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                  <text>12 - The DailY Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March 30 1977

.

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'

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."

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The ELLIPSE I
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Simulated grained
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Fine-tuning Control.
Illuminated Channel
Numbers. Provision
for cable or master
antenna connection.
VHF and UHF
Antennas. ·

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1 WEEK QNLY

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•
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•
•

$399

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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

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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

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G.E. 19" COLOR PORTABLE
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Pomeroy, Ohio

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'

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,

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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.
. "'

�•

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, March 31,1977

.

Assembly asks
•
review powers

UGANDAN President-for-Life ldi ',\min 'ilas the
support of Third World colleagues on a touch~ issue. AfroAsian nations blocked a proposal m the Umted Nations
Human . Rights . Commission to Investigate alleged
violations in Uganda.

Dayton utility
is subpoened
By J. R. KIMMINS
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio
Senate
Energy
Committee today voted IH to
subpoena officials of the
Dayton Power and Light Co.
to Ioree them to appear
before the committee April 13
and 14 as part of the
legislature's investigation
Into last winter 's energy
crisis.

James M. Stuart, director
of public affairs for the
utility, wrote committee
chairman
Sen .
Neal
Zimmers. D-Dayton, on
March 28 asldng Zillimers to
delay DP&amp;L's appearance
before the committee. ·
"All I have noted, our
principals thai 1f0uld be In·
I'Oived In either testimony or
appearing before
the
lUlUillttee are all pertiOil~Uy
involved durin&amp; lhe •edt ol
April 11 in plarininc t.nd
ta king pari In !'ucu~lve
Co;~mlttee MeetlD,i~,llol1.nl of
Dlroctora Meeting and
Mnual Slockholden Meed·
ling,'' wrQte St1111rt.

Zlrnmtrl IIlio told the com·
m1tt that Rldtard 11. Oun·
du, an olfitial ol the
Clncinna\1 Gu 1111&lt;1 Electric
Co., had informed the
&lt;.'OOllllit
In I Med, Z9
truer that "'--" ::.;m..ny would
al110 liite to delay Its
t]l;:.tarance before Ute panel
during Ule week after Easter.
The Senate corrunlttee did
not au!horiu lite subpOena of
OO&amp;.E offi cials, howeve~.
Tbe su bpoenas were
ettpected to be issued to ·
JWbert Frazer and Dwight
Garber, president and vice
president respectively of the
Dayton Power and Light Co.
• Alter the committee
authorized Zimmers' to issue
to subpoena, Dudley Taw,
president of the East Ohio
Gas Co. began testimony, the
first time a natural gas
distributor has appeared
before Zimmers' committee.
Earlier this week, Ziminers
praised East Ohio's handling
of the energy problems last
January and February,
noting that schools and
industries in the service area
ol that utility were not forced

By J. R. KIMMINS
members appointed by the
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The speaker and seven Senate
Ohio General Assembly members appointed by the
would have the power to president pro tern.
invalidate all rules made by
All state agencies would be
state agencies that it finds required to forward copies of
contrary to "legislative all proposed regulations to
intent" under ten!\s of a bill the joint committee, which
which was sent to the Senate could then decide to
by the House Wednesday.
recommend they be scrapped
The authority to review through a joint, concurrent
rules and regulations - an resolution.
attempt one representative
Adoption of the resolution.
said was needed to stem the which the governor cannot
••arrogance of power" veto, would invalidate the
assumed
by
state rules.
bureaucrats - would begin
"This will reassert the
Jan. 1, 1979.
supremacy of the legislature
A similar bill cleared the over the rule-making
legislature last year but was prpcess," said Rep. William
vetoed by Gov,. James A. Batchelder, R-Medina, one of
Rhodes .
31 co-&lt;&gt;ponoors of the bill
The vetoed bill would have carried on the House floor by
empowered the legislature to Rep. Thomas Gilmartin, !).
review all existing rules, as Youngstown.
well as ones yet to be drafted ,
In other legislative action,
but the Senate failed by a the Senate easily passed
single vote to override legislation to require that
Rhodes ' veto.
next year's candidates for
After passage of the bill, governor and lieutenant
the House adjourned until 1 governor run separately in
p.m. Thursday. The Senate party primaries, but run in
adjourned after its session tandem in the November
until 11 a.m. Thursday.
general election.
The rule-review process as
In June 1976, voters authoroutlined in the House bill ized tandem election of the
would start In a 1Hl1ember two top state officials with
comintttee of seven House approval of a constitutional

to close as was the case in the
rest of the state.
The lone "no" vote to Issue
the subpoena to D~&amp;L executives came from Sen. Thomas
Van Meter, R-Ash land, who
has heert a strong critic of
Zimmers and the progress of
the committee's investigation
into lhe energy crisis.
Van Meter asked If DP&amp;L
officials weren't legally required to attend their
stockholders' meeting.
Zimmers said he knew of no
such legal requirement.
The other two Republican
members of Zimmers' seven·
senator conunittee were
absent.
In addition to East Ohio,
testimony had already been
scheduled from officials of
the Columbia Gas Co. of Ohio
and West Ohio Gas Co., in
llllditloo to DP&amp;Land ffi&amp;E.
Zimmers has said that
hearings would be ftnlshed by
urly May with a final report
of the conunlttee 'a findings
and rtCOIIIIIlendations due by
the e!!\l .,; M• y .

TUSKAHOMA , Okla .
(UPI ) - Jess Love stroked
his prize rooster Cuddles, a
even-time winner now retired.
to the security of a brood
yard, and suggested his
chickens· have it a lot better
than birds bred for lhe frying
pan.
" Anybody wM raises
chickens for the sport takes
better care of them than
anyone," he said. "A sick
chicken is no good to
anyone."
They have a fighting
chance to live and fightil!g Is
what they. live for, he said.
"They're not made to fight.
It is natural with them."
Love, a truck driver, stared
intently into a rooster's eyes
as shadows from a small fleet
of 18-wheelers stretched.
across the grassy lawn at his
home in the Kiamichi
Mountain
area
of
••

of lhe Year award.
Cockfighting is legal and
popular In Oklahoma. Pits
have been estimated to
average one per county and
an operation near Disney in
northeastern Oklahoma bas a
2,600-foot air strip and more
than 50 cockhouses.
The Oklahoma Court of
Criminal Appeal sanctioned
cockfighting in 1963, ruling
chicken fights are not
prohibited ·by state laws
against cruelty to animals.
The last time the Issue
came before the legislature it
drew national publicity.
"In every country of the
world taken over by CommWiists, one of the first
lhings !hey do is outlaw
cockfighting," Rep . John
Monks told the House. "If we
ban cockfighting, then the
next thing we ban, I suppose,
will be boxing and then
football."
.,

•

' ..

•

•

.. ,
"

amendment,
but
left
implementation of the
amendnient up to the legis·
lature.
The bill passed.21h1.
Gilmartin reminded his
colleagues in the lower
chamber the idea of
legislative review of agency
rules had been before
lawmakers for the last five
years.

Gilmartin's version of the
bill would have allowed the
special conunittee to review
all 8,000 existing rules and
regulations, but a floor
amendment limited the
power to all future rules.
Rep. Arthur Brooks, !).
Cleveland, argued that
Gilmartin's version was
"usin~ a meat ax~ rather

lhe special 14-member
committee, and instead given
rule review powers to the 23
standing committees of the
Ohio House.
Gilmartin noted that giving
the review power to standing
committees would mean that
interest groups would try to
put more pressure on
committee chairmen.

than -a scapel to perform
surgery on the bureaucracy"
and said a thorough review of
all existing rules would
require more effort than
already-busy legislators
could afford.
Brooks tried to win accept·
ance of another amendment,
which was defeated 33-62,
which would have eliminated

By JOHN LESAR
CHICAGO (UP! ) - A
gangland enforcer described
by oow:ces as a key man in a
CIA-crime syndicate plot to
kill· Cuban Premier Fidel
Castro, has paid with his life
for riffs with the mob over
CIA influence in the
syndicate.
Cltarles Nicoletti, 60, of
Melrose Park, once capo of
Clticago mob hitmen, died
Wednesday -the victim of a
mob assassination.
He was pulled from his
burning car in the parking lot
of a suburban restraurant
Tuesday night after being
shot three times in the back of
the head at point-blank
range. Police said he died
without
regaining

once considered the logical
successor to the top spot in
the Clticago mob, had been
resi!O"sible lor drawing up
CIA-&lt;lrdered plans for the
assassination of Castro. They
also said he broke with the
mob following Glancana's
death because he felt the CIA
"was taking over the
operation. 11
~
The CIA-syndicate deal re·
portedly called for at least
tacit CIA cooperation in
smuggling prostitutes from
Marseilles, France, into the
United States to staff moboperated brothels 1n Las
Vegas and other cities,
sources said.
Sources said Nicoletti, who
commanded a small army of

hit men, was ordered to draw
the Castro assassination
plans In October 1963 after a
meeting of top mob leaders in
Miami.
A source involved in the
training of Cuban refugees
for the Bay of Pigs ihvasion
and . in a nwnber of CIA·
subsidized gun·running
operations said he was taken
to the Miami meeting by a
pnvate detective who served
as a runner between Miami

~

mob associates.
"! was persOnally taken
from Miami to a very large,
expansive bouse across from
Fountainbleu and underworld
figures were there discussing
the permanent retirement of

Two teachers
lose in court
me was innocent or par·
ticipating in the strike,
DeFazio said
.
A different referee found
Neloon guilty of striking but
recommended he be re·
employed without tenure,
placed on ..two years'
trobatlon and receive no pay
increase from his previous
011lary.
In a memorandum filed
with the rulilg Bacon stated
that the two teachers par·
ticpated in a trike as defined
~ state law.
DeFazio said he doesn't
think the rulings are Jn.
d!cative of how the judge will
rule on the other 30 similar
pending cases.
DeFazio said he will confer
with Cdlier and see If the
remaining cases can be
recided by submUtlng only
written briefs. In this way
~con could hand down the
decisions on the other
teachers at the same time, he
said.
DeFazio and Collier
tresented oral arguments in
the Nel~n and McKee cases.
In a related matter,
DeFazio said63 former South
Rlintteadters wftl not appeal
to the state Supreme Court to
contains only abuul ouu !l'der the school board to
calories, so he lost both pro- rehire them. The district
tein and lat. Thljt is, n.ot good oourl-ln February bad denle&lt;!
for you. He can' gairi 'it back : the request. ·
·
with exercise but he is kid·
ding himself if he thinks he
lost 30 pounds of fat. The
THE DALY SENTINEL
DEVOTED TO THE
pounds of water loss and food
INTEREST OF
waste loss will return as soon
MEIGS.MASON ARfo:Ao
as he gets hack to healthy
CHESTE R L. TANNE:HIU
EJCec. Ed.
eating habits.
ROBERT HOEFLICH
The proper way to diet and
£ilyEdU11r
Publ•~hc i.l thuly exc~pl SaturtUty
protect your muscles and
by 1'1~ Ohio V111l~y Publliltau11 Cilln·
your health is to use a well·
1111y, Ill Court St .. PUIIIJ&gt;ruy, Ohio
f~769, Bustrii!S!I Offu:t Plnm~ 992balanced diet plan that will
2156 Edlturud Phune99'l·2 157.
help you eat wisely from then
St.,;UJ1U ~:l&lt;lss I)(ISUlgt! paid at
Purn~ 1 oy. Ohio.
on. For that purpose I am
N11111111111 &lt;tdVt'J ibing l't'JW~81·
sendi9g you The Health Let· ial1\le
Waul · Grlft1th Company, Inter number 4-7, Weight Los· ~: . , Bolllllelh Cllld Galhighcr 01v.,
Tlnl'l.l Ave, New Yurk, N.Y.
ing Diet. Others who want 757
1!101 7
this safe plan to lose weight
Sub!implJun ra tes: Oellverl'tl bv
safely can send 50 cents for it l'lll'rlcl' where avalltsbl c 75 c~nUI pe'r
By Motor Route wiltll't l 'Mrrier
with a long, stamped, self· 1o011n•k
rv 1~'1" not it\'&lt;lilabl~. One mouth
addressed envelope for mail· j;l ~. n~· 1114lll Ill Oiriu .I:IIHJ w Va.:
, ~' l'm , t!l iiO; Silt mor1lhll,
mg. Write to me In care of UiJt·
U L~fl :
Thit'l' llHJnthll, 17 .00:
this newspaper, P.O. Box J ~ lstiiiWrt l $:lti.dJ) }'('ijl': SiJC mt)nths
1551, ·Radio City Station, New fl .l ~U : 'l ljf.l't' 111.,11111 .~. $7 .50,
~~~ U~n1' 1J&gt;Ilu1 ~)! ~~ I' 1111 Judt•s Suuday
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Tuu~.~ !:t .. !llit!l

ffiONI'ON - Two fired
South Poirt teachers have
l.a Slits in Lawrence County
Common Pleas Court to
regalh· their jobs, but the
wses will be appealed, the
pair's lawyer said Wed·
nesday .
Approximately 30 other
former South Point teachers
have similar suits to be
decided, according to the
lawyer, John DeFazio of
Youngstown.
Visiting Jlllge John Bacon
from Meigs County ruled that
lhe South Point Board of
Education legally fired Jack
Nelson and Majorie McKee,
who participated In the
teachers' strike in Spring
l975, acconling to records in
Ute Clerk of Courts office.
A referee on the teachers'
trike had recommended that
Miss McKee be reinstated
with lull back pay because

Burt Reynolds' diet flap
for part of his weight loss.
. On the days wiij10ut dinner
he must have eaten less than.
250 calories. On the days with
dinner he ate 1000 to 1200
calories. So he must have had
an average daily calorie in·
take of 675 calories. That
would mean he must not have
had a daily calorie deficit of
more than 2200 calories equivalent to only tw&lt;rthtrdr.
of a pound of body fat a day.
That is only 14 pounds of body
fat in three weeks- not 30.
Weight In pounds and fat
1081 are not the same thing.
The rest ol Burt's weight loss
then musl have been water
and food waste In the
digestive system - but that
was most likely only seven
pounda at the most making a
total of 21 pounds. What was
the other nine pounds' Burt's
mW!Cles. He lost part of that
manly torso as we.ll as blul&gt;ber. l\ poll!!d of le~ musc)es

who dpparOI)tly submitted Mexico, where he had holed
them to other mob leaders up to avoid testifying in a
probe of CIA-mob involand a CIA contact.
Nicoletti broke with tbe vements.
A federal investigator and
mob following Giancana's
1975 murder. Associates said long-time observer of mob
he believed the CIA1 had activities said thete had been
influenced the decision to some "talk in the streets" of
order Giancana "hit" shortly Nicoletti 's concern about
after he returned from CIAillob ties.

...
...
••

They'll Do It Every Time

...

A~DWHAT

and Giancana 's Louisiana

consciousness.
Sources said Nicoletti, one·
lime right-ltand man to slain
mob boss Sam Giancana and

Castro and seeking ideas on
how to carry it out," he said,
noting it was likely Nicoletti
got the assignment.
He also said he learned In
1964 that French girls from
Marse illes were being
"hustled into Las Vegas."
A one-time associate of
Nicoletti said he had drafted
several proposals for
Castro's assassination , and
presented them to Giancana,

WAS IT TI&lt;AT

HIM'? GIVE A
~OOKY .. ·

student plea

·.

,,
.,

to graduate
COLUMBUS (UP!) Franklin County Common
Pleas Court Judge G.W. Fais
Wednesday heard oral
arguments in the case of
Kimberly Clark, 15, whom
the Hamilton Township
Boars! of Education ha s
refused permission to par·
ticipate in graduation
ceremonies.
The Boanl of Education
refused to allow the girl to
participate in graduation
ceremonies although she has
met
all
academic
requirements needed for a
graduating senior.
Miss Clark did four years of
work in three years and the
Board of Education said she
could pick up her diploma in
the principal's office but
could not take part in
graduation ceremonies
because she has not he~n an
active member of lhe senior
class.
The suit was filed by the
girl's mother asking thai she
be allowed this "once in a
lifetime honor."
Fats sel April 15 as the
deadline for filing written
briefs in the case.

MR. FLUGG

"

0

'

..'
••

"'ao)(
"""""'tea,
"'

Gl..~ Wli..KIN60N 1

~N DIEGO, (:AUF.

lead in tourney

by Jon Peteraon

~RE WE'LL S.~AAE. ...ILL TA~
"THE ?EANl,lTS. ANO YOU ·CAN
HAVE n\E ·.~eL-1,..$,
.

tour and lhe third tournament
victory of hls career.
However, he is firth In "
earnings this year with '
$26,140 In 12 tournaments.
After two rounds he had a
score or 2,915.
Earl Anthony, Tacoma, "
Wash., the PBA Player of the ••
Year and leading mooey
winer the last three seasons,
was in second place with "
2,768. Pete McCordlc, "
Houston, was third with 2.702.
Mark IWth, Staten Island, :
N.Y., wit!i 2,674, and Dave '
GUes, Miami, with 2,670, 11
rounded out the top llve. !Wth "
Is Ute tour's leading mooey
winner so far ·this year with ~
$42,580.
.
Holman, 22, said his six
games Wednesday night were ~
"iJ'obably lhe best I've e~r '
.bowled, since . joining _the. •
PBA." He averaged 243 on '
games of 237, 225, 235, 227, 299 •
and 238 lor a six"i!ame block •
of 1,461.
"I'm really pumped up for
this touranment. I'rri not ·
bowling the next two stope on •
the tour so this is my last
chance to make aome money
on the winter tour before the :
Firestone Tournament of
Champions . My
concentration has never been '
0

better .

11

1

. ~
NEA. Inc.

By Greg Bailey
RACINE - The Southern
Tornados went to extra in·
nings Tuesday night before
taking their season opener at

speaker for
cage banquet

Gleason and a sinble by DH
Chuck Kreitz.
But in the fifth inning,
Miller pitchers got wild as
they issued five walks,
· followed · by Scott Wolfe's
'
double to allow the visitors to
plate four runs for a 4-2 lead.
In the sixth, it looked like
Southern might put the game
away as they got two more
runs on a single by Richard
Teaford, walks to Greg
Cundiff and Doug Warden,
and a single by Mike HudBy MORLEY MYERS
other two. Japan succumbd 0- dleston. Miller got one run in
BIRMINGHAM , Eng . 3 to the Chinese in the their half of the sixth to
(UP!) - "Friendship first, semifinals, and then Chang narrow the score to 11-3.
competition second," said the Li , losing finalist in 1975, and
The bottom of the seventh
Chinese table tennis players, Chang Te-ying completed the was a i near disaster for
and then promptly won both demolition in Wednesdays· Southern as they allowed the
the men's and women's world final against South Koreas hosts to tie the score. Dave
team finals Wednesday Lee Ailesa and Hung Hyun- Riley led off with a triple, and
without dropping a rubber. sock.
then two walks and two costly
The South Korean girls,
In the second division, errors sent the game into
who defeated China in the American Danny Seerniller extra innings. Miller still had
1973 Corbillon Cup final and was matching Liang on a the bases loaded with only
were edged 3-2 In the 1975 smaller scale.
one out, but Jeff Ferguson hit
rematch, were brushed aside
The 22-year-&lt;lld U.S. cham· a chopper to the mound and
3-0.
pion from Pittsburgh, Pa., Southern's Cundiff went
Japan, which had sailed met 26 opponents and scored home for the force out,
serenely through the men 's as many victories. More foliowed by catcher Steve
Swaythling Cup group importantly, Seemiller's Hendricks' relay back to
matches, beating 1973 three vital wms against third for a neat double play!
champion Sweden enroute, Austria Wednesday earned
In the top of the eighth
crashed 0-5 against the the Americans a 5-4 victory in Southern nailed the coffin as
superb Chinese trio of Liang the playoffs and promotion to they socked six str~ight hits
Ke-liang, Kuo Yao-hua and the first division for the first before an out was made.
Huang Liang.
time in 20 years.
Kelly Winebrenner then
It was almost too one-sided
"It's a beautiful dream, a cracked a double and six runs
to he ettciting.
. beautiful dream," said had scored. Miller got two
The Chinese had trained Seemiller, who was on the runs in their turn at hat, but it
·rour hours daily for three U.S. team which fell at the wasn't enough .
months before coming to promotion barrier in the 1973
Greg Cundiff picked up the
Birmingham to defend the and 1975 championships.
Win in relief or John Sayre.
titles they won in Calcutta
Seemiller's 18-year-\lld Together they fanned nine,
two years ago.
brother Rick and Californian walked only two, and gave up
The preparation paid off Ray Guillen from Hollywood nine hits. Miller pitdters
handsomely. The women's picked up the other wins to yielded twelve hits, fanned
team won six of its eight give the Americans a shot at nin e, and walked ten.
group matches 3-1!, dropping China's crown in two years' Burgess took the loss.
just one game apiece In the ·time.
Southern was · led by
Winebrenner ·and Wolfe with
:~~;:;::~;~::::~=~~;:r.~~:~~**~~~~1.1:~~f:~l~~J~~~l~~l~~~~~;~~~l~tf~;~~~~;~~ll;~~1~~:m~~;f:~~~1f:l% a double and single each
Miller 12-8.
· Miller took a 2-0 lead in the
bottom of the third on singles
by Dave Riley and Jim Cook,
followed by a walk to Mark

Korea and Japan

tr·T~d~;·~~
....."'
:;;;;~

.. ·

I

!\ \ ~ !~~~~~~~~u~:Jgw.oRi;J~~

d
@~:~~~a~dsi~:~~dr~~:h::::;~
Sport Par· e :;:;::
'•'•'·'·

RACINE- The Southern
Tornado Basketball
banquet will be held at the
high school at i:30 p.m.
Saturday with speaker to
be Charles McAfee.
.
McAfee retired In 1976
alter 35 years ol coaching,
22 years of which were at
Athens High School and 13
at Ames·Bern. His teams
won 571 games.
Those wishing to attend
but have no affiliation with
the team through their
daughters or sons are

asked to contribute $1 a
per&amp;on for the dinner.
OESTO MEET
RACINE - Racine Chapter
134, Order of Eastern Star,
will meet ui regular session
at 8 p.m. Monday at the
Masonic Temple. There w1ll
be practice for initiation and
all dues must be paid on this
date.

The
final
six-came
qualifying bloci 'will be held •
this afternoon before !he 2461111111 field II cut to the top M :
for eight game1 of maid! play '
tonight and 18 game• ol
match play llll Frldly., The '
top live bawlers advance to
lhe nationally televiled llnall
on Saturday with a flrlll ~ ·
of U4,000 at lllake.
. '

experiments.
Tim Vogler, a B-3, 232pound sophomore from
Covington, will be given a
at winning the starting
.,
ce er spot, Hayes wanting to
ad size to the position . Mark
Lang IB-1, 215), last year's
starling center, will probably
be moved to offensive guard.
In another position shift
aimed
at bolstering the offenCoach c L. !Johnny 1 Ecker's Rio on third broke tor home a second tune and sive line, freshman Ken Fritz
Gra nd e College Redmen won a was tagged out in a rundown for the third of Ironton has been shifted
·
doubleheader on Evans Field Wednesday out
As this was happening, the runner who from the defense. A 6-3, 232afternoon over visiting Urbana in the Mid·
pounder, Fritz may he used
Ohio Conference opener for both teams, and was on second had broken for third. He was either at guard or tackle
m the doing pulled an unheard of easily tagged out at third for the "fourth"
Hayes must lind another
out
"quadruple play."
linebacker
to team with
"It 's really one for the books," Ecker
"Jt a ll happened so htst," said F.cker, "no
sophomore
se
nsation Tom
one realized what happen ed until we started clarmed.
Cousineau,
the
defen si ve
Brett Wilson's three-run homer, a 365-foot
counting the outs as we walked off the
player
of
tl1e
Orange
Bowl
shot over the right centerfield fence. gave
fie!~ . "
game,
and
a
defensive
end
Rio a 9-7 come-from-behind victory in the
Here was the situation:
and
a
defensive
tackle
to
In the second game of the twinbill, Rio second contest. Rio had won the opener, 9·1.
replace
.
graduated
all·
In the first ga me, Dave Huesman went all
trailed HJ in the top of the fourth inning.
the
way fo r Rio and was credited with the Americans Bob Brudzinski
Urbana had the sacks loaded with nobody
and Nick. Buonamici.
win
out.
The secondary returns
J1m Bennett started the second game. He
. 'Phen one of the most unusu&lt;Jl plays m t he
intact
fr om last year. headed
was relieved by Stan Marvin. Wes Hairston
lon g history of baseball developed.
by
Ray
Griffin, but come thiS
The Urbana batter flied out to .right for th e finished the game and was credited wrth the
fall,
with
the likes of
first out. The Rio outfielder fired the ba ll Vtctory.
incoming
recruits
Todd Bell
The twin win gave Rio a 1·3 season mark
home to prevent the runner on third from
of
Middletown
and
Ray Ellis
scoring. The runner o'n third half-way home, and 2-0 con ference reeord.
of Canton McKinley, some ·
Saturda y, R10 plays MI. Vernon Nazarene
went hack to third. The runner on first was
at
Mt Vernon in a MOC twinbill, startuig at jobs may be up for grabs.
ca ught off the bag lor the second out
following a rundown . Meanwhile. the runner I p.m.

Rio has quadruple
play in double win

By GENE CADDES
UP! Sports Writer
COLUMBliS (UPI )
Finding a replacement for
fullback Pete Johnson 1s at
the top of Ohio State coach
Woody Hayes' priority llst
this spring.
Hayes greeted 41l~tte rmen
Saturday , mcl uqmg 16
starters, lor the first of .20
workouts, concludmg With
the annual spring game Ma y
7.
Of the lettermen, only tight
end Jimmy Moore, who
underwent his second knee
operation in just over a year

.
.
Jan. 4, Will be mlssmg.
Hay~ s has 16 sta rt ers
returmng from .the lea ~
wh1ch whipped Colorado 111
the Orange Bowl, e1ght on
both offense and defense, but
the veteran coach, begmrung
his 27th year at OSU, ha s
several pos1t10n sw!tches " 1
mmd .
W1th the loss of .the 240.
pound , Johnso n,
the
Buckeyes all{lme leading
scorer, through graduatwn ,
Hayes must e1ther fmd .a
replacement or revamp hiS
offensive thinkmg.
He gave a hmt of what

might be forthcoming in the highly regarded freshma n
Orange Bowl when he used candidates in 6-2, 215-pound
Jeff Logan, a 5-8, 18().p&lt;Jund Chuck Hunter from Newark,
tailback at th e fullback Dela ., 6·2, 210-pound Mike
pooitiun with speedy Ron Schneider from Cincmnati
Sprmgs playing tailback
(LaSa lle) and 6·2. 2\5iJound
T 11 at c 0 m b i 11 a 11 u n . J1m Laughlin of Cleveland
cornbmed With the qUickness (Brush)
of quarterback Rod Gerald,
Wmgback, which could
who alsv returns, proved a , have been a problem spot
pote nt olf ens 1ve weapon with the departure from
agamst the Buffaloes
school of freshman speedster
But, Hayes sllll must come Matt Jackson , was solidified
up with a fullback for short when Jimmy Harrell, last
yardage and goalline year's regular, dec1ded to
situations There are several take another year of
candidates
eligi bility which was granted
Paul ca~lbpell, a 6-1, 215· him.
pound sophomore . fr om
Hayes, wh o will go into
Rav en na saw the most sprin g pract1ce with three
actiOn l~st year behind new assistant coaches-Bill
. Johnson and would appear to Myles !offensive lme), Dave
Doug Flynn 's single gave the be tile top prospect for the Adolph 1.defens1ve lme) and
Reds a fourth run m the mnth post.
Gary Tranqu1U (defensive
off Dyar Mrller ·
has some other
·
so me

rvrmm Murray much too wild
F'J
.. _
'
TAMPA, Fla . (UPI) Nine walks issued by Woody
Fryman an~ Dale Murray
offset a pair of homers by
Johnny Bench and one by Ken
Griffey as the Baltimore
Orioles · defeated the Cm·
dnnall Reds 6-4 Wednesday.

next game is Frtday at
~:t
:;::~;:: Symmes Valley.
•'ryman gave up one of his
@
~:;~:; Southern 000 042 116-12 12 3 . seven walks during the three:::;;'
@ Miller 002 001 32-41 9 0 run Oriole first inning when
\~;~
By MILTON RICHMAN ""
::.::.::.: Sayre, Cundiff (7, WP) and he was tagged for singles by
~~
;;::;:&lt;
UP! Sports J!;dltor
.::::;:; Cundiff, Hendricks (7). Ill' Bumbry and Lee May and
Pompey, Harvey
(5), a double by Mark Belanger.
NEW
· (~.JPI)- Mike Schmidt gives it to you straight. Burgess (6,LP) and Starling. . A pair of two-\lut walks by
He's ,
the young men who has become :"' overnight
Murray in the eighth paved
millionw• ""cause of the entirely new econonuc concept m
the way for the Orioles' fi nal
baseball and if you ask him whether he ever imagined hlmsell
three runs, with both runners
maldng itus kind of money in all his wildest dreams, he tells
coming home on a Belanger
you, quite franllly, never.
single.
Some reports had the Philadelphia Phillies' curly.IJalred, 27·
Bench hit homers in the
year'-&lt;lld slugger.third baseman signing for $2 million, for six
second and fourth innings off
years and others had him getting $2.75 .million over lhe ~e
Oriole starter Mike Flanigan,
period. Six years is right, but the more accurate figure IS
who also gave up Griffey's
closer to $3 million . When you get up that high, who bothers
homer in the sixth .
counting anymore ~
Adouble by Mike Lum and
"!suppose In a war · ~·san ego trip wanting to become one of
the highest paid players in the game, but after you agree to the
figure, it makes you stop and do a little t!tinklng," says
United Press International
Schmidt.
The New Orleans Jazz, in a
"It makes you think I will be financially sound the rest of my classic case of too little too
life and I won't have any problems putting my children late, rolled to their seventh
through school.. It makes you feel 'I should sign every victory in a row Wednesday
autograph anybody asks me for and attend every banquet to night.
which I'm ihvlted.' Most of all, it makes you think '! 'm playing
The Jazz, with no shot at
a little kid's game and they're paying me to dolt."'
the playoffs, set the Phoenix
For three straight years now, Mike Sclmiidt ·has been the Suns back 112-100to set a club
National League home run leader. Last year, he hit 38, same as record for conseeutive wins.
he did the year before, and drove In 107 runs with his relatively
Once again, the story was
modest .:£! batting average.
defense.
,
The fact that he'll be coming Into a substantial amount of
"! always knew we rnuld
money before he reaches 30, hasn't caused Schmidt to run out play this well if we .played
and buy a new GO-foot yacht or anything like that. He never tough defense," said New
went in for material things that much before and hls new Orleans Coach Elgin Baylor,
contract hasn't changed him.
whose club is in fifth place in
How does It feel to become a millionaire so unexpectedly?
the Central Division, "And
"What I would like to do is help my parents because of some the last seven or eight games
of lhe Investments they made to help me," Schmidt says. "My we've been playing very
dad runs a sell«rvice restaurant In Dayton, Ohio. He makes aggressively and very
milk shakes and grilla hamburgers, but, he isn't complaining together."
about it. He's very happy. Ten years ago, he and my mother
Baylor, who took over from
never dreamed a ball player would make the kind of money the coaching job from Butch It's the cho1Ce ot the pros-for a
being paid today. I never dreamed anything like that myself. I van Breda Kolff in lot of good redsons A Gravely
remember the first contract 1 got when I started in profes- December, now finds the Jazz tractor •s t o~o~gt1 enough to lake
on t~ny jOb and come bnck
sional baseball. It was !he standard contract for $500 a month. in position to top last year's as'k1ng tor rriore You can plow a
1negotiated my rear end off the following year to go to Triple A record. At 34-42, and with six tle~ec t seedbed 1n one
ball for $1000 a month and !hey ftnaliy gave It to me . They games to go, New Orleans is operat1on. cultwate spray
wanted to'give me $11511 originally."
four wins short of last compos t or mow w1th a ch01ce
ot at1achments And our
Mike Sclunidt says he Ieels a deep sense of obllgatlon to the season's mark.
exc1us1ve all·gear dnve IS
Phillies for the kind of contract they gave him. He Isn't one to
Pete Maravlch, the designed
and bull! to be
take the money and run.
league's top srnrer, led the durable and deoendab!e, No
"If you would like to know how I feel inside, all you have to way with a game-ltigh 26 bel!s to slip, come loose or
• do Ia ask yourself bow you'd feel to)Vard an organization which points, while Jim McElroy brellk If you have b1g gard en
·has given you llfetl!ne securitY.." Schmidt says. "When I'm had 2.'1 ..
work to do-get a Gravely l1rst 1
finished pblying baseball, I won't have to work a day ih my !Ue '· BI!Ylor trace.s. the Jazz'
If 1 don't clioose to. I've been a very lucky young man since _I resurgence to strong third·
came Into the major leagues five years ago. I have to admit quarter play. Whereas the
everything has come pretty easy. That doesn't mean I don't -team would once fold up, !hey Gravely Tractor Sales
204 Condor St.
appreciate what I've gotten. I feel I deserve. it. I work hard." now bear down.
Pomeroy.
Ohio
The blCihin~ Schmidt would like to do now is play in a World
"~t one time we used to
Phone
992-2975
Series with the PhiWes, and he doesn't - why he can't this give games away in the third
Hours
quarter, but now the guys are
year.
·
"We feel we can win It," be says, referring not only to the concentrating on defense and 9 a .m. to s p.m. Weekly
divl&amp;lon title, which the Phils won last year, bul also to the especially the last few games
9 to noon Saturdays
pennant which they were knocked out of by the Reds.
we've been playing great
"I
our team bulltalot of character.last year," Schmidt . defense," said Baylor. · "Our
'
ilays. "Year by year, we've become team oriented, like ~ defense kept us in the game in
Reda are now and like lhe Pirates ll88d to be. What .we re the first half when we only
boping to do 11 buDd up a good early lead once the seaaon shot 37 percent."
lllllrtl. We bave enoU8h depth. We can put two good teama on
"During this win streak our
the ball field."
third periods have been
One 11 really all it lakes, and If lhey'n&gt; the ones to take it all stronger," said rookie Rich
this October the Philllea will be upse1'~ one of lhe late Kelley, who finished with 14
Branch Rick~'• prime theories. When it .r.~me to signing rebounds and seven 818ists.
ptayera, he alWIYI uid, ''ke&lt;!P 'em huni!I'Y ." Rickey felt that "It seems we've been comill((
made thtlll want 10 Will more.
·
out 1111d jwnping on people."
The Phllllea all have good contracts. They seem happy and
Phoenix was led by Alvan
contented. They have the perfect opport11dty ol showing Adams with 19 points and
eve{lbody that what winning really means 1s never again Dick Van ,Arsdale and Butch
havlitl to tell anybody you're hungry:
,j
FPher with 16 each.

Defense
by Jazz
sharper

See me.

Bill FLETCHER
149 South Third Street
Middleport, Ohio
992-7151

IN5UU.NCI

STATE FARM
Insurance Companies
Home 011J ces· Bloornrnglon, Illinois

~

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g
U

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IFYDUHAVE
GARDENING

thu:t

sht

Hayes looking for new fullback

TDDD·&amp;ET
A GRAVELY!

Holman has
MIAMI (UP!) - Marshall
Holman of Medford, Ore.,
rolled a 299 game Wednesday
night to lake, a 147-pin lead
after two rounds of the
$100,000 Burger King Open
Professional Bowlers
A'Ssoclation tourney in
suburban Kendall.
Holman is seeking his first
victory on this year's PBA

Tornadoes rally
to whip Miller

\@

CONKED

Judge hearing

McAfee will be

Otinese demolish

..

... A I&lt;'A.15e lllOOI-0 Ot..IL't' PUT '(00
lt-.lTO A Hie~ TA)C. BRACKET ... AND,
HB.ROD, 'rOU CMl'T AFFO~O IT i

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D. does about dieting.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I read
Let's examine what Burt
in the· paper that Burt · really did. If he lost :a pound
Reynolds lost 30 pounds in -' o!'fat. a day for three weeks
just three weeks. He had a that would be 21 pounds. He
half grapefruit, unsweetened, would have to use 3500
for breakfast With a cup of calories a day more than he
black coffee. For lunch he took in. Even on total starva·
had a single scoop of cottage lion that would be impossible
cheese and a peeled fresh unless he was doing lots of
peach. He- skipped dinner strenuous physical activity
every other day. When he did ·every day. It is more likely
have dinner it was limited to that he used closer to 2500 or
six ·ounces of steak, or six 2800 calories a day while he
ounces of ground beef or 12 to was on his diet. That is not
16 ounces of fish. With this he equal to the calories in a
had a salad with no salad pound offal.
dresslDg.
When anyone starts on a
When he felt like he was g&lt;r bad diet like that one which
ing to give in to his hunger he markedly decreases the food
jogged arowtd the block.
intake •he first week there
Doyouapproveolthisdiet? will be a lo~, of nonnal body
Is it really possibldo lose 30 water - your body weight is
pounds in three weeks that. hall water -and the digestive
way? Jf you think it is OK I'd system will empty out. YOu
like to try it. ·
can lose between five and 10
DEAR READEIJ: - I am pounds of weight (water, not
afraltf Burt-ReyndiJis knows fat) that w#; That at'Cuun!JI
more about movies than he

ooutheastern Oklahoma.
"You can tell when the ·
chickens are feeling good,"
he said. ''They danCe around
. and their pupils get big and
small."
Satisfied, he thrust the
rooster within pecking
distance of a chicken cradled
in the anns of his wife , Helen.
"I let 'em bill to make •em
mad," he explained.
Once on the ground, the
birds tore at each other
furiously until the couple
pulled them apart and
removed the lealher sparring
muffs secured to the cock's
spurs for protection. All of
Love's gamecocks had a turn,
giving him an idea which
were most ready for action in
the pit.
He owns 100 cocks and
fights a different set every
two weeks at a club south of
McAlester, where he is a top
contender for the Sportsman

'

Gangland enforcer pays with his life by assassination

Rooer Sol/en

lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

Fighting chickens given best of care

...

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, u., Thursday, March 31, 1977

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�~ -=The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday,.March 31,1977

4- The Daily Sentinel, Midclleport-P. me roy, 0 ., Th'!'sday, March 31, 19'/'i

Pro

Rose .Army
raise~s heat

NHL Stlndings

By united Press 1nternationa 1
Campbell conteren~e
Pltrick Dl~islon
W l T Pts . GF GA
X· Phildlph •7 16 15 109 316 '209
NV ISI&amp;ndrs 46 20 12 104 280 186
Atlanta
33 34 11 17 255 258
NY Rangers 29 35 14 12 269 301
Smythe Olvi1lon
W L T Pts. GF GA
x-St . Lou is 31 38 9 71 227 267
ChiC!IOO
26 41 11 63 234 288
M innesota 22 37 18 62 232 296 ·
vancouver 24 41 13 61 226 285
Colorado
19 44 14 S2 211 291

CINCINNATI (UPI )- The withdrawn all previous offers
emphatic cry from several · ID Rose that he was penning
Cincinnati Reds' fa~s Is "Sign an "open letter" to the Reds,
demanding they sign f'ete .
Pete."
Meanwhile, Richter &amp; Phil·Reds'
rooters
are
continuing to put pressure on lips, a jewelry and
the hallclub to sign their hero department store, announced
its "Let's Get Pete Signed"
-Pete Rose.
On Wednesday,
for fund would continue, with 10
example, a fan solicited per cent of the gross sales at
signatures on a petition from ·its suburban Delhi Hills store,
a stand he set up at Fountain in the area of Rose's home,
Square in the heart of the going into the fund.
The company started the
city, while another rooter,
who already had taken out a project last weekend and the
newspaper ad, prepared an fund hit $3,000. Company
"open letter" to the Reds. officials said although the
And , a company decided to money was earmarked for
keep donating part of its Rose, they expect him to
profits to a "Let's Get Pete donate It to charity. The fund
Signed" fund.
is more of a symbol, a
Les Thomes sought signa- message to the Reds, said
tures on a petition urging the company officials.
Reds to sign Rose. Thomes,
Rose, a Reds' star the past
who operated from a 14 years, could play out his
Fountain Square stand option and be with another
complete with a big poster of team next year if· he doesn't
Rose and a sign saying "Sign get a contract tn his liking. He
Pete," said he intends to is demanding $400,000 a year.
present the petition to Reds The Reds at one point
officials.
reportedly offered $325,000,
William Maxwell, a X'avier but now have withdrawn all
University freshman who offers. Reds officials say'they
earlier this month scraped up • ~ant to negotiate, but Rose's
$35.70 to run an. ad in the agent says the $400,000
Cincinnati Post advising fans request is not negotiable.
to write the Reds and request
that Rose's salary demands
he met, said he was so upset
at news the Reds had

Wale s cont.e rence
Norris Division
W L T Pts. GF GA
x -Montreai 58 8 12 128 37-l 170
Los Ange les 31 31 IS 77 251 230
Pittsburgh 32 33 l3 77 232 247
Washing tn 2-4 40 14 62 220 294
Oetrolt
16 52 9 41 -177 298
Ad1ms Division
W L T Pts. GF GA
Boston
47 23 8 102 300 233
Buffalo
47 24 7 101 293 216
Toronto
33 31 14 80 296 277
Cl!velend ,. 41 13 61 234 281
M-Ci inched div ision title
Wednesday's Resulb
NY litangers""l Atlanta 3
Phll a 3 Cleveland 3
Toronto 3 Montreal 3
Wash ington 4 Pittsburgh 3
St . Louis 4 Chicago 1
BOSton 4 8utf&amp; IO J
Thursday's Games
Minnesota at Detroit
Colorado at Los Angeles

Friday'' G1mes

Ch icago at Atlanta
Colprado at Vancou\ler

· NBA Standings
United Press International

Eastern Conference

Atlantic Olvi~ioh
W L Pet. GB
x-Ph ll.
47 28 .627
Boston
40 36 .S26 · 71h
NY Knlcks
34 41 .453 13

Buftalo
NY Nets

' ..

28 47 .373 19
21 54 .280 26

Central Division

W L Pel. GB
ol6 31 .597

Houston
Wash .
San Ant.
Cleve.
New Orl.
Atlanta

44

43

40
34
29

32
33
3S
42
47

.579
.566
.S33
.447
.382

1'1&gt;

21h
5
11'h
16'h

Western Conference
Midwest D'ivision

W L Pet.

Eastem·in

SIGN UPSET
MASON - Sign-up for T•
Ball, Pee Wee, Little League
and Pony League in the
Mason area will be held,
Friday evening, !HI p.m. or
Saturday morning, 10 till 2
p.m. at the Mason Youth
Center.
Registration Fee will he $6. •
If anyone is unable to attend
call Donald Russell (304) 7735231 or Willis Bentley, (304)
773-5195

Standin~s

42 29 .613
42 34 .S53
4() 36 .5 26
39 37 .513
32 44 .421

Denver

Detroit
Kan. City
Chicago
Indiana

12-lloss
to Belpre

MilwauPacific

~~~~~~:·

ByGregBaDey '
EAST ME'rGS ..,. Behind
seven costly errors, the
Eastern Eagles dropped their
third contest of the young
haseball season Wednesday
at the hands of visiting
Belpre, 12-1.
One bright spot in the loss
was that the · young Eagle
squad of Coach Larry Heines
had only three players to go
down swinging as the others
all. COMected with the ball.
After a scoreless first
frame, the visitors got two
runs on one base hit .. but it
was added to a stolen base,
WEEKEND
followed by two Eagle errors.
They committed a total of
SPECIALS!
seven miscues in the contest.
Belpre, coached by · Bob
Perkins, plated two more
runs in the third to score all
15,000 miles, 1 owner,. they needed.
·
clean .
Eastern made a game of it
as they plated their only run
of the evening in the bottom
of the third. Bruce Riffle
walked, junior Joe Ku~n
reached on a fielder's choice,
stole second, and scampered
home on a single by Steve
Little.
. . . o• ~ pitching allowed
Belpre just one extra base hit
LOADED!
in their eight safeties, but the
seven errors allowed Belpre
to cash in on their opportunities. The loss was
tagged on RH!le who was
relieved in the seventh by
Guinther. Together they
faMed seven and walked
Eight Belpre batters. Sams
went the distance for the
. visitors and struck out just
Auto ., P. S., P. B.,
three while issuing four free
A.M., F.M. Sharp!
passes.
Kuhn led Eastern by
stroking a double while Little,
Jeff Goebel, Kevin Buckley,
and Jim Davis each cracked
a
single. Eastern's nell game
See these cars at 195
Is
Monday when they · host
Upper River Rd. or
Southern.
further
I for
Belpre
002 040 4-12 8 I
Eastern
001 000 0-1 5 7
Sams and Ingold. Riffle
446-9800
(LP), Gdinther (7) and
Bissell.

'75 VW BUG

$2499

'73.CADIUAC
SEDAN DEVIU.E

$3499

GB

41f&gt;
61h
7'h

Back ·c ompensation pi~

Today 's Sports Briefs
HORSE RACING
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
Uolted Press laleruatloaal
(UPI ) - National Account
, dl1 : :.. : : • ~:;:longs in I :01 4GENEVA, Switzerland
5 Wednesday to win the (UPI ) - British rider Harvey
featured eighth race at Smith captured two of the
Thistledown.
first three events at the
The four-year-old, ridden international horse jumping
by David Valverde, paid competition in Geneva
$6.80, $5.40 and $3.20. One Wednesday.
More Shekel was second and
The opening event Tuesday
Cool Court was third.
was
won by Belgium's Edgar
average.
The 3-1~ ninth race trifecta Cuepper on Le Champion .
The other AA game of Lucky's Pep '0 Luck,
matches Springfield Saturday hero and Gray BalNorthwestern (16-1), loser · ance paid $1,960.80. The 3-9
only to AAA semifinalist daily double of Easter Too
Springfield North, and East- and Verlot was worth $460.40.
wood, which knoc~ed off No. I
The track aMounced that
ranked · Ontario along the Steve Cauthen, the 16-yearARRIVED
tnurnament trail.
old record-breaking jockey
The AAA portion of the who has taken New York by
IDurnament includes the No . storm, will ride in several
MANY
3, I and 5 teams in the final races at Thistledown A rill7
UP! poll.
on "Steve Cauthen
'
Third-ranked · T.oledo
HAND PAINTED
Central Catholic (21~) takes
NEW
YORK
(
UPI)
Bob
I
on No. 5 Columbus Walnut
Ridge (17-1) in the opening Horn, UCLA 's well-known
game (7:30p.m.) and fourth- water polo and associate
ranked Springfield'North (23- swimming coach, has been
0) meets unranked Men!Dr named coach of the United
(19-4) In the finale {9:30 States water polo team for
FROM MEXICO
the lOth World Maccablah
p.m.) .
.
Games
.
scheduled
in
Israel
Central Catholic beat No. 2
Medina in the regiol)81 finals, next July.
BOTH FOR EITHER
Horn replaces Monty Nitzwhile Walnut Ridge wiped out
kowski,
who
had
to
resign
two years of frustration with
an overtime win over No. I because of his busy schedule
INDOORS OR OUT
ranked Columbus Watterson after being named coach of
the U.S. water polo team in
in the regional semifinals.
Open 12 to 5 p.m.
Three AAA all-Ohio the 1980 Olympics.
Thursday, Friday
selectiQ!!s will be on display Innings as the San Francisco
in st. John Arena , juniors ·blanked Oakland
&amp; Saturday
5~.
Lynn Callander of Walnut Meanwhile, Willie McCovey,
Ridge and Kathy Evans of will be returning ID the Giants
Springfield North and .senior after enjoying-a hard-hitting
Simon's
KrisU Gordon of Central spring. The 39-year-old ·
Catholic.
McCovey, a free agent, had
Genter
The winner of Friday's six been with San Francisco for
semifinal games will meet 15 seasons but had played
Pomeroy, 0.
Saturday in championship most of the last three years
games at i1 :30 a.m. (A), 3 with San Diego.
p.m. (AA) and 7:30 p.m.

Lancaster girls
make .second try
of Coaches' jJoll, Westerville
South and· Lancuter High
School.
St.
Peter's,
Fisher
Catholic;s opponent, brings
the worst record among the
lour A schools in.to the
!Durnament, 14-5.
Fisher Catholic ls paced by
5-8 ali-&lt;Jhio forward Gerri
Helm and 5-5 guard Linda
Barney. St. Pete's. top player
is Peggy Mulherin, a sixfooter.
The second Class A game
(11:30 a .m. ) matches
Delphos St. John's, ranked
second in the final UP! Class
A girls poll, and Arcanum,
both unbeaten.
St. John ~s, paced by a trio
of talented 110phomores, Deb
Elwer, Sue Youngpeter and
Jeanne Arnzen, Is ~. while
Arcanum, 16-0, is a junior
dominated club, in Lisa
Graeff, Brenda Gray and
Kelly Karnes.
Warsaw River VIew, which
meets Campbell Memorial in
the second game (4:30p.m.)
is the only unbeaten team in

COLUMBUS (UP!) Being the only returning
team in this week's second
annual Girls State High
School
Basketball
T9urnament -doesn't exacUy
make Lancaster Fisher
Catholic the Class A favorite.
But, Coach Elaine McCullough has nine of those girls
who lost in the semifinals last
year back for another try at
the sinal! school tiUe and she
thinks the experience should
be a help.
11
1t's nice tO: make it back,''
said McCullough. "Losing
last year made our girls
really want to prove they can
play."
Fisher Catholic (20-4),
which meets Mansfield St.
Peter's Friday at 9:30a.m. in
the opening game of the tournament, ran into foul
problems in the semis last
year, losing to Rocky River
Lutheran West after blowing
a big lead.
"I hope it taught them how
to play under those
circumstances," said
McCullough. "I think we're a
stronger team this year. We
have a stronger bench and
the experience Is finally
beginning to tell."
Fisher's four losses were
all to larger schools,
de(~nding AA champion
Columbus Hartley, Columbus
Watterson, the No . 1 rated
AAA team in the UPI Board

AA.

accepted by all as fair
By JOE SARGIS
UP! Sports Writer
PHOENIX (U~I ) - Now
that everyone is in agreement
over the new playing
schedule, attention among
the National Football League
•owners turns today toward an
•equally thorny questloq ~retroactive
compensation.
: It took a day lot everyone
! to understand the new 16• game regular
season
: schedule, which will · take
: effect in 1978, and now that
: they all do, there is near
: unanimous agreement it will
~ work fairly and tn everyone's
" satisfaction.
, AI Davls, who led the fight
~ ugainst the !~arne schedule
: until he was able to modify
• theoriginalformat, says he is
: satisfied now that what all

this will mean in the end is a
lot more money for everyone
~ the owners, players and
television networks - and
more and evenly balanced
football for the fans.
There is some speculation
that when Pete Rozelle and
the
NFL
television
committee sit down to
negotiate a new contract
within · the · coming weeks, ·
they may ask for almoSt
double what they got the last
time. Under the old contract
each of the league's 26 clubs
(not counting Tampa Bay and
Seattle) received $2 million a
year in television money.
"We have a very saleable
package now,'' said Davis,
alluding tn the longer regular
season and playoffs starting
in 1978, and it ought to be
worth considerably mo.r e
•
than in the past ." .
•" . For Friday, Aprll1, 1'77
The retroactive questioo
won't be solved any easier
~
•
than the 1fi.ttame . schedule
Bernice Bede Osol proposal, and it may not be
solved at all.
: ARIES tMorch 21-Aprlt tl) Your
It 's bello more than a year
.. work cou ld be doubly lrustrafl ng since the old Rozelle Rule
~ today. mostly bec_
ause you dalay was thrown out by the courts
• things unlll th e last minute.
and in that time, 19 men whO
• TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) II had played out their options
::, social pressures beset you to- signed with various other
~ day , decide which is more im- c lubs~ Theoretically , the
.., portant: Peace of mind or doing
-:; what you feet ts expected of you. clubs that lost these players
," G!MIIfl (May 21 .Juno 201 For are out irlthe cold and are.not
"' the . sa&lt;e of harmony on the entitled to compensation.
.. home front . don't let outsiders · Under the recently signed
bult Into fam ily mauers. An collective bargaining
agitator could sfir up a· peck of compensation is spelled out
clearly.
trouble.
; CANCER (Juno 21-Juty 22)
For instance, If a player
, Take care how you ••press who is making $200,000 plays
• yourself today. You coul d In- out his option and signs with
: advertently offend someone with another club, his new club
• .words tha t convey double
~ meanings.
has to reward his old one with
•
two No. 1 draft choices. If he
• LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Someone
• you're very close to who Is a poor is making from $125,000 to
! manager may prevail on you to $200,000, the compensation is
:: get him out ol .a bind . You muil ' a No. 1 and a No. 2 draft
• evaluate the risk Involved.
choice . The scale slides all
: VIRQO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22) You'll the way down to be lowest
: be ludged by the company you salary schedule.

JUST

Hanging Pots

The Lady Bears, ~ and
led by all.Qhio forward Judy
Uher and f&gt;-10 sophomore
center Diane Baker, knocked
off defending champion
Hartley in the regional finals.
Campbell is paced by 5-3
senior guard Roberta Kish, a
second team all.Qhioan with
an 18 points per game (AAA).

•ASJRO GRAPH

i

Gift

•d. h b h d til•
*~~ m~·h 1 . rye
enc e un .
June by knee surgery

Jivi;~.;;51

14'h

20

~F

Seattle
38 39 .494 11 1h
Phoenix
30 ol6 .395 19
x-Ciinched division title ...
Wednesday's Re5ults
Boston 90 Chicago 88
Plllla 115 Detroit 112

New Orleans 112 Phoeni x 100

Washington 110 Atlanta 103
Seattle 111 Houston 105
Thursday's Games

NY Nets at Atlanta
NY Kn icks at Indiana
Buffalo at Denver
San Antonio at Golden State
Friday ' s Ganies
Indiana at NY Nets
Kansas City at Phlla
Cleveland af New Orleans
Houston at Washington

Denver at Chicago
NY Knicks at Milwaukee
San Antonio· at Los Angeles
Detroit at Phoenix
Golden State at Portland
WHA Standings
United PreS5 tntornatlona t
East
x-Qulebec
Cincln.
Indian.
New Eng .
Blrm.
y-Minn .

W L T Pis GF GA

45 30 2
39 35 4
35 35 a
33 39 6
31 44 3
19 18 5
West

92 338 279
82 345 290
78 264 292
72 264 279
65 276 293
43 136 129

W L T Pis. GF GA
47 23 6 100 304 226

x-Hous.
Winn.
43 30 2 88 343 268
San D.
37 35 4 78 263 269
Edmonton 32 42 3 67 226 291
Calgary 30 41 5 65 233 275
Phoen I&lt; 27 ol6 4 58 267 368
&gt;·Clinched. division title
y-Team disbanded
Wednesday's Rtlu Its
Cincinnati 5 Indianapolis 5, ot
Edmonton 8 Houston 0
Thursd1y's Gimes

New England at Phoenl•
Winnipeg at Son Diego
Friday's Games

Calgary at Edmonton
Cincinnati at Houston

TralnlDg Camp Romdup
By FRED UEF
UP! Sports Writer
The Bird awaits the knife
and the Boog gets the a~ .
Mark "the Bird" Fidrych,
Detroit's hyperkinetic
pitching sensation, wa~ told
Wednesday he will undergo
knee surgery and in aU
likelihood be lost to the Tigers
until June.
The 22-year-old rightbander tore cartiluge in his
left knee while shagging fly
halls on March 20 but then
rein jured hirnseH last Sunday
during a workout. He is
scheduled for surgery on
Thursday.
It was not injury but time
that levelled John "Boog"
Powell.
The 35-year-old slugger,
and one-time Most Valuable
Player, was released by the
Cleveland
Indians
Wednesday.
'' I'm naturally
disappointed," said the &amp;foot.:! power-bitter, who spent
13 seasons with the Baltimore.
Orioles. "But I feel very
confident that I will catch on
with another team.'
For Fidrych and the
Tigers, the injury is a
1

devastating setback.
from there. It's all part of
"Naturally, this a tnugh baseball . It 's all part of
blow to our ·club,' ' said sports."
For Powell, his release
Tigers' Manager Ralph
Houk, whose club finished in comes after an unproductive
a dismal fifth place last and injury·ddden season in
season. "You hate to. see which he hit just .215 with
these things happen. But you nine homers and 33 RB!s. It
can't look back. We'll have to was a long way from the 1970
bring up another young season when be belted 35
pitcher to fill his spot."
Home runs, hit ·.297 and
Whether the struggling knocked in 114 · runs with
Tigers can find anyone io fill Baltimore enroute 1D the
Fidyrlch's spot Is 311other . MVP award.
matter. The Worcester, · Elsewhere, John
Mass., native, who talks to Montefusco and Nolan Ryan
baseballs and made Bird turned in impressive stints
lovers of fans across the Wednesday and appear ready
league last season, had a Ill-S for opening day. Ryan, the
record ID go aloug with a 2.34 Angels' smoke-throwing
ERA ~nd walked ?If with the' right-hander, turned in seven
Amencan League s Rookie of strong Innings as CalHornia
the Year award.
defeated Seattle 5-3.
"He is expected to spend
Montefusco, who claims' he
about a week in the hospital,'' can win 25 games this season,
said a club spokesman from also worked seven good
the team's
Lakeland,
training
base.
"And ItFla.,
is
hoped he will ·be on crutches
not more than three. weeks
and be allle to start haseball
workouts in six or ei~t
weeks."
"In all hopes, from what
the doctors tell us,'' said
Houk, he'll be all right tiM!
first of June-and we'll go

:

: because you'll be painted with

DON'T GO
UNPROTECTED.

• LIBRA (Bopt. 23-0ct. 23) While
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SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You
cou ld m istakenly teet challenged
• by a fr iend today. Analyze the
: situation and you'll act more
.. rationally.

••

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•, CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 11)
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P"----------..------------·---..
Happy Easter!

: PISCES (F~b. 20-March 20)
• Usually you're quite easy 10 gel

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AT

al ong wllh . T oday , stubborness
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!

Callers at the Charles
Woode liome last Thursday
were Mr. and Mrs. Leonard
Amos and Garner Griffin.
Mr, and Mrs. Eric· Parker
and Randy of Camden,
Mlehlgan, spent the weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Wilber
Parker.
· Nina Robinson and Charles
· and ' Helen wootie attended ·
the Northeast Cluster hymn
sing at the Long Bottom
Church Saturday evening.
Effie Watson, mother of
Dorothy Roblnlon, of thl•
area, 11 a ~ttent In the
Veter8111 Memorial Hospital
at Pomeroy.
Chari• Woode called at the
· Athertolt, Pete FollrOd and
FllldllnC.CaldweU homes one
day lui week. The Ill are all
bnprovinCIOmt.
Mr. and Mn. BUI Foilrod
and Sue Ann of Athens visited
Clara · Follrod and Nina
Roblnm Saturillf evenln&amp;•
Mr. ind Mn. tharlea D.
Woode spent Sunday evening
with Mr. and Mrs. George
Guthrie, who have had the
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REV . JAYMES
The Rev. Richard W.
Jaymes of Bellelootaioe
will be evangelist lor
revival services which
begin this evenlog and
contloue through April 10 .
at the Rutlaod Church of
the Nazarene. Services wUI
be at 7:30 each evening and
at 10:30 on Suoday morolog. The public Is Invited.

Barr Sunday.
Mrs. Ella Rostofer , age 81 ,
former Langsville resident
died at Veterans Memorial
Hospital Thursday. She is the
mother of Lee and Bob. Fetty.
Mrs.
Emma
Ledlie
returned home Friday after
spending two weeks at the
home of her daughter, Carol
Ritter, of Fort Knox, Ky .
Mr. Harold White has
leased the Turner Grocery
and will be open for business
around April 11th.
Mrs . Elvira Barr and
family visited her son, Duane
Barr and fainily of Oak Hill,
Ohio.
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{anned one and walked none.
In four innings of relief,
Johnson fanned four , walked
one, allowed two hits and two
r uns.

Dunn allowed one hit and ·
one run in his brief stint. He
walked one. Allen allowed
five hits and four runs. He
fanned fo ur and walked five.
The Blue Devils next
outing is Tuesday, April 5, at
home against Meigs in a
Southeastern Ohio League
hattie.
Linescore :
GAHS
101 002 H-6-3
Oak Hill
002 000 2--4.0·2
Batteries: GAHS - Swain,
Johnson (4, WPI &amp; Barr. Oak
Hill- Dunn, Allen (1, LP) &amp;
Hale .

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·

is the heart of the bill,"
Under the bill , the
replied Hall . "It works ."
secretary of state will bave a
Although the Democrats compute r ized ma ster
retained the election day registratiort list for th e entire
provision, Van Meter got the state by 1979.
committee to go alon&amp; with
"Although this bill oontains
an amendmen t permitting many good things, they are
registered voters to go ahead overshadowed by the other
of non-registered voters in th ings which wlli turn voting
polling place lines.
from a pleasant experience
an
unplea sa nt
He also succeeded with an into
amendment requiring a experience in my opinion,"
notice in polling places that . Van Meter said.
voting twice is punishable by
a fine of $50-to $1,000 or one to
five years in prison , or both.
i'he Democrats promised
to offer an amendment on the
floor to elimin ate another
Republican criticism - that
Mrs. Dorothy Wright has
politi c a ll y activ e moved to Ashland , Virginia
organizations co uld take where she will make her
wholesa le numbers of home wi.th her daughter , Mr.
registration applications · and Mrs. John Dexter.
without accounting for them
Mr. Duane Barr and son
or returning incomplete ones . Shawn of Oak Hill, 0 . ca lled
Also adopted were amend· on his mother, Mrs. Elvira
ments :
- Makin g it easier for
county boards of election ID
keep track of registrations
alterna te
made
at
registration ites, including
other county offices, branch
reg is tration offices, auto
license centers, libraries and
shopping centers.
-Requiring a list of mental
patients judged incompetent
U&gt; vote.
Van Meter failed to gain
approval of an amendment
which would have required
the secretary of state to
install a toll-free line to check
changes of address filed on
election day .

Devils edge Oaks 5 to 4

Alfred
Social Notes

unnoticed orun rewarded .
(Are you an Atles f Bernlce
Osol has written a special AstrO·

r-_.--·-------------------11
· . . ·.
·

Steer clear of polit ical or

.. ph ilosop hical discussions today.
: Bitter eJtchanges could ensue.

MACH I

I Try Something New

SAGITTARIUS (Nov .. 23-Dec.

~ 21) SUccess will elude you today
,. becauie you' re zeroed-In on the

held during the evening . The dancers from the left are
Donna Frank, Barbara Sprague , Missy Van Meter , Julie
Elberfeld, Be.cky Ambrose, Melissa Thomas, Tina
Spencer, Pam Miller and Jenni Burke.

Nod given liberal ·voting bill

Ten ·NG grants
offered at Rio

• the same brush.

'73 MUSTANG

$2699

01

~:~~o~~d~~- :~~r!~sle: 1v~:~

Naturally, the clubs which
were hurt the most during the
past year are In the forefront
of the fight here ID work out a
compensation schedule that
is fair. All agree that the
schedule that takes effect
starting now may ·he !Do
severe to apply to the 19
currently affected players.
Art Modell of the Browns,
who sign!"~ Paul Warfield
during this no-rule period,
says he believes Miami
should be compensated and
he's willing to sit down and
talk with the Dolphins.
Wellington Mara of the
Giants, who signed Larry
Csonka, also feels the
Dolphins deserve something.
The Dolphins lost a third man
THESE SIXTH GRADERS of the Chester. Elementary
- Jirnm Klick (Broncos), so
School will be dancing in Friday night's variety show and
it'sprettyobviousJoeRobbie
minstrel to be staged at 8 p.m . at the school. Purpose of
is leading 011 fight here.
the show will be to raise funds to send 25 members of the
Commlsaioner Rozelle has
safety patrol to Washington, D.C . A hake sale will also be
kept hands oIf on the deba te
and his only comment on the
question when it was put to
him was "personally, I'd like
to see each case handled by
the clubs involved. But at the
same time I can ·understand
By LEE LEONARD
would permit fraud , cause
why some clubs would want
UP! Statehouse Reporter
long lines at voting booths.
to have It spelled out so that
COLUMBUS
(UP!)
The
add to election costs and
the whole question can he
Senate Elections Committee create an "adminstralive
solved quickly and without
late Wednesday night nightmare.",
acrlrnony."
·
d
approved a Democratic bill
Sixty-two coun ties now
Other players besi e the
sharply liberalizing voter have voter registration but 22
Miami trio involved in the · registration procedures in others have none and four
current debate and their Ohio, and set the stage for a have . only
partial
current clubs are Calvin Hill,
registration.
Jean Fugett, Ernie Janet, noor vote next week.
Sen.
Tony
P.
Hall,
DHall 's bill, backed by the
John Riggins and Pat
Dayton,
chairman
of
th
e
Ohio
Democratic party and
Sullivan of Washingtnn, Glen
committee
and
chief
sponsor
organized
labor, would
Holloway of San Francisco,,
of
the
bill,
said
he
hopes
for
a
require
voter
registration in
Ron Jessie of Los Angeles,
vote
by
the
full
Senate
next
every
county
and elimina te
Ted Kwallck of Oakland,
Tuesday
or
Wednesday.
·
the
requirement
that a person
• Duane Thomas ,and Ron
The
bill,
which
mandates
vote
at
least
every
two years
Johnson of Dallas, John
statewide
voter
registration
to
remain
on
the
rolls
.
Bablnecz of Philadelphia,
b B
1T
Ba
and provides for registration
Attempts to requir e
Bo
urns o ampa y, in~ variety of new places, as -individuals to re-register if
John GIWam of Atlanta, Ed well a~ by mail and at the they fail to vote for four Hars
.Marinaro of the New York
Jets, Ahmad Rashad of polls on election day, was or in two success ive
approved by the committee presidential elections failed
SeatUe and Mike Weger of
on a i)arty-iine vote of 5-3.
on 5-3 voes. •
Houston.
Although
Republicans
Republican attempts to
. offered tenacious Opposition eliminate house-to-house
during the three-hour registration and election day
committee meeting, they registration, and to require
failed to eliminate any of the state to pick up the
their main objections, which increased cost to local hoards
include permanent vQler_., of election were rebuffed by
registration , house-to-ltouse. · the Democrats ..
registration, election day ~- .. Hall said that if the federal
RJe GRANDE . - In line plying for the grant shouid 1 registration and registration goverrunent does not provide
with its ever-increasing role contact their local Ohio by ·deputy motor vehicle money to pay the cost of the
.
.
incr.e,ased reg istration ,
as a "partner in education" National Guard armory; call registrars.
The
Democratic-&lt;lominated
est
imated at $1.8 million for
the Ohio National Guard 1-800-282-7310 toll-free; or
committee
did
,
ho.wever,
two
years, he will persona lly
today announced a new write to CW4 Walter
agree
to
several
amendments
sponsor
an appropriat ions
tuition grant program at Rio Dona ugh, AGOH-RR, The
designed
to
make
it
easier
for
bill.
Grande CoUege-Rlo Grande Ad]utant General for Ohio,
Sen. Thomas A. Van Meter ,
Community College in Rio 2825 w. Granville Rd ., boards ·of election, eliminate
confusion
at
the
polis
and
R-Ashi
and , compl a in ed
Gran~e, Ohio.
Worthington, Oh. 43085.
serve
notice
that
voting
twice
election
day registration
Ten one-year grants are
Earlier this year the Ohio
is
a
fraud
punishable
by
a
fine
would
result
in long lines at
now being offered at Rio Guard announced tuition
and
prison
sentence.
the
polls
and
bring about
Grande to Ohio residents who grant programs at both
Rep
ubI
i
c
a
n
s
s
t
i
II
potential
fraud.
are current members of the · Hocking Technlca I School
complained the measure
"Election day r ~gistration
National Guard, or previous and Ohio University.
members of the active or
Twenty grants are still
Reserve forces who have available at Ohio University.
.completed military basic and Those interested. should call
advanced Individual training. the Ohio National Guard tollTo be eligible for the grant free number, 1-800-282-7310,
s prior service person must or contact !heir local armory.
be wllling · to enlist In the
Coach Jim Osborne' s victory.
Guard. A current member of
Gallipolis Blue Devils scored · In that sixth inning, three
the Ohio Guard must extend
twice In the top of the sixth walks by losing hurler Scott
his or her Guard membership
inning, then held off a last Allen,'three wild pitches, and
for at least a two year period.
inning rally by host Oak Hill singles by Johnson and Gary
Those who have two years or
to defeat the Oaks, 5-4, in a Swain (plus two stolen bases)
more remaining on their six
non -conference battl e produced the winning runs
for GAHS.
year Guard obligation are
Wednesday evening.
GAHS collected six hits,
also eligible.
Sunday school attendance . It was Gallia 's first win in
two
.each by Johnson and Tim
The grants, valued at an on March 11 was 51, the of- two starts this spring.
Carman,
Carman had a third
estimated $766 each, are now fering $27.85. Worship serGAHS jumped on starting
inning
double
for the winners.
available for the Fall Quarter vices were held at 10:45, with hurler Steve Dunn for one run
Jim
Harris
and
Swain had the
beginning Sept. 6, 1977.. The an attendance of 42. Rev. in the first inning.
other
GAHS
safeties,
both
deadline for applications Is Thomas !poke from March 8:
The Oaks took a 2·1 adAug. I, 1977.
34-38 on tile subj~ of "High vantage over Gallipolis and singles.
Oak Hill collected five hits ,
The grants are open to Cost of Dlrtclple!lblp. Howard $tartlng hurler Gary Swain
·one
each by Steve Kalinoski ,
Individuals who have at least Flanders was song leader and afler three rungs.
one year residency in Ohio Nina Robinson ', pianist.
Gallipolis plated two runs Doug Hale, Mark Howard 1a
and ,who will enter Rio Flanders and Florence in' th&lt;;. fifth and two more in ·double ), Ron McCorkle and
Grande as freshmen only.
Spencer sang' a special, the sixth behind relief hurler Steve Dunn .
In three innings on the
Those interested in at&gt;- "Jesus and Me".
Brent Johnson. The final two
mound,
Swain aUowed two
runs
held
up
and
Johnson
was
. Mrs. Eva Bibbee has
and
· three hits. He
runs
returned home from the credited with the mound
hospital, but ts still quite
. poorly and needs help 1D get

Shoes for Boys and Girls

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3Pc. Living ~ban SUiteS ....... '39!r heritage house
OF .SHOES
N. 2nd Ave.
·. Middleport, 0.
OPEN : Monday thru ·Thursday &amp; Slturday 9:30 to S
Friday.9': 30to8

•
I

�•

6

_ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday,

Mar~~-~:~::}~,:.~:::&lt;::::: : -: : : : : : : : : :.:·:·:·:i: : : : : : : : :&lt;: : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : :;&lt;':·:·:· :·:·:·:·&gt;:·;·:I
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Gardeners provide GSI program

RUTLAND - A re~~ll'l on a
ther•py program held last
wee~ at the Gallipolis State
Institute
was given when the
Whal Can I Do About My Fatherr
Rutland Garden Club met
~p :
.
.
alliin
My father is an alcoholic. He's been arrested sever
es . Monday night at the home of
for DWI and has had his license SU8pended, so he drives ID Mrs. R. S. Vale.
Mrs. Victor Nelson, Mrs.
work with friends. He's getting worse since Mom divorced
Carl
Denison and Mrs. Harry
him, bu.t since I can remember, he's alway&amp; hit the bottle.
·
Williamson
told of working
I'm married and have a young family, but I can't
with
ihe
patients
in planting
concentrate on them or my husband .vhile I'm constanUy
panzies
in
individual
pots so
worried about Dad.
·
that each one wo1ud have one
My brother jumps on him for boozing, which only makes ID take to her room. Favors
him worse. 1 try to get him interested in hobbles or volunteer
work. He sneers at A.A. Says he's not a lush. I feel responsible,
since Mom is gone, but it's ruining my life. I'm alternately
ashamed and humiliated, and sorry for him. How can I cope?
- FArnER'S KEEPER

...

F. K.:

ONE OF THREE concerts planned for the 1977-78
season of the Trl-County Community Concert .Association
is Paul Lavalle and the Chamber MIL'lic Society of Lower
Basin Street. Earning their reputation in 'the 194Qs on
radio, the group is creative in its production 8J!d
performance and widens the scope of all styles of mus1c
appreciation. Admission to this concert and other
programs in the associatio~'s series is by meml_Jership
only. The membership dr1ve for next season LS now
underway. For more information contact the drive
headquarters at the Gallipolis Chamber of Commerce
office, 16 Slate St . or call 44&amp;-2134.

.Ellen Rought is
new TOPS leader
•

Mrs. Ellen Rought was in·
stalled as leader of the TOPS
(Take Off Pounds Sensibly)
OH570 in a candlelight
ceremony Tuesday night at
the American Legion hall
meeting room in Middleport.
Other new officers installed
by Mrs. Betty Sayre were
Mrs . . Linda Grimm, coleader; Mrs. Treasa

W~od ,

secretary; Mrs. 'Genevieve
Harvey, treasurer: Mrs .
Joanne Eads , weight
recorder, and Mrs. Betty
Sayre, assistant weight
recorder. Mrs. Sayre was the
installing officer.
Yearly award s were

presented and the club queen
was honored. Mrs. Imogene
Dean was crowned queen and
will represent the chapter at
the Area Recognition Day in
Zanesville on Apnll6. Others
recognized were Mrs. Nellie
Grover, alternate, Mrs. Fran·
cis Haggy, a second place,
and Mrs. Treasa Wood and
Mrs. Dean, firsts.
Meetiugs of the club are
held every Tuesday night at
the Legion hall, Fourth Ave.,
Middleport, at 6:30 p.m.
Anyone interested in the program may call Mrs. Rought
at 992-5937 for infonnation.

If you 'll sit in on a few Al-Anon meetings, you'll learn how
other relatives of alcoholics cope with their problems. (Call
. Alcoholics Anonymous for further details.)
Mainly you must realize • you can't take on another
person's liie nor can you change him unless he wants change.
Accept your father for what he is, and don't let useless
worry ruin your own family life. He'll seek help much sooner If
his children stop nagging him. -HELEN AND SUE
..

~p:

+++

•

About'revirgination : I went through that. When I was in
my early teens, I was pretty wild. Figured I had _to be ''lf!th

it," and that meant proving how adult I was by havmg sex w1th
all the popular guys.
Then I realized how stupid this was. And how cheap. It
wasn't much fun, and even if I fell for a boy, he'd probably
dump me when a hotter number came along.
.
So I stopped going out -and just concentrated on majdng
friends. When my best (male) friend and I realized we really
cared for each other, it was another six months before we
started a relationship.
Whether we'll marry or not, Idon'tknow, but we're closer
than many married people. I think most older teens who have
sex are like us : true to each other, in love, and responsible. I
call that "revirgination.'' It's only promiscuous, uncaring sex
that's damaging. -FOUND TilE WAY
Dear F'IW:
A majority of teenagers agree with your last statement,
even thougl\ our and other surveys indicate near 50 per cent of
young people are "not sexually active" by age 19. (Th_is
includes some who, like you, are "revirginated," but sbll
waiting. )
. · ·
Thimks for your good letter. - HELEN AND SUE

DENISE MICHELLE
Laughery, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Vic Laughery of
Burnell Road, Columbus, ·
will celebrate her third birthday Sunday. She wUI
observe the occasion with a
vis!~ to her grandparents
Mr. and Mrs. · Robert
Uiughery of Parkersburg,
W. Va. and Mr. and Mrs.
Theodore Pullins, Bottom,
where she will enjoy a
Donald Duck bif\hday

plant, haby tears , and the
ep;:'.1.~~!~ Colwell won the
door prize furnished by Mrs.
Victor Nelson. Mrs. DayiDn
Parsons will prolvide the one
for the April meeting.
The Easter motif was carried out in the refreshment
table decorations. Mrs. Rolli·
day was at the coffee service,
and Mrs . .Turner poured the
punch.

GIRLS
~LADIES

&amp;
MEN',S

CLOG
SANDALS
ALL LEATHER

Going Uut of Business Sale

TURNER'S GROCERY
LANGSVILLE

~~

ott Pnced.Marked

Simon's

Groceries. hardware and miner 's boots.
· Everything . must go . Phone .742-9576. Sal~
starts March 31 thru April lOth. 7 a .m. 111
7: 30 p.m.

Pici&lt;-A-Pair
Pomeroy, 0.

cake.

Dear ~p :
.
A woman came to the door the other day, and when Mom
answered it, she said, 11l'ffi your Fuller Brush Man. II Funny I
huh? - FEMALE GIRL
'

Dear Female:
·
We-e-&lt;Jil, maybe someday soon a man will ring the doorbell
and annoimce, "I'm your Avon Lady." Equal rtghts, y-know.
- HELEN AND SUE

Polly Cramer

Iron candle wax out of knitted scarf

lemon rind, etc. but to no
By Polly Cramer
DEAR POLLY - A very avail. How can I get rid of
dear friend crocheted a scarf that odor? - M.B.
DEAR M.B . ..:: When the
for my TV and I had a candle
freezer
is empty disconnect it
sitting
on
it.
While
burning
,
Easter services were planand
fill
with crumpled up
the
caridle
left
a
big
blob
of
ned during a meeting of the .
newspapers,
close and leave
wax
oii
the
scarf
so
I
am
Golden Rule Class of the
heart
broken
as
I
do
not
know
for
a
couple
of
weeks. When
Pomeroy Church of Christ
~
how
to
get
i!
off.
Can
someone
paper
is
removed
, repeat the .
Tuesday night at the home of
PARTY
HELD
process
if
odor
remams.
An
please
tell
me
how
to
remove
Mr . and Mrs. Bill McDaniel.
Kristen
P.ape
celebrated
open
howl
or
two
of
vanilla
this
wax
so
I
can
put
the
scarf
Mrs. Eileen Bowers gave
her sixth birthday March
might also turn the trick.
back where it belongs. devotions on Peter and John 27
at the home of , ber
Readers,
have any of you had
MRS.li.P.G,
and the resurrection of Christ parents, Mr. and Mrs.
ihe
some
experience ? If so,
DEAR
MRS.
V.P.G.
The
using appropriate scriptures.
James
Pape,
Syracuse.
At•
do
Jet
us
know
what you did
laboratory
of
a
large
soap
Officers reports were given.
tending
·
the
celebration
company
suggests
the
followaboutit.-POLLY.
The revival to be held April 6
DEAR POLyY- Recently
through Easter morning was were her sister, Cheryl, · ing . Remove any surface wax
Carl
Autberson,
Elva
1
have
been in two stores that
with
a
dull
knife.
Place
your
discussed along with the Dailey' Mr. and Mrs. Nial
have
each
had a small box of
scarf
between
paper
towels
sunrise service and the Salser, Mr. and Mrs. John
toys
for
children
to play with
and
press
with
a
wann
iron.
breakfast to be served followPape, Johnny, Allen, and
while
their
lTlQillers
shopped.
Place
scarf
face
down
on
ingfte service. An Easter lily
Usa.
Cake,
ice
cream
and
This
was
sucJIL•
help
to me
clean
towels
and
sponge
the
will he purchased for the
Koo~Aid were served.
that
I
would
like
to
pass
the
back
with
a
dry
cleaning
church altar.
idea
on
to
store
owners.
fluid.
Let
dry.
La~nder.
with
Members discussed a new
detergent suds. If a slam re· Doubtless this is as great a
ministry, taking sermons to
mains, .soak in w.ater and a help to sa!espeopie as to
shutins on tape. Purchase of a
bleach that is safe for the mothers, as little hands that
cassette player was planned.
fabric
until stain disappears tnight otherwise be pulling
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Fields
over displays are occupied.
and
then
launder as usual. will host the next meeting
POLLY.
'
There have been times in the
wit'h Mrs. Frances Eskew
past when I have left a store
DEAR
POLLY
When
I
and Janet Venoy to have the
get
grass
stains
on
jeans
I
put
~ithout
making a purchase
devotions and entertainment.
Mrs. Mary Thompson and .
because
my -little daughter
a
bit
of
floor
cleaner
on
them
Refreshments were served. daughter, Kelly, and grand·
was
either
tugging at me or
before
washing
.
Wet
jeans
daughter, Melanie Cannon,
getting
into
something she
and
then
apply
the-cleaner,
entertained Tuesday night
should
not.
l
hope
other stores
let
stand
for
about
one
half
with a surprise birthday par·
will
take
heed
of
this.
- JAN
hour
and
then
wash
the
ty honoring Max Folmer, Sr.
regular
way.
This
nearly
v.
Guests were Citizens Band
Channel 15 friends , The always works. - SUSAN .
DEAR ·POLLY - I hope
decorated birthday cake WijS
you
have a solution for my
inscribed "Happy Birthday,
problem&gt;
We were overseas
Mr. Oil Can.'' Gifts were
for
four.years
and during that
presented to Folmer ~nd
time
our
freezer
was stored.
Diane Varian hosted a cake, ice cream, potato chips,
Apparently
mothballs
were
layette shower recently for coffee and Kooi·Aid were
•
put
in
the
st
rage
containers
0
Mrs. Jack (Esther) Bacon. served. Organ and piano
Games were played with music were enjoyed during nearby as a protection for the
furniture and rugs and this
prizes going to Carol Sigman, .the evening.
traveled
to the freezer. We
Marilyn Po11lins,. Patty
Attending were Mr. and
washed
'it
and aired it for
Johnson : . and' Charlotte Mrs. ·Clarence·.. Boyles·, Mr.
,
several
weekslllifore
_USing it
Varian. The door prize was and Mrs. Harry Reitmire,
but
everything
still
tastes
of
won by Cassie Hall.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Westfall, ,
mothballs
if
left
in
the
freezer
Cake, decorated with pink Vanessa Folmer, Mr. and
and blue booties and pink and Mrs. Joe Lieving, Teresa and for any length of time. I have
blue rattles, was served with Jennifer, Mr. and Mrs. tried soda, potato _peels,
mints, coffee and punch.
Everett Grant, Pamela. DebAttending besides those bie and Michael, Mr. and
MASON FURNITURE
named were Margaret Bar- Mrs. Simon Johnson, Sharon
rett, Rita Swan , Garnet . and Andie, Mr. and Mrs.
STORE HOURS
Varian, Mary Bacon, Lillian Harold Wilt, Sr., Debra L.
Demoskey, Betty Denny, Net- Reiimire and Belinda, Mr.
Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat.-8:301il5:00
tie Hayes, Bernice McKin· and Mrs. Larry Wiles, Sarah
THURSDAYTIL12 NOON
ney, Dottie Davis, Debbie and Rebecca , and Mr. and
Friend, Penny Stewart, Em- Mrs. Ernie Roush.
:
ma Moodlspaugh, Celesta
Bush, Sue UtUe, Ryan Hall,
Susie Barker and Wendy
BACK HOME
Batker.
Mrs.
Nellie Eblin has
Sending gifts were Wand&amp;
Gardner, Kay Logan, Etta rejurned to her home il)
Wlll, Peggy Ellis, Ella May j'fi!neroy foUo~im£ et c.:t··: :..: ~
Southern, Becky English and the flnl7"i· :.i..,lcal Center
and the Pleasant Hill ConMaxine Whittington.
valescent Home.

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Folmer
surprised

Esther Bacon
gives layette
shower recently

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FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

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:_.::_'.·

MJ;SON, W. Va. - A
revival is now in progress at
the Faith Baptist Church with
Herb Capehart as the
evangelist.
He will be bringing the
message Sunday morning at
9:45 and Sunday evening at
7:30.
Sunday School attendance
Sunday, 1\!arch 27 was 62.
Ttie Young Adult Class held
its monthly meeting at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. James
Pauley III recently with 11
JI
· attending.
The -regular schedule of
services is preaching, 9:45
,
a.m.; Sunday school 10 •30
• Mr. an&lt;! Mrs. Roy Jenkins and Sunday night service at
entertained Sunday with a 1:30; Wednesday Prayer and
llinner party honoring their Bible study, 7:30.
daughter, Kimberly Dawn,
Ivan Cardwell, Plains, is
on her second birthday.
the supply pastor.
She was presented a ~gThe Faith Baptist Church is
gedy Ann cake baked by her presently meeting in the Steel
grandmother, Mrs. Mary Li· Workers Union Hall on
sle. Cake and ice cream were Rallroad . Street between
ierved w Mr. and Mrs. Carl Horton and Pomeroy Streets.
. lenkins and Mrs. Lisle.- The publlc is invited.
• grandparents; Mrs. Florence
.
Potts greatgrandmother, PROF TO CIA
~ Mr. ~nd Mrs. John Lisle, · WASHINGTON (UP! ) .
• roddandScott.Mr.andMrs. Harvard University
• AI Harmon, Wendi and professor Dr. Robert R .
Crystal visited during the Bowie is CIA director
day. ·
·
' · Stansfield Turner's new
• · Gifts were presented to deputy for national intel; Kimberly by her grand- ligence.
made
the
father, Don Lisle, Mr. and · Turner
Mrs. Keith Lisle and Jason, announcement Wednesday
Rachel McBride, Tonia and and said Bowie, ftl, ''will he
- Sonia Ash, Troy, Renee and responsible
for
the
• Brian Willis, Becky and ~n- production ·,of natio~al
dy Roush. Kimberly also talk- intelligence estllll8tes, v1tal
ed to her godparents, the mgredients
in
the
Rev. and Mrs. Wendell formulation of U.S. policy."
·Stuller, by telephone. They . Bowie is a native of
were unable to come due to ijaltimore and a graduate of
illness.
PrinceiDn and Harvard.

T.enkt'ns hold

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THURSDAY
SOUTHERN Athletic
Boosters Thursday at the ·
high school at 7:30p.m. Fipal
plans for the basketball
banquet will be made.
SUTTON Township
T; ustees spe cial meeting
Thursday, 8 p.m. at the
Syracuse Municipal Building.
Purpose to review truck bids.
ANNUAL - inspection ,
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM,
7:30 p.m. Thursday at
temple; all Master Masons
invited.
MIDDLEPORT Youth
Baseball League Thursday 7
p.m. in old council room .
Interested persons urged · to
attend.
.FREE Clothing day at
Salvation Army, 115 But·
ternut Ave.. Pomeroy, 10
a.m. to noon Thursday. All
area residents in need of
clothing welcome.
SOUP SIJPPER, begiMing
3 p.m. Thursday, at Rutland
llnited Methodist Church
by
United
basement
. Methodist Church Women;
soup by bowl or quart, sloppy
joes and pie. Deliveries to
shut-ins and ill inside town;
take containers for carry out
!l'ders. starts at ~m.
·
FRIDAY ·
VARIETY show, minstrel
and bake saie,8 p.m. Chester .
Grade School auditorium
Friday. Proceeds go for
sending 25 school safety
patrol
members
to
WashingiDn.
EASTER BAZAAR by
Meigs County Humane
Society at Thrift Shop, across
from Pomeroy Post Office.
Craft ttems, bake sale and
vegetable soup.
HYPERTENSION Clinic
Friday evening, 5 to 7 p.m.
md 9 a.m. ID 12 noon
Saturday at Pomeroy
National Bank lobby by
Meigs County Department of
Health. Public invited" for
free blood pressure check.
HAPPY Harvesters Class,
Trinity Church, 7:30 p.m.
Friday.
EASTER bazaar, Meigs
County Hul!lane Society,
Friday and Saturday at the
Thrift Shop across from . the
Pomeroy Post OfficJ. Baked
goods, candies, homemade
soup flowera and .gift items
to~ sold.
,
RACINE
Baseball
Assoclatim meeting Friday,
7•30 p.m. at Racine
Elementary School. All In·
terested persons urged to
atend.
SATURDAY
PANCAKE SUPPER
Saturday at Salem Center
School sponsored by ·PTA.
Serving !rom 5 to 8 p.m.
Adults, $2: children, $1.
BAKE SALE Saturday at
Racine Post Offlce sponsored
by
Raclne · Baseball
Association. Collection of pop
tnttles and bottle caps.
RUTLAND Baseball
League slgnup day Saturday,
10 to noon at Rutland High
School gym.
SQIJARE DANCE Saturday at Reds Club j.n Mason, 9
p.m . to 1 a.m. sponsored by
VFW Stewart Johnson Post
!1926. Music -by Bernard
Connley and the Kanauga
Valley Ram biers.
HYMN SING 7:30 p.m.
Saturday at Freedom Gospel
Mission at Bald Knob. Ray
Seebaugh Family, Belpre,
will sing ; puhllc invited.
BARGAIN DAY rummage
111le and hake sale Saturday 9
a.m. to. 3 p.m. at Sacred
Heart ·Church basement,
Pomeroy. Each kern priced
a 10, cents and baked goods
rea~K~nably priced. •
MARY Slrlne 11, While
Shrine ot
Jerusalem,
busines~ milling 2 p.m.
Saturday at Pomeroy
Ma~K~nic Temple preceding 8
Installation of officers.
Potluck refreshments
ftlllowing Installation.

·Middleport

SUNDAY
SMORGASBORD sponsored by Southern Band
Boosters beginning 11 :30
a.m. Sunday at Southern
High cafeteria, Racine.
Tickets at door, $2 adults ;
tl .25 children. Proceeds to
help pay for new uniforms
and to sponsor concert trips
to Ohio State Capitol appearance and Cedar Point

ooncert.
SHOWER SET
A bridal shower for
Demaris Ash Crawford will
be heidat 7:30Friday night at
the Aabury I.Jniled Methodist
Church, Syracuse. All
· members of the church are
invited to attend.

Suicide said he
allowed Oswald

Mr, and Mrs. Carl Circle
and family, RD, Racine, Mt.
and Mrs. Robert Harden and
family, R.D., Racine, and
Melania West of Dorcas were
dinner guests at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Circle
on Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Multi
called on Walter and Eva
Archer while visiting here.
A birthday dinner in honor
of Susan Yost was given at
the home of Mr.· and Mrs.
Carl Circle on Sunday. Those
attending other than those
named were Mr . and Mrs.
Gene Yost and. son Chuck of
.oak Grove, Mrs. J . E. Foster
of Pomeroy, Jill and Jennifer
Cottrill of Carol, 0 ., and

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KROGER

. FRESH.FISH

world
premieres
in
celebration of the American
Bi-Centennial that included
Donald Saddler's "Dear
Fri~nds and Gentle Hearts,"
a tribute to Stephen Foster.
This talented company wiU
present a program of
classical dance at Ohio
University that includes the
Pas de Dix, a divertissement
of solo variations and ensembles from the final act of
Raymonda, the second act of
Tchaikovsky's
great
masterpiece "Swan Lake"
and " Frevo" frorri the
"Tropic Trio" by Lester
Horton. The Frevo is Brazil's
carnival street dance to '
samba rhythms.
Tickets are available at
Memorial Auditorium,
Athens, · Monday through
Friday, 1-4 p.m. or by calling ,
(614) 594·3471.

40 CHANNEL N.\OBI~E CB SPECIALS

YES

HAS

ATHENS - The Ohio
University Artist Series will
present the Cincinnati Ballet
Company In Memorial
Ayditorlum on April 6 at 8
p.m.
The Cincinnati Ballet
Company presented Its first
major performance In 1964
and has since developed into
a major professional com·
pany, elegant in style and
diversll!ed In its repertoire.
The company's series of
performances throughout
Ohio, Indiana and Kentucky
has expanded into national
and lntematlonal renown. In
1972 the great choreographer,
George Balanchine gave the
company permission to
perform his works and
presented, as a gift, his
"Concerto Barocco.'' In 1974,
the company presented its
first full-length ballet, The
Fire bird, by Stravinsky,
followed by a magnificant
full-length production of the
Nut Cracker. As a result of
this production, the company
won the Corbett Award for its
major contribution to the arts
in ClnclMati.
In 1974, the company
became part of the Dance
Touring Program for the
National Endowment for the
Arts and expanded its touring
program into Puerto Rico
and the Virgin Islands.
During Its 1975-76 season, the
company . presented two

C.rmel Ne.JJJS,
By the Day

-~So~
- -cia~l:.;;.;&lt;»:,

Ballet date set

party Sunday

POLLY·s POINTERS

slated

!

'

Vale for flowers rec_l'ived
while hospitalized.
Guests for the meetibg cohosted by Mrs. Eve.rett Colwell, were members of the
Star Garden Club, Mrs.
La-wrence Chapman, Mrs.
Robert Holliday, Mrs .
Kearney Ogdin, Mrs. Orion
Nelson and Mrs. Robert
Jewell. · Other guests were
Mrs. Fern Stansbury and
Mrs. John Colwell, and Mrs.
Joe Bolin, a member of the
Rutland.Friendly Gardeners.
Devotions were given by
Mrs. Everett Colwell who
read from the Upper Room
and had prayer. The Creed
and collect were given in
uni son and members
answered roll call with a
plant suitable for a hanging
basket.
.
Mrs. ~lph Turner, program ·chairman, introduced
Mrs. Harry Williamson who
demonstrated how to make a
floral macrame hanger.
Several hanging baskets
were on display and ·Mrs.
Williamson talked of plants
right for baskets including
yew, . ivy, vining begonia,
Swedish ivy, piggy back

+++

Services

\

were provided by Mrs. Paul
Winn for the party. These
were chicken and rabbits sitling on eggs filled with candy.
The napkins, cups and plates
carried out the Easter motif
for refreshments of sandwiches, c-ookies, mints lind
coffee serve&lt;) by the club
, members.
Read at the meeting was a
letter from · John Jeffers,
prestdent of the Rutland
Alumni Association, asking
for table arrangements for
the ·banquet, May 28, at the
Rutland Gym. It was announced that the spring
regional meeting will be held
in Logan on April20.
An invitation was read
from the Rutland Friendly
Gardeners asking members
to att.end an open meeting on
April 27 at the Rutland United
Methodist Church. Mrs. Tom
Stewart will be the
demonstrator on modern
flower arrangements. Andy
Lyle will be a guest. Fifteen
members of the Rutland
Garden Club will attend.
Thank you notes were read
from Mrs. ·Russell Little,
Mrs. Charles Foley and Mrs.

7_The Daily Sentinel,MiddleJort-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, March 31 , 1977

PORTUGUESE Premier
Mario Soars Ia pressing for
bts country's admission to
the European Economic
Community. With tbe
ebbing of revolutionary
fervor, the deteriorating
effect on · Portugal's
economy of tbe past
several years Of political
strife has become ap·
parent. Leaders want ties
wttb the nlne·member
Common
Market to
reverse the downward
trend.

C'l!ff.
Laure} '-'11
News Notes

By DANIEL F. GILMORE
WASHINGToN (UPI) - A
Russian-OOrn professor who
apparently killed himself in
F1orida Tuesday had said he
"was responsible for" the
activities of Lee Harv ey

Oswald in Dallas, according
to prevoiL'lly secret minutes
of the House assassinatiol)s
committee .
The minutes of a closed
session

Patrice, Jarrod and Jason

Circle. Calling in the af·
ternoon was Della Cross of
Columbus.
Harold Circle and sons
were at the Homer Circle
home on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Mutti
and family of Ma~sfield , 0 .,
spent ihe weekend with Mr.
and Mrs . Homer Circle,
Verna and Wavie.
Wllltam
and
Cathy
Carleton of ~cine , Eunie
Brinker, local, spent Thursday evening at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E.
Johnson, Sheryl Le Ann
Patrick and Betty Van Meter.
Mr. and Mrs. Jason Circle,
New Haven, have been busy
here on the !ann sowing oats
and working on their farm .
Mrs. Robert Lee and
Becky, Bob, and Bill Lee,
called at the home of Paul
Orr on Sunday afternoon at
Bashan.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom O'Neil

NEW CIA Director Stansfield Turner was no sooner
con! inned than he had to deal
'wtth an Intelligence flap the controversy over recently
revealed
U.S. ' covert

payments to Jordan's King
Hussein and other foreign
leaders. Turner defends the
practice, under proper clrw
cumstances, as a valuable

,tool of foreign policy.

.

Weddina6 set
WEST COLUMBIA, W. Va .
- The wedding vows of
Donna Jane Adkins, daughter
of Mr. 3.nd Mrs. Denver

Mar ch

17

al so

included testimony that the
professor, George De
Mohrenschildt, had indicated
"there Were others involved
in . the actual shooting" of
John F. Kennedy.
The transcript
was
released Wednesday night
after the panel won House
ap prova l to continue its
investigation of Kennedy's
murder in Dallas in 1963 and
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s
death in Memphis in 1968. The
vote was 230 to 181, only hours
after the controversial chief
counsel, ·Ric har d Sprague,
resigned.
Chairman Louis Stokes, DOhio, accepting Sprague 's
resig na tion with "deep
reg ret," · said he was
releasing the transcript of a
March 16 executive session in
which Sprague rebutted
charges by former chairman
Henry Gonzalez, D~Tex .

Rollins of West Columbia,
But Sprague's rebuttal
Ninety-eight persons atand
David
Anthony
Staats.
spilled
over to another closed
tended morning services
son
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Charles
session
the next day, and that
Sunday, March 27, at the
Staats
of
Point
Pleasant,
·
tran
sc
ript
c on t~ in e d
E.
Free Metho~ Church. Rev .
will
be
exchanges
on
April
5 previously UIU'eleased details
Harry Bates was guest
at 7:30p.m.
of
the
com mittee's
speaker for the morning and
The
pen
chyrch
ceremonv
preliminary
information
on
0
evening serviCes.
and , .f amily, · Mrs. James will take place at the First De Mohrenschildt.
A large number of friends Ingram of ColumbUs, spent Church of God, 24th and
attended
the
funeral the weekend here at the Lee Jefferson Av e., Point
Saturday of Clarence Curtis, home and with Mr . and Mrs. Pleasant. A reception will
held at Ewing Funeral Home, Robert Lee and family .
follow at the home of the
Pomeroy.
Arthur Earl, Margaret Ann groom's pa rents at 2105
Mr. and Mr~. Wyatt. Johnson, Sheryl Le Ann and Jefferson Ave.
SINGERS SLATED
Schaefer, Mt. Vernon, visited Patrick called at the home of
RACINE
- " Little Israel",
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
a
gos
pel
singing group
Norman Schaefer.
Johnson of Racine on Sunday "'" LOGANS VISITED
composed of young people
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Howell, evening .
Recent dinnc' guests of Mr. from Alabama will sing at the
Aston, sp.ent the weekend at
and Mrs. Dwight Logan ,
Wesleyan United
their home here.
Pomeroy, were Mr. and Mrs. Racine
Methodist Church April 4
AITENDED SHOWER
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Bauer, ·
Virgil Wamsley of Kyger.
Mrs. Ellen Johnson, Andie Here for the weekend were thro ugh April8 at 7•30 p.m.;
Marion, visited . Saturday
with Mrs. Bauer's parents, . and Sharon, were guests at a Mr . and Mrs. Logan's sister at the Portland United
layette shower hosted by the and brother-m-law, Mr. and Methodist Church, April 9
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Karr.
Mr. and Mrs. Alston Tracy Big Bend Citizens Band Mrs. Bill Smith of Cincinnati, and 10, ?.30 p.m.; Apple
and .friends, Columbus, · Radio Club Ladies Auxiliary and spending Sunday evening Grove United Method ist
visited Saturday with M~. for Lori Moore. Their ,names with them were Mr. and Mrs. Church, Saturday, April 9, 2
Tracy's mother, Mrs. Nellie were unintentionally omitted Floyd Mitchell , New Haven, p.m. The public is invited to
any·of the presentations.
from an earlier listing of the W. Va .
Tracy.
Mrs. Della Stahl and Mrs. shower guests.
Nancy J~ffers vlstted
recently w1th Mrs . Edna
Hawk, Athens.
Mr. Vern Story, Colurnbu~,
spent the weekend at his
home here.
Mr. and Mrs. Pearl Gilkey
and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Stahl
visited recently with Mr.
Fritz Stahl, New Marshfield.
Mr.
Paul
Archer ,
Columbus, called on friends
here Sunday .

The ss-year-old language
professor's body was found
Tuesday in the Pabn Beach
home of his sister-in4aw in
what police said was sulci_de.
According to the transcript,
staff member Robert
Tannenbaum said Willem
Oltmans, a Dfltch journalist
who had covered the Kennedy
assassination, approached
the committee ID say "he
bef riended a fellow who
looms in the shadows of this
whole investig ation. His
name is George Qe Mohrenschildt."
Oltmans, acc 0rding to the
transcript , said De Mohren·
schildt had been in con)acl
with him for 11 years and had
visited him in · Holland
several weeks ago.
"The purpose of his trip
was to divulge for the first
time his knowledge of the
assassination
of
the
President, and he indicated
that he was responsible for
Oswald's activity , and that
there were others involved in
the actual shooting of the
President, " !J'annenbaum
reported.
"What is signmcant, of
course," Tannenbamn told
th e committee, "is that
George De Mohrenschildt is
one person - I really have ID
underscore this - who iB
involved with lAle Harvey
Oswald as a part of history;
that is, he befriended Oswald
and had his daughter care for
Oswald's wife and child while
Oswald was living at a YMCA
in Texas ; so he is a person
that is not a John Doe, who is
coming forward, giving a
confession ID someone in the
media."
Tannenbaum said he had
lost contact with De
Mohrenschildt , but said "We
have indicated to him that his
· information indeed was new,

·.

•

·s··.

(

...
-·-

.

.'

sensitive and uniqq.e and

required further investigation, whi ch, in fact , it

does."
Subsequently , the
committee traced
De
Mohrenschildt ID Palm Beach
and sent an investigator to
talk ID him. The investigaiDr
missed him Tuesday morning
and said he would return that
night.

.

THE

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Ina M. vanMeter to Alvin
B. Mays, Allee Mays,
Thomas A. Mays, 1.03 acre,
Olive.
Frederick W. Gibbs Jr.,
Janice E. Gibbs to Gene D.
Hudson, Dreama L. Hudson,
Pl. Lots 153, 154, Middleport.
RoscOe C. Prater, Betty
Prater to Robert F. Duncan,
Sharon K. Duncan, 8.5258
acres, Bedford.
Irene Walker to Charles
Abbot, Int. in 80 acres, Olive.
David Ashley to Diana
Ashley, Pt . Lots 81, 82,
Middleport.
Darrell P. Chevalier, Nollf
Chevalier to
Edward
Chevaliet, Lots 26 and 'll,
McDole and Torrence Add.,
Reedsville.
CHURCHilL SUED
NEW YORK (UPIJ- Lord
Charles Spencer Churchill is
being sued for $3 million fo~
allegedly violating a contract
to promote a tine of men 's
clothing.
In a lawsuit · !Ued
Wednesday in U.S. District
· Court, Tarra !!all Clothiers of
Fifth Avenue said the I.JJndoo
lord reneged on an
agreement to be Tarra's
exclusive representative
through August.
The complaint named
Genesco Inc. as the second
defendant. It said the firm
"wro'ng'!ully Induced"
Churchill;..the brother of the
Duke of Marlborough, ID
promote its competing line of
men's clothing ln violation of
the Tarra agreement.
· Tarra said it paid Churchill
tsOO and was to have paid an
additional $3,500 lor each of
at least four personal
appearances at stores ln the
United States.

,.

SEE YOUR FORD DEALER TODAY!
HE'S OFFERING SAVINGS .OF UP TO

ON THE FAMOUSLY
EQUIPPED LIMITED EDITION ·
SALE 'n EXPLORER PICKUPS!

FORD

�8- The DaUySentinei, Middleport-Pomeroy,O.,Thursday,
March 31, 1977
.

I- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - 1

•

0

.Plane recordings
! ..~~~a De~~~" ! ~~~~~~~-~?~ t~. ~ !~.~~-u s

Mro. Anita Grace King , 59,
MASON _ Scott Knotts , Rdarded Citizens ·has an- -M of the event .
third place In ea dl category.
Evergreen commun ity , Spencer , W. va .. formerly ot ..,unced a !()-speed bicycle
Saturday, Apr il :lith, at 10
starting at 10 a.m. behind
formerly ol Po&gt;nl Pleasant, Mason, died Monday night at wlll be the nr• prl!e for the o'clock will be the HIKE- the Senior Citizens Centet In
W. Va., died unexpectedly the Lexington, Ky., Veterans toy and glrl who collect the BIKE this year and trophies Pomeroy, riders will roove
Wednesday morning at the Adm inistration Ho•pital
.
..
hom e of het" son.
.MI-. Knotts Is survived by most money from th eir
out of a measured rourse
•
•
·
A member of the Calvary his wife and several brother•
oonslstlng of approxlmately
Baptist Church, Rio Grande, and sisters. MI-. Knotts was
l1l miles. Ret!ldentsare asked
· By AR111UR HERMAN
directions given by the · expected for later today, the she was born Feb. 14, 1918 In tormerl r employed at Foote
tD ride cr spooaor a rider. All
SANTA
CRl!Z
DE control tower. The flight data remains of the ·American MaSOn County, W. Va. to the Miner a Corp. Funeral
tate Carl E. and Ruby services will be held at 1 p.m.
ages are Invited to par·
TENERlFE, Spain (UPI) - recorders will help us in •victims will be flown to Dover Gaskins
Lynch.
Fr iday at !he Sinnet FuMral
'
•
ttcipale arxl dleck points Will
A Spanish air force plane determining the speed and AFB In Delaware for another ·, She Is survived by her Home at Spencer, w. va.
HoberMedlcaiCealer
Dexter; Flora Williams, . be set up approximately five
·carrying· vital recordings of direction of the airplanes and attempt at id entification . husband , El lis King ; one son,
Dllcbaqu,MartbSO
Pomeroy ; Edna ' Reeves, miles apart wRh a plck·up
Most bodies
are
charred
and
Cha
rl
es
Larry
K
ing
,
CHARLES
LEGG
J
plane movemenls and radio whether the KLM rotaled.
·
Rer,noldsburg .· Ohio,· three
·
acqueline Anderson, AI bany; Oscar Imbod en, wh lcletoretumrlderstothe
Charles A. Legg, 64, Porter· R bl
canter , Reg 1na Min ersvill.e. .
"Rotating" refers to the mangled.
contacts left today for
SUrvivors, famUy members sis ers. Filena Lynch and died a t his residence Monda y'
o n
!Urtlng poht, If nece$Siry.
Washington where experts pilot of a plane pulling back
Ml-s. Donna Lambert. bot h ol even tng.
Chaney, Sara Clark, Anita
DISCHARG ED - Carol .. Powell's Supe r Valu and
will study them In an effort to on the control yoke to bring and officials -late Wednesday . Poin t Pleasant; Mrs. Carrie
Born Apr il 12, 1912 In Cordell, Timothy Cordle, Burnem, Rober! BlshQp, theMelgsC!IIllllunly Mental
establish the exact cause of the craft 's nose up off the paid homage to the dead in an Richison, Ok lahoma City, Mason County, W. Va . to the Teresa Cremean·s, Harold · IOO!el Underwood, Barbara Health Cent er have pur·
interdenominatiooal service Okla ., . and two grand· late Alfred and Klzle Till is
the worst disaster ln aviation ground when it reaches at
La Laguna cathedral. Four children. She was preceded in Legg, he Is survived by his . Dailey, Sr., Mae Dempsey, &amp;nlth, Dana Covert, Nora mased the first prize and the
history.
takeoff velocity.
dea th by a brother , Carl E.. wife, Marga ret and one Mary EUas, AmY Elklne, Buchanan, William Edwards, licycles are on display at
The plane left at 10:30 a.m.
"it is important that we sprays of gladioluses and Jr., in 1971 and a sister; dau~hler , Mrs. Lillian Mil- F·rleda Faehnle, Elble Judy Harr~oo , Melissa Fife, Powell's Super Valu. The
,
(5:30a.m EST) for the United coincide the tower wpes with red eand-wh it e rose s were Luci ll e in 1963.
che1 , Buff al o, W. Va . One Ferguson, Betty France, Helen Preston, Eliza Birch. -phles will be dlaplayoo
Funera I services will be' slsterprecededhlm
placed in an !Bth century
In death.
uu
States by way of Madrid.
themovemenls ofthe aircraft ..._
•
p.m. Sa turday at the CrowA retired C&amp;O railroad Mrs. Kenneth ,F ry · and
riso.
The Spanish plane carried and detennine where the uoape1m the cathedral.
Hussell Funeral Hom•. Point em pl oyee; he was a veteran daughter, Rosemay Goad,
· Ride rs are requested to
the llight data and cockpit aircraft were wh en the
Pl easant, with th e Rev . of World War 11 .
GregHofcomb,RhondaHunt,
!ickupthesponaorsheetsal
voice recorders of both . various statements were -:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:,:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::.:::·:::::::·:·:-:-:-::-:-:-:·:·:·:·:· ~~~r~rs wtLI.Iusbeher lnolfsiculnactrinegst"
Funeral services wlU be 11 Charla Knljlp, Gary Nicely,
Ueland Realty, 608 E. Main
planes and a copy of the being made," he said. ·
a.m. Frida y at the McCo~ - John • _._ Ch r1
M.
PLEASANT VAlLEY
Cemetery, Point Pleasant. Moore Funeral Home wt h
"""'"'"•
I ea
c- DISCHARGES .- Lana St., In Pomeroy or the
EXT ENDED OUTLOOK
control tower voice tape.
Haley did not comment oo
· ds may call at the th e
Farland , Me.....
"--- Newman,
Fmn
Rev.
Howard
Ccrnm111ity Mental Health
Saturday throu gh ~r~~~ayi.J:.o:'e 6 to 9 p.m. Killingsworth officiating . ,James Orr, M.D., Clara Burris, Point Pleaeant, Center,
W"llllam R. Haley, chief of statements Tuesday by
Second St. In
Mooday 1 a chan ce of
the Natiooal Transportation Spanish and Dutch officln ls
.-. ~'
Buria l will be In Fairview Powers, Allee Rulen, WUUam FUter, Hendert•, r. ; Puneroy, the respective high
show ers Saturd ay and
Safety Board team that has that the KLM pilot started
Cemetery. Friends niay &lt;all R
d Sh t Mild d Cltester "Leport, Gallipolis
!his evening from 7 to 9 a! the
aymon
a o,
re
scbools or by calling 992-3232,
again Monday . Fair
been Investigating Sunday's down the foggy runway
funeral hom e.
Shuler, Don stanley, VIola Ferry; Darrell Day, Vinton ; 7-12-30119 or !115-4112.
Surxlay. Highs wUI beln the
nmway collision of a Pan without a fina l takeoff
Stewart, Emma Swon, Betty Walters, Gallipolis;
The sponsor sheet muat be
TIIREE TREATED
50s north and the 6116 south.
· American 747 and a KLM 747, clearance.
E-R
CAlLED
Jonathan
Vanlca,
Gladys
Mnl.
Danny
Adkins,
Henmmpleted
by the day of the
The Pomeroy Emergency
Lows In the upper 30s or Squad answered several calls
said the read out-of the
He said Spanish authorities
The
M i d d 1 e p 0 r t Wallace, George Walters.
detson; Mrs. Birdie Queen, · take. And a ropy of the form
40s.
recordings will stsrt Monday. gave pen:nission to fly all the
Blrtbi, Marcb30 .
Southside; Lawren ce tllrned it the day of the hike.
Wednesday and Thursday Emergency Squad was called
Haley
· also
sa id · recordings to Washington and
to
village
hall
at
5:01
p.m.
,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Theodore
·
Scarberry,
Henderson ; After the ride the sheets will
roorning: at 10 : 2~ a.m., to the
preparations were expected also allowed American and
Wednesd
ay
·
for
Christopher
Clary,son,
Londonderry;
Mr.
Joseph
Forbus,
Point be checked acrordlng to tbe,
murthouse where Florence
to be completed Thursday for Dutch officials to interview
Diddle,
7,
Raclne.
and
Mrs,
Frank
Verglllo,
Pleasant;
Jay
Marshall,
!aunber of miles rlden. The
Nelson had fallen down some
the return of the remains of the two Spanish air controiers
1teps; at 2:10p.m. to SR 143 Otristopher had .fallen and daughter, Henderson, W. Hartford; Edna Rollins, riders wUI then collect their
the victims. The disaster for 21'&gt; hours Wednesday
for Mrs. Raymond Musser, was bleeding, He was being Va.; and Mrs. and Mrs. Letart; Mrs. Clinton Sayre, pledges and tum In the
killed at least 577. persons .
night.
are
111d at 6:23 a.m. to the Ulken to Holzer Medical Wilham Carter, son, Jackson. Point Pleasant; Melvin money. Sponsors
Haley told reporters it was
Haley said he did ''not
Center
by
~
mother
when
Wear
s,
Point
Pl,
e
asant;
requested
to
make
sure
a
Eugene Escue hom e on
. "anticipated that KLM and believe at all" reports that
tt!e
decided
the
injury
should
U!onard
Roush,
Letart
;
Cecil
,._,nsor
sheet
has
been
filed
Lincoln Hill Road for Fretl
· Pan American crews will the air controllers had a
VeleruaMemortaiHoapllal Martin, West Columbia; wt prior to dooatlng t'·'
Kind! who had fallen . All be bandaged. The squad
ADMITTED - Wllllam 91annoo Bash L · Gilb rt
,,.
· assist ln the identification of televiaion set In the tower and
were taken to Veterans IJlndaged the wound then the
·
· • eon ;
e
rmney. AU riders must have
Swisher-Lohse
Drug
Store
Borllig,
Albany·
,
Helen
Pullln
Pot"nt
Pleasa
t
the voices of crew members were watching a soccer game
Memorial H9spital where mild was taken on to the
•
n ; a sponsor !lheet before par·
Leifheit, Tuppers Plains·, Genevieve Barrett Lakin
· on the cockpit voice between Spain and Hunga ry in Pomeroy also has tickets th ey were treated and
medical
center
by
his
•·
In the hike.
for
the
aU-sporls
banquet
at
Roach and son;•' tlclpatlng
Sandra Oblinger, Mid- Mnl · M'-hael
recorders.''
at the lime of the crash.
released.
mother.
..
Forms must not be
Meigs
High
School
April
14
dleport·, John St.evens, Mason·' Clifford Murray • destroyed. This Is a record of
He said the tapes ''will
He said that following the
VInton·, George Hupp, Pomeroy ' and Mrs · James those who sponsored you as a
assist us In our inquiry of the release of the bodies , bein g sponsored by the
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
Racine·, Lorena Hoffman, Hartman P"'•t Pleasant
• -·
·
rider.
Club.
Tickets will be available
there and at these other
(Continued from page I )
locations through April 8:
(Continued from page I)
Quality Print Shop, Western
and a "k~y witness" in the assasslnatloo of John F. Kennedy. thinking It was cocaine,
Auto Store, Dutton Dr.ug
Sheriff's Pollee Lt. Richard Sheels eald Wednesday
store, all Middleport ; the authorities were holding "certain personal papers" belonging according to police In
Rutland Dept.
Store , to de Mohrenschlldt, described by sources as a fonner CIA TEmple, Tex. Shortly after
Rutland ; Meigs High School, agent, but he declined to eay If they pertained to the Kennedy me anlffed the drug, the
•k1im was a!Utltted to a
and also in Pomeroy, the New
By
Ualted
Press subsidiary of the McCulloch York Clothing House. The assassination. Deputies said de MohrenschUdt killed himself IDapltal with severe brain
late Tuesday ln a drawing room at socialite Cltarles Tilton ITI's dunage.
lnleraatlonal
Corp., developers of the city. tickets are $3 each.
,
waterfront
mansion with a shotgun belonging to his host. The
In an 18th copyrighted
Not all the eastern trans"nie drug la aimed at two
death was ruled a suicide by Palm Beach County Medical kinds of people - narcotics
article on crlme in Arizona, plants to Lake Havasu City
Examiner
Dr. Gambino Cuevas. ·
Investigative Reporters and have been orr the criminal
dficers or people tbe pushers
Editors Inc. said Lake side of the police blotter,
WASHINGTON - IT WAS A TIME OF testing· Ire trying lD gel rid of,"
Havasu City, Ariz .. is according to the IRE. One of
breakthroughs
were not to be eKpected. And President
Leffingwell sald .
. becoming an important them, 1n fact , was William
(Continued from page 1)
should
hold
firm
on
strategic
arms
because
"lf
the
Ruaslans
"Since IIIIIIY of these drugs
. weslemoutpostfororganized Hamill, Rochester , N.Y.'s damage. There were no Inwant an agreement, they 'll come around." Those conclusions -cocaine, heroin and so on
crime.
form er deputy poli ce juries and no citations.
bwlt with dependable difference
can
be drawn today from congre&amp;alonal. and diplomatic - look alike, a pollcenian
The IRE said the 14-year- commissioner.
Finally, Mrs. Olin Hysell,
In the aftermath of Secretary of State Cyrus Vance's muld eaally wind up a victim
ALPHA II RADIAL
. old community is "home
Despite that high rank, Rt. l , MinersvUie, reported to analyses
mission to Moscow.
II be accidentlY llliffl or
Premfum
Glass Belted 78 Series
· base" for the West's most Hamill left the Rochester the sheriff that Wednesday
It
was
''no
surprise"
to
Sen.
John
stennis,
one
of
the
tastee
IIIIa
substance,"
he
. notorious burglary ring arid is police department in !972 evening three lD!identlfi~d
..
· a magnet for dope traffickers under a cloud. A grand jury . persons attempted to steal a lea~g proponents of American military might, that. the · added.
SoVIet
Union
would
not
buy
Carter's
proposal
.
to
lower
A
wblte,
granular
powder,
and prostitutes who make accused him o! noncriminal dog from the tra iler
strategic
arms
ceilings.
The
veteran
Misslsaippl
Deffiocrat
"lance"
appareqtly
ca.n
their connectioos at casinos a misconduct for allegedl y residence d her son. Suspects
who
chairs
the
Armed
Services
CommiUee
said
he
believed
all
cause
Instant
death
and
• shorl distance away across turning over evidence In a ned on foot. A blue colored
• the Colorada River in major gambling case against Mustang auto was seen along the first dlscusaions ''would be a testing perlod . .. and ·eerloua brain damage If
=~ly tasted. Texas pollee
Mounted&amp; Nevada.
Ro chester gambling chief leaving the area , but no one that real negotiatioos would follow at a later date."
The IRE said organized Angelo · DeMarco, the IRE was able to get tts license
Balanced
Whlle Huntington pollee
WASIUNGTON ...,-SCIENTISTS HAVE dug up a bo~
crime figures are relocating said. .
plate number. It had primer
have oot enrountered tbe
in Lake Havasu City from the
Hamill recently sought a paint spots. The Incident is of precious metals, but It probably won't trlsger any gold ru!h. !llblltance yet, they fear It
-Pol yester Cord
Two scientists recently were looking for fertillzer ln sewage
with Fibergla ss
East.
job' as a reserve Mohave mder investigation.
Bells
from Menlo Park, Calif. Once they analyzed the burned uhes may be purchased by drug
The IRE said the fi rst County sheriff's deputy. He
ooyers mistaking It for
of
the
sludge,
they
turned
up
gold
and
silver
worth
as
much
as
. easterner to gain prominence didn 't get the job, the IRE
- Silky Smoo th
•
$200 per metric ton, the U.S. Geological &amp;lrvey said sno!ber substance.
. in Lake Hovasu City was said .
Ride
For
Instance,
It
could
be
PACKETS ARE HERE
Wednesday.
·
Josep~
Scavuzzo,
a
The IRE is an organization
Meigs County residents
''This is greater than the value of much of the ore from the mistaken for "snow white,"
- Available In
transplanted Bostonian, of
300
investigati ve
cr phenycycUdlne (PCP), an
White Sidewall
who
ordered
wild
life
packets
~s
of
the
Comstock
in
Virginia
City,
Nev.,
ln
lis
heyday,".
: .whose brothers .ran a journalists who spoosored a
Design
snlmal tranquilizer similar In
from
the
Meigs
Soil
and
S81d
geologist
Robert
Gulbrandsen.
"If
this
were
an
ore
body,
loansharking operation there team of 37 reporters and
effea bid weaker it ronfor the Ray1nond Patriarca eqitors from 25 news Water Conservation District It could be called 'bonanza' ore," he sald.
oentration than LSD, ac·
crime family. Scavuzzo, now organizat io ns who probed should pid&lt; the packets up
mrdlng to Leffingwell.
the area's dominant realtor, crime in Ar'izona following from I to 4 p.m. Saturday or
"Thls tng, alJo called
from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
started as a land salesman - the bombing murder last
SMITH
HIT
IT
'crystal
T.' probably ac·
LODGE
TO
MEET
for Holly Development Corp., June of Arizona Republic Mllnda y at the district office
It
was
Greg
Sm~h for the
munts,
for
11 per cent of all
HARRISONVILLE
A
in the Farmers Bank Bldg.
the land ·mark e tin g reporter Don Bolles.
Marauders who had a regular
.meeting
of dtenucal drug atTe•s we've
towering :liO foot drlver of the Harrisonville Lodge 411 made.'' Leffingwell aald.
N. 2nd. Ave.
Middleport, o.
!lit centerfield fence for a F&amp;AM will be held at 7:30 "Tiut's how conunoo l Is,
992
-7161
ll:lme run against Wahama p.m. Saturday at the temple. second only to marijuana ln
not . Jlm Smith as was AU Master Masons Invited. llmtlngton."
reported .

9- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, March 31, 1977

Doubts resolved about mammography

e

. "Any woman· who feel s safety of mammography are women with ~bronte cancer at the present time is
·· confused or frightened by the which have appe&lt;red in the cystic mastitis; lumps and early detectioo, and quoted
interview .
.~~1' contfoversy over who should media in recent months . The thickenings in the breast ; Dr. Byrd's
"Unless
you
find
and treat
have mammography will be confusion ha s caused some nipple discharge or other
breast
cancer
at
the
earliest
reassu red by the facts wo men to refuse ma m~ ni pple abnormalities ; a
stage,
you
lose
the
be•t
presented in an·article in the mogra phy examina tions) personal history of breast
chance
of
cure
you
want
to
March Rea der's Digest,'' even women with obvious cancer; a fal"t'ilY history of
pick
it
up
as
early
as
poS!ible.
according to Dr. Villaneuva, signs that co uld mean breast the disease; ear[j· onset of
Profe ssi onal E d uc a t ion cancer. These people are menstruation ; no history of And nothing does this better
Chairm an of the Meigs endangering their Ji ves, he pregnancy; first full-term than mammography."
Co unty Unit of the American said .
pregnancy alter age JO. For
LAFF _A _DAY
Dr. Byrd affirms that these wol)len Dr . Byrd
Cancer Society.
-'-E
- 0- ---.
Titl ed, " What Every nobody knows for sure what believes mammography is . - - -- .,.-- - N
01
~
Woman Should Know About the haza rds of these low dose vitally important.
The·article includes up-toBreast X-Ray," the article is x-rays might be. But if there
a n interview with breast are risks, tl)ey are very small date statistics: nearly 90,000
cancer expert , Benjamin F. and mu:;t Oe weighed against women will get breast cancer
Byrd, Jr., M.D., 1976 the benefit of detecting a during the.. year; over 33,000
Ameri can Ca ncer Society breast tumor very early, will die. It also gives a brief
history of this widely
President. It was written by when it is most curable.
He also spells out the signs disc ussed brea st ·x-ray
Walter S. Ross.
Dr. Vill aneuva said that he and personal, or fa mily, technique and its use In
is calling attention to this circumstances which place special detection centers
article to help dispel the certain women at higher risk around the co untry today.
Dr. Villanueva said that the
uncertainty and fear created than others of developi ng this
disease.
In
this
special
group
best
hope aga inst breast
by conflictin g views on the

Commg t 0

HOSPITAL NE WS

. EMPLOYEES LINDA WESTJOHN . CHESTER· ·
Mary Coates, Minersville, and Barbara Pul~er Pomeroy''

.

New city 'home
ha~e'

Police

for ring

Fire marshall

Carte;

SAF·T-8/LT

11RIS·

a

GENERAL TIRE SALES

SALE PLANNED
Forest Run Method'lst
Oturch will hold a bake sale
Friday, April!, beginning at
9 a.m. in froot of the Dale C.
Warner Insurance Agency.

••

.
•••

•

FERRY-MORSE

BULK GARDEN SEEDS

'·•
•

Garden Trawls

•

Hoes
ShOvels

'

Everything Is Herel

r.

••
•

•'

•.

•••

•i•
''

••
••

••

••

GRASS SEED
.,

PACKAGE VEGETABLE &amp; FlOWER SEEDS

Ebersbach Hardware
MAIN STREET

POMEROY

•

t

'

RIO . GRANDE - " In'
troduction. to Surveying" Is.
the title of a new course
added to the spring quarter
schedule at Rio Grande
College.Communlty College
(RGC.CC). The class meets
Saturdays, · beginning at 9
a.m., with the next session
scheduled for April 9,
Taught by B.S. Prlyanath,
eenlor mining engineer at
Southern Ohio Coal Com·
pany, the class -will Include
Information about care and
use of aurveying Instruments
compass surveying ,
notekeepin g, levelin g,
tranRverslng. mapping ond
computation .

•

SALE .

..

Actio·n recommended
in case animal bites

'

'

;~ Egg prices

••• UPTO
PANELING
liE[)

REG. PRICE

14,39

()~tc ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

MED. LUAUN ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
MOUNTAINEER HICKORY••••••••••••••••••
MOUNTAINEER WALNUT~ •••••••••••••••••
MAPLEBROOK HONEY.................... .
MAPLEBROOK AMBER .................... .
W~ODCUT

STRAW ••• e•••••••••••••••••••• ,.
MOUNTAINEER BUnER ......... ~ •••••••

BRADY BIRCH ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
EASTLAND PE~AN ......................... .
SEA FOAM WHITE ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
BLUE MIST••••••••••••••••••••• ······•·· ••••••••
NATURAL BIRCH••••••••••• ~ •••••••• ~ ••••••••
WATCHTOWER ELM •••••••••••••••••••••••••
BOUNTY PINE •••••••• ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••
TSUGA SIERRA •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
GASLIGHT BRICK DESIGN ................ .
..;...;

'

move doWn

"Even if you
.use the short

SERVICES TONIGHT
Masoolc services for
George Frederick Rlt·
tenhouse wUI be held at 7 this
evening at the Ewing Funeral

form, it
could pay you to

Home.

Prlyanath received his B.S.·
degree from the University of
My110re, India, and a diploma
in mining from the School of
Mines, Kolar Gold Fields,
Ind.
"Introduction to Sur·
veylng" Is open to anyone
Interested In underUndJne
general appllcattona lor
surveying. The course offer•
thrill! housr of ooUece credit
for a fee of pe, Partlclpants
may register at the nnt claas
session, or anytlme before, on
RGC.CC's campus.
·
Classes are held ln ADen
Hall, Room I. For more In·
formation phone ~ii:i3 .

,,
After complete remodeling,
- '
redecorating and restocking, ...,..,~!""',!!!111&gt;!­
Mr. and Mrs. Donald l(elly .
and their staff are moving .
Into high gear preparing for
the grand opening of their
Pomeroy Ben Franklin Store;
East Main St., on April 7.
The store, formerly owned
;- and operated by the lale R. L. &gt;
' Jambs of Pomeroy, has been
closed several weeks while
redecoration has been un·
• derway. New fixtures have
been installed and new stock
Is being reartanged.
The new owners have
expanded the · craft, picture ~. •· .
frame, greeting card, toy ,
1
yam and sewing notions ,
linen and lamp shade sales
areas.
• The bulk candy counter, a
•
: feature of Jacoba' store many """('!'
years , has been replaced by a
candy bar and packaged
candy area. Uve· plants wUI
NEW BUSINESS COUPLE - Mr, 81)d Mrs. Donaldl_{elly . 301 S. Sixth Ave., Middleport,
also be featured and yard
will
open their new Pomeroy Ben Franklin Store, E. Main St., on Thursday, April 7.
·
goods have been added to the
stock.
In observance of !be grand
openiDg of their business, Mr,
l and Mrs. Kelly wlll alage a
' tbree·day aale Thursday ·
tbroa1b Saturday of aext
week.
• The opening of the store on
i Thursday, April 7, will mark
: the first venture of the KeUys
l In a retail store. Mr. Kelly
i has been associated with the
\~ Kelly Manufacturing Co, in
- Untagged dogs are wards
Recorda show that as warm destroyed, proper tests for
Middleport.
of
the County.
Mr. and Mrs. Kelly, who weather returns and people rabies cannot be taken. This
All dogs ~nd cats should
reside at 301 S. Sixth Ave., spend more time outdoors, can cause a potential danger be properly vaccinated for
Middleport, are the parents the number of animal bites to the bite victim.
- If you feel the animal rabies. This is the respon1
•• of two children, Rick, a lncreaee according to th~
sibility of the owner.
, journalism graduate of Ohio Meigs County Health must be immediately
- "Important telephone
• state Unlverslty, employed Department. In case of a bite destroyed and this might numbers for animal bites:
happen when the animal is
; on the Sidney Daily News, the department strongly wild, unde.r NO cir- Meigs Co unty Health
Sidney, Ohio, and Vickl, a recommends the following
cumstances s"qllld it be shot Department, 992-3723 or 992junior at Kent State steps be taken :
7160 or the Meigs County Dog
-Q) to your doctor for or hit in the&lt;l liead. Rabies
University.
proper treatment. This tests are mhde1 on brain Warden, 992-7507.
The health department is
treatment usually mean s tissue. Damaged brain tissue
responsible
for protecting the
proper cleansing of the means the teStiliil cannot be
health
of
county
.residents. If
wound and-or a tetanus ln- conclusive. If you do, in an
the
health
department
is not
emergency ' destroy the
noculatloo.
notified,
the
needs
of
the
I
.
- Confine the animal animal, bring the head to the
Health Department Im- animal bite victim cannot be
•
responsible for the bite.
mediately
or refrigerate until properly served .
- Contact the Health
Enjoy the . outdoors, but
you
can.
Department to report the
take
precautions to protect
Any
stray
dogs
should
be
bite. This~ a very Important
the
health
of family and
step so that the animal will be reported to the Meigs County
properly watched for possible Dog Warden, Alfred Frank . friends, the department asks.
•
rabies Infection. The usual
••
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A, procedure for this is to tle up,
, poultry marketing economist or confine to a pen, the
: at Ohio State University says animal for 14 days and watch
the price of eggs will be going for unusual behavior. The
Meigs County Dog Pound
down .
does
not have facUlties for
According to OSU ExIsolating
potentially rabies
: tension Poultry Marketing
Infected
dogs:
the owner
Economist Ralph L. Baker,
must
do
this.
toe higher egg prices
- Under NO circumstances
Htnrv w. Bloc:k
customc;·~ found ln the stores
should
the
anlmal
be
kUiect.
If
resulted from a decrease
production because of the the animal Is Improperly
cold weather.
Baker salol the price of eggs
will continue to drop· during
the rest of the year because
Reason No. 15 why H&amp;R Block
, larger numbers of laying
. FIRST SON BORN
are coming Into
should do your taxes.
CHESTER - Mr. and Mrs .
••' bens
production on the natlon's
Roland Morris of Cltester are
fanns.
Even the short form is more complicated
announcing
the blrth of their
Me expects productloo by
this year. So to be sure you pay the
July to be about three per first ~n, Matthew Forrest.
smallest legitimate tax- it could pay you to
cent or more above the level lie weighed six pound&amp;, 13
ounces
and
was
born
at
St.
•
see Block. And if switching to the long •
. • of July of 1978.
Hospital,
form will save you money, we'll show you
:
Biker also expects the Joseph
Parkersburg,
W
;
Va.
Pater; . price to be about six cents a
just how much.
·
' dozen lower during the third nal-grandparents are Mr. and
' qlianer of this year than last Mrs. Eldon ·Morris of
Pomeroy, and the maternal.
I and about 10 cents a dozen • grandparents
are Mrs. Mary
! lower ln the fourth quarter ShoWalter of Chester
and the
: than last.
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
late Forre.'ll Showalter.
1,
Biker eald the lncrealliilg
, production of eggs stems
• !rom the steadily growing
l .tumber of egg-type chickR
Open 9 a.m.- 6 p.m. Weekdays, 9-5 ~a t .
: hatched.
Phone 992 -3791
; · He aald nearly 15 miUion
' more new layers will be half of this year than· were
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
"'" lllded to !locka throughout added during the first flail of
tile country during the first Jolt _year.

expected _to

'

AND PLASTIC
FLOWER
BOXES

Rakes

r-·.0--~~·----------~---~----------·------~--~--------...

Surveying coUPse to
be offered at RGC

· METAL

Spades

HAS SURGERY
Delores Aelder, Pomeroy,
111derwent major surgery
recently It Ohio University
Hospital , Columbus. Her
room number is 731 center,
fur those wbo wish to send
mrda.

NOW YOU KNOW
The dice · game "Crape"
was introduced to America
by Bernard de Mandeville In
New Orleans In 1813 and
became popular among that
city's Creole population,
deriving its name from the
nickname for a Creole,
"Johnny Crapaud,"

I.

Grand opening of refurbished
Ben Franklin Store April 7th

Swisher-Lohse
sells banquet
tickets too

News •• in Briefs

prepare the artificlnl flower department for the grand
opening of the Pomeroy Ben Franklin Store Thursday
April 7.
'

It's Like a·Dream Come True!
Now you cu afford lo Uve tile Ule of luxury! Becauae
our manufactiU'ed homea are equipped with everything
you could wan&amp; •.• apacloua room a, modern appUancea,
decorator furniJIIIDI•! P.lus much more! Free delivery
and n&amp;-up. Coavenlent ~erma. See Ul !

. KINGSBURY HOME SAJ.ES INC.
''FOR THE FINEST IN MANUFACTURED HOUSING"

l.~

1110 E. Main St. ·

992-7034

Pomeroy, o.

H&amp;R BLOCit
.

618 EAST MAIN

1

8.99

8.99
s'99
1
9.95
1
11.95
112.80
115.95
117.95
1

REG. PRICE

LACE WHITE ····················•·····
AVOCADO FLORENTINE .................. .
, ~ l i d or ~e rferated

'2"

4"xl0'

Reg . $3.00 Sheet

NOW

FIBERGLASS
BUILDING INSULATION

2x4 PRECUT STUDS
NOW
69~ Each

31fz" THICK REG. 13' sq. ft. · NOW 11' sq. ft.
6" THICK RE~, 23' sq. ft. NOW 20' sq. ft.

No. 1 Best Quality Pre Cut Studs

NOW

S

•8.69
'9.69·

SUB-SIDING

Joint

GRAOE

Reg . $1.49

10.50
111.84

1

4x8· '12"

PLASTIC PIPE

see tis."

•

4.95
16.¥
16.85
1
8.29
18.29
1
8.65
16.85
1
8:48
1

•3.49
''3.95
'4.99
'4.99
'6.45
'6.45
'6.65
•4.99
'6.59
'6.95
'6.95
'6.95
1
7.99
'9.35
'9.89
•12.45
1 14.95 .

129

4'x8'x 1 V:t'' CDxPLYWOOD

Each .

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

Also Available in .15" and 23" Wiclthli ;:.

. .................. ;; .•....•......... •8.19

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;SUPPLY CORPORATION
923 SOUTH 3RD AVE.

992-2709

MIDDLEPORT. 0,

OPEN: 7:0Q to 5:00 MONDAY THRU FRIDAY - 7:00 to.4:00 Saturday
AL.L ITEMS CASH &amp; CARRY

DELIVERY AVAILABLE

�•c::;:··-;;;S~iT~r
Trade
Through
The
Sentinel
Want
Ads
CHARGES
.
r
.---J: __ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ __ _
IS Wurdti ot UnOt't
C...h

'"

100

'""'

2WI.ys

1.00

3d¥)'1i

100
300

I day:.

Auto Sale!!

Auto Sales

0 1Mfttt'

2 SIGNS

m

OF
QUALITY

tiM! mimmwn 15
wonb Ill • L&gt;eUl!l 1'1!1 wonl pt'r day
At.W rwmi~ ulht!r U~t~n l'VIUie\'Ullvr
E.11t'h wocd

uv~r

days wtll be chilrged 111

...

u~

I di!.)'

~.

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

NOTICE ,

Pratfs

Meat

lf75FORD TORINO
121195
~ dr , dark green finish, black vinyl trim, 351 V·i .
automatic, P. steering &amp; brakes, wheel covers, radio,

Mkt.

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

DAVID BRICKLES
General Contracting

-to _..,.

S.rvlce

Free Estimates

NOTICE

SWAIN'$

Dnly'279.95

Pomeroy Landmark

·J:.t

PARTS • lABOR
·--GUARANTEED

REASONABLE
RATES

---

10

Paper ·Carrier.

In Syracuse

The

Dai~

Sentinel

992-2156
Pomeroy, Ohio

m,ooo.oo.

suoo.oo.

- ----.--·
FOil

-----------

--

1

Poineroy Landmatt

"'

1

HE HAD WAVY,
-Mv · MY!

Television log for easy viewing

lho -~~ llool

- p-

Route 3,

STOIII
WllfDOWS l DOORS
REPLACE. Ell!
WIRIIOIIS
ILUMIIIIIM
SIDIM&amp;WFITT

~RR~~~!~~DER
Ph. 992-3993

~10·1

THREW Hlo;
VOTE5 TO

NORTH

31

• AQ~

WEST
oio 108652

EAST
• J,9 7

'I Q87 53
t 932
"' 52

., 9 4 2

t J8
o1o K J 7

SOUTH
.K 3
'1 AI06
t K 71
oloA 10864

Pomeroy, 0 .
ALLEYOOP

Ne1ther vulnerabl e

AS SOON AS I DRAW TAAT
CRITTER AWAY FROM YOU,
YOU PEOPLE TAKE OFF
FOR "'&lt;);), Y'HEAR"'

WE'LL 00 LIKE '111E WiN[;!
NEVER FEAR: IT 'LL BE
A JOY 'TO GET OUT
OF HER\:."' ~ ....-'1

YOU HEAI&lt;P 11-IE MAN! JUMP IN
l'HER£.. AND WHEN YOU 'RE SEc

West

DON'T MOVE A HAIR!

Pass
Pass
Pass

PHOTOGRAPHY

North, East
l •
Pass

So uth
2N T

4NTPass

5'1

6NTPass

Pass

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

Aerial
Commercial
Schools
Weddings

North's four-notrump bid IS
deflmtely not Bla ckwood It is
a notrump ra1se and suggests
that North go on If hiS two·
no trump response was a sound

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

Located in Langsville
Box 28-A
R uti and, Ohto 115775
P h (614) 142 -2409
We Deliver
12224mos

11 30-Johnny Carson 3.4, 15. Gregory Peck A Living
Biography 6,13 , Ko1 ak B; Mary Hartman 10 ; ABC
News 33

one.

South 's f1ve-heart call was
wh a t we ca ll " Opt10nal
Blackwood " Soulh ha s a
super sound two notrump
Only 14 h1gh-card poin ts, but
all of them are m aces and
kmgs and he also has two ten
spots and a five-card smt He
mtends lo b1d SIX later on and
has some slight dream of get-

UITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-KITCHEN MECHANICS

(614) 985-4155
Chester, Ohio

10·17·1 mo (Pdl

8liT IT'S
THE ONlY

fXACTL'f ·· DUBB
K~E"I

HOSPITAL
IN TOWN ·

FREE WBE JOB

TI&lt;AT .. TO

COVER HIS
CLUMSINESS

tiE SAID IllS
HOPE l ESS

WITH OIL CHANGE
ANO FILTER

12 ·00-Mov1e "Keeper of the Flame" 10; Janak l 33.
12.4D-Movie " The House That Dripped Blood " 8
1 :Oo- Tomorrow 3,4, News 13

ting to seven

North has no mterest in

seven and

'I K J
t A Q 10 6 5

PROFESSI'ONAL

Southeastern Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.

merely

FRIDAY , APRIL 1,1977

bids s1x

6·00-Sunrlse Semester 10
6 15-Farm Report 13.
6· 2Q-- Not For Women Only 13
6:31}-.Columbus Today 4, News 6, Sunrise Semester 8;
Overseas M is sion 10.
6 45-Mornlng Report 3.
6 .5Q-Good M orn mg, West V1rglnla 13
7·00-Today 3,4, 15, Good Mornmg America 6, 13;
Chuck Whit e Reports 10.

nolrump
A hea rt or club lead would
sol ve all problems for South
but West opened a spade and
Soulh could on ly count II lop
t r.1ck s. ass um1ng the
diamonds came in So South
won lh e spade With hiS kmg
and we nt right after
d.amonds Not only did they
behave mcely but when he ran
all of the sUit, the defenders
chucked spades wh1l e South
let a couple or clubs go
Now South cashed the ace of
spades to account for all East·
West cards in that su1t H1s
next pl ay was to lead North's
queen of clubs and let 1l nde
around to West's kmg.
Then he spread hiS hand
smce West had to lead e1ther a
club or heart and giVe South
th e rest of the tncks

7· Os-Porky P iQ 10.
7 . JQ-Schoolies 10

8.01f-Howdy Doody 6; Capt Kangaroo 8,1 0, Sesame
St. 33
,
,
8;lif-Big Valley 6
9."0if-A M 3, Ph 1l Donahue 4,IS , Andy Gr 1ttlth 8; Mike
Douglas 10
9:30-Cross-Wits 3, Edge of N1g ht 6; Concentration B

10 OQ--Santord &amp; Son 3,4,15, D1 nah 6; Double Dare
8,10; Mike Doug las 13
10 Jo-Hallywood Squares 3, 4,15, Pnce IS Right 8,10.
11 •01)-Wheel of Fo rtune 3.4.15 Morn1nn Shnw 11

11 ·3Q--Shoot lor lhe Stars 3,4,15, Happy Days 6,13;
Love of L1le B.IO, Sesame St. 20,33
II 5s-CBS News 8; Ms Fi•lt 10

..

12. 0Q-News 3,4,6,10, Second Chance 13 , Name
That Tune 15. D1vorce Court a'.
12 3G-Lover s &amp; Friends 3,15, Ryan ' s Hope 6, 13, Bob
Braund , Search tor Tomorr ow 8, 10

~~~

I 00--Gong Show 3; All My Children 6. 13. News 8;

A Ca nadtan r eader wants to
know the correct response to
partner's one spade opening

Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15
1 3Q-Oays of Our Lives 3, 4,15, Famtly Feud 6.13. As

With
oio AJ 1076 42'1 762 t 32 oio 3
ThiS " a tough one , bu t we
b1d JUSt four spades .
(For a copy of JACOB Y

The World Turns B. IO.
2 IJ0-.120,000 Pyram id 6,13

MODERN. send $1 to " Wm
at Br&lt;dge ," c l o th 1s

]· 15---Gener al Hospita l 6,13.
3; 3Q--Malch Game 8,1 0; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.

2 3o-Doctors 3,4, 15, One L1fe to Live 6, 13; Guid 1ng

Light 8,1 0.
l OQ--Another World 3,4,15; All In The Family 8,10;
Crocke tt 's Victory Garden 20

newspa per P 0 Box 489,
Rad10 Cdy Stat1on . New York
N Y 10019)

4·0o-M1ster Cartoon 3, Litt le Rasca l s 4, Gong Show
15, New Mickev Mouse Cl ub ~ : Lucv Show 8:
Sesame St. 20,33 ; Mov ie "J udge Hardy &amp; Son" 10;
Dinah 13 •.
4· 15--L ittle !Rascals 4.
"

~

AT

4 3Q--My Three Sons l ; Partridge Family ~.
E mer'gency One 6; Partr idge Fam 8, Fllnfs tOnes
15.

,,y

by THOMAS JOSEPH

CHESHIRE
ASHlAND

ACROSS
I P ledge,

DOWN
I Faucel
2 Portuguese

VOW

6 Common
man
10 Eagle's
nest
11 Sao-,
Brazil
12 Famous

Cheshire, Ohio
Phone 614-367-0626
3-16-1 mo .

COUNTRY farmland w1ti'l seciud·
ed woods , wafer and good oc·
cess 1n Monroe County, W Vo
$1,000 down , coli (304 ) 772·

3102 or (304) 772-3227
CommerCial property opprox 17
acres , level land, located at
Tuppers Plotns on Oh1o, Roufe

7. Phone (614)667·6304.

BRADFORD, Auction eer, Com·
plete Se rvice . Phone 949-2487
or 949-2000. Racine, Oi'lio. Cnll
Bradford

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepars , toasters, 1rons. oil
small appliances lown mower,
next to State Highway Garage
on Route 7 Phone (614) 985-

3825.

NEW 3 bedroom house butlf·ln
k1tchen , both ond •; ,, Pkone
742-2306 or con tact MilO B Hut·
c:h1son, Rutland, Oh1o.
FOR SALE All elec nearly new
home 1n Rutland orea. Bose·
ment, 3 bedroom5 , ollocned
garage ,
$29 . ~oo ·
P'tlone

7'2-2531.

REMODELING, Plumbing, heating
and all types of genera l repo1r.
Work guorc:mteed 20 years ex·
pen ence Phone 992 2409,

'•ll"

SEWING MACHINE Repairs. ser
v1ce oil makes 992 2284 . Th e
Fo b r~ c
Shop , Pomeroy .
Authorized S1nger Soles ond
Service. We sharpen Scissors .

Virgil B. Sr., Realtor
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45!69
Phone 992-3325

mt.~
~ardf

It's not This is

40l!r job front
to c.lean

......,,•., ' 1t up,

EXCAvATING, dozer, looder ond
backhoe work ; dump trucks
and to-boys f or h~r e; wtll koul
f1!1 dirt, to soli, l1mestone ond
grovel Call Bob or Roger Jef·
fers, doy phone 992·7069,
n1ght pi'lone 992·3525 or 992·

TEAFORD

- - --=
---,------~

I li ke to
Don t throw an4keep it neat more 5tuff in the

and ... hey!

Slim~

~

•

~s.ooo.

JUST LISTED - 45 a cres
of wood s, good old 2
bedroom trail er, rural
water , septic tank and

SEPTIC TANKS deoned Modern
Sonllolion , 992 ·3~54 ."---WILL do roofing , conslrvclioF' .
plumbing and heating , No job
too Iorge or too small Phone

AN' GROANS WHEN H£
\&amp;-~~-.... WAKG5 UP~!'-

MOBILE Home Repair, Elec ..
plumbing and heotmg. Phone

Ex·

disposal I and corner lot for
lilly $18,000
SITE LOCATORS
DROP IN WHERE YOU
CAN BUY WITH CON ·
FIDENCE . G. BRUCE
AND
HELEN
L.
ASSOCIATES .-

EXCAVATING, Backi'loes , Dor.er,
- trencher, Low Bov. dump truck .
trucks , septic systems . B•ll ·•
Pullins. Pi'lone 992-2478 day or
n1ght.

ly, W Vo. Phone 1304) 772·
3102or(304)772·3227

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
5 bedroom home, large living room, dining,.
room and entrance, kitchen, office,
basement, washroom, paneled garage with
bar, 3 baths, 8 closets. brHzeway, large
covered patio, 2 wood burning fireplaces.
wall-to-wall carpet In rooms and stalrwav
and hall, 2 porches, large front yard, fenced
backyard. Call 992-3986 before 7 p.m. In
evening; after 7 call 992-5640. Shown 'bv
ointment onl

35 Robust
36 Competent
38 Former
ruler
4Q1Top
4[ Gone by
42 London 's
legendary
founder
43 Comprehend

8 QQ.--Sanford &amp; Son 3.4,15; Movie " The San PedrCl

Bu ms" 6,13; Code R 8,10, Washington Week in
Rev 1ew 20,33
8;3Q--Chico &amp; the

1

DAA

Government 33. Lowell Thomas Remembers 20
lO:Oo-Police Woman 3,4,15; Pilot 8,10; News 20 ;

Flr lnQ Line 33.
I0 ·3Q--Lock , Stock &amp; Barrel 20
II : OQ--News 3,4,6,8, 10,13,15, Monty Python 's Flying
Circus 20, Black Perspective on the News 33.

11 ·3Q--Johnn y Carson 3,4,15, SWAT 6,13, Mov1e
" Satan's School for Girls" 8; Mary Hartman 10;

ABC News 33.
12 .0G-Movle "The Innocents " 10, Janak ! 33.

I2 ;4Q--Mod Squad 6; Ironside 13.
1.00--fl'l •dnig ht Special 3. ~ . 15
1·41f-News 13.
2.3Q--News 3
5·3Q--Movle "Calling Northside 777" 3.

'\1 jfj}~ ~'il ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
\9 ~~~ ® byHennArnoldandBoblee

~

Unscramble these tour Jumbles,
one Ieder to each square, to form
four ord1nary words.

NOTIX

PJ
DA

MZL

DBQ
EAFFO
D'A A

KM Z
PZ

EBA
DBQ

JIQQUO

"'
.. ~

(11977 Kin&amp; Ftaluna Syndleate,ln~.

..1 -

I [J

tQULLA$1

LMO·
DA

DO ~Oll THINK IT WOVLO
HELP If! 1 5WUN6 TH((EE
13AT5 6EFOI!E I GOT
UP TO· THE PLATE?

a

"'

-•

IF 't'OU CAN'T SUliN6
ONE BA'l: MILO, 'iOW ARE
~OU GONNA SWINGTil~EE '

THANK
'fOLI,

MILO

TODA'f'S MY BIRFDAY
AI'J' ALL I GOT WUI

A BUSTED
LAIG --

esY

Ac·rok·:5

WHO HAVE NOTH IN(i;

EI..GE iO 1'0.
Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surpnse answer, as sug·
gested by the abOve canoon.

Print the surprise answer here: [

J l J X]
(Answers tomot"row)

Jumbles· QUIRE HONEY SIZZLE FEDORA
Yesterday's Answer Some~mes drunk by SGU&amp;res-"ROUNDS"

BARNEY

·-'

I

IGLIMYR
I
I K] I

u

PORE 0~ ME!!

I I

I

PJ

:

......

l

RYPEK

~

EAFFO
MD
ZPYBD . - IQO
MPXKMZ
Vealerday's Cryploquote: SHE . WAS A BRUNEITE BY
BIRTII BUT A BLONDE BY HABIT. - ARTIIUR " BUGS"
BAER
'

·~

v

3· 00-Mary Hartman 3.
5.0Q-Mary Hartman 3

HRJO

D PKQ

·

9·30-Movoe "Cooley High" 6,13, The Way It Was 20

WINNIE
WHY'D YOU PUSH ME
OUT OF 'THE PiCTU RE?
I THOUG/1T I WAS
5UPR:JSED m E&gt;E
YOUR. 'DA11:'1!

,

1V1an 3,~•/fi • Wal l Streel Week

20.33.
9;0Q--Rockford F1les 3,4,15, Nashville 99 8.1 0; People'•

,.-+-+-+--+--

CRYPTOQUOTllS

Coll992·7~81

SMALL form for sola , 10% down,
owner flnoncl'd. Monroe Coun-

22 Tree of
Asia
24 Surrounded
by
25 Falsehood
26 Bemg
(Sp. )
28 Kmd of
colll swn
( 2 wds.)

hmts Each day t he code lC' tters are 1hlfcrl'n!

HOMESITES for sole, 1 acre and
up. Middleport, neor Rvtland.

7ol81.

6; Treasure Hun t 8, MacNeil Lehrer Report 20,33;
Andy Wil lia ms 10; Name That Tun e 13, Pop Goes
the Country 15

across

29 Short poem "'
30 J oust
31 President
Carter's
nuddle

HI&lt;/ JJQL

NEW 3 bedroom' hou1e, 2 baths,
all ele~ .• 1 acre, Middleport,
close to Rutland, Phone 991·

prtze

One letter simply :slands for anoth er In this sample A is
used for the tlnee L's, X for the tw o O's, etc. Smgle letters,
apostrophes, the length and formatiOn of th e words arc all

698·7331.

basement and level corner
12ted 4 bedroom ranch
type home, lots of closets.
ges forced air furnace.

Marshall Uni versity Report 33 .
7. 30-Porter Wagoner 3; Gong Show A; Candid Camera

32 Penrusswn
34 Reach

DAILY C RYPTO(! UO TE - Here's how to work it :
AXVDLBAAXR
Is LO I\'GFELLO W

covotlng , sept ic systems ,
dot~, bockhoe, dump truck ,
limestone , gra..,ei' blacktop
paving, Rt . 143 Phone I (614)

l::edroom frame home, 2
~ths, garage on corner

lot, l'h baths tor S24,0Q0.
MIDDLEPORT - Car·

MErrr-

AH'L.L LEAVE HIM Hr=RE - AJ--1
ui:i5f CAI/'J"r SfAND TH' fV'CP.N3

CARPENTER , flooring , t elling ,
paneling. Phone 992-2759

2

level lot. Wan I $12,000.
2 BUILDING LOTS - AI
Rock Springs, rura l water
available. $5,000.
JUST LISTED
4
tedroom brick home, Iarge
din ing ,
living
with
flreplace . Utlllly room, full

LIL

742·23.8.

MARTIN

'

YesterdaY's Answer
18 Sap1en1
20 Trapper's

33 Sa ndra or
Ruby
34 - Na Na
37 Food
intake
regimen
39 Famous
concert
cellist
(2 wds.)
4f Fatigued
(2 wds.)
45 Indistinct
46 Require·
ment
47 Despoil

EXCAVATING, dozer, bocki'loe
ond ditcher , Charles A Hoi·
Bock Hoe Service ,
field
Rutland, Ohio. Phone 742-2008 .

9'1 2-5858.
HOWERY AND

com

3"ls !l a
boy - g~rl' "
4 Santone
Gobb•'
5 "Th1s - of
Mme' '
concert
6 - excellence
cellist
10neof7
14 Utah c1ty
deadly sms
15 "- Darn 8 Nevada c1ty
hot"
9 Fellow
16 Gullel
( sl )
19 Ensnare
II Ha1r
21 Pruna
product
donna 's
13 Of the aged
forte
16 Exlmct
23 Form a
Hawauan
thou ght
bird
21 Famous
17
DesiCcated
concert
vwllmsl
(2 wds)

5.01f-Big Valley 3. My Three Sons' ' Brady Bunch 8;
Moster Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Star Trek 15 .
5.31f-Adam 12 4,13 , News 6; Fami ly Affair 8; Elec
Co 20,33
6 Oo--News 3.4,8,10, 13,15, ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33
6·3Q--NBC Newsl,4,15;.ABC News 13 , Andy Gr iff ith 6,
CBS News 8. 10. Vegelable Soup 20; VI lla Alegre 33.
7 oo--TruthorCons 3; ToTell theTrulh4; Bowling tor
Dollars 6; $128,000 Quest ion 8. News 10. To Tell the
Truth 13; My Three Sons 15; Ohio Journal 20.

name

..,

5232.

RUTLAND - Ni ce older
home In good shape with 3
bedrooms. equipped kltd1en, fu ll basement, coal
furnace, double garage and
nice lot. $36.000.
JUST LISTED - Nice old
brick 3 bedroom home with
modern kitchen, balh ,
dning with llrep lace. 2
fX)rches. patio and 3 car
garagewithstorage . All for

Jl'lvacy. $12,500
MID.DLEPORT

II))

Opemng lead - 5 •

TRUSSES
ANYPIXH
ANY SIZE

11.01f-News 3,4.6,8,10, 13,15; MacNeil -Lehrer Report
33

Blackwood takes option

SO DID l~
BUT AYLWARD

"The Origin1tors
Not The Imitators"
2·21· 1 mo.

mo

20

10 30--Woman 20

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

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

GUTTERSAWIIIM~

General 20.
10 00-Westside M edtea l 6, 13, Barnaby Jones 8; News

BRIDGE

Young's Carpeting

Ftnanctnl AVIIIIblt

llooo intiW~biAHICI

10.
•
9 llf-Th ree's Company 6,13. In The Shadow ol lhe

Road 13 ; Dolly 15

Superior
Steam Extraction

lliWn
Insulation Sel'fiees

F tve 0 8. Classic Theatre 33; Mov ie " In Like Flint "

Price is Right 8; Wild Kingdom 10; Nashville on the

..

• Q93

FREE ESTIM~TES

9·00--Best Sellers 3,4,15, Barney Miller 6,13, Hawaii

7 3Q--Holflwood Squares 3.4; Oh io State Lottery 6.

Free Estimates
No Sunday Calls Please
3$11$1 mo .

Ph. IIZ.ZI74

61 13, Wa llons 8, 10, Cl as sic Theatre 20; Masterpiece
Theatre 33 8· 30-What's Happening 6,13

7.0o-Truth or Cons 3, To Tell lhe .Truth 4, Bowling
for Dollar s 6. Muppet Show 8, News 10; To Tell the
Truth 13; My Three Sons 15, Almanac 20;
Amer ic ana 33

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2 860

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

8 OG--Fantastlc Journey 3,4,15; Welcome Back , Kotter

THURSDAY. MARCH 31 , 1977
6.3Q--NBC News 3,4,15, ABC News 13. Andy Grofl lth 6,
CBS News 8,10

Bissell Siding f'AI.

F•llto .....

~~l
~:.:ttBJSe&amp;BiR ~ ~

WANTED

IN

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

EXPERIENCED
Radiator

(Pleasanton Meat Processmg,
lite ok~':-j•'ed UU[)' With CII.Sh W\\ h
Installation , samples
Int.) Custom slaughtfnng, and
~. 2:i t.'flll d111rgr for 111tls cat ty·
local 1 owner car.
processing. Reto1l , wholesale
lng Bill Nwnbt.&gt;r ln Ctrt of Tilt' St&gt;tlbrought to your home
No oppo1nment necessary . Colt
lin&lt;l
1971 BELAIR 4 DOOR
1895
with no charge.
(6H) 593·8655, hours, 9:00 till
Air,
v.e,
automatic,
power
steering
end
brakes,
rad1o.
1'tlr Pullllllh.:r re~rv~ OW:' n~ht
6 00 7 Pomeroy Rood Atk&amp;ns. CASH potd For all makes ond
to edit or rt)et'l. olllll)' alii; llt!t!nlt'd 00Carpet-Lino •• Tile
Oh .
models of mobile homes .
Jt!C:IIOILHI Tilt! Publild)t'f' w\11 not ~
$695
1972 VEGA 2 DOOR
Phone
Mike Young at
Phone
area
code
614·423-953
1.
responsible for nwt r thiln one UJL'Ut·
RACINE FIRE Dept w11l hove a
4 cylinder. l!lutomatlc, radio.
992-2206
or 992-7630
red utsertwn.
Gun Shoot every Saturday night TIMBER, Pomeroy Forest Pro·
Phont' W2-2156
6 p.m. at the•r building m
ducts. Top price for 1tonding
2-23·1 mo.
Boshon, Ol'llo •
sawtimber. Call t&lt;ent Hanby ,
I "6-8570
EASTER BAZAAR, Apnl 1 and 2,
Thrift Shop. craff Items , bake COIN S, CURRENCY , tokens. ,old
Kitchen Cabinets, Roofing,
sole and Vegetable wup
pocket watches ond ckams ,
Concrete
Patios,
MEIGS CO. HUMANE SOCIETY
sliver ond gold . We need 1964
Sidewalks, · New
and
older
sil
ver
coins.
Buy,
sell
,
YES, WE Hove sheeh, S2 00 lb
Construction
&amp;
or trade' Call Roger Wamsley ,
Also, Anniversary Sole, Mon Remodeling.
7A2
2331
day , March 28th thru April-4th,
0 &amp; J House of Fabrlt;:S , 1 mile WANTED , CHIPWOOD
Poles ,
below Middleport on St. Rt . 7.
maximum diameter · 10 mches
Mund11y
on largest end. $8 . per ton, AUto Sid.,.
RACINE GUN Club , We hove
Noonur1 Sllturdcly
bundles slobs $6 per ton
COAL limestone, and colc •um
changed our gun shoot to FRI
Delivered to Ohio ~o l let Com- 1965 VOLKSWAGON , fotr cond1·
chl~r 1de and colc1um brine for
DAY
,
nights,
starting
ot
7
p.m
Tuesday
lion . $200 Phone 985-4256.
pany. At 2. Pomeroy , Oh1o.
dust control and special m1xing
lhru Fndciy
SHOOTING MATCH at Ru tland
Phone 992-2689.
soli for formers Mom Street,
Route 2
1974 OLDS CUTLASS Supreme,
l PM
Leg1on Hall, Friday evening. 7
Pomeroy,
Oi'l1o
or
pi'lone
992·
very
good
cond11ion.
Phone
Pomeroy,
Dhio45769
the d11y befvt e pubhcattotl
CASH! II for Junk cars Frye's
p.m
3891
Free Estimates Ph. 992-7119
985-3839.
Truck
and
Auto,
WRECKER
SERSwu.lay
GOING OUT OF Busmess Sole,
VICE! Phone742-2081.
1968 CHEVELLE 396, • speed, APPLES , FITZPATRICK ORCHARD ,
&lt;PM
3-11 -1mo. pd.
Turners Grocery , Lol'\g sville 25
STATE ROUTE 689 PHONE
F't u.liiy aftemoon
SISO. Phone 992·5301
OLD
FURNITURE
.
1ce
bo~~:es
,
brass
percent OFF, Pnced marked
WILKESVIllE, (bl&lt; ) 669-3785.
Phone
Groceries , kordwore an d " b eds , etc . complete 197' GMC PICKUP
FULLER Brush Products for _..iiole
992-3288.
miner's boots Everytkmg must . households, Write M, D. M1ller,
Rt 4, Pomeroy. Ohio or coli
Phone 992-34 10
go Pkone 742 9576. Sole ~tarts
NICE 1~76 BLACK Charger SE
992-77/IJ.
FINANCIAL REPORT
Morch 31 tluu Apr ill Oth 7 o m.
CAMPER , $600
Also. korse
Loaded Phone992·6162
OF TOWNSHIPS
flll7 ·30 PM.
DISCARDED CAR Batte ruu.
troller $450 Pi'lone (614) 698·
For FtScaiYearEnding
Lawnmowers , tillers, etc . 197~ CHEVY CORVETTE, 350 4 bor·
3:190
JONES MEAT Processing. County
December ll, 1976
rell , 29 .000 m1les, silver Wlli'l
Phone 742 ·3074.
Rood 248, Little Hockir,g off
•Letart Township
STEREO,
NEW AM FM stereo
block leother 1ntenor, power
Meigs County
Washington Co. Rds . 26 or 555. STATION WAGON. 1967 lo 1972.
rod10 combma11on $129.95 or
wmdows
factory
01r
condition·
R r. 2, Rae ine, Ohio
Phone (6") 667-6133
Either m good cond1t1on or
easy terms Coll992-3965
ing, AM·FM rod1o, T-top.
March 23, 1t71
telescoptc end tilt steenng SHAKESPEARE BASS Boot u ·,
SHOOTING MATCH , jus! o.ff Rt. 7 good body wllh bod engme.
1 cer t 1ty the fol l ow ing
Phone 992·6294,
wheel , new set of M1chelln
Nob II Summit Road
report to be corre ct.
.
by-pass
Every Sunday , at
1976 Mercury 20 h p. with elecDarrell Norr1s
rodtal t ~res with less tkon SOCl
Rl . I
tnc start 1976 tilt trailer, pius
TownShip Clerk
m1les Phone 742-2025 offer 5
Mtddleport, 0
other
e.wtros
$1695
.
Phone
Tel No 614 247 -2684
p.m or 742·2211 before 5 p m
992-5724
992·3126. C P R•ffle ,
SUMMARY OF '-ASH
and
ask for Dov1d .
Complete
Sales and
BALANCES, REC -EIPTS
IF YOU ho'le o service to offer ,
Service
and
Supplies.
AND EX PEN DIT UR. ES
1974
V.W
,
2
dr
sunroof
,
rod10,
wont to b~,ty or sell someti'ling ,
NHD A
RED &amp; WHITE Beagle on Rose
Bala nce Jan 1. 1f76
3 1.4-1 mo.
pr~ced $2195 Coil even1ngs on·
oe look 1ng for work
or
Volley H1ll 1n Mmersv1 lle
General Fund
S3 ,676 65
7
ly. 992 7283.
wkotever
you·ll get res ults
WATER
SOFTENER
Female red eyes , nome Wl·11t1e ,
Motor Vehicle L1 cense
fo1ter w1ti'l a Senttnel Wont Ad
Tax Fu nd
338 1
Chdd ·s pet
Phone Jerry
1976 DATSUN, '/2 lon p1ckup w1th
Coll992·2156
Gasol ine Tax Fund
48 173
Grueser, 9•9·2805 Reword to
au to., trns m11iS 10n , 12 ,000
let Pomeroy Loiindmark
Cem etery Fund
5,44 127
any o ne k nowtng t ke LARGE THREE Fomdy Yard Sole ,
miles. Must sell . Phone even·
soften &amp; condition your
Federal Revenue Sha rin g
whereabouts of th15 dog.
1ngs only , 992-7283
Hartford , W Vo t hursdov and
Fund
4,204 32
woler and • Co.ap water
Automatic
Friday 10 ttll ? Nome brancf
Totals
13,837 78
FAWN &amp; WHITE Mm1oture muced
soflener.
Model
UC-XVI
.
Transmission
Service
ch1ldr~n s and adult clothing ,
Total Receipt!
terrier FOUND Mole Con ta ct
Now
Genera 1 Fund
6.625 83
1n ci ud 1ng
good
1e an s
Meigs Coun ty Humane Soetety
Motor Veh 1c le License
Bedspreads , dtshes lots of
to cia 1m, 992-2639.
Let us test youor •wu.aifie'"'r·±
· -=-1Tax Fund
5,231 11
miSc. tfems . Turn nght ot top of
Gasolme T a)( Fund 18,71 0 0.4
LOS T IN DarWm v1cmtty. Grey
Free.
Hartford Hil l first house on left
cem etery Fund
9.566 78
Cairn femer , Mole, phone
Watch for signs Pkone (304) FISHER WOOD Burn1ng stoves and
Cemetery B eQuest Fd. 448 87
992·3702 or 992·3&lt;87.
form lumber. PHONE Focemyer
882·2683
Fed-eral Re\lenue Sharing
Jack W. carsey, Mgr.
and Salmons lu mber Co. , Inc
~ Fund
3,778 00
RED IRI~H SETIER, answer• to Bar- PORCH SALE , Sa turday' Henry
Rt 1 Middleport, Oh10, (614)
Totals
44 ,360 63
Phone 992-2181
ron. Chil dren·s pet Rober t
Hortman s res tden ce, Chester
To1al Rece ipts:&amp; Balances
992 7425.
Eason
,
Flatwoods
Call
General Fund
10,302 48
YARD SALE , Wrtght St , Pom eroy , STRAWBERRIES in baskets on9
Reedsville, 0 . Ph.l71-6150
m_.nn . Reword.
Motor Vehicle L1cense
(troller
at
end
of
street)
Fn
.
T a)( Fund
5,264 92
!lots, now bearing ; pans1es ,
3·27-1 mo.
day, "prd 1 and Saturday, Apr~ I
GasotlneTaxFund 19,19 1.77
cabbage, lettuce, broccoli
2,
10
hll
4
Lorge
selection
of
cemetery Fund
15,008 05
cauliflower. Brussels Sprouts Will do odd jobs, roofmgJ pam
boys good clothing ltttl 6 to
11ng, gutter work . Phone 992·
Cemetery Bequest Fd 448 87
on~ons
Cleland Forms and
Federal Revenue Shar 1ng
I 2, Full Sill mattress, SS. Orher
7~09 .
MERRI-MAC has open1ng for Party
Greenhouse
.
Geroldme
Fund
1.982 32
s11e cloth.ng and mi1celloneous
, Pla n
Supervisors
and
To ta l s
58,198 41
Clolond~-------::- SEWING · A LTE R.A TI0 NS
•ferns Inside in co•• of roiL
Demonstrators in your area ,
Upholst e ri ng ,
drapes
Expenditures
U!W
FORESTRY EQUIPMENT
H1ghest
commiss ion , no YARD SALE at Silt Cross re••d•N.t
Genera I Fund
7,622 05
reosonoble. 572 Soutk Th~rd
Borko
loader
•
Model
6170
de l 1v ery
or co llecttng .
Motor Vehicle L 1cense
on Mo1n Sl ., Racine SOhitdoy
Ave ,
Mtdd leport
Phone APPROXIMATELY 7 or 8 acres
~er iti 60BC , Franklin Model
wooded land in Rock Sprmgs.
Demon strate top quality toys
TaK Fund
4,687 31
April 2, ~ till• p.m. _
9'12 6306.
1308, Morbork 636 Oebarker
Gasoli ne T ax Fund 17.88717
and g•fts. Call collect to Ann
Phone 992 2789
s·n 617, Contact Dennis Smurr PIANO TUNING. Lone Don•els. 12
Cemetery Fun d
5,960 20
Bo.wter (319) 556-8881 or write THURSDAY , fRID .. Y, on Monday
2
STORY
4 Bedrm . bnck home tn
Cemetery Bequest Fd 448 .87
ood Tuesdoy ot VIne Str"t
ye ars of serv•ce
Phone
Phone (6lA) BJ!:·::53&lt;f
::::::;
5' - - - MERRI-MAC, 801 Jo c k~on ,
Middl
eport
Phone 992 34~
Federa l Reve nu e Sha r 1ng
Racine 9 till 4 p m , Boty 1972 KAWASAKI " 175 Enduro
Dubuque, Iowa 52001
992 20::,:8:::
2·' - - - " - - Fund
5.106.42
cloti'l.ng ,
and
furniture
HOUSE,
6
ROOMS.
ond bolh , 6
Many extras In good shop•. W"illTRIM or cut tree5 or shrub·
Total s
41 ,71202
Easy FUll or portttme employ
Women
·s
moternltv
clothing
ond
three
fourtn
acres
ms1de
Balance Dec. l 1, 1976
$350 or best offer . Phone
bery Phone 949-25.tl5 .
ment selling handcrafted ~1lver
o!ld other clothing Some
city limits. New s1dmg and
General Fund
2,680 43
992·3367
1ewelry. Turq , coli jade and
glonwore.
storm windows. 3 acres fenced
Motor veh ic le License
mother of pearl Contact (JCM)
PIGS TOP Quality caltroted,
Tax Fund
577 61
for small posture S18,500
675·4835
or
675-3812.
Gi!ISOiine Ta l( Fund
1,304 60
iron shot , wormed, $30 Phone
Phone992-7352.
Cemetery Fuod
9,047 85
(6 .. )378·8311.
FOR SALE du&amp; to til health 28 It
HOUSEK EEPER COMPAN ION
7
ROOM HOUSE, new carp el,
Federal Rev~n u e Sharing
all olummum Anderson i'louse
needed for elderly lady 1n Mid·
FOR SALE 1974 Hondo Elsmor 125
Fund
2,87 5 90
roo f , 1nsulotlon owner limmc
RISING
STAR
Kennel
B
oarding.
troil
t~r
Three
rooms
both
w1th
dleport , not bedfast. Wnte P.
Cr L1k e new . $350 . . Phone
To tal
16,486 39
ed. CQII992-7454
Indoor Outdoor runs, grooming
shower, carpeted thru out
0 . Box 196, Chesi'lire, Oh1o
CASH BALANCE .
985·3597
all
breeds
.
dean
sanitary
N1ce
ond
deon
lns1de
and
new
b'h acres , garden spot , some
RECEIPTS AND
•5620.
focil1t ies. Chesklrtl , Pi'lone (6U) HAY FOR sole Phone 992-5266.
paint iob ouh1de New fur ·
EXPENOITURES
posture, firewood wl l~ wood·
HELP
WANTED
t6r
dolry
form
,
367 -om
niture and drapes Id eal for
BY FUND
burn1ng stove, fuel 01\ heal
ATTN
.
LADIES
LONG
R
ifle
Shop
fullttme, exper~ence preferred
General Fund
man an d wile , on construct1on,
outbu1ld1ngs 2 bedroom house,
HOOF
HOllOW
Buy
,
sell
,
trade
now
corry1
ng
a
l1ne
of
Red
broom i'louse Wlti'l boti'l furn iSh·
Bal , Jan 1,1976
3,676 .65
or for SUHlmer t:amp1ng. Con be
near kosp1tal and town .
or
train
horses
RUTH
REEVES
Hflort
W.ntuck
Kn11ting
ond
Receipts
ed. Call (6" ) 9A9·2579:
seen AT Aaron Kelton ·s,
$19,500 Pkone992-594 •
tro1ner Phone (614) 698-3290.
Crochetmg yorn Free lenon s
Genera l Property Ta-,; Welchtown Rood , Pomeroy,
Real Estate end
w1th
e\lerv
$5.00
purchase
248
3
BEDROOMS home. oil alec ., I
POODLE GROOMING , reasonable
Ohio.
Trailer (Gross )
2,764 .68
RIVet V1ew Dnve, Pomeroy
both, uttlttr. room by k1tchen .
rates
Call
for
appt
742.3162
Tangible Personal Property
Phone 992·30'10
x 50 2 BEDROOM Mobtle home.
115x 115 ot, I corgorogeln
Tax (Gras~ )
761.88
ENGLISH SPRINGER Spaniels
I,Jnfurnlshed. con 992 -38n .
Rutlond. Phone 742-2869
150
BALES
of
Alfalfa
ond
Orchard
Local Go\lernment Md
Pups, AKC liver and white, 5
Stat e Income Ta x 1.640.04
Gross, SJ 50 per bole; \50 TRAILER AND lot , Pomeroy .
weeks old, held tr1ol bred,
C1garette Lic ense Fees
boles of gross hoy , $1 00 bole
Phone 992 3288
cnomp1on bloodlines Call Jim
and Fmes (Gross )
18.56
Bocki'loe and end loader. Phone
Butcher,
247-2206,
or992-S426
Intangible
1,440 67
1970 12 .w 50 2 BEDROOM mobile
8~3 · 2900.
Total Receipts
6,625 83
home 1972 12 x 45 one
MALE
ST.
BERNARD
,
1
year
old,
To t al Begin ning Bala nce
NEW 1976 Hoo'ler Uprtgkt
bedroom mobile home.· Con be
$150
Phonem-7068
10,302 48
Plus Rece lpf5
Sweepers , Factory demo , only
seen at 493 8roadwr,- Street .
E xpenditures
6 OVOiiClble, $22 50 Cosh or
Middleport , Oh io
Phone
Total Expendit ures
terms. Phone 992·5146.
992-5535
- Administrative 6.84'2.05
- Town Halls, Memor1a1
ELECTROLUX SWEEPERS, com·
Buildings Md Grounds
pletely rebu1lt , oil attachmenh.
180 00
STARCRAFT, Mini -motors , 20 and
Real
E.tattcluESale-o
.:
--~
Only
$35
cosh
or
terms
Call
-Fire Pr otect 1on
605 00
22 ft Fold-downs , 51850 up, 23
Grand Tota l Exp . _
.9925
~
·
~
~6
~·-----­
ft . Travel Star S.C., $4199. We
MAIN
3 BEDROOM HOUSE for sole near
Gen~ral Fund
7,622 .05
sell service and 'quality. New FIVE H?B x 1~ tires, like new con·
Eastern H1gh School . Full bon·
Sol .. De&lt;:. 31, 1976
2.680 •3
POMEROY, 0.
d1tJon. Phone 992-5535.
and used. Camp Conley S1or
Total Exp Plus Bal ,
ment, 2 cor garage, family
NEW
i.1si'ING ..:. Souih&lt;;rn
croft Sales , Rt. 62 N. Pl . Plea- INTERNATIONAL 2 pt. hitch
Dec. 31, 1976
10,302.48
room ,
fireplace
Phone
style home. excellent
sant .
Motor Veh1cle L lcen~e
mower, $250. Phone 992-7190.
985·3867.
location In Pomeroy, very
Tu Fund
33 81
Bal. , Jan 1, 1976
1973 450 HONDA . Also, lorust COMMERCIAl BRICK BUILDING in
nice kitchen , llv1ng rodm,
Receipts
f~nce posts. Pi'lone 742·2312
downtown Pomeroy, Oh1o
dining room. 2ba111s. ulll lty
Cemewrv Bequest Fund
Motor Vehicle L1cense
Presently rented with income
111d
basement. Plus lwo
Receipts
Tu
5,231 11
CA ALLIS CHALMERS tractor,
448.87 WAN TED TO rent with possible
over SSOOO per year. Two ren·
rental
apls .
ONLY
Bequests
r ota ! Receip ts
5,231.11
mowing
machines,
ond
plow5
.
448 87
Tota l Recei pts
option to buy: 50 to 200 acres
tals downstairs and one
S24,000
,00.
Total Beginning Balan ce
Phone 992-7232
E xpendilurn
secluded land, some tillable
upstairs , Has uflfinslhed apart·
NEW LISTING
4
Plus Receipts
5,264 92
E~&lt;penditu res w1th
ini'lobitoble
house.
ColumBAB'I'
BED, 2 boys b1kes . 20 in.,
ment upstairs. Entire upstairs
Expenditures
!:Ed
rooms, ktlchen, bath,
Nonrestricted
448.87
Total Expend lfures
bia , Sc1pio, Bedford, or Rutland
Ma9nus Chord Organ, two 8
can eosily be made into 3
utility , yard A GOOD
Total EKp :
4.48 87
- Mlscelli!lneous
4.687 .31
Towns hipS
Wrtte
Tony
apartments, W·alf condtlion
track tape players, cloy flower
BUY. ONLY $7,225 .00.
Federal
A
evenu
e
Grand Total Exp Aussego, 1331 Meodow Rood ,
pots. 1958 Chevv. 6 cyl. slon ·
upstairs. 3 separate water, gas
NEW HOME - I ocre, 3
Shuint
Fund
Motor Vehic le License
Columbus , onto43212 .
dord. Phone 742·2078 .
ond electric met11rs . Can be
~~.Jan . 1, 1976
4,204 .32
bed t·ooms, ullllly, nice
TaxF und
4 , 687~1
Reettpts
fmonced 100percent to reliable
kitchen, c arpet ing , car Bal. , Dec 31 ,1976
57161
1974 HONDA 360, 2000 actual
Grants- Federi!ll
3.778 00
porty. Contact Paul Simon or
port, In go od location .
Total Exp . Plus
miles,
over
$600
of
extras,
om·
Total Receipt!
3,778 00
Guido Giro!om1 to secure on
Bi!ll , Dec 31, 1916 5,26492
fm
radio
with
tape,
cigarette
Total Beginn1ng Balance
GasollneTaxFun4
appointment. Priced upon in·
NEW FUI!NACE - F.A.
pIus R:ece tpts
7,982 32 3 AND .4 RM furn lsh&amp;d .ond unhghter, cargo carrie(', wmd·
sal., Jan 1, 1976
481 73
spetfton of property only .
fuel oi l furnace, 1 acre,
E
)lpenditures
si'11eld
wllh
windbreaker.
crash
Receipts
furnished opts. Phone 992.
modern kitchen , carpeting,
M•int. and Operation
bars . lots of chrome, many 5 ROOMS ond both in Mmersville
Gasoline Tax
U ,200 00
5&lt;3~ .
S&amp;
larlesEm
plo
yees
897
92
penelllng. really neat .
Other
4,5 10 04
more extras not meni1oned
Phone 992-5833.
Sup pi ies
1,398 54 COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork, Rt
$16,500.00.
Tota l Rece ipts
18,710 04
Phono
742-2025
after
5
p.m.
or
EQuipment
1, 373 75
ONE ACRE , 3 bedroom , 2 slory
To tal Beginning Sal
NEW KITCHEN - The
33 ten miles north of Pomeroy
7•2-2211 before 5 p.m . ond ask
Contracts- Services 1,206 00
home, dmmg room , large both,
~Ius fileceip,ts
1~,1 91 77
kitchen
In lhls 12 room
Lorge
lots
with
concrete
patios,
for
David.
Advertis ing ~ nd
Expenditures
natural go1 , large porch, nice
11dewalks , runners and off
home Is unbelleveable.
63
.84
Printing
Total Expendlturesblock garage, $20,000. Phone
formal dining, large living,
stree t pork1ng Phone 992-7479 COAL STOVE, Fuel oil stove ond
Public Employees
M ls.cellaneous
11.849 .52
tonk , electric hot water lank
992·5732.
Retirement
Syst
em
166.37
this
you
must
see.
Main tenance
6,037 65
and other items. Coil (614)
Total Exp
5,106.42 FARM QN tlver, 51 acres. 7 rooms
120,000.00.
8
ACRES
Meigs
County,
3
m1las
GraM Tota l Exp and both. Phone 992-5908.
Bal., oec 31, 1976
2.875 90
378-6257
OLD HOME - Live In or
Gasoline Tal&lt; f!A'Id
from Wllkesvlller $6000 Phone
17,887 .17 Tohl Exp Plus Bal ,
rent, Is 2 bedroom house
FURNISHED APT. for rent. Pkone 100 BALES of hay. Calf evenin~s
(304) 675·5455.
31,
1976
7,982
32
Dec
Bal. , Dec . 31, 1976
1,304 .60
Ill
larg e lot Is only
992-3'175 or 992-2571
onlv Paul Korr, Chester. Ohio.
Town ship Deb t- Bonds
FOUR BEDROOM frame house
Total Exp Plus Sal,
for Which Bond
VERY NICE 12 x 65 mobile home m - 985.3538
Dec 31 , 1976
19,191 .77 Purpose
122 Butternut Pomeroy,, $5 ,500
- .
...
ACE RAGE - We have
Debt Was Created
Moton . Adults only, no pets
cemetery Fund
Cal i O'Brien Crow Aeohy,
New
Motor
tor
Grader
!ll!veral
parcels tor home
Bat , Jan I, 1916
5,441 .27
Con tocl Sandra, 992·5693 Man·
SALE~· 992·2720 or 992·358'1.
Outs tandin g Jan . 1,
~tes, call loday.
Receipts
doy
thru
Friday
,
9
till
J
p
m
ond
3, 996.67
1976
New Co-Op water sotNEEDS REPAIR - We
General Property Tax NICE OLDER t'lome In Miner1ville,
wHkondo al (61~) 367·7150.
teners, model vc.svt .
New Issues Ourlnq
have a few_.. houses 111ot
Real E$tate and
Ohio Prtced for quick 50a.• at
-.
Yea
ring
1
9¥
3 . 1~ 6 . 25
Only
1171.!1
Tralter(Grossl
2,351.03
NEWLY REMODELED house In
need pe.!Jif' and flxed up ,
$5500. 1.7 acres wltk some fruit
Durmg Year
1 Good used Poulan Chain
Sale of Lots
2,185 .00 Redeemed
Investment potential, call
Chester. Furnished or un·
trees Good rental property
1976
•. 687 .31
S.w.
SU
Fell
.. ,:)30 75
furni•hed , ponntled , newly
today.
Balence
Ou
ts
fa
ndlng
save
uo
.oo
on
1
new
space
for
trailers.
For
more
in·
Tote I R ece-lpts
9,566.'78
IF YOU REALLY WANT
corpeted. ·Reosonoble r.nt to
Hotpolnt RefrigerAtor.
Dec 21 , 1976
31746 25
formation , coli {614) ~49·7563
Total Beg inning Belance
.
of 'nt
1 Pet
1 Good Ustd McCullough
TO
SELL
YOUR
_ .:!_a~~~!'Y ., all_1 -~~~~ 1~ __,__
PIVI Receipts
15.001.05 Rate
15 ACRES OFF New L•mo Rood
Date of 1- in ..I Mat
'79
Ch• in Saw •••••• ••• ••• St5
PROPE RT.Y
CALl,
E wptnd ttures
n.
near Foresl Acres Park Phor'l•
Total - Ou tstand ing Jan .
1 Good used 40" Hotpolnt
TODAY. Wt hove buyor1
Sllorl..
l.l6t:9~
1 1976
3,996 67
Rlnlt••••••••••••••• SIOO
742·2336.
for
Ierma and newer
Employer's Retirement
Now in stock, complete line
Total - New Issues
A'uclioD
Contribution
426 BJ.
IDmto
.
l
BEDROOM
HOME
ond
both
for
During Year 1976
3,746.25
of b•lk 11rden seed1 and
Toolt•nd Equ ipment 1.094.68
HENRY E. CLELANDsole. Cook'• Gop Hill. 7 ft.
Total Redeemed During
•nlon sets.
AUCTION
.
FRIDAY
,
7
p.m.
New
su pillS
28 "
BROKER
'l'earl976
.4,687 31
basemen t. full basement , oU
curling. loi s of oti'ler new
Ot~tr expenses
541 .60
Hank Cltlond Auoclolt
-- Ba lance outstanding
ul•ll tle1 . Pannelling inside.
Total hp .
5,960.20 Total
on
used m~trchandise at
Dec 21. 1976
3,746.!5
992-2259,992-2561 '
On 66 of on acre. Phone
•
·J ack w Carsey , ~~tr
Bot .• Doc. 31, 1976
9.0~7 .85
Mason Aucllon , Horton St ,
915·4112
mms.
Phone
992
·~111
Totollll••· Plu s Bf'..
Moson .W.Vo. (30&lt;1773-5&lt;71
Doll': 31 , 1976
15,00! 05 Ill ll, lie 't

.

WHEN HE S ENTENCED ME

'.
Route l, Pomeroy, 0.

Obi.tUMI')'

Mubilc HulllC !jill!$ and Y11td SHin

•

Business Services
Young'J Carpeting

In memury, C.rd ul TI\Mnb .1111d

6 t.&lt;t:lllll ptr woni. IJ 00
mininnam. Cuh ut iid\'tUK.'e.

¥

~icK: ;;:A~y Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, March 31 , l:117

1

Auto Sales

1.90

!&lt;!i

.

'

•

.. .

I

GIFT
! WRAPPED!!

lh"t::::2~

I

�__

,...

.....

12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, March 31, 19ii

One of the most important
duties of the President of the
United States is to implement
and conduct American
foreign policy in such a wasy
as to defend our national
·security and interests as well
as foster a climate for world
peace.
While the new President
needs time to orient himself
to the responsibilities of being
the leader of the free world , I
and others in the Congress
are disturbed about the
Administration's scattergun
foreign policy statements.
Its pencliant to shoot from
the hip on some rather
sensitive, complex issues has
already stireed controversy
and created confusion here
and abroad . This has
happened in the Middle East
with Mr. Carter's offhand
remarks about the creation of
a Palestinian homeland.
Other examples of this are U.
N. Ambassador Andrew
Young 's remarks that
Communist Cuban troops
introduce a stabilizing factor
in Africa and Young 's
comments on Great Britain's
so-&lt;:alled "ineffectiveness"
as a factor for peace in the
world on the eve of Prime
Minister Calaghan's recent

visit to Washington. Such
insensitivity can do nothing to
instill confidence in the
United States on the part of
U. S. Allies.
The Administration has
blasted. friend and foe alike
for not measuring up tO U. S.
standards of mora,lity. While
we are deeply committed to
human rights, the U. S. can
not be the world policeman
and referee internal disputed
in other nations. However, by
taking this course so unsubtly
and publicly, the Carter
foreign policy may well tend
to discourage the potential
for peace, upset nuclear anns
limitation talks and alienate
our allies. Nations subjected
to these sermons on how to
run their own affairs have
reucted in .an increasingly
nationalistic marmer at what
they perceive as outside
meddling.
When one nation chides
another publicly for the
con-dition of its citizens, the
intent · to promote human
rights can easily backfire .
Not surprisingly, the Soviet
Union has reacted to the
President '• continuing
criticism by cracking down
even harder on Soviet
dissidents through an
extensive series of arrests,
. - - - - - - - . threats, searches and attacks
in the press.
The point is that the U. S.
can effectively promote
freedom in the world if we go
about it in a responsible way .
There is not as · much
favorable publicity and
public acclamation with ·quiet
diplomacy, but the fruits tend
to be more substantive and
'lasting. In other words, Jet's
have Jess grandstanding and
more productive work.
I also hope the President
will take a consistent line on
human rights. While he cites
llHE--~----1 the Soviet Union and Brazil
for repressiveness, he is
advocating improved
relations with notoriously
repressive
regimes in control
... by
of Cuba and Vietnam.

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION .

WATCH FOR
OPENING DATE

BONANZA

R!dwin®

Soft.
s mooth
leather . . . in a tie
and
sli pon ... you
can count on Pedwin
for the latest good
looks. Copper Color.

Hospitals urged
to heat with oil

1

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
Ohio Hospital Association
Wednesday urged Ohio
hospitals which fire their
boilers by natural gas to
consider switching to oil for
next winter an.d to consider
coal as a long-range energy
source.
A spokesman for the
association said it would be
cheaper and quicker to '
switch to oil for the .1977·78
winter because of the
physical problems entailed in
changing over to coal. "While
we do not forsee a change in
the high priority hospitals
have in getting natural gas,
the very real question will be
its availability," said OHA
President
Donald
R.
Newkirk.

I
~

I

I.

ICom~
I

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
APRIL SALE DAYS
Sale begins Friday, April 1st 9:30 A.M. - Continues for one week ending
Saturday, April 9th at 5 P.M.

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8
---·-----------------,-·.;..
. . . . . . . . . . . . ..,. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .T . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .--.. --.. . ~---MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS
MEN'S DRESS .SHIRTS I s;,_~,~~:~. EA~!2N,.!J;~~s,.
1
v
~
I
I

I

Neck sizes 14 2 to 17112. Solid colors, white,
neat patterns, short sleeves, includes all of

Sizes small (14-14112) medium (15-15112 )
large (16-16112 ) extra large (17 -17112) Short
and long sleeve styles, western shirts,
leisure shirts, entire stock of men 's sport
shirts included :

I
THE
SHOE BOX

MI~.:~~~-~J

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No . 22058
Estat e of Virgil E . Roush ,
Deceased .
Not ice is her eby given tha t
Mary S . Roush , of R. D . 2, ·
Ra ci ne , Ohio , has been duly
appointed E xecu tr ix of the
Estate of Virgil E . Ro ush ,
decea se d , late of R. 0 . 2.
Rac ine , Me igs County , Ohio .
Cr ed i iCKS are requ ir ed to
file the ir clai ms with said
f id uciary
wi thin
thr ee
mon th s.
Dated this 9th day of March
1977
Manning D . Webster ,

PlANNING APIZZA PARTY
PHONE
.THE ALL NEW

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

·

5

·u.

5

Men's $5.95 Sport Shirts .................. $4 94
.
. eo,~S8.95 Sport Shirts .................. $7.49
Men s $10.95 Sport Shirts ............ ;.,, $9.19
Men's $12.95 Sport Shirts ............... $10.79
Men;s $14.95 Sport Shirts ............... $12 .49
Mens 518.00 Sport Shirts ............... $14.99

5

5

5

r,

M ,

I

_..~-

patterns .

.

.

5

I1

.,.......,_... . . ..._.. . . . _.._

s2.89

s4
50
·
SALE
S] 69
I
!I $5100
••..•.••••••••• SALE '4.09
$
SALE $449
550
1 s5 00
SALE s4 99
~

I

.

• • ••••• •• • • • • ••

e

I

11111111111 I l l

•

+. ••••••••••••••••

PAIR

•

I "'
L ------------- _.._.._.._.. ....._.._... . . . . . . . . . . .-.-................................._.._..
__,_.._.._.._........_..,_'1_._.._.._,__

Women' S ring Coats
SAVE 10o/c0

LITTLE GIRLS
EASTER DRESSES

I. ·

Includes our entir st ck, junior sizes 11 -12
to 15-16, misses sizes to 20 and half sizes
14112 to 22 112, pant and dress length for thi s
sale.

__.._. _. _. . . .

$} 00

.

s3~50~ ••.••••...••.. SALE
I

White, solid colors, and heather tones, one
~~z:ef.its 10 to 13 . Buy what you need now and

Regular 7.~5 Sh·. .. ........... Sale '6.59 i

Average and tall lengths, sizes 32 thru SO.

1

OR LON SOCKS

~

5

PAIR

MEN'S 51.25 BULKY KNIT

I

•

I
I
I

sse . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1

Regular 3.95 Shirts ............. Sale s3.29 I

FULL SLIPS

1

Ole size fits all sizes 10 through 13. An
excellent se lection of solid colors .

~--·---------.;_

Regular 55.95 Shirts ............. Sale $4;99

Included also in this special sale, entire
stock of men's pre-washed denim jeans.

....

DRESS SOCKS

I
1
I

Our entire stock of boy's short sleeve sport
shirts, sizes 8 to 20 in solid colors and

•

_.~---

l

'

!I

Regular s1.19 Yard

PRINTS
Co'"ON
I II
36 inches wide. fast color,
atterns, limited quantity.
P

79e

excellent

vo·

SALEI CALICO "PRINTS

1

!1
I
1 REG. 7.00............................... SALE 5.60 I
I REG. 10.00 ............................. SALE 7~99 !
.1 REG. '14.oo............................ SALE 11.19

100 per c:nt cotton, preshrunk,
patterns, 36 inches wide.
, Regular price $1.39
Sale Price

Sizes 6 months to size 14.

1

1

1

1

1

_..~---------·----1

good

$1 00 yd

. . . . ._._. . . ._.. . .
WOVEN STRAW

r

.

I

~----------_.

I

I REG. 117.00 ................... :........ SALE 113.59 I
I~-~--REG. '20.00 ........................... SALE 115.99 !
.......- - - - - - . - ................ _....__.._._....,
PLACE MATS
I
Chl'ldren's.
. I1 Limited quantity
for clearance sale, natural
I
E
·
I color .
I
aster Hats &amp;Bonnets
I 11.79 Oval or Rectangula,; ............ Sale 11.00 .

...............................................:~------~ REG. 52.99........................ SALE s2.39 j__:~~!.!~~~lar...:.... ::·:.::~le. ~~o
·
LITTLE BOYS
1 REG. '3.49 ........................ SALE s2.79
WOMEN'S WRANGLER
, EASTER SUITS .
REG. s4.00 ....·..................... SALE 53.19
KNIT TOPS
I REG s4 50
SALE s3 59 I ~rints, solids, terry, tubes, halters, Junior

!
!

!

l
. . ........................
.
. ~-----SALE-CAFE-SETS
I Just 100 sets to sell, eggshell with contrast
' 1 color trim, 50 per cent polyester and 50 per
1 cent rayon, set includes lower sashes and

- 2 Piece and 3 Piece
- P~~ester, Denim
7
- SIZes, 2T thru

~

s1zes S-M -L.

____ 1 Reg.· s4.00 Tops, ..:.............. Sale 3.19
!1 Reg.
Reg. ss.OO Tops .. "" ............ Sale s3,99
SS.OO Tops ........... ;.. ,; .. Sale s4.79
5

Reg. 514.00 Suits.............Sale 511.19
1
5
Reg. S1J.OO Suits ............ Sale 13.59 1 matching valance.
I Reg. 57.00 Tops.................. Sale '5.59
Reg. 521.00 Suits ............ Sale s16.79
Reg. '3.99 36 inch length ............ '2.19 set _I Reg. '8.00 Tops............ ~ ......Sale '639 ·
1
Reg. s23.00 Suits ............Sale s18.39
Reg. 14.99 45 inch length ............. 2.89 set
Reg. '9.00 Tops. .................. Sale s7.19
5
5
5
·_._.
Reg.
29:00
Suits
.............
Sale
23.19
I
Home Furnis~ings- 1st Floor
Reg.
1Q.OO Tops.................. Sale s7.99
. . . . _._.._...._._.._.._..._....__.._..._.._._.._ ___ b _ _.. ____,_... . . . _._.. _ _..._.._.._._.._.._,_..._..,.__.._........_........ ................._..._...........

l
!

RockeiS, S~ees, Gin ~ummy, Picnic Tables,
Club ChaiiS, Chaises, End Tables.

. U.OYD Fl BERCRAFT
High and Low Back ChaiiS,
Swings, Taoles and GlideiS

.

-student Size

-American Made

1

REDWOOD

LAWN LITE
CUSHIONED FURNITURE

GUITARS

I

SALE

!
!.
! SPECIAL SALE.
I
! .ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES
~._

I
!
l

SUMMER FURNITURE

' GlideiS, RockeiS, Chaises, ChaiiS.

with us!

our men's dress shirts .

•

Commo n Pleas Court.
Probat e Divi sion
Me igs Count y, Oh io
131 17 , 24 , 3 1, Jtc

inches, solids, patterns, our entire stock
included for this sale.

I Men's '9.95 Fashion Jeans........... '8.14
!I Mens, sc 95 D.ress Sh'rts1 :....... Sale ss•63 !I MMen's' 1210.9595 t'ash'
Fashion Jeans.; ....... '8.84
J
10 44
1
I ens •
1011 eans........ •
.I Men's s8.95 Dress Shi~ ....... Sale s7.33 I Men's $14.95 Fashion Jeans........sl2.14
! Men's 11.95 Dress Shirts...... Sale '9.73 I Men's 16.95 Fashion Jeans........sl3.74
II . Mens' s13•95 Dress Sh'rts Sale s1143
• II
_._. _. _. . . ._.._.___._. . _. _,_. _. _.._._. . . . . .----..-..--.. . .
. . .--.-.-_..r----------.. . . . . . . . ._.. . . . . . . . . . . . . _..
Boys Dress and Sport Shirt I MEN'S BANLON PANEL I ·
PHILMAID
.
1

WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC STREET

;, ood .,,;,,.,
to win an Easter
Basket to be given
away April 9th. No
purchase necessary .

•

,.·

.

~~

I·

HOUSfW!RES DEP!RTMENT-ISI R.ODR

!
l

-Sunburst, Blonde &amp;Brown Finishes s24~95
REG. '49.95
Hamilton Beach-Electric Knife......'l7.00

I Sale $3888 .

1'16.95 Presto Hamburg eau..... '12.50
~--------------------J S39.95 Rival Croc~ Pot ................ '30.00
!
··KROEHLER
! '18.95 ·
I SOFA &amp; LOVE SEAT SETS Proctor Silex Coffee Maker.....·..... '14.00

I

~

-MODERN or TRADITIONAL

1

-HERCULON, NYLON .

1

. ! REG. '978.00.
~

REG. '961.00
REG. '958.00

!! 29.95 Sunbeam-Electric Tar..
I

YOUR
QIOICE

.

5

~25.00 .

'15.95 Sunbeam-Hand Mix•....... ..'12.00 (

1
1
·
5
· 1 29.95 Schick Hair Blow.

$649 I

·

DIJer.... '24.00

00 '29.95 TOII)1!1hlltlr . . 0.0...!24.00
1 REG. '955.00
I REG. s878.00
•
1
.,.._._,......,.._....,.._.._.._.._.._.._._..._.._......................_..._..L...,.................a.-....-....... ~- .......---_.............. _. ........_....... _.. ....... _.._............. _.. .......... ~ .................................................._ _...

·. SALE
PRICES
·
·

SHOP SA'TURDA Y 9:30 A.M. TO 5 P.M.

ELBERFELD$ IN ·P
OMEROY·
. .
.

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