent, and
was presented a personal Bob Ord, Southern Local
trophy and a plaque for her Schools Superintendent. Mrs.
schootandCiintonreceiveda Nellie Parker, librarian at
trophy . Presenting the Eastern High School, was
awarcllt"was Supt. Bowen.
pronouncer.
'
Rules of the contest were
Jayne; l2, a reading and
presented by Russell Moore, spelling student of Roger
a county school supervisor, Birch, is the daughter of Mr.
with Mrs. Greta Suttle, also a and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich, High
county school supervisor who St., Pomeroy. Clinton is a
served as chairman, in- studimt of Anna E. Turner

BEST SPELLERS -Meigs County &amp;!~rintendent of Schools Robert E. Bowen presented
awards at the conclusion of the annual Meigs County Spelling Bee Tuesday night. Receiving
the awards were Jayne Hoeflich, winner, a lrophy and a plaque for her school, and Clinton
Turner, runner-up , lrophy ..

Vi sit Our Salad Bar
Lasnagna
Vegetable
Hot Rol ls
Coffee, Tea or Milk

Plus Tax

THE MEIGS INN
Pomeroy, 0.
Phone 992·6304
PIZZA SHACK Phone 992-6304

Wl~e

Spills Away
• Cotton F.lannel Backing
• Naeds No Washing

You almost have to .touch it before you discover that it's really vinyl "C · 1.-.
ha s the look of textured fabric and the easy·tare of vinyl It e
·h armva
cotton fringe . Simpl¥ wipe clean! Backed with flannel Sel~ct fr~~n ihas custom
beauliful solid decorator cplors; Avocado Blue Citron · Gold G · l " ese eleven
Pink, Red , Ecru, White. Machi ne wa s hable a~d neve~ need' ray .. I me, Orange,
.
s rron1ng.

HOME FURNISHINGS DEPARTMENT-1ST FLOOR

_ ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
I

•

'
VOL. XXVII NO. 239

By BERNARD BRENNER
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Agrirulture Secretary Bob
Bergland today proposed a
four-year farm support bill
providing increased income
protection for farmers, but
with smaller gains than some
congressiona l leaders and
farm groups demanded.
Bergland was for ced, in a
White House meeting
Tuesday, to scale down
"support target" rates for
SOllie crops before presenting
the plan today to the Sena \1!
Agriculture Committee.
A Bergland aide said the
plan could cost taxpayers
between $500 million and $2
billion a year, depending on
whether large crops depress
market prices and increase
support costs.
Target prices trigger
govenunent income support
payments to growers if
markets fall helow the target
· level.
Howard Hjort, Bergland 's
chief economist, said the plan
would protect farmers from
disastrous price declines in
surplus years. He said bad
weather could still cause
"considerable" price hikes
some years, but predicted the
plan would level out "peaks

at y

e
POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

and valleys" in supplies and
prices.
Bergland's plan would set
1978 "target prices" to
provide income support for
growers of wheat , feed
grains, cotton and rice based
on estirna ted production
costs, including 1.0 per cent of
land value .
After 1978, to prevent spurring land inflation, target
prices would he ra ised in line
with gains in ''variable1t
farm costs, with no inclusion
of management and land
costs.
Under Bergland's proposal,
the wbeat income target of
$2.47 a bushel would riBe to
$2.60 in 1978 and the corn

target from $1.70 a bushel to
$1. 75. Cotton income targets
would decline from 47.8 cents
a pound to 47.5 cents and rice
targets from 8.4 cents a
pound to 6. 75 cents.
However, Hjort said crop
support loan rates , which
undergird market prices,
would riBe in 1978 for corn,
soyheans and cotton .
The bill would replace a
law which ""Pires with 1971
crops. Federal payments to
farmers reached a peak of
nearly $4 billion in fiscal 1973.
Bu t with market prices
running above target levels
rece ntly ,
no
support
payments have been needed
for most crops. ·

UFOs sighted
LOS ANGELES (UPI ) - Police, sheriff's deputies,
hi ghway palxol officers and Air Force guards reported
a rash of UFO sightings in Southern Ca lifornia - at
least seven in a ~our per iod.
The law enforcement officers reported mysterious
bright lights that hovered, cruised and zoomed in the
skies over Los Angeles, Orange, Ventura , Riverside
and San Bernardino counties .
All the sightin gs were reported Monday night and
early Tuesday.
1 Continued on page 12)

en tine

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23. 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - -, - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - ' - - -

Banks -a warded
F~I.Ew~::~:~::~ county funds
:!;News. • .zn Brzefs;\1

Bids were opened for the
inactive
and interim funds of
By United Press lntel'll8tlooal
the
county
in the amount of
UVONIA, MICH. - A BODY FOUND In a roadside ditch
$300,000
when
the Mei gs
could mark the end of the trail in the weeklong search for 11year-old Timothy King, who police fear Is the sevonth victim in co unty board of co ma series of unsolved child murders. The body, discovered missioners met in regular
Tuesday night by a passing motorist, was tentatively identified session Tuesday ni ght.
The Racine Home National
early today as that of the missing boy, police said.
Bank
was the high bidder for
Authorities saidclot!Jing on the body ''fit the description of
$100,000
of active funds at
the mlsalnl! boy" and the dead child was about Timothy's age.
seven
percent
interest. The
A skateboard was found near the body. Timothy King was
Pomeroy
National
Bank was
carrying a skateboard whef! he disappeared. Timothy left his
awarded
$250,000
at
6.8 per
home In _Birmingham, an affluent Delroit suburb, last
cent.
High
bidder
for
interim
Wednesday night to buy a candy bar, He stopped at the drug
funds
was.
the
Pomeroy
store to buy the treat and has not been seen since.
·
National Bank at6.8 per cent.
Charles Bissell, Chester
WASHINGTON - AT LEAST ONE SENATOR finds it
Township
Trustee, met with
hard to believe "it takes lllOI'e generals and admirals to wage
the
board
to reeommend
peace tilan war." Sen. Sam Nunn, Ma ., spoke up TUesday at
changes
i
n
proposed
Chester
a Senate anned services subcommittee on mllitary manpower
Township
road
names.
.!X'Oblems. AJ three generala and an admiral listened, Nunn
said that in 1988, at the height of the Vietnam War, each Names proposed by Fleming,
admiral or keneral"corrunanded an average of 2,600 persons in Pag~. Stolte Inc. for Scipio,
Letart , Chester, Bedford and
the mllitary.
Today, Nunn said, t!Jere is one general or admiral for CAllumbia Townships were
every 1,800persons. "I find it bard to believe that it takes more approved.
Wesley Buehl County
generals and admirals to wage peace than war," said the
Engineer
and Ted Warner,
fonner Coast Guard seaman. "Clearly some action is eliDed
highway
superintendent
were
for to reduce this nwnber."
advised
by
the
commission
Nunn suggested the number of top brass be cut 20 per cent
over the nell five years, at the rate of 4per cent a year. ''This that in the future, before
would give us one general or admiral for every 2,200 men," he purchasing pipe, quotations
were to be received.
said.
Com mi ssio ner Jame s
OOLUMBUS - GOV. JAMES A. RHODES met here
Tuesday with 10 Republican big&lt;!Ounty chairmen and
appeared to be getting ready to seek re1!lection next year,
according to Hamilton CoWity Republican Chairman Earl s.
Barnes.
"He ~ 't appear to be a lame-duck governor or
aomeone who's looking forward to retirement," said Barnes.
"I think he's the same man he was IOor 12yearsago."
One person was injured in
"If he's breaUting, he's running," said Cityaho~ County
me
of two minor lraffic
Republican Chainnan Robert E. Hughes.
acc ident s Investigated
OOLUMBUS - THE STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION Tuesday by the Gallia-Meigs
would be "strongly urged" to develop and adopt a statewide Post State Highway Patrol.
The injury occurred at 10
plan lor desegregating pobllc· scoools under a resolution
a.m.
on SR 160 at the enol!ered 'l'uesday In the Ohio Senate. "The quality of education
lrance
to the Holzer Medical
In Ohio Is the responsibility of the state," said Sen. William F.
Center
where Ruth B. Selby,
Bowen, OOnclnnatl, the sponsor, "and the state Board of
68,
Point
Pleasant, los t
Education Is responsible for it. It's high time we address this
ronlrol
of
her
car which
problem statewide."
!truck
the
right
c~rb, ran off
, Bowen said every major city ir\ Ohio Is engaged In
llllgatloo or federal review of Its ~ool enrollment patterns. the left side of the road into a
He lllld a statewide desegregalloo policy would alleviate ditch. There was minor
"further soci&lt;H!CO!lomlc and financial strain" of carrying on damage. She was treated for
minor Injuries.
appeala.
An accident occurred today
"Let's get it out of local politics where people don 't have
It
3 a.m. on Rt. 7 in Meigs
~ gaU and guts to lltand up lor what Ia right, " said the
County
where Larry G.
senator.
Grogan, 26, Middleport,
CINCINNATI - FEDERATED DEPARTMENT Stores, apparently feU asleep at hls
Inc., the natlpn's larglll!l deperbnenl store chain, reported ..tleel, losing control of his
Tueaday that al• in flacallt'18 hit "·4 billion, an all-time car which ran off the highway
record. 'lbe company laid dollar and per share ~ lor irto trees.
the year were the secmd highest In history and cl011e
e 1975
recorda: Resulla lor the fourth quarter of 1176, which 1~ ded
tile Chrislmu -11, were the beat the company ever
achlewd.
Cloudy this aft ernoon and
ICim1np per flhare for ~ 52 w.ka ended Jan. 29, 1m,
IXIliiPirtd with 83.63 per llhare for the 52 weeks tooight. Lows tonight in the
lllldl!lcl Jan. 31, 1978. Ftiderated's net lnccme was 8111 rnillim, mid 20s. Fair Thursday,
CCIIIIPind with fllf mllllan the previous year, a decrease of lighs in the upper 40s or low
Probablllty
of
lll:.tenllil· of 1 per cellt. 1be 1971 sales of SU billion ~s.
jrecipitatlon 20 per cent
~ted a U per cent lncreue over previOUB year's sales
today, tonight and Thursday.
~fl bUUon.
~
N

•

k

Woman hurt in

auto accident

FRIENDLY BANK"
I'ITT Sill II'"

Modest gains in
supports asked

Weather

"'" euo,

Roush told the board lhat he
expects to arrange a Federal
program tha t may provide as
many as 25 employes who
could be used in ·road
maintenance and repair by
the county highway department . He said it is a federally
sponsored program, that it
will be no cost to the county.
Barbara Shuler, co unt y
Welfare director, and Mike
Cu ll ums, employe of the
Welfare Department, with
prosecuting atlorney Ri ck
Crow
and
Assistant
prosecutor', Carson Crow
presented an agreement between the proseculor's office
and Welfare Dept. , concerning a child supp ort
progra111.
Following a long discussion
the commission agreed to
entd in the agreement
whereby the county will be
reimbursed by the state for
aU money expended on the
child s~pport program.
Th e Citizens National
Bank, Middleport, Fanners
Bank and Savings, Pomeroy,
the Racine Home' National
Bank, Racine, and the
Pomeroy National Bank,
were
designated
as
depository agents for the
county's active funds.

A letter lfBS read from
Eleanor Robson, county
recorder, requesting a copy
_machine for her office. She is
to seek pr ices and report her
findin gs.
Roush proposed an official
flag be adopted for the county
and suggested that the public
volunt ee r de signs . Th e
design s will be judged by a
committee of five people to be
named soon chosen by th e
commission.
The comm issioners expressed disappointment that
the proposed Ravenswood
Bridge had been delayed and
it was decided to write a
letter to Gov. Rockefeller of
West Virginia urging funds
for this pro ject be released in
order that, "this much
needed project be continued."
The commissioners went on

record in supporting a· State
Highway Patrol Post in
Meigs County. A letter wa s
directed to the proper official
in support of the project.
Eleanor Thomas wa s
apointcd to Buckeye Hills
Board . Attendin g were
Richard Jones, Henry Well s,
and James Roush, commissioners l:nd Mary liotr
stetter. acting clerk.

.
TiffiEE SPEAKERS - Guest speakers at the meeting of the Ladies Auxiliary of Drew
Webster Unit 39, Pomeroy, Tuesday night were ,I..-, State Rep . Ron James, Nita Wisniski of
the Me1gs County Health Department, and Charles Legar, Pomeroy Fire Chief. James
disc~sed the severity of the winter, the energy crisis, and how the State of Ohio is tied into
it. W1smski spoke on Meigs County Community services, and Legar on disaster services.
Arranging for the speakers were Mary Martin ,Rhoda Hackett and Marjorie Reuter.

Gallipolis locks, dam
is endangered project
Cmgress)onal sources in
Washington sa id Tuesday the
U. S. Army Corps of
Engi neers '
proposed
L!lgrading of the Gallipolis
J.ocks and Dam is on a new
Cllrter Administration list of

endangered water projects.
Administrati on officials
lllve heen calling members
d Congress to inform them of
what to·expect a bout the new
list.
The sources said the new ·

Recognition given service to
auxiliary, church, community
By Charlene Hoeflich
. Mrs. Carrie Neutzling ,
member of the American
l£gion Auxiliary of Drew
Websler Post 39, Pomeroy,
for 49 years was honored at
die recent Legion 'birthday
party.
Mrs. Neutzling joined the
Auxiliary in March 1928 and
bss more years of mcmb!rship than anyone else in
lhe organization. She was
recognized for her numerous
oontributlons, not only to the
Auxiliary, Oocal, district and
.tate), but to community,
church,
and
civic
organizations.
The trilltte to Mrs. Neutdi~ was given by Mrs.
Grace Pratt, · Auxiliary
p-esident, who presented her
a tetTarium. Mrs. Pratt noted
that Mrs. Neutzllng has
served as chairman of all
rommittees several times,
1;111S unit secretary for 15
years, is a past president,
ocganized a It-ill ~m for the

lilt, expected to be released
by the White House today.
includ es as many as 32
water projects, many of them
carryovers from the list of 19
jrOjects. President Carter
jreviously deleted from his
recommended fiscal 1978
oodget.
Those deletions rai sed
oowls of protest from
members of Congress of roth
parties,
and
brought
a.surances from Carter that
in the future be would notify
members from affected
areas before making a pubHc
announcement.
According to representatives and senators who
received cal ls from th e White
&amp;use yesterday, the new list
is regarded by the Carter

Otorus and currently serves
junior auxiliary members, she is a member . She
md served as Eighth District ocganized the Senior Citizens as Its director.
chairman Of children and
youth, rehabilitation and
veterans affairs and organist.
Mrs. Neutzlng was the
president of the Eighth ~·
District from 1969 1 Ia 1971
administratio.n as 1 'semiwhen she was elected a
8nal." All projects on tbe list
delegate to the National
will undergo further review
O:mventlon held in Portland,
by the administration, inOre. On the department level,
·'
dudln g public hearings.
Mrs. Neulzlng has served as
mu sic chairman , n ational
security chairm an, and
:::::: :::::::::::: :;:~;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :; :::::::::::::::: :::::
chaplain. She has won
several ftrsl and seeond place
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
awards for her work in
Friday through Sullllay,
the Department.
and mild Friday,
fair
ln th e Past Presidents
Saturday
and Suuday.
Parley of Unit 39, she has
Highs
will
be ID the 40s or ·
held all offices. She is a
·· 50&amp; Friday alliin the IIQs or
member of Eight and Forty,
&amp;01 Saturday and Sanday.
Gallla County Salon 612,
Lows will be ID the upper
where !tie is a chapeau passe
Ztlo or the 3tls early Friday
111d has served as paro• 'y
and
In lite lOs or tea
dlalnnan.
Saturday
and Suuday.
For the pa!t 35 years, Mrs.
Neutzling has been organist
It Trinity Church of which
CARRij: NEUTZLING

.

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