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

12- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, March 29. 1977

More gas assured
OOLUMBUS {UP! ) - Columbla Gas Systems Inc., the
main supplier of natural gas
to four of llui alate's largest
gaa di.stribtors, said Monday
there shoold be more gas
available for Ohioans next

Rules for
(Continued from page I)
department has beer\ asked to
do such studies on Route 33
between Darwin and Athens;
Route 124 to WUkesville; the
area between Five Points and
Rock Springs and the
Bouman's Run area . He
explained that none of the
projects may develop.
It was reported that the
rural house . numbering
project is progressing and at
the last meeting the county
commissioners approved the
names of 90 'percent of the
roads in five townships.
Attending the meeting were
Henry )Veils, Jeff Burt,
Harry Bumgarner, Arch
Steiger, Thereon Johnson
who presided ;· Blakeslee,
Charles Russell, Ruth, E. F.
Robinson, Naomi Brinker,
George Collins, Georgene
Childers, James Jennings
and Richard Jones.

winter. ·
B.J. Clarke, president of
Columbia Gas Systems Inc,,
oollined the systems present
situation in a letter to Gov.
James A. Rhodes.
Clark said Columbia has
purchased substantial
amounts of emergency gas
under Federal Power
Commission Regulations and
the Emergency Natural Gas
Act of 1977.
"Only about ten per cent of
the ,~1 volumes requite
paYDack," said Clarke.
" After due allowance for
such paybacks, Columbill'
Transmlaslon plans that its
storage facilities will be fully
packed on November I, 1977.
"This, plus our present
estimates of flowing gas
s'"ly, indicate. l!lat gas
avaUable to Columbia during
the winter of 1977~78 will be
somewhat greater than the
volumes available to it during
the winter of 197&amp;-77," said
Clark.
Columbia Gas Systems Inc.
supplies Columbia Gas ol
Ohio, Dayton Power &amp; Ught
Co., Cincinnati Gas &amp;
Electric Co. and West Ohio
Gas of Lima.
Clarke also outlined for
Rhodes
the
property

Spaniards

next"winter :
I

Columbia has in Ohio and the
stage of its development.
As of Dec . 31, 1976,
Columbia has 5&amp;4,000 acres of
gas leasehol&lt;b in the Buckeye
State, Clarke said.
He said 229,000 acres are
classified as being 'ilnder
development'' for natural
gas.
This class i fication
includes :
- 150,000 acres · in actual
operation with completted
wells and gas flowing to
market.
-79,000 acres are being
drilled or are covered by
drilling commitments which
provide for an orderly
exploration and development
program.
Clarke said 5,000 acres in
Coshocton County are being
drilled under a program
which will fuly develop the
acreage during 1977.
Another 54,000 acres
in
Morgan,
located
Muskingum and Athens
counties have been tested by

the drilling of seven
exploratory wells. Five of
these weDs were not
commercial and the other
two were ony marginally
commercial, Clarke said.
Clarke said during 1977,
three exploratory wells will
be drilled on 83,000 aaes in
Belmont, Harrison and
Jefferson counties. Plans for
further development activity
In this arrea cannot be made
untU the results from the
three exploratory wells are in
hand, said Clarke.
Clarke also noted that
during his meeting with
Rhodes on March 21 "we
mutually re.cognized that
Columbia could not take any
action that violates any of its
legal duties to the Federal
Power Commission.
•:With that constraint, Columbia will cooperate to the
fullest extent possible in
order to accomoda te the
tralll!portaiion of Ohio self·
help gas," said Clarke.

Stock options are
controversial
and popular
can't ignore the newcomer
any longer and will give
options a try itself or perhaps
get into the business through
a merger with the American
Stock Exchange.
And
the
National
Association .of Securities
Dealers announced it w·
start an options progr
is
sutnmer in 10 ov r-thecounter securili
·
I
still, to say ·e least.,· nOt
everyone Is co ortable wltil.
option mania.
.\
"I'm not .critics
the
industry trying to dt! lop
new products to supply
consumer," says Robert .
Colin
executive vice
president of the securities
firm of Faulkner Dawkins &amp;
Sullivan. "Th~ thing 1
question is the suitability of
options in the long-term
investm,ent process."
Options by their nature are
deteriorating assets as they
approach their expiration
date no more than nine
mooths away. To stay in the
game, the options player has
to buy or sell again.
Colin, notes ·professional
traders
anned
with
computers can profit from
the smallest change in an
option price, 'buying and
selling rapidly, all quite apart
from the idea that investing is
loaning money to a company
in hopes it will do well and
give a return on the money..
"I just question what this
has ill do with anything,"
Colin sayr of options.
Bunk,
say
option
supporters. Buying stock to
sell options is still buying
stock and option profits can
help reverse the flight of the
small investor who was hurt
In the bear stock market.
But in the rush to share in
the seeming bonanza, some
small investors have paid
dearly fiR" their options' experience, afterwards
realizing neither they nor
their brokers !mew the new
game. Brokerage flrins now
are trying to educate both
· employes and customers and
build a reputation for options,
. ._ _ _ _ _ _ __. properly used, as a

NEW YORK (UP!) -'' In
the four years since their ·
introduction to the investing
PJblic in listed trading on
exchanges, stock options
have been as controversial a
form of investing as they
have been popular.
Options are legalized gam·
bling -or a means of making
money while limiting risk;
they undermine the. purpose
of stock markets ~ or they
are a way to bring investors
back to the market. Each
characterization has camps
of supporters in Wall Street,
Washington, academia.
The fixed views have kept
.-----~---~'!!!"---!!!'---""'tl the controversy going since
call options - the rights to
buy shares of stock at a fixed
~
price within a specific time,_\ \
were first listed on · the
Chicago Board Options
~'\~\'
t!"(
Exchange in 1973. The dehate
'V
. ~~t) \
is likely 10 quicken .as the
N-'-' \,/'1\J~~ttlt!
Securities and Exchange
})''
~'(;)
Commission
now
has
t\
authorized
the
first
\ \"(~
,\e,~\)
exchange:liste~ put options~\
a u~
allowing the holder to sell
All ~\" · o.tl,V,~'\
stock at a specific price
a.\\'\ ,.
within a specific time .v
starting this summer.
C.'-\1.• • • 'tt.'\ , •
The five options exchanges
"'\ ~tl '
and many brokers herald
'\\IU
PJts as the natural adjunct to
N-'-'\
calls that will multiply
"'\\)'' •
investment strategies.
\'
Options have helped lrokers
fill the commission gap
caused by negotiated rates on
securities transactions since
1975.
The New York Stock
Exchange, the nation's
premiere securities
marketplace, has decided it

\,a

._.

£

RALPH HAYMAN
Ralph 1Pelel Ha yman,

C~ESTER BLANKENS~IP

" Ches ter -Blankenship, 87, a

Oaytol'\. former ly of Me igs

resident of 43 Lincoln St..
Gall ipolis , died at II : 30 a .m .
Monday in Holzer Med ic~l

Counly, died Monday al Sl.
Elizabeth Hospital, Dayton.

Funeri;tl services will be 1 ,
p.m . Thursday at the Ewing
Funeral Home where friends

Center . He had been a pa ti ent

the past five d~y s .
He was born April 23, 1890,
in Mercerville, son of th ~ late
Stephen and Hanna Blanken .

may call afler noon Wed·

nesday . B'-W' ial will be in
Beech Gro11e cemetery.

5hlp Blankensh ip.

He wa s t he las1 ot his Jm.
mediate fam il y.
He · married the former

Goldie Sm ith of Glen wood. W.
preceded him in

Va . She

death.

Three chi ldren were born to
. this union : Loren , Ga llipolis;

Mel vin and Miss Mildred

Blanken ship, both at home.
Mr . Bla nkenship was a
farm er and also worked wi th
the Ra ymond Hoy Furniture
Factory and Bob Houck's

Wood Novelty Shop. He

retired 22 years ago.
Mr . Blankenship wa s a

Wor!d Wilr I veteran . having
servi ce with the U. S. Army in

France . He was a member Of

the DAV.

Funeral services will be

held

1

Miller ··~

'

Worker suing
for $100,000

p.m. Wednesday at
Home for Funerals,

with Rev . Everett DelaJ!Oy

and Rev. Jack Finrilcum
officiating . Buri8( will be in
Ridgelawn Cemetery ,
Mercerville'.
Friends may call at the
funera l home from 2·.4 and 7.9
p.m. ~uesday .

•. !'OINT PLEASANT - A
Point Pleasant 11lBP flied
suit yesterday in . U. S.
District Court In Hun·
tlngton in connection wUh
injuries be uys he suffered
while working as a seaman
and deck hand aboard a tug
boat.
James F. Will is seeking
$100,000 damages from G.
and C: Towing Co., Inc., of
Henderson, W. Va.
The suit says Will slipped
and was injured near Win-.
field, w. Va., on the Kanawha
River Dec. 30, 1975 while
working aboard a boat .the
CQmpany owns, and alleges
company negligence.

-r\)

.~
~

"'t.''

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR

Our low-cost auto loans are the key to
financing your next car. We've got a variety
of loan "models" .. . one is just right for you
and the car you want.

."THE

VACATION

WATCH FOR
OPENING DATE

FRIENDLY BANK"

THE INN PLACE
.Wednesday N~ght SpeciJJl

, OHIO ·.
Our NEW Telephone Number lis

992-6661

VIsit Our
Bar
BBQ Pork Chops
Mashed Potatoes
and Gravy
D.F. Mush ·Rooms

Installment Lllan Department Number Will
..Relhain Jhe Same 992-3077
t.llember Federal Deposit Insurance CorporaOOn

Hot Rolls

Coffee. Tea or Milk

THE MEIGS INN

Pom'erov, o.

Phone 992-6304
SHACK Photle 9'12·630~

DIEI-OSITS INSURED TO $40,000
!

Plus Tax

I

Area pledges
$126,492

Levy for mentally retarded on primary ballot
A recCil\mendatlon by Meigs County Probate Judge "
''The program for the retarded not ooly Is a most desirable
Manning Webster to the Meigs County Com1nlssioners but alao a mandatory program becauseofthe recent pessing of

A total of $126,492 was calls on Sunday. Vernon
pledged by area residents to Weber, immediate past
the !911 Huntington area president of the Middleport·
Easter Seal Telethon last Pomeroy Rotary Club was
weekend, according to chairman of the project.
Them·e of the 1977 Telethon
Telethon Chairman Paul
Beckett.
was : "Money Walks." Local
The show was broadcast . hosts for the marathon 20locally
by
WSAZ·TV ' hour appeal were Jute Hoff·
(Channel3) lrom·tbeir stuios . rr\an, Dave Co!Uns and Bud
in Huntington. The national Dalley, · WSAZ,TV station
portion of the tele\hon personalities. Funds raised
· originated live from Holly· by the telethon will help
wood · starring Michael provide rehabilitation . ser·
Landon, National EasterS I vices for handicapped
· Chairman. Last
r, th children and adUlts in West
Huntington area Teletho Virginia and
,
'
signed off the air with pledges
The tel
is a
ect of
of $104,600.
irg!nia Soc
for
Over $1,300 was -pledged to. Crippled Children and Adu
the Easter Seaf telethon by Inc ., in cooperation with
Meigs Countians Saturday Easter Seal affiliates in the .
night and Sunday.
Ohio counties of Adams,
The office o! Gene Riggs, Gallla, Jackaon, Lawrence, ,
John Hancock Ins. Co. agent, Meigs, Pike, Scioto, Vinton ,
in the Fanrters Bank Bldg. and Washington.
was used ~s headquarters
Nationally, the telethop
with members of the Ohio Eta was broadcast in 611 markets .
Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma 'from coast to. coast and ·
Phi Sorority receiving the raised $5,016,759 in pledges.

Tuesday night that a ooe mUllevy for the mentally .retarded
program be placed on the ballo.t at the ne1t election was
approved unanbnously.
.
Judge Webaler a1ao recommended change$ in the court
rooms oo the ll)ird floor of the courthouse .and submitted a list
of additional equipment needed by the courts. Tbe commission ·
agreed to purchase equipment ~ requested.
'lbe cunmisslon, Henry ·wells, president, issued. the
fo llo. wing statement concerning the proposed levy for the
Mental Retardation PrQIIram:
·

But experts are cautiously
!ndicatingdevelopmeritsmay
WASHINGTON (UP!) Tbe Agriculture Department, be heading the crop toward
issuing the ftrst projections of
on the farm front
potential 1977 grain crops,
says this year's corn harvest
could virtually equal last the upper end of their
year'S--{)r it might fall more projection.
The forecast
issued
than a billion bushels below
Tuesday in a ~w formal
it.
dictated by Agriculture
Secretary Bob Bergland,
offered two separate sets of
potential harvest and crop
demand figures
The first 1s based on the
possibility the United States
drought will ease and
. Holzer Medical Center
weather abroad will continue
IDischarges, March 28)
good.
Landon Ball, Mary Boster,
The second is if the drought
Gladys Davis, Nellie Eblin, continues · in this country
Janice Hankla, Bruce through 1977 whUe weather
Jamison, Sr., Mrs. Roger abroad deteriorates.
e,rvis and daughter, Donna
Officials warned 1977 har·
Jofil&gt;son, Mrs. Thomas vestsaremonthsaway,many
Kibble and daughter, Lola Plains and western states are
Lafon, Rose Lee, Alva still dry despite recent rains,
McKenzie, Mrs. William and "uncertainties cloud the
McNeil and daughter, Mrs. outlook."
Gary Perkms and daughter,
"But
with
recent
Glenn Powell, Keith Spencer, widespread improvement in
Co!'"elia Tipton,-Ea:I Wilbur, miilsture conditions in the
Charles Wllson, Jr.
United States, prospective
!Births, March28)
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Shockey,
son, Ravenswood, W. Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Riffle,
daughter, Gallipolis Ferry,
W. Va.

HOSPITAL
NEWS

Monday on CR 20, one and
developments have moved nine tenths miles north of SR
closer to the relatively 7 in Meigs County.
favorable weather .The Gallia·Meigs Post
assumption," the report said. State Highway Patrol said
· Last year's record corn the animal ran into the path
aop was 6.216 billion bushels of 8 car operated by Donald
and good weather could mean R. Smith, 19, Rt. 3, Pomeroy.
this year's crop would be There was minor damage to
·virtually the same. Bad Smith's car.
weather could mean a drop to
as small an output as 5 billion
bushels, experts said.
.
.For wheat, experts satd
Clear early tonight but
wtthgoodweatherforthe rest becoming mostly cloudy by
of the season, the 1977 crop Wednesday morning. Lows
could reach 2 billion bushels will be between :ill and 55.
compared to last year's Mostly cloudy with showers
record 2.147 billion bushel or thunderstorms Wed·
crop. With poor weather, the· nesday, highs around 70.
harvest could he as low as 1.7 Probability of rain is near
~on bushels -the smallest zero per cent today, 10 per
smce 1972.
.
cent tonight and 70 per cent
Analysts satd about 1.1 Wednesday.
·
billion bushels of surplus
wheat, the largest carryover
DANCE PLANNED
since 1963, would he on hand
MASON, W.' Va. - ,·A
when the 1977 cr?p lS square dance wm · be held
harvested.!! this years crop · Saturday, Arril2 at the Reds
reaches the upper !OI'ecast, Club from 9 p.m. to I a.m.
analysts said the surplus sponsored by the VFW
could rise again to. 1.3?7 &amp;ewart.Johnson Post 9926.
billion bushels in nud·1978• Music will be provided by
close to the 1961 record of Bernard Coonley and the
.1.411 billion bushels.
Kanauga Valley Ramblers.

Weather

0

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
Jackson &amp; Perkins

Veterans Memorial Hosplla1
Admitted - William Ed·
wards, New Haven; Myrtle
Hayes, Columbus; Jacob
Holman, Jr., Racine; Bertha
Robinson, Racine; Ruby
Cooper, Portland; Ray Hall,
Vinton; Robert Bishop,.
Rutland; Carol Burnem,
Racine; Judy Ha~rison,
Rutland; Maude Ross,
Middleport: Lucy Markin,
Athens:
Discharged Emma
·Hayman, Thomas Sarver,
Myrta Schafer, Clifford Hall.

ROSE BUSHES
Everblooming!
Two year field grown
superooted roses. The
most popular and best
growing varieties.

,., Queen Elizabeth • Pink
,., Charlotte Armstrong • Cerise
,., Eclipse . Yellow
,., K· T. Marshall • Pink
,., New Yorker • Red

,., Peace · Yellow/Pink blend
,., Ste~ing Silver • Lavender
,., Tiffany · Pink
,., White Queen • White
, Blaze • Red

,., Golden ShoweiS • Yellclw
.. ,

,., White Dawn • White
~

.

,.,. Tropicana .• OrangHed
,.,. Kordes Perfecta

at y

e
VOL. XXVII NO. 244

..

TiiESE CHESTER ELEMENTARY SCHOOL sixth
graders will play leading roles In a minstrel show to be
staged S:t 8 p.m. Friday in the school auditorium to raise
funds for tile school safety patrol trip to Washington D. C.
They arefroot, I tor, Roger Bissell and Keith Brogan, who
iVi!l be clown end.men, and back, 1 to r, David Gaul and
Eddie Werry, who will be interlocutors. Seventh graders
who will join the minstrel cast as end clownil are Nick
Lllonard, Bryce Buckley, Ray Werry and Rodney Keller.

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

ea

0•

C H AR LE ST 0 N
well as a convenience factor
Governor Rockefeller late· for our residents," the
Mqnday gave the go-ahead q'n Governor said. :
construction of two bridges At present, the closest
aossing tbe Ohio River at bridge in the Moundsville
Moundsvilie and Ravens· area connecting West
wood.
,
· virginia and Ohio is at
. : In . conference
in Benwood (a toll faclllty four
Charleston, Rockefeller said miles from Moundsville). To
the estimated cost ofthe two the south, the closest bridge
spans Is $37.9 mllllon..
crossing the Ohio River is 34
The Governor SBid 1 he miles away in New Martinsbelieves the Ravenswood and · ville.
Moundsville bridges will do
Similar conditions e1ist in
much to spur economic Ravenswood where motorists
development in the counties must travel 40 miles to
of Jackson and Marshall, as Parkersburg or 32 mUes to
well as surrounding areas. Mason to cross the Ohio.
"Bridges connecting
Based upon agreement
Moundsville and Ravenswood reached between the states of
to Ohio have bee~ badly West Virginia and Ohio, and
needed. The potenUal th.ey the Federal Highway Ad·
can provide ror industrial ministration. the estimated
developm"!lt is unlimited, as

$
Jackson &amp; Perkins

REDI-PLANTED
PATENTED
ROSES ·
,., Arlene Francis
,., Chtysler' ' 1mpenal

.

.

•

enttne

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 30, 1977

•

given

cost of the Moundsville
bridge is $23,904,000.
A breakdown Shows that
West Virginia's total cost
share is $14,707,000. Of that
amount, federal·aid funds
wUI provide $10,295,000, and
the state will match ·
$4,412,000.
Ohio's total cost share is
$9,197,000. Of that amount,
federal-aid funds will pay
$6,438,000, and Ohio will pay
$2,759,000 In matching
money.
For the Ravenswood
bridge, the estimated total
cost is $11,004,000. West
Virgnia 'a total cost share is to
be $5,686,000 or $3,980,000 in
federal-aid and $1,706,000 in
state matching funds.
Ohio's total cost share is

PRICE Fl FTEEN CENTS

•

r1

$8,318,000 or $5,823,000 in facilities that will enhance
federal-aid and $2,495,000 in and further support the
matching funds.
town's planned develop·
The Governor said, ment."
"Moundsville warrants
In addition, Rockefelier
improved transportation pointed out that the future

growth of Jackson County
depends on the development
of an adequate tr~ nsporta tion
network for accessibility and
service to the Ohio River
Valley.

·w,,,,,m~,,~;,,;, ,~, , , , , , , , , , , , , ,;, , , , , , , , . ,. , ,., , , , , , , , , , , ;,:,:,: ,:,:,:,:, , , , , , , , , ;, , , : :'

.A irhone clown wants
!News . . .in Briefs\\\ to make June regatta
It could be that "Thunder vertised boat races, people
By. Uaited Press Inte1118tioual
CANAL WINCHESTER, OHIO - VOTERS IN the Canal Chicken" wiD be a feature of cnve quite a distsnce to see
Winchester school district in Fairfield County Tuesday this year's Big Bend Regatta them, and there are no races~
Crow explained that it Is
· approved an 8.9oll\W operating levy by an unofficial vote of 1!62 in June.
Thunder Chicken claims to difficult to get a racing group
to 501.
&amp;lperintendent Andrew Miller said the ilchool system be the world's first skydiving to come and also someone to
would have·had to close ·u the levy had not passed. Voters clown. He is DaDas Witt· oversee the project. He said
.genfeld of Cel!na, Ohio who · there is no doubt local
defended a simUar menaure several months ago .
'
in 1969 served w~h Company museboat races and other
WOOSTER, OWO - OWO'S SMAIL MEAT pack~rs D. 75th Airborne Rangers b1 local races would perfonn on
cinnot affor4 a federal lake-over of the stale's meat inspection Vielnam, and later decided to &amp;today.
Quickie suggested a shuttle
JI"Ogram says John Tucker, who along with other meat turn to being a clown.
His business representative service be offered during
proce&amp;80rs, Is suing, to try and prevent such a move.
Tucker, from nearby Marshallville, and the group flied a Is Jim Wasson, who met with ~alta to control the traffic
suit againlt the takeover and last Friday were granted a Regatta sponsor Pomeroy JI'Oblem, perhapa using golf
temporary restraining order, stopping the change, at least for Chamber of Commerce · carts to help with the parade
tile present. Tueker said the case Is based on a 1971 state law Tuesday at noon in the Meigs 111 Friday evening. He also
which requires the state to maintain a meat inspection Inn. Wasson showed ftlms of SJggested that members of
Thunder Chicken's act.
the Big Bend CB Club be
program.
There Is ooe small catch to mked to help direct traffic.
"Small packers doo 'I want federal inspection," said
Jim Frecker is in charge of
Tucker. "We don't think we can afford it. Before we can meet Thunder Chicken's act which
is gmred lor every member the parade and Tonya Davis
the regulations, we'd have to dose down."
d. the family. Three days at is chairman d. the queen
OOUJMBUS - SEN. CHARLES BUTI'S, !).Cleveland, the regatta by Thunder oontest, assisted by Ralph
said Tuesday cigarette bootlegging has reached "alarming" Chicken wUI cost $975, and to Werry. It IS planned to move
proportions in Ohio and that his bill to set a mandatlll')' one-to- add a hot air balloon to his act right ahead with commUtees
ltick In another
Wassoo for the Regatta. No general
ten-year prison sentence for the crime should be passed.
Bull$ was named chairman of a subcommittee of the Ohio SJggested spoosors ~ ob- dlairpwson has been named
Senate Ways and Means Committee to work on the bill he ta!ned to bring the balloon. yet.
Thunder Chicken would do
Also meeting with the
Introduced March 8to set the mandatory sentence for a person
cmvicled of possessing more than $60 worth of oot-of'State two jumpa, present a ping dlamber was Mrs. Phyllis
pong ball drop, give a magic Early, representing Town
clgarelt!!s.
show, bitlloon rides to Meeting Ohio (TM).
TM i~designed to Increase
OOLUMBUS ,;.. THE 01110 HOUSE HAS giv~n an children (100 pounds In
"expression of intent" to support an agricultural museum on weight or less) and sign citizen participation in
meetln s. Chamber mem·
the campus of the Ohio Agricultural Reseach and Devetop. autographs.
The hot air balloon Is elght bers felt that since there are
inent Center at Wooster.
But, according to the sponsor of the re$0lutlon wbich cleared 111d one half stories high. !ll many organizations in tbe
unanimously Tuesday, the ''real test"wUI rome later when the Youllllsters would be given oounty now that TM would
General Assembly may be asked for financial supp~rt of the free rides 50 to 60 feet up. not be a success.
They can accommodate 75 to
Mem hera were presented
musewn, being planned lor a 1~ opening.
·
100 youngners in two-hours with a list of previously
PORTLAND, ORE. - ABOU'r EIGHT MILlJON baby between the hours of 6 and 8 PJbllshed priorities, 62 in aU,
salmon will have a bumpy ride to the Pacific this year because p.m. 'Th111der Chicken has for capital Improvements in
of the drought. &amp;.oe of the fingerlings will be scooped up and appeared in Athens and Meigs County. Each was
asked to check the list and
put on a barge, but those that miss the barge will go down Nelsonville.
Fred
Crow,
C
of
C
SJbmitto)ames
M. Jennings
Interstate 80 In trucb.
Jl"esldent,
was
to
meet
with
Associates
Co.
The maiHil8de conveyances for the salmon are part of a
Richard Jones asked
plan by the Army Corpa of Engineers to save the Uves .of Wasson following the meeting
to
discuss
booking
the
act.
persons
to mark those lm·
millions of YOUIIII salmon that might die going over the dams
BDI
Grueser,
Bill
Quickie
JI'OVements
that should not
oo the Snake and Columbia Rivers. The rivers are rum!ng at
about half their normal volame and most of the flow is being and last year's Regatta be .funded by local monies.
Crow added that not on the
directed through massive water turbines to generate Queen, Mary Ault; who at·
tended the Ohio Festival list, but something he would
hydroelectricity
meeting in ColumbUs Sunday, · ID&lt;e to see here, was painting
\VASHiNGTON - SENATORS WORRIED about a lrought back a disturbing the courthouse and the Meigs
limitation oo outside inc0111e. In the proposed ll!lW ethics code report. Quickie sa.lll the Ohio Olurty jail.
Crow announced that Good
,woo a reprieve with a quick and surprising vote I() delay the Festival Asso'&amp;ation Is
restrl_ctioo a year untU the start of 1979, Npt a single member · afuceril.ed with theBJg Bend friday s.,.vlces will be held
RA!gaita in that it lias ad·
Ajx;l · 8, a! the Grace
'
Continued on page 6
·.
0

-·

0

'

The commission examined the Page Street project
submitted by Wesley Buehl, county engineer, and agreed til
study tile proposal before taking any action.
Commissioner James Roush last week told the board he
expects to arralllle a Federal program that may provide as
many as 25 employes who coold be used in road maintenance
and repair by tile county highway department.
Last night Roush said since talking with Buehl, he thinks a
separate agency should be set up to Administer such a
program and will discuss the matter with Buehl. Attending
were Wells, Richard Jones , and Roush , commissioners, and
Mary Hobstetter, acting clerk.
·

•

•

,400.

StruYly!
Hardy!

conservative investment:
Other
options
controversies:
..:. The listing of options In
the same stock on two or
more exchan!ies has resulted
in a heated war lor business
between the Amex and the
CBOE whUe a third options
marketplace, the
PbUadephla Stock Exchange,
bas pleaded to the SEC to halt
dusl listings. The war has
added to lroker operating
costs and the question now is
before the SEC for decision.
-The Impact of options oo
fluctuations in the price of the
underlying stock haa not been
demoostrated, according to
option supporters, but is very
real to critics. The ''tall
wagging the dog" debate
continues· without conclusive .
evidence on either side.
- A' CBOE~mmlssloned
study im whether options are ·
diverting funds away from
!lOW stock isaues coold help
answer this question. But the
study by two university
profeslors·ls running late and
tile CBOE doesn't know when
Ita findings will be releued.
- The CBOE and Amel
have had to clean up mini·
IC8ndala invo!Yi!JB tradlnL
infractions picked up by
~Ich~tnge
surveillance
~s. In the year&lt;~ld
Amex 'Investigation, the esc .
change has yet to make
PJblic any detaUs ot the
violations, saying some cases
are still open.
Through it all, stock optima
Ire a big bualneu,
lpparently destined hJ
remain so.

House BUI 455. There is no looger any doobt as to the
responsibility of tile cow!ty to furnish funds !OJ: this program.
An extra levy of .75 of a mill expired two years ago and this
year a speciallevy of ,lllof a mill will expire. Without a special
levy the money must come from the county general fund. If
this is done, then some other worthwhile county programs
must be drastically .cut or elimiriated. A levy of one mill iS
needed to operate a mental retardation program on a minimal
basis."
Art Sy)vester discussed repair work needed at the county

sanitary landfill for which the commis.sion agreed to contact
tile highway department.
Robert Wingett, president of Syracuse Cooncil, discussed
the new recreation area in Syracuse. He said additional
materials are needed on the project and asked for help by the
county. Wingett stressed that the recreation area will benefit
the entire county. The commission agreed to investigate to see
if it can help.
The board discussed the heating and cooUng problem at
tile Welfare Building and dgreed to check with several
companies as to repair or replacement of the system.

t

· ·• • 1ooks good st:uc~~~
Car kills deer
Corn proJeCtion
;a~a~i~~d9 ~~:.
By BERNARD BRENNER

(Continued from page I)
why the two planes were on the same runway when the KLM
plane roared fm: takeoff atll!6 miles an hour.
Spanish authorities said Monday a misunderstanding could
have catised the collision, but an air ministry statement issued
later denied that the control tower was responsible.
"Any type of sabotage or the failure in the communications
of the control tower or Its personnel can be discounted," the
miniBtry communique said.
In New York, Pan Am officials denied a report carried by the
Spanish news agency Clfra that the Pan Am pilot may have
misunderstood cootrol tower directions and instead of turning
into a parking area moved onto a runway in front of the KLM
plane.
.
The job of identifying the dead was handed over to 16
American forensic etperts and 10 from the Netherlands flown
onto the island by helicopter.
·
The news agency Europa Press said American and Dutch
officials were malting arrangements·to fly the dead home. It
said the Dutch passengers and crew killed aboard the KLM 747
were being embalmed at the personal request of Queen Juliana
of the Netherlands.

0

Area Deaths

m

Episcopal Church from 12:30
to 1:30 p.m. The Ministerial
Association has requested
that employes be allowed to
attend the services. At·
tending were Cfow, Barbara
ChaJI!lan, secretary, E. F.
Robinson, Mr. and Mrs.
Virgil Teaforo, Bm Quickie,
BU1 Grueser, Vernon Weber,
Joe Young, Dale Warner,
Richard Jones and N. W.
Compton.

PATTY FLETCHER, ·Meigs County Cancer Crusade Chainruin, looks as three Meigs
County mayo~sslgn a proclamation declaring April to be Cancer Crusade Month. From the
left are Mayor.Eugene Thompson, Rutland; Mayor Fred Hoffman, Middleport, and Mayor
Charles Pyles, Racine. Unable to be present were Mayor Clarence AMrews of Pomeroy and
Mayor Herman London of Syracuse.
(See story on page 6) .

Banquet
State
may
help
utilities
tickets
on sale
COLUMBUS (UP!) -Offi.
cials of seven electric utility
companies were told by Gov.
James Rhodes Tuesday the
state might help them come
Dinner tickets- at $3 each up the $7 billion the utilities
-went on ssle today in Meigs say they'll need to meet the
Local School district for the ·
demand for electricity
Meigs High School first an· through 1981.
nual AU.Sports hanquet to be
In reports flied by the
sponsored by the Middleport . utilities with the Public
Pomeroy Rotary Club at Utilities Commission of Ohio,
Meigs on April 14.
the seven utilities projected
Vernon Weber, chainnan, the $7 billion in capital
said the master of construction expenditures.
ceremonies remains to be
About $5.6 billion of that
named for the event. There total was for extra generating
wlU be no lonna! speaker, an capacity.
innovation. made this season
Rhodes suggested that per·
in an attempt to hold costs to haps the state might issue
the public down as guests of hundreds of millions of
the club will include all boys dollars worth of tax-free
and girls athletic teams, bonds to build new coal·fired
including their cheerlead!ng electric generatiog .stations,
corpa.
then lease the facilities to the
"Name" speakers can individual utilities.
come as high as $2004400 plus
"To save Ohio consUmers
expenses at today's inRated mooey and to guarantee conprices.
tinued electric service, . we
Tickets are on sale, and will must find new ways to
remain on .sale through AprU finance your generating
8 at the Quallty Print Shop in facilities," said Rhode$.
Middleport, New York
"We'll call it the Ohio Plan
Clothing House in Pomeroy, for Electricity. Take a week
Dutton Drug Store, Mid· and get your beacb together,"
dleport; Rutland Department he told the electric utility
Store, Rutland; the bigh executiv~.
school, and We~em Auto
Last week, Rhodes huddled
Store in Middleport.
with officials of · coal and

natural gas industries, askil\g
them to review .their energy
problems and give him
recommendations toward
forestalling an energy crisis
next year.
"I doo't want this state to
go down the drain because of
a lack of intestinal fortitude,"
Rhodes told electric utility
executives. "You give me a
plan. We'll lake it to (Presi·
dent) Carter personally."
Rhodes predicted the.
electric utility industry would
be unable to find the $7 billion
in the hood market, ~nd if
they did, the cost to would be
prohibitive, driving up
consumer utility prices
beyond the consumer's
abUlty to pay.
But Rhodes said some solu·
lion to the impending
flnancial problems with
electric utilities must be
found to make ~urea deficit
in the supply of electricity
doesn't appear just as a
deficit appeared in the
natural gas supply last

delays, both in the state and
federal bureaucracies, were
as much of a problem as the
increasing cost of capital.
Robert Frazer, president of
the Dayton Power and Light
Co. , complained that the
Internal Revenue Service
would not broaden its
definition of "pollution
control" equipment.
Frazer said cooling towers
and thick protect! ve domes
over nuclear power plants
ought to be defined as
"pollution control" devices,
and therefore be eligible for
6¥, per cent bonded
financing, rather than the
normal71'.t per cent to 811 per
cent bonded financing.
In addition to DP&amp;L, participating in the meeting
were officials of Toledo
Edison, Ohio Edison, the
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric
Co., Ohio Power, Cleveland
Electric IDum!nat!ng Co. and
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co..
Also
present
were
winter .
representatives of the North
"U Y'"l uy you can't do American Coal Co., the Ohio
anything - that'swrong. You Department. of Taxation,
can do anything If you try," PUCO,IheOhloAF'IrCIO,the
said Rhodes.
O.hlo Environmental
Sev e r.a I o If c 1a Is. PrO\ee~on Agency and the
complained . that ~lory · Oi)io General AsSembly... ·.,

, Double Delight
,., First Prize
.
,., New Day
0

,., Red Masterpiece
,., Snow Fire
,.,. First Edition

,., Prominent

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY'

Heller cites need for ·adequate energy program
PORTSMOUTH - Ohio
Power Company's chief
a:itcutlve officer Tuelday
nltibl here called on
Prelldatt J~y Carter to
jjve the nation an adequate
tlleriY procram that, every·
me cu qree on.
Charlet
A.
Heller,
•ec:11tlve vice president,
IPtUJIII at Harold's
Restaurant to newspaper,.
radio
1nd
television
npresentatlves of the
~I

company's Portsmouth
D.vislon, stressed that an
adequ•e energy IIUpply is so
bldamet11a~ so vital to us as
a peoplt! and as a natioo, "we
amply. mu• lind so!utlona
that people of good will can
agree m."
In this objective Heller
JI'Omised the l'relldent his
company's
fullest
moperatlon and support.
Mr. Heller's speech wall
followed by a period of
~

IJ!eltions al\(1 answers. AI·
ten ding. from the Meigs·
Gellla media were Richard
Owen, publiBher, and Chester
'l'lnnehlll, 11ecut!ve editor,
d. the Ohio Valley Publlslllng
Ol. newspapers, and news
clrector Barbara Thomson ol
Radio Station WMPO.
Company representatives
- e Bll Llzon, manager of
the Gavin Power Plant at
Oleshire, and Fred Morrow,
mtnager in the Pumeroy

area.
' HlghllghiS ·of Mr. Heller's
remarks: The main thrust of
nw remarks last rear had to
do wlfh flnancla problems
and the ·difficulties we were
encountering In coping. While
Olio Power has had some
relief, the financial re!lOurcts
of lhe company remain under
pressure.
This year I want to talk
about the very real l!lreal
Which exlsls thai the electric
lpauslry might not be able lo
provide the ample and

dependable electric service
lhal has been Its hallmark for
many decades. You and I
need to uk ourselves a
serious and distressing
question :
.
Will this area have an

ade&lt;luale SUP!&gt;IY of power In
1982~ lam concerned that our
nation may not have an
•doquate supj)ly - thai we
may exper Ionce shortages of
electricity In the early 80's,
and perhaps socner. .
You may well ask why Ohio
Power Cbmpan,y Is con ·

cerned. With lhe addition of

two l,lOO,OOO · kllowatt
generating units which went
Into service at our General
James M. Gavin power plant
at Cheshire, Ohio, midway
between Gallipolis and
Pomeroy, in 1974and 1975, we
have euellenl generating
reserves. In fact. we have
been accused of overbuilding
our
g e n e r a t 1 on
facilities . . . of having too
much rf!Serve capacity.
Why am 1 concerned about
future supplies of eloctrlclly?
To explain my concern, I
must discuss three subjects

·~

wllh you: Flrsl) How much through 1985.
electric arowlh can we an·
On the · other hand, the
. llclpalef Secondly) What growth ·rate for electr ic
kind of construction will be _ power demand ts· pegged at S
.required to meet this growth? per coni. It Is lnlerestlng that .
And lhlrdly) Will we be able the FEA gives no reason tor
to accomplish this con . lowering lis growth rate In
slrucllon?
electric demand from last
Hlslorlcally, overall energy rear's 5.4 per cent pro jection
demand has grown at a rate lO·year torecasl).
of 3.5 per cent annually. At
I have trouble accepting
the present time, however, the 5 per cent figure. First, I
lhe Federal Energy Ad · do nol - know why the
ministration Is projecting r.:ojecllon was lowered from
lhal U.S. tolal energy ast year '&amp;outlook for 5.4 oer
demand will grow al the role
( Continued on page" 2)of 2.5 per cent annua ll y

~

1

�i)';i;-h.j;;b;'";~Ys KLM pilot took off without OK

.

3- The Dally Sentinel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Wednesday March 30 1977

CASH pc d fo o makes and
mode s at mob e hoP'Ies
Phonv o eo code 6 4 423 953

Marauders drop second by 5-3 count

TIMBER

By ARTHliR IlERMAN
SANTA
CRUZ
DE
TENERIFE Spain (UPI) A Dutch lnv~tor says a
KLM pOol / did not have
pennlssion to take off !1'001 a

foggy l'WIW&amp;Y thai ended in
the fatal colllllon with a Pan
American jetliner But KLM
questioned the report
'There was no take-off
clear~e which is not In

I

Heller CI'tes ore
foe

placed only those
II.. already committed

be ng

can be counted upon to

provide oddll ono capac ly
(Contmued from page I)
tor ou needs n the next 12
cent growth Second y f s years lh s means therefore
very far below 33 per cent that If we ore to doub e our
below
the h stor c rote of generating copab lily by 1988
seven plus per cent Th d y we shou d build 3l0 000

gas and o 1 shortages are
a eady start ng to resu t n

megawath of coal based
generation or expand these

greater

fac I ties by 81 per tl!nf

demand

for

e ec

11 c ty and h s shou d con
t but@ to

ncreased future

Shou d we expand o I s use

as a power gener atlon fue '

e ectrlca growth projections No I Should we expand the use
Fou thly he actual growth of gas for that purpose&gt; No
rate n 1976 was 6 per cent or Con hydro be expected to
20 per cent above the FEA s

•

make a

s gn flcant con

growth project on And h s fr but on? No Con we count
was ach eved n sp te o the on other exotic sources
recess on s tuat ion hat
to help out n the next 0
prevailed n 976
yea s or so? No they re
My guesstimate Is that the farther down the road And
p o eel on of growth In nuc ear&gt; The fact s that t
eleclr c ty should be at least 6 lakes 0 or more years to
per cent Th s takes nto contruct a nuclear plant
cons de allon continued and Accordingly only those
acce erated conse vatlon nuc e:ar units presently
efforts by power users
committed for construct on
The Ed son E edr c In w I help us meet our electr c
st lute wh ch Is the trade needs n the early 980s We
assoc at on of the nat on s must rely on coaJ.flred un ts
nvesto owned e ec r c to meet our needs
powe compan es est mates
As I said th s s the
e ectr c g owth at 7 per cen a p efe red or dea mode of
year You may lh nk · h s sa meeting future requ emenls
based I gu e and maybe II for electricity
s But I know hal we n Oh o
The third of my concerns
Power and AE P ry to do our namely can we accomp sh
ve y best to to ecast ac th s needed construct on
cu ately o promo e w se use nat ana y s perhaps the
and conse wat on of powe
most crlt cal of a I I be eve
and to prov de ou customers It s going to be extreme y
equ emenls fo eleclr c ly d If cull to meet the demand
1 bel eve that this also s true fore ectr c tv In the ear y 80's
of he many othe companies because of fhe many power
wh en make up the Ed son plant can cella! ons and
E ect c Ins! lute
defer as that have taken
The 6 pe cent g ow h rate I place w lh n just the past two
am p o ect ng means of and a ha f yea s
cou se a daub lng of e ectr c
On the nuclear front a one
demand In ust 12 yea s
new orders for nuclear
The second reason
am reactors have slackened
concerned about future cons derab y tr ck ng to an
power supply n the nat on s obso ule holt lhls year There
what k nd of construe on will were 33 reactor o!¥Mrs placed
ou e ectr c growth require• In 1972 36 n 1973 and 27 n
The nat on s e eclrlc 974 By 1975 the slump had
general ng capac ly now s set n and the number of
about 504 000 megawatts or orders was down to five Th s
us ng anothe term S04 past year on y three orders
m 11 on k owatts It has taken were placed So actual orders
us from 1882 and the advent have decl ned
of Ed son ~ Pearl Street
n add lion the number of
Sta on n New York to gel to nut ea un Is In the plann ng
where we a e today The stages has declined In the
p ojecl on of future e eclr c as! two and o half years
needs that we have rust pans for 187 nuclear un ts
d scussed nd cates that have been ether cancelled or
dur ng the next 12 yea s all of deferred Industry leaders
th s w 1have to be doubled o have long ago slopped talk ng
we w face shortages n about 000 nuc ear plants by
e ec r c ty
the year 2000
Foss 1 fue s
coal gas
The Atomic ndustrlal
and o I
presently support Forum the nuc ear In
ough y three fourths of the dust y s trade orgonlzaf on
nat ona electr c generat ng b ames the slump In nuc ear
production Hydro s con orders on the decline n the
tr but on Is 15 per cent growth rate of electr ca
Nuclear generation while consumption The AIF points
g eally expanded from 60 out that there was no e ec
megawatts twenty yea s ago tr ca growth In 1974 and the
to 43 000 megawatts today growth rate for 197l was only
s I prov des only about 9 pe three per cent po nted out
cent of he tota
to you earl e however that
t s very d fflcult to en e ectr ca consumpt on In
"' son how n 12 yea s a creased by close to six per
doub ng can be ach eved o cent n 1976 only sl ghtly ess
the add ton of approx malely than the pre recess on
an other SOO 000 megawatts ave age of seven per cent a
What would be
the year A be eve the e s grave
prefe ed
method
of danger n placing too much
ach ev n9 h s daub ng of our mportance for forecast ng
co untry s capac ty elec purposes on the very low rate
tr c ty•
of electric growth n 1974 and
We should not coun on 975 These were abnormal
e ther o or gas fo e ectr c years - years of extreme
gene at on These prec ous nf at on of ecess on and of
fuels must be preserved fo reaction to the Arab oil
th ngs on y hey can do
embargo 1 be Ieve that
Hydro wh ch n 94l t nanc a dill c~llles have
supp ed almost o third of the been respons b e to a Ia ge
nat on s capac ly canno be deQree for delay and can
counted upon to meet sub ceflal on of many generating
s ant al fulu1 e needs because units
new s tes a e a e and e\/en
n addit on to nuclear unit
deve opment ol the lew that deferra s some 127 cool fred
a e suitable s being b ocked un Is also were cancelled or
through public and l"l! slat ve postponed dur ng the past two
act on
Exot c
other
and half to three years Th ee
sou ces such as sola w nd of these are Amer can
t dal and fus on plus a few Electric
Power un ts
more a e s mply not eady planned by our sister com
If hey were they wou dn be panles and I II be refe ring to
cons dered exo c
them n more detal a little
Th s ~s w lh just later
coahll1d nuclea
Five of our neighboring
On th s sl de I p ojecl compan es comprising the
g owlh fo nuc ea power but CAPCO power pool recently
not un mpeded growth With announced deferrals of
a 0 year lead I me on general ng capocl y wh ch
nuc ear plan s p us the fact fhey anticipate w save SBSO
ha essen ally no new .orders

HULTH
Lawrence E Lamb, M D
By Lawrenct E Lamb MD
DEAR DR LAMB- Three
years ago I fell and broke my
left hip and left foot I had ex
pert attention and am very
happy to be working as usual
I teach p ano and I carry a
cane to be safe when I go
places
I have had more falls smce
the bad one and even sprained the ankle of the aame foot
that I broke I think I am for
lunate not to have broken
more bones
The doctor discovered that
I have soft bones and he
prescrabed four calcium
hablets to be taken daily for
the rest Q! life I am 78
My mqwry "' this have I
taken hhe calCium tablets
long enough now to be more
safe m regard to broken
lones? Is at all right to take
two tablets at the same Ume'
I sometimes realize that I
have forgotten to take all four
tablets
DEAR READER - I am

9

glad you have done so well
and that you are stlll active
You wtll need to keep mn lak
mg those calcium palls that
your doctor gave you He
knows that as long as you
keep taking calcawn at wall
help dM'ease the loss of
calcaum from your bones a
condataon that we call
osteoporosiS The problem IS
common In women after the
menopause and there Ill a
continual loss of bone
substance A large percen
tage of broken hips und other
fractures are caused by
brittle bones
from
osteoporosis
You need to lake about a
gram of calcawn a day To
help you understand
osteopoa 'IIIL' better and why
you need to keep taking the
calclwn I am Bending you
The Health Letter nwnber
6 I0 osteoporosts Bone
Soflenlng Others who want
this information can send 50
cents for It with a long

accordance with normal
p-ocedures said F A Van
Rysen chief of the Dutch
team mvestleatlng the fiery
cruh Sunday that kllled 5?5
per11011s
Van Rytten said Tuellday
the Dutch captain merely
said We are taking off

and started the fatal run
He saad the Pan Am
captain Vactor S Grubbs
apparenUy saw the disaster
descending upm his croft and
shouted a radio warning that
'We are stlll on the runway
1n ~adrad the newspaper
Pueblo said Grubbs words

were This man Is crazy
What Ill he doang' He Is going
toklllusall
At the time of the crash the
Pan Am plane was on the
runway luling to on access
ramp The KLM plane was to
have waited at the end of the
runway until the Pan Am

plane was out of the way
In The Netherlando KLM
said In a statement It Is
unthinkable that the KLM
pUot would have lak..a off
without permission The
airline demanded
conflnnatlon of the report
from the tapes In the two

Oswald intimate an apparent suicide
PALM BEACH Fla (UPI)
- A language profeasor
described as Intimately
involved with Lee Harvey
Oswald and a crucial
witness In the Congressional
investigation of the Kennedy
eese"'natlm was found dead
Tuesday In an apparent
suicide
Pabn Beach County Sheriff
Richard Wtlle Identified the
victim as George de MOOI'en
schndt 85 a flamboyant
Ruaslan.born teacher of
French at Dallas Bishop

College
Walle saad de Mohren
schlldt a guest at the
historic ocean !root mansioo
m suburban Manalapan Fla
of Mrs Charles Tilton ill
apparently placed the muzzle
of a 20 gauge shotgun to his
mouth and pulled the trigger
De Mmarenschildt had be..a
quoted by Dutch journallst
WUltam Oltmans about three
weeks ago as saying he had
prior knowledge of the
Kennedy assassination
Oltman had reported He

(de Mohrenschndt) asked me
How do you think the media
would react if I came out and
S81d I feel responsible for
Oswald s behavior'
De MohrenschDdt vanished
from Dallas after the report
and showed up m Oltmans
offace m Holland Then he
disappeared agam and was
traced by goverrunent Investigators from Brussels to
F1orlda
When mformed late
Tuesday night of the death
Rep Richardson Preyer [).

m lion n construct on costs
In the next f ve yea s The
CAPCO com panes a e
~ay ng construct on of f 'lie
projects one coa f red un I
and four nuclear un ts Othe
compan es n this sect on of
the country a so have
deterred projects
The Edison E ectr c In
sfltute estimates that more
!han 200 coa fired p an s
must be bu t by he m d
1980s
Top ese ve our standard of
I v ng and to malnla n our
economy we must expand
coa
production
and
ut lzatlon to the ma•lmum
extent poss b y over the neK
12 years II should be ap
parent that the mpos I on of
unnecessary obstacles to
such
product on
and
ut I zat on can only have
se ous consequences
Huge cap Ia Investments
are requ red to open new
m nes and upgrade tran
sporlallon faclllles Labor
un est and decreasing
productivity bear heav ly on
these future nvestment
dec s ons
Industry
s
prepared to meet demands
But I needs some reasonab e
assurance that after hav ng
nvesled billions of dollars
some leg Isla! ve body or
government agency wont
decide to eslab sh new lows
or regulations !hat out aw the
use of this coa
A General Electric Com
pany execut ve said recent y
that to prov de enough coa
for energy demand s n the
980s a nat onal comm !men!
w II be required He ex
pia ned that such a com
m tment w put enormous
pressures on the coal m nlng
and r allrood lnduslr es al ke
The GE study ..t mates that
the coal mining ndustry wll
have to expand Is p oduc on
to
b II on tons a year by
98S - from the 665 m on
tons produced ast ye&amp;r
(almost double This wou d
add many more wo kers to
the present 160 000 work force
and wou d requ re the
open ng of many new mines
GE estimates that to
ach eve needed produc on
for the 1980s the cap tal costs
for the coal mlncng industry
wl have o be fou o f ve
t mes the nduslrys annual
nveslmenf ate during the
pas decade All of h s s
requ red of an ndustry whose
poo heal h and safe y
eco ds over many yea s
have produced low labor
producllv ly and h gh evels
of worke unrest a low public
mage of the nduslry and a
poor record for attract ng
nvestment cap ta
Also to meet ansporl
requ remen s assoc ated w th
the expans on of the cool
nduslry
the nat on s
a roads already f nanc ally
ha d p essed w I have to
ocqu e by 1985 an add t onal
140 000 hopper cars and 900
new eng nes at a tota cost of
S3 m I on and make oadbed
repa rs and extensions
costing up to Sl b I on more
I am concerned tha as a
nat on we do not presently
seem ready to make this k nd
of a comm tment to exr,and
coal product on and ran
sportatlon If we do not make
such a comm tment we are
doomed to electr c sho tages
n the 1980s

am a so conce ned that
we as a company and an
negra ed
nte connected
Sysfem are no ab e o con
sfruct the new capac ty that
we should be We a e
very much awa e of
the
futu e
ca pac ty
problem but ou h sto cal
stance of be ng we ahead of
ncreas ng demand has
suffe ed due to nroads made
by fo ces O\/er wh ch we hll'lle
'llery ttle or no contra We
continue o bel e'lle that ou
AEP System load w con
nue to grow at a rate of
abou 6 pe cent a year ove
the next f ve to JO years
J s exceed ngly dlff cui o
pro1ect beyond tho
o
even o make pro 1ect ons fo
that per od
n he face of
he major forces wh ch are at
work nc ud ng conse vat on
energy subst tut on chang ng
pr ce elast c y re at onsh ps
env ronmental clean up
requirements and the future
development o the na onal
economy
E'llen though a
m I on
k owa t nuclear un t unde
construct on n southweste n
M ch gan goes on ne n 978
he AE P Sys em w soon
have nsuffic ent rese ves
un ess add t ona gene a ng
capac ly s bu t Wthou!
adequate reserves powe
d srupt ons could resu
We a enot runn ng n o h s
po en al of a capac ty b nd
because we d d a poo
plann ng and forecast ng job
Qv te ·he contrary Sfud es
c ear y nd cated he need fo
the add tonal capac ty but
our s ste com panes we e
unable to f nance con
struc on
One examp e s the West
V g n a un t s ar ed by a
s s e company n the sp ng
of 1974 (nea Spo n 1 but
greatly cu a ed sho y
thereat er because of
f nanc ng d ft cu t es Ac
cele at on of he cons uct on
s dependent upon suff cent
rate re ef to f nance the
pro ect to com pte on
Because of the long ton
struct on ead t me nvolved
resumpt on of const uct on
mus take p ace early h s
year af the a es f the AEP
Sys em s to have the
capac ty n serv ce by he
w nter of 980 81
In summa y on he sub ec
of to ecast ng powe needs
s
essential
to
forecast to the best
of one s a b I ly tak ng
nto fu account the rea
wo ld s uat on We a ways
ecogn ze ha he e a e
uncer a nt es of the tutu e
and that some error n the
forecas
s
nev tab e
Howe:ve
t s v ta y
essent a
to
fa ecas
prudent y and I to err to er
on the h gh s de
Energy s the lifeblood ot
our economy If the e are any
doub s about tha reflect on
wha our economy /obs and
I 'II ng s andards wou d be ke
w thou! adequate energy o
meet
our
everyday
requirements A remarkab e
cor eta on exists between
energy consumpt on and our
gross nat onal product They
go up together and they go
down ogethe
The e s no doubt that he
use of energy n Amer ca s
polng to contlnue to ncrease
n fhe yea s ahead Ze o

popu Ia lion g owlh not
ch ldren
w lhsland ng
a ready born mean that the
demand fo more ene gy s
bu It n unless we choose to
eg sale hat our ch dren
w I not be pe milled to live
as we I as we do Mo e
househo ds a e be ng formed
more people are enfe ng the
job market and consum ng
ene gy
Ways mus be fouhd to
al ev ale
ou
energy
problems
Accelerated
research can p ov de some
so ut ons for the longer term
but we have mmed ate
p oblems hat mus be g ven
pr or ly a tenllon Con
servat on o course will
he p bu conservat on can
prov de only a measure of
el ef at best
Coal n s natu al state
represents aw unref ned
energy Electr c power
ch efly p oduced by coa s
the purest and most 'lie sat e
form of ene gy that man has
yet produced Bu now n the
last half of the decade of the
sevent es
cons a n s
estr ct ons and I mlts have
been p aced on coal s use
and these facto s surely w I
have a negat ve mpac on the
economy Th s mpact w I
cant nue unt we f nd ac
cep abe ways to perm I
acce e a ted development of
coal esou ces and the
ul I zat on ol coal
Unless coa production s
sf essed and nuclear plants
start up n me and unless
there s s ngent energy
conservation the Federa
Power Comm ss on says
e ectr c ty shortages wll
a most certa n y ex st by the
m d 980s An Ed son E eclr c
Ins! lu e off c al sees ut II es
n I ally I ghl ng the powe
prob ems w lh voltage
educt ons and u t mately
be ng fo ced o reso
to
of all ng blackouts
CCN
Coal
con
servatlon nuc ear They are
!tie keys to adequate energy
suppl es n the lulu e
In order to de'llelop an
adequate power supp y
se\/era obstacles must be
recoon zed and ove come
The elect c gene at ng
plants or today must be
re nforced and supplemented
by
add onal
pants
tomorrow
The
price
struclu e of the ndusfry
must be adequate o perml
fhe flnanc ng of needed
construct on nclud ng S1 2
m on we w II have o spend
th s yea for envlronmenta
purposes l$340 million lola
through 9nl
Pres dent Co le
n hs
le ev sed add ess to the
American people ast month
summed up the s tuat on
c early and we he sa d
There s no way that I or
anyone e se n the govern
ment can solve our energy
problems t you are not
wllngtohep
There s a need to conserve
our energy and make
mutya sacr t ces as the
President so d And as our
company has commun cated
o him prompt conservat on
efforts must also be ac
companied by mmed ate
steps to assure an adequate
future energy supply
The President sa d. and we
agree !hal we must step up
the development of fossil fue
espec ally coa as well as
other "' ab le resources An
adequate ene gy supply Is so
fundamenta so vita to us as
are people and as a nat on
that we simply must lind
so uf ons !hal people of good
will can ag ee on All of us
not just here bOI everyone
everywhere must work
logethe to so ve lh s crlt ca
na onal p oblem

Keep taking calcium
stamped
self addressed
envelope for mailing People
can help prevent this problem
or decrease ats seventy by bemg sure they get enough
calctwn m thell' diet The
dowager s hwnp IS only
part of the disease Frequent
fractures wath mammal
damage IS the other unpor
tant problem
You dido t say why you are
haVlDg so much trouble Wlth
your balance You need to
fmd out what you can do to
prevent havmg more falls
That problem may he
re~led to your eyesight or
you may have a disturbance
m your balance mechanism
DEAR DR LAMB - I ve
been told that gwn chewang IS
dangerous and can cause the
Jaw to move out of plal'e Can
you gave me the straaght facts
about gum chewing I chew
about 10 paeces of gum a day
so as to keep from eaUng m n
between meals Is lhill too
much or too hannful 1
DF.AR READER
No

anything like • normal chew
mg mechamsm qlll not cause
you to dislocate the jaw The
only real hann s the sugar
content A constant source of
sugar m tile mouth may Ill·
crease your chances of hav
mgcavities
The other problem s
swallowmg all' This can
cause aar or gas accumula
lion m the digestave system
and makes some people uncomfortable If you are not
havmg thiS problem you can
forget that
Other than these two poss
ble problems t really doesn t
make any difference how
muc~gwn you chew
(Because of the volwne of
maal Dr Lamb cannot
answer your letters personal
ly but he w ll answer
representative letters of
general nterest m this col
wnn Write to him m care of
this newspaper P 0 Box
1551 Raclio City Stataon New
York NY 10019

N C a key member of the
committee said He was a
crucial witness lor us based
m the new Information he
had He was Intimately
Involved with Oswald
Wllle said only a maid and
the TDIUI family chauffeur
were at home at the Ume and
the
shooting
went
undiscovered until the body
was
found
by
de
Moorenschndt 8 daughter m
a second lloor drawing room
Both had been gul!sts at the
TUton home fer about a week
Wllle said It appeared that
de Moorenschlldt Teturned to
the TDtm home about 2 45
p m to learn that Gaeton J
Fonzl a staff Investigator for
the House Select Committee
on Assassinations had been
trymg to reach him
Fonzl was believed to have
placed the call from Miami
About an l!our later Wllle
said de Mohrenschlldt
apparenUy shot himself
We re 99 per cent certam he
killed hlmseH the sheriff
S81d
Wllle and Palm Beach
State
Attorney David
Bludworth questioned
witnesses about the shooting
untn shorUy before JIUdnight
Tuesday
Among the watnesses
quizzed was free lance wrater
Ed Epstein who had told the
West Palm Beach Post
Mooday night that he had
been
lntervlewang
de
MohrenschUdt In connectaon
wtth a book he was domg
about Lee Harvey Oswald
After his questiomng
Tuesday night Epatem saad
I doo t mean to be evasive
but the pollee told me not to
talk about de Mohrenschndt s
death to anybody
The Tilton home remamed
sealed off by sheriffs
deputies Tuesday mght

By SARA FRITZ
WASHINGTON (UP!)
The United Mine Workers
Journal charged today that
Senate Republican leader
Howard Baker may profit
Indirectly from legislation he
sponsored creating a raver
recreation area on the
Tennessee Kentucky border
The magazine also com
plalned that three of the
union s opponents the Blue
Diamond Coal Co Stearns
Coal and Lumber Co and
Southern Labor Union leader
Ted Q Wilson also stand to
receive possible windfall
benefits at taxpayers
expense from the Big South
Fork National River and
Recreatioo Area
Baker denied the charge
Sen Baker knows of no way
that he wlll benefit
a
spokesman said He added
that no one famWar with the
project has ever reached that
conclualon
The Journal noted Baker
has 10 per cent Interest In a
parcel fl. land owned by
Brimstone Co near the
proposed recreation area
'wblch could become more
~luable for resort and
J!Oualng development as a
result of Ita new neighbor
Baker placed
those
holdings In a blind trust about
two years ago
and
announced his 10 per cent
Interest In Brimstone would
be sold The m.agazine
questioned why theY were
never sold.
The spoltesnan explained
Baker stW 'would like very
much for the property to be
sold but the trustees camol
find
a
buyer
He
acknowledged
Baker
conUnues to profit from strip
and deep mines on
Brlmltone s U,OOO acres
Congr• two yeara ago
adopted Baker I propoul to
convwt 12$ 000 of land In
SOUtheaillern Kentucky and
nortbeutern Te~ for
hununc
fLihlng
and
camping to be known u the
Big Soutb Fork recrelllonal

area

The orlgtnal CCIIII estimate
li ~ mlllloo wulater l'llled
to f103 mtl1lon repcx1edly on
the bula of revised

Pome oy

Fo as

Po

d c s Top p ce fo sand Q
planes flight recorders
sow mbe
Co Ken Hanby
which have not yet been
.U6 8570
analyzed
The latest casualty flgurea CO NS CURRENCY oken• o d
pocke wa hes and ho ns
show 575 peopl' died In the
s e and go d We need %A
cruh of the two Boeing 717
ondode s ve cons Buy se
o
ode Co Rage Warns ey
jetliners - the wont In
742
233
avllltlon history Both planes
were fllled with tourists WANTED CHIPWOOO Po ••
max mum d orne e
0 n hes
heading either fer the warm
a 6 ges end $8 pe on
beaches of the Canaries or a
bund es s abs $6 pe
on
shipboard cruise In the
De eed oOhoPoe Com
pony R 2 Pome ov 01'1 o
Mediterranean
Pkane 992 2689
Van Rysen s statement
Ia unk cos Fyet
came In a news briefing after CASH
T u k and Au o WRECKER SER
he had joined U S and
V CE Phone 742 2081
Spanish officials In the
ot.O
FURN JURE ce·-bo
;-x-e•- ;-b-a·.,
Canary 18landa for a private
beds
e c
comple e
review of tape recordings fl.
houseMo ds W eM 0 M e
the final moments of the
R " Pome oy Oh o o co
m niiJ
tragedy
We presume there was a SMAL HOUSETRA LER- n-good
cond on Co o see Co Mo
misunderstanding In the
s Ru h:md 7.42 2932
KLM cockpit regarding the
Pan American (plane 8) D SCARDEO CAR Ba e es
lownmowe s
a s
e
position oo the runway he
Phone 742 3()74
S81d
A Pan Am spokesman said
the pilot of the Anierl~n
plane had radioed that he was
stW on the runway before the
Impact and was using
PUBliC NOTICE
correct procedures given by
n aeco dance w h sect on
557502 of the Oh o Rev sed
the control tower
Code sealed b ds sha be
As the 400-lon Dutch ma ed to Pau s Moo e
jetliner roared toward liftoff Rae ne Oh o Route 4577
e k of Sutton Townsh p
at 116 miles an boll' tt C The
b ds w be opened on
slammed Into the Pan Am Ap U 1977 a 8 00 P M Btll
spec a
mee no for
he
plane m a mushroom of fo
owng vehce
explOSions names and black
One 1975 o newer used
dump ruck w h ow m eage
smoke
w h
he
to ow ng
About 70 people - all spec f cat ons
AmeJlcans - survived I 120 x 84 x 30 dump bed w th
a ga e and center door
Fifty four of them left and
fu cab p o ec o s
Heavy du y 8 hot
and
TueSday aboard a U.S Air
Force C141 Starllfter 'flying levers
Cab gh s 4 corner gh s 6
hospital for a flight to
e ectors mud f aps 360 V 8
ne o arge
various medical facilities In eng5 speed
transm ss on
the United States
7 5()0 or l!lrge 2 speed rea
As the survivors left their axe
9 000 b front ax e
hospitals they thanked their
Powe s ee no
900 x 20 10 p v rough
ead
Spanish doctors and nurses
ea t res
for their help
900 x. 20
0 py
egu ar
The mvestlgallon Into the
ead on
es
Spoke whee s and spa e
cause of the colllslon has
m
prlmarUy cen~red on tape
4 ooo b rant sp no
0 000 lb o t1eav er ea
recordings of the airport
sp ng aux a v ea sp no
control
tower s radio dua
w pe s w th washe s
communications with the two dua ho ns
Wes Coast m r o s 30 gl!l
jetliners
gas ank heavy bumper and
Officials said additional OW hOOkS
70 Amp A terna o
Information about cmditlons
Heate and Def oste
Within the planes could be
The
Board of Sut on
gleaned from their black Townsh p Trus e-es ese ve
the gh ore ec any o a
boxes that record the bids
movements and voace traffic
of airplanes But this airport J JO c
lacked the sophisticated gear
necessary to extract the
Information from those
deVIces they said

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sporll Editor

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bemrce Bede Osol

Baker charged
for profiteering

f.RIES (lhirch 21 f.prll1t) L

governrnentestinlalesforthe
cost of land acqulsltton and

road.bulldlng
The Journal charged the
extra $70 mllllon wtn wind up
an the pocketa of the cWTent
land owners Including
Wilson Blue Diamond and
Stearns It estbnated Stearns
will receive up to $25 mllllm
for property valued In 1975 at
$1 3 mllllon
Baker was Identified by the
magazine a8 a former
director and attorney for
Stearns whoae chief officer
Bob Gable served as Baker s
1966 campaign manager
Wilson also has contributed to
Baker s campaigns It said
The JolD'nal charged that
WUaon bought p-operty In the
proposed recreation area
simply to get a government
relmbursment and contacted
Stearns about the possibility
of starting mining operatt0111
(II his land so that the
taxpayers would have to pay
a higher price to buy It for a
park
Blue Diamond acquired
land In the area by buying the
related Stearns Mining Co
whooe UMW workers have
been on strtlre Iince last year
seeking an Initial contract
with tbe company Blue
Diamond also owna the
Scotia Ky mine where 26
workers died In an accident
last year
Before becoming a seuator
Baker reportedly won lle'leral
law sulta as an attorney
against the UMW He abo has
1Upported 1 federal strip
mine reclamatloo law which
the union oppms

e
h ngs get you atten on today
bu you may e the b g one ge
away
Tf.URUS (April 20 May 20) You
have a tendency oday to bow
domest c ssues way ou o
p opo on t may not be a
p ob em a though t S paten a
y dange ous
GEMINI (May 21.June 20) Le
o he a smg your p a ses today
~
hey a e to be sung The me ody
w end on a d sco dant no e
you y o do you set
~
,.
CANCER (June 21.Jutr 22) You
&gt;!!
ea f ends w Ike you today to
ii.
whal you a e no tor wha you
haVe Don put on a s n o de

deceased li1f"bf Rt 1 Port
and

Oh o

Me gs

County

Oh o
c ed o s a e eQu ed o
e he r c a ms w h sa d
due e y w th n four mon hs

Dated h s 18 h dey of
March 971
Mann ng 0 Webster
Judgt
Court of Common P ees
P oba e o "' s on

(3

23 JO

Me gs Co n V Oh o
4)

6 Jtc

NEW YORK (UPI) - If he had only given me some
warning If he had S81d somethmg like 'put your hands up or
anythingatallllke that but he neversalda wordgavlng me the
s U he had ooly gaven me some warning If he had said
something like 'put your hands up or anythmg at all lUte that
at is spitting blood
Frank LuccheBI can speak but only with difficulty
He is allowed few vtslters or calls at Orlando s Mercy
Hospital where he is a patient
The popular 50-year-old manager of the Texas Rangers
underwent surgery for a fractured cheekbone Tuesday as a
result of an attack upm him by Rangers second baseman Len
Randle driven Into a rage becaliSil Lucchesa was playing
rookie Bump Wllls Maury Wtllu son more than him this
spring
Randle who hit 224 for the Rangers last year and is getting
$80 0011 this year is under suspension and probably wW never
play for them again
He s going to confer with both his agent and his attorney - a
step In the right dlrectloo because he needs help Intent carries
cooslderable weaght In court and all the evidence is against the
23-year-old Infielder since teanunate Bert Blyleven has saad
Randle spoke with him about hitting Lucchesi before be did therefore making the attack premedlated
Randle hasn t shown any remorse In fact he says he now
woo t have any trouble sleeping at night
Maybe this doesn t matter to him but Luc'Chest IS having
trouble sleeping eating or talldng He aches all over and all
the pain lsn ton the surface Some of It comes from Inside
Speaking from his hospital bed Lucchesa gave his version of
what took place on Monday morning
I had just gotten to the ball park and was walklng to our
dugout when Randle stopped me You haven t been fair with
me he saad Whad ya mean' I asked You haven t been
fair he repeated I lmew he thought I wasn t playmg bun
enough because we had talked about It before but now when I
saw he insisted on talking some more about it I said let s go
behind the screen In back of home plate
The Twins were taking batting p-actlce I stlllhadn't gotten
mto my uniform and I had one fl. my hands In my pocket I
turned around and my head was down I never saw the punch
he tlrew The last thing In my mind was that he had any such
Idea The last thing I remember is getUng hit as I started
walking toward home plate
Randle says he told Lucchesa to protect himsejf whach Ill
amusing considering Randle is 28 175 pounds and 5-10 and
Lucchesi is 50 150 pounds and only 5-ll Frank Lucchesllnslsts
Randle never warned him before he swung
I guess this whole thing has been building up because I gave
Bump Wllls the secood base job says Lucchesi Randle said
last week he was going to leave camp and go home This past
Saturday In Pompano Beach he told me that he and his wife
both wanted to talk Wlth me I saad to him, Lennie aren t you
man enough to speak to me without bringing your wife Into It?
He inatsted so I gave her a few minutes Some of the things she
said were rldlculoua Uke 'Why Ia Lemy playing only agalllSt
National League cluba1 She said Wllls had played more and I
told her I !mew that It was my p-erogaUve
Randle told me had his baga packed and he wanted to
leave lllld to him I wasn I going to kl.u hia rear and beg him
to stay 'Go ahead and leave ltold him 'Good luck to you He
walked out What got me WM here was a guy making $80 0011
moaning and groaning 'pllly me or trade me and on that same
day I cut !Okldl maklngf6 OOIJ..$7 OOOa year send them to the
minora when all of them would ve gladly carried ba1s or done
anything If only they could stay
Alii have to say Is thia I am not looking for any kind of
revenge at the expense fl. Lenny This thing never would ve
happened had he acted Uke 1 big leaguer I don t know what Is
In his mind but I certainly did not provoke him God !mows my
conscience IS clear

Kaatz
MC for OU

(Jutr 23-f.ug 22) Be su e """
vou goals a e worth lhe effort ':'!
oday You cou d be chas ng s ..,
a nbow wth spot of oars god !

LEO

a the end

sports fete

111

VIRGO (f.ug. 21 hpt 22) You
cou d get a conf dent a p today
ha cou d make o save you
money Button you J p o you I
a ena e you sou ce
LIBRA ( lept 23 Ool 23) ...
F ends w go to bat to you to ..w
dav - to a m ted extent You
encounte some eluctance f
you needs a e f nanc a o
mae a

3
:=

BCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 22)
You p og ess cou d be e a ded

oday by a cohort who taka a
good game Choose a es who
wo k at least as hard as you do
8AOmf.RIU8 (Nov

2S Dec

21) Dea s that you consummale
ove a uncheon or d nne may
be as fleet ng aa you appet 10
Be wary of too ~sh prom ses
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan 11)
Van u ng nto fle ds you know
11 e about cou d coot.~ou a prot

ty penny today Play ba on y on

you home I old

f.QUARIU8 (Jon 20-,ab 11)

You eaaon s tuat one out very
today but you may foolohly
gno e you own counae Oon t
ac n oppos ton to you nbo n
og e

Plow ape feet seedbed n

we

one operat on-P.Owe or

P18CE8 (Fob. 20 March 20) To-

tool culhvale spray com
post rqow and 1110re A
Gravely convert ble lraclor
and attachments does tall
Gel a Gravely and see how
your garden grows

day you could over ook the b g
sco e Sludy both the tore11 and
he nd vidual trees

GRAVELY
TRACTOR
Moroh 11

11n

Materia opportyn t at thou d bo
proMnted to you abundantly lh a
yea The oa t it ong p011lbll ty
however your apend ng wII
keep pace w th oa nlnga
(Arw you 1n Arlu? tfiint«
Oool hOI '" ttan a 11*1/11 Aolro
Grwph Lotti 1o rou For rou
copr - d 50 c01111 and 1 ""
add,...od, llomped 011'11/opf ro

Aauo Graph P 0 Be• 48P
City Stoffon Now York

,.dlo

81 aurw 10
Ar., Volumo 5 I

NY 10019

Olk

lor

By Greg Bailey
The Meigs Marauders
showmg their mexperlence
and youth dropped the r
second game In a row by 5 3
scores Tuesday night th s
time their SEOAL opener to
v 81\lng Wellston 5-3
Wellston committed seven
errors compared to just two
for the ho8ts but the Me gs
crew of Coach Dale Jlamson
couldn t cash In on them
Hamson concluded that for
has team to be compel \lve at
will have to show more en
thusaasm and gam self
confadence He stlll believes
his boys have championship
capabilities But they re not
using them he saad
Wellston broke the scormg
ace by plaUng a run n the
third liming when after two
were out they stroked three
str81ghl singles one each by
Gill Nonnan and Gilbland
They mcreased the r lead to
2-41 In the fifth when they did
exactly the same thing wath
the same three guys gettmg
three straight smgles wath
two gone
The wlnn ng run came ln
the sixth when the VISitors
plated two as the result of two
walks and error and a
double by Hudson They got
an Insurance run In the top of
the seventh on two h ts and
one Metgs error ts second
Meags wasn t down and out
as they staged a comeback n
the last liuung that looked
like it might be enough

SALES
204 Condor Street
992 2975
Pomeroy Ohto
OPEN
9 5 Mon thru Friday
9 Noon S.turdey

ATHENS - Bud Kaatz
sports director of WTVN TV
In Colwnbus and television
sports voice of the Ohio State
Basketball Buckeyes wlll be
master of ceremonies when
the Green and White Club
holds Its 16th i\nnual
Recognition Banqqet The
banquet is set for 8 p m
Thursday April 28 at Nelson
Commons on the Ohio
University South Green
Fave persona wlll receive
Certificates of Merit from the
club booster organiqtlon for
the Ohio University athletics
pnd Benlor male and female
athletes from the university
wlll be honored Main
speaker wlll be Peter A
Carleslmo athletic director
at Fordham University
Kaatz came to Columbus
from Washington D C
Wiler~ he worked at WKRC
TV the NBC ouUet In the
capital Prior to that he was
sporta director at WAVY TV
In Norfolk Va Among his
earner sporu asslf!JUDents
were play-by-play broadcasts
of the Vlrglnla SquIres
(American
Buketball
Association) the Vtrgtnla
Red Wings (American
Hockey League) and Virginia
Tech football
Tickets for the banquet
priced 11 .. each are
anllable from mem~f
the Boord of Dtrecton of the
GrMn 11 d Wltlte Club and at
VlriOUI Clther localilna in
Athens and out of town They
may 1110 be purdlased by
writing to t1te Athletic ncket
(lfflce Ohio University
Convocatioo Center Athens
Ohio 4$701
v

After one was out Br an
Ham lion Tun Ebersbach
and Da e Brown ng stroked
beck to back smgles to plate
one run Mike Wayland and
Ray Andrews drew two
straaght walks to score
another run and a Wellston
error let m the third still wlth
ooe out
Crenson Pratt then slammed a liner to the second
baseman who snagged the
horsehide threw to first to
double off the runner and the
game was over
Wellston s Galllland got
credit for the win as he and
reliever Montgomery who
came on n the seventh
combmed to fan four Meags
batters and walk seven Greg
Smith took the loss as he and
Ebersbach together fanned
two Wellston batters and
walked four wh le g v ng up
rune hats
Ha1n1lton led the Meags
hitters with two s ngles whale
Ebersbach
Brown ng
Wayland and Hood rounded
out the hatting Hudson got
the game s only extra base
knock a double and Gill
Norman Gilliand and
Butcher each got two hits
Meigs as die untal Fraday
when they \rave to Ironton
for another SEOAL contest
w
001 012 1-5 9 7
M
000 000 3-5 6 2
Gllllland ( wp
Mont
gomery (7) and Parson
Sm lh (lp) Ebersbach (7)
and Match

1HL P ayotfs
Sag naw
Un ted Press lnternatlona
x Aor 9 - SaQ naw a
QuarlerfKlals - All
Musk"!! on
Ser es Best of Seven
~ Apr
J
Musk eg on at
Fl nt 'liS Ka am a too
Sag naw
Ap I
Fl n a
~
f necessa y
Ka amaz oo
Apr 1
Ka amazoo at
F nt
~------- - -~

~r,..,~

Apr I
F nt

6

~ ~"mazoo8
x Ap

F n

•

Ka amazoo a

9 -

F n

x Apr I
amazoo

F n

2

Ka

a

Fort Waynevs Dayton
Apr I 2
Fort Wayne a
Dayton
Apr J
Day on at Fa
Wayne
Apr 6 - Fort Wayne a
Day on
Apr 9
Day on at Fo
Wayne
x Apr D-Fo Wayne a
Dav on
x Ap
J1 - Day on a
Fort Wayne
x Ap
3
Fort Wayne a
Day on
Toledo vs Columbus
ColumbUs eads 1 0
March 29
Co umbus 2
To edo 3 o s
Ap
5
To edo a
Co umbus
Ap I 6
Co umbus a
To edo
Ap
8
To edo a
Co umbus
X Ap
9
Co umbus a
Toledo
X
Ap
10
To edo at
Co umbus
x Ap
2
Coumbus a
To edo
Sag maw vs Muskegon
Ap
I
Muskegon a
Sag naw
Apr 2 - Sag naw at
M.Jskegon
Ap
3
Muskegon at

Sag naw

Apr 6
M kPoon
x Ao

a

Sag naw a

Muskegon a

Rose, Reds wider apart
renewed for $188 000 his 1976
salary
Katz said Rose has not
changed his $400 000 request
Blnce at was farst presented to
the Reds Feb 3
We said at the tune at was
not a negot18ble fagure and
we say It now saad Katz
We could ve asked for
$600 000 and comp-omised
But after ll years of playmg
for the Reds we did not feeht
was necessary for Pete to
play h gh low split-down the
maddle hargammg game
Katz said he and Wagner
met during the weekend and
for the f rst tune the Reds
made an offer over $300 000 to
Rose for one year
Katz added that the $300 000
was for the first year of a
multi year
contr~ct
Although Katz dad not
elaborate he mdicated the
salary In succeeding years
would go down
Katzalso said he offered to
have the salary squabble
settled by binding no holds

World Hockey Assoc a on
e s nte na ona

Bv Un ted P

x Quebec
1!

walks and an error There
were ooly two extra base
!mocks In the entire contest
both doubles Federal put the
game out of reach m the fifth
when they plated SIX runs
In the siXth Eastern goc lis
mly run when Bruce RifOe
led off with a walk stole
second and came racing
home on Eastern s only h t of
the game a sm gle by semor
Joe Kuhn
Chadwell ed the wmners
wtth three hits an four tnps

Rangers

Nolan one of the Reds five
starters this year gave up
single l'WIS In each of the first
three Innings four In the
fourth and four more In the

39 35 3 B 340 295
35 35
259 28

New Eng nd 33 39 6 2
B mnghm 3 44 J 65
v M nneso 9 8 5 3
We s
W L T J&gt;ts
x Hous on .t 21 6 00
W nn peg
43 30 2 88
San 0 ego 3 35 4 8
Ca ga
30 4 5 65
Edmon on 3 d2 3 65

264 2 9
2 6 293
36 29
G F GA
304 2 B
3"3 268
263 269
23 3 2 s

By JACK SAUNDERS
UP! Sports Writer
The 76ers and Lakera
cl nched thear respective
NBA diVISIOO tatl ... Tuesday
mght Philadelphia used 28
pomts from Julius Ervmg ID
post a 119-113 vactory over the
Ch cago Bulls and Los
Angeles got 29 pomts from
Kareem Abdu!Jabbar and a
cruc al slam dunk from
rookie Earl Tatum Wlth 11
seconds left en route to a 100.
97 tr umph over the SeatUe
SoperSonacs
Chicago meanwhne saw
Its wmnmg streak end at
e ght and the Bulls fell a half
game out of the playoff
p cture because of Kansas
Caty s VIctory over the New
York Knacks
Mackey
Johnson scored a career-high
37 poanls In the losmg cause
In Los Angeles Seattle
rallled from an ~9 def cat
early m the fourth per1od to
go ah•ad 9().118 wath 3 51 left
on the shoolmg of reserve
center Mike Green Green
wound up wath 31 pom1s 21 m
the second half and 13 of them
m the fourth peraod Abdul
Jabbar scored s x pomis
Tatwn two and Allen four
down the stretch to offset
Grll"ll s performance Tatwn
finished wath 19 pomts and
Allen had 18
The wm was the !..akers
49th against '!/ defeats - the
hest record m the NBA- and
the Lakers 34th m 37 games

at home If they wm thell'
remauung three here they
will establish an NRA hnm•
victory record
The loss put damper on
SeatUe s chances for the SIXth
and final spot m the playoffs
from
the
Western
Conference The defeat left
the Sonlcs wlth a 37-39 record
Elsewhere m the NBA
Cleveland routed Boston 11~
82 New Orleans downed the
New York Nets~ Kansas
City ou1scored the New York
Kn cks 132 126 Phoemx
dumped Milwaukee 122-110
San Antonio wath a 122-116
victory over Washmgton and Denver - " 119-105
W\nner over lndaana
eal'ned playoff spots m their
f rst year m the league
Golden State whapped
Houston 109-92 and I ortland
blitzed Buffalo 127 101
Cavallero 110 Celllcs 82
Austm Carr and J m
Chones combmed for 26
poants In a 3\opomt thll'd
quarter
that
carr ed
Cleveland to VIC lory Ql rr s
24 points topped all scorers
wh le Chones and Bobby
Smith each added ~ for the
Cavs Dave Cowens 16 led
Boston
Jazz 94 Nets 85
Pete Maravlch s 26 pomts
and Jun McElroy s 20 gave
New Orleans 1ts Blxth straaght
VIctory tymg a club record
M ke Banton paced New York
Wlth 26

Eagletts finish
season play 7·7
By Greg BaDey
EAST MEIGS - A season
wrapup shows Ea1tern s
aghth grade basketball team
fin shed ats games with a
respectable 7 7 record A
team I eld goal percentage of
lJ percent and a free throw
percentage of 48 percent
The team s leadmg scorer
was Greg W gal w th 161
)XItnts Greg was the floor
leader and team play maker
a fact whach sperked the
ream to Is VIctOrieS Leadmg
m the rebound department
was Joe Bowers wtth 123
Joe s stable defensave play
kept Eastern m several ball
!lllmes
Leading n field goal ac
curacy was Brett Matthews
Brett }X"obably the most
unproved player over last
!Eason made the team much
!tronger w th has consistent
play and hagh effacaency
performance Gene Cole
oontrlbuted to the effort With
his solid aU-around play as he
,.,ored '!/ pomts and collected
:li rebounds m a guard s
)X)Stt on
Bob Barringer had an
mtunely ann mjury wh ch
p:evented him from playmg
many games thiS year When

Bob was healthy h s presence
was much feh by Eastern s
qJpoomts Bob scored 61
pomts and grabbed 89
rebounds m just SIX games
He had the second highest
efflcaency record on the
team Another very con
Slslmt player was Rack Long
His attitude helped nsp re his
teammates n many games
A very good sixth man was
Ray Werry Ray played sbo t
every posatlon this year and
did well at each He d d all he
was asked and an domg so he
,.,ored 30 polhts and pulled
down 28 rebo unds Tony
Kennedy was the back up
point guard and each tmte he
was called on dld admirably
Randy Staats wtth his diehard attatude got much
(raise from hiS coach Randy
was always there when
needed Kenny Chapman
aune to the team late m the
season but stuck it out and
came through when hill tealll
needed him
Coach Arch Rose eJrtended
his appreclatmn to the team
md players parents for a
~d year and the pnvilege to
work wtth them He also asks
his players to express thear
~preclatlon to thell' parents

SMITH NELSON MOTORS
Proudy Announce The

Rangers rip Reds
TAMPA Fla (UPI) Gary Nolan hampered by a
sore right foot was clobbered
for 15 hits before bowing out
In the 5th Inning Tuesday as
111e l.'Ulcmnau lled8 took a 135 drubbing from the Texas

e,.

W L T Pts GF GA
45 o 2 92 338 279

ba rred arbatrat on
But
Wagner didn t like the adea
v
I sunply told them at
2 e 29
x
2 6 4 58 267 368
would be too tune conswrung xPhoe
C nch ed d son
e
and that we felt that two y T eam d sbanded
Tuesday s Resu s
parties should be able to
C nc n a 4 B m ngham 2
agree on a contract
Hous o 5 W nn peg 1
Caga 9Phoe x 5
particularly smce we ve been
New Eng and S sa D ego
negotiaUng so many years
Wednesdays Games
wtthout arbatration
c nc n a a nd anapo s
Hous o a Edmon on
Katz saad the arb tralloo
Thu sday s Games
offer was made because
New E gaM a Phoen ~.:
Wnnpega Sa Dego
Pete loves the (Cincmnat )
fans and wants to be a Red for
the remamder of h s career
ROSALYNN S TRffiliTE
DETROIT (UP! )
CAREY FINED
Rosalynn Carter vas ted
BEVERLY HILLS Calif Detroat Tuesday to pay
(UP!) - Actor MacDonald
Carey pleaded gullfy to a trabute to a man of goodness
mspll'allon
masdemeanor drunken and
The F rst Lady led a
draving charge and was fined delegation of Washmgton
$315 and placed on two years digmtarles - Including
probation Tueaday
Treasury Secretary W
Carey who now plays Dr
Michael Blumenthal and Sen
Horton on the televasaon Edmund Muskle of Maine se•18l Days of Our Lives
to memorialize the late Sen
appeared m many movaes m Philip A Hart
the 1940s such as Wake
I wish I had !mown Phil
Island The Great Ga1sby Hart as you all dad Mrs
and Streets of Laredo
Carter told hundreds of
persons at a Detroit
Symphony Orchestra concert
hononng
Machagan s
longtime Democratic
senator who daed last
md Mobbs went two for fave December after a battle
Green wmt the distance for against cancer
I dad know of his goodness
the wmners yteldlng that
has
nsplration
lone hat fanning eaght and
Eagles and walking fave however she saad
Hart earned the reputation
Dan Spencer took the loss for
the Eagles as he teamed with as the conscaence of the
John Evans to strike out four Senate for hill leadership In
walk rune Eastern s next civil rights legislation
game Is tomght when they
mst Belpre
F
000 001 ~ I I 5
F1l
100 563 x-15 11 I
Sp..acer (L P) Evans (41
and Bassell Green and
Poston

Lancers lace Eagles 15-1
The Eastern Eagles went to
the year when they fell
to host Federal Hockmg
1\lesday 15-1 after staymg
with the Lancers fot three
mlngs Federal took a Hl
lead In the bottom of the f rst
IItten lead-off batter Brent
Cliadwell walked the next
bitter was hit by a pitch and
Qladwell scampered home
m an Eagle error
Bat In the fourth the hosts
liew It open by plating five
nans oo five singles three

cop divisions

Pro :1
1
lStandings I

nd a naps

TAMPA F1a (UPI) -The
contract breach between the
Cincinnati Reds and Pete
Rose wadened Tuesday
Rose s &amp;geQt Reuven Katz
disclosed that the Reds have
withdrawn all prevaous
contract offers
mcluding
ooe of more than $300 000 for
ooe year - to the star third
baseman Reds general
manager Dack Wagner
confirmed the wtthdrawal
Wagner S81d thiS leaves the
Reds walling for Rose to
make the next move But
Rose remains steadfasl m hiS
non negotiable demand for
$400 000 a year
We l!llll have oo the table
and have had smce Feb 3 an
offer to sign for $400 000 for
either one two or three
years Katz said today
And that offer wtn remain
open until the first pitch
opening dsy Otherwise Pete
will play out the 1977 season
at his 1976 '!lllary
Earlier this mooth Rose s
contract was automatically

76ers, Lakers

at :
Ka amazoo a 1
F n

Cn

~2 on

o mp ess peop e

NOT CE OF

APPOINTMENT
Case No 22059
Estate of Efflt Oav 1 Star
ch•r Deceased
No ce s hereby o ven hat
S e'llen T S oen of A hens
Oh o hu been duly appo n ed
Adm n stretor of the Estate
of Eff e Dev s Ste che

r

WmtedtoBuy

OPENING APRIL 2
Area Newest
fifth before giving way to
Manne Oea ler
Jack Bllllngham with none
Featuring Starcraft,
out
Ouach ta
Mercury
and
Bump Wllls rapped out !outboards
three singles and Dave Mercru lsers
Sundberg added a single
double and a triple to pace the
Rangers attack
Burt Blyleven went seven
lnnlnga lor the Rangers ahd
Rt l3 North Co Rl 44
gave up three of the Reds five
,1:1-4 MIIH from Shade
runs

Doug's Manne
Sales &amp; SeMCe

APPOINTMENT OF

Edwin Florence
As Service Manager
Ed has had many years of experrence 10 the automohve field and
come s to us from Hunhnglon W Va So we are mvthng all of our
fnends and customers to come to and meet Ed He 1s very friendly
and wants to make all of our frrends and cuslomer.s happy Don I
forget we gtve 10 per cent d1scountto sentor c1hzens Wllh the Gold
Card Ca II Ed for an appomlment to have your car servtced by one of
our cerltfted men have tl done ""'""

APPil&lt;WAL LlltELY
W,\SHINGTON (lJPI)
Joan Claybrook s niXnlnallon
to head the National Highway
TriiDipotlation and Safety
Admtntatrallon seems
headed toward Senate
approval
The fermer chief lobbylsl
for conswner advocate Ralph
Nader
Ms
Claybrook
received a friendly recepttoo
from a Senate consumer
subcomlnlttae Tuesday witb
Nader In the audience
She told the committee ahe
was 'particularly concerned
about pedestrian deaths
That 1 one area where dealhl
hive not gone down
She said lhe hopes to be
lble to do 1001ething about
the unfortunate delay•
affllctlng NHTSA that
lllowed some satety deliCti
to Po uncorrected fer years

with
PlANNING APIZZA PARTY
PHON&amp;
THE ALL NEW

MEIGS INN PillA SHACK
-EnJOY three SIZes of your favonle
przzas
-Try our deltc1ous subs wh1ie you
sap your favorrle suds
Eat In Or Carry Out
Phone
992 6304

,

CALL US FOR ALL YOUR SERVICE NEEDS.
WE APPRECIATE YOUR BUSINESS

�.

T

d •
Class~ agurday ~s
Sat ay m

4 _The !J8Uy Senllnel,Mlddleport·Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, March 30,1m

Waverly's Pfeifer
·

AA player-of-year

Pomeroy

I

game. .
season, helping to lead Perry
Doing m«e than half of her to an unbeaten regular
shooting from the outside, season. She shot S7 per cent
Pfeifer &amp;hot 49 per cent from from the field and 73 per cent
the Door and 69 per cent frbrn from the free throw line. Her
the free throw line.
high scorinl! game for the
l'feifer edged out Perry's year was 53.
Candy Pfeifer.
Cindy Seese, another 30
Pallsy, the only Jilnlor on
Pfeifer, a !;.6 sharpshooter, points per game sccrer, in the the first team,led her teiUll to
who scored nearly 1,500 balloting by coaches, spcrts. the AA state championslup as
points in her four-year career writers and sporllcasters. ' a sophomore.
l'!ellerandSeesewere both
A ~5 guard, Pa)lay
and averaged 30 points per
game tbe pa.st seuon, was named to UPI's first girls all· averaged 15 points per game
voted the United Press Ohio first team along with the pest seuon, which saw
International Class AA high Amy Pallsy of Columbus the Lady Hawks lose to
scbool girls basketball player Hartley Cindy Packman of Uher's River View team in
Warren ' Charnpioo and Judy the regiooal finals.
of the year.
Packman, a 5-e senior, was
"She has a lot of basketball Uher of Warsaw River View.
An outstanding bell handler &amp;lao in the state tournament a
senae," Gecowets ~d of her
star. "She does things out with good quickness, !'feller year ago. She averaged 20
there which you just couldn't scored 1,493 points in 61 points per game this year.
Uher, who will lead ller
coach her to do. She uses both games during her four-year
hands, dribbles behind her Varsity career, an average of River View team Iilio. the
state semifinals Fnday
back, between~ legs. You 24.5 per game.
"She's not ·a selflab player,
against campbell
name it and &amp;he does it."
.
The daughter of a Waverly which it sounds like by her Mem
A .a forward, Uher
minster, l'feifer, who has scoring," said Waverly
Coach
Mary
Gecowets.
averaged
13.5 points and over
four brothers, bad a high
"She's
the
playmaker
of
our
13
rebounds
per game the
game of 59 points against
manager --; John Ar·
team."
past
season.
Portsmouth West the paat
nold , Gary
Coleman ..
The
5·9
Seese,
another
Amy
Tucker
of
Springboro,
sea9011 and hit 45 against
Darrin
~ Hayes, Chris KenSouth Point, coonecting oo 21 senior averaged just under a six.footer who averaged nedy, Dole Lillie, Parker
of 30 from the floor in that 32 pohtts per game the past 30.4 points per game beads Long, Michael Miller, Steve
the second team, which &amp;lao MJsser, Ryan Oliver, Joe
included Kathy Ball of South Parker, Lee Powell, Scot!
Pullins, Carl Sauvaqe, Tim
Point, Roberta KIBh of camp- Sloan,
Tammy Terry, David
bell Memorial,
Vicki Warth. .
·
.
Lawrence. ·of · Cortland • Redlegs - George Korn,
Lakeview and Aone Weikel of Mtnager - Beth Blaine.
Charlie Calahan, Ronnie
No. I rated Ontario.
Calahan , Tim Colmer,
Perry and Hartley each Charles Denton, Grea Fields.
had two players on the first .foe
Fields,
Erlc
three teams with Perry's Gryszka, .Re• • Haggy,
Julie Lukey and Hartley's Sherman Hoschar, uuune
In the bottom of the eighth, Nancy WUiiams being named Howell , Robert Jeffers.
Tim Frederick scored from
Bryan Kern, David Leach,
third base on a balk in the top Gary Swain walked and to the third team.
l:erln Roach, Rodney Roush,
of the eighth iMing to give TerrY Wall singled. On a
Others on the third team 0\rls Shank.
visiting Waverly a 5-4 victory double steal, both were safe, were Carol Bruning of
Team No. 3 - T. R.
manager
over Gallipolis on Memorial but Swain slid off the base at Pemberville Eastwood, Cullums,
Beaver, Bryon
Field Tuesday evening.
third and was tagged ol to another AA tournament Dou91as
~ft'"gton. Jennifer Cooch,
It was the Southeastern end the contest.
semlflnalist, Usa Burns of Heather Cullums, Todd
Ohio League baseball opener · U~ne went two-thirds o an Hillsboro and Doona Gray of Cullums, Greg Cunningham:
Bryan
Freeman,
Rod
inning, giving up three runs. Madison Plains.
for both teams.
Harrison , Michl King, Philip
Waverly jumped off to a 3~ He fanned one and walked
King, Gerold Mo«e, Charles
lead in the (irst inning off two.
NOiol, Otis Norris, Jeremiah
In seven and one-third
starting GAHS pitcher Chuck
Prater, Bryan Reeves. Scott
Roseberry. Brian Willis.
Lane. The Tigers upped their innings of relief, Wall fanned
T-Bot!Teams
lead to W in the top of the 10 and walked three. He
Daily
Sentinel - Mtrk
second iMing off reliever allowed two runs on nine hits
Tannehill, manager-Scott
and was charged with the
Terry Wall.
Barton, Anthony Grueser,
Joe Hall, Randy Hawley.
GAHS scored its first run of loss.
Bracy Korn, Scot.t Powell,
Mark Fielder retired the
the year in the fourth after
Todd Powell, Tom Rawlings,
Brent Johnson walked, went first eight GAHS batters to National Bnketball Association Jeff ·Ra;eberry, David Roush,
to second on a wild pitch and face him before Wall doubled
By united Press International Joey Roush, Bobby Rupe,
Mickey Seyler, Shellle
Entern Conference
scooted home on Tim Car- in the bottom of the third.
Atlantic Division
Fielder
was
relieved
by
R.
man's single.
w. L- Pet. GB
Johnson made li 4·2 with a Frederick in the sixth. Ph il adelphia 46 28 .622 ·Boston
39 36 .520 71/ 2
towering home run over the Frederick was credited with l;ojY
Knicks
34 41 .453 12 1h
left field fence in the bottom the win. Fielder gave up four Buffa lo .
28 47 .373 18'h
21 54 .280 25 112
hits and two runs in five .and NY Neti
of the fifth.
Cintiat ·o·lvislon
The Gallians knotted the one-third innings. Frederick
w. L Pet. GB
•6 JO .605
count at four-all in the bottom gave up two runs and two hits Houston
Washington
43 32 .573 2111
in
two
and
two-third
iMings,
of the seventh on walks to
San Antonio
43 JJ .566 3
•o JS .533 Sl!2
Terry Wall and Brent and was credited with the Cle\leland
New Orleans 33 42 .4AO 1"211:~
Johnson and a single by Jeff win.
Atlanta
29 46 .387 16'1:!
Waverly
outhit
the
Brown. That sent the contest
western confertnce
Midwest OiVISIOM
Gallians,l2~. Each team had
into extra innings.
North Gallla and Kyger
W- L· Pd. Ga
In the top of the eighth, Tim one error.
Creek, two of the expected
Denver
.t6 29 .613
A2 33 .560 •
J. Noble paced the winners Detroit
Frederick doubled with one
powerhouses Ibis year in the
Kansas Citv
40 36 .526 61h
out. He went to third on a with a double and two singles Chiugo
Southern Valley Athletic
39 36 .520 7
32 44 .421 l·W2 Conference, posted non·
ground out. After Rob ln four trips to the. plate. Tim Indiana
27 50 .351 20
Holsinger walked, Frederick Frederick had a pair of Milwaukee
league victories Tuesady
Pacific Division
doubles and scored three runs
w. L. Pet. GB night over Point Pleaasnt's
scored on a balk by Wall .
Angeles 49 27 .6AS
for the winners. Steve · X·LOS
Portland
44 33 .571 511'2 Big Blacks, il Class AAA
Williams had a pair of singles Golden State 42 34 .553 7 school. North Gallla edged
Caldwell joins
37 39 .487 12
and R. Frederick had a seatt'te
the Blacks, 6-6 while Kyger
PhoeniK
30 45 .400 tev..
double and single for the x -CIInched d ivision title
Creek woo the nightcap of a
winners.
Tuesday's Results
cbullledlp, fol.
Reds '77 staff
Cleveland 110 Boston 82
Besides Johnson's solo
Cosch Ted Lehew's North
New Orleans 94 NY Nets 85
home
run,
Tim
Carman,
Jeff
San
Anton
io
122
Washington
Gellis
Pirates, the defending
CINCINNATI (UP!) -The
116
.
Brown
and
Mark
Dobaon
all
dlllmps
of the 'IN AC for the
Cincinnati Reds Tuesday
Chicago 119 Philadelphia 113
had
singles
for
GAHS.
Wall
pest
two
seasons, plated
Kansas
City
132
NY
Knlcks
acquired Mike Caldwell, a 28126
led
the
Devils
with
a
double
three
runs
ln the Hrst and
year old left-handed relief
Phoenix 122 Milwa.f!kee 110
and
single·
in
three
trips.
three
in
the
second
enroute to
pitcher from the St. Louis
Denver 119 Indiana 105
Golden
State
109
Houston
92
Today,
the
Blue
Devils
play
lis
&amp;6
victory.
Cardinals for caSh or a player
Los Angeles 100 seattle 97
at Oak Hill in a non·
· Rm Plants, a senior, struck
-to be named later.
Portlend 127 Buffalo 101
conference
.game.
Wednesd•v's
G•mes
the
big blow, a three-run
Caldwell, originally signed
Chicago vS. Boston at Hart.
Llnescore:
bomt!l'. Terry Payne, another
by San Diego, pitched the last
ford
Pirate senior, had a two-run
Detroit at Phll.adelphla
three leasons for the San Waverly 310 000 01- 5'12-1
Phoenix
at
New
Orleans
GAHS
000
110
2!h+
6·1
cbuble
and Mike Casey, a
Francisco Giants before
Atlanta at washington
Batteries
Waverly:
junliir, drove In tbe other run
belnl! sent to the Cardinals in
Houston et Seettle
Thursday' Games
Fielder, R. · Frederick (6,
wWl ooeofhil two hts for the
an off-season trade.
NY Nets at Atlanta
He had a 1·7 record last WP) &amp; Williams. GAHS:
NY Knlcks at Indiana
• game.
Bulfo lo at Denver
· Fred Logan, senior first
sea9011, with 41 of his 50 Lane, Wall (1, LPJ &amp; Barr,
San
Antonia
at
Golden
State
!llcker, .was the big gill with
Harris
(6).
appearances as a rellever.
,
fllur hits in four trips.

afterni

Tigers.victor on
balk in eighth

®
BASKETBALL

beat the Toronto Blue Jays 31behind six innings of two-lilt
beD from Ken Holtzman.
A twl)nln hymer by !J8ve
And If what Rice Ia doing been 011e of the best players in Cash lifted the Montreal
this IIPI'in8 Ia any bidlcation, the majors to labor in Expos to a 6o5 viM)' over
Los
Angeles
ha might be about ready to oi*,Wi!Y1 e,ven though he has the
prove them right.
outllOIIIft'eD Lynn 47-31 and Dodgers... Plttsburgh UJed 13
In his lui four emlbltlon driven in more rUn.•. 18'1·170. singles to beat Detroit, which
pmt~~, the 24-yell'~ld Rice The difference In recot~nltlon hit four borne runs, a.a... Joel
baa 10 hits incl~ four Is that near the end of their Y01mgblood, obtained by St.
home nllll, hu !l-Iven in 10 rookie seaaon, Rice suffered Louis only a day earlier, hit a
fiN and scored six ti~Ms. a broken left hind, did not get pinch hit horner in the ninth
Followlns an e:rtremely slow to play in the. playoffs or inning f.or a I~ Cardinals'
llart, Rice has raised his W«ld Series, and left the victory over the Houstoo
spring aver.ge to .275, and If· rational spt(light all alone to Astroa.
Joe Wallis' Infield single in
the fi!8Ular season were to Lynn. ·
begin today, it would not be
"It's jlllt too bed we had to the lOth inning gave lhe.
soon enougb for him.
be rookies on the saine team Chicago Cuba a 9-li victory
Tuesday, he slugged a pair the same year," Rice lays. over the Oakland A'a ...BW
of hune.rs, his fifth and lixth
Elaewhere Tuesday, the Melton homered in a l:lhlt
of the aprtag, and drove in New York Yankees ciUlle up attack as Cleveland beat San
flverunstocarrytheRedSol' with anotber problem trying Francisco 6-4 ... the Texas
to a ~2 exhibition victory to·satlsfy all the stars m their , Rangers ripped Clnclnnatll3over the Minnesota Twins. peMilnt-w!Mlng teiUll. Graig s, clubbing sorefooted Gary
For two years, Rice baa Nettles, the American Nolan of« 11 runs and 15 hits
. League's horne run champion .in four-plus inninga .. :Paul 1
last
season,
perhaps Splittorfl allowed just one hit
. dissatisfied the Yankees in six innings to lead the
satlafled Sparky Lyle and Kansas City Royals over the
Roy White early in the week, Chicago White Sox W.
wDI hold a bake sale Satur- failed to &amp;how up for an
Junior Moore hit a \wl)nln
day, AprU 2, at Racine Post exhibition game against the fifth inning h(XJ!er peeing the
Office beginning at 9 a.m.
Atlanta · Braves to a 3,0
Toronto Blue .~ays.
Pop bottles and bottle capa
General Manager Gabe victory over the Baltimore
also . wDl be collected the Paul said Nettles, who has Orioles. Phil Niekro, who
l!llme.day 111d are to be taken two years remalnlng on a allowed three hits during the
to the home of Don Beegle In three-year, $420,000 contract first six lnning.s, was , the
Racine. Anyone wis!ling to be wants renegotiated, would wlnner ... tug McGraw
have bottles picked up are to be fined $500 a day. The pitched out of a bases.fllled,
ran M~257S.
Yankees also have four other none~ut jam of his own
unsigned veterans including making in the ninth Inning
with Prime MiniBter Morarjl Dock Ellis and Chris preserving the Plilladelphla
Desai, said "by having people Chambliss. MeanwhUe the Pl!illies' Z.l win over the New
·
act according to .the laws of Yankees still. were able to York Mets.
nature," crime . and disease
can be wiped out.
hi f&lt;r droughts and floods,
TRADITIONAL
"All these natural calamities
can be eliminated just by
having one or two per cent of
the people practice transcen.
dental meditation."
He also declared India's
newly elected govenunent
"the first government of the
age of enlightenment in

Sprfllg 'i'rallllac Roomdup
By IRA MilLER
UPI S,.U Writer
TWo yell'llgO, Fred Lynn

won the American League's

1110111 v1ilable pla&gt;;er award

MEDITATION A CURE?
NEW DEIJD (UPI)
Mshrishi Mahesh Yogi, who
popularized the
lranscerulental medltatiOil
movement, says India could
ellmtnate llocids, droughts,
crime and disease through
meditation.
The onetime guru to the
Beatles, questioned at a news
conference after meeting
Stobart, Brian Tannehill.
Steve Tracy.
Reu-ter-Brogan - Charles
Hysell, manager - William
Brothers, Mark Corbitt, Marc
Corsi, Decker Cullums, Sue
Fry, Mallhew Gibbs, Arthur
Hunnel, Jeremy Hysell,
Dwane Johnson. Erica
Johnston ,' Rudy l&lt;aldor,
Terry Newsome, Angle
Sloan, · Mike Will, Wesley
Young.

Team No. 3 - . Jim An.
d!rson, manager - Leah
Doidge,

Gary

Freeman!

Michael

Parker 1 . _ James

Danny Hall. Richard Jeffers.
RYan Jeffers, Kevin King,
Nick King, Michael Nardel,
Sauvage, Tracl Smith, Kevin
Tanner, Mike Van Meter,
Aaron Whaley , Belinda
'Mllllalch, Brent Zirkle.

'

-

BOBCATS WIN
Coach Jim Sprague's
Kyger Creek Bobcats woo
their second game In two
lltarts behind the one-hit
pitching
of
senior
righthander Todd Taylor.
Taylor's ooly blemish was
a single by Rick Young In the
seventh imlng which plated
the Poln\ Pleasant run ..
Meanwhile, Kyger Creek
jumped on losing pitcher
Kevin Kl!lllett for single runs
first and fourth Innings then
wrapped lt up with a two-run
seventh Inning rally against
reliever Holland.
Getting RBI's for the

FREE A&amp;'IISI' ANCE

TIIPPERS PLAINS ELEMENTARY taking part In the mini basketball program are
front,l-r, Jeff Caldwell, manager, Greg Collins, Troy Guthrie, Mark Gaddis, Frank Day and
Jimmy Caldwell, manage~· ; back, Jim Caldwell, coach, Mii\8 Morlan, Mike Connolly, Brian
: Well, David Durst, Tom Evere1t, Bill Gaddis, coach.
.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Hep . .
ThOIIlll• C. Sawyer, D-i\kron,
Introduced legislation
Tuesd~y
prohlbltl"g a
telephone company !tom
charging for directory
assistance if the number is
unlisted or incorrectly listed
In the latest directory.
Phone companies are
currently allowed to charge a ·
dime for eacb assltance
request from a given
rustomer bey011d three per
mmth.

Bobcats were junior out·
fielder Claude Cornelius,
Taylor and third sacker Steve
Baird. Baird was the leading
litter wlh two hits in four
tr'ips. Von Taylor, Brian
Lucas, Todd Taylor and Paul ·
Fife each had one safety.
In going the distance,
Taylor faMed six, while
issuing three walks.
North Gallla hosts South·
western Monday. Kyger
Creek · goes to Federal
Hocking Thursday then
returns home Saturday at 4
p.m. against Wahama.
t.lnesccres:
l«i
330 000 0- 6 10 2
pp
000 230 ()....6 . 7 1
Minnis (W) and Tackett.
Swann (L) Bateman (2)
Holland (5.) and Holland,

Swain

••
••

•..
•

•

•'
•••

••

that."

SPRING BLOSSOMS
FOR SOMEONE YOU LOVE

LILIES - MUMS - AZALEAS CORSAGES - CUT FUMER
ARRANGEMENTS
PERMANENT MEMORIAL FUMERS
Mrs. Millard VanMeter
106 Butternut Ave.
Phone 992:2039
992-5721
Pomeroy, 0.
We accept all major credit

100 100 ~6 I
pp
000 000 !-! J ~
Taylor (W) and Baylor.
Kennett (L) Holland (8).

cards and we wire flowers
everywhere.

SwBM .

ORANGES
5 Lb. Bag
79

.

89~

15oz.

4/ 1

REYNOLDS AWM. FOIL

LB.

PORK

~USAGE LB. 89

PORK BARBECUE

LAUNDRY DETERGENT
I•

69~

1

•'

1 Lb.

Pkg .

23~
OPEN

WE WELCOME

9til7

FOOD STAMP

Mon •.sat.
10 tl 5.

SHOPPERS

Sunday

'

60" Kiaprnon's

OffRegul
Pnce

62

DOTIED
SWISS
Good Selection Of
Spring Fabrics

many hours free gratis.
Coach Wolfe exten ded his
thanks to all of the coaches,
(layers and paren ts' who
were Inv olved · in the
(J'ogram.

THE FABRIC SHOP
Mc Ca ll's. Kw1 c ~ , Se w . Simp li city Pattern s
115 W . Second
,f92 228~
Pum 11r oy , 0 .

oz.

SLICED BACON ..........................................~.~:: . 89'
HOMEMADE HAM SALAD.........................:~:. 99'
BOILED HAM ..:~:.~~:~~................................... :~.~-~:sl 19
FROZEN FRYERS.~~~~.~:~............................. ~~: .. 59'·
1

?~~

,•
•• "'
'
•'
•

~ YMBOLS

OF LOVE

•
•'

'•
l

......
....,

-...

I
I
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I
GOl DE N ACCEN 1

A perfe[t Kl' t' ps.d·;.t•
· diamond, gu.mtnl ecd tn
writing, pernMnent ly
re gisfe red, with assured
trdde· in va l ue &lt;1 nd
protec,tion ,\~ai n s t lnss .

TUPPERS PLAINS ELEMENTARY student. in the mini basketball program ~re, ·
· front, 1-r, E. Collins, manager, T. Probert, R. Shields, R. Balser; M. Collins, P . Colli~,
~ manager;back, Charlie Co~. coach, M: Rice, B. Bowers, G. Watson, M. Riddle, L. Life
. and
. Gl!orge
.. Collins, coach..

.

'

~ Lucchesi

calls
iact
sneak attack
•
-

. By IXlUGLAS MONROE
ORLANDO, Fla. (UP!) \ "I'm not one for revenge, I
Wasn't brought up that way.
· a.&amp;t somehow, somewhere,
~ the man who provoked this
. ; jt)lnl! will be sorry."
' · , Texas Rangers manager
Lucchesi, 11111 ln pein
.,
ed
..
sur1err f« 1 !ractur
iZeheekbohe, !lpoke so!Uy from
:C:hil bo!lpltal bed Tuesday
!';.night about the punches
~ land~d by infielder Len

'I

Randle.
"I think it was a sneak
attack - worse than Pearl
Harbor," said Lucchesi. The
area around his right eye was
deep purple and a small
bendsge covered the lnclsloo
made to repair the fracture.
He said his jaw hurt when be
talked and that he l!ad a bed
bruise on his back but wasn't
sure if Randle had kicked
him.
."If there's a God above,
I•

and I know there is, He 'II
justify this whole thing," said
Lucchesi, who feels Randle's
"conscience will bother. him
very much when pe goes teo
sleep at night." .
But Rangers pitcher Bert
Blyleven said earlier that
Randle "told me that when be
goes to bed at night now he
won't have any trouble slee·
ping. He feels he did the right
.
thing."
Lucchesi said in a hospital
room interview with UPI that
he will wait several days "to
ge~ my head clear" before
decidinl! whether to press
charges against Randle.
"l'""""ery surprised that a
young, strong man like that
would do something like

I
I
I
I
I

!I

'

..'

' r;:•nk

ERA

~

.

PriceS Effective Thursday thru Sunday
11"x25'

•

Duane Wolfe, director, and
varsity head coach said 62
ooys are participating in the
program which ilpen ed
Monday with two games and
oonlinued Tuesday ngiht with
two more. The championship
game is Thursday. ·
Thursday night awards will
be presented with e;wh hnu
that participated receivin e a
memento. The game starts at
6p.m.
Coaches in the program are
Jim Caldwell, BUI Gaddis,
Charlie Collins, , George
Collins, Tim Baum, Ebley
Crow, Raymond Oliver ,
Dorsel Larkins, Mike
Larkins, and Archie Rnse.
eighth grade coach. Each boy
gets to play one quarter.
AD of the coaches have
either played basketball or
mve had experience working
with young people as a coach.
The roaches have worked

CARROTS

oz. Bottle .

5 OO

RIVERVIEW ELEMENTARY p!a)'ers in the mini ba;ketball progriUll are ," front, 1-r,
Jeff Masters, Keith Harris, Scott Upton, Richad Bartimus; back, Dorsal Larkins, coach,
Jeff Cowdety, Carl Swain, Glen PUtman and Kenny Browning.

Lucchesi, who wa&amp; taking
only liquids aoo gelatin, said
the surgery was "very
successful " and that he
expects to go home "possibly
. in a day or so." He said he
would "play it by ear" about
when to return to action, but
felt he would be ready by the
season opener.
A Rangers sp&lt;Jkesman said
Randle left Florida Tuesday
for Arlington, Tex., to await a
meetinglater this week with
club officials. But Randle, a
six-year veteran, told a
sportswriter tl at he was
flying to Phoenix where his
~ent lives.

Pomeroy Aower Shop

(2).

VI ETTA

PORK ROAST

EAST MEIGS - A first for
Eastern Local School District
this season is a mlni·basket·
ball program for boys.
ranging from age 10,11 aod 12
divided into six teams.

••

a~d

POLYESTER
GABAilDINE

RIVERVIEW SCHOOL students taking part in the mini basketball om"ra:m
Brian Collins, Jerry Larkins, Scott Justis, Scott Trussell, and Jimmy
Larkins, coach, Dave Young, Mark Bolter and Jimmy Carter.

Eastern ·district
boys in bask

•
•

KC

32

BUSH PINTO BEANS cr
GREAT NORtHERN BEANS

BUTT

NOW ONLY

58"

HUNTS

KETCHUP.

HE FASHION MATE • MACHIN E,
Get our fr ont drop· in bobbin . zi g·
zag st i tching and a lot of machine
for ver y little m oney. Cabinet or
carryin g case extra . Mode l 247.

·.

Scott Howard and Rick
Smith led Point with two hits
mch. Artie Vauglm slammed
a two run homer and
Bateman 8lso homered
Calvin Minnis, the winning
Imler, fanned nine whUe
issuing five walks. Swall!l
was the loser.

CHESTER ElEMENTARY PLAYERS - Taking part in the mini basketball program
are front, 1-r, LeOnard Koenig, Tom Crow, Randy Bahr, Barry Staat. ; back row, John
Ridenour, Aaron Parker, Tom Pullins, and Ebby Crow . Absent was Randy SU!wart and
Rhett Milhoan.

Jndla."_

~

BOSTON

CHESTER ELEMENTARY PUPILS taking part in the mini basketball are front, 1-r,
David Hawthorne, Dean Staats, Clinton Bailey, Keith Bentz, Bill McClure; back, Tim
Baum, coach; Bill Call, Tim Curtis, Roger Bissell, Rodney Tripp, Paul Harris and John
Miller, manager.

Easter flower~

FLORIDA

:.

•

...

...

PRODUCE SPECIALS

.'
.

longer without permission.
_Abi!Ddooed Watercraft
The property owner could
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio House passed Tuesday, take such action only if the
35 to I, and sent to the Senate boat were worth $2,000 or
a bill authorizing marina less. He could also auction off
owners to auction off · motors worth $250 or less if
watercraft left on their left without permission for
premises six months or 'six 11JOnths.

Baseball meeting is called

Pirates, Bobcats trip ,
Point in doubleheader

PORK
.
SHOULDER STEAK

5- The DaUv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesady, March 30,19n

Jim Rice regains old fonn

as
a
rookie,
and
The · Pomeroy '(outh knowledgeable
baaeball
Baseball League has set Tog
l:ey for the Pomeroy ar.. on . people thought the ~011
Saturday , April 2. from 9 a.m. Red 'S ol had their lllqlerstar
to 3 p.m.
of the future.
. Members of the Ll tile
Only tiling li, 1 Jot of them
League and PO&gt;y ~eegue will did .not think his name was
participate In tag day;
Fred Lynn.
oung~r members of. the
r.. gue will not help In this Even after Lynn 'a
;:ro\ect.
incredible first year and
A 1players are requosted to Ql!lck ascensloo to the ranka
repcrt to City Hall by 9 a.m.
Those memllers of the of baseball's $100,0110 players,
baseball league playing In the a lot of people In baseball
Elementary Basketball believed that Boaton'a
League are asked to report to
take part part In tag day at "lllher" rookie of 19'15, Jlm
mon or as soon as their game Rice, eventually would
Is finished.
become the bigger star.
Due to the Iorge number of
~gnups In the Pee Wee and T·
Boll age groups, three teams
wHI be fielded In each of these
age groups. Sponsors will be
RACINE ...: -The Racine
d&gt;talned tor these sl• teams
Baseball Assn. will meet
who will provide lee shirts
arid ball caps for team Friday, AprD I, at 7:30p.m.
members.
·
at the Racin~ Elementary
Following are rOsters for
the Pee Wee and T-Ball School All those Interested In
teams. Little League and helping in the summer
Pony League rosters will be program, espectaUy coaches,
J&gt;Jblished later .
1ft urged to attend. The
111blic is invited.
PeeW.,.Teems
The Racine Baseball Assn.
Angels - Don Hunnel,

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sport&amp; Writer
COLUMBUS (UPI )
"You name it and she does
it,'' said Waverly Coach
Mary Gecowets of .her
O\ltstandlng senior. guard

•

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II .

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· -

•-

;

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•• -

•

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Pkg .

1 Lb. Blue Bonnet

MARG. QUARTERS
Limit of 3

59~

25¢
~L~RY ~---~~~.~~ 3ge
NEW

. ..B.

CAGGAGE.. ......... ..
...

..

16 oz. Booths Perch Fillets ................~l 39 pkg.

!
I

103/4 oz.
Campbells chicken noodle soup ••••••• 3/69c

l
_~_ _".·"'.~~"-"-

CHEESE Ind .

$}
09
Wrapped

I

I

. . . . • __
-_._._
..

or

10 oz. Kraft
White Jet-Puffed Marshmallows ••••••••• 39~
18 OJ:, Kraft Grape Jelly ................... 59~
15112 ~z. Whitney Pink Salmon •••••••••• .'1"'
.
3 OL Instant~ Nestea ........................
. '1"
32 oz.
Wagners drinks, orange &amp; grape ..... 2/89c
10% oL Vletta Beef or Pork Barbec"e 89~
9% oz. Star-Kist light tuna ............... :1·"
'
2 roll pack Bounty Towels ................. 79~

I

;,_·~,~·

12 oz. Kraft Sliced
Pimento
American

~~:~:.:J

'

'

�6- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March 30, 1977

1;

!~ ~-----A~-.;;-o~;th~---- ! Oil, gas -sought
~

~·
1

I

,

I

:

RALPH p, HAYMAN
diO!f Mooday at St. Elizabeth

Spencer, Hunt ington. sur viv~s along wi th thr ee nfeces:
Sandra Jividen , Springfield,

••

former resident of Pomeroy .
He was a retired employe of
Wr ight Air Force Base, and a
Veteran of World War I.
He Is survived by his wi fe,

Hunt i ng ton
and
Am y
Cather ine Spencer ,· Rome,
Ga ,; two nephews. James E.
Spencer and R. Gea r y
Spencer, both of Huntington .

son, James R.• a grandson,
James Pi!lrker , all of Dayton ;

held 10 a .m . Friday at
Miller's Home for Funeral s

~

l

1

-t

:•
•:
'•

Ralph P. Ha yman, 75, wh o

Hosp ita L Dayton, wa s a

MOiicent 0 . Hayman : one

Va .;

Patrici a

J ust ice ,

Funeral services will be

_l
::1

two sisters, Grace Stone, with Rev. Frank Hayes ofWashington , · D.C. , , and .ficiating . !lurtal will follow in
Dorothy Charlesworth of Mound Hill Cemetery.

:!

a cousin,

Lake Ha'llasu City, Ariz., and
Dwight Parker,

Friends may call at the
funeral home from 7 until 9

Pomeroy.

p.m. Thursday .

1

•

•

.;
.,

F unerel services will be

held Thursday at I p.m . at
Ewing ChapeL-Burial wilt be

!f

In Beech Grove Cemetery .

''
,,''

George F, Rittenhouse, 79,
Rt. 2, Racine, died Tuesday,

FLO LEWIS

by his parents, Joseph and

'I

•
.••'

'.

·'::

'''.
'',•
,.
,r
''

I0

'.
·:
!•
I 0

,.,.

GEORGE RITTENHOUSE

He was preceded In death

Flo M. Spencer Lewis, 72, Carrie Aubley Rittenhouse,
widow of Royal Lewis, St. two sisters and two brothers .
Petersburg, Fla., died at 1: 30
:s urVi ving are his wife,
a.m. Tuesday at the Shore Selma 1Hackert) Ritten Acres Nursing Home in St .

Petersburg.

house ; four daughters, Ruth
Lutheran , Ra ci ne ,· Lois
Bauer, Canada i. Helen Me.

She was born Jul y II , 1904,
in Kayford, W, Va., daughter
of the late Charles Edward

Nesly, Maryland and Phyllis
Ucci, Canada ; 11 grand -

She married ·Royal Lewis of
Gallipolis in 1924 , He

children and nine greatgrandchildren .
He was a ri1ember of

and Florence Evans Spencer.
preceded her in death

in

September, 1976. They spent
most ot their life In Hun-

Masoni c Lodge 652

of

Cleveland .
.Friends
call at the
Ewing Funera Home from 7
to 9 Thursday even i ng .
Services will be at 2 p.m .

mar

e

m• two counties
According to this month's
Ohio Oil and Gas Association
report, three new wells have
been drilled in Addison Twp.,
Callis County _and other
drilling operations in Meigs
County are listed.
lj&amp;W Drilling has a well on
the property of Moore and
Glassburn located on the
Bulaville-Addlson Rd.; W, J .
Lydic, Inc. has a well on the
!ann of Norris and Genevieve
Nunn on the Bulaville-Porter
Rd. and Brasel &amp; Brasel is
drilling a well on the Smith
estate property off Georges
Creek Rd.
Great Lakes Gas Corp.
Wooster, Ohio, has been
granted a pennit by the
Division of Oil and Gas to
drill on 192.96 acres owned by
Hannon and Oma Hager near
&amp;"dney.
·

In Meigs County, Hanley E.
Hardin Is drilling on property
owned by C.W. and A.M. Kmg
in Bedford Twp,; Carl E.
Smith, Inc. Is drilling a well
oo lhe H,A, Cole property in
Orange Twp ,; Brasel and
Brasel has a well on the L.K,
Rice property In Rutland;
Talbott 011 and Gas Company
in drilling on N, $irueser's
land in Rutland; H.S.D, Oil
and Gas Company, D&amp;B
Welch, Talbott Drilling have
wells on N, Redd and 0. Karr
in Rutland area,
New pennlts have been
issued to H.S.D. OU and Gas
Co. Rt. 1, Middleport, for 10
acres on the Herald and K.
Dolan property in Salisbury
Twp. and to H.S.D. Oil and
Gas Co. for 47.42 acres on lhe
Robert King property in the
Rutland area,

News •• in Briefs

(Continued from page 1)
objected w postponing the $8,625 annual ceiling on income
from speeches and other "personal services," easily the most
One brother , H. Edward Friday at the Ewing Chapel.
••
hotly'contested provision of the proposed code and a larget of
,•
•
bipartisan attacks.
_
'•
Proponents urged the move Tuesday to make the Selll!te
:;
code conform with the ooe p&amp;ssed by the House early in March.
'•
Approval came on a voice vote after a brief discussion, W!th
'I
backing from chairman Gaylord Nelson, O.WIB., of the speCI81
:·.~
'panel that drafted the standards of conduct. The Senate ilet
aside time today for a lOth round of debale and planned a final
•'•
';,. By DREW VON BERGEN lrom the Interior Dep&amp;rtment vote oo the entire ~de Friday.
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A to Labor Department,
,:.,
McGUIRE AIR FORCE BASE, N, J. - ONE of the
federal mine coal inspector
The
National
Coal survivors
of Sunday's pl.ane craSll in the Canary Islands di\ld
!,
arrived at a mine and [oW&gt;d Allsociatloil and BllwninoiiS
Tuesday
night
a mercy fligllt to the Unl~d States for
•• electric cable draped over a Coal Operators Association specialized burnontreatment.
bigh.voltage power line, a said they would supp&lt;rt a
•' clear
The Air Force' "flying hospital" carrying 53 survivors and
••
violatioo of safety laws. _ transfer of the Mining
the
victim arrived at McGuire Air Force Base early
' But hand marks indicated it Enforcement and Safety today.lstest
The
casualty raised the death toll in SQnday's crash•' was
placed
there · · Admlnistratlon if they get
the worst in aviation history - to 578,
:: deliberately.
assurance current safety
Dr. Thomas Huglles, chlef medical officer aboard the
A
neighboring
mine
laws are reviewed before
•
flight,
the lslest death but did not release the name
received a bomb threat from amendments are coosidered, or sex coofirmed
of the victim.
a man, who, when arrested,
The transfer has been enf. admitted
lrying 1!J close the dorsed strongly by the United
,,
•r.: mirie so a friend could go to a Mine Workers union wbich
baseball game.
re.iterated its position at
••
Gilbert
Remey,
owner
of
Tuesday's
hearing,
••
••
the Rochester &amp; Pltsburgh
Critics of the current setup Vetenu Memorial Hospital
PLEASANT VALLEY
•
Coal Co. in southwestern claim enforcement of the 1969
Admitted - Myrtle Durst,
DISCHARGES - Mrs._
Pennsylvania, gave these law has been hwarted
•'•' examples lo a House !because Interior also works Syracuse; Nora Buchanan, Frederick Heldrlth and son,
~·
Reedsville; Mary Sloter, · Mason ; Clarence Persinger,
~ subcommittee Tuesday to to increase coal production. Racine; William Milliron , Crown City; Jeffrey Marlin,
show how "an irresponsible The UMW said 1,383 coal
Middleport ; James Bush, Point Pleasant; Mrs. Arnold
element"
of miners could miners have been killed since Vinton;
~'
Wanda Bennett, Blankenship, Letart; Gilbert
'
shut -down a mine.
· the law look.effecl, and 91,736 Parkersburg;
Preston Buzzard, Comfort, W, Va.;
••
Remey said allowing a 36- miners suffered disabling Parsons, Racine; Melissa Mrs. James Oliver, MI. Alto;
••
" day Closure for willful or injuries in mine accidents. Fife, Middleport.
Teresa Roberts , Point
«
gross neglect of safety laws
When Olairman John Dent,
•
Discharged
Mary
Eblin,
Pleasant; William Carper,
with full pay to miners could O.Pa., said he had promised
Kevin
Oiler,
Ruth
Thornton,
Jr.,
Point Pleasant ; Mrs. Roy
bring ''a potential horror oversight hearings on the
Terry
Deren
berger.
Smith
, Gallipolis Ferry;
;;: slory ," that may invite current law before
· Johnny Gardner, Point
miners to deliberately ~t up "substantive changes" were
· Pleasant; Diana Davis, Poinl
safety violations in order to made, Ralph Bailey, board
Pleasant; Clarence Clonch,
a incnth's paid vacation. chalnnan of COilliOlidatlon
SPEEDERS FINED
'•• getSwift
passage of such Coal Co., speaking for NCA Five defendants forfeited Henderson; Mrs. Keith ·
• amendments is not likely, and BCOA, said they "can bonds, all on speeding Taylor, West Columbia; Paul
•
hoWI!Ver, because of surprise support lhe transfer ,., charges, in the court of Hannon, Jr., New Haven;
•
Young, Mason;
• testimony by the coal providing oversight hearings Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Maude
Brenda
Smithson,
Chrlstillll'' industry regarding transfer .are held."
Andrews Tuesday night,
burg,
Va.;
and
Mrs.
Russell
Forfeiting were Kathryn
•• of mine safety enforcertlf'nt
McDaniel
and
daughter,
King, Middleport, $25; Leon,
''•.••
Jimmy McClure, Pome'FOY1
•
!
$30;
Connie
Rucker,
••
Coolville,
$36;
James
Kemp,
t
MOSCOW
(UP!)
Gallipolis,
$35,
and
Keith
morning and the Secretary of
•••
Family programs
Secretary of State Cyrus State went into the afternoon French, Newark, $30.
Vance,
awaiting
a
Kremlin
~
sessioo of talks seeking an
reply to lhe Carter 8119Wer on his proposa~for
resume at RGC
administration' s arms reducing arms, Soviet leatler
'
•'•'
E·RCACLED
limitation
proposals,
said
Leonid L Brezhnev was
••
Ieday lllere is no excuse for expected to lead the Soviet The Middleport
Emergency !!quad_was called
RIO GRANDE - After
failure of the talks.
side.
to
728
S.
ThintAve.,
at
10:28
"
more
than a month of being
"We carry the h"'" of aU
When the talks-opened two
••'
closed because of bad
the peoples of the world that days ago, Vance presented p.m. Tuesday for Melissa
weatiJ,er- and the energy
reason will prevail," Vance two proposals deslg!)ed to Fife, a medical palient, who
•'•
was
taken
to
Veterans
crisis,
family recreation·
!Did
Foreign
Minister
Andrei
reduce U.S. antl - Soviet
~
Memorial
Hospital
where
she
nigllt
returns
to Rio Grande
Gnxnyko
during
a
luncheon
••
stra~gic missile and bomber
,.
College - Community College
in the Soviet leader's honor, forces. In the past, the was admitted,
beginning Friday, April I.
"If we meel that
have objected ID both
••'.I ' responsibility O\!f efforts will Soviets
From 7to 9p.m. each week,
plans and U.S, diplomats
be applauded," Vance said, hope the Soviets this time will
an the facllilies of Lyne
:i
FffiEMEN CALLED
'
"H we fail, there is no excuse • at least offer flexible
The
Pomeroy
Fire Cenler will be available free
•'•'
Success can be deferred only reactions.
Department was called to of charge, Activities include
,.1
at a price, It cannot be
Brown Sl. on Lincoln Hill at basketball, volleyball,
forever
denied."
11:18 a.m. Tuesady to ex· badminton, handball and
~~
BffiTHDAY NEAR
Vance
and
Gromyko
held
swimming, as well as Wle of
tin
utsh a brush I ire,
.-:I '
Robert Oil's, funnerly of
lhree hours of talks this
the welgllt room and tramLong Bottom, now residing at
.,'
poUne.
·
•
Russells Nursing Home,
SALE
PLANNED
The
only
restructlons
are
•
Albany, wiD celebrate his
NEED CLOTHING?
•I
The Forest Run Methodist that families are invited wilh
••
CHESHIRE - The Ga!Ua - IOOth' birthday on April 10, Church will bold a bake sale children at least 6 years old
•'
Meigs Commuhity Action Carda would be appreciated. Friday, April I, starting at 9 and children must be ac•• Agency's
free clothing day
a.m. in froot of the Dale C. companied by a parent or
SUPPER SLATED
wiD be held from 9 a.m. to 2
Warner Insurance Agency, guardian.
,:
p.m. Friday. The agency's A pancake supper will he
~:
clothing bank Is located in the held at Sl!lem Center School,
old hlgll school building at Saturday, April 2 wllh ser·
~
Cheahlre. Area residenls in ving from 5 to 8 p.m. Dinners
•
need of clotbing are welcome. ll'e $2 for aduhs and $1 for
dJildren. The supper Is heing
,_
~nsored by the PTA,
ON DEAN'S UST
Donna Ruth Francis,
YARD SALE SET
. daughter of Mrs. Ruth
The
Middleport United
Francis, Anne St., Pomeroy
Pentecostal
Church will hold
has been named by Academic
a
yard
sale
on Friday and
Dean Roy Turley to the
Saturday
beginning
at 9 a.m.
winter dean's list at Otterbein
at
the
Luis
Shafer
residence
College.
'
on Chester Road off Route 7.
COLD BEER ON TAP

'.

'·

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tington , W. Va .• where he was

postmaster . They moved to
Florida about 10 years ago.

Horror story likely

in mine safety rules

'·

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,..'·

Mayors proc~aim 'Cancer Month'
Meigs County mayors
today officially proclaimed
April as Cancer Control
Month
urging county
residents to "rally for the
caiiSe of cancer control" by
supporting the American
Cancer Society's Educational
. and fWld..-alsing drive.
The mayors said It .was
important for all citizens to
become a part of this lifesaving effort in any way
possible. "Cancer will claim
an estimated 19.:«10 f'POPI• In

the state of Obio this year," It
was pointed out that with a
strengthened and unifi ed
effort to attack this vicious
killer, we will come closer to
finding a cure in our lifetime.
Througll lhe efforts of the
American Cancer Society and
other
cancer
control
organizations, one out of
every three cancer patients
now survives; and in Ohio
alone more than 10,000
conquered the disease. The

I

,,'
Visit Our Salad Bar
Seafood Platter
French Fries
Coffee, Tea or Milk

•

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Plus :rax

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

...
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ROBYN WVUO 40 CHANNEL CB ........................... Special '97.95
ROBYN LB120 40 CHANNEL CB......................... Special '104.95
ROBYN 007-140 40 CHANNEL CB ....................... SpeCial '127~95
ROBYN DG130D 40 CHANNEL CB ........:.............. : Special '109.95
LAFAYElTE 640 40 CHANNEL CB ........................... Special '94.95
LAFAYElTE 740 40 CHANNEL CB ......................... Speclal '124.95
LAFAYmE 940 40 CHANNEL CB ......................... Special '152.95

,,

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NQW.OPEN

OYAL FLUSH

!,.•

r·

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II

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''

''
''
I

{

•
••

Robyn LB23A 23 Channel ............................... $PECIAL '67.95
Robyn DG30 23 Channel... ......... ;.................... SPECIA~ '74.95 .
Robyn 5xl01 23 Channel.. ............................. SPECIAL '84.95

40 CHANNEL MOBILE CB SPECIALS

•'•'

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ROBYN 23 CHANNEL SPECIALS

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I

Going Out·of Business Sale

TURNER'S
GROCERY
.
LANGSVILLE

I

AND
BEER TOGO
STOP IN TOD4 Y

1A aft Priced Marked

718 North S,·con,J St.

Groceries, hardware and miner's boo.s.
Everything must go . . Phone 742-9576. Sale
starts March 31 thru April lOth, 7 a.m. Iii
7:30 p,m.

Middleport, 0 •

'

By JAMES A. WHITE
UPI BllllDess Writer
': ·
NEW YORK (UPI)- Talk
~ •,' · about mall delivery and
'
everyone· has a story about
' : · the letter that look three
' • - weeks to get a~ross town, tbe
1
, ,
Christmas cird that didn't
reach AWl! Mary unW tbe
•I'
.
following December or tbe
p&amp;ckage that never got to its
:·
,.
destlnallon at all.
:
Bring up I!Je topic with
1
Fred T, Allen, whose
company has a lot to do with
the mall, and get ready for an
argument .
"'
-"O'Iticlzing the mall seems
w
be a very fashionable thing
•
rut the fact Is the Postal
Service since 1970 has done a
pretty credible Job with what
wiiS an Ineffective, inefficient
operation , that was near start
disaster, " said Allen,
Chalnnan of Pllney Bowes
RIO GRANDE _ The Adult
Inc. "They are considerably Education staff , at Buckeye
more effective than they Hills Career Center, Rio
were In 1970,"
Pitney Bowes makes postal Grande, today announced the
meters and other mall· spring session evening
related equipment but Allen classes starting the week of
said only about 2 per cent of April 11·
his . company's ,business
The following programs
comes from the Postal will be offered: Air ConService. The Ucenses his ditloning • Heating Phase I,
company holds on metering Accounfing, Bookkeeping
machines are not exclusive Phase II, Diesel Engine
and are avatlable _to any Mechanics I, Drafting I,
manufacturer meeting Postal Eelectrical Schematic and
Service specifications,
Blueprint, Forklift Truck
What
coneema
him,
Allen
Driving Training Seminar
'
said Is that the Postal (OSHA). HorticultureService Is not getting credit Landscaping,
Medical
for the progress It has made _ Records, Metric System ,
and therelcre propoaala to ·Phannacology - , limited to
give prtvale carriers the LP Nurses only, Slimnastics,
first 1a1a 018u Typing and Welding,
rlghtiDcarry
Scott Coddington, Adult
lor example, arec gaining'
support without examining Education supervisor, stated
their conaequences.
the programs vary In
''
.,1 lhink this would be schedule. To register come to
devestatlng," Allen said, con· the Adult F;ducatlon office
tending private .carriers during the week of April 4,
would only be interested in between 8 a.m. and 4 p,m, or
the proBtable hlgll.volurne on April 4and 5, between 6:30
mall routes, skimming the and 8:30 p.m.
cream from the Postal
Service which IIIII would
have ID serve low volume
rural areas.
VIrtually every postal
service in the world has HEARING SCHEDULED
CINCINNATI (UPI) acluslve rlcbts to flrlll~lasa
Hamllton
County Sheriff Linmall, for good reason,
coln
Stokes'
request thai
according to Allen.
Cincinnati
mental
patient
"Consider the
Paul
R.
Kenler,
charged
with
colnpllcations of transferring
murdering
his
parenls,
be
from -one private carrier to
sent
ID
Urns
State
Hospital
Is
another. The mailer would
scheduled
for
a
hearing
bave a heck of a lime
determining his routing," Friday,
The
hearing
II
to
be before
according to Allen, not to
Hamllton
County
Common
mention the huge additional
Pleas
·Court
Judge
Frank
government subsldlllll he says
would be needed ID. Gusweller.
Kenter, 32, a pallent at
compensate for the lost post
Loogvlew
State Hospital for
office revenues.
mere
than
five
years, Is being
While pr...-re Is mo111tlng
held
In
Jail
without
bond alter
in Cmgretll for mere direct
being
Indicted
on
two
counts
control OVIIf r the P~l
of
murder
in
conilectlon
with
. Service - taking lilt\~ · e
•
the
abootlng
death
of
. his
of Its independ,rlce ganted
•
I
parents
March
15,
the
day
he
In Its reorgantzatlon ·tiJ years
ago - Allen noted the eacaped Longview.
Relatives of Kenter said be
General Accounting Office,
had
eiCiped Longview more
the
Congressional
than
20 t1mea in the past five
lnvelllptlve ann, has given
years,
;
, the poll ¢flee good marks on
: · - :.. lerVice, l'f.tei !lftd employee ,
· · relations. "
The 13-cent flrat~lass
lllamp Ia the cheapest among madewlthnew
Ill lndultrlallzed cqllltriet mechllliiation, Allen aald.
acept Canada and all the · The pieces of maD moved per
wcrld'a major poaal sylllems pollal employee worked out
except SWeden 1111 at a ID 132,000 Jut year, up from
defiCit. The U.S, Postal 111,000 11leces . in 1970, a
Service tDOVel hill lbe mall productivity gain equal to
1n the tree -1&lt;1 and has a 100,000 employees.
mucb larger territory to
'1bere 1t111 be incremenlal
111m llum iX]Ier tlfllema,
lncnasea In productivity
'!'ben why the aimolt from here on, nothing
.uvenal perception lhat the ~."Allen llld. One
u.s. mall II bad?
lingering problem . Is that
"When :youbandle 10 biDion many liOiilal facllltlea were
lelten 1 yell', lftn If the buUt In an tra 'llben the mall
PoUI Servlclil • ]Ill' eent moved by rail, meaning
per~~ct, lhft IIIII woald be majcr mall cllltllisllllll are In
ioo mlllkln letierl that WGIIId CliiiiPMd downtown areas,
be cltllytd," Aid Allin.
'"llle poll otrlcea are all in
Improvln&amp; p01tal the WI'CIII ]lilcel now, nt1rt.,
~vlly II harder, DOW lbe IJ'alllllalloa. Tbty lbould
' •' ' Cllllldarln( lhe _pint lll'eldY ·on the outaklrll."
I
,.l ;

Store Hours:
Mon.-Sat. 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

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

Prices 'Effective Thru
April 2, 1977

PORK -STEAK ••••••••~.
•

-FRESH PORK

SHOULDER ROAST••L~.
CRISPY SERVE
'

EIAt:()~ •••••••.•••••••.~~ ·

April 11

..

I:

VIrginia) and East Lynn and
Beech Fork L!lkes. He served
as resident engineer at the
latter two projects. Prior to
becom ing Chi ef of Con·
structton 'Division, Deeds
served lis Assistant Chief for
three years,
He is a graduate of Huntington East Higll School and
Marshall University.
Robinson joined the CQrps
in April 1947 as a rodmanchainman in Survey Branch,
Engineering Divisio11;. He
transferred to the Real
Estate Division in 1958 where
his first job was as cadastral
surveyor. Before joining the
Corps Robinson spent three
years with the Third Marine
Division of the U, .s. Marine
Corps and spent 26 months in
the Mariana Islands of
Guam, Saipan and Tinian. He
also worked on the Ohio River
as a striker apprentice
engineer on the G. W. McBride. He left this boat only
six days before she hit a pier
near Cincinnati and sank with
17 out of a .crew of 22 dead.
Prior to becoming Chief of
Real Estate Division he
served three years as
Assistant Chief.
The Huntington Engineer
District comprises an area of
45,000 square miles within the
states of Kentucky, Ohio,
West Virginia, VIrginia and
North Carolina. The construction program for Fiscal
Year 1978 will consist of
· expenditures in the range of
35-'10 million dollars, wbile
the Real Estate program will
cover expenditures of 12-14
million.

Spring classes

.•

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that had

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••

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Mails
not all

1.

HOSPITAL NEWS

Awaiting reply

HUNTINGTON - Key
perSQnnel recently appointed
in the Huntington District of
the Anny Corps of Engineers
Include David J. Deeds, who
Is now Chief, Construction
Division, replacing William
F. McCraw, Jr., who joined
the Tennessee Tomblgbee
project, and Carl H.
Robinson, Chief, Real Estate
Division, replacing R. Paul
Witten, who retired,
Deeds, a Huntingtonlan,
joined the District in 1961 and
has worked on various
projects including the
Summersville Lake, North
Fork of Pound Reservoir (in
l

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'

put in key posts

THE INN PLACE
Thursdlly Night Special

Fined in the court of court were Robert J . Hysell,
Middleport Mayor Fred 22, Middleport, $25 posted on
Hoffman Tuesday night were a charge of failing to yield the
Bruce Hawley, 23, Mid- right of way; Isaac A.
dleport , $15 and costs, '· Hawley, Jr., Gallipolis, $25,
spinning tires, and $25 and defective exhaust, and Annln
costs; reckless operation ; L. Haddox, no age or address
Don Lovett, 53, Middleport, recorded, $50, posted on a
$25 and costs, disorderly disorderly manner charge,
manner; James H. Gacy, 24,
Middleport, 125 and costs
recklelll! operalion; David A,
REVIVAL PLANNED
Woodall, 'll, Gallipolis, $10
GREATBEND-Arevival
and costs, running .a red · meeting will be held at 7:30
light; Margaret A. Hoschar, nightly at the Bethlehem
Point Pleasant, $5 and costs, Baptist Church In Great Bend
wrong way on a one-way
fmm April 4 through April 9.
street.
Easter sunrise service wUI be
Forfeiting bonds in the
held at 6:30a.m. and Sunday
s:hool at 7:45a.m. There will
be special vocal music, The
DEER KILLED
A deer was killed in an llJbtic is invited by Earl
accident at II p.m: Tuesday !imler, pastor,
on SR 33, lhree miles north of
CWB TO . MEET
SR 7 in Meigs County. ,The
BEDFORD
- The Bedford
Gallia-Melgs Post State
Gals
4-11
Club
will meet from
Highway Patrol said the
7 to 8 p.m. Monday at the
animal ran into the path of a
vehicle driveQ by Bethany L. homeofJo AnneKaldore, 4-H
Jeffers, 20, Patriot. There leader. Anyone interested in
joining cail 992-7751 or 992was moderaJe damage.
:1190.

Da~y Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Ma.rc~h:O.I~9~77••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••·~~

_Deeds, Robinson

looking for a successful
Educational and fund-raising
campaign-this year In hope of
surpassing our goal of $5,000,
This money will be used in
advancing the research,
education, and service and
rehabilitation programs of
the American Cance r
Society," said Mrs. Patty
Fletcher, Crusade Chalnnan,
of Middleport.

mayors urge citizens to have
8 yearly physical checkup.
Early detection and diagnosis
1s half the battle with cancer.
All residents are urged to
enlist in the ranks of the
Meigs CoW&gt;ty _Crusaders to
experience the ;personal
satisfaction that comes from
helping in the tremendous
~le against cancer.
"We in Meigs County are

eourt.

Several fined in town

7- The

,

I

, •

CB Slide .In Mount' with Coax Connector Reg. 58.95 Now '6.95

-

~

CB ANTENNA SPECIALS

American Electronics 93-212 Trunk Mount Reg. '22.49 Now '18A5 American ElectroniCs 93-314 Trunk Mount Reg. '16.~.Jf!»W'1 !14.95 ,,~
American Electronics 93-190 Luggage or Mirror Mount '~·&gt;'15.451.
_.low 513.80
Lafayette CP88 8
Phillips SA2o Surface
Phillips SA 200 Weclg e
POWER MIKE Track
Mount Stereo
l;y ~ ,Stf!r.!!9
. .
•. SPECIAL·
.
.
-AIJTO.
:
STEREO
SPEAKERS
'
SPfAKERS

Workman E 70122
Mfg. Sug, List -525.00
Now $13.95 ·
Phillips SA 1000
deluxe surface wedge
mount with 4" , x 6"
woofer and 2lf4 H
super tweeter 8 Dhm
30 •watts (pair) Reg.
$46.20
NOW

'34.95

Reg. 517.95

Reg. Cat. $39.95

$3469

NOW

lafayette LR85

STEREO RECEIVER
Regular $169.95
(Less speakers)

S149'5

NOW
•

NOW

Reg . $16.95

SJ2"

NOW.

Lltarette LSC 200
compact AM-FM
stereo phone with
built in 8 · track
record-playback
deck. Regular $"9.95
NOW

$1195

Robyn
Police
Emergency scanner
I~ channels with 8'
crystals
Regula r
$'169.95

SJS795
-,

NOW

sisg•

. 1

"

S&amp;E TWO-WAY -RADIO
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA-GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

1.

••

'I

CENTER CUT RIB

PORK CHOPS........ ~;.~
CENTER CUT LOIN

19

$ 49

•

PORK t:HOPS •••••• ·~ ;~- •••
COUNTRY STYLE

SAUSAGE •••••••••••••• !~.

FLORIDA

LARGE DOL

ORA..11 GES••••••••••
80 COUNT

BORDENS

•

PlASTIC

2% MILK ••• :~L...... ..
BANQUET (EXCEPT BEEF)
2LB.

COCA-COLA

16

~FROZE~ DI~~ERS ••

!p~les

·

-GOLD MEDAL FLOUR

·~ .· .

FLOUR • •••••••••••••••••••
PLAIN or S.R.

5 LB.

EGGS

COUPO N

REG.
35' EA

10/Slw;c

Limit I Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires April2, 1977

SMALL

COUPON

DOMINO
SUGAR
~
5 LB. 89

3 DO~
PKG.

••••••••••••• Ill

•

LOFTS
VEGETABLE

79

. GRADEA

CHICKEN OF THE SEA ,

TUNA
W;C

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires
2, 1977

&amp;~ o~

COUPO N

j

2/79e

ZESTA
CRACKERS
2LB.
PKG.

79~

W/C

Lim It i Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires Aprll2, 1977

�1-'nle DIIUySent!nei,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, March 30,1977

Memorial service conducted
at Racine auxiliary meeting

Association donors, sponsors
announced for current season
,J!.m71~ndbespohinsordrs

to thef .;, a bonus concert to new
.. ,.,.. Ttt-co
mem tyn Comm
p 1ve o members
1he
~
·
111
Con
un Y
Last year's donors were
)lul:~/t!:cl~tlncaw~re The Gallipolis. Savings. and
'IIppe ll el, dr{ ~tr:-:::' Loan Co., F1rst National
ve
n. Bank, The McGmness• D n e
•"- onors
are
those
stanley Agency • Inc., The
IEatlo
d
.
.~.an
nsan individuals Wiseman Insurance Agency,
,;who cootributed to the con- Brunicardi Mmic Co.
.
.rert series w,ithout benefit of
Willis .Tire Company,
:m~::P· S~~ are Johnson's Supermarkets,
._m er P" pnlzur"1o'a , by a Inc., Tom's stereo Center,
,...up or orga . at n oor an Harry and Lanny's Service
;lndlvldual or gr~up,
!latlon, Dean H. Davis, Paul
: The aSIIOCiation's 1977-78 lllvies Jewelers.
atve
through
George s· Hobstetter, Mr.
~U Is
2. mderway
F t
tl!hedul
ee ~ed on the and Mrs. Harold Sauer,
~d the a~ ~ Lavalle Thomas Clothiers and The
e
am r Music Cltlo Valley Bank.
:SOciety of Lower Basin
Sponsors were Mrs.
The Orpheus Trio and Harland Marlin, P .I.'s, Inc.,
ger, guitarisl and dancer Alint Pleasant Building and
1fal Shane
'
Farmers·
rt ri · ' .The
. . April 22 Loa n Assoc iat 1on,
~nee
~nisi . Thomas Bank and Savings, Kyger
hllmacher will be offered Creek High Sdlool National
Honor Society, Pomeroy

:r,reet,

NatiOnal Bank, The Peoples
Ban
.
,, .
k, Racme Hcme roat1onal
Bank
Tope Furniture
Gane'rtes, The Gallipolis
Savings and Loan Company.
Russ's Glass Service
·
Washmgton
Elementary'
School P.T.A., Lanna's Salon
c1 Beauty , Citizens' National
Bank of Point Pleasant
Chateau Beauty Shop Th~
Sewing Center comm'erciBI
aid Savings 'sank, Bernadine's Inc The Bastille
Inc J~ck &amp;''nr
'
1
·•
s.
Tawney Jewelers, Clark's
Jewelry Store The Haskins
Tanner Clothi~rs Co., Amy's,
Gillingham Drug Carl's
Family Shoe Stor~, Holzer
Medical venter Clinic My
Sister's Closet New 'y 0 rk
'
Clothing House
Holzer
Medical Center School of
Nursing, Scott en-Di llon
Tobacco Company.

Miss Iwasaki gives program
for Meigs Christian Women
Fumiko Iwasaki, Meigs
High School exchange student from Japan presented
the program at a recent
meeting of the Meigs Chris,
tian · Women's Fellowship
held at the Dexter Church of
Christ.
Miss Iwasaki showed slides
of Japan and talked about her
experiences sintj- coming to
the United States last summer.
Miss Sharon Wilson was at
the, piano and Mrs. Vada
Hazelton led group singing.
The prayer song, "Where He
Leads I'll Follow, " preceding
prayer by Mrs. Donald
Raley.
'
Miss Wilson sang "Truth,
Peace and Joy" Mrs, Merle
Johnson presided at the
meeting with Mrs. Norma
Russell .and Mrs. Virginia
Wyatt giving the secretary
and treasurer's reports.
A discussion was held on
having a lxdh at the Meigs
County Fair for distribution
of tracts and presentation of
taped gospel music. A Christian Fair Board was organized to plan for the booth, and
named to that were Mrs.
Trudy Andrews, Mrs. Ann
. Lambert and Mrs. Jane
Hazelton.

"'Q.».&gt;.,:

~-II¥W'IIAA~~~
.

Social
Calendar
THURSDAY
SOUTHERN Athl e ti c
Boosters Thursday at the
high school at 7:30p.m. Final
plans for the basketball
banquet wUl be made.
SUTTON Township
Trustees special meet ing
· Thursday, 8 p.m. at the
Syracuse Municipal Building.
Purpose to review truck bids.
ANNUAL i nspection,
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM,
7:30 p.m. Thursday at
· --.. ,!emple;_ all 1\!lllster Masons
invited.
MIDDLEPORT , Youth
Baseball League ThurSiliY 7
p.m. in old council room .
Interested persons urged to
attend.
FREE Clothing day at
Salvation Anny, liS Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, 10
a.m. to noon Thursday. All
area residents in need of
clothing welcome.
SOUP SUPPER, hegiMing
3 p.m. Thufllday, at Rutland
United Methodist Church
basement
by
United
Methodist Church Women·
soup by bowl or quart, sloppy
joes and pie. Deliveries to
lbut-ins and W inside town·
' take containers for carry out
(I'd~. Starts at 3 o.m. ·
FRIDAY
VARIETY show, minstrel
111d ba!r.e sale,8 p.m. Chester
Grade School auditorium
Friday. Proceeds go for
1encllng 25 school safety
p1trol
members
to
Walbington ,
EASTER BAZAAR by
Meigs County Humane
&amp;clety at Thrift Shop, across
from Pomeroy POIIt Office.
Qoaft Items, bake sale and
wcullle soup.
HYPERTENSION Clinic
Friday e~ning, 5 to 7 p.m.
111d 8· a.m. to 12 noon
Slturday at Pomeroy
National Bank lobby by
Mtlp CCiimty Department of
llllltb. Public Invited for
ht blood pressure check.
J

SINGER, GUITARIST and dancer Hal Shane is one of
three artists scheduled for the 1977-78 season of the TriCounty . Community Concert Association. The
membership drive for next year's season is purrently
underway, and !Jielllbershipo .are available at a cost of
$10, adults; $5, senior citizens Qr students and $30, family.
Also on next season's schedule are The Orpheus Trio and
Paul Lavalle and The Cba!nber Music Society. of Lower
Basin Street In addition, new members wUl be allowed til
attend llle Aprll 22 concert of pianist Thomas
&amp;hurnacher. Admission to concerts is by membership
ooly. For more information contact the association's
offices at 16 State St., Gallipolis or phone 446-2134.

The next meeting will be their scripture. Nina Mcheld at the Hemlock Grove Comber gave a report on a
Christian Church. There will woman of thti Bible, Ruth.
be adebate for the program. . The dosing prayer was by
Mrs. Frances Hysell and Mrs. Lambert. Cake, jello
Mrs. Norma Russell . had and coffee were served in the
devotions using Psalin ll9 for church social room .

POLLY"$ POINTERS
Polly Cramer

Old organ bellows need replacing
By Polly Cramer
DEAR POLLY - We
bought an old pedal type
organ at an auction several
years ago. It was playable
after my husband replaced
the worn out straps but now
the bellows seem to have
• given out. No one advertises
that they repair such instruments so I thought some
reader who had such an
organ could offer us some
suggestions.- MRS, C.L. R.
DEAR MRs. C.L.R. - I
was advised that there are a
few places in the country that
do such repair work but those
suggested to me were far
from where you live. Look in
the yellow pages of your
tel eph one book und er
"Organs" and call them as
they might know of someone
locally who could do thiS. ,I
was told tli;lt the.hellows used
on old player pianos are the
same as those on organs so
that may give you something
to work on. Perhaps some
reader will have more
speci fi c infonnation. - POLr
LY.
DEAR POLLY - My
Pointer
came from husband
ENGAGED- Mrs. Anne E. Swartz, 534 Fourth Ave
who
really·
knows his way
Gallipolis, is announcing the engagement and
around
the
kitchen, When
approaching marriage of her daughter, Sharon Ann to
chopping onions .he holds a
James Richard CWHiiff, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Jam~ l!.
wooden match or two
Cundiff, Sr., Rt. 1, Racine. The bride-elect will be a 1977
toothpicks
between his teeth
graduste of Gallia Academy High School, is presently
and
has
no
tears
in his eyes.
employed at the Holzer Medical Center Clinic. A 1976
I
also
need
some
advice.
gr~duste of Southern High School, her fiance is attending
We
have
end
tables
with
slate
mme m8llltenance mechanic and electrician school.
tops
and
after
a
year
of
use
Wedding plans are incomplete.
the slate looks dull. A damp
rag removes any spills but
the slate still looks rather
business meeting 2 p.m. dull. Sprdy wax leaves a film
FRIDAY
.and window cleaner is no help
EASTER bazaar, Meigs Saturday at Pomeroy so I experimented and put a
Masonic ..I_emple preceding 8
Co unty Humane Society
p.m
. installation of officers. small amount of cooking oil
Friday and Saturday at th~
on a rag and rubbed it ail
Thrift Shop across from the Pot ~k re fr es hm ent s around and then rubbed with
Pomeroy Post Office. Baked fnllowing instaRation .
a rag wet with plain water
goods, ca ndies, homemade
and dried with another doth.
. Sl'EAK.,ER NAMED
soup, nowera and gift items
This seemed to improve their
COOLVILLE - The Rev. I. looks but is the oil hannful to
to be sold.
D. Swinehart, Union Town,
RACINE
Baseball Ohio, will he speaker at the slate? I do not know
Associatim meeting Friday, revival serVlCI!S at 7:30 each where I got the idea of mlng
7:30 p.m. at Racine evening at While's Chapel, the cooking oil but what is the
Elementary School. All in· Coolville. Th er~ will be approved method of cleaning
terested persons urged to . special singing each' evening slate? - KAREN.
DEAR KAREN - There is
lttend.
aid the public is invited, the actually no hann in using the
SATURDAY
pastor Rev. Roy Deeter cooking oil but it will attract
PANCAKE SUPPER reports.
Saturday at Salem Center
School sponsored by PTA.
Serving from 5 to B p.m.
Adults, $2 ; children, $1. .
BAKE SALE Saturday at
Racine Post Office sponsored
by
Racine
Baseball
Association. Collection of pop
oottles and bottle caps.
ON ·
RUTLAND Baseball
League signup day Saturday,
10 to oom at Rutland High
School gym.
SQUARE DANCE Saturday at Reds Club in Malkln, 9
p.m. to l a.m. sponsored by
VFW Stewart Johnson Post
9926. Music ·by Bernard
Connley and the Kanauga
Valley Ramblers.
,
HYMN SING 7:30 p.m.
Saturday ai'Freedom Gospel
Mission at Bald Knob. Ray
Seebaugh Family, Belpre,
will sing ; public invited.
BAR':A!N DAY rumma_ge
111le and IJalte sale Saturday 9
a.m . to 3 p.m. at Sacred
Heart Church basement,
Almeroy. Eoch item priced
Mason, W. Va .
li 10 .cents arid baked goods
Open : Mon .- Thurs. &amp; Sat.8-S:JO
rea !llnably priced.
Fnday 8-8
MARY Shrine 37, White
Jerusa lem, , ··~llMI
~IlMI
-4&gt;&lt;4~~···
Shrine of

dirt and dust and become
sticky to the touch. · It seems
washing will remove any
gloss the oil adds to tbe slate,
Adea ler in such products advised me that slate should
have a sealer. The slate could
be cleaned with soap and
water, the sealer applied and
then there will be a shine
when it is wiped off. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - Even
wh en wea ring proper
eyeglasses many of us find it
difficult to read a fever thermometer. A small magnifying glass such as often used
by stamp collectors and other
hobbyists can he a tremendous help. No more squinting
and the numbers on the thermometer are crystal clear. BE;TTY.
.
DEAR POLLY - If you
have lined winter slacks
remove the lining for sUm:
mer and find them more comfortable. Use the lining to
make shorts, slacks for little ,

.The charter was draped for . junior District 8 conference
Mrs. Myrtle Walker, a past to be held at Junction City,
president, at the Tuesday Post 376, on April 16. Items
night meeting of the for judging are to be in place
American Legion Auxiliary at 10 a.m. Registration is $1.50
of Racine Post602 held at the and the luncheon $1, , and
reservations are to be sent to
hall.
A memorial service was Mrs. Mohler by April 9. Units
held for Mrs. Walker, and it are urged to take their poppy
was decided to send a queens since there will be
memorial gift to the Depart- special recognition for them,
A letter was read . from
ment of Ohio, American
Mrs:
Florence Richards,
Legion Auxiliary. for the
Eighth
District president, ·
Marie Moore Fund.
along
wit h
r e port
Mrs. Julia Norris presided ,
acknow
ledgements
from
at the meeting which opened
distrit1
officers.
Appointed
to
with prayer by Mrs. Frances
the
nominating
committee
Roberts , chaplain, and
reports from the officers, ~ were Mrs. Leora Young, Mrs.
conununication was read Eunie Brinker and Mrs.
from the Roush family for Shirley Ables.
A report was given on tbe
flowers.
legion
birthday party attend- ·
Mrs. Bill Mohler in a letter
ed
by
approximately 50. At
, to the unit an_nounced the
the party Elmer Pickens.

girls or anything else you
would like, Also cut out the
good lining in winter ciljlts
that are worn and use the l'in&lt;
ing for making other
garments.- MARGARET.
Polly will send you one of
her " peachy" thank-you
cards, ideal for framing or
placing in your family scrapbook, if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her column. Write Polly's
Pointers in care of .this
newspaper.

Church held at the Meigs
County Infirmary.
Mrs, Sharon Folmer had
the . opening prayer. Plans
were made for the group to
go howling in April and have
a cookout in May. Appearance of tbe Gospelaires,
a quartet from Parkersburg,
was announced for April29 at
7:30p.m. ·
Mrs. Darla Hawley and
Mrs, Ida Mae Martin served
refreshments. Attending
besides those named were
Franklin Martin, Leona Marlin, Dick and Sharon Folmer,
Kathy Scarberry, Bob and
Linda Foster , Randy
Hawley, Mrs. Doris Shook,
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Jacobs,
Diana Lewis and Mike and
Sharon Wright.

REGULAR PASSENGER
TREAD RECAPS

m

Cooking Centers ·

..,,..,,..,,

992-2101

John Fultz, Mgr.

Pomeroy, 0 .

(And remember, flexibility is Important too.)
7. Treat them with the courtesy you'd extend to someone
outside tbe family. This Is a Iough one, so let's say -try! But
when you're so mad you could knock his tittle head together, it
wm't work.
(I'm reminded of llle girl who wrote, "If I were Mom's
grown-Qp friend, and she talked to me the way she does to us
kids, I wouldn't want her for a friend .." Think about ti!- And
simmer down! )
8. Level with them. Honesty is often hard, but it pays off.
Besides,llley'll know when you're playing a coo game.
9. Doo't condemn or belittle. Ridicule withers. Many Urnes
a child won't ask an Important question, fearing someone wU1
imply he is stupid.
10. Use plenty of hwnor - at the right time and place.
Laughter can Ughten heavy situations, but not If it shows lack
of unlerstandiJ18.
11. Have faith in them and yourselves, but not blind faith.
And it helps to pray a little.
12. Let them grow, even If it means taking a few risks.
Overprotective, overpoueutve parents are as damaging as
1he overpermlulve variety.
13. Be friends with them. No! pals, but friends. There's a
great difference l
·
14. And always show them you love them, verbally·as well
as by yolD' actions. This even If you don't always love the
things tbey do.

YARDMAN-

f

M tflliiiJIIMUPIIU 1171

•n TIUPl.ICMIU m.n' OOL Tuu

,,

Except Closed Saturday Midnight Til 9 A.M. Sunday

I,
I _:•~;::r.:JllDr;-1

----------·
60' OFF ":
WITH COUPON

*
Gainea
Gravy Troin

Series .

!S k ~ to e1y

sweet P
-.f--2·0-;
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OFF "I
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......_,.,.,,,."
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oWPUCIIU IJUU liCil nu.t

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1
I
1

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Bleach

Stoke· ly
.
Kidney Beans... ..

!..!'".!r'.!!~lr.~~H Stokely

l · lb.

$1

73C

VestaiAire CIRCULATOR FIREPLACE
COMPLETE WITH 2 FANS AND 4 GRILLES
FULL-SIZE
SMOKE SHELF
3/ 16" BOILERPLATE.

HIGH SMOKE DOME

SQUARE CORNERS ELIMINATE
DIAGONAL BRICK COURSES

,

CLOSE·FlTIING
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FOR CIRCULATING AIR ·

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3/ 16" BOlLERPLA TE

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INSULATION..

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COOL AIR
INLET
EASILY CONTROLLED
DAMPER HANDLE

NOW~~LY

0
'225°

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773-5554
(

MASON, W. VA.

Party
enjoyed

CBround-up
set for May

VISIT PARENTS
Mrs. Shirley Texter and
sons. Shawne and Scott' of
North Canton were weekend
guest.a of her parenta, Mr.
1/"d Mn. Alfnid White. ·

ere

M~-ti: No.

:

Natlre'a Valley
Clt'HI

I

""Will,., ... t ' ltrl
IIIlA' Tl iV'f'UCIIU 11•n &amp; ltC&amp; TWJ VG

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35 0H "l
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-----------L:J

r::::.::r.:..."'fri:lu,r;'1 KBROGII
rown &amp;
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I ..

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11

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WITH COUPON

-::.~·

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Kroger Decaf
Instant CoHee

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Banquet
p t p•
0

-· -- -----·

•

WITH COU,ON

:

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1

'

Shoulder Arm or
English Roast ........ lb .

·.~$1
.

HOllY FARMS , U.S.D.A.

INSPECUO GRADE A

HOlt Y FARM$ , U.S.D.A.

INSPECtED GRADE A

$119
.
~t·;::
.
$1

Frying Chicken
Drumsticks...

• •...~•

K

PZ
25

sgc
79c
sgc

4
2 39C
·lb

aai

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19
Fresh
Asparagus ......... .lb.

Green
Beans..:..............lb.
131 SliE WASHtNGro'N STATE .

D~ Anjou

.

HtllSHlll

Pears,
Red or Golden
,,Delicious Apples~ach

Slud414

......._,.. st..... w~tt~:M """'"'•
ft.-.. .

Kielbasa or
Smoked Sausage ......

I
I

lb.

Meat Bologna.. :. ...... lb.

••I i
WITHCOU,ON
II
.. , . _ .
I I
..,,.., ... ,_.,._
I I
leftr Crockll' I 1I
c.lle MIIH
I 1
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•••••- ••••••••••••••
20' OFF ":I 1.uf
:•orchard
Grove ":
WITH COIWON
Citrus Puncll
I

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hlftr c• .,

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II
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WITH COUPON
me. wmtCOUIION

LIMIT'

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$129

·--- ---------·
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$1oo "

1
I
.
I
1Ofl Willi !Ills co- ond lilt
I PIIrchue of ono 3 lb. bag of· I
.
I
I I
I ISPOTI.IGHT BEAN COFF.EE:

'

..,r/,!!#,iil.ft.!...""
• - • - - . " " r=1
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·------ --- -·
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1tlfftlallllft llllil Ml,

sgc
sgc
.59c

1oC

10 fORSLoa

$12 9

Ruiaer

8

California
Strawberries

FRESH

.

1
II

·

FRESH

tl~;;ro••••12
Oranges. ..
fo•

1.0 ,

Pkg;.

tllll- @
_,.•11111•_.,
,..,.....11111.......
Dfl
WITH COU,ON

PKG.

ggc

:

4

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I
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100% Pure
:~~! Ground Chv ......

$169

Beef
Rib Roast... ....... lb.
Armour
Hot Dogs .... ... 1;i.;~·

Frying
C Chicken Thighs ....~

·--------·
-------------·
:
1.,.• 10 OFF . "
1

lb.

I
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Jella
Gelatin

$139

Boneless
Boston Roll .......

U.S. GOV'T. GRADED CHOICE
lONE-IN , BEEF CHUCK

99

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10'0FF ": FrenchFnes......

I
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l-Ib.

3

l--..:l':=:t'.lar.'JJI::a.r;'1
------- .L.:J Avon daIe

' I
Sunday

and Arthu:

Paper

U.S. GOY'T_GRADED CHOICE . BEEF CHUCK ,'
SHOULDER POT ROAST

~~~\'
a.'&lt;t.
.

~~,,~,

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE ,
1" CUT , LARGE END

-2tVciFT-:-:: Margarine .... .... . Pkg1 .
WITH COUPON
1
..::.~·
1 Kroger
·
12
Kroger
Flavored
CaHee :• Sliced Ch eese............ Pk·o•.
1.

1
1

USDA
ICE

Center Blade Cut...lb .
Chuck Steak .. ..

·1

. ..,B.....,mniLII.Illll!l v

visitors of Mr. Mnd Mn-· • • • • • • • • • • ••

JacOb Jo
Reeves.

GallonS

4

I
I

lb

U.S. GOY 'T, GRADED CHOICE
BEEF CHUCK

Lowfat Milk

8l

1

I
SUNDAYVISITORS
:
Mrs. Oma Grimm and Mr 1
and Mrs. Wendell Grimm. I

M , Lla
ar1e

I
I
I

ggc

~~~~!~:~ . . . . . . ... .

•·lb.

KROGER

A layette shower was held
recently for Lori Moore by
the Ladies Auxiliary of the ·
Big Bend Citizens Radio Club
at the Mulberry Heights
meeting room.
A c;ake baked by Mrs.
Shirley Gibbs was served
with potato chips and punch.
Gifts were presented to Mrs.
Moore.
Attending were.Mrs. Gibbs
BRENDA HYSELL
and daughtersJ Mrs. Cin~y
Aeiker, Mrs. Kate White,
Mrs. Ruth Hysell, Mrs,
Leona Krautter, Mrs. Donna
Davis and daughter, Mrs.
Maxine Jordan, Mrs. Elsie
Jones, Mrs. Barbara Pratt
and daughters, Mrs. Marie
Thomas, Mrs. Bonnie Dailey,
Mrs. Mary Bacon, Mrs. Etta
Brenda Lee Hysell Will and Mrs. Marlene
celebrated her 18th birthday Wilson.
on March 22 with a party at
ber ' home, 698 Laurel St., ..
Middleport.
•
Attending· were April and
George King, Terry Gardner,
David, Mike, Lisa and Susan
Manley, Kathy and Melissa
Perrine, SheiTi, Julie, and
A Citizens Ba~d Radio
• . · !!eM¥ HyseU, and Lori Fulk.
·
round-up
is being planned by
' Sending gifts were · Roxie
the
Big
Bend
Club for May 8
Oiler, Mr. and Mrs .
the
Meigs
County
at
Lawrence Manley, Vicki ·
Fairgrounds.
·
Johnston, Debbie Lambert,
Food for the round-up wUl
Margaret Coni, Frances and
be
sold by the Meigs Band
Eddie Manley, Mr. and Mrs.
Boosters
Association. There
Carl Gardner and Kathy and
will
be
door
prizes and game
Warren Perrine.
prizes
awarded
during the
Refreslunents were served
day,
along
with
live enterand games played. A lllrge
tainment.
Wirulie-tbe-Pooh cake wus
Last weekend several
' presented to Brenda by her
carloads
of Big Bend Club
mother. She is the daughter
members
to JacksoOcl Lawrence and Rosemary ·viJie for ' a went
f.ound~up and th.is
Hysell.
weekendwillgotoBuchtel.

COUNTRY STYLI: STORE
PACKAGED

t~~;·

DF

,. ,. P¥IC1WIIIf

~~!~f~e~~on ... ~~:: $119

1

Do•.

I . , WITH COUPON

VAC PAK

~::;
MAIK£T BASKET GRADE A.A. LAIIGE EGGS ... DOZ 77 ,

I

... lfRIU.-1.M'Itll, ltJJ
MICtBIIftJCAIUII'tllllU TWI

·
oast ... ... .. ........ .lb.

3 $1
4 $1
Cons

·

69c

fRlSH PICNIC (SLICED .. l8. 7'' )

Lvs.

I
I

.•
r

?.J)
Pork
. R

4·01.

1

Alii fl( PIICIWI Of
tHI. •
fOOO

Does Not Include Hinton &amp; White Sulphu

Section one fr.ee w lth SJ.Oil
purcha s e of S•ng e r Se wing

1-lb.$1

·------ --- •• L.::J

IO'wiTH COUPON

AND
ROTARY .
~;;:;;;~ MOWERS

...... ...

1
I
1

I

COST CUTTER·COUPON

I

Heinz
Ketchup

I

For Information :
Mr. Carl Anderson
Rte . 2, Box 169
Oak Hill, Ohio 4 5656

liMIT 0 1111 COU,ONPlltFAMilY

I
1

1

(Polled Means Profit)

UIIT liE CIIIITII CGIIIIIIID 11.5UDOITIMII IIICHISE
EICLI~IIC COlTClml COIIIIIITIIIS.

"n

I

:

34 LOTS OF OUTSTANDING CAmE

Can

WITH COUPON
••........
"" Pllt&lt;IASI
m ."

1I .
1

POMEROY, OHIO

10-oz.

I

:

ROCKSPRINGS ' FAIRGROUNDS

2-lb.

---------·
s• OFF ":

I

SOUTHEASTERN POLLED
HEREFORD SALE
FRIDAY, APRill, 1977 - 7 P.M.

Swift'ning

Lori Moore : -::.~"' : Kroger Grade A
l
Folger's
: Large Eggs . . .. . ..
CoHee
entertained
E),
----------·-------·
at shower : •---15' OFF ":
Hi Nu 2%

~~~~ 5 H.P. TILlERS

PICKENS HARDWARE CO.

COST CUTIIR ·COUPON

Wl U511YI 1'* lttGtft 10 liMIT QUANnnES.
NONE SOlD TO DfAlftS.
•

•

r---------------=----

•

IATUIO"Y, ,t.rtll2 , lt171H

-

Lena Wolfe famil y dinner.
A friencil;hip mcle close&lt;l
the meeting and the group
sang "Blest Be the Tie That
Binds."

Guests were Dayton l,ol"ea ndMi s. AudreySwett
McElroy, and Mr . .and Mrs. for the dmner arrangements
Errol! Conroy,
thO!re who prepl&lt;red u.;
Reported ill by the nower ' year's program books and
and card c'O rrunittee were those who worked o~ ·tbe
Mrs. Ida Childs, Mrs, Irene
Arnuld, Mrs. Pearl Reynolds,
Mrs. Mae Roach and Mrs.
Lavinia Ebersbach . A letter

and grand llethel librarian;
Kathy Kmg, past honored
qul!en and guardian of the
Bethel; Bill Quickel, chapter
advisor of Meigs Chapter, grace, and lhe welcome tu
Order of DeMolay, and . members and gueslil was
assoc iate Bethel guardian ; given by Mrs. Grace Pra tt.
'wC:ts read from a ni e~e uf Mrs.
Rose · Ann Sebo, past guarNelle DeWeese, telling of her
dian, and Tom Edwards, past
death
at the Portsmouth Nur- ,
associate guardian.
ENJOY VISIT
sing Home in January. The
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Mayer,
their daughter and son-in· class decide&lt;l to send money
law, Mr. and Mrs. Charles to the niece for nowers to be
placed on Mrs. DeWeese's
VISIT CASTOS
Saltz, and Rick Mayer, grave at Easter.
REEDSVILLE - Visiting visited recently with Mr. and
Easter sunrise services
the 0. K. C..sto family over Mrs. Ira Zicklefoose at the were announced and these
the weekend were Mr. and Christel Manor Nursing will be followed by a
Mrs. Milford Frederick of Home, 1120 South Dunaway breakfast. Two lilies will be
Minersville, Mr. and Mrs. St., Miamisburg, 45342. They plaL'ed on the church.altar. A
Gay Fields of CooMI!e and report !bat the couple are in donation from Sidney Russell
Mr. and Mrs. H. 0. Powers oi fair health and are well was acknowledged, and Mrs.
Parkersburg. 'Mrs.)'owers is satisfied with their new Rose Reynolds reported that
Mr. Casto's only sister. On reSidence. Mrs. Zicklefoose, a small cabinet had been purFriday evening Mr. and Mrs. . ~e former Louise Reuter, chased from donation in the
Casto visited Mr. and Mrs. ruece of AI Reuter, will memory of Mrs. Louella
Clyde Adllms of Long Bot- celebrate her 78th birthday Jenkinson.
tom. They went especially to on April 17. Cards may he
Mrs. Pratt thanked the
see the Adams' newhome,
sent to her at the Nursing committees, Mrs. Eleanor
Home,

COPYIIGt4T ""' TffE ICI()G.(I CO . lfEMS ANO
I"I:ICU GOOO SUNDAY. MAICH27.
THit\1

1

)

1\ IJ&lt;JllUck dmner was held
Thursday night preceding the
meeting of the Loyal Men and
Women's Class of the Middleport Church of Christ,
George Glaze, pl&lt;Stur, gave

iA 3F'oFF---.;-~ Corn ... ·... ··· .... ····

Sharon Ann Swartz

SAViNGS

~

:1 -by Bethel Monday

By Helen Bouel

error.

l'

-Meigs Tire Center, Inc. _

·······'11

=.s=

Electronic

Casing al)d
BOc Fed. Ex . Tax

H~lp·· · · ·

·:·:
Julie Byer, daughter of Mr.
14 Commaadment.s for PareafiDc
and
Mrs. Mrs. Bob Byer,
Dear Helen :
Middleport, and Brenda
We enjoyed your recent talk at out school and wonder If
daughter of Mrs.
you'd~?llll (and your readen) a favor, Couldy~ publish.your . Chappelear,
Patty · Huffman, Rt. 4,
list of Fourteen commandments for Parents." We'd like to Pomeroy \vere initiated into
of them In our next newsletter. · - PTA Bethel 62, International
.
Order of Jop's Daughters,
Monday night.
Dear President :
Paula Eichinger, honored
Be glad to: Forthwith:'queen, presid.ed a t the
FOURTEENCOMMANDMENTSFORPARENTS
meeting during which time
I.Uaten-withanopenmind; anddon't interrupt. Even if plans for inspection on April
you moat stop what you're doing, when a chUd need to talk
II were made. A potluck dinthat's the ~e - not when it's more convenient for you.
' ner will precede tl)e inspec2. Don t lecture. You can't fill the generation gap with hot tion at 6 p.m. A practice was
alr, but friendly dl.acusaion builds fine lridges.
set for 6 p.m. Friday night at
("Guided liltening" is a great tool. When you learn to use the temple. Mrs. Donna
it well, you'll often lind your children have asked themaelves Bawnan of Belpre, will be the
into your way of thinking ... or you've llstened yourself into inspecting officer.
theirs.)
A bake sale and rummage
3. Make lllem feel important. Forget llle boary old "be sale were set for May 7 atiO
humble" Puritan ethic. InsW1ing self-confidence and selfat the ColUIJ)bia Gas Co.
esteem are the lineal. things you can do for your chUdren : a.m.
office. The Jobies will serve
When they're assured of your pride in ·them they;Ulikely live the Pomeroy Alumni
up to it.
'
Association banquet on May
Afew Ups here: Make sure your compliments are sincere
211.
and be speciflcl "You look very nice, dear," isn't nearly~
Introduced were Angie
effective as "Gee, honey, that hair-do does great things for Sisson, past honored queen
your eyes."
And pleaaed surprise is sometimes the best compliment of
all. "I was amazed at how well you bandied that (particular)
situatloo" sends a kid up ten feet tall, for he's proving himself
to you.
4. Let them argue, and if they win, say so! You needn't
always be right just because you're a parent. If my chUdren
agreed with me on everything, I'd feel I'd failed as a mother,
for I .wouldn't have taught them to think.
5. Keep in mind dl.aclp~ is to teach, not to punish. Don't
raise yolD' chlldren on the adversary principal: it isn't "them
against us" but rather "them learning !rom us."
But never forget you're in charge here. Llmi~stlng klda ,
need a final ~uthorlty - and that's the way they want it, no
matter how IIley holler.
6. Be consistent, and If you aren't, let them know why.
You'll have much better communication when they
Wlderstand parents are human, therefOI'e subject to occasional

• DishwasheiS

•$1195 :~~sappable

Helen

I Us. . .

commander, gave a tribute
to deceased members, Virgil
Roush and Myrtle Walker'
and acknowledgement of the
absence of Mrs. Mary Roush
and John Joe Shain, family
members. '
Refreslunents were served
by Mrs. Leora Young.

• Freezers
• Stereos

ANY SIZE
13" - 14" and 15"

. ·.;-· · -. julie Eyer initiated ICt:z;;,;;b;;;, J;'p,;a;;kil 7rt~;r"l

lu':'*'""'"'~~&gt;!•!•:•:;:;:::;~:•:•!•!•!•!•!•:•:•:•!•!•!•!•!•:&lt;•!•!•!•'•'•'•'•'•'•&gt;'•'•&gt;(.•'9'•W•''&lt;

Discussion led at
Friday class meet
A discussion on "The Gift
of the Spirit" was led by the
Rev. Floyd Shook at the Friday night meeting of the
Young Adult Class of the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist

'

t- The ~~~ ~~~inel! Middleport-Pomeroy, o., W~sday, March 30, 1977

F

�"

=-m

'

11- Tbe Dally Senllnei,MldcDeport.f'omeroy, 0 ., Wednelldlly, Mareh 30, 1977

Buy, Sell or T~ade Through The Sentinel ~ Want Ads

15 Wordll u( Under

c..a.

I day
I days
3~)'1

I days

1.25
1.90 •
1.~

3.7$

Eat.il wurd. uver UM:! mlniunun 15
wordrl ia 4 t'eltta per wcard p!!r lily.
Ads n.uvling ~r than t."'O!lf(,.'llin
daya will bt chllrM:i.'d 111 tl~ J du.y

nte.

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

,.....

Chiorg•

1.00
lj;O
1.10 .
3.00

.

'
Card

In llltllllUI'y,
ul Thanks wnd
Obituary: I t-ents per wurd, $3.00
minilnwn . Cash Lllltdvant't'.

MubileHome saleund Ywrd !ll:lles

Mct.'t.•pted Ohly with Ca!lh Wilh
order. 25 cent c~ for 11d!! t:a rryili Box Nwnber In Cart of The Sen-

Ml'l!

tinel .

The Publisher re5erves lbe rijlht ·
lo edit or rt'.}a1. any atb det1ned 00.
je.:Uucwl. ·T~ PubU.Sher will nu( be
responsible for mort than une lnL'tlrrt!l1 insertion.
PI~Um 99J.2154

tf YOU have a . serviCe to offer
wont to buy or sell someth ing.
oe look ing for work . . . or
whatever . , , you 'll get results
faster with a Sentinel Wont Ad.

Call 991·2156.
YARD SALE, Marth 29, 30, 3)
behind Jones boys, blue house.
Baby things , skor~s . formal s,
alt types of clothes , household
misc. Inside it weather is bod .

.

1f74 MONTE CARLO CPE.
~reen finish, green cloth tr im,
SfHrlng ond brakes. rodlo.

LARGE THREE Family Yard Sole,
Hartford, W.Va . Thursday a,nd
Friday. 10 till ? Nome brand
children's and adult cloth ing,
i nclud i ng
good
jeans .
Be&lt;hpntads, dishes, lot s o f
misc. items . Turn right ot top of
Hartford Hill first hOuse on left,
Watch .for signs. Phone (30-4)

S37f5
air, automatic, power

1972 CH EV. 112 TON
S2095
8' Fleelslde, V-8, power st..,.lng 0 nd power brakes ,
redia, good tires.
1P11 CHEVELLE "t"
4 door, automatic, radio.

Monday
Noon an &amp;tlurdlly

4P.M.
the dlly be£or t&gt; pubhclllion

SWlday
&lt;! P.M.

Fritbty afl.enlVUil

--~----

ENGLISH

SPRINGER

Spaniels

Pup5, AKC li11er and wh ite , S
weeks old, field trial bred,
Champion bloodl il)es. Call Jim
Burcher , 2A7-2206 , ar992 -S.26.

------.
--MALE ST. BERNARO, 1 year old ,

___ _

$1 SO. Phone 992·7068
.... .

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

IN L9VING Memor)' of our belov·
seven {7} years ago today .

March 30, 1970. Sodly missed
by mother, sister and brothers .

STARCRAFT, Mini-motors , 20 and

2211. Fold-downs , $1850 up , 23

fr . Trovel Star S.C .. $-4199. We

WE WISH to express our gi-otitude
and thanks to our frief\ds ,
neighbor, , relatives , and the
Rev . Steve Wilson for the many
acts of k indness, prayers, fQOCI
and flowers during the death of
our son and grandson , Ryan
Roger Roush. Roger and Christy
Roush
Mr . and Mrs . C=5.Michael
Mr. and Mrs . H
r t Roush

sell service and quality . New
and used. Camp Conley Starcroft Soles, Rt. 62 N. Pt . Pleasant.

'----·

-·-- -- ---

W
~ij==,~ -~~;~·~~ n.;,J. ~~~1'1U
-- ---- ----1976 CAMARO 305 . 2 barrel!
automat ic,
__

silver

red

with

r:~-~~~~:~~~~~-~ dvr_:: : :·

6:0Q ? Pomeroy Road , Athen.s,

Oh.
RACINE FIRE Dept . will hove a
Gun Shoot every Saturday night
6 p.m . at their building in
Boshan . Ohio.

EASTER B"-ZAAR. April I end 2.
Thrift Sllop, croft ifems , b&lt;Jic¥
sole and Vegetable soup.

MEIGS CO. HUMANE SOCIETY .
YES . WE Ha,. sheets. $2.00 lb.
Also , Anniversary Sale, Moilday, March 28th thru April-4th.
0 &amp; J House of Fobdu, 1 mile
below Middleport on St. Rt. 7 RACINE GUN Club, We have
changed our gun .shoot to FRIDAY . nights, ttarting at7 p.m .

SHOOTING MATCH ol Rutland

~ARM

-~---

ON river , 51 acres , 7 rooms
and both. Phone 992 -5908.'

FURNISHED APT. for rent . Phone
992 -3975or992-2571 . '
VERY NICE 12 x 65 mobile home in
Mason . Adults only , no pets .
Contort S&lt;Jndra, 992-5693 Mondoy thru Friday. 9 flll3 p.m. and ·

weekends ol (61&lt;) 367-71 SO.

NEWL V REMODELED housit in
p .m .
Chester. Furnished or un·
GOING OUT OF Business Sole.
furnished ; ponntled, newly
Turne-r's Grocery, Langs~ille . 25 . carpeted . Reosonob.le rent to
percent OFF. Priced marked __!_!_~htporty.Calll ~:1 ?_3~ .:._ __
Groceries , hardware and
m iner's boots. Everything must
go. Phone 7-42·9576. Sole starts
March 31 fh ru April lOth . 7 o .m.
til l 7::xJP .M .
Legion Hall, Friday evening, 7

JONES MEAT Processing. County
Rood 2-48, Li ttle Hocking off
Washington Co . Rds. 26 or 555.

Phone 161•1 667-6133.

. FOIUAL_E _

New co-Op w1ter sot .
tenen, model VC-SVI.
Only 1279.95

' 1 Good Used Poulan Chain ·

Sow.

155

Seve sso.oo

RED &amp; WHITE Beagle on Rose
Volley Hill in Minersville.
Female red eyes, nome Whitie,
Child 's pet . Phone Jerry
Grueser . 9""9-2805. R&amp;word to
any one
know i ng
the
whereabouts of this dog.
FAWN &amp; WHITE Miniature nlixed
terrier FOUND. Mole. Contact
Meigs County Humane Society
to claim , 992-26.19 .
LOST IN DarWin vic inity. Grey
Cairn terr ier. Mole, phone
992-3702 or 992-:J.-487.
-'-'-'--~-

RED IRISH SETIER, onsY(ers to Barron . Chlldr•n's pet. Robert
Eason ,
Flatwoods .
Coli
992 - 7277 . R~ard .

MEIRRI·IM.C has o~n i ng for Party

The DaiiJ Senlil8f
992-2156
PCIIIItniJ, Ohio

Phone 13().jl877-2340.
1973 DART SWINGER. 31 6
automatic,

2 door . Phone

247-27S5.

Phone992·6137.
1965 VOLKSWAGON . fair condition . $200. Phone 9B5-4256.

-

1974

~--

~MC

PICKUP .

Phone

992·3288.
NICE 1976 'BLACK Charger SE .
Loaded. Phone 992-6162.

~~;.:r~ ~~~r~~~mf j
COAL. limestone, and calcium
chloride and calcium brine tar
dust control and special mix ing
salt for fo rmers. Main Streel,
Pomeroy, Ohio o r' phone 992 -

FULLER Brush Products for sole .
Phone992·3410.
CAMPER , $600. Also , horse
trailer , $.450. Phone (614 ) 698·

3290.
STEREO, NEW AM -FM stereo
radio combination. $129.95 or
easy terms . Coli 992-3965 .

------------- -SHAKESPEARE BASS Boot 1&lt;'.

197b Mercury 20 h.p. with elec tric start . 19?6 tilt tra ile'r , plus
other extras. $1695. Phone
m -3126, C. P. Riffle,

--- ----------+--. - --

FISHER WOOO Burning stoves ond
farm lumber. PHONE Facemyer
and Salmons Lumber Co., Inc .
Rl . 7 Middleport. Ohio, (614)

992·7425.
STRAWBERRIES ' in baskets ond '
flats , now beoring; ponsies ,
cabbage, lettu ce, broccoli,
cauliflower, Brussels Sprouts ,
onions . Cleland Forms and
Greenhouse .
Geraldine
Cleland .
..
---~
SINGER GOLDEN Touch N' Sew
does it oil ! Zig· Zags , ses on
len it , automatic buuonholer,
makes designs and many other
feature$ . Just like new.
Original price $5-49.95 , Must
sell , •only $129 .95. Cosh or
terms . Co /1 992·5146.

-----

__Ph~&gt;c·J~UIIJ3!! ·~~- _

Barko LOader Model 6170
Series 608C; Franklin Model
'1308, Morbork 636 Debarker
s-n 627; Contact Dennis Smurr.

Phone 992 -2111

. 1972 KAWASAKI 175 Enduro.
Many extras. In good shape ,
$350--0C-.. be'rt·......offer. Phone.
ATTN: 'LADIES. LONG-Rille Sho~
992·3367. ---- ---~ ........
now corrying o line of Rad -------- ~--~
Heart Wintuclc Knitting ond 2 YR . OLD Reg istered Tennessee
Crocheting yarn . Free lessons
Walking more, $250. Phone
with every $5.00 purchase. 248
7•2-3150'
River View Odve. Pomeroy.
PIGS, TOP Quality, castrated,
Phone
Iron shot. wormed , $30 . Phone
ISO BALES of Alfalfo and Orchard
J~l_._
) 37_
8~63
::.1:.L
. ----Gran , $1.50 per bole; ISO
boles of gross hoy , $1.00 bole. 1976 2SOCC BULTACO Frontera,
$&amp;)0. Two bike motorcycle
Backhoe and end loader . Phone,
trailer, $7S . Call 992-3746.
·
8&lt;13-2900.

--

m -.3090.

NEW 19?6 Hoover Upright
Sweepers . Foctorv demo., only
6 avaifGble, $22.50. Cash or
terms. Pl'lone992-51-46 .

FtVE H?8 x l4 tires, like new con- ·
dition. Phone 992-5535.

INTERNATIONAL 2 pl . hllch
992 -7190.
.. mo'fl!er,
. .$250.
--- Phone
.
. ..

--- -------- ... ---- -

FOR SALE. 197-4 Hondo Efsinor 12S
Cr. Like new, $350. Phone
98S-35'17.
_____
~ __
• _.- ____ _
HAY FOR sale. Phone .992·S266.

NI I [) A

'NAltR ~IJfTlNfR 1
Let PDmon~y ..anc~nilr~c
solton I condition your
wolor •nd • Co.op wotor
softener, Model uc.xvt.

:~ow only t279.9_5 -letr

us

test

your

.FrH . .

w•ter

.

;~
lr.~~~c.~!
Phone m-2111
t '

SWEEPEr AND Sewing Mo ~ hinet
.~·
Repa ir, p,,rtJ, and Suppli...
Davis Vacuum Cltaner, 'I t mile
up G.orge's CrHk Rood off
8 ACRES, Meig1 County, 3 miles
State Rt. 7.
'
from Wilk ..vlll•. $6000. Phone •
19?3 450 HONOA . Al10 , loculi
(31W) 675,5&lt;55.
fence pasts . Phone 7-42 -2312.
FOUR BEDROOM frome holJS"'
U. ALLIS' CHALMERS tractor.
122 8utternut Pom eroy , $5 . ~ .
mowing machimts, and plows .
Call O 'Br ien Cr ow Reolty 1
Phone 99'1·72.32.
992-2720 o• 992 3 ~ .

'

'

-

IN LIGHT OF OUft

C.rpof.Lhto.-Tilt
Phone t,llko Young•! ,
m-2201orm.7630

sMITH NELSON

DECI510N·- [MOVE We

MAKE

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

THE VOTE UllllM/OUf!i.l

J

.'

1
/,

Free

'

ONE ACRE . 3 bedroom, 2 story
home, dining room , large·both,
natural gas , lqrg&amp; porch , nice
block garage , $20,000. Phone

991-S732.

TfAFORD
Virgil B. Sr., ReoHor
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 4'76'
Phont991·3325
RUTLAND - Nice older
lvme in gooo shape wllh 3
bedrooms. equipped kll·
chen. full basement, coal
furnace, double garage and
nice lot. $36,000.
JU$T LISTED - Nice old
Irick 3'bedroo'" home with ·
modern

kitchen ,

bath,

cinlng wllh fireplace, 2
fX)rches. patio and 3 car

garage with storage. All f.or
S'lS,OOO.

·

JUST LISTEO- 45 acres
of woods, good old 2
bedroom tr·aller , rural
, septic lank and
acy. $12,500.
2
DLEPORT -

R001te 3, Pl&gt;meroy,

tedroom frame home, 2

bolhs, garage oo corner
level lot. Want $12,000.
2 BUILOING LOTS - AI
Rock Springs, rural water
available . SS,OOO.
JU.ST LISTED .
4
bedroqm tr-ick home, large

dining.
living
with
fireplace . Utlllly room, lull
basement and level corner

lql, 1'12 balhs for $24,000.
MIODLEPORT - Car.
peled 4 bedroom rancli
lype home, lots of closets,
gas forced

air furnace,

clsposall and corner laf for
Cllly S18,QOO.
SITE LOCATORS
DROP IN WHERE YOU
CAN BUY WITH CONFIDENCE. G. BRUCE
AND
HELEN
L.
ASSOCIATES .-

:!

.

OLD HOME - Live In or ·
ren I, lhis 2 bedroom house
ell a large lot Is only
$4,800.00.
ACE RAGE - We have

several parcels for home ·

sites, coli today . ·
NEEDS REPAIR - We
hove a lew houses lhat
need fli!lpYOnd fixed up,
!nveslmenl polenllal , call
1oday.
IF YOU REA,I.,LY WANT
TO
SELL
YOUR
PROPERTY
CALL
lOOAY. We hove byye,..
lor larnls and newer
homes.
HENRY E. CLELANO
BROKER .
Honk Cltland Assoclltt
"2·2259, 992·2541
'85.·4112

SWAIN'S

PHOTOGRAPHY

Automatic
Transmission Service

. Realty
incorparated

No. 200 - 9 tenths of an
acre, level ground, roads
Clllhree sides, 12x60 mobil~
home plus . an olde'f
dwelling with 2 garages,
downstairs carpeted. this Is
a good lnvestm!nf, close to
mines. Price $50,000.

and ditcher. Charles R. Ho..tl ield, Bock Hoe Se-rvice ,
RutiiJnd, -Ohio. Phone 742-2008.
SEPTIC TANKS cleaned. Modern
Sanitation , 992-395.4 .

992-6306.
PIANO TUN--:ING
-c:c.-L~.a~
ne-Da
-niels . 12
years of ~ervlce . Phone

9'12·2032.

-·------·-

WILL TRIM or c'ut trees or shrubbery . Phone 949 -2545.

- .. ------------

CAR~ENTER ,

flooring , ceiling,
paneling. Phone 992 -2759.

MOBILE Home Repair , Elec ..
plumbing ond heating. Phone
HOMESITES, for sole, 1 acre and
up. Middleport , near Rvtland .

Coll992·7•81 .

992-SSSB.
HOW&lt;RY AND

-

oil elec ,. 1 acre, Middleport,

3102or I3!U) 772-3227 .

·-.
o•

2 baths. close to mine arCM .

Price $20,000.
· 20.1 ~ 28.acrn mqp.e 01!
, ~as 3 bedrooms, .l.ully
carpeted, modern kitchen,
partial basement, own gas
·well, fruit trees, Iaroe
garden spot, also 22xl4
born, ond a 1971 Skyline
12x60 mobile home. Price

w.ooo.

No. 202 - 3 acres with
12x50 mobile · homo,
beaulllul view ol tho river,
20 miles from town, would
moke
nice
summer
vocation spot. Price $7,500.
No. 203 - House

~nd

lot In

town, olum. siding ond
windows, shari w1lk lo
stores. Price $7,500,
. 104W.MIIn
I'Dmeroy
m.nH

After992~';; c.11

CONTACT1
LoiS PIUIOII
· @r•nch Manager

UTTLE
RUNT bETS
'HeME ,I'M

'
.•

,.'

OFF WrfH
1!11S

HIM 1

SEWING MACHINE 'Repaint , ser vice , oil rnokes, 992-228-4 . The
Fabric
Shop , POmeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We 1harpen Scinon .

,.

.•

of course, one

·~

expects

Riqht! I just

such
behavior

burned

4our ·

boc.k ha.. work ; d~JIT!P trvcks
ond lo· boyt for hire; will haul
fill dirt, to soil, lime1tone and
grovel. Coli Bob or Roger Jef fers , day phOne 992-7089,
night phone 992-3525 or 992-

room and entrance, kitchen, office,
basement, washroom. paneled garage with
bar, 3 baths, 8 closets, breezeway, large
covered patio, 2 wood burning fireplaces,
wall-to-wall carpet in 8 rooms and stairway
and hall, 2 porches, large front yard, fenced
backyard. ·Call 992-3986 before 7 p.m. in
evening; after 7 call 992-5640. Shown by
ap ointment only.

INSTALL EO
ReguLir 114.95

$10.95

Sq . . Yd.
Every01y- nun11!y uvero
Good cholci colors •

•

RACINE- Good 3 b&lt; j,.. nJ.ft dining rQOm, low
utilities, even a garden 1 ~'1o!. ot only 1!8,500.
CHESTER -113.acre term, eo ecr.. tllloble land, nlc:a
2 story fern) house, 7 rooms ond bath, ell hordwQOd
floors ond bll_,..,t. Barno and ofhtr oufl)ulldlngs, 2
jlOnds, • ·nice l•rlng form priced to go, IOC4It.d near.
Chtslor, aall for oppolntmont.
COOLVILLE- Nic. modern brick home oontalnlntl
throe bedroonu, dining room, living room wilfi
flroploce, fullbiiMmenl with gar~•o '•rga front porch,
natural gas hH'NI&lt;», city "'if.O~ •nd Well wetw, a
btoutlluf home wHh ~ tt: .•toly s•.; ocrn ollhd,
fruit tr. . ond she~\; ... surr001ndlng It, plonty of
garden space, good .•Oiling •ru clllie by, located In
Coolville. Ohio, prlctd at only 132.000. C.ll now.
.
- .
WE AlE SELLING PROPERTY AND NIID YOUR
HELP, LIST WITH US. WE HAVE IUYUI FOR .
VAC~NT LANQ, FAR/.' .~ND IISIDIN:rtAL
PROPERTY.
.
JIMMY DEIM IIU.LlOll

•

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

. '

..
3 .....

WINNIE

.. '

·•

•

.

: · ••

-

..

..

.~..........

:

•

•
•

most interesting questions
will be used in th is column
and wilf re ceiv8 copies of
JACOBY MODERN.)

4: 15--Little

Yesterday's Answer

20 Tabard or
Garter
21 Marna's 22 Generally
23 Iron
Curtain

country
24 Fathom
25 Groucho
spoke
many

Rascals 4.

4:3!&gt;-My Three Sons 3; Parlrldge Family 4;
Emergency One 6; Parlrldge Family 8; Flintstones
15.
5:0!&gt;-B ig Valley 3; My Three Sons 4; Brady Bunch B;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33 ; Star Trek 15.
5,3()-Adam-12 4,13 ; News 6: Family Altair B; Elec.
Co . 20,33.
6,oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Once Upon A
Class ic 20,33.
6o3!&gt;-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Grlflllh 6;
CBS News 6, 10.
7,oo-Trulh or Cons. 3: To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling
for Dollars 6; Muppet Show B; News 10; To Telllhe
Truth 13; My Three Sons 15; Almanac 20;

26 "Wilt
the - 11
28 Gertrude 29 W'1ship

Americana 33 .
7 o3!&gt;-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Ohio State LoHery 6;

30 Scope
31 Belief
36 Here
(Fr.)
37 "- Mutual

Price Is Right 6; Wild Kingdom 10; Nashville on lhe
Road 13: Dolly 15.
6,oo-Fantastlc Journey 3,4,15; Welcome Back. Kotler
6, 13; Waltons B,10; Classic Thealre 20; Masterpiece
Theatre 33.8 :3!&gt;-Whal's Happening 6.13.
9ooo-Best Sellers 3,4,15; Barney Miller 6,13; Hawaii
Flve -0 8; Classic Theolre 33; Movie " In Like Flint"
10.
9o3!&gt;-Three's Company 6,13; In The Shadow of the
General 20.
10o0G-Weslslde Medlcal6, 13: Barnaby Jones 8; News
20.
10 : 3~Woman 20.

Friend'.'

11 :{)0--News 3,.4,6,8, 10,13, 15,· MacNeil-Lehrer Repor1

33.
·11o)!&gt;-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Gregory Peck: A Living
Biography 6, 13; Kalak 8; Mary Hartman 10; ABC
News 33.
12:GO-Movle "Keeper of lhe Flame" 10; Janak! 33.
12:4!&gt;-Movle " The House Tho! Dripped Blood'' B.
1ooo-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

to work It:

'illllirul ID'il

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ®

byHennArnoldandBoblee

Unscramble these tau~ Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to !arm
tour ordinary words.

how
AXVDLBAAXR
LONGFELI,OW

OGW

I MNJ

G
G

MCNTVJJV
l!fX({TR.V

"'J

,1

CRYPTOQVOTES

WLV

I KI

,..t-------.
LIZZES

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sin gle letters.
apostrophes, the length and formatio n of the words are ail
hints. Each day the code le!le!S are different.
-

MP

MP
LG-

II

::

.

ri · :.
:

..______________. . . , .•• ··-·•••••••.••••• , •••• ft.... '.
f

1
.

1
.

DARFQE

J

II
II

t

J I

K_ -~

SOMETIME-S t::'RUNK
BY 5QU.ARE5.
Now arrange the circled letlers to
form me surprise answer, as suggealed by the above cartoon~

In_,_: "r xxxxr J" ~
.

I

THAT'S PAW'S SPECIAL

~

U~ATI

.

envelopes are enclosed. Ttte ·

MAJ.- G C 'J L N C
' ' M N Z W"
MG V C
Yeeterd•J'• Ceyptoq110le: TRUE CONCENTRATION: TilE
Print
ABILITY TO DO YOUR CHilD'S HOMEWORK WHILE HE IS
(Answers tomorrow)
WATCHING TElEVISION. - TERRY MC CORMICK
Jumbles:
OUEST
LAUGH
TANDEM
BANTER
C lt'T1 K1n1 Peature1 Syndlca,~. Inc:.
Yeslerday's Answer: ......_,
'"'N
....,•t'
k""'..._
, ..... tnour~ ng.,,~ a ~ul'IQ'IvUNDERONE'SHAT
, BARNEY

.: ~·• · . ;

:f -iii-HllRUTLAND
FURNITURE
. . If
ARNOLD
RUTUND f
I

DON'T UPOTAGE: ME: 1
P.&gt;ILLY ! IT'S MY'
PIC'TUQE THEY

••

./·-~
' ~ ~ ~·:·

-·

Cbe Sit. ~ 5 p.M.
.

••

~.

~.

.

Mon., Tues., Wed.
a:ootns:oo .
Thursday 8 til Noon

.• a ·

Braun 4; Search for Tomorrow 8,10.

l ,oo-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6,13; News 8:
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1'3!&gt;-Days of Our Lives 3.4, 15 ; Family Feud 6,13; As
The World Turns 8, 10.
2:GO-S20,000 Pyramid 6, 13.
2o3!&gt;-Dactors 3,4,15: One Life to Live 6, 13; Guiding
Light 6,10.
3:oo-Another World 3,4,15; All In The Family 8,10;
Anllques 20.
3o15-General Hospital 6,13.
3:3!&gt;-Match Game 8,10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
4:0G-Misler Cartoon 3; Lillie Rascals 4; Gong Show
15; New Mickey Mouse Club 6: Lucy Show B:
Sesame St. 20 ,33; Movie "The Birds &amp; the Bees" 10;
Dinah 13.

•

.,:.• ..'.....1........ .·.•• .
•. .
.
•
.
::~ FRIDAY TIL 5 ~· ~
... ..
r

lite Jacobys " care of this
newspape r. The Ja cabys wifl
answer individual questions
if stamped, self-addressed

lrr-+--+--

MACJL

•

• ·

roo

you have a question
for the eKperts ? Write "Ask

.,...+--l--1

'•

·. 1

•

min.

Ia

742-221t ..

'

a•

(2 w&lt;bl.)

ding, S7.P5 sq. yd. With
padding lnllallod Sl.95
square y1nl.
Clll742·2211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
. CARPETCONIULTANT

Will do odd to~?~ . roofing, pointing ,' gut"t Werle . Phone IJ92.

-------.141J'/.
-

'

''·

120r15Ft.

991-2535.

A Carolina reader wants to
know the correct bid with o
• A K32 9 A KJ52 t
765
after the bidding has gone one
club - pass - one diamond .
The correct bid is to double .
This is a takeout double and
asks partner to bid. You are
well prepared for a heart or
spade response.

man

Gretn, gokl, reel, blue, rust.~
Do It yourtelf, with pod-

Pomeroy .

home. 1971 11 x -45 one
bedroom mobile home. Con be
sHn at 493 Broadway Street,
Middleport , Ohi9- . Phone

new bulll·ln cabinets with bronze stove ond
refrigerator to · match, new porches ond oil new,
aluminum siding ond storm windows, for'" olr
natural gas furnace al)d drilled well, garden space.
This houM Is warm and reecly for Immediate
occupancy, come take 1 look lust S1B,900.

f1rm house ·containing 4 bedrooms, dining room,
. kitchen. with . biil.ll In opplionces, bo~tment, lllv dlnd
-well water, 2 barns, work shOP ond ofhtr billldi'lllil,
large pond stocktd with fish, ~xlmotely 23 acres
•lllloblo and 46 acres fen'" .
loclllon, call tor
appointment, price $80,000.

Lot.

Phone 992-3288.
1'170 12 x SO 2 BEDROOM mobilo

REALTY CO.

NEW LISTING- FREE GAS-Nicomodern' 1'12 story

AND

I

Author
Comedian
Conway
M Patrioljc
group
35 American
frontiers-

501 Nn.oN

Unfurnished. 'col1992-3877.

~~~~

d' -

fU:L:A:B:N:E:R::=-/'(;;:;:ii);:;yj~\'l'{ijj;J'A:;;;;rJ"::Jn~~~~:;;J;7,=;;:;;r;;n:;~~\--l3%33 avln

HI-LO SHAG

10, S0:.:2,-B
_E_D-ROO
.,..-M-M
-o-cb-:lle- ,ho_m
_o.

6'45-Mornlng Report 3.
6:5!&gt;-Gaad Morning, Trl Slate 13.
7ooo-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS
. News 6; Chuck While Reports 10.
7:05-Porky Pig 10.
7:3!&gt;-Schoolles 10.
s ,oo-Howdy Doody .6; Capt. Kangaroo B,10: Sesame
Sl. 33.
6:3!&gt;-Big Valley 6.
9:oo-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,13, 15; Mike Douglas 10.
9,3()-Cross-WIIs 3; Edge of 'Night 6; Concentration B.
lO :oo-Sanlord &amp; Son 3, 4, 15; Dinah 6; Double Dare
8,10; Mike Douglas 13.
10 ·3!&gt;-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; Price Is Righi B.10.
1U!&gt;-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15; Morning Shaw 13;
Elee. Ca. 20 .
11 : 3~Shoollor the Slars 3.4.15 : Happy Days 6,13;
Love of LlleB.lO: Sesame Sl . 20.
11:5!&gt;-CBS News B; Ms . Flxlt 10.
12 ,oo-News 3,4,6,10; Second Chan ce 13; Name That
Tune 15; Divorce Court B.
12 :3!&gt;-Lovers &amp; Friends 3,15; Ryan's Hope 13,6; Bob

river
26 Foxy
· Z7 Of Arabs
and Jews
(abbr.)
28 Actor
Whibnan,
to pals
Z9 Jeanne

...

CARPOING

all aluminum Anderson house
trailer. Three rooms , both with
shower1 carpeted thru out .
Nice and dean inside ond new
point job outside. New fur ·
nlture and drapes. Ideal for
man and wif•. on construction ,
or for summer camping. Can be
seen AT Aaron Kelton 's,
Welchtown Rood, Pomeroy,
Ohio.

6 :Jo--os u Overview 4; News 6; Sunrise Semester 8;
Urban League 10.

25 English

book!

Ohio, Bee supplies and · equip·
ment . Phone (614) 378-635?.

FOR SALE · due lo Ill health 28 h .

This time crime did not pay
at all. West was one of those
people from Missouri . He
decided not to believe South's
three spade bid and led a
spade up to his partner 's ace.
Back carne the suit and South
had paid a 100-point fine for
speeding.

24 Coco-

crumb4

5232.

SAVE ON

Compul$1on
.0 Done in
41 John or
Walter
DOWN
I Stitch
2 Famed ski
resort
3 Alan Ladd
role
4 Part of a

a

EXCAVATING. dozer. loader oncl

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

6 :00--Sunrise

~

core

PIN!

382S.

ACROSS
I Low-toned
5 Cap
10 Noted
netanan
11 Stringent
1% Loft or
garage
·stove
(2 w&lt;bl.)
11 Coffee
break hour
15 Deface
16 Wooden

5 Beverages
I Tanguay or
17 Opposite of Bartok
WSW
7 Captured
11 Gives
again
Hennit
thwnbs up
19 Outfit
9 Cylindrical
zo Suffix for 11 Be cold
Gotham
13 Ham It up
%1 -notre
%2 French
river

RDU,.i~

•'

REMODELING . Plumbjng , heating
ond all types of general repair .
Work guaranteed 20 years ex perience . Phone 99'.2-2409.

HAPPfNW
\0

Hf&gt;.NDS
MD1\1 WI'l.L
FI~ ISH HIM

FRACTURE

Sweepers , too1ters , Iron• . oil
small oppUonces . Lawn mower.
nell I to State Highway Ga·rage
on Route 7. Phone (6U) 985 -

NOT~INb

6AR~

~NblD

HOPE

J"CK'S BEE SUPPLIES , Reed.,Uie,

~~~~~~~;2Hf"~~~~~~~2 atory
country
home,
~onlalnlng7
rooms ond 1'12Nice
baths,
mostly
carpeted.
Kltchon
hos all

No. "' - 1.3 acres with
24x60 double wide 4 BR and

'

'

I

I'Ll. SWANt&lt;.E.
HIM WITH MI.{

\\JI1~ 1\IAT

ELWOOQ BOWERS REP... IR -

EXCAVATING, Backhoes , Dozer ,
trencher , Low Boy, dump truck,
rrucks , septic systems . Bill
Pull ins . Phone 992-2478 dgy or
night.
,.

THURSDAY, MARCH 31, 1m
Semester 10.
6o15-Farm Reporl13 .
6'2!&gt;-Not For Women Only 13.

wlth one ace misslng.

~euM-otd'
'BORN LOSER

BRADFORD, Auct ioneer, Com plete Service. Phone 949·2-4B7
.o r 949-2000. Racine , Ohio, (rift
Bradford.

69B-7331.

992-

SMALL farm far sale, 10% down,
owner financed . Monroe County , W. \/a. Phone (30-4) 772·

E• ·

coveting , septic systems ,
dorer, backhoe , dump truck ,
limestone, gro~el , blacktop
paving, Rt , 143. Phone 1 (b14 )

-NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 baths,
dose to Rurlond . Phone
7481.

!A"RTIN

1:1!&gt;-News 13.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
38 Evoke

3-16-1 mo.

742-23&lt;8 .

Sou&amp;b

1•
3•
IN. T.
6•

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
It has been said many times
that crime doesn't pay . We
stand by that adage, but must
point out that a little rnis• 11 11 1• _ T H ,... ., .... D - 0 R D
direction may succeed when
..
.,
•
.... v
"
, _ _ _ _ _,.straightforward bidding
. . . . . . . . . . . . .1111111111
won't.
JUST A TUMOR.. HCIIHING
South knew his hand was
&lt;~~ oPERATt~ w~·r
. th 1
CURE PERMANENTLY·· We 11 10 e Sam
range a1ter
QUIT
North jumped to three hearts.
MRS.
But he didn't want to go
right into Blackwood. he was
looking at lhree little spades
and wouldn't know what to do
if North showed just one ace

....-

Cheshire. Ohio
Phone 614-367-0626

WILL do roofing , co.nstruction,
, plumbing and heating . No job
too Iorge or too 5moll . Phone

East
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

I :oo-T omof'lrow 3,4.

in response. So , South decided
to try a little misdirection and
bid three spades.
North . signed oil at four
hearts , but now South went
into Blackwood and bid six

.'

CHESHIRE
ASHlAND

EXU.V"TING, dow . backhoe
Upho l stering ,
drapes
reostmable . 572 South Th ird
Ave . , Midd leport . Phone

•.

AT

Reedsville, 0 . 1'11.378-6250
J-27-1 mo.

TRAilER

·- 1.21 hundreds of
• ...o--.~1 lovely 2 BR
I

WITH OIL CHANGE
AND FILT£R

RATES

SEWING· ALTER A Tl ON S:

0 R p H •11
L I T T L .,.
•
,.

We Deliver
12.22 -4 mos .

REASONABL£

(614) 915-1155
Chester,Ohio
·
1,0-17·1 mo (Pel)

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

Ph . l6141 742-2409

GUARANTEED

PHOTOGRAPHY

. .

Located in Langsvi lie
Box28·A
Rutl•nd, Ohio •sns-

·PARTS • LABOR

North
1•
3•
4•
5t
Pass

Opening lead - 5 •

FREE WBE JOB

PROFESSIONAL

KEN GROVER

see.

.A

• K 109 B
Both vulnerable

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Southeastern Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.

Nabil Summtt Road
Rt. 1
Middleport, o.
•
992-5724
Complete Soles and
·Service and Supplies.
3-14-1 m

Aerial
Commercial
Schools
Weddings

bath,

• 612
9AKI07 5

ro

s

o.

5 bedroom home, large living room, dining

Sbout

:

s:zo.ooo.oo.

SlrT WHft:T OF mlJ?

Z El...e-N ' 1'~ ' KIDS WHA'f WILL YOU
~
TO Vt&lt;OP S5~1ND !1'-~----, ~--&lt;
1110SE ~OCKS !

ANY PilCH
ANY SIZE

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

fuel oil fUrnace. 1 acre,

must

... ! WANT YOU ,

Wesl

YGUng's Carpeting

ulillly, yard. A GOOD
BUY. ONLY $7,225.00 . .
NEW HOME - 1 acre. 3
bedrooms, utility, nice
kitchen, carpeting, ctJrport, in good location .
$30,000.00.
NEW FURNACE - F.A.

you

tJ9752
• 63
SOUTH

AUEYOOP

IWIIIIIII
SIDIIIC-SGfflTI .

Route2
Pomeroy, Ohio 4576'
Free Estimates Ph. m -711t
3·11·1 mo. pd.

Estim1tes

• B3

Superior
SteCim Extraction

POMEROY, 0.

this

111fW11&amp; IIIIa

HP\ACU!IT
~~~-·­
llliiDOlls

General Contrading

"Tile Originators
Nqt Tho Imitators"
2-23-1 mo.

modern kllthen, carpellng,
panelling. really neat.
$16,500.00.
NEW KITCHEN - · The
kllchen In lhls 12 room
home Is unbelleYeable,
formal dining, large living,

,_

EAST
• A QB7
• 61
t 10 8 6 I 3
• 52

WEST
• K J 95

·'

. N'EW LISTING- Soulhern
style home, excellenl
la;:atlon In Pomeroy, very
nice kllchen, living room,
cining room, 2bajhs, ullllly
and basement. Plus two
rental
apls.
ONLY
. $24,000.00.
NEW LISTING
4
kitchen,

,..........

-

30

tKQ
.AQJ71

'"llihtiotl Stnicts

DAVID BRICKL£S

No Sunday Calls Please
3$11$1 mo.

IN

I:Edrooms,

NORTH (O J.
• to 3
• QJ 9 2

" Norwood" 8; Mary Hartman 10.

11:.so-Movie

12:GO-J anakl 33.
12 :1!&gt;-Movle " ll's Your Move" 10.
12: 4!&gt;-Mystery af the Week 6, 13.

Spade bid doesn't sell

MOTORS, INC.
,.,.

Kitchen Cablnels, Roofing,
Concreto
Potlos,
Sldewolks,
New
Construction
1
Remodeling.

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860

6. 13; News 20; Scenes fr om a Marriage 33.

10 :3!&gt;-Bobby Vinlon 4; In Search ol the Ileal Am erica
20.
11:GO-News 3,4,6, 13, 15; MacNeil-Lehrer Reporl 33:
Monly Py_lhon 's Flying Circus 20.
11 '1!&gt;-News B, 10.
11 ' 3!&gt;-Johnny Carson 3.4.1S: Rookies 6, 13; ABC News
33.

I

h. ttl-2174

2-23-1 mo.

BisseU Siding Co.

8, 10; Great Performances 33; Soundstage 20 .

lO :OG-Kingslono Conlldentla l 3,15; Char lie's Angels

BRIDGE

{._~M )

E~T EEMED COLLEAGUE AYLWARD'5

..-s.iiilllf"""'......rJ

'

Vinyl and aluminum
sidi·ng; storm windows and insulation.
Call Professionals

9:oo- 3 Girls 3· 3,15; Baretta 6.13; Movie " Ch isum"

.....
. ".

Installation, samples
brought to your home
with no charge.

Phone 992-5833.

·-·---- -----------

....
~~(~'! ~r~~~~~r.
.ail;

--

Phone

------·

w-.
----- -·-- --- ___ ,_
USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT.

~

98S -3867.

1%8 CHEVELLE 396, -4 speed,
$150. Phon•992-S301.

on 1 new
Hotp9int Refrioerttor.
1 Goad Used McCullough
Chain saw ••••• ••••• •• St5
1 Good used 40" Hotpoint
Rant•••• •••••••••!•• $100
Now in sfock, compete line
of bulk garden ueds l!nd
onion sets.

Pion
Supervi so rs
and
Demonstrators in your orvo .
Highest . C9.m min ion ,
no ElE~TROlUX - -SWEEPERS. ~ -c~;;;. .
· det i ~a:ry · or ·; coHect i n.'g . · · ·pletety rebUilt ; o!l artochr'nehts. ,
·only $35 cosh or terms . ·call .
Demonstrate- top ! quality toys
ond gifts. Call cOIIe&lt;t to Ann
991·SI•6.
.
---~'
Baxter (319) 556-8881 or wr ite
YAMAHA: HARLEY·D"VIDSON: &amp;
MERRI·MAC, 801 Jackson,
CAN ·AM , MOTORCYCLES .
Dubuque , lowo52001 .
· COiflplefe Soles and Fontasfic
~osy FULL or porttime employ Service! t10urs. M, f . T, 9·6:
W-F, 9-7; Sot . 9-5; "Tht Motor·
ment se!Ung hondcrahed silv•r
C'fde People of Southeastern
jewelry. hrq., coli, iod• and
mother af pe&lt;Jrl. Contact (304)
Ohio." AthenS Sport Cycles,
INc. 20 W. $1imsan Ave .,
_xs·•I!:JSor 7S.3812.
Athens , Ohio. Phone (61-4 )
\
.
.
S'l2·1692.

\ · WANTED

lil' 11u .

________
-

fireplace .

S ROOMS and both in Miners'vilfe.

Good

3691.
3 AND -4 RM. lurnished gnd un furnished opts . Phon• 992 - APPLES. FITZPATRICK ORCHARD,
STATE ROUTE 689. PHONE
__.::.:.::..:.:..
5•3&lt;.
. _WI~~~~~L.f:_(61C) ~J~~e_s ,.

COUNTRY Mobile Home. Parle , Rr .
33 . ten miles north of Pomeroy .
Lorge lots with concrete patios ,
sidewalks , runners and oft
street porking. Phone 992-7-4711.

r oom,

1972 FORO ECONOLINE 100 Von.

1972 DODGE Dart, .318 ~tngine
automatic, I owner, 50,000
miles , good condition, $1300.
Phone 7-42-2-4-46.

·----·- ~---

(614) S93-86SS, hours, 9,00 t;ll

•

smoke 8; Nova 20,33; Good Ti m e! 10 .
S:Jo-L oves M e, Loves Me Not 10. ~

• -q'

.Free Estimates

3 BEDROOM HOUSE for sale near 7 ROOM , HOUSE. new carpet ,
roof. insulotion owner financEastern High School. Full base ed. Co11'992-745•.
ment. 2 cor garage. family

19?-4 PLYMOUTH DUSTER or w ill
toke on o'lder cor oo trade of if.
Phone992·?797.

Rick ot 130.) 675 -3375 before 6
. _P · ~ -- ~~od ~~~~i_fi_?_~: ~u~t.. s~i~ .

96S-3839.

NOTICE , Pratt's Meat Mkt . &lt;;ORN or Soybean ground , in
Rut lond or Middleport area , 5
(Pleasanton Meat Proc~tn i ng , .
acres ond up. Ph_o~-~---2 ~~ .
Inc.) Custom slaughtering, and
processing. Retail , wholesale .
No oppoinment neceuary,. Coil

HOUSE, 6 ROOMS, and bath, 6
and three-fourth ocres inside
city limits . New siding ond
storm windows , .3 acrth fenced
for smoll posture. $1 8,500.
Phone 992-7352 .

6
ocre s. garden spot, some
posture, firewood with wood . .
burning stove , fuel oil heat,
COMMERCIAL BRICK BUILDING in ·
outbuildings 2 bedroom house.
downtown Pomeroy , Ohio .
near hospital and
town.
Presently rented wfth Income
$19,500. Phone992-5947 ,
over SSOOO per year . Two ren tals downsta irs and one
3 BEDROOMS home. all elec., I
upstairs. Has unfinsihed aport·
both , utility room by kitchen .
ment upstairs . Entire upstairs
115 x liS lot, I car garage in
can easily be mode lnto 3 . Rutland, ,Phone 742 -2$69.
apartments . W-air condition
upstairs . 3 separate water , gas
and electric meters . Con be
financed lOOpercent Ia reliable
port.,- . Contact Paul Simon or
Guido Girolomi to secure an
appointment. , Priced upon in spection ~f .P~a_p!r_f_v on!Y·

1974 MUSTANG II, Mac.h I. Aslc for

1974 OLDS CUTLASS Supreme,
very good condition . Phone
WANTED TO rent with possible
Option to buy: SO to 200 acres
secluded land, 5ome tillable
with jnhabitable house. Colum·
biiJ , Scipio, Bedford , or Rutland
Townships .
Write
Tony
Russego, 1331 Meadow Rood.
Golumbus. Ohio 43212.

__

_M~di!_PO~t_: ~h~~'! ~__?~5~:_-

Qvod rotrock .
1975 25ft . CAVELCAOE trailer . ai r
condilioned and several other
fUdros in good condition . Coli
after 6 p.m. ~..~~-4_:__ _____ _

_,_

2 STORY 4 Bedrm. brick home in

-- - - -197S JEEP &lt;;HEROKEE. p.b.. ps.
ed son and brother, Olan E.
Goodwin who pas.sed away

R001te 3, I'Dmoror, 0.

1

- -Phone
- 992·2789.

367·0292.

---~---

~lay

Young's Carpeting .

NEW 3 bedroom house, built -in
lcitchen. both and 'II, Phone
7-42-2306 or contact MilO 8. Hutchison, RUtland, Ohio.
·- -- FOR SALE . Ail alec. nearly new
home in Rutland areo. Bos.ement, 3 bedrooms . attached
garage ,
$29 ,900
Phon e

Consumer Survival Kll 20; Big Green Mogozlne 33.
7' 3!&gt;-Dolly 3; $100,000 Na me That Tune 4; Malch
Game PM 6; 125,000 Pyram id 8; MacNeii .Lehrer
Reporl 20,33; The J udge 10; Break lhe ·Bank 13;
Wild Ki ngdom 15.
B:oo-Grlzz ly Adam s 3,1S; Bionic Woman 6,13; Gun -

5:GO- Big Valley 3; My Three Sons 4; Brady Bunch 8;
Mlsler Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33: Star Trek 15.
5 , 3!&gt;-Adam -12 4, 13; News ,6; Famil y Affair B; Elec .
Co. 20.33.
.
6:0G-News 3,4,6,8,10,13, 1S; Zoom 20,33.
6o3!&gt;-NBC News 3,. ,1S; Andy Grl llllh 6; C:B S News
B,10; Vgelable Soup 20 ; Lil ias Yoga &amp; You 33.
7:0G-Truth or Cons. 3; Probe oThe World Around U• 4;
Bowling lor Dollars 6; Pop Goes lhe Country 8;
News 10; To Telllhe Truth 13; My Three Sons 15:

-~-ff!~ ~ ~~~:. ____ --------

RISING STAR Kenne-l Boarding,
Indoor-Outdoor run s, groomirtg
oil breeds, dean sonifory
facilities . Cheshire . Phone (b14 )

POODLE GROOMING , reasonable
rates. Col! fo~~P-~ ·!. ~?.:.~~~-~

WEDNESOAY,MARCH 30, 1977

.

APPROXIMATELY 7 or B ocre~
w\X&gt;ded land in Roclc Springs.

HOOF HOLLOW. Buy . sell , trade
or troin hors es. A:UTH REEVfS.
trainer . Phone (614) 698-3290.

T MUST BE SURE BEFORE
.&gt;"--'~:__A_- CrT_
. _....

-'·'

'Commercia l property opprox. 1?
acres, level land, located at
Tuppers Plains on Ohio~ Route

rarw:h , 1 h baths, 1
acre, all elec. finished garage.
Fully carpeted . Five Points .
area. $.30,000. Phone 992-2928

NOTICE

WANT-AD
. ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

$1 ,000 down , cqll (30&lt;1 772·
3102 or I31WI 772-3227 .

3 BEDROOM

. ------·-.--· --- --- PORCH SALE, Soturdoy' Henry

;

•

Television log for. easy vzewzng

· - N OW GET M E T&gt;!AT
PHOTO OF JUDGI" BAARS •

.
.
-,

•

Business ·Services

7•2-2531.

882·2683.

''"
••I

w.

COUNTRY forniland wfth Secluded woods . water and good oc o;en in Monr041 County, W. Yo .

•

•

. Real Estate for Sale

7. Phone 1614) 667-631W .

Hortman's residence, Chester.

t::

L.- ., ... """'-.oa
."..uy Sentinel, Mlddleport-P9meroy, 0 ., Wednesday , March 30, 1977

WHif' AM I SLEEPING
IN A CARDBOARD BOX?
WHif' IXl I AIJJJA'15 HAVE
1'0 SUFFER LIKE THIS 7

CHAIR·· HE DON'T ALLOW
NOBODV ELSE TO SET
IN IT

0

WHO COULD

GIT OVER
THAR?

�12 - The DailY Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March 30 1977

.

.

'

VISIT ENJOYE;D
Recent visitors of Mr. and
1\!rs. Allen Ball were Mrs:
Almeda Warner of Pittsfield,
!II., and Mr. and Mrs.
Cha rl es War ne r and
dau g ht er, Mindy, of
Hastings, Nebraska.

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION
WATOf FOR
OPENING DATE

Legislators
need outside
livlihoods
CITIZENS FIRST
C OLUMBUS
Periodically, editorial
writers, political scientists
and others suggest that Ohio
needs legislators committed
to devoting their "full time'"
to legislative activities. Their
thought is that our more
complex society and government's greater involvement
demands legislators' full·
time attention.
However, this runs con·
trary to the tradition in Ohio
and most states where we
have citizen-legislatures, in

TliE
WET

look
sliiNES
IN
0

'PoH.§Jlarmt
pATENT
Brigh t, lust rous ... it's the wet look in a
now t·strap for the youngest fash ionables.
You know she 'll be getting the fit and flex·
ibility, the careful craftsmanship and grow
room she needs . .

~

FREE==
as advertised on TV
FREE w ith purchase'
of POLL PARROT SH OES

Hartley 's Shoes
MIDDLE OF UPPER BLOCK
POMEROY, OHIO
OPEN
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mon. thru Thurs.
9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Friday
Sat. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

which elected citizens devote
a large portion of their time
to the legislature, but are
expected to have other means
of livelihood as well.
l have no quarrel with those
individual legislators who
consider themselves full·
time , but the citizen·
legislature has many advalitages, and l reject the
suggestion that II all
legislators devoted full
energies to legislative activity, the efforts would be
more "professional."
By expecting legislators to
have other employment, we
may moderate the economic
necessity some might feel to
win
election .
Over·
dependence on re-election
might
flavor
some
legislators' attitudes on
issues, diminish a sense of
independence, or even make
them more subject to special·
interest pressures.
Also, with legislators
spending most of their ttme in
their home districts, going
about their normal business,
social and community activities, they are in a good
position to understand the
day-to-day concerns as a part
of t!lelr own lives. There
could be no more effective
type of representatation.
There is also a disad·
vantage in
expecting
legislators to spend excessive
time directly in legislative
activities. That may lead to a
tendency to become intrigued
with and involved in
legislative and governmental
processes themselves, thus
losing some perspective as
how the results of that
process might affect the
citizens of Ohio. Legislators
should not become part of the
governmental establishment;•
but ought to remain
representative of their home
communities .
·Advocates of the citizen ·
legislature, such as myself,
believe strongly that it is
better IQ provide accepts ble
working conditions and
professional staff assistance
to legislators, rather than
paying a full-time salary and
expecting legislators ' ex·
elusive time and attention. In
recent years this assistance
has been provided your state
legislators.
One disadvantage of the
citizen legislature system is
that it may invite a greater
degree of conflict of interest,
with legislators dependent in
part on private income. While
this is a factor to be con·
sidered, it should be noted
that regardless of a

legislator's commitment to
public service and reliance on
public compensation, con·
mcts of interest are Inherent
and unavoidable. We are all
products ol our economic and
social background, personal
experiences, ~nd community
interests, We own our homes,
pay a variety of taxes, have
business interests , have
children In schools, and so
forth.
This legitimate concern for
conflict of interest can be met
best by making these in·
terests visible to constituents.
This is why the General
Assembly several years ago
required disclosure of the
nature of economi~ interests
· and
obligations each
legislator has.

Portland plea for better phone service opposed
LAWN AND fAllO -N~
~~~ FURNITUR[ SAIL
set for summer fun-in-the-sun! Our
new outdoor furniture is here in a wide
selection of designs . •. and at
refreshing buys. Sale prices on our
complete stock of ·summer furniture.
~t

Workshop set
for members
ofOAPSE
COLUMBUS
The
Custodian · Maintenance
Department of the Ohio
Association o[ Public School
Employees (OAPSE) will
conduct a one-day workshop
for its members Saturday,
April 2, at the Columbus
Marriott Inn, 2124 S.
Hamilton, Rd., just off 1·70
East.
Department President
Ralph Everson, 33905 Lawton
Ave., Eastlake, indicates a
"full day's activities are
planned beginning with an 8-9
p.m. registration and con·
.tinent.al breakfast.
The general assembly will
get under way at 9 a.m., and
will Include remarks from ·
both OAPSE Executive
Director Larry DeCresce and
Lou Kitchen, director of ·
governmental services.
Also included during the
morning session will be a
demonstration on "Spot and
Stain
Removal"
and
"Cleaning Indoor Athletic
Area" by the Huntington
Laboratories, Inc .
The following programs
are scheduled during the
afternoon session begiming
at I :30 p.m. - Columbus Fire
Dept., "Wake Up and Get
Out"; . Columbus Medics,
('C.T.R. For Man," and
Columbus Pollee Dept ..
"Crime Prevention."

ROCKER SALE

it:~~ATOR

II
COMPACT TV
The ELLIPSE I
H1950W
Simulated grained
American Walnut
cabinet. Picture
Control. Automatic
Fine-tuning Control.
Illuminated Channel
Numbers. Provision
for cable or master
antenna connection.
VHF and UHF
Antennas. ·

REG. $549.95
1 WEEK QNLY

.
•
•
•
•

$399

95

wtf

EVG-Eiectronic Video Guard tuning System
One-knob VHF and UHF Channel Selection
100% Solid-State Chassis
POWER SENTRY Voltage Regulating System

SALE $103110

COLUMBUS (UPI ) Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Electric Co. Will ask the
Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio for a $45.5 million a
year rate increase, it was
revealed today.
, The utility serves, about
435,000 customers in a 2f&gt;.
county area of Central and
Southern Ohio.
·
The PUCO granted the
utility a $44.1 million rate
increase last August.
. If granted, the average
monthly electric billing in
Columbus would Increase by
$1.60 a month .
Columbus Public utilities
Director Robert Newlon said
the city received notice of the
intent to file the rate increase
on Wednesday.
"In view of the very high
earnings (of the utility) the
increase would seem to
unjustified," said Newlon.

.. ' . ,.f'". •

,. I

p

.•

;- ...

~·......~ ·~-- ;
. '"'""'-~~ ..

I

'[

!

REG. '44.00 LOW BACK SPRING BASE CHAIR ................................ SALE 135.00
REG. S40.00 END TABLE ...........................
SALE. S32.00
.
.
REG. sll3.00 GLIDER..••.••.••.... ~ •....•.....••....••••• ·•••.•.•..•.•••.••••••• SALE '90.00
REG. 545.00 COFFEE TABLE .................................................... SALE &gt;:l'36.00
u ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Lloyd summer furniture features steel frames with durable flbercrafl seals and backs. Lasts tor

ROLL-UP
PORCH
BLINDS

.

LAWNIOY MOWER
SPECIAL

'159

-Vinyl with Nylon Stitching

00

-19" Cut -Dependable 2-cycle engine
.
'
-Easy culling height adjustment
- Ught Weight IIMr rust housing

-6 Fl Drop
-Widths: 4, 5, 6 and

10 Ft

·-Great for hill sides

nen
XL-100

Middleport, o.
I

•

"'nle company said the in·
crease is needed to attract
the capital Investment funds
needed to provide adequate
electrical service in the
future.
"Presently there is an adequate supply of electricity but
in order to keep It this way
!lie company must commit
more dollars and continue
·building more generating
plants and equipment to
s~ply its CUJtomer's needs,"
said the firm.
Evan Williams, a ,utility
vice president, said several
new rate designs are to be
proposed to PUCO.
One, said Williams, is a
small use rate which would
only increase monthly
payments by about $1.60 at
the 600 kilowatt hour usage
level.
He said that residential
customers whose usage
exceeda 700 kilowatt hours in
any one of the summer
months would be placed on a
higher res! dental rate.

INTEREST

On Certificates
Of Depmit

RCA COLOR PORTABLE

G.E. 19" COLOR PORTABLE
. TELEVISION

Xl·100 Colortrak
1.9 inch !liag. pjcture

Reg. 5519.00

100 Per

•

SALE•4&amp;9oo

Cent

Solid . Sta~e ·

SPECIAL •39900

Meip Co. Branch

_@
The Athtns County
Savinos &amp; L01n Co .

2U Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

DRYER

' -2 Washing Cycles
-3 Water levels

-Perm. Press ·cycle
-3 Temp. Selectitms
-Heavy Duty
SPECIAL

-:-Heavy Duty

$19goo
BUY ntE PAIR

IN
l

'

Fifteen Cents

Vol. 28, No 245

~Vance

begins
.
onn meeting
'

THEY'RE GIVEN HELP - Personal Advocacy male proteges are assisted by their advocates in construction of
hotpads from wooden frames and string.

Activity
·therapy
The Personal Advocacy
program headed by Mrs.
Mary Skinner has started
activity therapy, a new
· practice here.
The program, of craft
project work, will be con·
dueled on a once-a-week
basis at tM Mental Health
Center with advocates
assisting their proteges. Mrs.
Skinner said emphasis will be
on "learning to do by doing "
geared toward developing
self-help skills. She stressed
that the weekly meetings are
not a substitute for the
proposed sheltered workShop
ACTIVITY THERAPY - Colorful yarn scottleS on burlap Ill be made Into wall hangings
for adults
are made by women proteges of the Personal Advocacy program with SO!I)e assistance from
Most of the materials being
the advocates.
·
·
used in the craft projects
•'
. have been donated. The
make
such
things as burlap men meet from 2 to 3 p.m. to nameplates, wastebaskets,
women will meet every
and
floral
wall
hangings. The · make marble an imals, and hotpads.
Wednesday from 1to 2p.m. to

By United l'rellsblternatlooal '
WASIDNGTON - ACTION ON PRESIDENT Carter's
proposed $50 per porion~ rebate likely will be delayed until
after Congre11' Easter recess because of a lack of interest
among Its "supporters," many of !'hOm are angry their states
lost water projects.
While no one.Ia saying something as important.as a tax bill
should be held hostage because of public works projects, it Is
clear the Carter·admlnlstratlon's project "hit list" has cooled
the party )oyalty ot aome Democra!s who might otherwise
actively "ltlpport him. Democratic leader Robert Byrd of West
Virginia said Wednesday he would not bring up the tax bill
unleu there was agreement to complete it before Congress
leaveaAprU 7-111 agreement he called unlikely.

PALM BEACH, FLA. - AIITHORITIES SAY tney 11re
balding tht per10111l papers of ltllelde victim, Geo~v de
JofiihnNchUdl, the myllerlolll friend of lee Harvey ~aid
' ·
(Continued on page 8)

By NICHOLAS DANILOFF nothing new on their side ."
BONN , West · Germany
Before his departure today
(UP! ) - A disappointed for Bonn and London, Vance
Secretary of State Cyrus called the three days of talks
Vance, rebuffed in arms "useful" and said he was
limitation talks in Moscow, looking forward to further
arrived in Bonn today for a meetings in May in Geneva
meeting with Chancellor with Soviet Foreign Minister
Helmut Schmidt.
Andrei Gromyko .
Vance
left Moscow
"Our objective is not a
virtually empty handed after simple one. " he said.
Soviet leaders flatly rejected "Reaching agreement on
two American disarmament arms control measures is
proposals.
something which cannot be
He arrived in the West achieved overnight."
German capital alll :08 a.m.
He said he hopes both sides
(5:08 EST).
will study' the current
Soviet party chief Leonid proposais "and will hopefully
lirezhnev turned down two in the future find a way to
U.S. proposals Wednesday in move forward and reach
a dispute over a new advance agreement in this most vital
U.S. weapons systems. Van~ and important area."
said the Soviet "proposed· , Vance left Moscow with

only one relatively modest
accomplishme nt in the
negotiations- the creation of
a number of U.S.-Soviel
"follow-on" working groups
to pursue discussion of major
military and diplomatic
problems .
Van ce earlier said it
"would be a tragedy" if the
breakdown in U.S.-Soviet
strategic arms talks leads to
an acceleration of the arms
race.
In Washington, President
Carter said if he feels the
Sovietsarenotacting in good
faith and that an agreement
is unlikely '1hen I would he
forced to consider a much
mOI'e deep commitment to
th e development
and
deployment of additional
weapons ."

lr

Police warned

underway

WASHINGTON
THE FEDERAL POWER
COMMISSION Ia expected to decide today whether to
invellllgate a C(lllplalnt by Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, O.Ohio,
that the Columbia Ga~ Transmlaslon Corp. mlsm111aged its
natural gas reservea last fall. Metzenbamn conle!lds that
Columbia Gas Tranamlaslon last October sold gas from
I!IOI'agewhen the linn llhouldhave kept it for the Winter.
, Colwnbla Gu Tr811111liaslon, which supplle1 Colmnbla
Gu of Ohio, Dayton Power "Ugbt, Cincinnati Gu " Electric
Co. and Welt.Ohio Gas Co., said Its decision to market an
addltlanal :JObllllan cubic feet of gu last Oc:tober wu a proper
bullneu Judclllllllt. Metzenbaum liked the FPC to order
Columbia Trannilllon to lhow ea,_ wl)y It llhouldn 'I he
[Uliilltd from palling on to CUIIGneu l~e extra colt ol
buYbltl hlch11riced "emerg111cy" gas IAipplles over the winter
to iDib up for the gas 10ld off in October.

WASHER

general manager of the Southern Division, wbo said Portland
subscribers will be placed in a higher rate hand if the service is
gra nted . He presented statistics showing that 119 toll calls
were made from P~ nd subscribers to 985 numbers in
O.ester during !llarcfi, 1976. He said that the calls were made
by only 25.28 percent of the Portland customers with almost 75
percent making no calls to O.ester.
The additional service would mean an increase of ·$92'1
annually to The General Telephone Co. of Ohio while the costs
would be $3,173 annually, less the income per year, Shan&gt;
reported.
·
·
In questioning Sharp, Crow stressed that the additional
approxima~e $2,200 costs for General to provide the additional
service would be really a small amount compared to the
company's gross income.
Attorneys Charles Petree representing Western and
William H. Schneider, representing General, in closing
statements argued that the hearing had fa iled to prove that the
Portland subscribers depend on the extended area service for
their needs , and that the bulk of subscribers do not call Chester
numbers.
·
Paul Duffy prestded over the hearing on behalf of the
Public Utilities Commission of Ohio. Adecision will be handed
down by the commission later.

entine

aty

•

G.E. WJ,9tER &amp; DRYER SPECIAlS

INGELS FURNITURE

the extended service is granted .
Other te•timony brought out that many Portland resi&lt;\ents
thought they were Ill gel extended area service to 985 numbers
in the Chester area when it was given Ill Pomeroy and Racine
subscribers of General. Also it was noted that one of the two
top distribulllrs of bottled gas for homeowners is located in
Chester and it is necessary to call long distance to order fuel.
Harland Tracy, staff engineer of the Mid-Continental
-Telephone c;o., testified for Western. He said that during
October, 1976, 88.6 percent of the main stations (home phones )
in Portland made no long distance calls to 9~ numbers. He
reported that 170 calls, 9~ numbers to 843 numbers, were
made during that m9nth. Upon examination by Rick Crow,
Meigs County prosecutor, Tracy agreed tha t October would
not particularly he a heavy month of long distance calls for
persons engaged in farming. The costs involved if the service
were granted would be $599 in central office expense and $280
to General Telephone Co., Tracy stated.
For the General Telephone Co. , Arthur Huggler, Marion, a
staff planning engineer, testified on costs of the additional
service but up!)n questioning by Crow indicated that the
service could he implemented economically .
Also testifying for General was Joseph Sharp, Portsmouth,

Colorl'rak

'1.000 Minimum
1 Yr. Tenn

Come in today for an exciting demonstration
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106 N. 2nd Ave.

GIN RUMMY

California redwood featuring {1) custom-crafted
styling, {2) Cliniagard which provides greater'
durability, deeper, truer color and longer lasting ·,
beauty, {3) Hancock's assurance of quality and superior 5
craftsmanship.

)X)inted David
Vetter;Morgan
Portsand Victor
1,..•••••••••••••••••••••••••... mouth,

ClHI

e

wpay an addilional40 cent charge which would be involved if

Utility
•
w.a ntmg
.
•
mcrease

Reg. $128.80

Reg. $72.40

years and years. In green, bittersweet, yellow , whl1eor brown.

Stout, to the board of trustees
of the Shawnee State General
and Technical College and
also appointed Robert
Schroeder, Elyria, to the
state dental board.
Vetter, 57, is president of
the Citizens Saving and IAan
Co. and Is a director of the .
Federal H&lt;me IAan Bank of
Cincinnati.
Morgan is II' partner in
Morgan Brother Jewelers
and is a charter member of
. the Scioto County Joint
Vocational and Technical
College. ·
Schroeder has been a
dentist since 1952 and is the
6th District Representative of
the Ohio Dental Assoclaton.

Chester exchange area and the need of free telephone
communication ; the use of Chester area businesses for farm,
!Juilding and hardware supplies, all of which now involve long
distance calling, and the social closeness between people of
Portland and Chester, which, they felt, would be enhanced by
the additional service.
Humor was injected into the hearing by the testimony of
some witnesses relatmg their procedures m trytng to· avmd
Q~aking.long distance calls by calling people in the Ponleror
exchange area and havmg them relay messages to Chester
residents, an area where extended serv1ce does eXISt.
Interesting also were the proble1ns of Howard Lawrence,
l.Dng Bottom Postmaster and grocer, who has a phone from
one. company at hiS home and of another company a t h1s
busmess. He told of grocery orders beln~ phoned to his wife
who then must call hun long distance w1th the orders to he
filled . His phone bill w ~s $112.21 for February due to the
arrangement through whiCh hiS grocery customers can avo1d
long dist81lce phone charges.
.
The testimony further brought out that some residents of
the Portland area are served by the Eastern Local School
District and this involves long dlstanc'e calling. It was brought
out also that all subscnbers of The General Telephon~ Co. m
the portland area, except one, had md1ca tt&gt;rl their wllhnvness

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio.
Thursday, March 31, 1977

THREE APPOINTED
COLUMBUS (UP!) -Gov.
James Rhodes Tuesday ap-

AU new 1977

By Bob Hoeflich
&amp;ibscrlbers of The General Telephone Co. in the Portland
area want additional extended area service. Two companies
which would he involved in such extended service, General and
Western Reserve, oppose the request of the Portland telephone
subscribers.
However, despite what might have been a pretty
controversial situation, an air of congenia)ity prevailed during
a three and· one-half hour public hearing held at the Senior
Citizens Center Wednesday.
The hearing didn't really 'get off to a good start as all
parties concerned reported to the sched.uled location, Pomeroy
Village Hall. However, it soon appeared evident that the
facility was too small to acconunodate the more than 50
persons on hand. So, a new location was sought and the hearing
was moved when It was agreed that the Senior Citizens Center
would be available.
Some nine su!Jicrihers of The General Telephone Co. of
Ohio in the Portland area testlfled at the hearing stating their
reasons for wanting extended service to the "985" numbers of
the Western Reserve Co. (the Chester area ).
Witnesses Included Donna Bogard, Bruce McKelvey ,
Leatha Proffitt, Patty Triplett, Howard Lawrence, Marviene
Beegle, Slirley Johnson and David Brewer.
They told of having relatives, some of whom are Ill . in the

Meigs County -Sheriff
James J . Proffitt said today
he has asked the state fire
marshall's office to assist In
the investigation of~ fire that ·
""estro yed an unoccupied

house at about 5 a.m.
Tuesday in Chester.
Mrs. Margaret Amberger,
Chesler, awakened at5 by the
ll!lell of smoke, discovered
the house next door was

Lifeguards are wanted
The Middleport VIllage will open for th• seHson ""
Recreation Commission Sunday , May 29.
Meeting at town hall
Tuesday night began taking
Tuesday
night the com·
applications for lifeguards
and for the position of park "mission announced the
manager for the 1977 season. following price schedule for
All lile guard applicants the 1977 swim season :
Season tickets - family,
"must have their Red Cross
$211
plus $2 for each child in
Senior Uvesavlng card!. The
school,
single adult, $20,
perk manager will have the
single
student,
$15.
responslbllity for managing
Dally,
walk·ln
·rate the day·to-day operations of
Single
adult,
$1
,
single
the park, Including the pool.
,
student,
75
cents,
single
preEveryone interested in any
school,
50
cents.
of the positions is asked to
Rental of the pool for
lllop by the mayor's oHice ·In
private
parties, $40 for two
Middleport as soon as
-hours,
cost
Includes
possible and complete an
everything
.
application. The recreation
commission is hopeful that all · .. Swimming · lessons,
positions ean be filled at their regular. $7.50 (two weeks
am\j -senior
next m~lng, scheduled for course ),
lifesaving,
$10.
Tuesday, April 12. The pool
•

•

engulfed,. in flam es . The
Ch ester Fire Departmen\
responded, but the house was
destroyed. The Bill Foster
famUy had moved alit of the
house owned by Ida Van·
Meter, Portland, on Monday.
Other department activity:
Hockin g Tec h personnel
were called to Meigs County
Tuesday to assist In the in·
vestlgation of a B&amp;E of the
Wayne Turner residence in.
Rutland. Electric hand tools
and wrenches were taken.
Wayne. Blankenship, ad·
&lt;tess unknown, was arrested
Wednesday afternoon in
Tuppers Plains on a charge of
disorderly conduct and of
aiminal endangering others
after he broke a serving
window at the K&amp;G Dairy
Bar.

The department has in·
yestigated an accident in
Racine on private property in
'which Charlotte L. Wamsley,
23 years, Racine, ,was
l!ickin g from a parking place
and struck a vehicle owned
by Thorn as B. Stobart,
Racine, on the right side.
There

wa ,~;

11H1deratP

(Continued on page 8)

of sniffs that kill
HUNTINGTON , ·w. Va. Ja ck Seamonds, writing
today in the Huntington
Herald Dispatch, said a

mysterious new "drug" on

recently
received
in·
formation on a "lance"
victim In Texas .

A w&lt;man purchased the
lethal drug apparently
(Continued on page 8)

the underground markets is
making narcotics agents and
)XIIice more cautious about
\\ilat they stick their noses
into. His report:
.
This new synthetic potion is
mt intended to give the user .a

Two treated for
wreck injuries

''high" or a "low ."

Two persons were taken to
the Holzer Medical Center for
treabnent of injuries suffered
in a collision at 7:15 a.m.
WedneSday on SR 124, one
mile northwest of Racine.
The Gallla-Melgs Post
State Highway Patrol said a
vehicle driven by David A.
Hensler, 30, Rt. I, Racine,
hacked from a driveway in
front of a vehicle operated by
Florence M. Adams, 59, Rt. 2,
Racine. Mrs. Adams and a
passenger, Dorothy L.
Norris, 61, Rt. I, Racine,
were rushed to the. hospital.
Hensler was slightly injured,
but dld not require im·
mediate treabnent.
Hensler was charged with
improper backing. There was
moderate damage to both
vehicles.
Two persons were slightly
Injured in anacc;tdentat 7:20
a.m. Wednesday on US 35 in
Green Twp.
The patrol said an auto
driven by Pamela M. Alley,
19, Rodney, struck the rear of
a vehicle operated by
Richard T. Geiger , 24,
Jackoon. The Geiger vehicle
had stopped for a school bus.
Geiger and a· passenger In
the vehicle, John L. Brown,
64, JackSQn, claimed .minor
injuries but were not im·
mediately·treated . .,_uey was
li\ed to Municipal' Court for
!allure. to lllop within tbe
MSured clear distance.
Craig Venoy, 17, Rt. 3,
l'lmeroy, ~as clled to Meigs
J.uvenDe Court for .ldure to
yield rlCit ·ol way following a
traffic accident at 8 a.m.
Wedneslay on SR 7.
State trQO)leryald Venoy'a
vehicle pulled Info the path ol

It's designed to kill, and is
;~pparently capable of doing
91 quickly and quietly.
And the chemical can
easily be miStaken for other
&lt;tugs ·commonly available
undercover, according to
police.
The drug, called "lance" on
the streets, is a weapon drug
ti!aiers are using against
)»lice officers, according to
Del . Sam Leffmgwell of the
&lt;tug abuse unit; Huntington
Pblice Department.
In me case, pollee agencies
:·:·:;:::;;;;;::::::::::::::;:::;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Teachers will
meet Monday
'

to a~sess talks
"

EASI' MEIGS - Tbe
Ealllern weal Teacben
Association 1111 esDed a
meellog ol all teachers of
tbe district to dlscuu
negotiations wblch 11 ol
Mareb 30 were ill tbe lm·
passe
stage.
Tbe meetiDg wlll 'be. at I
p.m. oo Mooday at the
'I)Ippers Plabls llrebeuse.
Mrs. R. M. Joau,
president
ol
tbe
Anoclatlon, aaid
negotlatloa1 began Feb. 17
aad tbat lbe "Board aad
A81oclatlon are 1111 lar
apart 111 lle mi.jarlty oltbe
artlc:lea Ia the propo~~ll."
Also allendlllfllbe aaeetblg
wiD he Ted Bibbier, Oblo
Ediacalloa AuocfalloD VIIIServe r . .tstnlative.

:::::::::::::::::: : :: ::r ·~ ·· · :·::::::::::::::::::::::: ..,:,:,.;:;:::::i::::::

a car operated bY Hanford
Mayle, 47, Rt. I, Cottier.
There
was
moderate
damage.
Allnal accloont occurred at
10:20 a.m. on SR 7, two miles
mrth of US 35. According to
the report, a vehicle driven
]1f Robert J. Post, 61, Rt . I,
Glouster, flipped a stone Into
the windshield of a car driven
]1f Paul E. Christian, 40,
Wellston .

Jeffers missed
thief's head
intentionally
A would·be thief may he
IOOre wary, or think a second
time, before trying his next
heist.
Espeelally if .he ligures
Harold Jeffers, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, ooly happened to
miss.
J elfers reported to Sheriff
James J. Prof8tt's qllice that
Wednesday around 10:15
p.m., awakened by breaking
lf.ass, he got up to investigate .
and discovered aomoone had
lroken a pane of glass out d
the front door and a persoo
with long hair (apparently a
male) was reaching In · to
111lock the door.
Jell on oaid he grabbed Iii
lflotgun and llred through the
mar above the ildlvldaal's
head. The 111spect Oed.
No vehicle was seen ,.
heard leaving the area .
Jeffers did not think .be
wounded the pet.on. The
incident~ ~
under_ . Iii·
vestigatldlt.
. "'

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